Reading “Jane Randolph Her Book”
To make
Alamode Beef
Take a
Bullocks heart cut of ye Strings
Skinns &
Deaf ears & fat then Stick it
with a
Scewer in many Places, then take
an Ounce
of Salt petre, with a little Salt
& rub
it well in, then Cast on two handful
of Salt
then lett it Stand 4 Days, then
Bake it in
a Slow oven, then take it
out of the
Liquor, then put it up with ye
Same
weight of butter & Sewett as the
meat is,
with a Nuttmeg & Little Cloves
& mace
& half an ounce of Pepper; then
put it
into a pot & put it into ye Oven
for half
an hour
Jane
Randolph Her Book, p.28
Sixty feet down at the
southern end of the colonnade from the ice house and the eastern
gable of the Curles mansion stood the kitchen. It was 54 feet in
length, 22 feet in breadth, a single story with a garret, built of
brick and roofed with wood. Though it had been destroyed a century
and a quarter earlier, it’s outline was easy to see from the air,
from the window of the small Cessna hanging at stall speed with its
wings nearly perpendicular to the ground, no more than a hundred feet
up. A stain of clay and brick-red dust lying at the edge of the
terrace, in front of the site of the 95-foot long mansion, facing the
James River. That’s how it appeared in the spring of 1985.
A decade of archaeology
at Curles Plantation has taught us that the kitchen began life as a
house built by William Randolph sometime after he acquired the tract
in 1699 and before his death in 1711. By the time he reached his
majority in 1715, Richard Randolph, William’s son, had come to
possess Curles Plantation and it was here a few years later that he
brought his bride, Jane Bolling Randolph. The house they first lived
in is what we have come to call the kitchen, and it became a kitchen
shortly after Richard and Jane settled in, for they soon built one of
the grandest Georgian plantation houses to stand along the banks of
the James.
There are no
photographs or paintings of Curles; just a rough plan of some of the
main buildings drawn for an insurance policy in 1806. We have
identified traces of at least 45 buildings which once stood here.
There were many more. All were gone before the Civil War ended.
Nearly half a century before Richard and Jane Randolph arrived Curles
had already been referred to as “an ancient seat.” The remains of
an earlier mansion on the site, built by Thomas Harris about 1635,
lay directly beneath the Randolph’s brick kitchen, and Nathaniel
Bacon’s brick manor house, built in 1674, had stood just a few feet
in front of the spot the kitchen occupied. The Harris house had
lasted perhaps 25 years, and Bacon’s no more than 10. But the brick
kitchen stood at Curles a century and a half until it was taken
apart, brick by brick, by Union soldiers probably during the
Peninsula Campaign of 1862.
***
Historical archaeology,
we are often reminded, promises an opportunity to give voice to
history’s unheard. Before the 19th century very few women were
literate. Those who were came mainly from elite or gentry households,
and, even so, they have left us very little in the way of diaries,
letters or literature. Among the very few written works by women of
the Colonial period are a handful of “receipt” books. These
contain recipes for culinary and medicinal preparations, and they
were frequently passed from mother to daughter over several
generations. We are fortunate to have a manuscript--or, rather, a
facsimile of a manuscript, for I have had no luck locating the
original--of a receipt book from Curles Plantation. It is called Jane
Randolph Her Book and it was begun by Jane Bolling Randolph and
passed down, apparently, to her daughter, Jane, who married Anthony
Walke in 1750. The book then apparently passed to Jane Bolling
Randolph’s granddaughter then living at Curles: another Jane who
added a few additional entries beginning in 1796. While the earliest
entries are those of Jane Bolling Randolph, and date to as early as
1739, the majority of entries appear to be her daughter’s.i
My field school
students have excavated the Curles kitchen and much of its environs
over the past ten years, and throughout that time I have read and
re-read Jane Randolph’s book. I have prepared dishes from some of
the recipes. I have tried to identify people who are mentioned in the
book--often as sources for recipes--and to determine their
relationship with the women who kept the book. I have also combed
other cookery manuscripts which were kept in 18th-century Virginia as
well as published cookbooks available in Virginia at the time. I was
convinced that, somehow, the kitchen and the book belonged together
so naturally that the reading of one would interpret the reading of
the other. At the bottom of this effort was my hope to say something
more of women’s lives at Curles Plantation. Not just those of the
plantation mistresses and their daughters, but also the enslaved
cooks and their daughters who, after all, actually prepared
most of the foods and medicines, dug and tended the gardens, gathered
the roots and herbs, and ministered to the sick.ii
The cross reading of
site and document, site as text, document as artifact, seems to be
one of the most powerful and elegant methods of historical
archaeology. At times we find text and material telling much the same
story, one virtually illustrating and underscoring the other. Other
times we find a friction or dissonance between documents and sites or
artifacts, and here, too, lies grist for the interpretive mill. What
I found reading cookbooks and digging bricks, bones and rusted lumps
of kitchen equipage was two parallel stories: one of the
architectural changes to a building and its setting, of emerging
patterns of marketing, husbandry, butchering, ceramics preferences,
bottle usage, gardening methods, of evolving technologies and
aesthetics. The other is a story of continuity through networks,
kinship, and traditions which seemed untouched by history. A woman’s
world was described in some particular and limited ways through the
receipt book, and it seemed that Jane Randolph’s followed a track
already well-worn by the late Medieval period. Bringing parallel
texts to convergence was the problem.
The first regional
cookbook in America was Mary Randolph’s The Virginia Housewife.
Published in 1824, the book is an absolute marvel and a monument to
one of history’s great cooks. Mrs. Randolph was married to David
Meade Randolph, Jane Bolling Randolph’s grandson. David, or Davies
as he was called, grew up at Curles, and I have no doubt he was
nourished on foods and medicines prepared in the Curles kitchen from
receipts like those in Jane Randolph’s book. But Mary’s and
David’s lives were very, very different from those of their
grandparent’s generation, and Mary’s book is not merely a
19th-century published version of a Colonial receipt book. It was
here, then, I found a larger context that goes beyond Jane Randolph’s
book kept through three generations to the end of the 18th century
and the Curles kitchen and its associated trash pits, middens,
drains, garden beds, wells, cisterns, etc. For the Early Republic
world of David and Mary Randolph lay cleanly on the other side of
Revolution and Enlightenment. Here was a focus, a point of
convergence for the collocating or juxtaposing of separate texts
which, if we accept Richard Rorty’s view of the matter, is one of
the key paths to interpretation.iii
***
Remedy
For the Chollick & Stone
Take a
pint of white wine & make thereoff
a possett
then take off the Curd & seeth it
again to
Clarifye it then take of Mallow
seeds an
ozce Alkalingey berrys an ounce
Philopendula
roots an ounce Gallingall roots Do.
beat &
Seeth these altogether in a posset
Drink then
Strain it & Lett the Patient
Drink it
as warme as he can & Lay him
Down to
Sweat & within two hourse the
Stone will
break & void & he shall be
whole
Jane
Randolph Her Book, p. 39
The kitchen was built
with foundations two-and-a-half bricks thick laid in English bond
buried nearly three feet into the packed clay of the artificially
constructed terrace. The foundation sat on a broad spread footing.
Just above grade the brickwork changed to Flemish bond, as revealed
by mortar patterns from the salvaged brick work. Hundreds of
fragments of bricks with glazed headers indicate that the building
had the familiar checkerboard look of early 18th-century brick
buildings in Virginia. Perhaps the endwalls had been decorated with
diaperwork like that which once adorned the chimney of this
building’s near-neighbor and contemporary, Malvern Hill Plantation
house. The building had been constructed originally with two rooms
and a central chimney with small fireboxes facing each room. Sometime
later, in the 1720s or 30s, another room had been added to the
building, and the central wall had been demolished and rebuilt with
an enlarged cooking hearth and bread oven facing the center room. A
new firebox was constructed behind the main hearth, on the other side
of the crosswall, in order to warm the eastern room. The large
western room had been floored in small cobblestones. A perfect
rectangle with no paving indicated the location of a boxed-in stair
against the south wall leading to the garret quarters above. The
eastern room contained a root cellar lying in front of the hearth. In
it we found the remains of a large stoneware jar that had once held
beer, or vinegar, or meat pickled in brine.
The partially robbed
foundation trenches and adjacent middens contained fragmentary
remains of kitchen hardware: a bit from a butcher-block plane, chain
and dogs from a spit jack, iron hooks, cutlery, trivets, pots, and
other pieces still unidentified. Outside the eastern door lay a rich
midden with food remains, ceramics, and scattered arms and weights of
one or more stillyard balances. Just south of the building we found
the filled excavation of an underground cooler or meat house,
abandoned in the late 18th century and filled with huge amounts of
kitchen refuse. Likewise we found a kitchen well. It too was filled
with trash at the same time as the meat house. A barrel cistern had
stood at the southeast corner of the building and its overflow was
carried by a deep drain to a “stew pond” which had watered and
fertilized the kitchen garden beds lying at the foot of the terrace.
The beds themselves were square and rectangular excavations paved, or
“crocked” in the mid-18th century with broken pottery and bottles
to provide drainage. Another drain ran from the laundry and
brew-house to the stew pond and garden beds
From the door in the
south facade of the building a brick wall ran out across the middle
garden terrace towards the river. From the opposing door in the north
facade ran the colonnade back to the mansion. This axis formed by the
colonnade and brick wall divided the manor house complex into its
east working half and its west formal half. The colonnade ran to a
bulkhead entrance into the basement in the east gable end of the
mansion, and there, in the basement, had been a warming kitchen and
storage rooms paved with broken glass beneath a rammed clay floor to
prevent vermin from getting to the food supply and wine cellar. Lying
just below the kitchen at the foot of the terrace, alongside the
brick garden wall, stood one of the small frame buildings which
probably housed enslaved servants assigned to duties in the kitchen,
garden, and elsewhere in the manor house compound. The stair in the
kitchen led to garret quarters where the chief cook and her family
lived.
We can conceive of the
Curles manor house complex in the 18th century as having been divided
axially into quadrants. Crossing the north-south axis formed by the
colonnade and garden wall, passing through the kitchen, was an
east-west line which ran parallel to the 95-foot-long mansion,
continuing across the tract to the laundry, and on to the barn, then
along a road and fenceline to one of several field quarters. South of
this line lay the river face of the plantation, stretching out on
three broad terraces fringed with yet another cluster of quarters for
the enslaved workers and artisans that made the plantation work. The
northern face of the complex faced towards the Curles Church, built
by Richard Randolph, toward the Quaker’s Road, the guest quarters
and overseer’s compounds. Lying immediately in front of the mansion
was a parterre and a family burial plot. Later in the century the
master stable, ice house, and store house were constructed here as
well, and the northern end of the parterre was fringed with a lane
lined with shops and more quarters.
The prime division was
along the axis dividing east and west halves of the compound. The
western border was yet another line of shops and quarters, and the
steep rolling road to the vast Curles wharf and landing. The western
rooms of the mansion, I believe, served as the dining room and
parlor. East of the center passage were, I suspect, offices for the
master and mistress to manage their respective domains.
Perhaps it isn’t too
much of a structural stretch to see the west half of the plantation
complex as male, oriented to public interaction, church and state.
The eastern half seems to include the domains of work, of production,
of activity. The east yard and eastern rooms were lighted and warmed
by the morning sun. As day passed, the western yards and rooms gained
the advantage of the late sun. The northern face was towards the
neighborhood, the church, the Henrico community. The southern face
was to the river, the colonial networks, commerce, the world accessed
by water. The mistress’s charge included the eastern quarters of
the manor house compound with the kitchen, the laundry, the vegetable
and herb gardens, the stockyard, barns, and the houses of the
servants who worked in the manor house compound.
The kitchen stood
firmly in the southeastern yard, but walled off from the river
entrance path, excluded from the broader colonial domain. It
dominated and defined the eastern yard with its numerous quarters,
shops, work spaces, pens, barns, and kitchen gardens. Leading east
out of the compound was the principal road to the main field
quarters. Tucked far to the south on the terrace edge, the kitchen,
too was excluded from the neighborhood interaction, the social life
centered around the church and courthouse, the primary world of
three generations of Richard Randolphs. While the east yard, and
especially the southeast or kitchen quadrant could be viewed as a
female-gendered space, it would be a big mistake to see the domestic
and managerial domain of the plantation as the sole sphere of the
Randolph women.
***
Shugar
Cakes the
best
way
Take 1 lb
3qrs. of good butter
Well washd
in rose water
A pound of
flower a pound
of D.R.
Shugar Beat &
Sifted 10
Egs Leave out
1/2 the
whites a whole
Nutmeg
grated mix the
Butter &
Shugar together
first then
half the flower
then the
Egs and Nutmeg
then the
rest of the flower
put
currants in some
Carriways
in Some, &
Some plain
Bake y'm in
Little
Pans-
Pr. Mrs
Herbert
Jane
Randolph Her Book, p. 145
Like other receipt
books of the period, Jane Randolph Her Book contains recipes for food
and medicine preparations which were gathered from various sources.
Many of these came from kinswomen and neighbors, others from chemists
and physicians, and many were adapted from published sources and
widespread oral traditions. The sources credited by the book’s
authors are sometimes given in the receipt titles, such as “Mr
Chowns receipt for fitts in children,” or, to give an example of a
particularly descriptive title: “Mrs Barretts approv'd Oyntment For
the Irruptilis or St Anthony fire or a blast or any Swelling in ye
Breast or in any other part or to Anoynt a woman after hard Labour or
for the Piles outward or inwardly given in a Glister useing it
Instead of Oil for the Same or any other sort of Burn or Scald.”
Some other examples
are:
--To make a Cake Madam
Orlis's way
--Dr Butlers Oyl
--The Lady Allens water
--Thomas Edwards
Receipt for Sturgeon
-- Mrs Chiswel's
Receipt for a Cake, very good
-- Mrs Lanhorns way to
Bottle Cherrys
-- Mr Hinters Receipt,
to harden Fat
-- The old Talors
Receit for a Purging.
-- Barans Receipt for a
Rumatism
-- Eye Water, by Mrs
Farquer.
-- Doctor Jemmisons
Diet Drink
-- Mrs Dudlys Cake
--A Very Good Plumb
Cake, Not too Rich Thise Reecipt is in the Book Mr Rees gave to Jenny
Walke, and is exceeding good
This last receipt was
probably entered by Jane Randolph Walke and may have come from her
sister-in-law. One of my favorite receipts, and one which I have
tried to duplicate with my amateurish brewing skills, is for “Good
Ale.” This receipt is noted as “P[er] Mrs. Cary.” Mrs. Cary was
a kinswoman of Jane Randolph.
Take 3
Bushels malt 1/2 high & 1/2 Pail
dry'd let
your water boil them & put into your
Mashing
tubb, When the Steem is gone
off, so as
you may see your face; then put
your malt,
& after mashing it well then
cover it
with a blanket, Let it stand 2
hours,
then draw it of Slow, then boil it
three or
four hours, till the hops curdles
when
boiled Enough, cool a little, & work
that with
your yest, & so put the rest
of your
wort in as it cools, which must
be let in
small Tubs, let it work till
your yest
begins to curdle then turn it
& stop
your Barrel when it has done
working;
Note to Every Bushels malt
a Quarter
of pound of hops
The resulting beer is a
dark sweetish brew and, in its 18th-century incarnation, it was
probably embroidered with the “house flavors” of the wild yeasts
and bacteria endemic to the Curles cellar, as well as the distinctive
blending of lactic acid, acetic acid, tannic acid and complex esters
and oxidation products one expects from open ferments in wooden tubs
and storage in barrels. The very foreigness of my approximation to
Mrs. Cary’s Good Ale serves well enough to remind me of the
distance between history and present experience and expectation, but
when I realize that I cannot imagine if the hops available to
18th-century Virginians were fresh, floral, spicy, cheesy or just
bitter, then I am forced to admit the impossibility of knowing the
past in those nuances which make all the difference.iv
Besides “Good Ale,”
Mrs. Cary also contributed one of several plum cake recipes in the
manuscript. There is a recipe for cookies titled “Mrs. Byrd’s
Jumbels.” Mrs. Byrd was the mistress of neighboring Westover
plantation. Other neighbors and kinswomen who contributed to the
manuscript include Sally and Elizabeth Pleasants, who lived at the
head of Curles Neck beside the Church, and Jane Randolph Walke’s
sister, Elizabeth Randolph. A receipt credited to “AW” probably
came from her husband, Anthony. There is also a recipe for metheglen
credited to “Mrs. Mary Randolph,” probably Mrs. Cary’s
grand-daughter. I will return to her shortly.
***
The trash pits and
middens contained the bones of beef and hogs, sheep, deer and rabbit,
tortoise and turtle, frogs, raccoons, catfish, sturgeon, and gar.
Chickens, of course, and quail, and ducks, geese, and passenger
pigeons and a bald eagle. And the leg of a bear.
***
For a
broken Cancer
this
Receipt Cost
the old
Lady Rundell 200 L in germany
The
Caustick powder
Take
yellow Arsenick an Ounce Bole
Armoniack
half an ounce make ym to
fine
powder & mix them well together
Jane
Randolph Her Book, p. 35
The manor house complex
is covered with broken wine bottle fragments. The garden beds were
paved with them. The trash pits are full of them. Hundreds, probably
thousands, of smashed wine bottles aerate the earth of the
archaeological site of Curles Plantation. The first firm confirmation
that we had, indeed, found the Curles site came from a wine bottle
seal marked “R. Randolph, 1735.” Most of the few dozen seals we
have recovered are marked with the initials of one of the Richard
Randolphs, but other names occur as well, including the Randolph’s
neighbors, the Pleasants, and the mens’ more distant colonial-elite
cronies, such as Carter Braxton. But we don’t need archaeological
artifacts to trace the networks of the Richard Randolphs of Curles,
for these are inscribed in dozens of documents, through court
proceedings, land transfers, marriages, etc.
No networks were more
important to the 18th-century elite men of Virginia than those mapped
out in kinship relations, and the cookery manuscript reveals that the
women of Curles maintained equally extensive kin-based networks as
well as neighborly relations. Some of the contributions to the book
come from well beyond the neighborhood and the family, however. There
is a “Philadelphia Receipt. for a Fever, & Ague.” Another is
annotated: “Mr. Sylvanus Bevin Apothecary, Plow Court Lombard
Street, London,” and there is one “Prescrib'd by Mr. John Watson
of Suffolk.” And one can’t help but wonder what led “the old
Lady Rundull (Randolph?) to spend 200 pounds on a receipt for “a
broken cancer”--probably a cancor--in Germany.
Even more revealing
insight into the nature of Jane Randolph’s domain at Curles comes
from a precious few leaves from her plantation stores accounts which
appear in the cookery manuscript. These records are for debits to
accounts for disbursements from the plantation stores during the fall
of 1739, along with credits tendered towards those accounts as late
as 1743. The first account is that of “Mrs Margery,” who, on 19
October 1939 obtained various dry goods which, along with her debit
of 1 shilling on “George’s acct.,” indebted her to Mrs.
Randolph to the tune of 1 pound sterling. Nothing in the credit
column suggests this debt was ever paid.
The next account is
that of “Cate,” whose purchase if dry goods on the 21st and 22nd
of October, 1739, cost 12 s, 4p., of which she immediately paid 1
shilling, but no other credit is noted. Also on the 21st, “Joan”
received cotton valued at 7s 7p, but only after paying 1s 7p on an
older debt. The following day “Sam” bought stockings and a
worsted cap worth 5s. He paid half the bill only. And so it goes. In
fact, there is little evidence that anyone every paid off their
entire debt to Mrs. Randolph. One exception is “Joan,” who was
finally credited with the 7s 7p she owed for cotton. She paid her
debt on June 2nd, 1743. There are notes that some other accounts were
settled. A relatively large debt of Mr. Peter Randolph, Mrs.
Randolph’s brother-in-law, for dry goods, clothing and other goods
was listed as having been settled by private account with “R R,”
Jane's husband, Richard.
From these account
entries it seems that Mrs. Randolph’s world had three sorts of
people in it. The first group comprises persons known primarily by
their functional relation to Curles, such as “the gardener,” and
a large number of persons of both genders known to Mrs. Randolph
primarily by their given names: Cate, Joan, Sam, Ned, etc. There were
also people she referred to by both given and family names, such as
Mrs. Sackville Brewer, Mrs. Baugh, and Mrs. Joseph Hobson. Anyone
familiar with local history will recognize most of this second group
as middling and yeoman planters living in the neighborhood. The third
group were gentry, many of whom were her or her husband’s
relatives, such as “Beverly Randolph, Esqr.,” “Mr. Peter
Randolph,” “Major John Bolling,” and “Madm. Carey.”
Jane Randolph handled
the accounts of these three sorts of people differently. The singly
named persons, like Joan, were expected to pay something on
their debt immediately, even though the amount collected was often a
small percentage of what was owed. Of the middling or small planters,
most seem never to have repaid their debts even in part. For the
great planters, there was some special treatment. Either a large debt
was simply crossed out, as in the case of that of “Madm. Carey,”
or, as with Peter Randolph, settled in private by Mrs. Randolph’s
husband.
Rhys Isaacs has done an
especially good job of describing the relations of debt which seem to
have knit together Virginia society in the 18th century. The planters
remained hugely indebted to their merchant factors in England and
Scotland, while local middling and small planters remained
perpetually indebted to the great planters like the Randolphs. There
does appear to be one group from whom repayment was expected, and
those were the folks with single names: mostly likely Curles
servants, indentured or enslaved. One can only wonder, of course,
what benefit accrued to Joan for settling her debt of seven shilling
seven pence four years after she incurred it.
While Jane Randolph’s
plantation store accounts speak of her relationships to a broader
community of household, neighbors and kin, and of her
responsibilities for managing at least a part of the commercial
enterprise of the plantation, they also show the boundaries of her
world. She was not, for instance, privy to the debt arrangements of
her husband’s relations and peers. That was simply none of her
business. On the other hand, she kept close track of the withdrawals
from stores by her husband himself.
Those credits which do
occur are for payments in cash. In fact, the accounting is all in
sterling rather than in pounds of tobacco, which was the more common
currency of the country. I suspect that her husband kept track of,
and produced the bills and receipts for, exchanges valued in tobacco.
These were the larger and, in many ways, more visible transactions of
the plantation. But Mrs. Randolph’s handling of the stores accounts
shows that she had access to an extremely scarce and highly valued
resource. The culture of debt was a system of perpetual IOUs and
bills for tobacco put up in cask in public warehouses. The ultimate
reckoning lay in factors’ account books in London, Bristol, and
Glasgow. Cash, many often complained, was practically unseen. William
Byrd wrote of going for long periods of time without two coins to rub
together in his pocket. But Mrs. Randolph had the keys to the
storehouse, and she had cash in an economy of honor and promise among
men.
***
A
Receipt for a Purging
Take half
an oz: of Kipscacuanna, decant it in one
equal
quantity of Clarit, & Water. let it boil from a qut
to less
than a pint. Strain it, & add one Spoonful of Oil
give it in
a Glister. If the Patient be very weak, or
a Chid,
you must infuse less, of the Root. a Dram
being a
full Quanty for a Man--J Coupland
Jane
Randolph Her Book, p. 97
The recipes in Jane
Randolph Her Book are notable for their almost complete lack of
American ingredients and techniques. The recipe above is an
exception. It is based on the American Indian purgative, Ipecac
(Kipscacuanna), a member of the holly family. The rarity of American
influence isn’t unusual, for most of the Colonial receipt books
contain recipes which vary but little from their Renaissance and
Medieval counterparts. Many of the recipes have almost exact
parallels in other manuscripts and, indeed, in the most popular
published cookery books of the era, such as those of Richard Bradley
and Eliza Smith. The manuscript gives us no recipes using maize, or
“Indian meal,” although we know from sources such as William Byrd
and Phillip Fithian that corn and corn meal were regularly used in
the elite plantation households of 18th-century Virginia. There are
no recipes using beans (other than European-bred “French beans”),
or squash, or pumpkins, or black-eyed peas, or watermelons, or rice.
One of the few food recipes using New World Ingredients is for a
pickle. It calls for the use of “long pepper” and “Jamaico”
(sic) pepper, The first of these may refer to capsicum, while Jamaica
pepper is allspice (pimento). Both of these ingredients appear in
European recipes at least by the late 16th century, so while they are
of New World origin, they are not Virginian, and they don’t reflect
a local creole cuisine.
Like the purge receipt
given above, another of the very few recipes in the Curles receipt
book which is centered around an American ingredient is also
medicinal. This receipt is unique in some other ways. It is one of
the longest in the book, and while many of the medicinal preparations
include a description lauding them for their efficacy in various
cures, none approaches “The Oyntment of Tobacco” for its praise
of nearly miraculous properties spoken in nearly liturgical tones.
The
Oyntment of Tobacco
Take of
Tobacco Leaves 6 pounds
hogs Lard
Clarifyed 3 pounds Lett ye
Herb being
bruised be infused in a pint
or read
Sed wine a whole night in
the
morning put the Lard to the
herbs &
Lett it boyle Over a Slow
Fire to
the Consuming of the wine
Then
strain it of the Juice of Tobacco
a pint
Rosin 12 ounces sett it on the
Fire again
& Lett it boyle to ye consum
ption of
the Juice then take it off
& Lett
it stand a whole week then
Sett it on
a Slow fire & when it boyls
Putt in a
Little by Little of a time of
the Powder
of round beachworck roots
6 ounces
then Lett it Stand boyling
for half
an hour Stirring it all the
Time with
a wooden Stick then add
it half a
pound of bee's wax & when its
Melted
take it off & Lett it Stand to
Settle
then pour it off gently from ye
Dregs you
must Stir it first nor Losse
it till
its Cold
The
Virtues of this Oyntment
It Cures
humorous Apposthumus wounds
Ulcers Gun
Shots blotches & Scabs Itch
Stinging
with Bees or Wasps hornetts
Venemous
Beasts wound made with
Poysned
Arrows it helps Sealing with
burneing
Oil or Lightning & that with
out a Scar
it helps nasty Rotten
Intryfied
Ulcers though in the Lungs
In
Fistulaes though the bone be
Afflicted
it Shall Seale it without an
Instrument
& bring up ye flesh from
ye very
bottom a wound Dresst with
This will
never Putryfie a wound made
with a
Weapon that [illeg.] Can follow
Oint with
this & you need not fear any
Danger of
your head Aches anoint ye
Temples &
you Shall have Ease the
Stomach
being Anointed with it no
Infirmety
harbours there no not
Asthmas's
nor Consumptions of ye Lungs
the belly
being Anointed with it
Helps the
Chollick & Passion
it helps
the Hermoroids & piles &
is the
best for the Gout of all sorts
Jane
Randolph Her Book pp78-80
Clearly tobacco held a
very special place in the culture of Colonial Virginia. Its virtues
for that period are more typically seen as economic ones, but here we
can see that the magical properties which the Indians themselves once
credited it with were appreciated by women charged with the
responsibility for curing. I wonder from what source comes the
testament of this ointment’s effectiveness against poisoned arrows!
While many of Virginia’s young gentry, including several Randolph
men, fought in the Indian wars on the frontier at mid-century, there
surely was little call for such a cure in the precincts of Tidewater.
There seems to be
little or no Indian or African influence in the culinary receipts,
even though we know that African and Native American crops were
widely grown and African- and Indian-influenced dishes were
completely entrenched in the cuisine of the period. Certainly the
fact that African and African-American women did nearly all of the
gardening and food preparation helps to explain the widespread
influence of African foodways on Southern cuisine to this day. So why
is it so blatantly absent in the cookbooks of the 18th century? An
answer suggests itself in reading Mary Randolph’s The Virginia
Housewife written in the following century.
***
The difficulties I encountered when I first entered on the duties of
a House-Keeping life, from the want of books sufficiently clear and
concise, to impart knowledge to a Tyro, compelled me to study the
subject, and by actual experiment, to reduce every thing, in the
culinary line, to proper weights and measures...The government of a
family bears a Liliputian resemblance to the government of a nation.
The contents of the treasury must be known...A regular system must be
introduced into each department...The grand arcanum of management
lies in three simple rules: “Let every thing be done at the proper
time, keep every thing in its proper place, and put every thing to
its proper use.”
Mary
Randoph, from the preface of The Virginia Housewife (Hess
1984).
On the title page of
her fine cook book, Mary Randolph had the publisher print an
aphorism: “Method is the Soul of Management.” Mrs. Randolph’s
preface stresses the notion that method and management are the sole
of housewifery, a surprisingly modern concept expressed in language
that almost presages the “scientific” cooking school which came
to dominate American cookery at the end of the 19th century. But Mrs.
Randolph’s rationalism is not a product of late modernity, of
industrialism, but of its dawning: the Enlightenment. Enlightenment
values permeate Mary Randolph’s Virginia Housewife in the
subtleties of careful measurements which, the author assures us, she
has refined through continual experimentation. Whether as the result
of such rationality, or of pure talent and intelligent intuition, we
cannot doubt the quality of the results. Mary Randolph was hailed as
the finest cook of her day in Richmond. Apparently, people vied for
invitations to her dinner parties, and when she opened a boarding
house, it became the dining spot of the state’s capital
city.
Her cook book differs
from its predecessors in many other, more important, ways, however.
Here we find many recipes that are purely American, based on American
ingredients and prepared in ways that indicate centuries of creolized
cultural practices. Her ingredients include corn, hominy, rice,
squashes, chile peppers, and other staples of southern cooking.
Recipes for johnny cakes, buckwheat cakes, cornbread and other
commonplaces of our culture stand alongside the most sumptuously
spiced creations tinged with European, East Indian, and Caribbean
flavors and techniques. The Virginia Housewife reveals the
unique touches of a talented and creative cook. This individual
genius comes through loud and clear and proclaims a very different
era in cookery books. No longer are ancient “receipts” -- were
they called that because they were “received” rather than
created?--faithfully copied for the transmission of a cultural model
that stretches back to the Medieval period. Here, instead, is a
combination of brand-new creations with the old, tried-and-true ways
transformed through an individual vision. And the old includes not
only the academic, accepted “English” heritage, but the folk or
country creole recipes passed through oral, living tradition rather
than through meticulously copied canonical texts.
Mary Randolph, whose
nick-name was Molly, was a great-granddaughter of Jane Bolling
Randolph. She was born in August of 1762 and raised at Tuckahoe
Plantation just west of Richmond. She married her second cousin,
David Meade Randolph, a grandson of Jane Bolling Randolph. He grew up
at Curles, just east of Richmond. David’s father, Col. Richard
Randolph (II), had established a plantation for Davies and Molly just
across the river from Curles, and it was here they lived through much
of the 1780s and 90s. They were visited in 1796 by the Duc de la
Rouchefoucault Liancourt at their farm, which they called
“Presquile.” He wrote that “Mr. Davies Randolph is fully
entitled to the reputation he enjoys of being the best farmer in the
whole country.” The Randolphs, along with six adult and two child
slaves farmed a plantation of 750 acres, most of which was forest or
swamp. They produced primarily highly profitable harvests of wheat.
From the James River they harvested sturgeon, shad, and herrings
which, once salted, added an additional 800-900 dollars annually to
their income.v
***
Thomas
Edwardses Receipt to keep Sturgeon
You must
wash & Scrap it very clean,
then take
out the bones, and grisle,
then boile
it in Salt and water, scum it
all the
while tis boiling
when tis
Colld enoug, lay it on clean straw to
drain,
then take some vinegar, and the
liquor it
was boild in, an equal guan-
tyt boil
it together with pepper and
Salt, let
it cool and settle, when cold,
wipe the
sturgeon, and put it into the
Souce, put
the oil on it and cover it close
Jane
Randolph Her Book, p. 161
To Boil
Sturgeon
Leave the skin on, which must be nicely scraped, take out the
gristle, rub it with salt, and let it lie an hour, then put it on
cold water with some salt and few cloves of garlic; it must be
dredged with flour before it is put into the water, skim it
carefully, and when dished, pour over it melted butter with chopped
parsley, a large spoon of mushroom catsup, one of lemon pickle, and
one of pepper vinegar; send some of it to table in a sauce boat; the
sturgeon being a dry fish, rich sauce is necessary.
Mary
Randolph, The Virginia Housewife (Hess 1984: p. 69)
Among the faunal
remains recovered from late 18th-century trash deposits adjacent to
the kitchen at Curles were the bones of sturgeon, catfish, and gar.
Oddly, there were no white bass, striped bass, yellow perch,
pickerels, shad, alewives, porgeys, or any of the other dozens of
food fish species which are common to this stretch of the James
River, and which play so important a part in the cuisine of the
Chesapeake region. The Curles receipt manuscript contains only two
recipes for fish, and neither are for preparing them for the table.
Both are for preserving fish: the sturgeon recipe, above, and another
for pickling herrings.
In contrast to the
kitchen trash pit assemblages, remains from the root cellar of an
18th-century slave quarter at Curles contains a richly varied
assemblage of fish remains. One possible reason for the paucity of
fish at the manor house compound is that this class of food was
perceived by the Randolphs primarily as either food for slaves, or as
a product to be prepared for sale in local markets, or more likely,
for export. The testimony of Liancourt from his visit to Presquile
shows that some fish proved a valuable commodity.
***
Due, in part, to
Davies’ poor health and to the burden of tremendous debt left him
by his father, Davies and Molly sold Presquile before the turn of the
century and moved to Richmond where they bought a large house which
soon acquired an amalgam of their nicknames and became widely known
as “Moldavia.” Davies had held an appointment as federal marshal
of Virginia under Washington and Adams, but his federalist politics
caused him to have a bitter falling out with his cousin, Jefferson,
who fired him in 1802. While Davies proved to be a capable
entrepreneur, and is credited with a number of inventions, the
primary support of the Randolphs soon became the responsibility of
Mary. One important bit of fall-out from the American Revolution was
the end of the system of perpetual debt. The Treaty of Paris provided
that Virginia’s planters would repay all their debts British
factors, and those markers were called in. Richard Randolph’s debts
had been no greater than those of most of his peers, but they were
great enough to lead to the loss of numerous plantations. David Meade
Randolph, his brothers, and their sons would fight much of their
lives to avoid financial ruin from the debts of Richard of Curles.
Mary Randolph’s boarding house and her extraordinary cooking skills
kept her and her husband not only solvent, but centered in Richmond
society, although they eventually had to sell their big town house.
I have little doubt
that Mary urged the sale of the plantation and the move to Richmond.
For reasons history doesn’t tell us, she eventually moved to
Washington D.C. where she lived for a while apart from her husband,
although he soon joined her. In Washington, Mary Randolph again
became known for her cookery and hospitality. Here she worked to
complete and publish her masterpiece, The Virginia Housewife.
Four years after its first edition was issued, Mary Randolph died.
She is buried at Arlington, then the home of some of her kin. Her
epitaph tells us that “her intrinsic worth needs no eulogium.”
***
Mary Randolph was no
housewife. Certainly not in the traditional sense conveyed, for
instance, in Richard Bradley’s The Country Housewife published
a century before Mary Randolph’s book. Mary did not raise a family,
and despite her plantation upbringing and the bucolic beginnings of
her married life to Virginia’s “best farmer” --and I have
little doubt that her management skills and creative efforts
lent much to the success of that farm--she eschewed the role of
home-maker. While working within the realm of the “domestic,” it
is clear that Mary Randolph’s activities, like those of her
husband, were primarily entrepreneurial. There is no hint in the
meager documents of her life that she simply wielded her skills at
cookery and hospitality to hold onto the fading glories of elite
society; rather, she seems a person engaged, like a great many others
of her age in the New Republic, in finding a way to turn her
individual skills and efforts into a comfortable living. No longer
content with the pre-ordained quarter of life carved out in the
semiotics of a Georgian plantation landscape, Mary Randolph embraced
both the Enlightenment and the Revolution and promises of individual
accomplishment. And along with others in the urban society of
post-Revolutionary Richmond, she embraced the liberty and pride of
her American, creole heritage, and the place her new country’s
status made for her in a world order of nations tied by diplomacy,
trade, and cultural exchange. Born a colonial, Mary Randolph lived to
help create, and enjoy, her own liberty.
***
About the time that
Mary and David Meade Randolph moved to Richmond, just as the 18th
century drew to a close, David’s older brother, the third Richard
Randolph of Curles, was also forced by their father’s debts to sell
Curles Plantation. Throughout most of the Antebellum years the estate
was owned by absentee owners. Even the overseer lived elsewhere. The
mansion house and kitchen became quarters for slaves and tenants.
Curles became a kind of industrial farm, a vast 2500-acre tract
worked by a hundred or more slaves. The old axial symmetry of the
manor house compound remained partially intact, due to some remaining
fences, but the kitchen gardens appear to have been abandoned. The
stew pond dried up. The ditches which had fed it were filled in. A
huge hog butchering shed and rendering hearth were erected right in
front of the north facade of the mansion, bringing a dirty activity
out of the kitchen yard and into the former parterre, defacing the
ornamented house with an edifice of practical purpose. A storage shed
was built across the southern facade of the kitchen, covering its
century-old checkerboard brickwork. In 1812 the plantation was leased
to the militia who trashed the mansion and yards. In 1814, John
Randolph of Roanoke visited the old estate, probably on the occasion
of his grandmother’s death, and complained of its dilapidated
condition.
Federal soldiers camped
at Curles through the Peninsula Campaign, and probably continually
thereafter until the fall of Richmond. They tore down the kitchen,
brick by brick, leaving behind their own trash. The hardware of
fallen soldiers and horses were buried on the site to keep them from
enemy hands. Soldiers hauled bricks, boards, nails and other useful
things off to wherever they were needed to build their winter huts.
***
Structuralism is
seductive. James Deetz’s brilliant book, In Small Things
Forgotten, has influenced a generation of the brightest
historical archaeologists in many good ways and, like most who teach
the subject, I make my students read it carefully. But I worry about
finding some essential structural property--a Georgian mind set, or
whatever--an adequate summary of a people, a culture, a time.
Reducing the contingencies of history and the vagaries of individual
actions and motivations to an elegant corporate intuition, a frame
described by a few limited axes of variation, to use Mary Douglas’s
model, seems no different to me than attempting to describe all human
life by a small set of simultaneous differential equations. The model
may be real, but I’m not sure it tells us much.
It is not difficult to
see Deetz’s “re-Angicization” model, originally proposed for
18th-century New England, reflected in the “Georgian” world of
Virginia. But New England and Virginia were nonetheless very
different places, and life for Jane Randolph followed a very
different model than it did for Cate or Joan or Mrs. Margery, or
Richard Randolph, for that matter. But the imposing of different
frames upon the same scene can help animate the scenario. Jane
Randolph Her Book is an example of an ancient model for women’s
place in English culture, one which far pre-dates the Georgian formal
division of space and action found in the structure of Curles
Plantation. These two very different worlds are like a
cross-polarized crystal specimen in a petrographic microscope.
Illuminate them with the light of the Enlightened world of Mary
Randolph, and the colors begin to dance. There is something to be
said for seeking difference, rather than commonality, the playing of
atoms in the interstices and at the margins of structure.
As a text for revealing
“real life,” Jane Randolph’s manuscript is severely limited,
because it is a document of culture transmission, not of cultural
creation. It, too, is a frame, a structure into which the Randolph
girls were to grow, and the enslaved cooks were to become
enculturated. But history tells us that it didn’t work out that
way. The kitchen and plantation provide us insights into the imposed
spatial zonation of activity, but they give us little insight into
individual actions within, across, in spite of those prescribed
boundaries. Jane Randolph’s life was not lived by a cook book. She
probably cooked very little, and the recipes in her manuscript
probably reflect very poorly the nature of meals actually consumed in
any given day at Curles Plantation.
Mary Randolph broke the
frames, and while her time period permitted a more public display of
initiative and performance by some women, we should not imagine that
her female ancestors were somehow less innovative, less effective,
less important in creating, testing, and re-creating their own
cultural matrices. Nor should we believe that 18th-century Curles was
somehow English and that only after the Revolution did culture take
on American flavors. While The Virginia Housewife is surely
the product of individual genius, it, too, is a cultural document,
the product of those Georgian mind-sets and ancient traditions and
treatises on housewifery. But also of a lived world that no longer
had to be described in prescriptive, mythological terms.
For the
Bite of a Dog
Take of
grey ground Liverwort; in Powder, one
dram; of
Elicampane Powder one dram; of black
Hellebore
Root, in fine Powder, twenty grains;
of native
or factitious Cinnabar, well levigated, ten
grains.
mix them together for one Dose, to be taken
on an
empty Stomach the first Morning, if possible,
after the
Bite (fasting a few Hours after it) in a glass
of Wine;
or Wine and Water.
This
Medicine is such a powerful Alterative, that,
if taken
in fortyeight Hours after the Bite (Temperance
strictly
observed) it will not only resist and correct, but
soon expel
the Poison. Innumerable Experiments have
been tried
with the greatest Success, not only upon the
Human
Species, but upon Dogs and other Animals;
when those
that took it did well, and those who
took it
not in a short time died raving mad.
Tho' it
may appear to some a Remedy of no consequence,
as most
things do when once made public, it is,
notwithstanding
found by Experience (if given in
due time)
to be as infallible a Preservative in the
above
mention'd case, as Mercury is in raising a
Salivation,
or the peruvian Bark in curing a
regular
Intermittion
Jane
Randolph Her Book, p. 94
Like Mary Randolph,
historical archaeology is partly a product of the Enlightenment: in
its faith in method, and its quest for management; in its notion that
a recipe is a repeatable experiment rather than an instantiation of
history; in the belief that the human world can be adequately
described as patterns and processes. But God, the devil, and the
truth, are in the details, and I worry about the taste of Mrs. Cary’s
“Good Ale,” and I am astonished at how little I can know about
the world described in Jane Randolph’s book.
Notes
i
. Jane Randolph Cook Book, Mss 5:5 W1507:1, Virginia Historical
Society, Richmond. My attribution of the majority of the receipts to
Jane Randolph Walke follows that by historian Jane Carson, in a
letter dated February 1, 1970 which accompanies the facsimile. As
the 1796 and later entries include names of the Curles Randolphs of
that era and their neighbors, I assume that this third Jane was the
daughter of Richard Randolph (II) and Ann Meade. That makes her both
a sister-in-law and a first cousin of Mrs. Mary Randolph, about whom
I will write shortly. If my attribution is correct, then the receipt
book may have remained at Curles throughout the 18th century, or
else returned there after a sojourn with the Walkes in Princess Ann
County.
ii
. Some important published works include Rennaissance Lady's
Companion ***; Richard Bradley, The Country Housewife and Ladyís
Director, Prospect Books, London, 1980 [originally published in
1727, 1732 and 1736]; Eliza Smith, The Complete Housewife,
Studio Editions, 1994 [This is a facsimile of the 16th edition of
1758, but the recipes are most from the 17th and very early 18th
century period]. A much earlier, but very useful source is The
English Hus-wife by G. Markham. A facsimile of the 1615 edition
is published by Walter J. Johnson, Norwood, 1973. For a classic
Virginia manuscript that has been published in a very authoritative
edition, see Martha Washington's Booke of Cookery and Booke of
Sweetmeats, edited by Karen Hess, Columbia University Press,
1981. Below I will discuss in greater length The Virginia
Housewife by Mary Randolph. A facsimile of the original 1824
edition, along with additions from 1825 and 1828, is available with
excellent scholarly comment and criticism by Karen Hess, University
of South Carolina Press, 1984. For those interested in colonial
cookery in general, two very good secondary sources are Jane
Carsonís Colonial Virginia Cookery, Williamsburg Research
Studies, 1968; and Nancy Carter Crumpís Hearthside Cooking,
EPM Publications, McLean, Virginia, 1986. Crump's book is the place
to look for those who want to try their hand at hearthside cooking,
or to prepare recipes based on colonial originals adapted for modern
equipment.
iii
. Rorty, Interprepation as Re-Contextualization.
iv
. The Mrs. Cary referred to here and elsewere in the book was
probably Mary Randolph Cary, Jane Randolph Walkeís sister, or,
perhaps, it was her sisterís mother-in-law. The Cary's lived at
Ampthill, just a few miles away across the river from Curles.
v
. Hess, Liancourt, and Odell