228 results filtered with: Cooking, English - Early works to 1800
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The practice of cookery, pastry, pickling, preserving, &c. Containing Figures of Dinners, from Five to Nineteen Dishes, and A Full List of Supper Dishes; also a List of Things in Season, For every month in the Year, and Directions for Choosing Provisions: with Two Plates, showing the Method of placing Dishes upon a Table, and the manner of Trussing Poultry, &c. By Mrs Frazer, Sole Teacher of these Arts in Edinburgh, Several years Colleague, and afterwards Successor to Mrs M'iver deceased.
Frazer, Mrs.Date: M,DCC,XCI. [1791]- Books
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The complete British cook: Being a collection of the most valuable and useful receipts, for rendering the whole art of cookery Plain and familiar to every Capacity: containing directions for Gravies, Sauces, Roasting, Boiling, Frying, Broiling, Stewing, Hashing, Soups, Fricasees, Ragouts, Pastries, Pies, Tarts, Cakes, Puddings, Fritters, Preserves, Pickles, Syllabubs, Creams, Flummeries, Jellies, Custards, &c. &c. By Mary Holland, Professed Cook.
Holland, Mary, active 1800.Date: 1800- Books
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The English art of cookery, according to the present practice. Being a complete guide to all housekeepers, on a plan entirely new ... / With bills of fare for every month in the year, neatly and correctly engraved on twelve copper-plates.
Briggs, Richard.Date: 1794- Books
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A book of cookery and the order of meates to be served to the table, both for flesh and fish dayes : with many excellent wayes for the dressing of all usuall sorts of meats ... with their proper saw[c]es ... : likewise for making many precious waters with divers approved medicines for.
Dawson, ThomasDate: 1650- Books
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Delightes for ladies : to adorne their persons, tables, closets and distillatories. With beauties, banquets, perfumes and waters.
Plat, Hugh, Sir, 1552-1608?Date: 1603- Books
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The second part of the good hus-wiues iewell : Where is to be found most apt and readiest wayes to distill many wholsome and sweet waters. In which likewise is shewed the best maner in preseruing of diuers sorts of fruits, & making of sirrops. With diuers conceits in cookerie with the booke of caruing.
Dawson, ThomasDate: 1597- Books
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The lady's complete guide; or cookery and confectionary in all their branches. Containing the most approved receipts, ... To which is added, ... the complete brewer; ... also the family physician; ... By Mrs. Mary Cole, ...
Cole, Mary, cook.Date: 1789- Books
The frugal housewife, or complete woman cook. Wherein the art of dressing all sorts of viands with cleanliness, decency, and elegance is explained in five hundred approved receipts ... / [Susannah Carter].
Carter, Susannah.Date: 1795- Books
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The new book of cookery; or, Every woman a perfect cook: Containing the greatest variety of approved receipts in all the branches of cookery and confectionary, viz. boiling, roasting, broiling, frying, stewing, hashing, baking, fricassees, ragouts, made-dishes, soups and sauces, puddings, pies and tarts, cakes, custards, cheesecakes, creams, syllabus, jellies, pickling, preserving, candying, drying, potting, collaring, English wines, &c. &c. &c. To which are added, the best instructions for marketing, and sundry, modern bills of fare; also directions for clear starching, and the ladies' toilet, or, art of preserving and improving beauty: likewise a collection of physical receipts for families, &c. The whole calculated to assist the prudent housewife and her servants, in furnishing the cheapest and most elegant set of dishes in the various departments of cookery, and to instruct ladies in many other particulars of great importance too numerous to mention in this title page. By Mrs. Eliz. Price, of Berkeley-Square, assisted by others who have made the art of cookery their constant study.
Price, Elizabeth, Mrs.Date: [1785?]- Books
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E. Kidder's receipts of pastry and cookery, for the use of his scholars. Who teaches at his school in St. Martins le grand: ...
Kidder, E. (Edward), 1665 or 1666-1739.Date: 1740?]- 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. Likewise the best receipts 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: 1710- Books
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The house-keeper's pocket-book; and compleat family cook. Containing above seven hundred curious and uncommon receipts, in cookery, pastry, preserving, pickling, candying, collaring, &c. with plain and easy instructions for preparing and dressing every thing suitable for an elegant entertainment, from two dishes to five or ten. &c. and directions for ranging them in their proper order. To which is prefix'd, such a copious and useful bill of fare of all manner of provisions in season for every month of the year, that no person need be at a loss to provide an agreeable variety of dishes, at a moderate expence. With directions for making and breeding poultry to advantage. Concluding with many excellent prescriptions, of singular efficacy in most distempers incident to the human body; extracted from the writings of the most eminent physicians. By Mrs. Sarah Harrison, of devonshire.
Harrison, Sarah, active 1733-1777.Date: 1745- Books
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The London cook, or The whole art of cookery made easy and familiar. Containing a great number of approved and practical receipts in every branch of cookery. viz. Chap. I. Of soups, broths and gravy. II. Of pancakes, fritters, prossets, tanseys, &c. III. Of fish. IV. Of boiling. V. Of roasting. VI. Of made-dishes. VII. Of Poultry and game. VIII. Sauces for Poultry and game. IX. Sauces for butcher's meat, &c. X. Of puddings. XI. Of pies, custards, and tarts, &c. XII. Of sausages, hogs-puddings, &c. XIII. Of potting and collaring. XIV. Of pickles. XV. Of creams, jellies, &c. XVI. Of made wine. By William Gelleroy, late cook to Her Grace the Dutchess of Argyle. And now to the Right Hon. Sir Samuel Fludyer bart. lord mayor of the city of London. To which is prefixed, A large copper-plate, representing, His Majesty's table, with its proper removes, as it was served at Guild-Hall, on the 9th of November 1761, being the Lord Mayor's day, when His Majesty, and the royal family, did the city the honour to dine with them, and were highly pleased with their entertainment.
Gelleroy, William.Date: M.DCC.LXII. [1762]- 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 receipts, and a copious index. By a lady.
Glasse, Hannah, 1708-1770.Date: M.DCC.LXVII. [1767]- Books
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The queen's royal cookery: or, expert and ready way for the dressing of all sorts of flesh, fowl, fish: Either Bak'd, Boil'd, Roasted, Stew'd, Fry'd, Broil'd, Hash'd, Frigasied, Carbonaded, Forc'd, Collar'd, Sous'd, Dry'd, &c. After the Best and Newest Way. With their several Sauses and Salads. And making all sorts of Pickles. Also Making Variety of Pies, Pasties, Tarts, Cheese-Cakes, Custards, Creams, &c. With The Art of Preserving and Candying of Fruits and Flowers; and the making of Conserves, Syrups, Jellies, and Cordial Waters. Also making several Sorts of English Wines. Cyder, Mead, Metheglin. Together With several Cosmetick or Beautifying Waters: And also several sorts of Essences and Sweet Waters, by Persons of the highest Quality. By T. Hall, free cook of London.
Hall, T., cook.Date: 1719- Books
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Royal cookery: or the compleat court-cook. Containing the choicest receipts in all the several branches of cookery, viz. for making of Soops, Bisques, Olio's, Terrines, Surtouts, Puptons, Ragoos, Forc'd-Meats, Sauces, Patties, Pies, Tarts, Tansies, Cakes, Puddings, Jellies, &c. As likewise Forty Plates, curiously engraven on Copper, of the Magnificent Entertainments at Coronations and Instalments; of Balls, Weddings, &c. at Court; as likewise of City-Feasts. To which are added bills of fare for every month in the year. By Patrick Lamb, Esq; Near Fifty Years Master-Cook to their late Majesties King Charles II. King James II. King William and Queen Mary, and Queen Anne.
Lamb, Patrick.Date: MDCCXXXI. [1731]- Books
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The complete English cook, or, Prudent housewife : being a collection of the most general, yet least expensive receipts in every branch of cookery and good housewifery, with directions for roasting, boiling, stewing ... Together with directions for placing dishes on tables of entertainment: and many other things equally necessary. The whole made easy to the meanest capacity, and far more useful to young beginners than any book of the kind extant / by Ann Peckham of Leeds ... [etc.].
Peckham, Ann.Date: [1790?]- Books
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The guide to preferment, Or; Powell's complete book of cookery, containing, the newest and best receipts in cookery, for roasting, boiling, broiling, frying, fricaseys, hashing, stewing, force meats, potting, ragoos, collaring, salting and drying, soups, broth and gravy, baking, pies and pasties, tarts, puddings, cakes, cheesecakes, custards, jellies, conserving, candying, preserving, and connectionary, pickling, making wines. Likewise the best methods of marketing, to know the goodness and badness of each particular sort of eatables, that you want to buy of the butchers, poulterers, fishmongers, cheesemongers, pork shops, ham shops, Bacon warehouses, egg warehouses, &c. and to prevent being cheated. With the forms of placing dishes on a table, either in the middling or genteclest taste. Very necessay for ladies, gentlemen and their servants.
Powell, B.Date: [1785?]- Books
Preserving on paper : seventeenth-century Englishwomen's receipt books / edited by Kristine Kowalchuk.
Date: [2017]- Books
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The complete house-keeper, and professed cook. Calculated for the greater ease and assistance of ladies, house-keepers, cooks, &c. &c. Containing upwards of seven hundred practical and approved receipts, arranged under the following heads: I. Rules for marketing. II. Boiling, roasting, and broiling flesh, fish, and fowls; and for making soups and sauces of all kinds. III. Making made dishes of all sorts, puddings, pies, cakes, fritters, &c. IV. Pickling, preservaing, and making wines in the best manner and taste. V. Potting and collaring; aspikes in jellies; favoury cakes, blamonge, ice creams and other creams, whips, jellies, &c. VI. Bills of fare for every month in the year; with a correct list of every thing in season for every month; illustrated with two elegant copper-plates of a first and second course for a genteel [sic] table. A new edition, with considerable additions and improvements. By Mary Smith, late house-keeper to Sir Walter Blackett, bart. and formerly in the service of the Right Hon. Lord Anson, Sir Thomas Sebright, bart. and other families of distinction, as house-keeper and cook.
Smith, Mary, of Newcastle.Date: M.DCCLXXXVI. [1786]- Books
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The treasury of commodious conceits, and hidden secrets : commonly called the good huswiues closet of prouision, for the health of hir housholde. Meete and necessarye for the profitable vse of al estates. Gathered out of sundrye experyments, lately practised by men of greate knowledge: and now amplified and inlarged with diuers necessary and newe additions.
Partridge, John, active 1566-1573Date: Anno. 1584- Books
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The art of cookery, made plain and easy: which far exceeds any thing of the kind yet published. ... To which are added, one hundred and fifty new and useful receipts. Also, the order of a bill of fare ... And also, fifty receipts for different articles of perfumery. With a copious index. By Mrs. Glasse.
Glasse, Hannah, 1708-1770.Date: 1799- Books
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A complete collection of cookery receipts : (consisting of near four hundred), which have been taught upwards of fifty years, with great reputation / by Susanna, Elizabeth, and Mary Kellet.
Kellet, Susanna.Date: 1780- Books
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The second part of The good hus-wiues iewell : where is to be found most apt and readiest wayes to distill many wholesome and sweete waters : in which (likewise) is shewed the best manner in preseruiug [sic] diuers sortes of fruites, and making of sirrops : with diuers conceites in cookerie : with The booke of caruing.
Dawson, ThomasDate: 1606- Books
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The widowes treasure : plentifully furnished with sundry precious and approoued secretes in phisicke and chirurgery for the health and pleasure of mankinde : hereunto are adioyned, sundry pretie practises and conclusions of cookerie : with many profitable and holesome medicines for sundrie diseases in cattell.
Partridge, John, active 1566-1573Date: 1588