Cathy2 wrote:Recipes recorded in earlier eras also had an abbreviated style, which contemporary cooks blithely understand as simple. Again, they expected the recipes were in the hands of skilled and experience cooks who needed a bare outline to understand and replicate a dish. Most cookbooks today pretty much hand feed us with their endless detail.
Cathy2:
You're quite right on both counts (regarding recipes of old and recipes of late). Your comments reminded me of one of my favourite cookbook authors, namely, Elizabeth David. I have three books by her written between 1950 and 1960--
Mediterranean Food, Italian Food and
French Provincial Cooking-- and I learned much from each of them. Most of the recipes she gives in a very simple manner and only rarely does she spell everything out (though often a recipe builds on one or more of those preceding it).
I got these books many moons ago, when I first moved away from kith and kin to Belgium and had to start cooking for myself on a regular basis. Though I had a certain knowledge of basics learned from my mother and grandmother, as well as some from watching Julia Childs, David's recipes were sometimes a little daunting on account of the lack of detail. But her books were well written and engaging, and I think the fact that everything wasn't completely spelt out actually helped me to learn to cook, insofar as it forced me to think through what I intended to do and to rely on building up my own knowledge through experience. I made some bad meals, I guess, but then I was the only one subjected to them for the most part.
Concerning recipes from more or less historically remote periods, I especially enjoy reading those we have from classical antiquity but they are for the most part the most stream-lined recipes imaginable and, alas, much of what was then assumed knowledge is now unknown and the object of speculation for us moderns (or postmoderns).
Antonius
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.