STOCKING THE LARDER
Dear Jan and Bruce,
I'm also surprised, and again
pleasantly so, when you tell me about your canning fruit and veggies. Not many people do
that anymore. Oh, they may wrap excess provender and stow it in the freezer, but to pick
and peel it, cut it up, cook it down, sterilize jars, fill them hot, and seal them, that's just too much effort and most folks wouldn't know how. Nor do I read of any of the food experts
advocating home canning. We "put up" and "put
down" a goodly stock of vittles when I was
growing up, and for the same reasons you do, plus in our case a couple of additional
factors. For one, we did not have supermarkets or chain groceries or farmers markets,
which should come as no surprise. For another, we had no freezer or refrigerator, just a
small icebox and the cold cellar was our larder.
We had in our little town two grocery stores. Mr. Merriman had one on the
west side of Franklin Street two doors away from the Brewster & Church Co. where Dad
worked, and that's where we traded. A Mr.
Greenaway, whose son Spencer, better know as "Frog" was in my brother's
school class, had a grocery up on Bell Street. Both were one-man operations. The
proprietor was the sole employee and did everything; ordered the stock, stacked the
shelves, waited on customers, carried their purchases to their cars when necessary, swept
the floor and the sidewalk, and when he went home for dinner at noon or ran across to the
bank, he locked the door. They carried a small stock of staples and dry groceries, and
usually had a wheel of cheese on the counter covered with a glass dome that was raised by
a cord running through a pulley on the ceiling, and perhaps a stalk of bananas hanging
nearby. From Mr. Merriman, we purchased sugar and salt, coffee and tea, yeast and baking
powder, and so forth, and, yes sometimes a bunch of bananas or a dozen oranges.
Flour we bought at the feed mill on Bell Street in fifty-pound sacks, and
pulled them home in a little red wagon. Spices and seasonings and flavorings we purchased
from a Mr. Henry Wykoff who concocted them from the raw ingredients, and sold them, in his
little manufactory above the florists shop. Mr. Henry Wykoff's brother, Mr. Lute Wykoff, was an optometrist and
jeweler, and had his store between Mr. Merriman's
grocery and Dad's store. Mr. Henry Wykoff is
long departed but I understand that his business is still operating in the same place and
in the same way.

There was both a bakery and meat market within a block of our house. Going
west from our house there was our next door neighbor, Mrs. Lucy Button, then the combined
residence and studio of Mr. Robinson who was a photographer, and then there was a
two-story frame building that occupied the corner of East Washington and South Main
Streets. The bakery was on Washington Street, the corner space held in the office of
Burnett & Parker Real Estate Agents (that being Great-Uncle Joel Burnett and his
partner Mr. Harry Parker), and on the Main Street side was Honeywell's Meat Market and Squire's Printing Shop. About the time I entered High
School, that building, Mr. Robinson's house, and
another house occupied by the Harper family who had four daughters and a small dairy
business, were all razed and replaced by a Standard Oil service station where I worked
summers while I was in college. Before that, however, there was the bakery, a family-run
business where we bought bread: white, rye, wheat, Vienna, and sometimes we bought rolls.
Don't know why, but at home we baked only brown
bread and occasionally salt rising bread, and of course, pies and cakes and other
confections. Mr. George Honeywell's Meat Market
was another one-man operation, well, actually, a two-man operation for a couple of years
when Grandad Foster worked for Mr. Honeywell peddling meat from a panel truck from farm to
farm outside of town. Grandad was living with us at the time and each morning, mother would
pack him a lunch, he and Mr. Honeywell would load the truck with meat, ice it down,
Grandad would sling a large leather purse over his shoulder and take off on his regular
route. When I was small, I loved going to the meat market with Mother or Grandma because
the butcher would slip me a wiener or a slice of bologna, a treat that was eaten raw on
the spot.
We didn't, in those days, have a
refrigerator, that came much later, probably about the time I went to college. We, like
most kinfolks, had an ice box. Ours sat in the wood shed just outside the back door. It
was a varnished wooden cabinet, maybe five feet high, two feet wide, and a foot-and-a half
deep. The top was hinged and opened for access to a corrugated, galvanized steel box that
was the ice chest and took up a good third of the whole cabinet. A door on the front
opened for access to the food storage space, and a narrow door at the bottom lifted upward
to reach the large metal pan that caught the water from the melting ice, and that had to
be carried outside and emptied two or three times a day (another chore for the boy). Ice
was delivered six days a week by the City Ice & Fuel Co. who, I think must have had a
monopoly. The ice was made in Cleveland and trucked to our village icehouse in
hundred-pound cakes. Our icehouse was a one-story wooden building with a door and loading
dock in front and no windows. The walls and roof were packed with a foot or two of sawdust
for insulation. In the morning our local delivery icetrucks would load up and set off on
their prescribed route. The City Ice & Fuel Co. provided each house with a white card
about a foot square and printed on the four edges with number: 25, 50, 75, 100, sort of
like numbers on a clock face. The householder placed his card upright in a front window
and rotated it so that the number at the top told the iceman how much ice was wanted
today; 25 pounds or 50 pounds, etc. The icemen (cousin Danny McFarland was one) were
uniformed in dark blue, long-sleeved, woolen shirts with matching pants and cap, a leather
pad like a small saddle was strapped over one shoulder, and a needle-sharp steel icepick
was in a holster on his belt. The icetruck stopped in front of each house, the iceman read
the card in the window, chipped off the right-sized chunk of ice, grasped it with a pair
of steel tongs, slung it over his shoulder, and marched up the driveway. He knew where the
icebox was and wasted no time knocking on the door. Meanwhile, we urchins were stalking
the icetruck hoping to scrounge a sliver of ice to suck on. We thought it a treat; our
mothers were horrified. "You pass up perfectly
good food and grab a filthy piece of ice that men have walked on with their dirty boots
and spit tobacco juice on and put it in your mouth. You'll
catch some terrible disease and die for sure." We scrounged anyway.
In due course, we got a bigger icebox which was installed in the dining
room next to the back door, and Dad ran a drain pipe through the wall of the house, which
was a blessing. The old icebox we took to our cottage on the Little Farm and used it for
food storage. We rarely had ice in it though, the icetrucks didn't run out into the country. Oh, you could buy ice
right at the icehouse, and some folks did, wheeling it home in a child's wagon covered with rug or blanket. The other way to
transport it was by wedging it firmly on the rear bumper of your car and driving home as
rapidly as possible.
There wasn't much storage space
for food in the kitchen cabinets, either, so the cold cellar was our larder. Dad had
partitioned about one-fourth of the area to provide maximum wall space for shelves, and
during the summer the shelves began to fill with canned vegetables from our garden and
fruit and berries from a dozen sources. Everybody had fruit trees. We had an apple tree
and a peach tree. Mrs. Lucy Button, next door, had a pear tree that each year bore an
abundant crop, far more than she could use. Lowe's
Greenhouse and Nursery, next door to our Little Farm, had strawberries and cherries and an
apple orchard. Uncle Charlie Burnett, across the road, had peaches and pears and apples.
About a mile north on Chillicothe Road, Cousin Alfred Marion Wilbur owned and operated a
fruit farm. Cousin Alfred Marion Wilber was also our piano teacher and a gifted musician
and composer. The farmers had no market for their excess produce closer than Cleveland
twenty miles away, so they sold it off their front porch, on the honor system. A sign hung
out by the road listed what was available - beans, eggs, honey, etc. - and a candy box by
the porch post accepted your money.
Somebody always knew who had a good crop of whatever we were looking for,
and so we picked and purchased strawberries, peaches, currants, cherries both sweet and
sour, quinces, pears, and sometimes gooseberries which made delicious jam but were a pain
to process. You've probably never seen
gooseberries. They are colorless, about the size of a playing marble and covered with
prickers about an eighth-inch long. The first step was to grasp each berry carefully and
with a small pair of scissors snip off each pricker; like I said, a pain. Crabapples made
very tasty jelly but they were small and we didn't
often bother with them. Apples? Well, my goodness, it was just a case of what varieties do
you like and how many baskets do you want. The best apples we stored in wooden bins in the
cold cellar, the next best were turned into apple butter and apple sauce and canned, those
with bruises or rotten spots or worm holes we took to the cider mill. I kid you not;
everyone knew that cider tasted better with a few apple worms mashed in it. So we had a
keg or two of cider. With a wooden spile tapped into the bung hole and carefully laid on
its side on a crate, it was handy for whenever we happened to be down in the cold cellar
and felt the need of a jelly glassful or so. As the winter wore on, the cider "worked"
i.e. fermented, and by spring what was left was essentially vinegar. We used the vinegar
for pickling and as a condiment. Blackberries and elderberries grew wild on our Little
Farm and alongside most country roads, and were so plentiful we picked only from our
favorite patches where they were largest and sweetest.
All of these good things flowed through the kitchen and, as with the
vegetables, some was eaten fresh and the rest was "put
up" for the winter. All was what would be called
today "organically grown" that is, none of it was ever sprayed or treated with
chemicals of any kind, didn't need it, and if
fertilized at all it was with good horse or cow manure from right there on the farm. You
could just pick fruit and pop it in your mouth, and we did.
Other edibles were gathered, too. Lots of folks kept chickens; Mrs. Emma
Button next door, family friends Casius and Stella Clay who lived further up on Washington
Street above the railroad tracks, Uncle Howard Foster who lived way up on Washington
Street almost to the Fairgrounds, and more. So we "put
down" three or four dozen eggs, placed carefully
in an earthenware crock and covered with "water
glass" (sodium silicate) to preserve them. The
Clays kept bees and so did Cousin Alfred Wilbur so we would lay in a few combs of new
honey. Watermelon rinds were washed, diced, and pickled. Orange and grapefruit peels were
candied and turned up later in cookies and fruitcakes.
As the year wore on, berries and fruit petered out, and the frost killed
any that was still unpicked, and it was time to gather nuts. We gathered hickory nuts and
butternuts at the Little Farm or up behind the Fairgrounds, and carried them home in flour
sacks. The native chestnuts were just about all gone, lost to the blight, and beechnuts
were too small to bother with. A black walnut tree on the west side of our house always
had a good crop of nuts, and if it didn't, there
were friends that had a grove of walnut trees and were glad to share. Gathering was easy,
shucking was not. Both walnut and butternut hulls exuded oil that indelibly stained your
hands and everything else with which they came in contact. How badly did they stain? We
had a couple of black kids among the village lads and at walnut shucking time their hands
were stained as badly as ours, which we, and they thought hilarious. It was widely
reported that the best way to suck walnuts was to spread them out in the driveway and
drive your car over them. But I don't think we
ever tried that. Shucked or unshucked, the nuts were spread out to dry, usually on the
floor of the high attic above the second floor bedrooms. The main part of our house had a
mansard roof so there was a low air space between it and the ceilings below. We had
another attic over the kitchen and dining room but it was full of old furniture and trunks
and such. Access to the high attic was through a trapdoor in the ceiling of the upper
hallway, and you reached the trapdoor with an extension ladder brought in from the barn
and maneuvered up the stairs and down the hall, being careful not to scuff the wallpaper.
We only went up there to spread nuts to dry or when there was a leak in the roof. It was
about this time that we sometimes acquired an unwanted boarder or two; mice that squeezed
through a crack or crevice in the house and thought to spend the winter snugly ensconced
in the walls and ceilings. We knew we had mice when they would wake me up at night rolling
nuts around the attic floor overhead.
When the weather became cold enough for butchering, Dad arranged the
purchase of half a hog from whichever farmer had good hogs for sale. The farmer would
deliver exactly half of a full-size grown-up pig split lengthwise from snout right through
to his curly tail. That evening we hurried through supper and cleaning up, opened the
kitchen table to its full size, and laid the hog on it. Then Mr. Albert Bailey would
arrive. Mr. Bailey was an old friend who worked with Dad at The Brewster & Church Co.,
and who had once been a butcher. Dad was no mean hand himself at dressing out meat and we
had all the tools, saws, cleavers, and such, so they made short work of that half hog and
Mr. Bailey went home with a generous package of pork for his trouble. The roasts, ribs,
chops, etc. were wrapped and stored in the icebox. The hams and bacon were rubbed with
salt and herbs and spices in preparation for smoking. The remaining pieces and parts were
collected for sausage making. We didn't eat the
feet, the head, or the hide, but not much else went to waste. Next day, the smoker was
brought up from the barn and sited in the back yard close to the back door where it could
be easily tended. The smoker was a tightly fitted wooden box about the size and shape of
an icebox. In fact, an old icebox with the innards removed made a pretty good smoker. The
hams and bacon were hung inside and a smoldering fire built in a large steel pan at the
bottom. The fire was fueled with corn cobs and hickory bark, and kept going for several
days. In the kitchen, the pieces and parts were put through a hand-cranked, one-boy-power,
food grinder, seasoned with salt, pepper, sage, and so on, and "put down"
in an earthenware crock to be stored in the cold cellar. I think a layer of lard was
spread on top of the sausage as an air seal, and I know it was tightly covered. We never
cased our sausage. I don't know why; we had a
sausage stuffer among the kitchen utensils but we never used it. We also had a
hand-cranked applepeeler, a cherry pitter, and other handy tools that would probably
puzzle you if you found them in an antique store.
Out in the barn we had a large pen covering about one-third of the floor
area and made from poultry netting. Through the autumn months it gradually filled up with
live chickens, ducks, a turkey or two, and even the odd goose, prizes won at shooting
matches. Dad was one of the finest marksmen in the country with both rifle and shotgun,
and taught my brother and me to handle guns and shoot well from an early age. We belonged
to the Chagrin Valley Rifle and Pistol Club and shot competitively on a regular basis.
There were a number of shooting clubs and shooting ranges in the area and in the fall
there were matches almost every Sunday afternoon. Cash money was scarce and the prizes
were usually edibles; a ham or slab of bacon, sack of sugar, or quite often live poultry.
We, well mostly Dad, won our share and took our winnings home to add to the larder. The
live birds went into the poultry pen with straw on the floor, feed, and water, and even a
nest box or two in case any of them felt like laying an egg or two, and there they stayed
until their presence was required on the dining table. At one time we ventured over into
western Pennsylvania, somewhere up in the hills, to participate in "pig shoots"
where the prize was half a hog, but we caught on pretty quickly that the local chaps were
running a scam and we didn't go back again.
So, we went into winter pretty well provisioned, and we ate pretty well,
too, all year round. I planned to tell you what and how we ate, but I do get carried away
when I start writing about food, so I guess that will have to be another story.
Love,
Father
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