Sandra Merville Hart's Blog, page 105
April 16, 2017
Three Ways to Develop Good Cooking Habits – Advice from Fannie Farmer
I recently ran across The Fannie Farmer Cookbook in an antique store. This book was originally published in 1896. Fannie Farmer’s name is still well-known today.
Fannie gave advice about cooking habits before giving any recipes in her cookbook. There may be some wisdom in that strategy. Here are three ways to develop good cooking habits that are still surprisingly relevant today.
Firstly, read the whole recipe before doing anything. This shows what you will do—think about the reasons why. Preparation and/or baking times are included in most modern recipes; give yourself plenty of time to prevent becoming flustered.
When making a complete meal, decide what dishes can be prepared ahead of time—such as dessert. Consider your menu. What dish will take longest to prepare? This will help decide when preparations for the meal should begin. Study any unfamiliar recipes ahead of time.
[image error]Secondly, think about the season of the year when planning meals. Produce and meat are at their flavorful peak when fresh. Shop at the market for ingredients that are in season or “on special.” Don’t get your heart set on a particular recipe before finding what’s available at the grocery store. Fresh products make more flavorful dishes, so learn to be flexible.
Thirdly, don’t scorn leftovers. Instead, use your imagination to make a new dish.
[image error]Fannie advises deliberately preparing twice the amount of meat required to feed your family. She used the example of pot roast. If there is a bone, use it to prepare soup another day along with leftover vegetables and a bit of the gravy.
Take a portion of the leftover pot roast the following day and ground it to make stuffed green peppers or stuffed eggplant. There should be enough to make a beef noodle casserole as well.
Don’t neglect to save the vegetables, sauce, and rice from meals. These ingredients may be used in omelets, salads, soups, and baked dishes. Be creative.
Great advice from the creative Fannie Farmer on developing great cooking habits!
-Sandra Merville Hart
Sources
Revised by Cunningham, Marion and Laber, Jeri. The Fannie Farmer Cookbook, Alfred A Knopf Inc., 1983.
Filed under: Historical Nibbles Tagged: Fannie Farmer advice, good cooking habits, historical cooking, Historical Nibbles, leftover food, planning a meal, recipes, Sandra Merville Hart








Happy Easter!
Matthew 28:1-10 (New International Version)
After the Sabbath, at dawn on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to look at the tomb.
There was a violent earthquake, for an angel of the Lord came down from heaven and, going to the tomb, rolled back the stone and sat on it. His appearance was like lightning, and his clothes were white as snow. The guards were so afraid of him that they shook and became like dead men.
The angel said to the women, “Do not be afraid, for I know that you are looking for Jesus, who was crucified. He is not here; he has risen, just as he said. Come and see the place where he lay. Then go quickly and tell his disciples: ‘He has risen from the dead and is going ahead of you into Galilee. There you will see him.’ Now I have told you.”
So the women hurried away from the tomb, afraid yet filled with joy, and ran to tell his disciples. Suddenly Jesus met them. “Greetings,” he said. They came to him, clasped his feet and worshiped him. Then Jesus said to them, “Do not be afraid. Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me.”
Filed under: From Our Past Tagged: Easter, Jesus Resurrection, Sandra Merville Hart








April 12, 2017
Civil War Bugle Calls
Commands were often given musically during the Civil War. That is to say, by bugle or drum. A general’s voice only carried so far—especially over the din of battle. Soldiers soon learned specific bugle tunes signified that it was time to get up in the morning, for example.
John D. Billings, Union soldier, wrote about a typical day in camp in Hardtack & Coffee.
The first bugle call of the day was “Assembly of Buglers.” It came around 5 am in the summer and 6 am in the winter. Men knew it was time to roll out of their blankets. This unwelcome song always brought grumbling.
“Assembly” came fifteen minutes later. Unless ill or on guard duty, every enlisted man had to be present for his company’s roll call.
When everyone finally stood in line, the bugler played “Reveille.” Soldiers made up words to this song:
I can’t get ’em up, I can’t get ’em up,
I can’t get ’em up this morning;
I can’t get ’em up, I can’t get ’em up,
I can’t get ’em up today.
After this, “Stable Call” was played. Company drivers went to the picket ropes where they fed and groomed their horses.
“Breakfast Call” came next. Soldiers prepared and ate their breakfast or ate rations provided at the company cookhouse.
“Sick Call” sounded at 8 am. Men who were sick and required medicine proceeded to the surgeon’s tent. Quinine was given for many ailments including headache, stomachache, toothache, coughing, lameness, fever, and ague.
Next came the “Watering Call,” where cavalry and drivers watered their horses and mules. To learn more about the difficulties of watering thousands of animals, click here.
Soldiers cleaned camp, gathered wood and water, built stables, buried horses, and washed gun carriages for “Fatigue Call.”
[image error]Next, drum or bugle brought the “Drill Call” where men practiced artillery and other skills. This was practiced much more earlier in the war.
Cannoneers and drivers responded to “Boots and Saddles” as a battery drill.
“Dinner Call” sounded at noon.
Buglers played “Water Call” around 4 pm.
“Stable Call” was blown as a reminder to return horses to the stable.
“Attention” was blown at 5:45 pm, followed by “Assembly” where the soldiers fell in for “Retreat” roll call.
“Assembly of Guard” called soldiers to guard duty. A brass band or fife-and-drum-corps usually followed.
The bugler played “Attention” at 8:30 pm and then “Assembly.” Companies formed lines for the day’s final roll call, “Tattoo.”
Men then had thirty minutes to get ready for bed at 9 pm when “Taps” was played. A drummer then played to end the day.
Follow this link if you’d like to listen to a few of these.
-Sandra Merville Hart
Sources
Billings, John D. Hardtack & Coffee, University of Nebraska Press, 1993.
Villanueva, Jari. “Civil War Bugles Calls,” www/tapsbuglar.com, 2017/03/15 https://archive.org/details/CivilWarBugleCalls/20+Dan+Butterfield.mp3.
Villanueva, Jari. “Twenty Bugles Calls,” United States Air Force Band, 2017/03/14 http://www.usafband.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-150220-028.pdf.
Filed under: From Our Past Tagged: American Civil War, American history, Civil War, Civil War bugle calls, Civil War camp, Civil War commands, Civil War soldiers, Historical Nibbles, history, Sandra Merville Hart








April 11, 2017
Castles in the Clouds by Myra Johnson
Learning about the troubles of communities in the Dust Bowl of the 1930s snagged my interest. The author clearly demonstrates that the drought and Depression not only affected farmers but whole towns. Times were rough for almost everyone in Arkansas.
Larkspur Linwood ends up in a variety of settings in this novel. She is in college studying to become a teacher when the story begins. An opportunity to teach in Kenya thrills her, yet she is drawn there more by handsome Professor Keene who offers her the job than the position itself.
When that quickly turns sour, another teaching opportunity back in Arkansas captivates her. This time Lark is determined to keep her mind on the business at hand and not on another professor, Anson Schafer, who heads up the foundation. Anson is nothing like Professor Keene though it takes Lark a long time to figure that out.
The novel follows the lives of Larkspur and her two sisters, Rose and Bryony, and is Book Two in the Flowers of Eden series.
-Review by Sandra Merville Hart
Filed under: Review Tagged: Book Review, Historical romance, Myra Johnson, Sandra Merville Hart








April 9, 2017
Civil War: Confederate Remedy for Dysentery
As a writer of historical novels, I love to run across remedies used in past centuries. A wonderful book, Confederate Receipt Book, contains a few cures from the Civil War era.
A soldier’s remedy for dysentery (severe diarrhea) used only three everyday ingredients which were reported to be “efficacious” for these cases.
Dysentery killed more Civil War soldiers than any other diseases so it was a serious matter.
At that time, doctors often prescribed opium (paregoric, laudanum, or Dover’s powder) to treat dysentery.
Other medicines given to treat the disease were copper sulfate, oil of turpentine, lead acetate, and aromatic sulfuric acid. Surprisingly, laxatives were also used in the treatment—Epsom salts, calomel, ipecac, castor oil, and sulfate of magnesia. Calomel, also known as mercurous chloride, had terrible side effects: profuse salivation, loss of teeth, or—in severe cases—“mercurial gangrene.”
Strong medicines with unfortunate or fatal side effects could have led Confederate soldiers to search for a better cure. Or the lack of medical supplies might be the reason for trying a common cure. It’s also possible this simple cure had been around for years.
Whatever the case, the Confederate remedy for dysentery seems remarkably simple when compared to medicines listed above.
[image error]The instructions stipulate pure vinegar. The apple cider vinegar in my cabinet is diluted with water so that changes the experiment. This is merely a fun learning exercise since I’m not planning on treating dysentery, so this is not an issue.
I took a cup of apple cider vinegar and poured it into a salad dressing cruet. (Use any jar that can be tightly closed.) I then added salt, a teaspoon at time. The soldiers’ recipe advises to add as much salt as the vinegar can ferment and work clear.
[image error]My vinegar didn’t foam until shaking it. I used 6 teaspoons of salt, but it might have held more.
The soldiers corked the salty vinegar liquid and set it aside. When needed, they boiled a gill of water (4 ounces), added a large spoonful of the medicine, and drank it. It was supposed to be effective for cholic (colic) and dysentery.
As always, consult physicians before using this medicinally.
I use these old cures only in my historical writing. I made this recipe but will not be taking it. I’m not recommending it. This is merely meant to be fun and educational.
-Sandra Merville Hart
Sources
A Compilation of Over One Hundred Receipts, Adapted to the Times. Confederate Receipt Book, Applewood Books, 1863.
Oates, Stephen B. A Woman of Valor: Clara Barton and the Civil War, The Free Press, 1994.
Filed under: Historical Nibbles Tagged: American Civil War, castor oil, Civil War, Civil War diseases, Civil War dysentery, Civil War worst disease, Confederate cure, Confederate soldiers, Confederate soldiers' cure, Dover's powder, dysentery, Epsom salts, Historical Nibbles, ipecac, laudanum, oil of turpentine, paregoric, Sandra Merville Hart








April 6, 2017
Watering Thousands of Horses During the Civil War
According to John D. Billings, author of Hardtack & Coffee, one of the typical daily bugle calls was a Watering Call. Upon hearing this call, artillery drivers and all cavalry rank and file went to the picket rope to water their horses.
This was a simple task when the army camped near a river, which was often the case. When it wasn’t, thirsty horses were ridden a mile or two—sometimes longer—to find a pond or stream.
Finding a sufficient amount of water for thousands of animals was no small task.
General McClellan had about 38,800 horses and mules after the Battle of Antietam in September of 1862. 56,499 horses and mules were in the army’s care when they crossed the Rapidan River in 1864.
All animals weren’t taken to the same stream for watering because troops spread out for miles.
[image error]A drought in the summer of 1864 brought serious problems. No rain fell for several weeks. Soldiers were hard-pressed to find enough water for themselves. They’d find an old stream where only mud remained. Scooping out holes in the mud, soldiers patiently waited for “warm, milky-colored fluid to ooze from the clay.” The water came a drop at a time until it filled a dipper for the thirsty soldier.
Hundreds of men carried empty canteens through forests and valleys in search of water.
When the drought continued, Union soldiers dug wells. To their relief, they found an abundance of water 10-12 feet below ground. These wells met the needs of soldiers and their animals.
-Sandra Merville Hart
Sources
Billings, John D. Hardtack & Coffee, University of Nebraska Press, 1993.
Villanueva, Jari. “Twenty Bugles Calls,” The United States Air Force Band, 2017/03/14 http://www.usafband.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-150220-028.pdf.
Filed under: From Our Past Tagged: American Civil War, Bugle call for watering horses, Civil War, Civil War bugle calls, Civil War horses, Civil War watering horses, Historical Nibbles, Sandra Merville Hart








April 5, 2017
Civil War: Watering Thousands of Houses
According to John D. Billings, author of Hardtack & Coffee, one of the typical daily bugle calls was a Watering Call. Upon hearing this call, artillery drivers and all cavalry rank and file went to the picket rope to water their horses.
This was a simple task when the army camped near a river, which was often the case. When it wasn’t, thirsty horses were ridden a mile or two—sometimes longer—to find a pond or stream.
Finding a sufficient amount of water for thousands of animals was no small task.
General McClellan had about 38,800 horses and mules after the Battle of Antietam in September of 1862. 56,499 horses and mules were in the army’s care when they crossed the Rapidan River in 1864.
All animals weren’t taken to the same stream for watering because troops spread out for miles.
[image error]A drought in the summer of 1864 brought serious problems. No rain fell for several weeks. Soldiers were hard-pressed to find enough water for themselves. They’d find an old stream where only mud remained. Scooping out holes in the mud, soldiers patiently waited for “warm, milky-colored fluid to ooze from the clay.” The water came a drop at a time until it filled a dipper for the thirsty soldier.
Hundreds of men carried empty canteens through forests and valleys in search of water.
When the drought continued, Union soldiers dug wells. To their relief, they found an abundance of water 10-12 feet below ground. These wells met the needs of soldiers and their animals.
-Sandra Merville Hart
Sources
Billings, John D. Hardtack & Coffee, University of Nebraska Press, 1993.
Villanueva, Jari. “Twenty Bugles Calls,” The United States Air Force Band, 2017/03/14 http://www.usafband.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-150220-028.pdf.
Filed under: From Our Past Tagged: American Civil War, American history, Bugle call for watering horses, Civil War, Civil War bugle calls, Civil War camps, Civil War horses, Civil War watering horses, Historical Nibbles, history, Sandra Merville Hart








April 4, 2017
Embrace an Angry Wind by Wiley Sword
[image error]This nonfiction resource book is about a key year in the American Civil War—1864. The subtitle “The Confederacy’s Last Hurrah: Spring Hill, Franklin, and Nashville” shows where the author concentrates but the story begins earlier in the year.
Sword weaves a true story in a way that captivates readers. Readers learn about what generals are feeling from both sides of the conflict. They also learn what privates think about what’s happening, as gleaned from private letters and diaries.
Sleet, snow, wind, and temperature all could play a part in battles—and certainly mattered to soldiers on the march. Road conditions and swollen rivers that stalled important crossings are details that transport readers back to turbulent times.
Great book for Civil War research and history lovers.
-Sandra Merville Hart
Filed under: Review Tagged: Battle of Franklin, Battle of Nashville, Book Review, Civil War research, Historical Nibbles, Sandra Merville Hart, Wiley Sword








DevoKids post – Iowa, the Hawkeye State
Lots of Native American history in Iowa! Stop by DevoKids to learn fun facts about this midwestern state.
Filed under: On Another Blog Tagged: DevoKids, Historical Nibbles, Iowa, Sandra Merville Hart, the Hawkeye state








April 2, 2017
Civil War: Confederate Soldier’s Way To Relieve Asthma
As a writer of historical novels, I love to run across remedies used in past centuries. A wonderful book, Confederate Receipt Book, contains a few cures from the Civil War era.
A recipe to relieve asthma called for stramonium leaves (also known as Jamestown weed) to be gathered before the frost and dried in the shade.
The dried leaves were then saturated in a “pretty strong solution of saltpetre.” There is no indication given as to how much saltpeter (a white powder with a salty taste) makes a strong solution. According to the Cambridge Dictionary, saltpetre is used in the preservation of meat as well as in the production of explosives and fertilizers.
The Confederate soldiers then smoked the saturated leaves. Inhaling the vapors helped loosen lung congestion. The soldiers cautioned that the fumes could strangle the patient if “taken too freely.”
It is not stated whether the soldiers rolled the leaves into a cigarette or inhaled them over a fire.
I wanted to know if stramonium was still being used to treat asthma these days.
This plant is considered poisonous if improperly prepared. In modern times, the juice is taken from the plant before seeds and flowers sprout. Then the juice goes through a process of dilution process. This removes the poisonous part.
It is used today to treat a variety of complaints, including asthma. It relieves chest tightness and a wheezy cough.
The home remedy sites stress that the plant is poisonous and must be prepared properly.
The soldiers also gave specific instructions about stramonium, such as drying the leaves in the shade and gathering them before the frost. They seemed to realize that the plant must be handled carefully to work best.
I don’t suggest following the soldiers’ recipe. There are too many warnings about the poisonous plant. As always, consult physicians before using this medicinally.
I use these old cures only in my historical writing. I have not followed this recipe or tried the cure. I’m not recommending it. This is merely meant to be fun and educational.
-Sandra Merville Hart
Sources
A Compilation of Over One Hundred Receipts, Adapted to the Times. Confederate Receipt Book, Applewood Books, 1863.
“Homeopathy: Stramonium, Thorn Apple/Devil’s-apple,” Herbs2000.com, 2017/03/11 http://www.herbs2000.com/homeopathy/stramonium.htm.
“Saltpetre,” Cambridge University Press, 2017/03/11 http://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/saltpetre.
“Stramonium/Stram,” Home Remedy Central, 2017/03/11 http://www.homeremedycentral.com/en/homeopathic-remedies/homeopathy/stramonium.html.
Filed under: Historical Nibbles Tagged: American Civil War, Civil War, Civil War soldiers recipes, Civil War soldiers remedies, Confederate cure to relieve asthma, Confederate soldiers, Confederate soldiers cures, Confederate soldiers recipe, Confederate soldiers' cure, Historical Nibbles, Sandra Merville Hart, stramonium, stramonium leaves







