Wednesday, April 22, 2020

R is for Recipes - Blogging from A to Z April 2020 Challenge!

Today R is for Recipes in British Columbia 

Blogging about British Columbia Genealogy Resources



Fort St. John, B.C. - Alaska Highway. Image MSC130-2181-01, courtesy of the British Columbia Postcards Collection, a digital initiative of Simon Fraser University Library. Unused postcard; no photographer or date; AZO stamp box.

Community cook books can be a fun way of finding out a bit more about your ancestors, especially your female family members. In British Columbia, many organizations and businesses did in the past, and do still, produce recipe books from their members' or employees' submissions.

Find your family names in a cook book and you will know something more about the people - which church they supported, perhaps, and you'll have a new family recipe too. And many of these books have ads from local businesses which may be of interest. Or the owner might be a relative.

Nowadays some of these recipes will be very useful too - involving fewer and more common  ingredients, often including substitution tips, or, for example, how to make breads without yeast.





Here is an index of names from one of the British Columbia cookbooks in my own collection. This one commemorates a great undertaking in British Columbia, the construction of the Alaska Highway, a joint project with the United States, which began in 1942 at Dawson Creek in BC's north. Although the book is undated, it's clear from at least one ad that it was produced during WW II.

The submitters' names are sorted here by surname alphabetically. In some cases, there may be more than one woman with the same surname. And many women have more than one recipe.  I am slowly building a database indexing my own cookbook collection and other recipe books I'm able to index. Thank you to those who've assisted with this. Someday soon I will put that index out for others to search.

The churches involved with this cookbook were:

St. Martin's Women's Auxiliary, Fort St. John, and the North Peace River Parish - St. Martin's Church at Fort St John; St. John's Church at  Baldonnel; Church of the Good Shepherd at Taylor; St. Matthias Church at Cecil Lake; and St. Peter's at Hudson Hope. Rev. Hugh Mortimer was the Rector.
SURNAMES

Ambrose Mrs. 
Ambrose Barbara
Ambrose B.
Ambrose A. L., Mrs. 
Ambrose Mrs. 
Anderson Lucy
Bazeley M.C.
Bazeley M. G.
Bernard Mrs.
Bernard G. M., Mrs. 
Birley M. 
Bowes Mrs. 
Campbell R.A., Mrs.  Fort St. John
Cheurwater J.S., Miss
Clay Mrs.          Fort St. John
Cramer J.J.          Hudson Hope
Dodds Inga
Duddy Mrs. 
Erdos Istuan, Mrs. 
Fenby Glenn, Mrs.  Fort St. John
Finch Mrs. 
Hanke C. W., Mrs. 
Hargreaves Thomas
Hoffstrom Mrs. 
Jewish Recipe
Kearney H.W. Fort St. John
Kehler H., Mrs.
Little Fred, Mrs. 
MacLean Jessie
Martin Grace
Martin Grace S.
Mathews Mrs. 
Matthews Mrs. 
McLeod R.B., Mrs.
Morrison A. C., Mrs. 
Nyberg Al, Mrs. 
Nyberg Ed, Mrs. 
Nyberg Ed. Mrs.  Baldonnel
Oakley R. M. Mrs.
Ogilvie Mrs. 
Pickard J. G.
Pickell Mrs. 
Pickell Mrs. 
Pomeroy Agnes
Prospector's Recipe
Sandy R. W., Mrs. 
Schimberg A.W., Mrs.
Sowden R., Mrs. 
Stanberg J. T., Mrs.  Regina, Saskatchewan
Storrs Miss
Teather G. H.  Mrs. 
The Red Cross Special
Thomas M., Mrs. 
Thomas Bill, Mrs. 

Advertisements

Roche's Store
Dr. Szilagyi  dentist
Florence Shop Mrs. Warren, Fort St. John
Ann's Parka Shoppe Prince George
Fort St. John Lumber Co. Ltd.
Condill Hotel Co. Ltd. Helen Hooey
Paul's Confectionery Dawson Creek
Harold W. Kearney Optometrist
Log Cabin Auto Camp Henry Courvoisier
Donis Hotel Reuben Taylor
C. Ray Fell Saw & Planer Mill, Fort St. John
Walter's Lunch
Les Bazeley Truck Service, Hudson's Hope, Fort St. John
Pomeroy Cafe
Cuthill Meat Market Fort St. John
Fort St. John Flour Mill Otto Hoffstrom
B.C. Cafe Fort St. John
Joe's Barber Shop Fort St. John
J. J. Cramer Building contractor
Coffee Pot Mrs. Ted Boynton, Hudson's Hope
Fort St. John Co-op
Slyman's Store general merchant-fur trader, Fort St. John
Gething Mines Les Bazeley, coal, Hudson Hope  **war related ad
Canadian Utilities Fort St. John
Husky Cafe Gus Halvorsen, cafe & dance hall
Ken Dodds woodworking, Fort St John
Glacier Drugs Fort St. John
Pomeroy Hotel Ralph Pomeroy – hotel & cafe, licensed
Bowes & Herron Garage  Fort St. John
White Spot Fort St. John
Frank Wastrodowski carpentering etc.
Titus Mercantile Fort St. John – also rooms, Fort St. John
Dave's Garage D. Chiulli, Fort St. John
E. J. Paling real estate, etc., Fort St. John
Pop's Coffee J. Stokke
Cuthill Meat Market Fort St. John
Larry's Pool Hall Arctic Avenue
Donis & Taylor general store, Fort St. John
Mrs. Sowden's Rooms Fort St. John
Jack Stain Fort St John to Dawson Creek
Carroll's Bowling Alley transcontinental dog mushers 1936-37
Carlsonia Theatre Fort St. John
T. W. Hargreaves real estate, etc., Fort St. John
C. M. Brooks real estate, etc. Fort St. John
Kirkness Meat Market Fort St. John
Appeal re removal of survey posts - Back Cover


Just a couple of recipes...

Three Minute Cookies

2 cups rolled oats
1/2 cup butter
1 cup brown sugar

Mix together in a bowl. Press into a 9x9 pan and bake 12 minutes in a moderate oven. Cut while hot.
Submitter Jessie Maclean, well known in the area, a teacher for many years. A similar recipe to one my Na used to make for us. 

Vera's Sour Cream Pie

1 cup sour cream 
3/4 cup sugar
1 cup raisins
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 eggs
Salt

Mix cream and sugar and vanilla. Add well beaten eggs. Pour into uncooked pie shell. Cover top with strips of pastry. Bake in a fairly hot oven. 
No submitter's name. I suspect many would have known who Vera was. If you know or think you do, please let me know.

My idea would be to add the raisins and salt once the eggs were added. Does this sound right? (Maybe Vera didn't want to give her pie secrets up?) 



Dawson Creek, BC, Canada, Image MSC130-2160-01, courtesy of the British Columbia Postcards Collection, a digital initiative of Simon Fraser University Library. Postcard mailed 1942. Watch for another story.


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2 comments:

Dianne Nolin said...

I had seen mention of a cookbook for Waterville, QC and finally found a copy... with recipes of my ggm and aunts.
I also have my grandmothers first edition of the Five Roses cookbook with notations in the pages. Since then all our generations use one version or another of the a Five Roses book!

Molly of Molly's Canopy said...

You're right -- those recipes do look easy to make. Although I am always nervous about terms like "fairly hot oven" from the days before temperature gauges. Wonderful that you listed all the names contained in the cookbooks. Researchers will thank you!