Methinks yesterday’s legal-inspired
menu is calling to be followed up with another theme-dinner. I give you a menu
from an Engineer Officers Training Camp in Virginia.
LAST FORMATION
OF
SECTION B. COMPANY 1
E.O.T.S
-
CAMP A. A. HUMPHREYS,
VA
-
JANUARY 31, 1919
“LIGHTS ON”
COME
AND GET IT
DONE IN
THE FOLLOWING MANNER
Hoist
Down That Flag Pick
Up Your Brass
POINT
BLUE
POINT COCKTAIL
CONNECTING
FILES
CELERY A
LA ABATTIS OLIVES DRAB
ADVANCE
PARTY
SHRAPNEL
SOUP HOPPE NO. 9
CONNECTING
FILES
8TH SQUAD SALAD PICKLES
A LA SHRIMP 1ST
SQUAD DILL
SUPPORT
SALMON
(not from the Q.M) SARDINES (Close Order)
Continue
the March
CONNECTING
FILES
ROLLS
(Bedding) HARD TACK
RESERVES
MESS
HALL HASH SQUARE EGGS
HOMINY HOT DOGS
CONNECTING
FILES
E.O.T.S YAMS ASPARAGUS (long balks)
MAIN
BODY
TURKEY
ROASTED (Gorelangton Style)
Flankers HAM (as you were) Flankers
POHICK CRANBERRIES ACCOTINC
DRESSING
PUMPKIN
PIE (open faced) PERSIMMONS
(home grown)
NUTS
(volunteers) CHEESE
(porous knit)
ICE
CREAM CAKE
COFFEE
(not chemically treated)
REAR
GUARD
For
Smokers For Chewers
CAMELS BLACK
JACK
HAVANAS PEPSIN
FATIMAS TUTTI
FRUTTI
For
Those Who Neither Smoke or Chew
DEWITT’S LITTLE EARLY RISERS
GRAPE JUICE
NORMAL SIGHT 20-20
The actual dishes served at this dinner will remain
a mystery of course. They were no doubt regular dishes simply re-named for the
occasion.
So, to keep the military theme, I give you recipes from
the same era in another country.
From the Examiner (Launceston, Tasmania,
Australia) of 1 October, 1941:-
Most families have a soldier
relation at the war, or an airman or a sailor, and at
this time of the year cakes and puddings are being
made to send to the men overseas. This week the cash
prize has been awarded for recipes for a soldier's cake and a
soldier's pudding. The recipes were sent in by Mrs.
J. J. Glover, Scone Street, Perth.
Half pound butter, ½ lb. sugar,
4 eggs, 3 tablespoons sherry, ½ lb. seeded raisins, ½ lb.
currants, ½ lb. sultanas, 2oz peel, 2oz. blanched almonds,
10oz. plain flour, ½ teaspoon carb. soda, 1 dessertspoonful caramel
or Parisian essence, 1 teaspoon spice.
Cream butter and sugar. Add
well-beaten eggs gradually, then sherry.
Then add well-sifted flour, carbonate of soda and spice, with well-prepared fruit. Add the caramel. Turn into prepared tin and place in a hot oven; turn
heat down very low and allow to
cook slowly from 2 ½ to 3 hours. To test the cake
place a skewer through the thickest part and if it comes out quite
free from cake mixture the cake is cooked. Remove from oven and
allow to remain in tin until cold. Approximately 3 ½ lb. cake when baked.
Half lb. plain flour, ½ cup breadcrumbs, ½ lb. sugar, ½ lb. butter, ½ lb.
raisins, ½ lb. sultanas, 2oz. peel, 2oz almonds, 2oz. cherries, 2 tablespoons rum or sherry, 1 teaspoon carbonate of
soda, spice to taste. Sift flour and spice,
rub in the butter, add sugar and fruits, mix with
eggs and spirits, lastly add dissolved soda. Three-quarters fill
dried milk or treacle tins, well-greased, place lids on firmly. Boil three hours or steam five hours. On
day of using boil one hour. Open round edge of tin. Serve with cream or
sauce.
4 comments:
Funny. A book that I own on patterns of 18th & 19th c silver flatware illustrates one rare mid-19th century pattern with a quite heavily-mangled dinner fork. The author observes that the fork is engraved with the crest of a British regiment and remarks that generally speaking, officers' mess regimental flatware tends to have been subjected to a pretty high level of abuse.
On Michigan State University's Feeding America website they have a reproduction of a turn of the (last) century army cookbook. Dishes include Bombshells, Cannonballs, and Artillery Pie.
http://digital.lib.msu.edu/projects/cookbooks/html/books/book_49.cfm
The last recipe instructs us to "mix with eggs", doesn't specify the quantity with the ingredients.
I'm guessing 4-5, thereby making the dish a boiled pudding version of the original pound cake, containing equal weight of flour/butter/sugar/eggs, + additions?
I had to look up "Dewitt's Little Early Risers." Turns out they're a "laxative and cathartic" (the Smithsonian has a tube). I guess if you don't smoke or chew you're probably a teetotaler as well and, er, "clean."
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