Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘carrot pudding’

As you may know, I’m a Big Fan of carrot puddings. Not sure why,
but I am just fascinated with them! I enjoy making them, and I’ve
whipped up quite a few in past years. Maybe it’s because they’re
just so delicious! I even wrote here several times last fall about
my various carrot pudding-making adventures.

And so we made this dish during Saturday’s “Simple Mid-Day Meal”
hearth cooking class at The Israel Crane House. Naturally, we used
my favorite receipt (recipe) from the 18th century work E. Kidder’s
Receipts of Pastry and Cookery
:

A Carrot Pudding.
Boyl 2 large carrots, when cold pound
them, in a mortar, strain them thro [sic]
a sive, mix them nth [with] two grated
biskets, 1/2 a pound of butter, sack
and Orange flower water, Sugar and
a little Salt, a pint of cream mixt with
7 yolks of eggs and two whites, beat
these together and put them in a dish
covered and garnished. “Good”*

______________________________

“Boyl 2 large carrots” (we used three medium-sizeds)

pound them and “strain them thro a sive”

Nadia hard at work

the previously-made Naples Biskets, soon to become “two grated biskets”

enough batter for two puddings

ready for baking

TA-DA!

YUM!

____________________

*handwritten commentary on the original receipt

______________________________

NEXT: our biscuits

Read Full Post »

We’ll be making a carrot pudding during our hearth cooking class,
“A Simple Mid-Day Meal,” this coming Saturday at The Israel Crane
House
. Of course, my favorite receipt (recipe) will be used, which
as my regular readers know, is from Kidder’s Receipts for Pastry
and Cookery
(1740s). And it calls for the use of…Naples Biskets!
HUZZAH!

So, I’ve been busy baking. This time, however, just to mix things
up a bit, I decided to use a receipt that’s different from “my usual.
I chose John Nott’s version from his The Cooks and Confectioners
Dictionary
(1726). Incidentally, it’s the same receipt that we used
during the brick oven historic baking workshop at Ft. Lee this past
summer (as part of Deb Peterson’s Symposium). Now, one of the
major differences between this receipt and my “usual” is its use
of caroway seeds. Which, by the way, are to be “finely powdered.”
Yep, time to get out the mortar and pestle!

Nott’s receipt requires “double-refined Sugar,” as well. Superfine
Sugar found at most groceries is perfect to use, and I had some,
but, unfortunately, not enough. I really didn’t want to run out to
buy more, so I made my own:

I think you can see the difference. Here’s the “regular” sugar:

and the “pounded” or “powdered” sugar:

Finally, I was ready to mix up the Naples Bisket batter, pour it into
individual ramekins, and slide them into the oven:

In an effort to make it go faster, and so I wouldn’t have to bake
more batches than necessary, I used every ramekin I have, no
matter what the shape. Both ceramic and tin. In the end, however,
some worked better than others. (more on that later)

TA-DA!!!

Oooooh, pretty!

I think they turned out pretty well, yes?

Here’s Nott’s receipt:

To make Naples Biskets.
Take a Pound and half of fine Flour, and
as much double-refined Sugar, twelve Eggs,
three Spoonfuls of rose-water, and an Ounce
and half of Carraway-seeds finely powdered,
mix them all well together with Water; then
put them into tin-plates, and bake them
in a moderate Oven, dissolve some Sugar
in Water, and glaze them over.

(NOTE: I didn’t bother with the glaze.)

Now, a pound and a half of flour is roughly the equivalent of six
cups in modern measurements. Which would mean a boat-load
of Naples Biskets! I really only need two, if that. Well, and maybe
a few for folks to try on Saturday. So I cut all the measurements
in half. I still ended up with a seemingly endless quantity. Doing
so made for a much more manageable batter, as well.

Of course, these taste quite differently than my “usuals.” It’s not
bad, just different. The caraway seeds lend a hint of rye bread,
of course. I did put in the rosewater. Sometimes I leave it out,
because, well, it’s just over-powering. Reminds me of the smell
of ladies “lounges” (restrooms) back in the day of such things.
But it wasn’t bad. In fact, I hardly noticed it. Maybe the caraway
taste helps to mask it? The tops of them are interesting, too.
Even without the glaze, they still kinda shine (see photo above).
They easily flake off, as well. Not good! And I usually don’t have
trouble getting them out of the baking dishes, but I had a heck
of a time with these. I didn’t butter them at first, but even when
I did, they still stuck like glue. Not sure what that’s all about. Ahh
well, I may just stick with the other receipt from now on!

In any event, it was fun to try something different. And we’ll
definitely put these Naples Biskets to good use this weekend.
HUZZAH!

Read Full Post »

A few months ago, the folks in charge of foodways at Colonial
Williamsburg
initiated a bi-weekly feature on the institution’s
website. Entitled “History is Served,” it showcases an historic
receipt (recipe) from a colonial-era cookbook, complete with
a modern adaptation for use in one’s own kitchen. Assorted
background information is often given, as well, including slide
shows and/or videos.

One of the early segments dealt with boiled carrot puddings.
Now, as all my frequent readers know, I’ve made quite a few
carrot puddings and have written about my experiences here

at Historic Cookery. At the same time, however, although I’ve
done several boiled puddings, none of them were carrot. Yep,
all of my carrot puddings were baked.

Even so, my enthusiasm abounds for CW’s recent “History is
Served” entry. Why? Because the best part is its accompanying
video, which presents an excellent tutorial on the particulars of
doing any boiled pudding. Watch and learn. It’s simply fantastic!
HUZZAH!

Read Full Post »

Here’s one final receipt for carrot pudding. I promise. Well, for now.
(I think.) Anyway, it’s from the pages of Eliza Leslie’s Directions
for Cookery, in its Various Branches
(1840 ed.):

CARROT PUDDING.
May be made in the above manner.

Wow! That was easy. Oh wait, so what IS “the above manner”?
Well, the previous receipt is one for, drum roll, please, Sweet
Potato Pudding. HUZZAH! And although it seems fairly complex,
it’s actually quite simple and resembles other receipts written
specifically for carrots. I’ve made several white, or so-called
Irish, potato puddings, but none of sweets. One interesting
note on these, however, is that some experts (including
Elizabeth David) believe that any potato pudding written
prior to about 1800 automatically calls for sweet potatoes
and not white. Of course, most of those receipts would’ve
been primarily British. Nevertheless, this “theory” requires
additional research; something I began awhile back, but
haven’t continued, let alone completed. If any readers
out there in Internet-land know anything, please share!

In the meantime, here’s Eliza’s “above manner” which is
needed to make her carrot pudding (I trust all know
to substitute the words “sweet potato” with “carrot”):

____________________

Read Full Post »

I don’t know about you, dear readers, but I’ve kinda run out
of enthusiasm for carrot puddings. It seems time to move on
to another topic. And yet, I believe I promised to share a few
more receipts with everyone, particularly those from the early
19th century. So I will; but then that’s it, at least for a while.
I’m sure I’ll have an opportunity to revisit the dish at some
point in the future.

Now, it seemed to me that carrot puddings began to disappear
from published and manuscript cookbooks (at least in those
that I own) during the early years of the 1800s. Yet, they do
exist, here and there. For instance, this one from The Cook’s
Own Book, Being Complete Culinary Encyclopedia
, by a Boston
Housekeeper (Mrs. N.K.M. Lee) (1832). Note the similarities to,
and differences from, previous receipts. What I find interesting,
too, are the options offered, such as bread OR biscuit and
marmalade OR minced orange peel:

____________________

Pudding, Carrot.
Pound in a mortar the red part
of two large boiled carrots; add
a slice of grated bread, or pounded
biscuit, two ounces of melted butter,
the same quantity of sugar, a table-
spoonful of marmalade, or a bit of
orange-peel minced; half a tea-
spoonful of grated nutmeg, and
four well-beaten eggs; mix all
well together; bake it in a dish
lined with puff paste.

Read Full Post »


As I said previously, when we made
a carrot pudding during a Fireside
Feasts
program out at Wyckoff,
we didn’t use Kidder’s receipt. Or,
at least, I don’t think we did. Well,
actually, I’m really not quite sure.
Heck, it was three summers ago. I’ve slept since then!

So, if we didn’t use Kidder’s, what did we use? Well, I think it was
the one below, from The Cook Not Mad, or Rational Cookery, which
was published by Knowlton & Rice in Watertown, NY (1830). As my
fuzzy memory recalls, we used it because it was a bit simpler. It’s
included on the “Receipt Sheets” that were given to participants.
It’s also about the briefest one I’ve found:

____________________

No. 88. Carrot Pudding.
A coffee cup full of boiled and strained
carrots, five eggs, sugar and butter
of each two ounces, cinnamon and
rose water to your taste, bake in a
deep dish without paste, one hour.

____________________

Of course, I soon found out that it’s also another one of those
“stolen,” er, “borrowed” receipts that was originally published
elsewhere. In fact, I’ve discovered several “borroweds” in The
Cook Not Mad
. I have yet to determine, however, whether
the entire book consists of “stolen” goods. Maybe some day
I’ll take the time to compare the two.

In any event, other than a few minor differences (the numeral 5,
as opposed to the spelled-out word “five,” and such), it’s the exact
same receipt as that in Amelia Simmons’ American Cookery (1796).
And yes, it’s also what was used a week or so ago during the day
of open fire cooking at the Van Cortlandt House Museum:

____________________

Carrot Pudding.
A coffee cup full of boiled and strained
carrots, 5 eggs, 2 ounces sugar and
butter each, cinnamon and rose water
to your taste, baked in a deep dish
without paste.

____________________

Read Full Post »

Returning now to carrot puddings….

Three summers ago (2008), we whipped up several puddings,
both boiled and baked, during a session of my annual Fireside
Feasts
historic cooking program out at Brooklyn’s Wyckoff
Farmhouse Museum
. Among those was, yep, you guessed it,
a carrot pudding. HUZZAH!

Yum. Lookin’ tasty! (It most definitely was.) And what receipt did
I use for this one? Stay tuned.

Read Full Post »

Here’s yet another receipt for carrot pudding from a manuscript
cookbook, that of the Van Rensselaers of Albany, New York. It’s
attributed specifically to Maria Sanders Van Rensselaer, who lived
from 1749-1830. The exact date of this particular receipt is not
known, but judging by its contents, I have reason to believe it’s
most likely from the 18th century portion of her lifetime. You’ll
soon see why.

____________________

Carrot Pudding
Take 1/2 lb Grated Carrot & 1 lb bread
8 Eggs leave out 1/2 the Wites & mix
the eggs with 1/2 pint of Milk then
Stirr the bread & Carrot 1/2 lb butter
1/2 pint Sack 3 Spoon of Orange water &
Nutmeg & Sweeten to your Likeing Mix
all well together & if not thin enough
stirr in a little Milk let it be a Moderate
thickness lay a puff Paste over the Dish
it well take 1 hour bakeing It also may
be boilt & Serv’d up with Puding Sauce

deep pie pan by Westmoore Pottery

As to my reasons for thinking it’s highly likely that the above receipt is
from the 18th century, take a look at this one from Hannah Glasse’s
The Art of Cookery Made Plain & Easy:

____________________

A Carrot Pudding.
Take a raw Carrot, scrape it very clean,
then grate it, take half a Pound of the
grated Carrot, and a pound of grated
Bread, beat up eight Eggs, leave out
half the Whites, mix the Eggs with half
a Pint of Cream, then stir in the Bread
and Carrot, and half a Pound of fresh
Butter melted, half a Pint of Sack, and
three Spoonfuls of Orange-flower Water,
a Nutmeg grated, sweeten to your Palate.
Mix all well together; and if it is not thin
enough, stir in a little new Milk or Cream.
Let it be of a moderate Thickness, lay
a Puff-paste all over the Dish, and pour
in the Ingredients. Bake it, it will take
an Hour’s baking, or you may boil it;
but then you must melt Butter, and
put in White Wine and Sugar.

____________________

Look familiar? Why, yes! The above two receipts are alike. Some
words and phrases are paraphrased, while others are exactly the
same. Even the amounts of several ingredients are perfect matches.
It would seem, therefore, that Maria, living at her home Cherry Hill,
near Albany, copied her carrot pudding receipt directly from Hannah
Glasse’s published work. Or, perhaps, someone else did so, and then
passed it on to her.

Interesting, too, is the fact that, here’s a woman from a prominent
Dutch family in upstate New York, and she has a copy of a receipt
in her personal records that’s most likely from a cookbook published
in Britain. In fact, the introduction to the modern re-print of the Van
Rensselaer manuscript mentions this. It states that such receipts prove
the “anglisizing” of the Dutch. This same phenomenon is mentioned
in Jean Zimmerman’s book, Women of the House, as well. According
to her, early Dutch colonists brought their traditional ways with them,
but members of the third, if not the second, generation of any one
native-born Dutch family were definitely English through and through.

Not to mention, if Maria started her manuscript cookbook when she
was first married (as many women did), seeing as she was about 20
years old at that time, then she was compiling items 100 years after
Britain had taken control of New York and the entire Eastern seaboard.
In short, English ways were the norm.

_______________

The manuscript cookbook mentioned above was published in 1976
as Selected Receipts of a Van Rensselaer Family, 1785 – 1835,
compiled and edited by Jane Carpenter Kellar, Ellen Miller, and
Paul Stambach, Historic Cherry Hill, Albany, NY.

______________________________

NEXT: yep, MORE carrot pudding receipts, maybe even some
from the 19th century!

Read Full Post »

For some reason, I can’t seem to stop looking at, and comparing,
historic receipts (recipes) for carrot puddings. I think it’s the thrill
of the hunt. Or maybe it’s the numerous versions I’ve found. Or
perhaps it’s all the different directions each one takes me. And
then there are all the unanswered questions. Maybe it’s all of
the above! Whatever it is, it’s become a bit of an obsession.

In keeping with this carrot pudding theme, I thought I’d take
a look at a few of the receipts I found in select manuscript
cookbooks of the 18th and early 19th centuries.

First up is one from the receipt book of the Ashfield Family
of New York City and New Jersey. It was kept by the family
from the 1720s through the Revolutionary War period:

67. To Make a Carrot Pudding
Take a quart of milk and Scald it, and
Cut a towpenney [sic] white loaf in Slices.
Soak it in your milk. Great [grate]
in a whole Nutmegg, and 2 Midling
Carrots very fine. Put in a Little Salt
and the yolks of 6 Eggs and the whites
of 2 well beaten. Sweeten it to your
taste. Then make a Little fine paste
and twist it round the edge of your
dish and put in your pudding. Pour
over it half a pound of melted butter.
So bake it. When it comes out the oven,
Strew it with fine Suggar and Serve it up hot.

Of course, there are similarities between the above and the one
from Peckham’s book that we used during the Fort Lee bake oven
workshop, but there are also several differences, even within those
similarities: the amount of milk is specified; a twopenny (“towpenny”)
instead of one penny loaf is used (although, depending on the price
of grain on any given day, it’s possible they could’ve been nearly the
same size); there’s no orange flower water; the use of a whole nutmeg,
as opposed to just half; the butter, though melted, is not clarified (but
it may have been presumed that any melted butter was also clarified);
and, again, as with the Kidder receipt that I used at The Conference
House
, it calls for separate yolks and whites, rather than whole eggs.

Another aspect is that the two receipts (Ashfield and Peckham’s) are,
in a way, of British origin. The latter is from a cookbook published
in England, and the former is from a manuscript kept by a family
living in a British colony. Which makes me wonder: Was the Ashfield
receipt taken directly from Peckham’s book and then maybe altered?
Was it even based on it in any way? The Ashfields lived first in New
York City and then New Jersey, so goods from abroad were accessible,
including books published in England. Or did it come to the Ashfields
via someone else who had seen the British book? Someone else who
possibly changed sections? Or perhaps mis-copied or even mis-read
a sentence or two? Or maybe it’s source is an entirely different book?
Or…who knows? Oh, the questions are endless!

Here’s another manuscript receipt, with perhaps a more Southern take,
as the writer lived in the lowlands of South Carolina. It’s from Harriott
Pinckney Horry’s (1748-1830) personal receipt book, which she began
keeping in 1770:

Carrot Pudding
Take a large Carrot, boil it Tender
then set it by to be cold and grate
it through a hair sieve very fine,
then put in half a pound of melted
Butter beaten with Eight Eggs leaving
out half the Whites, two or three
Spoonfulls of Sack and Orange
flower Water, half a pint of good
thick cream, a little grated Bread,
a Nutmeg and a little salt, sweeten
it to your tast, and make it of the
thickness of an Orange Pudding.

Again, there are similarities and differences between the above
and the others (Peckham’s and Kidder’s). First, a major difference
amongst all these is that, thusfar, Kidder’s is the only one that calls
for Naples Biskets. I wonder if that fact says something, perhaps,
about Kidder himself and his profession? After all, he was a baker
and pastry maker by trade. Another difference is that the above
calls for only one carrot, not two; but then, it does specify one
“large.” In many other ways, however, the Horry manuscript version
is most similar to Kidder’s: the carrot is to be boiled and strained;
sack and Orange flower water are used; there’s a pint of cream;
and the eggs are separated. However, the butter is again melted,
and a nutmeg is used. I found it interesting, too, that nutmeg is
used in all the receipts we’ve looked at so far, except for Kidder’s.
What’s up with that?! Perhaps he just didn’t care for the taste?
Maybe he felt it wasn’t something he needed to specify? Or
perhaps he was leaving the spice choice up to the cook?
Or…something!

So, as I said previously, there certainly are alot of carrot pudding
receipts in historic cookbooks. They’re all pretty much the same,
and yet, they’re all a bit different. Hmmm…what else is out there?!
Stay tuned, there’s more.

____________________

sources:
1.) The Ashfield Family Receipt Book was published as Pleasures of Colonial Cooking,
by the New Jersey Historical Society, Newark, NJ, 1982.
2.) The Complete English Cook…, 2nd Edition, by Ann Peckham, London, England, circa 1767.
3.) Harriott Pinckney Horry’s receipt book was published as A Colonial Plantation Cookbook, edited by Richard J. Hooker, Columbia, South Carolina, 1984.
4.) E. Kidder’s Receipts of Pastry and Cookery, by Edward Kidder, London,
England, 1740

___________________________________

NEXT: published and manuscript receipts of the early 19th century.

Read Full Post »

Just for comparison’s sake, I thought
I’d share the carrot pudding receipt
(recipe) that we used during the bake
oven workshop held the day after the
recent historic baking symposium up
at Fort Lee, NJ.

You’ll see it is similar to the one I used
last week
, but there are also several very distinct differences:
it uses bread, instead of Naples Biskets, which is scalded with milk;
there’s no cream; the carrots are grated, but not boiled; the butter
is clarified;* half a nutmeg is added; whole eggs are used; it specifies
a puff paste; and there are instructions for making an accompanying
wine sauce. Hmmm, perhaps it’s more different than the same! It
also looked different, almost like a modern-day pumpkin pie, whereas
the other resembled a custard, or even a souffle (probably due
to its egg yolks and cream!).

Here now is the receipt, taken from Ann Peckham’s The Complete
English Cook
, 2nd edition (circa 1771-2; 1st ed. 1767):

To make a CARROT PUDDING.
Take the crumbs of a penny loaf,**
and scald it with milk to be stiff;
grate two middling carrots fine,
a spoonful of orange flower water,
half a pound of clarified butter,
a little salt, and half a nutmeg,
six eggs well beat, and sugar
to your palate; do puff paste
round, mix all well together,
and bake it; for sauce, use
wine, butter, and sugar.

____________________

Fort Lee’s carrot pudding:

The Conference House carrot pudding:

______________________________

*clarified butter: butter that’s been heated and then allowed to sit so that any
milk particles still remaining settle out; the resulting froth is also removed.

**penny loaf: the baking and selling of bread was heavily regulated in Britain.
The price a common consumer paid was determined by the current price of grain,
and so the size and weight of any loaf widely fluctuated. A penny loaf was whatever
could be bought for a penny on any given day.

Read Full Post »

Older Posts »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 70 other followers