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Directions for Cooking by Troops, in Camp and Hospital / Prepared for the Army of Virginia, and published by order of the Surgeon General, with essays on "taking food," and "what food." cover

Directions for Cooking by Troops, in Camp and Hospital / Prepared for the Army of Virginia, and published by order of the Surgeon General, with essays on "taking food," and "what food."

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About This Book

The manual provides practical, measurement-based directions for preparing large-scale camp and hospital meals, with recipes for soups, stews, broths, puddings, dumplings, and beverages, plus methods for frying, boiling, preserving grease, and stretching rations. Quantities and timings are given for both mass cookery and single-patient preparations, including concentrated beef teas, arrowroot and rice preparations, and lemonades. Accompanying essays discuss feeding the sick, emphasizing that weak patients often require frequent small, easily digested nourishment at suitable times rather than large solid meals, and recommend liquid nutritive preparations and attentive serving to ensure intake.

About the Author

Nightingale, Florence portrait

Florence Nightingale

Florence Nightingale (1820-1910) was a pioneering figure in nursing and healthcare reform, known for her foundational work in establishing nursing as a respected profession for women. She gained prominence during the Crimean War, where her efforts to improve sanitary conditions in military hospitals significantly reduced the death rate. Nightingale authored several influential texts, including "Notes on Nursing: What It Is, and What It Is Not," which provided essential guidelines for nursing practice and patient care. Her commitment to health statistics and sanitation laid the groundwork for modern nursing and public health initiatives, making her a key figure in the history of medicine.

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