In the Kitchen, 1550-1800 : : Reading English Cooking at Home and Abroad / / ed. by Hillary Nunn, Madeline Bassnett.

In the Kitchen insists that the preparation of food, whether imaginative, physical, or spatial, is central to a deeper understanding of early modern food cultures and practices. Devoted to the arts of cooking and medicine, early modern kitchens concentrated on producing, processing, and preserving m...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Amsterdam University Press Complete eBook-Package 2022
MitwirkendeR:
HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:Amsterdam : : Amsterdam University Press, , [2022]
©2022
Year of Publication:2022
Language:English
Series:Food Culture, Food History before 1900 ; 4
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (294 p.)
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Other title:Frontmatter --
Food Culture, Food History before 1900 --
Table of Contents --
Acknowledgments --
Introduction: In the Kitchen --
Section 1 Embodied Ecologies --
1. Sympoeisis and Early Modern Cooking : Troubling the Boundaries of Human/Nonhuman --
2. Between Earth and Sky : The Cook as Environmental Mediator in Paradise Lost --
3. Instinct and the Body of the Early Modern Cook --
Section 2 Bread, Cake, and Carp --
4. Early Modern Leaven in Bread, Bodies, and Spirit --
5. Cake: An Early Modern Chronicle of Trade, Technology, and Exchange --
6. The Power of the Pot : Naturalizing Carp Through the Early Modern English Receipt Book --
Section 3 Royalist Cookery --
7. How to Make a Bisk: The Restoration Cookbook as National Restorative --
8. ‘A Little Winter Savory, A Little Time’ : Making History in Elizabeth Cromwell’s Kitchen --
9. A Culinary Embassy : Diplomatic Home Making in Lady Ann Fanshawe’s Booke of Receipts --
Section 4 Around the Hearth --
10. Minding the Fire : Human-Fire Coagency in Margaret Cavendish’s Matrimonial Trouble and Seventeenth-Century Recipes --
11. ‘Teâgun kuttiemaûnch: What Food Shall I Prepare for You?’: Exchanges in Early New England Kitchens --
12. ‘A New Source of Happiness to Man’? : Maple Sugaring and Settler Colonialism in the Early Modern Atlantic World --
Index
Summary:In the Kitchen insists that the preparation of food, whether imaginative, physical, or spatial, is central to a deeper understanding of early modern food cultures and practices. Devoted to the arts of cooking and medicine, early modern kitchens concentrated on producing, processing, and preserving materials necessary for nourishment and survival; yet they also fed social and economic networks and nurtured a sense of physical, spiritual, and political connection to surrounding lands and their cultures. The essays in this volume illuminate this expansive view of cooking and aspire to show how the kitchen's inner workings prove tightly, though often invisibly, interwoven with local, national, and, increasingly, global surroundings. Engaging with literary and historical methodologies, including close reading, recipe analysis, and perspectives on gender, class, race, and colonialism, we begin to develop a shared theoretical and practical language for the art of cooking that combines the physical with the intellectual, the local with the global, and the domestic with the political.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9789048552368
9783110767094
9783110767001
9783110993899
9783110994810
9783110992960
9783110992939
DOI:10.1515/9789048552368?locatt=mode:legacy
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: ed. by Hillary Nunn, Madeline Bassnett.