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The Joy of Cooking

The Joy of Cooking( )
Author: Rombauer, Irma S.
Becker, Marion Rombauer
Illustrator: Matsumoto, Ikki
Hofmann, Ginnie
ISBN:978-0-452-27915-5
Publication Date:Nov 1997
Publisher:Penguin Publishing Group
Imprint:Plume
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $16.00
Book Description:

An American household classic, the newly revised and expanded edition of "The Joy of Cooking" is the most essential item one can have in the kitchen. Divided into three parts, "Foods We Eat", "Foods We Heat", and "Foods We Keep", "The Joy of Cooking" contains more than 4,500 recipes with hundreds of them new to this edition, plus an enlarged discussion on herbs, spices, and seasonings, tips on various cooking techniques, canning and preserving advice, and more. 1,000 line drawings.

Book Details
Pages:928
Detailed Subjects: Cooking / Regional & Cultural / American / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.8 x 9.08 x 1.31 Inches
Book Weight:2.12 Pounds
Author Biography
Rombauer, Irma S. (Author)
Irma S. Rombauer, Irma Rombauer was born and raised in St. Louis, Missouri. She is the well-known author of "The Joy of Cooking." For the first book, she depended on friends and relatives for recipes, whose experience was in German cooking and baking. She wanted to write the book for the post Depression women who had not been in their kitchens, were busy and not overly interested in cooking, but wanted to create a wonderful meal with minimal effort. Her style in the book was to present the recipe as a narrative with one paragraph essays that had no separate ingredient lists or instructions. Rombauer approached cooking as a necessity and covered the entire scope of kitchen procedures, making the book easy to use in a home kitchen.

Her first attempt at publication took her to Indianapolis to meet with D. Laurance Chambers from Bobbs-Merrill Company. Chambers strategically rejected her during their first meeting and then persuaded Rombauer to do a revision with no advance payment or guarantee of publication. She produced a manuscript that filled fifteen notebooks, which were a combination of new and old recipes that were in her distinctive format. Rombauer naively believed that she could negotiate a contract with Chambers by herself and after weeks of well timed rages, that caused her to be ill for weeks after, Chambers got her to sign a contract the gave Bobbs-Merrill the copyright to the new edition and the original, self published edition. In subsequent contracts, Rombauer made sure that her daughter, Marion Rombauer Becker, would have editorial control in the event of her death or absence.

Rombauer's daughter had her first solo effort as editor for the 1962 edition, which was just a short time before her mother's death. Marion's interests in natural and raw foods and her desire to make the book more detailed and accurate can be seen in subsequent editions. Marion's son, Than Becker, became involved in the editorship of the book and ha



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