Image from page 349 of “American cookery” (1914)

October 24, 2019 · Posted in Cookbook · Comment 

Some cool cookbook images:

Image from page 349 of “American cookery” (1914)
cookbook
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Identifier: americancookery19unse_0
Title: American cookery
Year: 1914 (1910s)
Authors:
Subjects:
Publisher: New York [etc.] : Whitney Publications [etc.]
Contributing Library: Boston Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Boston Public Library

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Text Appearing Before Image:
Buy advertised Goods — Do not accept substitutes344 Menu for Christmas Day BREAKFAST Grapefruit Sausage Baked Potatoes Dry Toast Waffles, Maple Syrup or Honey in the Comb Coffee Cocoa DINNER Peeled Malaga Grape Cocktail Roast Guinea Hens Sweet Potatoes, with Bacon Brussels Sprouts, Buttered Pimiento, Chestnut-and-Endive Salad Parker House Rolls Marshmallow-and-Nut Cream Little Cakes Chocolate Bonbons Half Caps of Coffee SUPPER Oyster Soup Olives Large Baked Apples, Cream Jumbles Tea

Text Appearing After Image:
American Cookery Vol.. XX DECEMBER, 1915 No. 5 From the Sand-age to the Lawn-age By Stella Burke May I T HAS passed — the barbaric agewhen rows of glass bottles, theirnoses buried ostrich-like in thesands, or bricks arranged obliquely,with one corner uppermost, makingserrated outlines of paths or flower beds,constituted a lawn in Florida—and evenas civilization covers her children withconcealing garments, where a string ofbeads or broken glass once sufficed, soprogress has spread a rich, green blanketover the nakedness of the sands, withthe result that two blades of grass nowgrow where none grew before. Xot so long ago, lawns in this sectionof the country were as scarce as tarponin the subway tube, but during the pastfive years a great change has come overthe face of the land; whether due to thenatural following upon the heels ofdevelopment, or brought about by thenumbers of incoming Kentuckians andsettlers from points farther north who,missing the verdance of their nativeblue-gra

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dorrance_a-d716_013
cookbook
Image by Schlesinger Library, RIAS, Harvard University
Description: Susie G. Larned Dorrance Recipe Book. Manuscript recipes.

Repository: Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America.

Collection: Susie G. Larned Dorrance Recipe Book

Call Number: A/D716

Catalog Record: id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/001925901/catalog

Questions? Ask a Schlesinger Librarian

PanOShroomsCloseup
cookbook
Image by YoAmes
Sliced mushrooms with some minced garlic, pepper and salt

Image from page 389 of “The pure food cook book, the Good housekeeping recipes, just how to buy–just how to cook” (1914)

June 26, 2019 · Posted in Cook Books · Comment 

A few nice cook books images I found:

Image from page 389 of “The pure food cook book, the Good housekeeping recipes, just how to buy–just how to cook” (1914)
cook books
Image by Internet Archive Book Images
Identifier: purefoodcookbook00madd
Title: The pure food cook book, the Good housekeeping recipes, just how to buy–just how to cook
Year: 1914 (1910s)
Authors: Maddocks, Mildred, ed Wiley, Harvey Washington, 1844-1930
Subjects: Cookery, American cbk
Publisher: New York, Hearst’s international library co.
Contributing Library: New York Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: MSN

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Text Appearing Before Image:
Shad Roe Croquettes.Recipe given on Page i6j.

Text Appearing After Image:
Lentils, Garnished with Cress and Celery Hearts. A Sala( Dressing may be added if liked.Directions for Cook in <j the Lentils on Page 320.

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Image from page 42 of “The Boston Cooking School magazine of culinary science and domestic economics” (1896)
cook books
Image by Internet Archive Book Images
Identifier: bostoncookingsch19hill_4
Title: The Boston Cooking School magazine of culinary science and domestic economics
Year: 1896 (1890s)
Authors: Hill, Janet McKenzie, 1852-1933, ed Boston Cooking School (Boston, Mass.)
Subjects: Home economics Cooking
Publisher: Boston : Boston Cooking-School Magazine
Contributing Library: Boston Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Boston Public Library

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Plain Coffee Cake. See page 27. bowl toward the body. When wellblended, continue the beating, addingeggs, one at a time, until seven in allhave been added (three besides thosefirst used). When the ball of sponge islight, remove from the water with askimmer, and place in the centre of theegg mixture. Fold the egg mixtureover the sponge, and continue thefolding until the two are thoroughlyblended. Then set aside in a tempera- size. Dip each piece into fritter batter,to cover each separate floweret. Thendrop them into deep fat, and let cookto a delicate brown. Serve at once,sprinkled with powdered sugar. Fritter Batter for Above Sift three-fourths a cup of flour, a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, and half a teaspoonful of salt. Beat one egg without separating the white and

Text Appearing After Image:
Elderberry Blossom Fritters, Vienna Style. ture of about 700, to become doubledin bulk. Cut down, and when againlight, but not doubled in bulk, set onice to remain about twelve hours, whenit is ready to use. yolk. Add half a cup of milk, and verygradually beat the liquid into the dryingredients. When about half the milkhas been added, beat the mixture verythoroughly. Then continue adding the 3° The Boston Cooking-School Magazine an hour milk. Let the batter standor longer, before using. Strawberries with CrustsStamp out slices of stale sponge cakeinto semicircular pieces, and spread

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Image taken from page 95 of ‘[The Voyages of Captain James Cook. Illustrated … With an appendix, giving an account of the present condition of the South Sea Islands, &c.]’
cook books
Image by The British Library
Image taken from:

Title: "[The Voyages of Captain James Cook. Illustrated … With an appendix, giving an account of the present condition of the South Sea Islands, &c.]", "Logs and Journals. Collected Editions"
Author: COOK, James – the Circumnavigator
Shelfmark: "British Library HMNTS 10003.d.9."
Volume: 01
Page: 95
Place of Publishing: London & New York
Date of Publishing: 1852
Publisher: John Tallis & Co.
Issuance: monographic
Identifier: 000772649

Explore:
Find this item in the British Library catalogue, ‘Explore’.
Open the page in the British Library’s itemViewer (page image 95)
Download the PDF for this book Image found on book scan 95 (NB not a pagenumber)Download the OCR-derived text for this volume: (plain text) or (json)

Click here to see all the illustrations in this book and click here to browse other illustrations published in books in the same year.

Order a higher quality version from here.

Image from page 53 of “American cookery” (1914)

May 15, 2019 · Posted in Cookbook · Comment 

Check out these cookbook images:

Image from page 53 of “American cookery” (1914)
cookbook
Image by Internet Archive Book Images
Identifier: americancookery19unse_4
Title: American cookery
Year: 1914 (1910s)
Authors:
Subjects:
Publisher: New York [etc.] : Whitney Publications [etc.]
Contributing Library: Boston Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Boston Public Library

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Text Appearing Before Image:
llon in Urns Coffee T T Potato Salad Cold Boiled Ham, Sliced Thin Unbuttered Rolls II Olives Pickles Sliced Ham Sandwiches Mayonnaise of IV Chopped Chicken Sandwiches Ice Cream Strawberries Cheese-and-Sliced Nut Sandwiches Cake Coffee Cocoa Coffee Four Course Banquets for Lodges, Boards of Tra ide, etc. i in (i) Halves of Grapefruit (i) Strawberry-and-Pineapple Cocktail (2) Turbans of Fresh Fish with Oysters (2) Fresh Fish Croquettes, Sauce Tartare Hot House Cucumbers Parker House Rolls (3) Planked Sirloin or Swiss Steak Olives Salted Nuts with Vegetables (3) Swiss Steak, (4) Fruit Cup Brown Mushroom Sauce Coffee Onions and PotatoesRomaine or Lettuce Salad II (4) Strawberry Ice Cream (1) Strawberries, Powdered Sugar (2) Creamed Fresh Fish in Ramekins IV Potato Diamonds with Peas (3) Broiled Lamb ChopsMacaroni (tomato, cheese) Salpicon of Fruit in Cups Lettuce and Cress, French Dressing Creai (4) Baked Alaska Ice Cream Jellied PhiladelphiaRelish, Jellied Coffee Baking Powder Biscuit 43

Text Appearing After Image:
Food Hints for June-July By Janet M. Hill DURING the summer months it iswell to plan for as many outdoormeals as possible. Easily trans-ported, light, wire frames, that may beset up over a wood fire, make possible thecooking in the open air of almost any-thing edible. For baking a few biscuits,a portable oven may be set on the frame,but the principal use made of the framewill be as a broiler for bacon, chops andfish, boiling vegetables, roasting corn,baking griddle-cakes and potatoes, andtoasting bread. To be sure, when goingaway for a week, or even a day, a basketof cooked food is always a welcome addi-tion to the supplies. But even if butone meal is to be eaten out of doors, thepleasure of that meal is much enhancedby preparing at least one hot dish besidethe pot of hot coffee. Brook trout,caught in the near-by stream, rolled inmeal and cooked in a frying pan in a littlehot bacon or salt-pork fat, will, withbread-and-butter sandwiches and hotcoffee, make a meal that puts the finish-

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“Dinner in the Beer Garden” & goodies (02)
cookbook
Image by cizauskas
I received my copy of Dinner in the Beer Garden (by Lucy Saunders) with a box full of ‘goodies’ (packed by Larry’s Market, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin). All the items are used in various recipes in the beer-with-food cookbook. (Full disclosure: I was a supporter of the book’s publishing, via Kickstarter.)

7 March 2014.

**************
Dinner in the Beer Garden
Saunders, Lucy. Milwaukee, WI: F&B Communications, LLC, 2014.
ISBN: 978-9-9769875-2-9

[See a close-up of the front cover: here.]

**************
"Fruits, vegetables, and beer, enjoyed outdoors in gardens and social spaces. This book isn’t about traditional biergarten fare. It’s a cookbook for people who like carrots and kale —as well as butter, fish, cheese, and chocolate! Profiles of gorgeous brewery gardens and juicy color photographs illustrate more than 100 recipes with beer pairings.

Lucy Saunders thinks of beer as food. She has chronicled American brewing since 1987, and her work has been featured in SAVEUR, USA TODAY, CHICAGO TRIBUNE, WASHINGTON POST, and more. Saunders teaches cooking with beer classes and tastings, at the Siebel Institute, as well as festivals, the Craft Brewers Conference, and has judged at the Brussels Beer Challenge. She organizes water conservation events at www.Conserve-GreatLakes.com, and lives in Milwaukee, WI."

**************
Dinner in The Beer Garden is available for purchase via
* email at beergardenbook at gmail dot com
* toll-free phone on 800-760-5998.

An ecommerce site to follow soon.
More details on Facebook: DinnerInTheBeerGarden.

***************
Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.
— Follow on Twitter @Cizauskas.
— Follow on Facebook.
Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.

Image from page 242 of “American cookery” (1914)

April 29, 2019 · Posted in Cookbook · Comment 

Some cool cookbook images:

Image from page 242 of “American cookery” (1914)
cookbook
Image by Internet Archive Book Images
Identifier: americancookery19unse_0
Title: American cookery
Year: 1914 (1910s)
Authors:
Subjects:
Publisher: New York [etc.] : Whitney Publications [etc.]
Contributing Library: Boston Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Boston Public Library

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Text Appearing Before Image:
Add nomilk Use-^water and^et BcTOr-p^cakes

Text Appearing After Image:
Tasty, Economical, Wholesome Malted Buttermilk in powder form is added toTeco flour at the mill. It takes the place ofmilk, and is an exclusive feature that gives TecoPancakes their decidedly distinctive flavor.Not a d.op of milk is added to make the deli- cious Teco Pancakes. Dont spend a cent formilk—and yet have unusually good pancakes.You just add zvater to Teco buttermilk griddlecake flours—then bake. Have 6 pancakes for acent—60 from a package. TECO Self-Rising Pancake andBuckwheat Flours Meets the Governments, Dr. Wileys,and the Westfield Pure Food Standards Some folks say they are crazy about pancakes,but often have trouble in getting good ones.But, once they try the Teco kind—how theylike em! Teco cakes are so delicious, andtender, and enticingly brown! They fairly meltaway—theyre bringing back the popularity pan-cakes had in grandmas day.When she churned, the buttermilk was saved andadded to her flour, to make pancakes. Thosewere the kind!—nobody ever got enough.

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Roasting red bell peppers
cookbook
Image by Vincent Ma
I’ve seen this done enough times on TV and in cookbooks that I wanted to try it.

The result was awesome!

Sichuan cookbook
cookbook
Image by renaissancechambara

Image from page 140 of “The pure food cook book, the Good housekeeping recipes, just how to buy–just how to cook” (1914)

March 5, 2019 · Posted in Cook Books · Comment 

Some cool cook books images:

Image from page 140 of “The pure food cook book, the Good housekeeping recipes, just how to buy–just how to cook” (1914)
cook books
Image by Internet Archive Book Images
Identifier: purefoodcookbook00madd
Title: The pure food cook book, the Good housekeeping recipes, just how to buy–just how to cook
Year: 1914 (1910s)
Authors: Maddocks, Mildred, ed Wiley, Harvey Washington, 1844-1930
Subjects: Cookery, American cbk
Publisher: New York, Hearst’s international library co.
Contributing Library: New York Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: MSN

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About This Book: Catalog Entry
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Text Appearing Before Image:
repare a thick custard by boiling a cupful of washedrice in slightly salted milk; cook until the rice is dry andtender, stirring in one well-beaten egg, a scant table-spoonful of sugar, a few drops of vanilla extract, andtwo tablespoonfuls of cream ; beat until light and pourinto shallow china cups, placing in the ice-box to be-come firm; when cold unmold and, with a sharp spoon,remove a portion of the rice from the center of each cup,filling the depressions with sliced preserved peaches anda little of the syrup; cover the top with powdered maca-roon crumbs, and after arranging on a baking sheet runinto a hot oven for about five minutes: serve with thickcream. Carrotina Rice Put one and one-quarter cup fuls of the best rice(picked but not washed) in covered stew-pan with twotablespoonfuls of butter, one-half of a tablespoonful ofpaprika (Hungarian pepper), and one teaspoonful ofsalt. Mix well. Place, covered, in hot oven for tenminutes, take out, add a good-sized carrot cut into cubes

Text Appearing After Image:
S o G

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Image from page 59 of “The Bookshelf for boys and girls Children’s Book of Fact and Fancy” (1912)
cook books
Image by Internet Archive Book Images
Identifier: bookshelfforboys00univ9
Title: The Bookshelf for boys and girls Children’s Book of Fact and Fancy
Year: 1912 (1910s)
Authors: University Society, New York
Subjects: Children’s literature Children’s encyclopedias and dictionaries Literature Encyclopedias and dictionaries
Publisher: New York. : University Society
Contributing Library: Brigham Young University-Idaho, David O. McKay Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Brigham Young University-Idaho

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e there in the valley of Dilly-Dally From seven till after nine.It s here with the bees we do as we please, Said little Somcotlicrtime.While here we stay We play and play— What else is half so fine? And then they were off to the By-and-by tree,Where the big cockatooAnd the little cuckooWere calling away with noisy ado :We dine some time; some time we dine !But oh, we are hungry as we can be!Our little boys said: And who can seeA sign when dinner ready will be ? Then the cockatoo winked at the little cuckooSome time, some time we 11 wait on you.This, boys, is the land of Weregoingto;It s a long way off from Nowrightaziuy,Where even the cooks are on time, they say. 42 POEMS FOR CHILDREN OF ALL AGES But this is the place for lads like you:You may take all day to button your shoe;You may take a year for nothing to do!What time is it, eh ? Next time at your easeSome time, any time, save now, if you pleaseOur clocks never strike; they drawl but one chime:Some other day ! Some other time !

Text Appearing After Image:
IN THE LAND OF NOWRIGHTAWAY Now the sun is low in the west, you see;And the dark creeps up to the By-and-bx treeSpeed away, good swallow, on swiftest wingAnd above that cockatoos screeching sing:Come home, little laggards, come home andstayIn your own fair land of Nowrightaivay,Where the clocks strike true, and faces shineWhen the school-bells ring out, Nine! nine! nine !The road is straight that brings you here,And after this we 11 call you dear Ycsrightaivay, Dear Justontimc,And forget the day you ran awayTo the dreary valley of Dilly-Dally— Poor little Goingtosomeday, And little Someothcrtime ! The clocks strike true, cAnd faces shineWhen the school-bells ring out, Nine I nine I nine I POEMS FOR CHILDREN OF ALL AGES 43

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