Eat local, meatless
Mondays, go wheatless, more fruits and vegetables, less white sugar— many of
the things we hear a lot about today Americans did during World War I. The Library Company’s exhibition Together We Win: The Philadelphia Homefront
During the First World War explores activities on the homefront, which
included food conservation and the ways in which every American could “do their
part” to help win the war through their food choices. On display in the exhibit
are cookbooks, magazines, colorful posters, and photographs.
Apple Brown Betty recipe from: Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, War-Time: Cook and Health Book (Lynn, MA, 1917). Gift of William H. Helfand. |
Linda August,
Curator of Arts and Artifacts and co-curator of Together We Win, along with Digital Outreach Librarians, Concetta
Barbera and Arielle Middleman, created the World War I Test Kitchen to gain
better understanding of this topic. They selected four food conservation
recipes and filmed the cooking of them. The first dish, Apple Brown Betty, may
be the quintessential war time recipe. It
uses fruit (locally grown is even better) and substitutes molasses for sugar,
while also using leftover bread in the crumb topping. Additionally, they made a
“wheatless” [i.e. gluten-free] sweet potato gingerbread and two savory,
meatless meals, bean loaf with tomato sauce and cottage cheese sausage. Library
Company staff served as the taste testers and surprisingly everything turned
out to be delicious. The first video is
posted on our website here: http://togetherwewin.librarycompany.org/apple-brown-betty/ Please check back to see the forthcoming
episodes.
Linda August
Curator of Art and Artifacts and Reference Librarian
Co-Curator of Together We Win