The 1925 Home Comfort cook book |
I love to cook and I really love to cook old school. Outside over an open fire or inside on an antique wood burning kitchen stove the way Grandma did it. In these times most everything is tossed into a microwave and nuked for a few minutes and people call that food. When someone takes the time to actually cook, the food tastes better, is better for you and makes you feel good.
Monday, September 30, 2013
A stove has been bought
Friday, September 27, 2013
First recipe attempt
My Wife Joanne had an idea that I really liked and I hope to give it a try this weekend. Peach and Pecan pie! What flavors could go better together than that? Well, ANYTHING with Bacon of course, but pie wise this has to be tops.
I am going to use a 100 year old Pecan Pie recipe and then play around using small pie tins and different techniques until I figure out a real good one and then I will post the recipe here. Sadly I will have to do this on the modern stove and oven as I don't have the wood one yet, but I am itching to get cooking so it just has to be. At least the recipe is old.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
It begins
Welcome folks, The first post! I don't really know how to start.This is about old school food. The way it used to be. There is something special about food made the old fashioned way. It just tastes better. A propane grill or even a charcoal grill can't compare to an open fire and cast iron cookware meal. Nor can it compare to bread baked in an antique wood fired kitchen stove. I already have an outdoor wood cooking site on our property, but have yet to buy a wood fired stove for the kitchen. So the first steps in this instructional blog is going to be finding, buying and installing an antiques wood fired cook stove. So far I have looked at 2 stoves, a Kalamazoo Prince and a Home Comfort. The Kalamazoo had a huge crack in the front of the stove so that the oven door would not close. The Home Comfort was in nice shape, but was missing some key parts. If I can find a source for the parts, I am going to try and buy the Home Comfort stove and do the repair work myself.
This is a Kalamazoo Prince stove. A very nice model and pretty easy to find.
This is the Home Comfort model. I prefer this model to the Kalamazoo.
Both were made in the 1920s or 1930s and both are enameled models. Both have warming ovens and both can burn wood or coal. Either one would work well, but for some reason I like the Home Comfort one better.
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