My Mother's Southern Kitchen: Recipes and Reminiscences (2024)

James Villas, Martha Pearl Villas

4.5332ratings6reviews

Rate this book

Gathers Southern-style recipes for appetizers, soups, stews, salads, meats, poultry, game, seafood, casseroles, vegetables, breads, and desserts

    GenresCookbooksFoodieSouthernNonfictionCooking

352 pages, Hardcover

First published September 23, 1994

About the author

James Villas was the food and wine editor of Town & Country magazine for twenty-seven years. His work has also appeared in Esquire, Gourmet, Bon Appetit, Saveur, The New York Times, and the Atlantic Monthly, among other publications. Two of his cookbooks have been nominated for a James Beard Award. He has also won a James Beard Award twice for journalism and received Bon Appetit's Food Writer of the Year Award in 2003. James Villas is the author of more than a dozen cookbooks and books on food, including My Mother’s Southern Kitchen and The Glory of Southern Cooking. He lives in East Hampton, New York.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?

Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

4.53

32ratings6reviews

4 stars

10 (31%)

3 stars

1 (3%)

2 stars

1 (3%)

1 star

0 (0%)

Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

Megan K. Brown

62 reviews4 followers

July 29, 2017

It's true. I read cookbooks like I read novels...cover to cover. This is actually my second reading of My Mother's Southern Kitchen. This first time was about 14 years ago. I checked it out from the public library (just like this time). And I have never forgotten this book...particularly the recipe for Ambrosia.

There is a food anthropologist that lives inside my heart and this cookbook makes that part of me giddily happy. Written by James Villas (food and wine editor for 27 years at Town and Country magazine) and his mother, a southern home cook from Charlotte, NC, it is a compendium of recipes and the memories that are inextricably tied to food from generations of their southern family. These people understood that food preparation and preserving is a part of being human. Not many people I know today actually cook at all (let alone serve fresh from-scratch biscuits at every meal). And I feel we are less human because of it. That is why reading this cookbook is such a rich experience. We are reminded that food is an expression of love and sharing a meal is a communal activity. Cooking is being human.

Arrel

225 reviews3 followers

January 4, 2019

Former UNC student and 27-year food and wine editor of Town and Country magazine James Villas fondly remembers his Mother and her kitchen in this charming book of recipes, remembrances, and family photographs. Concentrated in the Carolinas (he was born and raised in NC), this is a great read with really good recipes too. Another UNC Tarheel makes (very) good!

    cooking-eating

Sherry

51 reviews

April 14, 2009

Every Southern food enthusiast should own this book! Not only are the recipes wonderful, but the author's "reminiscences" are priceless! He keeps up a playful banter with his mother, Martha Pearl, throughout the book, telling stories of when he remembers his mother making the listed recipes, the two fussing with each other over the proper way to do this and that, and her accusing him of "corrupting" her tried-and-true formulas with his big-city culinary mumbo-jumbo. A real hoot! Most recipes are offered in their original form, along with the author's more modern variations and suggestions for substitutions. A good read if you simply read from cover-to-cover, really. Every recipe I have tried has been great. The only suggestion I would give is if you decide to follow the book's directions for canning. Miss Martha gives these directions the old-fashioned boil-the-jars-in-a-stock-pot way, which is fine for anything very acidic (pickles) or anything very sugary (preserves), which all the recipes she lists are. But if you plan to can anything else in between (vegetables, say) then I'd suggest investing in a pressure cooker and buying a Ball Canning Guide. This book fails to mention that its canning method is not suitable for canning all things. Better safe than sorry!

    all-time-favorites cooking own-it

Karen

201 reviews30 followers

May 26, 2015

Very much enjoyed reading this southern cookbook! Loved how the author shares memories of his mother and her southern recipes like Summer Tomato Pie, Olive Puffs, Creamy Peanut Soup, and Chicken and Rice with Tomatoes. The author's Greek roots are in evidence with recipes such as Greco and liberal use of Feta cheese in several of the recipes. Definitely, a great choice of cookbooks for southern cooking enthusiasts.

    cookbooks

Donna

494 reviews4 followers

February 23, 2016

I liked this so much I bought it. True southern cuisine interspersed w/ cute little anecdotal missives about the author's mother, aunts, grandmother & sister as well as himself. Good stuff, for sure.

Kelly Schooler

49 reviews

December 13, 2012

Like reading your mom's old recipes from a messy recipe box.....good stuff here. Lots of carefully written recipes

    cookbooks

Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

My Mother's Southern Kitchen: Recipes and Reminiscences (2024)

FAQs

Does the Southern Lady Cooks have a cookbook? ›

You can get all 4 of our digital cookbook collection for a great discounted price. Each cookbook is our most popular recipes and you will have them all at your fingertips! Get this great offer while it last! Casseroles & Skillet Meals Vintage Cakes Crock Pot Meals Southern…

Does Mama Sue have a cookbook? ›

Mama Sue's Southern Recipes Cookbook

This is a collection of southern favorites by Sue Garrett. Not only are these delicious recipes, the cookbooks are signed by Mama Sue as well.

Does all recipes have a cookbook? ›

Ladies and gentlemen, we're thrilled to announce a book that's been decades (and thousands of recipes) in the making: the Allrecipes Keepers Cookbook.

What female country singer has her own cooking show? ›

Music superstar and best-selling cookbook author Trisha Yearwood brings her family-inspired recipes and food traditions to her new Food Network series, Trisha's Southern Kitchen.

Did Mama Sue from Mama Sue's kitchen pass away? ›

Suzan (Garrett) Maus-known as Sue, or Mama Sue, born 5/28/1959, passed away 4/5/2021. Sue grew up as a proud Air Force brat, but Nanty Glo was always home to her, once her family settled there while she was in high school she had no desire to be anywhere else.

Where does Mama Sue's Southern kitchen live? ›

Mama Sue's rise to social media stardom came about quite by accident. Everyone in her hometown of Harpersville, Alabama, already knew that Sue Garrett was a good cook. She often posted pictures of dishes she had made for her family and shared recipes with friends on her personal Facebook page.

Where to download Cooking Mama? ›

Cooking Mama: Let's cook! - App on Amazon Appstore.

Does Lidia have a cookbook? ›

Lidia's From Our Family Table To Yours. Lidia's Newest Cookbook is a collection of 100's family favorites!

Does cook's Country have a cookbook? ›

Every recipe from every season. Now in hardcover! Hit the road with the top-rated Cook's Country TV show as it searches out the best recipes from across America along with the cooks and locales that inspired them.

Does Miss Brown from Food Network have a cookbook? ›

The Way Home is an unabashed love letter to her family's roots, packed with dishes that combine West African herbs, spices, and grains with traditional Southern cooking. “Gullah people laid the foundation for Southern cooking.

Does Christine from MasterChef have a cookbook? ›

Christine Ha is the blind cook who won “MasterChef" season 3 with Gordon Ramsay. Her first cookbook, Recipes from My Home Kitchen, was a New York Times best-seller.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Otha Schamberger

Last Updated:

Views: 5665

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Otha Schamberger

Birthday: 1999-08-15

Address: Suite 490 606 Hammes Ferry, Carterhaven, IL 62290

Phone: +8557035444877

Job: Forward IT Agent

Hobby: Fishing, Flying, Jewelry making, Digital arts, Sand art, Parkour, tabletop games

Introduction: My name is Otha Schamberger, I am a vast, good, healthy, cheerful, energetic, gorgeous, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.