The Mansfield Shield (Ohio) of April 16, 1915 had this to say:
“Not so many years back the cotton seed was
considered of little or no value. It was left in great stacks in the fields and
used as fertilizer …. It is now made into meal and hulls for livestock, oil for
cooking, and flour for baking, as well as leaving something for fertilizer. The
oil has numerous uses, even appearing in adulterations of ice cream.”
Cookies from Cotton Seed.
President Taft and
Cabinet Sampled the Latest Offering in Line of Food Supply.
Washington, Mar. 12 – President Taft’s cabinet ate
cookies made out of cottonseed flour. Secretary Dickinson provided the feast. It
came to him from his nephew in Ennis, Texas. The nephew, Henry Lindsley, declared
that J.W. Allen [sic], of Ennis, had been feeding his family on bread and cakes made
from cottons eed flour for twenty years.
Mr. Lindsley saw in this new kind of food a chance
to reduce the cost of living as well as provide another source of revenue for
the South. He urged Mr Allison to make his secret public. Together they made a
packing case full of bread, fruit cake, ginger bread, ginger snaps, cookies,
pound cake and other pastries from the cotton seed flour and sent it to
Washington.
The bread and cake tasted as good as the same
articles made from wheat flour, and the cotton seed taste could not be
detected. Mr Allison declares that the flour has more nutriment than wheat
flour.
The value of cotton seed was in its high protein and fat content
compared to wheat – so it was seen as more appropriate as a meat than a cereal
substitute. It is mentioned in several publications as being used as food for
German prisoners, and a commonly touted recipe was to include ¼ meal to ¾ meat
in the making of sausages.
The limiting factor in the use of cotton seed as a food is that the
seed contains tiny ‘glands’ filled with a yellow pigment called gossypol, which
is poisonous to ‘monogastric’ animals such as pigs, rabbits, poultry – and humans.
On the whole, however, the nutritional benefits of the high protein and high
oil content of the seed was emphasised, and this small inconvenience of
toxicity to consumers was avoided. One publication suggested that adults should
have no more than three ounces of the flour in a day, which would hardly have
assisted sales had it been on every packet of cotton seed flour.
The toxic pigment granules are no longer, apparently, a concern, as
scientists have developed a ‘glandless’ seed. ‘Glandless’ cotton seed kernels
can be boiled as a vegetable, roasted as a snack, and ‘texturized’ for use as a
meat substitute. The oil is used in butter substitutes and salad oils, and the
meal (flour) into bakery products, and no doubt with the ubiquity of corn
syrup, in many, many other manufactured food products.
Recipe for the Day.
From a community cookery book published in Los Angeles in 1910, I
give you a recipe for cottonseed flour biscuits.
Cottonseed Flour
Biscuit.
One cup cottonseed
flour, 1 cup wheat flour, 1 level teaspoon soda, 2 level teaspoons baking
powder, 1 tablespoon sugar, 2 tablespoons lard, ¾ cup buttermilk. Sift dry
ingredients together. Cut in lard with a knife. Add milk slowly. Turn out on a
floured board. Knead slightly. Roll out ½ inch thikc. Cut with a floured
cutter.
Note. – If it is
not convenient to use sour milk, sweet milk may be used by using 4 teaspoons
baking powder instead of both soda and baking powder. Cottonseed flour is six
times as nutritious as wheat flour and is good for all gastric troubles.
Magnolia Cook Book, 1910
Quotation for the Day.
The longer I work in nutrition, the more convinced I become that for
the healthy person all foods should be delicious.
Adele Davis.
2 comments:
This must be why some brands of sardines and smoked oysters are always packed in cottonseed oil. Bleech! I still eat them but it always reminds me of the big fuzzy mounds of cotton seeds left over after ginning.
I suspect cottonseed oil is a bit like corn syrup - it is in far more products than we realise.
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