Monday, November 14, 2022

New Digitized Cookbooks Available!

 

 

There’s more to a cookbook besides its recipes.   Explore our latest British Columbia additions to the digital content of the Newman Western Canadian Cookbook Collection.

Learn more about the Newman Collection here.

Funded by the BC History Digitization Program at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre at UBC and the UFV library, researchers, students, faculty and the broader community of the Fraser Valley and beyond can explore BC cookbooks covering the years 1911 to the late 1960s. The digitized BC cookbooks are open and freely available to all. The content is hosted in HarvestIR, UFV’s institutional repository: https://ufv.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/ufv%3Acookbook and is fully searchable and printable.



 

Dive into the King’s Daughters’ cookery book (1911) to understand the colonial home in Victoria prior to World War I.  Notes to the chatelaine include how to be a good housekeeper and tips on how to manage the “help” as well as dozens of recipes.  Take a walk through the 1920s with 300 ways to a man's heart by the Charles Dickens Parent Teacher Association from Vancouver or discover quirky recipes like Fly Cemetery in the Centennial cook book, published in 1958.

Posted by Mary-Anne

 

 

Thursday, November 10, 2022

Library Closure for Remembrance Day

 The UFV Libraries (Chilliwack and Abbotsford) and the AskAway virtural reference service will be closed on November 11, in honour of Remembrance Day. However, we have many resources (ebooks, databases, streaming videos) which are available 24x7 for you to access from the Library's website.

 Click here for full Library hours.

Posted by Brenda

Friday, November 4, 2022

The Langar Project

UFV Library has partnered with the South Asia Studies Institute to create an exhibit about the community meal, Langar.  Come to the Abbotsford campus library to learn about the history and evolution of Langar in Sikhism as well how Langar is prepared and the protocols of serving this communal meal.  An online exhibit is available to view here.