Foodstuffs/ingredients Pioneers used heirloom breeds of crops and livestock. The first crop planted in Salt Lake Valley in 1847 was potatoes, followed by buckwheat, corn, oats, turnips, beans, and others. Peach pits and apple seeds were planted soon thereafter. Some pioneers brought seeds from other places, including club-head wheat, the California pea, and the now-extinct Garnet Chili potato. Onions were widely grown, but not garlic. Nutmeg was very popular, and cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, and black pepper were also used. Farmers, including
Wilford Woodruff, strove to breed varieties of apples, peaches, and pears suited for Utah's climate. Livestock had multiple uses, with Shorthorn cattle lugging wagons and plows as well as providing milk and beef. The popular
Spanish Churro sheep was used for both wool and mutton. By the turn of the century, more specialized breeds had replaced these. Lard was difficult to produce, but highly valued. Wheat flour was scarce, and many pioneers used corn flour instead, since it was cheaper and easier to grow corn than wheat. Early grist mills, powered by water, provided a spectrum from whole-wheat to white flour (including middle types like
Graham flour). Corn was easier to grow on undeveloped land and all social classes ate Hominy. Poor families gleaned wheat from fields. Pioneers in 1847 learned about local foraging from indigenous tribes like the Goshutes. Pioneers ate wild sego bulbs, rose hips, berries, onions, nettles,
amaranth, dandelion greens, wild mushrooms, and artichokes. They hunted elk, rabbit, sage hen, duck, trout, and salmon. When grasshoppers decimated crops in 1855, pioneers fished and stored millet and trout for their winter food supply. The types of wild berries they harvested were
serviceberries,
chokecherries, currants, raspberries, strawberries,
elderberries, and
gooseberries. Harvests varied depending on local rainfall and grasshopper infestations. During years of bad harvests, pioneers survived on what they could forage. Seasonal food included peas, radishes, and sego bulbs in the spring, lettuce, beans, and corn in the summer, and tomatoes, cabbages, carrots, and potatoes in the fall.
Brigham Young discouraged pioneers from buying imported sugar in an attempt to keep more cash within the borders of the Utah Territory. Brigham Young encouraged pioneers to plant
sorghum cane and sugar beets, which they processed into molasses. Molasses was the main source of sweetening until a beet sugar factory was built in Lehi in 1890. Box elder tree sap was supposedly similar to sugar maple sap, and some pioneers washed sap off of cottonwood tree leaves and reduced it to a syrup. Pioneers used sweet ingredients like squash and berries to sweeten their cakes. Pioneers commonly had watermelon feasts to celebrate occasions. Starting in 1853, pioneers could buy yeast from Salt Lake City's California Bakery. Sometimes one household would propagate yeast, giving it out in return for flour or sugar that could feed the yeast colony. Cider-making was a familiar practice to immigrants from New England, which also produced yeast as a byproduct. Pioneers also used sourdough starters. Pioneers made vinegar from pea shells or grapes.
Processing Pioneers canned and dried fruit, storing enough to last two years. They stored preserved food in cellars and ate it during the winter. They dried fruit in large quantities, with one pioneer writing of inviting all the "young folks" to a "cutting bee" to prepare the fruit for drying. They traded dried fruit for flour or other items. In the 1860s, the LDS Church coordinated the sale of dried fruit, buying it from member farmers or accepting it as tithing and selling it to miners. Miners in Montana bought 200,000 pounds of dried fruit in 1864. Utah's cash-poor economy benefited from this rare export. Pioneers also dried squash, pumpkin, and melon. In the absence of apples, pioneers made squash butter, or a spreadable form of squash. Pioneers also preserved fruit in molasses syrup. When Mason jars were mass-produced in the 1860s, Utah women used them to preserve fruit. Pioneer remains were found to have decayed teeth, which scholars attribute to their starchy diet. Most immigrant pioneers came from the United Kingdom and continued eating bread and potatoes as was popular there. Wheat flour made up the most weight in wagons travelling westward, where they leavened their bread with saleratus, a type of unrefined baking powder. Recipes from the pioneer era assumed bakers already knew how to make bread. Leaders of the church encouraged pioneers to save meat for the winter and eat fish and eggs in the summer, which was a common seasonal practice. Pigs were usually ready for slaughter in December. To preserve meats, pioneers salted and dried fish in bulk. One pioneer woman used the salt from the
Great Salt Lake to preserve her beef. Neighbors helped butcher a pig for winter consumption; ham, shoulders, bacon, and sausage were made from the carcass. In some places, neighbors were traditionally given a small amount of fresh meat. Pioneers smoked their own meat in a smokehouse or chimney. Pioneers also used alcohol in preservation but vinegar was more common. They used natural fermentation to make sauerkraut and cheese. Dairy products were a common bartering commodity. A Jersey cow could produce more milk than a family would use, so excess milk was made into cheese. Neighbors would take turns sharing fresh milk so that one family could make cheese in bulk to share. Home curing and fermentation, while common among pioneers, is not popular among members today.
Influence of European cuisine A large number of pioneers were born outside the United States. In 1860, 22% of Utah residents were born in Britain, and 30,000 residents came from
Scandinavia. By 1870, 37,000 European emigrants had settled in Utah. Immigrants brought their own food traditions, including cheese making and holiday pastries. Immigrants often continued the food traditions of their previous countries. Some Danish immigrants continued to drink coffee and English immigrants to drink tea, even though it was forbidden in the Word of Wisdom. Rye did not grow well in Utah, so immigrants made do with wheat bread. However, they still made dishes like the English Yorkshire Pudding, Danish Ableskiver, and German Sauerkraut. Brigham Young used his wealth to provide himself and his family with exceptional food, both in type and quantity. He enjoyed donuts fried in lard, squab, and codfish gravy on a regular basis. ==Contemporary foodways==