Delivery & Return:Free shipping on all orders over $50
Estimated Delivery:7-15 days international
People:9 people viewing this product right now!
Easy Returns:Enjoy hassle-free returns within 30 days!
Payment:Secure checkout
SKU:49867904
101 Productions, 1973. Paperback. Good.
There’s a lot to love in this attractive little book written, hand lettered, and illustrated by architect Violeta Autumn (1930–2012). Born to Jewish-Russian émigrés in Peru, Autumn records the multi-national, multi-ethnic recipes learned from her mother.
The text is preceded by the disclaimer “any similarity to kosher cookery is purely coincidental,” priming us, with humor, for the cornucopia of recipes willfully blending and bending culinary traditions (anyone averse to pork, shellfish, or dairy in combination with meat should turn away now). Similarly fluid, the dish names are transliterations combining Spanish, Russian, Yiddish, and English.
Autumn begins with simple “Russky Snacks,” including garlic bread, plachintas, and matzo rubbed with onion dipped in schmaltz. Page by page thereafter is a culinary tour through an adventurous kitchen.
Among those enticing delectables:
We could easily go on and on with each dish more appealing than the next, though we will restrain ourselves and leave some discoveries to you.
The final section of household remedies is endearingly titled “cookery quackery,” a fitting end for such a joyful ride.
We are pleased to offer a paperback copy, clearly well-loved. Soiling to the wrappers and throughout, and evidence of a small critter's nibbles to the corners. It is, however, still soundly bound and very readable and useable.