Ok, ya caught me...my real name is Melissa...got my set at 7 years old...isn't my penmanship great???
Anyway, does anyone else have the set yet so we can discuss?
Can't wait to delve in again!
Posted 25 January 2011 - 08:30 PM
Posted 25 January 2011 - 08:45 PM
Posted 25 January 2011 - 08:57 PM
Posted 25 January 2011 - 09:01 PM
It's a great idea Melissa. I don't have a set but I like the idea so much I may swipe my sister-in-law's collection.
I may do something similar for Lucy Maud Montgomery.
Posted 25 January 2011 - 09:15 PM
Posted 25 January 2011 - 09:44 PM
Posted 25 January 2011 - 10:10 PM
Edited by Will, 25 January 2011 - 10:11 PM.
Posted 25 January 2011 - 10:24 PM
Posted 26 January 2011 - 06:35 AM
It's a great idea Melissa. I don't have a set but I like the idea so much I may swipe my sister-in-law's collection.
I may do something similar for Lucy Maud Montgomery.
Posted 26 January 2011 - 07:43 AM
Thanks to a lovely food blog on eGullet by Shelby (click) I am on board.
I have been taking note and am currently on "On the Banks of Plum Creek". So I will let you start with the first book which has SO much great food "Little House in the Big Woods". All of this is quite inspiring to enjoy and use what is around me.
Get to swiping so you can startIt's a great idea Melissa. I don't have a set but I like the idea so much I may swipe my sister-in-law's collection.
I may do something similar for Lucy Maud Montgomery.
Oh, you can still think of me as ShelbyI'm not sure I can think of you as anyone other than Shelby!
So, did you choose your username because of Steel Magnolias? That's always the first thing that comes to mind when I see your name.
My Little House set is sitting right next to me on the side table. I pulled it out when you mentioned it in your wonderful foodblog. I'm hoping they release the set for Kindle soon; I'm so used to reading books on the device now, I'm less motivated to hold a real "paper" book. For Little House I'll make an exception, though. I've always loved the description of how they used the whole hog.
I think I've got that exact same set... the name inside is the same too ;)
Loved that series!
I haven't read the series since I was a child but crisp pig tail and maple syrup candy come to mind.
I assume folks might already know this, but there is at least one cookbook based on the "Little House" series [edit: now I see that it was mentioned in the other thread linked up above]:
http://www.amazon.com/Little-House-Cookbook-Frontier-Ingalls/dp/0064460908
When I was a kid, we had this cookbook, and even had a "Little House" party, which featured a bunch of the recipes in the book ("churning" butter in a glass jar is my main memory from the day).
In the Little House in the in the Big Woods the first thing I noted was "fresh venison so good she wished they could eat it all but most must be salted and smoked and packed away for the winter". Then a wagonload of fish to be salted down and then the pig referred to above- first wild eating acorns and roots to fatten. The kids playing with the bladder blown like a balloon- bit more in touch with our food than we are used to.
Posted 26 January 2011 - 11:55 AM
Posted 26 January 2011 - 12:11 PM
Posted 26 January 2011 - 12:16 PM
Posted 26 January 2011 - 12:23 PM
It's a great idea Melissa. I don't have a set but I like the idea so much I may swipe my sister-in-law's collection.
I may do something similar for Lucy Maud Montgomery.
Posted 26 January 2011 - 12:29 PM
No slam on Ma, but the best food stories are in Farmer Boy. I still need to find fresh wintergreen berries before I die and I lived ten years in Pennsylvania where you'd think there would be some growing somewhere.
Posted 26 January 2011 - 03:49 PM
No slam on Ma, but the best food stories are in Farmer Boy. I still need to find fresh wintergreen berries before I die and I lived ten years in Pennsylvania where you'd think there would be some growing somewhere.
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Posted 26 January 2011 - 04:03 PM
No slam on Ma, but the best food stories are in Farmer Boy. I still need to find fresh wintergreen berries before I die and I lived ten years in Pennsylvania where you'd think there would be some growing somewhere.
Agreed! Pork with apples and onions, that's what I remember.....*sigh.
My books are all in a box in the attic at my parents' house, otherwise I'd be cooking along with you.
Posted 26 January 2011 - 04:21 PM
Posted 26 January 2011 - 04:52 PM
Yes! It's on page 131 in the foods from gardens and orchards section.Actually I think we are just swooning over the descriptions rather than cooking. I think the apples and onions from Farmer Boy did not even have pork in them (well maybe a little salt pork for flavor)- for some reason I did not make a note about the dish although I love that combo and was pleasantly surprised to see that simple meal as one of his favorites. As I just thumbed through I noted the use of the apple cores for vinegar- any idea how that was done? Shelby- is it in the cookbook?
Edited by Shelby, 26 January 2011 - 05:14 PM.
Posted 26 January 2011 - 06:44 PM
Actually I think we are just swooning over the descriptions rather than cooking.
Posted 26 January 2011 - 07:03 PM
Posted 26 January 2011 - 09:37 PM
Actually I think we are just swooning over the descriptions rather than cooking.
I think this is it, as well. I fondly recall Almanzo and his brother and sisters being left to tend the farm for the week while the parents went visiting. After being told not to eat all of the sugar, the first thing they do when the wagon is out of sight is make ice cream, cake and candy.
Posted 27 January 2011 - 12:33 AM
Posted 27 January 2011 - 07:32 AM
Edited by StanSherman, 27 January 2011 - 07:48 AM.
Posted 27 January 2011 - 08:14 AM
I love the gingham pattern on your books!I want to get in on this soon. I'm finishing up a Nero Wolfe book right now (talk about food fiction - fantastic food in those books - and WAY ahead of his time), but will probably start rereading the Little House books in order tomorrow or the next day.
Here's my set:![]()
I am completely on board for the LMM books, too. Anne with an E was my favorite girl ever. I reread them every few years.
Posted 27 January 2011 - 08:25 AM
Oh Beatrice, thank you so much for reading my blog. You've made my day by your kind words.Hi -- This is my first post on eGullet, though I've been lurking for years and years.
Shelby, your fabulous blog helped to pull me out of lurkdom, so thank you! I loved it all so much, and was frustrated that I couldn't comment (not that I haven't been frustrated before, but I was *extra* frustrated this time!) Especially since I am considering buying farmland and would love to pick your brain ;)
And I would even more love to participate in this discussion. I truly believe that the books I loved as a child led me to my love of cooking, and the Laura Ingalls Wilder books were a huge part of this. I haven't looked back at the books yet, but the town/country parties in Plum Creek (I think) come to mind right away! Ma's crispy little cakes! Lovely. Oh! Oh! And I just had a conversation with my sister a few weeks ago about how I read and reread ad nauseum the description of the perfect kitchen and pantry Almanzo built for Laura in (I think) The First Four Years. Anyway, the short book where they move into that fantastic kitchen [house] and then everything goes to hell like it always does in Ingalls-Wilder territory.
I think heidih is so right -- the joy of literary food, simple or fancy, is all in the description. How lovingly, gorgeously, lusciously is the food described? So... also Lord of the Rings, just in bits, but those bits are major for me -- the bacon and mushrooms in the first volume. I can't read that without violently craving bacon and mushrooms.
Little Women and other Louisa May Alcott books also have some great food descriptions tied so wonderfully closely to character (like the Little House books). Just to start, the description in the very beginning of Little Women of the Christmas brunch the girls give away, all dripping with butter, etc. Jo and her crisp apples... the blancmange Jo takes to Laurie. Or the so dramatic incident of Amy's pickled limes! And, much later, Amy's attempt to be "fancy," and her finally wise decision to be simple as Marmee suggests.
I could go on forever, but instead I will look into my set of Little House books and plan to cook something from them to show here!
Posted 27 January 2011 - 08:30 AM
Hi,
I seemed to overlook this topic. Glad to find it. That Laura girl sure got around! We have at least four of her places within a hundred miles of our farm.
Interesting idea on the cider vinegar. We’ve got the last of the seasons apples to process and already have too many pies in the freezer. I may do a five gallon batch in a carboy.
Shelby, we are in a corn/soy area and grow a fair amount of edamame. We’ve settled on: Beer Friend, Sayamusame and
Misono. If you want some help let me know.
Posted 27 January 2011 - 09:03 AM
Posted 27 January 2011 - 02:55 PM
I love the gingham pattern on your books!
I want to get in on this soon. I'm finishing up a Nero Wolfe book right now (talk about food fiction - fantastic food in those books - and WAY ahead of his time), but will probably start rereading the Little House books in order tomorrow or the next day.
Here's my set:![]()
I am completely on board for the LMM books, too. Anne with an E was my favorite girl ever. I reread them every few years.
I'm on the second book now...I swear I could just veg out and read for days....
On a completely un-food side question...am I the only one that ever wonders when Ma and Pa get some "alone" time?
Posted 27 January 2011 - 06:10 PM
I wonder about that whenever I read anything where the characters live in such close quarters. I guess people just got over any privacy scruples that they had. This boggles me - seeing as how just having the cat in the room can make me feel embarrassed!