Friday, September 28, 2018

Cookstove Inspiration and a Vintage Recipe: Raisin Rice Dainty

Today marks a week since we have been cooking exclusively on the wood cookstove again, and it has been extremely satisfying.  The other night as I was cooking supper, I was thinking about how comfortable cooking on the wood cookstove feels and about what a smooth and welcome transition it was to return to cooking on wood.  The best way I can illustrate it is to say that, for me anyway, quitting the gas stove in favor of the woodstove was like leaving a straight-backed kitchen chair for an overstuffed recliner.

Believe me, the comfort of the wood cookstove is not because we need the heat in the house.  In fact, the windows have been open most of the time, and we have been letting the fire go out between meals if we have no need of hot water.  What's comfortable is the pace and rhythm of the wood cookstove, the feeling that the stove and I are working in tandem (weird, I know), and the feeling that experimental cooking and long cooking times are neither expensive nor inefficient.

Furthermore, I said to Nancy the other night that having the cookstove going again just plain inspires me to want to cook.

And have I been cooking!  I can't remember everything that was cooked this week, but one of the highlights was Beautiful Burger Buns for our barbecued beef sandwiches.  This recipe is from the King Arthur Flour website, and it was a definite hit.

The three remaining hamburger buns.  They are a little dry for
sandwiches now, but they make excellent toast!

Because I've been so inspired, I dug out my 1926 West Pottawattamie County Farm Bureau Women's Cookbook and began looking for more things to try from it.  For Saturday's breakfast, I whipped up some cake doughnuts using a recipe out of this unique collection.  They were good, but Nancy and I decided that we are not really cake doughnut lovers, so the chickens enjoyed the vast majority of them.

Tonight I used some leftover rice and made Raisin Rice Dainty, a recipe which was contributed to the cookbook by Mrs. Dudley Stupfell.  I'm posting this recipe here to document how our taste in food has changed over the last ninety years.  Initially, it caught my eye because I love rice and raisins together, and after reading the recipe, I was interested because it doesn't have much sugar in it and I'm trying to reduce my sugar intake a bit.

Then, when I read the directions, the idea of a cold rice dish reminded me of a very pleasant memory from my childhood.  When I was about six or seven, my paternal grandparents went out to supper with us at a local restaurant called The Pink Poodle.  I remember having a small dish of a pink desserty salad there that I thought was really good, so Granny and Dad also tried it in order to figure out what was in it.  I remember how surprised we all were when Granny announced that one of the ingredients was rice.  This recipe is a little like that.

Here is what you need:
2 cups cold cooked rice, packed loosely
(You cooked this rice on the wood cookstove, of course.  You could also use prepared instant rice using this method.)
1 cup raisins
1/3 cup powdered sugar
1 cup whipped cream (measured after it is whipped--approximately 1/2 cup before whipping)
1 tsp. vanilla


The directions are pretty simple:

1. Combine the rice, raisins, and powdered sugar.

2. Blend the vanilla into the whipped cream.

3. Fold the rice and raisin mixture into the whipped cream.

4. Put into small glasses and serve extremely cold.

I garnished this with a small dollop of unsweetened whipped cream on the top.

We only have one little footed sherbet glass like this.
I would estimate that this is about a quarter of the total
recipe yield.
By today's standards, this recipe is extremely bland and not very sweet at all.  I think a little more sugar, a dash of cinnamon, and maybe a few apples (stewed a bit) could perhaps update this recipe.

But maybe it's not worth updating.  I don't know.  Maybe this post's recipe is best left as a history lesson.

So what about the title?  Have you heard of any other kind of "dainty"?


Friday, September 21, 2018

The Beginning of the Full-Time Cookstove Firing Season 2018-2019

Well, today was the day.  Yesterday (and for several days before that), our high temperature was in the nineties.  After a terrific rain storm last night, a cold front went through, and today our high was in the sixties.  With lows in the forties tonight, tomorrow is not supposed to reach seventy degrees.  The long-range forecast has a few seventies in it, but nothing too terribly warm.  Thus, after Nancy's shower this morning, I turned off the electric hot water heater and our season of firing the wood cookstove every day has officially begun.  I do believe that September 21st is the earliest we have ever done this.

Supper tonight was just chips and fresh salsa, raisins, and apples, but while the fire was going to heat some dish and laundry water, I cooked some more red raspberries for jelly. 

Another cooking job that I had been saving was the sugar pot from our Monday Market baking.  When I turn out a pan of sticky rolls, we catch the caramel syrup that runs off them in jelly roll pans beneath the cooling racks.  That is then scraped into a stockpot, and at the end of the season I make pancake syrup out of it.  It is quite delicious, and this way the sugar is not wasted.

The first step in that process is to add water to the pot and bring the whole thing to a rapid boil.  Tomorrow I will skim the butter and cinnamon layer from the top, make sure it is the right consistency, bring it to a boil again, put it in canning jars, and seal them in a hot water bath.

The kettle of red raspberries on the back of the
firebox and the sugar pot at the front.
This was not the first fire we've had in the stove this season, but with the electric hot water heater turned off, we are now committed to daily fires.  I'm really looking forward to it!


Thursday, September 13, 2018

Cheating with Your Wood Cookstove: Gooey Butter Cake

A quick internet search reveals that Gooey Butter Cake is a pretty common recipe, but I didn't know that several years ago when I found this recipe in the back of my mother-in-law's mini-van.  It had been written on a fancy recipe card and then photocopied onto an 8 1/2" x 11" sheet of paper.  It was attributed to someone named Hilda and neither Leona nor anyone else in the family knew where the recipe had come from.  No one knew Hilda, and no one even recognized the handwriting on the recipe card!

I made this according to the recipe the first time, but I wasn't that impressed.  I tweaked it just a bit this time, and the reviews are better, but I still wouldn't call this a stellar dessert.  However, if you need something a little exciting but don't have much time, this could do in a pinch, and because it is so rich, a little goes a long way.

For the bottom layer, here is what you will need:

1 chocolate cake mix (this is why I call this recipe cheating)
2 eggs
1/2 cup butter
1 tsp. vanilla


The original recipe called for a yellow cake mix, but my first change was to use a chocolate one.  I would say that yellow cake is probably my favorite, and if given a choice, chocolate cake is the last thing I would take. However, the bottom layer of this cake has kind of a brownie texture, so I opted for a chocolate cake mix, and that suits my eaters much better.   Lately, I've taken to putting about a tsp. of burnt sugar flavoring into brownies, so I also added that.  If you are unable to find burnt sugar flavoring, you can fairly easily make your own burnt sugar syrup.


As always when baking in a wood cookstove, the first step is to build your fire and begin heating your oven to the desired temperature.  You need a moderate oven for this cake, and I think it is best to shoot for around 325ºF.

While your oven is heating, begin melting your butter over the coolest part of the cooktop.



Combine the melted butter, cake mix, eggs, vanilla, and burnt sugar flavoring.  This could be done by hand, but I used an electric mixer because the mixture is so stiff.

Once everything is thoroughly combined, transfer to a greased 9"x13" baking pan.


Press the mixture into the bottom of the pan, spreading evenly all the way to the edges.  Buttered fingertips make this process a bit easier.


For the second layer you will need these ingredients:

1 pound of powdered sugar
8 oz. softened cream cheese
2 eggs
1 tsp. vanilla


Combine all of these ingredients until smooth.  Again, I used an electric mixer.


Spread the cream cheese mixture on top of the cake mixture.  I am careful to not let it touch the edges of the pan.


Bake in a moderate oven for about 40 minutes.  "Hilda" forbid me from peeking during this time, but I did take a gander in the oven at about thirty-eight minutes.  I think it is generally bad wood cookstove practice to never peek.  Mind you, I'm not advocating opening the oven door every few seconds, but we have to be reasonable.  When Meme taught me to bake, she never used a timer for anything.  In fact, she didn't even own a timer. Instead, we would take casual looks at the kitchen clock and rely on the sense of touch and sight.

I used to have a blind friend who could tell whether something was done baking by the smell of it.  However, wood cookstove ovens are not vented into the kitchen, and the Margin Gem even has a gasket around the oven door, so you can rarely smell baked goods until you open the oven door at least a crack.  

What Gooey Butter Cake looks like when it is done baking.
If you look closely at the oven thermometer, you can see that
the oven was running at about 325ºF.  I wouldn't go much
hotter than that.

Remove from the oven and cool completely.  You could eat this cake at this point, but I have to say that I think this one benefits quite a bit from being covered very tightly and refrigerated for at least a day.



These are extremely rich, and I find that a 1"x1" square is plenty to satisfy my sweet tooth for quite a while.

I hope you enjoy them!

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Summer Uses for a Cold Cookstove

My last post was about Marjorie the Margin Gem cookstove coming out of her summer retirement.  I got to thinking about that.  In reality, even though she had not been fired since May, it wasn't as if she had just been taking up space.  In the summer, she becomes a rather versatile kitchen cabinet--versatile because she doesn't mind if I set hot things on her.

I also mentioned that we don't use her for baking for Monday Markets anymore.  During the first season of Monday Markets, she did all of the baking because she had the only functional oven we had at that time.  You can read about that in this post.

Now, during Monday Market baking, Marjorie serves as a proofing center while her oven stores some large pieces of cast iron cookware.

Marjorie holding a small fraction of the sweet rolls baked yesterday
while they were rising.

During the approximately eight months of the year that the wood cookstove is being fired, the roles of our two kitchen stoves are reversed, and the modern gas stove becomes an elaborate cooling rack and storage area.  I also have a large, homemade cutting board that fits almost perfectly over the gas stove top and makes a nice addition to our counter space.

Using a cold wood cookstove for storage is not a new idea at all.  I used to know of an elderly couple in Macedonia, Iowa, who had an old wood cookstove in their kitchen.  When the lady of the house wanted to remove it, her husband opposed the idea because he didn't know where he would keep all of his medications if not in the cookstove.  I've also heard of people using cookstoves to store groceries and pet food. 

When I first moved back into our house from the little house up the hill, the chimney was not yet ready to hook a cookstove back into it.  Thus, my old Qualified range (which was only a little over a year old at that time) sat patiently waiting to be used again.  I used it as a microwave stand because the idea of the wood cookstove "supporting" the modern technology of the microwave oven appealed to my warped sense of irony . . . Yup, I'm that much of a nerd.

For those of you who have wood cookstoves in your kitchen which are not used year round, please fill up the comments below and tell us what you do with your stove in the off-season.

Saturday, September 8, 2018

Marjorie Comes Out of Her Summer Retirement

Our weather has finally turned a little cooler; in fact, we are supposed to have lows in the upper 40s tonight.  The air is much drier than it has been too, so I couldn't resist starting a fire in Marjorie the Margin Gem cookstove.  I have not had a single fire in the stove since May 27th.  This is the longest stretch of time I've been away from cooking over wood since 2002!

First I swept the chimney, cleaned out the stovepipe, and cleaned out the oven flues.  I always kind of enjoy the first chimney cleaning at the end of the summer.  Since the stove has been unused for such a long time, much of the hard creosote has loosened, so I'm able to do the best job possible.

I've been really hungry for Popovers Fontaine for quite a while, so these were my supper.


The popovers coming out of the oven.  Doesn't
Marjorie look nice in this photo?  Her lovely
appearance is due to my uncle Glen and my
mother-in-law having given her a good shine
for our family reunion back in the first part of July.

I also used the fire to cook some wild plums for making jelly later.

Wild plums from the road ditch cooking on the Margin Gem.

The small, short fire created enough hot water to wash a load of tablecloths and do up a few dishes, too.  Gotta love the efficiency of a wood cookstove!

Nancy was worried that it would get too hot in the house, but the thermometer in the living room only topped out at 70ºF, so we were more than comfortable.

I'm excited because our forecast has very reasonable temperatures for the next several days.  I told Nancy tonight that my goal is to switch off the electric water heater on Sept. 18 this year.  That is the day after the last Monday Market (Monday Market days are really crazy baking days here, but the baking is now all done in electric and gas ovens in order to keep my help--our mothers--from revolting due to the temperature of the kitchen.).  The two things that will have the biggest effect on my goal are temperatures and fuel status.  I'll keep you all posted.

Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Book Review: "Rediscovering the Woodburning Cookstove" by Robert Bobrowski

Where has the summer gone?  At the beginning of June, I had big plans to blog regularly over the summer and had hoped to get our summer kitchen moved closer to the house so that I could continue cooking over wood during hot weather.  We've made progress toward that, but it hasn't happened yet, and talking about it deserves its own post.

Today, I want to review the book Rediscovering the Woodburning Cookstove, written and illustrated by Robert Bobrowski.  Published in 1976 and originally retailing for $5.95, its ISBN number is 0-85699-130-9.  It was published by The Chatham Press of Old Greenwich, Connecticut.

A scan of the front cover or Robert Bobrowski's book.

For me, this book was an eBay find some years ago.  I no longer remember how much I paid for it, but I can guarantee it wasn't too much; otherwise, I wouldn't have bought it.  My copy is autographed by the author, but the message that accompanies the signature is so full of swear words that it probably actually detracts from the value of the book.

Rediscovering the Woodburning Cookstove is an album of information about various models of historic woodburning cookstoves sprinkled with some lore from the various cookstove users Bobrowski interviewed in compiling the stove biographies.  Directions for using a wood cookstove are present, but definitely take a secondary place to the historical information.

The most charming feature of the book is Bobrowski's artwork.  I counted no less than 107 hand-drawn pencil illustrations spread over the book's 95 pages.  Bobrowski also did a masterful job of choosing a wide variety of woodburning cookstoves to share with the reader.  From simple box stoves and the true original "cookstove" to various models of portable ranges to a beautifully rendered "set range," pretty much all styles of wood cookstoves known to man in 1976 are covered in this book.  (For a detailed discussion of each of these types of wood cookstove, see this post.)  Bobrowski also shares information about various equipment and accessories which are cookstove compatible.

Throughout the book, Bobrowski includes recipes which other cookstove owners shared with him as well as a few of his own.  The recipes are interesting, and several have a definite eastern United States feel, which is obvious to this Midwesterner because of the presence of fish and fiddleheads (forty-year-old cookbooks from the Midwest don't include fish recipes as a general rule).  Come to think of it, most of the brands of stoves featured in the book are also more common in the Northeast than in other parts of the country.

The only criticism I would offer is that the text of the book is handwritten in a somewhat calligraphic style, which can be truly difficult to read at times. I noticed that my reading was slowed considerably by this aspect, and I suspect that someone with eyesight more troublesome than mine would find the book quite challenging.

A scan of an interior page which shows the beautiful illustrations
and the difficult text.

I'm glad to have this book as a part of my wood cookstove media collection.  I've seen copies available for purchase online recently, so perhaps you too could land a copy.  

I'd like to close this post by quoting the text on the last page, which echoes my feelings about wood cookstoves and sums up my purpose with this whole blog:

"Not enough has been said here about the wonderfully solid presence of a wood cookstove, the feeling of social warmth it exudes and the companionable crackle of its fire.  No modern appliance can be its equal in this regard.  Whether in the daytime or at night, a wood cookstove fulfills a role above and beyond that of cooking and heating.  This quality is an intangible one and may be understood fully only through owning or using one regularly.  Many say that, after a while, this large inanimate object begins to assume a personality and become a friend, and from my own experience I must wholeheartedly agree."

P.S.--A big thank you to all of you readers who have kept this blog so busy over the summer!  I'm humbled by the awesome number of readers I have even during the off-season.