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Creole Gumbo and All That Jazz - by Howard Mitcham (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- A delightful book with excellent recipes . . . -Mimi Sheraton, New York TimesHugely influential for me and my budding culinary peers of the time . . . both [Mitcham] and his books were fascinating depositories of recipes, recollections, history, folklore and illustrations, drawing on his abiding love for humble, working-class ethnic food of the area.-Anthony BourdainCreole Gumbo is more than a cookbook.
- About the Author: Howard Mitcham, a renowned chef, poet, artist, and storyteller, died in 1996.
- 288 Pages
- Cooking + Food + Wine, Regional & Ethnic
Description
Book Synopsis
A delightful book with excellent recipes . . .
-Mimi Sheraton, New York Times
Hugely influential for me and my budding culinary peers of the time . . . both [Mitcham] and his books were fascinating depositories of recipes, recollections, history, folklore and illustrations, drawing on his abiding love for humble, working-class ethnic food of the area.
-Anthony Bourdain
Creole Gumbo is more than a cookbook. It is a history book, a music lesson and a personality profile of great jazzmen.
-Today
From the Back Cover
" . . . hugely influential for me and my budding culinary peers of the time . . . both [Mitcham] and his books were fascinating depositories of recipes, recollections, history, folklore and illustrations, drawing on his abiding love for humble, working-class ethnic food of the area."
-Anthony Bourdain
"Creole Gumbo is more than a cookbook. It is a history book, a music lesson and a personality profile of great jazzmen."
-Today
"A delightful book with excellent recipes . . . "
-New York Times
Here's a dazzling array of photos, foods, and far-out folklore, spiced up with tidbits of jazz history and lyrics-all gathered into a seafood cookbook that celebrates the world-famous cuisine of New Orleans. Author Howard Mitcham traces the development of sophisticated Creole cooking and its rambunctious country cousin, Cajun cooking, with innumerable anecdotes, pictures, and recipes.
Mitcham offers more than three hundred enticing dishes, from crab gumbo and shrimp-oyster jambalaya to barbecued red snapper and trout amandine. Along the way, he offers a list of substitutes for seafood that may be hard to find, a bibliography, and a guide to the best mail-order seafood markets in New Orleans.
Howard Mitcham, renowned chef, poet, artist, and raconteur, practiced the inventive art of New Orleans cuisine for three decades.
About the Author
Howard Mitcham, a renowned chef, poet, artist, and storyteller, died in 1996. For over thirty years Mitcham practiced the creative art of New Orleans cuisine. His book Creole Gumbo and All That Jazz: A New Orleans Seafood Cookbook is no ordinary cookbook. Along with more than three hundred recipes he incorporated the heritage of both the people of the city and the people of the country-the Creole and the Cajun. He called this book an autobiographical chronicle of his love affair with New Orleans. The fine art of cooking in New Orleans rivals some of the greatest cuisines in the world, including those of such countries as France and Spain. New Orleans cuisine alone is such a broad topic that Mitcham felt that he should write a cookbook focused on the seafood side of Creole-Cajun Cooking. Mitcham was the author of several cookbooks including Clams, Mussels, Oysters, Scallops, and Snails: A Cookbook and Memoir and the Provincetown Seafood Cookbook. He lived in both New Orleans and Provincetown, Massachusetts.