I had two grandmothers that I visited every summer. One lived in North Mankato, Minnesota. She was a widow living in a beautiful English Tudor home with 4 bedrooms, dining,living, kitchen and sunroom. Sunrooms used to be very common—they were not
like solariums of today—no glass panels or hot tubs. The room had lots of windows and was open to
both the living room and the dining room.
That Grandma worked at Martin and Hoer’s Jewelry store so my cousin (6
months older) and I were on our own during the day. We were never at a loss for something to do,
though; Grandma’s house was full of fun things to keep us busy. She was a magazine fan and had stacks and
stacks of Women’s magazines: Ladies’ Home Journal, McCall’s, Good Housekeeping,
American Home, Better Homes and Gardens and more. In those days, women’s’ magazines were really
fun. We spent hours going through those
magazines, cutting out pictures of movie stars that we loved (they were in
commercials, usually, such as soap or skin cream or the movies that they were
starring in). Then we took on their
personas and pretended. I was Debra
Paget and she was Susan Hayward.
When we tired of that, we turned to games that Grandma had
around. A card game called Touring or
Chinese checkers. Of course, lunchtime
rolled around and we were always starving.
A lot of times, Grandma would have told us to walk over town and meet
her at Woolworth’s lunch counter. There
we almost always ordered the same lunch:
grilled cheese sandwiches served with potato chips and a dill pickle, a
lime phosphate and a big almond cookie.
When I was there by myself or with my brother (4 years
older) I would spend hours playing with Grandma’s china-head pin cushion
doll. Grandma had a collection of
handkerchiefs that was stupendous. They
were stored in a small cardboard chest of drawers that sat on a large, regular
dresser drawer. She let me take the
small chest and the doll and a bunch of pretty hat pins and dress the doll in
thousands (or so it seemed) outfits made up of those handkerchiefs.
Another highlight of the day was going to the corner
store. We could spend an hour looking at
all our choices with the nickel we had. There were tons of candy bars and
frozen confections like push-ups or popsicles, but, unlike the little store up
in St. Louis Park
where I lived, this store had ice cream in large bulk cartons where a clerk
would dip out a cone in your favorite flavor. After looking at everything and
leafing through a few Little Lulu comic books, I would almost always end up
with a cone.
As we strolled back the 3 blocks to Grandmas, we had to pass
Koppen’s Farm. It was a small farm right
in the middle of the town—and they had a big barn in front where they sold the
produce from the farm. Mr. Koppen was a
large man who wore old-time overalls and spit tobacco all the time—much to my
grandma’s disgust. She didn’t really
like us to spend much time there although she would send us down to pick up
sweet corn or some tomatoes. His
daughter, Jane was also a large woman who was a friend of my mother. I remember my mom saying that Jane had served
her an onion sandwich for lunch once—I tried it one time after I heard that but
our onions were probably stronger than hers—because I couldn’t really eat
it.
That North Mankato house
was situated on South Avenue
which butted up to large woods. Right
next to the house was a sand road that was bordered on one side by the woods
and the other by a neighbor’s house. We
could follow the sand road down to the Minnesota River
(about a block or so). At that time, the
river was pretty dirty. The only fish in
it were carp (or so my mother said). When she had been a child growing up in
that house, she said the river was full of great fish, like Northern Pike and
Walleye. She and her brothers fished all
the time in the summer. Since Mom grew up in the Great Depression, they ate all
the fish they caught. The bathroom in
that house (on the second floor) looked out on the back yard and the woods just
beyond. The toilet was situated right
next to the window. Mom said that her
brothers took their shotguns with them when they used the bathroom and sat on
the toilet and shot squirrels for dinner.
I’ve often wondered if that was really true.
When Grandma came home from work, she was usually too tired
to make much of a dinner. Our favorite
supper was waffles. She had some plates
with a little Dutch people and a brown floral background that we called her
“waffle plates” because she always used them when we had waffle suppers. I still make her waffle recipe which I got
from her many years later—and everyone agrees they are the best waffles
ever. Though I’ve searched far and wide,
I have never found plates like hers—and I would dearly love to have them.
Grandma’s Waffles
2 ¼ cups flour
4 tsp. baking powder
¾ tsp. salt
1 ½ Tbsp. sugar
2 beaten eggs
2 ¼ cups milk
¾ cup salad oil
Sift together dry ingredients. Combine remaining
ingredients; add just before baking, beating only until moistened. (Batter will be thin) Bake in preheated waffle maker.
An excerpt from American
Home Cooking, by Cheryl and Bill Jamison talks about Brunswick stew:
Raymond
Sokolov tells the most common story about the origin of Brunswick stew in Fading Feast (1983). According to the
account, a Virginia
slave named “Uncle
Jimmy” Matthews created the concoction in 1828 for Dr. Creed Haskins and
friends, using squirrels he shot in the woods of Brunswick County. Descendants
of Haskins claimed that the original recipe contained nothing except squirrel, bacon, butter, onions,
stale bread, and salt and pepper to taste, making it a meaty
ragout. Cooks began adding other
vegetables within a few decades, and around
the same time started considering chicken as a viable substitute for squirrel.
In Common Sense In The Household,
(1871), Marion Harland, who grew up
in Virginia, said you could use either meat, but gave a preference for squirrel (two large gray ones or three
smaller critters). She also put
potatoes, tomatoes, butter beans and
corn in the pot. Other popular cookbook
authors of the same period dropped the
squirrel entirely and threw in extra vegetables.
Sarah Tyson Rorer, from Pennsylvania, called for chicken, ham, and limas, and Massachusetts Native Maria Parloa went with leftover mutton, carrots, turnips, and parsnips, turning a sunny southern stew into a wintry northern hodgepodge.
Sarah Tyson Rorer, from Pennsylvania, called for chicken, ham, and limas, and Massachusetts Native Maria Parloa went with leftover mutton, carrots, turnips, and parsnips, turning a sunny southern stew into a wintry northern hodgepodge.
Here’s a recipe for a modern Brunswick stew using chicken:
½ pound bacon, chopped fine
¼ pound salt pork, chopped fine
2 large onions, chopped
2 ½ to 3-pound chicken, cut up
2 10-oz. packages frozen lima beans
3 cups corn kernels, fresh or frozen
28-ounce can crushed tomatoes
6 ounces fresh green beans, sliced into 1” lengths
2 ½ Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
1 ½ Tbsp. yellow mustard
1 Tbsp. freshly ground black pepper
1 Tbsp. salt
1 tsp. cayenne pepper
3 large russet potatoes, peeled, boiled and mashed
Sweat bacon and salt pork in a Dutch oven over medium
heat. When fat is well rendered and meat
is brown and still limp, stir in the onions and cook until soft and
translucent, about 5 additional minutes.
Add the chicken and cover with 10 cups water. Cook uncovered for about 1 ¼ hours, until
chicken is tender. Remove the chicken
and set aside until cool enough to handle.
Stir in the lima beans, corn, tomatoes, green beans, Worcestershire
sauce, mustard, pepper, salt, and cayenne, and continue simmering 30 additional
minutes. Shred the chicken into bite
size pieces and return to the pot along with the mashed potatoes. Continue to simmer until the meat and
vegetables are quite soft and meld together into a thick stew, another 30 to 45
minutes, stirring up from the bottom occasionally. Add more water if needed to keep the stew
from drying out. Stew will improve after
cooling and reheating.
If you have a few squirrels lying around, by all means use
them!