I have a copy of Ruth Wakefield's Toll House Tried and True Recipes, including the original form of those famous chocolate chip cookies, made without chocolate chips, which weren't on the market yet - the recipe calls for chopping up a bar of Nestle's semisweet baking chocolate into pieces the size of a pea.
But I think the one I really love is my 1951 edition of The Settlement Cook Book, which was the last edition published before The Settlement Association sold the rights to a major publisher and the book underwent an overhaul to modernize it. This version presumes that the person reading it knows nothing, so the first chapter or two are devoted to the kitchen and its components (including how to use a fireless cooker), household hints (how to air out a room), table etiquette, the art of the place setting, and how to plan menus.
Even as late as 1951 the presumption of what was by then considered antiquated equipment is there, and it's a fascinating glimpse into how food preparation must have been in the early decades of the 20th century.
But I think the one I really love is my 1951 edition of The Settlement Cook Book, which was the last edition published before The Settlement Association sold the rights to a major publisher and the book underwent an overhaul to modernize it. This version presumes that the person reading it knows nothing, so the first chapter or two are devoted to the kitchen and its components (including how to use a fireless cooker), household hints (how to air out a room), table etiquette, the art of the place setting, and how to plan menus.
Even as late as 1951 the presumption of what was by then considered antiquated equipment is there, and it's a fascinating glimpse into how food preparation must have been in the early decades of the 20th century.