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Review Excerpts
Booklist - January 1, 2009
“Owens more than meets expectations, with every page filled with
humor, short stories, notes on cultural peculiarities (like gopher
turtles), not to mention 150 recipes divided into four seasons and
20 intermingling menus. …delivered with a great ear for dialogue and
a terrific sense of timing… A keepsake.”
Publishers Weekly - December 1, 2008
Owens (My Brother Michael), who proudly calls herself a “Florida
Cracker,” turns a derogatory term into a loving, humorous label for
her people, at the same time inviting non-crackers to hear from and
be fed by them as they usually cannot. Like an afternoon on a
Southern porch, this book is filled with family stories and local
legends delivered between mouthfuls of down-home cooking. Owens
groups the recipes into 20 seasonal menus, including
impress-your-rivals spring baby shower desserts, cold potato soup
and fried catfish for summer, hearty fall tailgating fare and
stick-to-the-ribs winter meals. She prefaces each menu and most
recipes with lengthy, hilarious descriptions of the food and its
cracker history, from the field peas her sister loves so much she
refused to date anyone who didn't eat them to the stewed squirrels
of her dad's childhood and her grandmother's chocolate gravy. Few of
the recipes are very challenging if one commits to using all the
butter or bacon drippings called for, but Owens does give shortcuts
for “lazy Crackers,” as well as some lighter recipes for diet-minded
“Metro Crackers.” But though some of the dishes may get onto the
tables of crackers who didn't grow up eating proper ham with red-eye
gravy, or even onto some non-cracker tables, this book is even
better to curl up with and read cover to cover, meeting Owens's
friends and family and basking in her comical, evocative
storytelling. (Feb.)
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