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Published 2014
In the 18th century, when many English cookery writers held fancy French dishes in scorn (or professed to do so), the ragoo became a sort of symbol of what they disliked. Thus
stuff’d with ragoos, and other dishes a-la-mode de France, as they call them; in which the mixture of spices is so great, and the expence so extravagant, that it frightens most people from using them; or, if any be so curious as to try them, and follow their rules punctually, instead of meats that are healthful, and agreeable to the palate, they will find a hotch-potch, destructive to an English constitution.
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