In 1824, Mary Randolph published The Virginia House-Wife, the first authentically American cookbook, reflecting her years of training in food production and a hard-won reputation as a cook. In the book, she included a recipe for a proto-cookie, the jumbal. This baked good developed in Europe in the Middle Ages and became a baking staple in England by the early seventeenth century. Imbedded in the simple recipe is a story of the development of crop production and foodways. Its ingredients reveal a complex history of cultural exchange, labor systems, human bondage, colonialism, and the development of an elaborate system of trade involving five continents. Its baking provides insight into questions of social class, gender roles, and female age...
Food played an important part in the material culture of English elites, not least through the late ...
Traditional southeastern American food evolved from a complex series of regional food elements emerg...
Until recently, critics have devalued the Victorian cookbook as an object of literary inquiry, regul...
In 1824, Mary Randolph published The Virginia House-Wife, the first authentically American cookbook,...
How did a mid-nineteenth century American invention, baking powder, replace yeast as a leavening age...
xv, 354 leaves :ill., map ; 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references. University of Otago departme...
This cookbook covers the years 1840 through 1945, a time during which American cookery underwent a f...
2014-11-14This dissertation seeks to advance the historical study of Early American cookery through ...
Dessert presentations in America shifted in the eighteenth century from simple desserts with few ing...
In 1796, the first American cookbook American Cookery by Amelia Simmons was published in Hartford, C...
The difficulty of working with personal recipe collections has led scholars to overlook their potent...
By Rachel A. Snell Between 1835 and 1870, Sarah L. Weld of Cambridge, Massachusetts collected twenty...
This paper examines the emergence of a distinctive colonial cuisine in the British colonies of Malay...
Collecting recipes was an established tradition that continued in elite English households throughou...
In nineteenth-century America refined sugar changed from being a rare substance enjoyed by the rich ...
Food played an important part in the material culture of English elites, not least through the late ...
Traditional southeastern American food evolved from a complex series of regional food elements emerg...
Until recently, critics have devalued the Victorian cookbook as an object of literary inquiry, regul...
In 1824, Mary Randolph published The Virginia House-Wife, the first authentically American cookbook,...
How did a mid-nineteenth century American invention, baking powder, replace yeast as a leavening age...
xv, 354 leaves :ill., map ; 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references. University of Otago departme...
This cookbook covers the years 1840 through 1945, a time during which American cookery underwent a f...
2014-11-14This dissertation seeks to advance the historical study of Early American cookery through ...
Dessert presentations in America shifted in the eighteenth century from simple desserts with few ing...
In 1796, the first American cookbook American Cookery by Amelia Simmons was published in Hartford, C...
The difficulty of working with personal recipe collections has led scholars to overlook their potent...
By Rachel A. Snell Between 1835 and 1870, Sarah L. Weld of Cambridge, Massachusetts collected twenty...
This paper examines the emergence of a distinctive colonial cuisine in the British colonies of Malay...
Collecting recipes was an established tradition that continued in elite English households throughou...
In nineteenth-century America refined sugar changed from being a rare substance enjoyed by the rich ...
Food played an important part in the material culture of English elites, not least through the late ...
Traditional southeastern American food evolved from a complex series of regional food elements emerg...
Until recently, critics have devalued the Victorian cookbook as an object of literary inquiry, regul...