Guide to the Elizabeth Fairfax cookbook, 1694-1795
A Collection in
Special Collections and Archives
Accession Number C0202
George Mason University Libraries
2011 By George Mason University Libraries. All rights reserved.
Processed by: Special Collections and Archives Staff
Administrative Information
Alternative Form Available
A digital version of the cookbook is available here
Access Restrictions
There are no access restrictions.
Use Restrictions
There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Elizabeth Fairfax cookbook must be obtained from the Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.
Preferred Citation
Elizabeth Fairfax cookbook, C0202, Special Collections and Archives, George Mason University Libraries.
Acquisition Information
Purchased from Bristow and Garland in 2009.
Processing Information
Processed by Kristen Korfitzen in November 2011. EAD markup completed by Kristen Korfitzen in November 2011.
Biographical Information
The Elizabeth Fairfax Cookbook is associated with two women of the Fairfax family by the two inscriptions present on the front page. The first inscription, a memorial to Frances Lady Fairfax reads "Frances Lady Fairfax Daughter of Sr. Thomas Chaloner was baptized Feb'ry the 20th, 1610 and dyed Jan'ry the 2nd 1692. She was Sixty years Mrs of Steeton as appears by her Arms set up w'th Sir William Fairfax over the hall door 1633." The other inscription reads "Elizabeth Fairfax Hir Booke 1694." Lady Frances Fairfax was the daughter of Sir Thomas Chaloner by his second wife Judith Blount. Sir Thomas Chaloner served as Member of Parliament for Lostwithiel and St Mawes. He also acted as tutor to Prince Henry the eldest son of James the 1st. Around 1630 Frances married Sir William Fairfax. During the English civil war Sir William, along with Frances' brothers James and Thomas, fought on the side of Parliament. On September 18, 1644 Sir William was mortally wounded during the relief of Montgomery Castle. Lady Frances and Sir William had four children, sons William and Thomas and daughters Catherine and Isabella. Little is known of Elizabeth Fairfax but it has been surmised that she was the granddaughter of Frances and William, being the daughter of either William or Thomas. Elizabeth Fairfax married Thomas Spencer of Attercliffe Hall. The Fairfax family resided in Yorkshire.
Whether original owner of the book was Frances of Elizabeth Fairfax is unclear. In addition to the inscription attributing the book to Elizabeth Fairfax, the initials E.F have been stamped into the back and front covers of the volume, suggesting that the book did originally belong to Elizabeth.
Scope and Content
The book contains over two hundred recipes for cookery, medicine and household products. The recipes are handwritten on vellum. The recipes in the book have been written in by several different people and had been continually added until approximately 1795. Several of the pages have been cut out from the book, and several blank pages still remain where more recipes could have been added. The first half of the book is dedicated to cookery. Recipes for cooking include titles such as "To Make Biskets ye Lady Ingrams way", "To Make the Fine Great Cake", "A Dutch Pudding", and "Fritters". Some of the recipes have been numbered, but this numbering is not consistent throughout the book. The second half of the book is dedicated to medicine and household products. Entries for medicinal remedies give recipes for salves, drinks and powders and common folk remedies. Titles for medicinal recipes include "Powder for Convulsion Fits, which was never known to fail when taken in time", "For ye Scurvey", and "To Preserve the Face from Puffying". Recipes for both cooking and medicine contain vague descriptions of measurements and procedures, but provide some information as to the cost of ingredients and commonly used units of measure for the time period.
Arrangement
Organized according to recipe.
Related Material
Special Collections and Archives also holds several other antiquarian cookbooks.
Index Terms
- Yorkshire (England)
- Cooking
- Medicine
- Cookbooks.
Geographical Names:
Subjects:
Document Types:
Contents List
This cookbook, compiled over a one hundred year period, contains common recipes for cooking and medicinal remedies found in England during the 17th and 18th centuries. The book contains numerous recipes for food, from drinks to deserts, and medicinal remedies for a variety of aliments.
- Volume: 1
Elizabeth Fairfax Cookbook,1694-1795