More questions than answers
What about yellow turnips/rutabagas? Squash? Or is squash just a New England dish? What about pumpkin?
Parsnips: I've heard that parsnips, at least in southern Michigan were often left in the ground, unharvested, intentionally. One source (Delia Lutes, who was writing memoirs in the 1930s of growing up in the 1880s with a Civil War veteran father), talks about how parsnips weren't considered "ready" to eat until they'd been overwintered in the ground -- that being frozen gave them a "tang."
Cow peas -- I'm thinking lots and lots of cowpeas would also be on the menu.
Sincerely,
Karin Timour
Period Knitting -- Socks, Sleeping Hats, Balaclavas
Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
Email: Ktimour@aol.com
What about yellow turnips/rutabagas? Squash? Or is squash just a New England dish? What about pumpkin?
Parsnips: I've heard that parsnips, at least in southern Michigan were often left in the ground, unharvested, intentionally. One source (Delia Lutes, who was writing memoirs in the 1930s of growing up in the 1880s with a Civil War veteran father), talks about how parsnips weren't considered "ready" to eat until they'd been overwintered in the ground -- that being frozen gave them a "tang."
Cow peas -- I'm thinking lots and lots of cowpeas would also be on the menu.
Sincerely,
Karin Timour
Period Knitting -- Socks, Sleeping Hats, Balaclavas
Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
Email: Ktimour@aol.com
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