About the Author:
Phyllis Pellman Good is a native of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. As a teenager she worked on Central Market and today, as a resident of Lancaster City, shops there. She edits books related to the Amish and Mennonites and is the author of a variety of cookbooks, including the top-selling The Best of Amish Cooking.
Louise Stoltzfus is also a native of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, and lives in downtown Lancaster. She, too, has authored several books about Amish and Mennonite life, and cooking: Amish Women: Lives and Stories and Favorite Recipes from Quilters. She is the co-author of two cookbooks with Phyllis Pellman Good-The Central Market Cookbook and The Best of Mennonite Fellowship Meals. She also co-authored the Lancaster County Cookbook.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:
About This Cookbook-and the Place from Which It Came There stands, just off the center square in downtown Lancaster, Pennsylvania, a monument to a food and gardening tradition-Central Market-both a building and an event. It is an architectural wonder in its gracefully historic character. It is a throbbing and enduring center, supported by its residential neighbors, the business and professional workers who share its streets, and all the loyals who drive in from greater Lancaster and even nearby states. What brings the customers? What holds the standholders? What sustains the remarkable life in this place when the city that surrounds it must fend off a slow-down of commercial activity, a dwindling tax base, and fears of crime? There are answers: Food that can't be resisted because it is carefully grown or produced by knowledgeable hands. Spirited standholders who understand their work as artisans. Devoted customers who know that going to market is always worth the trip, the earlier in the day, the better. A city who recognizes the treasure it has and continually interprets (and re-interprets) the market's charter-and intervenes when it is challenged. Those who bring their bounty to market, and those who line up to take it away, know good food. They are attuned to the seasons. They understand texture and flavor. They enjoy the robust and the subtle. These "experts"-who work with the basics, the truck-patch-grown, the home-baked, the hand-prepared-have gathered together their own favorite recipes for this cookbook. Some of these recipes call for products the standholders produce and sell, some are well rooted traditional dishes, some are simply personal favorites. As a collection, Recipes from Central Market mirrors the mix that Central Market is-the historic and novel, the foods of the long-settled Germans and the more-recently-arrived Asians and Lebanese, startlingly simple dishes and also multi-stepped productions. We are grateful to the many standholders who took time away from their market-tending and market preparation to put their recipes in readable form for this book. Market Master Don Horn and fourth-generation standholder Viv Hunt made many connections for us. Joy Kraybill ably oversaw many details. Steve Scott did considerable research on the market's history and wrote much of the historical material. Thank you all. Central Market offers its pleasure with food when you visit its brick-walled aisles-or when you prepare any of these choice recipes. -Phyllis Pellman Good and Louise Stoltzfus
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