Most recipes are faded and some are illegible. |
And how about durable?
Almost all salt and flour maps survived the school bus trips to and from
the schoolhouse…because they were as hard as rocks. They were rocks! Some can still be found in attics,
years after their creation. It was
the high concentration of table salt that preserved them, from mold as well as
from rodents. What mouse in his
right mind would bite into anything that is two parts flour to one part salt?
When I made my salt and flour maps in fifth and seventh
grades, little did I know that my great-grandfather was responsible for
innovating the use of German Salt Dough for topographic or relief map construction
for school projects.
The cover is encrusted with flour and many pages have shortening stains. |
One such recipe is “Salzteig.” When I first read the ingredients, (2 qt. flour, 1 qt. salt,
2 jiggers weinstein, 1 qt. water), I wondered, “Who in their right mind would
want to eat that? And what in the
world is ‘weinstein?’”
I then did a little research. “Good old” Alta Vista Babelfish translated “Salzteig” as
“salt dough.” More Internet
research revealed that salt dough was originally used to make decorative
sculptures, as far back as Ancient Egypt.
The high salt content really served as a preservative. Germans used the mixture to make
Christmas ornaments and other holiday decorations.
But what is “weinstein?” After more Internet research I learned that weinstein is the
white residue that forms on the inside of casks of wine when it ages. It’s actually potassium tartrate and it’s
left to dry, scraped off, and used in cooking. You might know it as cream of tartar.
Someone made a LOT of salt dough ornaments! |
Someone in the Latshaw family obviously made a ton of salt
dough Christmas ornaments. That is
interesting, but here is the unique part.
At the bottom of the page with the Salzteig ingredients in Hosea’s recipe
book, is this notation: Russell -
China map for school.
Russell Latshaw with one of the horses used to pull the bakery delivery wagon. |
Russell Latshaw was Hosea’s oldest child, born in 1895. He did not graduate from high school,
as he was needed in the bakery and to work on the family farm on Wall Street,
also in Spring City. However he
did finish the sixth grade. Could
it be that Russell made a map of China from the Salzteig? I suddenly became interested in the
history of salt and flour maps.
After many hours on the Internet, as well as chasing down
many false leads and bad information, I received a reply email from Amy Nibbet
of the Smithsonian Institution.
Amy is a conservationist with the Smithsonian’s Donald Rockwell Research
Center for the History of American Education. Amy told me that the first mention of salt dough maps is in
1911 in a school annual, the forerunner of the yearbook. The location was even more
important: Phoenixville,
Pennsylvania. After 1911, the
recipe for salt dough map making appears in educational periodicals and
teaching books.
Here’s the best part:
Amy told me that an “H. Latschar” had registered the recipe’s use for
map-making and that royalties had been paid whenever it was published for
twenty years, the term of the registration. Due to the spelling error, the money was never paid to
Hosea, and a law firm in New York City has held the royalties since 1913…with
interest. The original amount was
only slightly over $7,000, but with interest averaging 4.5% the total is now
almost $612,000! Since I am the
holder of the original recipe, which must still be tested for authenticity, I
will be able to claim the entire amount.
And if you believe that, don’t forget it’s April Fool’s Day!
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