New Standard Cookery Illustrated was edited by Elizabeth Craig. 'Craig's writing career began in Dundee where she studied journalism. She first published a cookery feature in the Daily Express in 1920, following comments from the Daily Mail's then film editor who declared she was "the only woman in Fleet Street who could cook".
Craig started to cook when she was six years old and began collecting recipes from age 12. She declared that the only formal training she had in cookery was a "three months course in Dundee". She began publishing cookery books after the end of World War I and proceeded through World War II and into the 1980s. She began writing in times when food was scarce and rationing was heavily relied upon, and her career ended when the majority of households had a refrigerator and an opportunity to access a much wider variety of foods: this can be observed in her writing as more diverse dishes appear in her later books.
Her contribution to English culinary literature comprises a very large corpus of traditional British recipes, although not only this: included are also a considerable collection of recipes from other countries which she liked to collect during visits abroad.' (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Craig_(writer))
This 1932 copy is in very good condition with no obvious markings or foxing. The cover is in good condition with only minor wear to the spine. A good tight copy. https://hungrytraveller.com.au/3d-flip-book/new-standard-cookery/
Additional information
Weight | 1450 g |
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Dimensions | 16 × 7 × 21 cm |
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