Marguerite Patten

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Marguerite_Patten an entity of type: Thing

Hilda Elsie Marguerite Patten, CBE (née Brown; 4 November 1915 – 4 June 2015), was a British home economist, food writer and broadcaster. She was one of the earliest celebrity chefs (a term that she disliked at first) who became known during World War II thanks to her programme on BBC Radio, where she shared recipes that could work within the limits imposed by war rationing. After the war, she was responsible for popularising the use of pressure cookers and her 170 published books have sold over 17 million copies. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Marguerite Patten
rdf:langString Marguerite Patten
rdf:langString Marguerite Patten
rdf:langString Twickenham, Greater London, England, UK
xsd:date 2015-06-04
rdf:langString Bath, Somerset, England, UK
xsd:date 1915-11-04
xsd:integer 1452765
xsd:integer 1105387114
rdf:langString OBE 1991; CBE 2010; Lifetime Achievement Award from BBC, 1998; Lifetime Achievement Award from Waterford Wedgewood, 1999; Woman of the Year Lifetime Achievement Award 2007
xsd:date 1915-11-04
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hilda Elsie Marguerite Brown
xsd:integer 1
rdf:langString April 2017
xsd:date 2015-06-04
rdf:langString British
rdf:langString Everyday Cook Book in Colour
rdf:langString Home economist, food writer and broadcaster
rdf:langString source says "When Patten started working as a cook", which was earlier
rdf:langString A far as I can see Patten is only mentioned a couple of times in the book Toast, and more as scene-setting than in an adulatory manner. The film adaptation of Toast puts the words, "I've read the complete works of Marguerite Patten and everything." into the callow young Slater's mouth, which is good for a laugh, but hardly relevant here.
rdf:langString Bob Patten
rdf:langString Hilda Elsie Marguerite Patten, CBE (née Brown; 4 November 1915 – 4 June 2015), was a British home economist, food writer and broadcaster. She was one of the earliest celebrity chefs (a term that she disliked at first) who became known during World War II thanks to her programme on BBC Radio, where she shared recipes that could work within the limits imposed by war rationing. After the war, she was responsible for popularising the use of pressure cookers and her 170 published books have sold over 17 million copies.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12477
rdf:langString Hilda Elsie Marguerite Brown
xsd:gYear 1915
xsd:gYear 2015

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