thecfarm------------------------Our home

Home - Profile - Archives - Friends

Cooking in Minnesota in the mid -1800's plus recipes... Pictures

Posted on Sunday, June 15, 2008 at 07:59

- Post Comment

A Brief Look at Cooking in Minnesota in the Mid-1800's

Introduction
    Like any other task on the Minnesota frontier, cooking was no easy thing to do.  Supplies were limited, preservation methods primitive to say the least, and the convenience of the modern day appliance would not be available for some time.  Women often passed on to each other secrets that they learned while making meals to their neighbors, and with the advent of the stove came the first cookbooks.  Women took pride in their accomplishments in the kitchen and with good reason too -- cooking food and finding ways to preserve it meant the survival of the family.

Important Types of Food on the Frontier
    Without a large supermarket to go to, the pioneer woman generally had to get all the food for the family's meal from their own farm.  Livestock that was raised was slaughtered for meat, or wild game was hunted.  Bread was one of the most important food items in the pioneer household (Kreidberg, 37).  Even if it was hard to come by wheat because of a bad harvest, women improvised in many ways so they could still set a loaf of bread on the table.  Eggs were provided either from neighboring farms or from their own chickens, and milk was also either bought at neighboring farms, or more commonly supplied by the family cow.  Finally, fruits and vegetables were grown in a kitchen garden next to the house (Kreidberg, 77).

Basic Ways Pioneer Women Preserved Food
    There were many different ways that women learned to preserve food so the family would be sure to have an ample supply to last them through the winter.  These included salting, pickling, smoking, drying, and canning foods.  With no refrigeration or modern day preservatives, it was necessary to learn how to do these things in order for the family to have meat and vegetables throughout the winter when they were no longer available.  Women figured out ingenious methods to preserve whatever they had, and often used whatever supplies they had available.  For example, modern day methods of canning were not available, so they often had to try and make a seal simply by putting wax around the rim of the jar (Kreidberg, 79).  Food preservation was of central importance to the survival of the early Minnesota pioneer.

The Cookstove:  Making Life Easier for Pioneer Women
    If they were lucky enough, most pioneer women were able to get their hands on a cookstove for around 23 dollars in the 1850's (Kreidberg, 149).  The cookstove made cooking much easier for women, and it also provided some much desired variety in the types of food that could be prepared.  It was also just more pleasant in general to not have to use an open fire and hearth to cook all the food for the family's meals.

Some Sample Recipes
-taken from the book Food on the Frontier:  Minnesota Cooking from 1850-1900 With Selected Recipes.

    Vienna Bread
    Sift in a tin pan four pounds of flour, bank up against the sides, pour in one quart of warm milk and water, mix into it enough flour to form a thin batter.  Then quickly and lightly add one pint of milk, in which is dissolved one ounce of salt, one ounce of compressed yeast -- leave the remainder of the flour against the sides of the pan, cover the pan with a cloth, set in a place free from draught, for three-quarters of an hour.  Then mix; the rest of the flour, with the dough, will leave the bottom and sides of the pan; let it stand two and one-half hours, finally divide the mass into one-pound pieces, to be cut in turn, into twelve parts each; rise one half-hour, bake ten minutes in a hot oven.  -From the Dayton Presbyterian Church Cookbook

    Norwegian Soup
    One large cup sago, one pound raisins, one pound currants, one pound best prunes, one tablespoon vinegar, pinch salt and several cinnamon sticks.  Water to make like thick sauce; cook several hours; sugar to taste.  Thin at the last with one pint good red wine; take out cinnamon sticks; keep thinned with water.  -From Marshall Ladies' Choicest and Best.

    Sweet-Sour Sauce for Boiled Tongue
    5 gingersnaps                4tbsp vinegar
    1/2 cup brown sugar    1 cup hot water

    Crush gingersnaps, and mix with other ingredients.  Cook until smooth.  Then add 1 sliced lemon; 1/4 cup raisins, sliced almonds.  Serve over tongue that has been boiled and sliced.  Makes 1 1/2 cups.  -From Bertha L. Heilbron Collection

    Brunswick Stew
    2 large squirrels                        1 qt. tomatoes
    1 pt. lima or butter-beans         6 potatoes
    6 ears corn                               1/2 lb. fat salt pork
    1/2 tsp. pepper                        1/2 lb. butter
    1/2 saltspoon cayenne               1 tbsp. salt
    2 tsp. white pepper                   1 onion
                                                    1 gal. water

    Boil together salt and water, add the onion, herbs, beans, corn cut from the cob, diced pork, pepper and let come to a boil, cut the squirrels in joints and wash them clean, add to the stew as soon as it boils.  Cut the potatoes in slices and parboil them, put them into the stew with the tomatoes and sugar about an hour before it is done.  Ten minutes before taking form the fire add the butter cut in bits and rolled in flour taste to adjust the seasoning and serve in soup plates.  -From New Cook Book

                                Woman Canning Pickles                                                    Woman Using a Stove
-pictures taken from the Minnesota Historical Society Website, www.mnhs.org


<i>Untitled Comment</i>

Posted by mequit73 on Monday, June 16, 2008 at 02:16 - Link

As a former Minnesota resident (I lived there about 35 years), I took particular interest in this post. It reminds me of those Laura Ingalls Wilder books. I swear I could read those 100 times and never get tired of them. It is so interesting to see what people did "in the old days" and how difficult it must have been for them. I've been thinking, in my personal life, a lot about how girls today never do say when asked when they want to be when they grow up..."be a homemaker" It certainly isn't cherished in the same way it once was. Our foremothers sure had some challenges, but look at all the great things they produced any way and in corsettes nonetheless.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Those were the days.. Thanks for stopping by..
Blessings Sister Brenda

Edited by haflinger on Monday, June 16, 2008 at 07:38

<i>Untitled Comment</i>

Posted by borderling on Monday, June 16, 2008 at 07:49 - Link

Thank you.
From Glory Farm (in Minnesota),
Rhonda
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thanks Rhonda for stopping by..
Blessings Sister Brenda

Edited by haflinger on Monday, June 16, 2008 at 07:39

<i>Untitled Comment</i>

Posted by Mennobrarian on Monday, June 16, 2008 at 03:55 - Link

Very interesting, Brenda. I'll pass on the boiled tongue, though. Sorry! Loved the pictures- thanks for posting them. I know it's a pain with dial up. Even when I access some things on HSB using the super-fast connection here at the library, it often takes a minute or so.
~Monica~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thanks for stopping Monica.. Always happy to have u stop by..

Edited by haflinger on Monday, June 16, 2008 at 03:46

<
? Last Page :: Next Page ?

Welcome folks put your feet up get your self something hot or cold to drink .Get ready to hear about our farm we have laying hens~ducks~our greeter dew the farm dog and our cat puppy that greet folks when they come.. Come enjoy hearing about what is going on in our lives~ running our saw mill ~ Depends on the season hear about our gardens vegetable ~flower ~baking~sewing and what crafts I might be doing..

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Check out Sense and sensiblity patterns http://www.sensibility.com/pattern/main/?page_id=50 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ COME CHECK MY SHOP OUT FOR APRONS AND SO MUCH MORE..I WILL BE HAVING USED BOOKS ALSO AND USE ITEMS.. http://wwwbackintime.blogspot.com/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ center>
Get This Calendar...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Christian Glitter by www.christianglitter.com

May God be with you! Proud to be an American and we support our Men and women and all the troops.

Home
View my profile
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Archives
My Blog's RSS

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner






Christian Glitter by www.christianglitter.com






















What type of Mother Hen Are You?
by Montessorimom.com: Educational Resource

BLUE

You give your love and friendship unconditionally. You enjoy long, thoughtful conversations rich in philosophy and spirituality. You are very loyal and intuitive.

Find out your color at QuizMeme.com!




Tag Me!





Maidens for Modesty

Recent Entries

Help needed I'm making a doll
Adult Bibs and for all ages~ gingerbread people~up date
Blog
Blog clean up..
crayola roll up
Sew craft and more..
Family Life
Pumpkin Spice Muffins (recipe and picture)
Pumpkins
Thanksgiving
Winzip
Money Saving Mom has a great give away..check it out..
Pumpkin Muffins
Blue Ribbon Sugar Cookies
Politics and Religion






Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Categories

Cooking
Christmas, 2006
Day to Day
Farm Animals
Farm Views
Horse Pictures
Pictures
Recetn Posts
Sewing
Snow Pictures



Click for Farmington, Maine Forecast

Links

homeschoolradioshows
ellenskitchen.com
farmgirlhaven
ripe4harvest
achristianhome
Household Notebook
myblessedhome
pgburrell.home.mindspring.com/
gloryacres
Sugar Cookies
OurCountryHome
Laine's Letters
menus4moms.com
Lesley
Christian Homestead
Marci
lovercountryfarms
Tasha Tudor
thefamilyhomestead.com
Andrea
myblessedhome
homemaking
3sisters/
homespunliving
howilovethee/
Mrs.Wilt
Jewel Blog
http://ruralvillage.org/
Maryjanesfarm
waltonfeed
http://myblessedhome.blogspot.com/
HomemadeSimplicity
Maidens-for Modesty-Values
Little Jenny Wren
http://www.likemerchantships.blogspot.com/
listen on the computer
http://www.tammysrecipes.com/
Crystal Miller
lost child
http://myvintagecharm.wordpress.com/
coupon lady mother of 6
http://anherbalbedfellow.blogspot.com
Deanna
Praireiemom
old family recipes
good to read
Money saving samples
Sensiblility Patterns
http://randvfarmstead.blogspot.com/
http://stampinmama.typepad.com/stampin_mama_a_mama_that_/bake_it_make_it_take_it/index.html
a lot of tutorials for crafts dolls and more



Books that are on are my night stand



Friends

FaithfulAcres
BackyardTreasures
quiverfull
lancelotacres
countrydreamn
wannabeone
HandsNHearts
Snowberryfarm
blessedmama

NannasKitchen
homesteadinthemaking
pointe510
mullerslanefarm
maidmyown
southernbelle
heritagehill


MrsBurns
GrannyG
savdn4gvn
Happyhomemama
Kitty
j706nancyr
morningsunshine
Cindeerella
happymama
hanemlee

MissionaryMom
Hisirishgem
HarvestMom
oklamouse
Brenda
mdonohue
FrontPorch
TeaFlower
mennonitegirl1
Hunnicutts
stitchnchick

lerdman4

blessingsbaound

mvose1051
sherry
Joanne

farmgal35
blessedmomof10
CedarCityMom
Billyhomesteader
Sweetmama2

DakotaSoaplady
cindy
countryheart
jennickless
momma25js
MrsC
findingcontentment
millersgrainhouse
browns71280
Countrycamogirl
ApplesofGold
SisterLori
tinabacon9
AbiBuening
gabbie427
homesteadwithlove
mommaofmany
addiema
cowgirl
oldfashionedgirl
specialmom42000
Mae
Mennobrarian
tractorchick72
countrylivin
jrejhkids
Belle
Mama
stitchesbyteresa
Monica
Scattertheseeds
Lancelot
kimbercup
catmint
godsgirlalways2001
Tiredmamaof5
annettedowney

HopefulHeart77
Momof3sons
1Teakettlelavendar
connimom
MissBee

Tabaitha
raspberrydreams
ajhelvie
WeightLossGroup
rosegardencottage
homeschoolmomof4



Entry 136 of 593
Last Page | Next Page




Graphics I like to use


Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket photo sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

dreamweaver statistics

All Content Copyrighted
by TheCFarm.
All Rights Reserved
2006-2008.

florida