40 Delicious Pioneer Recipes You Can Replicate • New Life On A Homestead (2024)

Food, glorious food, we’re anxious to try it…

Okay, okay, I won’t sing anymore, but this is going to be fun and drool-inducing! I’ve been cooking since I was about 10 years old.

As a cub scout, I had to cook three meals for my cooking badge (yes, that is a thing). These three meals had to be baked, cooked on a stove, and cooked over an open fire.

With that in mind, I made a cake (lemon if you want to know) for my mom’s birthday, spaghetti, and meatballs for the stove-cooked meal, and the barbeque was steak, sausages, and corn on the cob.

Now, while the barbeque didn’t quite go according to plan (I burned the potatoes), I very quickly came to enjoy cooking. In a time full of complicated, messy recipes, I wanted to look at some simpler ones that are easy to make.

I couldn’t do modern recipes though, that’d be more than a little bit boring, wouldn’t it? Instead, I’m going to share the easiest pioneer recipes to replicate.

Who’s hungry?

1. Potato Cakes

Considering the long journeys taken by the pioneers, they couldn’t afford to run out of food or have food go bad. Potatoes were easy to work with and lasted a ridiculously long time which made them a reliable source of nourishment.

These are easy to make and are a popular meal and snack. The recipe can be found here if you want to try them yourself.

2. Skillet Hasselback Sweet Potatoes

Pieces of sweet potato baked in melted butter and coated in a mixture of herbs, shallots, parmesan cheese, breadcrumbs, garlic, salt, and pepper. Sweet potato with a slightly salty flavor, a bit weird but it sounds pretty good to me. Here’s the recipe for you.

3. Johnny Cakes

Deep-fried cornmeal gruel results in a flat cornmeal bread or cake which is sometimes sweetened with a touch of sugar. The gruel is made by mixing cornmeal, salt, and hot water or milk. These delicious cakes are a popular pioneer treat, and a recipe can be found here.

4. Molasses Stack Cake

This pioneer treat was saved for special occasions because of how expensive it was to make. It’s a group effort of friends and family where each person brings a layer of the cake.

Each layer is stacked on top of the other with layers of either apple slices or apple butter in between each cake layer. You can get a recipe here.

5. Corn Pancakes

A mixture of white cornmeal, bacon fat/lard, and buttermilk make for a fluffy pancake which you can top with whatever you like. You can get the recipe here.

6. Jerky

The pioneers were heavily reliant on their cattle for meat, milk, and cheese. Jerky is dehydrated, cured meat and it’s a tasty treat that is popular all over the world. A recipe can be found here.

40 Delicious Pioneer Recipes You Can Replicate • New Life On A Homestead (1)

7. Chocolate Caramels

Who doesn’t like chocolate? Sweets were a major luxury item as they were rather expensive to make. The pioneer recipe mixed molasses, sweet milk, and vanilla to make this sweet treat.

8. Swiss Apple Cherry Pie

The Swiss contingent of the pioneers of the Oregon trail added cherries to their apple pies. This added some extra sweetness to an already sweet treat. If you want to try this one (and I highly recommend you do), you can get the recipe here.

9. Corn Dodgers

A deep-fried or baked mixture of milk, eggs, cornmeal, and wild onions among other things give us a tasty corn cake. This is a popular snack that can also be the main course of a meal.

They can be easily stored in your pockets, which makes them very convenient. There are many recipes for these, and you can find one here.

10. Native American Fry Bread

Deep-fried bread which can be eaten either plain or with honey or jam. A good recipe can be found here.

40 Delicious Pioneer Recipes You Can Replicate • New Life On A Homestead (2)

11. Pinole

A high energy food, pinole can be filling without eating large quantities. It’s super healthy and can be eaten as a cereal. If you’d like to make this one yourself, here’s the recipe.

12. Dumplings

Dumplings are made by wrapping pieces of dough around a filling of your choice – either sweet or savory – and either frying, steaming, baking, simmered or boiled. If you want to make dumplings yourself, here’s a recipe for you.

13. Pemmican

A Native American method of preserving meat and fish for extended periods, pemmican is made with meat, rendered fats, and, if you want some extra flavor, you can add berries. You can get a good pemmican recipe here.

15. Hardtack

Hardtack is a type of biscuit that was made from a mixture of flour, water, and salt. These were used commonly in the military from the 17th to the 19th century and in long sea voyages.

This was due to its remarkably long shelf-life, it could be used when perishable foods would’ve gone bad. A recipe for hardtack can be found here.

16. Mashed Potatoes

Mashed potatoes are easy to make and can be mixed to taste with cream, butter, and salt. They’re very, very easy to make and there are many ways in which to make them. They taste great, especially with sausages and gravy! Here’s a good recipe for you.

17. Hasty Pudding

Hasty pudding gets its name from how quickly you can make it.

It’s a British pudding that tastes great and, while it’s usually topped with whipped cream, you could probably change it up a bit and experiment with different toppings (say, strawberry jam for instance) until you find one you like. Here’s a recipe for you.

18. Rusks

Portions of bread dough are baked, then separated into smaller portions and baked again to give us a dried-out bread/biscuit which goes well with tea and coffee… just don’t try it with hot chocolate – trust me, it won’t end well.

You want to make your own rusks? Give them a try with this recipe.

19. Potjie

Potjie is a South African stew that’s typically made in a cast-iron pot. You can use any type of meat; beef and lamb are commonly used, but a particular favorite is oxtail. If you want to try it yourself, here’s an oxtail potjie recipe for you.

20. Vetkoek

Another South African favorite, vetkoek is basically deep-fried bread dough which is then filled with whatever you like – mincemeat, jam, and syrup are some commonly used fillings. Try it yourself with this recipe.

21. Spotted Pup

Spotted pup is a dessert made from a mixture of rice, sugar, vanilla, and raisins. It was usually made from leftover rice as wasting food was a big no-no back on the Oregon Trail. You can use this recipe to make it yourself.

22. Soda Biscuits

Soda biscuits are biscuits which were baked using baking soda instead of the usual baking powder. They’re easy to make and were typically eaten with either syrup or jerky gravy. You can get a recipe here.

23. Cornmeal Mush

A breakfast meal, is essentially a porridge-type meal and is both light and filling. You can try it with this recipe, it’s super easy to make and you can add whatever you like to it.

24. Jerky Gravy

This is used as a substitute for meat, it’s a gravy made from jerky – obviously – and can be spread over soda biscuits, potatoes, and cornbread. You can get a recipe here.

25. Rice and Beans

Okay, so I’m sure we’ve all seen a few westerns and one of the common things you’ll see is a cowboy eating beans out of a pot. That’s not just cinema funny business either, beans and rice are both full of carbohydrates and provide a very filling meal.

40 Delicious Pioneer Recipes You Can Replicate • New Life On A Homestead (3)

They’re also super easy to make and have an impressive shelf-life. There are many recipes just like this one which you can try yourself.

26. Venison Stew

Hunting was a major part of the pioneer lifestyle, a successful hunt meant that you had a lot of meat to last the winter. You could use that meat and any vegetables you may have with you or on your homestead and make a stew.

27. Pan-Fried Pork Chops

It seems pan-fried pork chops have been around longer than I thought. This dish was typically served the day after Thanksgiving. Pork chops were a treat for special occasions, with the rest of the meat preserved as salted pork or bacon. You can get a recipe here.

28. Basic Bread

Bread was a big part of the pioneers’ diet, it’s rich in carbohydrates and very easy to make. If done properly, it has a great flavor. You can get a great recipe here.

29. Classic Apple Pie

Apple pie is a classic dessert that’s popular all over the world. It has a sweet, spicy taste with a crisp crust and filled with apple slices.

It’s not hard to see why apple pie has remained a popular dessert – it goes especially well with whipped cream. I’ve always liked homemade apple pie more than the store-bought ones.

Of course, it helps that the crust is always crispier, and the filling is sweeter. You can get a nice recipe here.

30. Cured Bacon

Bacon was a huge part of the pioneer diet with the average family of four consuming 400 pounds of bacon. Of course, bacon doesn’t last long so the pioneers had to find a way to preserve their bacon.

They did this by curing the bacon – using salt to draw out all the moisture from the meat. You can cure bacon yourself with this recipe.

31. Apricot Oat Bars

Apricot oat bars…these are a healthy, sweet treat that can last a while – assuming you don’t eat them too fast.

I’ve always liked oat biscuits so when you make a bar…well, now you’ve got my attention. These bars can be frozen if you like and kept for later. You can make these with this recipe.

32. Cherry Pie

I’m a huge fan of pies, and I love cherries. Unfortunately, real cherries aren’t exactly easy to find in South Africa and even when you do find them, they’re ridiculously expensive.

With that said, a cherry pie is definitely worth the effort. Sweet, crispy, and utterly delicious! You can make this yourself, with this recipe.

33. Currant Bread

A Welsh Christmas recipe, currant bread is a loaf of bread with currants in it. The reason for using currants was that, at the time, raisins weren’t available to the pioneers during the Christmas season. You can get a good recipe here.

34. Fried Apples

Fried apples are a popular pioneer dessert because apples last much longer than other fruits. These are easy to make and have a variety of uses and recipes. Try them yourself, here’s the recipe for you.

35. Native Currant Whirligig

An English dessert that’s made with wild currants, the native current whirligig is a baked sweet treat with a spiral appearance (hence the name ‘whirligig’). If you don’t have wild currants on hand, you can use cranberries. You can get the recipe here.

36. Swedish Jam Cake

This is exactly what it sounds like, a Swedish cake with a jam filling. You can use any jam you like which makes this a versatile recipe and a sweet treat for the whole family. You can get the recipe here.

37. Side Pork with Mormon Gravy

Pork and gravy, that’s a common, and popular food at Christmas and New Year’s. This recipe, however, uses bacon instead of a pork roast.

The meal also used up all the bacon fat – they really wasted nothing, didn’t they? I’m not a huge fan of bacon fat, but if it gives us a nice gravy then I’m not going to complain. Try it yourself, here’s the recipe.

38. Milk Tart (Melktert)

Ah, milk tart, a personal favorite! Milk tart is a South African treat that originated in the Dutch Cape Colony sometime in the 17th Century.

The tart has a crispy crust and a soft, creamy filling covered in cinnamon. Some recipes use custard for the filling – yum! If you haven’t tried this, I highly recommend using this recipe and chowing down!

39. Dutch Oven Roast Chicken

Cooking in a cast iron Dutch oven is a classic pioneer skill, and this Dutch oven-roast chicken recipe really lets you embrace that pioneer lifestyle!

Once you master the basics of roasting a chicken in a Dutch oven (be it on the stove or an open fire), you can get creative and experiment with this recipe however you’d like.

You can add some cloves, nutmeg, and brown sugar for a sweeter brown sugar chicken bake (which goes great with a side of sweet potatoes!), or you can add more fat and protein by wrapping the bird in bacon first.

The choice is yours! Whatever you choose, get started with this basic recipe first.

40. Norwegian Fruit Soup

A Scandinavian version of tapioca pudding, Norwegian fruit soup contains very basic ingredients like 1 cup of water, a few prunes, and some dried currants (along with seasonings like cinnamon and sugar).

Here’s the recipe.

Who’s Hungry?

I don’t know about you guys, but I’m starving! These lists of foods are mouth-watering, and I hope you guys and gals enjoyed the article. As always, thanks for reading and I’ll see you next time. Until then, take care!

40 Delicious Pioneer Recipes You Can Replicate • New Life On A Homestead (4)

Print or Save this article as PDF

40 Delicious Pioneer Recipes You Can Replicate • New Life On A Homestead (2024)

FAQs

What 3 foods did the pioneers eat? ›

Breads, potatoes, rice, and starchy foods put backbone into a meal and the hungry souls who ate it. The mainstays of a pioneer diet were simple fare like potatoes, beans and rice, hardtack (which is simply flour, water, 1 teaspoon each of salt and sugar, then baked), soda biscuits (flour, milk, one t.

What did pioneers eat for breakfast? ›

Beans, cornmeal mush, Johnnycakes or pancakes, and coffee were the usual breakfast. Fresh milk was available from the dairy cows that some families brought along, and pioneers took advantage go the rough rides of the wagon to churn their butter.

What would pioneers eat for dinner? ›

The dinner menu was similar to breakfast and lunch (beans again!), but could also include fresh buffalo or antelope meat or prairie hens if hunting had been successful. Using their ingenuity and the materials at hand, pioneer women prepared special foods to relieve the eating monotony.

Did pioneers eat oatmeal? ›

Bacon and biscuits were common. Pancakes, beans and oatmeal were also options. Midday meal: Some pioneers cooked this meal ahead at breakfast so that they could rest.

What did people eat for breakfast on the Oregon Trail? ›

Answer and Explanation: One of the most common breakfasts eaten on the Oregon Trail was bacon and biscuits. Due to the need to pull up camp and get the wagons rolling as early as possible, many pioneers had to finish breakfast before the sun came up.

What did Pioneer kids eat for lunch? ›

Lunch at school, called 'nooning,' might include cold pancakes, bread with lard, jam or meat sandwiches, hard boiled eggs, dried meat, baked goods like muffins, cookies, and maybe even a slice of cake.

What did the pioneers drink? ›

Many 1800s pioneers traveled in covered wagons. Since there were no stores along the wagon trails, they had to pack all everything they would need for the journey. Water would be carried in canteens, and they would often drink coffee as well.

What did cowboys eat for breakfast on the trail? ›

Fellers back in the 1880's didn't eat very well. A typical breakfast for them consisted of: coffee, biscuits, maybe a little salt pork and even beans.

What did pioneers carry their lunch in? ›

There were no plastic lunch boxes or thermoses on the homestead. This girl is carrying her lunch in a tin container called a lunch pail. Some families could afford to buy lunch pails for their children. Others saved empty lard or syrup buckets to use as lunch pails.

What was a daily menu of the majority of the settlers? ›

For lunch many colonists would have had bread, meat or cheese along with water, beer or cider. Most cheese making was done at home, and was very hard work. At dinnertime the colonial people might have had a meat stew, meat pies, or more of that porridge, and again beer, water or coder to drink.

What is a cowboy dinner? ›

Cowboy dinner is a hearty casserole of flavorful beef, corn and beans topped with soft, fluffy cornbread and a layer of cheese. So delicious! This easy, comfort food casserole has been a family favorite for over 20 years! After that long, you know the recipe has to be a keeper!

Did pioneers eat fruit? ›

anything that was available, wild game naturally, fruits, nuts, berries, ground corn meal, pine nuts, roots, leafy greens, if it was edible they ate it. Some had gardens for potatoes, onions, corn, beans and vegetables that would grow in their region.

What kind of flour did pioneers use? ›

Buckwheat flour would have been one of those staples. The ample nutritional supplement offered by buckwheat made it a valued addition to the pioneer diet and remains so today.

What did the Mormon pioneers eat? ›

Pioneers learned what to forage from indigenous tribes, and relied on foraging in years of famine. They made their own sweeteners. Pioneers preserved fruit by drying it or canning it. They ate bread frequently, and communally butchered meat, which was preserved through smoking.

What did pioneers eat in winter? ›

Most pioneers also had a cellar and/or root cellar, which were dug underground to protect the food that was stored from freezing and to safeguard it from animals. Root vegetables that could be kept in the cellars included potatoes, sweet potatoes, turnips, beets, and carrots.

Did our ancestors eat 3 meals a day? ›

Early U.S. dining habits were shaped by those of English colonists. And, as Anne Murcott, a British sociologist specializing in food, writes, for centuries, up until about 1800, most English people ate two, not three, meals a day. The larger of these was often called dinner, but it wasn't typically an evening meal.

What are the three basic foods of Jesus time? ›

The ancient Israelites depended on bread, wine and oil as the basic dietary staples and this trio is often mentioned in the Bible (for example, Deut 7:13 and 2 Kings 18:32) and in other texts, such as the Samaria and Arad ostraca.

What was the most common food in the 1800? ›

Pork and turkey were widely eaten and considered staples among Americans, and alcohol consumption dominated the beverages throughout the country.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Dean Jakubowski Ret

Last Updated:

Views: 5405

Rating: 5 / 5 (50 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Dean Jakubowski Ret

Birthday: 1996-05-10

Address: Apt. 425 4346 Santiago Islands, Shariside, AK 38830-1874

Phone: +96313309894162

Job: Legacy Sales Designer

Hobby: Baseball, Wood carving, Candle making, Jigsaw puzzles, Lacemaking, Parkour, Drawing

Introduction: My name is Dean Jakubowski Ret, I am a enthusiastic, friendly, homely, handsome, zealous, brainy, elegant person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.