Bill/SFNM wrote:Yes. My rule is that I can't add a new book to the library unless I give another book away.
First African-American Cookbook 1866
Mrs. Malinda Russell
Paw Paw, Michigan, 1866
Only Copy Know of First African-American Cookbook
Malinda Russell was born in Tennessee a free woman of color. On her way to Liberia at age 19, she was robbed in Virginia by a member of her party. She immediately began to work as a cook, companion and laundress. She married had a son and was widowed after four years; using her maiden name for the rest of her life.
After her husband died, she returned to Tennessee and kept a boarding house on Chuckey Mountain for 3 years, than a pastry shop for 6 years and "by hard labor and economy, saved a considerable sum of money for the support of my self and my son."
Then in 1864, for the second time in her life, her money was stolen by a guerrilla party who threatened her life is she revealed who they were. "Under those circumstances, we were obliged to leave home, following a flag of truce out of the Southern borders."
Hearing that Michigan was the Garden of the West, she moved to Paw Paw. Forced to leave the South because of her Union principles, she wrote this book "hoping to receive enough...to enable me to return home."
It is quite astonishing this fragile and unique copy of "A Domestic Cook Book" has survived. For years, my husband Dan and I tried to discover more about her, spending our 48th wedding anniversary in the South, trying to uncover further details.
Her story is an African-American story; it is an American story. She has overcome.
The Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive, Clements Library
Originally published in 1901, The Settlement Cookbook became a beacon of sorts to Jewish home cooks and their less culinarily inclined offspring. Authored by a social service worker in Milwaukee named Lizzie Black Kander, The Settlement Cookbook has become a benchmark of Jewish cooking in America, and remained relevant over a century after its publication. . . .
That first printing was intended for the women at the Settlement House, as a study guide and reading primer. The language was clear and direct, the tone that of a stern but loving aunt, the underlying message that if you can master the domestic arts, you’ll have a happy husband, and if you have a happy husband, he’ll provide for you.