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Phoebe's Kitchen was named for my mother who passed away on November
19, 2007, just short of age 98. My Mother allowed me to bake and
cook whenever I wanted, I only had to clean up the kitchen afterward.
It is because of her that I have such a passion for writing cookbooks.
My legacy to my mother is the line of foods and books in her memory.
More on the Phoebe's Kitchen product line is coming
soon!
New Books for 2010
Taste and Tales of Costal New England (May 2010)
A Taste of Lobsters...and some tales, too (June 2010)
A Taste of Apples...and some tales, too (August 2010)
Taste and Tales of Cape Cod
and the Islands |
A
cookbook with 150 irresistable recipes from Cape Cod and the
Islands culled from inns, restaurants, bed & breakfasts
and vintage cookbooks plus 80 entertaining tales, written
and edited by P. Ann Pieroway with cover painting and illustrations
throughout by Massachusetts artist Louise
Minks.
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A Taste of Cranberries.and
some tales, too |
Not
so long ago, cranberries were only served at Thanksgiving
and Christmas but we can now experience this beautiful and
delicious berry year round. The over eighty recipes in P.
Ann Pieroway's cranberry cookbook feature cranberries in fresh,
frozen, dried and canned form. Joanna Weeks of South Coast
Times says, "the book… shines in its imaginative
entrees, salads and vegetable dishes. Pork Tenderloin with
Balsamic-Cranberry Sauce, Maple Cranberry Chicken Breasts,
and Turkey and Cranberry Panini sound particularly tempting.
Morsels of cranberry lore are interspersed throughout the
book."
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Taste and Tales of Massachusetts |
A cookbook full of 200 delicious recipes and 150 delightful
tales about the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, written and
edited by P. Ann Pieroway with cover painting and illustrations
by Massachusetts artist Louise
Minks.
"Writing this cookbook brings together
two of my favorite hobbies — cooking and history. Massachusetts
is the home of baked beans, Boston cream pie and cranberries,
but before that, there were the Native Americans and early
English Puritan settlers known to us as Pilgrims. One of America’s
most cherished holidays is Thanksgiving, which has been attributed
to a feast that occurred in Massachusetts in 1621.
From Boston to the Berkshires, to the islands
of Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard, come a myriad of
taste and three centuries of history. These marvelous foods
are a result of the many nationalities, past and present,
that call Massachusetts home. These include the English, Irish,
Portuguese, Italians, Polish, French, Africans, Russians,
Jewish and other Eastern Europeans, and in more recent years,
Hispanics, Asians and Arabs. These many cultures are responsible
for the variety of foods that are found across the Commonwealth.
I hope you enjoy the Taste
and Tales of Massachusetts as much as I have taken
pleasure in writing it."
— P. Ann Pieroway |
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