klaikungwon/Getty Images
Have you ever wondered what it would be like to eat like a president? So did Poppy Cannon. The food editor at
Ladies Home Journal and author of
The Can Opener Cookbook was inspired to write a presidential cookbook by her friend Eleanor Roosevelt; she even dedicated the tome,
The Presidents’ Cookbook: Practical Recipes from George Washington to the Present, to the former First Lady. Published in 1968, the book, co-written with Patricia Brooks, includes not just recipes, but everything you could ever want to know about how chief executives up to Lyndon B. Johnson entertained. Here are 15 recipes, updated by Cannon for modern chefs, that will help you eat like a commander-in-chief this Presidents Day.
10 restaurants for a romantic Valentine s Day date sethlui.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sethlui.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
friends@foxnews.com. onion, mushroom, jerk chicken. steve: you go ahead and work on that, and we re going to come over here to chef louie lujon from the ritz carlton. what are you making? lobster salad. i mix a little bit between u.s. and caribbean. we use caribbean lobster. steve: go ahead. we have very straightforward, a little bit of mayo, chives and that s it. avocado. with a little bit of cilantro. cilantro is local. we take a little bit of this lobster salad. that looks delicious. the finished product. steve: beautiful.
house side. and then the president said it s like moving between east and west germany here. did you hear him say that? brian: he hopped on the trolley. he did afterwards go to see a bunch of democrats on the other side. it was his fourth meeting in three days. so far by far they all agree the better spread republicans, special thanks to susan collins, used a maine lobster to make the lobster salad. the president just stared at the meal. did not eat. is there more to the story? absolutely. it turns out the president is steadfast in saying i m listening but we ve got to begin this talk by raising taxes. and then they got into some policy. alisyn: let s hear more about exactly what was said in these meetings. one of my favorite moments was when one of my colleagues said mr. president, it is not all that helpful to have you publicly questioning our motives, publicly accusing us of wanting to eviscerate medicaid, for example, simply because we want to