Mary Faulk Koock traveled throughout Texas gathering recipes ranging from down-home cooking to high-class affairs, from regional favorites to ethnic specialties. Scattered among these are the author's anecdotes from her vast and varied encounters with the famous and influential.
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"[A]s exuberant as the state, and full of amusing information and good recipes from every part of it. . [G]reat fun for Texans and non-Texans alike."--New York Times Book Review "Here is a collection of recipes as varied and interesting as the state from which they come. . . . Most recipes are given as part of a complete menu, and are clear and easy to follow."--Library Journal "Mary Faulk Koock was born with the ability to make people feel at home--good food, good atmosphere, good conversation. This is a great cookbook that captures Mary's gift!" --Ann W. Richards, former governor of Texas, 1991-1995 "Hooray! Mary Faulk Koock's book is back by popular demand. Life will be more interesting with her stories and recipes." --Liz Carpenter, former Press Secretary to Lady Bird Johnson "Mary Faulk Koock's Texas Cookbook has been a classic since it was published in 1965."--Sharon Hudgins, Dallas Morning News "Mary Faulk Koock's classic The Texas Cookbook was published in 1965 as the definitive resource on Texan cuisine. . . . Famously written with the guidance of the one and only James Beard, Koock's sprawling cookbook divides Texas by geographic region, starting with Austin and spiraling outward from there. . . . In many ways The Texas Cookbook was ahead of its time, offering a more diverse sampling of Texan cuisine that its contemporaries. Koock was dedicated to searching out food beyond the state's famed barbecue and Tex-Mex."--Texas Monthly