How to Make the Best Soup You've Ever Eaten | 1906 Antique Cookbook Sunshine Cake | My Happy Place

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 22 тра 2024
  • LMR Newsletter sign-up
    www.littlemountainranch.com/n...
    Little Mountain Ranch Family Cookbook
    bit.ly/4aGLmWW
    Tomato Soup recipe www.littlemountainranch.com/b...
    Best Tomatoes to Grow in a Short Growing Season www.littlemountainranch.com/b...
    Today, we're making one of our favourite tomato soups. This one is loaded with roasted veggies and simmered to perfection! Next, we made a cake recipe from a 1906 Cookbook, and it was delicious-definitely different than any cake I've made before, but good! Last, we headed out to the greenhouse to do a little potting up of our tomatoes. I hope you enjoy coming along with me today!
    Thanks for watching!
    Bunkie Life bunkielife.com CODE: LMR for 250.00 off
    Harvest Right Freeze Dryer
    affiliates.harvestright.com/1...
    ForJars Canning Lids
    forjars.co/?sca_ref=2654000.V...
    You can also find us on:
    INSTAGRAM @
    littlemount...
    Website
    www.littlemountainranch.com
    Pinterest
    www.pinterest.ca/LMRChelsea/
    Our Amazon Store
    www.amazon.com/shop/littlemou...
    Our favourite seed company!
    West Coast Seeds
    bit.ly/3khUsj5
    As an Amazon influencer, I earn from qualifying purchases on any Amazon link and from my Amazon store. Thank you so much!
    We would love to hear from you!
    PO Box 4463
    Williams Lake PO Main,
    BC
    V2G 2V3
    Business Enquiries
    info@littlemountainranch.com
    If you would like to support our channel, you can use the affiliate links above to purchase products we think are fantastic! It costs you nothing, but we make a small commission if you purchase. Thank you so much!
    Disclaimer
    The content provided on the Little Mountain Ranch UA-cam channel is for informational and entertainment purposes only. While we strive to provide accurate and helpful information, we are not professionals. The techniques, ideas, and suggestions shown in our videos are based on our personal experiences and should not be taken as professional advice. Please conduct your own research, consult with professionals, and consider your local regulations and individual circumstances before making any decisions related to homesteading, farming, or any other practices shown on our channel. We will not be held liable for any losses, injuries, or damages arising from the display or use of this information. Always exercise caution and prioritize safety when attempting any project or task.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 212

  • @jill-go7gd
    @jill-go7gd 8 днів тому +21

    My Mom always said that the man was the head but the woman was the heart. One is as important as the other and both were essential to life. Works together in harmony.

  • @kathithompson5951
    @kathithompson5951 Місяць тому +80

    My mom uses to say that my dad was the head of the house but she was the neck that turned that head lol 😆 😂 🤣

  • @cinnysangel
    @cinnysangel Місяць тому +39

    If a recipe tells you to measure first then sift as in “sift two cups of flour” it is only listed to sift for potential bugs or clumps bc of old time practices of flour storage. If the recipe says “two cups of sifted flour” it wants the flour sifted first then measured for lightness and less flour than compacted scoops of flour.

  • @jleer6178
    @jleer6178 Місяць тому +24

    The acid in the tomatoes would cause the protein in the milk to curdle and separate from the whey of the milk, much the same as making farmer's cheese. Baking soda is alkaline, so it neutralizes the acid and brings the soup Ph to neutral so the milk won't break.

    • @barbarahague6843
      @barbarahague6843 5 днів тому +2

      Thank you. A very good point that I did not know about.

  • @Velcrobaby
    @Velcrobaby Місяць тому +11

    I love your videos! I worked in a library for 17 years and we had a collection of old books. I would suggest wearing gloves when handling the books that are that old because the oils from your skin can damage the pages.

  • @HannaARTzink
    @HannaARTzink 7 днів тому +6

    Onions are stored commercially for a very very long time and often have mold under the dry lauet and even one below.
    It caused excessive gass.
    So warning to all of us using store-bought onions.
    Btw - beautiful farm kitchen!

  • @jo-annjewett198
    @jo-annjewett198 Місяць тому +80

    I think you must be a Wonder Woman. I am 74 or will be on the 28th and I can work circles around some 30/40 women but you get more done in a day than most accomplish in two weeks!! Love your channel. Makes me miss Canada-the people but not the government 🤣 I agree about the tea towels!!

    • @SJC49
      @SJC49 Місяць тому +1

      Just 74. Agree with you. I think it is a generational thing as well - work ethic. Hope you aren’t in the U.S. 😍🇨🇦

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Місяць тому +9

      Lol! Yes, the people are great.

    • @danamama6766
      @danamama6766 Місяць тому +2

      @@LittleMountainRanch 💕

    • @jo-annjewett198
      @jo-annjewett198 20 днів тому +2

      @@SJC49 I am in the US😄

  • @cindybrewer3520
    @cindybrewer3520 Місяць тому +12

    I was able to order off Amazon a reproduction of her book...yay...looking forward to reading it.

  • @lisagrafton2529
    @lisagrafton2529 Місяць тому +10

    I was taught to sift my flour, and then measure out the amount needed for a recipe. By sifting what the recipe calls for, one will likely end up with more flour in whatever is being made, than needed. Has anyone else been taught to sift, then measure flour? I'm 61 years old, and like you, I rarely sift my flour. But when I want a light and fluffy result, I take the time to sift, then measure my flour.
    The Hoosier cabinets had an area to store flour, and when you needed some for a recipe, it has a sifter attached to the bottom of the flour bin, that the flour must pass through to get out of the bin. Early homemakers always sifted flour.

    • @sseptember6301
      @sseptember6301 День тому

      I have that Hoosier cabinet in white!
      But the sifter is so rusty that I can't use it.

  • @deborahtolbert4185
    @deborahtolbert4185 Місяць тому +12

    Beating by hand in 1906 for 20 minutes should equal possibly 5 minutes with an electric mixer I would think. Love your channel and can't wait to see it pop up when a new one posts!

    • @lucyjane103
      @lucyjane103 9 днів тому +3

      I was thinking the same thing !

  • @susanc1265
    @susanc1265 7 днів тому +9

    I just watched a video by acre homestead in which she forgot to cream the sugar into the yolks, and added it with the flour. She decided to go ahead and make a second cake and creamed the sugar and yolks. The difference between the two cakes was in the texture and rise, with the first cake being shorter and spongier.
    Enjoyed your video!

  • @janicecraig2364
    @janicecraig2364 Місяць тому +13

    On the kitchen wall in the house I grew up in was a little tiny plaque which stated:
    I am the boss of this house and I have my wife’s permission to say so.

  • @deendrew36
    @deendrew36 7 днів тому +2

    That book is such a treasure! You need one of those book holders that holds the book open in a gentle “V”, if that makes sense. So it is not completely flat and is supported. I would LOVE to have a book like that!

  • @ShiraKaiman
    @ShiraKaiman Місяць тому +7

    to make the soup creamy without milk try adding an avocado and blend it in. You should get a handheld scanner and scan the old pages in your cookbooks and print them out the pages, use the printout instead when cooking thus saving the book from getting damaged.

  • @kimsampleshall7137
    @kimsampleshall7137 Місяць тому +6

    That is so crazy your just planting collard greens and mine are now going to seed, wow! #keepgrowingveggies, hugs! NW GA

  • @kevinknight470
    @kevinknight470 Місяць тому +8

    Tomato soup and grilled cheese sandwiches, one of my favorites. Soup looked very tasty. Thanx for sharing. 😃

  • @SJC49
    @SJC49 Місяць тому +7

    Love all your videos but notice that your eyes ‘smile’ so much when you are outside and in the greenhouse with the plants. Snapdragons are my grandsons’ favourite flower! Thanks, Chelsea!

  • @lowhydrogen7018a1
    @lowhydrogen7018a1 Місяць тому +9

    I miss my grandma

  • @Newbiehomestead
    @Newbiehomestead Місяць тому +7

    These recipes are so awesome to hear/watch. It’s so cool how simple they were but also highlights how “common knowledge” a lot of things were so it didn’t really need to be said. I probably would’ve failed miserably back then because I’ve had to teach myself everything I know so far about cooking/baking and UA-cam has been a big part of that 😂

  • @barbmitchell6666
    @barbmitchell6666 Місяць тому +7

    I think the book meant to say beat the yolks for 20 minutes because they did not have electric mixers in 1907

    • @DeviousKnitter70
      @DeviousKnitter70 6 днів тому

      They had hand mixers, or egg beaters in 1907. They were referred to for beating cream into whip cream, and used for beating eggs.

    • @enna4986
      @enna4986 2 дні тому

      @@DeviousKnitter70the beaters were used, but electric beaters weren’t invented until 1908 and thst was commercial only
      Abd homes started using them about 1960’s.

  • @mary-chiltonvanhees1201
    @mary-chiltonvanhees1201 Місяць тому +17

    I learned from my Dutch father-in-law, who was a baker, that sifting was done to remove unwanted impurities from flour! He visited his sister in America and when making her favorite baked goods to remind her of her homeland, discovered that store bought flour in the USA was VERY clean and light. He shared his surprise with me, his American daughter-in-law living in The Netherlands, on his return from his one and only round trip flight anywhere! He was a baker in the Netherlands throughout WWII because the Germans needed bakers to produce food during the occupation.

    • @ashleyashcraft1754
      @ashleyashcraft1754 Місяць тому +5

      It's so highly processed and white,flour is often bleached and we have it virtually free of anything bad or good. A lot of the impurities are gone but so are a lot of the nutritional qualities. I am learning about getting whole wheat berries and grinding them to preserve more of the nutrients, but I'm not there yet.

    • @1ACL
      @1ACL 13 днів тому +2

      Whole wheat flour is very clean, too. The point was that food purity regarding bugs, sticks, rocks, etc., is much better now.

  • @sseptember6301
    @sseptember6301 День тому

    It's said that fences make good neighbors ❣️👍🏻🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @jackieperkins691
    @jackieperkins691 Місяць тому +3

    Fences are good! They're like having good boundaries in your life.

  • @Niamh07421
    @Niamh07421 Місяць тому +8

    my great grandmother's recipes - we have to follow her 1890]s measurements- ex" a cup meant a tea cup= a teaspoon was the spoon she used to measure the tea leaves- tablespoon meant the large spoon which they used for soup (No soup spoons then) no measuring spoons marked 1/2 or 1/4 - an 1/8 tsp was a pinch a 1/4 tsp was a nice pinch-1/2 tsp a good pinch(which was more) and my favorite was 2 good double pinches - when we tried to make things using modern measuring utensils it never came out right- so we used our table and teaspoons. as for the cup- we used a good china cup(which are smaller than todays tea cups or even a measuring cup - and the recipe came out much better- they used what they had- have also found this to be true with some of my vintage recipe books

  • @kerstin.jitschin5861
    @kerstin.jitschin5861 8 днів тому +2

    Awesome job ❣️ I love that old fashion style for cooking, even with all the longtime tough work and time ( 20 min ) but these days it’s okay to shorten it up 🥰
    Now you need some geese 🪿 and animals to eat all of your waste, pigs 🐷 are Allesfresser ,you can feed them with all kind of stuff you would place out on a Komposth .

  • @cindymartin189
    @cindymartin189 День тому

    I’ve just found your channel and love all you do. Now going to binge on your videos and try new things. Watching from Australia 😊

  • @lisakbeemon
    @lisakbeemon Місяць тому +11

    Hi! I love watching you because you don't edit everything out and it's good to know I'm not the only one surfing the learning curve. ;0) Thank you for sharing. Love, respect and blessings.

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Місяць тому +15

      Thanks! I have to admit to being tempted to edit the mistakes out, but the world is full enough of the appearance of perfection and perfect, I am not.

  • @kimberbeardsley156
    @kimberbeardsley156 Місяць тому +14

    Sifting flour was because back then they ground wheat into flour, but sifted out the germ and outer fiber for making pastry flour. Since 1920's flour has been separated into bags of shelf stable flour, it just took a while for recipes to be written differently. Now days we rarely see sift flour in s recipe.

    • @carolkantner1770
      @carolkantner1770 Місяць тому +1

      I was just going to say the same. My Grandma told me this and she was a wonderful baker

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Місяць тому +6

      Makes sense and good to know since it’s an added pain in the butt! Lol

    • @karenwalker4764
      @karenwalker4764 Місяць тому +1

      I still sift all my flour.

    • @sseptember6301
      @sseptember6301 День тому

      It makes cakes more airy and fluffy

  • @trainman2860
    @trainman2860 Місяць тому +8

    My grandmother said you used to sift flour because there could be Flour Beetles and if your flour got damp it could get chunky.

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Місяць тому +1

      Interesting

    • @lisalouise999
      @lisalouise999 Місяць тому +4

      In England we call them Weavels

    • @sherip1270
      @sherip1270 17 днів тому +2

      @@lisalouise999 yes, we call them Weevil in the U.S. too. May depend on the different parts of the country. I am not sure.

    • @beverlyhayshouston2770
      @beverlyhayshouston2770 7 днів тому +2

      One must always choose the lesser of two weevils.

    • @southerngirl1408
      @southerngirl1408 6 днів тому +1

      ⁠@@lisalouise999I’m in the US and have always called them weavels

  • @deannale595
    @deannale595 7 днів тому +1

    I have this cookbook! I inherited it. It's a crazy read!

  • @user-kj9ou8uv3g
    @user-kj9ou8uv3g Місяць тому +2

    I'M HAPPY TO SEE YOU HAPPY IN YOUR GREEN HOUSE

  • @NancyDunton-hb9ir
    @NancyDunton-hb9ir 6 днів тому

    I love old recipes. Healthier, too. I use the same brand of olive oil, mmmhmmm!

  • @greenrockgarden2851
    @greenrockgarden2851 Місяць тому +1

    Sifting does make difference! Sifting allows for a fluffier whatever you’re making. If not sifted, the outcome will prove to be more dense. 😊

  • @redsandrock8073
    @redsandrock8073 8 днів тому +1

    I had a cookbook that called for beating the cookie dough for 20 minutes also! I don’t have the cookbook now but I always thought it was a misprint! The recipe wasn’t anything unusual so 20 minutes beating must have been a thing!! Love your cooking!

  • @iartistdotme
    @iartistdotme Місяць тому +3

    I hope I didn't bump any seedlings while sitting your seedling shelf, LOL. Felt like I was just sitting there watching you work. I also love tea towels that are cotton and absorbent like an old feed bag. Love that you save that one snapdragon just to admire it and bring you joy.

  • @stacypotts6341
    @stacypotts6341 Місяць тому +2

    Can't beat homemade soup, no matter what.
    I use roasted tomatoes, bell peppers, onions, and garlic.
    It takes more time to roast tomatoes before canning, but it's worth it, just like roasting beef and chicken bones for broth.
    Never have added squash before.
    But do add splashes of soy and worcestershire sauces.

  • @beccam507
    @beccam507 Місяць тому +1

    Your food always looks so delicious! That cake looks very similar to a souffle recipe that my mom used to make. You know, I think you must have the nicest viewers of any UA-cam channel I watch! You get such beautiful things from people! You have such a kind demeanor, it must be infectious through the screen 😊

  • @barbaradeclerck7341
    @barbaradeclerck7341 Місяць тому +2

    The old paragraph form of recipes were called receipts which I found interesting 🤔 I found this out on a USA utuber who are also late 1700’s to early 1800’s reenactors and on her channel Early American she makes vintage recipes (receipts) using very early cookbooks and the fireplace.

  • @jackiegagne2625
    @jackiegagne2625 Місяць тому +3

    I have a large collection of cotton teatowels. I bought them on my trips, so I not only have a memento but a very useful item. I have a kitchen drawer full of them! They have lasted so long that I have stopped buying them! lol

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Місяць тому +2

      They are wonderful! I had no idea!

    • @sherip1270
      @sherip1270 17 днів тому

      We use "flour sack" towels. With a large family, I have sewed two together as they are what we use to dry our dishes. They are great for glassware as it leaves no lint. I have been taught that terry cloth towels are hand towels and the tea towels are for clean dishes only. It makes me cringe when my houseful of men grab my tea towels and use them in ways that could stain their prettiness. In my kitchen I have terry cloth hand towels, tea towels for clean dishes and small dish clothes to wipe up messes.

  • @anick6265
    @anick6265 3 дні тому

    Thank you very much I will do the two recipe’s for sure 💕

  • @jolinbarilla2229
    @jolinbarilla2229 Місяць тому +3

    Hi! I just happened to catch this right away! Happy Sunday!

  • @kikomartin-pr
    @kikomartin-pr Місяць тому +1

    Your plants look so healthy. That soup looked delicious.

  • @deborahswanberg6144
    @deborahswanberg6144 Місяць тому +2

    Thanks for the baking soda trick, one reason I don't make homemade tomato soup is the curdling milk.

  • @CarolthePirate
    @CarolthePirate Місяць тому +1

    I love gates! There are so many different styles.

  • @mabelarnold8049
    @mabelarnold8049 18 днів тому +1

    I also miss Canada 🇨🇦

  • @susanluksetic977
    @susanluksetic977 Місяць тому +1

    I use those kind of tea towels ,love them !

  • @bkodra
    @bkodra Місяць тому

    I love vintage recipes! I have one from the 50's that has a recipe for spiced blueberries that is fantastic! Old is new again. 😍

  • @catracampolieto8989
    @catracampolieto8989 Місяць тому

    The soup looked so creamy. I have alot of my Mother's cookbooks. She loved to collect them, I love them too. I got her cookbooks when she passed away. The cake looked so yummy. I love lemon anything. Thanks for bringing us to the greenhouse.❤❤❤

  • @sgrvtl7183
    @sgrvtl7183 Місяць тому

    Excited for this growing season and 'walking' through the garden 'with you'. Wonderful to have your greenhouse in your garden area! Soup look very good, glad to hear the cake was light & fluffy, like the lemony frosting idea!

  • @katescaringcorner6765
    @katescaringcorner6765 Місяць тому

    I absolutely love old cookbooks!
    All four of my grandparents were born in 1906. Makes me think that my great grandmothers may have come from those if it was popular in New Brunswick Canada. ❤

  • @lindamills9444
    @lindamills9444 Місяць тому +2

    I always enjoy your videos!

  • @belieftransformation
    @belieftransformation Місяць тому

    Amazing kitchen creations, wonderful planting tips & a fun time spent watching you get so much done! Thanks for sharing & blessings to all 🤗🇨🇦

  • @sheilaMagilicudy
    @sheilaMagilicudy Місяць тому

    That cookbook myself I would buy a stand for it to rest on and display it for all to see. That is just amazing! You are so lucky to have that treasure. The cake looks great especially with a nice hot cup of tea or coffee. I am a soup gal. I make it a lot. What better way to use up veggies etc. especially now a days with the prices of things. Great video Chelsea Thank you

  • @Patricia-np1yv
    @Patricia-np1yv Місяць тому +2

    Look at the color of them eggs.I had to use store eggsand some farm fresh it was so funny the color are so different..

  • @susanspieker7262
    @susanspieker7262 Місяць тому +2

    My grandma (born in 1908) used to make Sunshine cake. She always used the pan with the removable bottom.It was so tall. I’ve tried a few times but it was usually half the size. She would use a dozen eggs in one cake, You have inspired me to try again.

  • @JulieG-kg5ue
    @JulieG-kg5ue Місяць тому

    I love how realistic you are! I can relate to you so well thank you!

  • @Bella-gj6wc
    @Bella-gj6wc 10 днів тому

    First time watching. Remember, that very probably the cake was made before everyone had electricity, so the beating X 20 mins was done by hand!😳 lol I get what you said about the recipe. I make Rappie Pie, which the first recipe I’d ever seen for it called for a “peck of potatoes, and a brace of rabbits”. Thankfully I (a now US citizen, via over half my life spent in Alberta), had a mum in law from Yarmouth, NS, who taught me how to make one of the best things I’ve ever eaten. Nice channel, I subscribed and will stay awhile. 😊 A blessed Mother’s Day to all watching. ❤️

  • @sistermaryam8204
    @sistermaryam8204 Місяць тому +2

    The baking soda makes it more alkaline thereby not so acidic. It’s what people used to use for indigestion before the pills.

  • @bcworth444
    @bcworth444 Місяць тому

    Everything's looking great, Chelsea! Roll on Spring!

  • @conniebowers8409
    @conniebowers8409 Місяць тому +1

    You are amazing! I love your videos!

  • @anounimouse
    @anounimouse Місяць тому +1

    Chelsea, if you plant your snapdragons horizontally - or pin the ends down w/a twig/etc - you will increase the number of bloom shoots at least 10X. They will put out a flower stem at every leaf axis.

  • @danoneill2846
    @danoneill2846 Місяць тому +1

    Looks Great !

  • @janeweldon8874
    @janeweldon8874 Місяць тому +1

    Your soup looks so yummy!!❤️

  • @lindas.8036
    @lindas.8036 Місяць тому +1

    Thank you for the video.

  • @VickieHisBeloved
    @VickieHisBeloved 6 днів тому

    Nice !! Thankyou…💕

  • @MyLivingApothecary
    @MyLivingApothecary Місяць тому

    I also love old cookbooks. The Anakarsrum is an excellent mixer. I've had mine for almost four years. I no longer experience mixer dancing, which occasionally happened with my Kitchen-Aid mixer. I love the Vita-Mix also. I've used their blenders since my daughter was a toddler. She'll be 21 next month. :)

  • @trishakrenek4171
    @trishakrenek4171 Місяць тому

    Hi Chelsea, your tomato soup looks absolutely delicious! I can almost taste it! Thank you for sharing your recipe, I’ll definitely make it!! 😋
    I thought of you when I went to a thrift store and found a 1936 Hershey’s cookbook! 🥰 I’m keeping my eyes open for more, so thank you!
    I enjoy all your videos and I totally agree that your voice is very soothing and sweet! 💛

  • @patricacompton9603
    @patricacompton9603 12 днів тому +1

    The baking soda is a base the tomatoes have an acid in them so the baking soda counteracts the acid in the tomatoes to allow you to add the milk the reason it foams is the reaction between the base and the baking soda and the acid and the tomatoes

  • @kate_700
    @kate_700 Місяць тому

    You are truly such a joy to watch. ❤

  • @cathykillion6544
    @cathykillion6544 Місяць тому +1

    Enjoyed the video 😊

  • @janisgriffin7278
    @janisgriffin7278 Місяць тому

    Am such an Afictionado of Antique Cookbooks😍I have several myself and the recipes are so delicious❣️Thank you for sharing these Fabulous Recipes🙏🏼🥰

  • @cynthiafisher9907
    @cynthiafisher9907 Місяць тому

    Love you Chelsea! Happy spring!

  • @elizabethcoates3024
    @elizabethcoates3024 Місяць тому

    We too love homemade cream of tomato soup, or tomato bisque.

  • @tamwolf20
    @tamwolf20 Місяць тому +4

    Hello, I just wanted to say that I love your channel. Your voice is very calm and easy to listen to. Lol😂 I know a weird thing to say. The knowledge you are sharing is awesome. You are incredibly organized. You make a person feel like it is totally possible to get things done! Like someone said in another comment. You get more things done in a day that many would take 2 weeks to do. I have to imagine that planning and preparation play a big role in getting things done. But from your videos, I have seen you also pivot when an idea doesn't pan out and you tweak things to get the result you are looking for, such as in the terraced garden area and you had the tractor assist in what you were trying to do. I love the example you are giving your kids. You sound like an incredible person to get to know. I am sure in the background it can be a crazy and beautiful life. I hope you keep making content.
    Thanks again!

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Місяць тому +6

      Hey, thank you so much, your comment made my day. Oddly enough, I get comments about my videos and voice being calming on almost every video, which makes me very happy. If there’s one thing we could all use right now it’s a little calm and peace so if I can contribute to that I’m glad to.
      And yes, it’s a madhouse here sometimes, but becoming less so as my kids get older.

  • @SOLDonRVLife
    @SOLDonRVLife Місяць тому

    Adding the squash to tomato soup intrigues me. It looks delicious!

    • @suewhalen3919
      @suewhalen3919 Місяць тому

      I know! It sounds strange, but I also add it to pasta sauce. It adds a sweetness, depth or just something!

  • @sowball8575
    @sowball8575 Місяць тому

    Thanks for sharing.

  • @drekfletch
    @drekfletch 26 днів тому

    I can remember my grandmother using those cotton tea towels (damp) to cover her bread bowl in the fridge. I imagine the wetness would close the weave-gaps minimizing evaporation, and the extra moisture would replace any moisture lost. I don't know if it works as well as plastic, though, as I don't make bread.

  • @valblatch8921
    @valblatch8921 19 днів тому

    I enjoyed watching you today. I love watching cooking shows. (I also live in WL!!!)😊.

  • @danamama6766
    @danamama6766 Місяць тому

    oh my gosh that cook book 💕I want that tomato soup and the little cake looks like it would taste so refreshing. I love touching my seedlings too and I know it makes them happy :) Snap dragons are one of my favorites too. I'm exhausted after watching you in this video because I know this was just a smidgen of your day. hugs and luv

  • @user-hx1ct3qt9o
    @user-hx1ct3qt9o Місяць тому

    I didnt realize how invested l was in the video, but I found myself urgently talking to you as you put the cake ingredients together… I was panicking lol! The food looked amazing! Glad it all turned out delicious!❤

  • @marytillison8392
    @marytillison8392 Місяць тому +3

    I myself would have added the roasted veggies in the blender with some of the soup first than added back to the pot!!

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Місяць тому +1

      I like it super smooth, including the tomatoes, but if you like a little texture that would work!

  • @Nancy-zk9dj
    @Nancy-zk9dj Місяць тому +1

    Is the longer mixing time because it may have been beaten by hand back then?
    We used to sift everything (60s and 60s.) Now Mom's beautiful old sifter is on a shelf on my kitchen. ❤

  • @sassmediaaccount217
    @sassmediaaccount217 Місяць тому +4

    Love the look and feel of those old cookbooks! But I gasped when I saw the lemon juice squirt onto the pages! 😮
    Here’s a hack I use when I’m making on of my mom’s recipes: I take a picture of it and follow it from my phone, so as not to accidentally damage the original recipe! 💞

  • @jamieprov1
    @jamieprov1 Місяць тому +2

    just a thought but if the book is that old you should consider ( if you haven't done so already) having the recipes scanned ( by a professional if not yourself ) for future generations.

  • @MaryStevens-tb2dz
    @MaryStevens-tb2dz Місяць тому

    I use butter to can tomato soup and also i added milk. I never made homemade tomato soup but yours look absolutely fabulous. God bless you for what you bring to us.

  • @dhansonranch
    @dhansonranch Місяць тому

    Soup and cake looks great! Plants are certainly doing well. I am running out of room as well and still have more to start - time to get innovative!

  • @debbiemarks6086
    @debbiemarks6086 Місяць тому +2

    Do you get your older cooks books in thrift stores? I love old ones, too. We live in a very little town in Northern California on the coast, and we have 1 thrift store. It is so much fun with old ones. Thank you for sharing ❤ 13:49

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Місяць тому +2

      Yes, when I’m lucky enough. Our thrift stores aren’t the best for old cookbooks but eBay is!

    • @debbiemarks6086
      @debbiemarks6086 Місяць тому +1

      @@LittleMountainRanch oh never thought eBay thank you 😊

  • @maryjanegibson7743
    @maryjanegibson7743 Місяць тому +6

    The comment about husbands being head of the household reminds me of the ladies I knew in the 60's when I was growing up who would say, tongue in cheek, "The husband is the head of the house ,,, but the wife is the neck ,,, and the neck turns the head." As a kid, I knew even though they all took great care to defer to their husbands that they did indeed set the course. So you triggered a memory that makes me smile.

  • @reneeobie8352
    @reneeobie8352 Місяць тому

    I joined the Gingiber tea towel a month club...love them. Designs are beautiful. They are all I use now. Wash great too.

  • @sarahhatheway308
    @sarahhatheway308 Місяць тому +1

    I am definitely going to use your soup recipe! Thank you! For old cookbooks, do you think the mixing/beating times would need to be adjusted for using my mixer? Because mixing with my mixer is probably way more effective faster than by hand? I also have a couple old recipes I've been holding onto to try.

  • @punjabseth260
    @punjabseth260 17 днів тому

    Nice 👌😃😃

  • @sheilamandley6778
    @sheilamandley6778 Місяць тому

    Hi, always sifft the flour when it is mentioned in the recipe because it helps to incorporate air. 1 Cup of siffted flour has less gramms of flour then 1 Cup of unsiffted flour.
    Mixing the sugar with the eggyolks first would have been done to dissolve the sugar, it is next to impossible after adding the flour without adding additional liquid.

  • @pinkplateful1957
    @pinkplateful1957 Місяць тому

    I make a similar soup and I add a drizzle of white truffle oil when I serve it up. Puts it over the top. :)

  • @Darkpetalsandtears
    @Darkpetalsandtears 5 днів тому

    New subscriber 💖💖💖🌹🌹💖💖💖

  • @debbieorazi2518
    @debbieorazi2518 Місяць тому +1

    That tomato soup looks luscious! Can it be canned (without the milk of course)?

  • @kathysalkeldbonilla6541
    @kathysalkeldbonilla6541 15 днів тому

    A little nutmeg would be good in the soup!

  • @KAStodgell
    @KAStodgell Місяць тому

    Looks like corn bread! Lol blackened is the best!

  • @tess9099
    @tess9099 12 днів тому

    Where did you get that opener you used for your tomatoes? I love that

  • @kathystarnes6744
    @kathystarnes6744 Місяць тому +1

    💚💚💚

  • @Tam-po5nw
    @Tam-po5nw Місяць тому +1

    190? They didn't have electric mixers...might want to do less time on electric mixer?...sounds like a good cake...can not wait to see after baked!...wish could have a taste...