Cakes baked in the large hearth at the Vierling Home & Apothecary. |
The new year often inspires resolutions of healthier eating
and reducing food waste. For those located near the Triad, an appealing model for
both can be found from a very old source: Old
Salem Museums & Gardens in Winston-Salem.
The Moravian settlement, established in 1766 by Protestant missionaries
from what is now the Czech Republic, thrives as a restored historical village. It
includes 22 structures ranging from a boy’s school and housing for single men
and women to an African church, gun shop, various merchants and professional
offices, as well as the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts. Tyler Cox,
Old Salem’s manager of community relations, says it has more structures on
original architectural footprints than Williamsburg.
Winter garden at the Miksch House. |
Not surprisingly, growing, cooking and preserving food was a key component of community
life. Even in winter, the heirloom garden at the Miksch House remains a hub of activity.
During a recent visit, cold frames were protecting tender vegetation, orchards
were trimmed and beds were being groomed for spring plantings.
Seasonal hearth cooking and preserving techniques – as well as
coffee roasting and butter churning – are demonstrated in homesteads throughout
the village. With benefit of immaculate records kept by original occupants, costumed
interpreters present the past in context with modern realities. These unscripted,
blissfully thee-and-thou-less insights encourage visitors to engage in sensibly
informative conversations.
This welcoming stance is in sync with the Moravian’s equitable
perspective on hospitality. The lessons are especially appealing when visiting
the kitchens and gardens of former private homes and shops, which maintain the
foodways of Old Salem’s industrious
forebears. Examples of creative and, importantly, healthful seasonal cooking
abound.
Interpreter Coreen Smith demonstrates Moravian foodways in the kitchen of the Miksch House. |
If you think kale salad is a new invention, be sure
to swing by the Miksch House at dusk, when the fireplace embers are fading. You're likely to find a bowl of greens just-cut from the winter garden awaiting a simple dressing from
home-cured vinegars. Most bottles were infused with herbs and chilies from the
garden; one fancy option was a mushroom “ketchup.”
“You eat what you’ve got, and right now, we’ve got lots of
kale,” says interpreter Coreen Smith while gazing into a field dotted with leeks, turnips and Swiss
chard. Crocks resting atop a cabinet soon would be filled with cabbage to make
sauerkraut. “If we’re lucky, the garden will continue to feed us for a few more
weeks.”
Typical kitchen tools include red clay cookware and a sturdy whisk made of bound birch twigs. |
A complete tour of Old Salem’s 22 sites can be done in about
four hours, but a leisurely visit provides a glimpse of the typical dawn-to-dusk
lifestyle of namesake dwellers. A fire is stoked early in the kitchen of the
Vierling Home & Apothecary, a focus of Old Salem’s ongoing fundraising and
restoration efforts through the On Common Ground campaign. The blaze is banked
not just to tame the morning chill but also to prepare the day’s meals.
Red clay cookware and cast iron Dutch ovens are nestled on the
hearth to boil and bake whatever is available from the garden or stored in the
larder. Warm apple dumplings and a dense pound cake, with a pound of each
ingredient whisked into batter with a bundle of birch twigs, scented the air.
Very little went to waste. Stale bread was grated to thicken
soup or, in the hands of a deft cooks, repurposed to make an elegant torte with
almond flour, bread crumbs and orange peel. This particular dessert was
documented on an original Winkler Bakery receipt – a term better known today as
a recipe.
Christian Winkler was the second operator of the town bakery
and become one of the community’s most influential citizens. Recruited by the
church, which selected a suitable bride as his helpmate, he arrived in
1807. Known for his fairness and
honesty, he fed countless families with breads that sold for pennies a loaf.
Interpreter Jeffrey Sherrill bakes from original Winkler receipts, including breads, sugar cakes and wafer cookies. |
Interpreter Jeffrey Sherrill, who bakes dozens of
original-recipe breads and cakes daily, says the wood-fueled ovens at Winkler’s
are greatly affected by cold winter winds, which cause uneven heat
distribution. This makes it especially tricky to bake the wafer-thin cookies
associated with the Moravian community and sold in the bakery.
Old Salem is about a two-hour drive from Raleigh, which
makes it an appealing day trip. It is open to visitors from 9:30am to 4:30 pm
Tuesday through Saturday and 1-4:30pm Sundays. Not all sites require a ticket
for admission, and some buildings in the village are private residences. For
details, visit http://www.oldsalem.org or
call 336-721-7300 (toll free, 888-653-7253).
Note: My tour of Old Salem
Museums & Gardens was
arranged by Visit Winston-Salem. Additional posts about things to do
in Winston-Salem will follow. For information about other area events and
activities, call Visit Winston-Salem at 336-728-4200 (toll free, 866-728-4200).
I love Old Salem. Its very nice how it was preserved right in the middle of Winston-Salem.
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