Sam Arnold\u27s Eating Up the Santa Fe Trail is a gustatorial revisiting of mealtime along the old trail. Using various travel accounts, Arnold provides directions for making camp meals and for recreating dinners provided along the way at stops such as Bent\u27s Fort and the Hays House at Council Grove. The recipes, written in a clear and entertaining style, cover everything from moose nose to Turkish pilaf for one hundred; Arnold helpfully suggests modem substitutes for ingredients that are no longer easily available. For readers who want to experience the pleasures and surprises of eating on the nineteenth- century Great Plains, this book is an excellent historical guide
The joys and pitfalls of dining outside, by Steve Fagin. Trail workers live fully in Tongass Nationa...
From 1839 to the beginning of 1846, the Mormons made their headquarters in Nauvoo, Illinois. Continu...
William Fairholme (1819-1868), a twenty-year-old Lieutenant of the British army, and six fellow offi...
Sam Arnold\u27s Eating Up the Santa Fe Trail is a gustatorial revisiting of mealtime along the old t...
Twelve sketches populate this pleasant little volume about overland travel between central Missouri ...
Williams uses original texts liberally-diaries, letters, contemporary published accounts, cookbooks-...
This volume is an intriguing combination of narrative and reference material. A first section sets t...
The history of the Sante Fe Trail has been repeated many times, often with the same material told in...
In the fall of 1856, wealthy James Ross Larkin of St. Louis joined a wagon train headed by William B...
Review of: "Feast or Famine: Food and Drink in American Westward Expansion," by Reginal Horsman
By the end of her wagon journey west, Phoebe Judson recalled, all of the little delicacies we broug...
Without doubt, Santa Fe is one of the most fascinating and enchanting cities in this country. Pueblo...
William Chalfant, long time western historian and Hutchinson, Kansas, attorney, focuses on one perio...
Alan Boye\u27s guide is complete in ways that Nebraskans and others who travel in Nebraska would fin...
This well-designed and appealing book, combining history with usable recipes reminiscent of the time...
The joys and pitfalls of dining outside, by Steve Fagin. Trail workers live fully in Tongass Nationa...
From 1839 to the beginning of 1846, the Mormons made their headquarters in Nauvoo, Illinois. Continu...
William Fairholme (1819-1868), a twenty-year-old Lieutenant of the British army, and six fellow offi...
Sam Arnold\u27s Eating Up the Santa Fe Trail is a gustatorial revisiting of mealtime along the old t...
Twelve sketches populate this pleasant little volume about overland travel between central Missouri ...
Williams uses original texts liberally-diaries, letters, contemporary published accounts, cookbooks-...
This volume is an intriguing combination of narrative and reference material. A first section sets t...
The history of the Sante Fe Trail has been repeated many times, often with the same material told in...
In the fall of 1856, wealthy James Ross Larkin of St. Louis joined a wagon train headed by William B...
Review of: "Feast or Famine: Food and Drink in American Westward Expansion," by Reginal Horsman
By the end of her wagon journey west, Phoebe Judson recalled, all of the little delicacies we broug...
Without doubt, Santa Fe is one of the most fascinating and enchanting cities in this country. Pueblo...
William Chalfant, long time western historian and Hutchinson, Kansas, attorney, focuses on one perio...
Alan Boye\u27s guide is complete in ways that Nebraskans and others who travel in Nebraska would fin...
This well-designed and appealing book, combining history with usable recipes reminiscent of the time...
The joys and pitfalls of dining outside, by Steve Fagin. Trail workers live fully in Tongass Nationa...
From 1839 to the beginning of 1846, the Mormons made their headquarters in Nauvoo, Illinois. Continu...
William Fairholme (1819-1868), a twenty-year-old Lieutenant of the British army, and six fellow offi...