A Proper Newe Booke of Cokerye explained

A Proper Newe Booke of Cokerye is a book of recipes, seasons for meat and listing of courses and dishes for service on fish days and non-fish days written for women running their own households by an unknown author.[1] The text was published in London and survives in three editions: 1545 (held at the University of Glasgow), 1557-1558 (held at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge) and two later editions, one of 1575 (held in the British Library).[1] It is a relatively small volume, beginning with a list of meats and their seasons, followed by a listing of dinners and suggested dishes for service for both flesh and fish days. After this comes a list of 49 recipes mostly covering meat dishes and pies, though there are a small number of sweet dishes, including "A tart of Bourage Flowers", "pye of aloes" and a "tart of Marygoldes, Primroses, or Cowslips".[1]

The book is important as it is one of the first cookery books in English aimed at a more general reader and also at a more female audience who might not have cooked before.[2] As result the recipes are fuller than their medieval equivalents, with indications of amounts for ingredients and cooking times.[2]

Modern editions

edited by Catherine Frances Frere, W. Heffer & Sons Ltd, London, 1913

References and sources

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Oxford, p. 3
  2. https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/a-proper-new-booke-of-cookery "A Proper New Booke of Cookery"