By Amy Tigner From the 1640s, recipes for chocolate drinks had been printed in English language books about chocolate; however, Hannah Woolley’s “To make Spanish Chaculata” in The Ladies Directory (1662) is, as far as I have been able to discern, the first in a printed cookbook in England. [1] The fact that Woolley identifies this recipe specifically as “Spanish” is significant because she is clearly indicating its foreign provenance and attendant associations; yet, the recipe already shows s..
By Sara Pennell Where do recipes fit into historical understanding of pedagogical processes around f...
This essay explores the importance of the cultural, social and power relationships within Europe to ...
El artículo "Del cacao al chocolate, entre paladares europeos y novohispanos. Siglos XVI al XVIII", ...
By Amy Tigner From the 1640s, recipes for chocolate drinks had been printed in English language book...
In The Queen-Like Closet (1670), Hannah Woolley publishes a second recipe, “To make Chaculato,” that...
By Amanda E. Herbert Ingredients in Eighteenth-Century Chocolate, Courtesy of the Historic Foodways...
By R.A. Kashanipour The Indies, personified as a maiden, give the gift of chocolate to the A...
This paper examines the first English translation of Colmenero's "Curioso Tratado de la Naturaleza y...
By R.A. Kashanipour In A New Survey of the West-Indies of 1655, the English friar Thomas Gage celebr...
By John Kuhn, Wesleyan University and Marissa Nicosia, Pennsylvania State University-Abington Colleg...
During the seventeenth century, the English were integrating foreign foods into their lives at an un...
Amanda E. Herbert Hans Sloane by Stephen Slaughter, 1736, National Portrait Gallery, London. Image ...
By R.A. Kashanipour Image 1 - Gifts of the locals. In this image appears as the frontpiece of a G...
For this guided history of chocolate our group chose to highlight key elements and moments in time f...
In 1796, the first American cookbook American Cookery by Amelia Simmons was published in Hartford, C...
By Sara Pennell Where do recipes fit into historical understanding of pedagogical processes around f...
This essay explores the importance of the cultural, social and power relationships within Europe to ...
El artículo "Del cacao al chocolate, entre paladares europeos y novohispanos. Siglos XVI al XVIII", ...
By Amy Tigner From the 1640s, recipes for chocolate drinks had been printed in English language book...
In The Queen-Like Closet (1670), Hannah Woolley publishes a second recipe, “To make Chaculato,” that...
By Amanda E. Herbert Ingredients in Eighteenth-Century Chocolate, Courtesy of the Historic Foodways...
By R.A. Kashanipour The Indies, personified as a maiden, give the gift of chocolate to the A...
This paper examines the first English translation of Colmenero's "Curioso Tratado de la Naturaleza y...
By R.A. Kashanipour In A New Survey of the West-Indies of 1655, the English friar Thomas Gage celebr...
By John Kuhn, Wesleyan University and Marissa Nicosia, Pennsylvania State University-Abington Colleg...
During the seventeenth century, the English were integrating foreign foods into their lives at an un...
Amanda E. Herbert Hans Sloane by Stephen Slaughter, 1736, National Portrait Gallery, London. Image ...
By R.A. Kashanipour Image 1 - Gifts of the locals. In this image appears as the frontpiece of a G...
For this guided history of chocolate our group chose to highlight key elements and moments in time f...
In 1796, the first American cookbook American Cookery by Amelia Simmons was published in Hartford, C...
By Sara Pennell Where do recipes fit into historical understanding of pedagogical processes around f...
This essay explores the importance of the cultural, social and power relationships within Europe to ...
El artículo "Del cacao al chocolate, entre paladares europeos y novohispanos. Siglos XVI al XVIII", ...