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  1. Country Scrapple: An American Tradition
    Country Scrapple: An American Tradition

  2. A Quaker Woman's Cookbook: The Domestic Cookery of Elizabeth Ellicott Lea
    A Quaker Woman's Cookbook: The Domestic Cookery of Elizabeth Ellicott Lea

  3. Complete Fish and Game Cookbook
    Complete Fish and Game Cookbook

  4. Home Book of Smoke Cooking: Meat, Fish and Game
    Home Book of Smoke Cooking: Meat, Fish and Game

  5. Sauerkraut Yankees: Pennsylvania Dutch Foods and Foodways
    Sauerkraut Yankees: Pennsylvania Dutch Foods and Foodways

  6. Lemon Herbs: How to Grow and Use 18 Great Plants
    Lemon Herbs: How to Grow and Use 18 Great Plants

  7. The Pennsylvania Heritage Cookbook: A Cook's Tour of Keystone Cultures, Customs and Celebrations
    The Pennsylvania Heritage Cookbook: A Cook's Tour of Keystone Cultures, Customs and Celebrations

  8. Bass Cookbook (A.D. Livingston Cookbook Series)
    Bass Cookbook (A.D. Livingston Cookbook Series)

  9. Trout Cookbook (A.D. Livingston Cookbook Series)
    Trout Cookbook (A.D. Livingston Cookbook Series)

  10. Shellfish Cookbook
    Shellfish Cookbook

  11. Saltwater Fish Cookbook (A.D. Livingston Cookbook Series)
    Saltwater Fish Cookbook (A.D. Livingston Cookbook Series)

  12. Clams: How to Find, Catch and Cook Them
    Clams: How to Find, Catch and Cook Them

  13. Cookery (National Outdoor Leadership School S.)
    Cookery (National Outdoor Leadership School S.)

  14. Pennsylvania Trail of History Cookbook
    Pennsylvania Trail of History Cookbook

  15. Real Thai: Best of Thailand's Regional Cooking
    Real Thai: Best of Thailand's Regional Cooking

  16. James McNair's Stews and Casseroles
    James McNair's Stews and Casseroles

  17. Baking Bread: Old and New Traditions
    Baking Bread: Old and New Traditions

  18. James McNair's Burgers
    James McNair's Burgers

  19. Dressing with Color: Designer's Guide to Over 1000 Color Combinations
    Dressing with Color: Designer's Guide to Over 1000 Color Combinations

  20. Garlic
    Garlic

  21. Antipasti
    Antipasti

  22. Tequila: The Book
    Tequila: The Book

  23. Backroad Wineries of Northern California: Scenic Tour of California's Country Wineries
    Backroad Wineries of Northern California: Scenic Tour of California's Country Wineries

  24. At the Japanese Table: New and Traditional Recipes
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  25. Cheesecakes: Thirty One Fantastic Recipes
    Cheesecakes: Thirty One Fantastic Recipes

Country Scrapple: An American Tradition
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A Culinary Treatise of the First Water. Buy It.
  • Mmmm, I loves me some tasty scraps of pigs!
  • A lively, easy read
Country Scrapple: An American Tradition
William Woys Weaver
Manufacturer: Stackpole Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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Similar Items:
  1. Sauerkraut Yankees: Pennsylvania Dutch Foods & Foodways (The Islands series)
  2. Pennsylvania Trail of History Cookbook
  3. Pennsylvania Dutch Country Cooking
  4. A Revolution In Eating: How the Quest for Food Shaped America (Arts and Traditions of the Table)
  5. Bones: Recipes, History, and Lore

ASIN: 081170064X

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A Culinary Treatise of the First Water. Buy It........2006-01-22

`Country Scrapple, An American Tradition' by the esteemed culinary writer, William Woys Weaver is the kind of book which every major food technique deserves to have written about it. It glorifies a humble, truly American product with scholarship and a respect rarely seen outside the rarefied worlds of wine and cheese writing.

This should come as no surprise to anyone who has read Weaver's best known book, `Sauerkraut Yankees' on the more general subject of Pennsylvania Dutch culinary traditions. Weaver has a touch that rivals the very best culinary scholars such as Elizabeth David, John Thorne, and Paula Wolfert. He is the mid-Atlantic answer to Thorne's New England perspective and the Southern culinary voice so loudly heard from Jim Villas and others.

The most revealing statement I found in this book is that scrapple can easily be seen as simply a `black polenta', as two of its most important ingredients are corn meal and a meat stock. To back up this perspective, Weaver begins with the story of scrapple's European beginnings in northern Germany and its strong similarities to another high-falutin' food preparation, liver pate. Unlike polenta and pate', scrapple has never lost its humble associations as a poor man's dish, garnered from the very last remains of hog butchery.

Part of the great charm in my reading this book lies in the fact that much of the action takes place within a 65 mile radius of my home in Bethlehem, the land of the Moravians, Quakers, Mennonites, and the Amish, and the site of scrapple central, the Reading Terminal Market in Philadelphia. On top of this is the charm and interest of Weaver's linguistic research, citing one of my major personal heroes, the bard of Baltimore, H. L. Menchen. This is also a clue to the fact that scrapple, under several other names, has a much broader range than southeastern Pennsylvania. It has also gone under the name of Panhas, Pon-hoss, and Panhaus in the lands beyond Lancaster County and while grits has entered the pantheon of classic American foods, scrapple and its close relatives such as Pashofa have been a staple of low-cost eating in the south for as long as hogs have been raised and slaughtered there.

The book is so rich in detail that I even picked up an obscure fact about hog butchery in that the pig's viscera are actually divided into `haslet'; the heart, lungs and liver and `offal', everything else in the viscera. This is probably not arbitrary, as the heart, lungs and liver are probably the three most blood rich organs, and blood is a common ingredient in many types of German sausage, of which scrapple is a close relative.

About half of this book is dedicated to this scholarly introduction. The second half is dedicated to recipes for cooking and making scrapple. Being a native of the Pennsylvania Dutch outskirts and a fairly able home cook, one would think that knowing the right technique for cooking scrapple is in my genes. It isn't. I follow James Beard's recipe whenever I make it and wonder why I'm unhappy with the result. The natural instinct is to fry it as if it were a veal cutlet. Unfortunately, it simply doesn't have the backbone of even a very thinly pounded cutlet. The secret is in bringing the thinly greased pan to a high heat, turning the heat way down, and then adding the scrapple. Unlike Beard, Weaver makes no mention of flouring the scrapple, which, if his low heat technique is used, is probably unnecessary.

Now we get down to the business of making scrapple and its condiments. Weaver provides twenty different recipes, fifteen of which are for scrapple and five are for scrapple condiments, leading off with the all time Dutch favorite, apple butter. The fifteen recipes for scrapple include both vegetarian and kosher recipes so everyone can get into the act. While about half are from scrapple central, several are from the south and the mid-west.

The book ends with a set of notes and a bibliography that would make John Thorne envious. It also has a list of suppliers for both scrapple and scrapple making supplies that make most books on oriental cooking look stingy.

This book may not be for everyone, but if you are a serious foodie with an interest in American cuisine, this book is easily the equal to better than Villas works on Southern cuisine.

Very highly recommended.

5 out of 5 stars Mmmm, I loves me some tasty scraps of pigs!.......2005-07-10

I once heard someone describe scrapple as "scraps of pigs."

Sure, that may sound disgusting to some people, but if you haven't tried scrapple than you really don't know what you're missing out on. It's great stuff!

Honestly, I don't know the first thing about this book I'm reviewing - but I sure know scrapple. Any book about scrapple is okay in my book (not that I have my own book, but I think you know what I mean.)

Viva Le Scrapple!

5 out of 5 stars A lively, easy read.......2004-06-06

Whether the reader has had Philadelphia scrapple once, twice or never, Country Scrapple's survey of an American tradition and its history and recipes is unparalleled in the cookbook world. Food historian William Woys Weaver provides a surprising look at the long and European-rooted foundations of Scrapple, adding a wide variety of Scrapple recipes from around the world. Fans of American culinary traditions and history will find Country Scrapple a lively, easy read which is nicely supplemented with excellent dishes.

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  1. Country Scrapple: An American Tradition
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  8. The "Southern Living" Complete Go Ahead Cookbook
  9. Low-Fat Ways to Stir-Fry
  10. The Food of London: A Culinary Tour of Classic British Cuisine

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