Sadly, its day has finally come.
It's been used to the point of disintegration.
I need to buy a new Fanny Farmer cookbook.
Join us in a moment of silence?
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Sadly, its day has finally come.
It's been used to the point of disintegration.
I need to buy a new Fanny Farmer cookbook.
Join us in a moment of silence?
You're going to get rid of your Fanny??? :eek: Oh no.............
Awww, make sure you save any important recipes! The copy I have is the Thirteenth Edition, last copyright date in it is 1990, in case you ever need me to look something up for ya!
I bet it needs spine surgery, or the Scotch tape has yellowed and won't hold anymore?
RIP Fanny, twas a pleasure to know you were there to help.
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You reminded me of a fun little tradition we had in our house.
My mom would hold on to electric appliances that were worn to the point that you needed to have the right touch to use. So, if anyone else tried them, we'd fail and she'd have to come over and use her magic spell.
I'd go buy a replacement for whatever it was, then go to her house, open the door and toss it out onto the porch.
The first few times she was very angry and that would last until I'd come back and she'd beam about "how easy" it was to operate the new one.
She gradually warmed up to the event and would hint about getting new stuff by asking to have stufff tossed.
The poor book was beyond salvage. We lost cookie recipes, some other recipes for baking, and the remnants of the book (6 or 7 pieces) were in a ziploc bag.
I went to find a recipe tonight and couldn't. I had to order a new book. :sad:
Meringue cookies. Made a batch of Mayo and realized we had enough egg whites for some cookies.
It's an easy one!
2 egg whites
1 teaspoon vanilla (or whatever)
8 tablespoons sugar, preferably superfine
Oven at 250° F
Cover a cookie sheet with brown paper or parchment. Beat eggwhites until stiff but not dry, and add 6 tablespoons of the sugar, a spoonful at a time, beating well between addition. Add the vanilla, and fold in the remaining 2 tablespoons of sugar. "Shape the meringues on the cookies sheet with a pastry tube or a spoon. Bake for 1 hour. Turn the oven off and let the meringues remain in the oven for 6 more hours." (Hardest part ...) Don't open the oven door - they must dry out to be nice and crisp.
Store in an airtight container, of course!
It's right near one of the deeper creases in the spine of my copy, no surprise there!
Not that I don't use my cookbooks for guidance any more, as I do..but a quick google search is usually my ending point. Easier, and lots of choices to select from.
In fact, I was making a quick sauce the other day, and wanted to add a little 'oomph' to it. I googled it and added two ingredients that my cookbook didn't even mention, and I wouldn't have considered! J said it was the best sauce yet.
Most recipes are guidelines. However, there are certain recipes in that cookbook that are both unavailable anywhere else and tough to beat. We have a notebook containing freelance recipes created in the kitchen and recipes from online sources, but most of those have been heavily edited/altered.
I dislike using recipes from online sources when I know I have it in a cookbook. Besides, laptops don't belong in the kitchen, and I hate printing out a recipe. The paper invariably gets destroyed in the chaos that is our kitchen.
Lady's Human,
Wait...YOU COOK??????:eek::eek::p:p
Only 6-7 days/week. :p
Sorry for your loss. *snicker*
The only thing I ever make from scratch are RESERVATIONS!!!!!!:p
My laptop is never in the kitchen. My smart phone, on the other hand, is. That screen wipes up super clean, I conserve paper by not printing, and it is super portable. In fact, I can store my faves right on the phone. I will create a list, from the online recipe, right onto my memo pad, and wah-la...easy peasy shopping.
I never met a recipe I couldn't make "better" (to suit my taste), yet.
Donna, all my parents' children, regardless of gender, could put a meal on the table to feed the whole family by the time each of us, in turn, hit middle school. Dad cooked, Ma cooked, we all cooked. We all also, regardless of gender, were expected to do outside chore, change oil in cars, know how to change a flat tire, etc, and all learned how to sew enough to produce actual garments.
If you ever you come to any of our family's gatherings, you will eat well!