iBoston.org is your site for Boston history and architecture. In addition, you can find information on Boston's public places, art, historic people and events. iBoston also
has a research area where you can learn how Boston grew physically as well as in population.
This Day in Boston History
January 7th, 1896
Fannie Farmer Cookbook

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On
this day the Fannie Farmer Cookbook was published. It immediately transformed
the culinary world by introducing "standard, level measurements"
such as the cup and teaspoon. Before this recipes called for a "nut
of butter", or "two fingers of water".
Farmer was raised and educated in Medford, Massachusetts. As a teenager
she suffered paralysis from a stroke and was confined to a wheelchair,
from which she learned to cook assisting her mother. She enrolled in the
Boston Cooking-School, graduating in 1889, and stayed on as assistant
director until taking over in 1894.
She began her own school, Miss Farmer's School of Cookery, to train homemakers
and amateur chefs, gaining a national following as a writer and lecturer.
She spent her later life promoting the health of a good diet to hospitals
and the public.
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From the writers of iBoston.org |
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