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DRIED RUSK
1 pint warm milk
2 eggs
1/2 teacup [about 2 tbs.] butter
1/2 cup homemade yeast [1 packet or cube commercial]
1 tsp. salt
Flour
Set a sponge with these ingredients, leaving out the eggs, and
stirring in [additional] flour until you have a thick batter. Early
next morning add the well-beaten eggs, and flour enough to enable
you to roll out the dough. Let this rise in the bread-bowl two
hours. Roll into a sheet nearly an inch thick, cut into round cakes,
and arrange in your baking-pan two deep, laying one upon the other
carefully. Let these stand for another half-hour, and bake.
...The rule is to divide the twins, thus leaving one side of each
cake soft, and, piling them loosely in the pan, set them in the oven
when the fire is declining for the night, and leave them in until
morning. Then put them in a clean muslin bag, and hang them up in
the kitchen. They will be fit to eat upon the third day. Soak in
iced milk or water, drain on a shallow plate, and eat with butter or
with fresh berries.
From Common Sense in the Household by Marion Harland, New York,
1871
Comment: Rusks were once very common items which have faded almost
entirely into the mists of history with the advent of commercial
bread-making. When each household had to make "our daily bread" by
hand, at home, with considerable investment of time, labor and
ingredients, it was inevitable that some days would come on which
bread could not be made, perhaps because the breadmaker was in the
throes of childbirth or the like. Thus the need for a bread dried
enough to avoid spoilage for several days. It did not need to be as
long-lasting as ship's-biscuit or its landbound counterpart of
hardtack, but still something that might carry a traveler through a
few day's journey when circumstances did not permit the purchase of
food as one went along.
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