cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/24537286
Source: https://mastodon.social/@MrLovenstein/114042795044030711
Secret panel: https://tapas.io/episode/3449140
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/24537286
Source: https://mastodon.social/@MrLovenstein/114042795044030711
Secret panel: https://tapas.io/episode/3449140
I learned a fun fact about old recipes last night… There’s a new edition of a cookbook published in 1866:
https://www.npr.org/2025/02/20/nx-s1-5299983/first-cookbook-by-black-american-woman-malinda-russell
But the recipes are a little inscrutable:
“One pound flour. One ditto butter. Nine eggs. Two quarts milk. A little yeast mixed together warm.”
WTF is a “ditto”?
See also here from 1806:
https://www.tastinghistory.com/recipes/routcakes
“Rout Drop Cakes. Mix two pounds of flour, one ditto butter, one ditto sugar, one ditto currants, clean and dry; then wet into a stiff paste, with two eggs, a large spoon of orange-flower water, ditto rose-water, ditto sweet wine, ditto brandy, drop on a tin-plate floured; a very short time bakes them.”
It makes more sense if you lay it out like a modern recipe:
two pounds of flour
two pounds (one ditto) butter
two pounds (one ditto) sugar
two pounds (one ditto) currants
two eggs
a large spoon of orange-flower water
a large spoon of (ditto) rose-water
a large spoon of (ditto) sweet wine
a large spoon of (ditto) brandy