The Little Women Cookbook: Acknowledgments
For a final post to conclude our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series, we would like to thank the many who helped us along the way.
For a final post to conclude our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series, we would like to thank the many who helped us along the way.
The recipes in The Little Women Cookbook were all derived from 19th-century sources. Here’s a full list of citations, librarian-style!
Part of our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series
To my woe, I didn’t find this title till after our manuscript was submitted, but I’d still highly recommend Savory Suppers and Fashionable Feasts to anyone interested in learning more about Victorian meals and table etiquette.
Part of our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series
We have a second recommendation for further reading if you’re interested in Little Women meals. Food in the Civil War Era: The North, by Helen Zoe Veit, is five 19th-century cookbooks in one, plus insightful, articulate commentary.
Part of our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series
The Marches say they’re poor, but they eat a lot of lobster. How can they afford it?
Part of our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series
And now we’d like to recommend three books for further reading on 19th-century meals, just in case you become as obsessed with 1860s food history as we are now. First up: the only cookbook specifically mentioned in Little Women is The Young Housekeeper’s Friend by Mrs. Cornelius. It also happens to be one of the most excellent historical cookbooks we have ever used for a 36 Eggs project. All the recipes we tried have been delicious, even when they sound real weird.
Part of our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series
Here is our Amy March paper doll, in celebration of our cookbook release! You can print and color your own here.
Part of our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series
Here we present weird facts we found out through our research for our Little Women Cookbook! Part 1: Victorian Thickeners features seaweed, calf’s feet, and fish bladders galore …
Part of our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series
I made a Beth March paper doll in celebration of our cookbook release! You can print and color your own here.
Part of our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series
I made a Meg March paper doll in celebration of our cookbook release! You can print and color your own here.
Part of our Little Women Cookbook Blog Series