Although I have finished my three-day series on
George Washington Carver, there is one more basic food which he inspires me to
write about today, although to date I have not been able to find any of his own
recipes for it - the soybean.
Soybeans were grown increasingly widely in America
in the second half of the nineteenth century, but they were grown as a fodder
crop, and for their oil. Two men were instrumental in the beans being accepted
as food. One was George Washington Carver, who began his work with them in the
first decade of the twentieth century; the other was Henry Ford, the automobile
entrepreneur.
Ford passionately believed that agriculture and
industry should be closely aligned and should be mutually supportive. His
interest in soybeans began when he was investigating crops which could provide
the raw materials for industry, and one of his dreams was that automobiles
could be grown from the soil. As is well known, he developed a prototype plastic
car in 1941 that was made from the soybean. The car itself was never mass
produced because it was not financially feasible, but it is said that every car
that rolled out of the Ford factory in the 1940s contained a bushel of the
beans in the enamel paint and a number of the smaller components.
Ford and Carver corresponded regularly on the
subject of soybeans, and Ford soon became quite evangelical about them as food.
He hosted a number of all-soy meals in the 1930s and 1940s, and his personal
chef was instructed to incorporate soy products in as many dishes as possible.
In honor of both men, here is a sample of recipes
for soybeans, from those early times.
Coffee
and Peanuts
Dry
soybeans have also been used as a substitute for salted peanuts and for coffee.
When prepared as a substitute for peanuts, the dry seed is first soaked in a 10
per cent salt solution for ten or twelve hours, and then roasted to a light
brown color. Yellow and green seeded varieties are preferred as they make a
better appearing and more palatable dish.
Soybean
Production in Illinois, 1928
Soy
bean butter.
Mix
hydrogenated soy oil with salt, coloring matter and diacetyl to color and
taste.
Recipes
for Soy Bean Foods, from the Edison Institute, 1936
Soybean
milk.
When
finely ground soybeans are mixed with about 10 parts of water and heated near
boiling point for 15 to 30 minutes, an emulsion is obtained which is remarkably
similar in appearance and properties to cow’s milk. Upon standing for a while
the particles of meal will settle out and the liquid can be poured off. The
liquid remaining in the residue can be separated by pouring the mass into a
cloth bag and shaking until the liquid has run out. If allowed to stand quietly
the filtration is extremely slow.
Cornell
bulletin for homemakers, 1945
Soybean Macaroons
1 cup cooked soybean
mash
2 cups flaked breakfast
cereal
1 cup sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
2 egg whites
1 teaspoon almond
flavouring
Add salt to the egg whites and beat until slightly
stiff. Add the sugar, a tablespoon at a time, and beat until stiff. Mix the
soybean mash with the flaked cereal, which has been crushed, and gradually fold
this mixture into the egg whites. Add the flavouring. Drop by spoonfuls on
waxed paper and bake in a very moderate oven (300-325 deg. F) for about 25-30
minutes, or until delicately brown and well set.
Soybeans
for health, longevity, and economy, by Philip S. Chen,
1956
2 comments:
Soynuts and soymilk are quite the thing these days; I had no idea they went so far back!
Sandra
Hi Sandra - except for the Chinese, who were using them this way for many hundreds of years!
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