Dining with the Georgians

£7.80

Dining with the Georgians

A Delicious History

Social and cultural history

Author: Emma Kay

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Language: English

Published by: Amberley Publishing

Published on: 15 October 2014

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 6 Mb

ISBN: 9781445636566


Introduction to Everyday Pleasures

A cup of coffee and a slice of cake, a glossy book in hand to cook for friends, Sunday lunch with the family at the local pub – most of us take these simple everyday pleasures for granted. But how did we learn to cook and what inspired us to get better at it?

The Roots of Food Culture in the Georgian Period

Today’s food-obsessed culture has its roots in the Georgian period. Kay explores how, as a consequence of wider trade and travel, people living in Georgian Britain witnessed the emergence of new and exotic ingredients. They learnt about new styles of cooking and the types of apparatus needed to achieve these. Chefs were recruited from overseas to work in Britain''s stately homes, taverns and inns.

Growth of Culinary Professions and Market

The number of men and women employed as pastry chefs and confectioners increased by almost 20,000 from the end of the Georgian to the middle of the Victorian period. The market for recipe books was prolific during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. This was also a time of great invention and the beginning of mass consumerism.

Technological Innovations

The first washing machine was developed, early refrigeration was refined, tin canning emerged and the first gas stove was patented long before Queen Victoria ascended the throne.

Historical Impact of the Georgians

Discover the real histories of our domestic and commercial kitchens, how Britain fell in love with food and how progress and invention in the culinary arts is largely attributed to the Georgians.

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