Bannock is a simple or quick- bread cooked on a hearth, or in a frying pan. This type of bread also was easy to make on the trail, when it was rolled into a strip, wound around a green stick and cooked over an open fire.
When cornmeal and an egg were included, it was called a "bannock cake." Bannock is a popular foodstuff in Scotland and Ireland, and it is possible this type of bread originated in the British Isles--see origin of the word below.
The history of Wolfeboro New Hampshire (page 537) describes how bannock was prepared: "Thick batter was spread upon a plate or small sheet of iron, sometimes upon a bit of board, and set up edgewise before the kitchen fire. Where the family was large, a considerable number of these would be before the fire at the same time. Rude as the method may seem, it required some skill to properly manage the baking. Care must be taken that the bread did not burn or slide down on the hearthstone. When one side was sufficiently baked, the bannock must be "turned," that the other side might be presented to the fire. To do this skillfully was regarded as a very desirable accomplishment."
Bannock is a great item to make when recreating an American colonial meal, and also as a treat on a camping trip (just remember to bring a large cast iron skillet, the deeper the better).
Janice
-Recipe for Bannock-
-Irish Bannock-
-Online Etymology Dictionary: bannock-
-A Tale of A Scottish Bannock-
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New Hampshire Glossary: Bannock
Comments
Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Bannock
by
Terry Thornton
on Sat 05 Jan 2008 11:04 AM EST | Permanent Link
Thanks, Janice, for another interesting approach to hearth cooking. I keep learning more and more about this old method of cooking. This reminds me of the "bread on a baseball bat" approach to cooking bannock that one of my son's Scout troops attempted on a camping outing. He still talks about that! LOL!
TERRY Re: Re: New Hampshire Glossary: Bannock
by
Janice Brown
on Sat 05 Jan 2008 11:43 AM EST | Permanent Link
Terry,
And here I thought I'd heard everything! What instantly came to mind was how they were able to "turn" the bread without it landing in the fire... It is understandable why he still talks about it! lol It probably beats my story of Girl Scout camp where our breakfast meal had added protein from hundreds of little mosquitoes and bugs that landed in it during the cooking process. Janice Trackbacks
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