EditorialBowl for broth, Meissen around 1730. This is one of the earliest examples of the famous Meissen " onion-pattern" the pomegranate on the lid was wrongly dubbed " onion" the chrysanthemum is still used in this Meissen china. Collectio...
EditorialWarming pot (rechaud), from Nymphenburg. A candle burned in the lower part of the little stove and kept soup or broth warm in a cup inserted under the lid. Fancy landscape with harbour and castle. 1765.
EditorialMeat, soups and stews. The Ni'matnama-i Nasir al-Din Shah. A manuscript o. 1495 - 1505. Meat, soups and stews being prepared for the Sultan Ghiyath al-Din. Soup and 'las' being cooked. The small inscription is 'taghd?iya,' food, nourishment). Ghiyath S...
EditorialHis other arm, his legs, and finally his head, severed by Rāma's arrows, Kumbhakar?a crashes to the ground. The severed head crushes part of the city of La?kā. The allies rejoice, apart from Vibhī?a?a, who looks sad on the death of his broth...
EditorialDominick. Good Lady Bertha's Honey Broth. Chapman & Hall: London, 1846. He expects the larks to fall into his mouth ready cooked. Wood-engraved page-decorations after Bertall. Image taken from Good Lady Bertha's Honey Broth With one hundred and twenty ...
EditorialSitula from tomb 44 / 2 on the Duerrnberg burial site, Salzburg, Austria. The situla holds 190 liters and could have been used for serving broth. A bronze helmet, found in the same tomb, on the right. Sheet bronze (5th BCE). Height 88 cm.
EditorialBroth bowl and cover (scodella and tagliere) from an accouchement set; Aeneas leaving Troy with his father and son (inside bowl); Pyramis and Thisbe (on cover).
EditorialLibrary Table, 1879?82, Made in New York, New York, United States, American, Rosewood, brass, mother-of-pearl, and abalone, 31 1/4 x 60 x 35 3/4 in. (79.4 x 152.4 x 90.8 cm), Furniture, Herter Brothers (German, active New York, 1864?1906), Herter Broth...
EditorialFEBRUARY. Here they are cutting down trees for firewood. The English called February "Sprout-kele." Kele meant "kelewurt," and was most extensively used at this time for making broth. The well-known custom of making pancakes on Shrove-Tuesday is a remn...
EditorialBowl for broth, Meissen around 1730. This is one of the earliest examples of the famous Meissen " onion-pattern" the pomegranate on the lid was wrongly dubbed " onion" the chrysanthemum is still used in this Meissen china. Collectio...
EditorialWarming pot (rechaud), from Nymphenburg. A candle burned in the lower part of the little stove and kept soup or broth warm in a cup inserted under the lid. Fancy landscape with harbour and castle. 1765.
EditorialSitula from tomb 44 / 2 on the Duerrnberg burial site, Salzburg, Austria. The situla holds 190 liters and could have been used for serving broth. A bronze helmet, found in the same tomb, on the right. Sheet bronze (5th BCE). Height 88 cm.