I have a re-print of the Virginia Housewife written in the 1820's. I have another re-print of an early cook book, IIRC from 1805, but I can't remember the name.
Gunston Hall, on Mason Neck in northern virginia, has George Mason's wife's hand written cook book from the 1770's on display in the kitchen of Gunston Hall. I tried to get permission to copy down some of the recipes, but they said no, they intended to publish it. Don't know if they ever did.
In the Virginia Housewife, there was a recipe for wafers. I ran across a set of wafer irons, so I made the wafers a few times at rendezvous. I compared the recipes and it is nearly identical to the recipe for Italian Pizzelles and for modern Fortune Cookies. While the recipes make different size batches, the proportions from one to the other are practically the same. But the archaic measurements are crazy. Like a tea cup of this, lard the size of a hen's egg, a dram of flour, a thimble of that, Jamaican sugar well pounded.