Browsing Old Cookbooks
February is a month that always seems
longer than its 28 days. It has not helped that this year we have had bright
sunny and warm days that lull us into believing that spring is just around the
corner, only to be awakened by another Sunday snowstorm. It is a good time to
browse old cookbooks for recipes less familiar and sometimes overlooked or
forgotten.
One of my favorites still is M. Givens
“Modern Encyclopedia of Cooking”
(1947) which has its origins in the Ozarks. Marjorie Moser published her “Good
Maine Food” also in 1947 and I have the original edition thanks to my younger
son. What started as a simple check on Welsh Rarebit (Rabbit) and curiosity about Kedgeree, often mentioned as breakfast
food in 19th century novels set in Britain turned in a delightful
and often humorous afternoon.
The casual perusal revealed not only
the predictable Ozark recipes for baked possum and racoon casserole, but it
also had a detailed recipe for frog legs. Ms. Moser and Kenneth Roberts were
equally prodigious in their presentations of wildlife recipes. There are
recipes for woodcock and porcupine livers.
Though Roberts cites an Old English method of woodcock preparation that
has the killed woodcock hang on an outside peg until it is gone and then cook
the peg! It also did not make me regret finding these recipes a couple of years
ago when our pear trees were attacked by a band of porcupineS.
If you were ever sent on a “snipe
hunt” in your younger years at camp, you may be interested that Maine actually
has snipes. They are real birds with brown plumage that wade in marshy areas.
The recipes for snipe (as porcupine) advise roasting them in clay, then broken
by a hammer, with the clay retaining the feathers (quills). Definitely a time
saver! What delightful reading, but here are some more accessible recipes.
Welsh rarebit is one simple, but tasty
preparations one could find in a pub or prepare at home for a warm lunch or
light supper. It basically consists of a slightly tangy cheese sauce on toast.
What could be simpler? But like most recipes it has evolved with time from a
simple sauce of milk, cheese and an egg to a beer and porter containing sauce with more complex flavors.
Welsh Rarebit
Melt 2 Tblsp butter in a pan over low
heat and stir in 2 Tblsp flour to make a roux. Slowly stir in ½ cup whole milk
followed by ½ cup ale until smooth. Add 1 tsp. Dijon mustard, 1 ½ cups shredded
sharp cheddar cheese and stir until melted, but do not allow to boil. Remove
from heat and stir in 1 well beaten egg until mixture is smooth and thick.
Serve on thick slices of toasted bread.
Bubble and
Squeak
This is another dish from pub fare,
but can easily be adapted to the home kitchen and has the benefit for utilizing
leftovers in a delicious meal. In a large pan melt 4 Tblsp butter, 1 Tblsp.
olive oil and sauté 1 chopped medium onion for 5 minutes. Stir in 1 ½ cups
shredded cabbage, cook for 1 minute and then stir in 3 cups leftover mashed
potatoes. When mixture is heated through stir in a cup of leftover cooked peas
or carrots. Continue to fry on medium heat 10 minutes, turning occasionally.
Serve hot with a fired egg on top.
Kedgeree was an import to Britain at
the time when the East India Company flourished in India under the British Raj.
It became a breakfast food that featured smoked fish, rice and curry. Ms.
Moser’s recipes feature unsmoked Maine seafood, but this version with smoked
fish provides more depth to this dish.
Kedgeree
with Smoked Trout
Heat, but do not boil 1 cup milk with
1Tblsp butter, 1 tsp. onion powder and 1 tsp. Dijon mustard each. Stir in 2
tsp. mild curry powder, 2 cups cooked rice, ¼ cup sherry (optional), 1 tsp.
salt and pepper to taste. Stir in 1 cup flaked smoked trout. Heat and serve
with quartered hard-boiled egg on top.
Culinary explorations can be
delightful, edifying and delicious.
(I. Winicov
Harrington lives in coastal Maine and is the author of “How to Eat Healthy and
Well for Less than $5.00 a Day: the Smart-Frugal Food Plan”; website:
www.winicov-harrington.com)
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