4 131 résultats
8614aafSierre, in-8°, Verkauf Pro Band/ Vendu Par volume.
2021500127590Solar 2021 1 pages 18 4x23 8x2cm. 2021. Broché. 1 pages.
M14190Glénat , 1992 , in8 carré , reliure en liège , 152 pp . Abondantes illustrations. L' étiquette collée sur le plat de la reliure porte le titre : Agenda de l' eau et du vin - Vittel grande source - 1993 Langue: Français
2012500183865LAROUSSE 2012 64 pages 14 6x19 4x2 4cm. 2012. Relié. 64 pages.
1984ABE-2415121113PETIT FORMAT-PLIEE EN DEUX-FILM DE GILLES BEHAT AVEC BERNARD GIRAUDEAU-CHRISTINE BOISSON-JEAN PIERRE KALFON
2006500082547Kenwood Ltd 2006 96 pages 20 8x1x24 8cm. 2006. Broché. 96 pages.
2006500095701Kenwood Ltd 2006 96 pages 20 8x1x24 8cm. 2006. Broché. 96 pages.
13.5" x 15.5". Two-color menu from the "Nandina" Ristorante of Firenze, Italy, Proprietor G. Sassoli. Possibly circa 1970? Unmarked with moderate wear and age-toning. Folded twice vertically and once horizontally. A charming Italian gastronomic memento. Book
1981500253477Grancher 1981 240 pages in8. 1981. cartonné. 240 pages.
267136London: Thomas Worlidge n.d. ca mid-18th century. Engraved portrait of James Ashley in cartouche flanked by ornate pedestals supporting two punch bowls with engraved caption as above by Thomas Worlidge. 1 vols. 7-9/16 x 5-3/4 in. A strong impression laid down light creases from prior folding small pin hole near engraved caption. Engraved portrait of James Ashley in cartouche flanked by ornate pedestals supporting two punch bowls with engraved caption as above by Thomas Worlidge. 1 vols. 7-9/16 x 5-3/4 in. Scarce trade card of James Ashley proprietor of the London Coffee House and Punch-House 1731-1776 who was "London's leading purveyor of Punch in the eighteenth century" Wondrich Punch p. 65 and "the world's first celebrity mixologist the first man to become famous for compounding and selling a mixed drink" ibid p. 172. <br /> <br /> Ashley a former cheese merchant opened his Punch-House in 1731 in Ludgatehill London. Extensive advertising in London papers as well as the distinct ornate pedestals surmounted by iron punch bowls which flanked its entrance made the London Punch-House one of the most well-known drinking establishments in the city. Clientele included Hogarth Boswell Oliver Goldsmith and Benjamin Franklin. <br /> <br /> A large sign outside of the Punch-House echoes the caption on this trade card "Pro bono publico. James Ashley in 1731 first reduced the price of punch raised its reputation and brought it into universal esteem." Ashley did indeed reduce the price of punch - from 8 shillings for punch made from a quart of arrack to 6 shillings - but his great innovation was to offer punch in smaller portions in servings as small as two ounces. These small servings made to order for the customer were the precursor to the modern cocktail. <br /> <br /> This trade card is engraved by Ashley's friend Thomas Worlidge 1700-1766 dubbed "the English Rembrandt" who also engraved portraits of Ashley's wife and one Mrs. Graywood the bar-keep at the London Punch-House. Not in ESTC Thomas Worlidge unknown
267079London: Thomas Worlidge mid-18th century. Engraved portrait of James Ashley in cartouche flanked by ornate pedestals supporting two punch bowls with engraved caption as above by Thomas Worlidge. 7-9/16 x 5-3/4 in. A strong impression with very slight rubbing and discoloration. Engraved portrait of James Ashley in cartouche flanked by ornate pedestals supporting two punch bowls with engraved caption as above by Thomas Worlidge. 7-9/16 x 5-3/4 in. Scarce trade card of James Ashley proprietor of the London Coffee House and Punch-House 1731-1776 who was "London's leading purveyor of Punch in the eighteenth century" Wondrich Punch p. 65 and "the world's first celebrity mixologist the first man to become famous for compounding and selling a mixed drink" ibid p. 172. Ashley a former cheese merchant opened his Punch-House in 1731 in Ludgatehill London. Extensive advertising in London papers as well as the distinct ornate pedestals surmounted by iron punch bowls which flanked its entrance made the London Punch-House one of the most well-known drinking establishments in the city. Clientele included Hogarth Boswell Oliver Goldsmith and Benjamin Franklin. A large sign outside of the Punch-House echoes the caption on this trade card "Pro bono publico. James Ashley in 1731 first reduced the price of punch raised its reputation and brought it into universal esteem." Ashley did indeed reduce the price of punch - from 8 shillings for punch made from a quart of arrack to 6 shillings - but his great innovation was to offer punch in smaller portions in servings as small as two ounces. These small servings made to order for the customer were the precursor to the modern cocktail. <br /> This trade card is engraved by Ashley's friend Thomas Worlidge 1700-1766 dubbed "the English Rembrandt" who also engraved portraits of Ashley's wife and one Mrs. Graywood the bar-keep at the London Punch-House. Not in ESTC Thomas Worlidge unknown
Sqaure medium octavo in green boards and blue illus DJ; 167p, illus in b/w and color. An uncommon wine book. No copy found in OCLC WorldCat at time of cataloging. Some portions in Catalan, Spanish and English. Numerous photos. Contributions by Pere Grases, Josep Tarin Iglesias, Miquel A. Torres, Mauricio Wiesenthal, Emili Giralt I Reventos. Rough translation of title: 1000 Years of Wine-Making in Catalonia. // Food. Drink. Cooking. Wine, Enology; Viticulture. Grape-growing. Spanish Wine. Grapes. Thirst!
Two Parts. pp. 56: 48. Illustrated with top margin woodcuts. 4to. Original full purple cloth binding. Edges sun faded. Owned by Judge Mayer Sulzberger (1843-1923). XLib. [Dropsie College]. Scarce reprint of the rare original 1700's edition. Interesting poems describing public houses (Pubs) in London and Westminister during the 1700's. Describes the kinds of beers they served and the sorts of people that frequented them. Wood cut images accompany each verse. Ward (1667-1731), was a humourist, of `low extraction' and with little education. In early life he visited the West Indies, and afterwards he began business as a publican in Moorfields. By 1699 he had moved to Fulwood's Rents, where he kept a punch-shop and tavern (probably the King's Head), next door to Gray's Inn, until his death. Giles Jacob (Poetical Register, 1723) says: `Of late years he has kept a public-house in the city (but in a genteel way), and with his wit, humour, and good liquor, has afforded his guests a pleasurable entertainment; especially the high-church party. A man of considerable natural parts and with a gift of humour, `Ned Ward,' as he is frequently called, imitated Butler's `Hudibras' both in his style and in his attacks on the Whigs and low-church party. Though vulgar and often grossly coarse, his writings throw considerable light on the social life of the time of Queen Anne, and especially on the habits of various classes in London; but much allowance has to be made for exaggeration" - DNB. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! WHISKEY 4
Colonia, Naumann & Gobel, s.d. (anni 2000), 8vo cartonato editoriale con copertina illustrata a colori, pp. 96 completamente illustrate con fotografie a colori.
195032534Partitions sur la Boisson 1950 approx.
188932897Partitions sur le Militaria Lafleur 1889
194088257Partitions sur la Seconde guerre mondiale,Partitions sur la Boisson 1940 approx.
191230844Partitions sur les Autres régions,Partitions sur la Boisson Durand 1912
0353788317.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
177011006Paris, Veuve Duchesne, 1770 ; in-12 ; cartonnage rigide de papier marbré bleu, étiquette manuscrite au dos, non rogné ; XXII pp. (y compris le titre), (1) f., 384 pp.
0138050 Reliure Dédicacé par l'auteur
First Edition, xiv,[ii],123,[3],[2],324pp., part II has a separate title-page, pagination and register, without endpaper, cont. calf, rubbed, hinges cracked. "The preface is signed 'Arabella Atkyns', which the B.M. catalogue says is a pseudonym. In it she states that the medical portion, which is much larger than the cookery, is taken from a common-place book of her brother who was a physician. It may be mentioned that she is the first lady who apologizes for her boldness in venturing to treat certain maladies which a lady would hardly be expected ti include. The cookery part is well arranged, the medical part is full of horrors. The treatment for appendicitis is to 'apply a live puppy to the naked belly' and follow up with a cataplasm of rotten apples or of 'sheeps-dung boil'd with milk'."?Oxford, English Cookery Books. Oxford, p.71; Maclean, p.49; Bitting, p.550; Cagle, 673; Pennell, p.150; Simon, 658.
189515352Paris, Chamuel, 1895 ; in-12, broché ; 177 pp., (1 bl.), (2) pp. de catalogue, couverture crème rempliée, illustrée, imprimée en vieux-rose et noir, petites figures.
194563927Los Angeles CA: Forbidden Palace New Chinatown 447-451 Gin Ling Way ca. 1945. 4to. 7.25 x 11 in. 4 pp unpaginated. printed in red & black on coated paper stock self-printed colour-illustrated softcovers front cover art idyllic image of traditional Chinese restaurant NF copy. First edition thus of this beautifully printed menu for the storied Chinese-American restaurant after being moved from its original location for the demolition and construction of Union Station and the surrounding area. The new restaurant served as the press reception location for the reopening of “New Chinatown†in 1939 and through World War II was a very popular reasonably priced eatery and night club for the Wartime military personnel. Their cocktails list was extensive and even served the Chinese liqueurs Ng Gar Pai & Mui Kwe Lu. No copies in Worldcat; 1 copy held by The Huntington Library. Forbidden Palace, [New Chinatown, 447-451 Gin Ling Way], paperback