In colonial American homes, fireplaces, and hearths were indispensable. They provided the primary source of warmth, crucial for survival during harsh winters. The hearth was the main area for cooking, with families using it to prepare daily meals.
Early American fireplaces and cooking The heart of the earliest homes was always the hearth, so let's start there. The earliest fireplaces were simply places where you set the fire. There might be an opening in the wall or roof to let out the smoke.
Hearth & Home: A (brief) history of the fireplace-and how to actually cook in one! Break out that Tuscan grill, featuring recipe developer and cookbook author Alexis deBoschnek. Cooking was a daily battle, and the right tools kept meals coming. One-Pot Meals and Open-Fire Feasts Colonial cooking wasn't fancy, but it was filling.
One-pot stews, boiled puddings, root vegetables cooked in embers-that's what dinner looked like. Roasts turned slowly on spits, and bread baked in heavy cast iron. Colonial Cooking: A Primer By Greenwich Historical Society The hearth was the heart of a colonial home.
It provided people with warmth, light, and most importantly, food. Almost everything a colonial family ate would have been prepared on the hearth. In this mini-series, I am going to show you how I make some of my hearth cooking staples.
Big fireplaces used for cooking, often with an oven in the fireback or next to the fireplace opening, generally predate Rumford. They were common in Colonial America and can be seen at historic places like Williamsburg and Mount Vernon. Nevertheless people continued to build these big old cooking fireplaces in summer kitchens and sometimes in basements well into the mid 19th century in homes.
A central feature of many cooking fireplaces was the crane. A vertical rod imbedded in the masonry at the back of the fireplace held a horizontal arm which in turn could be swung out so the iron pots suspended from it could be tended and then swung back over the hot coals to continue cooking. Those of us who are incurable collectors tend to jam our fireplaces with all kinds of antique cooking stuff, but it was likely that the colonial cooking fireplace had far fewer items in it.
But even if you don't have a working fireplace, a room always looks cozier with a mantle with antique cooking spoons and forks hung from it. Find and save ideas about colonial cooking fireplace on Pinterest. Cooking Methods in the 18th Century Most colonial kitchens were centered around a large hearth or open fireplace, where multiple dishes could be prepared at once using a combination of methods.
Suspended kettles allowed for slow boiling and stewing, while cast iron spiders.