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The archaeology of Christmas cakes
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The archaeology of Christmas cakes

Helen Leach and Raelene Inglis
Food & foodways, Vol.11(2-3), pp.141-166
01/01/2003
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/50631

Abstract

Cooking Festivals Food consumption Historical analysis Households New Zealand Socioeconomic status Women's role Christmas Cakes material culture socioeconomic factors
Like ceramic pots excavated by archaeologists, dishes, for which recipes provide detailed instructions, also can be treated as a form of material culture and analyzed to reveal the socioeconomic conditions prevailing when they were made. The Christmas Cake that originated in Victorian England from a long-standing tradition of rich fruit cakes became an important and persistent category in twentieth century New Zealand. As a complex cake with many ingredients, it could be adjusted to suit household composition and incomes, variations in price and availability of components, and changing roles of women. A study of 383 Christmas Cake recipes from 158 community cookbooks published in New Zealand between 1901 and 1980 revealed that for a "traditional" cake, the Christmas Cake was remarkably sensitive to socioeconomic trends. The method of microanalysis developed here should be applicable to many other recipe types with long, sequential histories.

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