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INDIAN GINGERBREAD
12 oz. sugar
1/4 lb (1 stick) butter
1 lb. flour
2 oz. ginger
1/4 oz. cinnamon
1/4 oz. cloves
Take twelve ounces of pounded loaf sugar, a quarter of a pound of
fresh butter, one pound of dried flour, two ounces of pounded
ginger, and of cloves and cinnamon a quarter of an ounce each. Mix
the ginger and the spice with the flour, put the sugar and a small
tea-cup full of water into a saucepan; when it is dissolved, add the
butter, and as soon as it is melted, mix it with the flour and other
things; work it up, and form the paste into cakes or nuts, and bake
them upon tins.
From The Cook's Own Book by "A Boston Housekeeper" (Mrs. N. K.
M. Lee) Boston 1832
Comment: This is an interesting variation on the theme of
"gingerbread" but what exactly qualifies it for the name of "Indian"
is unclear. It contains neither corn meal, which was known as
"Indian meal" in much of the 19th century, nor what we would
consider "Indian" spices today such as curry. Certainly cinnamon and
cloves come from what was then called the "East Indies" but they
were used in vast numbers of products that never had the Indian name
attached. Some things just must remain mysteries.
This evidently makes a very thick dough and the resulting products
would resemble cookies more than anything else.
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