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-Project Gutenberg's Canoe and Camp Cookery, by (AKA "Seneca") H. H. Soulé
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Canoe and Camp Cookery
- A Practical Cook Book for Canoeists, Corinthian Sailors and Outers
-
-Author: (AKA "Seneca") H. H. Soulé
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2017 [EBook #55705]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CANOE AND CAMP COOKERY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David E. Brown and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Canoe and Camp Cookery:
-
- A PRACTICAL COOK BOOK
-
- FOR
-
- CANOEISTS, CORINTHIAN SAILORS AND OUTERS.
-
- By "SENECA."
-
-
- NEW YORK:
- FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO.,
- 1885.
-
-
- Copyright,
- FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO.
- 1885.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-PART I.--CANOE COOKERY.
-
- CHAPTER I.
- Page.
- Outfit for Cooking on a Cruise.--Value of a Single Receptacle for
- Everything Necessary to Prepare a Meal.--The Canoeist's "Grub
- Box."--The Same as a Seat.--Water-tight Tins.--Necessary Provisions
- and Utensils.--Waterproof Bags for Surplus Provisions.--Portable
- Oven.--Canoe Stoves.--Folding Stoves a Nuisance.--Hints for
- Provisioning for a Cruise. 9
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- Soups.--Canned Soups.--The Brunswick Goods Cheap, Wholesome and
- Convenient.--Huckins' Soups.--Oyster, Clam, Onion and Tomato
- Soups. 17
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Fish.--Fish Caught in Muddy Streams.--Kill your Fish as soon as
- Caught.--Fish Grubs.--Fish Fried, Planked, Skewered and
- Boiled.--Fish Sauce, Fish Roe, Shell Fish. 20
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- Meats and Game.--Salt Pork.--Ham and Eggs.--Broiling and Boiling
- Meats.--Pigeons, Squirrels, Ducks, Grouse, Woodcock, Rabbits,
- Frogs, etc. 25
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- Vegetables.--Potatoes and Green Corn, Boiled, Fried, Roasted and
- Stewed. 30
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- Coffee and Tea.--Mush, Johnnycake and Hoe Cake.--Slapjacks,
- Corn Dodgers, Ash Cakes, Biscuits, Camp Bread.--Eggs. 34
-
-
-PART II.--CAMP COOKERY.
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- Outfit.--Go Light as Possible.--Carriage of Provisions and
- Utensils.--Camp Stoves, Ice-Boxes and Hair Mattresses.--The Bed
- of "Browse."--How to Make a Cooking Range Out-of-doors.--Building
- the Fire.--A Useful Tool.--Construction of Coffee Pot and Frying
- Pan.--Baking in Camp.--Fuel for Camp-fire.--Kerosene and Alcohol
- Stoves.--Camp Table.--Washing Dishes, etc. 42
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- Soups.--General Remarks on Cooking Soups.--Soups Made of Meat,
- Vegetables, Deer's Heads, Small Game, Rice, Fish, and Turtle. 50
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Fish.--Fish Baked, Plain and Stuffed.--Fish Gravy.--Fish
- Chowder.--Clam Chowder.--Orthodox Clam Chowder. 55
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- Meats and Game.--Hash.--Pork and Beans.--Game Stew.--Brunswick
- Stew.--Roast Venison.--Baked Deer's Head.--Venison Sausages.--Stuffed
- Roasts of Game.--Woodchucks, Porcupines, 'Possums and Pigs. 59
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- Preparation of Vegetables for Cooking.--Time Table for Cooking
- Vegetables.--Cabbage, Beets, Greens, Tomatoes, Turnips, Mushrooms,
- Succotash, etc. 67
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- Boiled Rice.--Cracked Wheat.--Hominy Grits.--Batter Cakes.--Rice
- Cakes.--Puddings.--Welsh Rarebit.--Fried Bread for Soups.--Stewed
- Cranberries. 74
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- Dishes for Yachtsmen.--Macaroni, Boiled and Baked.--Baked
- Turkey.--Pie Crust.--Brown Betty.--Apple Pudding.--Apple Dumplings. 80
-
- HINTS. 88
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-A BOOK in the writer's possession, entitled "Camp Cookery," contains
-the following recipe:
-
-"BOILED GREEN CORN.--Boil twenty-five minutes, if very young and
-tender. As it grows older it requires a longer time. Send to the table
-in a napkin."
-
-The writer of the above is a good housewife. She cannot conceive
-that anybody will attempt to boil green corn who does not know such
-rudiments of the culinary art as the proper quantity of water to put
-into the pot and the necessity of its being slightly salted and at a
-boil when the corn is put in, instead of fresh and cold; and, like the
-careful cook that she is, she tells the camper to send the ears to the
-camp "table" in a "napkin."
-
-The faults of the above recipe are the faults of all recipes furnished
-by the majority of books on out-door life. They do not instruct in
-those rudimentary principles of cooking so important to the outer who
-has eaten all his life no food except that furnished him ready for
-instant despatch; and they commend to the camper dishes that require
-materials and utensils for their preparation which are seldom at hand
-in the field and forest.
-
-The object of this little volume is to give to the Corinthian cruiser
-and the camper some practical recipes for simple but substantial
-dishes, in such a manner that the veriest novice in the art of
-the kitchen may prepare palatable food with no more materials and
-paraphernalia than are consistent with light cruising and comfortable
-camping. The first part, "Canoe Cookery," instructs in such dishes as
-the limited outfit of the canoeist or camper who "packs" his dunnage
-afoot will admit of, while the second part, "Camp Cookery," deals
-with the more elaborate _menu_ that can be prepared when ease of
-transportation will allow the carriage of a more extensive supply.
-
-Few of the recipes given are original with the compiler. Some have been
-obtained from trappers and hunters, others from army and navy cooks,
-and a few from cook books; but all have been practically tested in camp
-or on a cruise by the writer, whose pleasure in out-door cooking is
-only equalled by his delight in out-door life.
-
-
-
-
-CANOE AND CAMP COOKERY.
-
-
-
-
-PART I.--CANOE COOKERY.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
- OUTFIT FOR COOKING ON A CRUISE.--VALUE OF A SINGLE RECEPTACLE
- FOR EVERYTHING NECESSARY TO PREPARE A MEAL.--THE
- CANOEIST'S "GRUB BOX."--THE SAME AS A SEAT.--WATER-TIGHT
- TINS.--NECESSARY PROVISIONS AND UTENSILS.--WATERPROOF
- BAGS FOR SURPLUS PROVISIONS.--PORTABLE
- OVEN.--CANOE STOVES.--FOLDING STOVES A
- NUISANCE.--HINTS FOR PROVISIONING FOR A CRUISE.
-
-
-FOR canoe cruising a certain amount of food supplies and the necessary
-utensils for cooking should be carried in a single box or chest, so
-that when one cooks a meal on board he may have in one receptacle
-everything necessary for preparing a meal, and when going ashore
-for his repast he can take in his hands everything requisite at one
-journey. If on a long cruise the large portion of his food supply may
-be kept in different parts of the canoe, but the box should contain
-sufficient for at least three meals, and can be replenished from the
-larger store when stopping for the night or at a camping place for any
-length of time. The larger the box that his stowage room will allow the
-greater will be the comfort of the canoeist.
-
-The box may be made of wood, tin or galvanized iron. The former costs
-but little, can be made by the cruiser himself, and if properly made
-and properly taken care of, should answer the purpose; but a box of
-either japanned or painted tin or galvanized iron will stand much
-knocking about without fracture, and is therefore preferable when its
-expense is no objection. Of course it must be water-tight, and if made
-of wood the nicest joining and dove-tailing must be done, and it should
-be varnished inside and out with shellac or boat varnish. Arbitrary
-dimensions cannot be given because of the varying sizes of canoes and
-the different amounts of provisions carried on cruises, therefore let
-each canoeist first determine what amount and variety of eatables he
-will carry, and then construct the box according to his needs and his
-stowage room in the cockpit. If made of wood quarter inch or 5/16 stuff
-(pine) will do, and if the box is to be used as a seat the top and
-bottom pieces should be heavier, say 3/8 of an inch. The cover should
-be two inches deep and the handle by which the box is carried should be
-a thin, wide, flat strap tacked to the cover. If the box is not used
-as a seat but is stowed under the deck it will be found an advantage
-to have the flanges of the cover fall over the side pieces of the box
-and the strap tacked to one end piece, carried over the cover and
-fastened by a hook to an eye in the other end piece in reach of the
-hand, so that the cover may be removed and articles obtained from the
-box without taking it from under the deck. If used as a seat the cover
-may be hinged on one side and two hooks fastened at the ends on the
-other, and for the back rest two pieces of three-quarter inch pine are
-screwed to the sides, running aft horizontally six or eight inches from
-the aftermost end of the box, holes being bored in them an inch apart
-"athwartship" and cut opposite each other, through which a quarter-inch
-brass rod is passed for the back rest to play on. As the lower end of
-the back rest strikes the end of the box near the floor when in use, it
-may be "slanted" as inclination demands by changing the brass rod from
-one set of holes to another.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-To carry the provisions in the box so that they will not mix or spill,
-several water-tight tins should be used. The Consolidated Fruit Jar
-Company, 49 Warren Street, New York, makes tin screw-tops for jars and
-canisters that are perfectly water-tight. Send for several of these
-tops, of assorted sizes, and have a tinsmith make the tin cans of the
-dimensions you desire, so that they will nest in the box closely. The
-same company will also furnish you with a pint or quart earthen jar
-with water-tight screw-top, in which butter may be kept sweet for a
-long time in hot weather, and which may be enveloped in a net and
-lowered to the bottom of the river or lake without fear of its leaking.
-
-In the tin cans may be carried coffee, tea (or cocoa), sugar, flour
-(or meal), rice and alcohol. (A special screw-top is made for fluid
-cans.) Pepper and salt are in small spice boxes with two covers, the
-one underneath being perforated. Eggs are safest carried in the tins
-with the flour, coffee and rice; bread and bacon (or salt pork) are
-wrapped in macintosh and put near the top of the chest; the vinegar
-goes in a whisky flask (mark it to avoid mistakes), and canned goods,
-condensed milk, baking powder, etc., in their own cans. The alcohol
-stove and utensils necessary to cook a meal should go in the box,
-such as coffee pot, cup, fork, knife, spoon, frying pan and plates.
-The coffee pot should be of small size, with handle and lip riveted.
-If soldered, they are likely to melt off. Cups or plates should be of
-tin or granite ware. The fork and knife have their sheaths of leather
-inside the box cover. The plates should nest in the frying pan, which
-should have no handle, and is fastened inside the chest cover by two
-buttons, so that it may be readily released. Next the knife and fork
-have a sheath for a pair of small blacksmith's pliers. This instrument
-serves as a handle to the frying pan and a lifter for everything on
-the fire, and can always be kept cool. A three-quart tin or granite
-ware pail is necessary for stews, and two smaller ones may be nested
-in it, of two-quart and three-pint capacity, respectively. Put the can
-of condensed milk in the smallest pail. It will be out of the way,
-and won't make the rest of the things in the chest sticky. If you
-carry potatoes, onions or other vegetables, always have enough in the
-chest for three meals. The surplus supplies of provisions, such as
-vegetables, extra bread, crackers, flour, meal, pork or bacon, etc.,
-should be carried in waterproof bags, and they can then be stowed
-wherever necessary to properly trim the canoe. These waterproof bags
-may be used also for clothing and blankets. They are made of unbleached
-muslin, sewn in a lap seam, with a double row of stitches. When sewn
-they are dipped in water and slightly shaken to remove the drops, and
-then while wet a mixture of equal parts of boiled oil, raw oil and
-turpentine is applied to the outside with a brush. This takes about
-a week to become thoroughly dry, and then another coat is put on
-without dampening the cloth, and if a little liquid drier is added to
-the mixture, this coat will dry in four or five days. Having prepared
-several bags, the provisions, clothing, blankets, etc., are put in the
-bag, and its mouth is inserted in that of another bag of the same size,
-the latter being drawn on like a stocking as far as it will go. If
-several bags are used instead of one or two large ones, the canoe can
-be trimmed and packed to better advantage.
-
-A canoeist's portable oven is made of two small basins, one of which
-has "ears" riveted to its rim, so that when it is placed bottom up
-on the other the ears will spring over the rim of the second basin,
-thus making an oven that is not air-tight, allowing gases to escape.
-The basins should be made of sheet-iron, and, as their interiors
-can easily be kept clean, they answer very well for soup dishes.
-Instructions for baking in them will be given later on. These should
-not go in the provision chest, as they will smut everything with which
-they come in contact. Butter, I have found, keeps better in its jar
-outside of the chest than in. Outside, too, are kept a small jug of
-molasses, and a jug of fresh water, if cruising on the "briny."
-
-There is no perfect canoe stove. The "flamme forcé" is probably as
-good as any. It takes up a little more room than the folding "pocket"
-variety, and it does not give more heat; but it burns for a longer
-time, and is not top-heavy when a heavy pot or pan is set on it. For
-cooking in large utensils have three of these flamme forcé alcohol
-lamps, light them and place them side by side, and you can cook in this
-way a dozen slapjacks at once on a big griddle, if you like. Danforth,
-the fluid man, makes a small canoe stove that would be preferable to
-all others if his fluid were obtainable at all the corners of the
-earth that canoeists frequent; but unfortunately it is not. Beware of
-"folding stoves" to use ashore and burn wood in. They are the greatest
-possible nuisances--smutty, red-hot and cumbersome. Don't carry an oil
-stove. But if you really must, put the nasty thing in a large bucket,
-and only remove it from this receptacle when absolutely necessary.
-
-Now as to eatables in general, besides what I have already mentioned,
-condensed milk is a good thing, but condensed coffee, condensed eggs
-and condensed beef are abominations. Self-raising or Hecker's prepared
-flour, wheat, rye, Indian or Graham, is easily made into bread and
-slapjacks. The directions come with the packages. Pilot bread will
-keep an indefinite time, and is not so unpalatable as hard-tack.
-Indian meal is very nutritious and easily made up, as it requires
-nothing to lighten it; scald it before using when it is not fresh.
-Canned tomatoes, corn, fruits, beans, soups, salmon, etc., are easy to
-prepare, and can be stored as ballast in the canoe. Mr. Hicks, of the
-Toronto Canoe Club, prepares certain kinds of food in cans for ballast
-as follows, according to the _American Canoeist_:
-
-"Get a number of flat square tin cans made like oyster cans, of a handy
-size to lie under your floor boards. Then cook a turkey, some chickens,
-a sirloin of beef, etc. Cut the hot meat up into large dice-shaped
-pieces, and put it in the tins hot, then pour melted fat in till the
-tins are full, and then solder them tight. Get as much meat in as you
-can before putting in the fat. Put up fruit in square flat cans in
-the same way. There is your ballast, and heavy stuff it is. When the
-provisions run short let the crew feed on the ballast. The preparation
-described is far more nutritious than canned corned beef, is more
-palatable, and will keep indefinitely--that is, throughout a very long
-cruise."
-
-I have not tried this method of preserving provisions, but the theory
-is excellent, and I do not see why it would not be a feasible scheme.
-The Brunswick canned soups are the cheapest made, are easily prepared
-and as wholesome as any; but I have known squeamish canoeists who would
-not use them because they didn't like the looks of the powder to which
-they are desiccated. Dried beef, corned beef, lemons and sardines make
-good additions to an outfit. Potatoes, onions and other vegetables
-should be procured en route as needed, if possible.
-
-As it may puzzle some neophytes to know how much of each article of
-food to take on a cruise, I give below the exact amount of provisions
-I carried on a cruise of a week last autumn. I did not run short of
-anything at the end of the week, but I had not provisions enough left
-for three square meals: 1 lb. sugar (cut loaf); 1/8 lb. tea; 1 lb.
-flour; 1-1/2 lbs. crackers; 1/2 lb. lard; 1/2 lb. rice; 1/2 lb. bacon;
-3/4 lb. coffee; 1 lb. butter; 1 can condensed milk; 3 loaves bread; 3/4
-peck potatoes; 1/2 peck meal; 1 pint molasses; 2 oz. pepper; 1 bottle
-pickles; 1 bottle yeast powder; 1 qt. salt.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
- SOUPS.--CANNED SOUPS.--THE BRUNSWICK GOODS CHEAP, WHOLESOME, AND
- CONVENIENT.--HUCKINS' SOUPS.--OYSTER, CLAM, ONION, AND TOMATO SOUPS.
-
-
-CANOEISTS will hardly take the time and trouble to make soups out of
-meats and vegetables, unless they are in a permanent camping place for
-some length of time. Nearly all soups require several hours to cook
-properly, as they must be boiled very slowly to retain the aroma of the
-ingredients used.
-
-Canned soups, therefore, are the handiest for the canoeist or
-single-hand cruiser. I can recommend the Brunswick variety as cheap,
-convenient, wholesome and easy to prepare if the directions on the
-cans are implicitly followed. Any variation from these instructions,
-however, is certain to result in an unpalatable mess. The higher priced
-soups, Huckins' and other varieties, are more like home-made soups than
-the Brunswick kind, and hence a fastidious taste will prefer them. They
-are bulkier to carry, but are quite as easily prepared, and I would
-recommend those made by Huckins as especially good. The great objection
-to them is their high price.
-
-There are a few good soups that can be prepared from materials readily
-accessible to the canoeist, and in a comparatively short time. These
-are:
-
-
-Oyster Soup.
-
-Put a quart of milk and a piece of butter as large as an egg into the
-pot and heat gradually. When hot, stir in the strained liquor of one
-pint of oysters, very gradually, to prevent the milk from curdling,
-then one-quarter pound of crushed crackers or bread crumbs. When it has
-come to a boil put in the oysters (one pint), and let it cook till the
-edges of the oysters curl up, when it should be seasoned and served.
-
-
-Clam Soup.
-
-Exactly the same as oyster soup, using clams instead of oysters.
-
-
-Onion Soup.
-
-Put three tablespoonfuls of butter in a frying pan, cut six large
-onions in slices, and stir them into the butter over the fire till they
-begin to cook. Then cover tight and set them where they will simmer
-slowly for half an hour. Put a quart of milk with a tablespoonful of
-butter on to boil, and while this is doing stir into the onions a
-tablespoonful of flour while they are simmering. Turn the mixture into
-the boiling milk and cook quarter of an hour, seasoning with salt and
-pepper. If an old tin pan is handy that you can use for the purpose,
-the soup will be improved by knocking small holes in the bottom of
-the pan, thus making a colander, and straining the soup through it,
-afterwards adding the well-beaten yolks of four eggs and cooking three
-minutes longer.
-
-
-Tomato Soup.
-
-Mix one tablespoonful of flour and a piece of butter the size of an
-egg into a smooth paste, and if you have onions, chop up fine one
-medium-sized one. Prepare about one pound of tomatoes by scalding,
-peeling and slicing them (the same amount of canned tomatoes may be
-used), and put all the ingredients with a pinch of salt into one pint
-of cold water. Boil gently for an hour, stirring frequently enough to
-dissolve the tomatoes and prevent burning, then stir in one cup of
-boiled milk, and let it come again to a boil, constantly stirring.
-Season and serve. The soup will be good if the milk is omitted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
- FISH.--FISH CAUGHT IN MUDDY STREAMS.--KILL YOUR FISH AS SOON
- AS CAUGHT.--FISH GRUBS.--FISH FRIED, PLANKED, SKEWERED, AND
- BOILED.--FISH SAUCE, FISH ROE, SHELL-FISH.
-
-
-FISH should naturally have a prominent place in the canoeist's larder.
-Few streams that he will navigate are entirely destitute of edible
-fish, and a few minutes spent in angling will amply repay the cruiser.
-
-Fish caught out of muddy streams have an unpleasant taste, and their
-flavor can be improved by soaking them half an hour or more in strong
-salted water. Fish should be killed as soon as caught by a sharp rap
-on the back just aft of the head with a stick or the handle of your
-big knife, not only in justice to the fish, but because he tastes
-better, for the same reason that a butchered steer is preferable to one
-smothered to death.
-
-You may find grubs in fish along the backbone in July and August. You
-will generally remove them by taking out the backbone and its branches.
-But if you don't get them all out, never mind; they are good to eat;
-but if any one of the party is squeamish, tell him you have got them
-all out anyway: he won't know any better after they are cooked. It is
-supposed that everybody has known how to clean fish ever since he was a
-schoolboy, so we will proceed at once to the instructions for cooking.
-
-
-Fried Fish.
-
-Small fish may be fried whole, but large ones should be cut up. Have
-enough pork fat or lard bubbling hot in the frying-pan to well cover
-the fish. Smear the fish well with dry corn meal or flour, or, what
-is better, dip it into well-beaten egg and then into bread or cracker
-crumbs, and fry both sides to a clear golden brown. Sprinkle lightly
-with pepper and salt just as it is turning brown.
-
-
-Planked Fish.
-
-Shad, flounders, sunfish or any other "flat" fish may be "planked."
-Cut off the head and tail, split open the back, but do not cut clear
-through the belly, leaving the fish so that it may be opened wide like
-a book and tacked on a plank or piece of bark. Tack some thin slices of
-bacon or pork to the end of the fish that will be uppermost when before
-the fire, and, if you like, a few slices of raw onion sprinkled with
-pepper and salt. Sharpen one end of the plank and drive it into the
-ground, before a bed of hot coals. Catch the drippings in a tin cup or
-large spoon and baste the fish continually till it smells so good you
-can't wait another instant to eat it. It is then done.
-
-
-Skewered Trout.
-
-Sharpen a small, straight stick, and on it skewer small trout and thin
-slices of bacon or pork in alternation. Hold over a bed of hot coals
-and keep constantly turning, so that the juices will not be lost in the
-fire. A very few minutes will suffice to cook the trout.
-
-
-Boiled Fish.
-
-Tie or pin the fish (which should not weigh less than three pounds)
-in a clean cloth. If the pot is too small for the fish, skewer the
-tail into the mouth. Put into enough boiling water to cover it about
-an inch, and simmer steadily until done. Some fish boil quicker than
-others; as a general rule those of white flesh requiring less time than
-those of a darker tinge. If a couple of tablespoonfuls of salt and four
-ditto of vinegar are put into the water the fish will cook sooner.
-About twenty-five minutes are necessary for a three-pound fish, and
-over that six minutes extra to every pound. An underdone fish is not
-fit to eat, and one boiled too long is insipid. When the meat separates
-easily from the backbone it is cooked just right. Take it up, remove
-the cloth carefully, and pour over it the following hot
-
-
-Fish Sauce.
-
-Put two tablespoonfuls of butter and two ditto of flour into a hot
-frying pan over the fire and mix them together with a spoon into a
-smooth paste. Pour over very gradually about a pint of the water in
-which the fish was boiled, stirring it well in. Boil up once and
-season with pepper and salt. If an acid taste is desired, add a few
-drops of vinegar.
-
-
-Boiled Fish Roe.
-
-Wash and wipe the roes with a soft cloth. Wrap in a cloth and boil the
-same as fish. Or, they may be tied inside the fish with a string and
-boiled with it.
-
-
-Fried Fish Roe.
-
-Prepare as above, dredge in meal or flour, and fry exactly as fish.
-
-
-Soft Crabs.
-
-Have enough boiling hot grease in a pan over a hot fire to cover the
-crabs. Throw them in as soon as possible after they are taken, with a
-little salt. Let them brown and turn them once. When done cut off the
-gills or "dead men's fingers," and serve on toast.
-
-
-Hard Shell Crabs.
-
-These are best steamed. Boil two cups of water in your largest pail.
-Put in two or three large handfuls of grass and then the crabs, as
-soon as possible after they are caught. Over them put more grass,
-and, covering the pail, let them steam thoroughly over the fire for
-twenty minutes. When done, eat all except the shell, the gills and the
-stomach, which last is in an easily distinguished sack. Be sure to have
-sufficient water in the pail to keep up the steam for the requisite
-time.
-
-
-Fried Oysters.
-
-Strain the liquor from the oysters. Crush crackers into fine crumbs;
-or, if you have no crackers, toast some slices of bread and crush them
-fine. Beat up an egg (both white and yolk) in a tin cup with a spoon.
-Dip the oysters into the beaten egg, then roll them in the crumbs, and
-put over the fire in a pan of boiling fat over half an inch deep. Turn
-when brown on one side, and let the other side brown. If the oysters
-are small do not prepare them singly, but place them two together (the
-large portions at opposite ends), then immerse them in the egg and
-crumbs together. If the crumbs do not readily adhere, pat the oysters
-gently while rolling them in the crumbs.
-
-
-Blanketed Oysters.
-
-Get the largest oysters you can find, cut fat bacon into very thin
-slices, wrap an oyster in each slice, and skewer with a small stick.
-Heat a frying pan very hot, put in your oysters, and cook long enough
-to just crisp the bacon--not over two minutes--taking care that they do
-not burn. Serve immediately without removing the skewers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
- MEATS AND GAME.--SALT PORK.--HAM AND EGGS.--BROILING AND BOILING
- MEATS.--PIGEONS, SQUIRRELS, DUCKS, GROUSE, WOODCOCK, RABBITS,
- FROGS, ETC.
-
-
-IN selecting salt pork pick out that which is smooth and dry. Damp,
-clammy pork is unwholesome. Canned corn beef is palatable, and useful
-in making hash, but is sometimes poisonous from the solder used in
-sealing the cans. If canned beef is carried, use only the portion that
-does not touch the metal of the cans, throwing away the remainder.
-
-
-Fried Salt Pork (or Bacon).
-
-Slice thin, put in frying pan with cold water enough to cover, let it
-come to a boil and boil two or three minutes; then turn off the water
-and fry brown on both sides; or, soak one hour in cold water, then roll
-in bread or cracker crumbs and fry with a little butter or lard in the
-pan.
-
-
-Broiled Salt Pork.
-
-Slice thin, and broil on the end of a green switch held over the coals,
-using extra care that the smoke and flame from the drippings do not
-reach the pork.
-
-
-Ham and Eggs.
-
-Fry the ham first, the same as pork or bacon, and fry the eggs in the
-fat left in the pan. Break each egg separately into a cup, and thence
-transfer it to the pan, by which means the yolks are kept intact and
-bad eggs are discovered before it is too late. While the eggs are
-frying dip up some of the fat with a spoon and pour it over the tops of
-the eggs.
-
-
-Broiled Steaks.
-
-If the steak is tough, beat it on both sides, but not enough to tear
-the meat and allow the juices to escape. Sharpen a green switch at
-the end, secure the steak on it, and place over a bed of hot coals,
-turning frequently. Do not let the escaping juices set fire to the
-meat. Season, after it is done, with pepper and salt, and if a gravy
-is desired, put a half teaspoonful of salt, half as much pepper, and a
-piece of butter or fat as large as a duck's egg into a hot dish, and
-add two tablespoonfuls of boiling water. Pour it over the steak slowly,
-so that every part of the latter will be moistened.
-
-
-Broiling in a Frying Pan.
-
-Broiling can be done as well with a frying pan as with a gridiron, and
-all the juices are preserved. Heat the empty pan very hot first, then
-put in the meat to be broiled, cover over with a tin plate, and turn
-the meat often in the pan.
-
-
-Boiled Meat.
-
-Put the meat into enough boiling water so that the former will be
-a little more than covered. Cover the pot and boil till cooked,
-which will take about fifteen minutes for every pound of meat. Skim
-constantly while boiling, and turn the meat several times. Replenish
-when necessary with boiling water. One teaspoonful of salt for each
-five pounds of meat should be put into the pot a short time before the
-meat is done. If there is a layer of fat on top after the meat is cold,
-remove it. Beef or venison may be used for frying.
-
-
-Fried Pigeons.
-
-Dress them, parboil until they are tender, then cut off the legs and
-wings, slice off the breast pieces, roll in flour or meal and fry in
-hot pork fat till they are nicely browned. Grouse, ducks, quail, snipe
-and plover may also be fried, but are better cooked as given below.
-Snipe, quail and plover need no parboiling.
-
-
-Fried Squirrels.
-
-Skin and clean, cutting off heads, tails and feet. Parboil and fry,
-same as pigeons.
-
-
-Roast Quail, Snipe or Plover.
-
-Dress and impale each on a stick with a piece of fat pork in each
-bird. Set the stick in the ground before a big bed of live coals in
-a slanting position so that the heat will fall evenly on all portions
-of the bird, and turn frequently till a sharp sliver will easily pass
-through the breast. Catch the drippings in a tin cup and pour over
-the birds again and again, and if they are served on toast pour the
-drippings also on the toast. The blacksmith's pliers mentioned in
-Chapter I. will come in handy for turning the birds before the fire on
-their sticks and holding the cup to catch the drippings. Without this
-tool the cook's hands are likely to be roasted by the time the birds
-are done.
-
-
-Roast Ducks and Grouse.
-
-Parboil till tender, then roast as above.
-
-
-Roast Woodcock.
-
-Pick, but do not clean. Roast as above without parboiling. Remove the
-entrails after the bird is done.
-
-
-Rabbits or Hares.
-
-These require considerable parboiling unless young. They may be fried
-like squirrels, cutting them into pieces, or made into stews.
-
-
-Stewed Rabbit.
-
-After skinning and cleaning the rabbit cut it into pieces, and wash
-again in cold water. Mince an onion, cleanse and cut into small pieces
-one-half pound of fat salt pork, and put with the cut-up rabbit into a
-pot with about a pint of cold water. Season with pepper and salt, cover
-the pot and let it simmer till the flesh can be easily pierced with a
-sharp sliver. Take it up when done and set where it will keep warm, and
-make a gravy by adding to the water left in the pot one cup of boiling
-milk or water, stirring in gradually one well-beaten egg and one or two
-tablespoonfuls of flour made into a smooth paste with cold water. Boil
-one minute and then pour over the rabbit. This gravy will be nearly or
-quite as good if the egg is omitted.
-
-
-Stewed Ducks or Pigeons.
-
-Stew exactly the same as rabbits. The pork may be omitted without
-detracting from the edible quality of the dish.
-
-
-Frogs.
-
-Use only the hind legs of small frogs, but both the fore and hind legs
-of large ones. They are best broiled, but may be fried in butter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
- VEGETABLES.--POTATOES AND GREEN CORN, BOILED, FRIED, ROASTED AND
- STEWED.
-
-
-THE canoeist, whose stowage room is limited, will not carry with him
-a variety of vegetables, therefore completer directions for cooking
-these edibles will be left for Part II. of this book, and instructions
-will here be given only for the preparation of the potatoes, which he
-will most certainly carry, and green corn, which, in its season, he
-can obtain readily, if his cruise leads him through a farming country.
-These two articles will form the canoeist's mainstay in the vegetable
-line, and can be prepared in several appetizing ways.
-
-
-Boiled Potatoes.
-
-Small or medium-sized potatoes are preferable to large ones. Choose
-those with small eyes, as those with large eyes are generally about to
-sprout and are of poor quality. Do not pare unless they are very old,
-and in the latter case put them in cold water and allow it to boil. If
-they are of unequal size cut the large ones, so that they will boil
-evenly; wash, cut out bad places and eyes, and slice off a piece of
-skin at each pointed end. Put, unless old, into enough boiling salted
-water to cover them, and simmer steadily till a sliver will easily
-pierce the largest. Strain when done, and set the pot near the fire,
-shaking them occasionally to dry them.
-
-
-Mashed Potatoes.
-
-After boiling, peel and mash thoroughly with the bottom of a large
-bottle, working in pepper, salt, butter, and sufficient hot milk or
-water to make them into the consistency of soft dough. If mashed in an
-iron pot they will be discolored, but will taste just as good as if
-mashed in tin or earthenware.
-
-
-Roasted Potatoes.
-
-Wash and wipe them dry, and cut off the ends. Bury them in the ashes
-till a sliver will easily pierce them. Do not make the common mistake
-of putting them among the live coals of the fire, or they will be
-burned, not cooked through.
-
-
-Fried Cooked Potatoes.
-
-Peel and slice cold cooked potatoes, and put them into enough
-"screeching hot" lard or pork fat to cover the bottom of the pan. Stir
-frequently and fry slowly, seasoning with pepper and salt.
-
-
-Fried Raw Potatoes.
-
-Wash, peel, and slice very thin. Put few at a time into enough boiling
-fat to float the slices. If too many are put in at one time they will
-chill the fat and will not fry evenly. Turn and fry a light brown on
-both sides. When done remove with a fork, leaving as much grease as
-possible, and shake them up in a covered dish to eliminate the grease
-still further.
-
-
-Stewed Potatoes.
-
-Cut cold boiled potatoes into pieces the size of a hickory nut, put
-them into enough boiling milk to cover them, and let them simmer slowly
-till the milk is nearly exhausted, stirring frequently to prevent
-burning. Season with pepper, salt and butter.
-
-
-Sweet Potatoes.
-
-Are cooked the same as Irish potatoes, but require longer time. See
-time table in Part II.
-
-
-Boiled Green Corn.
-
-The sweetness of corn is better preserved in the boiling if the outer
-layer of husks only is stripped off. Turn back the inner husks and
-strip off the silk, then replace the inner husks and tie the ends. Put
-the corn into enough boiling salt water to cover it. Boil, if young,
-twenty-five minutes; if old, nearly or quite twice as long. After
-half an hour's boiling, an ear had best be removed occasionally and
-the kernels prodded with a sliver, to see if they have cooked tender.
-Overboiling spoils corn. Drain off the water as soon as they are done.
-
-
-Fried Corn.
-
-Cut cold boiled corn from the cob, mix with mashed potatoes, and fry in
-butter or pork fat.
-
-
-Roasted Corn.
-
-Leave the ear in the husks, cover it well with the hot ashes, and let
-it remain from forty-five minutes to an hour.
-
-
-Stewed Corn.
-
-Cut the corn from the cob, put it into a pot, barely covering it with
-cold milk. Season it with pepper and salt, and if common field corn,
-with sugar. Cover and stew gently till very tender.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
- COFFEE AND TEA.--MUSH, JOHNNYCAKE AND HOECAKE.--SLAPJACKS, CORN
- DODGERS, ASH CAKES, BISCUITS, CAMP BREAD.--EGGS.
-
-
-Coffee.
-
-THE simplest way to make good coffee is to put into the pot two
-tablespoonfuls of the ground and browned berry to each cupful of the
-beverage. Pour on cold water to the required amount, remove it from
-the fire when it first boils up, let it stand a few moments in a warm
-place, and then pour into the pot half a cup of cold water to settle it.
-
-
-Coffee, No. 2.
-
-If the ground coffee is running low or the cook wishes to economize
-and has plenty of time and utensils, I will give him a recipe which
-requires much less of the berry to produce the required strength, as
-follows: Put the dry coffee into the pot, and heat it, stirring it
-constantly. Then pour over it one quart of boiling water to every two
-tablespoonfuls of coffee, and set the pot where it will keep hot but
-not boil. After standing ten or fifteen minutes it is ready to drink.
-
-
-Tea.
-
-For most teas the right proportion is one tablespoonful of tea for
-every teacup that is to be drawn and one "for the pot." The simplest
-method of making it is to put cold water on the tea in the pot, set
-over the fire and let it almost boil. Just as it begins to steam remove
-it to a place less hot, where it will simmer and not boil for five
-minutes. If it boils or simmers too long the tannin will be dissolved,
-and the tea will have a disagreeable astringent taste. When the liquid
-is all used out of the pot I do not throw away the "grounds," but
-add one-half the quantity for the next drawing, and so on till the
-pot is one-third full of grounds, when it is all emptied and the pot
-thoroughly washed.
-
-
-Cornmeal Mush.
-
-The main difficulties in making good cornmeal mush are the care
-necessary to prevent the formation of lumps and the long time required
-to cook it. The surest way to avoid lumps is to mix the meal first with
-cold water enough to make a thin batter, and then pour this batter into
-the pot of boiling water (slightly salted) very gradually, so as not to
-stop the boiling process. Sufficient of the batter should be stirred in
-to make a thin mush, and the latter should then be boiled until it is
-of such consistency that it will hang well together when taken out with
-a spoon. The longer it is allowed to boil the better it will be, and
-if long boiling makes it too thick, add more boiling water. It can be
-advantageously boiled two hours, but is eatable after twenty minutes'
-boil. If it is sprinkled into the pot of boiling water dry, do so very
-gradually and stir it constantly to prevent its lumping.
-
-
-Fried Cold Mush.
-
-Cut cold cornmeal mush into slices half an inch thick, and fry on both
-sides in boiling pork fat or butter. Or, dip each slice into beaten egg
-(salted), then into bread or cracker crumbs, and fry. If fried in lard
-add a little salt.
-
-
-Oatmeal Mush.
-
-Is made the same as cornmeal mush, but must always be sprinkled dry
-into the pot of boiling water.
-
-
-Johnnycake.
-
-Make a thick batter by mixing warm (not scalding) water or milk with
-one pint of cornmeal, and mix in with this a small teaspoonful of salt
-and a tablespoonful of melted lard. Grease your bake-tins (described in
-Chapter I.) thoroughly with lard or butter, set the Johnnycake batter
-in one, cover over with the other, and bury the oven amongst the hot
-coals and ashes of the camp-fire, heaping the coals around it so as
-to have an equal heat on all portions of the oven. In twenty minutes
-dig out the oven, open it with the pliers and test the Johnnycake. It
-should be thoroughly baked in a good fire in from twenty to thirty
-minutes. If the meal is mixed with scalding water it will be lumpy and
-difficult to work into a batter.
-
-
-Hoe Cakes.
-
-Johnnycake batter, thinned down with more warm water or milk, may be
-fried the same as slapjacks.
-
-
-Slapjacks.
-
-To properly cook slapjacks the frying pan should be perfectly clean and
-smooth inside. If it is not, too much grease is required in cooking.
-Scrape it after each panful is cooked, and then only occasional
-greasing will be required, and this is best done with a clean rag
-containing butter. Drop thin batter in with a spoon, so that the cake
-will be very thin. Disturb it as little as possible, and when the cake
-is cooked firm on one side, turn it and cook on the other.
-
-
-Cornmeal Slapjacks.
-
-One quart of cold water is mixed with meal enough to make a thin
-batter, one teaspoonful of salt and one or two teaspoonfuls of baking
-powder having been stirred into the latter. The addition of one or two
-well-beaten eggs will improve it. Cook on a very hot pan, as above.
-
-
-Wheat Slapjacks.
-
-Make as above, except using wheat flour, and adding last of all one
-heaping tablespoonful of melted lard or butter, thoroughly stirred in.
-
-
-Hecker's Flour Slapjacks.
-
-Mix well one pint of Hecker's prepared flour with one-half pint of cold
-milk or water. Cook as above.
-
-
-Corn Dodgers.
-
-Mix one pint of corn meal, one small teaspoonful of salt and one
-tablespoonful of sugar with warm (not scalding) water enough to make a
-moderately stiff batter. Make into flat cakes about three-quarters of
-an inch thick, and fry in _boiling_ fat till brown. Fried in bacon fat
-and eaten with the fried bacon they are very palatable.
-
-
-Corn Pone or Ash Cakes.
-
-If unprovided with the portable oven or bake tin recommended in Chapter
-I., mix up a pint of corn meal with water and a pinch of salt into a
-stiff dough, make into cakes, and set them on a clean, hot stone close
-to the coals of a hot fire. When the outside of the cakes has hardened
-a little cover them completely in hot ashes. In fifteen to twenty-five
-minutes rake them out, brush off the ashes, and devour quickly. Any
-ashes adhering after the brushing process can be readily removed by
-cutting out the irregularities in the crust where they have lodged. The
-writer has known a party of ladies, who could scarcely be induced to
-taste these cakes at first, become so fond of them after a trial as to
-insist upon having them three times a day for a week in camp.
-
-
-Baking Powder Biscuits.
-
-Put one pint of flour into a deep vessel, mix into it two large
-teaspoonfuls of baking powder[A] and a pinch of salt; then rub in one
-small teaspoonful of lard or butter, lessening the amount of salt
-if the latter is used, and add enough cold water or milk to make a
-soft dough. Handle as little as possible, but roll into a sheet about
-three-quarters of an inch thick, and cut into round cakes with an empty
-tin cup. Lay the biscuits close together in a well-greased tin, and
-bake a few minutes in the coals, as described above for Johnnycake.
-
-
-Hecker's Flour Biscuits.
-
-Require only the mixing of the flour with water, and are then ready to
-bake.
-
-
-Quick Camp Bread.
-
-Make a biscuit dough as above, and roll it to a thickness of half an
-inch. Grease a frying-pan and set it over the hot embers till the
-grease begins to melt. Then put the dough into the pan and set it on
-the fire, shaking it frequently to prevent the dough from adhering.
-When the crust has formed on the bottom, take the bread out of the pan
-and prop it up on edge, close to the fire, turning it occasionally to
-insure its being baked through. Or, turn the bread in the frying pan
-until it is cooked through. This bread will not keep soft long, and
-the writer prefers, when depending for any length of time upon his own
-baking, to make
-
-
-Unleavened Bread.
-
-This is the kind almost wholly used by coasting vessels, and is cooked
-as above in a frying-pan, even when there is a galley-stove with a
-good hot oven on board the vessel. The dough is mixed up with a quart
-of wheat flour, one teaspoonful of lard, a teaspoonful of salt and
-sufficient water to make it stiff. It is then beaten or hammered
-lustily on a board or smooth log until it becomes elastic. When cut up
-into biscuit it can be baked in the portable oven among the coals. It
-is called "Maryland Biscuit" along the Potomac and Chesapeake.
-
-
-Fried and Boiled Eggs
-
-Are so easy to prepare that no instruction is necessary in these
-familiar methods of cooking them.
-
-
-Poached Eggs.
-
-Into a frying pan nearly full of boiling water containing a teaspoonful
-of salt slip carefully the eggs one by one, breaking each previously
-into a cup. Keep them on the surface of the water, if possible, and
-boil gently three or four minutes, dipping up some of the water with a
-spoon and pouring it over the tops of the eggs. Serve on toast.
-
-
-Scrambled Eggs.
-
-Break the eggs into a cup to insure their freshness, and throw them
-into the frying pan with a lump of butter and salt and pepper. Stir
-over a fire of coals until they are almost hard. Do not break the yolks
-at first.
-
-
-
-
-PART II.--CAMP COOKERY.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
- OUTFIT.--GO LIGHT AS POSSIBLE.--CARRIAGE OF PROVISIONS AND
- UTENSILS.--CAMP STOVES, ICE-BOXES AND HAIR MATTRESSES.--THE BED
- OF "BROWSE."--HOW TO MAKE A COOKING RANGE OUT-OF-DOORS.--BUILDING
- THE FIRE.--A USEFUL TOOL.--CONSTRUCTION OF COFFEE POT AND FRYING
- PAN.--BAKING IN CAMP.--FUEL FOR CAMP-FIRE.--KEROSENE AND ALCOHOL
- STOVES.--CAMP TABLE.--WASHING DISHES, ETC.
-
-
-THE remarks given on outfit in Chapter I. of Part I. are, many of them,
-as well adapted to camp as to canoe cookery. The utensils carried for
-cooking in a permanent camp, and for more than one person, will of
-course exceed in number those used by the canoeist, but there will be
-few additional articles really necessary, even with the varied and
-extensive bill-of-fare that the possibilities of a three weeks' camp in
-one place suggest. Even if you have teams and lumber-wagons to carry
-your outfit into the woods it is better to go light as possible. With
-few things to find places for the camp can be kept neat and ship-shape,
-and everything will be handy; while the chances are that a portion of
-a large and varied outfit will be wasted. Two friends and myself go
-regularly into camp for three weeks with no added utensils to those
-mentioned in the canoe outfit except an iron pot and a Dutch oven, and
-even these additions are seldom used. A large cooking outfit for a
-camp can be best packed in a large pack basket, such as is generally
-used in the Adirondacks and Maine woods; but these receptacles
-are not waterproof, therefore I would recommend that the eatables
-themselves be carried in waterproofed muslin bags, each variety having
-its own bag. All together may then be packed in basket, chest or
-knapsack, as desired. Butter will keep sweet longer in an earthen jar
-with water-tight cover, as described on page 11, than in any other
-receptacle I know of. It can be enveloped in a net and lowered to the
-bottom of a lake or river, or set in a cold spring, or tucked away in
-the coolest corner of a little cellar dug into a side hill and lined
-with clean birch bark. If I carry a dozen or two of eggs into the woods
-with me I let them ride in a tin pail along with plenty of corn meal,
-and seldom find a broken one among them.
-
-A good many campers--and especially lady campers--think it necessary to
-carry a camp stove; some people go into the woods with an ice-box and a
-ton of ice; and others bring with them bedsteads and hair mattresses.
-I do not camp with such people, and I think every true woodsman will
-agree with me that these deluded persons do not enjoy to the full the
-pleasure and wholesome exhilaration of real camp life. A bed of spruce
-or hemlock browse, properly "shingled" and of a good depth, is the
-cleanest, softest, most fragrant and healthful couch in the world. If
-I never camped for any other reason, I would go once a year for the
-express purpose of enjoying for a brief season the delicious odor and
-natural elastic softness of this best of beds.
-
-I have never felt the need of ice or ice-box in all my camping
-experience. A cold spring of water keeps my butter sweet, and I never
-send to town for butchered meat; if I did perhaps I should find a
-refrigerator useful.
-
-Now as to camp stoves. A camp of lumbermen will find a stove of
-some sort a time-saving utensil, for but little time can be spared
-from their work in the woods to prepare meals, and a dinner can be
-unquestionably got quicker on a stove than with an open fire. But
-to a party of pleasure outers whose time in camp is not of so great
-importance, a camp stove is a superfluous piece of furniture. It is
-unwieldy to carry, smutty to handle, and makes a camp look like a
-summer kitchen in a back-yard. Every necessary culinary operation can
-be performed equally well or even better without it, if the camper
-knows how to properly make a cooking camp-fire.
-
-The fire, in summer, should not be made so close to the tent as to make
-that sleeping and lounging place too warm, nor should it be made so far
-away as to tire the cook from running back and forth with the cooking
-utensils and grub. Two green logs, five or six feet long and eight to
-twelve inches in diameter, of a nearly even thickness throughout, are
-laid on a level piece of ground side by side, about a foot apart at
-one end, and touching at the other, thus forming an elongated V. With a
-hatchet hew them on their upper sides until the surface is level enough
-to support pots and pans in safety. Between these logs build your fire.
-This should not be done carelessly, but methodically and with patience.
-Begin with only as many dry shavings as you can grasp in your hand.
-When these are ablaze, add shavings and bits of dry wood of a little
-larger size, and then those a little larger than the last, and so on,
-increasing the size of the sticks very gradually and leading the fire
-by degrees until it covers all the space between the logs.
-
-When the fire is well under way and blazing brightly at all points,
-pile on it plenty of split sticks, short, and as near a uniform size as
-possible, and let them all burn to coals before cooking is commenced.
-If some of the sticks are large and some small, they will not burn
-evenly, and by the time the larger ones have become coals, the coals
-of the smaller ones will have become ashes. And if the sticks are
-round instead of split, they will not catch fire so easily, and will
-nest so close together as to give insufficient draft. Driftwood will
-do to start a fire, but it should never be used after the blaze is
-well going, because it burns to ashes instead of coals. The best coals
-result from burning hard wood. Never put a cooking utensil on the fire
-until the smoke and blaze have ceased. When you have a good bed of
-coals set the coffee pot on near where the logs join, and the frying
-pan, large pot, etc., where the logs are further apart. If there is
-much wind, ashes will be blown about to some extent, and it is best to
-always keep the open end of the "range" to windward, as the frying pan
-is generally set on this end, while the coffee pot and other pots being
-covered, can stand a shower of ashes without harm to their contents.
-As fast as one dish is cooked, set it on one of the logs where it will
-keep warm, and use the handy blacksmith's pliers to heap up the live
-coals under other dishes that are not cooking fast enough.
-
-These pliers can be made by any blacksmith, and should be from twelve
-to eighteen inches in length, and quite broad in the gripping part,
-which may with advantage be curved to a slight angle. I always use
-a frying pan without handle for compactness, and can lift it from
-any side of the fire with the pliers, which are always cool. I even
-grip the coffee pot with them and pour the coffee for the whole party
-without touching it with my hands, saving many a scorch thereby. It
-is a handy tool in making repairs to boats, and in various other ways
-proves its value as a necessary part of the camp outfit. The coffee pot
-should not have a spout, but a lip, riveted on, near its topmost edge.
-The handle should also be riveted, and should set as near as possible
-to the top of the pot. A wire bale may be attached for handiness in
-lifting.
-
-The cooking range above described will suffice for nearly all branches
-of camp cookery. On it one can fry, broil and boil. When a boil is to
-be kept up for hours, however, as in cooking beans, greens, and some
-soups and stews, it will be necessary to set up a forked stake at each
-end of the fire, hang the kettle on a cross-piece between, and keep
-up the fire beneath by constant feeding and attention. Do not let the
-blaze mount so high as to burn or char the cross-piece.
-
-The fire for baking should be made apart from the range. A hole in the
-ground a little more than deep enough to contain the bake-kettle or
-Dutch oven should be dug, and of sufficient diameter to allow four or
-five inches' space on each side of the oven when it is in the hole.
-Build up a good fire in the hole, and when you have a large quantity
-of hot coals and ashes, dig out all but a thick layer on the bottom,
-set in your oven, and pack it all around and on top with the coals and
-ashes. Cover the whole with a piece of turf or some earth. When baking
-without an oven, as fish in clay, a bird in its feathers, or a 'possum
-in its own hide, dig out nearly all the coals, put some green grass or
-leaves in the bottom, then the fish, bird or beast, then more grass or
-leaves, then coals and ashes, then earth, and lastly build a small fire
-on top and keep it burning steadily.
-
-In all the baking recipes recommended in this book a certain time is
-given for each operation. This time mentioned is only approximate, and
-it will be found to vary a few minutes, according to the amount of coal
-used, the kind of firewood, etc. The time necessary to bake a given
-thing can only be learned exactly by practical experience; but this
-experience will teach the cook all he needs to know after the first two
-or three attempts.
-
-In closing my remarks on fires I would suggest that the best wood to
-be obtained for cooking fires is that from hard wood trees that have
-fallen in the woods or been cut down, and have lain long enough to
-become well seasoned. If this is used the fire will stand any ordinary
-rain, and the camper will not be compelled to resort to his alcohol
-stove under shelter for any thing short of the equinoctial storm. If
-wood is damp, a few drops of kerosene, gun oil or alcohol sprinkled on
-it will be a valuable aid in starting a fire.
-
-I have no love for kerosene stoves. The alcohol "flamme forcé" is more
-compact, gives a stronger heat (have two, set side by side), and is
-perfectly clean. If, however, you must take along a kerosene stove, the
-wind-protected kind manufactured by Adams & Westlake (5 East Fourteenth
-Street, New York, and 78 Washington Street, Boston) will probably be
-found the most suitable. Neither the kerosene nor the alcohol stoves
-should be used when an outdoor fire can be built.
-
-A camp dining-table can be made by driving down four forked stakes in
-the corners of an imaginary rectangle. Connect the end stakes with
-cross-pieces, and lay planks from one cross-piece to the other. Make
-it just high enough to get the legs and feet under comfortably when
-sitting upon the ground, and build it away from the fire. A camp chest
-makes a good table, so does a large log with one side hewed level. Each
-member of a party that I frequently camp with has a tin or wooden box
-in which fishing tackle, cartridges, tools, etc., are carried. When
-dinner is prepared a piece of spare canvas is laid upon the grass, the
-tin dishes and edibles are put upon this, then each man brings his box
-to the particular corner of the cloth he selects, sits on the grass,
-crosses his legs, and has each his individual table in his own private
-box, the cover of which is large enough to hold a tin plate, tin cup,
-knife and fork, etc.
-
-By all means wash the dishes immediately after each meal. You can smoke
-your post-prandial pipe and do this at the same time. Have a pot or
-kettle of water heating while you are eating, and if the frying pan is
-dirty, fill it with water and let it boil over the coals awhile. Put
-your dishes into the largest pail, pour hot water over them, tone it
-down with cold water so you can handle them, and wash the dishes, the
-least dirty first, with a sponge. Sapolio is good to scour them, but
-sand is better. Soap is less often used by male campers in dish-washing
-than it should be. It makes the work much easier. When washed, rinse
-the tin-ware in cold water, drain and dry with a towel. Wring out the
-sponge in clean water, and hang it on a bush ready for use again.
-
-Remove all refuse and leavings to a good distance from camp, and never
-allow the vicinity of the tent to become littered up with tomato cans,
-old cartridge shells, bones, feathers, corn-husks, etc.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
- SOUPS.--GENERAL REMARKS ON COOKING SOUPS.--SOUPS MADE OF MEAT,
- VEGETABLES, DEER'S HEADS, SMALL GAME, RICE, FISH AND TURTLE.
-
-
-SOUPS should be made in camp as often as the materials are at hand.
-They are wholesome and invigorating, and not difficult to prepare; and
-so many different kinds can be made that no camper's appetite need be
-cloyed by lack of variety. Most canned soups are excellent, and the
-directions for cooking which come with them should be closely followed.
-
-The time given for cooking soups in the recipes that follow may seem
-unnecessarily long, but if it is done in a less time, it is at a loss
-in the flavor. Fast boiling drives off considerable of the aroma of
-the ingredients used, the water evaporates fast and requires constant
-replenishing with boiling water, which compels the cook to have an
-additional vessel always on the fire. Constant skimming is necessary,
-and an occasional slight stirring will prevent any of the vegetables
-from burning on the pot where but little water is used.
-
-Campers do not commonly have fresh meat in camp, unless in a portion
-of the country where venison, buffalo or bear meat form a part of the
-larder. With any one of these, or with beef, we can make what I will
-call
-
-
-Meat Soup.
-
-Use one pound of lean meat (cut into pieces the size of an egg) to
-a quart of water. Put on the fire with the water cold, and let it
-heat gradually and simmer rather than boil, skimming it constantly
-and keeping the cover on the pot when this operation is not being
-performed. If any cooked meat or bones are to be added, this should be
-done after the soup has cooked three-quarters of an hour. From four and
-a half to five hours are necessary for the soup to cook. Just before it
-is done, season with salt and pepper. If made in an iron pot it should
-be transferred as soon as done to a tin or earthen vessel. In cold
-weather this soup may be kept fresh and sweet for a week and "warmed
-over" as long as it lasts.
-
-
-Vegetable Soup.
-
-Onions, potatoes, carrots, turnips, beets, parsnips, cabbage,
-cauliflower, pumpkins, squash, etc., should be picked over, washed,
-pared, and cut into small pieces from a quarter to a half-inch thick,
-put into a pan of cold water, rinsed and drained. Tomatoes should be
-scalded, peeled and sliced. Prepare a meat soup as above, and when it
-has cooked four hours put in all your vegetables except potatoes, which
-should be put in only about thirty minutes before the soup is done.
-Stir the soup occasionally to prevent the vegetables from scorching or
-sticking to the bottom of the pot, and skim frequently. When done take
-out the vegetables, mash and return them to the soup, boil one minute,
-season and serve. Canned corn or tomatoes may be used in this soup the
-same as fresh vegetables.
-
-
-Deer's Head Soup.
-
-Skin the head and split it in pieces, remove the eyes and brains, and
-wash thoroughly in cold water. Then cook same as meat soup.
-
-
-Small Game Soup.
-
-Squirrels, rabbits, and small game generally can be cleaned and split
-and made into soup as above. When vegetables are added to soup made of
-small game, the latter should be removed and strained, and the good
-meat returned to the pot just before the vegetables are put in, leaving
-out all the bones, skin, gristle, etc.
-
-
-Rice Soup.
-
-Make a meat soup, with the addition of one sliced onion. Prepare the
-rice (one-half pound to a gallon of water) by picking it over, washing
-and draining, and stir it into the soup half an hour before it is done,
-stirring frequently to prevent burning.
-
-
-Bean Soup.
-
-Pick over two quarts of beans, wash, and soak them over night in
-cold water. Scrape clean one pound of salt pork, and cut into thin
-slices. Drain the beans, put them into six quarts of cold water, with
-one tablespoonful of soda, and let them boil gently for half an hour,
-skimming constantly. Then drain off all the water and put in the same
-amount of fresh boiling water. Boil slowly for an hour and a half,
-stirring frequently; then put in the pork. When the beans have become
-tender enough to crack, take out the pork and mash the beans into a
-paste with a wooden masher or the bottom of a large bottle. Then put
-all back and boil slowly an hour longer. If no soda is used, longer
-boiling will be necessary. Bean soup will burn if not constantly
-stirred. Not much salt, but plenty of pepper should be used for
-seasoning.
-
-
-Pea Soup.
-
-Treat the peas exactly the same as the beans in the above recipe,
-except as to the preliminary boiling in water with soda. Make the same
-way as bean soup. Pea soup cools and thickens rapidly, therefore if
-squares of fried bread are thrown upon the surface before serving, it
-should be done quickly and while the bread is hot. Use more salt than
-with the bean soup for seasoning, and boil gently or it will surely
-burn.
-
-
-Fish Soup.
-
-Cut up large fish, after it has been cooled from a previous cooking,
-into small pieces, and stew it with a piece of salt pork for two hours.
-
-
-Turtle Soup.
-
-Snapping turtles, "mud turtles" and all tortoises can be made into
-appetizing soup. Cut their throats to kill them and then let them
-bleed. Break the shell on the under side, cut out the meat, rejecting
-the entrails, head and claws, and boil slowly for three hours with some
-sliced onion.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
- FISH.--FISH BAKED, PLAIN AND STUFFED.--FISH GRAVY.--FISH
- CHOWDER.--CLAM CHOWDER.--ORTHODOX CLAM CHOWDER.
-
-
-THE subject of fish cookery belongs more to the canoeist than to
-the general camper, for the reason that the former is so constantly
-among them in their fluid home that he can readily catch a mess, and
-easily cook them with his small means after he has caught them. That
-is why nearly all the practical methods of cooking fish are given in
-Chapter III. of Part I. of this book. There are, however, some ways of
-preparing fish in camp that the canoeist will hardly attempt, for lack
-of time or utensils, and these methods will be given here.
-
-
-Plain Baked Fish.
-
-Dig a hole in the ground eighteen inches deep and large enough to
-contain the fish; build a fire in it and let it burn to coals. Remove
-the coals, leaving the hot ashes in the bottom, on which place a thick
-layer of green grass. Put the fish on the grass, cover with another
-layer of grass; then rake back the coals and loose earth and build a
-small fire on top. In an hour the baking will be complete, the skin
-will peel off and leave the flesh clean. A fish prepared this way need
-not be scaled, but only disembowelled, as the scales will come off with
-the skin after it is cooked.
-
-
-Stuffed Baked Fish.
-
-Only a large fish should be cooked in this manner, as it is hardly
-worth the trouble to stuff a small fish. Prepare a stuffing of bread
-or cracker crumbs, with enough butter or lard to make the mixture
-moist. Season with pepper and salt, and chop up with it one onion, and
-a little summer savory or sage, if desired. Clean and wipe the fish
-dry, put in the stuffing lightly and then sew up the opening. Lay the
-fish in the bake-kettle or Dutch oven, rub it all over with butter or
-lard and dredge it with flour, meal or some of the dry crumbs left
-over from the stuffing. Or, lay thin strips of fat salt pork or bacon
-on the top. Pour a little boiling water into the bottom to prevent the
-fish adhering, close the bake-kettle and put it into the fire among the
-hottest coals. In a very hot oven it should be done in forty minutes.
-Remove the bake-kettle several times before it is done to baste it.
-When cooked, serve with the following
-
-
-Fish Gravy.
-
-Put the bake-kettle back on the fire after the fish is removed; stir
-into the gravy left, gradually, two tablespoonfuls of flour. Let it
-boil up once, season with pepper and salt, and pour over the fish. If
-there are squeamish people in camp remove the "black specks" from this
-gravy with a spoon.
-
-
-Fish Chowder.
-
-Clean the fish and cut up all except the heads and tails into small
-pieces, leaving out as many bones as possible. Cover the bottom of
-the pot with slices of fat salt pork; over that a layer of sliced raw
-potatoes; then a layer of chopped onions; then a layer of fish; on
-the fish a layer of crackers, first made tender by soaking in water
-or milk. Repeat the layers, except pork, till the pot is nearly full.
-Every layer must be seasoned with pepper and salt. Put in enough cold
-water to moisten the whole mass well, cover the pot closely, set over a
-gentle fire, and let it simmer an hour or so. Cook it till it is rather
-thick, then stir it gently, and it is ready to serve. Tomatoes may be
-added as a layer after the onions.
-
-
-Clam Chowder
-
-Can be made the same as Fish Chowder, using clams instead of fish, but
-a large party of sea-beach picnickers will probably prefer the regular
-
-
-Orthodox Clam Chowder.
-
-The first thing necessary is an out-door oven made with flat stones.
-Start a rousing fire in this and let it burn until every stone is hot
-all the way through. Then rake out the coals beneath, even to the
-faintest cinder, so that there will be no smoky taste to the chowder.
-Then put a couple of stout boughs across the open top of the oven,
-and cover them with fresh seaweed an inch or two thick. Spread the
-shelled clams on the seaweed, over them a layer of onions, then a layer
-of sweet or Irish potatoes, or both, then green corn, then the fish
-(cleaned and salted and mapped in a cloth, and either a bluefish or a
-cod, if extra-orthodox), then a lobster, either alive or boiled. Now
-cover the whole arrangement with a large cloth, and pile on seaweed
-till no steam escapes. When it has cooked half an hour or so let the
-company attack it _en masse_, uncovering it gradually as it is eaten,
-so as to retain the heat in it as long as possible. The stones should
-be extremely and thoroughly heated, or the chowder will be a failure,
-and the cinders should be cleaned out, the chowder put on, and the
-whole covered with great haste, so as not to give the stones a chance
-to cool.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
- MEATS AND GAME.--HASH.--PORK AND BEANS.--GAME STEW.--BRUNSWICK
- STEW.--ROAST VENISON.--BAKED DEER'S HEAD.--VENISON
- SAUSAGES.--STUFFED ROASTS OF GAME.--WOODCHUCKS, PORCUPINES,
- 'POSSUMS AND PIGS.
-
-
-SOME good recipes for cooking meats and game, which are not given in
-Part I., are the following:
-
-
-Frizzled Beef.
-
-Cut dried beef into very thin shavings, and put into a frying pan
-nearly half full of cold water. Set over the fire and let it come to a
-boil, then stir in a large lump of butter and enough flour to make a
-good gravy.
-
-
-Hash.
-
-Four pounds of cold boiled meat (not pork) or corned beef, free from
-bone or gristle, one large parboiled onion, and two pounds of boiled
-or baked potatoes are chopped and mixed together, seasoned with pepper
-and salt, and stirred up with about a pint of hot water. Put enough
-lard or butter into a frying pan to well cover the bottom when melted,
-and when it is "screeching hot," put in the hash. Stir it for a few
-minutes, then let it fry till it is brown on the bottom. Corned beef
-hash requires little salt for seasoning.
-
-
-Boiled Pork.
-
-Soak over night in cold water and put into a pot of cold water over the
-fire when the boiling begins. Boil same as other meat (see page 27) and
-save the cake of fat that rises when it is cold for frying purposes.
-Turnips, cabbage, potatoes and greens are good boiled with the pork.
-See table for boiling vegetables in the next chapter.
-
-
-Pork Hash.
-
-Cut salt pork or bacon into small dice, and while it is frying over a
-slow fire cut raw potatoes and onions into thin slices, put them with
-the pork, cover the frying pan and cook for ten minutes, occasionally
-stirring.
-
-
-Pork and Beans.
-
-The right proportions are two quarts of beans to three pounds of pork.
-Pick over the beans at night, wash them, and put them to soak in cold
-water until the next morning. Then if only boiled pork and beans are
-desired, drain the beans, and put them with the pork in the pot, just
-cover with cold water, set over the fire (with the cover on the pot),
-and boil till the beans are tender, skimming the scum off as it rises.
-If baked beans are wanted parboil the pork and cut it into thin slices,
-then drain the beans and boil as above. Put half the beans into the
-bake-kettle, then the pork, then the remainder of the beans, and pour
-over them half a pint of boiling water. Bake among the coals till
-the top is crusted brown. If buried in the ground with a good supply
-of coals it is best to put them in at night when going to bed, and
-they will be done in the morning. If the bake-kettle is enveloped in
-hot coals on the surface of the ground they will bake on the outside
-quicker, but inside, where the pork is, they will not be baked at all.
-This latter method, therefore, should only be used when in a hurry, and
-in this case the pork should be scattered around in different portions
-of the pot, and the beans left may be re-baked for another meal.
-
-
-Game Stew.
-
-Cut up any kind of game, whether furred or feathered, into small
-pieces, wash it, and put it in a pot with some pork cut into pieces
-three inches square, and rather more than enough water to cover it all.
-Let it boil for half an hour, skimming off the particles that rise to
-the top. Then add four or five sliced onions, some parsley or summer
-savory, salt and pepper, and boil slowly for an hour and a half. Half
-an hour before it is done put in a few pared potatoes, cut to a uniform
-size.
-
-
-Brunswick Stew.[B]
-
-For a stew for five or six persons the following are the ingredients:
-two-good-sized or three small squirrels, one quart of tomatoes, peeled
-and sliced, one pint of butter or lima beans, six potatoes, parboiled
-and sliced, six ears of green corn cut from the cob, one-half pound of
-butter, one-half a pound of fat salt pork, one teaspoonful of black
-pepper, one-half a teaspoonful of cayenne, one gallon of water, one
-tablespoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of white sugar, one onion
-minced small. Cut the squirrels into joints, and lay in cold water
-to draw out the blood; put on the gallon of water, with the salt in
-it, and let it boil for five minutes; put in the onion, beans, corn,
-pork which has been cut into fine strips, potatoes, pepper and the
-squirrels; cover closely, and stew two and a-half hours very slowly,
-stirring the mass frequently from the bottom to prevent its burning.
-Then add the tomatoes and sugar, and stew an hour longer. Ten minutes
-before it is to be taken from the fire, add the butter, cut into bits
-the size of a walnut, and rolled in flour; give a final boil, taste to
-see that it is seasoned to your liking, and serve at once.
-
-
-Flour Gravy.
-
-After stews have been taken from the pot stir a tablespoonful of flour
-gradually into a small quantity of cold water, carefully breaking all
-the lumps. Then pour this gradually into the boiling liquor left in
-the pot from the stew, let it boil well two minutes, and serve. If
-flour is sprinkled dry into boiling water it Will form into lumps at
-once, no matter how much it is stirred. A tablespoonful of flour will
-sufficiently thicken nearly a quart of liquor. If what is called "brown
-gravy" is desired, heat the flour first in a frying pan, stirring it
-till it is brown.
-
-
-Roast Venison.
-
-The saddle is the best portion for roasting, and after this the
-shoulder. Hang it by a cord over a huge bed of coals, or use the
-crotched stakes, impaling the venison on the cross-piece. Insert thin
-slices of salt pork or bacon in gashes cut with a knife where the flesh
-is thick enough to admit of "gashing," or skewer them on with hard wood
-twigs where it is not. Turn frequently. The flesh on the surface will
-become hard by the time the roast is done, but this can be avoided by
-covering it with buttered paper fastened on with wooden skewers. From
-two to three hours are required for roasting.
-
-
-Baked Deer's Head.
-
-Build a fire in a hole in the ground. When it has burned to a good bed
-of coals put in the deer's head, neck downward, with the skin on but
-the eyes and brains removed. Cover with green grass or leaves, coals
-and earth, and build a new fire on top of all. In about six hours
-exhume the head, remove the skin, and the baking is complete. This
-method of baking applies as well to the head of any animal.
-
-
-Forequarter of Venison.
-
-This portion is always tough, but may be utilized by stewing it, or
-making it into
-
-
-Venison Sausages.
-
-Chop up pieces of the forequarter, mix with half as much chopped salt
-pork, season with pepper and salt, make into balls, and fry.
-
-
-Stuffed Shoulder of Venison.
-
-If you are very "swell" campers-out, and have some port or Madeira
-wine with you, you may stew the shoulder of venison in the following
-manner: Extract the bones through the under side and make a stuffing as
-follows: Chop up suet very fine, and mix it with bread crumbs, in the
-proportion of half a pint of suet to a quart of breadcrumbs. Moisten
-this with wine, season with pepper and allspice and fill the holes from
-which the bones were taken. Bind firmly in shape with strips of clean
-cloth, put in a large saucepan with part of a gravy made by boiling the
-trimmings of the venison; add to this a glass of port or Madeira wine
-and a little black pepper. Cover tightly and stew very slowly three or
-four hours, according to the size. It should be very tender when done.
-Remove the strips of cotton cloth with care, dish, and, when you have
-strained the gravy, pour it over the meat.
-
-
-Stuffed Game Roasted.
-
-Large birds (ducks or turkeys, etc.), rabbits, hares, woodchucks,
-porcupines, opossums, and the like, may be stuffed with a dressing made
-of salt pork and bread or crackers. Chop the pork very fine, soak the
-bread or crackers in hot water and mash them smooth, and mix them with
-the chopped pork. Season with pepper, a little salt, sage and chopped
-onion. Sew up the game after stuffing with wire in two or three places,
-and roast over hot coals. If wrapped in wet brown paper it may be
-immersed in hot ashes and baked, if small, or may be baked the same as
-fish.
-
-
-Woodchucks and Porcupines.
-
-When properly cooked, are little inferior to any game. They must be
-thoroughly parboiled before cooking, and then may be roasted or stewed.
-A young wood-chuck or porcupine may be baked in the ground with the
-hide on, after having been drawn, and is very palatable.
-
-
-Opossums and Young Pigs
-
-Are roasted alike. After cleaning the opossum or pig stuff him with
-bread crumbs, chopped onion and sage or summer savory for seasoning,
-boiled Irish and sweet potatoes (the latter especially with the
-'possum) and whole boiled onions being pushed in among the dressing.
-Wire up the opening in two or three places, fold the legs down on
-the body and wire them fast. Then cut a strong, straight, hard-wood
-limb, and run it through the animal from stern to snout. This is to be
-suspended from two crotched stakes over the fire, and, if smooth, the
-'possum or pig cannot be turned on it, as the limb will turn inside the
-animal. Therefore, in lopping off the twigs from the limb after it is
-cut, leave half an inch or so of each twig to act as a barb, insert the
-limb in the animal butt first, then give it a "yank" backward so that
-the barbs may hold when it is desired to turn the animal to roast all
-sides alike. Cut gashes in the thickest parts of the meat so that it
-may roast evenly throughout. A 'possum or pig prepared as above may be
-coated with clay and baked in the ground with plenty of coals in from
-two to three hours. When roasted over the fire the drippings should be
-caught and used to baste it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
- PREPARATION OF VEGETABLES FOR COOKING.--TIME TABLE FOR COOKING
- VEGETABLES.--CABBAGE, BEETS, GREENS, TOMATOES, TURNIPS, MUSHROOMS,
- SUCCOTASH, ETC.
-
-
-ALL vegetables must be carefully looked over. Remove the unripe or
-decayed parts, and then wash in cold water. When to be boiled they
-should be put in boiling salted water, and if necessary to replenish
-the water before the cooking is complete, boiling water should be
-always used. Keep the vessel covered, and drain the vegetables as soon
-as done. Do not let the water boil long before the vegetables are put
-in. Old and strong vegetables sometimes require boiling in two or three
-waters.
-
-The following time table for cooking vegetables, culled from the
-writer's scrap-book, is reliable:
-
- Potatoes, old, boiled, 30 minutes.
- Potatoes, new, baked, 45 minutes.
- Potatoes, new, boiled, 20 minutes.
- Sweet potatoes, boiled, 45 minutes.
- Sweet potatoes, baked, 1 hour.
- Squash, boiled, 25 minutes.
- Squash, baked, 45 minutes.
- Shell beans, boiled, 1 hour.
- Green peas, boiled, 20 to 40 minutes.
- String beans, boiled, 1 to 2 hours.
- Green corn, 25 minutes to 1 hour.
- Asparagus, 15 to 30 minutes.
- Spinach, 1 to 2 hours.
- Tomatoes, fresh, 1 hour.
- Tomatoes, canned, 30 minutes.[C]
- Cabbage, 45 minutes to 2 hours.
- Cauliflower, 1 to 2 hours.
- Dandelions, 2 to 3 hours.
- Beet greens, 1 hour.
- Onions, 1 to 2 hours.
- Beets, 1 to 5 hours.
- Turnips, white, 45 minutes to 1 hour.
- Turnips, yellow, 1-1/2 to 2 hours.
- Parsnips, 1 to 2 hours.
- Carrots, 1 to 2 hours.
-
-If a piece of lean salt pork is boiled with some of the above, they
-will be sufficiently seasoned. If not, season with salt, pepper and
-butter.
-
-
-Potatoes and Corn.
-
-For all methods of cooking these vegetables, see Chapter V. of Part I.
-
-
-Boiled Cabbage.
-
-Remove the outer and all bad leaves, examining carefully for insects,
-and halve or quarter the cabbage, according to size. Wash, soak a
-short time in cold water, and put in a covered pot of boiling salted
-water. When it is tender and "smells good" it is done. Drain, and press
-out the water, seasoning with salt, pepper and butter. The latter
-should be omitted if it is boiled with pork.
-
-
-Cabbage aux Legumes.
-
-Cut out the centre of a large cabbage, and fill the hole with small
-potatoes, onions, parsnips, beets, etc. Cover with a cloth and boil
-till tender.
-
-
-Fried Cooked Cabbage.
-
-Have enough lard in the pan to just cover the bottom when melted. Chop
-the cabbage, put into the melted lard and stir frequently till the
-cabbage is piping hot, when it is ready to serve.
-
-
-Succotash.
-
-Cut the corn from the cob and shell the beans. If string beans are
-used, string and cut into half-inch pieces. The right proportion for
-succotash is two-thirds corn to one-third beans. Put them into enough
-boiling salt water to cover them. Stew gently till tender, stirring
-frequently; then drain, add a cup of milk and a piece of butter the
-size of an egg, and stir till it boils up once. Season to taste.
-
-
-Boiled Beets.
-
-Winter beets must be soaked over night in water. Wash them, but do not
-scrape or cut them, as they lose in color and quality by being cut. Put
-them in boiling water enough to cover them well, cover and boil till
-tender, which will take from one to three hours. Then put them in cold
-water and rub off the skins quickly. If large, slice them; if young,
-split lengthwise.
-
-
-Greens.
-
-When in camp or on a cruise, a most delicious dish can be made of
-boiled greens, of which a large variety of weeds and plants furnishes
-the material. Dandelion leaves, nettles, milkweed, spinach, young beet
-tops, turnip tops, mustard, narrow dock, mountain cow-slip, kale,
-cabbage, poke, sprouts and other "weeds" are good. They should be
-picked over carefully, washed in three or four waters, and soaked in
-cold water half an hour; then drain and put in enough boiling salt
-water to cover them. Press them down till the pot is full, as they
-"boil away" and lose more than half in substance. Cover, and boil
-steadily till tender. Then drain and press out the water. Season to
-taste with butter, pepper and salt. Greens are good boiled with salt
-pork, bacon, corned beef or ham. Put them in the pot in time to be done
-with the meat.
-
-
-Stewed Tomatoes.
-
-Peel by pouring over them boiling water, when the skin will easily
-come off. Cut up, discarding unripe and hard parts. Put into a
-pot, seasoning with butter, pepper, salt, and if very acid, two
-tablespoonfuls of sugar. Cover, and stew gently. See time table.
-
-
-Boiled Turnips.
-
-Wash and peel, and if old, pare off part of the "meat" next the skin.
-Cut into pieces of a uniform size, soak in cold water half an hour, put
-into enough boiling salt water to cover them, cover, and cook according
-to time table. Season with butter, pepper and salt. Omit the butter if
-they are cooked with meat.
-
-
-Mushrooms.
-
-Edible mushrooms are found in clear, open, sunny fields and elevated
-ground where the air is pure and fresh; poisonous ones are found
-in woods, low, damp ground, in shady places and upon putrefying
-substances. The edible kind are most plentiful in August and September,
-and spring up after low lying fogs, soaking dews or heavy rains. They
-first appear very small and of a round form, on a little stalk, the
-upper part and stalk being then white. They grow very fast, and, as
-the size increases, the under part gradually opens and shows a fringy
-fur (called "gills") of a delicate salmon color. After the mushroom
-is a day old this salmon color changes to a russet or dark brown. The
-gills of the poisonous variety are red, green, blue, yellow or orange
-red, and sometimes white, but they never have the delicate salmon color
-of the edible mushroom. The latter have an agreeable odor, and the
-poisonous have sometimes a similar odor, but generally smell fetid. The
-flesh of the edible kind is compact and brittle; that of the poisonous
-generally soft and watery. The skin of the former is easily peeled from
-the edges, and the seeds or sprouts are for the most part roundish or
-oval; the skin of the latter is not easy to peel and the seeds are
-mostly angular. Some poisonous ones assume a bluish tint on being
-bruised and others exude an acrid, milky juice. The mushroom should
-have all of the above-named characteristics of the edible variety
-before it is put in the pot, and it is safest not to select mushrooms
-gathered by somebody else, as they change color after being picked
-several hours, and the two kinds are then difficult to distinguish.
-Finally, if a white peeled onion cooked with them turns black, or if
-a silver spoon with which they are stirred while cooking turns black,
-don't eat them; and if you don't know a salmon color from a yellow let
-somebody gather them who does.
-
-
-Stewed Mushrooms.
-
-Select mushrooms of uniform size. Wipe them clean with a soft cloth;
-peel, commencing at the edge and finishing at the top; cut off the
-lower part of the stem; put them into a tin or earthen vessel and
-half cover them with cold water, and stew gently for fifteen minutes,
-frequently stirring to prevent burning; season with pepper and salt.
-When the stew is done stir into it one or more tablespoonfuls of
-butter, previously cut in small pieces, and rolled in flour; stir
-three or four minutes. Do not let it boil.
-
-
-Fried Mushrooms.
-
-Prepare as directed for stewing; heat in a frying pan enough butter
-to thinly cover the bottom; put in the mushrooms and fry both sides a
-golden brown.
-
-
-Broiled Mushrooms.
-
-Prepare as above, put on a broiler with gills uppermost, sprinkle on a
-little salt and pepper and a tiny piece of butter, and hold over a bed
-of coals.
-
-
-Fried Beans.
-
-Put enough butter in a frying pan to just cover the bottom when melted.
-When it is hot put in your beans, already boiled and drained, and fry
-brown, stirring occasionally.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
- BOILED RICE.--CRACKED WHEAT.--HOMINY GRITS.--BATTER CAKES.--RICE
- CAKES.--PUDDINGS.--WELSH RAREBIT.--FRIED BREAD FOR SOUPS.--STEWED
- CRANBERRIES.
-
-
-Boiled Rice.
-
-PICK one pound of rice over carefully and wash it clean in one or two
-cold waters, then drain and put it into a pot containing four quarts
-of boiling water, and add four teaspoonfuls of salt; cover and boil
-steadily for fifteen minutes, then drain off the water, empty the
-rice, wipe out the pot, sprinkle a little salt over the bottom of it
-and rub it with a dry cloth, finally emptying out the salt, replacing
-the rice and setting the pot near the fire for fifteen minutes longer
-to let the rice dry and swell. If a large pot is at hand a better way
-after the rice has boiled fifteen minutes is to drain it as above, then
-pouring the boiling water into the large pot, set in the dry rice in
-the smaller one, which should be put in the larger one and all set over
-the fire and the rice allowed to steam thoroughly dry, which will take
-fifteen minutes.
-
-The writer followed the above recipe implicitly till he discovered that
-nothing further is necessary to cook rice to his own particular taste
-than the boiling fifteen minutes. Since making this discovery he has
-omitted the further portion of the recipe in practice, but gives it
-here for the benefit of those whose tastes may be more dainty than his
-own.
-
-
-Cracked Wheat.
-
-To one quart of the wheat add one tablespoonful of salt, and soak
-over night in cold water enough to cover it. In the morning put the
-wheat with the water it was soaked in into a pot, cover closely
-and cook gently until soft--probably from one to one and one-half
-hours--stirring frequently to prevent scorching. When necessary to
-replenish the water add boiling water.
-
-
-Hominy Grits
-
-Are cooked the same as cracked wheat, and are very wholesome. Coarse
-hominy requires long boiling.
-
-
-Batter Cakes.
-
-Put one quart of sifted flour in a deep dish, and mix with it one-half
-teaspoonful of salt, two heaping teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one
-teaspoonful of sugar. Add warm water (milk is better) sufficient to
-make a thick batter. Then add two eggs, beaten light, and if they do
-not thin down the batter sufficiently, add more water (or milk). Beat
-thoroughly and cook immediately the same as slapjacks.
-
-
-Rice Cakes.
-
-Into one quart of sifted flour stir enough water (or milk) to make a
-medium thick batter; add two cups of cold boiled rice, one teaspoonful
-of salt, and lastly, four eggs, beaten light. Beat thoroughly and cook
-immediately the same as slapjacks.
-
-
-Plum Pudding.
-
-Put into a basin one pound of flour, three-quarters of a pound of
-raisins (stoned, if possible), three-quarters of a pound of fat of
-salt pork (well washed and cut into small dice or chopped), and
-two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Add half a pint of water and mix well
-together. Dip a cloth bag large enough to hold the pudding into boiling
-water, wring it out, and apply flour well to the inside. Put in the
-pudding and fasten it up, leaving a little room in the bag for the
-pudding to swell. Now place the whole in enough boiling water to cover
-the bag, and boil two hours, turning the bag several times to prevent
-its scorching against the bottom or sides of the pot. If necessary to
-add water to keep the bag covered, add boiling water. When done take
-the pudding from the pot, plunge it into cold water for an instant, and
-then turn it out to be eaten.
-
-
-Omaha Pudding.
-
-Mix in a deep dish one quart of sifted flour and one tablespoonful of
-baking powder. Dissolve one heaping teaspoonful of salt in one half
-pint of cold water (or milk), adding enough of the latter to the former
-to make a very thick batter. Mix quickly and boil in a bag as above.
-
-
-Batter Pudding.
-
-One quart of sifted flour in a deep dish worked into a smooth paste
-with one quart of sweet milk; then mix in the yolks of seven eggs,
-beaten well, one teaspoonful of salt and one-fourth of a teaspoonful of
-baking powder dissolved in a little hot water. Stir hard and finally
-work in quickly the whites of the seven eggs, which should previously
-have been beaten into a stiff froth. Boil two hours in bags and leave
-plenty of room for it to swell.
-
-
-Corn Starch Pudding.
-
-Dissolve three tablespoonfuls of corn starch in a small quantity of
-milk, add two eggs, beaten light, and a small pinch of salt. Heat
-three pints of milk nearly to boiling, mix all together and boil four
-minutes, constantly stirring. Dip a cup or basin in cold water to cool
-it, and turn into it the pudding, which should be eaten with sugar and
-milk when it is cold.
-
-
-Baked Rice Pudding.
-
-Pick over and wash well one pint of rice and soak it two hours in
-enough milk or water to just cover it. Then stir it into two quarts of
-milk, one half pound of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, and a small
-quantity of nutmeg or cinnamon, if at hand. Put into the baking basins,
-having first well greased them, and bake in the ground two or three
-hours till it is done brown.
-
-
-Creole Sauce.
-
-The juice of a lemon, three tablespoonfuls of sugar, ditto of tomato
-catsup, one teaspoonful of mustard. Heat all to near the boiling point,
-and use hot with meats or game.
-
-
-Welsh Rarebit.
-
-Cut bread into slices about one inch in thickness, and pare off the
-crust. Toast the slices slightly without hardening or burning and
-spread with butter; cut slices of cheese not quite as large as the
-bread, lay it on the bread, and toast all over the fire on a broiler.
-Be careful that the cheese does not burn, and let it be equally melted.
-Spread over the top a little mustard already prepared and seasoning of
-pepper, and serve very hot.
-
-
-Fried Bread for Soups.
-
-Cut stale bread into square pieces, and fry in boiling fat for an
-instant. Take care it does not burn, removing it as soon as brown.
-
-
-Stewed Cranberries.
-
-Pick the berries carefully; then wash them in cold water; drain. Put
-them into fresh cold water and allow them to remain therein five or
-ten minutes; drain. Then put the fruit into a well-covered pot (not
-iron) with sufficient boiling water to cover the berries. Stew rather
-quickly, stirring occasionally until soft. They should cook in from
-twenty to thirty minutes. Five minutes before they are done stir in
-sugar to taste.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
- DISHES FOR YACHTSMEN.--MACARONI, BOILED AND BAKED.--BAKED
- TURKEY.--PIE CRUST.--BROWN BETTY.--APPLE PUDDING.--APPLE DUMPLINGS.
-
-
-FOR the benefit of Corinthian yachtsmen, recipes are here given for
-some dishes which are rather too elaborate in preparation for camp
-purposes, but which can be cooked readily in the yacht's galley, if it
-be provided with a regular yacht's stove, having an oven, etc.
-
-
-Boiled Macaroni.
-
-Wipe the macaroni carefully, and break it into lengths, put it into a
-pot of boiling salt water, say ten times as much water as macaroni.
-Boil fifteen to twenty minutes, or until tender. Take care that it does
-not burst or become a pulp from excessive boiling; drain at once and
-season with butter.
-
-If desired to impart the flavor of onion to macaroni boil with it two
-onions for each pound of macaroni. The liquor drained from the macaroni
-may be used for broth or soup.
-
-Boiled macaroni may be served with a white sauce, made as follows;
-for one pound of macaroni put into a pot over the fire two ounces of
-butter and two ounces of flour, stir until it becomes smooth, then
-gradually stir in one quart of hot milk and water in equal parts,
-season with pepper and salt, put in the macaroni, and let it remain
-over the fire for one minute.
-
-Or, as soon as the butter and flour bubbles, gradually pour in one
-quart of boiling water, stirring it until it becomes smooth; season
-with pepper and salt; put in the macaroni and let it remain over the
-fire for one minute. Have ready one or two onions, minced or shredded,
-fried brown. Dish the macaroni and pour the fried onions over it.
-
-Boiled macaroni may be served with tomato sauce made as follows:
-for one pound of macaroni put into a pot half a can of tomatoes, or
-twelve large fresh ones, one half a pint of stock, gravy, or broth
-of any kind, a little thyme or parsley, six whole cloves, a sliced
-onion, pepper and salt. Cover and boil gently for one hour, stirring
-frequently; drain and press the mixture through a sieve (an old pan
-full of nail holes will do); then stir into it about two ounces of
-butter and one ounce of flour, previously mixed smooth over the fire;
-stir until it is well incorporated; pour it over the macaroni: sprinkle
-on top grated cheese, and put it into the oven for five or ten minutes.
-
-
-Baked Macaroni and Cheese.
-
-Boil and drain the macaroni and with it fill by layers a buttered
-earthen dish, seasoning each layer with butter, grated cheese, mustard,
-pepper, and salt; add bread crumbs for the top layer. Cover and put it
-into the oven, and bake with a moderate heat for a half hour. Remove
-the cover, and when the top is browned serve in the baking-dish.
-
-Minced fat pork may be used instead of butter.
-
-
-Baked Turkey.
-
-Tame and wild turkeys are prepared and cooked alike. The time for
-cooking is from fifteen to twenty minutes to the pound, but this
-depends much upon the age of the bird; it must be well done to be
-palatable. Success lies in cooking it long enough, and frequent basting.
-
-Put the turkey into a pan of cold water; rinse it inside and out in
-three or four waters; in the last water but one dissolve a teaspoonful
-of soda. Fill the body with this water; shake it well; pour it off and
-rinse with fresh water; wipe it dry inside and out; rub the inside with
-pepper and salt. Prepare a stuffing as follows; Mix into enough grated
-bread crumbs to fill the craw and body of the turkey a half teaspoonful
-of summer savory, thyme, or sage, four ounces of lard, four ounces of
-butter, with enough warm water to make the mixture moist.
-
-Mix all thoroughly and stuff the craw and body with it; tie a string
-tightly about the neck; sew up the incision; tie down the wings and
-legs; then lay it on its back in the baking-pan; wet the skin and
-season it with pepper and salt and dredge it with flour. Distribute on
-the upper side small pieces of butter; put into the pan about a pint
-of boiling stock or a quarter of a pound of butter; have a brisk fire;
-put the pan into the oven and bake. Baste frequently, at least every
-ten minutes; bake to a rich brown. If it browns too rapidly lay a sheet
-of white paper over it until the lower part is done. When the turkey is
-browned on the breast turn it over in the pan while in the oven.
-
-Pepper, salt, and dredge the back with flour, and bake until browned,
-basting as above. When baked remove the strings from the neck and body;
-put it into a hot dish and serve with a flour gravy, made as described
-on page 62.
-
-The turkey may also be stuffed with sausage-meat, fresh oysters or
-roasted chestnuts.
-
-
-Pie Crust.
-
-All pie crust should be made in a cool place and handled as little as
-possible during the process. The heat from the hand makes the crust
-tough. The ingredients are:
-
-One quart of flour (sifted); one-fourth of a pound butter; one-half
-teaspoonful salt; enough cold water to make a stiff dough. Sift the
-flour into a deep wooden bowl or tin pan; put into it the salt; mix;
-then the lard. With a keen chopping-knife cut up the lard into the
-flour until it is thoroughly incorporated, with no lumps; wet with
-cold water, stirring it in with a wooden spoon until it becomes a
-stiff dough. Flour the hands and make dough into a lump with as little
-handling as possible.
-
-Remove lump to well-floured kneading-board, and roll it out into a
-sheet a fourth of an inch thick, always rolling from you, and with as
-little pressure upon the rolling-pin as may be necessary.
-
-Into the rolled sheet stick small pieces of butter at regular
-intervals. Dredge slightly with flour. Roll up the sheet, commencing to
-roll from the side nearest you. Roll out, again buttering and dredging
-until the butter is exhausted. If time will permit, when the butter has
-been exhausted and the roll made up, lay it away in a cold place or on
-the ice for twenty minutes.
-
-Place it again upon the floured kneading-board, roll out into a sheet
-as hereinbefore directed. Butter the pie-plates; lay the paste lightly
-within them, fitting it nicely. Trim off the paste neatly around the
-edges of the pie-plates. Gather up the cuttings and roll them into a
-separate sheet.
-
-If the pies are to have a top crust, cover the tops with the paste,
-cutting neatly round the edges, and with a knife, spoon or the fingers
-join securely the edges of the top and sides to prevent escape of
-juices. Then with a sharp knife make three or four incisions about an
-inch long in the center of the top crust.
-
-If the top crust is lightly brushed with sweet milk, it will brown
-evenly.
-
-Bake in a moderate oven until a light brown. Be careful to have the
-heat as great at the bottom as at the top of oven. If this is not
-looked to, the lower crust will be uncooked and inedible.
-
-Should a richer crust be desired the proportions of lard and butter can
-be doubled.
-
-
-Brown Betty (Baked).
-
-The ingredients are: Cooking-apples, pared, cored, and sliced;
-dry-bread crumbs, or well-toasted bread rolled into crumbs; sugar,
-butter, and ground cinnamon.
-
-Grease well a deep baking-dish. Into the bottom of this put a layer of
-prepared apples; sprinkle them lightly with sugar; scatter small pieces
-of butter over this, then dust with ground cinnamon; over this place a
-layer of bread crumbs from one-half to three-quarters of an inch thick;
-over this apples, butter, and cinnamon, and continue this process until
-the dish is full, or until sufficient material has been used. The top
-layer must be crumbs, and on this must be scattered small pieces of
-butter. If the top layer is moistened with a couple of tablespoonfuls
-of milk it will brown more evenly.
-
-Put into a moderate oven and bake from a half to three-quarters of an
-hour.
-
-When a fork will easily penetrate the apples it is cooked. Alden dried
-apples may be substituted for the fresh fruit.
-
-It can be eaten hot or cold with butter, sugar, or sauce.
-
-
-Baked Apple Pudding.
-
-Use the following ingredients: Apples pared, cored and sliced; one
-quart sifted flour; three teaspoonfuls baking powder, incorporated with
-the dry flour; one-half teaspoonful salt; two tablespoonfuls lard
-(half butter is preferable); one pint milk (cold water will do).
-
-Have ready sugar, butter, and ground cinnamon. Put flour into a deep
-dish or pan; mix into it the salt and lard; then add the milk, and work
-the mixture with the hands to a smooth light dough.
-
-Roll the dough into a sheet about one-quarter of an inch thick. Have
-prepared a well-greased baking-dish. Cover the bottom and sides of the
-dish with rolled dough or paste, press it lightly against the sides and
-bottom, and cutoff the edges above the dish.
-
-Put into the bottom of the baking-dish thus prepared a thick layer
-of sliced apples, sprinkle them with sugar and ground cinnamon, then
-another layer of apples treated in like manner, and so on successively
-until the dish is full. The top layer of apples should have the
-dressing of sugar and cinnamon, and be also sprinkled with small pieces
-of butter. Wet the top layer with three or four teaspoonfuls of water,
-and then sprinkle it lightly with dry flour.
-
-Take the remainder of the dough, roll it out thin, and cover the dish
-with it, pressing the paste down round the edges of the dish to join it
-with the paste that lines the sides. Make three or four incisions in
-the cover with a sharp knife.
-
-Then put the dish into a moderate oven and bake from one to one and a
-half hours. When a fork easily penetrates the pudding, it is cooked.
-Eat hot with sauce. Alden dried apples, canned apples, canned peaches,
-or fresh peaches pared, quartered, and the stones extracted may be
-used.
-
-
-Baked Apple Dumplings.
-
-The apples pared, cored and quartered. Prepare paste as directed for
-Baked Apple Pudding above.
-
-When the paste is rolled, cut it into squares, and in the centre of
-each square place the four parts of an apple; add to each apple a piece
-of butter the size of a chestnut and a small sprinkle of sugar and
-ground cinnamon.
-
-Envelop the apple in the paste, pressing the cut edges together. Place
-the dumplings thus prepared into a well-greased baking-pan, cut edges
-downwards.
-
-Bake a half to three-fourths of an hour in a moderate oven. When a fork
-will penetrate the dumplings they are cooked. Apples dried by the Alden
-process may be used.
-
-
-
-
-HINTS.
-
-
-COOKING IN IRON POTS.--Let nothing stand in an iron pot after it is
-cooked, or it will become discolored and have an unpleasant taste.
-
-RUSTY KNIVES.--If knives become rusty, rub them with a fresh-cut potato
-dipped in ashes.
-
-EMETIC.--Gunpowder dissolved in water is a good emetic.
-
-SAVE THE BACON GREASE.--After frying salt pork, bacon or fat meat, do
-not discard the grease that is left in the pan. Keep a cup or small tin
-pail, in which pour all residue. It will soon harden, and is just the
-thing for frying slapjacks or potatoes in.
-
-IMPROVED RIVER WATER FOR DRINKING.--If you make tea do not throw out
-the "grounds" after each drawing. In warm weather ordinary lake or
-river water will taste very refreshing if poured into the pot where
-tea-grounds have been left, and allowed to stand a few minutes before
-drinking.
-
-SALT.--It is always best in cooking to use too little salt rather than
-too much. Further salting can be easily done at any time, but it is
-difficult or impossible to freshen anything that has been over-salted.
-
-BAKING POWDER.--In using baking powder it is always best to follow the
-printed directions on the can as to the amount. The different makes of
-baking powders have each a different strength.
-
-SPOONS.--On a canoe trip, where storage room is at a premium, one spoon
-will suffice for all purposes. Let it be of iron, of "dessert" size.
-Get a tinsmith to cut off two inches of the handle, and solder strongly
-to the stump a tin cylinder one-half inch in diameter. There will be
-no long handle to interfere with packing it in a small space, and if a
-long handle is desired for skimming soups, stirring mush, etc., a stick
-of any length can be instantly cut to fit the tin cylinder.
-
-FROZEN FISH should be soaked in cold water to thaw them before cooking.
-
-FISH-EATING DUCKS may be made palatable by parboiling them in water
-with an onion in it. After parboiling them throw away the onion and
-lay the ducks in cold water for half an hour, after which they may be
-roasted, broiled, fried or stewed.
-
-SOFT VS. HARD WATER.--Beans, peas and other vegetables are best boiled
-in soft water. Hard water can be made soft (if its hardness depends
-upon the presence of carbonate of lime) by boiling it an hour and then
-allowing it to cool, when most of the lime will be precipitated.
-
-BROILING.--Remember that it is better to broil before a fire than over
-it, as by the former process the juices of the meat can be caught and
-used as a dressing, while in the latter manner they are lost in the
-fire and tend to give a smoky flavor by their ignition. In broiling,
-the article should be turned frequently.
-
-FRYING.--The lard or fat used for frying should always be very
-hot before the article to be cooked is put in. If little jets of
-smoke issue from the top of the fat it is hot enough. If the fat is
-insufficiently hot, anything cooked in it will taste of the grease,
-while the moment a substance is dropped into fat at a great heat the
-exterior pores are closed, and no grease penetrates it.
-
-MIXING INGREDIENTS.--Preciseness in the preparation of ingredients is
-an important element of success in cooking. Guessing at proportions is
-the practice of the lazy or indifferent cook.
-
-NEW IRON POTS.--Boil a handful of grass in a new iron pot, then scrub
-it inside with soap and sand, fill it with clean water and let this
-boil half an hour. It is then ready to use for cooking.
-
-TABLE OF APPROXIMATE WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.--The following table may be
-of use. It is near enough to accuracy for cooking purposes:--
-
- Three teaspoonfuls = One tablespoonful.
- Four tablespoonfuls = One wine glass.
- Two wine glasses = One gill.
- Two gills = One tumbler or cup.
- Two cupfuls = One pint.
- One quart sifted flour = One pound.
- One quart powdered sugar = One pound, seven ounces.
- One quart granulated sugar = One pound, nine ounces.
- One pint closely packed butter = One pound.
- Three cupfuls sugar = One pound.
- Five cupfuls sifted flour = One pound.
- One tablespoonful salt = One ounce.
- Seven tablespoonfuls granulated sugar = One half pint.
- Twelve tablespoonfuls flour = One pint.
- Three coffee cupfuls = One quart.
- Ten eggs = One pound.
-
-YEAST.--A serviceable yeast for leavening bread may be made by mixing
-flour and cold water into a thin batter. Set it away in a bottle until
-it sours, when it is ready for use.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
- Apple dumplings (baked), 87
- -- pudding (baked), 85
- Ash cakes, 38
-
- Bacon, fried, 25
- -- grease should be saved, 88
- Bags, waterproof, for provisions and clothing, 13
- Baked apple dumplings, 87
- -- apple pudding, 85
- -- brown Betty, 85
- -- deer's head, 63
- -- fish, plain, 55
- -- -- stuffed, 56
- -- macaroni with cheese, 81
- -- rice pudding, 77
- -- turkey, 82
- Baking powder, 89
- -- -- biscuits, 39
- -- time necessary for, 47
- -- without a stove, 47
- Ballast, canned goods for, 15
- Batter cakes, 75
- -- pudding, 77
- Beans, fried, 73
- -- pork and, 60
- -- soup, 52
- Beds, camp, 43
- Beef, frizzled, 59
- Betty, brown, 85
- Biscuits, baking powder, 39
- -- Hecker's flour, 39
- -- Maryland, 40
- Blacksmith's pliers, 12, 46
- Blanketed oysters, 24
- Boiled cabbage, 68
- -- eggs, 40
- -- fish, 22
- Boiled fish roe, 23
- -- green corn, 32
- -- macaroni, 80
- -- meat, 27
- -- pork, 60
- -- potatoes, 30
- -- rice, 74
- -- turnips, 71
- Box for provisions, the canoeist's, 9-11
- Box for salt and pepper, 12
- Bread, fried, for soups, 78
- -- pilot, 15
- -- quick camp, 39
- -- unleavened, 40
- Broiled mushrooms, 73
- -- salt pork, 25
- -- steaks, 26
- Broiling hints, 89
- -- in a frying-pan, 26
- Brown Betty (baked), 85
- Brunswick stew, 61
- Butter jar, 11
-
- Cabbage aux legumes, 69
- -- boiled, 68
- -- fried cooked, 69
- Cakes, ash, 38
- -- batter, 75
- -- hoe, 37
- -- rice, 76
- Camp bed, 43
- -- cellar, 43
- -- dining-table, 48
- -- fire, 44-48
- -- stove, 43-44
- Canned corn beef, 25
- -- food for canoe ballast, 15
- Canoe stove, 14
- -- -- Danforth's, 14
- Cellar, camp, 43
- Chest, provision, for canoeists, 9-11
- Chowder, clam, 57
- -- -- orthodox, 57
- -- fish, 57
- Clam chowder. (_See_ chowder.)
- -- soup, 18
- Coffee, 34
- -- pot, construction of, 46
- Condensed provisions, 14
- Cooking in iron pots, 88
- Corn, boiled, 32
- -- fried, 33
- -- roasted, 33
- -- stewed, 33
- -- dodgers, 38
- -- pone, 38
- -- starch pudding, 77
- Corned beef, canned, 25
- Cornmeal mush, 35
- -- -- slapjacks, 37
- Crabs, hard shell, 23
- -- soft, 23
- Cracked wheat, 75
- Cranberries, stewed, 78
- Creole sauce, 78
- Crust, pie, 83
-
- Damp wood, to start a fire with, 48
- Danforth fluid canoe stove, 14
- Deer's head soup, 52
- Dishes, washing, 49
- Driftwood for fires, 45
- Drinking river and lake water, 88
- Dumplings, apple (baked), 87
- Ducks, fish-eating, 89
- -- roast, 28
- -- stewed, 29
-
- Eggs, boiled, 40
- -- fried, 40
- -- poached, 40
- -- scrambled, 41
- -- ham and, 26
- -- method of carrying to avoid breakage, 12, 43
- Emetic, 88
-
- Fish, 20, 55
- Fish, baked, plain, 55
- -- -- stuffed, 56
- -- boiled, 22
- -- chowder, 57
- -- fried, 21
- -- gravy, 56
- -- planked, 21
- -- sauce, 22
- -- soup, 53
- -- skewered, 22
- -- caught in muddy streams, 20
- -- frozen, 80
- -- grubs in, 29
- -- roe, boiled, 23
- -- -- fried, 23
- -- should be killed as soon as caught, 20
- Fish-eating ducks, 89
- Fire, best fuel for, 45, 47
- -- for camp cooking, 44-48
- -- how to build, 45
- -- how to start with damp wood, 48
- -- of driftwood, 45
- Flamme forcé, 14, 48
- Flapjacks. (_See_ slapjacks.)
- Flour gravy, 62
- Flour, self-raising, 15
- Folding stoves, 14
- Forequarter of venison, 64
- Fried beans, 73
- -- cold mush, 36
- -- cooked cabbage, 69
- -- -- potatoes, 31
- -- eggs, 40
- -- fish, 21
- -- -- roe, 23
- -- green corn, 33
- -- mushrooms, 73
- -- oysters, 24
- -- pigeons, 27
- -- raw potatoes, 31
- -- salt pork (or bacon), 25
- -- squirrels, 27
- Frizzled beef, 59
- Frogs, 29
- Frozen fish, 89
- Frying hints, 90
- Frying-pan, broiling in, 26
- -- handleless, 46
- Fuel for camp-fire, 45, 47
-
- Game, 25, 29
- -- soup of small, 52
- -- stew, 61
- -- stuffed and roasted, 65
- Gravy, flour, 62
- -- fish, 56
- -- for stews, 62
- Grease, save the bacon, 88
- Green corn, boiled, 32
- -- -- fried, 33
- -- -- roasted, 33
- -- -- stewed, 33
- Greens, 70
- Grits, hominy, 75
- Grouse, roast, 28
- "Grub-box," canoeist's, 9-11
- Grubs in fish, 20
-
- Ham and eggs, 26
- Hash, 59
- -- pork, 60
- Hard-shell crabs, 23
- Hard vs. soft water, 89
- Hares or rabbits, 28
- Hecker's flour biscuits, 39
- -- -- slapjacks, 38
- -- prepared flour, 15
- Hints, 88
- Hominy grits, 75
- Hoe cakes, 37
-
- Ice-box, 44
- Ingredients, mixing, 90
- Iron pots, cooking in, 88
- -- -- new, 90
-
- Johnnycake, 36
-
- Kerosene stoves, wind-protected, 48
- Knives, rusty, 88
-
- Macaroni, baked with cheese, 81
- -- boiled, 80
- -- sauce for, 80
- Maryland biscuit, 40
- Mashed potatoes, 31
- Measures and weights, table of, 90
- Meat, boiled, 27
- -- soup, 51
- Mixing ingredients, 90
- Mush, cold, fried, 36
- -- corn meal, 35
- -- oatmeal, 36
- Mushrooms vs. poisonous fungi, 71
- Mushrooms, broiled, 73
- -- fried, 73
- -- stewed, 72
-
- New iron pots, 90
-
- Oatmeal mush, 36
- Oil-stoves, wind-protected, 48
- Omaha pudding, 76
- Onion soup, 18
- Opossums, 65
- Oven, portable, 13
- Oyster soup, 18
- Oysters, blanketed, 24
- -- fried, 24
-
- Pack baskets for carrying outfit, 43
- Pancakes. (_See_ slapjacks.)
- Pea soup, 53
- Pepper and salt boxes, 12
- Pie crust, 83
- Pigeons, fried, 27
- -- stewed, 29
- Pigs, young, 65
- Pilot bread, 15
- Planked fish, 21
- Pliers, blacksmith's, 12, 46
- Plover, roast, 27
- Plum pudding, 76
- Poached eggs, 40
- Pone, corn, 38
- Porcupines, 65
- Pork and beans, 60
- Pork, boiled, 60
- -- broiled, 25
- -- fried, 25
- -- hash, 60
- -- selection of, 25
- Portable oven, 13
- 'Possums, 65
- Potatoes, boiled, 30
- -- fried (raw), 31
- -- fried (cooked), 31
- -- mashed, 31
- -- roasted, 31
- -- stewed, 32
- -- sweet, 32
- Pots, iron, cooking in, 88
- -- -- new, 90
- Powder, baking, 89
- Provisions consumed in a week's cruise, 16
- Pudding, apple (baked), 85
- -- batter, 77
- -- corn starch, 77
- -- Omaha, 76
- -- plum, 76
- -- rice, 77
-
- Quail, roast, 27
- Quick camp bread, 39
-
- Rabbits or hares, 28
- Rabbit, stewed, 28
- Range, out-door cooking, 44-46
- Rarebit, Welsh, 78
- Rice cakes, 76
- -- boiled, 74
- -- pudding, baked, 77
- -- soup, 52
- River water, improved for drinking, 88
- Roast ducks and grouse, 28
- -- green corn, 33
- -- potatoes, 31
- -- quail, snipe and plover, 27
- -- venison, 63
- -- woodcock, 28
- Rusty knives, 88
-
- Salt and pepper boxes, 12
- -- in cooking, 88
- Sauce, Creole, 78
- Sausages, venison, 64
- Scrambled eggs, 41
- Self-raising flour, 15
- Shoulder of venison, stuffed, 64
- Skewered trout, 22
- Slapjacks, 37
- -- cornmeal, 37
- -- Hecker's flour, 38
- -- wheat, 37
- Small game soup, 52
- Snipe, roast, 27
- Soft crabs, 23
- Soups, 17, 50
- -- Brunswick, 17
- -- fried bread for, 78
- -- general remarks on making, 17, 50
- -- Huckins', 17
- Soup, bean, 52
- -- clam, 18
- -- deer's head, 52
- -- fish, 53
- -- meat, 51
- -- onion, 18
- -- oyster, 18
- -- pea, 53
- -- rice, 52
- -- small game, 52
- -- tomato, 19
- -- turtle, 54
- -- vegetable, 51
- Spoon, improved, 89
- Squirrels, fried, 27
- Steaks, broiled, 26
- Stew, Brunswick, 61
- -- of game, 61
- Stewed cranberries, 78
- -- ducks or pigeons, 29
- -- green corn, 33
- -- mushrooms, 72
- -- potatoes, 32
- -- rabbits, 28
- -- tomatoes, 70
- Stews, gravy for, 62
- Stove, camp, 43-44
- -- canoe, 14
- -- folding, 14
- Stuffed baked fish, 56
- -- game roasted, 65
- -- shoulder of venison, 64
- Succotash, 69
- Sweet potatoes, 32
-
- Table, camp, 48
- -- of weights and measures, 90
- Tea, 35
- Tins for carrying provisions, 11
- Tomatoes, stewed, 70
- Tomato soup, 19
- Trout, skewered, 22
- Turkey, baked, 82
- Turnips, boiled, 71
- Turtle soup, 54
-
- Unleavened bread, 40
- Utensils for camp cookery, 43, 46
- -- for canoe cookery, 9-16
-
- Vegetables, remarks on, 67
- -- for a canoe cruise, 30
- -- time-table for cooking, 67-68
- Vegetable soup, 51
- Venison, forequarter of, 64
- Venison, roast, 63
- -- sausages, 64
- -- stuffed shoulder of, 64
-
- Washing dishes, 49
- Water, hard vs. soft, 89
- -- river, improved for drinking, 88
- Waterproof bags for provisions and clothing, 13
- Weights and measures, table of, 90
- Welsh rarebit, 78
- Wheat, cracked, 75
- -- slapjacks, 37
- Woodchucks, 65
- Woodcock, roast, 28
-
- Yachtsmen, dishes for, 80
- Yeast, 91
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[A] See note on baking powder in the chapter of "Hints."
-
-[B] This is a favorite Virginia dish, of which the compiler of this
-book has eaten, but which he has never cooked. The recipe here given is
-said by an old Virginian to be reliable.
-
-[C] If the unopened can is put in boiling water, only about ten minutes
-are necessary.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
-
-
- Text in italics is surrounded with underscores: _italics_.
-
- Inconsistencies in spelling, hyphenation, grammar, and punctuation have
- been standardized.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Canoe and Camp Cookery, by
-(AKA "Seneca") H. H. Soulé
-
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