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500 Things to Eat Before It's Too Late: and the Very Best Places to Eat Them |  | Authors: Jane Stern, Michael Stern Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Category: Book
List Price: $19.95 Buy New: $9.00 as of 3/11/2010 04:29 CST details You Save: $10.95 (55%)
New (37) Used (13) from $8.98
Seller: Alenn J Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 6461
Media: Paperback Pages: 448 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.2 x 0.9
ISBN: 0547059078 Dewey Decimal Number: 647.9573 EAN: 9780547059075 ASIN: 0547059078
Publication Date: June 4, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
What are the all-time best dishes America has to offer, the ones you must taste before they vanish, so delicious they deserve to be a Holy Grail for travelers? Where’s the most vibrant Key lime pie in Florida? The most sensational chiles rellenos in New Mexico? The most succulent fried clams on the Eastern Seaboard? The most memorable whoopie pies, gumbos, tacos, cheese steaks, crab feasts? In 500 Things to Eat Before It’s Too Late, "America’s leading authorities on the culinary delights to be found while driving" ( Newsweek) return to their favorite subject with a colorful, bursting-at-the-seams life list of America’s must-eats. Illustrated throughout with mouth-watering color photos and road maps, this indispensable guide is organized by region, then by state. Each entry captures the food in luscious detail and gives the lowdown on the café, roadside stand, or street cart where it’s served. When "bests" abound—hot dogs, hamburgers, pizza, apple pie, doughnuts—the Sterns rank their offerings. Sidebars feature profiles of idiosyncratic creators, recipes, and local attractions. Amazon.com ReviewProduct DescriptionWhat are the all-time best dishes America has to offer, the ones you must taste before they vanish, so delicious they deserve to be a Holy Grail for travelers? Where’s the most vibrant Key lime pie in Florida? The most sensational chiles rellenos in New Mexico? The most succulent fried clams on the Eastern Seaboard? The most memorable whoopie pies, gumbos, tacos, cheese steaks, crab feasts? In 500 Things to Eat Before It’s Too Late, "America’s leading authorities on the culinary delights to be found while driving" ( Newsweek) return to their favorite subject with a colorful, bursting-at-the-seams life list of America’s must-eats. Illustrated throughout with mouth-watering color photos and road maps, this indispensable guide is organized by region, then by state. Each entry captures the food in luscious detail and gives the lowdown on the café, roadside stand, or street cart where it’s served. When "bests" abound--hot dogs, hamburgers, pizza, apple pie, doughnuts--the Sterns rank their offerings. Sidebars feature profiles of idiosyncratic creators, recipes, and local attractions. Memorable Mileposts from 500 Things To Eat Before It's Too Late: and the Very Best Places To Eat Them (Click on Images to Enlarge) Don't Miss Marquees Chicken Annies in Pittsburg, KS | Burgerville in Portland, OR | Leonard's Pit Barbecue in Memphis, TN | The Cherry Hut in Beulah, MI | Must-Eat Meals Deep Fried Hot Dogs at Rawley's in Fairfield, CT | Huckleberry Sundae at Ekstrom's State Station in Clinton, MT | Cinnamon Roll at Gus Balon's in Tucson, AZ | Barbecued Oysters at Hog Island Oyster Company in Marshall, CA | |
| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 15
On the Food Road Again May 25, 2009 wogan (Indiana&Maryland- U.S.A.) 39 out of 41 found this review helpful
On the Road Again
Once again Jane and Michael Stern have come up with a food guide, or rather a guide to places where you can get `real' food. Food that one just longs to eat -pies, ice cream, cake, ribs, just think of anything that you are warned is not health food... that is food to long for. Who wouldn't want to find the best, or the 500 things to eat before it's too late. Now whether that is too late for you or too late for these wonderful places to exist is a matter of conjecture.
The book itself is arranged in a different manner than the Sterns' other food books and most other foodie guides. First there are colored `tabs' for the different regions of the US - New England, Mid Atlantic, South, Midwest, Southwest and Great Plains and West. So you can immediately find the section of the country you want. At the beginning of each chapter is a map with the names of featured towns. Then each state list is divided into foods, such as Crumb Cake, Stuffed Ham, French Fries with the town and page numbers. Once you get used to this style it is easy to find information. The size of the book is very portable. Less than 1 inch thick and approximately 5 x 8 inches. Pages are smooth and colorful with plenty of pictures both of food and the stores themselves.
The back has two indexes; one to eateries, divided by state and city, handy if you are sitting somewhere looking for something other than golden arches and a general index which lists eateries, food, even a few recipes that are included.
Phone numbers, addresses, web sites are included - always helpful information Of course there are the reviews and information, sometimes a history or other fascinating tidbits. Better than just plain information is the poetic love of great food. I was impressed with several regional specialties that you will not find elsewhere and the style with which they are written of. When they write of southern Maryland's little known stuffed ham, they write of a dish that exists no where but in an ancient spit of land where the air smells of the sea - how can you resist the hunt for something like that?
My only complaint and frustration is the placement of National Best lists, which inexplicably are stuck in different places of the book and will for example list a food item from another region of the country -pizza in New England section, but Franks is in Illinois and then is not listed in the Illinois - Midwest section. That makes no sense. But it still isn't frustrating enough to give up on this as a guide, just surprising for what I expect from the Sterns
I have given these books as wedding presents, as going away presents and even to a friend from England who drove cross country - he now thinks America is the greatest country in the galaxy. How else could he or you for that matter find johnnycakes, shoofly pie, conch chowder, cinnamon buns, green corn tamales or huckleberry sweets. This book might be the utmost reason ever for a cross country trip. This is why I use these Road Food books as my traveling and local guides. This is my new guide that I can see will lead us to continued adventures, meeting the locals and going places that we might have by-passed on the super highways of life. Read this, follow some food adventures before it is too late
A Foodie Speaks Out June 30, 2009 Food Addict (Goose Creek, SC, USA) 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
I bought "500 Things To Eat..." because I am a Stern's Junkie. I love these guys and the way they write up the places they visit, hear about or imagine in their minds. I don't always agree with their assessments of places or dishes but I spend hours reading and re-reading their books. Good Book, Good Price, Good Reading! )
An outstanding acquisition that stands apart from your usual travel guide September 18, 2009 Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Any traveler in America who wants to sample cheap eats and local specialties will find 500 Things to Eat Before It's Too Late the perfect take-along tote. It covers everything from beachside stands and Texas barbecue to regional dishes that don't get much publicity outside their hometowns. Maps, color sidebars of information, unique places to shop - and recipes - make this an outstanding acquisition that stands apart from your usual travel guide.
Great Resource November 11, 2009 G. Hect (Linden, Michigan) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
We just got back from a five week road trip out west and back. This book was a great resource during the trip. We would spend a couple of days in a town and look to see what the book suggested. It was an adventure and the book provided an eating diversion from the regular hit and miss. It never disappointed, food was as described and made for destinations to see that we would not normally venture to. Well worth the purchase.
The Enrico Biscotti Company in Pittsburgh June 5, 2009 Jordan Kay 11 out of 16 found this review helpful
They were right! Just visited The Enrico Biscotti Company in Pittsburgh, PA. Attended one of their bread classes and WOW! Enrico/Larry is such an exciting guy and the stories with all the history about the importance of bread is just fantastic. Yes, the biscotti is incredible too! - Thanks Michael & Jane for this recommendation.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 15
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