Title
The title refers to a quote from Ellen White, a founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church: "The one who understands the art of properly preparing food, and who uses this knowledge, is worthy of higher commendation than those engaged in any other line of work. This talent should be regarded as equal in value to ten talents", which references the Parable of the Talents.Description
The 1968 edition consisted of 750 plant-based, whole food recipes for adults and infants, along with glossaries of natural ingredients, tables of equivalents, nutritional information charts,Publishing history
The cookbook was originally self-published in May 1968. It was updated in 1985; at that time it was published by College Press of Collegedale, Tennessee. In 1991, it was entering its 44th printing and had sold more than 250,000 copies. The cookbook was expanded in 2012 to encompass more than 1,000 recipes. In 2014 the cookbook was in its 48th printing. It has always been published in a spiral binding. Jonathan Kauffman, writing in ''Hippie Food'' (2018), said it sold hundreds of thousands of copies.Reception
In 1971 the '' Santa Cruz Sentinel'' called the book "one of the very few completely natural foods cookbooks", and in 1977 the North American Vegetarian Society recommended the book as an encyclopedia of vegetarian cooking. In 1994 '' Vegetarian Times'' named it to their list of "Cookbooks You Can't Live Without" as a runner-up to the category of "Best Cookbooks for Beginners", saying it had been one of the few resources for vegetarian cooks in the late 1960s and early 1970s and was still one of the best general references. The 2004 ''Dietitian's Guide to Vegetarian Diets'' called it the classic Seventh-day Adventist cookbook. In 2017 '' Washington Post'' Food Editor Joe Yonan listed it as one of three "must-have classic vegetarian cookbooks". Vegan teacher and cookbook authorCritical reviews
In 1976 Connie I. Dahlke, Chief Therapeutic Dietician at Boulder Memorial Hospital, sent a letter reviewing the book to the bookstore manager at the Colorado Conference of Seventh-Day Adventists in Denver; copies had been forwarded to hospital and university nutrition and home economics department heads and to the authors. The letter contained a 21-point negative review of the cookbook and asked that it be removed from sale. Among the criticisms were the book's preference for raw sugar and honey over brown sugar and refined white sugar; the claim that "sunflower seeds, almonds and coconut are 'valuable sources' of Vitamin D... when in fact they contain no Vitamin D"; and an assertion that "monstrous statements about the ingredients of ice cream... and objections to meat eating... reveal emotionalism and poor judgment". The authors reportedly responded to the criticisms by "making many changes" in the text before the next reprinting. A 1977 article in ''Awards
The cookbook won a Silver Medal in the Cooking/Natural category at the 2009 Living Now Book Awards.Authors
Rosalie Hurd (b. April 1937) is a nutritionist and home economist. Frank Hurd (b. March 1936) is a doctor of chiropractic and medicine. They are Seventh-day Adventists and proponents of Christian vegetarianism, and met at Atlantic Union College, a now-defunct Seventh-day Adventist institution. At the time of the book's first publication they lived in Chisholm, Minnesota, and ran a health-food store and sold a breakfast cereal called "Get Up and Go". As of 2014 they lived inReferences
Sources
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* {{Veganism and vegetarianism Vegetarian cookbooks Vegan cuisine American cookbooks Christian vegetarianism Seventh-day Adventist Church Vegan cookbooks Vegetarian-related mass media Collaborative non-fiction books 1968 non-fiction books