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POACHED EGGS
Eggs
Salt
Pepper
Butter
Place a broad stew-pan of clean water over the fire till it boils,
and set it level before the fire. Break the eggs separately into a
plate or saucer, to ascertain if they are good, dropping them as you
examine them into the boiling water. They must not be too much
crowded, and there must be plenty of water to cover them well.
Having put them all into the pan in this manner, let them remain
till the whites become set; then place the pan again on the fire,
and cook them as hard as you desire; they probably will be
sufficiently hard by the time the water begins to boil. Raise them
carefully from the water with an egg-slice, trimming the edges
smoothly, and lay them separately upon small buttered toasts or
broiled ham, arranging them neatly in the dish; sprinkle on a very
little salt and black pepper; put on each a spoonful of melted
butter, and send them up warm. They are eaten at breakfast. When
prepared for the dinner table, omit the toasts or ham; serve them in
a small deep dish, sprinkle on some salt and pepper, and pour over
the same melted butter. They are sent as a side dish to accompany
poultry and game.
From The Kentucky Housewife by Lettice Bryan, Cincinnati, 1839
Comment: Most people today find poached eggs entirely difficult
enough to make in a nonstick pan on top of a range with carefully
calibrated temperature controls. Picture Mrs. Bryan and other women
of her era accomplishing the same task over an open fire with
cast-iron cookware--while at the same time getting the bread
toasted, butter melted, ham broiled and sliced, and other dishes
prepared-- and you will begin to appreciate the back-breaking nature
of the work required of a "housewife" in this time.
Between cooking, laundry, chopping wood for the fire, hauling water
from the well, and nearly continual pregnancy, it is not to be
wondered at that so many simply wore out and died in what would
today be considered barely middle age.
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