LINKS

LINKS

HERE ARE SOME LINKS TO FANTASTIC books and websites related to vintage stoves, pie, Hoosier cabinets, etc.

The Lost Art of Pie Making
Next to The Idle Hour cookbook, there's not a better volume than The Lost Art of Pie Making to have close to your Chambers stove.  Barbara Swell's homespun writing is all it takes to put me in the mood for pie.  Then there are the recipes and stories she includes for familiar and just plain crazy pies.  Mmmm-mm!  Just try to resist!  A fantastic gift book for all your pie loving friends.






The Hoosier Cabinet in Kitchen History
In good company with the Chambers stove as a perfect and uniquely American invention, the Hoosier cabinet was once ubiquitous, and is now practically forgotten.  This despite the famous personalities behind it's development, and it's roll as the first giant step in liberating women from household servitude.  In my opinion, the author, Nancy Hiller, has pulled off an admirable accomplishment by creating a compelling page turner about a piece of furniture!  A mesmerizing story due to Hiller's ability to pull together the same kind of historical threads as Devil in the White City.  I bet that if this were a handy sized paperback, it would be on the New York Times best seller list.





Chambers Stove Lovers website
THE website for Chambers stove enthusiasts.  Todd White's labor of love is the reason why owning a Chambers is so easy and satisfying:  lots of info, well organized, plenty of great photos and illustrations, and a forum that allows lots of sharing and learning.  No other vintage stove brand has a website, period.  We are so lucky to have ANY website, much less one as thorough and interesting as this.





Michael D. Morgan is another enthusiast author restoring life to forgotten perfection:  namely, the German-American neighborhood of Over The Rhine (OTR), during it's heyday between the 1880's and Prohibition.  Due to world-wide passion for the new lager beer, combined with Cincinnati's unique circumstances in place and time, OTR was, for an oh so brief period, one of Cincinnati's most vital economic engines, and a "must-see" international tourist destination of terraced beer gardens overlooking the Ohio River.  Morgan's excellent story telling skills trace the clash of cultures between Cincinnati's established powers (it's "real Americans) and the German laborer class pouring into the Queen City, producing and consuming an astonishing amount of beer until World War I.   OTR's demise is painfully traced from the war, through Prohibition, and up until it's very recent revival.  

Morgan doesn't just write about what he knows, he acts on it, being a primary force behind OTR's thoughtful revitalization via return of small breweries and community scaled development.  Like any historical author worth reading, Morgan creates drama utilizing thorough insight, combined with an ability to weave together so many relevant (and fascinating) facts.  Good beer, great story telling, intriguing history, making things happen:  if you are an enthusiast for any one of them, put this book on the top of your reading list.

3 comments:

Plant1965 said...

I'm curious if you have ever seen a 6 burner chambers imperial with 2 thermal pots? I recently came across a picture of one. I am wondering what the width of one of those would be and if there is a model number? More pics of you have them would be great! :)

Joseph Oliver said...

Plant1965:

You're probably totally disgusted that I haven't replied until now, 4 months late, but if you are still listening out there in the WWW, I'M SO SORRY I didn't answer earlier! Haven't figured out how to get notified on this thing when someone leaves a comment.

Anyway, the answer to your question is Yes, I have serviced an Imperial with two ThermoWells and two ovens. Can't recall the width though. I'd query the forum at http://chambersrangers.proboards.com/

Aleksandra said...

Hello! I have one of those 6 burner commercial Chambers stoves. It has a gas leak/thermostat problem in the larger oven. Would you please recommend where I could get it fixed and how much it might cost? I’m in Northern California. Thanks a bunch in advance!!