I decided that since I have four kittens in the house this year that I would be crazy to put a Christmas tree up. Even if it is an artifical tree, I wasn't sure I wanted to wake up every morning/come home from work every evening/run a few errands and come home to 1) ornaments rolling across the floor; 2) kittens balanced on branches; 3) the tree laying on its side, a few times over the season or every day.
What I did do was stop at Lowe's one Saturday morning and ask the fellows trimming trees if I could raid their cut branches bin and take an armful. I made a swag for the front door and dug out a vintage Mason jar where I have half a dozen or so boughs draped in vintage red velvet ribbon and a handful of ornaments. All out of kitten range, of course, on top of a small bookcase.
The 'no Christmas tree' was a wise decision as I discovered that within seconds of taking the photo below, I heard the first ornamnent hit the floor and a walnut go 'swoosh' out of the bowl and onto the tile. Kitten paws have impressive batting power. The attention a makeshift tree garners from out of kitten sight to within kitten range is huge.
There was not a huge amount of baking done this year. Enough to get treats out to family and friends and a very small handful left for myself, though I'm thinking a half recipe of bourbon balls might be coming to fruition in the next few hours. Every year, I try to make something new, something different among the many batches of biscotti and other sweets made. I picked up a slim cookbook a couple of months ago, 'Treasured Honey Recipes' from the California Honey Advisory Board. The Honey Walnut Date Bars was this year's new recipe. I've made them four times this month. And each time they've been devoured. I'm always so happy when a vintage recipe still works after 40+ years.
Merry Christmas!
I cook, I bake, I eat...and sometimes write about it. Welcome to my corner of random musings.
Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Thursday, February 26, 2015
The Easy Way Out via 1928
'Any one can Bake,' according the cookbook of the same name from 1928, released by the Royal Baking Powder Company. One of the more recent acquisitions to my cookbook collection, this is really a little gem. I love the photos, table setting guides, and the recipes are pretty easy and straightforward. I really could have made something a little more involved, a little more elaborate, but I opted for biscuits. There is a recipe for a coffee cake that completely caught my attention, because who can turn down a good coffee cake? But after the decadence of the brownies I made over the weekend, I thought it best to stay away from another indulgence of cake.
Biscuits are always a good pick in my book. While they may be easy to make, I don't think they're always easy to be successful. You can have 'okay' biscuits, 'good' biscuits, and 'awesome' biscuits. I'm going to put this in the 'good' category. A little flaky with a decent rise. I halved the recipe and did use shortening. I may have rolled them out too thinly, but honestly, once they were baked, split, and topped with a fried egg...they were fabulous.
Baking Powder Biscuits
Adapted from the Royal Master Recipe for Baking Powder Biscuits
Makes 6
1 cup flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1 tbsp shortening
3 fl oz milk
Preheat oven to 475 degrees. Line a cookie sheet with parchment. Sift together flour, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl. Add shortening and cut in with pastry blender or forks. Gradually add milk to make a soft dough.
Roll dough out of about a half-inch thickness and cut out with biscuit cutter. Place biscuits on cookie sheet and bake for 10-12 minutes, until they are golden.
Serve warm with plenty of butter.
Biscuits are always a good pick in my book. While they may be easy to make, I don't think they're always easy to be successful. You can have 'okay' biscuits, 'good' biscuits, and 'awesome' biscuits. I'm going to put this in the 'good' category. A little flaky with a decent rise. I halved the recipe and did use shortening. I may have rolled them out too thinly, but honestly, once they were baked, split, and topped with a fried egg...they were fabulous.
Baking Powder Biscuits
Adapted from the Royal Master Recipe for Baking Powder Biscuits
Makes 6
1 cup flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1 tbsp shortening
3 fl oz milk
Preheat oven to 475 degrees. Line a cookie sheet with parchment. Sift together flour, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl. Add shortening and cut in with pastry blender or forks. Gradually add milk to make a soft dough.
Roll dough out of about a half-inch thickness and cut out with biscuit cutter. Place biscuits on cookie sheet and bake for 10-12 minutes, until they are golden.
Serve warm with plenty of butter.
Thursday, February 12, 2015
1861 Carrots in the German Way
I promised to start a Throwback Thursday series, where once I week I'll cook a recipe from one of my vintage cookbooks, covering each decade of the 20th century through the present. Within a few hours of making this declaration, I discover that I have nothing to cover 1900-1910. Granted, my 1914 copy of The Boston Cooking School Cookbook has copyrights from 1896 to 1914, but I'm leaving that book in the second decade.
What I do have is a 1968 edition of Beeton's Book of Household Management, which was originally published between 1859 and 1861. Yes...we're throwing it back to the 19th century for the first #tbt! The 1968 edition is a facsimile of the original 1861 version, it's small in stature--just about 5 x7 inches--and comes in at a whopping 1100+ pages. The Table of Contents covers everything from the duites of a home's mistress, what is expected of the housekeeper, the arrangement and economy of the kitchen, and 'observations' and recipes for every game bird you can think of, boiled calves heads, and veal cake (promised to be a convenient dish for a picnic).
I began flipping through the desserts sections, but figured that with half a cake still in the fridge, I should probably opt for something that wasn't a cake, cookie, or pudding. Maybe something a little healthier, but not a venture into how to stew pigeons or roast a haunch of venison.
Vegetables seemed a safe route to travel and after bypassing 'Artichoke Pudding',' 'Potato Snow,' and a few other recipes, I settled on 'To Dress Carrots in the German Way.' Honestly, I'm not sure what makes this the 'German Way'...maybe the nutmeg? I don't use nutmeg too often and usually it's in sweets, but this...this is a great dish even after 150 years.
I'm going to spend a little more time in this book. An explanation of the duties of the laundry-maid. Advice on child rearing and dealing with infantile fits. And where else would you learn about a mesurement called a gill? (And then have to Google to find the answer. It's a quarter pint!)
Adapted from 'Beeton's Book of Household Management'
Serves 2-4
3 medium to large carrots, washed and cut into short pieces
3 tbsp butter
1/4 tsp nutmeg, freshly grated
1 tbsp parsley, minced
1 tbsp onion, minced
1 1/2 cups veetable or chicken stock
1 tbsp flour
salt
In a large skillet, melt 2 tbsp of the butter over medium heat. Add the carrots, onions, parsley, and nutmeg. Stir to coat the carrots and cook until onions begin to turn translucent and carrots begin to soften. Pour stock into skillet and simmer until carrots continue to tender. In a small saucepan, melt the remaining tablespoon of butter, then add the flour, stirring until mixture begins to brown. Add the liquid from the carrots and bring to a boil for a minute or two. Return stock to skillet and simmer until sauce reduces and thickens.
A perfect side for roast chicken or over a bed of rice.
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Wanna Swap?
I love Instagram. Everyone can be a photographer (with varying degrees of talent). There are a million posts of cats (I am extremely guilty of contributing to this), and there is no end to the food posts from bloggers and foodies alike (I am also guilty of contributing to this). But...know what else I've discovered? (Other than the shops people run on there. I've bought more than my fair share of vintage kitchenware, linens, and jewelry over the past two years.) I've discovered that there are an awful lot of great people on it.
AND it is through different groups of these great people that swaps are held! Swaps--where you are partnered up, trade various bits of info about yourself, and go out and find something awesome for your partner. I've done a vintage Secret Santa Christmas swap, a vintage planter swap, and a coffee mug swap (with a second mug swap happening soon!). I also recently hosted my first cookbook swap!
I am sure it comes as no surprise that the love of cooking leads to the love of cookbooks. I especially love vintage cookbooks. Every once in a while, I like to pick a recipe from a vintage cookbook and see if it stands up to the hands of time. I enjoy seeing food trends over the decades (aspic, fondue) and watch the progression (or decline) of food photography (like The Brown Period, as I call the 70s). A post went onto Instagram, looking for people to sign up, and after about a week, I had nineteen people just as excited as I was to swap books. Everyone received a short survey to help discern tastes and set the terms: vintage and/or modern books accepted, extras okay, and keep it all under $20, folks!
And with that...'Cookbook Swap 2014' was underway. Partners were partnered, surveys were surveyed, and the time limit to gather and send was set. A couple of weeks later, the posts began to pop up. Hashtagged #cookbookswap2014, swappers were showing off the contents of their #happymail packages that were being delivered. Between the fun of picking out the 'just right' cooksbooks and kitchenalia, then watching the mailbox for your box of surprises, there's a feeling of being a kid on Christmas morning to it all.
The kicker? As swappers were posting their pictures, even more people were asking about getting in on the swap, so it looks as though I'll be hosting another one in a month or so. It will be the Fall/Pre-Holiday edition of 'Cookbook Swap 2014.' Once again, I have to thank everyone who was a part of this. The whole thing went off without a hitch, everyone came through, and everyone had a great time. This just might turn into a regular occurrence.
AND it is through different groups of these great people that swaps are held! Swaps--where you are partnered up, trade various bits of info about yourself, and go out and find something awesome for your partner. I've done a vintage Secret Santa Christmas swap, a vintage planter swap, and a coffee mug swap (with a second mug swap happening soon!). I also recently hosted my first cookbook swap!
I am sure it comes as no surprise that the love of cooking leads to the love of cookbooks. I especially love vintage cookbooks. Every once in a while, I like to pick a recipe from a vintage cookbook and see if it stands up to the hands of time. I enjoy seeing food trends over the decades (aspic, fondue) and watch the progression (or decline) of food photography (like The Brown Period, as I call the 70s). A post went onto Instagram, looking for people to sign up, and after about a week, I had nineteen people just as excited as I was to swap books. Everyone received a short survey to help discern tastes and set the terms: vintage and/or modern books accepted, extras okay, and keep it all under $20, folks!
And with that...'Cookbook Swap 2014' was underway. Partners were partnered, surveys were surveyed, and the time limit to gather and send was set. A couple of weeks later, the posts began to pop up. Hashtagged #cookbookswap2014, swappers were showing off the contents of their #happymail packages that were being delivered. Between the fun of picking out the 'just right' cooksbooks and kitchenalia, then watching the mailbox for your box of surprises, there's a feeling of being a kid on Christmas morning to it all.
The kicker? As swappers were posting their pictures, even more people were asking about getting in on the swap, so it looks as though I'll be hosting another one in a month or so. It will be the Fall/Pre-Holiday edition of 'Cookbook Swap 2014.' Once again, I have to thank everyone who was a part of this. The whole thing went off without a hitch, everyone came through, and everyone had a great time. This just might turn into a regular occurrence.
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What started it all... |
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A collage of the photos posted on Instagram. |
Labels:
#cookbookswap2014,
#happymail,
cookbook,
cookbook swap,
cookbooks,
Instagram,
swap,
vintage
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
New Old Tools of the Trade
Ever since high school, I've been a collector of vintage. What I collect has changed over the years. It started with clothing and handbags, scarves, and jewelry. I went through a very long phase of wrought iron candle holders and candelabra. Then came the kitchen- and dinnerware. This phase has lasted the longest. I've started and stopped collections. Salt and pepper shakers were my first, because they're small. But seriously, how many sets does one person need? I've sold most of them, except for the milk glass range set and a 'fancy' silver pair. Of course, I should apply that thinking to my current 'accidental' collection of pitchers and creamers. I can't resist the pureness of a white ironstone creamer, or the charm of a bright red cap on a clear glass pitcher. I love enamelware and glassware. Anything in aqua makes me weak in the knees. I have a set of Sasha Brastoff's 'Surf Ballet' in aqua and platinum that I cherish. That's my 'good' china, the set I would have registered for...if I had been getting married in 1954. I can see that dinnerware displayed in a blonde Heywood Wakefield hutch, situated in a dining room flooded with light. Someday. When I have the house and the hutch.
I love mid-century pieces. Stainless steel and rosewood serving trays and platters from Denmark. Pyrex and Fire King casseroles for roasting chicken or baking lasagna. Silver-trimmed Dorothy Thorpe old fashioned glasses to channel a 'Mad Men' vibe. And the cookbooks. Oh, my god...the cookbooks. This blog has been a thrift shopping bonanza for me. Know why? Props! An interesting plate, an embroidered tablecloth, a glass juicer. Sometimes I'll be setting up a photo wishing I had a certain colour plate or working in the other direction, I'll be at the thrift store, pick up an item, and imagine it in a future shot.
I try to be practical (justification!). I look for pieces that I will actually use on a regular basis. I don't like anything too fine or delicate (hence the pieces of restaurant ware--they take a beating). So imagine how happy I was when I came across one of my newest finds, an old enameled dutch oven. Yes, I already had a dutch oven. All 5-quarts of it are great when I'm making no-knead bread or a large amount of stock. I wasn't really on the look-out for another one, but when the opportunity arises, well, who am I to say no? This one...well, she's a looker. She's a vintage Cousances (bought out by Le Creuset). Cobalt blue, 18 cm, a little discoloured on the inside from use, but the enamel is still shiny and only a nick or two in the enamel on the rim and one of the handles. A perfect bargain at $8.00. A perfect size for me. A perfect size for making soup.
Maybe I'll share photos of the blog props after I do some rearranging. Maybe I need to rotate what I have and freshen up the kitchen. Maybe I need to purge some of the collection. Or maybe I just need to keep finding things to make in my new old tool.
Pesto Broth with Butternut Squash Ravioli
Serves 2
For the pesto:
4 oz basil
2 cloves garlic, sliced
2/3 cup Parmesan, grated
1/2 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
2/3 cup pine nuts
Olive oil
For the soup:
2 cups vegetable or chicken stock
4 tablespoons pesto
2 cups spinach
4 oz ravioli or other cooked pasta
Parmesan, grated, for topping
To make the pesto, remove any thick stems from basil and throw half the amounts of basil, pine nuts, and cheese in a food processor with the garlic and black pepper. Pulse a few times to mince the ingredients and pour in some olive oil. Stop every few pulses to scrape down the sides and mix everything together. Add the remaining ingredients, pulse repeatedly, slowly adding more oil until it reaches a consistency you're happy with.
Heat the stock over medium heat. Add the pesto and whisk to mix in. Add the spinach and let wilt before adding the pasta. Simmer for 5-8 minutes. Ladle into soup bowls and top with grated cheese.
Note: I used a butternut squash ravioli from Trader Joe's. You'll find it in the refrigerated section. You could easily use tortellini. If you want to use a plain pasta, I would use a cut like ditalini.
I love mid-century pieces. Stainless steel and rosewood serving trays and platters from Denmark. Pyrex and Fire King casseroles for roasting chicken or baking lasagna. Silver-trimmed Dorothy Thorpe old fashioned glasses to channel a 'Mad Men' vibe. And the cookbooks. Oh, my god...the cookbooks. This blog has been a thrift shopping bonanza for me. Know why? Props! An interesting plate, an embroidered tablecloth, a glass juicer. Sometimes I'll be setting up a photo wishing I had a certain colour plate or working in the other direction, I'll be at the thrift store, pick up an item, and imagine it in a future shot.
I try to be practical (justification!). I look for pieces that I will actually use on a regular basis. I don't like anything too fine or delicate (hence the pieces of restaurant ware--they take a beating). So imagine how happy I was when I came across one of my newest finds, an old enameled dutch oven. Yes, I already had a dutch oven. All 5-quarts of it are great when I'm making no-knead bread or a large amount of stock. I wasn't really on the look-out for another one, but when the opportunity arises, well, who am I to say no? This one...well, she's a looker. She's a vintage Cousances (bought out by Le Creuset). Cobalt blue, 18 cm, a little discoloured on the inside from use, but the enamel is still shiny and only a nick or two in the enamel on the rim and one of the handles. A perfect bargain at $8.00. A perfect size for me. A perfect size for making soup.
Maybe I'll share photos of the blog props after I do some rearranging. Maybe I need to rotate what I have and freshen up the kitchen. Maybe I need to purge some of the collection. Or maybe I just need to keep finding things to make in my new old tool.
Pesto Broth with Butternut Squash Ravioli
Serves 2
For the pesto:
4 oz basil
2 cloves garlic, sliced
2/3 cup Parmesan, grated
1/2 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
2/3 cup pine nuts
Olive oil
For the soup:
2 cups vegetable or chicken stock
4 tablespoons pesto
2 cups spinach
4 oz ravioli or other cooked pasta
Parmesan, grated, for topping
To make the pesto, remove any thick stems from basil and throw half the amounts of basil, pine nuts, and cheese in a food processor with the garlic and black pepper. Pulse a few times to mince the ingredients and pour in some olive oil. Stop every few pulses to scrape down the sides and mix everything together. Add the remaining ingredients, pulse repeatedly, slowly adding more oil until it reaches a consistency you're happy with.
Heat the stock over medium heat. Add the pesto and whisk to mix in. Add the spinach and let wilt before adding the pasta. Simmer for 5-8 minutes. Ladle into soup bowls and top with grated cheese.
Note: I used a butternut squash ravioli from Trader Joe's. You'll find it in the refrigerated section. You could easily use tortellini. If you want to use a plain pasta, I would use a cut like ditalini.
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Isn't she pretty? |
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It all started last Summer when Dad sent me that green pitcher. |
Monday, September 17, 2012
From Those Who Know
A couple of years ago, I was brutal in cleaning up the collection, keeping only those that I thought I would really use. On occasion, I did come home with another cookbook, but I made sure that it would be a book that would be consulted over and over again. Then the vintage collection began. I can probably pinpoint that fateful moment to a weekend trip to Palm Springs about 5 years ago. It was an old paperback from the 1950's in really poor condition, but I loved the graphics, and for less than a dollar, how could I leave it? A year or so ago, I had the notion to make notecards with recipes from old cookbooks. That justified the purchase of more cookbooks...more raw materials needed. After I brought the books home, I realized that I loved looking through them...for the pictures, for the copy, for the sheer enjoyment of recipes that you don't see today.
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Where it all began. |
I starting wondering about how well those recipes would hold up today. I was thinking about how great it would be to find a book of tried and true recipes. Then it hit me...you know those cookbooks that are put out by churches, women's groups or schools for fundraising? Spiral-bound, Times Courier font, no-frills books full of recipes handed down from grandmother to mother to daughter, passed from neighbor to neighbor with all the kinks worked out over the years. So...guess what I did. I bought myself a few. A lovely little lot of five. I've perused them over and over again since I received them last week. I love seeing each recipe credited with its contributor. I love seeing the occasional mention of 'oleo' in the ingredients list and the sage advice in the directions: 'Allow plenty of time for this.' Know what? I can see myself making a lot of the recipes in these books. It took me no time to try the first one. A recipe for bread that seemed so easy, I had to make it. I was not disappointed in the outcome. It was easy and delicious and no doubt will be in rotation regularly.
So...I want to say 'thank you' to the Dinwiddie County Junior Women's Club for gathering their winning recipes together, and especially to Ann H. Jarvis for her English Muffin Loaf. This is fabulous right out of the oven, slathered with butter, but I actually think I liked it better the next day. You can slice this really thin. Think about it for a cocktail party...use it as you would cocktail rye bread. I also topped it with a spread of cream cheese, feta, and roasted red pepper. This is a keeper.
Next time you find yourself at a yard sale or flea market, don't turn your nose up at these books. They may not have the splashy color photos or be written by the latest Food Network star, but I'll bet you'll use it over and over, because, well...they know.
English Muffin Loaf
Courtesy of Ann H. Jarvis
Makes two loaves
6 cups unsifted flour
2 pkg dry yeast
1 tbsp sugar
2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp baking soda
2 cups milk
1/2 cup water
corn meal
Combine 3 cups flour, undissolved yeast, sugar, salt and baking soda. Heat milk and water until very warm (120-130 degrees). Add to dry ingredients and beat well. Stir in remaining 3 cups flour to make a stiff batter. Spoon into two 8 1/2 x 4 1/2 x 2 1/2 inch loaf pans that have been greased and sprinkled with corn meal. Sprinkle tops with corn meal. Cover; let rise in a warm place, free from draft, 45 minutes. Bake 25 minutes at 400 degrees. Remove form pans; cool. Slice and toast. Freezes well.
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The Source |
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The Result |
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A Sampling of 'The Collection' |
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