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BAKED BEANS
Original Recipe:
Put
a quart of white beans to soak in soft water at night; the next
morning wash them out of that water; put them into a pot with more
water than will cover them; set them over the fire to simmer until
they are quite tender; wash them out again, and put them into an
earthen pot; scald and gash one and a half pounds of pork; place it
on top of the beans and into them, so as to have the rind of the
pork even with the beans; fill the pot with water in which are mixed
two table-spoonfuls of molasses. Bake them five or six hours; if
baked in a brick oven, it is well to have them stand in over night.
Source:
Mrs. Putnam's Receipt Book and Young Housekeeper's Assistant,
New and Enlarged Edition, New York: Phinney, Blakeman & Mason, 1860.
Modern-Day Adaptations:
In the days before mechanical refrigeration was available, "pork"
was assumed to mean a product which had been smoked, dried or salted
for preservation, either by the family at home or by the party which
supplied meat to a city market. Fresh pork was available only in the
fall when pigs were butchered, and even then only for a day or two
since the meat would immediately begin to spoil unless cooked.
If dried "country ham" style meat is used it should be soaked
overnight to rehydrate it. "Gashing" the meat was
necessary to cut through the hard outer crust of meat preserved in
these fashions.
"Soft water" would most likely be rainwater captured in a barrel or
cistern, since water from wells was usually of high mineral content
and that from rivers likely to be polluted. Adding a teaspoon or so
of baking soda (which was well known and commonly available in the
19th century) to the initial soaking water is often recommended when
preparing baked beans as it hastens the softening process.
We used a 1-pound bag of Great Northern dried beans; for the pork we
used about a pound of jowl bacon, which might not be available
everywhere. Regular bacon would work the same, as would ham hocks,
leftover roast pork, or any other reasonably fatty cut which you
find available. (Sorry, dieters--no way to avoid it in this case.)
The rest of the recipe was followed precisely, except that the dish
was cooked on top of the stove in a cast iron pot.
Results:
While the beans came out tender (a frequent challenge to those of us
who rarely work with plain dried beans), a mere two tablespoons of
molasses is not sufficient to make them as sweet as the modern
palate expects baked beans to be. Those who like beans with onions
should feel free to add one or two, finely minced, added at the
point at which the dish goes on to bake. Although quite filling, the
dish as Mrs. Putnam designed it did not thrill the modern diners,
who rated it between 4 and 6.
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