Cooking in the 1800s (from Tar Heel Junior Historian) (2024)

Originally published as "When Dinner Wasn’t Quick and Easy"

By Courtney Hybarger
Reprinted with permission from Tar Heel Junior Historian, Spring 2007.
Tar Heel Junior Historian Association, NC Museum of History

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Cooking in the 1800s (from Tar Heel Junior Historian) (2)Today’s rapidly increasing demands and hectic schedules make it challenging for a family to dine together. Many dinners include fast food or carryout delivery from places like KFC or McDonald’s. When families do have time to prepare a meal, it is rarely “from scratch.” Technology that we often take for granted—such as microwaves and refrigerators—has greatly affected what we eat and how we eat it.

Modern meals are planned around the family’s schedule, but this was not the case two hundred years ago. In fact, two hundred years ago, the family planned its schedule around meals!

During the early 1800s, cooking dominated the time and energy of the average housewife. There were no big grocery stores where families could go to purchase food, and eating out was truly a rare treat, usually possible only when traveling. Most fruits and vegetables were grown on the farmstead, and families processed meats such as poultry, beef, and pork. People had seasonal diets. In the spring and summer months, they ate many more fruits and vegetables than they did in the fall and winter. During those colder seasons, families found ways to preserve their food.

The three main ways of curing (the process of preserving food) during this time included drying, smoking, and salting. Each method drew moisture out of foods to prevent spoiling. Fruits and vegetables could be dried by being placed out in the sun or near a heat source. Meat products could be preserved through salting or smoking. A salt cure involved rubbing salt into the meat, which was then completely covered in salt and placed in a cool area for at least twenty-eight days. During this time, more salt was constantly added. When the meat was no longer damp, it was washed, then shelved or bagged and left to age. Families would hang meat preserved through a smoke cure in rooms or buildings with fire pits. For a month, the meat was constantly exposed to smoke, which dried it out while adding flavor. Using different kinds of wood for the fire, such as hickory or oak, could produce different tastes.

A typical day on the farm began very early. Women rose and built the fire based on the meals planned for that day. Families who could afford to have detached kitchens—kitchens in buildings separate from the house—did so for several reasons. The kitchen often was hot, smoky, and smelly. Most North Carolina families did not have the resources for a separate kitchen, though, and the hearth provided the center of home life and family activity. With no ovens or electricity, women prepared meals on the hearths of brick fireplaces. They used different types of fires and flames to prepare different types of food. For example, a controllable fire was used to roast and toast, while boiling and stewing required a smaller flame.

To use all of the fire’s energy, families shoveled coals and ash underneath and onto the lids of Dutch ovens. Standing on three legs and available in a wide array of sizes, the cast-iron Dutch oven was one of the most important tools found on the hearth. It was used to prepare several types of food and allowed cooking from both the top and the bottom. Dutch ovens evolved into woodstoves, common in homes of the later 1800s and early 1900s before most people got electricity at home.

Preparing meals was not just a matter of starting a fire for cooking. Spices, such as nutmeg and cinnamon, and seasonings, like salt and pepper, had to be ground up with mortars and pestles. Milk had to be brought in from the family dairy cow and cream and butter made from it. After someone brought in the milk, it usually sat out for about an hour. The cream rose to the top, separating from the milk. Women placed this cream into a butter churn and beat it until it hardened, first into whipped cream and eventually into butter!

Every family member contributed to the production and preparation of meals. Men and boys spent most of their time outdoors. Chores included working crops in the fields, feeding larger livestock, and hunting. Diets included wild game, such as deer and turkeys. Women and girls worked mainly in the kitchen and fed smaller livestock.

When it came time to butcher animals, families joined with their neighbors to share the workload and the meat. Pork was the staple meat in the Southeast until the 1940s. Hogs proved more manageable than their much larger counterparts, cows. The taste of pork also improved with curing. Neighbors often gathered in the fall, using the time to get their work done but also to catch up, sharing news and gossip. What began as a chore turned into a social event. This was also the case at harvesttime. Neighbors pitched in to bring in crops such as corn and wheat. After the work was done, everyone might celebrate with feasts, bonfires, and dancing.

Clearly, meal preparation two hundred years ago involved several more steps than it does now. Much like today, families usually ate three daily meals. The main meal in the 1800s, however, was not the large evening meal that is familiar to us today. Rather, it was a meal called dinner, enjoyed in the early afternoon. Supper was a smaller meal eaten in the evening.

A big difference between the way people eat today compared with long ago is the work and time needed. For modern families, food and meals are merely an afterthought in the schedule. Two hundred years ago, food and food preparation stood at the center of the family’s daily lifestyle. Without the advances in technology that help us store, preserve, and prepare food, men and women would spend much of their time getting meals ready to eat. Instead of calling pizza delivery, imagine spending all day in front of a fire!

At the time of this article’s publication, Courtney Hybarger was a historic site interpreter at President James K. Polk State Historic Site in Pineville.

Cooking in the 1800s (from Tar Heel Junior Historian) (2024)

FAQs

How did people cook in the early 1800s? ›

During the 19th century people used open flames for cooking or stoves. Stoves were gaining popularity in the 1800s, but they were not electric or gas like ours are now. Instead, they had either a wood fire or a coal fire inside. The stove allowed the heat to more uniformly cook and bake food than an open flame.

What did kids eat in the 1800s? ›

A diet of meat, vegetables, fresh milk was commonly available and they were available to feed their children the nutrients they needed for growth and development. 6: Children living on farms would have a far better diet than those within the city.

Did people eat three meals a day in the 1800s? ›

Mealtime! Like most Americans today, people around in the 1800s ate three meals a day. Their primary meal, however was their second.

What was a typical meal in the 1800s? ›

The foods served varied, changing with the customs of each region, but in the North some common foods were chowder, beef, clam soup, baked beans, roasted pork, custards, oxen, turtles, mutton and salmon.

How did they keep meat from spoiling in the 1800s? ›

Meat products could be preserved through salting or smoking. A salt cure involved rubbing salt into the meat, which was then completely covered in salt and placed in a cool area for at least twenty-eight days. During this time, more salt was constantly added.

What did the pioneers use to cook? ›

Dutch ovens, frying pans, boiling pots, and roasting spits were typically employed. As settlements grew, so did the range of cuisine.

What did poor people eat in the 1800s? ›

If the rural poor ate birds then the urban poor ate pairings of tripe, slink (prematurely born calves), or broxy (diseased sheep). Edgar Wallace recollects working-class families along the Old Kent Road shopping for 'tainted' pieces of meat and 'those odds and ends of meat, the by-products of the butchering business.

What did people feed dogs in 1800? ›

From medieval times up until the mid-1800s dogs were mainly fed a steady diet of table scraps. They ate things like cabbage, potatoes, and bread crusts – whatever their owners could spare. As far as meat goes sometimes they were offered bits of knuckle bone or horse meat if they were lucky to live in a more urban area.

What did pioneers use for lunch boxes? ›

Some families could afford to buy lunch pails for their children. Others saved empty lard or syrup buckets to use as lunch pails. For the adults at home, the noontime meal was often the biggest of the day and was called "dinner," not lunch. Corn in some form was usually on the homesteader's table.

What did they eat for breakfast in the 1800s? ›

Graham's work made what would come to be known as “Graham” flour a common item in the nineteenth-century pantry. Although graham crackers would be his most lasting contribution, Graham gems, Graham muffins, and Graham bread made with his flour all became common breakfast fare in the 1800s.

What did rich people eat for dinner in the 1800s? ›

Raising animals for meat is costly, so buying meat was seen as a luxury that many were unable to afford. Victorians with more money enjoyed mutton, bacon, cheese, eggs, sugar, treacle and jam as part of their meals. Breakfast may involve ham, bacon, eggs and bread.

What did southerners eat in the 1800s? ›

Meals often consisted of beef, eggs, hot biscuits, corn bread, hot cakes, porridge and seasonal vegetables and fruits. Coffee, tea, water or cocoa were consumed in “large quantities.” Whiskey, inexpensive and readily available, was the most popular alcoholic beverage, Cooper recorded, especially in the South and West.

What desserts did they eat in the 1800s? ›

Ready, Set, Bake: Recipes from the 18th and 19th Century
  • Queen Cakes – (Rundell, 1822)
  • To make Ratafia-Cakes – (Kettilby, 1719)
  • Excellent Rolls – (Rundell, 1822)
  • The best Orange-Pudding that ever was tasted – (Kettilby, 1719)
  • Rasberry Tart – (Henderson, c.1800)
  • Rich Puff Paste – (Rundell, 1822)
Aug 24, 2016

What did slaves eat in the 1800s? ›

For the most part, slaves' diet consisted of a form of fatty pork and corn or rice. Cornbread was commonly eaten by slaves. Produce from a vegetable patch or garden could also be added to the rations.

What was the difference between dinner and supper in the 1800s? ›

Supper was originally a secondary lighter evening meal. The main meal of the day, called dinner, used to be served closer to what is known as lunchtime, around the middle of the day, but crept later over the centuries, mostly over the course of the 19th century.

How did people do dishes in the 1800s? ›

Dish washing took two pans, one for washing the dishes, the other for scalding. Without a sink to wash in, many women washed dishes on the broad flat stove surface. An advantage of that was that the dish water stayed hot--almost too hot! Homemade lye soap was put in the bottom of the dish pan.

How did people in the 1700s cook? ›

Over an open fire, food could be cooked by boiling, and coals could be pulled out onto the hearth to create smaller burners over which frying pans on legs, called spiders, could be placed. This gave the cook a significant amount of versatility, able to prepare any number of dishes at one time.

What were kitchens like in the 1800s? ›

Kitchens were still separated from the house, located on the bottom floor of homes. With a large fireplace being the predominant feature in the 18th-century kitchen, the area was hot, smelly, and sooty and generally not a pleasant place to be. The first kitchen sink was introduced in the early 1800s.

How did early humans cook their food? ›

Some scientists estimate our early human cousins may have been using fire to cook their food almost 2 million years ago, long before hom*o sapiens showed up. And a recent study found what could be the earliest known evidence of this rudimentary cooking: the leftovers of a roasted carp dinner from 780,000 years ago.

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