Recipes from Another Time
Savor the flavor of old St. Augustine and try a couple of these original recipes.
- By Smithsonian magazine
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2001, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Remove boots from palm and peel down to the heart. Break heart into bite size chunks and soak in cold water until ready to cook. Chop some onions. Fry ½ lb. salt pork, cut into small pieces, in a skillet. Add a handful of onions and some butter and cook until onions are soft. In a Dutch oven melt a stick of butter. Add a generous amount of cabbage and a fourth as much onion. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Add more cabbage and onion in the same proportion until pot is half full. Cook over low heat for about 30 minutes, stirring to keep cabbage from burning. Serve when cabbage is tender.
To preserve our trees, please cut cabbages from palms that are growing in dense clusters, or from construction sites where they are to be removed. The best cabbage comes from trees that are from eight to twelve feet tall.
To Drink:
Orange Shrub
About the time of the American Revolution, Jessie Fish's grove, on Anastasia Island, was yielding the finest oranges in America. They were in demand, as far away as London, for the making of Orange Shrub. This powerful drink combined orange juice with rum and sugar. It might be considered an ancestor of the whiskey sour. It was a hit with Loyalists and Patriots alike.
Mix 1 gallon of rum with the peel of 6 oranges. Add 6 cups of sugar and dissolve by mixing well. Combine this mixture with a quart of sweet orange juice and place in a wooden cask or earthenware crock for several weeks to age and develop character. After aging, remove shrub from the cask, strain, and bottle for immediate consumption or storage. This is a wonderful base for a hearty punch.
Ahh! Desert!
Ambrosia
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