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Professed cookery: containing boiling, roasting, pastry, preserving, potting, pickling, made-wines, gellies, and part of confectionaries. With an essay upon the lady's art of cookery. Together with a plan of house-keeping. By Ann Cook, teacher of the true art of cookery.
Cook, Ann, writer on cookery.Date: 1755- Books
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The good hous-wiues treasurie : Beeing a verye necessarie booke instructing to the dressing of meates. Hereunto is also annexed sundrie holsome medicines for diuers diseases.
Date: 1588- Books
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The art of cookery, made plain and easy; which far exceeds anything of the kind yet published, Containing I. How to Roast and Boil to Perfection every Thing necessary to be sent up to Table. II. Of Made Dishes. III. How expensive a French Cook's Sauce is. IV. To make a Number of pretty little Dishes for a Supper or Side-Dish, and little Corner dishes for a great Table. V. To dress Fish. VI. Of Soups and Broths. Vii. Of Puddings. Viii. Of Pies. IX. For a Lent Dinner; a number of good Dishes, which you may make Use of at any other Time. X. Directions to prepare proper Food for the Sick. XI. For Captains of Ships; how to make all useful Things for a Voyage; and setting out a Table on board a Ship. XII. Of Hogs Puddings, Sausages, &c. XIII. To pot and make Hams, &c. XIV. Of Pickling. XV. Of making Cakes, &c. XVI. Of Cheesecakes, Creams, Jellies, Whip-Syllabubs, &c. XVII. Of made Wines, Brewing, French Bread, Muffins, &c. XVIII. Jarring Cherries and Preserves, &c. XIX. To make Anchovies, Vermicella, Catchup, Vinegar, and to keep Artichokes, French Beans, &c. XX. Of Distilling. XXI. How to Market; the Season of the Year for Butchers Meat, Poultry, Fish, Herbs, Roots, and Fruit. XXII. A certain cure for the Bite of a Mad Dog. By Dr. Mead. XXIII. A Receipt to keep clear from Buggs. To which are added, one hundred and fifty new and useful receipts, and a copious index. By a lady.
Glasse, Hannah, 1708-1770.Date: [1775?]- Books
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Murrels tvvo books of cookerie and carving.
Murrell, John, active 17th centuryDate: 1641- Books
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Murrels tvvo books of cookerie and carving.
Murrell, John, active 17th centuryDate: 1638- Books
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The art of cookery, made plain and easy; which far exceeds any thing of the kind ever yet published. Containing, I. Of Roasting, Boiling, &c. II. Of Made-Dishes. III. Read this Chapter, and you will find how Expensive a French Cook's Sauce is. IV. To make a Number of pretty little Dishes fit for a Supper or Side-Dish, and little Corner-Dishes for a great Table; and the rest you have in the Chapter for Lent. V. To dress Fish. VI. Of Soops and Broths. Vii. Of Puddings. Viii. Of Pies. IX. For a Lent Dinner, a Number of good Dishes, which you may make use of for a Table at any other Time. X. Directions for the Sick. XI. For Captains of Ships. XII. Of Hogs Puddings, Sausages, &c. XIII. To pot and make Hams, &c. XIV. Of Pickling. XV. Of making Cakes, &c. XVI. Of Cheesecakes, Creams, Jellies, Whip Syllabubs, &c. XVII. Of Made Wines, Brewing, French Bread, Muffins, &c. XVIII. Jarring Cherries, and Preserves, &c. XIX. To make Anchovies, Vermicella, Carchup, Vinegar, and to keep Artichokes, French Beans, &c. XX. Of Distilling. XXI. How to Market; the Seasons of the Year for Butchers Meat, Poultry, Fish, Herbs, Roots, &c. and Fruit. XXII. A certain Cure for the Bite of a Mad Dog. By Dr. Mead. XXIII. A Receipt to keep clear from Buggs. To which are added, By Way of Appendix, I. To dress a Turtle, the West-India Way. II. To make Ice Cream. III. A Turkey, &c. in Jelly. IV. To make Citron. V. To candy Cherries or Green Gages. VI. To take Ironmolds out of Linnen. Vii. To make India Pickle: Viii. To make English Catchup. IX. To prevent the Infection among horned Cattle. By a lady.
Glasse, Hannah, 1708-1770.Date: [1755]- Books
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Professed cookery: containing boiling, roasting, pastry, preserving, pickling, potting, made-wines, gellies, and part of confectionaries. With an essay upon the lady's art of cookery: together with a plan of house-keeping. By Ann Cook, Teacher of the True Art of Cookery.
Cook, Ann, Writer on Cookery.Date: [1760?]- Books
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The art of cookery, made plain and easy. To which are added, one hundred and fifty new receipts, a copious index, and, a modern bill of fare, for each month, in the manner the dishes are placed upon the table. By H. Glasse.
Glasse, Hannah, 1708-1770.Date: M.DCC.LXXIV. [1774]- Books
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The art of cookery made plain and easy. To which are added, one hundred and fifty new receipts, A Copious Index. And a Modern Bill of Fare, for each Month, in the Manner the Dishes are placed upon the Table. By H. Glasse.
Glasse, Hannah, 1708-1770.Date: M,DCC,XCI. [1791]- Books
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A collection of above three hundred receipts in cookery, Physick and Surgery; for the use of all good wives, tender mothers, and careful nurses. By several hands.
Kettilby, Mary.Date: MDCCXIV. [1714]- Books
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The ladies handmaid: Or, A compleat system of cookery; on the principals of elegance and frugality. Wherein the useful art of cookery is rendered plain, easy and familiar: containing the best approved, yet least expensive receipts in every branch of housewifry, viz. roasting, boiling, made-dishes, soups, sauces, jellies, ragouts, fricasses, tarts, cakes, creams, custards, pastry, pickling, jarring, &c. And every other branch of cookery and good housewifery, too tedious to be enumerated in a title page. Together with instructions for carving and bills of fare for every month in the year. Embellished with variety of curious copper-plates, representing the genteelest method of disposing or placing the dishes, trussing fowls, &c. Also the best approved method of clear-starchig. By Mrs. Sarah Phillips, of Duke-Street.
Phillips, Sarah, Mrs.Date: M,DCC,LVIII. [1758]- Books
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Royal cookery; or, The complete court-cook. Containing the choicest receipts in all the particular branches of cookery, now in use in the Queen's Palaces of St. James's, Kensington, Hampton-court, and Windsor. With near forty figures (curiousity engraven on copper) of the magnificent entertainments at coronations, instalment, balls, weddings, &c. at court; also receipts for making the soupes, jellies, bisques, ragoo's, patrys, tan[qies] forc'd-meats cakes puddings. &c. By Patrick Lamb, Esq; near 50 years master-cook to their late Majesties King Charles II. King James II. King William and Queen Mary, and to Her Present Majesty Queen Anne. To which are added, bills of fare for every season in the year.
Lamb, Patrick.Date: 1710- Books
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Mrs. Taylor's family companion; or the whole art of cookery display'd, in the newest and most easy method, being a collection of receipts to set out a table cheap, Under the following Heads: Boiling Roasting Frying Broiling Stewing Hashing Baking Ragouts Fricassees Made-Dishes Sauces Soups Puddings Pies Tarts Cakes Cheesecakes Custards Syllabues Creams Jellis Pickling Preserving Candying Collaring Potting Drying, &c. To which are added, instructions for marketing, sundry bills of fare, Directions for Clear-Starching, The Lady's Toilet, or Art of Preserving Beauty, &c. &c. &c. The whole calculated to assist the prudent mistress and her servant, in providing the cheapest and most elegant Set of Dishes in the various Departments of Cookery. By Mrs. Margaret Taylor, Late Cook from the Crown and Anchor.
Taylor, Margaret, Mrs.Date: [1795?]- Books
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A collection of above three hundred receipts in cookery, physick and surgery; for the use of all good wives, tender mothers, and careful nurses. By several hands. The fourth edition. To which is added, a second part, containing a great number of excellent receipts, for Preserving and Conserving of Sweet-Meats, &c.
Kettilby, Mary.Date: M.DCC.XXVIII. [1728]- Books
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The accomplish'd lady's delight in preserving, physick, beautifying, cookery, and gardening. Containing, I. The art of preserving ... II. The physical cabinet: ... III. The compleat cook's guide: ... IV. The lady's diversion in her garden: ...
Date: 1706- Books
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The prudent housewife; or, Complete English cook, for town and country. Being the newest collection of the most genteel, and least expensive receipts in every branch of cookery, viz. going to market; for roasting, boiling, frying, hashing, stewing, broling, baking, and fricasseeing. Also, for making pudings, curtards, cakes, cheese cakes, pies, tarts, ragouts, soups, jellies, syllabues, wines, &c. To which are added, selected from the papers of a lady of distinction, lately deceased. New and infallible rules to be observed, in packling, preserving, brewing, &c. And in order to render it still more valuable than any other publication that hath appeared, a treasure of valuable medicines, for the cure of every disorder, crowns the whole of this work; which coutains every instruction that relates to the pleasing of the palate, and the preservation of that inestimable blessing, health. Written by Mrs. Fisher, of Richmond.
Fisher, Mrs.Date: [1788]- Books
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The lady's, housewife's, and cookmaid's assistant: or, the art of cookery explained and adapted to the meanest capacity. Containing, I. How to roast and boil to perfection every thing necessary to be sent up to table. II. Of made-dishes. III. To make a number of pretty little dishes for a supper or side-dish, and little corner-dishes for a great table. IV. To dress fish. V. Of soups and broths. VI. Of puddings. Vii. Of pies. Viii. Of hogs puddings, sausages, &c. IX. To pot and make hams, &c. X. Of pickling. XI. Of making cakes, &c. XII. Of cheese cakes, creams, jellies, whip-syllabubs, &c. XIII. Of made-wines, brewing, French bread, mussins, &c. XIV. Jarring cherries, preserves. XV. To dress turtle, and make mock turtle. The whole designed to fit out an Entertainment In an Elegant Manner, and at a Small Expence. By E. Taylor.
Taylor, E.Date: MDCCLXIX. [1769]- Books
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The lady's housewife's, and cookmaid's assistant: or, The art of cookery explained and adapted to the meanest capacity. Containing, I. How to roast and boil to perfection every thing necessary to be sent up to table. II. Of made dishes. III. To make a number of pretty little dishes for a supper or side-dish, and little corner-dishes for a great table. IV. To dress fish. V. Of soups and broths. VI. Of puddings. VII. Of hogs puddings, sausages, &c. VIII. Of pyes. IX. To pot and make hams, &c. X. Of pickling. XI. Of making cakes, &c. XII. Of cheese-cakes, creams, jellies, whip-syllabubs, &c. XIII. Of made wines, brewing, French bread, muffins, &c. XIV. Jarring cherries, preserves. XV. To dress turtle, and make mock turtle. XVI. To prepare food for sick persons. The whole designed to fit out an entertainment in an elegant manner, and at a small expence. By E. Taylor.
Taylor, E.Date: MDCCLXIX. [1769]- Books
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The lady's, Housewife's, and Cookmaid's Assistant: or, the art of cookery, explained and adapted to the meanest capacity. Containing, I. How to roast and boil to perfection every thing necessary to be sent up to table. II. Of made dishes. III. To make a number of pretty little dishes for a supper or side-dish, and little corner-dishes for a great table. IV. To dress fish. V. Of soups and broths. VI. Of puddings. Vii. Of pies. Viii. Of hogs puddings, sausages, &c. IX. To pot and make hams, &c. X. Of pickling. XI. Of making cakes, &c. XII. Of cheese-cakes, creams, jellies, whip-syllabubs, &c. XIII. Of made-wines, brewing, French bread, muffins, &c. XIV. Jarring cherries, preserves. XV. To dress turtle, and make mock turtle, &c. &c. The whole designed to fit out an Entertainment, in an Elegant Manner, and at a Small Expence; And calculated to improve the Servants, and save the Ladies a great deal of trouble. By E. Taylor.
Taylor, E., of Berwick.Date: M,DCC,LXXVIII. [1778]- Books
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The director: or, young woman's best companion. Being the plainest and cheapest of the kind ever published: the whole makes a complete family cook and physican. Containing above three hundred easy receipts in Cookery, Pastry, Preserving, Candying, Pickling, Collaring, Physick, and Surgery. To which are added, Plain and easy Instructions for choosing Beef, Mutton, Veal, Fish, Fowl, and other Eatables. Directions for Carving, and to make Wines. Likewise Bills of Fare for every Month in the Year. With a complete index to the whole. A book necessary for all families. By Sarah Jackson. Collected for the Use of her own Family, and printed at the Request of her Friends.
Jackson, Sarah, active 1754.Date: [1770]- Books
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England's newest way in all sorts of cookery, pastry, and all pickles that are fit to be used. Adorn'd with copper plates, setting forth the Manner of placing Dishes upon Tables; And the Newest Fashions of Mince-Pies. By Henry Howard, Free-Cook of London, and late Cook to his Grace the Duke of Ormond, and since to the Earl of Salisbury, and Earl of Winchelsea. Like Wise The Best Receits for making Cakes, Mackroons, Biskets, Ginger bread, French-Bread: As also for Preserving, Conserving, Candying and Drying Fruits, Confectioning and making of Creams, Syllabubs, and Marmalades of several sorts.
Howard, Henry, active 1708.Date: 1717- Books
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The director: or, young woman's best companion. Containing, above three hundred easy receipts in Cookery, Pastry, Preserving, Candying, Pickling, Collaring, Physick, and Surgery. To which are added, Plain and easy instructions for chusing Beef, Mutton, Veal, Fish, Fowl, and all other Eatables: also, directions for carving, and Made Wines: Likewise Bills of Fare for every Month in the Year. With a complete index to the Whole. A book necessary for all Families. By Sarah Jackson. Collected for the Use of her own Family, and printed at the Request of her Friends. Being one of the Plainest and Cheapest of the Kind. The whole makes a complete Family Cook and Physician.
Jackson, Sarah, active 1754.Date: M.DCC.LIV. [1754]- Books
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The lady's assistant in the oeconomy of the table: a collection of scarce and valuable receipts, taken from the manuscripts of divers persons of the most refin'd Taste and greatest Judgment in the Arts of Cookery, Preserving, &c. To which is added, the author's own method of pickling, together with Directions for making several Sorts of Wines, Mead, Sherbet, Punch, &c. after the most approved Manner. Also Directions for Marketing, Instructions for Carving, Bills of Fare for every Month in the Year, &c. Concluding with many excellent Prescriptions, of singular Efficacy in most Distempers incident to the Human Body. Originally published, by the late Mrs. Anne Battam. from several Ladies, never before published.
Battam, Anne, -approximately 1755.Date: [1759]- Books
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The art of cookery, made plain and easy; which far exceeds anything of the kind yet published. Containing, I. How to Roast and Boil to perfection every Thing necessary to be sent up to Table. II. Of Made-Dishes. III. How expensive a French Cook's Sauce is. IV. To make a Number of pretty little Dishes for a Supper or Side-Dish, and little Corner-Dishes for a great Table. V. To dress Fish. VI. Of Soops and Broths. Vii. Of Puddings. Viii Of Pies. IX. For a Lent Dinner; a Number of good Dishes, which you may make use of at any other Time. X. Directions to prepare proper Food for the Sick. XI For Captains of Ships; how to make all useful Things for a Voyage; and setting out a Table on board a Ship. XII. Of Hogs Puddings, Sausages, &c. XIII. To pot and make Hams, &c. XIV. Of Pickling. XV. Of making Cakes, &c. XVI. Of Cheesecakes, Creams, Jellies, Whip-Syllabubs, &c. XVII. Of made Wines, Brewing, French Bread, Muffins, &c. XVIII. Jarring Cherries and Presepves, &c. XIX. To make Anchovies, Vermicella, Catchup, Vinegar, and to keep Artichokes, French Beans, &c. XX. Of Distilling. XXI. How to Market; the Seasons of the Year for Butchers Meat, Poultry, Fish, Herbs, Roots, and Fruit. XXII. A certain cure for the Bite of a Mad Dog. By Dr. Mead. XXIII. A Receipt to keep clear from Buggs. To which are added, by way of appendix, one hundred and fifty new and useful receipts, and a copious index. By a lady.
Glasse, Hannah, 1708-1770.Date: [1760]- Books
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The art of cookery, made plain and easy; Which far exceeds any thing of the kind yet published. Containing, I. How to roast and boil to perfection every thing necessary to be sent up to table. II. Of made-dishes. III. How expensive a French cook's sauce is. IV. To make a number of pretty little dishes for a supper or side-dish, and little corner-dishes for a great table. V. To dress fish. VI. Of soops and broths. VII. Of puddings. VIII. Of pies. IX. For a lent dinner; a number of good dishes, which you may make use of at any other time. X. Directions to prepare proper food for the sick. XI. For captains of ships; how to make all useful things for a voyage; and setting out a table on board a ship. XII. Of hogs-puddings, sausages, &c. XIII. To pot and make hams, &c. XIV. Of pickling. XV. Of making cakes, &c. XVI. Of cheese-cakes, creams, jellies, whip-syllabubs, &c. XVII. Of made wines, brewing, French bread, muffins, &c. XVIII. Jarring cherries and preserves, &c. XIX. To make anchovies, vermicella, catchup, vinegar, and to keep artichokes, french beans, &c. XX. Of distilling. XXI. How to market; the seasons of the year for butchers meat, poultry, fish, herbs, roots, and fruit. XXII. A certain cure for the bite of a mad dog. By Dr. Mead. XXIII. A receipt to keep clear from buggs. To which are added, by way of appendix, one hundred and fifty new and useful receips, and a copious index. By a lady.
Glasse, Hannah, 1708-1770.Date: M.DCC.LXV. [1765]