brush to the fire beneath it, and as both ends were open, the draft was all that could be desired.
These ancient Indians were expert potters, and made vessels in which mush and meats were boiled. The pots were often supported by large stones which held the pot against the wall and above the fire.
Other and later Indian tribes of the far West cooked quite differently, or even, before kettles were to be had, ate some of their food raw. The Hupa Indians of northern California wove water-tight baskets in which they cooked acorn-meal mush by dropping several hot stones into the mixture of water and meal. They also baked on soapstone dishes over glowing wood fires. The Indians who could get fish used to cook them on a “spit” over a fire, or boil them with other food in baskets, as already described.
While many Indians were cooking their food out-of-doors, the Eskimos, who had little or noA Hupa Indian of Northern California.
He is lifting the last of five very hot stones, which he will put into the basket where the others have made the mush boil. The stone is so hot it makes the sticks by which he is lifting it smoke and burn.
An early Indian method of cooking fish.
A drawing of General Washington’s camp gridiron is here shown. It was made from the original in the National Museum, at Washington, where many of the objects described in this article may be seen.
In those old days in the colonies, many methods were used for cooking, over and before the fire. There were horizontal, and vertically reversing gridirons. The latter would bring bothAn Eskimo reindeer stew.
This is cooked indoors in a large, rectangular, soapstone vessel over a soapstone oil-lamp.