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9780897324168

The Best of Virginia Farms Cookbook and Tour Book Recipes, People, Places

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780897324168

  • ISBN10:

    0897324161

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2003-03-10
  • Publisher: Menasha Ridge Pr

Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.

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Summary

The Best of Virginia Farmsuses a variety of writing features (interviews, sidebars, tours, essays, and recipes) along with unique illustrations and maps to convey America's fascinating agricultural story. The book reveals the intimate relationship between a state's agriculture and its overall identity. America's oldest farm state, Virginia has a fascinating farming history. In addition to the expected crops, readers will also find information on wine and spirits, Christmas trees, and Virginia's famous horse farm industry. Whether it's a tour of Virginia's historic plantations or a traditional holiday recipe from Colonial Williamsburg,The Best of Virginia Farmswill provide a unique perspective on the Old Dominion. Filled with fun and practical how-to information, thisbook will inspire readers to prepare a recipe, take a tour, or enjoy a new product they have never tried. Promising to enrich the spirit, this book taps into the traditions and mystique that surround farming in Virginia and celebrate the family bonds and rugged individuality of rural life.

Author Biography

The author of five cookbooks, CiCi Williamson has been writing a weekly food column in numerous newspapers across the country for 21 years. She's also a travel writer and photographer who has visited more than 80 countries and written hundreds of travel articles. But the McLean, Virginia resident always returns home thinking her state is the most beautiful and diverse.

Table of Contents

Old Dominion to New Millennium vii
Governor Mark R. Warner
A Bountiful Harvest viii
Bruce L. Hiatt
Introduction ix
Willard Scott
Virginians and Their Land: Preface xi
Acknowledgments xii
part one POULTRY AND EGGS
Chickens
2(8)
Turkeys
10(6)
Charles Wampler, Jr., Turkey Producer
13(2)
Virginia's Farming Regions
15(1)
Other Poultry
16(3)
Eggs
19(9)
Museum of American Frontier Culture
23(2)
Stratford Hall Plantation: Birthplace of General Robert E. Lee
25(3)
part two MEAT
Beef and Veal
28(11)
Three Years to a Hamburger
33(3)
Historic Farmsteads
36(3)
Pork
39(7)
The Genuine Smithfield
41(5)
Lamb
46(6)
Jamestown and Yorktown: The Beginning and Ending of Colonial America
50(2)
Farm-Raised Game
52(8)
Chippokes Plantation State Park: Chippokes Farm and Forestry Museum
56(4)
part three SHELLFISH AND FISH
Shellfish
60(13)
Tschiswapeki: An Overview of the Great Shellfish Bay
70(3)
Fish
73(15)
A Mariner's Tour of the Lower Chesapeake Bay
83(5)
part four DAIRY PRODUCTS
Milk
88(9)
J. Carlton Courter, III, Virginia Commissioner of Agriculture
89(5)
From Cow to Cheese: Making Dairy Products at Shenville Creamery
94(2)
Shenville Creamery
96(1)
Butter and Cream
97(7)
Patsy Waddle, Virginia Farm Bureau's Farm Woman of the Year 2001
103(1)
Cheese
104(8)
Blue Ridge Institute and Museum
108(2)
Kevin Riddle: Crafting Farm Tools the Old-Fashioned Way
110(2)
part five FRUITS AND NUTS
Apples
112(10)
John Bruguiere, Appalachian Apple Farmer
113(7)
Winchester, Virginia's Apple Capital
120(2)
Peaches, Nectarines, and Plums
122(4)
Pears
126(3)
Melons
129(3)
Berries
132(5)
Peanuts
137(7)
Triumph of a Community: Southampton Agriculture and Forestry Museum
141(3)
part six VEGETABLES
Tomatoes
144(9)
Thomas Jefferson, the Gardener
147(3)
Monticello, ``The Little Mountain''
150(2)
The Monticello Vegetable Garden
152(1)
Potatoes
153(4)
Snap Beans
157(3)
Bell Peppers
160(4)
Cucumbers
164(3)
Cabbage
167(3)
Sweet Corn
170(4)
Soybeans
174(3)
Other Vegetables
177(31)
The Taylor Family, Produce Farmers
178(26)
Virginia's Explore Park
204(4)
part seven GRAINS
Winter Wheat
208(16)
Development of the Reaper by Virginian Cyrus McCormick
210(4)
Cyrus McCormick's Farm
214(6)
In the Footsteps of Wheat Farmer Washington
220(2)
George Washington Slept Here---and Here, and Here
222(2)
Barley and Rye
224(24)
Historic Gristmills of Virginia
228(4)
part eight WINE
A Short History of Winemaking in Virginia
232(8)
To Your Health! A Toast to Virginia Wines: An Interview with State Viticulturist Tony K. Wolf
240(3)
A Weekend Tour of Central Virginia Wineries
243(5)
part nine OTHER FARM PRODUCTS
Horses
248(11)
Virginia Hunts
249(6)
Virginia Races and Shows
255(2)
Paul Maxwell, Blue Ridge Farm
257(2)
Christmas Trees
259(8)
Christmas the Colonial Way
260(4)
A Year in the Life of Elysium Christmas Tree Farm
264(3)
Floriculture
267(4)
Gardens and Arboretums of Virginia
268(2)
Landscaping and Lawns
270(1)
Tobacco
271(4)
Tobacco's Beginnings in the New World
272(1)
Going, Going, Gone
273(1)
American Indians and Virginia Crops
274(1)
Cotton
275(5)
Cotton: History and Harvesting
276(1)
The James River Plantations
277(3)
part ten HONORABLE MENTIONS
Honey
280(3)
Maple Syrup
283(13)
Calling All Maple Lovers
286(3)
APPENDICES
Resources Restaurants and inns, historic sites, contemporary vineyards and farms, museums, farmers markets, governmental agencies, and agricultural industry boards/associations
289(7)
Bibliography 296(1)
Recipe Index 297(7)
Subject Index 304(4)
About the Author and the Illustrator 308

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

Fish and Shellfish Introduction
As the sun rises and its coppery reflection shimmers on Chesapeake Bay, Virginia's "watermen" (commercial fishermen) are already on their job of landing 500 million pounds of seafood a year. Soon they will point their skipjacks (historic bay sailboats) and oyster boats toward the marshy shores and beckoning sea grasses to deposit their catch.
What's for dinner tonight? Take your pick from almost 300 species: Saltwater fish and shellfish or freshwater fish. Saltwater mixes into the Bay from the Atlantic Ocean. Freshwater flows from the Bay's 48 major rivers and 100 small tributaries. Thus the Bay can support both fresh and marine life forms, plus those that can tolerate fluctuating salt levels.
The great Chesapeake Bay dominates coastal Virginia. Its marshlands offer shelter for millions of migrating waterfowl; its tides nurse the state's network of creeks and rivers. Broad sloughs, coves, wetlands, and tidal ponds intermingle and embrace three lush, green "necks" (peninsulas) cut out by the long, wide mouths of the Potomac, Rappahannock, York and James Rivers.

Excerpted from The Best of Virginia Farms Cookbook and Tour Book: Recipes, People, Places by CiCi Williamson
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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