‘Mush’ is a bit of a mystery to me – me not being
American an’ all. I know what it is, of course – it is cornmeal porridge, which
has a rather good sound to it – a better sound, I think, than ‘mush’, which
sounds like an accident. As you can tell, I became briefly fixated on this word
‘mush’, so had to dig into the Oxford
English Dictionary for information. The OED says that it is ‘apparently an
imitative alteration of mash’ which is not particularly mysterious after all,
unless it leads you to wonder how the word came to be so universally applied to
the American version of polenta, or oatmeal porridge, or frumenty. The OED
agrees that ‘mush’ is:
“Chiefly N. Amer.
Porridge; spec. porridge made with maize meal boiled in water or milk until
thick. Freq. in mush and milk, mush and molasses.”
No good cooking concept stays unchanged, however, and in
celebration of mush, may I give you two interesting adaptations of the basic cornmeal type?
Rye
Mush.
To
make smooth rye mush, sift a quart or more of rye meal into a pan, and
gradually pour in sufficient cold water to make a very thick batter, stirring
it hard with a spoon as you proceed, and carefully pressing out all the lumps
against the side of the pan. Add a very little salt. The batter must be so
thick at the last that you can scarcely stir it. Then thin it with a little
more water, and see that it is quite smooth. Rye, and also wheat flour, have a
disposition to be more lumpy than corn meal, when made into mush. When
thoroughly mixed and stirred, put it into a pot, place it over the fire and
boil it well, stirring it with a mush-stick till it comes to a hard boil; then
place it in a diminished heat, and simmer it slowly till you want to dish it
up. Eat it warm, with butter and- molasses, or with sweet milk, or fresh
buttermilk. Rye mush is considered very wholesome, particularly in cases of
dyspepsia.
Miss
Leslie's New Cookery Book
(Philadelphia, 1857) by Eliza Leslie.
Pumpkin Mush.
Pour into a clean pot,
two quarts or more of good milk, and set it over the fire. Have ready some
pumpkin stewed very soft and dry; mashed smooth, and pressed in a cullender
till all the liquid has drained off. Then measure a large pint of the stewed
pumpkin; mix with it a piece of fresh butter, and a tea spoonful of ground
ginger. Stir it gradually into the milk, as soon as it has come to a boil. Add,
by degrees, a large pint or more of indian-meal, a little at a time, stirring
it in, very hard, with the mush-stick. If you find the mush too thin, as you
proceed, add, in equal portions, more pumpkin and more indian-meal, till it
becomes so thick you can scarcely stir it round. After it is all thoroughly
mixed, and has boiled well, it will be greatly improved by diminishing the fire
a little, or hanging the pot higher up, so as to let it simmer an hour or more.
Mush can scarcely be cooked too much. Eat it warm with butter and molasses, or
with rich milk. It is very good at luncheon in cold weather.
New Receipts for Cooking
(Philadelphia,1854) by Eliza Leslie
better than the original dish is the "fried mush" served the next day for breakfast! the biggest problem with it, of course, is the mess one gets from the spattering oil in which it is cooked....
ReplyDeleteTess: Yes! Fried mush is wonderful! Mother used to make it for us when I was small, and I now indulge from time to time, knowing there will be a lot of cleaning of the kitchen stove afterward. Still, it's a great treat.
ReplyDeleteMy grandmother, who was Portuguese from Madeira, frequently added fava beans and kale to her mush. Set up overnight on the kitchen table (with a dish towel over it), she'd slice it and fry it up crisp the next day.
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