Open
hearth cooking is the oldest way of cooking. Before cook stoves came
into existence, fireplaces were commonly used. A cook knew how to prepare
the fire for a day of planned cooking. The cook would rise early in
order to start the fire for the day's cooking. The fire was also the
last thing at night the cook tended to, banking it for the next morning's
use.
The fire is something to be studied. If you do not understand how a
fire operates, you will not be able to control it. Not just any wood
would do. Hardwoods are the best. Ash, oak, hickory, hard maple, or
dogwood are some hardwoods good to burn. " The two essential properties
of the best cooking woods are that they generate an even, intense heat
and that they produce a good supply of red hot coals as combustion proceeds."
Hardwoods accomplish both properties. Blazing fires do look dramatic
for display, but were used little for useful cooking.
Cooks used a controllable fire, which roasted and toasted foods. Boiling,
simmering, and stewing foods were under a small flame. To utilize still
further the fire's energy, its coals were raked up, placed on the lid,
and then placed underneath the Dutch ovens to bake. On rainy days, when
the wood supply got wet, it was brought into the house and stacked around
the back and sides of the fireplace. The heat of the fire would dry
the wood out. This technique of drying wet wood in a fireplace is seen
in old photographs of the period. The area you were settled in had a
great deal to do with what wood you had available.
Some area's had only soft wooded trees growing around them. Bents'
Fort had a problem with obtaining the proper wood for cooking, because
of the softwoods native to their surroundings. Without the hardwoods,
coals were difficult to accumulate. Baking is only successful with the
aid of coals.
Although early American cooks used long-handled pots and utensils,
being burned and even burning one's house down were frequent misfortunes,
especially during this period of rudely constructed chimneys.
The floor near the cooking hearth was swept constantly, and the hearth
itself scrubbed often to keep it free from grease. Dripping pans were
used when roasting or boiling to prevent the grease from dripping directly
on the hearth.
Scalding was a common accident when people used lugpoles. Lugpoles
were sturdy, very green, saplings that rested on the projecting inner
ledges of the fireplace throat six or seven feet above the hearth. If
this big pole were not replaced frequently, it would burn through, causing
damage to those around the hearth.
Lugpoles were replaced by cranes. The crane is a large iron bracket
hinged to the fireplace jamb. From "S" hooks and trammels placed on
it, the cook suspended her cooking pots over the fire. The cranes' hinges
allowed her to swing the pots on and off the fire safely. Many implements
were used by the cook. Each one performed a useful task. Different types
of tools used to care for the fire were; shovels, pokers, tongs, and
bellows. Without these implements, one would not have been able to cook.
Tending to the fire was important because without doing so, one would
not be able to have available the right amount of coals for baking or
enough flames for boiling.
Other versatile cooking implements are: peels, posnets, spiders, bird
ovens, coffee roasters, tilting teakettles, ember tongs, salamanders,
tin kitchens, Dutch ovens, clock jacks, griddles, waffle irons, and
kettles of all sizes. Not all kitchens were supplied so lavishly.
The general arrangements were sparse. This did not hinder the cook's
basic cooking techniques. One could turn out the prepared dishes with
a surprisingly high degree of accuracy, and with remarkably tasty results.
That was because of the cook's resourcefulness. Pots, which were designed
for a particular cooking technique, were used in a variety of other
ways as well. An average cook had a skillet or frying pan and would
own a griddle, which was useful for baking biscuits, muffins, small
cakes, pancakes, and sautéing. For pots that did not have fat on them,
a trivet was required for supporting it. Spoons for stirring, forks
for piercing, and spatulas for turning were all-important implements
used.
Cookbooks were not common items in the 1840s. All good cooks knew their
recipes by heart. If a cookbook were found in this time era though,
you would see recipes for French bread, ladyfingers, sponge cake, and
puff.
Your wood, knowledge of fires, implements, and of course, safety, are
all a part of open hearth cooking this type of cooking is continuous
process of learning. New recipes tried against old are always a challenge.
The best teacher of all in open hearth cooking is just experiencing
it yourself and the old cliché - if at first you don't succeed- try,
try again!
Information in this section was adapted from an article
on open hearth cooking written by Alice Maffett, a former park ranger
at Fort Scott NHS.
