Before Food Blogs: the Community Cookbooks

Girls stir food and peel apples in a cooking class at Mitchell School in Denver, Colorado.[between 1899 and 1905?] Maria Mitchell, cooking class

Maria Mitchell, cooking class
Before today’s booming industry of celebrity cookbooks and food bloggers, there was a cottage industry of “community cookbooks” published by and for local communities to support local causes. In the United States, these amateur cookbooks got their start with a book published by women during the Civil War to raise money for injured soldiers. The idea spread to churches, schools and volunteer organizations. For over a century, community cookbooks have proved a surprisingly steadfast way for people (mostly women) to use their prowess in the kitchen to help others.

Cloud City Cook-book

Cloud City Cook-book
One of the earliest cookbooks in the Western History and Genealogy Department is Cloud City Cook-book, published by the women of the local Leadville Congregational church in 1889. Early community cookbooks are noteworthy for the sparseness of their recipes, in both ingredients and instruction. They assume that readers already know rudiments of cooking (as most proper 19th century wives would) and the ladies of Leadville have some of the shortest recipes I have ever seen. One of my favorites is their 16-word recipe for macaroni soup: “One gallon soup stock, five sticks macaroni, one onion. Season with salt and pepper. Boil well.” Sounds easy and perfect for a head cold.
Community cookbooks encapsulate a specific community in place and time. Cloud City Cook-book was compiled to help incoming wives cope with the challenges of cooking at altitude. I certainly hope no one today needs the authors’ admonishment that “the husband who has recently brought his wife from the East, is not in healthy employment when he reminds her of the superior quality of his mother’s cooking. He must wait until she has learned the new conditions in her new world.”

Colorado Cache Cookbook – in color!

Colorado Cache Cookbook – in color!
If we move forward in time, our most recent community cookbook is Colorado Cache: A Goldmine of Recipes from the Junior League of Denver, published in 2008. Boy, have times changed. While there are still plenty of low-budget local cookbooks, this one is the fifth edition of a national bestseller, making it a sort of hybrid community cookbook. It is also definitely for the modern cook, from the detailed instructions to the special section on “Microwave Cooking.” Yet, the recipes are still compiled from amateur cooks and include some local touches, such as dessert-making tips from Sugar City (I certainly hope with pun intended). Despite the national readership, the recipes are for Denver’s altitude, with suggestions for converting to higher or lower altitudes. You can take the recipes out of Denver, but it is much harder to take Denver out of the recipes.
If you’re looking for more community cookbooks, Western History and Genealogy has a growing array from local schools, churches, organizations, and even your very own Denver Public Library. Two cookbooks from First Baptist Church are also digitized and available online: 300 Choice Recipes (1892) and How We Cook in Colorado: Choice Recipes (1907). How about you? Have you ever used or contributed to a cookbook in your community?

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