BU Libraries Search provides a single place to search for a wide variety of academic material provided by the library. The material covered by the search includes books, journals, scores, video and audio recordings, and other physical items held by the library. The search also covers ebooks and ejournals owned by the library, as well as online material provided by the library from a variety of sources.
Oxford Food Symposium on Food and CookeryThis link opens in a new windowContains proceedings from an annual symposium to share food research by scholars, enthusiastic amateurs, writers, and chefs from around the world. Volumes of Symposia proceedings prior to the most recent five years available via Google Books and as free downloads.
BU Gastronomy Cookbook Library Catalog on LibraryThingCatalog of 3600+ cookbooks and other food studies titles held by the Cookbook Library, a non-circulating collection housed within the Gastronomy program in the Fuller Building,
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Relevant subjects for print and electronic books may include but are not limited to those listed below. For more information on subjects used for books on gastronomy topics, see: Subject headings for cooking and food and drinking customs.
Women Working, 1800 - 1930.Women Working, 1800–1930 is a digital exploration of women's impact on the economic life of the United States between 1800 and the Great Depression. Working conditions, workplace regulations, home life, costs of living, commerce, recreation, health and hygiene, and social issues are among the issues documented in this online research collection from Harvard University.
Mexican Cookbook Collection, University of Texas at San AntonioUTSA’s Mexican Cookbook Collection includes over 1,200 titles in English and Spanish documenting the variety and history of Mexican cuisine from 1789 to the present. Areas of particular focus include traditional recipes, regional cooking, and healthy eating.
Dr. Jacqueline M. Newman Chinese Cookbook Collection, SUNY Stony Brook.In 2002, Special Collections and University Archives at Stony Brook University acquired the Dr. Jacqueline M. Newman Chinese Cookbook Collection, the largest cookbook collection of its kind. The collection includes more than 3,000 Chinese cookbooks; books on food Chinese food culture, medicine, and history; haute cuisine magazines; archival materials; and audio visual materials.
Ruth Graves Wakefield Cookbook Collection, Framingham State UniversityThe Wakefield Cookbook Collection is comprised of the donor's personal library of books on cooking, domestic science, etiquette, and other household topics.
The most famous of her original recipes was the Toll House Chocolate Crunch Cookie.
Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive, University of MichiganWe are not just what we eat, but how we eat — not to mention when, where and with whom. Cookbooks, menus, advertisements, manuals of table etiquette and the like may not be written to preserve the history of everyday life, but that’s exactly what they do. And this is what makes the library’s Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive (JBLCA) so valuable. Containing more than 25,000 items including ephemera publications, it paints a rich and unique portrait of American life over the centuries. In the context of the collection, American culinary history is defined broadly to include both influences upon American foodways and the influence of American culinary practices elsewhere.
Sinclair New Jersey Cookbook Collection, Rutgers UniversityThe Sinclair Jerseyana Collection includes a significant body of New Jersey cookbooks written and compiled by various local and regional groups active throughout the state during the twentieth century, with post-WWII publications constituting its most active area of development.
Cookery & Food Collection, Michigan State UniversityResearchers will discover important and unique resources for the study of cookery and food. The collection features over 25,000 cookbooks and food related items from as early as the sixteenth century up to the present from all continents of the world. Special collecting emphasis is on contemporary cookery of the Americas, including the United States; African American; Jewish American; Caribbean, Latin and South American; and the influence of West African food and diet on the Americas. The Michigan Cookbook Project is an attempt to collect all cookbooks published in the state. In addition to cookbooks there are strong resources in diet, health, and nutrition from the very old to the latest diet fad.
Iowa Cookbook Collection, Iowa State UniversityOver the past century, many towns, organizations, and churches in Iowa have gathered recipes from members and published them, essentially preserving and documenting the culinary heritage of this state. These cookbooks often contain family recipes, ethnic dishes, and history about the organization or area. We currently have about 3000 cookbooks dating back to the 1800's for Iowa in addition to about 100 historical America cookbooks dating back to the early 1700's.
Food, Wine, and Culinary History, Cornell UniversityThe Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections offers outstanding research materials on the history of food, wine, gastronomy, and restaurants. Prominent among Cornell's food history collections are: an assemblage of more than 3,000 rare cookery books from the 15th century to the present; The Eastern Wine and Grape Archive, dedicated to preserving the history of the wine industry East of the Mississippi; and a collection of more than 10,000 international restaurant menus from the 1850s to the present.
Cookery Collection, Rare Books, Kansas State UniversityThe Cookery Collection was built in large measure through the generosity of K-State alumni and friends. Over the years, their substantial donations of books and bequests of personal libraries, along with judicious purchases, have produced a collection containing over 15,000 cookbooks and related volumes, ranked among the foremost in the nation. With works dating from 1487 to the present and reflecting several languages and cultures, the collection holds many works considered rare, including some which are not available anywhere else in the world.
Beatrice A. Macintosh Cookery Collection, UMass AmherstThe McIntosh Cookery Collection includes nearly 7,500 books, pamphlets, and ephemeral items relating to the history of cookery in New England. Although there are many commercially-produced cookbooks reflecting New England cuisine from the early 19th century forward, the heart of the collection lies in three areas: cookbooks prepared by community organizations, usually for fundraising or charitable purposes; cookbooks prepared by corporations as marketing tools; and ephemera associated with food production, marketing, or consumption.
Peacock-Harper Culinary Collection, Virginia Techive centuries of culinary arts are documented in the Peacock-Harper Culinary History Collection at Virginia Tech. From this initial donation, a collecting area focused on the history of food and drink emerged. The Peacock-Harper Culinary Collection includes more than 160 pre-1900 imprints, another 153 works published before 1923, and an additional 330 pre-1950 imprints. The large collection contains more than 4,200 volumes and more than 50 manuscript collections.
The David Walker Lupton African American Cookbook Collection, University of AlabamaThe University of Alabama Libraries is proud to hold the David Walker Lupton African American Cookbook Collection, one of the largest collections of African American cookbooks in the country.
The collection currently consists of four hundred and fifty volumes covering the period from 1827, when the first book with recipes by an African American was published, through the year 2000.
The Mississippi Community Cookbook Project, University of Southern MississippiBetween 1900 and 1970, Mississippi churches, youth groups, teacher-parent associations, and other community groups published over a hundred community cookbooks. The Mississippi Community Cookbook Project is working to collect, digitize, and study Mississippi’s unique culinary heritage. Over the course of the next year, the first twenty cookbooks will be made available online with accompanying profiles of the communities that produced these cookbooks. We are also developing essays, new recipes, and other materials that will help scholars and the public to make the most of the cookbook collection.