Bread, rolls, muffins, biscuits, and breakfast cakes

Boston Brown Bread

60 · First Edition, 1896 · Report an issue

Ingredients

  • 1 cup rye-meal
  • 1 cup granulated corn-meal
  • 1 cup Graham flour
  • 2 cups, or 1¾ cups sour milk, or sweet milk or water
  • ¾ tablespoon soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • ¾ cup molasses

Method

  1. Mix and sift dry ingredients, add molasses and milk, stir until well mixed, turn into a well-buttered mould, and steam three and one-half hours.
  2. The cover should be buttered before being placed on mould, and then tied down with string; otherwise the bread in rising might force off cover.
  3. Mould should never be filled more than two-thirds full.
  4. A melon-mould or one-pound baking powder boxes make the most attractive-shaped loaves, but a five-pound lard pail answers the purpose.
  5. For steaming, place mould on a trivet in kettle containing boiling water, allowing water to come half-way up around mould, cover closely, and steam, adding, as needed, more boiling water.

Kitchen Notes

  • A trivet is a rack that lifts the pan above the kettle bottom.

Original 1896 Text

1 cup rye-meal 1 cup granulated corn-meal 1 cup Graham flour 2 cups, or 1¾ cups sour milk, or sweet milk or water ¾ tablespoon soda 1 teaspoon salt ¾ cup molasses Mix and sift dry ingredients, add molasses and milk, stir until well mixed, turn into a well-buttered mould, and steam three and one-half hours. The cover should be buttered before being placed on mould, and then tied down with string; otherwise the bread in rising might force off cover. Mould should never be filled more than two-thirds full. A melon-mould or one-pound baking powder boxes make the most attractive-shaped loaves, but a five-pound lard pail answers the purpose. For steaming, place mould on a trivet in kettle containing boiling water, allowing water to come half-way up around mould, cover closely, and steam, adding, as needed, more boiling water.