|  |     This is my annotated list of bread cookbooks. 
    
    The books marked with an "\r" are the books I own; the "\l" I have 
    borrowed from the Nashua Public Library but do not own.  The "\w" 
    books were extracted from Note 891.2 by Meredith STEREO::Whitcomb.  
    Prices are appproximate. 
    
    
    	Allman, R		$7 ppr	ISBN 0-88240-085-1  1976 \r
    	Alaska Sourdough
    
    		Limited.  Allman would use sourdough for anything.
    
    	Beard, J		$3 ppr	ISBN 0-345-29550-1  1973 \r
    	Beard on Bread
    
    		This is a "classic", and it might be good, but my 
    		copy is hard for my eyes to read and just recently 
    		purchased, so I don't use it.  I recommend others.
    
    		Because of the age of this text, it doesn't even mention 
    		Rapidrise yeast, food processors, or convection ovens.
    
    	Braue, J		$2 ppr	ISBN 0-515-02045-1  1961 \r
    	Uncle John's Original Bread Book
    
    		OK, especially for breads of northern Europe.
    		Not recommended if you can buy Ojakangas instead.
    
    	Brown, E		$3 ppr	ISBN 0-87773-025-3  1970 \r
    	The Tassajara Bread Book
    
    		Recommended.  Old, limited, but good.
    
    	Casella, D	A World of Breads
    	$10			1966	David White, pub
    
    	Casella, D		$10	ISBN 0-87250-032-2  1979 \l
    	The New Book of Breads
    
    		Recommended.  Brief, simple, broad, good, but incomplete.  
    		A nice ten page section on pizza type breads; one page on 
    		French type breads, and that one not particularly good.
    
    	Clayton, B		$25	ISBN 0-671-60222-5  1987 \r
    	New Complete Book of Breads   (replaces his 1973 book)
    
    		Recommended for those who own a few good bread books 
    		already.  Very thorough, especially in alternate 
    		mechanical processes for the same recipe.  I'm having 
    		good luck with the book.
    
    	Clayton, B		$15	ISBN 0-672-52071-0  1978 \l
    	The Breads of France
    
    		Recommended.  Rather thorough, but don't look for a 
    		recipe for "French Bread" in Clayton's books.
    
    		I think Clayton's New Complete Book of Breads has 
    		reproduced several of this book's recipes.
    
    	Cutler, C		$6	ISBN 0-89256-317-6  1985 \r
    	Carol Cutler's Great Fast Breads
    
    		Pretty good book; organized by time, the total elapsed 
    		time from start to table.  Four chapters: less than 30 
    		minutes, less than 60, 90, and two hours.  So there 
    		isn't anything on sourdough, and I don't think I'll try 
    		her French bread (and, in fairness, she mentions the 
    		limitations and differences in her hurried recipes).
    
    		Includes recipes for No-knead, "no-rise", yeast breads
    		that do indeed rise without a proofing period.
    
    
    	Dworkin, F & S						 \w
    	Bake Your Own Bread 
    
    		Recommended by Meredith Whitcomb. 
    
    	Early & Morris						 \w
    	Fast Breads! 
    
    		recipes that take very little time to make 
    		Recommended by Meredith Whitcomb. 
    
    	Greene, D		$9 ppr	ISBN 0-89594-147-3  1984 \l
    	Whole Grain Baking
    
    		Recommended, especially for someone with little time
    		who buys bread books for occasional use, not serious 
    		reading.  In that context, this is another little gem.
    
    	Gubser, Mary						 \w
    	Mary's Bread Basket & Soup Kettle 
    
    		360 bread recipes and 65 soup recipes 
    		Recommended by Meredith Whitcomb. 
    
    	Gubser, Mary		$23	ISBN 0-688-04176-0  1985 \r
    	America's Bread Book
    
    		I'm not impressed.  She doesn't seem to understand the 
    		biochemistry of bread; I believe some statements to be 
    		in error.  However, my wife doesn't understand the 
    		process perfectly, and Betty makes better bread than I.
    
!   		The organization of the book is a travelogue, not 
! 		my preference for a cookbook.  Essentially identical 
! 		recipes appear in multiple places.  
! 
! 		I have not used the recipe section yet.
    
    	Hunter, B		$2	Pivot ? #87983-078-225  1972 \r
    	Whole-Grain Baking Sampler 
    
    		Limited but OK. 
    
    	Jones, J & E		$11 ppr	ISBN 0-06-091359-2  1982 \r
    	The Book of Bread
    
    		I've only had this book for two weeks, but it looks 
    		like it may become a favorite, rivaled only by Laurel's
    		Kitchen and maybe Ojakangas.  It has multiple recipes 
    		for batter breads, popovers, and French bread --- more 
    		than I can say for most books.  The theory sections 
    		seem good.
    
    	Ojakangas, B		$20	ISBN 0-525-24247-3  1984 \r
    	Great Whole Grain Breads
    
    		Very much recommended.  Don't be misled by the title; 
    		she uses some white flour in almost all recipes.
    
    	Roberts, A L		$4	ISBN 0-486-24529-2  1967  Dover \r
    	Sourdough Breads and Coffee Cakes
    
    		This books is a little gem!  Recommended for the 
    		intermediate bread baker.  I bought mine at LL Bean's.
    
    	Robertson, Flinders, & Godfrey	$20	ISBN 0-394-53700-9  1984 \r
    	The Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book
    
    		Recommended for beginner or baker.  Although the emphasis 
    		is on whole grain baking, the book is very, very good.
    
    		The list price, $20, has been marked down to $6 at the 
    		Royal Discount Bookstore in Merrimack.  I intend to buy 
    		some copies to set aside as future gifts.
    
    	Rosenberg, L		$3 ppr	ISBN 0-942320-13-1  1986
    	Muffins and Cupcakes
    
    		Not generally recommended.  Fancy fluff.
    
    	?			$ ?	ISBN ? 	Fleischmann's Y-11191-3/76
    	Fleischmann's Bake-it-easy Yeast Book 			\r
    
    		Recommended!  Brief, good, and probably free from 
    		people who want you to succeed.
    
    	?							 \w
    	Bread Winners Cookbook 
    
    		Recommended by Meredith Whitcomb. 
    
    
    Recommendations:
    
    If you intend to bake only a few times a year, use the bread section of 
    Pillsbury's cookbook or Betty Crocker.  And follow the recipes exactly, 
    including the *brand* of yeast.  (Not all brands of yeast are the same; 
    some recipe techniques won't work well with another brand.)
    
    If you intend to bake once or twice a month, buy Greene, Cutler, Casella, 
    and Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book.  Later get the Fleischmann booklet.
   
    If you are captured by bread baking magic, then add to your library the 
    recommended books by Ojakangas, Jones, Clayton, Brown, and Roberts.
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