[Sca-cooks] food(ography)
lilinah at earthlink.net
lilinah at earthlink.net
Sun Jun 27 18:05:58 PDT 2010
emilio wrote:
>>From the first cookbook, Apicius, to Julia Child's masterpiece, we're
>>diving headfirst into the glossy oversized tomes spread across your
>>kitchen table. You don't even need a library
>>card - we'll help you click through virtual
>>cookbooks and phone apps for all of your
>>favorite
>>recipes.
>
>A good idea, I like it.
>
>However: Is the work of or ascribed to Apicius the "first cookbook"?
Nah. There are several tablets written in
Akkadian from around 1700 BCE (i.e., nearly 4000
years old) that i think currently qualify as the
oldest known cookbooks... well, short collections
of recipes. Eminent French Assyriologist Jean
Bottero analyzed and translated them into French
as:
* Textes culinaires mésopotamiens (Studies on the
Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurr)
* Eisenbrauns: Winona Lake, Indiana, 1995
There is a more recent edition in English:
* The oldest cuisine in the world: cooking in Mesopotamia
* Translated by Teresa Lavender Fagan
* University of Chicago Press: 2004
--
Someone sometimes called Urtatim
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