Food Suggestions

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In addition to this information Elizabeth Stewart Clark has an article on foods for reenacting entitled “No Refrigeration Needed.”

Slab bacon, pickled pork and/or corned beef, (not the stuff one typically gets at the local grocer, but properly cured.)
Corn meal or flour

Round wheel of cheese
, preserved by rubbing with butter
Lard
Fresh eggs
from the farm (unwashed), keeps about a week when kept out of direct sunlight
Dried Beans

Dark brown sugar or white loaf sugar
(broken into chunks)
Molasses

Period appropriate fruits and vegetables
(generally something like apples, Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes, onions, carrots, or other seasonal type food from the garden or orchard, or from the cellar).
Coffee and/or coffee substitutes
Homemade bread

Jumble cookies
Gingerbread
Pickled eggs
Fried dried apples or fried apple pies
Dried peach pudding
Pickles

Canned goods
with period labels and used with period openers
Condiments
such as pepper sauce, mustard and mushroom catsup

Search period cookbooks for ideas as well. Modern-day “off-the-shelf” foods chosen carefully for their resemblance to period foods are acceptable.

Another resource is “Re-staging an 1861 Picnic Or a Civilian Living History Activity for First Manassas”, page 30-35, Civil War Historian Magazine, May/June 2006, Volume 2 Issue 2.

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From A Journey Through Texas, by Frederick Law Olmsted, 1857.

Beginning in East Texas:
Page 60: “Supper, consisting of pork, fresh and salt, cold corn-bread and boiled sweet potatoes…”

Page 61: “After a breakfast, similar in all respects to the supper…[in Texas] the meals are absolutely invariable, save that fresh pork and sweet potatoes are frequently wanting. There is always, too, the black decoction of the South called coffee, than which it is often difficult to imagine any beverage more revolting. The bread is made of corn-meal, stirred with water and salt, and baked in a kettle covered with coals. The corn for breakfast is frequently unhusked at sunrise…Wheat bread, if I am not mistaken, we met with but twice, out of Austin, in our whole journey across the state.”

Page 65: “At supper we had capital mallard-ducks from the river, as well as the usual Texan diet [referring to pork and corn bread]”.

Page 80: “We cooked a kettle of chocolate…”

Page 84: “There was no flour in the town, except the little of which he made his cakes.

“We inquired at seven stores, and at the two inns, for butter, flour, or wheat-bread, and fresh meat. There was none in town. One inn-keeper offered us salt-beef, the only meat, except pork, in town. At the stores we found crackers…poor raisins…When butter was to be had it came in firkins from New York.”

Page 95: “Until we reached Austin, the people, in cultivation of character and style of life, were as uniform as their pork and corn diet.”

Western Texas:
Page 132: “…a clean table set with wheat-bread, ham, tea, and preserved fruits…”

Page 144: [In New Braunfels at a German home] “…An excellent soup is set before us, and in succession there follow two courses of meat, neither of them pork and neither of them fried, two dishes of vegetables, salad, compote of peaches, coffee with milk, wheat bread from the loaf, and…sweet butter.”

Page 187: [In New Braunfels at a German home] “…For supper we had wheat and Indian bread, buttermilk and eggs. At breakfast, besides the same articles, there were also pfannelkuchen, something between a pancake and an omelet, eaten with butter and sugar.”

Page 245: [near Victoria] “…In the garden were peach and fig-trees, and raspberries. Pears on quince-stocks…The banana is cultivated here and at Indianola, but only as a curiosity…”

Page 254: [in Indianola] “…vegetable gardens, which furnish…salads at all seasons….The native oysters are large and abundant. Game of all kinds is cheap.”

Page 280: [in Dhanis] “…venison, wheat-bread, eggs, milk, butter, cheese, and crisp salad.”

Page 318: [Eagle Pass] “..roast kid, eggs scrambled with sausage meat, and vegetables…”

From Bacon, Beans, and Galantines by Joseph R Conlin. This book deals mostly with the California Gold Rush; however, food descriptions should be applicable to the 1860s as well.

Page 8: “…Samuel Griswold Goodrich described a New England breakfast as ‘no evanescent thing. In a farmer’s family it consists of little less than ham, beef, sausages, pork, bread, butter, boiled potatoes, pies, coffee, and cider.’…John Mack Faragher describes the daily diet of a midwestern [sic] farm family of mid-century as including two kinds of meat, eggs, cheese, butter, cream (especially in gravies), corn in one or more forms, tow kinds of bread, three or four different vegetables, jellies, preserves, relishes, cake or pie, milk, coffee, tea.”

Page 11: “By mid-century beef was replacing pork in the Northeast but pigmeat remained the cushion of southern comfort. There were nearly two hogs per capita in most of the southern states…A writer in Godey’s Lady’s Book sums it up: ‘[In the] South and West…it is fat bacon and pork, fat bacon and pork only, and that continually morning, noon, and night, for all classes, sexes, ages, and conditions; and except the boiled bacon and collards at dinner, the meat is generally fired, and thus supersaturated with grease in the form of hog’s lard.’”

Page 12: “…[Corn] was the staple of the South, eaten in mush, cooked before an open fire as ‘pone’ or hoecake, and baked into a more or less proper bread.”

Page 14: “Beans were ubiquitous at home…”

Page 16: “…common fare during the 1840s were broccoli and artichokes. Other vegetables, of which there are numerous off-handed recipes in the cookbooks and references in the marker reports, were asparagus, lima beans, haricot or string beans, cucumber, eggplant, mushrooms, okra, rutabagas, salsify, and spinach, as well as tomatoes.

“..eating greens and other vegetables raw seems not to have been uncommon….the common American salad was…’composed’ of a variety of vegetables and dressed with a sweetish mayonnaise-based liquor much like the substance contemporary bottlers sometimes label ‘French Dressing.’

“Then there were the preserved vegetables and fruits…”

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