A
cookbook printed in 1850 points out that "with good bread the coarsest
fare is tolerable; without it, the most luxurious table is not comfortable."
Bread was no better, however, than the flour used in making it; and,
in 1850, the best test for good flour was to see whether it adhered
slightly to the hand, and if pressed in the hand, retained its shape.
Dough made from this kind of flour was yellowish white and did not stick
to the hands after sufficient kneading. The cookbook warned that there
was a great deal of bad flour on the market, which could not be made
into nutritious food, and bad flour made a dough resembling putty.
HOW TO SELECT FLOUR.-
- Look at its color; if it is white,
with slight yellowish or straw colored tint, it
is a good sign. If it is very white
with a bluish cast or with black specks
in it, the flour is not good.
- Examine its adhesiveness – wet and
knead a little of it between the
fingers; if it works dry and elastic, it is good; if it works
soft and sticky,
it is poor. Flour made from spring wheat is likely to be sticky.
- Throw a little lump of dry flour against
a dry, smooth, perpendicular
surface, if it adheres in a lump the flour has life in it; if
it falls like powder,
it is bad.
- Squeeze some of the flour in your hand;
if it retain[s] the shape given by
the pressure, that too is a good sign. Flour that will stand
all these tests,
it is safe to buy.
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To clean wheat before it was taken to the mill to be ground, two or three
bushels were mixed with water and stirred. The water was poured off, and
this was repeated until the water was clear and all the chaff removed. Grain
could not be allowed to stand in water, since it would swell and be injured.
The cleansed wheat was spread on a large cloth in the sun or in a warm spot,
stirred occasionally, and dried for a day or two. Newly ground flour that
had never been packed was considered superior to barrel flour. Cockle, mustard
seed, or bran arising from poor grinding at the mill appeared as dark specks,
while blue-colored flour contained dirt. Mealworms found in flour could
be sifted from the top few inches of a barrel; and sour flour could be restored
by mixing fresh flour of a better grade with it. The latter, however, required
judicious handling, and regulations declared it would be "prudent to send
occasionally a well qualified man to watch over the process of kneading,
to guard against the mixing of cheap but deleterious substances with the
dough, as damaged flour.
Contemporary shipping invoices of the 1840s indicate that flour was
transported in barrels to the western outposts. Specifications for flour
barrels of a later period probably did not differ substantially from
those that would have been shipped to Fort Scott. The later barrels
were fully head lined and fashioned from strong, tight-fitting staves,
They were secured with 12 half-round hickory hoops, each weighing when
empty about 23 pounds. The inspection holes were plugged and capped
to forestall leakage. The best storage temperature for flour was between
70° and 75° Fahrenheit. Since the ovens of the bakery would
have heated the room to a greater temperature than this during the baking
process, flour not in immediate use was stored in the Commissary Storehouse.
Information for this page was taken from the
Historic Furnishing Plan
for The
Bake House by Sally Johnson Ketchum.