Amish - Member Meeting Place - Eat Your Books

Forum

Welcome Guest! You can not login or register.

Notification

Icon
Error

#1 Posted : Saturday, September 21, 2019 5:18:04 PM(UTC)
Hello Mjes. I noticed a mention of Amish in your background. I went to middle and early HS in Amish area of PA. There were Amish students in our school. Learned to love botpie ie homemade rustic noodles with chicken soup - not called potpie, PA hoagies, kraut in many forms, and the creamiest ice cream around. The Amish students who attended the school used school bus, but once outside of school, very little interaction.
#2 Posted : Saturday, September 21, 2019 8:57:37 PM(UTC)

Originally Posted by: Rinshin Go to Quoted Post
Hello Mjes. I went to middle and early HS in Amish area of PA. 


Then you likely knew someone with my maiden name Eshelman/Eschlemann/Aeschlemann and many other variations in spelling. There were 500 of us listed in the Lancaster County phone book when my uncle looked after the war. I grew up in (very) rural south central Washington where our heritage was Finnish/Lappish, Amish/German (rather than Ukrainian), and Irish. Our family was one of the few that was all three - most were pure or a mix of two. It was half an hour, half on gravel roads, to the nearest shopping - a lumber town of 2,000. So I grew up with the what you grow/what you preserve/what your neighbor grows style of cooking in which the Amish/German cooking was over-represented as it had already adjusted to American ingredients. Shall we say that barley flour, Baltic herring and reindeer weren't readily available for my Grandmother's family? It is in fermented veggies, ginger bread/cookies, slaws, and scrapple where Amish recipes really remind me of home. But my Applachian daughter-in-law, from Maryland near the Pennslyvania line, swears that my stews betray an Amish background ... especially if I add dumplings.

#3 Posted : Saturday, September 21, 2019 11:05:04 PM(UTC)
There used to be an Air Force base in Middletown Pa and some families including ours ended up living in Army depot in a small town close to Lancaster. The school cafeteria smelled of kraut many days. People were very much into preserving. I was fascinated with beet eggs because of the color and beets were unheard of in Japan in those days. What stood out for me was botpie. So comforting in colder weather. The use of tumeric in the soup must be modern interpretation to bring out the color of golden hue.
You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.