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Sherryl Woods - The Sweet Magnolias Cookbook: More Than 150 Favorite Southern Recipes

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Sherryl Woods The Sweet Magnolias Cookbook: More Than 150 Favorite Southern Recipes
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Fill your home with the freshly baked scent of luscious apple pie, the sizzle of peachy grilled chicken or the beckoning aroma of juicy roast lamb, all brought to life in this charming collection of recipes.
New York Times bestselling author Sherryl Woods invites you into the world of Serenity, South Carolina, where good food and good friends await. Based on her beloved Sweet Magnolias series, this gorgeous cookbook is full of Southern classics and heartwarming stories of friendship and fun. Join Dana Sue Sullivan, a popular character and Southern cook herself, as she shares her favorite down-home recipes as well as secrets, stories and small-town gossip from the world of the Sweet Magnolias!
Whether youre making flaky, buttery, too-good-to-be-true biscuits, or spicy seafood gumbo, the 150 recipes found in these pages will bring your family and friends together to celebrate the comforts of home.
From legendary margarita nights to indulgent Sunday brunches to heartening holiday meals, every recipe in this book is sure to infuse your life and your kitchen with the warmth of the South and the comfort of good food.

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New York Times USA TODAY Bestselling Author

SHERRYL WOODS
WITH C HEF T EDDI W OHLFORD
THE SWEET MAGNOLIAS COOKBOOK
150 F AVORITE S OUTHERN R ECIPES
SWEET MAGNOLIAS BOOKS by SHERRYL WOODS
Stealing Home A Slice of Heaven Feels Like Family Welcome to Serenity Home in Carolina Sweet Tea at Sunrise Honeysuckle Summer Midnight Promises Catching Fireflies Where Azaleas Bloom
INTRODUCTION
Throughout the Sweet Magnolias booksten of them to datefood plays an important role. Southern food. Grits and gravy. Fried chicken. Red velvet cake. Peach cobbler.

Bread pudding. Oh, my! I can gain ten pounds just writing about these things. As for eating them, its best I not go there, at least on a regular basis. Moderation, thats the key. I try to remember that in real life, if not in my fictional world of Serenity, South Carolina. The talk of food is particularly prominent in A Slice of Heaven , Dana Sues story centered around Sullivansher regional success story, a restaurant known for putting a new spin on traditional Southern dishes.

But foodand drinkalso come into play at the infamous margarita nights held by the group of old friends who call themselves the Sweet Magnolias, at the caf in The Corner Spa where less caloric offerings are available and in the many backyard get-togethers of the Sweet Magnolias and their families. These Southern gals are, you seelike the friends you have in your community or neighborhoodalways ready to share a meal and have some fun. As for myself, I have an interesting relationship with food: I love to eat! A little too much, perhaps. I also love to write about food. I guess I must be good at inventing things because the funny thing is, Ive never really considered myself much of a cook. While growing up, I didnt show much interest in learning to cook (I was too busy reading!), but by the time I was in my early teens, I was the default cook in my family.

My working mother hated to cook. My dad enjoyed it, but he also worked. If I expected dinner at a reasonable hour, I figured out that I had to make it, so I set out to learn a few basics. I managed to get food on the table most of the time. At least until the night my parents arrived home to find me standing in the yard in tears and cradling my hand, which Id managed to sear with hot grease, probably while attempting to fry chicken. That gave my mother pause.

In the end, though, I kept cooking. Nothing fancy, mind you. No baking pies or cakes. No exotic, complicated dishes. Just get-it-over-with meals that were edible. Once I was out and on my own, my repertoire expanded.

I was, after all, trying to impress a date from time to time. I recall the first Thanksgiving dinner I made for friends. I had to call my dad, the grand master of the Thanksgiving meal in our household, to figure out what on earth I was supposed to do with the turkey. He also coached me through our familys traditional dressing and how to perfect our favorite sweet potatoes with marshmallows. These days I do more writing about cooking than actual cooking, but I still like to get into the kitchen and try to impress some of my friends. It seems that a lot of them have taken cooking classes or belong to some gourmet club that hosts fancy monthly dinner parties.

Im traumatized every time I invite them to dinner, wondering how theyre going to react to my dishes. My proudest moment came a few days after Id grilled grouper and served it with a mango-papaya chutney Id made from scratch. A friend reported having a similar dish at a fancy restaurant we all love and said, Yours was better! So, apparently I do have my moments of culinary triumph. Then one day I was busy writing awayno doubt creating dishes on the page but not in the kitchenwhen my publisher suggested that it might be nice to have a cookbook reflecting all the many occasions on which food plays a comforting or celebratory role for the Sweet Magnolias. While I was still trying to wrap my mind around the thought (how would I ever write a cookbook?), along came an out-of-the-blue e-mail from a reader named Teddi Wohlford. Teddi said she loved the Sweet Magnolias books, then added that she identified particularly with Dana Sue because she, too, is a Southern chef.

She was also, as it turned out, the answer to my prayers. Teddi cooks! She caters! Shes published a couple of Southern cookbooks of her own! Well, you can see how this might be a match made in publishing heaven. Since the Sweet Magnolias series began, many of you have asked about recipes for some of the dishes mentioned. Here they are, along with many, many more created by Teddi, who (like Dana Sue) has put a new spin on many traditional Southern dishes and kicked em up a notch. I have worked my way through these incredible recipes and developed a whole new relationship with my treadmill along the way. But trust me, its been worth it.

I hope you enjoy them as much as I do! CONTENTS SWEET MAGNOLIAS MARGARITA NIGHTS Hey yall Im Dana Sue Sullivan - photo 1CONTENTS SWEET MAGNOLIAS MARGARITA NIGHTS Hey yall Im Dana Sue Sullivan - photo 2

CONTENTS SWEET MAGNOLIAS MARGARITA NIGHTS Hey yall Im Dana Sue Sullivan - photo 3
CONTENTS
SWEET MAGNOLIAS MARGARITA NIGHTS
Hey, yall. Im Dana Sue Sullivan, one of the three original Sweet Magnolias, and Ill be your guide through these pages. Ill tell you a little about myself, a lot about Serenity, South Carolina, and a few secrets Im probably supposed to be keeping to myself. Id like to believe the task was turned over to me because, as the owner of Sullivans, Im the best cook, but the truth is everyone else in Serenity is so darn busy. Or suddenly claims to be. You know how it goes.

Heres a little background on the Sweet Magnolias to start. Three of usHelen Decatur-Whitney, Maddie Maddox and Ihave been best friends since we met on the playground at Serenity Elementary School, which at the time was the only elementary school in town. Now there are two. Thats how small Serenity is, which can be both a blessing and a curse. Neighbors around here sure do have a way of getting in your business. I think they like to look at it as part of the small-town Southern charm, though personally Im a lot fonder of some of our other traditions.

At any rate, I wont say just how long ago it was when the three of us started calling ourselves the Sweet Magnolias, but I spotted my first gray hair the other day. That alone was almost traumatic enough to call for a margarita night. You see, thats what margarita nights are all about: friends getting together to support one another in a crisis, no matter how large or small. Helen, Maddie and I have faced our share of crises over the years, I can tell you that. Divorces, controversy, serious problems with our kids. We sometimes joke that Helen became a lawyer just because she knew wed all eventually land in so much hot water! Whenever theres trouble for any one of usor for any of the many women weve welcomed into the fold in recent yearsthe first thing we do is call for a margarita night.

It used to be that these get-togethers were impromptu, but now that there are so many of us and our schedules are so crazy, we have to plan for them. Either way, planned or spontaneous, Im not sure what wed do without these occasions when we can let off steam. Its not about Helens Lethal Margaritas, not really. Nor is it about my Killer Guacamole, though it is to die for, if I do say so myself. Its about friends supporting friends through tough times. Its about finding laughter through the tears, about giving advicewhether its wanted or not.

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