Kids Culture Camp Cookbook
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Author | : Jania Otey |
Publisher | : Kids and Culture |
Total Pages | : 0 |
Release | : 2023-08 |
Genre | : Cooking |
ISBN | : 9781962204002 |
Kids & Culture Camp Cookbook takes your taste buds on an interactive culinary journey to sample a variety of cuisines from different regions.
Author | : Jania Otey |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : |
Release | : 2019-06-21 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9780368978128 |
In this much-anticipated debut, the Kids and Culture Camp Cookbook takes your taste buds on an interactive culinary journey sampling a variety of vegan cuisines from around the world, while offering insight of its history. Each recipe is confidently kid-tested and approved. By sharing these recipes, we promote healthy and mindful eating while emphasizing the connection between food, culture, and understanding. These recipes teach children about a variety of culturally significant dishes and how they differ from region to region, and by our children preparing these recipes themselves, they will be more excited to taste and love what they have prepared. This Kids and Culture Camp Cookbook will prepare your child today to thrive in tomorrow's global society.
Author | : Linda Ly |
Publisher | : Voyageur Press |
Total Pages | : 224 |
Release | : 2017-07-01 |
Genre | : Cooking |
ISBN | : 0760359377 |
The New Camp Cookbook is a book for day trippers, adventurers, campers, and anyone who enjoys cooking outdoors. You'll find organizational advice and cooking techniques, from planning your meals, packing a cooler, and stocking a camp pantry to building a fire, grilling in foil packs, and maintaining heat in a dutch oven. There's nothing quite like waking up in the woods and making breakfast in the open air or gathering with friends around a fire after a long day of hiking. Good food makes for great camping! The two can and should go hand in hand, and the recipes and tips in this book, will guide you along the way. The recipes are presented by meal: breakfast, lunch, snacks, sweets, and all-out feasts.You can choose your own adventure for each occasion, with recipes as easy as Mexican Street Corn Salad and Tin Foil Seafood Boil to more involved dishes like Korean Flank Steak with Sriracha-Pickled Cucumbers and Dutch Oven Deep-Dish Soppressata and Fennel Pizza. All recipes use a standard set of cookware to streamline your cooking in camp, and are marked with icons to help you quickly find a suitable recipe for your cooking style. Whether you're an aspiring camp chef or a seasoned Scout, you'll find plenty of inspiration in these pages for getting outside and eating well under the open sky. Editors’ Pick for Amazon Best Books of the Month of July 2017
Author | : Sherrie A. Inness |
Publisher | : University of Pennsylvania Press |
Total Pages | : 295 |
Release | : 2015-08-31 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 1512802883 |
At supermarkets across the nation, customers waiting in line—mostly female—flip through magazines displayed at the checkout stand. What we find on those magazine racks are countless images of food and, in particular, women: moms preparing lunch for the team, college roommates baking together, working women whipping up a meal in under an hour, dieters happy to find a lowfat ice cream that tastes great. In everything from billboards and product packaging to cooking shows, movies, and even sex guides, food has a presence that conveys powerful gender-coded messages that shape our society. Kitchen Culture in America is a collection of essays that examine how women's roles have been shaped by the principles and practice of consuming and preparing food. Exploring popular representations of food and gender in American society from 1895 to 1970, these essays argue that kitchen culture accomplishes more than just passing down cooking skills and well-loved recipes from generation to generation. Kitchen culture instructs women about how to behave like "correctly" gendered beings. One chapter reveals how juvenile cookbooks, a popular genre for over a century, have taught boys and girls not only the basics of cooking, but also the fine distinctions between their expected roles as grown men and women. Several essays illuminate the ways in which food manufacturers have used gender imagery to define women first and foremost as consumers. Other essays, informed by current debates in the field of material culture, investigate how certain commodities like candy, which in the early twentieth century was advertised primarily as a feminine pleasure, have been culturally constructed. The book also takes a look at the complex relationships among food, gender, class, and race or ethnicity-as represented, for example, in the popular Southern black Mammy figure. In all of the essays, Kitchen Culture in America seeks to show how food serves as a marker of identity in American society.
Author | : Deborah T. Hanfman |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 594 |
Release | : 1987 |
Genre | : Shellfish culture |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Lynn Manning Ross |
Publisher | : A Smart Site Publication |
Total Pages | : 123 |
Release | : 2004-08-18 |
Genre | : Cooking |
ISBN | : 097545322X |
WORLD KIDS COOKOUT celebrates cultures as it takes readers on an international cookout with festive stories, secret recipes, and histories to 31 countries through something we all have in commonholidays, festival celebrations, and eating! But it is more than a fabulously fun read and cookbook; it is a mission for cultural exchange.
Author | : Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 820 |
Release | : 1984 |
Genre | : Cookery |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Miyoko Schinner |
Publisher | : Ten Speed Press |
Total Pages | : 258 |
Release | : 2021-05-11 |
Genre | : Cooking |
ISBN | : 1984858882 |
100+ hearty, succulent, people-pleasing meals featuring vegan meat, from comfort food classics and speedy weeknight dinners to global flavors and showstoppers, plus recipes for DIY vegan meats and cheeses. “When vegan cheese queen Miyoko Schinner pens a new cookbook, you don’t walk to your nearest bookstore. You run. . . . Get ready for your weeknight dinners to never be the same.”—VegNews From the Impossible Burger and Beyond Meat to MorningStar Farms, Boca Burgers, and more, plant-based meats are a growing trend for those who want to help the planet, animals, and their health but don’t want to give up the meaty flavors they love. In The Vegan Meat Cookbook, bestselling author Miyoko Schinner guides you through the maze of products available on store shelves and offers straightforward guidance on how to best use them in everything from Sausage Calzones with Roasted Fennel and Preserved Lemon to Hominy and Carne Asada Enchiladas with Creamy Green Sauce. Dig in to a satisfying vegan meal of Weeknight Shepherd’s Pie with Bratwurst and Buttery Potatoes or Meaty, Smoky Chili. Wow your guests with Coq au Vin, Linguine with Lemon-Garlic Scallops and Herbs, or Lettuce Wraps with Spicy Garlic Prawns. For those interested in making their own vegan meats and cheese from scratch, there are recipes for Juicy Chicken, King Trumpet Mushroom Bacon, Easy Buffalo Mozzarella, Miyoko’s famous Unturkey, and many more that you’ll never find in stores. Whether you’re cutting back on meat for your health, the environment, animal welfare, or affordability, The Vegan Meat Cookbook will satisfy the cravings of flexitarians, vegans, vegetarians, and even carnivores.
Author | : Robb Walsh |
Publisher | : Ten Speed Press |
Total Pages | : 274 |
Release | : 2009-02-19 |
Genre | : Cooking |
ISBN | : 0307491765 |
Texas cowboys are the stuff of legend — immortalized in ruggedly picturesque images from Madison Avenue to Hollywood. Cowboy cooking has the same romanticized mythology, with the same oversimplified reputation (think campfire coffee, cowboy steaks, and ranch dressing). In reality, the food of the Texas cattle raisers came from a wide variety of ethnicities and spans four centuries. Robb Walsh digs deep into the culinary culture of the Texas cowpunchers, beginning with the Mexican vaqueros and their chile-based cuisine. Walsh gives overdue credit to the largely unsung black cowboys (one in four cowboys was black, and many of those were cooks). Cowgirls also played a role, and there is even a chapter on Urban Cowboys and an interview with the owner of Gilley’s, setting for the John Travolta--Debra Winger film. Here are a mouthwatering variety of recipes that include campfire and chuckwagon favorites as well as the sophisticated creations of the New Cowboy Cuisine: • Meats and poultry: sirloin guisada, cinnamon chicken, coffee-rubbed tenderloin • Stews and one-pot meals: chili, gumbo, fideo con carne • Sides: scalloped potatoes, onion rings, pole beans, field peas • Desserts and breads: peach cobbler, sourdough biscuits, old-fashioned preserves Through over a hundred evocative photos and a hundred recipes, historical sources, and the words of the cowboys (and cowgirls) themselves, the food lore of the Lone Star cowboy is brought vividly to life.
Author | : Dorothy K. Fletcher |
Publisher | : Arcadia Publishing |
Total Pages | : 160 |
Release | : 2021 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 1467148210 |
Revisit Florida at a time when children were much more at home in the wild. The balmy northeast corner of the state, filled with lakes and forests primeval, was a camper's paradise. Iconic summer camps like Blanding, Chowenwaw, Echockotee, Immokalee, Montgomery, Keystone, Seminole and Weed played vital roles in the development of countless children. They swapped adventures beneath the stars, a heartening reminder that even the worst days can make the best stories. Join author Dorothy K. Fletcher and experience the giddy relief of campers who weathered their first dark night and welcomed a brilliant sunrise, just before all the fun begins!