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Cooking --- American --- Midwestern style
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Cooking --- American --- Midwestern style
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Cooking, American --- Farm life --- Rural life --- Country life --- Cooking, Midwestern --- Midwestern cooking --- Midwestern style. --- History --- Middle Western style
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An American collection of heirloom recipes from a chef's point of view designed for home cooking. Award-winning chefs Colby and Megan Garrelts present 50 handcrafted recipes passed down through generations and celebrated around American tables ... Acclaimed chefs and recipient of the 2013 James Beard award for Best Chef Midwest, Colby and Megan Garrelts feature their favorite library of American classics redefined by easy, chef inspired techniques, quality ingredients, and a love for regional flavors from their Midwestern roots ... Made in America features 50 recipes sorted by the cooking methods commonly used in American kitchens from daybreak, to the garden, cast irons, grilling and frying, and of course the bakeshop. Many recipes begin with a childhood memory from Colby or Megan that describes the roots and the journey of each recipe"--
Bluestem Restaurant. --- Bluestem (Restaurant : Kansas City, Mo.) --- Cooking, American --- Cooking, Midwestern --- Midwestern cooking --- Midwestern style. --- Middle Western style
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Joanne Raetz Stuttgen's cafe guides showcase popular regional diner traditions. In her companion book Cafe Indiana she introduces travelers to the state's top mom-and-pop restaurants. Now, Cafe Indiana Cookbook allows you to whip up local cafe classics yourself. Breakfast dishes range from Swiss Mennonite eier datch (egg pancakes) to biscuits and gravy; entree highlights include chicken with noodles (or with dumplings) and the iconic Hoosier breaded pork tenderloin sandwich. For dessert, try such Indiana favorites as apple dapple cake or rhubarb, coconut cream, or sugar cream pie . All 130 recipes have been kitchen-tested by Jolene Ketzenberger, food writer for the Indianapolis Star. Cafe Indiana Cookbook reveals the favorite recipes of Indiana's Main Street eateries, including some rescued for publication before a diner's sad closure, and documents old-fashioned delicacies now fading from the culinary landscape--like southern Indiana's fried brain sandwiches.
Cooking, American --- Cooking --- Restaurants --- Midwestern style.
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Cooking, American --- Cooking (Frankfurters) --- Cooking, Midwestern --- Midwestern cooking --- Cookery (Frankfurters) --- Cooking (Hot dogs) --- Cooking with frankfurters --- Frankfurters --- Cooking (Sausages) --- Midwestern style. --- Middle Western style --- Use in cooking
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"Set in the frozen wasteland of Midwestern academia, The Lost Journals of Sylvia Plath introduces Wilson A. Lavender, father of three, instructor of women's studies, and self-proclaimed genius who is beginning to think he knows nothing about women. He spends much of his time in his office not working on his dissertation, a creative piece titled "The Lost Journals of Sylvia Plath." A sober alcoholic, he also spends much of his time not drinking, until he hooks up with his office mate, Alice Cherry, an undercover stripper who introduces him to "the buffer"--the chemical solution to his woes. Wilson's wife, Katie, is an anxious hippie, genuine earth mother, and recent PhD with no plans other than to read People magazine, eat chocolate, and seduce her young neighbor--a community college student who has built a bar in his garage. Intelligent and funny, Katie is haunted by a violent childhood. Her husband's "tortured genius" both exhausts and amuses her. The Lavenders' stagnant world is roiled when Katie's pregnant sister, January, moves in. Obsessed with her lost love, '80s rocker Stevie Flame, January is on a quest to reconnect with her glittery, big-haired past. A free spirit to the point of using other people's toothbrushes without asking, she drives Wilson crazy. Exploring the landscape of family life, troubled relationships, dreams of the future, and nightmares of the past, Knutsen has conjured a literary gem filled with humor and sorrow, Aqua Net and Scooby-Doo, diapers and benzodiazepines--all the detritus and horror and beauty of modern life"--
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This book presents a history of the Midwestern Universities Research Association (MURA) during its lifetime from the early 1950's to the late 1960's. MURA was responsible for a number of important contributions to the science of particle accelerators, including the invention of fixed field alternating gradient accelerators (FFAG), as well as contributions to accelerator orbit theory, radio frequency acceleration techniques, colliding beams technology, orbit instabilities, computation methods, and designs of accelerator magnets and linear accelerator cavities. A number of students were trained
Particle accelerators --- Research --- History. --- Midwestern Universities Research Association.
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What can Evelyn Birkby possibly do to follow up the success of Neighboring on the Air: Cooking with the KMA Radio Homemakers? She can do what she has done in writing Up a Country Lane Cookbook. For forty-three years she has written a column entitled ""Up a Country Lane"" for the Shenandoah Evening Sentinel. Now she has chosen the best recipes from her column and interspersed them with a wealth of stories of rural life in the 1940s and 1950s, supplemented by a generous offering of vintage photographs. She has created a book that encompasses lost time.With
Cooking, American -- Midwestern style. --- Farm life -- Iowa. --- Cooking, American --- Farm life --- Recreation & Sports --- Social Sciences --- Rural life --- Country life --- American cooking --- Cookery, American --- Midwestern style
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In a political culture infused with debates about personal liberties, the role of government, and even the definition of "freedom" itself, Haymaker tells the story of an isolated Michigan town that becomes the flashpoint for some of the principal ideological debates of our day. When a libertarian organization selects the town as its flagship community, hundreds of its members migrate and settle within the town's borders. The resulting clash with local townspeople is violent and impassioned, even as the line that divides the two sides increasingly blurs.The story follows characters on both of these sides: an eccentric millionaire known as The Man in White, who is still viewed as an outsider even after living in Haymaker for thirty years; a policewoman trained in hostage and suicide negotiations who questions raising children in this new environment; a teenage girl devoted to basketball and her desire to leave home, who has a close but complicated relationship with her uncle, a local who fistfights outsiders in an annual challenge; a libertarian PR expert, just hoping to calm the storm; and the town's mayor, who owns a local diner and is raising a baby daughter as her husband becomes tragically unhinged. A town first settled by lumberjacks, prostitutes, and roughnecks, Haymaker's present becomes as volatile as its past.Haymaker is a story about the failure of best intentions and the personal freedom of individuals to do good or to harm. This witty and politically charged novel will certainly appeal to Michiganders and Midwesterners, but will also interest those looking for an entertaining fictional account of a situation that could plausibly play out in one of the many small, remote towns in the country.
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