Post Reply  Post Thread 
 
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Votes - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Cooking in America, 1590-1840
10-22-2009, 12:54 AM
Post: #1
Cooking in America, 1590-1840
Cooking in America, 1590-1840
[Image: i20ep4.jpg]

Trudy Eden, "Cooking in America, 1590-1840 (The Greenwood Press Daily Life Through History Series)"
Publisher: Greenwood Press | 2006 | ISBN 0313335672 | PDF | 184 pages | 12.3 MB

There are no recipes for what the Indians ate in Colonial times, but this cookbook uses period quotations to detail what and how the foodstuffs were prepared. The bulk of the cookbook is devoted to what the European immigrants cooked and what evolved into American cooking. The first colonists from England brought their foodways to America. The basic foods that Americans of European descent ate changed very little from 1600 to 1840. While the major basic foods remained the same, their part in the total diet changed. Americans at the end of the period ate far more beef and chicken than did the first colonists. They used more milk, butter and cream. They also ate more wheat in the form of breads, cakes, cookies, crackers and cereals. The same was true with fruits. Over time the more exotic vegetables like broccoli, cauliflower, artichokes, and numerous root vegetables including both sweet and white potatoes became common vegetables. By the end of this period, many Americans were even eating foods like tomatoes, okra, and sesame, which were unknown to their ancestors. In addition, Americans, like their relatives in Europe, incorporated coffee, tea, and chocolate into their diets as well as more sugar. Along with them came new customs, such as tea time, and, for men, socializing at coffeehouses. Also, distilled beverages, particularly rum, which was often made into a punch with citrus juices, were increasingly used. Basic cooking technology also remained the same throughout the period, and the cookbook gives a sense of how meals were prepared. The open hearth provided the major heat source. As time passed, though, more and more people could afford to have wood-fired brick ovens in their homes. Although the recipes presented here from the first century of colonization come from cookbooks written for people of upper status, by the end of the time period, literacy rates were much higher among men and women. European and American authors published numerous cookbooks that were relatively inexpensive and available, so it is reasonable to assume that those recipes were representative of actual American cookery practices. Many changes occurred to cookbooks and recipes during this period. The recipes became more detailed and more reliant on standard measures, and the recipes were for foods that are less complicated and expensive to prepare.

Code:
http://rapidshare.com/files/295981958/eden.rar
Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
FuzzyShare ads (Click the ad to support us)
Post Reply 


Similar Threads
Thread: Author Replies: Views: Last Post
  Guide to Latin America 2009 tuning1 0 28 03-04-2010 04:00 AM
Last Post: tuning1
  Cooking for Two tuning1 0 23 02-22-2010 08:51 AM
Last Post: tuning1
  Great Cooking Books Of 29 Countries goodeve 0 341 02-22-2010 05:02 AM
Last Post: goodeve

Forum Jump:

Contact UsFuzzyShareReturn to TopReturn to ContentLite (Archive) ModeRSS Syndication

Affilates
SoftDDL HQ-Uploads WarezUN ErroR-ZonE
Devil's Funhouse WarezAll FileBorg PirateView