Patriotic Stabilist
Platinum Member
I don't know if I've written about this on this board before, maybe I have.
I'm frying some cabbage I got out of the garden, one of my last 3 and got to thinking about stuff mom cooked. Seems like not to many people ate like we did.
We always had a huge garden but sometimes chickens and sometimes dad would butcher or have butchered a hog.
I can remember having baked heart, which is extremely good, also liver, tongue cooked and peeled. You let it get cold and slice it, delicious. Mom would make headcheese or souse, that I didn't like. Sometimes I can find it in the store, can at ethnic markets still.
We had chicken feet cooked and pigs feet too. I loved pickled pigs feet, still do but they aren't as good. Remember when taverns had big jars of those and pickled eggs. Never tried the eggs. When my DIL was here from Korea, she if from Russia, she just couldn't get over me having all the fresh eggs I wanted. She said they lived in Siberia and they would get shipments of eggs sometimes. She would ask me if she could have an egg, I told her eat all she wanted, she said if only she could take lots of them to her mom. I had chickens and chicken feet, she loved those, said they were something they really liked back home. I told her very few people did this kind of thing in the US anymore that I was an oddity.
Mom would make dumplings and clean and cook the egg bag it was called in the dumplings, was really really good.
We ate all kinds of stuff people won't touch now. Brains scrambled with eggs, not my favorite but would eat it. Before we got a freezer dad would sugar cure the hams and bacon. It was so salty you had to soak and wash the meat before eating it, but my it was tasty. I can remember her cooking and canning sausage and pork too.
Mom got a lot of her cooking from my great aunt and uncle Kentucy hill folk.
My aunt made light bread on an old cookstove, that stuff would raise 6 inches high, made with lard of course. They still had an icebox, yes that had the big block of ice you put in it. I can remember us going to the icehouse and getting a big block to put in it, think it lasted close to a week, not sure.
Bean soup with ham was a staple on washdays cooked on a small laundry stove, then cornbread.
We had fish we caught, bluegills, or sunfish, catfish, aunt and uncle cooked eel but mom wouldn't touch it, they also ate raccoon, she wouldn't eat it either.
We always had a rabbit box out so mom killed and dressed lots of rabbit. Dad would go frog giggin', loved those frog legs. He wasn't a real good shot so when we had squirrel mom had to soak it in salt water and pick out the shot. I generally bit down on one. Another goody was turtle. She cooked the game food in a pressure cooker after browning it. I remember her putting a slice of bread on top she said that pulled some of the gamey taste out.
We had home made noodles and lots of good food. Often had cobblers.
She canned 100 quarts of tomatoes, 50 of green beans, relish, beets, corn, dad would raise irish cobbler potatoes. We had a huge bin full that lasted all winter. Mom would have gallon jugs that she put tomato juice in and seal with sealing wax and corks.
We had morel mushrooms when they could find them. Soaked in salt water and thoroughly cleaned. Melted butter in a saucepan, dipped in flour and fried, I can still taste those.
My aunt knew different kinds of mushrooms, she could eat out of the woods. She cooked things like sourdoc and polk, think it was young or something because I also remember them saying it was poison, and other plants but mom was afraid to let me or her eat them.
She knew about things from the woods for stomach ache and constipation and other stuff. Uncle would get what he called sweet tobaco and blow it in my ear when I got an earache, and yes it helped but probably just the warm air. They lived to be in their 90's. They never had indoor plumbing in their lives, I didn't till 1964 when I was in high school. I can still tend a coalstove if I have to. Learned to drive on a stickshift vehicle. I learned on an old 52 Ford truck. Dad had me go out in the field and drive first. Then he let me drive around the block on gravel roads, that was before I was allowed to venture out anywhere else.
We were poor when I was growing up. At about 10 mom got a factory job so we started having more store bought stuff, but you know there is nothing like those memories and the good food we had to eat. I had allergies but overall we were pretty healthy and ate nothing but sugar, lard, fried and all kinds of foods. I think they were better for us.
Memories
I'm frying some cabbage I got out of the garden, one of my last 3 and got to thinking about stuff mom cooked. Seems like not to many people ate like we did.
We always had a huge garden but sometimes chickens and sometimes dad would butcher or have butchered a hog.
I can remember having baked heart, which is extremely good, also liver, tongue cooked and peeled. You let it get cold and slice it, delicious. Mom would make headcheese or souse, that I didn't like. Sometimes I can find it in the store, can at ethnic markets still.
We had chicken feet cooked and pigs feet too. I loved pickled pigs feet, still do but they aren't as good. Remember when taverns had big jars of those and pickled eggs. Never tried the eggs. When my DIL was here from Korea, she if from Russia, she just couldn't get over me having all the fresh eggs I wanted. She said they lived in Siberia and they would get shipments of eggs sometimes. She would ask me if she could have an egg, I told her eat all she wanted, she said if only she could take lots of them to her mom. I had chickens and chicken feet, she loved those, said they were something they really liked back home. I told her very few people did this kind of thing in the US anymore that I was an oddity.
Mom would make dumplings and clean and cook the egg bag it was called in the dumplings, was really really good.
We ate all kinds of stuff people won't touch now. Brains scrambled with eggs, not my favorite but would eat it. Before we got a freezer dad would sugar cure the hams and bacon. It was so salty you had to soak and wash the meat before eating it, but my it was tasty. I can remember her cooking and canning sausage and pork too.
Mom got a lot of her cooking from my great aunt and uncle Kentucy hill folk.
My aunt made light bread on an old cookstove, that stuff would raise 6 inches high, made with lard of course. They still had an icebox, yes that had the big block of ice you put in it. I can remember us going to the icehouse and getting a big block to put in it, think it lasted close to a week, not sure.
Bean soup with ham was a staple on washdays cooked on a small laundry stove, then cornbread.
We had fish we caught, bluegills, or sunfish, catfish, aunt and uncle cooked eel but mom wouldn't touch it, they also ate raccoon, she wouldn't eat it either.
We always had a rabbit box out so mom killed and dressed lots of rabbit. Dad would go frog giggin', loved those frog legs. He wasn't a real good shot so when we had squirrel mom had to soak it in salt water and pick out the shot. I generally bit down on one. Another goody was turtle. She cooked the game food in a pressure cooker after browning it. I remember her putting a slice of bread on top she said that pulled some of the gamey taste out.
We had home made noodles and lots of good food. Often had cobblers.
She canned 100 quarts of tomatoes, 50 of green beans, relish, beets, corn, dad would raise irish cobbler potatoes. We had a huge bin full that lasted all winter. Mom would have gallon jugs that she put tomato juice in and seal with sealing wax and corks.
We had morel mushrooms when they could find them. Soaked in salt water and thoroughly cleaned. Melted butter in a saucepan, dipped in flour and fried, I can still taste those.
My aunt knew different kinds of mushrooms, she could eat out of the woods. She cooked things like sourdoc and polk, think it was young or something because I also remember them saying it was poison, and other plants but mom was afraid to let me or her eat them.
She knew about things from the woods for stomach ache and constipation and other stuff. Uncle would get what he called sweet tobaco and blow it in my ear when I got an earache, and yes it helped but probably just the warm air. They lived to be in their 90's. They never had indoor plumbing in their lives, I didn't till 1964 when I was in high school. I can still tend a coalstove if I have to. Learned to drive on a stickshift vehicle. I learned on an old 52 Ford truck. Dad had me go out in the field and drive first. Then he let me drive around the block on gravel roads, that was before I was allowed to venture out anywhere else.
We were poor when I was growing up. At about 10 mom got a factory job so we started having more store bought stuff, but you know there is nothing like those memories and the good food we had to eat. I had allergies but overall we were pretty healthy and ate nothing but sugar, lard, fried and all kinds of foods. I think they were better for us.
Memories