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The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy is a cookbook by Hannah Glasse (1708–1770), first published in 1747. It was a bestseller for a century after its first publication, dominating the English-speaking market and making Glasse one of the most famous cookbook authors of her time.
Like many other British people of her social class and generation, Mrs. Beeton adopted a distaste for unfamiliar foods, saying that mangoes tasted like turpentine, lobsters were indigestible, garlic was offensive, potatoes were "suspicious; a great many are narcotic, and many are deleterious", cheese could only be consumed by sedentary people ...
Martha Brotherton (bapt. 1782–1861), cookbook writer and author of the first vegetarian cookbook, Vegetable Cookery (1812) Sarah Brown, author of Sarah Brown's Vegetarian Kitchen and television series; May Byron (1861–1936), writer, poet and cookbook writer; Deborah Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire (1920–2014), writer, socialite
Mandalay: Recipes and Tales from a Burmese Kitchen is a Burmese cookbook written by the British-Burmese author MiMi Aye. [1] The book was published by Bloomsbury Absolute in 2019, and was recognised by critics as an "introduction for many to an underappreciated cuisine". [2]
Eliza Acton (17 April 1799 – 13 February 1859) was an English food writer and poet who produced one of Britain's first cookery books aimed at the domestic reader, Modern Cookery for Private Families.
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "British cookbooks" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 ...
Frontispiece of a T. J. Allman edition. A New System of Domestic Cookery, first published in 1806 by Maria Rundell, was the most popular English cookery book of the first half of the nineteenth century; it is often referred to simply as Mrs Rundell, but its full title is A New System of Domestic Cookery: Formed Upon Principles of Economy; and Adapted to the Use of Private Families.
She translated French fiction and wrote the cookery column, though all the recipes were plagiarised from other works or sent in by the magazine's readers. In 1859 the Beetons launched a series of 48-page monthly supplements to The Englishwoman's Domestic Magazine ; the 24 instalments were published in one volume as Mrs Beeton's Book of ...