Skip to content
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL DOMESTIC ORDERS $35+
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL US ORDERS $35+

Dutch Treats: Heirloom Recipes from Farmhouse Kitchens

Availability:
in stock, ready to be shipped
Save 4% Save 4%
Original price $21.95
Original price $21.95 - Original price $21.95
Original price $21.95
Current price $20.99
$20.99 - $20.99
Current price $20.99
Internationally known food historian William Woys Weaver presents a richly photographed gastronomical journey into the heart of Pennsylvania Dutch food traditions, with more than 100 heritage recipes and the colorful stories behind them – including Shoofly Cake, New Year's Pretzels and the original Snickerdoodles. Dutch Treats shines a much-anticipated light on the vast diversity of authentic baked goods, festive breads and pastries that we call Pennsylvania Dutch (named for the German-speaking immigrants who settled there starting in the late 1600s).

ISBN-13: 9781943366040

Media Type: Hardcover

Publisher: St. Lynn's Press

Publication Date: 09-15-2016

Pages: 208

Product Dimensions: 8.10(w) x 8.10(h) x 0.70(d)

William Woys Weaver is an internationally known food historian and the author of 16 books. He is a rare 4-time winner of the prestigious IACP/Julia Child Cookbook Awards. His most recent gold medal went to Culinary Ephemera, 2010. His 1993 award-winning cookbook Pennsylvania Dutch Country Cooking will be included in the forthcoming anthology: 100 Great American Cookbooks of the 20th Century. Weaver’s most recent book, As American as Shoofly Pie was published by the Universityof Pennsylvania Press in 2013. Weaver is also the founder and director of the Keystone Center for the Study of Regional Foods, near Philadelphia. He maintains the Roughwood Seed Collection of heirloom food plants at the historic Lamb Tavern in Devon, Pennsylvania.williamwoysweaver.com

What People are Saying About This

Palmer Marinelli

“Those warm, buttery treasures were like a secret we knew only in Pennsylvania. Dr Weaver's latest book bridges our childhood and lifelong love of baked goods and sweets with the history and folklore that make enjoying them all the more soulful. These foods have already been shared across America, but here in Dutch Treats we get to appreciate and be proud of where they came from – and revel in the fact that we can continue to share them for time to come.” ~ Palmer Marinelli, chef at Another Planet

Spike Gjerde

“William Woys Weaver singlehandedly saved fish peppers and he is the reason that semmels, rusks and clafty pudding are on the menu at Woodberry Kitchen. Dutch Treats continues the essential work that includes Country Scrapple and Sauerkraut Yankees, with an authoritative yet affectionate portrait of Pennsylvania Dutch baking, connecting us with the traditions, people and landscape of this special place. Like a warm shoofly cake, Dutch Treats is a gift that will continue to enrich the conversation and our table.” ~ Spike Gjerde, chef, Woodberry Kitchen in Baltimore; 2015 James Beard Award for Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic

Jane Lear

"With his passion, energy, and discoveries in both kitchen and garden, William Woys Weaver has transformed the field of food scholarship – in fact, he is a national treasure. In Dutch Treats, he offers the definitive guide to a little-understood American regional cuisine." ~ Jane Lear, co-author of One Spice, Two Spice: American Food, Indian Flavors

Betty Fussell

“A new feast for the eye, mouth, mind, heart and soul, conjured by the Merlin of American Regional Cookery. Deliciously timeless.” ~ Betty Fussell, author of Masters of American Cookery; My Kitchen Wars and others

Dan Barber

"Here is one of Americas richest foodways, generously chronicled – and cooked – by one of our greatest culinary historians." ~ Dan Barber, author of The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food, chef/co-owner of Blue Hill and Blue Hill at Stone Barns restaurants

Rick Nichols

“Few culinary historians have written as lovingly and knowingly and, certainly, wittily as Will Weaver has on his favorite subject – the true offerings of the Pennsylvania Dutch kitchen. With Dutch Treats he puts fresh polish on the apple. It will be a treat, indeed, for the serious scholar as much as the adventurous home cook.” ~ Rick Nichols, former longtime food columnist for The Philadelphia Inquirer

From the Publisher

“A new feast for the eye, mouth, mind, heart and soul, conjured by the Merlin of American Regional Cookery. Deliciously timeless.” ~ Betty Fussell, author, Masters of American Cookery; My Kitchen Wars and others

“Ever since my first bite of shoofly pie as a child, I’ve been hooked on Pennsylvania Dutch treats. Now, thanks to William Woys Weaver’s delightful new guide, I can indulge in over one hundred tempting breads, cakes, cookies, puddings, and pies with equally tempting names: who can resist kissing buns, leopard cake, bellylaps, or purple pump pie? As the world’s foremost authority on Pennsylvania Dutch cooking, Weaver brings his recipes to life through tales of fact and fancy. I can’t wait to head to the kitchen!” ~ Darra Goldstein, Founding Editor of Gastronomica, Editor in Chief of The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets

"Here is one of Americas richest foodways, generously chronicled – and cooked – by one of our greatest culinary historians." ~ Dan Barber, author, The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food, chef/co-owner, Blue Hill and Blue Hill at Stone Barns restaurants

“Lavishly illustrated and culled from a lifetime of fieldwork in no less than twenty-five counties, Dutch Treats captures the wide diversity of Pennsylvania's folk culture of baking, and is a treasure trove of lesser-known recipes. Far from the contrived foodways of the Lancaster County tourist industry and beyond even the authentic local sources, which tend to be limited in their geographic range, Dr. Weaver delights with a broader spectrum of Pennsylvania’s baking traditions than anyone previously thought possible.” ~ Patrick J. Donmoyer, Pennsylvania German Cultural Heritage Center, Kutztown University

"With his passion, energy, and discoveries in both kitchen and garden, William Woys Weaver has transformed the field of food scholarship – in fact, he is a national treasure. In Dutch Treats, he offers the definitive guide to a little-understood American regional cuisine." ~ Jane Lear, co-author, One Spice, Two Spice: American Food, Indian Flavors

“Those warm, buttery treasures were like a secret we knew only in Pennsylvania. Dr Weaver's latest book bridges our childhood and lifelong love of baked goods and sweets with the history and folklore that make enjoying them all the more soulful. These foods have already been shared across America, but here in Dutch Treats we get to appreciate and be proud of where they came from – and revel in the fact that we can continue to share them for time to come.” ~ Palmer Marinelli, chef, Another Planet

"The name William Woys Weaver guarantees us original research into a freshly discovered subject. In Dutch Treats he explores his own home ground with 100 cakes, cookies and puddings from the Pennsylvania Dutch country that hark back to European traditions – with tempting illustrations of recipes such as Peach Schnitz and Saffron Bread. Schluppers, anyone?" ~ Anne Willan, culinary historian, writer, founder of École de Cuisine La Varenne

“Few culinary historians have written as lovingly and knowingly and, certainly, wittily as Will Weaver has on his favorite subject – the true offerings of the Pennsylvania Dutch kitchen. With Dutch Treats he puts fresh polish on the apple. It will be a treat, indeed, for the serious scholar as much as the adventurous home cook.” ~ Rick Nichols, former longtime food columnist for The Philadelphia Inquirer

“William Woys Weaver singlehandedly saved fish peppers and he is the reason that semmels, rusks and clafty pudding are on the menu at Woodberry Kitchen. Dutch Treats continues the essential work that includes Country Scrapple and Sauerkraut Yankees, with an authoritative yet affectionate portrait of Pennsylvania Dutch baking, connecting us with the traditions, people and landscape of this special place. Like a warm shoofly cake, Dutch Treats is a gift that will continue to enrich the conversation and our table.” ~ Spike Gjerde, chef, Woodberry Kitchen in Baltimore; 2015 James Beard Award for Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic

Darra Goldstein

“Ever since my first bite of shoofly pie as a child, I’ve been hooked on Pennsylvania Dutch treats. Now, thanks to William Woys Weaver’s delightful new guide, I can indulge in over one hundred tempting breads, cakes, cookies, puddings, and pies with equally tempting names: who can resist kissing buns, leopard cake, bellylaps, or purple pump pie? As the world’s foremost authority on Pennsylvania Dutch cooking, Weaver brings his recipes to life through tales of fact and fancy. I can’t wait to head to the kitchen!” ~ Darra Goldstein, Founding Editor of Gastronomica , Editor in Chief of The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets

Patrick Donmoyer

“Lavishly illustrated and culled from a lifetime of fieldwork in no less than twenty-five counties, Dutch Treats captures the wide diversity of Pennsylvania's folk culture of baking, and is a treasure trove of lesser-known recipes. Far from the contrived foodways of the Lancaster County tourist industry and beyond even the authentic local sources, which tend to be limited in their geographic range, Dr. Weaver delights with a broader spectrum of Pennsylvania’s baking traditions than anyone previously thought possible.” ~ Patrick J. Donmoyer, Pennsylvania German Cultural Heritage Center, Kutztown University

Anne Willan

"The name William Woys Weaver guarantees us original research into a freshly discovered subject. In Dutch Treats he explores his own home ground with 100 cakes, cookies and puddings from the Pennsylvania Dutch country that hark back to European traditions – with tempting illustrations of recipes such as Peach Schnitz and Saffron Bread. Schluppers, anyone?" ~ Anne Willan, culinary historian, writer, founder of École de Cuisine La Varenne