SOAR Cookbook on sale now

April 16, 2018

Through The SOAR Cookbook, you can find a new favorite recipe and give back. The fund raising cookbook鈥攆eaturing more than 200 faculty, staff and student entries鈥攇oes on sale today.

 SOAR Cookbook
SOAR Cookbook

Want to make a Cluckin Good Chicken Salad?

Thanks to The SOAR Cookbook 鈥攁nd more specifically N鈥橩enge Gonzalez鈥攜ou can.

鈥淲hen most people take the first bite, they smack their lips, their eyes open wide and they say bawk. It鈥檚 that good and it needed a name to match,鈥 said Gonzalez, a senior international studies student and SOAR Office student assistant who volunteered to coordinate the making of the cookbook. 鈥淎ll of these recipes look so good. As I was reading through them鈥攕alads, desserts, and everything in between鈥攖o put the cookbook together, my mouth was watering.鈥

, the spiral-bound The SOAR Cookbook: Scrumptious Outpourings of A鈥檓aizing Recipes is $20; $15 for students. Cookbooks bought online can be picked up in the SOAR Office, 1038 CASL Building, starting Wednesday. Also beginning on Wednesday, cookbooks will be available for purchase in the SOAR Office.

The Student Outreach and Academic Resources (SOAR) program鈥檚 mission is to increase access to post-secondary education for non-traditional adult learners with financial need. All cookbook proceeds benefit the SOAR Support Fund, which helps students meet an unexpected financial hardship or defrays the cost of academic enrichment opportunities they might otherwise be unable to afford. For example, funds may go toward purchasing a textbook, repairing a student鈥檚 mode of primary transportation, technology fees and more.

鈥淣ontraditional students juggle many responsibilities, including financial ones. We want to remove as many barriers as we can,鈥 said Ellen Judge-Gonzalez, SOAR director. 鈥淏ut this cookbook goes even beyond fundraising. It鈥檚 really about community building.鈥

Judge-Gonzalez said since SOAR began cooking up the book last spring, students have come to the table to share family stories.

鈥淚 overheard them sharing the origin of recipes, comments about favorite dishes grandma made, how they added their own touch to a family recipe. It was good to hear so much conversation about it,鈥 she said. 鈥淔ood has a way of bringing people together.鈥

And it鈥檚 not just SOAR students. Faculty members, staff, retirees, alumni and SOAR Advisory Board members contributed approximately 200 recipes for the book.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 wait鈥鈥檝e already tried [William E. Stirton Professor Emeritus of Anthropology] Dan Moerman鈥檚 make-your-own mayo. It is delicious,鈥 said Judge-Gonzalez, who shared her mom鈥檚 Polish Kifle, a crescent-shaped cookie, recipe.

And Gonzalez, who graduates this month, can鈥檛 wait to put the book on her dining room shelf. An avid home chef, Gonzalez has dozens of cookbooks, but said The SOAR Cookbook will hold a special place on her shelf and in her heart.

鈥淚鈥檓 proud to have been a part of this cookbook. There was an investment by so many people and I had the opportunity to create something that brings us all together,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t took a year, but that is nothing compared to the lasting impact it will have for many of us. With the recipes and family stories, this cookbook can be passed down to the next generation.鈥