I am pleased, proud, and a little scared to announce that I
have a new book project. It is to be a Food
History Almanac to be published by AltaMira Press - but not for a couple of
years as it is a big, two-volume project.
I can only hope to provide as much fun as Morton's Sixpenny Almanack And Diary, With
Diary and Compendium, published in London,
in1876. Today I give you some gleanings
from this delightful book – the food-oriented ones, of course.
Firstly, I give you A String of Mottoes, and encourage you
to add your own to the list:
A String of Mottoes.
For
Publicans Love me, love my grog.
For Cooks
Onion is strength.
For
Bakers Early to
bread, and early to rise.
For Cheesemongers
High and mighty.
For
Fishmongers Confession is good for the soul.
For
Milkmen Chalk it up.
For Pork
Butchers The whole hog or none.
For
Woodcutters Chops and Steaks.
Secondly, I give you
a small selection of the riddles scattered through the text (focussing on those
with a food reference of course):
-
Why is a publican's trade a profitable one to follow
?—Because, by conducting it with good spirit, he has more bar-gains than most
others, and all the pull is on his side.
-
What animal has death no effect on?—A pig, because
directly you have killed him you can cure him, and save his bacon.
Next, I give you
some of the medical advice from the book (something that will NOT be included
in my own Almanac, I promise)
Dyspepsia.
Dr. Brown-Sequard's
method of treating dyspepsia, which he has found successful in the majority of
cases during ten years' practice, is on the principle of eating little but often.
Take from one to four mouthfuls at once, but eat again in ten, twenty, or
thirty minutes. Use nourishing food and drink, as roasted or boiled meats, and
especially beef, mutton, eggs, well baked bread, and milk, with butter and
cheese, and a very moderate quantity of vegetables and fruit. Beef tea or milk
is recommended instead of water, and the quantity of solid food for one day
should not exceed forty ounces. This plan need be pursued but two or three
weeks, when return may be had to the ordinary rule of three meals a day. By
this method the stomach is gently and steadily occupied but not over-loaded.
(P.S. We had
a recipe for Dyspepsia Bread in a previous post.)
Advice to Consumptive
People.
You want
air, not physic. You want nutrition, Each as plenty of meat and bread will
give, and they alone. Physic has no nutriment; gaspings for air cannot cure
you; monkey capers in a gymnasium cannot cure you, and stimulants cannot cure
you. If you want to get well, go in for beef and out-door air, and do not be
deluded into the grave by advertisements and unreliable certifiers. - Dr. Hall.
And, finally
– what is an Almanac without recipes? I can certainly promise that some will be
included in my own work. Here is the example that followed the above advice to
consumptives:
Barley Water.
Wash two ounces and
a half of pearl barley; boil for one minute in half a pint of water, which
throw away; then pour on to the barley four pints of water; boil down to two
pints, and strain. Flavour with sugar and lemon to taste. This is an excellent
drink in cases of fever.
Quotation for the Day.
All hail! a cow,
with coat of silk,
That yields the rich and poor the milk,
Supplying peasant and the peer
With yellow butter—giving cheer
To rustic's and to prince's board,
The creamy store she doth afford.
That yields the rich and poor the milk,
Supplying peasant and the peer
With yellow butter—giving cheer
To rustic's and to prince's board,
The creamy store she doth afford.
[From an un-credited
poem in Morton’s Sixpenny Almanac.]
2 comments:
Congratulations!
Excellent! Looking forward to more announcements / excerpts!
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