From the Back Cover:
The classic cookbook, now fully updated and revised--with old New England favorites adapted for the modern kitchen, plus ethnic specialties When this volume was first published in 1948, it was called The Boston Globe Cook Book for Brides. Where were the grooms? . . . Thank goodness all that has changed. But sixty years later, something about the original book still feels familiar. Those pages celebrated the spirit and tastes of the New England table, as these updated recipes do. You can imagine the fishermen bringing their catch into the docks, growers spreading out their produce at the markets, eager consumers shopping for traditional, hearty fare whose main ingredients have hardly varied in all these decades . . .But now men are welcome in the kitchen, as are young adults, teenagers, and tots. So this volume is for everyone who wants a flavor of New England, including anyone who has ever rented a cottage on Cape Cod, climbed a mountain in New Hampshire, or driven through western Massachusetts during fall's glorious leaf-changing season.--From the Introduction by Sheryl Julian, Food Editor of The Boston Globe Among the 200+ recipes in The New Boston Globe CookbookBreakfast Pie - Ricotta Frittata - Quiche Lorraine - Goat Cheese Croquettes - Broiled Scallops and Bacon - Quick Black Bean Soup with Turkey Sausages - Curried Butternut Squash Soup - Rhode Island Clam Chowder - Lazy Man's Lasagna - Maple Baked Beans - Vietnamese Pot-fried Rice Succotash -Turkey Salad with Red Grapes and Green Apple - Creamy Deli-style Tuna Salad Russian Beet and Potato Salad - Clams with Garlic and Ginger - Seared Scallops with Cider Cream Pan-seared Steaks with Rosemary Butter - New England Boiled Dinner - Italian-American Meatballs Hot-milk Cake - Aunt Selma's Chocolate Cake with Espresso Glaze
About the Author:
For the last 20 years, Sheryl Julian has worked for the Boston Globe, writing and styling a food column in the Boston Globe Magazine. She has also been the food reporter at the newspaper, writing about people in the food business, trends, agriculture, and good cooks, winning several awards. Two years ago, she became food editor and now oversees the Wednesday food section. She also teaches food writing at Boston University.
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