Won on Ebay on Jan 12, 2013 for $20.50 plus shipping of $8.05. Seller was cliff4199 from Lodi, Wisconsin.
Manufactured between 1937-1957 per http://www.griswoldcookware.com/history.htm
Given to Kelley for her 29th birthday.
Won on Ebay on Jan 12, 2013 for $20.50 plus shipping of $8.05. Seller was cliff4199 from Lodi, Wisconsin.
Manufactured between 1937-1957 per http://www.griswoldcookware.com/history.htm
Given to Kelley for her 29th birthday.
This skillet was one we had before we began buying CI on Ebay. It came from Jeff’s mother and was given to Jeff on his 34th birthday.
Company Info: http://www.gcica.org/mfg-history/king_stove.html
The image below is a scan of the Knippenberg’s 2001 Thanksgiving Recipe Booklet. This is the pound cake she made every Thanksgiving.

By Mary Lynn Davis, before 1999. Transcribed by Tom
Secret – DO NOT measure the ingredients in this recipe carefully. If they are added based on what looks and feels right then the dish will be right.
Ingredients
Directions
From our original recipe collection is this one dated September 1997.
Inspired by Stracotto Aila Fiorentina from our copy of The Fine Art of Italian Cooking By Giuliano Bugialli.
Below was edited twice in 2021 to improve on my English and reflect what we have done for years.
The Italian pot roast is one large piece. The chuck or rump is preferred so it can cook a long time (the word stracotto means “Very well cooked”). Some fat must be left on, and, so the meat remains juicy on the inside, it is larded by drawing strips of pancetta through the inside with a larding needle (in Italy, ago lardellatore). The carrot, inserted through the center, helps to flavor the inside of the meat and is aesthetically pleasing when the meat is sliced.
Stracotto is cooked with the full red wine of the area where it is made. Barolo is used in Piedmont, in Tuscany, one of the fuller Chiantis.
Cut the onions, celery, and 3 of the carrots into ¼-inch pieces. Heat the olive oil in a large enameled castiron dutch oven (DO) and add the onions, celery, and carrots. Saute until the onions are beginning to be translucent.
In the meantime, insert a long, thin knife lengthwise all the way through the center of the meat making a large enough slit to insert the carrot. Withdraw the knife and fit the remaining carrot, whole, through the opening made by the knife.
Add more olive oil as needed and the meat coated with flour, salt, and pepper. Brown the meat pressed down through the vegetables so it is on the bottom of the DO. Once it is browned, add the wine, simmering until it evaporates. [Alternate – Brown the floured meat first. Remove the meat and saute the vegetables. Add the meat to the veggies with the flame on low sauteing very gently.]
After 15-20 minutes add the tomatoes and optional tomato paste if you want a thick marinara. Cover and simmer very slowly for about 2-3 hours depending on the size of the meat and quality. Add hot broth when needed and turning the meat several times. Taste for salt and pepper.
Alternately, and what we usually do, is break the meat into small chunks and serve it with the marinara on top of pasta.
This recipe is based on a dish made in small Italian Restaurant in Addicks on the west side of Houston in the 1980s. It led to Tom working a few Saturday afternoons there as a prep chef where the chef showed him how to cooked a dish for their early dinner before opening. Chicken Angelina was the first dish and the second was with clam, butter and garlic. That very short “job” led to owning many Italian cookbooks and gaining weight.
When he made it for the first time for Mary and Kelley it was a big hit. That eventually lead to Mary owning all his stuff. So, be careful to whom you serve it.
This is a fast dish that I often take too long to assemble. The heat is high– just enough to not burn the clarified butter. Have french bread ready to serve hot with the plate of antipasto or a Ceasar salad before making the chicken.
Note – The date of this post was set to be about the time Tom made that famous meal for Mary and Kelley. That was about 10 years after the time in the restaurant.