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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Its been a long time since I was in the Army, in fact I went in just 50
years ago. They used to have cornbread often in the mess hall. It was unlike any I have had in restaurants or that my wife makes or that comes out of a box. It was not sweet and had a significant corn taste and was a tad on the dry side. Most of our cooks seemed to be from the South (US) and maybe that had something to do with it. If anyone has a recipe or a source or an idea I would appreciate it. Thanks in advance. -- JakeInHartsel |
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![]() "Glenn Jacobs" > wrote in message . .. > Its been a long time since I was in the Army, in fact I went in just 50 > years ago. They used to have cornbread often in the mess hall. It was > unlike any I have had in restaurants or that my wife makes or that comes > out of a box. It was not sweet and had a significant corn taste and was a > tad on the dry side. Most of our cooks seemed to be from the South (US) > and maybe that had something to do with it. If anyone has a recipe or a > source or an idea I would appreciate it. > > Thanks in advance. > > -- > JakeInHartsel Look here it is the Navy recipe - I suspect all the military used the same recipes. http://nll3.navsup.navy.mil/docs/recipe/D01400.pdf This will give you an idea - you'll need adobe acrobat. Dimitri |
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![]() Don't know but is this similar to what you talking about? There is a "poverty" version of cornbread my family ate -- when, toward the end of the month, we only had staples left in the cupboard. Some cornmeal Salt to taste A lot of boiling water (not just hot, boiling) Mix cornmeal and salt in a heat-proof bowl (we used a big crock bowl). Stirring constantly, add boiling water and mix vigorously until cornmeal is "cooked" and all of the water is absorbed. [Don't concern yourself with measurements, the cornmeal will absorb "all" of the hot water if it is hot enough -- best to add too much water rather than too little, just continue to stir.] The batter will be dense, not runny. Wet hands in cold water and form pones (or you can use the large mixing spoon to form a pone) and place in hot oil (in the '50s we sometimes used a mixture of Crisco shortening and bacon drippings but when we cook it nowadays we use vegetable oil). Fry on medium to high heat until golden brown. Drain on paper towels and enjoy. Especially good with collard, mustard, and turnip greens; soups, stews, and most beans. |
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![]() On 9-Mar-2004, Gerlonda Battles > wrote: > Don't know but is this similar to what you talking about? > > There is a "poverty" version of cornbread my family ate -- when, toward > the end of the month, we only had staples left in the cupboard. > > Some cornmeal > Salt to taste > A lot of boiling water (not just hot, boiling) > > Mix cornmeal and salt in a heat-proof bowl (we used a big crock bowl). > Stirring constantly, add boiling water and mix vigorously until cornmeal > is "cooked" and all of the water is absorbed. [Don't concern yourself > with measurements, the cornmeal will absorb "all" of the hot water if it > is hot enough -- best to add too much water rather than too little, just > continue to stir.] The batter will be dense, not runny. > > Wet hands in cold water and form pones (or you can use the large > mixing spoon to form a pone) and place in hot oil (in the '50s we > sometimes used a mixture of Crisco shortening and bacon drippings but when > we cook it nowadays we use vegetable oil). > > Fry on medium to high heat until golden brown. Drain on paper towels and > enjoy. Especially good with collard, mustard, and turnip greens; soups, > stews, and most beans. This is not cornbread; it is a southern staple, or was 50 years ago - cornmeal mush. When my dad was laid off for several months, we ate mush at least one meal a day, sometimes more, for weeks. It was good fried in government commodity butter and topped with syrup. Or commodity cheese on top made it tolerable at lunch. I could not stand to look at the stuff for years because we had burned out on it; now, I will eat Polenta, it's foriegn cousin<wink>. |
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On Wed, 10 Mar 2004 01:53:56 GMT, "LAllin" >
wrote: > we ate mush at > least one meal a day, sometimes more, for weeks. It was good fried in > government commodity butter and topped with syrup. Oh, my god... THAT is the best way to eat mush.!!! The other good way to eat cornmeal is is when it's made by an Italian (or an Italian at heart) who calls it polenta. Practice safe eating - always use condiments |
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![]() "Gerlonda Battles" > wrote in message ... > > Don't know but is this similar to what you talking about? > > There is a "poverty" version of cornbread my family ate -- when, toward > the end of the month, we only had staples left in the cupboard. > > Some cornmeal > Salt to taste > A lot of boiling water (not just hot, boiling) > > Mix cornmeal and salt in a heat-proof bowl (we used a big crock bowl). > Stirring constantly, add boiling water and mix vigorously until cornmeal > is "cooked" and all of the water is absorbed. [Don't concern yourself > with measurements, the cornmeal will absorb "all" of the hot water if it > is hot enough -- best to add too much water rather than too little, just > continue to stir.] The batter will be dense, not runny. > > Wet hands in cold water and form pones (or you can use the large > mixing spoon to form a pone) and place in hot oil (in the '50s we > sometimes used a mixture of Crisco shortening and bacon drippings but when > we cook it nowadays we use vegetable oil). > > Fry on medium to high heat until golden brown. Drain on paper towels and > enjoy. Especially good with collard, mustard, and turnip greens; soups, > stews, and most beans. I hadn't thought of this in a long time! It is, if I remember right, also called Scalded Cornbread. Good stuff, especially when fried in lard or bacon grease. Charlie |
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On Wed, 10 Mar 2004 07:23:36 GMT, "Charles Gifford"
> wrote: >> Fry on medium to high heat until golden brown. Drain on paper towels and >> enjoy. Especially good with collard, mustard, and turnip greens; soups, >> stews, and most beans. > >I hadn't thought of this in a long time! It is, if I remember right, also >called Scalded Cornbread. Good stuff, especially when fried in lard or bacon >grease. in Napoli, Italy, they call it "scagliuozzi" and have a triangular shape... best, Jiminy |
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In article >,
Gerlonda Battles > wrote: > Don't know but is this similar to what you talking about? > > There is a "poverty" version of cornbread my family ate -- when, toward > the end of the month, we only had staples left in the cupboard. > > Some cornmeal > Salt to taste > A lot of boiling water (not just hot, boiling) > Hot water cornbread, corn pones, cornmeal mush, fried polenta--call it whatever you wish. This is wonderful stuff. Slice the pones in half and cover them with a strict beef hash (maybe mushrooms but no potatoes) and lots of gravy--you're talking pure heaven for moi. |
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![]() "Dimitri" > wrote in message . com... > > "Glenn Jacobs" > wrote in message > . .. > > Its been a long time since I was in the Army, in fact I went in just 50 > > years ago. They used to have cornbread often in the mess hall. It was > > unlike any I have had in restaurants or that my wife makes or that comes > > out of a box. It was not sweet and had a significant corn taste and was a > > tad on the dry side. Most of our cooks seemed to be from the South (US) > > and maybe that had something to do with it. If anyone has a recipe or a > > source or an idea I would appreciate it. > > > > Thanks in advance. > > > > -- > > JakeInHartsel > > Look here it is the Navy recipe - I suspect all the military used the same > recipes. > > http://nll3.navsup.navy.mil/docs/recipe/D01400.pdf > > This will give you an idea - you'll need adobe acrobat. > > Dimitri This one is a little more current than the poster asked for. I have the recipe from the Navy 1944 cookbook if the poster can wait until tomorrow so I can type it up. The 1944 version is considerably simpler. Charlie |
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![]() "Charles Gifford" > wrote in message hlink.net... > > > This one is a little more current than the poster asked for. I have the > recipe from the Navy 1944 cookbook if the poster can wait until tomorrow so > I can type it up. The 1944 version is considerably simpler. > > Charlie Well heck. I can't find the one from 1944. I had it in my hand day before yesterday. Anyway I offer instead, one from the Navy Cook Book of 1940. It is a little different from the one in the 1944 revision I think. I doubt that it is the same as the Army recipe of the same era. I think that there was no unified service recipes until 1959 but I'm not positive about that. Also, as I have mentioned elsewhere, I don't do numbers very well so I leave proportioning to others. If I can find where I set my other Navy cook books or the copy I was looking at a couple of days ago, I'll post it eventually. Charlie U.S. NAVY CORNBREAD 1940 Source: "The Cook Book of the United States Navy" 1940 Serves 100 2 pounds sugar 1.5 pounds vegetable shortening 12 eggs 2.75 quarts milk (evaporated milk 2 parts water to 1 part milk) 1 ounce salt 5 pounds flour 2 pounds corn meal 5 ounces baking powder Sift the flour; add the cornmeal, salt and baking powder and mix well. Rub the sugar and shortening together until creamed. Beat up the eggs until light; add to the sugar and shortening. Then add the milk, mix thoroughly. Add the flour mixture and mix lightly. Turn mix lightly. Turn in greased pans and bake about 40 minutes in a moderate oven. |
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Just leave the sugar out of a recipe (or cut the amount used). The real
secret is in the corn-meal. Government issue is superior to any that you can buy in a supermarket. See if you can find someone eligible for "commodities" if they are still distributed. Find a good mill that is grinding ! |
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![]() Sam 1121 wrote: > > Just leave the sugar out of a recipe (or cut the amount used). The real > secret is in the corn-meal. Government issue is superior to any that you > can buy in a supermarket. See if you can find someone eligible for > "commodities" if they are still distributed. Find a good mill that is > grinding ! Came home last year after some traveling and found the corn in my garden didn't do well with my flaky while-we're-away watering system. I let the ears dry on the stalks, pulled 'em off at the end of the season, rubbed the kernels off the cobb and stored 'em in a plastic container 'till I decided how to use 'em. I recently used some to make nixtamal (haven't used it yet so I don't know how that turned out) and ground some dry through my Corona plate mill to a cornmeal consistency. I made cornbread with it yesterday and it turned out pretty tasty...had a nice fresh corn taste that we don't get with storebought cornmeal. Rich |
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Jill....Thank you for posting the link! I have used the grits from this
source. If the amount of sugar is cut down and good yellow meal is used,as you have said,then it should be possible to make great cornbread. A black iron skillet with some bacon grease well heated before the batter goes in would also help! SAM |
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Thank you for your service.
Curiously, southern cornbread usually has more sugar than northern cornbread. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- Louis Cohen Living la vida loca at N37° 43' 7.9" W122° 8' 42.8" "Glenn Jacobs" > wrote in message . .. > Its been a long time since I was in the Army, in fact I went in just 50 > years ago. They used to have cornbread often in the mess hall. It was > unlike any I have had in restaurants or that my wife makes or that comes > out of a box. It was not sweet and had a significant corn taste and was a > tad on the dry side. Most of our cooks seemed to be from the South (US) > and maybe that had something to do with it. If anyone has a recipe or a > source or an idea I would appreciate it. > > Thanks in advance. > > -- > JakeInHartsel |
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Louis Cohen wrote:
> Thank you for your service. > > Curiously, southern cornbread usually has more sugar than northern > cornbread. Depends on what part of the South. I only allow 1 Tbs. of sugar in mine and then only under duress. And I require yellow cornmeal, not white. Bolivar and I often have discussions about this; he's in Virginia, I'm in Tennessee. YELLOW dammit, and lay off the sugar! (laugh) Jill > > "Glenn Jacobs" > wrote in message > . .. >> Its been a long time since I was in the Army, in fact I went in just >> 50 years ago. They used to have cornbread often in the mess hall. >> It was unlike any I have had in restaurants or that my wife makes or >> that comes out of a box. It was not sweet and had a significant >> corn taste and was a tad on the dry side. Most of our cooks seemed >> to be from the South (US) and maybe that had something to do with >> it. If anyone has a recipe or a source or an idea I would >> appreciate it. >> >> Thanks in advance. >> >> -- >> JakeInHartsel |
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Louis Cohen wrote:
> Thank you for your service. > > Curiously, southern cornbread usually has more sugar than northern > cornbread. > Heh... that's not my experience. When I went to Boston a few years back my friend Paula and I stopped to grab a beer in a local pub. For some odd reason the proprieter decided to bake and hand out free cornbread to the patrons. Paula, born and raised in Tennessee, said, "Jill, you're not going to like it." The first thing I noticed was, it wasn't nicely golden brown. But I don't pass up free food and it was a long flight, so I took a bite. "YOWSA! What's with all the sugar?" She laughed and said that's how they make it "up here". I'll be damned... how about just give me a bag of sugar? Waiter! I need another beer! Jill > > "Glenn Jacobs" > wrote in message > . .. >> Its been a long time since I was in the Army, in fact I went in just >> 50 years ago. They used to have cornbread often in the mess hall. >> It was unlike any I have had in restaurants or that my wife makes or >> that comes out of a box. It was not sweet and had a significant >> corn taste and was a tad on the dry side. Most of our cooks seemed >> to be from the South (US) and maybe that had something to do with >> it. If anyone has a recipe or a source or an idea I would >> appreciate it. >> >> Thanks in advance. >> >> -- >> JakeInHartsel |
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Glenn Jacobs wrote:
> Its been a long time since I was in the Army, in fact I went in just 50 > years ago. They used to have cornbread often in the mess hall. It was > unlike any I have had in restaurants or that my wife makes or that comes > out of a box. It was not sweet and had a significant corn taste and was a > tad on the dry side. Most of our cooks seemed to be from the South (US) > and maybe that had something to do with it. If anyone has a recipe or a > source or an idea I would appreciate it. > > Thanks in advance. > My wife makes cornbread like that. I'll get the proportions tonite. I know it's basically white cornmeal, buttermilk, egg, and baking soda. No flour and no sugar. Melt some Crisco (shortening) in an iron skillet in the oven while it preheats (400 degrees?). Pour a little of the hot Crisco into the batter and stir it in, pour the batter into the skillet, bake about 20 minutes. It's good for sopping up runny pinto beans or blackeyed peas, but other than that it's way too dry and I much prefer my cornbread that has yellow cornmeal and flour in it (like Yankee cornbread) but no sugar. Wife like to crumble up her leftover cornbread into a glass and pour milk over it. -Bob |
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