culinaria - traduzione in Inglese
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Traduzione e analisi delle parole da parte dell'intelligenza artificiale

In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

  • come viene usata la parola
  • frequenza di utilizzo
  • è usato più spesso nel discorso orale o scritto
  • opzioni di traduzione delle parole
  • esempi di utilizzo (varie frasi con traduzione)
  • etimologia

culinaria - traduzione in Inglese

ROMAN-ERA COOKBOOK
De re coquinaria; Apicius, Marcus Gabius; Marcus Gaius Apicius; Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome; De re culinaria; In re quoquinaria; Apicius: De Re Coquinaria
  • Apicius, ''De re culinaria'' (Lyon: Sebastianus Gryphium, 1541)
  • ''De opsoniis et condimentis'' (Amsterdam: J. Waesbergios), 1709. Frontispiece of the second edition of [[Martin Lister]]'s privately printed version of ''Apicius''
  • monastery of Fulda]] in Germany, which was acquired in 1929 by the [[New York Academy of Medicine]]

culinaria      
n. cookery, art of cooking
culinario      
culinary
gastronomico      
culinary, gastronomic

Wikipedia

Apicius

Apicius, also known as De re culinaria or De re coquinaria (On the Subject of Cooking) is a collection of Roman cookery recipes. It is thought to have been compiled in the fifth century AD. Its language is in many ways closer to Vulgar than to Classical Latin, with later recipes using Vulgar Latin (such as ficatum, bullire) added to earlier recipes using Classical Latin (such as iecur, fervere).

The book has been attributed to an otherwise unknown Caelius Apicius, an invention based on the fact that one of the two manuscripts is headed with the words "API CAE" or rather because a few recipes are attributed to Apicius in the text: Patinam Apicianam sic facies (IV, 14) Ofellas Apicianas (VII, 2). It has also been attributed to Marcus Gavius Apicius, a Roman gourmet who lived sometime in the 1st century AD during the reign of Tiberius. The book also may have been authored by a number of different Roman cooks from the first century AD. Based on textual analysis, the food scholar Bruno Laurioux believes that the surviving version only dates from the fifth century (that is, the end of the Roman Empire): "The history of De Re Coquinaria indeed belongs then to the Middle Ages".