Olde Ulster : an historical and genealogical magazine . , and great store of slate for houses,and other good stones. To be continued In Response to a Number of Inquiries regard-ing old Dutch cookery we would say that the Dutchcalled vegetable soup, and dried green corn of whichit was largely made, Aargroenten (often spoken of asaargreetjes), aar meaning corn and groente greens andpot-herbs. There was a favorite cookery called boer-lengen, made of sweet apples, flour and meal boiledmany hours with sweetening into a pudding ; this wasthen baked and, when cold, cut into slices and name


Olde Ulster : an historical and genealogical magazine . , and great store of slate for houses,and other good stones. To be continued In Response to a Number of Inquiries regard-ing old Dutch cookery we would say that the Dutchcalled vegetable soup, and dried green corn of whichit was largely made, Aargroenten (often spoken of asaargreetjes), aar meaning corn and groente greens andpot-herbs. There was a favorite cookery called boer-lengen, made of sweet apples, flour and meal boiledmany hours with sweetening into a pudding ; this wasthen baked and, when cold, cut into slices and name means farmers pudding and lengen refers tothe long time of cooking. At the fall butchering on the farms the souse-tub was carefully prepared forthe preservation of pigs feet, hockies and the the things there pickled was rolletjen (littlerolls). They were composed of strips of beef, alter-nately fat and lean, sewed into tripe, and boiled beforeputting into the pekelsaus (pickle souse). 135 Governor **><** George Clinton Sixteenth Paper. OVERNOR CLINTON did not slack-en his efforts to solve the problem ofcompelling the Iroquois Confederacyto remain neutral. The Oneidaswere practically in alliance with theAmericans, many of the Tuscaroraswere very friendly to the patriots, and the efforts ofClinton through James Duane and Colonel CorneliusVanDyck to detach the Onondagas and the Cayugasfrom the Senecas and Mohawks under the lead ofWalter Butler, the Johnsons and, above all, of Brant,were unremitting. Early in this year 1779 ColonelVanDyck once more visited Fort Schuyler (Stanwix)and had an interview from which he expected greatresults. But all that was gained was that certain ofthe Onondagas remained neutral. The tribe was toomuch entangled with the schemes by which Brant hadbrought them into a virtual alliance with the the preparations for the expedition of GeneralSullivan went on. There was one matter which gave Governor Clintongreat concern during all


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