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I have a collection of recipes in rhyme that I've been meaning to share for some time now. Recipes in rhyme became more common in the United States after the Civil War, when church groups were raising money to provide support for soldiers returning from the war. In earlier times, recipes in rhyme were a useful method for remembering recipes when literacy was not as widespread as it is today.
Monday, February 25, 2013
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Stewed Duck and Peas
I give thee all my kitchen lore,
Though poor the offering be;
I'll tell thee how 'tis cooked, before
You come to dine with me.
Then stew'd with butter well,
And streaky bacon, which reveals
A most delicious smell.
When duck and bacon, in a mass,
You in a stewpan lay,
A spoon around the vessel pass,
And gently stir away;
A tablespoonful of four bring,
A quart of water plain,
Then in it twenty onions fling,
And gently stir again.
A bunch of parsley, and a leaf
Of ever verdant bay,
Two cloves, -- I make my language brief, --
Then add your peas you may;
And let it simmer till it sings
In a delicious strain,
Then take your duck, nor let the strings
For trussing it remain.
The parsley fail not to remove,
Also the leaf of bay;
Dish up your duck, -- the sauce improve
In the accustom'd way,
With pepper, salt and other things
I need not here explain;
And if the dish contentment brings,
You'll dine with me again.
From Poetical Cook-Book by M.J.M. (Maria J. Moss), Philadelphia: Caxton Free Press, 1864.
Though poor the offering be;
I'll tell thee how 'tis cooked, before
You come to dine with me.
Then stew'd with butter well,
And streaky bacon, which reveals
A most delicious smell.
When duck and bacon, in a mass,
You in a stewpan lay,
A spoon around the vessel pass,
And gently stir away;
A tablespoonful of four bring,
A quart of water plain,
Then in it twenty onions fling,
And gently stir again.
A bunch of parsley, and a leaf
Of ever verdant bay,
Two cloves, -- I make my language brief, --
Then add your peas you may;
And let it simmer till it sings
In a delicious strain,
Then take your duck, nor let the strings
For trussing it remain.
The parsley fail not to remove,
Also the leaf of bay;
Dish up your duck, -- the sauce improve
In the accustom'd way,
With pepper, salt and other things
I need not here explain;
And if the dish contentment brings,
You'll dine with me again.
From Poetical Cook-Book by M.J.M. (Maria J. Moss), Philadelphia: Caxton Free Press, 1864.
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