The Queen-like Closet
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''The Queen-like Closet, Or, Rich Cabinet'' was a cookery book published in 1670 by the English writer on
household management Housekeeping is the management and routine support activities of running an organised physical institution occupied or used by people, like a house, ship, hospital or factory, such as tidying, cleaning, cooking, routine maintenance, shopping, ...
,
Hannah Woolley Hannah Woolley, sometimes spelled Wolley, (1622 – c.1675) was an English writer who published early books on household management; she was probably the first person to earn a living doing this. Life Her mother and elder sisters were all skil ...
(1622 – c.1675). It ran through five English editions by 1684. At least two German editions were also printed. The book provides a recipe for
trifle Trifle is a layered dessert of English origin. The usual ingredients are a thin layer of sponge fingers or sponge cake soaked in sherry or another fortified wine, a fruit element (fresh or jelly), custard and whipped cream layered in that ord ...
, involving cream but no custard, a gooseberry fool,
hot chocolate Hot chocolate, also known as hot cocoa or drinking chocolate, is a heated drink consisting of shaved chocolate, melted chocolate or cocoa powder, heated milk or water, and usually a sweetener like whipped cream or marshmallows. Hot chocolate ...
, and cheesecakes. Woolley's mince pies still contain meat as well as dried fruits. Ingredients include pumpkins and molasses from the New World. The book contains the first known recipe for Sussex pond pudding.


Context

Woolley had already published two books, ''The Ladies Directory'' in 1661, and ''The Cooks Guide'' in 1664. She was probably the first person to make her living by writing books on
household management Housekeeping is the management and routine support activities of running an organised physical institution occupied or used by people, like a house, ship, hospital or factory, such as tidying, cleaning, cooking, routine maintenance, shopping, ...
.Considine, John (2004) "Wolley, Hannah" (b. 1622?, d. in or after 1674),
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
', Oxford University Press.


Book

Richard Lowndes published Woolley's ''The Queen-Like Closet'' in 1670. The title is a reference to "W.M."'s 1655 book ''The Queens Closet Opened''. The book is dedicated to Woolley's friend Mrs. Grace Buzby, daughter of Sir Henry Cary. Page 1 of the book, however, contradicts the title page by naming the book ''The Ladies New Closet. OR RATHER Rich Cabinet.''


Approach

The book consists almost entirely of numbered recipes, prefaced only by Woolley's letter "To all Ladies, Gentlewomen, and to all other of the Female Sex who do delight in, or be desirous of good Accomplishments." and a one-page address "Ladies, I do here present you" in verse. After the recipes are bills of fare (pages 353 to 369) for different times of the year, including "for extraordinary Feasts in the Summer", "for Winter Season", "for Lesser Feasts", "for Fish Days & Fasting Days in Ember week, or in Lent", "without feasting", "in Winter in Great Houses".Woolley, pages 353–369 Woolley then describes (pages 378 to 383) the duties of each "office", including the cook, the "Maid under such a Cook", the butler, the carver, and other servants, and then "the Gentlewomen who have the Charge of the Sweet-Meats, and such like Repasts". Part 1 of the book describes the making of many such "Sweet-Meats".Woolley, pages 378–383 The book ends with separate alphabetical indexes to parts one and two.


Illustrations

The book has no illustrations other than the frontispiece, which has six kitchen scenes, including a three-legged pot over an open fire, cordials being distilled, a bread oven, and pots and roasts on a spit over a fire, topped by a title medallion. It is inscribed "Printed for Rich. Lownes".


Contents


Part 1

The 293 recipes in Part 1 are not grouped explicitly, but nos. 1 to 36 are for medicinal cordials and waters, such as "To get away the Signs of the Small Pox". The following recipes are a mixture, with cakes, creams and puddings, medicines, preserves and wines in no discernible order. No. 58, a
trifle Trifle is a layered dessert of English origin. The usual ingredients are a thin layer of sponge fingers or sponge cake soaked in sherry or another fortified wine, a fruit element (fresh or jelly), custard and whipped cream layered in that ord ...
, is made with boiled cream, rosewater, mace, and some rennet to help it set. No. 109 is a gooseberry fool made with gooseberries, water, sugar, egg yolks, cream, and nutmeg. Recipe 101, "To make Collops of Bacon in Sweet-meats" calls for Marchpane Paste, sugar, cinnamon, and ginger, sliced into escalopes as if it were bacon. The foods described are the sweet-meats which Woolley considered that her "Gentlewomen" readers would "have the Charge of". Recipes involving meat appear with nos. 138 and 139, with "To make Christal Jelly" using knuckle of veal and calves feet, and "To make China-Broth" using "china", hartshorn, a "Red Cock cut in pieces and bruised", raisins and pearl barley. Recipe 142 is "To make Chaculato", a
hot chocolate Hot chocolate, also known as hot cocoa or drinking chocolate, is a heated drink consisting of shaved chocolate, melted chocolate or cocoa powder, heated milk or water, and usually a sweetener like whipped cream or marshmallows. Hot chocolate ...
drink made with
claret Bordeaux wine ( oc, vin de Bordèu, french: vin de Bordeaux) is produced in the Bordeaux region of southwest France, around the city of Bordeaux, on the Garonne River. To the north of the city the Dordogne River joins the Garonne forming the ...
, chocolate, egg yolk and sugar.


Part 2

Part 2 is headed "The Second Part of the Queen-Like Closet; Having an Addition of what hath already been treated of, and directing a very true & excellent way for all manner of Cookery, both Fish, Flesh, & Pastry." It contains 288 recipes, and is ascribed to Hannah Wolley, alias Chaloner, and published by "R. L." in 1670. Recipe 3 is the first for a main dish, "To make Coller'd Beef", the flank of beef being marinaded with saltpeter, spices and herbs, and then braised in a pot with claret and butter. Recipe 6 is for cheesecakes, using milk,
manchet Manchet, manchette or michette, is a wheaten, yeast-leavened bread of very good quality, or a small flat circular loaf. It was a bread that was small enough to be held in the hand. History One of the first recipes printed in English for manc ...
to thicken it, butter, curd, currants, eggs, and a little cream and sugar, with pastry. More meat dishes follow from no. 18, a chicken pie, with recipes for brawn,
pasties Pasties (singular pasty or pastie) are patches that cover a person's nipples and areolae, typically self-adhesive or affixed with adhesive. They originated as part of burlesque shows, providing a commercial form of bare-breasted entertainment. T ...
, and an elaborate "Olio" with a "fricasy" of calves head, oysters, anchovies, pigeons, bacon, sweetbreads, and veal. Recipe 102 is for "Minced Pies", the filling inside the pastry being made with veal and suet in equal amounts, with dried fruits (raisins, currants, prunes, and dates), spices, verjuice and sugar. Recipes 113 to 121 are for fish dishes, starting with "a Fricasie of Oisters". Recipe 132 is for "Pumpion-Pie", the pumpkin being fried with beaten egg and then baked in slices in a pie crust with dried fruits, butter, sack, and "some sharp apples". Recipes 144 to 157 are for meat or fish pies. Recipe 261 is for a " Haggus Pudding". Recipe 285 is for "Vin de Molosso, or Treacle Wine", calling for " Molossoes" boiled with spices and rosemary, then brewed "as you do Beer".


Editions

Five English editions are recorded: * 1670 – First edition. Richard Lowndes * 1672 – Second edition. Richard Lowndes
1675 – Third edition. Richard Lowndes
* 1681 – Fourth edition. R. Chiswel and T. Sawbridge
1684 – Fifth edition. R. Chiswel and T. Sawbridge
At least two editions of a German translation were published as ''Frauenzimmers Zeitvertreib''. * 1674 – ''A Supplement to the "Queen-Like Closet," ''or, ''A Little of Every Thing''


Reception

The historian Wendy Wall describes Woolley as "a domestic female celebrity who acted as the
Martha Stewart Martha Helen Stewart (, ; born August 3, 1941) is an American retail businesswoman, writer, and television personality. As founder of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, she gained success through a variety of business ventures, encompassing pu ...
of the seventeenth century." Wall argues that Woolley's cookery books including ''The Ladies Directory in Choice Experiments'' (1662) and ''The Cook's Guide'' (1664) as well as ''The Queen-Like Closet'' and its supplement are part of a rags-to-riches tale in which "domestic expertise" offered social mobility. The essayist
Charles Lamb Charles Lamb (10 February 1775 – 27 December 1834) was an English essayist, poet, and antiquarian, best known for his '' Essays of Elia'' and for the children's book '' Tales from Shakespeare'', co-authored with his sister, Mary Lamb (1764†...
wrote that he found a copy of the ''Queen-Like Closet'' in a bookstall: "I lit upon a ragged duodecimo, which had been the strange delight of my infancy, and which I had lost sight of for more than forty years ... being an abstract of receipts in cookery, confectionery, cosmetics, needlework, morality, and all such branches of what were then considered as female accomplishments." Kate Colquhoun notes that Woolley "addressed servants for the first time" in her books, focussing on practicality and economy. She argues that Woolley succeeded best by recognising that people "wanted to offer upmarket, modern dishes on a constrained budget." She brought fashionable ingredients like anchovies, capers and wine into her simplified dishes, with frugal advice on reusing leftovers. Colquhoun however criticises her organisation: But, Colquhoun concludes, Woolley was "a fine, solid cook" who was prepared to roast
woodcock The woodcocks are a group of seven or eight very similar living species of wading birds in the genus ''Scolopax''. The genus name is Latin for a snipe or woodcock, and until around 1800 was used to refer to a variety of waders. The English name ...
"The French Way" however much she disliked the show of "some rare whimsical French cook", using bacon over the bird's breast and serving it on toast. And her bills of fare were "carefully detailed" with "a buttered apple pie, an almond custard or a syllabub – the dessert of the age."


See also

* ''
A Collection of above Three Hundred Receipts in Cookery, Physick and Surgery ''A Collection of Above Three Hundred Receipts in Cookery, Physick and Surgery'' is an English cookery book by Mary Kettilby and others, first published in 1714 by Richard Wilkin. The book contains early recipes for plum (Christmas) pudding ...
'' * ''
The Good Huswifes Jewell ''The Good Huswifes Jewell'' is an English cookery book by the cookery and housekeeping writer Thomas Dawson, first published in 1585. It includes recipes for medicines as well as food. To the spices found in Medieval English cooking, the book ...
''


Notes


References


External links


Text

Free ebook


(in 'manuscripts' archive)

and introduction at
The British Library The British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom and is one of the largest libraries in the world. It is estimated to contain between 170 and 200 million items from many countries. As a legal deposit library, the British ...

Handwritten recipe for ''ye orange puding'' from front of a 1672 copy signed "Mary Halfpeny hor Booke 1678"
{{DEFAULTSORT:Queen-Like Closet, The 1670 books English cuisine Cookbooks