On
January 7, 1896 a book that revolutionized American kitchen and changed the lives of women was published for the first time. The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book was compiled
and written by the school’s 41
year old director, Fannie Farmer. It was comprehensive
in scope, and well organized. Packed with detailed, step-by-step directions
and specific measurements of ingredients, it allowed home cooks—both hired help and homemakers—to
create consistent meals that turned out the same every time. Not only was it an immediate best seller, but Farmer kept it up to date through 21 more editions
in her lifetime. It is still maintained with
regular new editions by Farmer’s successors and is published today as
the Fannie Farmer Cookbook—the
one cookbook found in more homes than any other.
Born in Boston,
Massachusetts on March 23, 1857, Farmer was the eldest daughter of a master
printer and his wife. She grew up in
Medford where, despite their class,
her parents prepared her for a college
education. It was a cultured, Unitarian home. But at age
15 Fannie’s dreams for higher
education were dashed when she
suffered a paralytic stroke. She was bed
ridden for over a year and only slowly
recovered the ability to walk, although she had a limp
there after. As she was able, she began
to help her mother around the
house. Eventually she developed a special interest in cooking. When her mother opened the home to boarders,
Fannie’s outstanding cooking attracted
more roomers than they could
handle.
To help bring cash
income to the home, Farmer went to work as a cook in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shaw,
a wealthy and influential family.
Recognizing not only her gift in the kitchen, but Farmer’s eagerness to learn, Mrs. Shaw
encouraged her to enroll in the Boston
Cooking School, an establishment for professional household cooks operated by Carrie M. Dearborn which emphasized not only kitchen procedures, but scientific nutrition, the chemistry of cooking, sanitation,
and household management. Farmer was 30 years old when she started at
the school and was soon the star pupil
and Dearborn’s top assistant. After she graduated in 1889, she became assistant director and the school’s top instructor. When Dearborn died, Farmer became Principal 1891.
Since
1884 the school had used a moderately successful cookbook Mrs. Lincoln’s Boston Cook Book, by Mary J. Lincoln. But Farmer
was dissatisfied and set out to revise it. The effort took years
and became, essentially a whole new creation. Key was Farmer’s insistence on strict adherence to
precise measurements. “A cupful is measured level ... A tablespoonful is measured level. A
teaspoonful is measured level.” she insisted.
In
1902 Farmer left the Boston School to found her own establishment, Miss Farmer’s School of Cookery. She soon expanded her interests, and the school curriculum beyond
basic cooking skills to kitchen management for the gentlewoman, nutrition, and particularly to
preparation of palatable food for sick and infirm. She considered this the most important work of
her lifetime. She published Food and Cookery for the Sick and
Convalescent which was so well
regarded that she lectured at Harvard
Medical School on diet and nutrition.
Detailed, precise, and taking nothing for granted, Farmer showed just what tools, utensils, and pots a well organized home kitchen required and explained just how and when to use them. Words like whisk, foreign to many housewives, became familiar.
Farmer’s influence spread through a regular
column in the leading magazine Woman’s
Home Companion which ran for nearly ten years. She also lectured
widely and contributed articles to daily
newspapers and other periodicals.
Although she suffered another disabling stroke, after a period of convalescence
she returned to her rigorous schedule.
Farmer gave her last lecture from a wheelchair just three weeks before she
died in Boston on January 15, 1915 at the age of
58. She was interred at historic Mt. Auburn Cemetery alongside Boston’s literary greats, important
statesmen, and Unitarian elite.
She
had no relationship at all with Fanny Farmer Candies founded in 1919 four years after her death
which was named to take advantage of
the reflected glory of Fannie’s reputation.
Nor, despite some Hollywood flack planted stories, was she any relation to 1930’s an ‘40’
movie star Francis Farmer, now best remembered for being committed to a psychiatric hospital for schizophrenia.
No comments:
Post a Comment