Miss Parloa's New Cook Book by Maria Parloa
Let's set the scene: It's 1880. Home economics is becoming a serious science, and Maria Parloa was one of its first celebrities. Miss Parloa's New Cook Book isn't a novel with a plot, but its journey is clear. It starts with the absolute basics—how to build and manage a fire in your stove, how to select good meat at the market—and walks you through every part of running a kitchen. The 'story' is the progression from a raw ingredient to a sophisticated dinner party. Chapters move logically from soups to fish, to meats, to elaborate desserts and preserves. Woven in are lessons on nutrition, budgeting, and even how to set a proper table. The book assumes you have plenty of time and help, aiming to elevate home cooking into something both nourishing and impressive.
Why You Should Read It
I picked this up out of historical curiosity, but I stayed for Parloa's voice. She's firm, confident, and wonderfully detailed. You get a real sense of her personality when she insists on specific techniques or scolds the reader for taking shortcuts that would ruin a dish. Reading her instructions for making yeast or clarifying butter is a humbling reminder of how much culinary knowledge we've lost to boxes and cans. More than that, it's a snapshot of a society in transition. Her excitement about new tools like Dover egg beaters or her careful explanations of canned goods show a world eagerly embracing technology in the home. It makes you appreciate your refrigerator in a whole new way.
Final Verdict
This book is a treasure for food history lovers, historical fiction writers looking for authentic detail, or any curious cook. It's not a practical guide for your Tuesday night dinner (unless you're up for making your own ketchup). But if you enjoy seeing the 'why' behind the how of old recipes, or if you just love the idea of peeking over the shoulder of a 19th-century expert, you'll find it utterly absorbing. Think of it less as a manual and more as a conversation with a very knowledgeable, slightly stern, but ultimately generous great-great-grandmother of cooking.
This digital edition is based on a public domain text. It is now common property for all to enjoy.
David Wright
9 months agoAs someone who reads a lot, the plot twists are genuinely surprising. This story will stay with me.
Kevin Torres
6 months agoBased on the summary, I decided to read it and the plot twists are genuinely surprising. Worth every second.