Descriptive Information
Permalink
https://omeka-s.library.illinois.edu/s/rbml/item/3044
- Title
- Dell arte del cucinare con Il mastro de casa e Trinciante
- Description
- This work combines two of the most important Renaissance books on cooking, service, and etiquette: the monumental Opera dell'arte del cucinare by private chef-to-the-popes Bartolomeo Scappi (circa 1500- 1577) and Vincenzo Cervio's (active 16th century) posthumous treatise on meat carving Il Trinciante (The Carver). Scappi's work was first published in 1570 and was reprinted many times. It is one of the earliest illustrated cookbooks and contains 1,000 recipes, rules for courtly feasts, and even meal plans for papal conclaves. Its illustrations depict Renaissance kitchens and cooking utensils, including the first known picture of a fork. Cervio's work Il Trinciante was finished by fellow carver Fusoritto da Narni and was first published in 1593, along with two of Fusoritto's dialogues, including Il mastro di Casa.
- Call Number (click link to view in library catalog)
- 641.5 Sca6d
- Authors
- Scappi, Bartolomeo; Cervio, Vincenzo
- Full Title
- Dell arte del cucinare con Il mastro de casa e Trinciante.
- Date
- 1643
- From the Exhibit
- Building a Library: Social Life and Customs
- Publisher
- Combi
- Location
- Venice
- Language
- Italian
- Rights
-
This item is the physical property of the Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Intellectual property rights, including copyright, may reside with the materials' creator(s) or their heirs.
The Rare Book & Manuscript Library's reproduction and publication policies are available here: https://www.library.illinois.edu/rbx/collections/reproduction-services/. The library welcomes requests for reproductions made from works in our collections, though restrictions may apply to certain materials. Please contact the library with any questions at askacurator@illinois.edu. - Type
- Text
- Medium
- Book
- Bibliographic Citation
- Scappi, Bartolomeo; Cervio, Vincenzo. Dell arte del cucinare con Il mastro de casa e Trinciante. Venice: Combi, 1643. Print.