"My Christmas was bean
soup without bread. The boys are not seeing a good deal of fun," wrote
Johnny Jackman in his diary 146 years ago.
A trooper in the 9th Kentucky of the Confederacy, Jackman's lean
Christmas was shared by thousands of other young American men in 1863.
Food supplies for the armies of the Civil War were usually limited to
the basics and deprivations were common. If they filled their journals
with reviews of their meals it was because these events were often the
highlight of an otherwise dismal day.
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In
1864, Jackman's Christmas holiday was a little brighter: fresh pork,
baked sweet potatoes, hardtack.
Civil War historian William C. Davis compiled an authoritative record
of the conflict's cuisine, describing the menus of the camp
commissaries and how selected dishes were prepared.
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"The Civil War Cookbook" combines historic photographs and reportage
with handsome studio portraits of meals and kitchen accoutrements. More
than four dozen authentic Civil War era recipes are included, from
Southern gumbo and rice bread to Yankee doughnuts.
The
sweet potatoes Johnny Jackman referred to in his diary may have
been prepared as sweet potato pudding for holiday fare. Here's the
recipe Davis found:
Sweet
Potato Pudding
6 medium-sized sweet potatoes (white or orange-fleshed)
1 C milk
1 C sugar
3 eggs
Juice of a lemon
1 tsp cinnamon
Boil the potatoes for 30 minutes until soft and mash with the milk to a
smooth consistency. Add the sugar, eggs, lemon juice, and cinnamon, and
beat until smooth. Pour into a shallow, lightly buttered dish and bake
in a moderate oven (375 degrees) for 30 minutes. Serves 4.
The old maxim that an army marches "on its stomach" was certainly
appropriate for the Civil War, whose outcome may have been decided in
the camp kitchens as much as on the battlefields. Union kitchens were
almost always better supplied than their Confederate counterparts, and
consequently their soldiers ate more heartily.
A Union solder's Christmas was often more festive, writes Davis, "with
their mess tables or camp kettles groaning with turkeys, chickens,
hams, and special issues of vegetables, supplemented by goodies sent
from home and goods locally purchased from sutlers and farmers."
Beef steaks were cooked over an open fire according to the following
recipe:
Beef
Steaks
2 Tbsps butter or oil
2 beef steaks (best quality available)
3 onionsBlack pepper
Mixed herbs
Fresh horseradish
Beats the steaks with a mallet. Peel the onions and cut into thick
circles. Heat thebutter or oil in a large frying pan, when hot place
the steaks in the center of the pan and surround with onion slices.
Sprinkle the steaks and onions with the pepper and herbs and fry
quickly over a high heat to required doneness, turning halfway through.
When the steaks are almost ready, sprinkle over some grated
horseradish. Serve the steaks straight from the pan. Serves 2.
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Captain
William Seymour of the
Confederacy's famed "Louisiana Tigers" is quoted from his diary on
Christmas Eve, 1864. It was a cold night at Raccoon Ford, Virginia, and
Seymour had been warming his toes by the campstove.
"We had made up our mind to go egg-nogless to bed, when -- about 11
o'clock -- the welcome sound of horses hoofs on the crisp snow outside;
out we rushed and there we found the tardy 'Mose' with his well-filled
demijohn. The eggs were quickly beaten -- the sugar stirred in and then
the whiskey added, and we had one of the most delicious nogs that ever
mortal man quaffed."
Davis offers the following recipe for the treat Seymour so enjoyed:
Egg
Nog
4 egg yolks
4 Tbsps sugar
1 C cream (whipping)
1 C brandy
1/4 C wine
4 egg whites
A little grated nutmeg
Beat the egg yolks until light, then slowly beat in the sugar, cream,
brandy and wine. Whip the egg whites separately and then fold into the
other ingredients. Sprinkle with nutmeg to serve.
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