Harvey D. Parker (sculptor John D. Perry, 1874) Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston |
While working as a coachman for a wealthy socialite, he frequently ate his noon meal in a dingy basement tavern. In 1832, he bought the tavern for $432 and renamed it Parker’s Restaurant. Excellent food served by an attentive staff soon made the place a popular dining spot for the city’s newspapermen, lawyers, and businessmen.
Parker's hotel, ca. 1900 |
Parker's dining room, ca. 1910 |
Parker’s hotel introduced a new concept: Rooms and meals were priced separately. Guests were offered menus appropriate to the time of day and ate virtually anytime they pleased. The upscale food was prepared by a kitchen staff and served in a grand dining room, where members of the public were invited to dine at their convenience, too.
Parker House rolls, courtesy King Arthur Flour. |
Today, the Parker House is part of the Omni Hotels chain of high-end lodging establishments. Omni chose to maintain the original property’s lux décor, for the most part. The walls remain burnished American oak; lobbies, bars, and the restaurant resonate with the deep colors of yesteryear; massive crystal chandeliers sparkle in the public areas, and elevator doors are overlaid with a patina of burnished bronze.
My most recent batch of Parker House rolls. I was in a hurry, so I didn't fold them. They were delicious, nonetheless. |
Here it is, with baking instructions for modern kitchens:
Parker House Rolls
1¾ cup scalded milk
¼ cup lukewarm water
2 Tbsps. active dry yeast
1 cup butter, melted and cooled to room temperature
1/2 cup sugar
2 teaspoons salt
1 large egg
6 cups all-purpose flour
1. Dissolve yeast in water.
2. In large bowl, combine 1/2 cup butter, sugar, and salt.
3. Stir in water/yeast mixture, milk, and egg.
4. Add 3 cups flour and beat thoroughly. The mixture should resemble a thick batter. Cover and let rise until at least double.
5. Stir down sponge, then stir in enough flour to make a soft dough (about another 2½ cups).
6. Turn dough onto lightly floured surface and knead until smooth and elastic, about 10 minutes, working in more flour (about ½ cup) while kneading.
7. Shape dough into a ball and place in large, lightly greased bowl, turning so that top of dough is greased. Cover with towel; let rise in warm place (80 to 85 degrees F.) until doubled, about 1½ hours. (Dough is doubled when 2 fingers pressed into dough leave a dent.)
8. Punch down dough by pushing the center of dough with fist, then pushing edges of dough into center. Turn dough onto lightly floured surface; knead lightly to make smooth ball, cover with bowl for 15 minutes to let dough rest.
9. Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
10. In 17¼-inch by 11½-inch roasting pan, melt remaining ½ cup butter over low heat; tilt pan so melted butter coats entire bottom.
11. On lightly floured surface with floured rolling pin, roll dough ½ inch thick.
12. Cut dough into circles with floured 2¾-inch round cutter. (Note: The dough may be cut into rectangles instead of circles.) Holding dough circle by the edge, dip both sides into melted butter pan; fold in half.
13. Arrange folded dough in rows in pan used to melt the butter. Each roll should nearly touch its neighbors. Cover pan with towel; let dough rise in warm place until doubled, about 40 minutes.
14. Bake rolls for 15 to 18 minutes until browned.
The heroine in my latest story briefly works in a dingy cafe on the wrong side of the tracks in Fort Worth, Texas. That's a big step down from her previous life as a pampered socialite. “A Long Way from St. Louis” appears with stories from seven other authors in Prairie Rose Publications’ new holiday anthology, A Mail-Order Christmas Bride.
A Long Way from St. Louis
Cast out by St. Louis society after her husband leaves her for another, Elizabeth Adair goes west to marry a wealthy Texas rancher. Burning with anger over the deceit of a groom who is neither wealthy nor Texan, she refuses to wed and ends up on the backstreets of Fort Worth.
Ten years after Elizabeth’s father ran him out of St. Louis, Brendan Sheppard’s memory still sizzles with the rich man’s contempt. Riffraff. Alley trash. Son of an Irish drunkard. Yet, desire for a beautiful, unattainable girl continues to blaze in his heart.
When the debutante and the ne’er-do-well collide a long way from St. Louis, they’ll either douse an old flame…or forge a new love.
A Texan to the bone, Kathleen Rice Adams spends her days chasing news stories and her nights and weekends shooting it out with Wild West desperados. Leave the upstanding, law-abiding heroes to other folks. In Kathleen’s stories, even the good guys wear black hats.
Her short story “The Second-Best Ranger in Texas” won the coveted 2015 Peacemaker Award for Best Western Short Fiction. Her novel Prodigal Gun is the only novel-length western historical romance ever nominated for a Peacemaker.
Visit Kathleen’s hideout on the web at KathleenRiceAdams.com.
Oh my those look good. Merry Christmas Kathleen.
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas to you, too, Livia! :-)
DeleteParker House Rolls...the only ones I ate were baked by a sister-in-law, and it felt like heaven, eating those soft, buttery rolls. Mother never made them, as she had he own kind of home baked rolls. My mother-in-law--who I never knew very much--made rolls the family called "Mrs. Yeary's rolls." These were made with water--no milk. It makes a softer dough, perfect for imitation Parker House Rolls, which I created. Harvey Parker was a fascinating man, a great entrepreneur.
ReplyDeleteIn the Christmas Anthology, I enjoyed all the stories. I did particularly like yours, Brenden being a favorite. He was rough and sometime dirty, but had a heart of gold. Sigh. And Elizabeth...she played her cards right. Thanks for the story, the photos--my favorite--and the story about the rolls.
You're more than welcome, Celia. I'm glad you enjoyed Brendan and Elizabeth's story. Your praise always makes me happy all over. BIG HUGS to you and yours and a very merry Christmas!
DeleteIt is so amazing to me to read about people with nothing, through wit, vision, and perseverance, manage to amass a fortune like Parker did. Thank you so much for including the recipe for Parker Rolls. I have always loved these rolls and now I'm going to see if I can make these babies.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Kathleen.
I find Parker's story inspiring, too, Sarah. He had grit and determination.
DeleteLet me know how the rolls turn out for you! I'm already looking forward to baking some for Christmas dinner.
Big Christmas hugs!
Looking forward to these stories. Favorite holiday food? Pumpkin Pie
ReplyDeleteOoh! Good one, Alisa! I think I see a pumpkin pie in your future, in that case. :-D
DeleteMerry Christmas to you and yours, and HUGS!
I had never heard the story of Parker House Rolls. My mom made wonderful yeast rolls, but I never tried. All I need is to learn to bake something else fattening. LOL I'll leave the rolls for you thin people.
ReplyDeleteYou know, I love to bake -- especially bread. Typically, the problem with that is I'm not quick enough to get any before other people scarf it down. :-| I suppose the bread must be good, but I may never know! :-D
DeleteMerry Christmas to you, Hero, and yours, Caroline! BIG HUGS!!!!