- Joined
- Dec 7, 2017
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- 342
I have been searching online for rice cookbooks. Found one from the rice councle of AR. Anyone know of others?
I think I have all of her books now. I think she is LDS and has been involved in food storage for many years.Oh, I forgot about that one, I have it. That's pricey for a little book. But it's a good one. She has "Cooking with Powdered Milk" and "Cooking with food storage" that are good, too.
Yes, they have been doing food storage since Brigham Young was their leader.Yep. She's pretty good. Alot of the good stuff has come from LDS
Wow! Who would have thought that recipes would be one thing lost in storms? I am sure it has happened more than once, as well as in floods, house fires, and more.Cajun cookbooks! We Cajuns love our rice, and all of our cookbooks show it.
A few of my favorites (in this order):
Cooking Up A Storm: Recipes Lost and found from the Times-Picayune of New Orleans
After Hurricane Katrina ripped my hometown of New Orleans apart in 2005, many recipes were lost in the storm. The local newspaper, The Times-Picayune, set out to recover those recipes by publishing requests from grieving readers who lost their favorite recipes in the floodwaters, some of which were prized heirlooms passed down from previous generations. Some could only remember a few of the ingredients, so they wrote in what they could remember. Other readers would recognize the skeletonized recipes and submit copies of their own. This way many lost recipes were successfully matched.
The result is, in my opinion, the best South Louisiana cookbook of all time. This is a labor of love that restored the prized recipes of many families. I grew up with nearly every recipe in this book, and it has a place on my top shelf!
River Road Recipes (all three editions) by Junior League of Baton Rouge
The Encyclopedia of Cajun & Creole Cuisine by John D. Folse
Chef Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen by Paul Prudhomme
Talk about Good! by Junior League of Lafayette
My New Orleans: The Cookbook by John Besh
So many more, but that will be a good start to discovering new ways to use all of your rice! You might even become an honorary Cajun/Creole! (FYI: our food is NOT all about hot, hot, hot... the best cooks leave the hot stuff in the bottle and put it on the table for diners to add to the dish at their own discretion.
Wow! Who would have thought that recipes would be one thing lost in storms? I am sure it has happened more than once, as well as in floods, house fires, and more.
I used to have more than 100 cookbooks. Most of them had one or two recipes that I used, such as the latke recipe from Molly Roseburg's Jewish Cookbook. I decided I needed to pare down my cookbook collection, so I started my recipe blog, making the entries of my favorite recipes from friends, family and cookbooks. I went through my cookbooks pretty thoroughly to see if there were other recipes I might use. Daughter and others find recipes they like there. I had a half sized 3 ring binder where I wrote and glued recipes I found in newspapers and magazines. Those were typed into my blog as well. I maybe have around a dozen cookbooks now, and for some people that is a lot of cookbooks. It has been very helpful to have easy access to my recipes no matter where I am and for my daughter to find what she is looking for as well.
This got me thinking. I searched for "rice recipes pdf." If there are any recipes you want, you can search for them online. You can also search for cookbooks in pdf format. Recipes are out there, being shared by many. The older cookbooks are sometimes found in this format online, for free. This is just one group of rice recipes, but what I realize is that we do not have a thread for rice recipes alone. Anyone else have a bunch of rice? If you are a prepper, you are likely to easily have 100 or more pounds of it in Mylar in 5 gallon buckets. Eating white rice day after day would sure get boring, but there are probably 100's of recipes for rice.
https://www.uaex.edu/rice-expo/Rice recipe book 2014.pdf
This is the one I found before. Thanks for posting for others. I am asking because I plan to give my kids a bucket of rice and they won't have a clue what to do with it.This got me thinking. I searched for "rice recipes pdf." If there are any recipes you want, you can search for them online. You can also search for cookbooks in pdf format. Recipes are out there, being shared by many. The older cookbooks are sometimes found in this format online, for free. This is just one group of rice recipes, but what I realize is that we do not have a thread for rice recipes alone. Anyone else have a bunch of rice? If you are a prepper, you are likely to easily have 100 or more pounds of it in Mylar in 5 gallon buckets. Eating white rice day after day would sure get boring, but there are probably 100's of recipes for rice.
https://www.uaex.edu/rice-expo/Rice recipe book 2014.pdf
That is a great idea. If there isn't one cookbook dedicated to just rice recipes, maybe one of us can put it together?This is the one I found before. Thanks for posting for others. I am asking because I plan to give my kids a bucket of rice and they won't have a clue what to do with it.
Many years ago, I lived next door to a man who said he had been a chef in New Orleans. He gave me some of the best recipes. I could take a pound of hamburger, some rice and feed my family of 8 and they devoured it. I no longer have his recipes. It is all in the spices.Cajun cookbooks! We Cajuns love our rice, and all of our cookbooks show it.
A few of my favorites (in this order):
Cooking Up A Storm: Recipes Lost and found from the Times-Picayune of New Orleans
After Hurricane Katrina ripped my hometown of New Orleans apart in 2005, many recipes were lost in the storm. The local newspaper, The Times-Picayune, set out to recover those recipes by publishing requests from grieving readers who lost their favorite recipes in the floodwaters, some of which were prized heirlooms passed down from previous generations. Some could only remember a few of the ingredients, so they wrote in what they could remember. Other readers would recognize the skeletonized recipes and submit copies of their own. This way many lost recipes were successfully matched.
The result is, in my opinion, the best South Louisiana cookbook of all time. This is a labor of love that restored the prized recipes of many families. I grew up with nearly every recipe in this book, and it has a place on my top shelf!
River Road Recipes (all three editions) by Junior League of Baton Rouge
The Encyclopedia of Cajun & Creole Cuisine by John D. Folse
Chef Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen by Paul Prudhomme
Talk about Good! by Junior League of Lafayette
My New Orleans: The Cookbook by John Besh
So many more, but that will be a good start to discovering new ways to use all of your rice! You might even become an honorary Cajun/Creole! (FYI: our food is NOT all about hot, hot, hot... the best cooks leave the hot stuff in the bottle and put it on the table for diners to add to the dish at their own discretion.
We could start a thread in the recipe section with only rice recipes. I will check my databaseThat is a great idea. If there isn't one cookbook dedicated to just rice recipes, maybe one of us can put it together?
I almost started one earlier today.We could start a thread in the recipe section with only rice recipes. I will check my database
This is the one I found before. Thanks for posting for others. I am asking because I plan to give my kids a bucket of rice and they won't have a clue what to do with it.
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