About This Book
A concise historical survey traces the development of English culinary practice and the books that recorded it, surveying medieval and early modern recipes, royal and domestic kitchens, and the social habits that shaped food preparation and consumption. It examines sources from ancient Greece and Rome to Norman and later English households, extracts early receipts, and discusses ingredients, methods, diets of different classes, kitchen organization, and table etiquette, emphasizing how cookery literature reflects changing tastes, techniques, and domestic economies.
About the Author
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