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A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook
| Our Price |
$ 16.68
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| Retail Value |
$ 18.95 |
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$ 2.27 (12%) |
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| Item Number |
495706 |
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Item Description... This cauldron of culinary magic forever banishes the ordinary in eating. A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook by Patricia Telesco combines over 300 carefully selected recipes with bewitching information that will change your approach to cooking, whether you are the chef for yourself, your family, or a roomful of friends.
A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook combines delicious and easy-to-make recipes that span the globe and the centuries. You can use these wonderful dishes for any occasion. You can use a different recipe almost every day of the year and not repeat.
More than a listing of recipes, A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook enables you to use the foods you make to nurture your own magical goals or one provided in the book. Each ingredient's essential magical nature has been carefully considered and combined for a purpose. Here you will discover that apples are good to encourage peace, love, health, and earth magic, while apricots are ideal for romance. Brussels sprouts help in matters of endurance, tenacity, and stability, while horseradish can be used for protection or fiery energy. Over 110 foods are described, from alfalfa sprouts to yogurt.
Every chapter includes some of the tastiest foods you've ever experienced, including:
* Amuletic Appetizers * Blessed Breadstuffs * Charmed Cheese * Enchanted Eggs * Divine Desserts * Mystical Meats * Spellbound Salads * Visionary Vegies
Mystical and magical lore peppered throughout this book includes how your kitchen utensils are magical tools.
A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook is about making every aspect of your life magical. If you follow a spiritual way of life, or if you just like good food, get this book.
PUBLISHER'S COMMENT:
Mercy Bread from Arabia. Oat apricot muffins for forgiveness rituals. Mustard Sauce of Valor for fire festivals. Apricot Fricassee for initiation rituals. These are just a few of the 300 recipes you'll find in A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook by Patricia Telesco.
More than a collection of recipes, A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook weds modern ingredients and utensils with potent traditional preparations for a truly magical resource. Whether in the sacred space of the hearthstone, or anywhere cooking takes you, your meal preparation experience can be both creative and consuming as you sample the helpful hints, superb resources, and fascinating lore in A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook.
From food preparation to mealtime presentation, the goal of this book is to make your world more magical. You'll learn measurement conversions, alternative ingredients, magical correspondences with foods, and appropriate dishes for a wide variety of rituals, celebrations, and festivals.
* Gain insight into how creative personal magic can be ? not only at festivals, but in daily life * Use these recipes for everyday cooking * Attain a refreshing historical perspective on the diversity and "flavor" of magic * Create new approaches to magic at little expense
A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook provides step-by-step instruction for transforming meals into manifestations of your magical life. Get your copy today.
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Item Specifications...
Pages 384
Dimensions: Length: 1" Width: 7.5" Height: 10.25" Weight: 1.75 lbs.
Binding Softcover
Release Date Sep 1, 2002
ISBN 1567187072 EAN 9781567187076
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Availability 12 units. Availability accurate as of May 26, 2012 09:07.
Usually ships within one to two business days from Momence, IL.
Orders shipping to an address other than a confirmed Credit Card / Paypal Billing address may incur and additional processing delay.
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Reviews - What do our customers think?
 | Eclectic Cooking Jun 3, 2008 |
The Kitchen Witch's Cookbook / 1-56718-707-2
This is a very eclectic source and, true to Telesco's usual style, aims to be a "lowest common denominator" book that will appeal to as many people as possible. As such, the recipes presented here are not "new" wiccan-themed dishes but rather regional dishes from around the world, with their "magical significance" penciled in. Nor is the "magical significance" limited to wiccan and pagan traditions - Telesco frequently notes dishes as being sacred to Christian, Muslim, Jewish, or Buddhist cuisine. I suppose publishing is a business and we can't blame anyone for trying to make a buck, but it is a bit irritating to read about olives being sacred to Noah... as opposed to the more obvious "witchy" choice of Athena. Oh well, but it does bother some people, so I thought I'd mention it.
As a further attempt to be all things to all people, this book is neither vegan nor vegetarian, as there are quite a few recipes involving meat, creams, and cheeses. However, there is a whole section on tofu and another for rice, so that no eating choice is neglected. I think this is a nice compromise for everyone involved and no one gets left out or has to go hungry.
For the recipes themselves, each recipe is lavishly laid out with an explanation of the history of the dish, the country of origin, the associated holidays, sacred symbols, and religion or god/dess(es), as well as suggested variations which could promote different witchy intents. In the face of all this wonderful detail, I do find that I am again faced with the absolute hardest part of being an American wiccan - lack of European ingredients! With one recipe calling for "1 whole pig (about 14 pounds)" and dozens more calling for the addition of flower petals I've never even heard of, this cookbook may be very daunting to people who don't have access to a local butcher or gardener. I'm not certain I'd try the flower recipes anyway, as Telesco offhandedly points out that "some" of the flowers of certain varieties of plants are quite poisonous, while others are not... but with no indication of how to tell what is safe and what is not. I guess you have to purchase another book for that, I'm not sure.
Hmm. I guess as a bottom line, I got some real enjoyment out of this cookbook. We're all pretty picky eaters in my family and we tend to stick to the tried-and-true, so a lot of the more exotic recipes were fun to read about but I probably wouldn't actually make. I did glean at least 10-20 new recipes that I enjoy and, really, that's about the best I hope for with a cookbook. As a spiritual guide, I don't know how practical it is - admonitions to make "every meal magical" and to avoid cooking when tired or irritable because negative magic will slip in fail to consider my own busy lifestyle and the fact that if food doesn't get on the table, the family will go hungry. And while the total immersion into a magic lifestyle is tempting, I expect that the modern witch will end up being disappointed and frustrated at the inevitable failure to serve every meal by candlelight with the TV turned off and the radio silenced. I would suggest buying this book for the recipes, taking some of the philosophy as a nice goal (but not a realistic destination), and enjoying the results and not worrying about the failures. | | |  | It's A Good Book, But.... May 20, 2008 |
This book was my introduction to the whole idea of kitchen witchery, and of using food for magickal purposes. As such, it will always occupy a special place in my heart. Additionally, some of the recipes are quite good, and have found a permanent place in my repertoire. I am particularly fond of the Americana Pasta (I think that's what she called it - I always refer to it as "Patriotic Macaroni and Cheese") and the Blue Moon salad dressing. In fact, unable to find a source of borage with which to garnish the aforementioned mac and cheese, I was inspired to grow my own, and thus discovered a delightful new addition to my garden.
All that said, however, there are several things I found less than perfect about the book. I agree with the person who complained that she'd borrowed too many holidays from too many traditions. I will go further and say that I wish the recipes had been better organized. If I wanted to look up recipes for, say, prosperity, I had to check the index and then flip to recipes scattered throughout the book. Also, as I experimented with various recipes, I noticed that in many of them, the author seems to have been more concerned with making the numerology of the ingredients work out than with the actual result. Unfortunately, cooking just doesn't work that way. A dish needs what it needs, and you can't use more or less just because you'd like the numbers to work out to the appropriate numerological meaning for your purpose.
Since first purchasing this book many years ago, I have become a fairly competent kitchen witch in my own right. I rarely refer to this book anymore, as there are better books if one simply needs to look up the magickal correspondences of various foodstuffs (Cunningham's Encyclopedia of Wicca in the Kitchen is a must-have in any magickal kitchen), and if one is simply looking for something tasty to prepare for dinner or whatever, there are simply scads of cookbooks on the market that have much better recipes from a purely food standpoint, not to mention such online sites as Epicurious.com and the Food Network's website.
Still, once in a while it's fun to take it down and browse through it, and maybe even try something new or find a recipe that accomplishes some kind of magick that is relevant to my life at that point.
If you are completely new to the idea of kitchen witchery, and of using food to make magick, this book is a great introduction. If, however, you already have experience in this area, I'd recommend skipping it, or at the very least, checking it out of the library first to see whether you find it useful. | | |  | I'm never getting rid of this book! Nov 19, 2007 |
This is the book that started me on my journey into Kitchen Witchery.. :) Patricia is absolutely wonderful in turning the ordinary kitchen into a magical shrine (or even place of worship!). Whether you're looking to make a typical Tuesday night's dinner or prepare some ritual goodies for offerings, I guarantee you'll open this cookbook first. It's very easy to use and sorted by food categories.
If you ever feel disconnected from the powers & energies found in different foods, Patricia's heartfelt recipes will surely reconnect you. | | |  | Ummm...did we read the same book? Nov 8, 2007 |
| First of all, I have to say that this is the first Wiccan cookbook I have ever bought. I hated it. I hated everything about it. The recipies were unusual, but nothing, not even one, that sounded good enough to try cooking. The "magic" included here is suspect at best. I will try another cook book for Wiccan's but not one of hers. The whole tone of the book was actually kinda snotty, not at all like most kitchens witchs are. | | |  | knowing what to cook Apr 5, 2007 |
| This book has been so helpful in the holiday seasons. I have been able to find recipes for all to enjoy. Some may be put off my the name of the book, but it's what drew me in. Magic is in everything we do every day. | | | Write your own review about A Kitchen Witch's Cookbook
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