JSTOR - Individual Account - free -100 articles per month through December 31, 2020. It is a collection of scholarly journals, ebooks, and images. Home page HERE. Special offer HERE
Constantly updated post on upcoming virtual talks, workshops, etc. HERE
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Monday, June 22, 2020
Fig lemonade
This is a lemonade for hot weather - like Switchel or Shrub - very tart (only 1T or a teaspoon of honey). Alexis Soyer called it a "Cooling Lemonade" in 1849, and a later cookbook author named it "Picnic Lemonade." The vivid pink color happens instantly when lemon juice is added to the liquid from boiling the figs and yellow of the lemon peels.Monday, June 15, 2020
Historic cooking at home - Benjamin Franklin's recipes
The American Philosophical Society, founded in Philadelphia by Benjamin Franklin in 1743,
houses his papers, which include recipes in French. The APS “invited scholars, public historians, and chefs with a range of interests to share their reflections on Franklin, his recipes, and the
culture of the eighteenth-century Atlantic World over the coming weeks” on their BLOG. Other sites offer videos or old recipes, below.Monday, June 8, 2020
A dozen favorite posts from the past
Some of my favorite topics over the last 11 years - from the conical strawberry pottles image on left, HERE to the most popular, Snap-apple at Halloween - were easy to list, since they are viewed the most. It was harder not to include many others. I even considered making it a "baker's dozen" ...
Monday, June 1, 2020
Volunteer to transcribe manuscript cookbook recipes
Monday, May 25, 2020
Memorial Day - Never forget
Monday, May 18, 2020
"Food and Disruption" - free online Dublin Gastronomy Symposium
50 peer reviewed papers and wonderfully illustrated talks from 17 countries were presented at the 5th Dublin Gastronomy Symposium (usually held in Ireland). This online event was free and... terrific!
Monday, May 11, 2020
Muffin Pudding 1826
English Muffins (in this case from Hannah Glasse, changed slightly by Richard Briggs in 1796, made during William Rubel's weekly bread seminar) can be made into a pudding layered with dried cherries. Rundell's 1826 baked version contained brandy and orange-flower water.
Tuesday, May 5, 2020
Bees from hive to branch to wooden hive
The bees are out enjoying all the dandelions from all the rain. This 1869 image depicts the "three classes of bees" and how the swarm leaves the beehive to "settle upon a limb" then placed in the wooden box. The author clearly was not allergic, boasting "no protection to face or hands." Don't try this at home!Monday, April 27, 2020
Calendar of virtual food history talks
The Calendar will continue in a limited way, since I must cut back on the long hours I have spent on it the last four years.
There have been over 4,500 (in 2023) virtual food history talks, demos and tours by museums, historical associations, small businesses, groups, and others.
There have been over 4,500 (in 2023) virtual food history talks, demos and tours by museums, historical associations, small businesses, groups, and others.
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
Doctors' house calls and medicine
Monday, April 6, 2020
White Rabbit Egg Dye for Easter Eggs
Since 1888, White Rabbit has been competing with Paas (founded 1880) packaged egg dyes. The White Rabbit advertising included colorful graphics and lovely paper dye sheets. These 1899 ads are more colorful than Paas Egg Dye Co's advertising. Their web site is just as colorful and creative.Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Mary Randolph and Thomas Jefferson
Mary Randolph Randolph was a distant cousin of Thomas Jefferson, as was her husband; and her brother married Jefferson's daughter. There were other connections, and several false stories...
Labels:
American women cookbook authors,
Jefferson,
Randolph
Sunday, March 22, 2020
Mothering Sunday - Simnel cakes and furmety
Monday, March 16, 2020
Saving snow in 18th century Naples for iced drinks and food
Snow instead of ice was used in Naples. The snow was stored in the "cliffs and caverns on the mountain of San Angelo, between Castell-a-Mare and Sorento." Donkeys carried the snow down to boats then to Naples. The Bourbon kings of Naples felt they had to provide the snow for their subjects drinks or they would revolt.
Wednesday, March 11, 2020
Olio
Olio was an extravagant stew of many meats, vegetables, herbs and spices served in it's own "close-covered" cooking "olio pot." Vincent La Chapelle, "Chief Cook" to the Earl of Chesterfield, included three recipes in his 1733 work The Modern Cook - one French Olio and two Spanish. By the 1860s a Crab Olio was in two Maryland cookbooks - no meat, but crab, eggplant and tomatoes.Monday, February 24, 2020
Making butter yellow
Winter butter was pale, but was enhanced with carrot juice, marigold, annato, turmeric and even egg yolks for selling in the cities. "No one in the country will eat colored butter in winter except as the
milk colors it." The taste and color naturally improved when the cows ate grass instead of their winter diet of hay. More on grass butter HEREMonday, February 17, 2020
Rumford Roaster - never before seen pieces
How great would it be to own a c200 year old Rumford Roaster! This Rumford Roaster, made by Elijah Fuller of Salem, was originally in an 18th century house in Peabody MA, and was working into the late 20th century; the home was demolished and the oven was saved and installed in a new house. Again removed and stored, the current owner contacted me and hopes it will be used and appreciated once again.Monday, February 10, 2020
Chickens roosting in trees
Although there are many images of chicken ladders in Germany through the centuries, HERE I haven’t seen a chicken ladder going into a tree...until recently. The photo was taken the first two decades of the 1900s on a farm in southern Monroe County, Pa. In the few writings about the pros and cons of chickens in trees, only one mentioned to "place something" for the chickens to get to the branches.
Monday, February 3, 2020
Robert Roberts - author, abolitionist, butler
Robert Roberts (c1777-1860) was a free African American who wrote the marvelous The House Servant's Directory in 1827.
Labels:
African American,
Cookbook authors,
Dining,
Rumford Roaster
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