The Day

GHOSTS OF CHRISTMAS PAST

Leffingwel­l House in Norwich remembers Founding Father’s boozy eggnog recipe

- By MARTHA SHANAHAN m.shanahan@theday.com

Re-enactors Greg Farlow, left, and Dayne Rugh, both of Norwich, take a close look at the ornaments for sale in the west parlor of the Leffingwel­l House Museum in Norwich during the Colonial Christmas open house there Sunday.

Norwich — One quart cream. One quart milk. One dozen tablespoon­s sugar, one pint brandy, half a pint of rye whiskey, half a pint of Jamaica rum and a quarter pint of sherry.

The parlor at the historic Leffingwel­l House Museum was decorated Sunday as George Washington's Mount Vernon would have been outfitted for Christmas: simply, with small garnishes of mistletoe and holly.

But the eggnog served to museum visitors in styrofoam cups barely resembled the drink Washington would have sipped on in his own parlor.

Inspired by that boozy recipe, attributed to Washington who visited the inn on more than one occasion, museum volunteer Camilla Farlow included the drink in her menu at the annual colonial Christmas celebratio­n. The 342-yearold house was built by Stephen Backus and later kept as an inn by the Leffingwel­l family.

The recipe fit with what Courtney Reardon described as a typical holiday season for an 18th-century high society household.

“Big parties with lots of booze,” said Reardon, a museum volunteer and Leffingwel­l House historian from East Haddam who stood by a plate of fruitcake Sunday, serving it to the parlor's visitors. If they didn't want eggnog, they could try another recipe on display in the museum: rum punch, an equal mixture of fruit juice, light rum, dark rum and orange curaçao liquer.

The drink in the styrofoam cups on a table in the museum's George Washington-themed parlor didn't have any alcohol in it — just storebough­t non-alcoholic eggnog and rum extract.

“He (George Washington) could hold his eggnog. The Revolution was founded by a bunch of men who were, by our terms, drunk.” COURTNEY REARDON LEFFINGWEL­L HOUSE VOLUNTEER, HISTORIAN

In another room of the museum, cookies came with a suggestion for an equally lethal colonial concoction: flip, a drink made with sugar, eggs, rum, brandy and ale.

Modern day drinkers in the museum, operated by the nonprofit Society of the Founders of Norwich, got a mild, non-alcoholic cider instead.

Washington was tall, Reardon said, and was probably more accustomed to the heavy drinking of his time than the crowd in the museum would be if they tried his version of a holiday drink.

“He could hold his eggnog,” she said. And Washington wasn't alone: “The Revolution was founded by a bunch of men who were, by our terms, drunk,” she said.

The alcohol, Farlow said, was likely a coping mechanism for long winters with no heating.

“If you look at the ingredient­s, it's ... to gag for,” she said. “But there wasn't much else to keep them warm.”

 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ??
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY
 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? Re-enactor Kenneth Giella of Dayville talks with visitors Tamara and Dennis Gibbs of Groton Long Point while in the tavern of the Leffingwel­l House Museum where hot cider was offered Sunday during the Colonial Christmas open house in Norwich.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY Re-enactor Kenneth Giella of Dayville talks with visitors Tamara and Dennis Gibbs of Groton Long Point while in the tavern of the Leffingwel­l House Museum where hot cider was offered Sunday during the Colonial Christmas open house in Norwich.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States