I found a Mixed Spices and Seasonings, used for soups and sauces, in an 1841 cookbook and decided to make it.
This recipe calls for summer savory, a new spice for me. It has a pungent, peppery flavor.
The 1841 cook used lemon-thyme, which smells and tastes like lemon. I was unable to find this seasoning so I substituted thyme for it.
I adjusted the amounts yet maintained the proportions in the 1841 recipe because it made too large a batch. For instance, the cook used 2 ounces of dried parsley and an ounce each of the other seasonings. This is way more than I need to store for the next few months.
2 tablespoons dried parsley
1 tablespoon lemon-thyme (I used thyme)
1 tablespoon summer savory
1 tablespoon sweet marjoram (also called marjoram)
1 tablespoon dried basil
1 tablespoon dried lemon peel
1 tablespoon celery seeds (optional)
Mix ingredients together. Though the celery seeds are optional, I added them.
Store in closed container until needed for soups or sauces.
To try out the seasoning blend, I made vegetable soup. At first, I added 2 teaspoons of the seasoning mixture to the soup as it cooked. Then I added another teaspoon because I made a large stockpot of soup.
Yum! I loved the flavors this seasoning blend added to vegetable soup. Winter is the perfect time for soup and this addition made the dish even more comforting. I will make this again.
I’d love to hear if you try it.
-Sandra Merville Hart
Sources
Hale, Sarah Josepha. Early American Cookery: “The Good Housekeeper” 1841, Dover Publications, Inc., 1996.
“Marjoram Leaf,” Spices, Inc., 2018/01/21 https://www.spicesinc.com/p-95-marjoram-leaf.aspx.
“Summer Savory,” Spice Islands, 2018/01/21 http://spiceislands.com/products/summer-savory.

