Amish Cooking for Kids: For 6-To-12 Year Old Cooks

Read ! Amish Cooking for Kids: For 6-To-12 Year Old Cooks by Phyllis Pellman Good, Kate Good, Rebecca Good ´ eBook or Kindle ePUB. Amish Cooking for Kids: For 6-To-12 Year Old Cooks Color illustrations.. This delightful cookbook offers easy-to-follow recipes for delicious foods--each tied to a particular event or occasion in Amish life. What better way to enjoy time with ones children than through cooking--a time-honored Amish way of celebrating family and food]

Amish Cooking for Kids: For 6-To-12 Year Old Cooks

Author :
Rating : 4.12 (668 Votes)
Asin : 1561481319
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 89 Pages
Publish Date : 0000-00-00
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

The presentation of Amish practices in the introduction is oversimplified, and the book's organization does not flow logically. . Not a necessary purchase.Susan Pine, New York Public LibraryCopyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. From School Library Journal Grade 3-6-This attempt to introduce the Amish through recipes is unsuccessful. The full-color artwork is amateurish, and some of the procedures depicted are unsafe. The step-by-step instructions are detailed, but still leave out some necessary hints and techniques that novices require

Color illustrations.. This delightful cookbook offers easy-to-follow recipes for delicious foods--each tied to a particular event or occasion in Amish life. What better way to enjoy time with one's children than through cooking--a time-honored Amish way of celebrating family and food

"Great book" according to Mark B. This neat cook book for kids is filled with interesting recipes All were delicious! I would recommend this book to teachers and parents. A great way to inspire youngsters and pass along a love of cooking!. Nice It's a pretty good book. Some of the recipes are a bit more complex than I had expected, but my 8 year old granddaughter is having fun with it.. L. Price said Three Stars. Not too bad, but not really what I was expecting.

. Phyllis Pellman Good, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, has been involved in educating and writing about the Amish for more than 20 years. She and her husband, Merle, are co-directors of The People’s Place, in the village of Intercourse, Pennsylvania, an educational heritage center interpreting the Amish and

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