Salt Rising Bread. Genevieve Bardwell
her rambling farmhouse perched crookedly atop the mountain ridge, Pearl Haines intrigues us with the story of her lifelong connection to salt rising bread. Like the majority of people who cherish and love this bread, Pearl’s ties to salt rising bread go back many generations. It is typical to find this bread tradition passed down from mother to daughter and from grandmother to granddaughter.
Pearl Haines in her kitchen with granddaughter Marnie Blake.
We know that Pearl’s great-grandmother was not the only woman baking salt rising bread in the mid-1800s. The yeast that was available then was from beer-making, and commercial yeast was not available in the United States until the 1860s. If a family didn’t make beer, or approve of its nature, then the only other options for making raised dough were using pearlash or saleratus. Before we talk more about that, it’s important to hear Pearl’s words about why she called it salt raisin’.
You people call it salt risin’ bread, but I think it is supposed to be called salt raisin’ bread. The sun rises on its own generation, but not bread. If you put a ball of dough on the table, it will just lie there, unless you mix something into it to raise it. Just like a flat tire is raised. That’s why we always called it salt raisin’ bread. It needs to be raised up by something.
Pearl tells us this with a distinct air of complete certainty in her voice. Her hands move in front of her as if to say, “Now, you girls listen to me!” Many theories exist about how salt rising bread got its name. With the sincerity that we so admire in Pearl, she explains her theory:
My grandmother used an ingredient in her salt raisin’ that was called salt a raitus. I believe that the “salt” in the name salt raisin’ bread refers to this ingredient, and it has nothing to do with table salt, as we know it. Way back, people used soda or sody or salt a raitus for various purposes, one of which was to raise dough. This salt a raitus was a mixture of chemicals. In chemists’ terms, you mix two or more chemicals together and you have a salt. Same as with baking soda, since it is a mixture, it is also a type of salt. This mixture is a type of salt that raises the bread. That’s why I think baking salt raisin’ bread was a universal thing back in the early 1800s.
When Pearl speaks of salt a raitus, she is referring to saleratus. Saleratus was used in early recipes of salt rising bread, as well as in biscuits and cakes. It was a manufactured chemical as early as the late 1700s (both as sodium carbonate and potassium carbonate) – but it can also form naturally on the ground, which is often where the pioneer women obtained it in their travels west (see page 40.) It is easy to see how the word salt a raitus evolved from the word saleratus. It is especially easy to see how salt a raitus became “salt rising” – giving us our first theory of how salt rising bread got its name.
Another theory. After salt rising bread became a well-established favorite in Appalachia, the pioneer women took it west with the wagon trains. A second theory about the name’s origins has to do with that westward movement, when, out of necessity to find a way to ferment their salt rising bread starter on the trail, women would place it inside the salt barrel on the wagon wheel, to hold it in a warm place (in the sunshine) by day. In the evening, after the starter had time to rise using the heat-keeping property of the salt in the salt barrel, the women baked their salt rising bread in Dutch ovens around the campfire.
SALT RISING BREAD AND DUTCH OVENS ON THE OREGON TRAIL
Thomas E. Cooley, born in 1872, describes how salt rising bread was made in his youth (in a 1956 interview with Velma Olling):
The cabin in which I first lived had neither cook stove nor heating stove, but a fireplace serving for both. A tin reflector about 30 inches long was used for baking. The pans filled with salt-rising bread were pushed into the bottom of it and baked in the direct heat from the open fireplace. Dutch ovens were used around the campfire on the trip across the plains, to bake bread.
Just before we leave the mountaintop, Pearl tempts us to have some of her warm salt raisin’ bread:
My family ate salt raisin’ bread hot from the oven with a thick layer of butter on it. We also toasted it on a wood fire, sometimes purposely dropping it in the ashes, or steamed it over a kettle of boiling water, which we called smoked bread. By far, however, our favorite way to eat salt raisin’ bread was to place a fresh slice on a pie plate, pour coffee over the slice, sprinkle it with brown sugar, and then pour real cow’s cream, thick and sweet, over it all.
Like Pearl’s family, other lovers of salt rising bread describe their favorite way of eating this memorable bread, and most often it is as toast. In a survey of a hundred customers at the Rising Creek Bakery, we found that the overwhelming majority prefer to eat their salt rising bread toasted with butter. Another favorite way to eat it is as grilled cheese sandwiches, or as a fresh tomato-cucumber sandwich. Others enjoy their salt rising bread with coffee and sugar poured over it, while some like to eat it sliced with gravy on top.
Pearl is gone now. We will never forget her, and we will be forever grateful for the many hours we sat in her home while she so willingly and proudly answered every question we could possibly ask her about salt rising bread. She taught us so much!
Today, the Haines generations who have come after Pearl are still carrying on this family tradition. Pearl made sure that she taught her daughters and granddaughters to make salt rising bread, and one of Pearl’s great-grandchildren is now making salt rising bread in the same wooden bowl made in 1869. Here is the recipe that the family still uses today and that Pearl lovingly passed on to so many people who continue to help keep this tradition alive.
INGREDIENTS
½ cup scalded milk
3 tsp. cornmeal
1 tsp. flour
1/8 tsp. baking soda
PREPARATION
1. Pour milk onto the dry ingredients and stir.
2. Keep warm overnight until foamy.
3. After the raisin’ has foamed and has a rotten cheese smell, in a medium-sized bowl add 2 cups of warm water to mixture, then enough flour (about 1½ cups) to make like a thin pancake batter. Stir and allow to rise again until it becomes foamy. This usually takes about 2 hours.
4. Next, add 1 cup of warm water for each loaf of bread you want to make, up to 6 loaves (e.g., 6 cups of water makes 6 loaves of bread). Add enough flour (20 cups for 6 loaves or about one 5 pound bag of flour plus ⅓ bag of flour). Form into loaves and grease tops. Let loaves rise in greased pans for 1.5 to 3 hours – sometimes longer if it is a cold day.