From Publishers Weekly
As the latest volume in Iowa's maverick and distinguished Szathmary Culinary Arts Series, this one brings us a notebook of the London pastry cook and pioneering cooking teacher Kidder (1665?-1739), with recipes presented in handwritten facsimile and in a typeset transcription. Probably dictated, the recipes are brief, will strike most modern readers as brightly idiosyncratic and are utterly free of gastronomic political correctness: Kidder liked his suet. They make ideal bedside reading. There is, for instance, the one for "A Regalia of Cowcumbers." Dried, fried, gravied, and mixed into a sauce to accompany meat, they are dealt with by Kidder with such dispatch and such quaint spellings that the recipe is like a bluntly physical poem, rough and uneven in its hurl. There are pies (artichoke, egg, pigeon, tongue, calve's head); cakes; puddings (e.g., "a quaking Pudding"); soups; meat dishes ("Bombarded veal"); fish. A glossary is absolutely necessary, and provided. Instructions will not fail to amuse: "Take a good buttock of beef," suggests the master, and "Take a live carp and scale and slice him." Thank God, we can't--not as he did. Schoonover is a curator at the University of Iowa Libraries and an editor of previous Szathmary series titles.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
