Monday, November 30, 2009

Virginia Hams

The James River and centuries old methods divide the Virginia hams prepared in Colonial Williamsburg from those by the Edwards’ Ham Company in Surry, Virginia. While the basic technique of salting and smoking to preserve meat is the same, Edwards is able to make use of modern technologies to replicate the seasonal process. Dry curing has been done for centuries, and still is for other regional hams such as “Kentucky Hams” and the “Old Hams” of Maryland.

Receipts abound in old manuscripts, cookbooks, and farming manuals on curing. Andrew Henderson recalled his father’s salting process and smokehouse fifty years prior to his 1826 book, The Practical Grazier.

"… the sides and hams dressed the first day may be kept separate, and piled up across each other upon some flags or boards, giving each flitch and ham a powdering of saltpeter, and then covering them over with salt. The saltpeter ought not to be omitted, as it opens the pores of the flesh to receive the salt, and likewise gives the hams a pleasant flavour, and makes them more juicy. Let them lie in this state about a week, then turn those on the top undermost, giving them a fresh salting. After lying two or three weeks longer they may be hung up to dry in some chimney or smoke-house…the flitches were about two to three feet from the floor, which was covered about six inches thick with sawdust, kindled at two different sides; it burned without any flame injurious to the bacon. Bacon and hams so prepared are generally ready in about ten days to pack into a hogshead and send off to market. Bacon can only be cured from the middle of September until the middle of April."

The Colonial Williamsburg foodways staff start their demonstration on the second Saturday in December. Salt, salt petre and brown sugar are rubbed onto the hams which are put in salt in the salt house. The colder temperatures will increase the time, and if it freezes, the curing process ends. After weeks laying in the salt, the excess salt is washed off and the meat covered with ashes, which from their research, was used rather then pepper, that was used at a later time according to Frank Clark.

To obtain salt, Betty Randolph wrote to her uncle, Landon Carter, on Sept 16th 1776, that she had “… taken the liberty to send some boilers down to Rippon to make salt.” Rippon Hall, on the brackish York River, was one of Carter’s homes. A copy of her letter is tacked to the door of the Randolph smokehouse in CW.

The hams are hung in a smokehouse for one to three and a half weeks, depending on the size and weather, of constant smoking using green hickory wood. They remain hanging for a few years.Smoking the hams could be done in chimneys, ‘smoking-closets,’ attic smoke rooms, in wood, brick or stone smokehouses and even in a barrel. Wood types to be burned varied. In Richard Allen’s Domestic Animals, NY: 1848, “Green sugar-maple chips are best for smoke, next to them are hickory, sweet birch, corn cobs, white ash, or beech.”

The Edwards’ Ham Company of Smithfield County, Va. follows the age old process but uses modern apparatus. Where the salting process was done during the cooler months, now refrigerated rooms house the pallets of ham and salt. Halfway through the process they are rotated top to bottom with more flake salt added, just as Andrew Henderson noted two hundred years earlier.

As the months warmed, the ‘fermenting’ would naturally cure the meat, according to Edwards. Smoking helps to preserve the surface and repel insects. Hickory sawdust is burned five to eight days in an outside generator with the smoke flued into and out of the smoke rooms. Each room can hold up to twenty two racks of ninety six hams. The early smokehouses of his grandfather were shaped like wigwams, for market appeal, with fires inside at the base.

The climate controlled aging rooms intensify the flavors, resulting in more consistent hams, and the adjusted heat reflects the seasonal weather changes.

At fifty or sixty days into the aging process, the taste starts to change, and the color becomes a richer hue. The hams are aged a year, or longer.

While in the past, the process was limited to the fall and winter months, mechanization allows for a year round production schedule. The changing popular tastes are also affecting what is done by the various producers. The modern pigs do not possess the tremendous fat content of those two hundred years ago.

The heirloom pork used at Colonial Williamsburg is extremely fat, as seen in the white part of the ham pictured, from the Palace kitchen.

Edwards uses a slightly fatter breed of pig, some are Berkshires, than does the giant, Smithfield Foods, Inc., and is experimenting on returning peanuts back into the pigs’ feed. They focus on quality and sell their products at places like Dean & DeLuca, Balducci’s, and on their website: http://www.virginiatraditions.com/. With the popularity of prosciutto, their new Serrano-style Virginia Ham is aged longer, sliced thin and does not need to be cooked.

There were a variety of recipes to remove some of the salt from the hams before preparing the ham. Some suggest soaking overnight, others recommend placing the hams in pans half filled with water and slowly cooked. Slicing paper thin portions, which also helps cut the salt, makes the ham a perfect and traditional filling for beaten biscuits or small biscuits.

William Byrd of Westover wrote this receipt c1674: “To eat ye Ham in Perfection steep it in Half Milk and Half Water for 36 hours, and then having brought the water to a boil put ye Ham therein and let it simmer, not boil, for 4 to 5 hours according to Size of ye Ham for simmering brings ye salt out and boiling drives it in.” Westover is a grand mansion on the James River west of Williamsburg.

©2009 Patricia Bixler Reber

Monday, November 23, 2009

Cranberry Sauce


This cranberry sauce was made in a slack oven, then add a wineglass (1/4C) of brandy.

CRANBERRY SAUCE. --Wash a quart of ripe cranberries, and put them into a pan with about a wine-glass of water. Stew them slowly, and stir them frequently, particularly after they begin to burst. They require a great deal of stewing, and should be like a marmalade when done. Just before you take them from the fire, stir in a pound of brown sugar.When they are thoroughly done, put them into a deep dish, and set them away to get cold.You may strain the pulp through a cullender or sieve into a mould, and when it is in a firm shape send it to table on a glass dish. Taste it when it is cold, and if not sweet enough, add more sugar. Cranberries require more sugar than any other fruit, except plums.Cranberry sauce is eaten with roast turkey, roast fowls, and roast ducks.
Leslie, Eliza. Directions for Cookery, in its Various Branches. Philadelphia: 1840

In "Aunt Babette's" Cook Book, 1889: Never sweeten while cooking; it injures the color. Better prepared the day previous to using.

Cranberry Sauce recipes can be found in Thanksgiving - Cranberries: Pemmican to Cranberry Sauce.

©2009 Patricia Bixler Reber
hearthcook.com

Monday, November 16, 2009

Lydia Child's Thanksgiving connection

Lydia Maria Child (1802-1880) today is best known for her cookbooks The Frugal Housewife, 1830, later titled the American Frugal Housewife, 1832; and The Family Nurse, or Companion of the Frugal Housewife, 1837.

Most people have sung "Over the river, and through the wood" which is taken from her poem "The New-England Boy's Song about Thanksgiving Day" from Flowers for Children, II, 1845. It is interesting to note that in the original poem, the destination is to Grandfather's house. The first and last two of the original twelve stanzas are as follows:

The New-England Boy's Song about Thanksgiving Day

Over the river, and through the wood,
To Grandfather's house we go;
The horse knows the way to carry the sleigh
Through the white and drifted snow.

Over the river, and through the wood,
When grandmother sees us come,
She will say, Oh dear, the children are here,
Bring a pie for every one

Over the river, and through the wood,
Now Grandmothers cap I spy!
Hurrah for the fun! Is the pudding done?
Hurrah for the pumpkin pie!

Home to Thanksgiving, 1867, Currier and Ives

©2009 Patricia Bixler Reber
hearthcook.com

Monday, November 9, 2009

Researching at State Archives & County Courthouses

Each state archives contains copies or original records from local courthouses and other government agencies, but the years vary with each state and circumstances (such as fires). Although some of the archive buildings are still next to their state capitol - Pennsylvania is just down the hill, the Maryland Archives is a healthy walk to the oldest continually used State House; others are miles away - Mass. is located across the parking lot from the JFK Museum & Library. The National Archives is now in two locations, DC and College Park, MD, but there are branches throughout the country, including Philadelphia.

Probate inventories. When a person died a record listing every item was made and filed in the courthouse, but like today, this was not done for every estate. It is a terrific resource for food historians. The inventory shows not only what items they owned for cooking and dining, but where it was kept. Often the list goes from room to room, although the rooms may or may not be labeled. Even if the person or museum house you are searching does not have one, you can search for other local comparable probate estates. Gunston Hall did such a search in the VA/MD area.
Inventories online.
Pictured is a page from Margaret Carroll's (1742-1817) probate inventory, Maryland Archives [not online].

Genealogical research is helpful in learning more about the person (birth, death records, census) and thus useful in finding other sources of information. Knowing the relatives can help find more letters related to the person/home you are researching. Wills give details on the family, ofcourse, and may mention other things, such as outbuildings.

Recipes can be found in letters or written manuscripts which have been donated to the archives.

Other items found in the Archives may include property sales (which may list outbuildings, orchards, etc), Tax Lists, colonial newspapers, church records, manumission papers, colonial and state/county records, maps, plats, and much more.

©2009 Patricia Bixler Reber
hearthcook.com

Monday, November 2, 2009

Cranberry harvesting (stealing) in 1864 New Jersey


Excerpt from: Edmund Morris. How to get a Farm, and where to find one... NY: 1864.
"It is known that several counties in New Jersey contain thousands of acres of cranberry lands, which annually produce abundant crops of fruit. … The whole region is but thinly settled, and there are but few clearings among the dense pine forests which cover a large portion of the ground. Most of these have been made by pine-hawkers and charcoal-burners, who support life under great privations… They swarm among the swamps during the picking season, so that the owner gets little or none of the crop. …

All these wild lands are consequently unsalable, and are worth from two to five dollars per acre. They have been in the market at these prices for many years… Large districts of them are within a few miles of a railroad...but they lie on no public thoroughfare, and hence they have remained unnoticed and neglected.

Seven years ago an enterprising farmer of Burlington county purchased a hundred acres of this swamp land, for which he paid $5 per acre...a third or a half to be paid down. Much of his purchase was grown up with cranberries… He conciliated, to some extent, the jealousies of the neighboring sand-hillers by employing them to cut brush sufficient to construct a fence around the portion to be protected, so as to keep off the hogs and cattle which roamed the woods, rooting up or trampling down the plants.

He had purchased the land in April, and that fall he sold $600 worth of fruit, netting $440. The following year was less productive, in consequence of a heavy frost when the plants were in bloom. In the mean time he had enlarged his plantation by extending his brush fence around other portions of the tract, and at this writing is clearing an average of $1100 annually from about thirty acres. …

Once established, these cranberry swamps rarely fail. Now and then a frost may injure the crop, or the worm may wholly destroy it; but on the average of five years, there is probably no investment that can be made to pay better. ...

For a beginner it possesses rare advantages. Generally it will take care of itself, requiring little labor or attention, except when the crop comes in. For at least ten months of the year he may employ most of his time in working out for others, or in cultivating other land for the production of food for his family.

The crop is among the most marketable of all the fruits. Its sale is distributed over the whole year, instead of being, like other berries, crowded into a few weeks. It is largely exported, and there has rarely been a glut. ...At one time, said Dr. Miller's farmer, 200 persons might have been seen in that swamp picking cranberries. It was a lively scene. After they were gathered, they were taken to the house, where they were sorted, the soft berries, after winnowing them, were culled out by women and girls, preparatory to barrelling.Dr. Miller has about twenty-five acres, divided into five meadows... all on the same stream of water. The whole can be overflowed at will in about two hours." [average price of the cranberries: $10 a barrel, and 1100 barrels...]
Painting: Jonathan Eastman Johnson. The Cranberry Harvest on the Island of Nantucket, 1880
©2009 Patricia Bixler Reber
hearthcook.com