The analysis of cookbooks suggests that contrary to their Western European neigh- bors, the French of the fourteenth century did not hâve a taste for sweet things. Later, the constant expansion of sugar consumption shows that they did acquire a taste for sweets. However, beginning in the seventeenth century, an increasingly clear distinction is made between which foods can be sweetened and which can be salted. Their position within the course of a meal was specified with greater and greater précision.The analysis of cookbooks suggests that contrary to their Western European neigh- bors, the French of the fourteenth century did not hâve a taste for sweet things. Later, the constant expansion of sugar consumption shows that they did acquire a...
Entre 1651 et 1799, l'édition culinaire de langue française connaît une efflorescence sans précédent...
The aim of this article was to establish if Le cuisinier françois, the famous cookbook published in ...
Aesthetics and \u2018good table\u2019 have a lot in common. The whole Eighteenth century is swinging...
Taste and Necessity : Some Thoughts about the Use of Fats in Western European Cooking (14h-l6th cent...
International audienceThe analysis of culinary treatises makes it possible to follow the evolution o...
International audienceThe analysis of culinary treatises makes it possible to follow the evolution o...
VON HOFFMANN Viktoria, From Gluttony to Enlightenment : The World of Taste in Early Modern Europe, C...
Scorned since antiquity as low and animal, the sense of taste is celebrated today as an ally of joy,...
Perspective gourmande et importance des cinq sens dans les contes de fées entre 1691 et 1756. Dimens...
Gilly Lehmann : English cooks and French cuisine. French food was fashionable in 18th-century Engla...
Ouvrage issu de la journée d'études du 13 mars 2014 à l'Université de Haute Alsace sur le thème : "l...
From five culinary treatises written in Paris and Southern France (Forez, Eastern Languedoc), we tri...
peer reviewedThis paper explores the intersection between taste and education in the early modern p...
During the 18th century, food gifts are a widespread social practice throughout the South-West Franc...
Attitudes regarding sugar and sweetness have been subject to remarkable shifts in the course of hist...
Entre 1651 et 1799, l'édition culinaire de langue française connaît une efflorescence sans précédent...
The aim of this article was to establish if Le cuisinier françois, the famous cookbook published in ...
Aesthetics and \u2018good table\u2019 have a lot in common. The whole Eighteenth century is swinging...
Taste and Necessity : Some Thoughts about the Use of Fats in Western European Cooking (14h-l6th cent...
International audienceThe analysis of culinary treatises makes it possible to follow the evolution o...
International audienceThe analysis of culinary treatises makes it possible to follow the evolution o...
VON HOFFMANN Viktoria, From Gluttony to Enlightenment : The World of Taste in Early Modern Europe, C...
Scorned since antiquity as low and animal, the sense of taste is celebrated today as an ally of joy,...
Perspective gourmande et importance des cinq sens dans les contes de fées entre 1691 et 1756. Dimens...
Gilly Lehmann : English cooks and French cuisine. French food was fashionable in 18th-century Engla...
Ouvrage issu de la journée d'études du 13 mars 2014 à l'Université de Haute Alsace sur le thème : "l...
From five culinary treatises written in Paris and Southern France (Forez, Eastern Languedoc), we tri...
peer reviewedThis paper explores the intersection between taste and education in the early modern p...
During the 18th century, food gifts are a widespread social practice throughout the South-West Franc...
Attitudes regarding sugar and sweetness have been subject to remarkable shifts in the course of hist...
Entre 1651 et 1799, l'édition culinaire de langue française connaît une efflorescence sans précédent...
The aim of this article was to establish if Le cuisinier françois, the famous cookbook published in ...
Aesthetics and \u2018good table\u2019 have a lot in common. The whole Eighteenth century is swinging...