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04 Nov 21:06

Archive of Handwritten Recipes (1600 – 1960) Will Teach You How to Stew a Calf’s Head and More

by Kate Rix

If you’ve ever tried to follow a recipe from your grandmother’s collection, squinting at her spidery writing on a stained 3×5 card, you might be a candidate for the University of Iowa Libraries’ latest DIY History project.

The University’s special collections manages the Szathmary Culinary Manuscipts and Cookbooks, a handwritten collection of American and European recipes from the 1600s to the 1960s.

Helpful foodies, history buffs and handwriting sleuths are invited to participate in UI’s crowdsourcing history project by transcribing digitized images of recipes.

It’s not the first time the university has outsourced a portion of its archival handwork. Last year the Civil War Diaries and Letters Transcription Project was powered by volunteers, who transcribed more than 15,000 pages of material. All you need to do is select a page from within the collection and get started. So far more than 17,000 pages have been transcribed and volunteers chat and post questions on a discussion forum.

An example of the historical nuggets uncovered while transcribing: a posnet is an 18th century term for a small metal pot, a spider is a skillet, and to scearce is to sift. Of course no cookbook historian has completed their task until they have actually tried the recipes themselves. This could be interesting for the lucky transcriber of a recipe from Abigail Wellington Townsend’s cookbook, circa 1840:

To stew a calfshead, let the calfshead be split and open and cleaned put it in the stew pan with water to cover it stew it quite tender take it and cut it to pieces put them on again in the stew pan with the water it was first boiled in  put with it six large onions half a pint of claret a little catch up a little mace & pepper & salt to your taste when it is stewed tender thicken the gravy with yolks of six eggs boiled hard & braid in a little of the gravy put in six yolks of eggs boiled hard & fry’d forced meat.

Kate Rix writes about digital media and education. Find more of her work at katerixwriter.com and thenifty.blogspot.com.

Archive of Handwritten Recipes (1600 – 1960) Will Teach You How to Stew a Calf’s Head and More is a post from: Open Culture. You can follow Open Culture on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and by Email.


29 Oct 20:39

Infographics Made Easy

by Note & Point
Ahangar

AB

http://noteandpoint.com/u/249

While the world may not have a need for more infographics, it probably does have a need for us to learn how to build them better. Thankfully Chris Lema breaks it down for us. A good deck with good visuals and resources.

I’m not a huge fan of Sketch Rockwell but that’s nit-picky and purely subjective, it probably works well in this situation.

Infographics Made Easy :: Note & Point
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28 Oct 20:56

Creepy Close-Ups: Best Microscope Critter Photos

by Betsy Mason
Ahangar

Can you see the 1st shared item A. B. ?

<< Previous | Next >> House Spider

Spiders, weevils, wasps, lice, mites and mosquitoes are among the creepiest subjects of the winners of Nikon's Small World microscope photography competition this year. Super-close-ups of eyes, tongues and silk spinnerets are amazingly beautiful, but also gross enough to induce shivers.

More Microscope Images: 6 Super Close-Ups of Crazy Bug Eyes Incredibly Small: Best Microscope Photos of 2012 Mini Motion: Award-Winning Microscope Videos

These delightfully disturbing photos are among the winners, honorable mentions and images of distinction selected for their originality, informational content, and visual impact by Nikon's judging panel of scientists, journalists and optical imaging experts. Nikon announced the rankings at 10 a.m. ET today, including the first place winner, who will receive $3,000 and some Nikon products. We have a post with the top 20 winners on Wired Science.

If your favorite from the tiny terrors contained in this gallery isn't among the winners, you can vote for it until Nov. 13 on the Small World Facebook page to win the popular vote.

Above:

House Spider

Harold Taylor, Kensworth, Dunstable, United Kingdom

Subject: House spider
Technique: Image stacking
Magnification: 30x


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