Welcome!

When I started The Ferguson Recipes in 2006, my main goal was to create a place where I could collect and present our favorite family recipes in an orderly fashion, without all of the distractions of other recipe sites. Here you won't find step-by-step instructions with photos or annoying pop-ups telling you where you can buy the ingredients. At The Ferguson Recipes you will find recipes, plain and simple, just like the recipe cards you have crammed into that well worn binder of your family's most beloved recipes.

Many of the recipes included here are Ferguson family favorites passed down through the years. Many more are recipes we have gotten from friends or shamelessly "adopted" from other recipe sites. And a lot of the recipes are from three recipe collections which family members have participated in creating: "Cooking with Carl, Hugh and your Friends", "Cooking With Cow", and "The Sears Sun Cookbook"

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Thanks,

'Uncle' Dave Ferguson - 8/13/18 (A Palindrome Date)


Founded Founded April 13, 2006   
Copyright 2006 - 2024 fergusonrecipes.com
Our oldest family recipe from Missouri Ann Ferguson, grandmother of J. Carl Ferguson, Jr. (and my great-grandmother), in her own handwriting.
Written by Missouri Ann Ferguson in 1864
"The Politics of Cuisine" is an upcoming publicatioon by University of California, Merced Political Science professors Nathan Monroe and Courtenay Conrad, dedicated to investigating how politics--government actions, and citizens reactions to those actions--shape and change cuisine. Here we bring these stories to life by sharing the recipes behind the stories!

Dave Ferguson - 10/04/22

In 1974, J. Carl Ferguson, Jr. of Kaiser Aluminum, and Hugh Griffiths of Sangamo Electric, put together a cookbook for the annual meeting of the E.E.I. Purchasing and Stores Committee (an electrical products industry group). This cookbook included many recipes of the committee members and their wives - mostly the wives - and was called "Cooking with Carl, Hugh and Your Friends". I have tried, as much as possible, to leave the text exactly as written, except where it didn't make sense (and a couple of them still don't make sense, but they're in the cookbook anyway). The women who contributed most of the recipes were middle-class housewives, many of whom were born during the depression and grew up during WWII. Most of them didn't work outside the home; they stayed home to take care of the kids and the house. This was just before the birth of "women's liberation", and many of them were identified by their husband's name: Mrs. John Smith, for example. The nice thing about "Carl and Hugh" is that it does give you a glimpse into what families were eating in the 60s and 70s.

By the way, we haven't tested many of these recipes, so if you find an error, let us know. Some of these recipes are fairly old and ingredients commonly available when they were written may not be so common now. Many of the recipes suggest using "oleo", which is what margarine used to be called, back when dinosaurs roamed the earth. Also, I recently noticed that there are a lot of recipes that include MSG as an ingredient. Most of them are probably fine without it.

Dave Ferguson - 10/09/14
"Cooking With Cow" has nothing to do with beef. Well, there might be some beef recipes in there, but Cow is actually a nickname for my sister, Carol Ferguson Jancsi. She put together her cookbook over many years, giving out new pages as she added them. Unlike the Carl and Hugh recipes, most of Cow's recipes have been tested by someone still living to tell about it.

Dave Ferguson - 6/27/18

Way back in my sordid past, sometime in the middle 1990s, I helped put together a collection of recipes by folks at my work called "The Sears Sun". You guessed it: I worked at Sears in Modesto, California, for waaaay too long. The cookbook never got printed, but it has remained alive on my computer and it is part of The Ferguson Recipes. Some of the recipes are just plain weird. I think there is one for Italian Chicken that involves dumping a bottle of Wishbone Italian on chicken for a few hours and then cooking it. Simple, but weird.

Dave Ferguson - 6/27/18

Our Aunt Gussie Rush left a big card file full of recipes, most of them neatly type on 3" x 5" index cards. As of the date below, I have begun transcribing those recipes. Gussie was born in 1911 and died in 1997; most of her recipes are from the 1940s thru the 1980s. There is a lot of margarine and a lot of shortening, and a lot of terms that we don't even use today.
One thing I do love about Gussie's files is that the recipe cards are impeccably typed, as she had been an executive secretary for most of her career. It is these cards that influenced the way I want measurements and abbreviations to be formatted here.
Dave Ferguson - 1/30/22
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Founded Founded April 13, 2006   
Copyright 2006 - 2024 fergusonrecipes.com
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