No
doubt many of you are suffering from the usual post-Christmas simultaneous
over-loaded stomach and over-loaded fridge syndromes. Are you tired of turkey
yet? Is the pudding all gone? Is there chocolate still, for breakfast?
I
ask you to consider briefly the plight of the nineteenth century housewife. She
had no refrigerator to prolong the safe life of her leftovers, nor a microwave
to heat them up with convenience and economy. For those in the northern
hemisphere the colder weather meant that the first problem was not so great,
and the fire was likely on in the stove and hearth, so the second also not such
an issue. Think, however, of the British colonial wife sweltering in the
furthest equatorial and southern reaches of the Empire – how much more of a
worry the Christmas leftovers must have been to her, and her cook!
I
will explore the plight of the hot-weather housewife in respect of leftovers,
in another post, but first, I want to show you some of the ways suggested in
nineteenth century cookery books for warming up leftovers. Some of these
methods would not fit modern food-safety guidelines today of course (especially
as the food would not have been refrigerated for the day or so before the
warming up process.
[To serve plum pudding the second day]
When served the
second day, or cold for supper, it is cut in slices; some Jamaica rum is poured
over it, then set on fire, basting as long as it burns, and serve. It is
generally burnt on the table, but the rum may be poured over in the kitchen.
Handbook of Practical
Cookery, for Ladies and Professional Cooks (1868),
by Pierre Blot
How to Warm Up a
Fillet of Beef, and Other Roast Meats.
The best way to
warm up roast meat is to envelop it in a sheet of paper and put it on the spit,
when it will soon become as fine as the first; if the piece be too small, wrap
it in paper, and put it on the gridiron.
French Domestic Cookery (1846), by Louis-Eustache Audot.
To Warm Up Cold
Poutry Whole.
Poultry or game
if not over-roasted may be warmed whole by being wrapped in a well-buttered
paper, and put down before the fire till warmed through.
The English
Cookery Book: Uniting a Good Style with Economy
John Henry Walsh, 1859.
To Warm Up Fish
The Second Day.
Salmon may be
put into boiling water, and just heated through, taking care to add vinegar as
at first. Turbot, brill, and codfish are best picked from the bones, and warmed
up with cream or white sauce; then mash some potatoes, and form a wall round a
dish (which may or may not be egged and browned), in which the fish is to be
placed and served.
The English
Cookery Book: Uniting a Good
Style with Economy
John Henry Walsh, 1859.
To Warm up
Shelled Beans.
Pour off all the
milk, sift through a colander, and mix with an equal quantity of cold mashed
potatoes; add 1 well-beaten egg. Make into small cakes with the hands; place on
well-oiled tins and bake in the oven. A little thick nut cream may be added if
desired.
Guide to Nut
Cookery (1899) Mrs. Almeida Lambert.
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