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Maggie Black (1) (1921–1999)

Author of The Medieval Cookbook

For other authors named Maggie Black, see the disambiguation page.

35+ Works 1,131 Members 12 Reviews

Works by Maggie Black

The Medieval Cookbook (1992) — Author — 575 copies, 8 reviews
The Jane Austen Cookbook (1995) 251 copies, 4 reviews
Cheesecakes (1980) 16 copies
The Complete Cookery (2005) 6 copies
Mrs. Beeton's Favourite Cakes and Breads (1972) — Editor — 5 copies
Hundred Ways with Cheese (1976) 5 copies

Associated Works

A Taste of History: 10, 000 Years of Food in Britain (1993) — Introduction — 115 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Howorth, Margaret Katherine
Birthdate
1921-09-22
Date of death
1999-08-05
Gender
female
Education
University of the Witwatersrand
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
An interesting look at food culture in Georgian/Regency England, accompanied by dozens of contemporary recipes each with a modern "translation" to allow you to cook your own if you so please. I have to admit that I'm highly unlikely to ever try any of them myself—even in modernised form, many of them seem really fussy and time-consuming, and the flavour profiles preferred by the average member of the Georgian gentry seem quite different from my own. (The inclusion of photographs of the show more various dishes might have helped to whet the appetite more.) However, still fascinating to dip into, and full of interesting little nuggets of information—such as the fact that Austen's contemporaries were as likely to use the still-rare potato in sweet as they were in savoury dishes. show less
½
Any fan of Jane Austen's novels would do well to read, or at least sample, this book. Austen's work is the story of domestic life of her time, and this book provides a lot of useful information about an important context of her novels: food, meals, and dining. What is a nuncheon? How do cooks cope without refrigeration? And how, specifically, does one prepare many of the foods familiar to Austen's world? This book addresses these questions, in a well-written and well-researched style. It is show more physically attractive, and soundly based on contemporaneous records and recipes ('receipts') of the time, although these were recorded in ways foreign to us. show less
The cookbook would have been greatly enhanced by inclusion of the passages from Austen's works which inspired the recipes contained in it. The book is more interesting from the standpoint of culinary history than from an attempt to provide recipes which modern cooks would wish to prepare. I have not yet figured out how to give 1/2 star ratings, but I'd really rate this as 3.5 stars.
Want to throw a medieval feast? This is the book you need. Lots of great recipes and stories to give you a foundation of historical background on feasting in the Middle Ages. The barley bread recipe is fantastic!

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Statistics

Works
35
Also by
1
Members
1,131
Popularity
#22,700
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
12
ISBNs
107
Languages
5

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