Date: Fri 24-Jan-1997
Date: Fri 24-Jan-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDREA
Quick Words:
Sarah-Booth-Cookbook-library
Full Text:
Sarah Booth Cookbook Gets National Recognition w/ cuts
B Y A NDREA Z IMMERMANN
If townspeople of yesteryear could come back to visit at will, you could be
assured Sarah Edmond Booth would be center stage at Edmond Town Hall on
January 31 when a representative of the McIlhenny Company bestows its Special
Merit citation for the 1996 Tabascoâ Community Cookbook Awards. You see, it is
a collection of Sarah's recipes, The Sarah Booth Cookbook , that has stirred
all this attention.
The nationwide contest was open to original cookbooks, complied and published
in either 1995 or 1996 by non-profit organizations; recipes had to comprise at
least 50 percent of book, and proceeds had to benefit a bonafide cause in the
community.
The cookbooks were judged on title and theme, contribution to recording
American regional culinary tradition, layout and art reflective of the area or
subject, recipe content, fundraising record, and documented or intended use of
proceeds for community projects.
The Sarah Booth Cookbook , published by the Friends of the Library, was given
the special award by the judges for its charming presentation, single focus,
and blending of past and present by providing both original recipes from the
18th and early 19th Centuries and modern adaptations. Proceeds from the sale
of the book will be used to purchase materials for the Cyrenius H. Booth
Library children's reading room and computer software for the reference room.
The 20 recipes in the cookbook are taken from the handwritten notebook of
Sarah Booth, who lived from 1800 to 1864. They include cakes, breads and
desserts such as Soft Ginger Bread, Queen's Cake (flavored with wine and
brandy), Wedding Cake, Carrot Pudding, New Year's Cookies, Good Fritters,
Genuine Whigs (buns) and Jumbles (cookies). Library Curator Caroline Stokes
found the recipe collection - actually lists of ingredients without
instructions - that eventually made it into the hands of Carolyn Greene, a
Friend of the Library.
As editor, Mrs Greene contributed a special combination of talents to creation
of the cookbook. She has operated Silver Spoon Catering for the past six
years, and when she was in college, majored in publishing and graphic art.
Prior to the publication of the cookbook, Mrs Greene was art director and one
of the designers of League of Women Voters' Newtown Connecticut: Directions
and Images .
Mrs Greene and Michele Grillo took the list of ingredients for a limited
number of "recipes" and test-baked to create recipes that would work in
today's kitchens. The resulting cookbook includes a good representation of all
the original recipes; those that would be of interest to the modern cook, said
Mrs Greene. The book offers notes, variations and serving suggestions for the
recipes, and explanations of some of the phrases used in the original
versions.
"The most challenging was the one called `Muffins,'" said Mrs Greene. Yeast
was one of the ingredients listed, but when Mrs Grillo baked the muffins in a
tin, the results were "a little tough." After studying the handwritten list
and the one-line clue: Spoon the batter into rings, Mrs Green realized they
must be English muffins, which are baked on a griddle, and delicious when
cooked that way.
Many of the ingredients on the lists did not have an amount, but Mrs Greene
said there is a certain relationship between dry and wet ingredients, salt and
sugar, and so on.
Some of the ingredients were unknown to the bakers. Mrs Grillo thought "pearl
ash" might be a spice and tried to bake without using it. Finally, she was
able to ascertain that, in Sarah Booth's days, a local plant was burned and
the ashes used in cooking in the manner that we now use baking powder.
"What I found most interesting was trying to get the mind set of Sarah Booth
and how she would have made it," said Mrs Grillo, a Friend of the Library who
enjoys cooking as a hobby. "It might say `mix it together over the fire.' So I
would imagine a big fire, try to imagine how hot the fire was so I could
adjust the temperature of my stove. Just think - they had to grow their wheat
and bring it over to mill, get chickens to lay eggs, get cows to milk - just
to make a cake."
Along with the citation, Friends of the Library will receive a $100 check.
"This is a really nice contribution in light of the library expansion project
and the increased space that will be available for the children's library,"
said Friends President Marian Wood. "This cookbook honors Sarah Booth, who is
part of Newtown's past, while raising funds to support Newtown's present and
future through the library."
First place national winner was Stop and Smell The Rosemary , published by the
Junior League of Houston, Inc.; second place went to The Kansas City Barbecue
Society Cookbook ; and third place was awarded to Main Line Classics II -
Cooking Up a Little History , compiled by The Junior Saturday Club of Wayne,
Penn..
Special merit citations were awarded for The Sarah Booth Cookbook , and The
McClellanville Coast Seafood Cookbook from McClellanville Arts Council,
McClellanville, S.C. Winners of regional cookbook categories and those selling
more than 100,000 copies also received awards.
"These outstanding books from non-profit organizations help preserve our
culinary history and traditions," said Paul C.P. McIlhenny, executive vice
president of McIlhenny Company. "By sharing recipes and expertise from
knowledgeable cooks, they raise thousands of dollars for deserving causes
within their communities. We are pleased to recognize the efforts of the
volunteers who created them."
Members of the judging panel were Jan Turner Hazard, food editor of Ladies'
Home Journal ; Meryle Evans, culinary historian; Ann H. Harvey, editorial
director, Special Interest Publications, Oxmoor House, Inc; Jan Longone,
curator of the Wine and Food Library; William Rice, columnist for the Chicago
Tribune ; Tommy Simmons, food editor of the Baton Rouge Morning Advocate ; and
Nahum Waxman, owner of Kitchen Arts and Letters bookstore.
The public is invited to attend the award presentation Friday, January 31, at
3 pm, in Edmond Town Hall Theater. During the ceremony, First Selectman Bob
Cascella will make a proclamation.
The Sarah Booth Cookbook is available for $6 from the Booth Library,
temporarily located at Shelton House on the Fairfield Hills Campus; or for
$7.50 (including shipping and handling) from Friends of the C.H. Booth
Library, 25 Main Street, Newtown 06470.
