Poets described the food that tenants gave to their landlords: capon at New Years, fish for Lent, fowl at Midsummer [June 24], goose at Michaelmas [Sept 29], and a capon at Christmas "for fear their lease fly
loose" - lose their lease.
Monday, December 30, 2019
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
Lebkuchen - German honey cake for Christmas
Monday, December 16, 2019
16th century “Christmas Husbandly Fare” poem
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
Cider making in Devonshire, 1850
Monday, December 2, 2019
Le marchand de marrons - roasted chestnut sellers
Monday, November 25, 2019
Thanksgiving at Washington Market, New York City
Monday, November 18, 2019
400 turkeys walking to Washington City (D.C.) market in 1826
“A drove of turkeys amounting to nearly four hundred from Westmoreland
County, Pennsylvania just now passed the door on their way to Washington
City. They go at the rate of 8 miles per day. Saturday February 4th
1826 8 o'clock AM"
Monday, November 11, 2019
Soyer’s Army Barrack Cooking Apparatus and obit 1858
Monday, November 4, 2019
Medieval acorns for pigs - from the Hours of Duc de Berry (1400s), Queen Mary Psalter (1310) and Henry VIII (c1500)
The "Labours of the Months" for November was a depiction of pigs routing under oak trees - with the bottom limbs removed - for acorns to eat before they were butchered. The great Très Riches Heures of the Duc de Berry (left) was done in the 15th century, The Hours of Henry VIII from c1500 and Queen Mary Psalter c1310 all show swineherds with sticks to get more acorns.
Monday, October 28, 2019
Lambswool for Halloween night - Nov. 1 "Day of the apple fruit" lamasool
Like wassail, lambswool consisted of ale, roasted apples, sugar and spice and drunk to celebrate the apple. The Celtic "la mas ubhal, that is, the day of the apple fruit; and
being pronounced lamasool" was celebrated on November 1.
Tuesday, October 22, 2019
Storing apples in Federal America
Monday, October 14, 2019
18th century immigrant ships - provisions, hardships, indentured servant process
Monday, October 7, 2019
Roasted apples street sellers
In winter a pan or container of burning charcoal roasted apples or chestnuts on a tin plate as shown in 1820 by Rowlandson and described in Craig's Cries of London 1804. Sixty years later "Roasted apples used
to be vended in the streets...
but it is a trade which has now almost entirely disappeared."
Monday, September 30, 2019
Fire starters - fire pistons, fire syringes
Fire pistons, (or fire syringe, pneumatic syringe, instantaneous light-giving syringe) were ingenious devices created out of wood, horn, bamboo, ivory, bone or metal by the peoples of Southeast Asia. The plunger would force the air in the tube to compress and get very hot, thereby lighting the tinder in the base.
In Europe they were usually a "scientific curiosity." The fire piston on left was from Borneo.
Monday, September 23, 2019
Fire starters - flint, steel and tinderbox ... and bamboo strick-a-light
It was hard work lighting and maintaining fires for cooking and heat. A few coals could be saved from the previous day or coals borrowed from a neighbor's fire. Flint and steel was tricky, especially if the "flint was dull, and the steel soft." Then there were the more unknown methods such as the "Bamboo strike-a-light" (bamboo struck by a piece of porcelain).
Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Blow pipes, Iron blowers, Fire-blowing tubes
Six 'iron blowers' were in the 1818 inventory of Virginia Gov. Preston taken in the Virginia Governor's Mansion, built in 1811. They were long thin
tubes with a mouth piece, which were also called ‘fender blower,’ ‘blower,’ 'iron
blow,’ ‘blow tube’ or ‘blow pipe.’
Bellows were also available to start or intensify the kitchen fire.
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
Selling matches on the street
Boys and women sold matches in cities for a modest fee. They whittled pine or cedar sticks, dipped the pointed end in brimstone or bought the matches from match manufacturers from the "low parts of London." By 1827 an author claimed "the itinerant Matchseller,
will, of consequence, become obsolete." Pictures from prints and books of "Cries" from London, New York City and Boston...
Tuesday, September 3, 2019
5 centuries of Picnics
Thursday, August 22, 2019
Ruined Picnics
Sunday, August 18, 2019
Maryland Peaches: Baltimore Peach Cake & Ellizabeth Ellicott Lea's Peach Marmalade
The fluffy, yeast cake topped with peaches existed by 1910 when it was mentioned in a poem by a Baltimore Sun writer. It was and is sold in Baltimore bakeries during peach season. Recently, marmalade is spread over the cake as a glaze. Maryland cookbook author Elizabeth Ellicott Lea's 1846 marmalade recipe is easy and delicious.
Labels:
Cake,
Jelly,
Lea (Elizabeth Ellicott),
Maryland Food History,
Peaches
Monday, August 12, 2019
Garlick flour
Wild garlic, grown among the wheat plants, caused problems in the mills by gumming up the mill stones and later, the rollers. Although it was almost impossible to "destroy the garlick" in the fields, farmers shared their attempts such as using plaster of Paris. One early author claimed that the Hessians during the Rev War introduced it. As for grinding the grain with the garlic seeds - Oliver Evans wrote his method to "dress" the mill stones and several inventions were patented.
Monday, August 5, 2019
Niagara's International Hotel waiters marched and served to music in 1860
Monday, July 29, 2019
Ice cream bombs, plombieres, fromage moulds, iced souffles, Iced Charlotte and more in "Queen" Cookery Book of ices
Ending this Ice Cream Month with a late 19th century cookbook with wonderful descriptions of types of ice creams and molds. Bombs, introduced by Francatelli (more HERE) were no longer round with a spun sugar flame, but longer shell shape (left).
Monday, July 22, 2019
'Gunter's Tea Shop' was Negri's 'Pot and Pineapple' founded in 1757 at Berkeley Sq., London ... ice cream recipes in 6 cookbooks
Incredibly, six confectioners who worked at the Berkeley Square shop wrote cookbooks - Nutt, Jarrin, and lesser known Jeanes, Abbott, Barnes and William Gunter (son of the owner James).
In 1757, famed confectioner Domenico Negri opened the 'Pot and Pineapple' at 7 Berkeley Square. By 1784 James Gunter (1731-1819) became a partner and by 1799, as sole owner renamed it 'Gunter's Tea Shop'.
In 1757, famed confectioner Domenico Negri opened the 'Pot and Pineapple' at 7 Berkeley Square. By 1784 James Gunter (1731-1819) became a partner and by 1799, as sole owner renamed it 'Gunter's Tea Shop'.
Monday, July 15, 2019
Spongati, Spongada, Spumante - meringue in ice cream
The "very light form of whipped" ice cream was popular in Italy, but less known in the UK. Francatelli, chef to Queen Victoria, included several recipes in one of his books The Modern Cook, and suggested "the rich variety" of flavors "for the second course."
Monday, July 8, 2019
Fuller's Freezing Machine, Manual with recipes & ice cream made with flowers
William Fuller of London invented his "Neopolitan Freezing Machine" (an early mechanized ice cream maker, replacing the sorbetiere) and wrote A Manual: containing original recipes for preparing ices, in 1851 before his patent. Some interesting ice cream recipes included Spumoni, Spongati, Flowers, Candied eggs and many flavors. By 1847 he was the "ice pail maker" to Queen Victoria and other royals.
Monday, July 1, 2019
4th of July 1819 in Philadelphia
Monday, June 24, 2019
Watermelon street sellers in Philadelphia
Monday, June 10, 2019
"When they fall ill -- of course they must"
Monday, June 3, 2019
19th century Strawberry Parties
Monday, May 27, 2019
Military campaign chairs and tables
Years ago I wrote a post on Army tables and chairs with creative ways to close and transport on mules or wagons during the Rev War and Civil War ... 39 examples HERE
Monday, May 20, 2019
1607 Italian book with mills powered by water and animals
For those of us who like mechanical devices - check out Vittorio Zonca’s (1568-1603) Novo Teatro Di
Machine Et Edificii. Padoua: 1607. Click to enlarge.
Monday, May 13, 2019
Macaroni sellers in Naples, Italy - 18th and 19th centuries
Visitors to Naples noted the "great coppers filled with macaroni ready prepared, sprinkled over
with cheese" and customers "taking it securely between the finger and
thumb, they raise it very high, and let it fall into the mouth." The Naples area produced the best pasta - either "by their skilful method of compounding and kneading the flour, or
from some peculiar excellence in the water and climate."
Monday, May 6, 2019
Dolly Varden Cake - Doll Cake
Monday, April 29, 2019
Advice from the creator of Kentucky Derby Benedictine sandwiches - Jennie C. Benedict
Virginia "Jennie" Carter Benedict (1860-1928) created Benedictines - the green cucumber sandwich common at Kentucky Derby parties. In the late 1890s she was forced to earn a living and rapidly developed her cooking business. She wrote two cookbooks, both contained advice for women wanting to enter the cooking profession.
Monday, April 22, 2019
Mary Randolph's refrigerator described by Harriott Pinckney Horry in 1815
On the trip north from her South Carolina plantation the 67 year old made a point to stay at "Mrs. Randolph's" - a renowned boarding house. It was full, but Mr. Otis (from Boston) gave up his room and Horry was able to write in her journal about the refrigerator and a table fan.
Wednesday, April 17, 2019
Hot-cross Buns - 100,000 sold on one day in London
Once sold on the streets on Good Friday, the buns, marked with a cross on top, are now remembered as a nursery rhyme "One-a-penny, two-a-penny, hot-cross buns!" In 1851 "500 persons" sold the buns on the street that one day. Another author, in 1825, lamented that "some thirty or forty years ago
pastrycooks and bakers vied with each other for excellence in making
hot-cross-buns; the demand has
decreased, and so has the quality of the buns."
Monday, April 8, 2019
Piping icing through paper cornets or ox guts
In an early (1842) detailed description to pipe icing onto cakes, paper was rolled into a cone, and the end was cut. In addition to "stout foolscap paper" the author also used small bags made of "gut of the ox" with tin tips. Urbain Dubois noted in his Artistic Cookery, 1870, that "icing-sugar, squeezed through a cornet" was an "innovation of rather recent date" and kept secret, which he learned in the 1840s in Rome.
Monday, March 25, 2019
Large scale pasta production in 1767
A Frenchman, Paul-Jacques Malouin (1701-1778) wrote a detailed (over 300 pages) book Description et détails des arts du meunier: du vermicelier et du
boulenger - about the pasta maker and baker - with marvelous images. The hard manual labor was eased somewhat by rotating a pole connected by rope to the pasta press bar and by jumping up and down on a pole to knead the dough (similar to 1638 biscuit break).
Monday, March 18, 2019
1911 Macaroni machine
Huge macaroni machine in 1911 as compared with Jefferson's smaller version a hundred years before (below, more HERE ); from Artemas Ward's The Grocer's Encyclopedia. NY: 1911
Monday, March 11, 2019
Thomas Jefferson's Maccaroni machine
Friday, March 1, 2019
2 prong forks
When the wider silver folks came out some continued to eat with two prong steel forks or knife. An American defended "that Americans have as good a right to their own fashions" and to eat off a knife in 1837. Even 15 years later a British visitor remarked on the habits of Baltimore women still using two prong forks.
Monday, February 18, 2019
Pepper pot street sellers in 1811, 1850 Philadelphia; 18th & 19th century recipes
The peppery soup of tripe (stomach lining), meats and vegetables was very popular in Philadelphia. So popular, that later recipes were labeled "Philadelphia Pepper Pot" in cookbooks not published in Phila. British recipes for the dish "sort of clear-larder" of seasonal or leftover veggies; meats and even seafood (but no tripe), then highly seasoned with pepper. The Dutch (pepper trade) and Virginia Housewife connection?
Monday, February 11, 2019
"America Eats Project" of the 1930's Great Depression
"What America Ate, Preserving America’s Culinary History from the Great
Depression" - is an interactive website and digitized archive of cookbooks, letters, recipes written during the Depression. MSU (Michigan State University) and National Endowment for the
Humanities gathered the scattered materials made for the government's “America Eats Project” during the Depression of the
1930s
HERE
Monday, February 4, 2019
Medieval Gyngerbrede
Honey - a lot of honey - is boiled, foam removed, spices and dried bread crumbs incorporated, then pressed or rolled flat. Cut into hard (firm) slices. It's not cake-like.
Monday, January 28, 2019
Francatelli's special dinner using Liebig's Extract of Meat 1869
Once the chef for Queen Victoria (from 1840 to 1842), the Reform Club, the Prince of Wales and others, Charles Elme Francatelli (1805-1876) became the manager of the St. James's hotel when it opened in 1863. Among his many banquets was one to introduce Liebig's extract as a substitute for beef stock.
Monday, January 21, 2019
Smoke jacks
So how did they work? Leonardo da Vinci sketched one in the 1480s; the one on left is from the 1600s. The smoke jack was attached in the throat of a chimney so the rising smoke and hot air would move the fan on a shaft (like blowing a windmill spinner toy), causing the gear and plate to rotate, thus moving the wheel attached by chains to the wheel on each spit.
Monday, January 14, 2019
Federal-era kitchen apparatus in Gadsby's Indian Queen Hotel, Baltimore
By 1815, the Indian Queen Hotel in Baltimore had state-of-the-art kitchen equipment: a "patent oven" (metal wall oven), "steam for boiling" (steam kitchens), "stoves set in brick" (stew stoves), smoke jacks to turn meat on spits and a coffee roaster.
Monday, January 7, 2019
Food history symposiums, conferences 2019
Along with the symposiums, there is an opportunity to apply for a paid summer fellowship at the cookbook collection of Michigan State University, and an exhibit at the Folger in DC.
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