Rebecca Lang is a cookbook author, cooking instructor, and food writer.

With true southern hospitality, she welcomed Where We Cook into her Georgia kitchen. With true southern charm, she shows us around and shares with us her kitchen sentiments.

What three words would best describe your kitchen’s style?

Comfortable, warm, and functional

Why this style?

My kitchen has to perform as room for recipe testing but also as a gathering place for my family. It is the melding of these two very important functions that has created a room that is uniquely mine.

What do you enjoy most about your kitchen?

I enjoy the amount of counter space. There’s nothing worse than a lack of workspace. The room is just the right size for cooking comfortably with no more than a few steps needed between appliances.

What one feature in your kitchen do you consider pure indulgence?

My sink is nothing short of dreamy. I have a farmhouse sink that’s big enough to bath a small child and deep enough to wash any pot I own.

If you could change one thing about your kitchen, what would it be?

I would add several electrical outlets under the counter top so I could plug in handheld appliances wherever I want.

What three aromas most frequently permeate your kitchen?

Bacon, caramelized sugar, and the waxy scent of crayons.

How many cookbooks do you own? Any of those cookbooks have your name on the cover?

About 1,200 cookbooks have a home in my office. Three of those have my name on the cover.

What one feature in your kitchen is rather unusual?

I have a glass shelf of orchids suspended in my kitchen window over my sink. I can take in the delicate blooms as I wash dishes and the orchids love the steam from the hot water.

What is your warmest childhood memory involving a kitchen?

I remember running through my grandmother’s kitchen after tirelessly climbing the sweet gum tree in her yard. All the grownups would be hovering around the counters waiting for a fried fish supper while my sister and I darted through, still sweaty from the descent down the limbs. The kitchen was paneled in dark wood, had counters outlined in stainless steel and unique hammered metal drawer pulls. It was a small kitchen with just enough counter space for drying dishes or making biscuits, never both at the same time.

Whose kitchen do you most enjoy visiting today?

I love visiting any kitchen that has those I love in it. Be it at the beach, my parents’ house, or my best friend’s, it’s the people with me that make me enjoy whatever kitchen I find myself in.

Whom might we find in your kitchen with you?

Our King Charles Cavalier Spaniel, Miss Bea, is almost always at my feet as I cook. She’s constantly hoping something falls on the floor for her snack. My two small children and my husband are never far from the stools and the fridge.

Any favorite tunes on your cooking playlist?

At home, I tend to cook in silence. I treasure the quiet and tend to be surrounded by noise at every other turn. Cooking is therapeutic and I adore the tranquility.

Julia Child’s kitchen is now in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History. Where would you like your kitchen to be displayed one day?

A photograph of my kitchen on one of my future grandchildren’s counter would be amazing. If I can manage to pass along a fraction of the cooking legacy that was gifted to me, I’ve done my job as a mother and a cook.

I think you’re doing a great job. Thank you, Rebecca.

About Rebecca Lang

Home: Athens, Ga.
Occupation: cooking instructor, food writer, cookbook author
Latest book: Quick-Fix Southern
(Andrews McMeel Publishing, March 2011)

Website
Blog

Facebook

Anne Coleman: Food writer, recipe developer, mother of seven (seven!) children, genetically predisposed cookbook-collector, Short Order Mom for DisneyFamily.com … and kind enough to make time to share her kitchen and kitchen stories with Where We Cook. (Thanks, Anne!)

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Where We Cook Interview with Anne Coleman:

Kitchen style?kitchenColeman
Hectic, varied and classic all at the same time.

Inspiration?
Seven children, a picky husband and a culinary diploma.

Best thing?

That it’s mine. I shared a kitchen for years with my mother-in-law and although I loved aspects of it, the fact that it was never truly my own space was difficult. Now I’m free to create as I please – and I do.

Your indulgence?
The KitchenAid stand mixer. It was given to me, but I still find that it’s not completely necessary. I spent so many years kneading my own bread and whipping my own egg whites and cream that I sometimes forget that it’s there.

What would you change?
More counter space! That seems to be the boon of every cook I know. We all need more room. Most common aromas? Garlic, olive oil and yeast.

Cookbooks?
I have a collection of nearly 200 cookbooks and I’m not sure how many booklets and magazines. My mother had a collection of over 1,500 at one time; it’s got to be genetic.

Most unusual item?
Not unusual, but very individual is the lamp over our table. It’s a stained glass version that my father-in-law made. We cherish it much as he is no longer with us. It’s like having him at the dinner table each night.

Childhood kitchen memories?
In my family, our togetherness and love was so connected to food that it’s hard to choose just one memory. Up there with the best is my maternal grandmother’s kitchen. Nothing special to look at, she even had the washer and dryer in the corner of the room, but the love there was incomparable. We spent our summers in her kitchen and on warm summer evenings with the smells of corn fields floating in through the open windows and sounds of crickets and katydids chirping, the red-ripe and juicy tomatoes from her garden tasted all the better because of where we were.

Favorite kitchen to visit today?
My mother-in-law’s. My own mom has stopped cooking because of health issues, so my husband’s mom has been the only kitchen we visit – and happily so; she is a wonderful cook who loves to try new things and succeeds well at it.

Childhood play kitchen?
We played in the real kitchen – making things that we shouldn’t and most likely wasting food my mom needed. She never scolded us, though – just let us create and learn. The first thing I ever ‘made’ was a glass of sugarless iced tea when I was all of 3 years old.

In the kitchen with you?
My oldest daughter will stand and watch me cook and chat with me while I get my work done. The smaller children run in and out asking for food and generally getting underfoot.

Kitchen playlist?
I don’t listen to music when I cook simply because I don’t have any radio etc. there. I sang when I was younger and I still do it while I cook – lots of show tunes.

Julia Child’s kitchen is now in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History. Where would you like your kitchen to be displayed one day?
Maybe in a local museum because by then I’d become a local icon. I doubt it will happen, but you never know.

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About Anne:
anne 008

Anne Coleman
Lehigh Valley, PA, USA

Website: http://cookingwithanne.com
Blog: http://www.athousandsoups.blogspot.com
On Disney’s Family.com: http://family.go.com/food/pkg-cheap-eats
Twitter: http://twitter.com/anniepooh

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