Home Page Thursday 2 September 2010


Quick Search

 

or
Browse by Subject

Find Us on Facebook!

Sale Bargains &
Special Offers

Distributed Titles

Current Catalogs and Leaflets
Take advantage of our latest offers

Information on Shipping Charges

Damaged Books

Conference Timetable

Request Catalogues


e-Mailing List
Be the first to hear about new offers and new sale books - join our e-mail list! Or enter your address to unsubscribe or change your profile


La Varenne's Cookery: The French Cook; The French Pastry Chef; The French Confectioner

by Francois Pierre de la Varenne, translated and with a commentary by Terence Scully

These three books by Francois Pierre de la Varenne (c. 1615-1678), who was chef to the Marquis d'Uxelles, are the most important French cookery books of the seventeenth century. They were the first French cookery books of any substance since Le Viandier almost 300 years before, and they ran to thirty editions in 75 years. The reason for the success was simple: these were the first books to record and embody the immense advance which French cooking had made, largely under the influence of Italy and the Renaissance, since the fifteenth century. Some characteristics of medieval cookery are still visible, but many have disappeared. New World ingredients make their entrance. A surprising number of recipes for dishes still made in modern times (omelettes, beignets and even pumpkin pie) are given. The watershed from medieval to modern times is being crossed before our eyes in La Varenne's pages.

So important was this book that English cooks of the time immediately bought copies and one (anonymous) even translated it into English in the middle of the Puritan rule of Oliver Cromwell. This translation, as is the original, is extremely difficult to understand: there are difficult words, omissions, mistranslations, and other opacities. Terence Scully has solved all modern readers' problems by undertaking a modern translation with detailed commentary of the original French texts. His work takes cognisance of the early English translation, as well as not ignoring contemporary works available to those early cooks for purposes of comparison and contrast.

Terence Scully is Emeritus Professor of French at Wilfrid Laurier University. He specialises in medieval French language and literature, and is the author of The Art of Cookery in the Middle Ages, and has translated Le Vivendier, Le Viandier, and the treatise on cookery by Chiquart. He is also author of many articles and other writings on French philology. 628p, 2 b/w illus. (Prospect Books 2006)

ISBN-13: 978-1-903018-41-5
ISBN-10: 1-903018-41-2

Hardback. Price US $80.00
This book is generally in stock.


Browse other Food & Cooking books

Browse other Seventeenth Century books





We respect our customers' privacy and security.
The credit-card details form in our order process is secure-server protected. This means that your credit card details are scrambled in transit, and then stored securely so that we are the only people who can access your information.
We will not give or sell your personal information to any other company; nor will we send you any unsolicited e-mail. Users who sign up to our e-mailing list may unsubscribe at any time.

© Most of the descriptions on the website have been published in Oxbow Book News and other Oxbow catalogues, and are protected by copyright. If you wish to use any of the content on this website, please contact the web administrator for advice.