1st Edition

Encyclopedia of Kitchen History

By Mary Ellen Snodgrass Copyright 2004
    696 Pages 103 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    A space common to all peoples, the kitchen embodies the cultural history of domestic life: how people around the world acquire, prepare, cook, serve, eat, preserve, and store food; what foods we eat and why and when; what utensils, cutlery, decorations, furnishings, and appliances we create and use; what work, play, chores, services, and celebrations we perform. The history of the kitchen reflects human ingenuity solving problems posed by daily necessity and the human desire for social comfort and continuity. Kitchen history also tells us much about our interaction with others and with other cultures as well. From the history of beer, cooking stones, ergonomics, medieval kitchens, Roman cookery, pasta, and chopsticks to inventors such as Nils Dalén and George Washington Carver and cookbook authors such as Isabella Beeton and Julia Child, this A-Z Encyclopedia presents almost 300 wide-ranging entries that detail the culinary history of each topic. The Encyclopedia of Kitchen History features: *See Alsos which lead the reader to pertinent entries *Useful Sources section at the end of entries that compiles a list of books, CDs, journals, newspapers, and online databases and news sources for further research *An appendix of Common Sources- the most helpful resources on domestic histories *Numerous illustrations that explain and communicate the vibrancy of domestic culture *Thorough, analytic index that directs the reader to the people, writings, recipes, inventions, processes, and foodstuffs that make up kitchen history. From the discovery of fire to the latest space mission, the Encyclopedia of Kitchen History brings together the rich diversity of kitchen history in one accessible volume. Students, researchers, scholars, and culinary aficionados- from beginners to experts- will find this Encyclopedia to be a fascinating look into the history of the kitchen from the foodstuffs prepared to the tools and implements used as well as the innovators who shaped its function and utility.

    Selected Entries include: Acton, Elizabeth Air Conditioning Aphrodisiacs Baby Food Baking Banquets Birdseye, Clarence Bread Candles Cannibalism Chafing Dish Cheese Communal Meal Detergent Drying Foods Eggs Etiquette Farmer, Fannie Feng Shui Frontier Kitchens Garbage Glasse, Hannah Grog Hines, Duncan Honey Ice Cream Ironwork Japan Ware Kellogg, John Harvey Kimch'i Kitchen Gardening Lamps and Lights Linens Maillard Reaction Microwaving Mixers and Blenders Mortar and Pestle Needles, Kitchen Oil (as Food) Open-Hearth Cooking Pewter Plastics Precious Metals Querns Ramada Refrigeration Roman Cookery Salt Sieves and Strainers Smoked Food Stone Boiling Taro Television Kitchens Ulu Vacuum Cleaners Water Weights and Measures Women's Magazines Yeast and many more

    Biography

    Mary Ellen Snodgrass

    'Larger public and academic libraries, especially those with a demand for resources in the culinary arts, will want to consider this work.' - Library Journal