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YORKSHIRE CAKES
1 and 1/2 pint milk
1/4 pint homemade yeast (2-3 packets or cubes commercial yeast)
Flour
6 oz. butter
3 eggs
Take a pint and a half of milk quite warm, and a quarter of a pint
of thick small-beer yeast; mix them well together in a pan with
sufficient flour to make a thick batter; let it stand in a warm
place covered over until it has risen as high as it will; rub six
ounces of butter into some flour till it is quite fine; then break
three eggs into your pan with the flour and butter; mix them well
together; then add sufficient flour to make it into a dough, and let
it stand a quarter of an hour; then work it up again, and break it
into pieces about the size of an egg, or larger, as you may fancy;
roll them round and smooth with your hand, and put them on tins, and
let them stand covered over with a light piece of flannel. [Bake]
From The Cook's Oracle by William Kitchiner, MD, New York, 1829
Comment: Translating recipes for yeast breads is always difficult
because the quantities given are for "homemade" yeast which is
nowadays used primarily by those who make their own sourdough
products.
In the 19th century a pot of live yeast starter sat in every
kitchen, carefully located closer or farther from the heat source as
the season dictated to keep it from either freezing or dying of
over-heating. It was removed by the tablespoon, cup or pint-full to
make the amount of bread needed by the household on a daily basis.
The amount removed was replaced with an equivalent amount of flour
and water, and the remaining yeast creatures would spread through
that until the next day's baking time rolled around.
If that yeast "wore out" or was lost in some fashion it was
necessary to make a trip to the local tavern or other beermaking
emporium and buy or beg a resupply from their stock. This was
considered a great disgrace, the mark of a slovenly housekeeper, if
the yeast was lost to anything less than a house fire.
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