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Conference turris::cooks

Title:How to Make them Goodies
Notice:Please Don't Start New Notes for Old Topics! Check 5.*
Moderator:FUTURE::DDESMAISONSec.com::winalski
Created:Tue Feb 18 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:4127
Total number of notes:31160

2985.0. "BOOK: Cookbook Help" by ROULET::SHEEHAN () Mon Apr 08 1991 11:32

    I am trying to find out how to obtain the latest cookbook
    you can copy from the terminal. If anyone has some information
    please send mail to scoman::sheehan. 
                          Thanks, Paula
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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2985.1MISERY::BLUM_JOMon Apr 08 1991 16:564
    I'd like to know, too.  Please reply here.
    
    
    John
2985.2exLEDS::MELANSONMon Apr 08 1991 17:066
    I know this has nothing to do with cooking, but does anyone know
    how to modify an entry ???
    
    Thanks.
    
    Sandy
2985.3Re .2:SWIM::RICHARDSONMon Apr 08 1991 17:415
    Type HELP MOD ENT at the Notes> prompt.  If anything
    in the online Help is confusing, let me know (I'm
    the Notes writer).
    
    Mary Alice Richardson
2985.4�COOKBOOK?LUDWIG::SHUMANTue Apr 09 1991 02:063
    
    Back to the cookbook, inquiring minds would like to know about it.
    
2985.5Here it isHYEND::JBROWNTeenage Mutant Ninja TribbleTue Apr 09 1991 13:5611
    You can find the cookbook on 
    
    	$ Dir OCTAVE::DJA1:[CB]*.ps
    
    The entire cookbook is 29,076 blocks long, but you can get it a chapter
    at a time to save disk space.
    
    Warm Regards,
    Janet
    :-)
    
2985.6ALOSWS::LEVINEInsert Witty Remark HereTue Apr 09 1991 19:2510
    
    Something that a noting friend and I did was to buy our own paper and
    print it out on the week-end (and to print it two-sided).  That way, we
    weren't using the company's paper, and we were able to use pre-punched
    paper (it made life much easier).
    
    When printing to an LPS20 (and LPS40?), use /param=side=2  .
    
    Sarah
    
2985.7AAARRRGGGHHH!!!ROULET::SHUMANWed Apr 10 1991 03:3010
    
    For us dummies that can not seem to get a copy of the cookbook to 
    transfer, how do you transfer or copy the book?  I tried to transfer a
    copy to my disc and ended up with 80K blocks locked up and had to get
    computer operations to kill the system before --------!!!!.
    
    This has been one of those days(daze) when you wish you were directing
    traffic on the freeway. :^(
    
    Thanks for the help, I need all I can get.
2985.8DNEAST::MAHANEY_MIKEWed Apr 10 1991 07:111
           How does one extract something from Dir OCTAVE::DJ1......?
2985.9BookReader version TLE::EIKENBERRYDon't confuse activity with productivityWed Apr 10 1991 10:5222
  For anybody who is interested, I've generated a BookReader version of the
cookbook.  The total space is just over 17,000 blocks.

  The files are at:

	SHAR::SHAR$:[EIKENBERRY.PUBLIC]COOKBOOK.DECW$BOOK
	SHAR::SHAR$:[EIKENBERRY.PUBLIC]COOKBOOK.DECW$BOOKSHELF

My node - SHAR - is a hidden node within ZKO.  I don't know how outside 
folks can get to my workstation - perhaps by using another node as a 
pass-thru node?

  To read the cookbook:

	$ br :== $sys$system:decw$bookreader.exe
	$ br <full path name>COOKBOOK.DECW$BOOKSHELF

  There's no index because of a hard-coded limit within Document.  But it's
great fun to browse through!  Much easier than flipping through a hard
copy that weighs a ton!

--Sharon
2985.10How do I copy from shar?EASE::BARRETTThu Apr 11 1991 07:2314

Sharon,

I am very interested in the bookreader format, but I am having difficulty in 
seeing shar, presumably because it is hidden.


Can you ask your MIS folks how the files can be copied, please?


Thanks,

Ann.
2985.11TLE::EIKENBERRYDon&#039;t confuse activity with productivityThu Apr 11 1991 10:235
  I *think* you can copy them using the path 

	TLE::SHAR::SHAR$:[EIKENBERRY.PUBLIC]

--Sharon
2985.12HUMOR::EPPESI&#039;m not making this up, you knowThu Apr 11 1991 20:1013
RE  last couple --

I think you can get to just about any hidden node through VORTEX.  For
example, VORTEX::SHAR::SHAR$:[EIKENBERRY.PUBLIC].

RE .6 -- 

> When printing to an LPS20 (and LPS40?), use /param=side=2  .
                                 ^^^^^^

Nope, won't work with an LPS40.  They don't print two-sided.

							-- Nina
2985.14If only it was as simple as pushing a button!YUPPY::COULSONSun Apr 21 1991 13:0813
    I have tried to print various chapters from the cookbook without any
    success.
    
    I do not have access to the $ prompt normally but somebody "fiddled" on
    my terminal and hey presto!  However when I sent the job to my LN03,
    following the instructions I'd been given, it dissapeared.  This has 
    happened each time I've tried.  Can anybody help a system illiterate to 
    complete what looks like it should be a simple task?
    
    Thanks
    
    Gary 
                                                                
2985.15A question about latest recipes in cookbookLEDS::SIMARDjust in time.....Thu Aug 06 1992 14:1312
    Been over a year since the last note here.  I wonder if people are
    still around.
    
    My question is:  Is the cookbook updated with the new recipes since
    last one entered?  I wonder if the recipes in it stopped with the
    creation of it and none further.
    
    
    Thanks
    
    Ferne
    
2985.16BOOK:To The King's TasteFIEVEL::FILGATEBruce Filgate SHR3-2/W4 237-6452Sat Oct 07 1995 12:159
 Has anyone seen this book?  I have searched some of the online
 references but could not located the title.

 Steve Kallis wrote in 1985 that is was a `series of kitchen-tested recipes'
 in a discussion of middle ages cooking.

 Bruce

2985.17BOOKS:A Fifteenth Century Cookery BookFIEVEL::FILGATEBruce Filgate SHR3-2/W4 237-6452Sat Oct 07 1995 12:1615
 This book was not located in an online search, has anyone
 used it?

 Steve Kallis wrote in 1985 in the SCA conference:
Also, I once ran across _A Fifteenth Century Cookery 
Book_, whose author/editor I don't recall.  The only trouble is the book
is printed in Middle English, and the recipes are untested.  One of
the spices, by the way, is Sandalwood, which I suppose they slivered
or ground (high fiber, anyway).

The medieval recipes are qualitative, but not quantative.  "Take fair
mete," for instance, tells you what the ingredient (more or less) is,
but not how much of it to use.  This is true for the majority of recipes
I've seen.
2985.18RANGER::GODIVA::benceSounds like a job for Alice.Mon Oct 09 1995 17:154
    I've got a copy of "A Pleine Delight" at home.  I'll check the ISBN
    tonight.
    
2985.19BOOKIE::chayna.zko.dec.com::EPPESNina EppesTue Dec 05 1995 17:597
>    I've got a copy of "A Pleine Delight" at home.  I'll check the ISBN
>    tonight.

Wow, it's been a loooong night.... :-)

-- Nina (catching up on this conference)

2985.20RANGER::GODIVA::benceSounds like a job for Alice.Tue Jan 09 1996 09:3515
    Pleyn Delit
    
    Medieval Cookery for Modern Cooks
    Constance B. Hieatt & Sharon Butler
    University of Toronto Press 1974
    Paperback Reprinted 1985
    ISBN 0-8020-6366-7
    
    A excellent bookstore for current and out-of-print cookbooks is:
    
    Kitchen Arts & Letters
    1435 Lexington Ave. (between 93rd & 94th)
    New York, NY  10128
    212-876-5550
2985.21Dunno if they're still in print, bought mine around '80LYCEUM::CURTISDick &quot;Aristotle&quot; CurtisTue Jan 09 1996 21:1421
    .16:
    
    Sass, Lorna J.
       To the King's taste.
    
    TX705.S33		641.5'942		75-17859
    			(hm, that's an odd Dewey #)
    ISBN 0-87099-133-7
    
    (C) 1975 by The Metropolitan Museum of Art
    
    
    Sass, Lorna J.
       To the queen's taste.
    
    TX717.S32		641.5'942		76-23242
              
    (C) 1976 by Lorna J. Sass
    	(but printed by the Metropolitan)
    
    Dick
2985.22I've seen sources for skirret seed & medlar trees, btwLYCEUM::CURTISDick &quot;Aristotle&quot; CurtisTue Jan 09 1996 21:3321
    .17:
    
    Lorna Sass's preface to "To the King's Taste" mentions "Two Fifteenth
    Century Cookery Books", published by the Early English Text Society.
    "A few years ago" (in 1975) she found them in the Columbia University
    library.  Couldn't guess whether they're still available.
    
    
    If you can stand to deal with stuff from 12 to 14 decades later (i.e.,
    1590-1620), you might consider
    
    Sallets, Humbles, and Shrewsbery Cakes
    by Ruth Anne Beebe (David R. Godine, Boston, 1976)
    
    	ISBN 0-87923-195-5; LoC 76-14226
    
    Like the other books mentioned here, it has the advantage of providing
    both the original text of the "receipts" and adaptations to
    contemporary American kitchens.
    
    Dick
2985.23Pleyn Delit : Medieval Cookery for Modern Cooks; Constance B. Hieatt, et alFIEVEL::FILGATEBruce Filgate SHR3-2/W4 237-6452Wed Jan 10 1996 08:0816
 Current status appears that the book is in a reprint/republish cycle.


Pleyn Delit : Medieval Cookery for Modern Cooks; Constance B. Hieatt, et al;
Hardcover; $40.50 
(Not Yet Published -- On Order)

Pleyn Delit : Medieval Cookery for Modern Cooks; Constance B. Hieatt, et al;
Paperback; $15.26 
(Not Yet Published -- On Order)

 from a search on http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ats-query/2335-1501038-902264


 Bruce