In 1900 Madame B 1/2gu 1/2 wrote her recipes down in a French cook book collectors have always prized.
The instructions assume a basic knowledge of cuisine: the measurements are often left to taste, temperature is relative, and cooking times left to the best judgment of the chef.
It takes a few pages to realize much of the cookery takes place not on a stove, but over an open fire.
-Don Spiro, Zelda: The Magazine of the Vintage Nouveau Originally published in 1900 from the handwritten notes of Mme.
B 1/2gu 1/2 herself, this collection of dishes from a quintessential New Orleans restaurant are now available in a edited and modernized version of the 1937 edition.
One of the first cookbooks ever published in New Orleans that became a sought-after souvenir of the B 1/2gu 1/2's dining experience, it has been updated with a foreword by renowned food enthusiast Poppy Tooker.
Originally published as a guide for tourists wanting a taste of true Creole cuisine, it includes recipes from other well-known cooks, including Victor Bero from Victor's Restaurant (later called Galatoire's).
Tooker recreated the most significant of Madame B 1/2gu 1/2's creations by providing a contemporary rendition of the original recipe.
Included are such treasures as Turtle Soup, Chicken 1/2 la Creole, and Creole Gumbo.
Cuisine | The measurements are often left to taste temperature is relative and cooking times left to the best judgment of the chef |
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Zelda | The |