9 results filtered with: Bakers

- Pictures
- Online
A baker is carrying a tray of pies on his head. Engraving by B. Smith, 1824, after W. Hogarth.
William HogarthDate: Febr.y 10th 1824Reference: 30323i
- Books
- Online
Bread, bakehouses, and bacteria : reprints of various papers / by F. J. Waldo and David Walsh.
Waldo, Frederick Joseph, 1852-Date: 1895
- Books
- Online
The modern baker, confectioner and caterer : a practical and scientific work for the baking and allied trades / edited by John Kirkland ; with contributions from leading specialists and trade experts.
Date: 1911
- Pictures
- Online
A baker is loading uncooked dough into an oven, as baked loaves are carried away by a woman. Woodcut by J. Amman.
Jost AmmanDate: [1568]Reference: 34948i
- Pictures
- Online
Rue du Petit Musc, Paris: street vendors outside a liquor shop;a group of soldiers walk down the street on the left, while a boy wearing clogs sweeps the street. Coloured aquatint by R.B. Peake.
Richard Brinsley PeakeDate: [1816]Reference: 30807i
- Pictures
- Online
Plymouth: bakers working at an oven and a table. Aquatint by John Hill after A. Dibdin.
Dibdin, Anne, approximately 1776-Date: 1801Reference: 31330i
- Books
- Online
The bread and biscuit baker's and sugar-boiler's assistant : including a large variety of modern recipes for bread - tea cakes - hard and fancy biscuits - buns - gingerbreads - shortbreads - pastry - custards - fruit cakes - small goods for small masters - confections in sugar - lozenges - ice creams - preserving fruit - chocolate, etc. etc., with remarks on the art of bread-making and chemistry as applied to bread-making / by Robert Wells.
Wells, RobertDate: 1890
- Ephemera
- Online
A. Winter & Sons, confectioners & pastry cooks, &c. : 177 Snargate Street, Dover : ball-suppers & routs attended & supplied : established 1795.
A. Winter & SonsDate: [between 1800 and 1899?]- Books
- Online
Artachthos or A new booke declaring the assise or weight of bread : not onely by troy weight, according to the law, but by avoirdupois weight the common weight of England at what price soever, not exceeding five pound the quarter of wheate, shall be sold in the market and conteining divers orders and articles made and set forth by the right honourable the Lords and others of his Majesties most honourable privie Councell, for the making and assising of all sorts of bread lawfull and vendible, within this realme ... whereunto is prefixed a briefe and plaine introduction to the art of numeration ... And lastly hereunto is added. A true relation or collection of the most remarkeable dearths and famines which have happened in England since the comming in of William the Conquerour, as also the rising and falling of the price of wheate and other graine, with the severall occasions thereof.
John PenkethmanDate: 1638