Elizabeth Goodfellow
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Elizabeth Goodfellow (c.1767–1851), generally called Mrs. Goodfellow, started one of the first
cooking school A cooking school is an institution devoted to education in the art and science of cooking and food preparation. There are many different types of cooking schools around the world, some devoted to training professional chefs, others aimed at amate ...
s in America. She taught classes for thirty years, and her recipes and techniques were passed on for generations in the cookbooks of one of her students,
Eliza Leslie Eliza Leslie (1787–1858), frequently referred to as Miss Leslie, was an American author of popular cookbooks during the nineteenth century. She also wrote household management books, etiquette books, novels, short stories and articles for magazin ...
. Goodfellow also ran a renowned bakery and confectionery in
Philadelphia Philadelphia, often called Philly, is the List of municipalities in Pennsylvania#Municipalities, largest city in the Commonwealth (U.S. state), Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the List of United States cities by population, sixth-largest city i ...
during the first fifty years of the 19th century.


Personal life

The life of Mrs. Goodfellow is largely unknown. Elizabeth Pearson, pastry cook, was already married and running a successful business on Philadelphia's Dock Street by 1801. Her daughter, Sarah Anne Pearson Bouvier (1800-1826) had been born the year before. Robert Coane, her second husband, and she had a son Robert Coane (1804-1877) who would become a partner in the store in 1837. Lastly, she married William Goodfellow, a clockmaker, in 1808, but he died ten years later. According to her obituary, Mrs. Elizabeth Goodfellow died on January 5, 1851, at age 83 in Philadelphia, so she was most likely born in 1767.


Career

For a half-century, her highly successful shop was located on three streets: Dock, South Second and finally Sixth Street, moving further from the Delaware River docks each time. She was well known for her pies and cakes, particularly Lemon Pies, Cocoanut Pies, Spanish Buns and Jumbles (later, recipes for those in particular, labeled with the famous name ‘Mrs. Goodfellow,’ appeared in several cookbooks). Her reputation soon led to her teaching cooking classes, with equally positive results, lasting thirty years. Daughters from wealthy families attended her classes as a part of their education to prepare to enter society. One of her students from a prominent family, Susan Israel Painter (1790-1845), the daughter of Revolutionary War General
Joseph Israel The first USS ''Israel'' (DD-98) was a in the United States Navy during World War I and the years following. Namesake Joseph Israel was born c. 1780. He entered the Navy as Midshipman on 15 January 1801. He served on during the Quasi-War with ...
from
Delaware Delaware ( ) is a state in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States, bordering Maryland to its south and west; Pennsylvania to its north; and New Jersey and the Atlantic Ocean to its east. The state takes its name from the adjacent Del ...
graduated in 1807, and married four years later. Many of her handwritten recipes were included in the ''Colonial Receipt Book: Celebrated Old Receipts Used a Century Ago by Mrs Goodfellow’s Cooking School''. Another student,
Eliza Leslie Eliza Leslie (1787–1858), frequently referred to as Miss Leslie, was an American author of popular cookbooks during the nineteenth century. She also wrote household management books, etiquette books, novels, short stories and articles for magazin ...
(1787-1858), compiled her teacher's recipes into the first of many extremely popular cookbooks, ''Seventy-five Receipts for Pastry, Cakes, and Sweetmeats'' in 1828. Leslie took two of Goodfellow's courses sometime after her father died and her mother was forced to manage a succession of boarding houses. As a student, she took many notes, and over the years, friends would ask her for copies. Her brother suggested that she compile some of them into a book so she did not have to copy the recipes each time. As part of her recipe for Goodfellow's famous lemon pie, Leslie wrote: "A genuine baked lemon pudding (such as was introduced by the justly celebrated Mrs. Goodfellow), and is well known at Philadelphia dinner parties, must have no flour or bread whatever. The mixture only of butter, sugar, and eggs, (with the proper flavoring) and when baked it cuts down smooth and shining, like a nice custard. Made this way, they are among the most delicious of puddings…" The recipe used whole eggs in the filling, so it's improbable that Goodfellow created the lemon meringue pie - with egg yolk filling and the leftover egg whites whipped for meringue topping.


Legacy

For years after her death Mrs. Goodfellow would be remembered by her students, their families ("many a household, for years after, bore evidence of her skill in teaching") and her customers. Months after she died, Mrs. Goodfellow's cocoanut pie was vividly recalled by a Philadelphian reporter stationed in Europe.
William Henry Fry William Henry Fry (August 10, 1813 – December 21, 1864) was an American composer, music critic, and journalist. Fry was the first known person born in the United States to write for a large symphony orchestra, and the first to compose a pub ...
wrote an article for Sartain’s ''Union Magazine'' (a Philadelphia magazine), about an acrobatic horseman, trained at the riding school of Philadelphia, performing at the Paris Hippodrome in 1851. The rider did seventy consecutive somersaults and other
equestrian vaulting Equestrian vaulting, or simply vaulting, is most often described as gymnastics and dance on horseback, which can be practiced both competitively or non-competitively. Vaulting has a history as an equestrian act at circuses, but its origins stre ...
marvels. Perhaps nostalgic for a favorite dessert, Fry suggested another Philadelphia school - the Goodfellow cooking school - would do well in Paris, and compared her cocoanut pudding to the best of the extravagant displays by the French chef
François Vatel François Vatel (; 1631 – 24 April 1671) was the majordomo (in French, ) of Nicolas Fouquet and prince Louis II de Bourbon-Condé. Vatel was born either in Switzerland or in Paris in 1625, 1631, or 1635. He is widely credited with creating ...
from the 17th century. Although Mrs. Goodfellow never wrote a cookbook, her recipes appeared in a variety of cookbooks, such as one by a Quaker from Philadelphia, Elizabeth Nicholson's ''What I Know, or, Hints on the Daily Duties of a Housekeeper''. That and a second book were published in Philadelphia in 1856, five years after she died. ''Cookery as it Should be: new manual of the dining room and kitchen, for persons in moderate circumstances'' was written by a former student, who "experimented" with the more modern recipes. The same book was published almost a decade later and retitled ''Mrs. Goodfellow’s Cookery as it Should be''. It was claimed to be written by Mrs. Goodfellow, which it obviously was not. Other cookbooks contained recipes identified with her name. However, it was Eliza Leslie's first cookbook, and to a lesser degree her other books, which allowed Mrs. Goodfellow's teaching to influence generations of cooks. Mrs. Goodfellow stressed quality ingredients, thus her baked goods "were always excellently made, nothing being spared that was good." Leslie followed Goodfellow's recipe layout by putting the ingredients first, rather than in the usual paragraph format, in her ''Seventy five Receipts for Pastry, Cakes, and Sweetmeats''.


References


Further reading

* Diamond, Becky (2012). Mrs. Goodfellow: The Story of America's First Cooking School. Yardley, PA: Westholme Publishing. * Schmidt, Stephen
Mrs. (Elizabeth) Goodfellow: Mrs. Goodfellow and Miss Leslie
* Weaver, William Woys.

Encyclopedia of Food and Culture, 2003 {{DEFAULTSORT:Goodfellow, Elizabeth 1767 births 1851 deaths American cookbook writers Educators from Philadelphia American women educators Cooking schools in the United States Writers from Philadelphia American women non-fiction writers