posted on 2021-02-23, 22:14authored byAndrew Warnes, Stephanie Lambert
<p>Reflecting its designated
status, the Cookery Collection at the Brotherton Library, University of Leeds,
includes many unique or rare documents that have not been digitised but which
have significant potential value for international researchers. The collections
are:</p>
<p> </p>
<p>1.
<b>Cookery Printed Books</b> is composed of a range of individual gifts made to the university since
1939. It includes nearly 10,000 printed volumes and over 140 manuscript recipe
and household books. Its holdings range from 1487 to the present day. The
collection has particular thematic strengths in astronomy, empire, home economics,
medicine, confectionery, recipes, menus, and vegetarianism. National
traditions, including those of China and Italy among others, are also well
represented. </p>
<p>2.
<b>Cookery Scrapbooks</b>. The work of a single cook, Ann Sergeant, the extensive cuttings
(packaging, recipes, ingredients) and recipes in these scrapbooks offer a
distinctive window of the evolution of food production and cooking since World
War Two. </p>
<p><b>3. </b><b>Michael Bateman
Archive. </b>This archive includes scrapbooks, videotape,
artwork, and diaries alongside the published writings of Michael Bateman. The
collection reflects Bateman’s interest in contemporary food writing as well as
in processes of food manufacture, including his 1980s Campaign for Real Bread. <b><u></u></b></p>
<p><b>4. </b><b>Food Standards
Committee Papers</b>. Alongside his noted
work in establishing the Procter Department of Food Science at the University
of Leeds, Professor Alan Ward was chair of the British government’s Food
Standards Commitment between 1959 and 1977. These papers include a series of
important reports that the committee published in this time among other
contextual documents. <b><u></u></b></p>
<p> </p>
<p>Scoping work carried out as a result of this
AHRC research network has indicated that <b>a</b><b>t
least</b> 17% of the material in the Cookery Collection has been digitised. Approximately
4% of this material has been digitised by the university while the remaining 96%
sits on external resources such as the Internet Archive. </p>