167 results
- Ephemera
- Online
French farmers salad / Tesco.
Tesco (Firm)Date: [1994]- Ephemera
- Online
Salade de Provence / Tesco.
Tesco (Firm)Date: [1994]- Books
Recherché side dishes for breakfast, luncheon, dinner, and supper : comprising hors d'œuvres, savouries, salads, & oriental dishes / by Charles Herman Senn.
Senn, Charles Herman, 1862-1934.Date: 1894- Books
- Online
The American salad book / by Maximilian De Loup. The most complete, original, and useful collection of salad recipes ever brought together.
De Loup, Maximilian.Date: 1901- Ephemera
- Online
Fine salad oil.
Date: [between 1870 and 1879?]- Ephemera
- Online
Feta and green bean salad : main course / Tesco.
Tesco (Firm)Date: [1994]- Ephemera
- Online
Lobster and orange salad : fish made simple : main course / Tesco.
Tesco (Firm)Date: [1994]- Ephemera
- Online
Greek salad : made with cos lettuce, watercress, beefsteak tomatoes, green pepper, spring onions, cucumber, feta cheese and olives / Tesco.
Tesco (Firm)Date: [1993]- Books
- Online
Outdoor salad crops.
Date: 1948- Pictures
- Online
A woman carrying a child in Lazio is buying salad greens from a vendor carrying produce in large baskets. Etching by B. Pinelli, 1815.
Pinelli, Bartolomeo, 1781-1835.Date: [1819]Reference: 30420i- Books
- Online
A treatise on the cooking of big joints : as also instructions for roasting and boiling poultry and game, together with hints on the preparation of vegetables and the making of salads / by Jenny Wren.
Wren, Jenny, active 1891.Date: 1891- Ephemera
- Online
Mozzarella salad with ratouille stir fry : a taste of Italy : main course / Tesco.
Tesco (Firm)Date: [1994]- Books
Heinz salad recipes : enjoy your salad days.
Heinz.Date: [1933]- Ephemera
- Online
Salad : tasty & nutritious / designed and produced by Compass Group UK and Ireland's Design Centre.
Date: 2005- Pictures
- Online
Corn Salad (Valerianella olitoria Pollich.): entire flowering plant with separate floral sections. Coloured etching by M. Bouchard, 1774.
Date: [1774]Reference: 16784i- Pictures
- Online
A lobster seated at a table, serving itself from a bowl of salad. Drawing by G. Hope Tait, ca. 1900.
Tait, Geo. Hope (George Hope), 1861-1943.Date: 1900Reference: 577181i- Books
Enjoy your salad days : Heinz salad cream / H. J. Heinz Co. Ltd.
Vernon, Françoise.Date: [1935?]- Books
Salad for the social / by the author of "Salad for the solitary".
Saunders, Frederick, 1807-1902.Date: 1856- Ephemera
- Online
Spiced Moroccan salad : farm-fresh British Romaine lettuce : £1.43 per serve : two of your five a day ... / Tesco.
Date: 2010- Digital Images
- Online
Allium schoenoprasum L. Alliaceae. Chives. Bulbour perennial herb. 'schoenoprasm' means 'rush leek' in Greek, referring to the narrow leaves. Distribution: Asia, Europe and North America. Leaves used as a garnish on cooked food and in salads. However like others in Boraginaceae it contains the pyrrolizidine alkaloid cynoglossine which causes liver damage. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Dianthus caryophyllus L. Caryophyllaceae Carnation, clove-gilliflowers - Mediterranean Culpeper (1650) writes that ‘Clove-gilliflowers, resist the pestilence, strengthen the heart, liver and stomach, and provokes lust.’ They smell strongly of cloves, and an oil made from the petals is used in perfumery, soaps etc. The petals are sometimes used as a garnish for salads. In herbal medicine they are used to make a tonic. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Illustrated recipe for 'Under the Sea Salad'
- Books
The American salad book / by Maximilian De Loup.
De Loup, Maximilian.Date: 1901- Ephemera
- Online
How to make Stork cream cheese.
Date: [between 1930 and 1939?]- Digital Images
- Online
Pulmonaria officinalis L. Boraginaceae Distribution: Europe. Pulmonaria or Lungwort are names for a lichen and a perennial plant in the Boraginaceae. This is the latter. Lyte (1578) has a woodcut of our plant and also calls it Sage of Jerusalem and says it is of 'no particular use in physicke, but is much used in meates and salads with eggs, as is also Cowslippes and Primroses, whereunto in temperature it is much alike.' He lists and describes the lichen separately. Culpeper (1650) said he found many sorts of lunguewort in perusing Authors ' Pulmonari, arborea and Symphytum maculosum [and the latter is our plant, the others the lichen] and that they 'helpe infirmities of the lungues, as hoarseness, coughs, wheezing, shortnesse of breath etc.' Coles (1657) who espouses the Doctrine of Signatures in a way unrivalled by any other English author, might have been expected to confirm the concept that the mottled leaves looked like the cut surface of a lung which indicates their purpose, but he only mentions the lungwort which is a lichen. However, Porta's beautiful book on the Doctrine, Phytognomica (1588), is clear that the plant called Pulmonaria with hairy leaves like a bugloss, spotted white with purple flowers, commonly called 'cynoglossa' [with a woodcut which could be Pulmonaria officinalis] indicate its use for ulcerated lungs, spitting blood, shortness of breath and asthma equally with the lichen with the same name. Lobel & Pena (1570) call it 'PULMONARIA, masculosa folia Borrago. floribus Primula veris, purpureis [PULMONARIA spotted, Borage-leaved, flowers like Primula veris - Cowslips - purple]' and say that women mix the leaves with a little broth and make it into an omelette for lung disorders and to strengthen the heart.. Lobel (1576) calls it Maculosa Pulmonaria and describes a white flowered form with a good woodcut. Gerard (1633) uses the same woodcut as Lobel and calls it Pulmonatia foliis Echii, Buglosse Cowslips with red flowers, and a woodcut of a narrow leaved plant as Pulmonaria masculosa, Spotted Cowslips of Jerusalem with red, blue and purple flowers and says 'the leaves are used among pot-herbes. The roots are aso thought to be good against the infirmities of ulcers of the lungs...'. Quincy (1718) writes: '... it has a glutinous juice ... and heals ulcers and erosions. It is commended in coughs and spitting of blood but is little used either in the Shop or Prescriptions'. Not used in modern medicine. It is in the family Boraginaceae whose species are often rich in pyrrolizidine alkaloids that cause liver toxicity and liver cancers, but levels in Pulmonaria officinalis may not be significant. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley