The Wild West captures many people’s imaginations as a time of freedom and hard work. But we don’t always realize how hard living was during those days.
Because of their harsh lifestyle, many pioneers had to resort to eating and cooking industriously. Some of these foods were borrowed from Native American cultures, who had been living on the land for generations for years and knew how to feed themselves well. But other meals were made up on the spot as a way to get sustenance and weren’t always the best-tasting.
Check these Wild West meals to see for yourself how creative people got back in the day.
1. Would you eat roast skunk?
According to one pioneer cookbook, skunks and muskrats would easily become dinner for people in the Wild West. The ingredients list is quite simple (just skunk, bouillon, carrots, and onion juice), and the cooking instructions are straightforward. That must be part of why this recipe became a go-to for pioneers.


2. Frying Pan Bread didn’t require much equipment.
People cooking in the Wild West needed an alternative to oven cooking. This bread could be made over an open fire, using only a frying pan.
This recipe may have come from Indigenous groups and it required very few ingredients. The way to test doneness was to hit the skillet and listen for a ringing sound.


3. Beef tea, anyone?
Beef tea was popular for pioneers, but it was also a British health dish.
Beef would be boiled in water in order to create a drink that was similar to beef broth. This was said to help people having digestive problems.


4. Beef and beans were classics
These two popular foods are still popular today. Beef and beans are both great sources of protein, so it makes sense that cowboys turned to these dishes as well.
5. You could still make acorn bread today
Acorn bread is actually a Native American recipe that pioneers learned about and began to make themselves.
It involves gathering acorns and grinding them up to make flour. If you have acorns in your backyard, this could also be a tasty gluten-free bread you try to cook today.


6. Rather than Jell-O, calf’s foot jelly
Calf’s foot jelly has shown up in a number of cultures, such as Ashkenazi Jewish food. But it was prevalent in the Wild West for the belief that it could restore strength and health to people.
This recipe consisted of boiling the calf’s feet down into a gelatin consistency.


7. Rocky Mountain Oysters, aka Prairie Oysters
Like many other people around the world, the pioneers ate animal testicles. This particular dish is bull testicles that were removed from the animals in order to make them get meatier and behave better.
The pioneers would fry them up and enjoy them as a tasty delicacy.


8. Vinegar Pie wasn’t as bad as it sounds
There weren’t really bountiful grocery stores in the Wild West, so people had to get creative with their sweet treats.
Turns out, pie crust ingredients were pretty accessible (milk and butter both come from cows!), so people would often fill the pies with whatever they had around. In this case, the vinegar is a flavoring rather than a pie filled with vinegar, and it helps to balance out the sweetness of the pie.


9. Frizzled beef sounds pretty good to me!
Frizzled beef calls for dried beef, which today is much more expensive than it was back in the day. Mostly, this recipe is dried beef fried in butter, with milk and flour added for consistency. It would be served over bread for a really hearty meal.


10. Sheep Sorrel Pie
Lemon pie is pretty good, but a lot of pioneers didn’t have easy access to the citrus fruit. Instead, they made pie from sheep sorrel, a plant that grew abundantly in the area.
The flavor of sheep sorrel was almost tart enough to replace lemons.


11. Squirrel meat lead to some other inventions
Squirrels were everywhere, so they were easy to kill and eat. Wild game was a popular food for people living in the west. There were a lot of ways to cook squirrels, be it frying or stewing them.
There are even rumors that the popularity of eating squirrels brought about the development of the Kentucky rifle, which is very good at killing squirrels from a distance.


12. Jackrabbit was a plentiful meat
Just like squirrels, there were plenty of jackrabbits in the Wild West. For pioneers, this was an easy animal to kill and eat. That being said, jackrabbits don’t have that much protein, so if you only ate them for meat you could get malnutrition. This happened to a lot of people on the Great Plains who turned to jackrabbit for sustenance. This dish also made a resurgence during the Great Depression, with similar results.


13. If you lived in the south, you would drink Sweet Potato Coffee
During the Civil War, the North created a major blockade of goods going towards the South. As a result, people living in the south didn’t have easy access to coffee beans. Oftentimes to make up for this lack, people would combine a small amount of coffee with dried and ground sweet potato to make the drink.


14. Bear Head Cheese
This snack wasn’t actually cheese. It was a method of preserving the meat from a bear’s head, because pioneers wanted to use all parts of the animal they killed. It was a brined and solidified collection of the meat from the head that was pressed into a block for consumption. Today, head cheese comes from pigs.


15. SonofaB—- Stew
There may not be a more cowboy-style name than this one. This was a type of beef stew that used various parts of the steer. Some of the main ingredients were the cow’s head and tongue. Although we don’t really eat it today, it was hearty and kept cowboys fed.


Would you try any of these recipes? There certainly is something for everyone here, and the ingredients might be even easier to come by than they were during the Gold Rush.
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