Patty Vineyard MacDonald, a home economist from Oklahoma A&M married to a West Pointer, has revived recipes combined with biography in Long Lost Recipes of Aunt Susan and Spiced with Wit: Will Rogers' Tomfoolery and More Aunt Susan Recipes. A member of the International Association of Culinary Professionals and American Southern Food Institute, she and her husband live in Hot Springs Village, Arkansas.
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"A must-have for any serious collector of Texas cookbooks. . . . Luckily for those who didn't inherit copies of Corbitt's books, the new collection offers an appealing cross-section of her culinary creations, updated and modernized somewhat by the author/editor who compiled the book. Rest assured, however, that these are Ms.Corbitt's recipes and they work as she intended. Her writer's voice is still very much in evidence, with an enthusiasm and unabashed confidence in the value of her creations that shines through on every page."--Austin Chronicle "Corbitt presided over the Zodiac Room from 1955 to 1969, drawing scores of loyal customers and bringing the city itself a new level of dining sophistication. . . . [The book has] certain magical recipes: the poppy seed dressing, of course, and the orange souffle. The chicken salad with grapes. Miss Corbitt's bouillabaisse, which 'tastes like Marseilles out your back door.'"--Dallas Morning News "Corbitt was the first woman to win the Golden Plate Award, the highest honor in the food industry."--Texas Monthly "It says a lot about Corbitt that more than two decades after her death, cooks still treasure her recipes. . . . Her cookbooks sold hundreds of thousands of copies. . . . In Texas, every kitchen belongs to Helen Corbitt."--Houston Chronicle "Many Dallas palates trace their awakening to Helen Corbitt's cooking. And her flowerpot desserts still sprout every spring at wedding showers around Dallas."--D Magazine "With a foreword by Stanley Marcus, who called Corbitt the Balenciaga of food, The Best from Helen Corbitt's Kitchens chronicles her life and her recipes, some of which have never been published. Helen Corbitt was of another generation, but many of her recipes live on in the Lone Star State, as do her fans."--Austin American-Statesman

