history notes--pioneer, Civil War, cowboy & Victorian foods (2024)

How much did this cost?
  • Charles Baker'sprovision list
  • San Antonio,Texas: 1853
    Pork, 11 cents/lb
    Bacon, 12 1/2-15 cents/lb
    Salt beef, 8 1/2-9 cents/lb
    Fresh beef, 4 1/2-5 cents/lb
    Flour, 4 /14 cents (superfine)-5 cents (extra fine)/lb
    Hard bread, 9-10 cents/lb
    Beans, 10 1/2cents/quart
    Rice, 8-10 cents/lb
    Coffee, 12 1/2 (Rio) to 18 (Java) cents/lb
    Sugar, 7 1/2-8 cents for "Louisiana brown"/lb
    Vinegar, 6 1/4 cents/quart"
    ---The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, October 1947 (p. 170)
  • Madison, Wisconsin: 1861
    Grains
    During the last week bushels of little wheat has come in and prices have ranged a cent or two lower They are now quoted at 63@65 cents. In ournext we expect to be able to quote higher prices, as the foreign demand is disclosing an urgentness that must have a stimumlating effect on the American grain markets.
    Wheat, 63-65 cents (per cwt, 100 pounds)
    Rye, 40-45 cents
    Oats, 16-20 cents
    Barley, 40-45 cents
    Indian corn, shelled, 30-35 cents
    Indian corn in cobb, 20-25 cents
    Flour and meal (per cwt, 100 pounds)
    Wheat flour, 2.25-2.50
    Rye flour, 2.25
    Corn meal, 1.50-2.00
    Bran & shorts, 60 cents
    Family markets
    Eggs, 16-18 cents/dozen
    Butter, 16-18 cents/lb
    Green apples, 2.00-3.25/barrel
    Potatoes, 18-23 cents/bush(el)
    Lard, 12 cents/lb
    Common salt, 2.20/bbl (bushel barrel)
    Hams, 12-14 cents/lb
    Cheese, 12-14 cents/lb
    Codfish, 5-6 cents/lb
    Whitefish, 3.20/half barrel
    Table salt, 20-25 cents/sack
    Brown sugar, 7-9 cents/lb
    White sugar, 10-14 cents/lb
    Coffee, 15-20 cents/lb
    Tea, 50-75 cents/lb
    Molasses, 40-50 cents/gallon
    Vinegar (cider), 25 cents/gallon
    Dried apples, 9 cents/lb
    Dried peaches, 20 cents/lb
    Cranberries, 12 cents/quart
    Hubbard squash, 1.00/cwt
    Raisins, 12-20 cents/lb
    Honey, 25 cents/lb
    Lemons, 2-3 cents/each
    Sweet potatoes, 2.00/bushel
    Squashes, 2-3 cents/each
    Lake Mich(igan) trout, 8 cents/lb
    Currants, 12 cents/lb
    Meat (per cwt, 100 pounds)
    Lambs, 2-2.35/cwt
    Beef, 2.50-3.00/cwt (live weight)
    Hobs, 5.50-6.00/cwt
    Veal calves, six weeks old, 3.00/cwt
    ---SOURCE: Weekly Wisconsin Patriot, February 9, 1861 (p. 7)

How much would these provisions cost today?
Very doable, but not as easy at is seems. This assignment is one of those tasks that appears simple: compare prices then & now. In reality, the task before you is more complicated. For starters, 19th century America (all 100 yars) witnessed the beginnings of a new monetary system, fledgling prosperity, rampant inflation, the Civil War, the Industrial revolution and massive wealth accumulation. Also, prices are determined by supply and demand. Plentiful New England eggs fetched far different prices from their rare commodity counterparts along the Oregon Trail.Prices, in this context, can take two meanings:

  • If you were outfitting a 19th century American westward wagon, how much money would that be in *today's* dollars?"
    Use this inflation calculator to find out.
  • If you had to outfit a classic wagon-train with provisions today, how much would it cost today?
    This requires you find today's retail prices for everything on the list. Keep in mind some items (coffee, wool) are actually cheaper today than back in the 19th century. Some items (wagons) might be really hard to find. Some items (butter, pillows) were generally made at home and/or bartered back then. If you want a Conestoga wagon today, you will either have to make it yourself or commission a craftsman. Of course, it is possible you could find one on EBay.
    Current food prices
    Excellent excuse for a little primary supermarket research or use national average data.
    Current clothing/household goods prices
    Mall trip or shop online.
    Livestock
    US Dept. of Agriculture (& meat industry assoiations) report this data. Prices are not reported by animal, but by age & weight of animal. In addition to finding out price per 100 weight, you'll need to get the average weightof a marketable/grown animal. General encyclopedias may be useful here. Get out your calculators!

PERIOD RECIPES

MODERNIZED RECIPES

  • Utahbound!--food, recipes & cooking methods of westward-bound wagon trains circa 1847
  • Sourdoughbread, favorite of the California 49ers
  • Old West Baking Book, Lon Walters
    ---modernized recipes with history notes
California Gold Rush

The foods and recipes of Gold Rush California were as diverse as the people who lived in that placeand time. It was a convergence of cultures (Anglo-American, Spanish, Chinese, Mexican etc.) andeconomic status: sparkling rich to dirt poor. Folks venturing into towns could sample thefinest Victorian fare or drink themselves into oblivion on cheap whisky. Camp fare was similar towhat the pioneers ate on the Oregon trail: belly-filling foods made with local ingredients (freshlyshot game, fruits & vegetables) and store-bought provisions (coffee, beans & bacon). As timeprogressed, so did the food.
Sourdough bread was a staple of the forty-niners.Hangtown fry was the culinary icon.

"With the discovery of gold, California...abruptly changed character. The territory had launched itself upon an agriculturalcareer, but with the gold strike California's farms were abandoned, and so were its towns. As ships from the East Coast reachedCalifornia, their crews promptly deserted and went gold hunting too; by July 1850, the harbor of San Francisco was clogged with five hundred vessels becalmed for want of crews. San Fransico was promoted from a small village named Yerba Vueina, "good herb,"for a local plant with a mint-like flavor, to a thriving, bustling metropolis of 25,000 citizens, mostly miners. In 1849, eightythousand new gold seekers entered California...Three-quarters of the gold hunters were Americans, bringing with them Anglo-Saxoneating habits destined to overwhelm Spanish-Mexican ideas. The same phenomenon already encountered on a frontier inhabited bya society with no women in the kitchen was now repeated, strengthening the American tendency to neglect culinary niceties: women madeup only eight percent of California's new population, and in the mining areas only two percent. The successful prospectors wereheavy spenders; they had to be when it came to food, which was outrageously expensive. Since nobody in California wanted to raise it,everything had to be imported. Nevertheless, for unsuccessful, or not yet sucessful prospectors, San Francisco developed, in the 1850s, relatively modest hotels and boarding houses, whose prices were reasonable in their context. Everybody sat down at a commontable, and the food was hearty. Meanwhile, for epicurians among those who had struck it rich, a surprising number of French restaurantswere opened. The first important one was named Le Poulet d'Or...For the moment, the spectacular potentiality of California as a grwoer of food was neglected. Its new-found riches served chiefly, in this domain, to further developments of Oregon as a food-supplyingstate, catering to the California gold-rush population."
---Eating in America: A History, Waverley Root & Richard de Rochemont [William Morrow:New York] 1976 (p. 176-7)

"Hundreds of the accounts of westward migration speak either of near-starvation or of having to make do with whatever might beat hand. A forty-niner, writing in his journal, described a meeting with another wagon train: "Their sugar, rice, beans & flour were also out & they had been living on nothing but hard tack & coffee, & coffee and hard tack. They had no shot guns and & ofcourse took no game. This reconciled us, I assure you, & we censured ourselves for our past time growling, & find, insteadof suffering, we have been feasting." His group, in fact, had been varying a diet of salt pork with "Jack Ass" rabbits on which, thejournal says, "we fared sumptuously."
---American Heritage Cookbook and illustrated History of American Eating & Drinking, [American Heritage Publishing Co.:New York] 1964 (p. 57)

" 'A party recently left Joe's store at Mormon Bar for the Valley, and a friend of the Star furnishes the following statistiics--showing the amount of "the necessaries of life" which is required for an eight day's trip in the mountains:
8 lbs potatoes.
1 bottle whiskey.
1 bottle pepper sauce.
1 bottle whiskey.
1 box tea.
9 lbs onions.
2 bottles whiskey.
1 ham.
11 lbs crackers.
1 bottle whiskey.
1/2 doz. sardines.
2 bottles brandy, (4th proof.)
6 lbs sugar.
1 bottle brandy, (4th proof.)
1 bottle pepper.
5 gallons whiskey.
4 bottles whiskey. (old Bourbon)
1 small keg whiskey.
1 bottle of co*cktails , (designed for a "starter.")
From Hutchings' California Magazine, 1860'"
---ibid (p. 59)

Retail food prices, 1849. Compare with Australia's gold rush [Ballarat, Victoria] & Klondike gold [Alaska].

FOOD AVAILBILITY, RETAIL PRICES & GROCERY STORES

"No characteristic of gold rush California is so well known as the astronomical prices at which everything seemed to sell. Beefs seven or eight dollars a head in February 1848, sold for twenty-five to one hundred dollars by the summer. A year later, "little of itwas to be had, and then only jerked, at correspondingly high prices." Flour, eight dollars a barrel before Marshall's discovery, soared by the summer of 1849 to fifty dollars in San Francisco and eighty-five at Sutter's Fort. The year 1849 also saw bay oysters and eggs available from established californios going at a dollar apiece. In Sacramento potatoes and onions sold at a dollar and a half a pound, and in the mines at least a few of those changed hands for a dollar each, "entirely out of reach as anarticle of food." In Placerville a plain slice of bread sold for a dollar, a buttered one for two. The Sonora hospital counted outfive dollars in gold dust for each six-ounce bottle of lime juice that was purchased. Canned fruits were marked up 2000 percentover retail rates on the eastern seaboard. For dinner at Sacramento on Christmas day, 1849, Catherine Haun paid two and a half dollars for a grizzly bear steak and another dollar for a side of cabbage...Almost all the forty-niners expressed bemusem*nt thatvegetables should sell by the pound rather than by the bushel...On September 21, 1849...Dr. Charles Frederick Winslow wrote to associates back east...'Canistered provisions and vegetables and all sorts of fruit are first rate but very expensive in thiscountry.' Flour came from Oregon and Australia. Chile sent beans, China sent rice. Argentina shipped jerky...In July 1850 a shiparrived from Boston loaded with ice that sold for eighty cents a pound...As early as January 1, 1850, well-intergrated grocery companieslike Warren & Co. tacked broadsides on pines and oaks of the Sierra slope to announce the opening of such emporia as "the Excelcior tentat Mormon Island." Inside...included 'Pork, Flour, Bread, Beef, Hams, Mackeral, Sugar, Molasses, Coffee, Teas, Butter & Cheese, Pickles, Beans, Peas, Rice, Chocolate, Spices, Salt, Soap, Vinegar, &c,' as well as 'Every variety of Preserved Meats andVegetables and Fruits [more than eighty different kinds], Tongues and Sounds; Smoked Halibut, Dry Cod Fish; Eggs fresh and fine;Figs, Raisins; Almonds and Nuts; China Preserves, China Bread and cakes; Butter Crackers, Boston Crackers, and many other very desirable and choice bits. No doubt the prices at the Excelsior were as fabulous as those already described. The California dream was,after all, a fortune overnight...Therein lies the clue to the nature of the retail economy of 1849 that is too little recounted in the histories. The provisions market on the California frontier--and on other metal mining frontiers to follow--was notcharacterized so much by dizzying high prices as by a crazy instability. Prices of every edible from wheaten flour and salt porkto oranges and canned caviar did not start at sky-high levels and only eventually decline to merely high levels. From the beginningthey swung widly from absurdly high to (for the merchants) dishearteningly low."
---Bacon, Beans, and Galantines: Food and Foodways on the Western Mining Frontier, Joseph R. Conlin [University of Nevada Press:Reno]1986 (p. 90-95)

FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES?
Our research indicates fresh fruits and vegetables were highly prized by some, but not all, miner diners. Local historians generally agree the first commercial enterprises in mining towns centered on food: saloons, makeshift restaurants, boarding houses, and grocery stores. One of the passages below describes a miner who decided his fortune would be better made in fruits and vegetables. The evidence we examined suggests fresh fruits and vegetables (local grown, in season only) were sold both indoors (grocery stores) and outside (fresh from the farm, off a wagon). We find no evidence supporting actual stands/structures constructed specifically for this purpose. Wagons full of fresh produce might have gathered at the edge of town, in sort of farmer's market style. Baskets/crates of fresh produce might have been available both inside and outside grocery stores, depending upon space availability. Not that it would have been any cooler in those days! Then, as today, farmers markets sometimes also sold home-made fresh baked goods and preserves.

"It is a common misconception about the history of American food habits that we only recently began to eat lots of fresh fruit and vegetables. In part this error is due to the fact that it was indeed just yesterday, after the discovery of vitamins early in the present century, that professional dieticians began to tout them. During the decades just before the discovery of vitamins...the same professionals crusaded against fruit and vegetable eating, particularly among the poor, because fruit and vegetables were a relatively expensive way to fuel up in calories. But the generation of 1849 was not burdened by the counsels of professional dieticians. They made do with their mothers' judgement...Among foods 'discovered' by Americans of the post-World War I period that were common fare during the 1840s were broccoli and artichokes. Other vegetables, of which there are numerous off-handed recipes in the cookbooks and references in the market reports were asparagus, lima beans, haricot or string beans, cucumber, eggplant, mushrooms, okra, rutabagas, salsify, and spinach, as well as tomatoes. It is true that our forebears were inclined to cook their vegetables into a sodden mess, but eating greens and other vegetables raw seems not to have been uncommon. Indeed, whereas the typical European salad of the time was made up exclusively of greens (dressed with oil and vinegar), the common American salad was adventurous by comparison, 'composed' of a variety of vegetables and dressed with sweetish mayonnaise-based liquor much like the substance contemporary bottlers sometimes label 'French Dressing.' The most strident warning against eating 'too many juicy vegetables, such as melons, salads, radishes, etc.' found in the literature of the gold rush is in a traveler's manual written in German...The there were the preserved vegetables and fruits, the supernumerary varieties of preserves, conserves, pickles, relishes, catsups, 'sasses,' jams, and jellies...Commercially preserved foods were making their appearance in 1849...by 1855, the Mills B. Espy Company of Philadelphia was annually canning twenty thousand pounds of cherries, ten thousands pounds of strawberries, and four thousand bushels of pears, tomatoes, and peaches. The California market for these goods proved to be one of the most lucrative..."
---Bacon, Beans, and Galantines, Joseph R. Conlin [University of Nevada Press:Reno] 1986 (p. 15-17)

"...George Perasich's store on Carson Street [Carson City, NV] [sold] apples, bananas, oranges, berries, nuts as well as celery, lettuce...The fresh fruits and vegetables were received daily during their seasons from tropical, California, and local Nevada sources."
---Bacon, Beans (p. 79) [NOTE: this text captions an itemized grocer store bill of sale dated May 1, 1877.]

"In September 1849 [Edward Austin] wrote his brother to send him seeds for radishes, early cabbage, and head cabbage, early white turnip...'curley lettuce,' carrots, beets, squash, melon, spinach, peas of several varieties, celery, and other garden truck. Overly impatient, he wrote again within a few weeks to say: 'I am not too sanguine when I say I can get off of 10 acres of land at the present prices of vegetables 80,000$.'"
---Bacon, Beans (p. 93)

"[1883] Fresh vegetables from the valley of the Carson are brought daily in their season to the mines...on the market stands of Virginia City...strawberries, apricots, pears, peaches, grapes, apples, figs and all other products of the luxuriant gardens and vineyards which are the boast of the Pacific seaboard cover the counters of the open stalls in luscious heaps."
---Bacon, Beans (p. 103)

COMMON MINING CAMP COOKERY

Food historians confirm average '49ers did not cook. These male-dominated make-shift communities were served by a variety of inexpensive publiceateries.

"Neither Kenoffel's Spokane Cafe nor Truax's English Kitchen claimed, as so many miners' restaurants did, to be the "one and only,"the old original "Delmonico's of the West," "only beter." Like the large majority of mining camp eating houses, they unpretentiouslyprovided ordinary everyday all-American meals fo bacons and eggs, soups, stews, steaks, roast beef, chops, potatoes, --and almostalways oysters, of course--and the like for reasonable prices. There never was a day on which an argonaut could not get a substantialfill in San Francisco for a dollar. A full meal in Virginia City could run as little as fifty cents, one dollar for both breakfastand dinner if paid in advance. In rawer camps like Telluride, one-dollar to two-fifty-a-plate was the list price...Saddle RockRestaurant advertised a dinner for a quarter. The mining towns teemed with cheap eateries. In fact, San Francisco and the rawest campsof the Sierra slope teammed with homey eating houses (or tents). They were "numerious, plentious, inviting and even cheap."Restaurants were among the very first businesses at the scene of every strike. Keeping a public tables was one of the first nonmining occupations to be found in a hundred "No Name cities." A "restaurant rush" followed closely on--when it did not lead in!--the provisions rush. There are more than a few examples of "starving" forty-niners and Pike's Peakers who allayed their faminenot by grubbing on wild plants, snaring beasts, seeking charity, or by fortuitiously buying a sack of flour, but by throwing theirweary legs under a table at a not-too-distant restaurant. The reason for this is not obscure. In a society in whichdomestic cooking remaied woman's work, the first flood of population in every mining region was overwhelmingly male...'Therewas no such thing as a home to be found. Scarcely even a proper house could be seen. Both dwellings and places fo busines were tihercommon canvas tents, or small rough board shanties, for frame buildings of one story...Meals were taken at eating houses, of which there was an immense number in every protion of the town. They were of every descrption, good, bad, and indifferent, and kept by everyvariety of people...'"
---Bacon, Beans, and Galantines: Food and Foodways on the Western Mining Frontier, (p. 152-153)

FINER DINING OPTIONS

Although historians tell us the "grand hotels" of the west were not established in the 1870s there isevidence of "grand dining" in western mining regions prior to this time. The larger the city, the moreelegant the dining options. In 1849, however, most Gold Rush towns were just springing onto the map.Saloons, boarding house meals, and crude camp cooking were the norm.

"Hotels and resorts sprang up, crude at first, but by the 1880's such elaborate affairs as the Del Monte inMonterey, the Raymond in Pasadena, and Coronado in San Diego, all models of Atlantic elegance. Thistransition began sometime in the early 1870's, although there were traces of it a half-decade before."
---Americans and the California Dream 1850-1915, Kevin Starr [Oxford University Press:New York] 1973(p. 175)

""So completely was California inundated with taverns, boarding houses, etc.," wrote an English lady in 1851, that the GoldenState could as aptly have been named "the Hotel State."...A miner who arrived in 1849 remembered that "there were anynumber of eating houses and hotels" in Coloma, where it all began. Red Dog, a camp of only two hundred people in Nevada County,California, had a restaurant featuring "Choice Meals served up at al hours, day or night, in the best style." Indian Bar's HotelHumboldt added dinner music...meals of oysters...salmon...roast beef, mince pie and pudding and Madiera, claret, andchampagne...At Placerville's Cary House, hangtown fry was invented. At its El Dorado Hotel, the fare included beef under specialsspecies, veal, peas, potatoes, sauerkraut, bacon, and hash...As the gateway to the goldfields, San Francisco established early onits enduring reputation as a restaurant city. Hall McAllister and Sam Ward were so disgusted with ship's food when theydisembarked from the steamer Panama on June 4, 1849, that they foreswore digging for gold and instead opened a restaurant on Telegraph Hill. At first pork and beans were the only improvement on the Panama's galley they could manage. By December...nearby competitorsat the Ward house...had improvised an ingenious menu from available ingredients that included baked trout with anchovy sauce($1.50), curried sausages ($1), and bread pudding ($.75). Johann Knocke ran another typical restaurant for miners. He opened at five each morning and closed at eleven at night, featuring fishballs (dried fish and boiled potatoes) and "hot cakes donebrown" as his specialties...What Cheer served four thousand meals daily. Each day diners consumed twelve hundred eggs, one hundred pounds of butter, five hundred pounds of potatoes, four hundred quarts of milk...In the mining towns, a finerestaurant was one of the ems by which hosts demonstrated to eastern or European guests...that, despite their geographicalisolation, they where thoroughly cosmopolitan."
---Bacon, Beans, and Galantines (p. 138-148)

Bill of Fare, What Cheer Restaurant, San Francisco California, mid-19th century
[NOTE: this was a popular & economical dining room]
Boiled mutton with oyster sauce, 10 cents
Roast beef with lima beans, 10 cents
Pig's feet, soused or in batter, 10 cents
Beefsteak and onions, with fried potatoes, 10 cents
Stewed mutton with bread, butter and potatoes, 5 cents
Buckwheat cakes with honey, 5 cents
Clam chowder, 5 cents
Cup of chocolate (hot chocolate), 5 cents
Chicken pot pie, 20 cents
Porterhouse steak, 25 cents
Baked apples, 5 cents
Stewed prunes, 5 cents
Mammoth glass of Mason Celebrated Beer, 5 cents
Roast turkey and currant jelly, 25 cents
Hot oatmeal mush, 10 cents."
---Bacon, Beans, and Galantines, (p. 141)

Bill of Fare, Ward House (restaurant), San Francisco California, December 27, 1849:
[NOTE: this was an upscale dining facility.]
Ox tail soup, 1.00
Baked trout, white and anchovy sauce, 1.50
Roast beef, Stuffled lamb or mutton, 1.00
Pork & apple sauce, 1.25
Curried sausages, 1.00
Stewed Kidney, Sauce de Champagne, 1.25
Beef stewed with onions, 1.25
Tenderloin lamb, green peas, 1.25
Baked sweet potatotes, boiled Irish (white) potataoes, cabbage, squash, .50 (each)
Bread pudding, mince pie, apple pie, cheese, stewed prunes, .75 (each)
Brandy peach pastry, rum omelette, jelly omelette, 2.00 (each)
Wine (bottle): champagne, 5.00; Pale sherry, 3.00; Old Madeira, 4.00; Claret, 2.00; Champagne
cider, 2.00; Ale, 2.00

How did the '49ner's celebrate July 4th?

ETHNIC CULINARY INFLUENCE

"Given the miners' adventurousness in adopting la cuisine francaise, and the innovation of the free lunch, it is curious that theydid not take a keen interest in most of the other "ethnic" foods and modes of prepration to which they were exposed. The argonautswho traveled by sea to California sometimes commented, even favorably now and then, on the way people ate in the Caribbean and in the Latin American ports...But the typical notice of edibles in their diaries dwells on the abundance, lushness, and cheapness offruits in Sao Paolo, Valparaiso, Acapulco, or whatever. With the occasional exception of the man who prepared "chili" for hist mates, and the appearance of the odd enchilada on the free lunch bars...despite the fact that Chileans and Mexicans were numerous in California--South American and Mexican foods and styles of prepration had little impact on the Californians...To be sure, groups ofnon-Americans that were large enough on the mining frontier to create the sustain and ethnic community clung to familiar foodsand forms of cookery...Italian gold miners...shunned regulation biscuits, cornbread, and sourdough in favor of the classicloaves of their homeland, even though this meant taking considerable pains to construct the beehive oven required to bake themproperly...Forty-niners from South Wales had their "dampers"--flour water, and salt dough covered with hardwood coals--which were said to have been durable for a week...Mexicans manning a pack train...cooked tortillas on a hot sheet of iron, frijoles...and "charui fried in hotmantequilla."...eating places considered best in the mining country were run by Germans, French, or Italians, it may be that theirmenus reflected the national cuisines of their proprietors...Any number of boarding restaurants were well known at the timeto cater to specific groups...With the exception of the French...and the Chinese, the Cornish almost alone among mining countryethnic region. Cornish women were reputed to be excellent cooks, peerless in the use of citron, jellies, raisins, currants, and saffron...the enduring popularity of the pasty...in...mining districts is exceptional...On the face of it, the cocina of the californios,the Hispanics who had California almost to themselves in 1848, should have had a great deal of influence on the arrival of forty-niners...Californio cookery failed to influence the new Californians because few of the latter vistied in the homes of the formerand fewer yet were invited...Nor did the somewhat different foodways of the Mexicans who swarmed to California have much effecton the habits of other forty-niners. Even those American gold-seekers who crossed Mexico on their way to California...tended to cling to their own diet and modes of preparation and shun that of the Sonorans. This is worth remark because...some Mexicanfoods were better adapated to life in the mines that were their American equivalents. Whereas baking saleratus biscuit orsourdough bread required considerable time and a makeshift oven, tortillas could be cooked in a minute on a sheet of iron orflat rock. Refried beans were more easily whipped up than a crock of baked beans...The Americans and at least the English-speaking forty-niners from abroad despised the Mexicans for, among other things, their poverty. They "ate French" because cusinesfrancaise represented to them what the rich ate back East. By the same principle, they were unlikely to adopt the foodways of apeople whom they had just defeated in war..."
---Bacon, Beans, and Galantines (p. 180-186)

"Boring diet gave miners appetite for eating out",Sacramento Bee

history notes--pioneer, Civil War, cowboy & Victorian foods (2024)

FAQs

What kind of food did pioneers eat? ›

The mainstays of a pioneer diet were simple fare like potatoes, beans and rice, hardtack (which is simply flour, water, 1 teaspoon each of salt and sugar, then baked), soda biscuits (flour, milk, one t. each of carbonate of soda and salt), Johnny cakes, cornbread, cornmeal mush, and bread.

What did settlers eat in the 1800s? ›

Most fruits and vegetables were grown on the farmstead, and families processed meats such as poultry, beef, and pork. People had seasonal diets. In the spring and summer months, they ate many more fruits and vegetables than they did in the fall and winter.

What did pioneers eat and how did they get that food? ›

The early pioneers survived by eating meat, wild berries, and food they found in the forest. But once they had settled, they began to grow crops. The most popular and easiest to grow crop was corn. Corn could be grown almost anywhere and in the poorest of soils.

What did pioneers eat for supper? ›

The dinner menu was similar to breakfast and lunch (beans again!), but could also include fresh buffalo or antelope meat or prairie hens if hunting had been successful. Using their ingenuity and the materials at hand, pioneer women prepared special foods to relieve the eating monotony.

What did the cowboys used to eat? ›

Cowboys in the United States relished similar "chuck" (also called grub or chow). Canned and dried fruit, "overland trout" (bacon), beans, fresh meat, soda biscuits, tea, and coffee. Breakfast might include eggs or salt pork. Eggs, sometimes shipped west for considerable distances, sometimes went bad.

What did cowboys eat on? ›

Along the trail, the staples of a cowboy diet consisted of beans, hard biscuits, dried meat, dried fruit, and coffee. Occasionally, a type of bread known as pan de campo (or “camp bread”), which was cooked on a skillet was also available.

What did cowboys eat in the 1800s? ›

Along the trail, cowboys ate meals consisting of beef, beans, biscuits, dried fruit and coffee. But as cattle drives increased in the 1860s cooks found it harder and harder to feed the 10 to 20 men who tended the cattle. That's when Texas Ranger-turned-cattle rancher Charles Goodnight created the chuckwagon.

What did cowboys eat in the late 1800s? ›

Lunch/Dinner: roast beef*, boiled potatoes, beans, brown gravy, light bread or biscuits, and coffee. Occasional Dessert: stewed dried fruit, spiced cake made without eggs or butter, dried fruit pies, or spotted pup (rice and raisins). *Northern cowboys were more likely to get beef with their meals.

What did citizens eat during the Civil War? ›

The most common food given to soldiers was bread, coffee, and salt pork. The typical ration for every Union soldier was about a pound of meat and a pound of bread or flour. The Confederacy started out following the same rules.

How did the pioneers keep food from spoiling? ›

Drying: Pioneers would hang food up to dry. Taking the moisture out of the food helps make it last longer. Pioneers would string foods up close to the fire where the heat from the fire would help dry them out, or they could place some food outside, and the heat from the sun would dry things out.

What did pioneers eat for dessert? ›

As for desserts — they were simple, but many and varied. There were apple dump- lings, rice and bread puddings, soft molasses cookies, sugar jumbles, and mincemeat, pumpkin, dried apple, or custard pies. On special occasions we might have lemon pie. It was not necessary to skimp on eggs or milk.

What did pioneers eat for breakfast? ›

Beans, cornmeal mush, Johnnycakes or pancakes, and coffee were the usual breakfast. Fresh milk was available from the dairy cows that some families brought along, and pioneers took advantage go the rough rides of the wagon to churn their butter.

What did the pioneers drink? ›

So instead of drinking water, many people drank fermented and brewed beverages like beer, ale, cider, and wine. Children drank something called small beer. One of the first steps in brewing beer is to boil the water, which kills the germs and bacteria and makes it safe to drink. This first brewing has alcohol in it.

How did pioneers keep bacon from spoiling? ›

Marcy advised travelers to pack the pork in sacks, “or… in boxes… surrounded with bran, which in a great measure, prevents the fat from melting away.” Unfortunately, bacon still occasionally spoiled and had to be ditched along the trail. In less delicious news, bacon wasn't just cured, it was a cure!

What kind of bread did the pioneers eat? ›

In days past, pioneers got sourdough starts from family or those on the trail. Some even carried their starts from the “old country” as they crossed the ocean and then loaded it into their wagons.

What drink did cowboys drink? ›

Cowboys never had a reputation for being very sophisticated connoisseurs. The whiskey they drank was simply fuel for the saloons' many other pastimes, whatever those happened to be. Quality and flavor among whiskies in the late 1800s varied widely.

What did cowboys eat for breakfast in the 1800s? ›

Each morning, the cowboys would cook breakfast in cast iron grills, skillets, and pots over a hot fire. Meals often consisted of hot coffee, a large pot of beans, and biscuits that were baked in a cast iron pot and slathered with lard and gravy.

How did cowboys keep meat from spoiling? ›

They placed the meat on a layer of salt and covered it with more salt, sometimes mixed with pepper and brown sugar. Salt draws moisture out of meat and thus stops the process of rotting.

What is a cowboy dinner? ›

Cowboy dinner is a hearty casserole of flavorful beef, corn and beans topped with soft, fluffy cornbread and a layer of cheese. So delicious! This easy, comfort food casserole has been a family favorite for over 20 years! After that long, you know the recipe has to be a keeper!

How did cowboys keep things cold? ›

They cut blocks of ice from a frozen river or lake during the winter then stored the blocks in an insulated or subterranean building called an "Ice House." Ice houses were designs to keep ice frozen through the summer so it could be used at any time of the year.

How did cowboys carry food? ›

Chuckwagons carried food, cooking supplies and medical kits and were driven by the cook who rode alongside the cowboys on the cattle trail. This allowed the ranchers, who often had to travel long distances, to enjoy freshly-prepared hot food rather than whatever preserved food they could carry.

What desserts did cowboys eat? ›

  • Apple Water.
  • Ash Cake.
  • Baked Apple Pudding.
  • Baked Indian Pudding.
  • Boiled Cracker Pudding.
  • Black Pudding.
  • Boy in a Bag.
  • Bread Pudding.

What was the most common food in the 1800s? ›

Corn and beans were common, along with pork. In the north, cows provided milk, butter, and beef, while in the south, where cattle were less common, venison and other game provided meat. Preserving food in 1815, before the era of refrigeration, required smoking, drying, or salting meat.

What did 1860 people eat? ›

Preserved meats were the standard, usually salted or smoked lamb, beef or pork. The main game meats found in the American diet during the antebellum era were rabbit, squirrel, venison, buffalo and bear.

What meat did cowboys eat? ›

What did cowboys eat?
  • Beef – fresh and preserved. Salt pork was the usual preservable meat of choice because it had a much longer shelf life than other meats, but with the widespread availability of cattle, beef played a huge part in the diet of a cowboy. ...
  • Pork. ...
  • Pemmican. ...
  • Biscuits. ...
  • Beans and potatoes. ...
  • Syrup and molasses.

What kind of beans did cowboys eat in the Old West? ›

Pinto beans were the choice of the cowboys, and they were even better if the cocinero had some chili peppers to add spice. Out on the trail, the chuck wagon cook soaked beans in a pot during the day. He'd set up camp and cook up a batch, but the beans would have to be eaten right away.

What did the poor eat in 1850s? ›

For many poor people across Britain, white bread made from bolted wheat flour was the staple component of the diet. When they could afford it, people would supplement this with vegetables, fruit and animal-derived foods such as meat, fish, milk, cheese and eggs - a Mediterranean-style diet.

What are two important facts about food during the Civil War? ›

Union soldiers were fed pork or beef, usually salted and boiled to extend the shelf life, coffee, sugar, salt, vinegar, and sometimes dried fruits and vegetables if they were in season. Hard tack, a type of biscuit made from unleavened flour and water, was commonly used to stave off hunger on both sides.

What was a popular food during the civil rights movement? ›

Civil rights movement supporters would often house leaders and protesters, offering them a home-cooked meal of soul food upon their arrival. Buttermilk biscuits are fast and easy to make—perfect for feeding extra guests. Biscuits were a standard item on Georgia Gilmore's table.

How did food affect the Civil War? ›

Corn was an alternative as a readily accessible and local crop, and cornbread replaced fresh or hard bread for the soldiers. Other rations, such as coffee, were affected by the Union blockade, and chicory roots were used instead. The Confederacy did have some supplies in abundance, such as peanuts and tobacco.

What did people eat before refrigeration? ›

Before the refrigerator . . .

More breads and salted or dried meats and fish not requiring refrigeration were consumed. Fruits and vegetables were seasonal – eat them while you have them. Or they could be preserved by drying, fermenting (like sauerkraut), or pickling.

What did pioneers eat to survive the winter? ›

Meat & Dairy

Since most colonial diets were protein-based, meat smoked in fall would be consumed during the winter. Colonists could also supplement with fresh meat, which could be kept cold by hanging in their unheated attics or by putting the meat on ice for the short-term.

How did pioneers feed their horses? ›

Horses in the 1800s were used for war, transportation, farm work, mail delivery, hunting, and sport. These horses burned a lot of calories, and yet the primary feeds for these horses working 8-10 hours a day was hay and chaff (a mixture of hay and chopped straw).

What kind of cookies did pioneers eat? ›

Cookies used common ingredients of the day — molasses, honey, lard. Ginger, cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg were popular spices; raisins or currants were sometimes added. Alas, chocolate chips didn't come until much later.

What was a typical breakfast in 1800? ›

Before cereal, in the mid 1800s, the American breakfast was not all that different from other meals. Middle- and upper-class Americans ate eggs, pastries, and pancakes, but also oysters, boiled chickens, and beef steaks.

Did pioneers have cheese? ›

By Dorthea Calverley Cheese making was a pioneer domestic art. The most common form of this high protein food was “cottage” or “homesteader's” cheese, the making of which could be so simple as to rate hardly a comment in records of the time.

What time was dinner in the 1800s? ›

In the early 1800s, upper-class Bostonians were still eating breakfast at nine a.m., dinner at two p.m., and supper at eight, earlier hours than their counterparts in London. Their two o'clock dinner was the time for entertaining guests, and showing off the silverware and fancy foods.

Did pioneers eat bacon? ›

Thank goodness, the pioneers had bacon. Cured meat was popular on the Oregon Trail as it lasts a long time. And more importantly, it's delicious. They would cook bacon for breakfast, add it to bean-based dishes or fry it up for a mid-afternoon snack (some things never change).

How did pioneers filter water? ›

The early systems involved straining water through sand and gravel to remove sediment. By the beginning of the 1900 s, cities began to realize that slow sand filters could remove some germs, notably the typhoid germ. In addition, it was recognized that treatment of water may also be necessary.

What did cowboys like to drink? ›

In the Old West, cowboys would drink whiskey, beer, sarsaparilla, or coffee, if visiting a nearby saloon. While working on the prairie, though, cowboys would simply drink water or coffee.

Did pioneers boil their drinking water? ›

Many families had to boil their well water to kill off contaminants.

What did a typical family carry in their wagon? ›

Research suggests that a typical family of four carried 800 pounds of flour, 200 pounds of lard, 700 pounds of bacon, 200 pounds of beans, 100 pounds of fruit, 75 pounds of coffee and 25 pounds of salt. The wagon also had to carry a shovel and cooking utensils.

What did the pioneers do for fun? ›

They had races and played games such as Sheep Over the River, Hide and Seek, Pull the Rope, and Steal-Stick Duck-Stones. They also sang and danced. They made dolls from corn cobs and rags and used a bladder balloon for ball games.

What was the main item that pioneers brought with them in their covered wagons? ›

The pioneers would take with them as many supplies as possible. They took cornmeal, bacon, eggs, potatoes, rice, beans, yeast, dried fruit, crackers, dried meat, and a large barrel of water that was tied to the side of the wagon. If the pioneers could take a cow, they would.

How did pioneers get flour? ›

Before settlers could make bread, they first had to make flour. Since they could not buy flour at a grocery store, they had to grind it from grain that they grew on their land. In order to grind it they, of course, need to have quick and easy access to a reliable grist mill.

What did the pioneers eat for snacks? ›

The mainstays of a pioneer diet were simple fare like potatoes, beans and rice, hardtack (which is simply flour, water, 1 teaspoon each of salt and sugar, then baked), soda biscuits (flour, milk, one t. each of carbonate of soda and salt), Johnny cakes, cornbread, cornmeal mush, and bread.

Did pioneers have peanut butter? ›

North Americans weren't the first to grind peanuts—the Inca beat us to it by a few hundred years—but peanut butter reappeared in the modern world because of an American, the doctor, nutritionist and cereal pioneer John Harvey Kellogg, who filed a patent for a proto-peanut butter in 1895.

What did people eat for dinner in the 1800s? ›

Most fruits and vegetables were grown on the farmstead, and families processed meats such as poultry, beef, and pork. People had seasonal diets. In the spring and summer months, they ate many more fruits and vegetables than they did in the fall and winter.

What did cowboys eat while on the trail? ›

Along the trail, cowboys ate meals consisting of beef, beans, biscuits, dried fruit and coffee. But as cattle drives increased in the 1860s cooks found it harder and harder to feed the 10 to 20 men who tended the cattle.

What did Victorians eat for dinner? ›

Dinner was the most elaborate meal with multiple courses: soup, roast meats or fish, vegetables, puddings and sweets. Cheese was served at the end of the meal, after dessert. Tea and biscuits were usually offered to guests after the meal.

What fruit did Victorians eat? ›

The main fruits were apples in the winter and cherries in the summer. The Victorians also ate lots of healthy, fibre-rich nuts, such as chestnuts and hazelnuts, which were often roasted and bought from street-corner sellers.

What was lunch called in the 1800s? ›

By the early nineteenth century, lunch, what Palmer in Moveable Feasts calls "the furtive snack," had become a sit-down meal at the dning table in the middle of the day. Upper-class people were eating breakfast earlier, and dinner later, than they had formerly done...in 1808...

How much did it cost to join a wagon train? ›

It was also an expensive enterprise. It was estimated that the journey cost a man and his family about $1,000. He would also need a specially prepared wagon that cost about $400.

What did cowboys drink in saloons? ›

Cowboys never had a reputation for being very sophisticated connoisseurs. The whiskey they drank was simply fuel for the saloons' many other pastimes, whatever those happened to be. Quality and flavor among whiskies in the late 1800s varied widely.

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