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Free e-book editions of Apicius from Project Gutenberg, the
grand-daddy of free on-line e-book sites. Direct link to Apicius download page Direct link to
Apicius in Latin download page Here are direct links to a free Kindle edition of the book, and some
paperbacks to purchase via Amazon.com Here is a link to the free e-book Kindle from Amazon.com You can view images from the Vatican's edition, the oldest known
edition of Apicius, De Re Coquinaria, in the original Latin.
You can download a PDF
book, facsimile images of each page, from the Internet Archive. I link
to the book's page at the Internet Archive site, from where you can
choose the e-book version you wish to download (left column), including
the PDF. There are no bread recipes in Apicius, bakeries
provided the bread
Honey and reduced grape juice were the
primary sweeteners for the ancient Romans. The Arabs brought
sugarcane to Europe around the year 800. The Ancient Roman cookbook attributed to Apicius
is presented in an English translation together with a treatise on
Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome, and offered for
free from Project Gutenberg, a free e-book website. The editors of the book are skilled cooks
in their own right, which makes their book, which is in the public
domain, one of the more intelligible printings of Apicius's book of
recipes. The Apicii Librii, The Apicius Books, are
actually the ten chapters of the Ancient Roman chef's recipe
collection. Included in this edition is a chapter of notes
collected by a student of Apicius. Manuscripts, books written by hand, of Apicius's cookbook
were copied over and over again through the centuries, from roughly
100 B.C., during the reigns of Augustus Caesar and Tiberius Caesar,
to the late 1400s. In the late 1400s, the only surviving cookbook
from the Ancient Roman era was printed using the newly invented
printing press. It has been in print ever since. While not the
first European cookbook to be printed on a press, which was
Platina's cookbook in 1474, Apicius's is the oldest European cookery
book in existence, and its early printed editions are rare and
highly valued. It is possibly the oldest cookery book in the world. These are the ten chapters (roughly 500
recipes) of Apicius's cookbook: The Careful Experienced Cook: Basic cooking
tips including storage and preserving food, substitutions,
troubleshooting, medicinal mixes, and standard spice mixes and
sauces Minces: Chopped meats and fish for sausages
and patties and fillings The Gardiner: Cooked vegetables, salads and
dressings Miscellaneous Dishes: Aspic salads and
one-dish meals, condiments and dressings Legumes: Chickpeas, lentils, peas and beans,
many served over savory grain puddings Poultry: Mostly chicken but also ostrich,
crane, flamingo, parrot, and sauces for them Fancy dishes: Also called "Sumptuous Dishes"
which refers to the "sumptuary laws" in Roman times that put high
taxes on certain rare ingredients. These dishes feature those
ingredients. Rare cuts of meat, and expensively raised animals
(fig-fed pork, for example). Truffles. Mushrooms. Snails. Large
numbers of eggs. Dates. Apricots. Large amounts of almonds (for a
marzipan sweet). Quadrupeds: Literally four-footed animals,
which includes cow, goat, sheep, boar, and even a sort of opossum.
They are oven roasted, spit roasted, and stuffed. Lots of sauce
recipes for dressing the raw meat, and then for serving with the
cooked meat. Sea Food: Lots of sauces for the seafood, and
ways of cooking things from lobster to oysters. Fish Sauces: Lots of sauces for use with fish,
generally assumed to be translated from a Greek sauce book. The editors include the notes from a Goth (the
original meaning!) student of Apicius's called Vinidarius.
Vinidarius includes with his 31 recipes more instructions for
cooking and serving the dishes than Apicius does. Vinidarius also
lists Apicius's recommendation for what should be included in every
well-stocked kitchen in the form of spices, seeds, dried herbs and
legumes, liquids ingredients, nuts, and dried fruit. You will find no bread recipes, and very few
sweets recipes, because these foods were generally purchased from
specialized cook-shops. Just like today, most people do not bake
their own bread, nor do them bake all their own desserts and
snacks. You will also notice the direct link made between
food and
health, which is often lacking in modern cookbooks. For example,
vinegar and brine are added to vegetable dishes "to counteract
inflation" meaning gas, which is a problem when diets are heavy in
vegetables. Cooking ingredients and cooking utensils have
not varied much since the dawn of human settlements. The plants and
animals are those of the Earth. The means of preparing food and
cooking it has varied little over time. Only the sources of the
heat for cooking, and the means of storing food have changed,
slightly, through the ages: gas and electricity for cooking and
sterilizing, electricity for refrigeration and freezing. Utensils, serving dishes, plates and bowls, and
pots and pans are remarkable similar over the centuries, since the
cooking tasks have remained the same. Once a good design was
developed, it lasted! The major difference is that today these
things are normally mass produced, and most often machine produced. The flavors of Ancient Roman cooking are very
similar to traditional North African and southern Spanish and Asian
Indian cooking, with a reliance on staple grains and legumes and
vegetables, with a heavy use of spices and other flavorings to vary
the taste of the dishes and to create many layers of flavor in each
dish (the "pepper" in the cookbook is likely a spice mix like
all-spice or five and seven-spice). The meat dishes are strikingly
similar, too, the major difference being a lack of pork dishes, and
the lack of dishes reliant on wine in Muslim North Africa, where
both pork and alcohol are proscribed. Three other major differences between Ancient
Roman cooking and today's cooking are the New World ingredients,
sugarcane, and more meat: Potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, pumpkins, etc.
have enriched the world's diet since their discovery by explorers
around 1500. Sugarcane, spread by North African conquerors
to Europe, now dominates the former stars: honey and condensed
grape juice/must (sapa). Meat production has become supersized and
specialized, which together with modern freezing technologies and
transport, has made it an ingredient that is more available than
ever before. Romans ate more freshly harvested fish, and freshly
killed domesticated poultry, and freshly collected poultry eggs.
They also used all parts of the animal from the brains to the
udders, and especially the offal, wasting nothing! The editors of this wonderful translation
provide such scholarly additions as: A description of Apicius's era An Index/Glossary with definitions and Roman
terms, with much history Illustrations of Roman cooking and serving
tools, with much history Copious footnotes so each recipe makes sense to
a cook, and historically Frontispieces from early editions and
manuscripts of Apicii Librii and information about those early
editions The creators of the e-book edition have
hyperlinked many parts of the book for easy of reference. The
e-book is free. Some entrepreneurial persons have taken the free
text and created books for sale. I provide links here for free and
paid versions. I leave you with the thought that food culture
is as timeless as human nature: the editors of this book quote from
the wall of a Pompeian inn-keeper's wall, where it is boasted that
his roast pork is "pan-licking good".
Apicius -
Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome