gotsnowgotslush
skates like Eck
- Joined
 - Dec 24, 2007
 
- Posts
 - 25,720
 
1951 N Y Folklore Qtly vii, 272 
Molasses knobs, a kind of Christmas candy, were also made. [1911]
GRENFELL 64-5
Our cook, who had gone ashore to forage for some fresh food supplies, had discovered his wife mixing a few spoonfuls of the ever-scarce molasses into the loaf she was baking, that the family might, in 'lassie loaf,' have the nearest approach to a birthday cake they could afford.
M 70-9 Weiners and beans. That's what I'm taking. And lots of lassie loaf.
M 65-9 Lassy mogs [are] small round cakes made from a mixture of flour, baking powder and molasses, etc.
1979 Salt Water, Fresh Water We had a mug-up, home-made bread, strawberry jam, molasses mogs, hard molasses cookies.
1939 DULEY 36 I'm going to make boiled pudding with lassey sauce.
T 393/4-67 Now when that puncheon ( high- proof dark, heavy rum from the Carribean) was gone, there'd be usually a half a barrel o' sugar, molasses sugar An' 'twas the best kind—we loved it on bread.
1842 JUKES i, 49 Molasses-tea [is] common tea, boiled in a tea-kettle, with a spoonful of molasses for sweetening, and often drunk, in default of a better cup, out of the tea-kettle lid.
1897 HOWLEY MS Reminiscences
http://www.heritage.nf.ca/dictionary/azindex/pages/2921.html
				
			Molasses knobs, a kind of Christmas candy, were also made. [1911]
GRENFELL 64-5
Our cook, who had gone ashore to forage for some fresh food supplies, had discovered his wife mixing a few spoonfuls of the ever-scarce molasses into the loaf she was baking, that the family might, in 'lassie loaf,' have the nearest approach to a birthday cake they could afford.
M 70-9 Weiners and beans. That's what I'm taking. And lots of lassie loaf.
M 65-9 Lassy mogs [are] small round cakes made from a mixture of flour, baking powder and molasses, etc.
1979 Salt Water, Fresh Water We had a mug-up, home-made bread, strawberry jam, molasses mogs, hard molasses cookies.
1939 DULEY 36 I'm going to make boiled pudding with lassey sauce.
T 393/4-67 Now when that puncheon ( high- proof dark, heavy rum from the Carribean) was gone, there'd be usually a half a barrel o' sugar, molasses sugar An' 'twas the best kind—we loved it on bread.
1842 JUKES i, 49 Molasses-tea [is] common tea, boiled in a tea-kettle, with a spoonful of molasses for sweetening, and often drunk, in default of a better cup, out of the tea-kettle lid.
1897 HOWLEY MS Reminiscences
http://www.heritage.nf.ca/dictionary/azindex/pages/2921.html