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Paperback My Little House Cookbook Book

ISBN: 059039732X

ISBN13: 9780590397322

My Little House Cookbook

(Part of the My First Little House Books Series)

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

$8.09
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Book Overview

This new activity picture book in the My First Little House Books series presents 11 delicious and easy recipes, ranging from Pancake Faces to Laura's Little Maple Cakes. A perfect first cookbook for... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Favorite cookbook

My 8 year old daughter loves cooking and baking out of this recipe book. Super easy and tasty.

excellant cookbook for fans or beginners

I've loved the Little House books my whole life. Now that I'm grown, with children of my own, I've started collecting anything to do with these books since they can help teach and illustrate the more simpler times gone by and I'm trying to teach my children those values. Considering that these recipes are very simple, most of them a child can make on their own or very little supervision, helping to impart a sense of accomplishment. You do have to take into account that these recipes were not written for an adult. If you want that, I reccomend The Laura Ingalls Wilder Country Cookbook. It's a collection of recipes that Laura compiled during her life. I was amazed at the horrible reviews left for this book. You have to remember that most of these recipes were from a more simple time when not only our habits but how food was prepared was radically different. Some people mentioned that these recipes seemed old fashioned, or that some of the techniques weren't what they expected. Well, as to old fashioned, what did you expect from books written about a time over 100 years ago? As for being dissapointed that the technique for the butter was too modern, you're lucky that they were updated so a modern reader could understand them. I have a cookbook that's over 100 years old passed down through my mothers family and I'm still trying to decipher some of it. All you had to do was buy some cream, some small canning jars, and give each girl a jar about half full of cream and let her shake it to her hearts content. No, popcorn and milk doesn't sound very appetizing to me, but then bread in milk doesn't either, and my great grandmother ate that with a bit of sugar for her "sweet tooth" quite often. As to the carrot in the butter, in the winter since fresh green pasture was not avaiable, the butter was not always yellow, but sometimes pure white and carrots were once used to give it a bit of color. You don't add the actual carrot to the butter. Grated carrots are added to water and boiled down to extract the color. It's the colored liquid left as a result that colored, as well as sweetened the butter. Carrots were often more available than annatto, a popular dye made from a tropical tree, that was also used, as well as powdered turmeric, which imparted a richer flavor. My copy of this book is packed at this time since we just moved, and it's been some time since I read it so I don't remember how the butter recipe was set up. However, if it does tell you to add the carrot directly to the cream in the blender, I would reccomend not doing that since you would wind up with little bits of carrots all through your butter. :D If it's available, buy carrot juice at a local health store and add a small amount of it to the cream before churning it. I do admit that some of the ingredients called for, and some of the technique as well, definately wouldn't have been used in that era. But you would be surprised at a lot of stuff that they did have access too, at times under d
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