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Sensible Cook : Dutch Foodways in the Old and New World

Part of the New York State Series series
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The most favored Dutch cookbook of the seventeenth century, The Sensible Cook (De Verstandige Kock) had a major impact on the foodways of the Dutch in the Netherlands and in their New World territories. As a part of the larger work, The Pleasurable Country Life, The Sensible Cook records the foodways of rich middle-class households, the cooking methods and typical dishes they prepared, and the implements and ingredients they employed. Often the recipes are surprisingly sophisticated. From braising a chicken with orange peel and cinnamon to stuffing pigeons with a mixture of parsley, ginger, sugar, butter, and raisins, many of the dishes are still appealing today.

Peter G. Rose has, in fact, adapted some two dozen of the recipes for contemporary use tempting dishes such as "Shoemaker's Cake," a delicious combination of bread crumbs, butter, eggs, and stewed apples. Handsomely illustrated with Dutch genre paintings, The Sensible Cook will interest cooks, food historians, students of social and cultural history, and the large number of Dutch descendants in America.

Most important, this book will be welcomed by all who enjoy good food.

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Product Details
Syracuse University Press
0815602413 / 9780815602415
Hardback
01/09/1998
United States
142 pages
163 x 243 mm, 482 grams
General (US: Trade) Learn More