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The 1751 edition was the first book to mention trifle with jelly as an ingredient; the 1758 edition gave the first mention of "Hamburgh sausages", piccalilli, and one of the first recipes in English for an Indian-style curry. Glasse criticised the French influence of British cuisine, but included dishes with French names and French influence in ...
In her chapter Consuming Nigella in Feminism, Domesticity and Popular Culture, Lise Shapiro Sanders observes that Lawson's early books including How to Eat and How to Be a Domestic Goddess (2001) "emphasize cooking and eating as sites of pleasure for women." Sanders explains that the pleasure is both "authentic" and "ironic, self-consciously ...
Hannah Glasse Glasse's signature at the top of the first chapter of her book, The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy, 6th Edition, 1758 Born Hannah Allgood March 1708 London, England Died 1 September 1770 (1770-09-01) (aged 62) London, England Occupation Cookery writer, dressmaker Notable works The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy (1747) Spouse John Glasse (m. 1724 –1747) Children 10 ...
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
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.
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.
The frontispiece and titlepage of Bradley's 1758 work The British Housewife. Martha Bradley (fl. 1740s–1755) was a British cookery book writer. Little is known about her life, except that she published the cookery book The British Housewife in 1756 and worked as a cook for over thirty years in the fashionable spa town of Bath, Somerset.
Maria Eliza Rundell (née Ketelby; 1745 – 16 December 1828) was an English writer.Little is known about most of her life, but in 1805, when she was over 60, she sent an unedited collection of recipes and household advice to John Murray, of whose family—owners of the John Murray publishing house—she was a friend.