Name/TitleSWRI Jubilee Cookery Book
EditionEighth
MakerScottish Women's Rural Institutes
About this objectRing-bound paperback book titled 'SWRI Jubilee Cookery Book (Eighth Edition)', featuring a yellow map of Scotland against a red background on the cover. Published in 1967 and re-printed in 1968, priced 9s 6d. Includes a list of all the federations, a general introduction and a preface written by Sheila Lumsden, Convenor of the Housewives Committee. The contents are listed as follows:
- General Information, Handy Measures, Etc.
I. Soup
II. Fish
III. Meat
IV. Made-up and Savoury Dishes
V. Vegetables, Salads and Hors D'Oeuvres
VI. Puddings
VII. Pastry
VIII. Baking
IX. Cheese Dishes
X. Traditional
XI. Egg Dishes
XII. Sandwich Fillings
XIII. Fruit Bottling
XIV.. Chutneys, Pickles, Sauces, Stuffings, Etc.
XV. Beverages
XVI. Sweets
XVII. Deep Freezing
Partly digitised (29 pages incl. front pages, preface, general notes & index)
Medium and MaterialsOrganic, paper
MeasurementsH: 211 x W: 150 x D: 18 mm
Date Made1968 reprint
Period1960s
Place MadeScotland, Edinburgh
Place NotesScottish Women's Rural Institutes, 42 Heriot Row, Edinburgh EH3 6EU
PublisherScottish Women's Rural Institutes
Publication Date1967
Publication PlaceScotland, Edinburgh
Subject and Association Descriptionhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Women's_Institutes:
The Scottish Women's Institutes (SWI), informally called "the Rural", is a registered charity which promotes the preservation of Scotland's traditions and rural heritage, particularly in the sphere of household activities. It does so by means of local groups of women which meet regularly throughout the country. It was formed on 26 June 1917 as the Scottish Women's Rural Institutes, part of the movement of rural women's institutes started in Stoney Creek, Ontario in 1897. The first meeting in Scotland look place at Longniddry in East Lothian. Catherine Hogg Blair had identified the need for a Scottish example of the emerging Women's Institutes movement and she organised the meeting at Longniddry to avoid a measles outbreak in her own village. 37 women became members and campaigner Nannie Brown was the area organiser. The SWRI created the chance for rural women to network and share their skills with one another. The group's magazine, Scottish Home and Country was first published in 1924. The name changed to Scottish Women's Institutes in 2015.
Subject and Association Keywordscookery, cooking, recipes
Subject and Association KeywordsScottish Women's Rural Institutes (SWRI)
Subject and Association Keywordswomen's organisations
Named CollectionGlasgow Women's Library
Object TypeBook
Object numberGWL-2012-3-4
Copyright LicenceAll rights reserved