Thursday, December 12, 2013

Christmas Muffins, 1900-1938.

In food history, as in life, one thing leads to another, and yesterday’s post set me thinking about muffins specifically made for Christmas. There is a dearth, dear friends, a veritable dearth. Which is surprising, really, given that almost everything else on earth has been turned to the enterprise that is Christmas.

A search for “Christmas Muffins” was not in vain, however. The first find was worth it on account of the title of the source:  The Monitor. Catholic Organ for Great Britain (January 19, 1900.)  The recipe itself, however, is a disappointment. It is singularly uninspiring, and I do not know what is “Christmassy” about it – but perhaps I am missing something.

Christmas Muffins.
One pound of flour, one and a half teaspoonful of baking powder, two ounces of butter, one large tablespoonful of sugar, one egg, sweet milk, enough to make it of a proper consistency, a pinch of salt. Rub flour and butter together, then add sugar and baking powder; beat eggs and add to milk. Mix all together, knead as little as possible, roll out into rounds, cut in flour, brush over with egg or milk, and bake for twenty minutes.
The following muffin recipe is a colourful step in the right direction:

Christmas Muffins.
Use for the making of the muffins, two cups of flour, one-half teaspoon salt, two and one half teaspoon baking powder, four tablespoons granulated sugar,  one egg, one cup of milk, one-fourth cup of melted butter, one-half cup of chopped maraschino cherries, one-half cup of chopped crème de menthe cherries. Sift together the dry ingredients. Add the unbeaten egg, milk and butter. Stir quickly until mixed but do not beat. Fold in the chopped cherries, and drop the mixture by spoonfuls into well-greased muffin tins, filling them to two-thirds full. Bake in a 400 degreee oven for from twenty to thirty minutes.

Freeport Journal Standard (Illinois) of Thursday, December 15, 1938.


And this one would suit the season, although it was intended to assist the wartime wheat-conservation program in the US during WW 1.

Mincemeat Muffins.
1 cupful barley flour
1 ⅓ cupfuls entire-wheat flour
½ teaspoonful soda
½ teaspoonful salt
2 teaspoonfuls baking powder
½ cupful rice or potato water
1 cupful sour milk.
Sift dry ingredients together thoroughly, add milk, water, and mincemeat, and beat well. Bak in a hot oven twenty minutes. If the mincemeat is very dry, work it into the flour as if it were raisins, if very moist, leave out part of the water. Sweet milk may be substituted for the sour, using five teaspoonfuls baking-powder, and omitting the soda.

Good housekeeping: Volume 66, Number 6 (June 1918) 

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Velvety Food for Christmas.

Yesterday’s source,  the Twentieth Century Home Cook Book, by Mrs. Francis Carruthers, the Celebrated Authority on the Science and Art of Cooking (Chicago, 1905) contains suggested menus for various holidays and other special days, including the following:

MENU FOR CHRISTMAS.
Breakfast. Grape nuts and cream, baked apple, ham omelet, velvet muffins, coffee.
Dinner. Blue points, crackers, tomato soup. French tenderloins, roast turkey, cranberry sauce, giblet gravy, mashed potatoes, pineapple sherbet, white asparagus salad mayonnaise, spaghetti au gratin, fruit cake, white grapes, nuts, dates, St. Julien claret, café et noir.
Late luncheon. Sliced turkey, mustard sauce, celery and nut sandwiches, chocolate, fruit.

The item that jumped out at me for comment today was the velvet muffin. I have never heard of velvet muffins before, although I consider myself something of a muffin aficionado. The book did give a recipe for the muffins, although their inclusion sans recipe suggests that readers would have known what they were. The book does contain a recipe for Velvet Cream, which I transcribed lest I was unable to find instructions for the muffins.

Velvet Cream.
Two tablespoonfuls of gelatine dissolved in half a tumbler of water, one pint of rich cream, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, flavor with sherry, vanilla, extract of rose water. Put in moulds and set on the ice. This is a delicious dessert; it can be made in a few minutes. Serve with or without cream.

Deep in our hearts we all know that the raison d’être for the modern “muffin” is to justify the eating of cake for breakfast. The velvet muffin, then, is perhaps based on a pre-existing velvet cake? The well-known Red Velvet Cake is a relatively recent invention - the first recipe I know of appears in an American newspaper of 1961, but perhaps there were previous color-not-specified cakes?
I give you my potted-history notes on Velvet Muffins and Velvet Cake:
1871.
The earliest recipe I have found to date for a Velvet Cake is in a Canadian magazine:

Velvet Cake.
One pound of sugar, one pound of flour, half a pound of butter, four eggs, one teacup of cold water, one teaspoonful of cream of tartar, half a teaspoonful of soda. Flavor with extract of lemon. Beat the sugar and butter to a white cream, dissolve the soda in the water, and sift the cream of tartar into the flour, mixing thoroughly. Add to the butter and sugar the pound of flour and the water; beat it all well. Beat the eggs - the yolks first, and then the whites - to a stiff froth; beat them together for a minute, and stir into the cake. Flavor with a teaspoonful of extract of lemon, and beat the cake well for about three minutes. Bake an hour. This will make two loaves, and is the nicest cake I know of - better than pound cake. It may be flavored with nutmeg and spices, or with raisins and currants, or be made into delicious chocolate cake by being baked in layers, and filled with chocolate frosting. It makes nice jelly cake.
The New Dominion Monthly (Montreal, 1871)

1880-1890.
I have come across a few references from the late 1880’s for Velvet Muffins, but the first recipe I have found so far was given in the Aurora Dearborn Independent (Indiana) of June 19, 1890. It is not at all cake-like, and is a reminder that once upon a time, “muffins” were made from yeast-raised batter cooked on a griddle  - the style now sometimes called “English” muffins.

Velvet Muffins.
Sift one quart of flour with a level teaspoonful of salt in int. Rub into the flour thoroughly four ounces of butter. Mix it with one teacupful of good yeast and as much fresh milk as will make a very stiff batter. Beat four eggs separately, very light, stir these in and set in a moderately warm place to rice. In three hours it will be sufficiently light.

1903.
The Piqua Leader Dispatch (Ohio) February 7, 1903 contained a recipe for Velvet Muffins in an article on Californian cooks and cookery. The muffins are leavened with baking powder and have a relatively small amount of sugar added, so are a step closer to the modern variety, although are cooked in hot muffin pans in a similar manner to popovers.

Velvet Muffins.
Velvet muffins are a Californian breakfast standby worth heralding abroad. Stir to a cream two tablespoonfuls each butter and sugar. Add two well-beaten eggs, one cupful of milk, one scanty quart of flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt. Beat until light and bubbly, thought the batter must be quite stiff, and turn at once into the muffin pans, which should be hot enough to hiss as the batter goes in. Bake in a quick oven.
1949.
By 1949, the Abilene Reporter News (Texas) of January 16 gave a recipe which was attributed to a visiting Kentuckian. The muffins are slightly sweeter than the above , and are clearly cake-like in style and method of cooking.

Velvet Muffins.
In step with other Kentuckians. Mrs. J. W. Williams of Bowling Green has recipes for many dainty dishes. Guest here of her daughter, Mrs. Rufus Wallingford for a number of visits, Mrs. Williams has made a wide circle of friends who have found her cooking “a delight.”
By request, she is publishing today her recipe for Velvet Muffins.
The amount for the muffins: Two cups flour, ¾ teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoons baking powder, 1 cup milk, 1 egg, 3 tablespoons sugar, 4 tablespoons melted butter.
Method: Beat egg, add baking powder, salt and sugar to flour, add to other ingredients. Measuer flour after it is sifted, and do not add butter while it is too hot.

Grease muffin tins, pour in the mixture, and cook in a moderate oven.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Weird Beers.

It is time to start thinking of your holiday beverages. Are you tired of the same old freshly squeezed juice of Himalayan goji berries, artisanal beers, French champagne, and egg-nog made with free-range, organic low-fat, low carb, gluten-free, high GI eggs from happy , healthy monogamous hens?  Are you looking for something a little different to serve your guests this year?

Have you considered Beer of Sulphuric Acid? No? Perhaps Tomato Beer appeals to you more?
From the Twentieth Century Home Cook Book, by Mrs. Francis Carruthers, the Celebrated Authority on the Science and Art of Cooking (Chicago, 1905,) I give you the following recipes, (although do not suggest that you actually make the sulphuric acid version!):-

Beer of Sulphuric Acid.
Take of dilute sulphuric acid and concentrated infusion of orange-peel, each twelve drachms; syrup of orange-peel, five fluid ounces.
This quantity is added to two imperial gallons of water. A large wineglassful is taken for a draught, mixed with more or less water according to taste. This beer is entirely harmless, even if taken in considerable quantities, and is refreshing in hot weather.

Tomato Beer sounds a lot less scary:
           
Tomato Beer.
Gather the fruit, stem, wash and mash it; strain through a coarse linen bag, and to every gallon of the juice add three pounds of good brown sugar. Let it stand nine days, and then pour it off from the pulp which will settle in the bottom of the jar. Bottle it closely, and the longer you keep it the better it is. Take a pitcher that will hold as much as you want to use, fill it nearly full of fresh sweetened water, add a few drops of essence of lemon. To every gallon of sweetened water add a half-tumblerful of beer. This is a favorite drink in the Southern States of America, and is healthful.

The following idea is also sounds safe, if a little boring (and who wants boring during the holiday season?)

Cream of Tartar Beer.
Mix two ounces of cream of tartar, three pounds of brown sugar, three quarts of yeast. To be mixed and allowed to work. This makes ten gallons, and should be drunk as soon as worked. A strong syrup of pie-plant stalks [rhubarb] makes an excellent beer prepared as above, but without the tartaric acid.

If it is an alcohol-free alternative that you are after, you could jazz up your soda with some home-made bitters, or if you are not into “natural” products, you could improve your coffee with some artificial cream.

Home-Made Bitters.
Take half an ounce of the yolk of fresh eggs carefully separated from the whites; half an ounce of gentian-root; one and a half drachms of orange-peel, and one pint of boiling water. Pour the water hot upon the ingredients mentioned, and let them steep in it for two hours; then strain, and bottle for use.

Artificial Cream for Coffee.

Beat well one egg, with one spoonful of sugar; pour a pint of scalding hot milk over this, stirring it briskly. Make it the night previous.

Monday, December 09, 2013

Of the Street Sellers of Gingerbread Nuts.

The English social reformer and writer, Henry Mayhew’s seminal work London Labour and the London Poor: A Cyclopaedia of the Condition and Earnings of Those that Will Work, Those that Cannot Work, Those that Will Not Work  (1851) has provided us with several interesting stories in the past, and we are going to hear from him again today.

A large part of his monumental book relates to the vendors of food in the streets of London, and as it is the time of year for gingerbread – especially in the form of gingerbread houses and gingerbread men – we are going to find out how it was sold in the 1850’s. The article is interesting in so many ways – and it includes a recipe for ‘street’ gingerbread too.

Of the Street Sellers of Gingerbread Nuts &c.
The sale of gingerbread, as I have previously observed, was much more extensive in the streets than it is at present. Indeed, what was formerly known in the trade as "toy" gingerbread is now unseen in the streets, except occasionally, and that only when the whole has not been sold at the neighbouring fairs, at which it is still offered. But, even at these fairs, the principal, and sometimes the only, toy gingerbread that is vended is the "cock in breeches;" a formidable-looking bird, with his nether garments of gold. Twenty or thirty years ago, "King George on horseback" was popular in gingerbread. His Majesty, wearing a gilt crown, gilt spurs, and a gilt sword, bestrode the gilt saddle of his steed, and was eaten with great relish by his juvenile subjects. There were also sheep, and dogs, and other animals, all adorned in a similar manner, and looking as if they had been formed in close and faithful imitation of children's first attempts at cattle drawing. These edible toys were then sold in "white,"' as well as in "brown" gingerbread, the white being the same in all other respects as the brown, except that a portion of sugar was used in its composition instead of treacle.
There are now only two men in London who make their own gingerbread-nuts for sale in the streets. This preparation of gingerbread is called by the street-sellers, after a common elliptical fashion, merely "nuts." From the most experienced man in the street trade I had the following account: he was an intelligent, well-mannered, and well-spoken man, and when he laughed or smiled, had what may be best described as a pleasant look. After he had initiated me into the art and mystery of gingerbread making—which I shall detail separately —he said,
"I've been in the 'nut' trade 25 years, or thereabouts, and have made my own nuts for 20 years of that time. I bought of a gingerbread baker at first—there was plenty of them in them days — and the profit a living profit, too. Certainly it was, for what I bought for 5s. I could sell for 16s. I was brought up a baker, but the moment I was out of my time I started in the street nut trade for myself. I knew the profits of it, and thought it better than the slavery of a journeyman baker's life. You've mentioned, sir, in your work, a musical sort of a street-crier of gingerbread, and I think, and indeed I'm pretty certain, that it's the same man as was my partner 20 years back; aye, more than 20, but I can't tell about years." [The reader will have remarked how frequently this oblivion as to dates and periods characterises the statements of street-sellers. Perhaps no men take less note of time.] "At that time he was my partner in the pig trade. Dairy-fed, d'you say, sir? Not in the slightest . The outsides of the hanimals was paste, and the insides on 'em was all mince-meat. Their eyes was currants. We two was the original pigs, and, I believe, the only two pigs in the streets. We often made 15s. between us, in a day, in pigs alone. The musical man, as you call him—poor fellow, he dropped down dead in the street one day as he was crying; he was regular worn out—cried himself into his grave you may say—poor fellow, he used to sing out

'Here's a long-tailed pig, and a short-tailed pig,
   And a pig with a curly tail:
 Here's a Yorkshire pig, and a Hampshire pig,
  And a pig without e'er a tail.'

"When I was first in the trade, I sold twice as many nuts as I do now, though my nuts was only 12 a penny then, and they're now 10. A little larger the 12 were, but not very much. I have taken 20s. and 24s. many and many a Saturday. I then made from 2l [pounds] to 2l, 10s. a week by sticking to it, and money might have been saved. I've taken between 7l and 8l at a Greenwich Fair in the three days, in them times, by myself. Indeed, last Easter, my wife and me—for she works as well as I do, and sells almost as much—took 5l. But gingerbread was money in the old times, and I sold 'lumps' as well as 'nuts;' but now lumps won't go off— not in a fair, no how. I've been in the trade ever since I started in it, but I've had turns at other things. I was in the service of a Customhouse agency firm; but they got into bother about contrabands, and the revenue, and cut off to America—I believe they took money with them, a good bit of it—and I was indicted, or whatever they call it, in the Court of Exchequer—I never was in the Court in my life—and was called upon, one fine day, to pay to the Crown 1,580l and some odd pounds and shillings besides! I never understood the rights of it, but it was about smuggling. I was indicted by myself, I believe. When Mr. Candy, and other great houses in the City, were found out that way, they made it all right; paid something, as I've heard, and sacked the profits. Well; when I was called on, it wasn't, I assure you, sir—ha, ha, ha!—at all convenient for a servant—and I was only that—to pay the fifteen hundred and odd; so I served 12 months and 2 days in prison for it. I'd saved a little money, and wasn't so uncomfortable in prison. I could get a dinner, and give a dinner. When I came out, I took to the nuts. It was lucky for me that I had a trade to turn to; for, even if I could have shown I wasn't at all to blame about the Exchequer, I could never have got another situation —never. So the streets saved me: my nuts was my bread.
"At this present time, sir, if I make, the year through, 9s. a week, and my wife 1s. or 2s. less, that's the extent . When the Queen opened Parliament, the two on us took 10s. The Queen's good for that, anyhow, in person. If the opening was by proclamation" [so he called it, three or four times], "it wouldn't have been worth while going to—not at all. If there's not a crowd, the police interfere, and 'move on!' is the order. The Queen's popular with me, for her opening Parliament herself. I count it her duty. The police are a great trouble. I can't say they disturb me in the place (never mind mentioning it, sir) where you've seen me, but they do in other places. They say there's no rest for the wicked; but, in the streets, there's no rest for a man trying to make an honest living, as I'm sure I do. I could pitch anywhere, one time.
"My chief dependence is on working-men, who buys my nuts to take home to their young 'uns. I never sell for parties, or desserts, that I know of. I take very little from boys—very little. The women of the town buy hardly any of me. I used to sell a good many pigs to them, in some of the streets about Brunswick-square; kept misses, and such like—and very pleasant customers they was, and good pay: but that's all over now. They never 'bated me—never."
To make about 56 lbs. of the gingerbread-nuts sold by my informant, takes 28 lbs. of treacle, 7s.; 48 lbs. of flour, 14s.; ½ lb. of ginger, 4d.; and ½ lb. of allspice, 4d. From 18 to 20 dozen of small nuts go to the pound. This quantity, at 40 a penny, reckoning 18 dozen to a pound, realises about 5d. per pound; or about 25s. for an outlay of 11s. 8d. The expense of baking, however, and of "appurtenances," reduces the profit to little more than cent, per cent .
The other nut-sellers in the streets vend the "almond nuts." Of these vendors there are not less than 150; of them, 100 buy their goods of the bakers (what they sell for 1s. costing them 4d.), and the other 50 make their own. The materials are the same as those of the gingerbread, with the addition of 4 lbs. of butter, 3d. per lb.; 1 lb. of almonds, 1s. 4d.; and 2 lbs. of volatile salts, 8d. Out of this material, 60 lbs. of "almond nuts" may be made. A split almond is placed in the centre of each of these nuts; and, as they are three times as large as the gingerbread nuts, 12 a penny is the price. To sell 36 dozen a day—and so clearing 2s.—is accounted a "very tidy day's work." With the drawback of wet weather, the average weekly earnings of the almond nut-sellers are, perhaps, the same as the gingerbread nut man's — 9s. weekly. These almond nut-sellers are, for the most part, itinerant, their localities of sale being the same as in the "cake and tart" line. They carry their goods, neatly done up in paper, on trays slung from the shoulder. The gingerbreadnuts are carried in a large basket, and are ready packed in paper bags.
Some of the "almond" men call at the public-houses, but the sale in such places is very small. Most of those who make their own nuts have been brought up as bakers—a class of workmen who seem to resort and adapt themselves to a street trade more readily than others. The nuts are baked in the usual way, spread on tin trays. To erect a proper oven for the purpose costs about 5l., but most of the men hire the use of one.
I have already specified the materials required to make 56 lb. of gingerbread nuts, the cost being 11s. 3d. To that, the capital required to start in the business must be added, and this consists of basket, 6s.; baize cloth, 1s.; pan for dough, 1s.; rolling-pin, 3d., and baking-tins, 1s. In all about 21s. To begin in a small way in the "almond" line, buying the nuts ready made, requires as capital: tray, 2s.; leather strap, 6d.; baize, 1s.; stock-money, 1s. 6d.—in all 5s. The sale is prosecuted through the year, but hot weather is unfavourable to it, as the nuts then turn soft.
Calculating that 150 of these street-dealers take 17s. each weekly (clearing 9s.), we find 6,630l. spent yearly in "spice" nuts in the streets of London.

Previous stories from Mayhew about street vendors of food:


Friday, December 06, 2013

Cassava bread in 17th C Barbados.

Today I want to continue some of Richard Ligon’s story of his time in the English colony of Barbados in the 1640’s, as related in A true & exact history of the island of Barbados (1657.)  Ligon explains in his book the method of making the staple ‘bread’ (a sort of pancake) from cassava (manioc) root. The ‘poyson’ he mentions is cyanide, which must first be removed from the root, before it is safe for eating.

Bread, which is accounted the staffe, or main supporter of mans life, has not here that full taste it has in England; but yet they account  it nourishing and strengthening. It is made of the root of a small tree or shrub, which they call Cassavie;  the manner of his grouth I will let alone, till I come to speak of Trees and Plants in generall.

His root only, which weare now to consider, (because our bread is made of it) is large and round, like the body of a small Still or retort; and as we gather it, we cut slicks that grow neerest to it, of the same tree, which we put into the ground, and they grow; And as we gather, we plant. This root, before it come to be eaten, suffers a strange conversion; for, being an absolute poyson when 'tis gathered, by good ordering, comes to be wholsome and nourishing; and the manner of doing it is this: They wash the outside of the root clean, and lean it against a Wheel, whole sole is about a foot broad , and covered with Latine, made rough like a large Grater. The Wheel to be turned about with a foot , as a Cutler turnes his Wheel. And as it grates the root, it falls down in a large Trough, which is the receiver appointed for that purpose. This root thus grated , is as rank poyson, as can be made by the art of an Apothecary, of the most venomous simples he can put together: but being put into a strong piece of double Canvas, or Sackcloth, and prest hard; that all the juice be squeezed out, and then opened upon a cloath, and dried in the Sun, 'tis ready to make bread. And thus 'tis done.

They have a piece of Iron, which I guesse is cast round , the diameter of which is about twenty inches , a little hollowed in the middle, not unlike the mould that the Spectacle makers grinde their glasses on, but not so much concave as that,  about halfe an inch thick at the brim or verge, but thicker towards the middle with three feet like a pot , about six inches high , that fire may be underneath. To such a temper they heat this Pone, (as they call it) as to bake , but not burn. When 'tis made thus hot, the Indians, whom we trust to make it because they are best acquainted with it, cast the meal upon the Pone, the whole breadth of it, and put it down with their hands,  and and it will presently stick together : And when they think that side almost enough, with a thing like a Battle-dore, they turn the others and so turn and re-turn it so often, till it be enough , which is presently done. So they lay this Cake upon a flat board, and make another, and so another, till they have made enough for the whole Family. Thin bread they made, when we came first there, as thick as a pancake; but after that, they grew to a higher degree of curiosity , and made it as thin as a wafer, and yet purely white and crispe, as a new made wafer. Salt they never use in it, which I wonder at; for the bread being tasteless of itself, they should give it some little seasoning. There is no way it eats so well, as in milk, and there it tasts like Almonds. They offer to make Pie-crust , but very few attain to the skill of that; for, as you work it up with your hand, or roll it out with a roller, it will alwaies crackle and chop, fo that it will not be raised to hold any liquor, neither with, nor without, butter or egg.

But after many tryalls, and as often failings , at last, I learnt the secret of an Indian woman, who shew’d me the right way of it, and that was, by searsing [sifting] it very fine, (and it will fall out as fine , as the finest wheat-flower in England) if not finer. Yet, this is not all the secret, for all this will not cure the cracking. But this is the main skill of the businesse: Set water on the fire in a skillet, and put to it as much of this fine flower, as will temper it to the thicknesse of starch or pap; and let it boyl a little , keeping it stirring with a slice; and mix this with the masse of flower you mean to make into pye-cruft, which being very well mingled , and wrought together, you may add what cost you will of butter and eggs, and it will rise and stand nere as well as our past [paste] in England.

In spite of its inherent poison, cassava is an enormously important staple food in many parts of the world. Some of us know it best in the form of tapioca, and some of us (not me!) like it as bubble tea. I have had a little to say on tapioca in the past, and if you want to become acquainted with tapioca with tomatoes, or tapioca with melted cheese, or simply want to become reacquainted with the tapioca pudding of your childhood, please do so via the following links.


Thursday, December 05, 2013

A 17th C Dinner in Barbados.

I don’t believe we have vicariously enjoyed a meal in Barbados before – and certainly not in the mid-seventeenth century. Our virtual meal today is courtesy of Richard Ligon, a British man who lost all his money and set off in 1647 for Barbados, to try to make another fortune there. He published the narrative of his adventures as A true & exact history of the island of Barbados : illustrated with a mapp of the island, as also the principall trees and plants there, set forth in their due proportions and shapes, drawne out by their severall and respective scales, by Richard Ligon (1657.)
He describes an impressive meal shortly after his arrival:

….by and by, a Cloath was layde, of Calico, with 4 or 5 Napkins of the same, to serve a dozen men. The first Course was set on the table, ushered in by the Padre himself, (Bernardo, the Mollotto, and Negroes following after,) with every one a dish of fruite, 6 in all, the first was Millions [melons], Platines the second, the third Bonanos, the 5 of Guavers, the 5 of Prickled Peares, the 6 the Custard Apple: but to fill up the table, and make the feast yet more sumptuous, the padre sent his Mollotto, into his own Chamber, for a dish which he reserved for the Close of all the rest, Three Pines in a dish, which were the first that ever I had seene, and as farre beyond the best fruite that growes in England, as the best Abricotis beyond the worst Slow [sloe] or Crab [apple.]

Having well refresh our selves with these excellent fruites, we drank a glass or two of Red Sack; a kinde of wine growing in the Maderas; verie strong, but not verie pleasant, for in this Iland, there is made no wine at all; nor as I thinke of any of grape, so neere the Line upon Ilands in all the world. Having made an end of our fruite, the dishes were taken away and another Course fetcht in; which was of flesh, fishe, and sallats; the sallats being first plac’d upon the table, which I tooke great heed of, being all Novelties to me, but the best and most savourie herbs that every I tasted, verie well season’d with salt, Oyle, and the best vinagre. Severall sorts we had, but not mixt, but in severall dishes, all strange, and all excellent. The first dish of flesh, was a leg of younge sturke, or a wild Calfe, of a yeare old, which was of the Colour of stags flesh, and tasted very like it, full of Nerves and sinews, strong meat and very well Condited; boyl’d tender, and the sauce of savorie herbes, with Spanish Vinagre. Turkyes and Hens we had roasted, a gigget of young goate, fish in abundance of severall kinds, whose names I have forgotten, Snappers, grey and red, Cavallos, Carpions, &c., with others of rare colours and shapes, too many to be named in this leafe; some fryed in oyle, and eaten hot, some souc’t, some marinated; all of these we tasted and were much delighted.

Ligon’s story will be continued tomorrow, but in the meanwhile, I fly forward three hundred years, and celebrate the pineapple with a fine batch of little cakes.

Spiced Pineapple Cup Cakes
2 cups sifted cake flour
½ teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon each nutmeg and cinnamon
1 tablespoon butter
1 cup sugar 
1 cup sour cream
2 eggs, slightly beaten
1 cup seedless raisins
½ cup nuts chopped
1 cup drained crushed pineapple.
Sift flour, baking soda, baking powder, and spices together. Cream butter, add sugar and sour cream and blend. Add eggs, raisins, nuts, pineapple, and mix. Add sifted dry ingredients gradually, stirring until entirely blended and batter is smooth. Place paper baking cups in muffin pans, fill two thirds full and bake in a moderate oven (350 deg.) 25 minutes; 5 dozen small cakes.

Oakland Tribune January 13, 1942

Wednesday, December 04, 2013

Real Coconut Bread.

I was tempted yesterday to round-out the coconut menu with some coconut bread, but the rice accompaniment seemed sufficient – and in any case, most “coconut bread” is actually coconut cake, merely shaped as a loaf. I had temporarily forgotten (how could I?) the amazing Miss Eliza Acton, whose English Bread-book has a recipe for the real, yeast-risen, unsweetened thing.

Cocoa-Nut Bread or Rolls.
The oil contained in the cocoa-nut imparts a peculiar richness to bread biscuits and cakes, as well as to various other preparations of food; and to many persons its flavour is very agreeable. The rasped nut therefore, when fresh, may be used with advantage for them. If in the slightest degree rancid, it will produce a very unpleasant effect.

Put four ounces* of the finely-grated nut into a quart of new milk, heat it slowly, and let it simmer very gently indeed, that there may be no great reduction of the quantity, for about three quarters of an hour; then withdraw it from the fire, and when it has cooled down a little, strain it through a fine sieve or cloth with so much pressure as shall leave the nut quite dry.

Use the milk while it is still warm with yeast and flour as for common bread, and manage it in exactly the same manner. The grated nut in substance may be used instead of the flavoured milk; but the bread will then be less delicate and less wholesome. When this is done, it should be thoroughly blended with the flour before-the dough is moistened.

Rasped fresh cocoa-nut, ¼ lb.; milk, 1 quart; simmered three quarters of an hour. The milk expressed from the nut to be used for dough in the usual manner. Or, with each pound of flour, 3 oz. of the grated nut to be well mixed, and the yeast and liquid to be added.

Obs.—The oil of the nut will render it necessary to reduce, for this last method, the ordinary proportion of liquid used for dough.

* This proportion of a full-flavoured nut is sufficient; but it can always be increased at pleasure. It should be grated down on a delicately clean and bright grater; or, on occasion, it may be infused in the milk, after having been merely pared, sliced thin, and cut up small; but a much larger quantity of it must then be used to impart an equal degree of flavour.
The English bread-book for domestic use, (1857) by Eliza Acton.

And, as a bonus, may I offer you some genuine carrot bread?

Carrot Bread.
1 cup sweet milk
1 ¼ teaspoons salt
½ tablespoon fat
¼ cake yeast
1 cup hot mashed carrots
About 3 cups white flour.
No sweetening is needed because of the sugar in the carrots. This makes a beautiful yellow bread, and is an easy way to feel carrots to those fastidious people who think they do not like them. A cup of mashed carrots may be added to any of the dark breads.

A book of original receipts, by Kathryn Romig McMurray (1917)

Tuesday, December 03, 2013

A Coconut Menu.

The recipes in yesterday’s post made me realize that coconut has not featured to any great extent in this blog over the years – in spite of the fact that I do love coconut. One of these days I will give you a little more of the history of this interesting and versatile food – but that must wait for a little more available research time. Until then, we must be satisfied with historical recipes.

Coconut lends itself to many dishes, both sweet and savoury, and it would be entirely possible to serve a meal in which it was featured in all dishes.

Let us have coconut soup to start with:

Hindu Coconut Soup.
Add the grated meat of half a fresh coconut to 1 quart of white stock. Cook slowly for 20 minutes, then strain through cheesecloth. Add the juice of a lemon and season to taste. Pour the mixture on the beaten yolks of 2 eggs, heat in a double boiler until thickened and serve boiled rice with the soup.
The Land (Sydney, NSW) 15, September 1922

 Yesterday’s source, Cre-Fydd's family fare (London, 1864) gives us our main course and an alternative coconut pudding, in case yesterday’s recipe does not appeal:

Calcutta, Receipt for Curry.
A teaspoonful of turmeric, a tablespoonful of coriander-seed, a tablespoonful of poppy-seed, half a teaspoonful of ginger, a quarter of a teaspoonful of red chilli, half a teaspoonful of cumin-seed, all well pounded; mix the powder with three ounces of butter, and fry it with two sliced onions for ten minutes. Cut up a young fowl; put it into the pan, and simmer for a quarter of an hour; add the milk of one cocoa-nut and a salt-spoonful of salt, stir well, and simmer a quarter of an hour longer; stir in the juice of half a lime or a lemon, and serve, with plain boiled rice in a separate dish.
Cre-Fydd's family fare (London, 1864)

Baked Cocoa-Nut Pudding.
Two-thirds of a cocoa-nut, grated, a quarter of a pound of loaf sugar, three ounces of beef-marrow, chopped, three ounces of dried crumbs of bread, six ounces of any dried fruit, a quarter of a pint of new milk, two fresh eggs, the milk of the cocoa-nut, and the juice of a lemon; beat these ingredients well together; butter a pie-dish or a mould; put in the pudding, and bake in a moderate oven about an hour and a quarter. Turn out carefully,
and serve.
Cre-Fydd's family fare (London, 1864)

We must have a little candy with our coffee too, mustn’t we?

Coconut Candy.
Two grated coconuts, 1 tablespoon vanilla, 2½ pounds sugar. Wet sugar with milk of the coconut and let cook as for icing until it ropes, then add grated coconuts and cook a few minutes, stirring constantly. Pour into a bowl, add vanilla and stir until it begins to harden; then spread on buttered dish and cut in squares. If grated coconut in stock is used, wet with cream or rich milk.

Lima Times Democrat, November 3, 1916, Lima, Ohio

Monday, December 02, 2013

What to Eat on December 2.

I don’t know about you, but to me, suggested daily menus in magazines and cookery books always seem a bit (or a lot) unrealistic. Nevertheless, I have a soft spot for old cookery books that do offer this advice, and today I want to give you an extract from one of my old favorites. It is an English cookery book – but as my home since my teens has been in Australia, the seasonal advice for me is all topsy-turvy of course. Perhaps I should look at June 2 for ideas for December 2?

For those of you not stuffing yourselves with mangoes in sweltering in summer heat, I give you suggestions and recipes from Cre-Fydd's family fare : the young housewife's daily assistant, on all matters relating to cookery and housekeeping : containing bills of family fare for every day in the year, which include breakfast and dinner for a small family, and dinner for two servants, also twelve bills of fare for dinner parties, and two for evening entertainments, with the cost annexed, also diet for invalids, and a few things worth knowing (1864, London.) Firstly, here are the authoress’ comments on the usefulness (or otherwise) of cookery books in general – and I am sure they will strike a chord with anyone who has been frustrated by the  mismatch between their own efforts with a particular published recipe and the photograph in the book itself.

The Authoress would not have been thus daring had she not ascertained by her own experience, as well as that of many friends, that whatever the other merits of previous works on the subjects of cookery and household management, they are not practically available for the moderate and economical, yet reasonably luxurious housekeeper, or for those who are young or who are inexperienced in those matters. In those works there is no lack of receipts, maxims, and directions to the cook; but in general, when tested by a moderate cook, or directed by an inexperienced person, failure and disappointment are the result.
Let any young housewife in moderate circumstances (and we cannot all afford to invoke the shade of Ude, or have Francatelli at our elbow) answer whether, when she has put the newly-purchased cookery-book into the hands of her cook, she has not been ultimately disappointed. Not from excessive fastidiousness on her part, or from the want of goodwill in the cook, but because, in the majority of instances the receipts and directions are only suited to those cooks who are well informed, and have had considerable practice. They are often the result of theoretical ingenuity, or the productions of those who know, but who cannot impart their knowledge to the uninformed.
Theory and practice must be combined; and that combination put forth in such language, that while the lady will not object to read, the cook will be able to understand.

For this day, December 2, the authoress of suggests the following dishes for the day:

BREAKFAST
Rissoles of veal, ham, kippered salmon.
DINNER
Fried skate.
Stewed ox palates, Neapolitan agnelloti, spinach, potatoes
Lady Betty’s pudding
                               KITCHEN [i.e servant’s dinner]
Cold veal, potatoes, treacle pudding

In the event of company coming to dinner, the recommendations for a dinner for eight persons in November and December are:

Palestine soup,
Baked haddock.

Stuffed onions,
Oyster patties,
Roast ribs of beef, horseradish sauce,
Brussels sprouts, potatoes.

Pheasant, German pudding.
Iced chestnut pudding.
Stewed apples.
Stilton cheese, celery, &c.

Cost, £1 11 6

Naturally, the book includes recipes for each of the dishes suggested in the menus for each day. My first choice today is the Palestine soup – so called because it is based on Jerusalem artichokes, which are so called because of a corruption of its earlier name of girasole (sunflower) artichoke. For dessert we are going to have a coconut pudding with a coconut sauce, because one cannot have too much coconut, can one?

PALESTINE SOUP.
(Two quarts.)
Peel and wash three pounds of Jerusalem artichokes, one large onion, and a small head of celery. Put them into a stewpan, with two ounces of mild lean ham, a small blade of mace, a dessertspoonful of loaf sugar, and two quarts of stock (No. 2). Boil quickly (uncovered) for an hour. Knead together two ounces of butter and three tablespoonfuls of baked flour, and stir it into the soup for twenty minutes. Rub the soup through a fine sieve with a wooden spoon. Put it again into the stewpan; boil up; skim if necessary ; then stir in half a pint of thick cream, and serve immediately.

LADY BETTY'S DELIGHT.
(A good pudding.)
Grate the third of a fine new cocoa-nut, stone six ounces of muscadel raisins, chop a quarter of a pound of fresh beef-marrow, strain the juice and grate the rind of a small lemon, grate the sixth part of a nutmeg. Make a custard as follows: Boil three ounces of loaf sugar in half a pint of new milk; beat two large or three small fresh eggs; mix them with the milk while hot, but not boiling; add a tablespoonful of the milk of the cocoa-nut; stir till nearly cold. Cut six very thin slices of bread, a day old (about three ounces); butter a plain mould thickly, and stick it with raisins in the form of a cross. Divide all the ingredients into five parts, and lay them in the mould in the following order till it is full: Bread, marrow, raisins, cocoa-nut, lemon juice, peel, and nutmeg, custard; finish with bread and custard. Let it stand to soak for half an hour; tie it closely over, and boil last in plenty of water for three hours and a half. Turn out carefully, and serve, with the following sauce in the dish.
Note. A pint mould will be required.

COCOA-NUT CREAM.
(A sauce for puddings.)

Put two ounces of loaf sugar into a saucepan, with a wineglass of water, an inch of cinnamon, one clove, and two inches of thin lemon peel; boil till in a thick syrup. Mix a dessertspoonful of Oswego [cornflour] with two tablespoonfuls of cocoa-nut milk, strain the syrup to it, and boil up for one minute; add two tablespoonfuls of cream ; stir till cold; then, add one tablespoonful of brandy and twenty-five drops of the essence of vanilla. Serve cold.