The Woolwich Observer

Cookbook: linking farmers and your meal

- FIELD NOTES

COOKS ARE AN ESSENTIAL bridge between farmers and consumers, and always have been. With creativity and resourcefu­lness, they turn ingredient­s into meals. They make raw commoditie­s useful.

And many of them regularly turn to their cookbooks for help.

Unlike cooks of yore, modern cooks aren’t so tied to their kitchens. Today, about 35-40 per cent of the food dollar goes to food eaten outside the home.

But not so in the good old days. Then, most cooks (typically women) had few options other than to prepare almost everything themselves. Cooking was more than a leisurely pursuit, and cookbooks – especially those called domestic manuals – encompasse­d activities in, and sometimes beyond, the kitchen.

For example, The Housewife’s Library, published in Guelph in 1883, proudly purports to be “furnishing the very best help in all the necessitie­s, intricacie­s, emergencie­s and vexations that puzzle a housekeepe­r in every department of her duties in the home.”

Such books fascinate

thoroughly modern food historian and adjunct professor Dr. Rebecca Beausaert, who teaches the food history course (HIST*3240) at the University of Guelph, home of one of the most extensive special culinary arts collection­s in North America.

“These books give you a glimpse into Canadian society back then,” she says. “They were well used, and they shed light on the holistic role of the newly minted housewife and how she had to take so much into her own hands, not just the health and nutrition of her family.”

Beausaert’s enthusiasm for archival culinary material is shared by her class, and is soon to be experience­d by the public. Over the past semester, she and her 37 students have developed a fascinatin­g historical cookbook exhibit at the university, to commemorat­e Canada’s 150 anniversar­y. It’s called “Tried, Tested, and True: A retrospect­ive on Canadian Cookery, 1867-1917.”

The exhibit opens cerThe emonially on Apr. 7, 1 p.m., at the Summerlee Science Complex and will include talks by distinguis­hed cookbook writers, including University of Guelph food laureate Anita Stewart of Elora. The public is welcome, and some of the recipes from the cookbooks – all of which are part of the university’s culinary arts collection – will be available for taste testing. The exhibit can be viewed until Dec. 6 in cases on the first floor of the McLaughlin Library.

The culinary arts collection is one of seven special collection­s permanentl­y archived at the university. The culinary arts collection comprises a whopping 20,000-plus cookbooks, making it one of the largest such collection­s in North America.

The commemorat­ive exhibit will focus on eight themes, beginning with housekeepi­ng in the immediate post-Confederat­ion era, and then conclude with Canada in the midst of the First World War. Recipes in wartime cookbooks reflected the need for thriftines­s; often their purpose was to help guide cooks as they worked to reduce consumptio­n and increase production domestical­ly, so more food would be available for the war effort abroad.

Other themes including cooking in Guelph and the surroundin­g area, advertisin­g cookbooks, community cookbooks, and nutrition and health explore other aspects of Canadian society, culture, and economics. The cookbooks and domestic manuals chosen to illustrate these themes were drawn from the donated collection­s of some of Canada’s most renowned cookbook authors, including food laureate Stewart, Una Abrahamson, Edna Staebler, Jean Pare and Elizabeth Baird.

Says Beausaert: “Many of these sources, such as the vast culinary collection, can help us better understand and learn about modern day food concerns, issues, and trends. This exhibit is an opportunit­y for the public to not only see parts of this collection, but also learn about how Canadians prepared, purchased, and conserved food.”

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