Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Step Up to the Chuckwagon!

Laura Jones at the Fort Wallace Museum, Photo by J. Denise Coalson


Each year at the Fort Wallace Museum, Doc and Laura Jones set up their chuckwagon and feed the multitudes with delicious country-fried steak, mashed potatoes, and freshly baked bread. It is one of the biggest attractions of our fall living history event (held this year on September 8 & 9). The novelty of the chuckwagon, developed by Charles Goodnight to feed cowboys on the long drives, is such a draw to old and young alike.

There is a lot of interest in chuckwagon cooking as evidenced by my friend, Natalie Bright. A rancher and a writer, Natalie authored Keep 'Em Full and Keep 'Em Rolling: The All-American Chuckwagon Cookbook.

Natalie's book deservedly won the 2022 Will Rogers Gold Medallion for Western Cookbook. As a fellow member of Western Writers of America, I am thrilled to share Natalie's work with you. Far beyond simple recipes, the volume truly is a slice of ranching life. 
 

 

Monday, February 6, 2023

For the BEST Chicken Tortilla Soup


My friend and accomplished living history presenter, Marla Matkin, often meet at the Tropical Mexican Restaurant at Wakeeney (Exit 122 off I-70). Sometimes I have a margarita, sometimes I behave. But I always order the chicken tortilla soup (pictured above--I should have taken a photo before I dived it but I couldn't wait). It is simply the best--packed with flavor and just the right amount of EVERYTHING! It has gotten to the point where I have stopped trying it at other restaurants because it always falls short. The guacamole is consistently good and it is hard not to eat too much before the soup arrives but that just means I have some to take home!

Let's plan to rendezvous there sometime!


Marla performing a skit at the Fort Wallace Museum. She has authored a children's book. A Dragon's Tale, which is based on the discovery of a plesiosaur fossil by officers at Fort Wallace. It is available at the museum or contact me directly.



 

Not sure if this is Kansas or Iowa . . .


 

Monday, January 30, 2023

All Eggs Are Not Created Equal




The Upland Ranch, Dodge City, KS, reports that their birds are stepping up production! Chicken eggs are $5 a dozen and duck eggs are $4 a half-dozen (Prices are subject to change from the time of my report).

They are a first-generation SW Kansas family farm offering meat, produce, dairy, seasonal gifts, and apparel. Find them on FB at UplandRanchLLC or 

620-255-5954, or uplandranch2019@gmail.com

Support our Family Farms 

and let's see some duck egg recipes!



Friday, January 27, 2023

Ad Astra Eating--and Drinking


As we prepare to celebrate Kansas Day tomorrow, let us pause to remember Carry Nation. Ron Lopez-Reese of Topeka has quite the Carry Collection which will be donated to the new saloon that will be a part of the Old Prairie Town collection of buildings. (http://parks.snco.us/facilities/facility/details/28)

He added some decorations to this cabinet card he owns to brighten Carry's demeanor and perhaps soften the edge of that hatchet she is wielding. 

God bless you, Carry. A toast!

Sunday, January 22, 2023

Snow



Snow men (and women), snow angels, snowballs, snow forts, snow cream.

With a bowl of snow, a little milk, sugar, and vanilla, the fluffy white stuff is transformed into a treat -- it falls from the skies, after all. Magic.

Snow is transformative. It softens and quiets, outlines and highlights. Lowly weeds and magnificent trees become fixtures in a surreal landscape.



 

Thursday, January 19, 2023

In the absence of wheat. . . .

Martha White self-rising flour made legendary by Flatt and Scruggs, "with Hot-Rize plus!" 

Jesus declared, "I am the bread of life. . . ." Though I cannot be certain, I'm pretty sure he was referring to wheat bread and not cornbread. 

Corn and wheat are not used interchangeably in the biblical texts, but they are both used symbolically in the nurturing of the body and soul. Wheat gets the crown, however. In studying pioneering America, I came across a reference to struggles to survive and a review question that asked, "In the absence of wheat," what did the pioneers plant? The inference is that corn is okay if you do not have wheat, but why would you want cornbread if you can have wheatbread? 

In my Blue Ridge Mountain childhood, at least at Granny's house, there were biscuits in the morning, cornbread at dinner (the noon meal), and leftovers of both at supper. Daddy did not like cornbread because it reminded him of being poor and not being able to afford flour for biscuits (corn was raised, taken down to the mill to be ground, and taken home perhaps just for the cost of sharing a portion of the meal). I was blessed to have no such negative association and butter in the middle of a slice of hot cornbread was sinfully delicious to me.
Crumbled cornbread in a glass of milk was the only way I would consume milk. Fried cornbread with honey, well, that was the most special of events.

But flour does have its ritual. Until I was six years old, I slept between Granny and Grandpa when I stayed with them--Granny next to the wall, then me, then Grandpa, facing the darkness, his back to us. He was this great shield protecting us. It was the safest I have ever felt. Around 4 a.m., Grandpa would get up and build a fire in the wood cookstove, then come back to bed. Around 5 a.m., Granny would get out of bed, still in her nightgown, get out her doughboard and make biscuits. I often got up with her because I could not stand to sleep and miss something. She wore her long, silver hair in a braid which she wound into a bun during the day, but in the early morning, it still hung down her back like a school girl. She kneaded the dough and shaped out the biscuits, taking little scraps and shaping them into "dough babies" for me. When all was in the oven and the kitchen was warm, she got dressed, and when the biscuits were done, Grandpa awoke for the second time. Perhaps this is the difference between wheat and corn and the reason corn is the food of survival while wheat carries, if not wealth, the connotation of plenty, of abundance, and is so suited to biblical purposes. There is no ritual in making cornbread. Any fool can stir up cornmeal and water or milk (doesn't mean any fool can make good cornbread, but it will be edible). But to make biscuits requires patience and understanding. It takes the touch. There is an intimacy in baking bread from flour. 

Praise the Lord and pass the biscuits.

Food Has A Past, Too

Step Up to the Chuckwagon!

Laura Jones at the Fort Wallace Museum, Photo by J. Denise Coalson Each year at the Fort Wallace Museum, Doc and Laura Jones set up their ch...