Early Modern Maritime Recipes

Circulating Knowledge in the Atlantic World

Edith Snook author Lyn Bennett author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press

Publishing:22nd Sep '26

£31.00

This title is due to be published on 22nd September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Early Modern Maritime Recipes cover

Describing how to pickle beef, make a low-cost substitution for sugar, waterproof a coat, or treat kidney stones, eighteenth-century settler recipes recorded a wide range of processes essential to daily life. Early Modern Maritime Recipes offers a compendium of culinary, medicinal, and domestic recipes from before 1800 that point to the many ways knowledge was preserved and circulated in the Atlantic world.

Drawn from newspapers, letters, diaries, and notebooks held in archives of the northern Wabanaki territories – the region French settlers called Acadia and later named New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island – the collected recipes reflect the needs and practices of an eighteenth-century English-speaking population, revealing much about how settlers grew and prepared food, treated ailments, cared for animals, controlled pests, and maintained their households. Each recipe is Introduced with an explanation of its origins and followed by detailed analysis focusing on sources, ingredients, and techniques. Tracing the integration of Indigenous, African, and other non-European knowledge into settler cultures, the book highlights the many intersections of domestic life with social networks and political power.

Richly detailed and historically grounded, Early Modern Maritime Recipes documents the cosmopolitan quality of settler household knowledge, revealing that the history of settler domesticity is never far from the history of colonialism.

“Recipes, when interpreted through the first-rate scholarship of this book, have much to tell us about the many ways domesticity interacted with the settler colonial process; they also contribute substantially to our understanding of foodways. The authors bring out important and innovative cross-cutting themes of social class, gender, and racialization.” - John Reid, Saint Mary’s University

ISBN: 9780228028871

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

384 pages