|
Showing 1 - 17 of
17 matches in All Departments
Elizabeth Raffald was an amazing woman, achieving a great many
things in a short time. She was an author, innovator, benefactor
and entrepreneur as well as a mother and a wife. From the age of 15
she was in service as a housekeeper to great families and at the
age of 30 began her career in business. She began with catering,
included a school and employment office before writing this
cookbook which contains her own original, innovative recipes,
giving us wedding cake, stock cubes, Eccles cakes and much more
that we take for granted. She gained a huge reputation for her
confectionery skills, while running shops and a coaching inn,
giving financial aid to the only newspaper in Manchester at the
time, producing the town's first ever directory in 1772, (only the
second after London), supporting several poor widows of the area,
collaborating on a book of midwifery, and having 9 children.
This extra special edition, created in 2019, to commemorate the
250th anniversary of the first printed recipe for wedding cake,
contains a reproduction of the first edition of the original
cookbook from 1769; includes an Appendix with the additional
recipes featured in the second edition issued in 1771; AND includes
an introduction by Suze Appleton containing references to source
material from her research. It was Elizabeth Raffald's innovation
for rich fruit cake with double icing for wedding cake which began
a long lasting tradition. Her book also contains many other
innovative recipes in the original 800 recipe book. This edition
also contains an extract of the fiction of Elizabeth's life, An
Uncommon Woman, currently in progress, to be released in 2020.
This is a retyped edition of the original 18th century book by
Elizabeth Raffald, the forgotten woman of Manchester. Her first
edition of The Experienced English Housekeeper contained around 800
recipes and for the second edition another 100 were added including
several for turtle It is a comprehensive work and covers most
foods, often going from the live animal to the finished dish. It
was reprinted many times up to the mid 19th century, with 13
genuine editions, together with another 26 pirate editions,
including one for America. It was not until after Elizabeth's death
that the books carried an engraving of her, the only image we have
of her. Working in the 18th century Elizabeth Raffald produced an
amazing cookbook, was a serial entrepreneur with multiple
businesses and is also renowned as the compiler of Manchester's
first ever town directory in 1772.
Elizabeth was an amazing woman, achieving a great many things in a
short time. She was an author, innovator, benefactor and
entrepreneur as well as a mother and a wife. From the age of 15 she
was in domestic service as a housekeeper to great families
including the Warburtons of Arley Hall, Cheshire, where she married
the head gardener and at the age of 30 beginning her career in
business. She began with catering, included a school and employment
office before writing a cookbook which contained her own original,
innovative recipes, giving us wedding cake, stock cubes, Eccles
cakes and much more that we take for granted. She went on to gain a
huge reputation for her confectionery skills, while running shops
and a coaching inn, giving financial aid to the only newspaper in
Manchester at the time, producing the town's first ever directory
in 1772, supporting several poor widows of the area, collaborating
on a book of midwifery, and having 9 children.
|
|