Comfort Food and Kitchen Table Wisdom
author: Meg Favreau
publisher: Quirk Books
hard cover: 160 pages
photos: Yes...but not of food...of little old ladies, of course!
chapters/sections: Introduction: What the Heck Happened to Food? - Breakfasts and Coffee Klatch - Soups, Salads, and Casseroles - Appetizers and Refreshments - Suppers and Side Dishes - Sweets and Treats
fantastic features: I love the little quotes of kitchen wisdom gathered from all sorts of "little old ladies"...and the pictures that go with it. I just wish a couple of my favorite little old lady's pictures were in here. They'd fit right in...as would their kitchen wit. One of my favorite little quotes, in the form of the start of a recipe is... "Hot fat is a beautiful thing. Not beautiful like Robert Redford, but a more useful, Clint Eastwood-kind of beauty." I was /thisclose/ to making the recipe for Doughnuts just because this is the way the recipe opened up!
(a few of the) recipes destined for my kitchen: Brown Betty, Frosted Cinnamon Rolls, Cheese Dreams, Dried Beef and Cheese Balls, Pierogies, Bourbon Balls, Hot Slaw, Boston Brown Bread, Goulash
Additional Thoughts: I love the concept for this cute little book. I cherish recipes that have been passed down generation to generation, be they from my family or somebody else's. This book is filled with good, old comfort food that so many of us grew up on. Plus, no shame is shown in the use of lard and butter. That's my kind of food. This book is a lot of fun. But remember, if it's pictures of food you're looking for...you won't find them here. But sassy old ladies abound!
recipe I have already tried: Chicken and Dumplings
recipe I have already tried: Chicken and Dumplings
Chicken and Dumplings
adapted from Little Old Lady Recipes
serves 4-6
soup:
2 Tbs. olive oil
1 large onion, chopped
4 carrots, peeled & sliced
2 celery stalks, sliced
2 garlic cloves, chopped fine
1 tsp. dried thyme
3 qt. chicken broth/stock
1 Tbs. hot sauce
freshly ground pepper
~1½ lb. chicken (skin removed, & bones too, if you wish)
salt
dumplings:
2 c. flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. sugar
1 egg
1¼ c. buttermilk
Heat oil in a large pot over medium-high heat. Cook onion until translucent. Add carrot, celery, garlic, thyme, and broth/stock. Bring to a boil. Add hot sauce, a few good grinds of black pepper, and chicken. Reduce to a simmer and cook for ~15 minutes, or until chicken is just done. Remove chicken and shred (remove from bone if you didn't do this before) and add back to broth. Taste and season with more black pepper, and salt if you think it needs it.
While the chicken is cooking, stir together everything for the dumplings and set aside. Once the shredded chicken is back in the pot, bring back to a boil and drop in big spoon-fulls of batter. Put a lid on the pot, reduce heat to simmer, and cook for ten minutes. Serve immediately.
my thoughts on the recipe: Just as it should be, this is a big pot full of goodness and comfort. I used buttermilk in place of regular milk which gave the big, fluffy biscuits a pleasant tang. I also cut back on the celery and added garlic. Because really, what's a bowl of comfort without a bit of garlic!? Lastly, I left the chicken on the bones until after cooking to add extra flavor to the broth...and because I was too lazy to de-bone it before putting it in the pot. My sister always tells me that she remembers my mom making this for her when she was sick. I'm thinking that must have been after I was out of the house, because I don't remember that at all. However, I wish I did. Why? Because it's delicious, homey, and sure to ease the symptoms of a cold, a bad day, or a broken heart.
about the author: Meg Favreau is a writer, comedian, actress, and food enthusiast, and one time eating-contest winner living in Los Angeles. Her work has appeared on sites including the Huffington Post, McSweeney's, and the Smart Set, and she serves as a senior editor of the frugal-living and personal-finance site Wise Bread. Meg dedicates this book to her grandmother, whose pie-making skills remain unrivaled, and her mother, who once said, "I want the dedication in your first book to be 'To my mother, who always believed in me.'" (It's true.)
*I received a free copy of this book to review from the publisher. All thoughts and opinions stated in this post are 100% mine.






























The quotes and pictures of LOLs are so fun in this book. I am still trying to decide what to make from it. Your chicken and dumplings look wonderful. Thanks for sharing them with Souper Sundays. ;-)
Oh! I haven't had chicken + dumplings since college - a dear friend of mine from Texas had the simplest and yet most divine recipe passed down from her grandmother. Yours looks so rich and comforting, just like hers.
Yum! I love chicken and dumplings and this recipe looks wonderful. I will have to try it.
Oh, that one sounds like a lot of fun, too! I love these types of books, as well =)
You know what? I don't! I've been wanting to pick one up, but haven't yet. ...and thanks :)
I have this book to review also and I'm loving the sassy old lady quotes! I still haven't figured out what to make but your chicken and dumplings looks great!
I love quirky recipes books. I found "Growing up on the chocolate diet" by Laura Brody (something Brody, I forget what her first name was...) and it was a memoir set with chocolate dessert recipes. This "Little Old Lady Recipes" looks like a great read.
Nice combo! Would love to try this delicious soup for sure :)
you always make the best soups good review as always have you got any dan lepard books?
"It's short all right." ...hahahaha, too cute. I love these type of books, as well. =)
Little old ladies should rule the world. ---and those buttermilk dumplings look crazy good.
Qué lindísimo libro...!!! debe de ser una joya!!! y sus comentarios jajajaja ;D
Saludos , ah!!! rica receta! gracias
PILY
I have memories of a meal of chicken & dumplings very similar to this recipe being brought to my house when I was sick years ago. I love, no ADORE chicken & dumplings so this sounds like heaven to me. Thanks for the memories!
I absolutely LOVE the concept!!! I buy a lot of "community" cookbooks and always look for the ones from the older ladies because we all know that no one cooks better than Grandma!! My favorite recipe (I've never made) is a shortcake recipe from an amish cookbook. It lists about 5 ingredients and nothing else! I imagine her family asking for her shortcake recipe and she heard short, cake recipe!! LOL Its short all right!! :)
soup looks delicious and filling looks wonderful
Did you know that Chicken & Dumplings are my all-time favorite dish? If I had to choose my last meal, this would be it!
Next time I make some, I'll try adding an agg to my dumplings.
This book sounds like one I'd love. :) Thanks for posting about it. :)
These chicken and dumplings looks so good! I've been wanting to make some for a while but this picture is making me want to get up and make them for supper. To bad I've already started supper. :(
I love the "hot fat" quote! And those dumplings have my name!
They are actually from the ladies. Here are a few of my favorites:
"Club soda is a wonderful thing. You can use it to remove any stain, or mix it with gin and drink until you don't care about the stain anymore." - Chastity, Deli Clerk, 72"We had to eat a lot of beans and greens, vegetables- that was during the depression. Mom made one thing, and you didn't get anything else. So you learned to like it." - Rita, computer-card puncher, 80"Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without." -Thelma, homemaker, 88
But Favreau definitely throws some funny stuff of her own creation in the book, too...
It's my Church Basement Ladies (without the inconvenient getting up early on Sunday morning). I do wonder about the quotes... are they from the comedian author? or actually from the little old ladies who she got the recipes from?
It does sound like a great stocking stuffer type book!
this looks like such a sweet book, i love old recipes too. great review!
I love sassy old ladies and have several in my life. I hope to become one when I grow up! I think this would be the perfect cookbook for me. Thanks for the heads up on it.
I know I would love this book. My favorite recipes are those passed down to me from my grandmother and mother. Most of the time I prefer simple, old-fashioned cooking.