Family Recipes From Rosedown and Catalpa Plantations
By Richard Scott, Stella Pitts and Mary Thomas
()
About this ebook
Discover authentic antebellum recipes in this cookbook from two legendary Louisiana plantations—enlivened with cultural history and personal stories.
Dixie biscuits, divinity candy, pond lily salad, lightning cake, and foolish pie are just a few of the delightful dishes included in this collection from the historic Rosedown and Catalpa plantations of West Feliciana Parish, Louisiana. Nearly three hundred recipes are included here, along with a brief history of plantation life and cooking in the antebellum South, as well as firsthand memories of Rosedown.
Found by researchers exploring the Catalpa Plantation attic, many of these original family “receipts” are used in the present-day Rosedown Plantation kitchen demonstrations. Recipes for familiar comfort foods such as corn fritters, green pepper pickles, stuffed eggs, turkey gumbo, lobster croquettes, Thanksgiving relish, bread pudding, and many more are included, offering an abundant selection of nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century culinary favorites.
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Family Recipes From Rosedown and Catalpa Plantations - Richard Scott
Acknowledgments
The authors of this cookbook express gratitude to the following individuals for their generous assistance in the creation of this cookbook: Paul C. Kiene, historical cooking consultant, former proprietor of the Orange Grove Plantation Store, and generous donor to the Rosedown Kitchen; Thomas W. Klein, antiquarian, St. Francisville, Louisiana; Charlen Simmons Moore, researcher and former interpretive ranger, Rosedown Plantation State Historic Site; W. Parke Moore III, site manager, Rosedown Plantation State Historic Site; Jill Larsen, artist and photographer, New Orleans, Louisiana; Polly Luttrull, curator, Rosedown Plantation State Historic Site.
Introduction
After nearly half a century of emptiness and silence, the old plantation kitchen at Rosedown has come to life again.
Today, the fire blazes again in the ancient fireplace; iron kettles hang from the old crane, filled with boiling vegetables and meats; close to the fire, two chickens roast slowly in the old tin kitchen
utensil; and down on the brick hearth, on top of a bed of hot coals, Martha Turnbull's white cake rises slowly in an iron kettle beneath a cover piled with more hot coals.
The once-a-week cooking demonstrations at Rosedown provide visitors to the state-owned historic site with a tantalizing glimpse of the nineteenth century cooking procedures followed for many years on this historic Louisiana plantation. Visitors also can see for themselves—and sometimes even taste—the quaint, old-fashioned, and sometimes all-but-forgotten dishes enjoyed by Martha and Daniel Turnbull and their family and friends so long ago.
[graphic]Historians and preservationists have long known that the past can never be recreated exactly as it really was, but the cooking demonstrations at Rosedown come very close, providing a fascinating—and delicious—glimpse of an era that is gone.
This cookbook is an outgrowth of these cooking demonstrations and also is a means of recording and preserving a selection of several hundred Turnbull family recipes, or receipts as they were called, recently discovered in the attic of nearby Catalpa Plantation, a site closely connected with the family and history of Rosedown. These receipts, along with many other hand-written Turnbull family receipts, are used in the Rosedown kitchen demonstrations and are typical of plantation cookery practiced throughout the antebellum and post-bellum South.
[graphic]The names of these early Southern concoctions are intriguing and delightful: jumbles and puffs, tomatoe soy and monkey pudding, lightning cake and foolish pie.
And where did the Turnbull family find these receipts? Many probably came from their relatives—Martha's family was originally from England, Daniel's came from Scotland. Like all early Southern families, they also exchanged receipts with friends and nearby neighbors in West Feliciana Parish. They often copied receipts they especially liked in nineteenth century cookbooks, such as Miss Leslie's Seventy-Five Receipts for Pastry, Cakes and Sweetmeats, published in 1827, and Miss Leslie's Directions for Cookery, published in 1851. Martha Turnbull owned both of these early American cookbooks penned by the famous Eliza Leslie of Philadelphia.
Some Turnbull family receipts may even have originated at Mount Vernon, home of America's first president, George Washington. The Turnbull's oldest son, William, married Caroline Butler, whose grandmother was Eleanor Parke Custis Lewis, the famous Nellie,
and whose great-grandmother was Martha Washington herself. Both Nellie and Martha were famous cooks, and many of their original receipts have been preserved, including one of the most famous American receipts, Martha's receipt for Great Cake,
which begins with the words, Take forty eggs and divide the whites from the yolks ...
Hand-written receipts were common in many Southern homes, shared among family and friends and eventually passed down to subsequent generations. Sadly, far too many of these irreplaceable bits of Southern culinary history were lost through the years—forgotten in attic trunks, damaged in fires and storms, left behind when families moved away, or simply discarded by later generations. It is therefore truly remarkable that so many of the Turnbull family's receipts have survived to provide a valuable record of this Louisiana plantation family's dining habits.
[graphic]Established shortly after the state of Louisiana acquired Rosedown Plantation in late 2(11)0, the cooking program was begun by lormer interpretive park ranger Richard Scott and has been continued by staff members and volunteers, who keep the fires going, cook the dishes, and give visitors an oral history of plantation cooking—its origins, its traditions, and the lasting influence it has had on modern cooking methods and cuisine, not only in the South but throughout the entire country.
The Rosedown Plantation kitchen, like all plantation kitchens, was always separate from the main house, primarily because of the danger of fire but also to keep the heat and smells of cooking far from the house. The meals were cooked here, then carried on covered platters into the service room at the rear of mansion, where they were arranged on serving pieces and carried into the dining room.
Many of the old iron and tin utensils used at Rosedown are original nineteenth century cooking items—kettles and skillets, gridirons and toasters, trivets and graters and corn shellers, long-handled spoons and forks. There are wooden beadles
(today known as potato mashers) and a tin kitchen
that is a forerunner of a modern rotisserie oven. Simple and primitive as they all are, they really work, to the amazement and delight of visitors.
Of course, missing from this living portrait of a vital part of nineteenth century plantation life are the people who actually worked in the kitchen and produced the daily meals for the family so long ago—
the slave cooks. Ranked at the very top of the plantation's slave hierarchy, the slave cooks were highly valued and skillful members of the plantation community. Working under the direction of their mistresses, they provided astonishingly diverse and delicious meals under difficult and often uncomfortable circumstances that modern-day cooks can scarcely imagine.
In 1862, an inventory of slaves at Rosedown Plantation listed two cooks—a forty-year-old man named Wilkinson and a woman named Grace, who was fifty. Nothing more is known of them, nor do we know all the names or the histories of their predecessors or of those who followed after them.
But names can make people from the past seem very real, and it is somehow easy to imagine Wilkinson and Grace as they might have been at Rosedown in 1862: building up the fire, piling up the hot coals, peeling vegetables and mixing puddings, and stirring cake and bread batters. They worked from early morning until late in the evening, day after day, summer and winter. They prepared early morning breakfasts, main meals that were served at three o'clock in the afternoon, and light evening suppers that closed out the long plantation day.
In the hope that Grace and Wilkinson, and all of their fellow slave cooks throughout the plantation South, will always be remembered for their skills and their lasting contributions to Southern cooking, we dedicate this volume to them: to Grace and Wilkinson of Rosedown Plantation and to all the slave cooks who lived and labored in the plantation kitchens of the antebellum South.
Richard Scott, Stella Pitts, and Mary Thompson
[graphic]Image for page 16Image for page 17Rosedown and Catalpa: The Story of Two Plantations
Rosedown and Catalpa—two legendary names in West Feliciana Parish, two very different plantation houses that share a common heritage as well as a fascinating history that reaches back to the earliest days of the nineteenth century.
Both houses have close connections with two of the most prominent early plantation families in the region—the Barrows and the Forts. Both were originally surrounded by plantations comprising thousands of acres of cotton and sugar cane. Both were renowned in the region for the wealth, culture, and hospitality of the families who owned them. And both, in different ways, are survivors—reminders of a vanished way of life that have emerged beautiful and vibrant in the twenty-first century.
It was at the very beginning of the nineteenth century—in 1800—that two North Carolina families, the Barrows and the Forts, arrived in Neuva Feliciana,
a stronghold of the English in a predominantly French and Spanish territory. The Barrows became one of the wealthiest and most prominent families of the Old South, as influential in Louisiana as were the Byrds, the Carters, and