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Arabella Boxer's Book of English Food

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This book is a review of British food in the 1920s and 1930s. It attempts to be part social history and part cookery book, it sets out to describe the dishes - and the social conditions in which they were prepared, cooked and eaten - in the short span between the two world wars. It contains 200 recipes, mostly drawn from cookery books or from magazines of the period, from family sources or from talking to survivors who still remember those days. All the recipes have been tested and adapted, where necessary, for modern use. The dishes reflect the different trends from simple "nursery dishes" that were served in country houses, the elegant "dinner party" food that was popular with the London hostesses and the informal French cooking that also had its own following. This period of time was followed by almost 15 years of food rationing and restrictions, so that once freedom of choice was restored the English preferance was for something new. With the publication of Elizabeth David's first book in 1950, a passion for Mediterranean food swept the country. The author of this book is a former Food Writer for "Vogue" and the author of "First Slice Your Cookbook" and "The Sunday Times Complete Cookbook".

288 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1993

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About the author

Arabella Boxer

56 books1 follower
Arabella Boxer first began writing for Vogue in 1966, taking over from Robert Carrier, and established a new approach to cooking as a simple and pleasurable experience. Her first book, First Slice Your Cookbook, ingeniously designed by her husband Mark, was a huge success and she has since published 10 books, including Arabella Boxer's Garden Cookbook and The Sunday Times Complete Cookbook. She has also been twice winner of the Glenfiddich Award for Food Writer of the Year.

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163 reviews1 follower
January 25, 2021
Really enjoyed it, even though her ideas about working class food between the wars are completely mad.
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