Cookbook celebrates 100th anniversary of a name that’s well known in home kitchens The first Betty Crocker cookbooks appeared in the 1930s and ‘40s, with the first picture cookbook published in 1950, ...
“Betty Crocker Lost Recipes: Beloved Vintage Recipes for Today’s Kitchen,” Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $25, 240 pages, hardcover Check out “Betty Crocker Lost Recipes: Beloved Vintage Recipes for Today ...
At 90, Betty Crocker is a hip gal, with a bacon martini in one hand, a caramelized pot roast in the slow cooker, tofu on the menu, Sriracha pickles in the refrigerator, vegan chocolate cupcakes for ...
Also, the Betty Crocker cookbook series has published more than 300 titles on subjects ranging from boys and girls, Christmas cookies, entertaining and diabetes to Indian and Mexican home cooking and ...
MINNEAPOLIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--At home, at the store or anywhere in between, more than 10,000 of the most popular, time-tested Betty Crocker® recipes are just a fingertip away with the new Betty ...
“300 Calorie Comfort Food: 300 Favorite Recipes for Eating Healthy Every Day,” By Betty Crocker (Houghton, Mifflin Harcourt, $19.99) Quick look: Betty Crocker’s latest cookbook helps make healthy ...
It's a branded product recognizable to most Americans, whether grabbed blearily from the cupboard on weekend mornings to produce a pancake breakfast or picked up in the supermarket to make quick ...
IN THESE TRYING times, it would seem natural to crave what we used to call “Comfort Food.” But the whole notion is fraught with challenges. For one thing, what comforts the goose doesn’t necessarily ...
Come to find out about it, there’s a classic, time-honored frosting called white mountain, and it may well be what Katie Carpenter of Everett was hoping for when she asked if readers could reconnect ...
Betty Crocker has a simple recipe: Keep changing. In October, the icon became a centenarian and has now wrapped up her 100th holiday baking season. General Mills, the company that owns her likeness, ...
In the spring of 1945, the best-known woman in America, according to a survey by Fortune magazine, was first lady Eleanor Roosevelt. The second-best-known woman? Well, that would be one Betty Crocker.