Biscuits from nineteenth century Cincinnati
Today’s biscuit recipes are from The American Economical Housekeeper, and Family Receipt Book by Mrs EA Howland. It was published in Cincinnati in 1845. For saleratus you can use baking soda, and everything else is pretty obvious. Is it equally obvious that I’m falling asleep at my desk? I hope not.
“17. Brown Bread Biscuit.
Two quarts of Indian meal, a pint and a half of rye, one cup of flour, two spoonfuls of yeast, and a table-spoonful of molasses. It is well to add a little saleratus to yeast almost always, just as you put it into the article. Let it rise over night.
18. Bread Biscuit.
Three pounds of flour, half a pint of Indian meal sifted, a little butter, two spoonfuls of lively yeast; set it before the fire to rise over night; mix it with warm water.
19. Tea Biscuit.
* Take one pint of sour milk, one tea-spoonful of saleratus, flour enough to knead up, a small piece of lard or butter, a little salt; roll it out, and cut it into small biscuits.
20. Light Biscuit.
Take two pounds of flour, a pint of buttermilk, half a tea-spoonful of saleratus; put into the buttermilk a small piece of butter or lard rubbed into the flour; make it about the consistency of bread before baking.
21. Rice Biscuit.
Two pounds of flour, a tea-cupful of rice, well boiled, two spoonfuls of yeast; mix it with warm water; when risen enough, bake it.
25. Rich Milk Biscuit.
Two pounds of sifted flour, eight ounces butter, two eggs, three gills of milk, a gill and a half of yeast. Cut the butter into the milk and warm it slightly, sift the flour into a pan, and pour the milk and butter into it. Beat the eggs and pour them in, also the yeast; mix all well together with a knife. Flour your moulding-board, put the lump of dough on it, and knead it very hard. Then cut the dough in small pieces, and knead them into round balls; prick and set them in buttered pans to rise till light, probably about an hour, and bake them in a moderate oven.
26. Butter Biscuit.
Eight ounces of butter, two pounds of flour sifted, half a pint of milk or cold water, a salt spoonful of salt. Cut up the butter in the flour and put the salt to it, wet it to a stiff dough with the milk or water, mix it well with a knife. Throw some flour on the moulding-board, take the dough out of the pan, and knead it very well. Roll it out into a large, thick sheet, and beat it very hard on both sides with the rolling-pin. Beat it a long time, cut it out, with a tin or cup, into small, round, thick cakes. Beat each cake on both sides with the rolling-pin, prick them with a fork, put them in buttered pans, and bake them to a light brown in a slow oven.”


May 1st, 2008 at 8:00 pm
I always wonder about saleratus when I am reading a book from the Little House On The Prairie series.
May 2nd, 2008 at 12:45 am
The one thing that’s NOT obvious to your common Aussie reader, is that American biscuits are actually variations on the scone. Without that info, you might be very puzzled by the outcome
May 2nd, 2008 at 12:55 am
Linda, there was a whole series of elavinigns and they not only show changes over time, but also access to natural resources. I did a post on that, once. I might have to do an index some day.
Cath, once upon a time I did a post explaining that the scone, biscuit, ship’s biscuit and cookie relationship was worth exploring and that the terms could mean significantly different things in different places. That’s why I’m doing this collecting and the long series of posts: to start to establish firmer geogrpahical and temporal boundaries for the terms. So far all I have are a bunch of interesting recipes and evidence that the British scone and the US scone have more overlap than we tend to think (so it’s not just biscuit that’s confusing). Keep an eye on the blog and maybe, one day, I’ll have enoughe vidence to say something intelligent. Right now, though, it’s all about the recipes. (And I love it that some US readers react to the word biscuit, too, but in the opposite direction, reminding me that they’re cookies.)