The Closet of the Eminently Learned Sir Kenelme Digbie, Kt., Opened 1669
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
This book was last printed in 1910, in a sound edition that is no longer easily available. This new version has several improvements. The editors discuss the role of George Hartman, Digby's assistant, in the compilation of the book, and relate its contents to the work that went out in 1682 over Hartman's own name, The True Preserver and Restorer of Health. There is a full glossary and the reader will be helped by the extensive biographical notes about people named in the text as the source of recipes.
Digby's work is perhaps the most literate of seventeenth-century cookery books. He was a natural writer, as entertaining as instructive. Many of the recipes are for drinks, particularly of meads or metheglins, but the culinary material provides a remarkable conspectus of accepted practice among court circles in Restoration England, with extra details supplied from Digby's European travels. The editors also include the inventory of Digby's own kitchen in his London house, discovered amongst papers now deposited in the British Library; and they have provided a few modern interpretations of Digby's recipes.
The Closet of the Eminently Learned Sir Kenelme Digbie, Kt., Opened 1669,Jane Stevenson,Peter Davidson,Kenelm Digby,Prospect Books (UK),0907325769,Cookery, English,Cooking,Early works to 1800,Family / Parenting / Childbirth,General,Liquors,Methods - General,Wine and wine making,General cookery,Other prose: 16th to 18th centuries
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