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Civil War Era Foods You Can Still Make Today

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During wartime or a natural disaster, food shortages and lack of natural resources for cooking requires a great deal of improvisation and basic knowledge of cooking principles. The Civil War era foods listed in this article stood the test of time and they can still be cooked today. This is reliable information for when times get rough and survival cooking will become a way of life.

Cooking over a campfire or baking in a clay oven is completely different from cooking with temperature-controlled appliances. The recipes were adjusted by trial and error and substituting ingredients required knowledge that was attained only through day to day experimentation. While some may say that Civil War era foods are not as delicious as the foods we have today, we have to acknowledge that famine is not pleasant either. Even more, foods can be improved by adding spices and everything becomes edible, especially if you are hungry enough.

Civil War Era Foods:

Fire Cake and Hoe Cakes

These are probably the most common civil war era foods we know about and it is one of the easiest ways of making flour edible. Even though making a simple dough and fry or bake it over a fire may not be very appetizing, for the soldiers it was a hot meal that helped raised their morale. Hoe cakes were made from corn meal dough carried to the fields by slaves and other farm workers. At lunch they cleaned their hoes, put the dough on them and cooked it over a fire.

Entrenching Tool Cake

Ingredients:

4 GI canteen cups white cornmeal
boiling water
1 GI mess kit spoon (1 tablespoon) bacon drippings
GI mess kit spoon salt
Preparation: Scald cornmeal with enough boiling water to make a stiff batter, then add bacon drippings and salt. Shape into pones, leaving the imprint of four fingers across top. Place batter on the cleaned, greased blade of an entrenching tool and set up next to fire to bake.

Corn Pone

Ingredients:

2 cups cornmeal
3/4 tsp. salt (or less)
boiling water
2 tbsp. butter or margarine, melted; or vegetable oil
Preparation: Combine all ingredients to make a semi-stiff mush. Spread 1/4-inch thick in a well-greased heavy pan and bake at 375 degrees 20 to 25 minutes. Corn pones used to be baked on a greased shovel over glowing coals.

Hardtack

This is another one of the civil war era foods that is still being used today and its popularity is increasing amongst preppers and survivalists. Hardtack was a virtually indestructible 1/2-inch thick cracker about three inches by three inches, pierced with sixteen holes and made from flour and water. The daily ration was nine or ten crackers, but there was usually enough for those who wanted more since some men would not draw a full ration. They were eaten plain, soaked in coffee or crumbled and added to the stew pot.

Hardtack (original 1860’s recipe):

Use one part water to six parts flour. Roll dough flat and score into cracker shapes.

Bake 20-25 minutes and cool off until completely dry before storing in canisters.

The crackers should be hard as bricks and indestructibly unappetizing. If not consumed by hungry soldiers, the crackers might last at least until the Lord returns!

Hospital Gingerbread

Gingerbread was a favorite food when it was available and it is one of the Civil War era foods described as a comfort food. It was often called the “food for sick men” or the “dying man’s food” because it was offered to wounded soldiers in field hospitals. This food was often found in care packages sent to the soldiers by their families and it was a constant source for many food-related fights within the ranks.

Hospital Gingerbread (original 1860’s recipe)

Ingredients:

1 cup molasses
¼ lb. butter, softened
½ cup buttermilk
2 eggs
1 tablespoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon baking powder
2 cups flour
Preparation: Preheat the oven to 350 F. Butter a 9-inch square pan and dust it lightly with flour. Beat the ¼ lb. of butter until it is smooth and creamy. Add the eggs and beat well. Add the buttermilk and molasses, and blend.

In a separate bowl, mix together the flour, ginger, and baking powder. Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture and mix well. Pour the batter into the pan and bake for 35 minutes. Stick a toothpick into the center of the gingerbread. If it comes out clean, the gingerbread is done. Cool in the pan, and then cut into 9-12 pieces.

Confederate Shortbread

Wheat flour was quite scarce in the South during the Civil War so soldiers baked bread from available ingredients such as white cornmeal. Some people prefer to add baking powder, but you have to keep in mind that Confederate soldiers did not have baking powder.

Ingredients:

1 TB butter
2 cups white cornmeal (not self-rising)
3/4 tsp. salt
2 eggs
2 cups milk
1/4 cup oil
Preparation: Preheat the oven to 400 F. Grease a square baking pan with the butter. Combine the cornmeal and salt in a large bowl. In a small bowl whip the eggs with a fork and combine with the milk and oil. Stirring only until all the dry ingredients are wet, add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and then pour the batter into the prepared baking pan. Bake 20-25 minutes or until the top is lightly browned.

Suggested reading: Living in a 1800’s SOD house

Idiot’s Delight

Also known as Idiot’s cake this simple but tasty food was one of the civil war era foods that gained rapid popularity amongst soldiers. Although not as common as the other foods, this deep-dish, dark brown float of biscuit-like objects in a thick cinnamon-raisin sauce was often found in packages soldiers received from home. Since it was easy to put together from readily-available ingredient, it was said that even an idiot can make it, hence the name of the food.

Ingredients:

Filling:

1 cup Brown Sugarwater2
1 cup Raisins
1 tbls. Butter
1 tsp. Vanilla
4 cups Water
Batter:

7 tbls. Butter
1/2 cup White Sugar
2 tsp. Baking Powder
1/2 cup Milk
1 cup Flour
Preparation: Boil together the first 5 ingredients. Make a batter of the second 5 ingredients. Drop the batter in a greased pan by spoonfuls. Pour first mixture over it and bake in a moderate oven until golden brown.

Horehound candy

This was another wildly popular civil war era foods and it was often eaten by Civil War soldiers fighting for both the Union and the Confederacy. This threat was made from Horehound (Marrubium vulgare), a sturdy plant brought to America by settlers. Horehound candy was not only a sweet indulgence, but was used as a cure for stomach aches and sore throats.

Ingredients:

white or common horehound
Horehound tea or extract
Sugar
To make it at home, you will first need to make horehound tea or extract by boiling the leaves and flowers of the plant in water. You can make horehound tea by pouring one cup of boiling water over one teaspoon of dried horehound leaves.

Preparation: Mix the horehound tea or extract with the sugar and boil until it reaches 300°F. Once it reaches the hard crack stage of candy making, allow it to cool for a few hours before braking it into small chunks of candy.

Swamp Cabbage Stew

Foraging for food was often a necessary activity as resources were running low. Swamp cabbage stew was a favorite southern dish and it was highly appreciated when salted pork was added. Swamp cabbage (Ipomoea aquatica) was being harvested from the many swamps in the south and it was a popular ingredient for stews. Many recipes of civil war era foods were lost to time while others (like this one) are hard to make since there were vague details about the quantities needed to prepare the dish.

Ingredients:

green cabbage
stewed tomatoes
salt pork
salt
pepper
cajun seasoning or cayenne pepper (not both)
onion
garlic
The exact proportions are not known since it was a taste to see if it’s good to eat recipe.

Preparation: Cut up salt pork into chunks, fry in cast iron pot. Slice, not chop, onions and cabbage. Fry these in pot with salt pork. Add stewed tomatoes to make a stew. This will cook down so you will need to avoid burning the dish. Add spices to taste. Add slowly and a little bit at a time, the taste will blend the longer it cooks. Cook at a very low heat for 4-5 hours. Taste at least once every hour so you can tell if you need more seasoning.

Pemmican

Pemmican is a nutritious, preserved food created by the women of Native American tribes. The term Pemmican is derived from pimii, the Cree-Chippewa word for fat. Pemmican consists of a mixture of cooked, dried and shredded buffalo meat, or fish, which is combined with melted fat. The pemmican was tightly packed into a bag made of buffalo skin and used as a convenient type of long lasting food. Although not as common as the other Civil War era foods, pemmican was also available for the soldiers and there were many debates regarding the taste of this food. Since the quality of the meat used for making pemmican was doubtable as it was rumored to be made of rotten old dried beef and the refuse of soap factory soldier often joke about their pemmican lots. They were feeding it to rats and if the rats lived, they would become confident enough to consume pemmican.

Ingredients:

4 cups lean meat (deer, caribou or moose)
3 ½ cups dried fruit (blueberries, chokeberries, raisins, etc)
2 cups rendered fat
1 cup unsalted nuts
1 shot of honey
Preparation: Procure meat as lean as possible and double grind it using a meat grinder. Spread it out very thin on a cooking sheet and dry at 180 degrees F for at least 8 hours, until the meat becomes strong and crispy. Pound the meat into a nearly powder consistency using a powerful blender or other tool you have at hand. Grind the dried fruits. Heat the rendered fat on a stove at medium until liquid. Add liquid fat to dried meat and dried fruits, and mix in nuts and honey. Mix everything by hand and let it cool before storing it in your pantry. You can store it and be consumed for several years.

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