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Historic (rec.food.historic) Discussing and discovering how food was made and prepared way back when--From ancient times down until (& possibly including or even going slightly beyond) the times when industrial revolution began to change our lives. |
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![]() Olivers wrote: > > Arri London muttered.... > > > > > > Ah but that's a feature of much American cooking to us foreigners. > > There is a pervasive sweetness in things that weren't sweet at 'home'. > > > > a collateral track... > > My father's mother, orphaned as a child and raised on a hardscrabble West > Texas ranch near Buffalo Gap aspired to some gentility and the props and > affectations of same in her old age. After my grandfather's death, she > kept her house, and in the 7th and 8th grades I walked two blocks from > school three days a week to lunch with her. That's nice! Lucky you. > > For the first few weeks, lunch always includedd "store bought" light bread. > I had a heck of a time convincing her that I would be more'n happy with > biscuits and even happier with cornbread, especially the "hot water" sort, > "fried", at which she excelled. She had served light bread because she > truly believed in indicated a higher social status or level of > sophistication. She was hardly alone at that time. When I was growing up in Holland, 'white bread' was party bread or special occasion bread. > > Back in the early 50s, produce was still seasonal, and many of the meals > would have been classed as vegetarian except for the standard additions of > "side meat" to the cooking process. In this climate, the hardier greens > are available well into the Winter, but dried bean season starts in October > and runs thru April or so. Except for canned tomatoes, I don't remember > ever having a store bought canned vegetable except for beets (always a > "salad"). I still buy "real" hominy, the dried sort, attempting to recrate > the miracles she could perform with a food most popular those who couldn't > afford cornmeal. Although I was born later, the same was true in Europe. We didn't grow up with much in the way of canned vegetables (which often came in glass jars anyway). > > Having white sugar, brown sugar, molasses and sorghum syrp available and > affordable had given her a sweet toooth in later years, souvenir of a > sugar-deprived childhood, and sweeteners were in many of her recipes, > especially for yeast rolls, which put me off them for years. > > TMO It was hard to get used to when I had to move to the US as an adult. As a kid, my parents avoided those sorts of things when we were in the US. My mother, who has lived in the US longer than I have, certainly has picked up a sweet tooth. When I follow most American baked goods recipes, I cut the sugar by about half unless it's truly essential to the structure. Strangely enough, everyone eats the stuff I bake anyway and asks for more. They don't seem to miss the sugar, despite normally eating much more of it. |
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