Showing posts with label canning jars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label canning jars. Show all posts

Monday, November 8, 2010

Recording Our Past IV

This is my third article about recording our past. I am slowly putting together our family history. If you are fairly new to my blog you can go here for my post about keeping track of family heirlooms and here to see my post about old family photos.

Today I am posting about food customs and traditions. Every family has their own memories about their food customs and traditions. Below are my memories and, I bet, you probably have some of the same memories as I have.

There were no fast food places in the old days. Our families never ate out as they do today. Women cooked three meals a day. Baked bread of some sort had a place on the table at every meal. The rolling pin was a much used utensil in the kitchen and my grandma always wore an apron.

The red handled rolling pin was my Aunt Irma's. She had it since she was married in the late 1940s.
The old hand carved one was my moms. She gave it to me when I married.

Flour was bought in 25 lb. bags. Recipes were not always written down and ingredients were put in by the handfuls, instead of careful measuring.

Potatoes, pinto beans and bread were staples at the kitchen table. A huge pot of cooked beans lasted for several days. Neighborhood kids were often sent home with a buttered piece of cornbread in their hands. Fried apples and biscuits were a favorite and leftovers were eaten for breakfast the next day.

I remember visiting relative's homes for Sunday dinners. Colorful tablecloths were spread over the food after eating a meal. It kept flies off and enabled you to come back for leftovers later.

At Christmas, there were not always lots of presents to open up, but there were usually oranges, mixed nuts, chocolate balls, hard candy and lots of pies. Thin pies were stacked on top of each other and baked.

On New Years Day, everyone in our area of Appalachia cooked cabbage with a silver coin placed in it. The person who ended up with the silver in their serving, had luck in money the following year, or so they said. I believe it was also a way to get children to eat their cabbage.

On Easter, eating salty fish and eggs for breakfast was a tradition where I grew up. Mr. Walker's store had kegs of fish in salty brine. You would take them home, scale and bone them, and soak them overnight to get the salty taste out of them.

The applesauce stack cake was a favorite of our family. Layers upon thin layers were baked and stacked on top of each other with applesauce spread in between. If you did not have applesauce, apple butter or even jelly was spread in its place. Grandma made 'sweet cakes' out of any left over dough and put them in Grandpa's and Uncle Doc's lunch the next day. Grandma was not the only one who made them, so did my Aunts. Below is the OLD TIME STACK CAKE recipe that my Aunt Goldie put in the Walker Chapel Church cookbook in the early 1970s. Of course, you roll out many layers, and when stacking you spread applesauce between the layers. It is best if it sits covered for a day or two in the refrigerator before eating.

This cookbook is a treasure in itself. 
It is filled with recipes from my family members.

Grandma made these stack cakes all  the time. They were delicious. I remember coming in the back kitchen door and she would have the cake sitting on the table. She would cut me a piece and I gobbled it down.

Everyone canned, and they canned everything imaginable. I remember washing the canning jars outside in a large galvanized tub filled with hot sudsy water. Sausage was cooked, usually in round balls,  put in canning jars and hot grease was poured over them. They would then turn the jars upside down until the grease became cold and solid. They put away green beans, corn, tomatoes, chow chow, pickles and peaches for the winter. Grandma won ribbons for her blackberries,cherries, tomato preserves,  watermelon and blackberry preserves and blackberry jelly at school fairs in the 1930s. She was also hired by the state to go to people and teach them how to can.

The canned food was stored on shelves in cellars along with the baskets of potatoes and apples.

People lived off the land. Blackberry vines abounded on Grandma's land and they were picked and canned as is or made into jam and jelly. Cobblers were a favorite dessert during the summer.

Apples were made into apple butter. The family gathered in the cool fall air and cooked it in a large kettle over an open fire. It was a big undertaking and took all day. Grandma wrapped her 1891 silver dollar in a hanky and it was thrown into the kettle to keep the apple butter from sticking.
If you beat the squirrels to them, hickory nuts and black walnuts were harvested from the woods.

We raised our own chickens and pigs. Pig slaughtering day was a big event in the fall. They used everything from the pig except the 'squeal.' Ham, sausage, bacon, brains, lard rendered from the fat, feet and cracklins.

Chickens provided people with eggs and they were also the main dish for Sunday dinner!

Cows provided us with butter and milk. A churn and butter mold was a staple in the country kitchen.

One way to preserve your food history is to put together a family cookbook. I have gathered recipes from family members twice and put together a cookbook. The books are filled with pictures, recipes from the past and present and food memories that were shared to me by my cousins. It is a labor of love and worth the time spent in putting it together. It doesn't have to be bound professionally, a spiral notebook works very well, and it also makes it easy to add new recipes.

I have put the recipes from my first family cookbook here on my genealogy site.

Do you share some of the same food memories as I have? Have you ever put together a family cookbook?

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Canning Jars

There's been a lot of posts about canning and jelly making lately, so I thought I'd post about canning jars.

Canning jars have been around for a long, long time.
This year the Ball brand jar is celebrating their 125th anniversary.
Go to their site and look around. There's recipes, items to buy and interesting info about the company.

In 1858 John Mason patented the Mason Jar. As a matter of fact there are jars that say Nov 30th 1858 on them, but that doesn't mean they were made in that year. That's the year they were patented. But they did stop making them in the early 1900s with that saying on them. So if you have one of those, unless it's a fake, it is still pretty old.

I have one. . . It's not a very good picture, it's very hard to get a good picture of a canning jar. The top of the jar is rough. It was hand blown into a mold and the lip was ground. If it was machine made the lip would be smooth. It probably dates to around 1900. I found this quite a few years ago at a Salvation Army Thrift store. I knew nothing about the jar at the time. It's probably not worth much, but I think it's neat and I'm keeping it. If you click on the picture for a close up, you can see the lettering and the date.


If you have lots of jars click on this great site that helps you date them. At the bottom of the page there is a chart of the different ways "Ball" was embossed on the jar and it tells the range of dates for the making of that particular jar. So you can get out your jars of produce and see if you have an old one. I haven't checked all of mine, but I did check a few and there were some in the 1923-1933 range.

There's even a Ball Jar Collector's Website.

Here is an old Kerr Home Canning Booklet.
It's the World's Fair Edition dated 1933-1934.



And I love these old Jumbo Peanut Butter Jars.


Here's a few old ones I found in my attic.
The one on the left is the cracked Liberty Bell made in 1976,
an old Atlas one and some pretty colored ones.


I kept these, because I thought they were neat. The one on the left has an anchor on it and says 'Mason', a square one embossed with lots of little blocks and one with tomatoes embossed on it.




Of course, jars aren't just used for canning. They are great for storage.

This old one holds sea shells in my bathroom.
They are the ones my dad brought back from Japan
when he was over there at the end of WWII.



This big Atlas jar is full of pretty colored bouncy balls.


Here is one made into a pretty light.
I put rose hips in the bottom and put in a candle light.



I remember when I was a child and my mom had bushels of canning jars under the house. She put an ad on the local radio swap and shop to sell them. I bet there were a lot of old ones.

Canning jars are great! What would we do without them?
Whether you can or make jelly with them, store things, or craft with them, they would be hard to live without.