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Arabella Boxer

Author of The Herb Book

32+ Works 835 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Arabella Boxer was a food writer for Vogue for seventeen years and has written numerous cookbooks. She currently resides in London.
Disambiguation Notice:

Arabella Boxer wrote 2 different books on herbs: the earlier Herb Book co-authored with Philippa Back first published in the 80's which exists in several editions; and the Hamlyn Herb Book published in 1996 then later re-issued, combined with the Hamlyn Spice Book. These should not be combined. WorldCat has things a bit muddled but I own the 2 books and they are not the same.

Works by Arabella Boxer

The Herb Book (1980) 386 copies, 1 review
Arabella Boxer's book of English food (1991) 49 copies, 1 review
First slice your cookbook (1964) 30 copies, 1 review
The Spice Book (1997) 27 copies
Mediterranean Cookbook (1981) 26 copies
Fashionable First Courses (1986) 19 copies
Garden Cook Book (1974) 17 copies
Soups (Master Chefs) (1996) 15 copies
Book of Herbs and Spices (1985) 15 copies
Herb and Spice Handbook (1999) 14 copies

Associated Works

Food in Vogue: Six Decades of Cooking and Entertaining (1976) — Contributor — 9 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Lady Arabella Stuart
Birthdate
1934-07-11
Gender
female
Education
Hatherop Castle Boarding School
Awards and honors
Andre Simon Memorial Fund Award 1991
Short biography
Arabella Boxer, married to the journalistic genius Mark Boxer in the 1960s, was brought up in the north of Scotland. "The food was very dull," she recalls now. "But when I was a little older my mother took me to Maine – she was American – and it was just divine. Strawberry ice-cream, corn chowder, chicken pie. I found out what fun food could be."
Nationality
UK
Places of residence
Darnaway Castle, Scotland
London, England, UK
Disambiguation notice
Arabella Boxer wrote 2 different books on herbs: the earlier Herb Book co-authored with Philippa Back first published in the 80's which exists in several editions; and the Hamlyn Herb Book published in 1996 then later re-issued, combined with the Hamlyn Spice Book. These should not be combined. WorldCat has things a bit muddled but I own the 2 books and they are not the same.
Associated Place (for map)
UK

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
This is a revised version of the original 1991 edition. It is most easily tagged as gastronomy, but it is also memoir, history and recipe book.

There is no denying that, even among people who should know better, English cooking has a poor reputation. Boxer's thesis is that this is unfair. Between the wars there was a move away from stodgy Edwardian cooking, driven by a shortage of servants and the introduction of modern cooking equipment. (We are not talking about the working class, whose show more diet remained atrocious.) The momentum was lost after the Second World War, with Elizabeth David beginning a vogue for foreign cuisines that has not abated until very recently.

Boxer was born in 1934, and the introductions to each chapter include reminiscences from her own upper-class childhood, setting the food in its cultural context. The recipes are all sourced from books of the period; a great many of them are familiar to anyone raised on what I like to think of as "good plain cooking" of the British style (Boxer cannot avoid Scottish recipes, being Scottish herself).

Recommended to anyone with an interest in social history, or in unfussy, delicious recipes. If, like me, you are interested in both, you are in for a real treat.
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Unusual cookbook divided into three independent sections so you can mix and match for a menu.
Good all round basic book on herbs from growing, their uses and cooking.
The recipies make your mouth water, the pictures are amazing

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Statistics

Works
32
Also by
1
Members
835
Popularity
#30,604
Rating
3.8
Reviews
4
ISBNs
79
Languages
6

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