The Pittard Family Home Cook Book
1911 - 2018 First Edition
by Annette Rountree Taylor
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About the Book
In these pages you will find a sampling of the recipes and stories our family has enjoyed over the years – from 1911 when Fletcher Pittard and Fannie Wells got married to 2018 when this book was published. A few new food recipes are sprinkled in because the journey is never ending.
The book captures food traditions that bring back the smell of pound cake cooking in the oven, Christmas Day at Grandma’s house, fresh oysters Granddaddy brought back from the shore, dessert buffets that seem endless, ice cream freezers churning out summer flavors, cousins that share childhood memories, gardens large enough to call crops, butterbeans that require shelling, blackberry brambles hanging full of fruit, meals of fresh vegetables from the garden, stews cooked outside, dinner on the grounds at church, Harvest Festivals with fried pies and auctions, quilting bees where the gossip flows freely, celebrations and sorrows that pull us together and deep comforting sleep under layers of Grandma’s quilts.
The book captures food traditions that bring back the smell of pound cake cooking in the oven, Christmas Day at Grandma’s house, fresh oysters Granddaddy brought back from the shore, dessert buffets that seem endless, ice cream freezers churning out summer flavors, cousins that share childhood memories, gardens large enough to call crops, butterbeans that require shelling, blackberry brambles hanging full of fruit, meals of fresh vegetables from the garden, stews cooked outside, dinner on the grounds at church, Harvest Festivals with fried pies and auctions, quilting bees where the gossip flows freely, celebrations and sorrows that pull us together and deep comforting sleep under layers of Grandma’s quilts.
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About the Creator
I grew up in a family of great cooks. Becoming a cook is a lifetime of trial and error. Those that love to cook read recipes just for the fun of it. Taste dishes to try to figure out the ingredients. And for those dishes that your mother made or were family favorites, you will spend a lifetime trying to recreate how that special dish tasted. The taste is, however, as much about who cooked it, who you ate it with and where you ate it as it is about the ingredients. I hope to publish a series of family cookbooks that help recreate some of those special memories.