You are so right. I have been immediately looking for and purchasing them every new title announced! Today’s brought me to happy tears reminding me so much of the spirit of my late dad how he would always investigate and follow trails of history.. grand scheme most people don’t really put much stock or value in something so simple as a cookbook and the sweet little owner from Ithaca.. but small scale history is so important to.. to value and cherish.
Janicer...l love her OVAL stove as well. Only $12,000+ delivered. But it will last 200 years! I love these stories & finding the authors of these cookbooks etc! ❤❤❤Please Chelsea do more videoing like todays!
My mom use to season the wood stove after a lot of cooking. she rubbed grease on the cast irn part to make it shine. Im 70 years old so that was many years ago
I have the loveliest chills surging through me as you tell the story of Pauline and Betty. What a wonderful legacy they left and they didn't know it. Thanks Chelsea for sharing and thanks Dan for gifting these to your beautiful wife. What a joy!
Hi, when you make the ‘funny cake recipe’ again…try putting the top batter into a pastry bag or zip lock bag with a small opening and trail the batter starting at the outside rim, and you might use all your batter and not have the over flow. But, I’d still use a tray under it🤗🤩. Great video, thanks for sharing the recipes and stories of these wonderful cookbooks!👍
I can confidently tell you that the Pennsylvania Dutch and their descendants of Amish and Mennonite who settled in southwestern Ontario (my family background) LOVE pies. I don’t believe we ever had a family gathering without at least 3 kinds of pie for dessert when my grandmother was hosting.
The Pennsylvania Dutch funny cake recipe I have says to put the cake batter in the pie shell first and the chocolate mixture on top of the cake batter. I think doing it that way it may not boil over. Try it again and see if it works. I love your cooking and love your kind of living. I am from Greenville, Rhode Island, the smallest state in the union.
Love watching you in the kitchen and outside I can’t find if anyone told you the pot pie from the Pa Dutch book the 2 inch squares are noodles to be cooked in the broth our pot pie doesn’t have many vegetables potatoes onions maybe corn .You feed your family such a variety of good food You are truly a joy
Love the Elmira cook stove! Growing up we had 1 in my house, coincidentally we lived in Elmira , Ontario 2 blocks away from where these stoves were manufactured.
Instead of the parchment, paper or clingfilm, you could use what my grandmother and great grandmother would’ve used beeswax wraps. Very organic have anti-bacterial properties reusable, but cannot wash in hot water and you wouldn’t use it on meat poultry or fish. However, perfect for covering up your pastry, your bread dough, my grandmother, even used to wrap my grandfathers and uncles sandwiches and lunches in it. Old-fashioned alternative
I think I get more nostalgic as I get older. People are forever saying that british food is tasteless and boring but I've recently realised why I disagree so much. Properly homecooked British food is the same foods that people have been eating for hundreds of years. Vegetables, meats and pastry with salt and lots of butter. They were comfort foods against the cold weather. I love the simplicity of chicken pot pie and the history behind it.
Any leftover pie crust my Mommy would roll out and put Cinnamon and Sugar on it us kids loved it more than the pie Love the bowl Love the old cookbooks
My grandmother still uses an old wooden stove from time to time she has an electric one and she has a gas one, but she still uses the wooden one for certain recipes and if I’m being honest food taste better. However, as she got older, it’s harder and harder for her to clean. We help out when we’re there but instead of scrubbing it with a sponge scourer, or a metal scourer. I went out and bought her a relatively inexpensive orbital sander with very fine grain sanding pads, which wouldn’t scratch up the metal on the stove top. It has a little bag to suck up any kind of dirt and grind like a vacuum cleaner as she runs the sand across the stove. This is better as it’s much lighter work far quicker to do it and you’re putting no water on the stove at all. A little tip from me to you about cleaning the wooden stove the way my grandmother would do it.
Zackly. No water! If you must, fire up stove to dry it and *then* oil it so to not trap water/rust. Especially when not being used for awhile. Wire brushing the undersides of the plates as well as other components aids cleaning. Ash gets so fine that no matter the filter, it *will* trash your shop vac motor. Ash is alkaline and not friendly to motors. I’ve found that my baked recipes are so must tastier in the cookstove than in modern stoves.
This video made me so happy, but also tears to my eyes to hear about all the updates on the cookbooks. Love this. Thank you Chelsea for sharing your happiness with all of us. 😊♥️
Om goodness. My mom always made just chicken pie. She would put four on the bottom crust then the chicken and fill it up with the chicken broth. It would thicken as ot baked. She would made homemade noodles , mashed potatoes and corn. Total carb overload. She passed 6 years ago at the age of 92. This was the one dinner all 7 of her children asked for our birthday dinner. I have never heard of anyone making this pie. How exciting. My family and all my neices and nephews also love this pie. How amazing you have this recipe.
What a good husband you have there buying you cook books that you love. Not everyone would do that, he might not like the camera but he certainly thinks the world of you. And for someone who doesn't like cooking you're very good at it.
What fun!!!! I got married 1964.but hadn't cooked before and really enjoyed learning. One of my favorite cookbooks was an older Better Homes and Garden cookbook that we all loved the ingredients - full fat milk, honest cream, butter, cut up fresh fruit. It was wonderful and when we moved I got rid of the old books and bought a newer edition of the same name. Boy, was that a mistake. The ingredients had become - more healthy, less real, boring. Some of our favorites were no longer included like bread pudding, basic apple pie, stew. Everything had been upgraded, reduced fat, fancied up, less taste or missing altogether. I appreciate those older recipes so much when food tasted so good. Cut down on the portion sizes but not the taste. I remember when McDonald's first sold burgers and fries - they were tiny in size and we all never noticed them being small - but now they would be called kid's meals. I'm so happy you are cooking from the old recipes - we have a lot to learn from the old days when food was not so processed and was made from real ingredients. I can't wait to try both of these recipes. Can't wait for your next adventure.
I have copy of Better Homes and Garden Cookbook, the best I can tell it is 60 years old. It was my grandmothers. I use some of the recipes but mostly the other info in the book about food and measurements
A couple things. If you’ll drape your crust down into the pie pan then trim it , it won’t shrink back and be too small. Second if you’ll hold your whisk, spoon or whatever overhand instead of underhand when you stir or whisk, it won’t tire your hand and wrist out so quickly or leave you sore. I love your wood stove, it is gorgeous!
I have some old mennonite cookbooks given to me by my mother in law. I think they were given to her by her mother. They say to put the cake filling in first and the chocolate sauce is poured over it, and then during baking the chocolate sauce settle to the bottom, and you have a nice chocolate swirl through your cake part. But the end result would be close to the same, so maybe some did it differently. Yours looks delicious.
Just take you pin roller and roll over top of dish it will cut off the excess quickly. My mom used to take the left over pie crust and place in cookie sheet and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon. We would eat it like a snack. lol
Absolutely love your channel! I collect old cookbooks as well and have a copy of your Pen Dutch. My favorites are the cookbooks that give life advise...nutrition and how to set up a house. The basics don't really change that much. Remember to put your own information in each book for the next generation.
Oh my my! I started getting goosebumps when you said that Pauline lived in Ithaca-my dad grew up in Ithaca and myself and my siblings have many fond memories of going there to visit our grandparents. They were on Hector Street and lived there from the 1940s into the early 2000s. It looks like she must have lived only a couple miles away from my grandparents! What a small world indeed!!!!
You have inspired me to visit a local vintage book shop. Luckily their is 1 in the small market town I live. Buxton, Derbyshire, England. I'm now wanting to look into recipes from war time when food was rationed and in short supply. I'm looking forward to listening from women of the past. Thank you
have you watched the series "wartime farm" ? There were a few seasons based on different eras (Edwardian, Victorian, Tudor, tales from Green Valley) . i would very much recommend them. I watched all the seasons on youtube- i think some may stream on Prime video
My grandmother was Pennsylvania Dutch. She had a cook book very similar to the one that you have if not that exact one. Yes, pretty much everything could be put in a pastry, either sweet or savory, to make a pie. To this day, I still use a pie crust recipe that my great-grandmother used. Fortunately, it can be used for both sweet and savory pies.
So so glad you come out with a video today!!! I needed some happiness in my life. And your channel is where I find that. Love love love your channel ❤️ 💛 💖 ♥️
For cleaning the top of your stove check out restaurant grill cleaning brick. There are used on restaurant griddles does a very very good job of removing any food residue and does no damage to the metal. Then finish with a rolled up cotton cloth or rag.Thick enough to protect your hands from the heat.
I paused your video to clean my woodstove as it's been on my list for way too long. Now, if you could also remind me where I put my vacuum bags that'd be helpful too.
Yes, PA Dutch recipes have a lot of doughs. The Amish used to milk their own grain in bulk & farm.(a lot of eggs on hand too)They still live in large houses with extended families. A lot of mouths to feed. Dough is filling. We do a lot of dumplings, fried dough, breads & yes pies.
I think that's an Old World phenomenon. I was watching a video with a married couple, she's American and he's either English or French (French and they met in England or English and met in France). He was giving her a hard time about how he grew up eating all sorts of pies and all we have is apple pumpkin or chicken.
@@LittleMountainRanch I agree that it does feel important. I've been making a chicken pot pie recipe from my grandmother and it's probably my family's favorite.
My mom used to use something called stove black after she had cleaned it. Instead of a warming oven, hers had a cistern for warming water. Food was so tasty cooked on them.
My mom used stove black on the wood cook stove top at my great-aunt's one room log cabin at Bull Lake Montana. We went there every summer for our 2 week vacation. I now have my own wood cook stove (not hooked up yet) and I said to myself, "I need to get some stove black".
Lol! I came here, 9 months later on viewing this video to ask and comment the same thing! I grew up with my gramma's cooking on a wood stove, with a hot water reservoir on the side, and she used stove black to keep her stove shiny and new looking! It always looked like it came right out of a show room....a great source of pride to her.
I have been learning to can, grow veggies and fruits. Have chickens already but pondering if we should purchase a cow and/or goats or if they do not warrant the cost of upkeep. Really like your channel. Our neighbor has a wood stove she would like to give us, trying to figure out the logistics of said stove. Videos are very informative. Thank you
Something is missing in most ready made or box mixes. Nothing compares to cooking from scratch. I miss those days. Decreasing recipes to fit one or two people seems to lose something. I can't seem to get all the adjustments correct. Thanks for sharing. I'll be trying these.
Eva L Jipson was married to Dan Jipson, according to the 1910 census. They lived in Smithfield, NY. Had 2 children, Franklin 3 yo and Minnie less than a year old. At the time of the census, Eva and Dan had been married for 4 years. Maybe this can lead you to more information.
Those look amazing and the recipe books are fantastic. I have a bunch of books my mom collected I should go through them and make a few things. I'm all about self sustaining so lard is a good thing ;)
I enjoyed this video. From a person who in the last couple of years began looking into old stoves as a heating and cooking source. And within the last year begin looking for old cookbooks this here topic is dear to me. Keep'em coming.
How cool all the information about the cookbook owner! I live near Ithaca NY and was shocked to hear a town name I recognized from a Canadian UA-camr. Loving all these old time recipes💜😊
Just came across your channel love i love it. I live in Pa. Dutch Country. My grandmother was a great PA. dutch cook. She made many pies, haven't seen anyone make chicken corn pie since 1984. THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES!
I wrote the Hoiday Sandwich recipe and sent it to the address of the house to who lives there now. I put information on your utube channel so they can watch you make the recipe.
I am getting so much enjoyment from watching you go through these cookbooks and find out who they belong to. I love thinking about who owned them and what was going on in their lives at the time. So much fun!
How strange that I am rando V Ky watching this today and everything you are talking about takes me back to the time I visited Ithaca as a college student and then again decades later when my sister-in-law and daughter both lived there. I know everything you were talking about.
I also live in upstate NY. It's so amazing hearing these cookbooks jouney! I love hearing you talk about the small towns around me! Looking forward to more updates!! So crazy this small world we live in!
Absolutely loving all these old time recipes your sharing😁. It's at exciting and interesting to find out more about the women that owned and used these cookbooks to look after their families. Fabulous!
These cook books are so much fun. Thank you for sharing them. I also was raised in the Ithaca area. It’s so interesting to learn about the cook books and recipes of the past. Very exciting.
Small world indeed! I grew up in Cortland, NY and both my parents families are from that area, Cortland, Dryden, Freeville. There's been generations of my grandmother's family in the village of Freeville and I still have relatives living there. Also have some in Ithaca. How funny to watch your video and see ties to my hometown!!
Wow the story stemming from Betty's cookbook & the articles in her book was very cool. Mrs. Livingston's greatest sandwich recipe & the fact that 1 of your followers actually met her back in 1930, just so cool.
Ohhhh… new series for homesteaders or home cookin folks.. Cookbook Mysteries unsolved and solved by viewers like you. You’ve inspired me to get my great grandmothers 1936 Detroit cookbook out and take a peek. Thank you!
The cookbooks are bringing joy to so many people I’m sure. I know they are me. I have some cookbooks 50 to 60 years old. I purchased them in high school. They were a fundraiser for FHA ( Future Homemakers of America). Sadly UA-cam and the internet have made cookbooks nearly obsolete. I used to work for a company that published cookbooks for church’s and organizations. They quit publishing cookbooks in 2006 because not enough were being published. I was able to take extras. I love reading cookbooks.
I collect cookbooks. Cookbooks are still being printed at a rate that I cannot keep up with them. However those specialized cookbooks from flour, salt, baking powder, local grocery stores etc are fast dying. Even Costco no longer puts out a cookbook which was available every New Year.
The history section of the video was so cool! I did not think the funny cake would be that good looking at it, but the look on your face says otherwise! Good job!
This cookbook journey is like a living history museum. I am enjoying Betty's book and all the recipes so much! And even if it's not your passion, you ate a fabulous cook.
I’m 65…and had a big house with land. I had BOTH sets of grandparents’ old cast iron white enamel oven/stoves. I loved them…..they were O’keefe and Merritt from the 1940’s…..sadly, I had to move and sell my home due to medical and old age…..and it broke my heart to have to leave the two ovens, but they each weighed more than 500 pounds(guess) and my new place is a tiny home, so they won’t fit. 😞😢. I had even advertised for sale(make me an offer) , but in almost a year, and several attempts….i couldn’t even sell them😞
Yummy! Always looking for new good recipes. Our family eats together every Sunday supper plus a few extras and several of us take turns cooking. The Funny Cake for sure and the chicken pot pie will be e a hit for sure! There are between 9-15 of us so I appreciate the double triple recipes. Thanks so much!!
Love your wood cook stove. I cooked for a number of years only with wood. I got so spoiled because it is so versatile and nothing gives such a beautiful golden crust to a pie.
Absolutely LOVE your bowl! I have been collecting cookbooks for a few yrs now. I love how some of the old ones their language is different. I just got one two weeks ago where the cover is made out of wallpaper lol and fastened with yarn.
You commented on how many pies were in the PA Dutch cookbook. As someone with Mennonite and Amish family background, I can attest to sweet dishes being an integral part of our diet. I remember my dad telling us how, as a kid, he would grab a slice of pie on his way through the kitchen to do chores in the morning to tide him over until breakfast. I also remember, as a child, being shocked when I learned that people ate cobblers and strawberry shortcake for dessert. Those were regularly a main course for our suppers! I assume it is a Swiss German cultural thing. Love your channel, BTW!
I am really enjoying watching you guys! That's so interesting! Thanks again for your time and sharing! Making me hungry watching you cook! God Bless you!
Old cookbooks are a wonderful way to learn about food heritage. I collect them too and have brought a few back from road trips through the states. Would be nice if my husband was as sensitive as yours on this subject ;-) Also, Jean has great taste. Wowwww.... That bowl is awesome. ♥
Hi Chelsea- I had a 1980 Finley Oval like yours. I loved it! I also would recommend checking out the new airtight Kitchen Queen. If I had to replace our 1930 Home Comfort, I would look into the KQ or similar. Your stove is so much easier to clean than mine! I cannot remove the top frame, only the lids. Hence I use a long handle scraper to push the ash over to the right side. It drops to the bottom and there is a tiny clean out door directly beneath the oven door. I have it down to an art. You have reminded me to get cleaning! After wiping off the oil, scrunch up a large ball of wax paper and polish the surface. It gives it a teflon type shiny finish. Then you can place toast directly onto the surface. Grandma Hazel taught me that :-) Thanks for taking us along. I hope others consider a kitchen wood stove. Our vintage stove will heat 1,000 square ft. and is great during a power outage.The Irish Stanley is a lovely small air tight that comes in colors. I am not sure if they are still manufactured, but they are around. ~ Diane
I served as a missionary in BC and that area looks so beautiful and familiar. It warms my heart to know you live there. I followed your channel before I found out where you were from but now I enjoy it even more! Thank you!
I think we all would like to thank Dan for the gift of these cookbooks. They are bringing so much joy to so many.
You are so right. I have been immediately looking for and purchasing them every new title announced! Today’s brought me to happy tears reminding me so much of the spirit of my late dad how he would always investigate and follow trails of history.. grand scheme most people don’t really put much stock or value in something so simple as a cookbook and the sweet little owner from Ithaca.. but small scale history is so important to.. to value and cherish.
For someone whose passion isn’t cooking/baking, you do a fantastic job of it!
Bet your husband had no idea the Adventures these cook books would bring to you guys! Excellent gift.
He didn't, but he's having almost as much fun as I am with them!
Janicer...l love her OVAL stove as well. Only $12,000+ delivered. But it will last 200 years! I love these stories & finding the authors of these cookbooks etc! ❤❤❤Please Chelsea do more videoing like todays!
Tupperware used to sell a plastic version of that rolling pin. Use just added ice water to it.
The funny cake recipes I've seen you put the batter in first and the chocolate on top. During baking it reverses. That's why it's called a funny cake.
My mom use to season the wood stove after a lot of cooking. she rubbed grease on the cast irn part to make it shine. Im 70 years old so that was many years ago
I have the loveliest chills surging through me as you tell the story of Pauline and Betty. What a wonderful legacy they left and they didn't know it. Thanks Chelsea for sharing and thanks Dan for gifting these to your beautiful wife. What a joy!
Glad you enjoyed it
Hi, when you make the ‘funny cake recipe’ again…try putting the top batter into a pastry bag or zip lock bag with a small opening and trail the batter starting at the outside rim, and you might use all your batter and not have the over flow. But, I’d still use a tray under it🤗🤩. Great video, thanks for sharing the recipes and stories of these wonderful cookbooks!👍
I can confidently tell you that the Pennsylvania Dutch and their descendants of Amish and Mennonite who settled in southwestern Ontario (my family background) LOVE pies. I don’t believe we ever had a family gathering without at least 3 kinds of pie for dessert when my grandmother was hosting.
The Pennsylvania Dutch funny cake recipe I have says to put the cake batter in the pie shell first and the chocolate mixture on top of the cake batter. I think doing it that way it may not boil over. Try it again and see if it works. I love your cooking and love your kind of living.
I am from Greenville, Rhode Island, the smallest state in the union.
Love watching you in the kitchen and outside
I can’t find if anyone told you the pot pie from the Pa Dutch book the 2 inch squares are noodles to be cooked in the broth our pot pie doesn’t have many vegetables potatoes onions maybe corn .You feed your family such a variety of good food You are truly a joy
I love that stove, it's beautiful
Love the Elmira cook stove! Growing up we had 1 in my house, coincidentally we lived in Elmira , Ontario 2 blocks away from where these stoves were manufactured.
Agreed! Crust is the best thing ever
Chelsea I found the full newspaper with that Holiday Sandwich recipe you found in Betty’s cookbook. I emailed you the info.
Instead of the parchment, paper or clingfilm, you could use what my grandmother and great grandmother would’ve used beeswax wraps. Very organic have anti-bacterial properties reusable, but cannot wash in hot water and you wouldn’t use it on meat poultry or fish. However, perfect for covering up your pastry, your bread dough, my grandmother, even used to wrap my grandfathers and uncles sandwiches and lunches in it. Old-fashioned alternative
I think I get more nostalgic as I get older. People are forever saying that british food is tasteless and boring but I've recently realised why I disagree so much. Properly homecooked British food is the same foods that people have been eating for hundreds of years. Vegetables, meats and pastry with salt and lots of butter. They were comfort foods against the cold weather. I love the simplicity of chicken pot pie and the history behind it.
I agree, I feel that British cooking takes a proper good cook to do justice to the recipes.
Any leftover pie crust my Mommy would roll out and put Cinnamon and Sugar on it us kids loved it more than the pie Love the bowl Love the old cookbooks
My mother did the same thing.....was my favourite part as well.
I still do that! Our daughter loves those extra cinnamon crispness best.
Mine too❤. Wonderful childhood memories.
Butter, cinnamon, sugar pie crust is my favorite treat! I even make it for my “birthday cake”.😊
We called the extra pie crust that had been rolled thin, sprinkled with cinnamon and sugar, snaps. We looked forward to the snaps.
My Mom tells hoe much she loved my Grandmother pies baked in a wood stove. The top was browned perfectly.
Martha is a beauty.
My family is Pennsylvania Dutch I still live in Pennsylvania. We are definitely pie people. Pie for breakfast is perfectly acceptable. Love that.
My grandmother still uses an old wooden stove from time to time she has an electric one and she has a gas one, but she still uses the wooden one for certain recipes and if I’m being honest food taste better. However, as she got older, it’s harder and harder for her to clean. We help out when we’re there but instead of scrubbing it with a sponge scourer, or a metal scourer. I went out and bought her a relatively inexpensive orbital sander with very fine grain sanding pads, which wouldn’t scratch up the metal on the stove top. It has a little bag to suck up any kind of dirt and grind like a vacuum cleaner as she runs the sand across the stove. This is better as it’s much lighter work far quicker to do it and you’re putting no water on the stove at all. A little tip from me to you about cleaning the wooden stove the way my grandmother would do it.
Zackly.
No water! If you must, fire up stove to dry it and *then* oil it so to not trap water/rust. Especially when not being used for awhile.
Wire brushing the undersides of the plates as well as other components aids cleaning. Ash gets so fine that no matter the filter, it *will* trash your shop vac motor. Ash is alkaline and not friendly to motors.
I’ve found that my baked recipes are so must tastier in the cookstove than in modern stoves.
This video made me so happy, but also tears to my eyes to hear about all the updates on the cookbooks. Love this. Thank you Chelsea for sharing your happiness with all of us. 😊♥️
❤️
Om goodness. My mom always made just chicken pie. She would put four on the bottom crust then the chicken and fill it up with the chicken broth. It would thicken as ot baked. She would made homemade noodles , mashed potatoes and corn. Total carb overload. She passed 6 years ago at the age of 92. This was the one dinner all 7 of her children asked for our birthday dinner. I have never heard of anyone making this pie. How exciting. My family and all my neices and nephews also love this pie. How amazing you have this recipe.
What a good husband you have there buying you cook books that you love. Not everyone would do that, he might not like the camera but he certainly thinks the world of you. And for someone who doesn't like cooking you're very good at it.
What fun!!!! I got married 1964.but hadn't cooked before and really enjoyed learning. One of my favorite cookbooks was an older Better Homes and Garden cookbook that we all loved the ingredients - full fat milk, honest cream, butter, cut up fresh fruit. It was wonderful and when we moved I got rid of the old books and bought a newer edition of the same name. Boy, was that a mistake. The ingredients had become - more healthy, less real, boring. Some of our favorites were no longer included like bread pudding, basic apple pie, stew. Everything had been upgraded, reduced fat, fancied up, less taste or missing altogether. I appreciate those older recipes so much when food tasted so good. Cut down on the portion sizes but not the taste. I remember when McDonald's first sold burgers and fries - they were tiny in size and we all never noticed them being small - but now they would be called kid's meals. I'm so happy you are cooking from the old recipes - we have a lot to learn from the old days when food was not so processed and was made from real ingredients. I can't wait to try both of these recipes. Can't wait for your next adventure.
I have copy of Better Homes and Garden Cookbook, the best I can tell it is 60 years old. It was my grandmothers. I use some of the recipes but mostly the other info in the book about food and measurements
A couple things. If you’ll drape your crust down into the pie pan then trim it , it won’t shrink back and be too small. Second if you’ll hold your whisk, spoon or whatever overhand instead of underhand when you stir or whisk, it won’t tire your hand and wrist out so quickly or leave you sore. I love your wood stove, it is gorgeous!
I have some old mennonite cookbooks given to me by my mother in law. I think they were given to her by her mother. They say to put the cake filling in first and the chocolate sauce is poured over it, and then during baking the chocolate sauce settle to the bottom, and you have a nice chocolate swirl through your cake part. But the end result would be close to the same, so maybe some did it differently. Yours looks delicious.
You should add your own note about how you received the cookbooks and when. ❤ the stories of them and your kitchen adventures with them!
I should! I’m a little scared to write in them, but I’ll at least add some notes.
Just take you pin roller and roll over top of dish it will cut off the excess quickly.
My mom used to take the left over pie crust and place in cookie sheet and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon. We would eat it like a snack. lol
Absolutely love your channel! I collect old cookbooks as well and have a copy of your Pen Dutch. My favorites are the cookbooks that give life advise...nutrition and how to set up a house. The basics don't really change that much. Remember to put your own information in each book for the next generation.
Oh my my! I started getting goosebumps when you said that Pauline lived in Ithaca-my dad grew up in Ithaca and myself and my siblings have many fond memories of going there to visit our grandparents. They were on Hector Street and lived there from the 1940s into the early 2000s. It looks like she must have lived only a couple miles away from my grandparents! What a small world indeed!!!!
Martha makes me homesick. Grew up in Nova Scotia with similar one and ended up in California many years later.
❤❤❤Martha! I would be on cloud nine if i could have a wood cook stove!❤❤
Having you bake from the old cookbooks is like opening pages of history, bringing Betty back to life . I absolutely love it!!❤
You have inspired me to visit a local vintage book shop. Luckily their is 1 in the small market town I live. Buxton, Derbyshire, England. I'm now wanting to look into recipes from war time when food was rationed and in short supply. I'm looking forward to listening from women of the past. Thank you
Oh, I would love to have an old cookbook from England. How lucky you are. Greetings from New Orleans, Louisiana USA
I love England, so much! I would love to go wander through used book shops there. I can imagine there's treasure to be found.
have you watched the series "wartime farm" ? There were a few seasons based on different eras (Edwardian, Victorian, Tudor, tales from Green Valley) . i would very much recommend them. I watched all the seasons on youtube- i think some may stream on Prime video
My grandmother was Pennsylvania Dutch. She had a cook book very similar to the one that you have if not that exact one. Yes, pretty much everything could be put in a pastry, either sweet or savory, to make a pie. To this day, I still use a pie crust recipe that my great-grandmother used. Fortunately, it can be used for both sweet and savory pies.
Share the recipe?
What a gorgeous wood cook stove! Such a treasure!
The only books I like to read are cook books! And the older the better.
I like hearing the kiddos!!! No shushing necessary. I’ve got 2 of my own and love those genuine conversations.
❤️
You are such a treasure and a real sweet heart. Dan is a lucky man!
thank you for sharing the stories i can acttuly say to you your video is the only video that i watch with out fast forwerding againg thank you
So so glad you come out with a video today!!! I needed some happiness in my life. And your channel is where I find that. Love love love your channel ❤️ 💛 💖 ♥️
You are so welcome!
For cleaning the top of your stove check out restaurant grill cleaning brick. There are used on restaurant griddles does a very very good job of removing any food residue and does no damage to the metal. Then finish with a rolled up cotton cloth or rag.Thick enough to protect your hands from the heat.
I paused your video to clean my woodstove as it's been on my list for way too long. Now, if you could also remind me where I put my vacuum bags that'd be helpful too.
lol! I always wish I could ask you guys where I put things.
@@LittleMountainRanch Wood cookstoves are great. I tried to send you a pic of mine just for the fun of it but the email failed to send.
Oh my goodness thank you so much for the laugh!!
Love your wood cook stove❤
Yes, PA Dutch recipes have a lot of doughs. The Amish used to milk their own grain in bulk & farm.(a lot of eggs on hand too)They still live in large houses with extended families. A lot of mouths to feed. Dough is filling. We do a lot of dumplings, fried dough, breads & yes pies.
I think that's an Old World phenomenon. I was watching a video with a married couple, she's American and he's either English or French (French and they met in England or English and met in France). He was giving her a hard time about how he grew up eating all sorts of pies and all we have is apple pumpkin or chicken.
Really Great video, just all the info and the Cooking, awesome!
i love the deep dive you're doing with these books...many wouldn't even bother...but this is amazing and i've been loving watching it develop!
I don't know why, but it feels important to me.
@@LittleMountainRanch I agree that it does feel important. I've been making a chicken pot pie recipe from my grandmother and it's probably my family's favorite.
My mom used to use something called stove black after she had cleaned it. Instead of a warming oven, hers had a cistern for warming water. Food was so tasty cooked on them.
My mom used stove black on the wood cook stove top at my great-aunt's one room log cabin at Bull Lake Montana. We went there every summer for our 2 week vacation. I now have my own wood cook stove (not hooked up yet) and I said to myself, "I need to get some stove black".
Lol! I came here, 9 months later on viewing this video to ask and comment the same thing! I grew up with my gramma's cooking on a wood stove, with a hot water reservoir on the side, and she used stove black to keep her stove shiny and new looking! It always looked like it came right out of a show room....a great source of pride to her.
I have been learning to can, grow veggies and fruits. Have chickens already but pondering if we should purchase a cow and/or goats or if they do not warrant the cost of upkeep. Really like your channel. Our neighbor has a wood stove she would like to give us, trying to figure out the logistics of said stove. Videos are very informative. Thank you
Something is missing in most ready made or box mixes. Nothing compares to cooking from scratch. I miss those days. Decreasing recipes to fit one or two people seems to lose something. I can't seem to get all the adjustments correct. Thanks for sharing. I'll be trying these.
Eva L Jipson was married to Dan Jipson, according to the 1910 census. They lived in Smithfield, NY. Had 2 children, Franklin 3 yo and Minnie less than a year old. At the time of the census, Eva and Dan had been married for 4 years. Maybe this can lead you to more information.
Oh yes my husband bought me a marble one I think about 24 years ago lol it’s beautiful
Those look amazing and the recipe books are fantastic. I have a bunch of books my mom collected I should go through them and make a few things. I'm all about self sustaining so lard is a good thing ;)
Small world indeed. Keep the great recipes coming from these wonderful cookbooks.
Thank you.
I enjoyed this video. From a person who in the last couple of years began looking into old stoves as a heating and cooking source. And within the last year begin looking for old cookbooks this here topic is dear to me. Keep'em coming.
How cool all the information about the cookbook owner! I live near Ithaca NY and was shocked to hear a town name I recognized from a Canadian UA-camr. Loving all these old time recipes💜😊
Same here. I am South of Ithaca on the Pa border and it is cool to hear towns that you often think no one knows about.
Yes, crust IS the best thing ever! I’m enjoying these vintage cookbooks and recipes so much. Thanks!
💜 I so appreciate you being here, Cynthia.
That soot us so good for the garden!!
I so appreciate your showing your wood cookstove and how you care for her!!
Blessings!!
So fun thanks Dan!!!
Just came across your channel love i love it. I live in Pa. Dutch Country. My grandmother was a great PA. dutch cook. She made many pies, haven't seen anyone make chicken corn pie since 1984. THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES!
Welcome!!
I wrote the Hoiday Sandwich recipe and sent it to the address of the house to who lives there now. I put information on your utube channel so they can watch you make the recipe.
What a lovely thing to do! I hope they comment one day.
I am getting so much enjoyment from watching you go through these cookbooks and find out who they belong to. I love thinking about who owned them and what was going on in their lives at the time. So much fun!
How strange that I am rando V Ky watching this today and everything you are talking about takes me back to the time I visited Ithaca as a college student and then again decades later when my sister-in-law and daughter both lived there. I know everything you were talking about.
I love watching you make these old recipes, so much fun!! Now I want some old cookbooks 😊
I also live in upstate NY. It's so amazing hearing these cookbooks jouney! I love hearing you talk about the small towns around me! Looking forward to more updates!! So crazy this small world we live in!
Absolutely loving all these old time recipes your sharing😁. It's at exciting and interesting to find out more about the women that owned and used these cookbooks to look after their families. Fabulous!
These cook books are so much fun. Thank you for sharing them. I also was raised in the Ithaca area. It’s so interesting to learn about the cook books and recipes of the past. Very exciting.
Small world indeed! I grew up in Cortland, NY and both my parents families are from that area, Cortland, Dryden, Freeville. There's been generations of my grandmother's family in the village of Freeville and I still have relatives living there. Also have some in Ithaca. How funny to watch your video and see ties to my hometown!!
Wow the story stemming from Betty's cookbook & the articles in her book was very cool. Mrs. Livingston's greatest sandwich recipe & the fact that 1 of your followers actually met her back in 1930, just so cool.
I am thrilled that you are taking us all on the cook book journey! I look forward to each one ❤. Thank You to Dan for such a precious gift!
We love our Heartland Oval wood cookstove too !!!
Found and downloaded alot of old cookbooks on the Internet Archive library. Some of the American pre-civil war ones are amazing.
Thank you for the information about the Internet Archive library!
Ohhhh… new series for homesteaders or home cookin folks.. Cookbook Mysteries unsolved and solved by viewers like you.
You’ve inspired me to get my great grandmothers 1936 Detroit cookbook out and take a peek. Thank you!
Thanks for a fabulous video!
Glad you enjoyed it!
The cookbooks are bringing joy to so many people I’m sure. I know they are me. I have some cookbooks 50 to 60 years old. I purchased them in high school. They were a fundraiser for FHA ( Future Homemakers of America). Sadly UA-cam and the internet have made cookbooks nearly obsolete. I used to work for a company that published cookbooks for church’s and organizations. They quit publishing cookbooks in 2006 because not enough were being published. I was able to take extras. I love reading cookbooks.
I collect cookbooks. Cookbooks are still being printed at a rate that I cannot keep up with them. However those specialized cookbooks from flour, salt, baking powder, local grocery stores etc are fast dying. Even Costco no longer puts out a cookbook which was available every New Year.
The history section of the video was so cool! I did not think the funny cake would be that good looking at it, but the look on your face says otherwise! Good job!
This cookbook journey is like a living history museum. I am enjoying Betty's book and all the recipes so much! And even if it's not your passion, you ate a fabulous cook.
Are
😊
I’m 65…and had a big house with land. I had BOTH sets of grandparents’ old cast iron white enamel oven/stoves. I loved them…..they were O’keefe and Merritt from the 1940’s…..sadly, I had to move and sell my home due to medical and old age…..and it broke my heart to have to leave the two ovens, but they each weighed more than 500 pounds(guess) and my new place is a tiny home, so they won’t fit. 😞😢. I had even advertised for sale(make me an offer) , but in almost a year, and several attempts….i couldn’t even sell them😞
Yummy! Always looking for new good recipes. Our family eats together every Sunday supper plus a few extras and several of us take turns cooking. The Funny Cake for sure and the chicken pot pie will be e a hit for sure! There are between 9-15 of us so I appreciate the double triple recipes. Thanks so much!!
Love your wood cook stove. I cooked for a number of years only with wood. I got so spoiled because it is so versatile and nothing gives such a beautiful golden crust to a pie.
Loving this series! I love old recipes and really enjoy learning about the ladies who owned them so long ago. Thank you for sharing
I’m having the best time watching you cook from these books. I want to go treasure hunting for some cool books like these now.
Absolutely LOVE your bowl! I have been collecting cookbooks for a few yrs now. I love how some of the old ones their language is different. I just got one two weeks ago where the cover is made out of wallpaper lol and fastened with yarn.
What I wouldn’t give to find something like that! Amazing!
You commented on how many pies were in the PA Dutch cookbook. As someone with Mennonite and Amish family background, I can attest to sweet dishes being an integral part of our diet. I remember my dad telling us how, as a kid, he would grab a slice of pie on his way through the kitchen to do chores in the morning to tide him over until breakfast. I also remember, as a child, being shocked when I learned that people ate cobblers and strawberry shortcake for dessert. Those were regularly a main course for our suppers! I assume it is a Swiss German cultural thing.
Love your channel, BTW!
So interesting! 😊
I am really enjoying watching you guys! That's so interesting! Thanks again for your time and sharing! Making me hungry watching you cook! God Bless you!
Our pleasure!
Old cookbooks are a wonderful way to learn about food heritage. I collect them too and have brought a few back from road trips through the states. Would be nice if my husband was as sensitive as yours on this subject ;-)
Also, Jean has great taste. Wowwww.... That bowl is awesome. ♥
We had a big cast iron stove as a child. My mother used blacken - a polish especially made for cast iron stoves to keep it polished and rust free.
Watching your videos helps inspires me with meals ideas. Thank you.
How fun and exciting are those cookbooks and getting to learn about and hold a piece of history! ❤
It really is!
❤Awesome… so glad you are enjoying the bowl. May you bless your family and friends with your recipes for many many years to come!!!!
I truly adore it! ♥️
Wow that pot pie looks delish, omgoodness soooo good, thanks Chelsea, this series has been great. 🇨🇦🌷
Way cool for being able too share more history of the cook books and finding out so much 🙃
wow!!!!!!!!! what a small world!
Hi Chelsea- I had a 1980 Finley Oval like yours. I loved it! I also would recommend checking out the new airtight Kitchen Queen. If I had to replace our 1930 Home Comfort, I would look into the KQ or similar. Your stove is so much easier to clean than mine! I cannot remove the top frame, only the lids. Hence I use a long handle scraper to push the ash over to the right side. It drops to the bottom and there is a tiny clean out door directly beneath the oven door. I have it down to an art. You have reminded me to get cleaning! After wiping off the oil, scrunch up a large ball of wax paper and polish the surface. It gives it a teflon type shiny finish. Then you can place toast directly onto the surface. Grandma Hazel taught me that :-)
Thanks for taking us along. I hope others consider a kitchen wood stove. Our vintage stove will heat 1,000 square ft. and is great during a power outage.The Irish Stanley is a lovely small air tight that comes in colors. I am not sure if they are still manufactured, but they are around. ~ Diane
I am absolutely loving these nostalgic recipes and very videos ❤️
I'm so glad!
It's been so fun to follow along with the recipes! Thanks for sharing 🤗
I served as a missionary in BC and that area looks so beautiful and familiar. It warms my heart to know you live there. I followed your channel before I found out where you were from but now I enjoy it even more! Thank you!