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CORN AND TOMATOES
Fresh corn
Tomatoes
Salt
Pepper
Sugar
Butter
Take equal quantities of green corn cut from the cob, and tomatoes
sliced and peeled. Stew together half an hour; season with pepper,
salt, and a very little sugar. Stew fifteen minutes longer, and stir
in a great lump of butter. Five minutes later, pour out and serve.
Common Sense in the Household by Marion Harland, New York, 1871
Comment: Do not be confused by the term "green corn." This recipe
dates to the time when corn was simply corn, before different
varieties were bred of which some were fed to livestock and others
known as "sweet corn" were intended for human tables. When corn was
just fully ripened, fresh and juicy, it was used in recipes like
this. That which was left on the stalk past this point began to dry
out and could be either taken to the mill for grinding into corn
meal or preserved in the form of hominy. When fully dried it was
then considered winter food for livestock.
This is something of an oddity in that we know of no recipes today
that are simply corn and tomatoes cooked together. Corn and lima
beans, yes; this we know as succotash. Tomatoes and, well, nearly
everything else, sure; we know this as "pizza" and other things.
Corn and tomatoes? Not so much. While these recipes are found in
books intended for civilian life, we have no doubt that something
very much like this would have been eaten by troops in the field who
passed through an area at the right time of year for vegetables to
be fresh in the fields. Farmers did not like to see armies passing
anywhere nearby for precisely this reason.
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