19th Century British History - Victorian Era (1837-1901), Cooking & Food History, Home Economics, British Cooking, British History - Social Aspects
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Overview
What was life really like "below stairs" in Victorian times? In her book The Victorian Kitchen, Jennifer Davies look behind the scenes. The book includes a section on that most Victorian of culinary techniques, and has a collection of recipes which have been specially adapted from Victorian cookery books. Beautifully illustrated with period drawings and engravings as well as full-color photographs of the restored Victorian kitchen.Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
If you've ever wondered how downstairs provided upstairs with all of those elaborate meals, wonder no more. Davies, a BBC producer, has written a meticulously detailed work about the nerve center of the Victorian home--the kitchen. Be warned: this is not a cookbook so much as book about cooking, although some recipes are included. The author explains how the kitchen functioned in an era when industry was expanding but stoves still had to be lit by hand at six o'clock in the morning. Chapters examine the relationship between mistress and servants, the social hierarchy of the kitchen and the sometimes Dickensian conditions under which kitchen maids and cooks had to work to yield the expected bounty. The book is filled with period illustrations and photos from the BBC series of the same name, and includes vivid anecdotes from veterans of Victorian staffs. The few recipes featured are drawn straight from Victorian sources. They have been modernized, but read carefully before trying them. If you do attempt them,, you'll produce a reasonable facsimile of a Victorian dinner--typically, with mulligatawny soup, boiled leg of mutton, potato snow and treacle pudding. Still, after you've made all of these things by hand, you may want to give your microwave a hug. (Nov.)Book Details
Published
October 31, 1991
Publisher
BBC Books
Pages
192
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780563362814