This is a very nature oriented post. I spent a lot of time outside, even though we've had a lot of rain. I suggest everyone get out at least a little bit these next few days. I've been trying to get together all of the stuff I need for the next Historical Food Fortnightly challenge.
6-8-2014
It's my birthday so Andy and I took a walk in the park. We only had a few minutes before it was going to be dark and rainy but the clouds were very beautiful.
6-9-2014
Some visiting horses came to the farm to plow the fields as one of our horses is to old to plow and the other is just learning. This was very cool to see.
6-10-2014
Under the crab apple trees. Can't wait to try to make crab apple cider in the fall.
6-11-2014
Experimenting with my camera.
6-12-2014
6-13-2014
These storms are starting to become a regular thing.
A blog dedicated to Early American History Lovers, Civil War Reenactors, Living Historians, and people that love the past. Lots of Historical Recipes and Patterns!
June 13, 2014
June 8, 2014
Secret Life of Bloggers Blog Party: Post 21
I hope everyone had a great week. The weather has been amazing. I can't believe that it is June already.
6-1-2014
6-2-2014
The baskets at work are being filled with summer produce.
6-3-2014
I got to work today and noticed that I forgot a memory card for my camera, so of course I wanted to take photos of everything.
6-4-2014
Lent a hand putting a boom up on Gazela and rearranging a few things.
6-5-2014
The ox acting goofy while penned up. The cow is about to give birth soon.
6-6-2014
I have the cutest little bunny living in my back yard.
6-7-2014
Took a walk on the grounds of Rockwood Manor and looked at the unique trees.
6-1-2014
6-2-2014
The baskets at work are being filled with summer produce.
6-3-2014
I got to work today and noticed that I forgot a memory card for my camera, so of course I wanted to take photos of everything.
6-4-2014
Lent a hand putting a boom up on Gazela and rearranging a few things.
6-5-2014
The ox acting goofy while penned up. The cow is about to give birth soon.
6-6-2014
I have the cutest little bunny living in my back yard.
6-7-2014
Took a walk on the grounds of Rockwood Manor and looked at the unique trees.
June 4, 2014
Historical Food Fortnightly-Literary Foods: Anne of Green Gables Nut Cake
I am excited to be taking part in the Historical Food Fortnightly! If you haven't heard about it, go over and check it out.
For this challenge, I decided to make the nut cake with pink icing and walnuts from Anne of Avonlea. It was a hard decision, I was considering making something from Les Miserables or Wuthering Heights as they were both books where food played a major role in the plot. But I Love the Anne of Green Gables series and wanted to make this cake a few years back but hadn't gotten around to it.
In Anne of Avonlea, Anne accidentally sells the wrong cow for Mr. Harrison's and offers him a cake she baked to apologize.
"Poor Anne got her hat and her twenty dollars and was passing out when she happened to glance through the open pantry door. On the table reposed a nut cake which she had baked that morning. . .a particularly toothsome concoction iced with pink icing and adorned with walnuts. Anne had intended it for Friday evening, when the youth of Avonlea were to meet at Green Gables to organize the Improvement Society. But what were they compared to the justly offended Mr. Harrison? Anne thought that cake ought to soften the heart of any man, especially one who had to do his own cooking, and she promptly popped it into a box. She would take it to Mr. Harrison as a peace offering."
The Recipe:
The Date/Year and Region: 1902, Northeast US
How Did You Make It:
Ingredients:
- 1/2 Cup Butter
- 1 1/2 Cups Sugar
- 3/4 Cup Milk
- 2 Cups Sifted Flour
- 2 Teaspoons Baking Powder (Rollings Reliable Recommended)
- 4 Egg Whites, beaten stiff
- 1 Cup Hickory Nuts, ground
Instructions:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Sift the Baking Powder and the Flour together in a medium sized mixing bowl, add the ground nuts. In a separate bowl, cream the Butter into the Sugar add the Milk. When thoroughly mixed add the Butter mixture into the Flour mixture and add the Egg Whites. Grease and Flour 2 9 inch loaf pans. Bake for 60 minutes or until a toothpick comes out of the center clean.
For the glaze: Mix 1 1/2 Cups of Powdered Sugar with a Tablespoon of Vanilla and enough hot Water to form a stiff paste. Spread on the cake once cooled.
Time to Complete: 1 1/2 Hours with baking time included.
Total Cost: I already had flour, sugar, baking powder, vanilla, food coloring, and eggs on hand. I had to buy the walnuts, butter and powdered sugar, which came to about $8.00.
How Successful Was It?: It looked good and tasted better than I thought it would. The cake is dense but the sugar frosting made it very tasty. "Toothsome" was the word for this.
How Accurate Is It?: I did not use hickory nuts as they are impossible to find in stores and the trees here don't have nuts yet. I substituted walnuts instead.
I had a lot of fun making this and can't wait to see what everyone else is making.
June 2, 2014
Secret Life of Bloggers Blog Party: Post 20
This week was very tiring. The last thing I wanted to do was take photos. Everyone at my one job got sick right in a row and then a few people at my other job did. Not sure if we all had the same thing as the symptoms varied. I've never been sick so frequently as I have been this year. All I know is that I am constantly tired and just want to curl up in bed the second I get home from work.
I have been told by other bloggers that the blog party is now a year old. So it is. I'm always so excited when I realize just how much happens in one year. I am ecstatic that so many people are still participating and following after all of this time.
5-24-2014
Finally got some blog related historical cooking done.
5-25-2014
5-26-2014
My life is full of apples, fruit tarts and cakes.
5-27-2014
Art day!
5-28-2014
I guess I shouldn't exclude some mundane parts of my life, like cleaning. :)
5-29-2014
Sometimes the bakery looks like a horror movie.
5-30-2014
Taught English country dancing up near the wagon barn which is currently full of woodworking tools.
5-31-2014
Made a huge cake for a dog's first birthday. There was enough cake here to feed at least 75 people (2 half sheets.) The customer picked it up and said "That's enough to feed 15 people, right?" The cake weighed more than Lucy.
I have been told by other bloggers that the blog party is now a year old. So it is. I'm always so excited when I realize just how much happens in one year. I am ecstatic that so many people are still participating and following after all of this time.
5-24-2014
Finally got some blog related historical cooking done.
5-25-2014
5-26-2014
My life is full of apples, fruit tarts and cakes.
5-27-2014
Art day!
5-28-2014
I guess I shouldn't exclude some mundane parts of my life, like cleaning. :)
5-29-2014
Sometimes the bakery looks like a horror movie.
5-30-2014
Taught English country dancing up near the wagon barn which is currently full of woodworking tools.
5-31-2014
Made a huge cake for a dog's first birthday. There was enough cake here to feed at least 75 people (2 half sheets.) The customer picked it up and said "That's enough to feed 15 people, right?" The cake weighed more than Lucy.
May 26, 2014
18th Century Altoids: A Recipe from the 1790s and Beyond
The current day mints that we call Altoids have a long history. The recipe
dates back at least to the 1780s, and were called peppermint lozenges.
Peppermint lozenges were originally thought to cure upset stomachs. They were created as a convenient substitution for peppermint water which was used previously.
By the early 1800s, doctors and chemists attest to the popularity of lozenges and mention the additional flavors of ginger and horehound.[1] By the 1860s, authors mention many additives such as liquorish, anise, black currant, cayenne, rose, lavender, rhubarb as well as others, including quinine.[2]
They became popular as both medicine and candy throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. In modern times, there are few candies that have stuck with this simple recipe. Altoids is the most prominent company making them today. Their history with the recipe dates back to one of the early big producers in the 1780s, Smith and Co. who dubbed their brand of peppermint lozenges Altoids, but they weren't sold in the United States until the 20th century. The recipe remains very similar today. [3]
Peppermint Lozenges
Ingredients:
- 16 oz Powdered Sugar + more for dusting
- 2 oz Gum Arabic, Gum Tragacanth or Tylose (more common in modern baking)
-Peppermint Oil
-Food Coloring
Instructions:
Mix sugar, gum and water in a bowl. If making one flavor, about 15 or so drops of oil and coloring can be added during the mixing process. If making multiple flavors, make the dough first and knead in the colors and flavors later. Let sit for 15 minutes. Roll out on a powdered sugar or cornstarched surface and cut shapes with a small cutter or large straw.
Sprinkle your hands, workspace and rolling pin with powdered sugar or cornstarch.
***Alternatively, Modern gum paste can be bought and used as it has changed very little in recipe, most are a mixture of sugar and some type of gum. Many modern recipes for gum paste are also available online.
[3] Altoids®
(Wrigley.com) http://www.wrigley.com/global/brands/altoids.aspx
By the early 1800s, doctors and chemists attest to the popularity of lozenges and mention the additional flavors of ginger and horehound.[1] By the 1860s, authors mention many additives such as liquorish, anise, black currant, cayenne, rose, lavender, rhubarb as well as others, including quinine.[2]
They became popular as both medicine and candy throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. In modern times, there are few candies that have stuck with this simple recipe. Altoids is the most prominent company making them today. Their history with the recipe dates back to one of the early big producers in the 1780s, Smith and Co. who dubbed their brand of peppermint lozenges Altoids, but they weren't sold in the United States until the 20th century. The recipe remains very similar today. [3]
Peppermint Lozenges
Ingredients:
- 16 oz Powdered Sugar + more for dusting
- 2 oz Gum Arabic, Gum Tragacanth or Tylose (more common in modern baking)
-Peppermint Oil
-Food Coloring
Instructions:
Mix sugar, gum and water in a bowl. If making one flavor, about 15 or so drops of oil and coloring can be added during the mixing process. If making multiple flavors, make the dough first and knead in the colors and flavors later. Let sit for 15 minutes. Roll out on a powdered sugar or cornstarched surface and cut shapes with a small cutter or large straw.
Sprinkle your hands, workspace and rolling pin with powdered sugar or cornstarch.
***Alternatively, Modern gum paste can be bought and used as it has changed very little in recipe, most are a mixture of sugar and some type of gum. Many modern recipes for gum paste are also available online.
[1] Chamberlaine,
W.. "Mr. Chamberlaine, on the Ammendments of the Medicine Act." In The
Medical and Physical Journal, . London: Richard Phillips, 1803.
[2] Weatherley,
Henry. A treatise on the art of boiling sugar, crystallizing,
lozenge-making, comfits, gum goods, and
other
processes for confectionery, etc.: in which are explained, in an easy and
familiar manner, the various methods of manufacturing every description of raw
and refined sugar goods, as sold by the trade, confectioners, and others.
Philadelphia: H.C. Baird, 1865.
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