I
started off today’s post by intending to answer queries from several readers
about the Butternut Coffee with Peanut Cream on the menu of the vegetarianThanksgiving dinner which featured here last week. As so often happens, one
apparently simple road tempts one down many interesting little side-roads, and I
ended up in a more distant spot, having learned some interesting things along
the way.
First
things first, as they say. The butternut coffee on this menu would indeed have
been made from the seeds of the butternut pumpkin (squash.) Vegetarians of the
time were commonly also vehemently against stimulants and condiments of all
kinds , so the coffee on this menu should not be confused with the popular canned
coffee known by the brand-name of Butter-Nut which was originally made by the
Paxton & Gallagher Company in Omaha in the early twentieth century.
The
Peanut Cream which topped the coffee on the vegetarian Thanksgiving menu also
seasoned the soups, so it was clearly an adaptable item for those who eschewed
animal flesh in 1899. Luckily for us, the
go-to book for vegetarian nut-cookery of the time - Guide for Nut Cookery: together with a brief history of nuts and their
food values, by Mrs. Almeida Lambert, (published in 1899, the same year as
the Thanksgiving menu, in Battle Creek, Michigan) – contained recipes for both
the ‘coffee’ and the ‘cream’:
Butternut
Coffee.
Put butternut kernels
on a pie-tin, and bake in the oven until they are nicely browned, but not
scorched. When cold, mash them to a meal with a cup or glass bottle on the tin,
and use 1 tablespoonful for 2 cups of coffee. It is rich, and has the best
flavor of all coffee substitutes.
Peanut Cream.
For making cream, the
peanuts should not be roasted so much as for making butter. They should have a
light straw color. Then grind them very fine, and to a tablespoonful of nut
butter add 1 ½ cups of water, adding a little at a time, and beating until it
is smooth.
This
recipe brought me to one of those tempting information byways. Finding peanut
cream in this book opened up my eyes to a wonderful range of nut milks that I
immediately wanted to share with you. I have touched upon ‘alternative milks’
before, but only briefly. Artificial Asses’ Milk and Almond Milk, have appeared
in previous posts, and you might like to look at them again. Don’t be misled,
however, by the version of Asses’ Milk which appeared alongside Elephant Milkin yet another post – they are completely unsuitable for the young of any
species, and for adults of a temperance persuasion.
For
those of you who love nut milks, and are keen to make your own, I give you,
from the book of the day:-
Peanut
Milk.
Make like the peanut cream, only add more water.
The amount of nut butter to be used depends upon the richness of the milk
desired.
Almond Milk.
Dissolve 1
tablespoonful of almond butter [equates to almond meal, in this book] in 1 pint
of warm water, adding a little at a time.
Hickory Milk.
Crack the hickory-nuts
and pick out the kernels; grind them through the mill, being careful not to
grind them too fine or they will be oily. Then to each heaping cupful of the
nut meal add 1½ cups of lukewarm water and beat thoroughly, rubbing the mixture
against the side of the dish with the back of the spoon. Then line a large bowl
with two thicknesses of clean, strong cheese-cloth, pour in the nuts, and
squeeze out the milk. After the milk is taken out, the remainder can be made
into sausages or gravy.
Pine-Nut Milk.
Grind the pine-nuts
through the mill, and then add about 1½ cups of water to 1cup of the butter or
meal; beat well and press all the milk through a cloth. The remainder that is,
the part that is left in the cloth - can be used in making sausages, soups, or
in roasts. The milk can be used in vegetables or in making gravies, while the
cream that rises on top is excellent for making crisps, rolls, cakes, and pie
crust.
Chufas Milk.
Select good, fresh
chufas, wash them well in several waters, and grind quite fine; then pour over
them hot water enough to wet well, but not to make them too watery; rub well, pressing
them against the dish, with the spoon, and pour into a jelly-bag made of two
thicknesses of cheese-cloth. Then press with the hands to squeeze out the milk.
Cocoanut Milk.
Select a cocoanut that
has milk in it, cut a hole in the eye of the nut, and let out the milk. Then
break the nut with a hammer, remove the meat, and with a sharp knife peel off
the hard, brown, woody coat, being careful to take as thin a peeling as
possible, as the most of the oil is next to the skin. Then grate through a
cocoanut-shredder, or on any grater, or grind through the mill, then for each
cocoanut, add 2 cups of boiling water, and with a tablespoon beat and work for
ten or fifteen minutes. Place a clean new cheese-cloth over a large bowl, and
pour the cocoanut into it. Work well with the hands, and squeeze out all the
milk possible, then empty the cloth into a stew-pan, pour boiling water over it
the same as before, work well again, and squeeze through the cloth the second
time. You will then have all the milk that can be taken out, but the cocoanut
can be cooked in water for twenty or thirty minutes and then strained, and the
water used for making pie, the same as in cocoanut-pie recipe.
I
feel confident that ‘chufas’ will raise some questions. Be patient, folks, for
more on chufas on Monday.
1 comment:
Thank you so much. I enjoyed the post immensely. I ended up reading parts of the cookbook on archive.org, because of your earlier post. Chufas, I love them. Too bad I cannot get a hold of fresh. I cannot wait for your next post.
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