The National Cook Book, 9th ed. by Hannah Mary Peterson

(6 User reviews)   1310
By Richard Baker Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - The Rare Room
Peterson, Hannah Mary (Bouvier) Peterson, Hannah Mary (Bouvier)
English
So, I found this old cookbook online—*The National Cook Book, 9th ed.*—and at first I thought, 'Cool, vintage recipes.' But then I started flipping through, and wow. This isn't just a cookbook; it's a time machine. Think about life in the 1800s: no refrigerators, no measuring cups in the way we know them, no grocery store on every corner. Hannah Mary Peterson (Bouvier) shows you how to handle all that—oven tables that burn wood, recipes that say 'take a bunch of butter' and that part is mostly terrifying. But here's the real mystery: she crammed everything from practical tips to fancy dinner party menus to household hints (how to stop your milk from curdling? Remove a stain? Cook with war rations deep in Confederate territory? Oh yes). Sometimes the advice is shockingly modern (crisp textures! Mess-free cooking!). But there's also this eerie silence on big changes happening in America just after the Civil War. She wrote for a country struggling to rebuild, asking readers to 'be economical, be season-aware.' Why did this tiny book get reprinted six times? I had to know. The answer is she made old-fashioned domesticity feel thrilling—like surviving a century before air fryers. Curious? Prepare for history that tastes like blackberry pudding and turns your kitchen into a debate parlor.
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The Story

The year is 1880-something, Hanah Mary Peterson puts out her copycat of a British cookbook author's work: The National Cook Book, 9th ed. This thick, charming bomb shows a busy woman (or someone paying a cook) everything from 'How to store apples in a root cellar for winter' to 'Fire risibles in baking.' There isn't as much guidance about navigating leftover roast what to do if oven fire reduces your stew to charcoal an hour before company comes-no worries, fix your butter, bake far faster. The secret charm: She reads like a loving mom turned Army chef making it into letters for granddaughters moving West or weary Southern post-war brides learning to waste NOTHING.

Why You Should Read It

This book connected me strangely, no cover gloss needed. Hidden inside Hannah’s vocabulary—plenty 'mince fine,' 'dress the fowl dead with bread?'—we find hot lines dealing daily dramas we understand: the woman worried about butter in my box gone grannies? Planning meals for four, stressed about cost? Read her section on 'Poor Cinderella soup' where she flings leftover potato and meat into a hot froth?!

I ADMIRE honesty in chaos. When she jumps from pickling turnips to directions stopping bedbugs on pantry shelves? She talked no large sad talk about war survivability feeling forced into new normal. Instead she just lists 5 dinner party sweets and a hat cleanliness note. Straight forward yet crammed true to that era—fancy enough but practical for muddy 1800s soirees. That real conversational confusion? Totally reflects being a reader, cook, manager messy houses of many kids despite modern illusions trying composure.

Final Verdict

Get this during October time when leaf scrape wind suggests slower kitchen life curiosities—still learning from voices past funny smart with yeast recipe thoughts. Best audience: absolute Food Nation history fans who geek difference between soup culture 1830 versus our new low carb obsession fan . You mix 3 actual favorites: home historian delight , actual weekly menu brainstorm inspiration scrappy cooks , lazy day read see far our efficiencies grew cook quicker & done . Intense? For poetry Victorian modern method perfectionists then skip preten al of charmlife as over achieving dinnerplate. Ready bake ginger crack cake hot hand into funny discovery; we modern get eat shock though. Powerful piece kitchen journalism sent cross age showing intimacy —and bravery craft lasting through dusted annotations older surviving lady sitting at plain wooden table trusting instinct & paper back little yet real.*And still certain meat thermometer optional…*



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Joseph Garcia
6 months ago

I found the data interpretation to be highly professional and unbiased.

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5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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