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mushroom ketchup
I saw a bottle of this in Tesco's the leading Brit supermarket chain,
yesterday. Made by Geo. Watkins, according to an old recipe. I didn't buy it, as the ingredients were mostly just vinegar etc, and 1% mushroom powder, but I feel that I chickened out, and for the honor of this group I should get some next time and taste it on behalf of us all. Lazarus -- Remover the rock from the email address |
mushroom ketchup
On Tue, 18 May 2004 14:23:08 +0100, Lazarus Cooke > wrote: >I saw a bottle of this in Tesco's the leading Brit supermarket chain, >yesterday. Made by Geo. Watkins, according to an old recipe. > >I didn't buy it, as the ingredients were mostly just vinegar etc, and >1% mushroom powder, but I feel that I chickened out, and for the honor >of this group I should get some next time and taste it on behalf of us >all. > >Lazarus 1% mushroom powder by weight probably represents some 25% by volume of the sauce, remembering by how much dried mushrooms swell in water. Yes, buy it and let us know what it tastes like. BTW, Mrs Beeton's receipe for mushroom ketchup doesn't contain any vinegar: MUSHROOM KETCHUP. 472. INGREDIENTS.—To each peck of mushrooms 1/2 lb. of salt; to each quart of mushroom-liquor 1/4 oz. of cayenne, 1/2 oz. of allspice, 1/2 oz. of ginger, 2 blades of pounded mace. Mode.—Choose full-grown mushroom-flaps, and take care they are perfectly fresh-gathered when the weather is tolerably dry; for, if they are picked during very heavy rain, the ketchup from which they are made is liable to get musty, and will not keep long. Put a layer of them in a deep pan, sprinkle salt over them, and then another layer of mushrooms, and so on alternately. Let them remain for a few hours, when break them up with the hand; put them in a nice cool place for 3 days, occasionally stirring and mashing them well, to extract from them as much juice as possible. Now measure the quantity of liquor without straining, and to each quart allow the above proportion of spices, &c. Put all into a stone jar, cover it up very closely, put it in a saucepan of boiling water, set it over the fire, and let it boil for 3 hours. Have ready a nice clean stewpan; turn into it the contents of the jar, and let the whole simmer very gently for 1/2 hour; pour it into a jug, where it should stand in a cool place till the next day; then pour it off into another jug, and strain it into very dry clean bottles, and do not squeeze the mushrooms. To each pint of ketchup add a few drops of brandy. Be careful not to shake the contents, but leave all the sediment behind in the jug; cork well, and either seal or rosin the cork, so as perfectly to exclude the air. When a very clear bright ketchup is wanted, the liquor must be strained through a very fine hair-sieve, or flannel bag, after it has been very gently poured off; if the operation is not successful, it must be repeated until you have quite a clear liquor. It should be examined occasionally, and if it is spoiling, should be reboiled with a few peppercorns. |
mushroom ketchup
In article >, Richard Wright
> wrote: > 1% mushroom powder by weight probably represents some 25% by volume of > the sauce, remembering by how much dried mushrooms swell in water. I know, I know. I thought the same thing just after I'd left. I buy dried porcini at absurd prices by weight, but they're good value by flavor. I'll get back to you. L -- Remover the rock from the email address |
mushroom ketchup
Here is a recipe for Mushroom Ketchup using American measurements.
I haven't tried it myself but all these posts have inspired me to give it a try. The recipe does not give an amount for the vinegar -- I think that must be a typo -- so I guess the best approach is to add vinegar little by little until the desired piquancy is achieved. BTW, someone in another thread was talking about early catsups in terms of condiments. My impression from reading old cookbooks is that they were used to flavor sauces and gravies. I didn't think they made it to the table for individual diners to use as condiments. Anyone think otherwise? Mushroom Ketchup 3/4 ounce (1 package) dried boletus (porcini or cepes) (optional) 3 pounds mushrooms 2 tablespoons sea or pickling salt 1 whole pod cayenne pepper, or 1/4 teaspoon crushed hot red pepper flakes 1/2 teaspoon whole black peppercorns 1/2 teaspoon whole allspice 1/2 teaspoon whole cloves 1 or 2 blades mace, broken up, or large pinch of powdered mace 1/2 nutmeg, crushed 2 bay leaves 1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger root 2 large shallots 4 to 6 garlic cloves Red wine vinegar 2 tablespoons red wine I. If you are using the dried mushrooms, spread them in a heatproof bowl. Bring 1 cup of water to a full boil, and pour it over them. Let them steep for half an hour, then lift the mushrooms out carefully, dipping them in the water to loosen any sand that may be attached. Put them in a saucepan that will hold all their soaking water comfortably. Pour the water over the mushrooms, through a coffee filter or an undyed paper towel, and turn on the heat to medium. Cook the mushrooms until the liquid has evaporated and been absorbed, stirring frequently to keep them from sticking or scorching. Turn off the heat and let them cool. 2. Wipe the fresh mushrooms with a dry towel to remove any grit that may be clinging to them. If they are very large, break them into several pieces. Put a layer of them in the bottom of a ceramic or stone crock with the reconstituted wild mushrooms, if using, and their juice. Sprinkle them liberally with salt. Put on another layer of mushrooms and salt, continuing until all the mushrooms and salt are used. 3. Cover the crock tightly and set it in a cool, dark place. (If your house is particularly warm [more than 70° F.], this had better be the refrigerator, because the mushrooms will mold on the top if allowed to sit for too long at too high a temperature.) After the mushrooms have steeped for only a few minutes, they will begin to wilt. Within an hour or two, the contents of the crock will have reduced by half. Let them steep for at least 24 hours, pressing on them from time to time with a clean spoon. 4. After the mushrooms have steeped for the allotted time, set a food mill or large wire sieve over a stainless-steel or enameled kettle large enough to hold the contents of the crock. Force the mushrooms through the mill or sieve, along with all their juices that have accumulated, into the saucepan. (Don't use a food processor; it will puree the mushrooms too fine.) 5. Add the cayenne or pepper flakes, peppercorns, allspice, cloves, mace, nutmeg, bay leaves, and ginger. Crush the shallots and garlic and add them to the kettle. Turn on the heat to medium. Bring the mixture to a boil, reduce the heat to a simmer, and cook uncovered for about 45 minutes, until the ketchup is fragrant and somewhat reduced. Turn off the heat and let it cool completely. 6. Strain the mixture through a fine wire sieve into a measuring cup, pressing hard to get all the liquid extracted. Discard the solids. Wipe out the kettle, then measure the juice and return it to the kettle. If there is more than 1 3/4 cups, bring it back to a brisk boil and reduce it to that amount. Add the vinegar and wine, then reduce the heat to medium. Let the ketchup simmer gently for about 5 minutes more. Turn off the heat and pour it, while still hot, into a sterilized heatproof jar or bottle. 7. Seal the jar or bottle and let it cool, then refrigerate it. Stored in the refrigerator, it will keep for several months. Makes 16 ounces (1 pint) NOTES: This recipe sounds time-consuming, but actually it is not. I estimate that, all totaled, only about three-quarters of an hour of my time is required. The rest of the time (steeping, simmering, etc.) is pretty much unattended. On the ingredients: Too much salt will make the mixture coarse and banal, not enough will invite spoilage, so be judicious. Many English recipes specify white wine rather than red, which makes a distinct difference in flavor. If you elect to substitute it, also use white wine vinegar. As to the mushrooms: remember that early cooks used only wild mushrooms. If you can get wild mushrooms, please feel free to use. The little white button mushrooms from the supermarket are lost in this strongly flavored sauce unless you combine them, as Bill Neal suggested, with dried Boletus edulis as outlined here. All the old recipes used allspice and ginger; most Southern recipes included cayenne and either nutmeg or mace and, occasionally, both. Less frequently used were black pepper, cloves, shallots, and garlic, though they were usual in eighteenth-century English recipes. --- This recipe comes from Classical Southern Cooking by Damon Lee Fowler. |
mushroom ketchup
"Cookie Cutter" > wrote in message ... > Here is a recipe for Mushroom Ketchup using American measurements. > I haven't tried it myself but all these posts have inspired me to give > it a try. The recipe does not give an amount for the vinegar -- I think > that must be a typo -- so I guess the best approach is to add vinegar > little by little until the desired piquancy is achieved. > > BTW, someone in another thread was talking about early catsups > in terms of condiments. My impression from reading old cookbooks > is that they were used to flavor sauces and gravies. I didn't think > they made it to the table for individual diners to use as condiments. > Anyone think otherwise? > > A brief history of ketchup A look at the history of ketchup From its beginning as a fish sauce in China, to the sweet tomato version we love today. Nearly everyone likes ketchup, even if what they like to put it on seems odd-Nixon covered his cottage cheese with it, the Japanese eat it on rice, and one ice cream manufacturer allegedly once tried a ketchup ice cream. But how did this condiment, by some estimates owned by 97% of US households, become America's favorite accompaniment to the classic hamburger and fries? In the 1600s Dutch and British seamen brought back a salty pickled fish sauce called 'ketsiap' from China. In this version, it was more related to soy or oyster sauce than the sweet, vinegary substance we call ketchup today. Variations in both the name and the ingredients quickly developed. British alternatives included mushrooms (the favorite), anchovies, oysters, and walnuts. In 1690 the word 'catchup' appeared in print in reference to this sauce, and in 1711 'ketchup'. The first ketchup recipe was printed in 1727 in Elizabeth Smith's The Compleat Housewife, and called for anchovies, shallots, vinegar, white wine, sweet spices (cloves, ginger, mace, nutmeg), pepper, and lemon peel. Eighty-five years later the first tomato ketchup recipe was published in Nova Scotia by American ex-pat James Mease, which he often refers to as 'love apple' ketchup-he attempts to give it more cachet by stating that this variation is influenced by French cooking, although there is no proof of it. Recipes continued to appear periodically, featuring mushrooms in Britain and tomatoes in the United States. A New England Farmer offered it for sale in 1830 in bottles, and priced from 33 to 50 cents. In 1837, Americans selling ketchup in Britain were encouraged to rename it 'tomato chutney' in order to draw attention to the differences between their product and the mushroom ketchup popular in Britain. In addition to the difference in ingredients, the British version also differed in texture, being nearly transparent and very thin in consistency. Ketchup was sold nationwide in the US by 1837 thanks to the hard work of Jonas Yerkes, who sold the product in quart and pint bottles. He used the refuse of tomato canning-skins, cores, green tomatoes, and lots of sugar and vinegar. Lots of other small companies followed suit-by 1900 there were 100 manufacturers of ketchup. The big success came in 1872 when HJ Heinz added ketchup to his line of pickled products and introduced it at the Philadelphia fair. The Heinz formula has not changed since, and has become the standard by which other ketchups are rated. In 1848 some ketchup manufacturers came under fire for their unsanitary practices-coal tar was frequently used to heighten the red color. Others made the condiment from concentrated tomato pulp in the off-season, which they stored in questionable circumstances. This debate continued until the 1900s, when the Pure Food Act put strict limits on food manufacturers. (Today's FDA has very strict guidelines on what even constitutes ketchup, specifying the spices that must be used, as well as the thickness of the end result.) So, what's in a name? Variations such as catsup, catchup, katsup, and others abounded alongside 'ketchup'. However, when the Reagan administration briefly decided to count ketchup as a vegetable in 1981, Del Monte Catsup found itself out of the loop due to their spelling-they permanently changed to 'ketchup', but by then public outcry had forced a reversal of administration policy. Ever since, though, you'll be hard-pressed to find a bottle from any manufacturer labeled anything other than 'ketchup'. Although it frequently graces such foods as fries and greasy burgers, ketchup itself has a moderate health benefit, as it contains lycopene, an antioxidant associated with decreased cancer risk. (Unlikely that it's enough to cancel out the negative effects of the fries, though.) |
mushroom ketchup
"Cookie Cutter" > wrote in message ... > Here is a recipe for Mushroom Ketchup using American measurements. > I haven't tried it myself but all these posts have inspired me to give > it a try. The recipe does not give an amount for the vinegar -- I think > that must be a typo -- so I guess the best approach is to add vinegar > little by little until the desired piquancy is achieved. > > BTW, someone in another thread was talking about early catsups > in terms of condiments. My impression from reading old cookbooks > is that they were used to flavor sauces and gravies. I didn't think > they made it to the table for individual diners to use as condiments. > Anyone think otherwise? > > A brief history of ketchup A look at the history of ketchup From its beginning as a fish sauce in China, to the sweet tomato version we love today. Nearly everyone likes ketchup, even if what they like to put it on seems odd-Nixon covered his cottage cheese with it, the Japanese eat it on rice, and one ice cream manufacturer allegedly once tried a ketchup ice cream. But how did this condiment, by some estimates owned by 97% of US households, become America's favorite accompaniment to the classic hamburger and fries? In the 1600s Dutch and British seamen brought back a salty pickled fish sauce called 'ketsiap' from China. In this version, it was more related to soy or oyster sauce than the sweet, vinegary substance we call ketchup today. Variations in both the name and the ingredients quickly developed. British alternatives included mushrooms (the favorite), anchovies, oysters, and walnuts. In 1690 the word 'catchup' appeared in print in reference to this sauce, and in 1711 'ketchup'. The first ketchup recipe was printed in 1727 in Elizabeth Smith's The Compleat Housewife, and called for anchovies, shallots, vinegar, white wine, sweet spices (cloves, ginger, mace, nutmeg), pepper, and lemon peel. Eighty-five years later the first tomato ketchup recipe was published in Nova Scotia by American ex-pat James Mease, which he often refers to as 'love apple' ketchup-he attempts to give it more cachet by stating that this variation is influenced by French cooking, although there is no proof of it. Recipes continued to appear periodically, featuring mushrooms in Britain and tomatoes in the United States. A New England Farmer offered it for sale in 1830 in bottles, and priced from 33 to 50 cents. In 1837, Americans selling ketchup in Britain were encouraged to rename it 'tomato chutney' in order to draw attention to the differences between their product and the mushroom ketchup popular in Britain. In addition to the difference in ingredients, the British version also differed in texture, being nearly transparent and very thin in consistency. Ketchup was sold nationwide in the US by 1837 thanks to the hard work of Jonas Yerkes, who sold the product in quart and pint bottles. He used the refuse of tomato canning-skins, cores, green tomatoes, and lots of sugar and vinegar. Lots of other small companies followed suit-by 1900 there were 100 manufacturers of ketchup. The big success came in 1872 when HJ Heinz added ketchup to his line of pickled products and introduced it at the Philadelphia fair. The Heinz formula has not changed since, and has become the standard by which other ketchups are rated. In 1848 some ketchup manufacturers came under fire for their unsanitary practices-coal tar was frequently used to heighten the red color. Others made the condiment from concentrated tomato pulp in the off-season, which they stored in questionable circumstances. This debate continued until the 1900s, when the Pure Food Act put strict limits on food manufacturers. (Today's FDA has very strict guidelines on what even constitutes ketchup, specifying the spices that must be used, as well as the thickness of the end result.) So, what's in a name? Variations such as catsup, catchup, katsup, and others abounded alongside 'ketchup'. However, when the Reagan administration briefly decided to count ketchup as a vegetable in 1981, Del Monte Catsup found itself out of the loop due to their spelling-they permanently changed to 'ketchup', but by then public outcry had forced a reversal of administration policy. Ever since, though, you'll be hard-pressed to find a bottle from any manufacturer labeled anything other than 'ketchup'. Although it frequently graces such foods as fries and greasy burgers, ketchup itself has a moderate health benefit, as it contains lycopene, an antioxidant associated with decreased cancer risk. (Unlikely that it's enough to cancel out the negative effects of the fries, though.) |
mushroom ketchup
"Cookie Cutter" > wrote in message ... > Here is a recipe for Mushroom Ketchup using American measurements. > I haven't tried it myself but all these posts have inspired me to give > it a try. The recipe does not give an amount for the vinegar -- I think > that must be a typo -- so I guess the best approach is to add vinegar > little by little until the desired piquancy is achieved. > > BTW, someone in another thread was talking about early catsups > in terms of condiments. My impression from reading old cookbooks > is that they were used to flavor sauces and gravies. I didn't think > they made it to the table for individual diners to use as condiments. > Anyone think otherwise? > > A brief history of ketchup A look at the history of ketchup From its beginning as a fish sauce in China, to the sweet tomato version we love today. Nearly everyone likes ketchup, even if what they like to put it on seems odd-Nixon covered his cottage cheese with it, the Japanese eat it on rice, and one ice cream manufacturer allegedly once tried a ketchup ice cream. But how did this condiment, by some estimates owned by 97% of US households, become America's favorite accompaniment to the classic hamburger and fries? In the 1600s Dutch and British seamen brought back a salty pickled fish sauce called 'ketsiap' from China. In this version, it was more related to soy or oyster sauce than the sweet, vinegary substance we call ketchup today. Variations in both the name and the ingredients quickly developed. British alternatives included mushrooms (the favorite), anchovies, oysters, and walnuts. In 1690 the word 'catchup' appeared in print in reference to this sauce, and in 1711 'ketchup'. The first ketchup recipe was printed in 1727 in Elizabeth Smith's The Compleat Housewife, and called for anchovies, shallots, vinegar, white wine, sweet spices (cloves, ginger, mace, nutmeg), pepper, and lemon peel. Eighty-five years later the first tomato ketchup recipe was published in Nova Scotia by American ex-pat James Mease, which he often refers to as 'love apple' ketchup-he attempts to give it more cachet by stating that this variation is influenced by French cooking, although there is no proof of it. Recipes continued to appear periodically, featuring mushrooms in Britain and tomatoes in the United States. A New England Farmer offered it for sale in 1830 in bottles, and priced from 33 to 50 cents. In 1837, Americans selling ketchup in Britain were encouraged to rename it 'tomato chutney' in order to draw attention to the differences between their product and the mushroom ketchup popular in Britain. In addition to the difference in ingredients, the British version also differed in texture, being nearly transparent and very thin in consistency. Ketchup was sold nationwide in the US by 1837 thanks to the hard work of Jonas Yerkes, who sold the product in quart and pint bottles. He used the refuse of tomato canning-skins, cores, green tomatoes, and lots of sugar and vinegar. Lots of other small companies followed suit-by 1900 there were 100 manufacturers of ketchup. The big success came in 1872 when HJ Heinz added ketchup to his line of pickled products and introduced it at the Philadelphia fair. The Heinz formula has not changed since, and has become the standard by which other ketchups are rated. In 1848 some ketchup manufacturers came under fire for their unsanitary practices-coal tar was frequently used to heighten the red color. Others made the condiment from concentrated tomato pulp in the off-season, which they stored in questionable circumstances. This debate continued until the 1900s, when the Pure Food Act put strict limits on food manufacturers. (Today's FDA has very strict guidelines on what even constitutes ketchup, specifying the spices that must be used, as well as the thickness of the end result.) So, what's in a name? Variations such as catsup, catchup, katsup, and others abounded alongside 'ketchup'. However, when the Reagan administration briefly decided to count ketchup as a vegetable in 1981, Del Monte Catsup found itself out of the loop due to their spelling-they permanently changed to 'ketchup', but by then public outcry had forced a reversal of administration policy. Ever since, though, you'll be hard-pressed to find a bottle from any manufacturer labeled anything other than 'ketchup'. Although it frequently graces such foods as fries and greasy burgers, ketchup itself has a moderate health benefit, as it contains lycopene, an antioxidant associated with decreased cancer risk. (Unlikely that it's enough to cancel out the negative effects of the fries, though.) |
mushroom ketchup
>
> >In the 1600s Dutch and British seamen brought back a salty pickled fish >sauce called 'ketsiap' from China. Not true. No evidence for Dutch or British seamen bring back pickled fish sauce from China. Englishmen did bring it back from Indonesia. In this version, it was more related to >soy or oyster sauce than the sweet, vinegary substance we call ketchup >today. Variations in both the name and the ingredients quickly developed. >British alternatives included mushrooms (the favorite), anchovies, oysters, >and walnuts. In 1690 the word 'catchup' appeared in print in reference to >this sauce, and in 1711 'ketchup'. > The work "catch-up" first appeared in print in 1682; "ketchup" in 1682. > >The first ketchup recipe was printed in 1727 in Elizabeth Smith's The >Compleat Housewife, No evidence for E. Smith's first name being "Elizabeth." >Eighty-five years later the first tomato ketchup recipe was published in >Nova Scotia by American ex-pat James Mease, which he often refers to as >'love apple' ketchup-he attempts to give it more cachet by stating that this >variation is influenced by French cooking, although there is no proof of it. Not true. James Mease was an American who had nothing to do with Nova Scotia. There is nothing "French" about his recipe, and Mease made no such claim. > > >Recipes continued to appear periodically, featuring mushrooms in Britain and >tomatoes in the United States. Tomato, mushroom, etc. ketchup recipes were published both in the US and in England until the early 20th century. > >Ketchup was sold nationwide in the US by 1837 thanks to the hard work of >Jonas Yerkes, who sold the product in quart and pint bottles. Yerkes hadn't even been born in 1837, so I don't think we can thank him for his work at that time. He used the >refuse of tomato canning-skins, cores, green tomatoes, and lots of sugar and >vinegar. Lots of other small companies followed suit-by 1900 there were 100 >manufacturers of ketchup. The big success came in 1872 when HJ Heinz added >ketchup to his line of pickled products and introduced it at the >Philadelphia fair. This is absolutely false. Heinz didn't sell ketchup in 1872, and his company went broke in 1875. It did not display anything at the Philadelphia Centennial Fair in 1876. The Heinz formula has not changed since, > This is pure BS. I have the original formula, and if you use it, it ends up a ruddy brown, thin product. > >In 1848 some ketchup manufacturers came under fire for their unsanitary >practices-coal tar was frequently used to heighten the red color. No ketchup manufacture came "under fire in 1848, or anytime thereafter for decades. Who makes up this stuff? Andy Smith |
mushroom ketchup
>
> >In the 1600s Dutch and British seamen brought back a salty pickled fish >sauce called 'ketsiap' from China. Not true. No evidence for Dutch or British seamen bring back pickled fish sauce from China. Englishmen did bring it back from Indonesia. In this version, it was more related to >soy or oyster sauce than the sweet, vinegary substance we call ketchup >today. Variations in both the name and the ingredients quickly developed. >British alternatives included mushrooms (the favorite), anchovies, oysters, >and walnuts. In 1690 the word 'catchup' appeared in print in reference to >this sauce, and in 1711 'ketchup'. > The work "catch-up" first appeared in print in 1682; "ketchup" in 1682. > >The first ketchup recipe was printed in 1727 in Elizabeth Smith's The >Compleat Housewife, No evidence for E. Smith's first name being "Elizabeth." >Eighty-five years later the first tomato ketchup recipe was published in >Nova Scotia by American ex-pat James Mease, which he often refers to as >'love apple' ketchup-he attempts to give it more cachet by stating that this >variation is influenced by French cooking, although there is no proof of it. Not true. James Mease was an American who had nothing to do with Nova Scotia. There is nothing "French" about his recipe, and Mease made no such claim. > > >Recipes continued to appear periodically, featuring mushrooms in Britain and >tomatoes in the United States. Tomato, mushroom, etc. ketchup recipes were published both in the US and in England until the early 20th century. > >Ketchup was sold nationwide in the US by 1837 thanks to the hard work of >Jonas Yerkes, who sold the product in quart and pint bottles. Yerkes hadn't even been born in 1837, so I don't think we can thank him for his work at that time. He used the >refuse of tomato canning-skins, cores, green tomatoes, and lots of sugar and >vinegar. Lots of other small companies followed suit-by 1900 there were 100 >manufacturers of ketchup. The big success came in 1872 when HJ Heinz added >ketchup to his line of pickled products and introduced it at the >Philadelphia fair. This is absolutely false. Heinz didn't sell ketchup in 1872, and his company went broke in 1875. It did not display anything at the Philadelphia Centennial Fair in 1876. The Heinz formula has not changed since, > This is pure BS. I have the original formula, and if you use it, it ends up a ruddy brown, thin product. > >In 1848 some ketchup manufacturers came under fire for their unsanitary >practices-coal tar was frequently used to heighten the red color. No ketchup manufacture came "under fire in 1848, or anytime thereafter for decades. Who makes up this stuff? Andy Smith |
mushroom ketchup
ASmith1946 wrote:
>> >>In the 1600s Dutch and British seamen brought back a salty pickled fish >>sauce called 'ketsiap' from China. > > Not true. No evidence for Dutch or British seamen bring back pickled fish sauce > from China. Englishmen did bring it back from Indonesia. <<< snip >>> > The Heinz formula has not changed since, > > > This is pure BS. I have the original formula, and if you use it, it ends up a > ruddy brown, thin product. > >>In 1848 some ketchup manufacturers came under fire for their unsanitary >>practices-coal tar was frequently used to heighten the red color. > > No ketchup manufacture came "under fire in 1848, or anytime thereafter for > decades. > > Who makes up this stuff? <LOL> There's a guy in Secaucus, New Jersey (where else?) who makes his living by writing stuff to bedevil people. Last one I saw from him was the list of where words come from. That whole thing that included "honeymoon" and "throwing out the baby with the bath water" and things like that. I'm totally serious. Pastorio |
mushroom ketchup
ASmith1946 wrote:
>> >>In the 1600s Dutch and British seamen brought back a salty pickled fish >>sauce called 'ketsiap' from China. > > Not true. No evidence for Dutch or British seamen bring back pickled fish sauce > from China. Englishmen did bring it back from Indonesia. <<< snip >>> > The Heinz formula has not changed since, > > > This is pure BS. I have the original formula, and if you use it, it ends up a > ruddy brown, thin product. > >>In 1848 some ketchup manufacturers came under fire for their unsanitary >>practices-coal tar was frequently used to heighten the red color. > > No ketchup manufacture came "under fire in 1848, or anytime thereafter for > decades. > > Who makes up this stuff? <LOL> There's a guy in Secaucus, New Jersey (where else?) who makes his living by writing stuff to bedevil people. Last one I saw from him was the list of where words come from. That whole thing that included "honeymoon" and "throwing out the baby with the bath water" and things like that. I'm totally serious. Pastorio |
mushroom ketchup
Bob (this one) extrapolated from data available...
> ASmith1946 wrote: > >>> >>>In the 1600s Dutch and British seamen brought back a salty pickled >>>fish sauce called 'ketsiap' from China. >> >> Not true. No evidence for Dutch or British seamen bring back pickled >> fish sauce from China. Englishmen did bring it back from Indonesia. > > <<< snip >>> > >> The Heinz formula has not changed since, > >> >> This is pure BS. I have the original formula, and if you use it, it >> ends up a ruddy brown, thin product. >> >>>In 1848 some ketchup manufacturers came under fire for their >>>unsanitary practices-coal tar was frequently used to heighten the red >>>color. >> >> No ketchup manufacture came "under fire in 1848, or anytime >> thereafter for decades. >> >> Who makes up this stuff? > > <LOL> There's a guy in Secaucus, New Jersey (where else?) who makes > his living by writing stuff to bedevil people. Last one I saw from him > was the list of where words come from. That whole thing that included > "honeymoon" and "throwing out the baby with the bath water" and things > like that. > > I'm totally serious. > More subjects and more ridiculous than even that noted cookbook author whose name eveades me whose treatises on Western cooking methods and recipes range from "just plumb silly" to "What was he smoking?". TMO |
mushroom ketchup
Bob (this one) extrapolated from data available...
> ASmith1946 wrote: > >>> >>>In the 1600s Dutch and British seamen brought back a salty pickled >>>fish sauce called 'ketsiap' from China. >> >> Not true. No evidence for Dutch or British seamen bring back pickled >> fish sauce from China. Englishmen did bring it back from Indonesia. > > <<< snip >>> > >> The Heinz formula has not changed since, > >> >> This is pure BS. I have the original formula, and if you use it, it >> ends up a ruddy brown, thin product. >> >>>In 1848 some ketchup manufacturers came under fire for their >>>unsanitary practices-coal tar was frequently used to heighten the red >>>color. >> >> No ketchup manufacture came "under fire in 1848, or anytime >> thereafter for decades. >> >> Who makes up this stuff? > > <LOL> There's a guy in Secaucus, New Jersey (where else?) who makes > his living by writing stuff to bedevil people. Last one I saw from him > was the list of where words come from. That whole thing that included > "honeymoon" and "throwing out the baby with the bath water" and things > like that. > > I'm totally serious. > More subjects and more ridiculous than even that noted cookbook author whose name eveades me whose treatises on Western cooking methods and recipes range from "just plumb silly" to "What was he smoking?". TMO |
mushroom ketchup
Olivers wrote:
> Bob (this one) extrapolated from data available... >> >><LOL> There's a guy in Secaucus, New Jersey (where else?) who makes >>his living by writing stuff to bedevil people. Last one I saw from him >>was the list of where words come from. That whole thing that included >>"honeymoon" and "throwing out the baby with the bath water" and things >>like that. >> >>I'm totally serious. >> > More subjects and more ridiculous than even that noted cookbook author > whose name eveades me whose treatises on Western cooking methods and > recipes range from "just plumb silly" to "What was he smoking?". That would probably be George Herter and his truly astounding book called "Bull Cook." I can't imagine he understood exactly how appropriate the title is. But there are certainly others out there. "Cooking with Intuition" by Fred Mansbridge who calls himself "the world's happiest psychic" is a trip down trip lane. Subtitled, "The revolutionary way to become a gourmet cook OVERNIGHT [his caps]." A be-sure-to-miss on any culinary adventure. "New Native American Cooking" by Dale Carson who admits that "All the recipes in this book are based on traditional dishes or have been developed using traditional foods. Traditional foods, in my interpretation are those that are either indigenous to the Americas (corn, tomatoes, beans, squash, berries, maple, varieties of game meats and fowl, fish and shellfish, etc.) or whose introductions were readily embraced by indigenous peoples (apples, wheat and oat flours, leavening, dairy products, eggs, etc.). [] This is a food enthusiast's book of updated and original recipes that call for the delicious foods gathered, hunted, fished, cultivated, cooked and enjoyed by native peoples for centuries." They didn't eat eggs before Europeans showed them? Original recipes that have been enjoyed for centuries... Right. Like wild blueberry ice cream... There are so, so many more like these... Pastorio |
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Olivers wrote:
> Bob (this one) extrapolated from data available... >> >><LOL> There's a guy in Secaucus, New Jersey (where else?) who makes >>his living by writing stuff to bedevil people. Last one I saw from him >>was the list of where words come from. That whole thing that included >>"honeymoon" and "throwing out the baby with the bath water" and things >>like that. >> >>I'm totally serious. >> > More subjects and more ridiculous than even that noted cookbook author > whose name eveades me whose treatises on Western cooking methods and > recipes range from "just plumb silly" to "What was he smoking?". That would probably be George Herter and his truly astounding book called "Bull Cook." I can't imagine he understood exactly how appropriate the title is. But there are certainly others out there. "Cooking with Intuition" by Fred Mansbridge who calls himself "the world's happiest psychic" is a trip down trip lane. Subtitled, "The revolutionary way to become a gourmet cook OVERNIGHT [his caps]." A be-sure-to-miss on any culinary adventure. "New Native American Cooking" by Dale Carson who admits that "All the recipes in this book are based on traditional dishes or have been developed using traditional foods. Traditional foods, in my interpretation are those that are either indigenous to the Americas (corn, tomatoes, beans, squash, berries, maple, varieties of game meats and fowl, fish and shellfish, etc.) or whose introductions were readily embraced by indigenous peoples (apples, wheat and oat flours, leavening, dairy products, eggs, etc.). [] This is a food enthusiast's book of updated and original recipes that call for the delicious foods gathered, hunted, fished, cultivated, cooked and enjoyed by native peoples for centuries." They didn't eat eggs before Europeans showed them? Original recipes that have been enjoyed for centuries... Right. Like wild blueberry ice cream... There are so, so many more like these... Pastorio |
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Bob (this one) extrapolated from data available...
... Right. > Like wild blueberry ice cream... > > There are so, so many more like these... > That's no "boil in a bag" Pueblo basket, Bob. That's a home ice cream freezer... The little basket with the cream and eggs goes inside, then the snow and the some of that gypsum salt from down on the Pecos around them. Twirl it around your head forty times, and it's ice cream. Next year , if the bees will cooperate, we can make it taste better, and if the shaman Looks Like Puke makes it back from his pilgrimage to he cenotes of the Yucatan, maybe we'll have some vanilla beans to add. Meanwhile, scrape the skin off some more of them peaches, Little Bird With Big Butt. TMO Next you'll be showing us one of the PreColumbian deep fat fryers for making "Indian Fry Bread". |
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Bob (this one) extrapolated from data available...
... Right. > Like wild blueberry ice cream... > > There are so, so many more like these... > That's no "boil in a bag" Pueblo basket, Bob. That's a home ice cream freezer... The little basket with the cream and eggs goes inside, then the snow and the some of that gypsum salt from down on the Pecos around them. Twirl it around your head forty times, and it's ice cream. Next year , if the bees will cooperate, we can make it taste better, and if the shaman Looks Like Puke makes it back from his pilgrimage to he cenotes of the Yucatan, maybe we'll have some vanilla beans to add. Meanwhile, scrape the skin off some more of them peaches, Little Bird With Big Butt. TMO Next you'll be showing us one of the PreColumbian deep fat fryers for making "Indian Fry Bread". |
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Olivers wrote:
> Bob (this one) extrapolated from data available... > ... Right. > >>Like wild blueberry ice cream... >> >>There are so, so many more like these... >> > That's no "boil in a bag" Pueblo basket, Bob. That's a home ice cream > freezer... > > The little basket with the cream and eggs goes inside, then the snow and > the some of that gypsum salt from down on the Pecos around them. Twirl it > around your head forty times, and it's ice cream. Next year, if the bees > will cooperate, we can make it taste better, and if the shaman Looks Like > Puke makes it back from his pilgrimage to the cenotes of the Yucatan, maybe > we'll have some vanilla beans to add. > > Meanwhile, scrape the skin off some more of them peaches, Little Bird With > Big Butt. > > TMO > > Next you'll be showing us one of the PreColumbian deep fat fryers for > making "Indian Fry Bread". Had some Pre-Columbian coffee a little while ago. Along with some xocholotl-chip cookies. Yummy. Pastorio |
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Olivers wrote:
> Bob (this one) extrapolated from data available... > ... Right. > >>Like wild blueberry ice cream... >> >>There are so, so many more like these... >> > That's no "boil in a bag" Pueblo basket, Bob. That's a home ice cream > freezer... > > The little basket with the cream and eggs goes inside, then the snow and > the some of that gypsum salt from down on the Pecos around them. Twirl it > around your head forty times, and it's ice cream. Next year, if the bees > will cooperate, we can make it taste better, and if the shaman Looks Like > Puke makes it back from his pilgrimage to the cenotes of the Yucatan, maybe > we'll have some vanilla beans to add. > > Meanwhile, scrape the skin off some more of them peaches, Little Bird With > Big Butt. > > TMO > > Next you'll be showing us one of the PreColumbian deep fat fryers for > making "Indian Fry Bread". Had some Pre-Columbian coffee a little while ago. Along with some xocholotl-chip cookies. Yummy. Pastorio |
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On Sat, 31 Jul 2004 20:25:37 -0400, "Bob (this one)" >
wrote: >Had some Pre-Columbian coffee a little while ago. Along with some >xocholotl-chip cookies. > >Yummy. > >Pastorio I know someone who makes chocolotl chip cookies. She adds cayenne to them. (She doesn't pretend that there is anything historical about them, of course.) Robin Carroll-Mann "Mostly Harmless" -- Douglas Adams To email me, remove the fish |
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On Sat, 31 Jul 2004 20:25:37 -0400, "Bob (this one)" >
wrote: >Had some Pre-Columbian coffee a little while ago. Along with some >xocholotl-chip cookies. > >Yummy. > >Pastorio I know someone who makes chocolotl chip cookies. She adds cayenne to them. (She doesn't pretend that there is anything historical about them, of course.) Robin Carroll-Mann "Mostly Harmless" -- Douglas Adams To email me, remove the fish |
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Robin Carroll-Mann wrote:
> On Sat, 31 Jul 2004 20:25:37 -0400, "Bob (this one)" > > wrote: > > >>Had some Pre-Columbian coffee a little while ago. Along with some >>xocholotl-chip cookies. >> >>Yummy. >> >>Pastorio > > I know someone who makes chocolotl chip cookies. She adds cayenne to > them. (She doesn't pretend that there is anything historical about > them, of course.) Gary Jennings (who wrote the novel "Aztec" and others about them) was a friend and a very knowledgeable foodie. He researched the background for those novels for 8 years. Whew. How thorough can you get? That's where I got that spelling for chocolate. The "x" is pronounced like "sh." According to him, the crude (unconched) chocolate they enjoyed often included hot peppers of one sort or another and was considered an aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. Moctezuma reportedly drank 50 cups of it a day. I hope they were small cups or he spent his whole day in the potty. Pastorio |
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Robin Carroll-Mann wrote:
> On Sat, 31 Jul 2004 20:25:37 -0400, "Bob (this one)" > > wrote: > > >>Had some Pre-Columbian coffee a little while ago. Along with some >>xocholotl-chip cookies. >> >>Yummy. >> >>Pastorio > > I know someone who makes chocolotl chip cookies. She adds cayenne to > them. (She doesn't pretend that there is anything historical about > them, of course.) Gary Jennings (who wrote the novel "Aztec" and others about them) was a friend and a very knowledgeable foodie. He researched the background for those novels for 8 years. Whew. How thorough can you get? That's where I got that spelling for chocolate. The "x" is pronounced like "sh." According to him, the crude (unconched) chocolate they enjoyed often included hot peppers of one sort or another and was considered an aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. Moctezuma reportedly drank 50 cups of it a day. I hope they were small cups or he spent his whole day in the potty. Pastorio |
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"Bob (this one)" > wrote
> According to him, the crude (unconched) chocolate they enjoyed often > included hot peppers of one sort or another and was considered an > aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. Moctezuma reportedly > drank 50 cups of it a day. I hope they were small cups or he spent his > whole day in the potty. This imparts a whole new meaning to "Montezuma's Revenge", an affliction that besets NordAmericanos visiting Mexico for the first time. -- Bob Kanyak's Doghouse http://www.kanyak.com |
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"Bob (this one)" > wrote
> According to him, the crude (unconched) chocolate they enjoyed often > included hot peppers of one sort or another and was considered an > aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. Moctezuma reportedly > drank 50 cups of it a day. I hope they were small cups or he spent his > whole day in the potty. This imparts a whole new meaning to "Montezuma's Revenge", an affliction that besets NordAmericanos visiting Mexico for the first time. -- Bob Kanyak's Doghouse http://www.kanyak.com |
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On Sun, 01 Aug 2004 15:41:00 -0400, "Bob (this one)" >
wrote: >Gary Jennings (who wrote the novel "Aztec" and others about them) was >a friend and a very knowledgeable foodie. He researched the background >for those novels for 8 years. Whew. How thorough can you get? That's >where I got that spelling for chocolate. The "x" is pronounced like "sh." > >According to him, the crude (unconched) chocolate they enjoyed often >included hot peppers of one sort or another and was considered an >aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. Moctezuma reportedly >drank 50 cups of it a day. I hope they were small cups or he spent his >whole day in the potty. > >Pastorio The part about the hot peppers is true. Father Jose de Acosta wrote about chocolate in his 1590 book, _Historia Natural y Moral de las Indias_. He said "They are in the habit of adding spices and a lot of chili" (usan echarle especias y mucho chili). http://www.cervantesvirtual.com/serv...4/p0000002.htm Robin Carroll-Mann "Mostly Harmless" -- Douglas Adams To email me, remove the fish |
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On Sun, 01 Aug 2004 15:41:00 -0400, "Bob (this one)" >
wrote: >Gary Jennings (who wrote the novel "Aztec" and others about them) was >a friend and a very knowledgeable foodie. He researched the background >for those novels for 8 years. Whew. How thorough can you get? That's >where I got that spelling for chocolate. The "x" is pronounced like "sh." > >According to him, the crude (unconched) chocolate they enjoyed often >included hot peppers of one sort or another and was considered an >aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. Moctezuma reportedly >drank 50 cups of it a day. I hope they were small cups or he spent his >whole day in the potty. > >Pastorio The part about the hot peppers is true. Father Jose de Acosta wrote about chocolate in his 1590 book, _Historia Natural y Moral de las Indias_. He said "They are in the habit of adding spices and a lot of chili" (usan echarle especias y mucho chili). http://www.cervantesvirtual.com/serv...4/p0000002.htm Robin Carroll-Mann "Mostly Harmless" -- Douglas Adams To email me, remove the fish |
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Robin Carroll-Mann wrote:
> On Sun, 01 Aug 2004 15:41:00 -0400, "Bob (this one)" > > wrote: > > >>Gary Jennings (who wrote the novel "Aztec" and others about them) was >>a friend and a very knowledgeable foodie. He researched the background >>for those novels for 8 years. Whew. How thorough can you get? That's >>where I got that spelling for chocolate. The "x" is pronounced like "sh." >> >>According to him, the crude (unconched) chocolate they enjoyed often >>included hot peppers of one sort or another and was considered an >>aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. Moctezuma reportedly >>drank 50 cups of it a day. I hope they were small cups or he spent his >>whole day in the potty. >> >>Pastorio > > > The part about the hot peppers is true. Father Jose de Acosta wrote > about chocolate in his 1590 book, _Historia Natural y Moral de las > Indias_. He said "They are in the habit of adding spices and a lot of > chili" (usan echarle especias y mucho chili). > http://www.cervantesvirtual.com/serv...4/p0000002.htm Gary and I made some to see what it would be like. We used bittersweet chocolate, poor quality countryside Mexican stuff he brought back, to more closely approximate what they would have had. It was gritty, but likely not as much so as the original. We whisked it into hot water, foaming it up, adding tiny snippets of chile de arbol. No sugar. It was awful *and* it burned. We didn't know exactly how much pepper to add. Extremely bitter, gritty, astringent and hot. The Aztecs had no concentrated sweeteners according to him. We decided it was much improved by the addition of a fair bit of Kahlua. All in the interests of science... Pastorio |
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Robin Carroll-Mann wrote:
> On Sun, 01 Aug 2004 15:41:00 -0400, "Bob (this one)" > > wrote: > > >>Gary Jennings (who wrote the novel "Aztec" and others about them) was >>a friend and a very knowledgeable foodie. He researched the background >>for those novels for 8 years. Whew. How thorough can you get? That's >>where I got that spelling for chocolate. The "x" is pronounced like "sh." >> >>According to him, the crude (unconched) chocolate they enjoyed often >>included hot peppers of one sort or another and was considered an >>aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. Moctezuma reportedly >>drank 50 cups of it a day. I hope they were small cups or he spent his >>whole day in the potty. >> >>Pastorio > > > The part about the hot peppers is true. Father Jose de Acosta wrote > about chocolate in his 1590 book, _Historia Natural y Moral de las > Indias_. He said "They are in the habit of adding spices and a lot of > chili" (usan echarle especias y mucho chili). > http://www.cervantesvirtual.com/serv...4/p0000002.htm Gary and I made some to see what it would be like. We used bittersweet chocolate, poor quality countryside Mexican stuff he brought back, to more closely approximate what they would have had. It was gritty, but likely not as much so as the original. We whisked it into hot water, foaming it up, adding tiny snippets of chile de arbol. No sugar. It was awful *and* it burned. We didn't know exactly how much pepper to add. Extremely bitter, gritty, astringent and hot. The Aztecs had no concentrated sweeteners according to him. We decided it was much improved by the addition of a fair bit of Kahlua. All in the interests of science... Pastorio |
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>>> [Aztec chocolate] often included hot peppers of one sort or another and >>> was considered an aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. >>> Moctezuma reportedly drank 50 cups of it a day. > Gary and I made some to see what it would be like. We used bittersweet > chocolate, poor quality countryside Mexican stuff he brought back, to > more closely approximate what they would have had. It was gritty, but > likely not as much so as the original. We whisked it into hot water, > foaming it up, adding tiny snippets of chile de arbol. No sugar. > It was awful *and* it burned. We didn't know exactly how much pepper > to add. Extremely bitter, gritty, astringent and hot. The Aztecs had > no concentrated sweeteners according to him. Wouldn't the Aztecs have made it directly from cocoa pods? Where would any grit come from that way? I doubt the emperor of a country with a few million subjects needed to put up with poor-quality anything. Particularly when there was a steady demand for hundreds of human sacrifice victims every year. ========> Email to "j-c" at this site; email to "bogus" will bounce <======== Jack Campin: 11 Third Street, Newtongrange, Midlothian EH22 4PU; 0131 6604760 <http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/purrhome.html> food intolerance data & recipes, Mac logic fonts, Scots traditional music files and CD-ROMs of Scottish music. |
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>
>It was awful *and* it burned. We didn't know exactly how much pepper >to add. Extremely bitter, gritty, astringent and hot. The Aztecs had >no concentrated sweeteners according to him. We decided it was much >improved by the addition of a fair bit of Kahlua. Bob: I don't believe that Aztecs "drank" chocolate-- they consumed the "foam" produced by constantly pouring the mixture back and forth between containers. And Aztecs did have sweeteners-- honey and vanilla, for instance, but there is no evidence that these were ingredients employed in their making chocolate froth. Andy Smith |
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>
>It was awful *and* it burned. We didn't know exactly how much pepper >to add. Extremely bitter, gritty, astringent and hot. The Aztecs had >no concentrated sweeteners according to him. We decided it was much >improved by the addition of a fair bit of Kahlua. Bob: I don't believe that Aztecs "drank" chocolate-- they consumed the "foam" produced by constantly pouring the mixture back and forth between containers. And Aztecs did have sweeteners-- honey and vanilla, for instance, but there is no evidence that these were ingredients employed in their making chocolate froth. Andy Smith |
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Of course, whatever its spelling or transliteration, and those clerics did
butcher Nuahatl to Spanish pretty badly, being pretty confused about "X" back then, chocolate still appears in one of what must have been its earliest venues, combined with chiles and other incgredients in several versions of mole, most commonly served with turkey or chicken, and likely pretty close to what must have been served to upper crust Azrecs (when a bit of obsidian-sliced Tarascan captive/hostage/sacrifical victim wasn't on the Bill of Fare. Hmmmm.... Mayan Maiden Mole Given no metal with which to convert chocolate into a smooth paste, the volcanic grit from a lot of metate mashing may have made Moctezuma's morning chocolate a little gritty. As for sweetener, did you and Jennings try it in atole, the corn gruel/beverage which hasa vague sweetness, not quite horchata, but.... TMo |
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Of course, whatever its spelling or transliteration, and those clerics did
butcher Nuahatl to Spanish pretty badly, being pretty confused about "X" back then, chocolate still appears in one of what must have been its earliest venues, combined with chiles and other incgredients in several versions of mole, most commonly served with turkey or chicken, and likely pretty close to what must have been served to upper crust Azrecs (when a bit of obsidian-sliced Tarascan captive/hostage/sacrifical victim wasn't on the Bill of Fare. Hmmmm.... Mayan Maiden Mole Given no metal with which to convert chocolate into a smooth paste, the volcanic grit from a lot of metate mashing may have made Moctezuma's morning chocolate a little gritty. As for sweetener, did you and Jennings try it in atole, the corn gruel/beverage which hasa vague sweetness, not quite horchata, but.... TMo |
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bogus address wrote:
>>>>[Aztec chocolate] often included hot peppers of one sort or another and >>>>was considered an aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. >>>>Moctezuma reportedly drank 50 cups of it a day. >> >>Gary and I made some to see what it would be like. We used bittersweet >>chocolate, poor quality countryside Mexican stuff he brought back, to >>more closely approximate what they would have had. It was gritty, but >>likely not as much so as the original. We whisked it into hot water, >>foaming it up, adding tiny snippets of chile de arbol. No sugar. >>It was awful *and* it burned. We didn't know exactly how much pepper >>to add. Extremely bitter, gritty, astringent and hot. The Aztecs had >>no concentrated sweeteners according to him. > > > Wouldn't the Aztecs have made it directly from cocoa pods? Where > would any grit come from that way? Cocoa pods are processed before they become chocolate. Then they're ground. The grinding process didn't make a smooth result. It wasn't until industrial processes were applied that the particles were made small enough not to be noticeable. > I doubt the emperor of a country with a few million subjects needed > to put up with poor-quality anything. It wasn't seen as poor quality. It was the only quality available. > Particularly when there was > a steady demand for hundreds of human sacrifice victims every year. The connection escapes me. Pastorio |
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bogus address wrote:
>>>>[Aztec chocolate] often included hot peppers of one sort or another and >>>>was considered an aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. >>>>Moctezuma reportedly drank 50 cups of it a day. >> >>Gary and I made some to see what it would be like. We used bittersweet >>chocolate, poor quality countryside Mexican stuff he brought back, to >>more closely approximate what they would have had. It was gritty, but >>likely not as much so as the original. We whisked it into hot water, >>foaming it up, adding tiny snippets of chile de arbol. No sugar. >>It was awful *and* it burned. We didn't know exactly how much pepper >>to add. Extremely bitter, gritty, astringent and hot. The Aztecs had >>no concentrated sweeteners according to him. > > > Wouldn't the Aztecs have made it directly from cocoa pods? Where > would any grit come from that way? Cocoa pods are processed before they become chocolate. Then they're ground. The grinding process didn't make a smooth result. It wasn't until industrial processes were applied that the particles were made small enough not to be noticeable. > I doubt the emperor of a country with a few million subjects needed > to put up with poor-quality anything. It wasn't seen as poor quality. It was the only quality available. > Particularly when there was > a steady demand for hundreds of human sacrifice victims every year. The connection escapes me. Pastorio |
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bogus address wrote:
>>>>[Aztec chocolate] often included hot peppers of one sort or another and >>>>was considered an aphrodisiac. The Aztecs reserved it for royalty. >>>>Moctezuma reportedly drank 50 cups of it a day. >> >>Gary and I made some to see what it would be like. We used bittersweet >>chocolate, poor quality countryside Mexican stuff he brought back, to >>more closely approximate what they would have had. It was gritty, but >>likely not as much so as the original. We whisked it into hot water, >>foaming it up, adding tiny snippets of chile de arbol. No sugar. >>It was awful *and* it burned. We didn't know exactly how much pepper >>to add. Extremely bitter, gritty, astringent and hot. The Aztecs had >>no concentrated sweeteners according to him. > > > Wouldn't the Aztecs have made it directly from cocoa pods? Where > would any grit come from that way? Cocoa pods are processed before they become chocolate. Then they're ground. The grinding process didn't make a smooth result. It wasn't until industrial processes were applied that the particles were made small enough not to be noticeable. > I doubt the emperor of a country with a few million subjects needed > to put up with poor-quality anything. It wasn't seen as poor quality. It was the only quality available. > Particularly when there was > a steady demand for hundreds of human sacrifice victims every year. The connection escapes me. Pastorio |
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ASmith1946 wrote:
>>It was awful *and* it burned. We didn't know exactly how much pepper >>to add. Extremely bitter, gritty, astringent and hot. The Aztecs had >>no concentrated sweeteners according to him. We decided it was much >>improved by the addition of a fair bit of Kahlua. > > Bob: > > I don't believe that Aztecs "drank" chocolate-- they consumed the "foam" > produced by constantly pouring the mixture back and forth between containers. I've read that, Andy. Gary brought back a kind of whisk that he said was what was used to make a hot water based beverage that was to be entirely consumed. He got it in the back country somewhere and was told that it was the "traditional" way. Could be a tradition that went all the way back to, oh, last Wednesday. Quien sabe? The whisk was a tree branch the end of which had been pounded (or something) to break apart the fibers. It looked like Don King's hair. Piece of chocolate in a mug, hot water (with or without finely minced chile) and whisk away until your arm was the size of Schwartzenegger's. It frothed. It's likely the predecessor of the molinillo used in making modern Mexican-style hot chocolate. It's, of course, entirely possible that there was either some fakelore or mistaken understanding going on. > And Aztecs did have sweeteners-- honey and vanilla, for instance, but there is > no evidence that these were ingredients employed in their making chocolate > froth. I'll give you honey, but vanilla is a stretch for being a sweetener. Pastorio |
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Olivers wrote:
> Of course, whatever its spelling or transliteration, and those clerics did > butcher Nuahatl to Spanish pretty badly, being pretty confused about "X" > back then, chocolate still appears in one of what must have been its > earliest venues, combined with chiles and other incgredients in several > versions of mole, most commonly served with turkey or chicken, and likely > pretty close to what must have been served to upper crust Azrecs (when a > bit of obsidian-sliced Tarascan captive/hostage/sacrifical victim wasn't on > the Bill of Fare. > > Hmmmm.... Mayan Maiden Mole > > Given no metal with which to convert chocolate into a smooth paste, the > volcanic grit from a lot of metate mashing may have made Moctezuma's > morning chocolate a little gritty. As for sweetener, did you and Jennings > try it in atole, the corn gruel/beverage which hasa vague sweetness, not > quite horchata, but.... We gave up combining it with anything after we tried the Kahlua. I think. Pastorio |
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Olivers wrote:
> Of course, whatever its spelling or transliteration, and those clerics did > butcher Nuahatl to Spanish pretty badly, being pretty confused about "X" > back then, chocolate still appears in one of what must have been its > earliest venues, combined with chiles and other incgredients in several > versions of mole, most commonly served with turkey or chicken, and likely > pretty close to what must have been served to upper crust Azrecs (when a > bit of obsidian-sliced Tarascan captive/hostage/sacrifical victim wasn't on > the Bill of Fare. > > Hmmmm.... Mayan Maiden Mole > > Given no metal with which to convert chocolate into a smooth paste, the > volcanic grit from a lot of metate mashing may have made Moctezuma's > morning chocolate a little gritty. As for sweetener, did you and Jennings > try it in atole, the corn gruel/beverage which hasa vague sweetness, not > quite horchata, but.... We gave up combining it with anything after we tried the Kahlua. I think. Pastorio |
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