Farina Pudding: Civil War Recipe, Served to the Wounded after the Battle of Gettysburg (2024)

Farina Pudding: Civil War Recipe, Served to the Wounded after the Battle of Gettysburg (1)

Farina Pudding: Civil War Recipe, Served to the Wounded after the Battle of Gettysburg (2)


This was a hard challenge to do. I had a feeling everyone was going to pick a Gettysburg food or an Independence Day food so I wanted to do something a little different. I thought of doing something from Vicksburg as it was falling around the same time as the Battle of Gettysburg was occurring in the north. However, as the meals were extremely meager in Vicksburg, I didn't think that a rat or bit of mule would be appetizing in the least or fun to cook.

I was incredibly moved from reading accounts about the aftermath of the Battle of Gettysburg. Many are familiar with the 3 days of battle but what happened next is truly at the heart of the event. Women poured in from different parts of the country to administer aid and what they recorded was horrific. They noted the smell of rotting horses. The screams and cries of the wounded and family members wandering the fields in an attempt to find the bodies or graves of missing loved ones. They wrote of the many men that they met and the ones they cared for one day who were gone the next. There were over 27,000 wounded men after the battle, more than 7,000 killed and 10,000 missing. The magnitude of the battle is hard to fathom, it is harder still to imagine what remained after the armies left.

Farina was mentioned in many accounts from nurses and ladies of the Sanitary Commission. They were most likely just adding water or milk to the farina and heating it to make a gruel that would feed many, be nourishing and easy to eat and digest for the wounded. I chose to make a farina pudding as plain farina is so simple it doesn't require a recipe. The recipe I used a farina pudding recipe that I found in a hospital manual.

Farina Pudding: Civil War Recipe, Served to the Wounded after the Battle of Gettysburg (3)

Farina Pudding: Civil War Recipe, Served to the Wounded after the Battle of Gettysburg (4)



The Challenge:

Today in History June 29 - July 12
Make a dish based on or inspired by a momentous occasion that took place on the day you made it. Get creative - you would be surprised by all the interesting things that happened every single day!

The Recipe:

Farina Pudding: Civil War Recipe, Served to the Wounded after the Battle of Gettysburg (5)

The Date/Year and Region:

1861-1863 Pennsylvania

How Did You Make It:



Ingredients:

-1/4 cup Farina (Cream of Wheat)
-3 cups Milk
-Sugar to Taste

Instructions: Add milk and farina to double boiler. Boil until it clumps together and pour it into a greased mold being careful as it is very hot. Cool the mold off in a large bowl full of ice. Once cool, turn over the mold to release the pudding and top with sugar.

Time to Complete:
15 Minutes

Total Cost:

About $4.00

How Successful Was It?:The pudding did not turn out as smooth as I thought it would. It might have had a smoother appearance if I boiled it in the mold. It tasted good but a little bland as hospital food is known.

How Accurate Is It?: I forgot to use a double boiler so it only took a few minutes to cook instead of having to boil it for 45 minutes. Even using a double boiler, I don't think it would take 45 minutes to cook.

An Excerpt from a letter to J. Huelings in Moorestown, New Jersey from a Nurse in Gettysburg on July 16, 1863:

"The atmosphere is truly horrible, and camphor and cologne or smelling salts are prime necessaries for most persons, certainly for the ladies. We think that diminutive bags of camphor, say an inch square, would be a great comfort to the soldiers, relieving them in some measure from the ever-present odors.

We rode in an ambulance to the hospital of the Second Corps. The sights and the sounds beggar description. There is great need of bandages. Almost every man has lost either an arm or a leg. The groans, the cries, the shrieks of anguish, are awful indeed to hear. We heard them all day in the field, and last night I buried my head in my pillow to shut out the sounds which reached us, from a church quite near, where the wounded are lying.

We could only try to hear as though we heard not, for it requires strong effort to be able to attend to the various calls for aid. The condensed milk is invaluable. The corn-starch, farina, and milk punch are eagerly partaken of, and a cup of chocolate is greatly relished. A poor fellow with a broken jaw seemed to appeal, though mutely, for special attention. I beat up quickly two or three eggs, adding a spoonful of brandy and a cup of scalding hot milk, which he managed to draw through his scarcely opened lips, and at once seemed revived. The Union soldiers and the rebels, so long at variance, are here quite friendly. They have fought their last battle, and vast numbers are going daily to meet the King of Terrors."

Farina Pudding: Civil War Recipe, Served to the Wounded after the Battle of Gettysburg (2024)

FAQs

What happened after the Battle of Gettysburg? ›

What Happened After The Battle of Gettysburg? After a blowing defeat on July 3, 1863, General Lee's Confederate army retreated south. Although additional battles ensued afterward, the Battle of Gettysburg was the most pivotal, as it marked a turning point in the Civil War.

What happened on day 3 of the Battle of Gettysburg? ›

July 3, 1863: On the third day of the Battle of Gettysburg, Confederate General Robert E. Lee's last attempt at breaking the Union line ends in disastrous failure, bringing the most decisive battle of the American Civil War to an end.

What was the result of the Battle of Gettysburg? ›

Union victory. Gettysburg ended Confederate general Robert E. Lee's ambitious second quest to invade the North and bring the Civil War to a swift end. The loss there dashed the hopes of the Confederate States of America to become an independent nation.

What was the bloodiest Battle of the Civil War? ›

At Gettysburg, in 1863, the bloodiest battle of the Civil War ended the Confederate army's northward advance. U.S. Capitol - Visitor Center.

What was the bloodiest Battle in history? ›

Battle of Stalingrad

What happened to the Confederate dead after Gettysburg? ›

Where are the Confederates buried at Gettysburg? They were originally buried in mass graves on the battlefield (out of necessity). In later years, they were removed by their states to graves in the south. But there are probably still many unmarked and unknown Union and Confederate graves at Gettysburg.

What went wrong at Gettysburg? ›

The great error at Gettysburg was selection of the site for the battle. Longstreet also opposed to fighting at Gettysburg. Lee was looking for a defensive battle by forcing the Federals to attack and on ground favorable to the Confederates.

What was the bloodiest day of the battle of Gettysburg? ›

Both armies suffered extremely heavy losses on July 2, with 9,000 or more casualties on each side. The combined casualty total from two days of fighting came to nearly 35,000, the largest two-day toll of the war.

Is Gettysburg the bloodiest war? ›

Between 46,000 and 51,000 soldiers from both armies were casualties in the three-day battle, the most costly in US history.

How did the Battle of Gettysburg impact the outcome of the Civil War answer? ›

The Union's eventual victory in the Battle of Gettysburg would give the North a major morale boost and put a definitive end to Confederate General Robert E. Lee's bold plan to invade the North.

Could Lee have won at Gettysburg? ›

Lee could have won at Gettysburg if a number of factors were changed. One, if Pickett's Charge did not take place the way it did. If Confederate artillery supported the charge, and there were a couple of extra divisions, say, 50,000 troops make the charge, it could have succeeded.

Could the South have won at Gettysburg? ›

The concepts, recommendations, and means were at hand—at least as late as the first day of Gettysburg—for the South to emerge victorious. It did not happen because the South's primary leaders could not see the way to victory.

What were the two major results of the Battle of Gettysburg? ›

In the Battle of Gettysburg, Union Major General George Meade's Army of the Potomac defeated attacks by Confederate General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, halting Lee's invasion of the north and forcing his retreat.

What happened after the Battle of Lincoln? ›

Aftermath and effects

The city of Lincoln was pillaged by Marshal's victorious army, on the pretence that it was loyal to Louis, later euphemistically called 'the Lincoln Fair'.

Did the Gettysburg Address happen after the Battle of Gettysburg? ›

The Gettysburg Address is a speech that U.S. President Abraham Lincoln delivered during the American Civil War at the dedication of the Soldiers' National Cemetery, now known as Gettysburg National Cemetery, in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania on the afternoon of November 19, 1863, four and a half months after the Union armies ...

What happens in I survived the Battle of Gettysburg? ›

I Survived the Battle of Gettysburg, 1863 is an amazing story following a young coloured boy named Thomas and his little sister Birdy. The two are stuck in the middle of the American civil war when they run from a slave plantation. They find a home with the Northern soldiers, and, there, they also find a family.

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