On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (2024)

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (1)

Cheese & Lentil Savoury

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (2)

1916: What To Do With Cheese

Cheese And Lentil Savoury Recipe

Lentils are a highly nutritious as well as an economical food, and when treated as follows, they are also very delicious. Take eight ounces of cheese, five and ahalf ounces of lentils, three ounces of breadcrumbs, four ounces of onions, one and a half ounces of fat, parsley, salt and pepper.
Wash the lentils; peel and chop the onions and cook them in a little water with the lentils, stirring occasionally. Have the cheese grated; put it into a basin and when the lentils and onions have nearly finished cooking stir them to the cheese and add the breadcrumbs, a tablespoonful of chopped parsley and pepper and salt.

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (3)

One of the most fascinating pieces of commissioned work I have undertaken recently was linked to the act of commemoration for all those who fought and lost their lives in The Great War of 1914 to 1918. I was asked to recreate some original recipes from the era and then style them withappropriateprops andphotographthem.I was sent an extensive list of recipes as sent in to The People’s Friend by their readers of the time, and what a remarkable and interesting list of recipes they were. From Treacle Scones and Vegetable Cutlets toPortuguese Toast (eggs, ham, onion and tomatoes on toast) andBonza Stew (vegetable stew), the recipes were a poignant and a tangible snapshot of the way we used to cook and eat at the beginning of the twentieth century. The recipes were published in the special edition of The People’s Friend in September of this year, and, as we are in the week of remembrance, I thought it would be interesting to share all the recipes I made for the project today.

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (4)

Apricot Charlotte

1915:Apricot Charlotte

Soak half a pound of dried apricots all night in just enough cold water to cover them. Next morning add some sugar, and stew until tender. Well butter a pudding bowl, and scatter brown sugar on bottom. Line it thoroughly with bread buttered, and pour apricots in when ready. Press plate on top, and put into oven for half an hour, when it will turn out nice and brown. Serve with sweet sauce and it will be delightful.

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (5)

In the end, I whittled the list down to six recipes, each one to represent a different course and with some of them using leftovers and ingredients that are not that common today; the recipes I chose to recreate were:

Pea Soup (1914) – made with split peas, onion, carrot and turnip, this soup was very comforting and extremely filling.

Cheese and Lentil Savoury(1916) – this was a spread made with cheese, lentils, breadcrumbs and parsley.

Saturday Pie (1915)– a classic leftovers dish of cold meat, mashed potato, onions and herbs.

An Indian Recipe (1917)– a curry by any other name, this was originally made with rabbit, although I used chicken thighs.

Apricot Charlotte (1915)– a thrifty pudding made with stale bread and dried apricots.

1918 War Cake (1918)– a very thrifty boiled fruit cake made with scant amount of fat (margarine) and no eggs

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (6)

1918 War Cake

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (7)

As an extra project, I applied a “time machine” edit to some of my colour photos (in a photo editing programme) so all the black and white images are reproduced as if the photos were taken on a box camera of the era.I styled them with old cutlery, linens and crockery from a similar time period, and served the recipes as suggested in the original recipe. I discovered that most of the recipes that suggested they would feed four people, would in fact feed two to three people nowadays……another indication of how our portion sizes have increased along with our girths. I had to adapt some of them slightly, so where dripping was suggested, I used butter instead, and I used brown bread and white pepper in all the recipes, both which would have been more common at the turn of the century. In the Indian Recipe, I used chicken thighs in place of rabbit, not due to any squeamishness on my part, as I like rabbit, but because I wanted to show that the recipes could be recreated with another ingredient for today’s taste.

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (8)

An Indian Recipe

1917: An Indian Recipe

Cut a fowl or rabbit in small pieces. Shred onion small and fry in butter. Sprinkle fowl with flour, salt and curry powder, and fry till a nice brown. Then add a pint of stock. Stew slowly to half quantity, and then serve with rice. Slice 3 large Spanish onions very fine, and fry to a pretty light brown. Sprinkle this over the above stewed chicken or rabbit.

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (9)

I thoroughly enjoyed “test-driving” these 100-year-old recipes, and it made for a very tangible connection with the housewives of the day, as well as making me feel that in some way I had contributed to the First World War’s centenary in a very personal way.I have shared some cooking notes and authentic recipes from WW1 below and I hope you have enjoyed my WW1 project cooking on The Home Front. See you soon with more recipes, travel notes and news, have a relaxing weekend, Karen

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (10)

Pea Soup

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (11)

The Mid-Day Meal – Pea Soup

(1914)

Take one pound split peas, a good-sized piece of dripping, a piece of carrot, a piece of turnip, an onion, a little minced parsley, salt and pepper. Wash the peas well, and soak them over night. Put them on to boil with two or three quarts of cold water and the dripping. When the soup comes thoroughly to the boil, put in the onion, neatly cut into pieces. After it has boiled for three hours, strain it, and return it to the pot, adding the pepper and salt, the grated carrot and turnip, and the minced parsley. Let it come again to the boil. Serve a slice of toasted bread cut into squares with the soup.

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (12)

Saturday Pie

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (13)

Saturday Pie

(1915)

Butter the bottom and sides of a pie-dish, and spread a layer of mashed potatoes on the bottom. On this put a layer of chopped cold meat, nicely seasoned with pepper and salt, and a little onion and a dusting of herbs. Then arrange another layer of potatoes and meat; add a little thick gravy. Cover the dish with a nice crust, and cook until pastry is done. A.C., Dundee.

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (14)

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (15)

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (16)

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (17)

Related Posts

  • Comforting Recipes You Have To Try This Autumn

  • Wartime High Tea Recipes

  • Lest we Forget: Remembrance Sunday and The Wartime Kitchen Recipes

  • 1918 War Cake

On The Home Front: Original Wartime Recipes from The Great War 1914 to 1918 (2024)

FAQs

What did people eat on the homefront in WW1? ›

In the war, schools also had food shortages and had to cut back. Sadly, there were a lot of poor families who ate only one meal a day. They got by on tea, bread and jam. They may have had only one meal a week with meat, usually on a Sunday.

What did people eat in 1914? ›

By the First World War (1914-18), Army food was basic, but filling. Each soldier could expect around 4,000 calories a day, with tinned rations and hard biscuits staples once again. But their diet also included vegetables, bread and jam, and boiled plum puddings. This was all washed down by copious amounts of tea.

What was the war between 1914 and 1918? ›

World War I, an international conflict that in 1914–18 embroiled most of the nations of Europe along with Russia, the United States, the Middle East, and other regions.

How did food play a role in WW1? ›

Hunger stalked the civilian populations of all the combatant nations. Agriculture and food distribution suffered from strains imposed by the war and naval blockades reduced food imports. Some countries met this threat more successfully than others. The war took men and horses away from farm work.

What food was in the homefront? ›

Rationed Foods. The categories of rationed foods during the war were sugar, coffee, processed foods (canned, frozen, etc.), meats and canned fish, and cheese, canned milk, and fats.

What did WW1 soldiers eat for lunch? ›

A typical day, writes Murlin, might include breakfast of oatmeal, pork sausages, fried potatoes, bread and butter and coffee; lunch of roast beef, baked potatoes, bread and butter, cornstarch pudding and coffee; and dinner of beef stew, corn bread, Karo syrup, prunes, and tea.

What food was invented in 1914? ›

Canned fish became a thing.

But that all changed starting in 1914. A small California company called Van Camp launched that year and started canning fish, particularly tuna, for sale in markets far from the sea. Tuna was quite exotic then, and it wasn't easy to convince people to eat the stuff.

What food was served in ww1 trenches? ›

Troops serving in the trenches received a regular supply of food called rations. The daily ration for a British soldier consisted of measured amounts of fresh or canned meat, bread, vegetables, bacon, cheese, jam, tea and sugar, rum and tobacco.

What was the trench sandwich in ww1? ›

A little while ago Pete (Living History UK) on TikTok shared the Trench Sandwich. Apparently a fav amongst British troops in WW I, it combines cheddar cheese, canned corned beef, and jam. All of it cold. To be fair, it doesn't seem like it would terrible but also not optimal.

How many died on Armistice Day? ›

Casualties of November 11 1918. It is believed around 11,000 casualties were taken on both sides on November 11 1918. Of those, it's estimated around 2,750 were killed. Commonwealth War Graves records indicated the Commonwealth armies lost 910 dead on November 11.

Why did Germany lose WW1? ›

Its army is what helped Germany last through the miserable 4 years of fighting on the Western and Eastern Fronts of the war. However, Germany lacked the colonies of both France and Britain which meant that it did not have the vast natural resources or colonial populations that either of those countries had.

Why did the Germans surrender in WW1? ›

Four years of hardship at home and the news of military defeats led to social unrest and revolutions in Germany, and Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicated in November 1918. With a weakening military and no support on the home front, the Germans had to sign on the Allies' terms.

What was canned food in ww1? ›

Daily rations were meant to include fresh or frozen meat, but many meals would have consisted of tinned food, like this 'Maconochie' beef and vegetable stew. Named after the company that made it, it was a familiar aspect of the British soldier's diet.

What food did they eat in the war? ›

Meat (March 1940) was first, followed by fat and eggs, cheese, tinned tomatoes, rice, peas, canned fruit and breakfast cereals. Remember this was a world where even in the pre-war days of plenty, olive oil was sold as a medical aid and dried pasta was confined to a few Italian shops. Rice was mainly for puddings.

How did soldiers sleep in WW1? ›

Men resting in sleeping shelters dug into the side of a trench near Contalmaison. When able to rest, soldiers in front line trenches would try and shelter from the elements in dugouts. These varied from deep underground shelters to small hollows in the side of trenches – as shown here.

What was WW1 like on the homefront? ›

It was very difficult. Civilians were seen as fair game during the First World War. As well as being threatened with starvation, they were attacked from the air. German airships had raided Britain since 1915, and two years later Gotha bombers also began terrorising the population.

Were soldiers in ww1 hungry? ›

In 1914, the armies at war had to feed more than 20 million soldiers. In 1918, this figure had risen to 75 million soldiers who had to be fed on a daily basis.

Where did the soldiers sleep and eat in ww1? ›

Getting to sleep

Men resting in sleeping shelters dug into the side of a trench near Contalmaison. When able to rest, soldiers in front line trenches would try and shelter from the elements in dugouts. These varied from deep underground shelters to small hollows in the side of trenches – as shown here.

References

Top Articles
PvM Encyclopedia Guides - Mechanics
RS3 Archaeology Training Guide - 1-99/120
Menards Thermal Fuse
Craigslist Home Health Care Jobs
Somboun Asian Market
Kansas City Kansas Public Schools Educational Audiology Externship in Kansas City, KS for KCK public Schools
Ffxiv Palm Chippings
Farepay Login
Fully Enclosed IP20 Interface Modules To Ensure Safety In Industrial Environment
Eric Rohan Justin Obituary
Is Csl Plasma Open On 4Th Of July
Gameplay Clarkston
GAY (and stinky) DOGS [scat] by Entomb
Bhad Bhabie Shares Footage Of Her Child's Father Beating Her Up, Wants Him To 'Get Help'
Fcs Teamehub
Where's The Nearest Wendy's
Https://Gw.mybeacon.its.state.nc.us/App
83600 Block Of 11Th Street East Palmdale Ca
Busty Bruce Lee
Red Tomatoes Farmers Market Menu
Elizabethtown Mesothelioma Legal Question
Haunted Mansion Showtimes Near Millstone 14
Urban Airship Expands its Mobile Platform to Transform Customer Communications
Bridge.trihealth
Viha Email Login
Gina Wilson All Things Algebra Unit 2 Homework 8
Woodmont Place At Palmer Resident Portal
Little Rock Skipthegames
Conscious Cloud Dispensary Photos
Talk To Me Showtimes Near Marcus Valley Grand Cinema
Urbfsdreamgirl
Cinema | Düsseldorfer Filmkunstkinos
Things to do in Pearl City: Honolulu, HI Travel Guide by 10Best
Ts Modesto
How rich were the McCallisters in 'Home Alone'? Family's income unveiled
How Do Netspend Cards Work?
Broken Gphone X Tarkov
Timothy Kremchek Net Worth
School Tool / School Tool Parent Portal
That1Iggirl Mega
Blasphemous Painting Puzzle
Oriellys Tooele
Ashoke K Maitra. Adviser to CMD's. Received Lifetime Achievement Award in HRD on LinkedIn: #hr #hrd #coaching #mentoring #career #jobs #mba #mbafreshers #sales…
Weather Underground Cedar Rapids
Florida Lottery Claim Appointment
Avatar: The Way Of Water Showtimes Near Jasper 8 Theatres
Samsung 9C8
Makes A Successful Catch Maybe Crossword Clue
Sj Craigs
Dmv Kiosk Bakersfield
Jigidi Jigsaw Puzzles Free
BYU Football: Instant Observations From Blowout Win At Wyoming
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Dan Stracke

Last Updated:

Views: 5585

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (43 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Dan Stracke

Birthday: 1992-08-25

Address: 2253 Brown Springs, East Alla, OH 38634-0309

Phone: +398735162064

Job: Investor Government Associate

Hobby: Shopping, LARPing, Scrapbooking, Surfing, Slacklining, Dance, Glassblowing

Introduction: My name is Dan Stracke, I am a homely, gleaming, glamorous, inquisitive, homely, gorgeous, light person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.