Saturday, November 11, 2017

1891 - Another Heartfelt Ode to the Thanksgiving Pumpkin Pie!

I like this!  Of course, I may be partial to a poem the uses the botanical name for the pumpkin :-)

THAT THANKSGIVING DINNER.
How dear to our hearts is the Thanksgiving dinner,
As fond recollections presents it to view,
When father‘d come home from the raffle a winner,
And bring along with him a gobbler or two.
Ah, then in the kitchen was hurry and bustle,
Sis weeping at having the onions to shell,
And mother just making the whole of us hustle
To hasten the dinner that filled us so well;
The Thanksgiving dinner, the gorge‘us old dinner.
The big turkey dinner that filled us so well.
Oh, how can I all the ingredients measure
That dear bill of lading prescribed as our store,
The turk and his mystic abdominal treasure,
The beans and the giblets, the gravy galore,
The cider we brought in a jug from the depot,
The truck agricultural none could excel,
And ah! the lush fruit of Curcurbita pepo
The dear pumpkin pies that we garnered so well!
Yum, yum, what a dinner! That turk and punk dinner!
That Thanksgiving dinner that crammed us so well!
                                                                                                 —Boston Courier.

I don't know about you, but the line "That turk and punk dinner" surprised me.  I don't know why exactly, but it seemed a more casual playfulness with words than I expected folks in 1891 used!  

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

1786 - Rudbeckia Engraving - I'm In Love!








This hand tinted engraving from Curtis's Botanical Magazine is my cup of tea! 
                      Have fun eye surfing on the lines.











The first volume's illustrations were mostly by Sydenham Edwards 
who drew and engraved the plates himself until 1792.  
It is a copperplate engraving. 
You can see the plate's impression on the paper all around the edge.

(See the little N0. 2 right below? There is the impression of the corner of the plate.)



Monday, November 6, 2017

1891 - A Recipe in Poetry for Pumpkin Pie (and a photo documentary of a pie)

I had no idea pumpkin pies have been the muse to so many poets! 

Pumpkin pie poems are coming out of the the woodwork it seems.  They each have their charm, and this one gets my applause for trying to put a recipe to verse.  

Published in Good Housekeeping, 1891.

This pumpkin was rescued  from being thrown away at school after the pumpkin season for kindergarten had ended. :-)

PUMPKIN PIES


In the kitchen fair Phyllis, one hand 'neath her chin 


   (Her dear little chin. with the dimple nicked in,) 

And a look on her face that she means to be wise,

  Sits and ponders the question of making some pies.

“Let me see, now! " she says. “there is apple and quince; 

  There is peach, there is cherry, there's lemon and mince;
But I think," here a blush a sweet secret confessed,

  “Of them all Colin’s sure to like pumpkin the best!

And though, oh dear me, they will be lots of bother,

  I know I can make them as good as his mother!

Or, perhaps he may think mine a little the best:

  How I'll smile then and say ‘Surely Colin you jest! '

While he’ll whisper.  'T'is so,’ all unheard by the rest. 

   But before I begin, there's the pumpkin to find;

I shall be sadly misled if it's not to my mind."


  So she hastens away, like the maiden of old,

To the garden, where glimmer the great globes of gold. 

  And selects one with care—quite as large and as mellow 

As once formed the coach of the good Cinderella!

  To the kitchen then back, in delight with her prize, 

And a knife for the wand of the fairy applies, 

  When, presto! the pumpkin is soon changed into pies.



HOW SHE DOES IT.

Cut the pumpkin in half, just as smooth as you can,

   And put it to bake in a clean dripping pan—

When the seeds are removed—with the skin side on top,

  In a very slow oven. ’Twill be time to stop

When you find it will scrape from the rind with a spoon,

   Like a crusty baked loaf ’twill be nicely brown soon.

Mash finely, and to one quart of pumpkin, while hot,

   Stir of butter, a quarter of a pound in the pot;

Let cool, and add to it what sugar you like;

   (Not too much or too little, a medium strike);

Then pour in a quart of milk fresh in the pan,

   ('Tis better to let it be cream if you can);

Then the yolks of four eggs, beaten well to be nice,

   With two tablespoonfuls of ginger as spice,

One of nutmeg, too. If you wish them quite comely,

   Bake in a quick oven with bottom crust only.

Of the whites of the eggs a stiff froth should now rise

   To spread over the tops. Who could wish better pies?

                                                                                 
                                                          —Adelaide Preston  




These photos were taken to show children where pumpkin pies come from.  I should have started with a field though!