The Phoenix

‘MORE-WITH-LESS’

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Cara Longacre Hurst remembers testing many, many recipes. She was just a kidwhen her momwrote the “More-with-Less” cookbook, celebratin­g “simple, joyful eating.”

“We would have a new dish every night,” Hurst said. “We would give it a thumbs up or a thumbs down.”

Now she’s giving the 40th anniversar­y edition rave reviews and hopes her late mother, Doris Janzen Longacre, would be proud.

“It’s exciting to kind of have it in the spotlight again,” Hurst described. “It’s always been a wellloved book. A lot of people come up to me and talk about how much they’ve used it and passed it on.”

It’s sold almost a million copies.

“It was the first cookbook that I ever cooked things from growing up,” recalled Rachel Marie Stone, who updated and edited the new version. “My parents got the cookbook as a wedding gift.”

When the Mennonite Central Committee commission­ed “More-withLess,” Longacre reviewed recipe submission­s from around the world. Favorites like oatmeal bread remain along with “quite a few new recipes.”

“I think we really kept the iconic recipes and philosophy of eating exactly the same,” Stone said, while modernizin­g “what we understand about nutrition and what we understand about the environmen­t.”

“By and large, it’s the same cookbook we know and love,” agreed Amy Gin- Many readers love the recipe for Mahsi, Middle Eastern stuffed vegetables.

gerich, editorial director for MennoMedia. “It’s environmen­tal. It’s economical, and it’s faith-based… Doris was ahead of her time in all of them.”

Born out of concern for the hungry, “More-withLess” highlights the idea that “how we cook can change the world.”

“She talks in the book about meatless Mondays” and eating “in a way that’s sustainabl­e for our whole planet, which is just as relevant, if not more relevant today,” Gingerich said.

There’s also “this idea of eating with joy,” she added. “It’s just such a lovely phrase that really captures the ethos of ‘Morewith-Less.’”

In fact, Stone named her own cookbook “Eat with Joy.”

As for the new “Morewith-Less” - “it’s just beautiful,” she said. “It’s big. It’s got great photograph­s. It’s just a lovely book.”

Oatmeal Bread

Yields 2 loaves Combine in large bowl:

1 cup quick-cooking oats ½ cup whole wheat flour ½ cup brown sugar 1 tablespoon salt 2 tablespoon­s butter Pour over: 2 cups boiling water Stir in to combine. Combine, dissolving yeast:

1 tablespoon active dry yeast ½ cup warm water When batter is cooled to lukewarm, add yeast mixture. Stir in: 5 cups white flour

When dough is stiff enough to handle, turn onto floured surface and knead 5 to 10 minutes. Place in greased bowl,

cover, and let rise until doubled. Punch down and let rise again. Shape into two loaves and place in greased 9-by-5-inch pans. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 to 40 minutes. Cool on rack, brushing loaves with butter for a soft crust.

Option: For added texture, add ¼ cup bulgur wheat before the boiling water.

Mahsi

Serves 6

Vegetables Select a variety of vegetables to prepare for stuffing:

Tomatoes, bell peppers, zucchini, small eggplant

Cut off tops, reserving lids. Clean out center seedy portions, reserving tomato pulp.

Parboil three minutes to soften:

Leafy vegetables, such as cabbage and green grape leaves

Use newer grape leaves - old ones are tough. For easier stuffing, use leaves at least 4 inches long. Prepare stuffing.

Stuffing

Brown in skillet: ½ to 1 pound ground beef, pork, or lamb

1 large onion, finely chopped

3 cloves garlic, minced (optional) Add: 1 cup uncooked rice ½ cup parsley, minced Fresh mint or dill, or combinatio­n, to taste, chopped

2 cups tomato sauce plus any reserved tomato pulp

3 tablespoon­s butter or olive oil 1 teaspoon salt Dash pepper

Taste to check seasonings. Fill hollowed-out vegetables two-thirds full with

 ?? PHOTO BY EMILY RYAN ?? The new edition of “More-with-Less” is larger and full of color photos.
PHOTO BY EMILY RYAN The new edition of “More-with-Less” is larger and full of color photos.

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