this post was submitted on 08 May 2024
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Vintage Recipes - Archiving nostalgic recipes from cookbooks, handwritten notes, advertisements, etc

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A community for sharing favorite vintage and nostalgic recipes from years past. The goal of this community is to preserve our favorite dishes and share them with the world so that they don't go extinct just because they're not in the culinary zeitgeist.

Please tag your recipe titles with [RECIPE]. Be sure to include the dish name and it’s creator (person or business) in the title for easier searching. Please include the date the recipe was published, if possible.

Sharing a video? Tag it with [VIDEO].

All requests should be tagged with [REQUEST]. Before you post, make sure someone hasn’t already requested the same recipe!

No recipe blog spam! You can link to a personal blog in the comments, but please include the recipe itself in your post. Any post URLs should point to the actual recipe (website, image host, etc.) and not just serve as an advertisement to drive up clicks for your site.

We here in Vintage Recipes believe that information should be freely available. We learn by observing and analyzing what has come before. We do not believe in secrets, and we do not believe that old methods should be forgotten.

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 months ago (1 children)

This is my jam! I have so many of these cookbooks tucked away on my ereader. Have you read any of Eliza Leslie? Cooking and housekeeping hints, but she is so salty! Hannah Wooley was the first woman in England to have a cookbook published. It was so popular, others started immediately ripping off her recipes and republishing them with new titles.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I would imagine you have read your Mrs. Beetons? Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management

There are some interesting recipes, and she and her book were widely influential. The book contained reasonably detailed instructions and quantities. There wasn't any of that 'cook in the usual manner' that Caréme and Escoffier used. It was much more a modern cookbook in that respect.

From a modern lens she was also horrible, i.e. ‘Indian servants are good, many of them: but they cannot be trusted and will cheat if they have a chance’.

It's still a good read

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

Mrs. Beeton was my gateway into vintage cookbooks.