Food and Drink: Difference between revisions

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*[http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/foreigners/2013/08/gin_and_tonic_kept_the_british_empire_healthy_the_drink_s_quinine_powder.single.html "The Imperial Cocktail: How the gin and tonic became the British Empire’s secret weapon"] by Kal Raustiala  August 28, 2013 slate.com
*[http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/foreigners/2013/08/gin_and_tonic_kept_the_british_empire_healthy_the_drink_s_quinine_powder.single.html "The Imperial Cocktail: How the gin and tonic became the British Empire’s secret weapon"] by Kal Raustiala  August 28, 2013 slate.com
*[http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/2014/08/14/long-lost-recipes-from-indias-colonial-past/  "Long-Lost Recipes From India’s Colonial Past"] by Rajyasree Sen, August 14, 2014 Wall Street Journal India. Retrieved 15 August 2014
*[http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/2014/08/14/long-lost-recipes-from-indias-colonial-past/  "Long-Lost Recipes From India’s Colonial Past"] by Rajyasree Sen, August 14, 2014 Wall Street Journal India. Retrieved 15 August 2014
*[http://www.natgeotraveller.in/magazine/month/february-2015/chhanar-mishti "Sugar Rush: A Foodie's Guide To Bengal's Sweetest Treats"] by Arundhati Ray, February 23, 2015 natgeotraveller.in. This a tradition brought by the Portuguese.
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20151229052554/http://www.natgeotraveller.in/magazine/month/february-2015/chhanar-mishti "Sugar Rush: A Foodie's Guide To Bengal's Sweetest Treats"] by Arundhati Ray, February 23, 2015 natgeotraveller.in, now archived. This a tradition brought by the Portuguese.
*[http://www.newburytoday.co.uk/gallery/recipes/16724/Christmas-in-the-days-of-the.html "Christmas in the days of the British Raj"] by Jenny Malin 10 December 2015 newburytoday.co.uk
*[http://www.newburytoday.co.uk/gallery/recipes/16724/Christmas-in-the-days-of-the.html "Christmas in the days of the British Raj"] by Jenny Mallin 10 December 2015 newburytoday.co.uk
*[http://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1570&context=lhapapers ''Food Culture in Colonial Asia: A Taste of Empire''] by  Cecilia Y. Leong-Salobir, University of Wollongong  2011. Mainly in respect of India, but also includes [[Malaysia]] and [[Singapore]].
*[http://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1570&context=lhapapers ''Food Culture in Colonial Asia: A Taste of Empire''] by  Cecilia Y. Leong-Salobir, University of Wollongong  2011. Mainly in respect of India, but also includes [[Malaysia]] and [[Singapore]].
:[http://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2971&context=lhapapers "Spreading the word: using cookbooks and colonial memoirs to examine the foodways of British Colonials in Asia, 1850-1900"] by Cecilia Y. Leong-Salobir, University of Wollongong. From ''The Routledge History of Food'' 2015 (pp. 131-155)
:[http://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2971&context=lhapapers "Spreading the word: using cookbooks and colonial memoirs to examine the foodways of British Colonials in Asia, 1850-1900"] by Cecilia Y. Leong-Salobir, University of Wollongong. From ''The Routledge History of Food'' 2015 (pp. 131-155)

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Related Articles

  • Tea
  • Jewish for some information about Indian Jewish food.
  • Malaysia for some information about cook books published in Malaya.

Terms used in recipes

You may see words used in recipes designating quantities such as ollock, abbreviated to oll, pollum and viss. [1]

1 ollock (oll) =11.719 cubic inches=192 millilitres (ml) (or cubic centimetres)
1 pollum=1¼ oz= 35.5 grams
1 viss=3lb 2oz=1.42kg [2]

External Links

"Spreading the word: using cookbooks and colonial memoirs to examine the foodways of British Colonials in Asia, 1850-1900" by Cecilia Y. Leong-Salobir, University of Wollongong. From The Routledge History of Food 2015 (pp. 131-155)

Recommended Reading

Historical Books online

A Hindu Woman Cooking
Undated edition, catalogued 1869 with some handwritten recipes. Archive.org. 1880 edition Archive.org. The Indian Cookery Book, published c 1900 by Thacker, Spink & Co, Calcutta. Project Gutenberg Australia.

Restricted viewing (probably available in North America)

References

  1. "Five Grandmothers and an Anglo-Indian Cookbook!" by Kalyan Karmakar June 29, 2015. indiafoodnetwork.in, now an archived webpage.
  2. Page 213 onwards ‪The Anglo-Hindoostanee Handbook‬ 1850 Google Books