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Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Foods of the Age of Exploration and Western Colonialism
Mar
9
12:00 PM12:00

Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Foods of the Age of Exploration and Western Colonialism

*ONLINE* In this cooking demonstration and workshop, we will study, prepare, and taste early modern European recipes influenced by the Age of Exploration and empire-building of Western colonialism. We will explore this period of culinary exchange and discovery and learn about premodern food culture through reading and interpreting recipes from a variety of European culinary sources.


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Plague Waters, Chocolate Cures, and Sickdishes: Food and Health in Medieval and Renaissance Recipes
Feb
20
1:00 PM13:00

Plague Waters, Chocolate Cures, and Sickdishes: Food and Health in Medieval and Renaissance Recipes

*ONLINE* People have long turned to food to maintain health and cure ailments. In medieval and renaissance Europe, medical practitioners prescribed food and medicines recorded in recipes to preserve health and negotiate times of plague and illness. In this seminar, we will examine this historical relationship between food, health, and recipes. 2 Sessions.

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Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Foods of the Columbian Exchange
Oct
21
1:00 PM13:00

Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Foods of the Columbian Exchange

*ONLINE* In this class, conducted as a cooking demonstration and workshop, we will study, prepare, and taste early modern European recipes influenced by the Columbian Exchange. This transfer of plants, animals, populations, and diseases between the Old and New Worlds following Christopher Columbus’s first voyage to the Americas led to many modern regional culinary identities and dishes. We will explore this exchange of foods and the adoption of culinary identities through reading and interpreting recipes from a variety of European culinary sources.


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The Medieval Spice Trade: Making and Tasting Historical Recipes
Oct
11
1:00 PM13:00

The Medieval Spice Trade: Making and Tasting Historical Recipes

*ONLINE* In this virtual cooking demonstration, we will explore the medieval spice trade through the preparation of medieval European recipes. Learn about premodern food culture through reading and interpreting recipes featuring an array of historical spices.

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Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: The Medieval Spice Trade
Jun
17
1:00 PM13:00

Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: The Medieval Spice Trade

*ONLINE* In this class, which will be conducted as a cooking demonstration and workshop, we will study, prepare, and taste medieval European recipes from manuscript sources. We will explore the medieval spice trade and learn about premodern food culture through reading and interpreting recipes featuring an array of historical spices.

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Considering Culture: Music and Food in Interwar America
Apr
30
1:00 PM13:00

Considering Culture: Music and Food in Interwar America

*ONLINE* This seminar, conducted as a musical performance, cooking demonstration, lecture, and discussion, offers a new way to consider American culture between the two World Wars. The instructors, a professional pianist and a culinary historian, will weave together musical and culinary examples of technology, popular and high culture, and foreign influences to speak more broadly about American culture. This seminar is co-taught with Elizabeth Newkirk.

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Tasting and Knowing: The Kitchen as a Space for Historical Inquiry
Feb
12
10:45 AM10:45

Tasting and Knowing: The Kitchen as a Space for Historical Inquiry

*ONLINE* Cooking Demonstration and Presentation at The Ohio State University’s Conference on “The Experimental Archaeology of Medieval and Renaissance Food.”

On February 11-12, 2022, the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies will host its biennial celebration of Popular Culture and the Deep Past (PCDP) at the Ohio State University, with ‘The Experimental Archaeology of Medieval and Renaissance Food.’ As in past years, this event will feature a scholarly conference (with papers, round tables, and other academic events) nested within a Renaissance-faire-like carnival (featuring exhibits, gaming, contests, and activities of all kinds).

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Foods of the Columbian Exchange
Feb
2
9:30 AM09:30

Foods of the Columbian Exchange

Can you imagine the American Midwest without wheat fields, Italy without marinara sauce, or Spain without gazpacho? Wheat, tomatoes, chili peppers, and many other foods were transferred between the Old and New Worlds following Christopher Columbus’s first voyage to the Americas in 1492. This transfer of foods, as well as other plants, animals, humans, and diseases, is now known as the Columbian Exchange. Contact between Europe and the Americas resulted in a fantastic array of foods available globally. With the discovery of the New World, Europe secured enormous tracts of fertile land suited for the cultivation of popular crops such as sugar, coffee, oranges, and bananas. Upon introduction of these crops, the Americas quickly became the main suppliers of these foods to most of the world. In an effort to produce new ingredients for their markets, European empires laid claim to land in the New World, impacting the culture, language, religion, and politics in the Americas for centuries. Furthermore, the desire to grow valuable crops, procure prized resources, and transport them globally resulted in the rapid spread and transportation of enslaved populations from Africa to the Americas. Through the evaluation of sources from early modern books, art, maps, and recipes, many found within the Newberry Library’s own collections, we will examine foods of the Columbian Exchange and their lasting impact.

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Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Autumn Feasts
Nov
13
9:00 AM09:00

Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Autumn Feasts

*ONLINE* In this seminar, conducted as a cooking demonstration and workshop, we will study, prepare, and taste early modern English recipes from manuscript and print sources. We will explore the background, methods, and meanings behind a few historic preparations for dishes with ingredients harvested or served each autumn and learn about premodern food culture through reading and interpreting recipes.

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Sugar in Early Modern Europe
Oct
2
1:00 PM13:00

Sugar in Early Modern Europe

*ONLINE* Sugar was one of the most precious and luxurious commodities in premodern Europe. In this seminar, we will explore the sugar industry in Europe and its colonies, including farming and processing, culinary uses, trade networks, and the widespread use of slave labor in sugar colonies. The seminar will include a presentation of Newberry materials so participants can observe the impact of sugar through early modern texts, images, and maps.

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Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Savoring the Summer
Aug
21
1:00 PM13:00

Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Savoring the Summer

*ONLINE* In this cooking demonstration and workshop, we will study, prepare, and taste early modern English recipes from manuscript and print sources. We will explore the background, methods, and meanings behind a few historic preparations for dishes inspired by summertime produce and learn about premodern food culture through reading and interpreting recipes.

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Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Early Modern Sweets
Mar
20
10:00 AM10:00

Making and Tasting Historical Recipes: Early Modern Sweets

*ONLINE* In this seminar, conducted as a cooking demonstration and workshop, we will study, prepare, and taste dishes made using early modern English recipes from manuscript and print sources. We will explore the background, methods, and meanings behind a few historic preparations for sweets and learn about pre-modern food culture through reading and interpreting recipes.

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Sugar and Power
Mar
10
9:30 AM09:30

Sugar and Power

*ONLINE* Despite sugar’s ubiquity in the modern Western diet, it was once reserved as a medicinal ingredient for the wealthiest consumers. From the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century, sugar transformed from a rare luxury item to a commonplace ingredient, shaped by dramatic shifts in health, trade, and politics. Sugar became increasingly desirable in the early modern period as its consumption became essential in several new, caffeinated drinks: coffee, tea, and chocolate. The rise of sugar was also encouraged by the popularity of molasses, a byproduct of sugar processing, and rum, the distilled spirit made from it. Colonial structures and the exploitation of enslaved people facilitated the remarkable increase in sugar production and popularity. Through evaluation of sources pulled from literature, art, economic and political texts, maps, material goods, and recipes, many found within the Newberry Library’s own collections, we will delve into the history of sugar (c. 1100 to 1900), focusing on the connections between sugar consumption and production with social, economic, and political power.

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Creating Cookbooks: Networks of Recipe Readers and Writers in England, 1300–1700
Feb
18
11:30 AM11:30

Creating Cookbooks: Networks of Recipe Readers and Writers in England, 1300–1700

  • The Institute of Historical Research (IHR) (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

*ONLINE* Institute of Historical Research Food History Seminar

In this seminar, I propose a new model in which to consider the development of cookbooks in medieval and early modern England. I propose a framework shaped not only by the food and structure of recipes, but also the networks of readers who copied, purchased, and used these texts. I will particularly focus on the shift from manuscript to print in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Reader networks ranged from professionals like medical practitioners, elite households, and middling class women. These groups and the overlaps between them reveal much about the changes in cookbooks throughout this period, such as the types of recipes contained within and the presentation of the recipes on the page. My conclusions were formed by an examination of over one hundred manuscript and printed cookeries in libraries across the United States and Europe and tens of digitized books and manuscripts. In carefully documenting diverse textual, codicological, and bibliographical features including dedications, ingredients, mise en page, marginalia, watermarks, and stains, I was able to identify several distinct groups of readers. Unraveling the web of cookbook readers in conjunction with concurrent changes in food trends and book production is important in demonstrating the growth of the cookery genre and the rapid expansion of readership in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. This expansion of readership furthermore supports a broader claim in my research that a widespread audience existed for manuscript cookeries prior to the introduction of print and subsequent explosion in cookbook production. These early reader networks shaped the prodigious circulation of recipes among families and individuals in seventeenth and eighteenth-century recipe books and the parallel circulation and readership of cookbooks as printed texts.

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Coffee, Tea and Chocolate: A History of Caffeinated Drinks in the Western World
Feb
3
1:00 PM13:00

Coffee, Tea and Chocolate: A History of Caffeinated Drinks in the Western World

*ONLINE* The ubiquity of coffee, tea, and chocolate obscures their past at the center of geographical exploration, religious debate and medical observation. Explore topics like the medical properties of chocolate and immorality in early modern coffeehouses. 4 Sessions.

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Teaching With Recipes
Dec
16
9:30 AM09:30

Teaching With Recipes

*ONLINE* Contemporary cooking is driven by engaging recipes, but for students and scholars, historical recipes can provide valuable insight into the past, as these texts have been recorded for thousands of years to document ways to feed, preserve, heal, and transform. Drawing upon examples from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century, we will explore how recipes—whether culinary, household, medical, or alchemical—can be used in classroom settings. Teaching with recipes can reveal new ways to consider themes as diverse as scientific experimentation, premodern communication, health and medicine, the environment, and the cultural transmission of marginalized groups. Participants will be provided with a guide to digital resources featuring recipe content from American and European institutions and examples of remote and in-person classroom activities based on historical recipe sources.

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Food in Late Medieval English Literature
Nov
5
6:00 PM18:00

Food in Late Medieval English Literature

*ONLINE* Food was an important feature of everyday life in the Middle Ages and appeared regularly in late medieval English literature. Writers used cultural conventions surrounding food and dining to illuminate ideas about power, class, gender, spirituality, and much more. In this seminar, we will read and discuss excerpts from some of the most celebrated works in the medieval English literary canon, examining how and why the authors of these texts turned to depictions of food and dining.

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Making and Tasting Historical Recipes
Aug
8
9:00 AM09:00

Making and Tasting Historical Recipes

*Online* In this seminar, conducted as a cooking demonstration and workshop, we will study, prepare, and taste medieval and early modern English recipes from manuscript and print sources. We will explore the background, methods, and meanings behind a few historic preparations and learn about pre-modern food culture through reading and making recipes.

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Plague Waters, Chocolate Cures, and Sickdishes: Food and Health in Medieval and Renaissance Recipes
Aug
1
9:30 AM09:30

Plague Waters, Chocolate Cures, and Sickdishes: Food and Health in Medieval and Renaissance Recipes

*Online* People have long turned to food to maintain health and cure ailments. In medieval and Renaissance Europe, professional and household practitioners prescribed food and medicines recorded in printed and manuscript recipes to preserve and manage health during times of plague and illness. In this seminar, we will examine the historical relationship between health, food, and recipes, considering professional medical theories, household health practices, medical and culinary recipes, and more.

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