Thanks, Kim. I'm betting Maryellen will love this detailed look into that book. I enjoyed peeking at your facebook page and was led further into a link to Forks over knives. Really appreciate your help! Arianne On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 12:59 PM, Kim Rogers <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Arianne, > > I have the book Steve mentions--Twain's Feast: Searching for America's = > Lost Foods in the Footsteps of Samuel Clemens. And while there aren't = > specific recipes included that originated from Twain exactly, the author = > Andrew Beahrs, uses the fantasy menu of favorite American foods dreamed = > up by Twain while on a European tour after he'd grown sick of hotel = > cooking.=20 > > =46rom Twain's list of 80-some dishes, Bears selects eight regional = > specialities and goes on a drive-about the country in search of them: = > possum and raccoon, trout at Lake Tahoe, oysters and mussels in San = > Francisco, terrapin in Philadelphia, sheep-head and croakers in New = > Orleans, cranberries, and maple syrup.=20 > > Sprinkled throughout the book, Beahrs includes recipes or directions = > from experts and/or cookbooks of the times. Here's one entitled, "To = > Make Cranberry Tarts" from Hannah Glasse, The Art of Cookery Made Plain = > and Easy, 1805. > > To one pound of four three quarters of a pound of butter, then stew your = > cranberry's [sic] to a jelly, putting good brown sugar in to sweeten = > them, strain the cranberry's and then put them in your patty pans for = > baking in a moderate oven for half an hour. > > Let me know if you have any questions. > > Mahalo, > Kim > > > Kim Steutermann Rogers > Read: www.kimsrogers.com > Write: [log in to unmask] > Call: 808.634.6667 (cell) > Tweet: twitter.com/kimsrogers > Like: facebook.com/kimsrogers > Photograph: instagram.com/kimsrogers > > > On Jan 3, 2015, at 11:31 AM, Stephen Railton <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > > > Arianne--There's a book called Twain's Feast, by Andrew Beahrs, you=20 > > should look into. Steve Railton > >=20 > > On 1/3/2015 3:50 PM, Arianne wrote: > >> One of my friends is also a Mark Twain enthusiast. Once she did > >> research to prepare a meal of Mark Twain's favorites in honor of > >> a local Mark Twain impressionist who scared us by a too long pause = > when he > >> entertained us after dinner. > >>=20 > >> She and her husband were with me when we met Kevin and Pegge in = > Boston > >> several years ago. Her book, "Lost Restaurants of Sacramento and = > Their > >> Recipes" is enjoying a long run on Amazon written by Maryellen Burns = > and > >> her brother Keith. > >>=20 > >> But recently, somewhere, she saw a reference to Mark Twain recipes. > >> Neither of us knows if there are any. Do you know if in any of his = > writing > >> actual recipes appear? > >>=20 > >> Thanks for any help. > >>=20 > >>=20 > -- Arianne Laidlaw A '58