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Food & drink in BritainFood & drink in Britain

Food & drink in Britain

C. Anne Wilson

About this book

C. Anne Wilson Traces culinary practices and preferences from our earliest prehistoric forbears down to the generation of the Industrial Revolution, and offers an extraordinary taste of the times. She provides a tabletop perspective on class structure, religion, politics, and social custom, generously seasoned with such culinary and cultural tidbits as the importance of salt in English history and the role of romance in England's first taste of the wines of southernmost France. Readers will become acquainted with the sources of many of our current tastes and conventions. Discover "macrows," the prototype of macaroni, and that "whales, porpoises and sturgeon were all royal fish." Meringue, to the Elizabethans, was a "dishful of snow," and rather difficult to whip up before the advent of the fork in the late 17th century. Before the Reformation all buns were "hot cross" in order to ward off evil spirits that might prevent the bread rising. Adventurous readers who wish to dine as their ancestors did may do so; Ms. Wilson includes many authentic recipes--such as 17th century rice pudding--which add flavor of a unique kind. This cornucopia of custom and cuisine provides plenty of food for thought for everyone, and what could be of more interest if we are, indeed, what we eat?

Details

OL Work ID
OL501316W

Subjects

Food habitsBritish CookeryGastronomyDinners and diningHistoryBritish CookingCooking, britishFood, historyBeveragesGreat britain, historyGreat britain, social life and customsCuisine britanniqueHistoireGastronomieGreat britain, social conditions

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.