Home an e uth Mossok Johnston is very happy these days. Her three major interests — writing, cooking and early Americana — came together over the last two years to result in a stunning pro- ject, The Buffalo Cookbook: The Low Fat Solution to Eating Red Meat (Hancock House Publishers, $29.95). Sampling one of Johnston's recipes in her authentically fur- nished 1840 Greek Revival farm- house in Franklin is a unique experience. The period chairs are circa 1930. the table dates from the late 1700s, the bison and Ruth Mossok Johnston was on her feet serving dried-cherry kugel are in her Franklin kitchen. samples of the chili from 7 a.m.-6 p.m. for two days very 1995. The results straight. "We had the are proof positive that most popular booth at the buffalo meat tastes like beef, is not gamey, and is delicious convention," she says. Johnston's cookbook, which when prepared properly. "Some of the recipes in the book reached bookstores in October, is are labor intensive; some are very enhanced by beautiful illustrations simple," says the multi-talented and graphics by her husband, food authority who is a culinary renowned Americana artist David columnist for a local newspaper and Johnston. Her husband, she says, magazine. Last June, in prepara- is the reason she developed an in- tion for the annual American Book- terest in preparing buffalo meat in sellers Association convention in the first place. In 1987, David Johnston suffered Chicago, Johnston made 59 gallons of buffalo and black bean chili. She a heart attack and was warned not In a new cookbook, Ruth Mossok Johnston banks on buffalo. MARJ JACKSON LEVIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS