“A porterhouse steak for .25 cents? No thanks, we’ll eat at home!”

Elizabeth Garraux, the central figure of my novel, “When He Was Gone,” became well-known for being a great cook during the late 1800s in Greenville. A newspaper article even mentioned the tantalizing smells of freshly baked bread, and meats slow-roasted in brown sugar and spices coming from her kitchen. So, what was cooking and dining…