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What Mrs. Fisher Knows About So. Cooking (Cooking in America)

What Mrs. Fisher Knows About So. Cooking (Cooking in America)
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What Mrs. Fisher Knows About So. Cooking (Cooking in America)

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4379990897

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Description:

This is a wonderful collection of 160 authentic and tasty recipes of the Old South. Originally published in 1881, it was the first African-American cookbook. Prior to Applewood's edition, it had been reprinted only once in a limited edition of 100 copies. 93849

Product Details:
Author: Abby Fisher Mrs Mrs
Paperback: 96 pages
Publisher: Applewood Books
Publication Date: March 01, 1995
Language: English
ISBN: 1557094039
Product Length: 7.97 inches
Product Width: 5.07 inches
Product Height: 0.25 inches
Product Weight: 0.25 pounds
Package Length: 7.26 inches
Package Width: 5.02 inches
Package Height: 0.28 inches
Package Weight: 0.2 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 7 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.0 ( 7 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

39 of 39 found the following review helpful:

4Historical Treasure  Sep 20, 2000

As soon as I learned of this book's existence, I ordered a copy for myself. I love cooking (and cookbooks), and I am also fascinated by the kind of first-person, anecdotal history that can be derived from the writings or records of ordinary people living long ago. This work--the first cookbook by an African-American, actually a former slave, originally published in 1881-- appeals to both of those interests, and, in addition, is a curious little conversation piece to display on a bookshelf. The recipes are not ones you will turn to each night when making dinner, but they are fun to experiment with, as long as you rewrite the directions first in their proper order (they are written in a stream-of-consciousness style), and as long as you read the historical notes that define the units of measure used in the recipes. This book could be a great guide for a "historical reinactment" of a Civil War era dinner, or, if not, then it is at least a selective culinary history of the Old South. Most interesting to me are the medicinal recipes, like blackberry syrup as a remedy for dysentery, and the recipe for "infant diet." This edition contains not only the original cookbook, but an informative afterword that explains some historical facts about Mrs. Fisher and the society around her. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in American history, African-American history, or the art of cooking.

21 of 22 found the following review helpful:

4Interesting for the student of African-American Gastronomy  Oct 26, 2001
By Ed Gibbon www.congocookbook.com
"What Mrs. Fisher Knows" is a charming antique and should be read by anyone with an interest in African-American or Southern cookery, or anyone who would like to re-create authentic 19th century American cuisine.

This reprint of "What Mrs. Fisher Knows" was brought into being by Karen Hess. Hess has provided an informative introduction to the recipes (which are reproduced in their entirety), explaining many 19th century cooking concepts which may be unfamiliar to the modern cook and providing as much of Abby Fisher's story as can be found. In Fisher's original text it is interesting to see some of the earliest known written recipes for several dishes and to discover others which are almost unknown today. Fisher's original recipes are typical of 19th century (and earlier) cookbooks. Each recipe is several sentences in a single paragraph, with no separate ingredient list. In many cases it is assumed that the cook will know how to prepare something that is taken as a given in the recipe. This is a cookbook from a time when all cooking was "from scratch", when there were few labor-saving kitchen gadgets, and printed books were luxury items. It is not a step-by-step cookbook. [For that, see Chef Paul Prudhomme or Southern Living.]

"Good Things to Eat" by Rufus Estes is sometimes called the first cookbook written by an African-American. "What Mrs. Fisher Knows" was published thirty years earlier. (It could be said that Mrs. Fisher, a former slave, did not actually "write" the book as she evidently did not know how to write; she dictated the recipes to a member of the Women's Cooperative Printing Office in San Francisco which published the work in 1881.)

(The editor, Karen Hess has done similar work on Mary Randolph's "The Virginia Housewife" and "Martha Washington's Booke of Cookery and Booke of Sweetmeats".)

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

3You're gonna need an interpreter  May 01, 2012
By FoxyLady
I was excited when I saw this book, not only is a part of history but I love old school down home recipes. This book was written by people who did not truly understand slavery or post-slavery dialect. Some of the wording simply does not make sense. The afterword is helpful in terms of translating the measurements. But it is still very challenging to understand the recipes. I have yet to cook any of the recipes, because I am still translating them. If you have the time to devote, it would be a fun project.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5What mrs Fisher Knows....  Oct 03, 2010
By Brunetta
This book goes into my historical collection of recipes, many are more simple than contemporary recipes.

5Plantation Holiday Foods  Dec 26, 2011
By George Smith
Thanks for publishing WHAT MRS. FISHER KNOWS ABOUT OLD SOUTHERN COOKING. As an African-American teacher, I appreciate African-American history. On our Christmas program, one of my kindergarten students displayed the book while explaining that Mrs. Abbey Fisher has two recipes for pound cake in the book and pound cake is an antebellum holiday food. Mrs. Fisher's pound cake recipes are on page twenty-eight; one is called the Gold cake and the other is the Silver cake. The class ate pound cake at the Christmas party. The class party setting was Goose Creek Plantation at Charleston South Carolina in 1859. The student also told that the book was published in 1881, and Mrs. Fisher was a former slave who could not read or write. But she dicated her recipes for friends to write down. After the Civil War ended slavery she left Mobile, Alabama and went to San Francisco where her book was published. Since I grew up in Mobile, I was more than thrilled to get this historic book. Another teacher ordered two of the books; one he gave to a friend for Christmas.

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