On a humid afternoon not long ago, Bonnie Slotnick, the owner of an eponymous cookbook shop in the East Village, hiked up to the carpeted top floor of an elegant town house on West Twelfth Street. Slotnick, who is seventy and slight, almost wispy, wore a sleeveless linen shirt pinned with a small enamel carrot. The house had belonged to the late food writer Mimi Sheratonâthe first woman to hold the position of restaurant critic at the Times, who further distinguished herself by wearing disguises on the jobâand was freshly on the market. In advance of its sale, Sheratonâs son had emptied its four stories of almost everything but his motherâs vast collection of books on food and cooking. In the houseâs eaves, where Sheraton and her husband kept cozy twin offices, the books awaited Slotnick, who specializes in out-of-print and antiquarian titles, and whoâd been given first dibs.
âThere are about three boxes of books that are legitimately old and rare,â Slotnick said, as she began to peruse them with a practiced confidence. âThereâs an eighteenth-century olive-oil treatise in Italian, with all kinds of ingredients.â The most valuable item was what Slotnick called a manuscript, an eighteenthcentury handwritten British household cookbook, authored by âa very literate servant,â she guessed. Among recipes for âa very good pudding,â for mock turtle (made from veal), and for Turkish dolmas was one for âgay powdersâ (meant to treat epileptic fits), which included serving sizes: âas much as will lie upon a shilling,â for an adult; âas much as will lie upon a sixpence,â for a child. âNow, thereâs a measurement for you!â Slotnick said.
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