Skip to main content.

The Chemistry of Cookery

This book, written in the late 1800s, is a book of chemistry that explains the whys and hows of cooking to trained chefs and laymen alike. The book deals with some compounds of common foodstuffs, like albumen or gluten, and illustrates what happens from a chemist's point of view during certain types of food preparation like roasting, frying, or stewing. A part of the chapters also details adulterations of food - thankfully since outlawed - and how to detect them in the finished product. (10 hr 21 min)

Chapters

00 - Preface

3:03

01 - Introductory

13:01

02 - The Boiling of Water

19:04

03 - Albumen

22:25

04 - Gelatin, Fibrin, and the Juices of Meat

27:00

05 - Roasting and Grilling

28:28

06 - Count Rumford's Roaster

31:00

07 - Frying

44:57

08 - Stewing

30:09

09 - Cheese Part 1

30:44

10 - Cheese Part 2

28:07

11 - Fat--Milk

34:23

12 - The Cookery of Vegetables

46:24

13 - Gluten--Bread

38:13

14 - Vegetable Casein and Vegetable Juices

30:05

15 - Count Rumford's Cookery and Cheap Dinners.

27:54

16 - Count Rumford's Substitute for Tea and Coffee

47:19

17 - The Cookery of Wine Part 1

31:09

18 - The Cookery of Wine Part 2

29:46

19 - The Vegetarian Question

16:38

20 - The Physiology of Nutrition

18:17

21 - Malted Food

22:57