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The Boston Cooking School magazine of culinary science and domestic economics. The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book (1896) by Fannie Farmer is a 19th-century general reference cookbook which is still available both in reprint and in updated form. It was particularly notable for a more rigorous approach to recipe writing than had been common up ...
A candy thermometer, also known as a sugar thermometer or jam thermometer, is a cooking thermometer used to measure the temperature and therefore the stage of a cooking sugar solution. (See candy making for a description of sugar stages.)
The book quickly became an American classic, and is still in print today. [4] Fannie Farmer left the Boston Cooking School in 1902, and subsequently opened Miss Farmer's School of Cookery, located in Huntington Chambers, 30 Huntington Avenue, Boston. [note 4] In 1902, the Boston Cooking School became part of Boston's Simmons College. [1]
Company's Coming is a popular line of cookbooks that has sold over 30 million copies since 1981. The series is produced by Company's Coming Publishing Limited based in British Columbia, and distributed from Edmonton, Alberta.
The Country Cooking of France (2007) A Cook’s Book of Quick Fixes & Kitchen Tips (2005) The Good Cook (2004) Good Food No Fuss (2003) Cooking with Wine (2001) From My Château Kitchen (2000) In and Out of the Kitchen in Fifteen Minutes or Less (1995) Cook It Right (1998) Look and Cook, 17 Volume Series, (1992–1995) La Varenne Pratique (1989 ...
A cooking school [a] is an institution devoted to education in the art and science of cooking and food preparation. There are many different types of cooking schools around the world, some devoted to training professional chefs, others aimed at amateur enthusiasts, with some being a mixture of the two. Amateur cooking schools are often ...
The earliest origins of the material in Joy of Cooking are unclear. Marion considered that it evolved from a collection of recipes supposedly used by her mother as part of a cooking course for the First Unitarian Women's Alliance [8] but later research raises questions about Marion's recollection, with no indication that the mimeographs of the Women's Alliance recipes pre-dated the first ...
Mary Johnson Bailey Lincoln (July 8, 1844 – December 2, 1921) was an influential Boston cooking teacher and cookbook author. She used Mrs. D.A. Lincoln as her professional name during her husband's lifetime and in her published works; after his death, she used Mary J. Lincoln. [1]