Tag: Bourbon

Kentucky Sweets Bourbon Balls, Spoonbread & Mile High Pie


Free Download Kentucky Sweets: Bourbon Balls, Spoonbread & Mile High Pie By Sarah C. Baird
2014 | 192 Pages | ISBN: 1625849052 | EPUB | 5 MB
Kentuckians from frontiersmen to modern-day pastry chefs have put their marks on the state’s baking history. Residents of the commonwealth have plenty of rich recipes and time-honored traditions, like pulling parties, where folks would gather to make taffy. Stack cakes originated from Appalachian weddings, where guests would each offer a layer of cake to the bride and groom, who then added the jam to hold the creation together. The decadent Modjeska confection gets its name from a Victorian-era candy maker’s crush on a popular Polish actress. Join author Sarah Baird on a whirlwind trip–complete with recipes–that examines the delectable history of unique Kentucky treats from pawpaws to chocolate gravy..

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Kentucky Bourbon & Tennessee Whiskey


Free Download Kentucky Bourbon & Tennessee Whiskey By Stephanie Stewart-Howard
2015 | 256 Pages | ISBN: 1493018345 | EPUB | 6 MB
Kentucky Bourbon and Tennessee Whiskey serves as a guide to regional tourists and to armchair aficionados highlighting the major distilleries and up and coming micro distilleries, largely along the I-65 through Bluegrass Parkway Whiskey and Bourbon Corridor from the Alabama border through Tennessee and across Kentucky. In the course of that tour, readers can explore the history of spirit production in the region and learn to nuances of tasting. Included are more than 50 cocktail recipes from the distillers themselves and well-known mixologists from the region.

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The Art of Professing in Bourbon Mexico Crowned-Nun Portraits and Reform in the Convent


Free Download The Art of Professing in Bourbon Mexico: Crowned-Nun Portraits and Reform in the Convent By Córdova, James M
2014 | 252 Pages | ISBN: 0292753152 | PDF | 48 MB
In the eighteenth century, New Spaniards (colonial Mexicans) so lauded their nuns that they developed a local tradition of visually opulent portraits, called monjas coronadas or "crowned nuns," that picture their subjects in regal trappings at the moment of their religious profession and in death. This study identifies these portraits as markers of a vibrant and changing society that fused together indigenous and Euro-Christian traditions and ritual practices to construct a new and complex religious identity that was unique to New Spain.To discover why crowned-nun portraits, and especially the profession portrait, were in such demand in New Spain, this book offers a pioneering interpretation of these works as significant visual contributions to a local counter-colonial discourse. James M. Cordova demonstrates that the portraits were a response to the Spanish crown’s project to modify and modernize colonial society–a series of reforms instituted by the Bourbon monarchs that threatened many nuns’ religious identities in New Spain. His analysis of the portraits’ rhetorical devices, which visually combined Euro-Christian and Mesoamerican notions of the sacred, shows how they promoted local religious and cultural values as well as client-patron relations, all of which were under scrutiny by the colonial Church. Combining visual evidence from images of the "crowned nun" with a discussion of the nuns’ actual roles in society, Cordova reveals that nuns found their greatest agency as Christ’s brides, a title through which they could, and did, challenge the Church’s authority when they found it intolerable.

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Fealty and Fidelity The Lazarists of Bourbon France, 1660-1736 The Lazarists of Bourbon France, 1660-1736


Free Download Seán Alexander Smith, "Fealty and Fidelity: The Lazarists of Bourbon France, 1660-1736: The Lazarists of Bourbon France, 1660-1736 "
English | ISBN: 1138380008 | 2019 | 240 pages | PDF | 2 MB
The career of the French saint Vincent de Paul has attracted the attention of hundreds of authors since his death in 1660, but the fate of his legacy – entrusted to the body of priests called the Congregation of the Mission (Lazarists) – remains vastly neglected. De Paul spent a lifetime working for the reform of the clergy and the evangelization of the rural poor. After his death, his ethos was universally lauded as one of the most important elements in the regeneration of the French church, but what happened to this ethos after he died? This book provides a thorough examination of the major activities of de Paul’s immediate followers. It begins by analysing the unique model of religious life designed by de Paul – a model created in contradistinction to more worldly clerical institutes, above all the Society of Jesus. Before he died, de Paul made very clear that fidelity to this model demanded that his disciples avoid the corridors of power. However, this book follows the subsequent departures from this command to demonstrate that the Congregation became one of the most powerful orders in France. The book includes a study of the termination of the little-known Madagascar mission, which was closed in 1671. This mission, replete with colonial scandal and mismanagement, revealed the terrible pressures on de Paul’s followers in the decade after his demise. The end of the mission occasioned the first major reassessment of the Congregation’s goals as a missionary institute, and involved abandoning some of the goals the founder had nourished. The rest of the book reveals how the Lazarists recovered from the setbacks of Madagascar, famously becoming parish priests of Louis XIV at Versailles in 1672. From then on, fealty to Louis XIV gradually trumped fidelity to de Paul. The book also investigates the darker side of the Congregation’s novel alliance with the monarch, by examining its treatment of Huguenot prisoners at Marseille later in the century, and its involvement with the slave trade in the Indian Ocean. This study is a wide-ranging investigation of the Lazarists’ activities in the French Empire, ultimately concluding that they eclipsed the Society of Jesus. Finally, it contributes new information to the literature on Louis XIV’s prickly relationship with religious agents that will surprise historians working in this area.

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