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  • Nov. 1, 1876
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1876: Page 15

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    Article SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. ← Page 3 of 5 →
Page 15

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

Now there cannot be a doubt but that in nearly every , if not in every , household of the middle classes of society , to say nothing of the upper , sufficient is absolutely wasted to feed at least one poorer family—witness tbe crusts of bread , trimmings and

shreddings of meat , skimmings of fat , parings aud outsides of vegetables , and the like ; all of which properly cleaned and cooked would form many a meal not only wholesome and nutritious , but positively toothsome and savoury , only our sisters know

not how to utilise them ; the very bones , again , which are tossed aside as useless , would yield in a digester a quantity of excellent stock . We have met with one capital plan by which soup , as good as it is wholesomeis made without any expense

, further than that of the thickening : all bones , whether of meat or of poultry , instead of being " picked , " after having had the meat cut from them are carefully placed aside ; these together with any shreddings are put to stew in the digester ; the

addition of the rind of ham or bacon gives an exquisite flavour to the soup ; tops and parings of vegetables , as well as those rejected on account of their small size are

added , and when the whole has been stewed a sufficient time a capital soup is the result , which can be thickened either with oatmeal , pea-flour , or the pulp of vegetables . We must not , however , suppose that waste is confined to the well-to-do , for there is

probably no more extravagant class in existence than the extreme poor—witness the way in which the cottager who has a garden rejects those small vegetablespotatoes , for instance—which are too small to cook in the ordinary waybut which are

, quite as useful in a stew as the largest that he can produce . One other blunder , made by richer as well as poorer housewives , requires correction , which is that only the so-called primest parts of the meat are good for cooking ; no greater mistake can be

made , for every portion , properly manipulated , has not only its use but also its individual merit . That savoury dish known as " a la mode" or stewed beef is best prepared from the so-called " coarse " part of the meat taken from the shoulderwhich

, Part , indeed , is the only proper one for the Purpose . Now to return to the latter part of our first remed y , namely , the utilisation of

home and foreign products for our purpose . When we come to deal with our indigenous food-supply we find that our people act as if there were a certain definite number , and that small enough in all conscience , of animals and plants upon which we may safely feed , whilst all others are to be

avoided as poison , or at least to be shunned as carrion ; but what is the actual state of the case ? Why , that the lap of motherearth is brimming over with wholesome and nutritious products , from which we turn with disgust , simply because we have

never been accustomed to their use . Wh y should our French nei ghbours consider snails a delicacy , whilst we pass them by with loathing . We eat the periwinkle , which is exactly the same thing , and the shrimp aud prawn , which are worse ,, being

nothing more nor less than sea beetles ; then why nob snails , especially such as are within a few yards of us , as we write , find noble fellows , descendants , they say , of those brought over by the ancient Romans' ? Our gipsy friends make a luxurious meal off a hedgehog , why not we . Anyhow , it is as clean a feeder as a duck or a pig . Take small birds again ,

why should starlings , which are in one county regarded as remarkably good eating in a pie , be regarded as carrion in the next ? Now turn to the vegetable world , and see what stores of good Dame Nature provides to our hand in every field

and hedgerow : the tender tops of the hop and nettle give us excellent greens , the young dandelion aud sorrel a capital salad , arrow-root , or something very nearly resembling it , is to be had in plenty from the roots of the cuckoo-pintflour can be

; obtained from the chesnut properly cooked , aud we are much mistaken if something could not be done with the bitter acorn . Our fathers ate it , and we strongly doubt that they relished it in its acrid state , and rather fancy that they must have had some

method of making it palatable , which we surely might recover . What we have said with respect to other vegetable growths will apply equally well to the mushroom tribe . Hundreds of tons of edible fungi , other than truethat is to say the ordinary

, , mushrooms , spring up and decay where they stand , instead of going , as they might , were it not for ignorance of their wholesome properties , to feed our hungry

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-11-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111876/page/15/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
PINE'S ENGRAVED LISTS OF LODGES. Article 2
A LIST OF REGULAR LODGES, Article 3
NOTES ON THE LIST OF A.D. 1734. Article 7
EXTRACTS FROM A MINUTE BOOK OF THE LAST CENTURY. Article 8
MUSING. Article 10
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 11
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 13
FREEMASONRY. Article 17
THE RAVENNA BAPTISTERY. Article 17
GERARD MONTAGU; Article 21
PARTING. Article 23
A Review. Article 24
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 27
THE SCHOOLMASTER ABROAD. Article 29
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 31
RECIPROCAL KINDNESS. Article 34
Our Archaological Corner. Article 35
THE STORY OF A LIFE. Article 35
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 36
POETS' CORNER* Article 41
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 42
TAKEN BY BRIGANDS. Article 45
ADDRESS OF P.G.M. BRO. HON, RICHARD VAUX, AT CENTENNIAL OF AMERICAN UNION LODGE. Article 46
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Page 15

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

Now there cannot be a doubt but that in nearly every , if not in every , household of the middle classes of society , to say nothing of the upper , sufficient is absolutely wasted to feed at least one poorer family—witness tbe crusts of bread , trimmings and

shreddings of meat , skimmings of fat , parings aud outsides of vegetables , and the like ; all of which properly cleaned and cooked would form many a meal not only wholesome and nutritious , but positively toothsome and savoury , only our sisters know

not how to utilise them ; the very bones , again , which are tossed aside as useless , would yield in a digester a quantity of excellent stock . We have met with one capital plan by which soup , as good as it is wholesomeis made without any expense

, further than that of the thickening : all bones , whether of meat or of poultry , instead of being " picked , " after having had the meat cut from them are carefully placed aside ; these together with any shreddings are put to stew in the digester ; the

addition of the rind of ham or bacon gives an exquisite flavour to the soup ; tops and parings of vegetables , as well as those rejected on account of their small size are

added , and when the whole has been stewed a sufficient time a capital soup is the result , which can be thickened either with oatmeal , pea-flour , or the pulp of vegetables . We must not , however , suppose that waste is confined to the well-to-do , for there is

probably no more extravagant class in existence than the extreme poor—witness the way in which the cottager who has a garden rejects those small vegetablespotatoes , for instance—which are too small to cook in the ordinary waybut which are

, quite as useful in a stew as the largest that he can produce . One other blunder , made by richer as well as poorer housewives , requires correction , which is that only the so-called primest parts of the meat are good for cooking ; no greater mistake can be

made , for every portion , properly manipulated , has not only its use but also its individual merit . That savoury dish known as " a la mode" or stewed beef is best prepared from the so-called " coarse " part of the meat taken from the shoulderwhich

, Part , indeed , is the only proper one for the Purpose . Now to return to the latter part of our first remed y , namely , the utilisation of

home and foreign products for our purpose . When we come to deal with our indigenous food-supply we find that our people act as if there were a certain definite number , and that small enough in all conscience , of animals and plants upon which we may safely feed , whilst all others are to be

avoided as poison , or at least to be shunned as carrion ; but what is the actual state of the case ? Why , that the lap of motherearth is brimming over with wholesome and nutritious products , from which we turn with disgust , simply because we have

never been accustomed to their use . Wh y should our French nei ghbours consider snails a delicacy , whilst we pass them by with loathing . We eat the periwinkle , which is exactly the same thing , and the shrimp aud prawn , which are worse ,, being

nothing more nor less than sea beetles ; then why nob snails , especially such as are within a few yards of us , as we write , find noble fellows , descendants , they say , of those brought over by the ancient Romans' ? Our gipsy friends make a luxurious meal off a hedgehog , why not we . Anyhow , it is as clean a feeder as a duck or a pig . Take small birds again ,

why should starlings , which are in one county regarded as remarkably good eating in a pie , be regarded as carrion in the next ? Now turn to the vegetable world , and see what stores of good Dame Nature provides to our hand in every field

and hedgerow : the tender tops of the hop and nettle give us excellent greens , the young dandelion aud sorrel a capital salad , arrow-root , or something very nearly resembling it , is to be had in plenty from the roots of the cuckoo-pintflour can be

; obtained from the chesnut properly cooked , aud we are much mistaken if something could not be done with the bitter acorn . Our fathers ate it , and we strongly doubt that they relished it in its acrid state , and rather fancy that they must have had some

method of making it palatable , which we surely might recover . What we have said with respect to other vegetable growths will apply equally well to the mushroom tribe . Hundreds of tons of edible fungi , other than truethat is to say the ordinary

, , mushrooms , spring up and decay where they stand , instead of going , as they might , were it not for ignorance of their wholesome properties , to feed our hungry

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