All Artists: Elliot Essman Title: Blues Cookbook Members Wishing: 0 Total Copies: 0 Label: Elliot Essman Original Release Date: 3/6/2006 Release Date: 3/6/2006 Genre: Blues Style: Number of Discs: 1 SwapaCD Credits: 1 UPC: 837101151375 |
Elliot Essman Blues Cookbook Genre: Blues
Blues Songs Are Also Down-Home Recipes. All but one of the fourteen songs on the Blues Cookbook music CD double as recipes for down-home southern and country dishes. The remaining song may well be the world?s only love ... more » |
CD Details
Synopsis
Product Description Blues Songs Are Also Down-Home Recipes. All but one of the fourteen songs on the Blues Cookbook music CD double as recipes for down-home southern and country dishes. The remaining song may well be the world?s only love song dedicated to cookware. Created by award-winning food writer and composer Elliot Essman, Blues Cookbook is a CD of fourteen blues songs that all have to do with cooking and food. Written in a variety of urban and traditional blues styles, the songs in Blues Cookbook are filled with cooking advice for such down-home favorites as chicken-fried steak, cornbread, okra, sweet potato pie, pan-fried chicken, collard greens, barbecue, biscuits, and more. ?I?ve been playing blues guitar, piano and harmonica since I was a teenager,? says Essman. ?After recording the song Gumbo and realizing I?d belted out what amounted to a musical recipe, I developed the full menu. Southern cuisine was a natural. You can?t very well write a credible blues song about wilted field greens over pan-seared porcini mushrooms in an aged balsamic vinaigrette.? One number, Southern Fried Catfish, done in gospel style, provides a complete recipe for the dish in less than a minute. Other songs, like Pralines and Rice and Beans, use styles reminiscent of John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters, taking their sweet bluesy time to meld all the flavors. Hip hop style Piggy Food covers the full range of pork offerings, from bacon to barbecue, and even winds up speculating in pork belly futures. Whole Mess of Greens and Okra add some healthy vegetables to the mix. Perhaps the most unusual song on Blues Cookbook is a unique ?paean to pans.? His audio engineer told Essman that Cast Iron Pans was a true love song, dedicated to cookware rather than to a sweetheart. ?People love cast iron,? Essman insists. ?They pass well-seasoned pots and pans down as heirlooms. Similar CDs
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CD ReviewsYUMMY! Lorraine A. Davis | CT, NY, NM, MA | 06/02/2009 (5 out of 5 stars) " The first time I heard this CD I was howling! It was so funny! I love cooking to it and playing it at parties - especially when having a BBQ - I've played it dozens of times and I never get tired of it. Dancin' in the kitchen!" Nice collection! M. Nelson | 05/14/2009 (5 out of 5 stars) "What a great collection of fresh ideas and fun songs. Each has it's own personality and feel. I love the biscuit heaven as I can relate to loving biscuits. A little too often, at times..." Savory Blues Michele N. Beier | Long Island , New York | 06/06/2009 (5 out of 5 stars) "Dancing to the "Blues Cookbook" evoked joyful memories of cajun meals, the bayou and the soulful sounds of the saxophone...This is an ingenious blend of blues and cooking: joyful, humorous and uplifting. My particular favorites include "Chicken Fried Steak" which is happy, upbeat and witty, "Biscuit Heaven", slow and sensual and "Whole Mess of Greens", fast and fun. "Piggy Food" made me laugh out loud. Nice guitar and fine vocals. If you enjoy dancing while preparing a savory feast, buy the "Blues Cookbook" today."
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