I have for you today a lovely story about World War
I rationing, enthusiastic volunteer teachers, keen military students, ways to
save Government money, and menu planning – all in one article!
From The
Times (London,
England), Wednesday, Nov 24, 1915…..
BETTER AND CHEAPER RATIONS
---------------------------------------------
A FORTNIGHT’S MENUS
A
large contingent of soldiers recently came up to London to be taught cooking by
certificated teachers, who gave up half of their holiday to undertake this
useful work. The men were enthusiastic about the quality and quantity of the
food, which they declared was “much better than anything they had since they joined.”
It
may be useful to give the exact menus from one lady whom I know gave her
services for a fortnight. Everything was of the best and the cost 1s. 1d. per
head, a saving of 8d. on the Government allowance per day, and where a division
is billeted in one camp ₤4,676 would be the balance left over at the end of the
week. But we should want 40 cooks, (with soldiers under them) at ₤2 per week
(the high salary would attract first-rate cooks and organizers) and 10s. for
food, reducing the balance to ₤4, 596 per week, or ₤2,379,522 per annum. Nor is
this all. The men were more than satisfied. Because details are more
convincing, I give the exact diet table:-
Breakfast:-
Porridge, tea, and bread and butter every morning, with the addition of fried
bacon or fish or sausages – liver and bacon or kippers – often a choice of two
dishes.
Dinner:-
Monday.-
Irish stew, jam roll.
Tuesday.-
Boiled beef, baked, one boiled dumpling.
Wednesday.-
Curried mutton, beef steak pie, jam roll.
Thursday.-
Roast beef, fruit tart.
Friday.-
Cottage pie, meat pudding, bread and butter pudding.
Saturday.-
Mutton, sea pie, cherries in batter.
Second
Week.
Monday.-
Stuffed mutton, beef steak pie, jam roll.
Tuesday.-
Soup, steamed fish, fruit pudding.
Wednesday.-
Irish stew, dumplings, stewed cherries, rice.
Thursday.-
Roast or boiled mutton, meat pie, fruit tart.
Friday.-
Shoulder of mutton, onion sauce, plum pudding.
Saturday.-
Meat pie or pudding, cheese sandwiches, plums, cake.
Every
day during the fortnight potatoes cooked in different ways were provided for
dinner and one or two other vegetables, including peas, beans, onions,
tomatoes, vegetable marrow, cabbage, and cucumber.
Supper
every night. Lentil soup or macaroni cheese or apple dumplings or Cornish
pasties with mince meat. Occasionally cocoa was added.
Tea.-
Tea and coffee, home-made bread and butter, cake, jam, lettuces, cucumber, cold
bacon, occasionally milk and sugar served separate, and not mixed in an urn.
This last was very much appreciated.
If
the head of the Commissariat Department at the War Office thought it unwise to
employ trained cooks, and a certified teacher, fully trained – to pay surprise
visits – many trained ladies would be proud to give their services. I know
personally three who are doing the cooking in hospitals, and although they have
no technical training and very little experience at home, by the aid of cookery
books and brains, educated girls have been immensely appreciated by our heroic
defenders whom they felt honoured to serve. I have tried to show that much more
appetizing meals with no reduction in quantity and much improvement in quality
can be provided for very much less money.
It is an interesting idea, is it not? – using
volunteer ladies to teach soldiers how to cook, and at the same time show the
military how to reduce costs. Somehow I cannot see the same system being tried
in these modern times, can you?
From the good, plain dishes on this menu, I have
chosen one I think most likely to be acceptable to today’s tastes.
Cherry Pudding.
Butter
a mold and fill two-thirds full ripe cherries. Make a batter of one-quarter
cupful butter, one-half cupful sugar, one well beaten egg, one-half cupful
milk, one and one-half cupfuls sifted flour, three teaspoonfuls baking powder
and a little salt. Beat until light, pour over cherries in mold, put on tight
fitted cover and steam one and one-half hours. Serve with sauce made as follows:
Cream
one-third cupful of butter, one cupful powdered sugar, add beaten white of an
egg and one-quarter cupful of strained cherry juice.
Fruits and Their
Cookery (New York, 1921)
The menu listing here reminds me of a brain niggle that has bothered me for years. I remember a bit of rough and ready verse about the uses of a a good cut of beef. As I remember it it is something like:
ReplyDelete"Roast on Sunday
Cold on Monday...
... minced on Friday
Soup on Saturday"
It sounds a thing Stanley Holloway might declaim.
Can anyone help me identify it? Fill in the lacunae? Many thanks.
And Thank you for these nice bits of domestic research.
--ml