Shortly
after the United States entered World War I in the spring of 1917, Herbert
Hoover was appointed head of the U.S. Food Administration. As such, he oversaw
the coordination of food production and conservation of food supplies for the
war effort. The Administration’s education and promotion proved so successful
in stirring national conscience about food rationing that the term
‘Hooverizing’ became synonymous with a national stamp of approval for
economizing food. Below is the main structure of what was expected while
Hooverizing your meals.
[Ladies' Aid Society Cook Book. First Baptist Church. Butte, Montana, 1917. CKB 641.5 F519L 1917] On MMP http://cdm16013.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p16013coll70/id/196/rec/3 |
[Red Cross Cook Book. Hot Springs Red Cross Society. Hot Springs, Montana, 1918 CKB 641.5 H797R 1918] On MMP http://cdm16013.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p16013coll70/id/132/rec/5 |
["War Winning" Recipes. Young Ladies Sodality. St. Francis Xavier's Church. Missoula, Montana. 1918. CKB 641.5 St109W 1918] |
Could you go a full week of Hooverizing? Maybe you already do
cut back on wheat, sugar, and meat. But, which of these recipes would you, or
do you, use on a regular basis? Try them out and let us know what you think. Notice
that most recipes have names, or use terms, associated with the war and with
Hooverizing!
**************
Eat corn bread and rye,
Meatless days, wheatless days,
Eat less cream and pie.
For our Allies’ sake, cut out the
cake,
Save food, and win – or die;
Keep fighters fit, this is our bit,
And that is the reason why…
[from: Red Cross Cook Book, p.13]
**************
Scotch
Broth
5
cups water
5
tbs. rolled oats
½
can tomatoes
1
small onion diced
2
small potatoes diced
Salt
and pepper to suit taste. Cook about 1 hour until onion and potatoes are well
done.
Mrs. Mary Kimball, who made this notation
next to this recipe: Good
War Winning Recipes, Young Ladies Sodality, of St. Francis
Xavier’s, Missoula, MT, 1918, p.21.
Conservation
Soup
Put
1 tbs. butter in sauce pan, slice in a small onion, let simmer slowly until
onion is soft, but not brown. Now add
any small bits of left-over vegetables you may have, also cooked rice or
oatmeal, season to taste with salt, pepper, a bit of bay leaf or anything you
may like, simmer slowly until ready to serve, add milk or cream and milk, to
make enough needed, heat to boiling point and serve; 2 rolled crackers added
just before serving is an improvement.
Mrs. Belle Vanderhoof, Hot
Springs, Mont.
Red Cross Cook Book, Hot Springs Red Cross Society, 1918, p.17
**************
Woodrow
Wilson’s Okey Hash
Cook
a piece of lean beef or other meat till very tender, take meat out of broth,
when meat is cold run through food chopper or chop fine. Heat broth to boiling and stir in barley
groats as for mush, stir in as much as you can with a spoon, add chopped meats,
let cook for 3 or 4 hours on back of stove or in double boiler, or fireless
cooker. This can be eaten fresh or
warmed up same as hash or cold potatoes.
Mrs. Belle Vanderhoof, Hot Springs,
Montana
Red
Cross Cook Book,
Hot Springs Red Cross Society, 1918, p.20.
Allies.
Left-Over meat
1
pint any cold meat or fowl. Cook
together a few minutes, ½ cup water or stock and 2 tbs. bread crumbs, add 2
tbs. cooking oil or butter, the meat, seasoning and 2 well beaten eggs, fill
well greased custard cup or gem pans, stand in pan of boiling water in oven and
bake 15 or 20 minutes. Sauce—1 tbs.
butter, 1 tbs. flour, ½ cup milk and ½ cup stock or water, mix well, put on
stove, stir till boiling, remove and add yolk of one egg, salt and pepper and
strain into serving dish. Turn Allies
into sauce, and garnish with triangles of toasted bread.
Mrs. T. G. Demer, Hot Springs.
Red Cross Cook Book, Hot Springs Red Cross
Society, 1918, p.18
**************
Salads
“O woe is me,” cried Mrs. Rye
On Wheatless, meatless day,
“What shall I fix that isn’t meat?”
We answer, just this way:
[from: Red Cross
Cook Book, p.23]
Liberty
Salad
1
small head cabbage, 1 medium sized onion, 5 cold boiled potatoes, 3 slices fat
bacon or fat from ham, chop onion and cabbage fine together, dice potatoes
finely, then mix with cabbage and onion, dice bacon and fry crisp, mix all
together, pouring grease from bacon over all while still hot. Dressing— ½ tps. Salt, ½ tps. Pepper, ½ tsp.
mustard, cup of vinegar, if too strong weaken with water, mix and pour over
salad. Can omit potatoes and add either
cold dried beans or cooked string beans.
Mrs. C. Maher, Hot Springs.
Red
Cross Cook Book, Hot Springs Red Cross Society, 1918, p.24
General
Pershing Salad
Mix
½ cup grated cheese with 1 cup whipped cream. Season to taste with salt and
pepper and add 1 tbs gelatin dissolved in 1 scant cup water. Put into molds
rinsed with cold water; when jelly begins to harden sprinkle with grated cheese.
A nice change can be had by adding any small quantity of any preferred minced
green vegetable, such as chives, green onions, parsley, etc., but only a small
quantity, and minced fine, some salad fruits also can be used, chopped apples
and celery, bananas and celery, or a very little orange. Serve with French or
cream dressing. During war time possible French will be more appropriate.
Mrs. C. Maher, Hot Springs, Mont.
Red
Cross Cook Book,
Hot Springs Red Cross Society, 1918, p.24
**************
Side Dishes
Carrots
and Onions, La France
Carrots
sliced, not too thin, boil in salted water till tender. Cut up onion and fry in
hot drippings, pour about 1 cup into pan with the onions, let come to boil,
thicken with cornstarch stirred up in cold water, cook till slightly thickened,
add carrots, drained cook up, add pepper and sald.
Mrs. Alex Howell, Rosalia, Wash.
Red Cross Cook Book, Hot Springs Red Cross Society, 1918, p.29
Tomatoes
en Camouflage
Slice
nice large ripe tomatoes, lay two or three slices on each plate, on lettuce,
mince up green onions, radishes, parsley, sweet green peppers and cucumbers,
mix well together, and sprinkle over tomatoes and pour over them any good salad
dressing, dressing like for the tuna fish salad is good. Any of the above
things can be omitted but onion.
Mrs. S. L. Oliver, Spokane, Wash.
Red
Cross Cook Book, Hot Springs Red Cross Society, 1918, p.25
**************
Cakes, Cookies,
Pies
Milkless,
eggless, butterless cake
1 c.
brown sugar
1 c.
water
1/3
c. lard
2 c.
seeded raisins
¼
tsp. nutmeg
1
tsp. cinnamon
½
tsp. cloves
Boil
all 3 minutes. When cold add ½ tsp salt, 1 tsp soda dissolved in a little
water. Add 2 c. flour sifted with ½ tsp.
baking powder. Bake in slow oven. Also served hot as a pudding with sauce.
Hand-written recipe inside cover of War Winning Recipes, Young Ladies
Sodality of St. Francis Xavier’s,
Missoula, MT, 1918
Wheat-less
Chocolate Cake
½
cup fat, 2/3 cup sugar, 1 cup syrup, 3 eggs, ¾ cup milk, 1 tsp salt, 1 cup rice
flour, 2 cups barley flour, 6 tsp baking powder, 1 tsp cinnamon, 1 tsp vanilla,
2 squares chocolate. Cream the fat,
sugar and egg yolks. Add the syrup and
mix well, add alternately the liquid and dry ingredients sifted together, add
flavoring and melted chocolate. Fold in well beaten whites. Bake 1 hour, starting in moderate oven, after
20 minutes raise heat.
Florence Hotel, Missoula, Mont.
Red Cross Cook Book, Hot Springs Red
Cross Society, 1918, p.48
Liberty
Angel Food
Whites
of 4 eggs, ¾ cup powdered sugar, ½ cup pastry flour, 1/3 tsp cream of tartar,
beat whites stiff, then beat the other ingredients in, bake in moderate oven.
Mrs. Dave Hyre, Hot Springs, Mont.
Red
Cross Cook Book, Hot Springs Red Cross Society, 1918, p.41
**************
The ad
above, from the May 31, 1918 Hardin
Tribune, alludes to the fact that war bread might not go down very well.
Below are some recipes for war bread that you can try. Let us know if you could
‘stomach’ them.
War
Bread
Two
large cups whole wheat flour, 1 large cup white flour, 2 cups bread sponge, 2
tablespoons dark molasses, 2 tablespoons sugar, 2 tablespoons shortening, ¾ cup
warm water, salt, mix, let rise once, then put in tins, let rise and bake;
makes two loaves.
Mrs. Ed Mergel
War
Bread
Set
a sponge at night with 3 pints potato water (warm), 3 pints flour mixture, 1
cake compressed yeast. In the morning
add lard size of an egg, 2 tbs. sugar, 1tbs. salt; enough flour mixture to
knead stiff. Let rise until light, about
1 ½ hours, then mold into loaves when light.
Bake 1 hour. This will make 3
good loaves.
Mrs. R. Klinager
War-Winning Recipes, Young Ladies Sodality, St. Francis Xavier’s,
Missoula, 1918, p.2
Contributors
to the #HooverChallenge Project include MHS staff members Maggie Ordon, Curator
of History; Molly Kruckenberg, Research Center Director; Zoe Ann Stoltz, Reference
Historian; April Sparks, Government Records Archivist; and Barbara Pepper-Rotness,
Reference Librarian.
And,
if you are looking for a home for your Montana WWI era cookbooks (or, other
Montana cookbooks), you can contact Zoe Ann Stoltz at 444-1981 or zstoltz@mt.gov.