Ann Cook (cookery book writer)

Ann H. Cook (fl. c. 1725 – c. 1760) was an English cookery book writer and innkeeper. In 1754 she published Professed Cookery, which went on to two further editions in her lifetime.
Living in
Further editions of Professed Cookery were published in 1755 and 1760; a revised edition, containing a selection of the recipes from the first edition, was published in 1936. In the first two editions of the work, Cook was stated as living in Newcastle upon Tyne; for the 1760 third edition, she was living in lodgings in Holborn, London. The second and third editions of Professed Cookery cover several areas, including a critical analysis of Glasse's work, traditional English recipes and an essay on household management that includes a biography of a friend and Cook's autobiography. The introduction, written as a poem, accuses Glasse of plagiarism and mocks her capability of being a teacher, as well as poking fun at her illegitimacy.
Life
Little is known about Ann Cook's early life, although she was probably born in the late 1690s and possibly in
In 1739–1740, during the Lent circuit of the
In late 1745 the Cooks moved from the Black Bull to Morpeth, Northumberland, where they ran the Queen's Head inn on behalf of the landlord, Thomas Pye. To secure their position, they entered into a bond of £369 with Pye.[b] The Cooks did not know that Pye was a cousin of Allgood; in 1746 Allgood accused Mr Cook of being, in Dodds's words "a rebel, a rogue and a villain". Calling him "a rebel" was an accusation of him being a Jacobite—the Jacobite rising of 1745 still continued and was causing fear in many parts of northern England.[9] The persecution continued in 1749 when Pye instigated a rumour that because the Cooks were selling their household possessions, they were insolvent and on the verge of abandoning the town. In reality they were giving some of their unneeded possessions to their eldest daughter who had recently married and was running an inn with her new husband in Newcastle upon Tyne. By this stage the Cooks had paid back £320 of the £369 bond; they sold most of their remaining goods and moved to Newcastle with the intention of setting up a pastrycook shop. Their creditors followed them for the balance of the bond, and would not allow any terms for an easy settlement; John was taken to a debtors' prison within a month of their arrival in the new town.[1][10] Nothing further is known of him.[10]
According to Gilly Lehmann, Cook's biographer in the
A second edition of Professed Cookery was published in 1755, which added a "Plan of House-Keeping" to the contents.[15] Cook's address was again given on the title page as a house in the Groat-market.[16] A third edition of Professed Cookery was published around or after 1760;[1] its title page stated that Cook was a lodger at the house of the cabinet maker Mr Moor, in Fuller's Rents, Holborn, London. The book cost six shillings.[17][e] It is not known what became of Cook after the third edition was published.[1]
Professed Cookery
![Newspaper advertisement that begins: "Just published, [Price six shillings] The Second Edition of Professed Cookery: Containing an essay upon the lady's Art of Cookery."](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e1/Advert_for_Professed_Cookery%2C_from_The_Newcastle_Courant_-_29_November_1755%2C_p_1.jpg/330px-Advert_for_Professed_Cookery%2C_from_The_Newcastle_Courant_-_29_November_1755%2C_p_1.jpg)
The later editions of Professed Cookery cover several topics: an introduction, "To the reader"; "An Essay on the Lady's Art of Cookery", which is a critical analysis of Glasse's work The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy; "Professed Cookery" is the section for the recipes; and "A Plan of House-Keeping" begins as an essay on household management before moving into a biography of a friend and then an autobiography.[18][19][20] A later edition, published in 1936 by Oxford University Press, comprises extracts of the 1760 printing and was edited by one Regula Burnet, who arranged "A Plan of House-Keeping" into further chapters and also updated the punctuation.[21]
Introduction
The introduction ("To the reader") is written in the form of a poem, in what Lehmann describes as "appalling doggerel".[22] Cook warns that Glasse's aim was not to educate, but "To fleece the poor low servants to get wealth / And collect surfeits to destroy all health".[23] One part of the poem, accusing Glasse of plagiarism, reads:
She steals from ev'ry Author to her Book,
Infamously branding the pillag'd Cook,
With Trick,Legerdemain,
Right Pages to bear up vain Glory's Train.[24]
Glasse extensively used other sources in the book: of the 972 recipes in the first edition, at least 342 had been copied or adapted from other works without attribution.[25][26] This plagiarism was typical of the time as the Statute of Anne—the 1709 Act of Parliament dealing with copyright protection—did not protect recipes from copyright infringement.[27][28]
Cook does not refer to Glasse by name, but mockingly refers to her as "the lady" or "the lady teacher",[29][30] and as such she ridicules the idea of a lady—of high social class—being in a position to teach cookery to a professional.[15] Cook knew that Glasse was illegitimate, and refers to this when she rhetorically asks her readers "What Title can be due to broken Glass".[31][15]
Essay
The second edition of Professed Cookery includes a chapter of criticism of Glasse's Art of Cookery, "An Essay on the Lady's Art of Cookery", which covers 66 pages.
Although Glasse ridiculed the expense of ingredients in other cookery books, many of her own recipes are unnecessarily extravagant and wasteful according to Lehmann.[38][39][40] A supposedly economical recipe for a cabbage (costing 1⁄2d) is, in Stead's words, "dressed with luxury items worth 2s 1d".[40][f] The resultant dish would be something no "man, woman or child, hog, sow or dog" would eat, according to Cook.[41]
Glasse's cooking methods are also derided in Professed Cookery: the recipe which called for oysters to be larded and roasted on a spit, was mocked, as "the oysters will baste to pieces, and [it is] beyond Art to keep them on the spit".
According to the Anglicist Andrew Monnickendam, "Cook's wit and sarcasm produce amusing moments and valid criticism, yet such heavy doses of vitriol eventually tire some readers".[47] Stead agrees, and says the continued criticism can become tedious, although in places the criticism "has the chill elegance of a rapier thrust through her heart".[48] Burnet thinks it "interesting and, in some places, amusing".[29]
Recipes
Lehmann writes that Cook's recipes are more traditional than those provided by Glasse, but it is clear she was also familiar with the French sources used in The Art of Cookery, including the recipes of Vincent La Chapelle.[1][49]
Professed Cookery contains recipes for
Household management
The chapter "A Plan of House-Keeping" takes the form of a narrative of Cook meeting a friend with whom she had lost touch for thirty years. Although the text does not clarify the point, Burnet considers it likely that this chapter was not written by Cook alone, but by Cook transcribing a friend's part of the story as the two women talked.[20] Burnet sees two different dispositions behind the descriptions, with the friend being more kind and charitable than Cook, whom Burnet describes as "doubtless a very worthy woman, [who] was by nature litigious and quarrelsome. She was never happier than when she was in the middle of a stand-up fight, nor than when she was proving some one else to be in the wrong."[20] Nevertheless, Burnet considers that "Though ... Mrs Cook is rather involved, she has a good narrative sense".[21]
In the chapter, the text describes the stories of the lives of two friends, while interweaving instructions on their approaches and lessons on housekeeping as a domestic servant.[3] This includes the best ways to manage servants.[3][71] The instructions include information relating to the management and care of live poultry and how, by doing this properly, one can achieve the optimal flavour from the animal, and ensure the person eating has the best result.[72][73] According to Monnickendam much of the description is "based on cleanliness and respect for the animal's welfare. Her ideas share many common points with ecological farming of today".[74] Cook writes that she would rise no later than 6:00 am to look after the poultry—and two hours earlier if there was "an elegant dinner to send up".[75] She described her approach to poultry rearing thus:
My great care was to keep the feathered flock clear of diseases, which, without great care and pains they are subject to; and to prevent distempers, I never bought chickens with their feet tied together, and stopped into baskets and creels, for this reason: the birds are confined to lie on their sides, which the stepping or trotting of the horses makes them full of bruises, and puts them into fevers.[75]
Historiography and legacy
In the 1936 edition, edited by Regula Burnet, knowledge of Cook's personal history was limited solely to Professed Cookery, with no further details known about her. When Dodds saw a copy of the 1936 edition, she was working on the history of the Allgood family and was able to identify Cook and her connection to Glasse. Dodds's research into Cook's background was published in
Professed Cookery is valued by historians of both food and social history.[76][77] The work has also been used as a source for the Oxford English Dictionary and is quoted six times,[78] for the terms "hard-boil" (in relation to eggs),[79] "left-off" (for parts discarded),[80] "poky" (for poking or projecting),[81] "ribby" (for having ribs),[82] "rock codling" (meaning "A young or small cod")[83] and "roll" (meaning "An item of food that is rolled up").[84]
Notes and references
Notes
- ^ £369 in 1745 equates to approximately £77,000 in 2024, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) measure of inflation.[8]
- ^ No copy of this work exists, but was advertised that month in The Newcastle Journal.[1]
- ^ Professed Cookery had the subtitle "containing boiling, roasting, pastry, preserving, pickling, potting, made-wines, gellies and part of confectionaries. With an essay upon the lady's art of cookery; together with a plan of housekeeping".[12]
- ^ Six shillings equates to approximately £33.93 in 2023, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8]
- ^ 1/2d equates to approximately £0.23 and 2s 1d equates to approximately £11.76 in 2023, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8]
- ^ This was one step in Glasse's recipe to roast ox palates.[43]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lehmann 2011.
- ^ a b Dodds 1938, pp. 52–53.
- ^ a b c Dodds 1938, p. 51.
- ^ Dodds 1938, p. 52.
- ^ Lehmann 2003, 2042.
- ^ Dodds 1938, pp. 55–56.
- ^ Lehmann 2003, 2046.
- ^ a b c Clark 2024.
- ^ Dodds 1938, p. 61.
- ^ a b Dodds 1938, p. 62.
- ^ Willan & Cherniavsky 2012, p. 294.
- ^ Monnickendam 2019, p. 188.
- ^ Aylett & Ordish 1965, p. 120.
- ^ "The Art of Cookery – Title page". British Library.
- ^ a b c Lehmann 2003, 2028.
- ^ Cook 1755, Title page.
- ^ Cook 1760, Title page.
- ^ Lehmann 2003, 522, 2033.
- ^ a b Stead & Bain 2004, p. viii.
- ^ a b c Burnet 1936, p. ix.
- ^ a b Burnet 1936, p. viii.
- ^ Lehmann 2003, 2065.
- ^ Cook 1755, pp. iii–iv.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. iv.
- ^ Hoare 2014.
- ^ Snodgrass 2004, p. 442.
- ^ Willan 1992, pp. 100–101.
- ^ David 2001, p. 266.
- ^ a b Burnet 1936, p. xvii.
- ^ Monnickendam 2010, p. 31.
- ^ Cook 1755, p. viii.
- ^ a b c d e Stead 2002, p. 345.
- ^ Dodds 1938, p. 49.
- ^ Glasse 1748, p. 211.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 59.
- ^ Glasse 1748, p. 102.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 34.
- ^ Lehmann 2003, 4400.
- ^ Trager 1996, p. 163.
- ^ a b c d Stead 2002, p. 346.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 65.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 13.
- ^ Glasse 1748, pp. 43–44.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 21.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 42.
- ^ Stead 2002, p. 344.
- ^ Monnickendam 2019, p. 179.
- ^ Stead 2002, p. 349.
- ^ Lehmann 2003, 2019.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 69–74.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 75, 78–79, 83–84, 95.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 75, 92.
- ^ Glasse 1748, pp. 81, 87, 122–123.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 93.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 102.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 103–112, 182–184.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 112–124.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 124–128.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 131–138.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 138–155, 170–171, 188–189.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 156–170, 184–188.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 178–181.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 80–83, 86–88, 96–100.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 96–97.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 80–81, 86, 87, 90, 98, 112.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 89.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 79, 90, 107.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 89, 130, 142–143.
- ^ Cook 1760, p. 107.
- ^ Cook 1760, Unnumbered pages after p. 189.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 213–217.
- ^ Monnickendam 2019, p. 181.
- ^ Cook 1760, pp. 195–196.
- ^ Monnickendam 2010, p. 34.
- ^ a b Cook 1760, p. 195.
- ^ Cockayne 2007, pp. 96, 101–102.
- ^ Mennell 1996, p. 97.
- ^ "Professed Cookery". Oxford English Dictionary.
- ^ "hard-boil". Oxford English Dictionary.
- ^ "left-off". Oxford English Dictionary.
- ^ "poky". Oxford English Dictionary.
- ^ "ribby". Oxford English Dictionary.
- ^ "rock codling". Oxford English Dictionary.
- ^ "roll". Oxford English Dictionary.
Sources
Books
- Aylett, Mary; Ordish, Olive (1965). First Catch Your Hare. London: Macdonald. OCLC 54053.
- Burnet, Regula (1936). Introduction. Ann Cook and Friend: With an Introduction and Notes by Regula Burnet. By Cook, Ann. London: Oxford University Press. pp. vii–xxxv. OCLC 1745604.
- ISBN 978-0-3001-1214-6.
- Cook, Ann H. (1755). Professed Cookery. Newcastle: Self published. OCLC 1125514976.
- Cook, Ann H. (1760). Professed Cookery. London: Self published. OCLC 82699407.
- ISBN 978-0-14-029290-9.
- OCLC 938365682.
- Lehmann, Gilly (2003). The British Housewife: Cooking and Society in 18th-century Britain (Kindle ed.). Totnes, Devon: Prospect Books. ISBN 978-1-909248-00-7.
- ISBN 978-0-6311-3244-8.
- Monnickendam, Andrew (2010). "Food and Patriotism: The Battle of Words Between Hannah Glasse and Ann Cook". In Lamarra, Annamaria; Federici, Eleonora (eds.). Nations, Traditions and Cross-Cultural Identities: Women's Writing in English in a European Context. Bern: P. Lang. pp. 25–36. ISBN 978-3-03911-413-9.
- ISBN 978-1-135-45572-9.
- Stead, Jennifer (2002). "Quizzing Glasse, or Hannah Scrutinzed". In ISBN 978-1-5800-8417-8.
- Stead, Jennifer; Bain, Priscilla (2004). Introduction. "First Catch Your Hare ...": The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy. By Glasse, Hannah. Totnes, Devon: Prospect. pp. v–xiv. ISBN 978-1-9030-1837-8.
- Trager, James (1996). The Food Chronology: A Food Lover's Compendium of Events and Anecdotes from Prehistory to the Present. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-8541-0399-4.
- ISBN 978-1-85145-596-6.
- ISBN 978-0-520-24400-9.
Journals and magazines
- doi:10.5284/1059994.
- Monnickendam, Andrew (June 2019). "Ann Cook Versus Hannah Glasse: Gender, Professionalism and Readership in the Eighteenth-Century Cookbook". Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies. 42 (2): 175–191. .
Websites
- "The Art of Cookery – Title page". British Library. Archived from the original on 25 February 2020. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
- Clark, Gregory (2024). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
- "hard-boil". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 6 June 2024. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
- Hoare, Charlotte (19 May 2014). "The Art of Cookery / by a lady". St John's College Cambridge. Archived from the original on 15 November 2023. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
- "left-off". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 6 June 2024. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
- Lehmann, Gilly (2011). "Cook, Ann (fl. c. 1725–c. 1760)". doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/65131. (Subscription or UK public library membershiprequired.)
- "poky". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 6 June 2024. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
- "Professed Cookery". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 31 March 2024. Retrieved 31 March 2024.
- "ribby". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 6 June 2024. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
- "rock codling". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 7 June 2024. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
- "roll". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 6 June 2024. Retrieved 2 April 2024.