Farmer’s book popularized the modern recipe format, and it was a fitting guide to food and home life in a modernizing country. Farmer’s recipes were gratifyingly precise, and unprecedentedly replicable, perfect for Americans with newfangled gadgets like standardized cup and spoon measures, who worked in relative isolation from the friends and family who had passed along cooking knowledge in generations past. They also appreciated her methodical approach to cooking, which spoke to the unique conditions they faced. Home cooks in the United States loved the tastiness and inventiveness of Farmer’s recipes. It introduced cooks to recipes like hamburg steaks and French fried potatoes, early prototypes of hamburgers and fries, and fruit sandwiches, peanuts sprinkled on fig paste that were a clear precursor to peanut butter and jelly.Īmericans went nuts for the 567-page volume, buying The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book in numbers the publishing industry had never seen-around 360,000 copies by the time author Fannie Farmer died in 1915. But it added a forward-looking bent to older kitchen wisdom, casting ingredients such as cheese, chocolate, and ground beef-all bit players in 19th-century U.S. Published in 1896, it was filled with recipes for such familiar 19th-century dishes as potted pigeons, creamed vegetables, and mock turtle soup. The first edition of The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book-now known as The Fannie Farmer Cookbook-reads like a road map for 20th-century American cuisine.
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