Help us preserve our heritage.

If you have old Iowa menus, brochures, or flyers, a collection of Iowa cookbooks, or your grandmother's handwritten recipe book, please consider donating them to the Iowa State Univerisity, Iowa Cookbook Collection. Old Menus, brochures, and recipes are invaluable for scholars. We will preserve them and make them available to researchers from around the world.

Contact:

If you have questions concerning the
Iowa Cookbook Collection in the Iowa State University Library, please contact please contact the Special Collections Department
Phone: 515-294-6672
archives@iastate.edu.

Donors of the Iowa Cookbook Collection

In the 1990s, the ISU library received a large gift of over 12,000 cookbooks and cooking related material from Robert F. Smith of What Cheer, Iowa. This donation also included many recipe booklets from Iowa companies such as Quaker Oats, Maytag, and Amana. This flagship gift has been substantially expanded through the generosity of Iowa's churches, women's groups, historical societies, and libraries donating copies of their books to the Iowa Cookbook Collection. The library is still actively pursuing additional Iowa cookbooks, particularly historical ones. Below is a list of those whom have donated to the Iowa Cookbook Collection.

Robert F. Smith

Robert Smith is a retired army cook and cook book collector from What Cheer, Iowa. Mr. Smith was born in What Cheer, Iowa in 1929, and began collecting cookbooks while serving in the United States Army from 1946-1968. He is a World War II, Korean War, and peace time veteran.  In his retirement, he has continued to collect cookbooks, as well as authoring two of his own.  In 1992, he generously donated nearly 12,000 pieces to the Iowa State collection including both cook books and cooking ephemera of all kinds.

 

Iowa Organizations

For the past 20 years, Iowa organizations such as churches, women's groups, historical societies, and libraries, have donated books to the Iowa Cookbook Collection. Many of these books include histories and other information about the organizations.  The collection has been increased by literally hundreds of cookbooks simply through the giving of individuals and organizations in Iowa.

 

 

 

Alice Westrum

Excerpts from a letter dated 2/13/2001 to D. Shonrock

"..I was the oldest girl of seven children so I learned to cook at a very early age. My mother was a wonderful cook and I learned by watching her. By the times I was 10 years old I had learned to bake bread and that was the beginning of my love of cooking and baking. I had saved many of Mother's recipes while growing up and tried and collected recipes for 48 years of my married life. I worked 13 years as head cook at Trinity Lutheran Church and School in Boone, Iowa. As I made out menus, I would enlarge my recipes to serve 80-100 or more people. When I retired I decided to put my recipe collection into books so I could save time looking for the right recipe. This is a 60 year old collection and over 1600 recipes.  After publishing the first set we decided to make a third book called Great Tastes in Quantity for those who like to cook for large crowds. After retiring my husband and I did a lot of catering for crowds of 100-300 people… Many thanks to my mother - I have enjoyed the art of cooking and baking for 55 years and now it is time to hang up my apron."

Gladys Hertzberg

Gladys Hertzberg provided a $5,000 grant to the Iowa Cookbook Collection that is being used to purchase added cookbooks for the collection and provided for the cost of digitizing Kitchen Klatter and some historical cookbooks including: Mrs. Welch's Cook Book, Woman Suffrage Cook Book, and Suffrage Cook Book.

Family of Leanna Driftmeier

Over the period of the last year, I have been privileged to talk with and meet several members of the Driftmeier family. This collection has benefitted from the gifts of Leanna's daughter Mrs. Marjory Strum and her grandniece Juliana Lowry. It is with their permission that we acquired have digitized the entire run of Kitchen Klatter Magazine and the Kitchen Klatter Cookbook plus a number of other pieces of ephemera from the Kitchen Klatter radio show on KFNF/KMA in Shenandoah, IA.