Maren Elisabeth Bang

Maren Elisabeth Bang (1797–1884) was a Norwegian cookbook writer who wrote the first printed Norwegian cookbook Huusholdnings-Bog, indrettet efter den almindelige Brug i norske Huusholdninger in 1831. Her early publications were anonymous but after 1842 she published in her own name. She was the most productive 19th-century Norwegian author of cookbooks and housekeeping guides.[1][2]

Biography

The daughter of Hans Arnt Poulsen (1768–1809) and Sara Elisabeth Bergström (1770–1845), she was brought up at Skansgården near Kongsvinger in south-eastern Norway. In 1817, she married Lieutenant Lauritz Christian Steen Bang who from 1829 to 1839 was imprisoned for embezzlement while working at Norges Bank in Christiania (now Oslo). While he was in prison, Maren Bang earned a living by selling meals, which she either delivered herself or sold from home. She recorded her recipes, first publishing Huusholdnings-Bog, indrettet efter den almindelige Brug i norske Huusholdninger (Housekeeping Book, Prepared in Accordance with Normal Practice in Norwegian Households) in 1831, with new editions in 1834 and 1838. A selection of her recipes was published separately as Den Norske Kokkepige (The Norwegian Cooking Girl) in 1835.[2]

Later publications included Huusholdningsbog for Almuen Housekeeping for General Use), Slagtebog (Charcuterie), Almindelig Syltebog (Preservation and Pickling), Nyttige Huusraad (Useful Housekeeping Tips), Bagebog (Baking Book) and Praktisk Farve-Bog for Almuen (Practical Methods of Dyeing).[2]

In 1849, the couple moved to Kristiansand where Lieutenant Bang ran a restaurant until his death in 1862. Thereafter, Maren Bang returned to her writing, undertaking major revisions of her earlier works while publishing Vinbog (Wine Book) and Raad og Veiledning for Landmanden (Advice and Guidance for Countrymen).[2]

Bang spent her later years in Kristiania where she died of gastroenteritis on 3 July 1884.[2]

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gollark: Yet they do not do this, and instead ineffectually demand communism which would totally make everything great and wonderful.
gollark: Consider: the people complaining about wanting communism could probably work in a well-paying job, obtain money, and donate it to effective charities like the Against Malaria Foundation.
gollark: Capitalism seems to be doing a fairly okay job of satisfying the values of, well, people in places with more resources, and apparently most people's values don't actually involve helping people they don't directly interact with because humans are bad.
gollark: From what I do know of Marx, he ends up just making up an analysis framework to get the results he wants out of analyzing things.

References

  1. "Maren Elisabeth Bang". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  2. "Maren Elisabeth Bang". Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian). Retrieved 19 November 2016.
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