Tag Archives: cider

This and That

John and I both enjoy hot cider. Apple and peach are our favorites. And this time of year invites us to the porch with a mug in hands. This has become a chosen response to the changing season.

Even though there are no fall breezes yet, the respite will be peaceful. Holding the warm mug and savoring the tart, yet sweet, flavors is only made better only by the ginger snaps I will dunk in the mug. (My Nanna taught me this added bonus to savoring cider or hot tea.)

 Since I haven’t shared a colonial recipe with you, this drink made me think of the cider most often drunk by all ages during the eighteenth century.

One recipe/receipt gives these simple instructions for Hot Spiced Cider.

“Pour a gallon of cider into your kettle. Drop two cinnamon sticks and eight cloves into cider. This may be heated hearth side. You may wish to add one quart of scuppernong wine for extra flavor.”

The founders of our country enjoyed cider. Benjamin Franklin said: “He that drinks his cyder alone, let him catch his horse alone.”    

One of my favorite memories of our visits to Williamsburg is walking the streets with a cup of hot cider and a molasses cookie. Along Duke of Gloucester Street at Chowning’s Tavern Cider Stand are these drinks and snacks.

As I look forward to inhaling the flavors from my cup, I know that the combined smell of fruit and spices would have also beckoned everyone to the fireplace in a one room cabin in the 18th century.

Good things in life don’t change, but we need to remember to choose them. A safe harbor of fellowship can be found on a porch or around a fireplace; the century doesn’t matter. It’s the people we are making the memories with who are the most important.

Speaking of smells, and also sights and sounds of the eighteenth century, I want to invite you to visit Festifall at Walnut Grove Plantation this first weekend in October. Today and tomorrow the community is invited to join reenactors to celebrate that early life in our county. This year, it is a free event to enjoy time together outside.

This and That

John and I enjoyed a cup of peach cider on the porch this afternoon. With the light fall breeze waving the back door to and fro, the respite was peaceful. Holding the warm mug and savoring the tart, yet sweet, flavors was made better only by the ginger snaps I dunked in the mug.

Image result for 18th century ginger snaps

English colonists introduced gingerbread to America. “We ate gingerbread all day long,” wrote the Virginia diarist William Byrd in 1711, referring to a day he spent training for the local militia. Germans who emigrated to Pennsylvania added Lebkuchen to the American gingerbread repertoire; Moravians in North Carolina rolled gingerbread dough paper-thin to make delicious crisp cookies; and Swedish settlers brought along their recipes for pepparkakor, which are the cookies we now call gingersnaps.

Eighteenth-century Americans also developed a fondness for soft, cakelike gingerbread. Mary Ball Washington, George’s mother, created such a confection, studded with raisins and orange rind, in her kitchen. When General Lafayette paid her a visit in 1784, she served him some, accompanied by a mint julep—and the gingerbread cake came to be known as Lafayette Gingerbread.

The Raleigh Tavern in Williamsburg, Virginia serves a delicious ginger cake. I have fond memories of walking the streets with a mug of cider in one hand and one of those cookies in the other. Served warm, they are fragrant, as well as delicious.

Image result for colonial williamsburg ginger cakes photos

Cider was most often drunk by all ages during the eighteenth century.

Image result for peach cider

One recipe/receipt gives these simple instructions for Hot Spiced Cider.

“Pour a gallon of cider into your kettle. Drop two cinnamon sticks and eight cloves into cider. This may be heated hearth side. You may wish to add one quart of scuppernong wine for extra flavor.”

As I inhaled the flavors from my cup, I realized that the combined smell of fruit and spices would have also beckoned everyone to the fireplace in every one room cabin.

Related image

Good things in life don’t change, but we need to remember to choose them. A safe harbor of fellowship can be found on a porch or around a fireplace; the century doesn’t matter. It’s the people we are making the memories with who are the most important. My Nanna taught me the added bonus of dunking ginger snaps to savor cider or hot tea.

Author Beverly Lewis says, “Growing up around Amish farmland, I enjoyed the opportunity to witness firsthand their love of family, of the domestic arts – sewing, quilting, cooking, baking – as well as seeing them live out their tradition of faith in such a unique way.”

Hope you can taste that cup of cider or tea now, and don’t forget the ginger snaps.

 

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