by Anna Kathryn Lanier
Cooking in the Old West was often an adventure in
itself. Though iron cook-stove were available
by the 1860’s, most households in the west did not have them. First, the massive size and weight made them
hard to ship over the crude wagon trails.
Most cooking, from boiling to roasting and baking to steaming were therefore done open-hearth with cast iron
kettles, Dutch ovens and frying pans.
Corn was a mainstay for the pioneer and the common staple
found its way into much of food placed on the table: johnnycakes, corn
fritters, and corn pone. Sweet potatoes, squash, cabbage, turnips, wild
berries, mushrooms and dandelion greens were also common pioneer foods.
Here are some recipes our pioneer forefathers and mothers
would have enjoyed:
Baked Squash
3 butternut or acorn squash
6 teaspoons butter
6 teaspoons brown sugar
Salt
Cut squashes in halves. Clean out seeds and fibrous
membrane. Place one teaspoon of butter
and brown sugar into each half. Dash
each with salt. Arrange squash halves in
a shallow baking pan with water to a depth of ½-inch. Cover pan with loose foil. Bake in 400° F.
oven 45-50 minutes.
Butterscotch Bread
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon baking soda
¼ teaspoon salt
1 cup brown sugar
½ cup chopped walnuts
2 eggs, beaten
1 cup buttermilk
2 tablespoons melted butter
In a large mixing bowl sift together flour, baking powder,
baking soda and salt. Stir in brown sugar and nuts. In a separate smaller bowl
blend eggs, milk and melted butter. Stir
into dry ingredients just enough to moisten.
Pour into batter into a greased loaf pan.* Bake in 350° F. oven 45-55 minutes. Cool on
rack.
*I made this recipe and it’s very good, but my loaf pan was
only a 2-pound pan and the batter spilled over the pan while cooking and the
bread didn't cook right. I realized I needed to use a larger pan. I would
recommend either using a 3-pound pan or two 2-pound pans.
Dried
Apple Pie
Soak 2 cups of dried apples in water
overnight. Drain off water and mix apples with ½ cup sugar and 1 teaspoon each of
allspice and cinnamon. Line an 8-inch
pie pan with a crust, and add the apple mixture. Dot with 3 tablespoons butter
and cover with a second pie crust. Make
a few slashes in the top for ventilation and bake in a 350° oven for about 1
hour or until crust is golden brown.
Cabbage Salad
2 cups grated cabbage
1 cup chopped apples
½ cup chopped onion
½ cup chopped turnip
½ teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons sugar
½ cup vinegar
1/3 cup water
Toss all ingredients lightly.
I've posted on old west cooking before. Click HERE and HERE to read those blogs. Some of the recipes are repeated on this blog post.
PS. I'm teaching THE HERO'S JOURNEY via TITANIC at Hearts Through History campus in August.
THE
HERO'S JOURNEY VIA TITANIC
Whether
you’re a plotter or a panster, knowing The Hero’s Journey will help you with
your story’s plot. Using Christopher Vogler’s guidelines, I will lead you
through your own The Hero’s Journey, including a special journey via the TITANIC
and other romance movies.
Find out more HERE.
Anna Kathryn Lanier
Romance Author, A GIFT BEYOND ALL MEASURE
Romance Author, A GIFT BEYOND ALL MEASURE
I recommend your Hero's Journey class to anyone who wants to improve their writing. I enjoyed your workshop when you presented it to Yellow Rose RWA.
ReplyDeleteAs for campfire cooking, give me an air-conditioned home with all my appliances and sanitation. I am simply not a camper. I do love reading about pioneer life, though, and appreciate your post very much.
It is a wonder those people did not starve to death all the time under those cooking conditions, or die of food poisoning. I am with Ms. Clemmons - I want air conditioning and a clean kitchen to cook in.
ReplyDeleteHi, Caroline and Stephanie. Thanks for stopping by. I do agree, you gotta love the modern appliances and AC, especially in the hot Texas summer!
ReplyDeleteI liked the mix of cabbage and apples and I always wondered how to make a pie from dried apples. Now I see it has to do with soaking them over night.
ReplyDeleteYour class sounds very helpful.
I wish you the very best.
OH YUM those recipes sound so good. Hubby would love the butterscotch bread for sure. Thanks, Anna Kathryn. :)
ReplyDeleteI love to read recipes, and recipe books. Probably, many of do, too.
ReplyDeleteBut when it comes to much cooking, I don't do a lot. I don't cook meat, so we live on salads and pasta dishes, and vegetable soups, etc.
The apple cabbage salad sound great--except for those turnips. Nope, no turnips. Mother grew those and loved cooked turnips. She never succeeded in making her three girls like turnips.
Thanks so much for the information..I loved it.