When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Thelma Pressman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thelma_Pressman

    Pressman studied microwave technology at California Community Colleges in 1967. [2] In 1969 she founded the first microwave cooking school in the United States in Encino, California . [ 3 ] [ 1 ] The Microwave Cooking Center became an industry test kitchen in which products were evaluated and cookware and recipes were developed for the nascent ...

  3. The Alice B. Toklas Cook Book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Alice_B._Toklas_Cook_Book

    This work is as much of an autobiography as it is a cookbook, in that it contains as many personal recollections as it does recipes. The most famous culinary experiment is a concoction called "Hashish Fudge". Made from spices, nuts, fruit, and cannabis, Hashish Fudge quickly became a sensation in its own right. In the recipe, Toklas says it is ...

  4. Homemade Blow Pops Recipe - AOL

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/homemade-blow-pops-recipe

    Ingredients 1 cup granulated sugar 1/2 cup corn syrup 1/4 cup butter 1/4 cup water One 3-ounce box strawberry gelatin mix Nonstick cooking spray 1 bag bubblegum, such as Double Bubble

  5. Chocolate brownie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate_brownie

    The earliest-known published recipes for a modern-style chocolate brownie appeared in Home Cookery (1904, Laconia, New Hampshire), the Service Club Cook Book (1904, Chicago, Illinois), The Boston Globe (April 2, 1905 p. 34), [2] and the 1906 edition of Fannie Farmer's cookbook. These recipes produced a relatively mild and cake-like brownie.

  6. Cookbook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookbook

    A cookbook or cookery book [1] is a kitchen reference containing recipes. Cookbooks may be general, or may specialize in a particular cuisine or category of food. Recipes in cookbooks are organized in various ways: by course (appetizer, first course, main course, dessert), by main ingredient, by cooking technique, alphabetically, by region or ...

  7. The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Boston_Cooking-School...

    9th edition, 1951. 878 pp. (The New Fannie Farmer Boston Cooking-School Cookbook on cover) 10th edition, 1959. 596 pp. (The All New Fannie Farmer Boston Cooking-School Cookbook) 11th edition, 1965. 624 pp. (first to be titled The Fannie Farmer Cookbook) 12th edition, 1979. 811 pp. ("Revised by Marion Cunningham with Jeri Laber")

  8. The Essential New York Times Cookbook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Essential_New_York...

    The Essential New York Times Cookbook is a cookbook published by W. W. Norton & Company and authored by former The New York Times food editor Amanda Hesser. [1] The book was originally published in October 2010 and contains over 1,400 recipes from the past 150 years in The New York Times (as of 2010), all of which were tested by Hesser and her assistant, Merrill Stubbs, prior to the book's ...

  9. Betty Cronin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betty_Cronin

    Betty Cronin (July 12, 1928–December 11, 2016) was an American bacteriologist and co-author of Campbell’s Great American Cookbook. Some call her "the mother of TV dinners", [1] though the development of the idea has several claimants. [2] She started her career in 1950 working for the Swanson brothers. [2]