| Women in the Kitchen by Anne Willan, published 2020. |
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| Illustration from Women in the Kitchen. Note that there is a book open on her table while the woman works at the fire — no doubt a cookbook! |
I learned about several authors whose works I had only vaguely heard about. Sarah Rutledge (born 1782) for example, was the author of The Carolina Housewife. “By 1847, when Sarah Rutledge published The Carolina Housewife, her only book, she could look back on a lifetime as doyenne of Southern society, featuring rounds of spring presentation parties and languid summer suppers giving way to the festivities of Thanksgiving and the winter holiday season. When she set up house independently in Charleston, she would have been served by slaves.” So her advice on how to run a household is very different from later authors, who address women who had few or no servants!
Predictably, there’s a chapter on Irma Rombauer and her original and insanely successful way of writing a cookbook: The Joy of Cooking. Who doesn’t know this cookbook? By 1974: “No cookbook in American history had achieved such fame. Two decades later Joy of Cooking was chosen by the New York Public Library during their centennial celebration in 1995 as the only cookbook among its 150 most influential books of the century. More than a million copies had been sold by the time the seventh edition was published in 1997. After a series of revisions, a 75th anniversary edition was published in 2006. It contained 1,152 pages and more nearly echoed earlier editions. The urge to modernize was curbed and the teaching text was restored and expanded. As Julia Child put it when she heard about the upcoming anniversary edition: ‘Thanks for putting the joy back in JOY.’”
Women in the Kitchen is a quick and entertaining book to read. I found some of the material new to me, and some very familiar — which is a nice combination, I think. The author keeps her focus on food!


10 comments:
Thanks for the book recommendation. I'm going to check my library.
What a wonderful book to discover! The detail about Fannie Farmer's Boston Cooking-School cookbook outselling everything until World War I is remarkable, and Julia Child's quote about Irma Rombauer putting the joy back in Joy of Cooking made me smile. Books like these remind you that cooking is really storytelling too. Adding this to my reading list right away. Your salmon and au gratin potato Sunday dinner also looks absolutely perfect!
This looks like a really fun book! Alice's dinner looks fantastic, too.
This is a wonderful book. Thanks for sharing it. I do love this photo. Have a nice day today.
That looks like a super dinner, and it's great photo of your granddaughter. That sounds like a good book too. It sounds familiar to me, even though I know I haven't read it. Hmmm.
I am ashamed to say, I had never heard of The Joy Of Cooking. But your book about cookbook authors sounds good.
Happy T-Day,
Lisca
Why do you do this? In a sec I order the book and I have too many books! But, over time I turned to cooking so... my kindle will get a bit "fatter"!
I just ordered paperback...
Sounds like a good book, thanks for the review.
Your Sunday dinner looks delicious.
Take care, have a great day!
I like the sound of this book. I enjoyed reading the historical fiction book, Miss Eliza's English Kitchen. It was about Eliza Acton who put together Modern Cookery for Private Families.
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