By Caroline Clemmons
When I wrote
GENTRY AND THE MAIL ORDER BRIDE, I had the heroine, Heidi Roth, purchase a
basket of food from a restaurant to take with her on the stagecoach. The basket
included bottles of water and apple cider as well as sandwiches. Someone asked
me if there were really bottles of drinks in 1875. The answer is yes!
Stephen
Martinelli started a soda water business in a lean-to by his brother Louis’ barn
near Watsonville, California in 1862. They produced apple cider beginning in
1868. They’ve won numerous prizes for their products. (In my opinion,
Martinelli’s is the best apple juice ever.)
You’ve probably read that there was canned food for soldiers in the Civil War. When we lived in a rural area, I canned what seemed like a gazillion jars of vegetables and jellies and jam and fruit. I loved having home-canned food through the year. Taking a jar or two out of the pantry to serve when the weather was cold was a great feeling. However, I learned that if there is a day when you have too much to do and absolutely can’t spare the time—you think—to process food that day, that’s the day it’s at its peak and must be canned or frozen.
The
absolute champion of home food canning, and someone I hold in awe, is author Peggy
L. Henderson. She canned enough for the year. I’ve never canned meat, but she canned
chickens she had raised and had to kill, pluck, yada yada. The woman is
amazing!
We’ve probably all read about
American Indians drying food over a fire. When I write about ranchers of the
Old West, I include a smokehouse. When visiting one of Hero’s distant relatives
at the site of a home of the mid 1800’s, we saw a beautiful example of a smoke
house. In fact, that was the only structure remaining of the original farm
buildings. I would love to have brought it home piece by piece to reassemble it.
The wood was hand hewn and beautifully fitted together.
Since then, I’ve seen other
smokehouses from that era, which, by the way, if my favorite for writing and
reading. Smoking is the process of exposing meats,
fish, and cheese to wood smoke, which has been shown to have antimicrobial
effects on food, meaning it removes the microbes that cause bacteria to grow.
This process was probably discovered by early cavemen burning fires in their
caves without chimneys, causing the cave to fill with smoke and thus exposing
food to smoke and unknowingly preserving it. Must have been hard on the lungs!
Over time, they began pre-treating the food with salt before smoking, making
the smoking even more effective. Today, smoking is mainly used to flavor food
rather than preserve it. Picture the smoker grill on the patio.
Even into the late 20th century, my uncle salt-cured his pork. The ham was so salty I probably couldn’t eat it now. As a child, I thought it was delicious fried and served with mashed potatoes and red-eye gravy. Yikes, it’s a wonder people survived that diet, but they worked hard.
Fermenting
This is just a
brief list of the methods for food preservation in the Old West.
If you’re looking for a book to read, try my two books of the
Texas Hill Country Mail Order Brides.
GENTRY AND THE
MAIL ORDER BRIDE, book 1, https://www.amazon.com/Gentry-Texas-Country-Order-Brides-ebook/dp/B0B6YN6QHK
JESSE AND THE MAIL ORDER BRIDE, book 2, https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BD64JC1D
QUINN AND THE
MAIL ORDER BRIDE, book 3, will be released in late November.
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_preservation
https://nchfp.uga.edu/publications/nchfp/factsheets/food_pres_hist.html
What an interesting article. I can pickles and vegetables, but not meat or soup.
ReplyDelete