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Possibly originally from post to pillar, perhaps a reference to the rapid movement of the ball in real tennis; The Wordsworth Dictionary of Proverbs (1993) notes that from post to pillar dates to at least the 15th century. Hyphenation: from pil‧lar to post adverb
from pillar to post (not comparable)
(idiomatic) From one place (or person, or task) to another; from post to pillar, hither and thither. quotations ▼ The term normally implies a harassing situation. https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/from_pillar_to_post#Adverb
Shoofly pie is a type of American
pie made
with molasses associated
with Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine. While shoo-fly pie has been a staple of Moravian, Mennonite, and Amish foodways, there is scant
evidence concerning its origins, and most of the folktales concerning the pie
are apocryphal, including the persistent legend that the name comes from flies
being attracted to the sweet filling. The
name shoo-fly was borrowed from a brand of molasses that was
popular in parts of the U.S. during the late 19th century. Possibly related to the Jenny Lind pie (a
soft gingerbread pie), it
may have originated among the Pennsylvania Dutch in the 1880s as molasses crumb cake, and is
sometimes called molasses crumb pie. Traditionally it
was not served as a dessert pie, but instead as a breakfast food with
hot coffee. Shoo-fly pie has been described as a crumb cake baked in
a pie
crust.
The primary ingredients of the filling are molasses, brown sugar, and water. Serving the cake in pie crust made it easier
for people to eat
it with their hands in
the 19th century. It comes in two
different versions: wet-bottom and dry-bottom. The dry-bottom version is baked until fully
set and results in a more cake-like consistency throughout. The wet-bottom version is set like cake at the
top where it was mixed in with the crumbs, but the very bottom is a stickier,
gooier custard-like consistency.
Different recipes for the wet and dry versions appeared in the
early 20th century--the dry version was suitable for dunking in a cup
of coffee. Shoo-fly pie began as a crust-less molasses
cake called centennial cake in 1876,
to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence in Philadelphia. There is
no evidence of it being made before the American
Civil War. Precursors include Jenny Lind pie, a type
of gingerbread cake that
was named for the famed Swedish opera star, Jenny Lind, after her tour of America in the
1850s. Because shoo-fly pie
traditionally contains molasses but no eggs, historians
conclude that it was typically baked during the winter, when chickens laid
fewer eggs and molasses could be stored in the cold weather without fear of
it fermenting.
A Montgomery pie is similar to a shoo-fly pie, except lemon juice is used in the bottom layer. Treacle tart is a pie with a filling made from light treacle. Shoo-fly pie has been described as a crumb cake baked in a pie crust. The primary ingredients of the filling are molasses, brown sugar, and water. Serving the cake in pie crust made it easier for people to eat it with their hands in the 19th century. It comes in two different versions: wet-bottom and dry-bottom. The dry-bottom version is baked until fully set and results in a more cake-like consistency throughout. The wet-bottom version is set like cake at the top where it was mixed in with the crumbs, but the very bottom is a stickier, gooier custard-like consistency. Different recipes for the wet and dry versions appeared in the early 20th century--the dry version was suitable for dunking in a cup of coffee. The modern name comes from a particular brand of molasses from Philadelphia, Shoo-fly Molasses. The name "shoo-fly pie" was used in the 1880s, but its first appearance in print was after World War I. The "Shoo-fly Molasses" brand was named after a popular circus animal that toured in Pennsylvania in the 19th century, "Shoo-fly the Boxing Mule". The mule, in turn, may have been named after a song that became popular half a century before: "Shoo Fly, Don't Bother Me". The pie is mentioned in the song "Shoo-Fly Pie and Apple Pan Dowdy", popularized by Dinah Shore in the 1940s. In the Pennsylvania Dutch language, shoo-fly pie is called Melassich Riwwelboi or Melassichriwwelkuche (molasses crumb cake). Before its modern name became popular during the 20th century, it was molasses crumb pie or soda rivvel cake (rivels are lumps of food). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoofly_pie
http://librariansmuse.blogspot.com Issue 2888 December 20, 2024
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