Blue Eggs!

 

Blue Baked Eggs

 

Not for you if you don't like bleu cheese; but if you do, these are lovely!

 

Preheat your oven to 325.

 

For each person, get out a custard cup, and also an oven tray that will hold all your cups (if you have a lot of cups you may need to adjust the time, or use a convection setting to be sure the heat is distributing nicely).

 

Brush a generous amount of olive oil into each cup.

Break one egg into each cup.

Top each with a generous amount of blue cheese.

Sprinkle with a somewhat generous amount of ground black pepper.

 

Bake for 30 minutes/until set to your liking (I need mine completely cooked).

 

 

 

The easiest crusty bread / rolls ever

 


 

Crusty, chewy, springing, whole grain, easy, and plenty of scope for creativity…

 

This is extremely unorthodox (including it has no sugar) but it super worked for me. Inspired by Nagi, who in turn was inspired by the New York Times; but her ideas didn't work for me, so probably type of flour, brand of yeast, etc matter a lot.

I edited this after more experimentation in late October 2020.

 

Makes one big Dutch oven size loaf or 2 regular size loaves or a lot more rolls or an in-between amount of say little coffee cakes.

 

You'll need a kitchen scales and thermometer.

Note that the type of yeast (instant) and the type of flour (hard wheat) seem to make a difference.

 

Start probably about 2½ hours if your kitchen is 69 or above, up to 4½ hours if cold, before you want to start eating it.

 

Mix in a large bowl to combine

·  500 g whole wheat flour (I used Breadtopia Hard White Spring Whole Wheat; note that pastry flour did not work for me)

·      1 packet instant yeast

·      a scant 2 tsp salt (the full 2 tsp will probably be fine with 500 g)

 

Then

·      at least 2 cups water at 120 F

The mixture should be wet, sloppy, though not super thin like cake batter; add flour or water if needed.

 

If the sides of the bowl have much dough, get your fingers very wet and push the dough down to join the rest of the dough.

Coat the top with

·      olive oil

Cover.

 

Set in a warmish place for 1½ to 3 hours, until it is doubled. Check after the 1st hour to be sure it's rising; if necessary move it to say a microwave no one will be using for a while with a mug of just-boiled water set beside the bowl, be sure the bowl is covered, and shut the door. But I have found even in a 69 kitchen it only takes 1½ hours.

 

Meanwhile choose what shape(s) and pan(s) you want to use – though you'll not be able to shape-shape like pretzels or crescents from this; it's too thin to do more shaping than a rough ball, and really is more conducive to spooning into a pan. (I myself prefer rolls dropped into say a round cake pan that rise to meet each other, to be torn apart to serve; but you could bake in cupcake pans instead if you prefer.) You can go from a small roll size up to a big rounded loaf; you can bake in shallow or deep pans.

 

Also choose what flavor(s) you want. Here are flavor ideas – note that unless you're crazy about plain bread this really is lovely with added flavorings, especially spiced or herbed or sweet ones, and you can really get creative, this is just to get you started:

cinnamon & raisins

cinnamon & sugar

butter & brown sugar

chocolate pieces

fresh garlic & butter

fresh herbs & olive oil (and maybe coarse salt)

 

When your dough is about doubled, butter or coconut-oil your pan(s) (olive oil tastes good but always makes my bread stick).

 

Without completely deflating your dough, spoon in about half as much as you want for each pan and top with your flavorings, though probably not to the very edge to prevent their burning and also so it rises together so doesn't fall apart, then top with the rest you want of the dough. You'll want to leave enough room for some rising in your pan.

 

Sprinkle with some plain flour (corn meal would probably be lovely too). (I prefer not brushing with say butter, since I'm aiming at crusty crust.)

 

Let rise in a warmish place for 20 to 30 minutes, only covering it if it's convenient. (This assumes your oven takes no longer than about 15 minutes to preheat; if yours takes a lot longer, start the next step earlier.)

 

Then turn on your oven to preheat to 450 (or 430 convection) while the dough continues to rise.

 

Bake at 450 (or 430 convection) until it tests about 212 F in/near the center. The time depends on the size of the bread; I'd start with 15 minutes for rolls, up to 45 for a big loaf. You may want to keep notes for future reference on how long it took you to bake favorite shapes and sizes. I found that my narrow glass loaf pans took 40 minutes in a 430 convection oven. If you use a Dutch oven, you may want to experiment with keeping the cover on for a while at first.

 

Let it sit, still in its pan, on top of say a cool stovetop with grates, or another grate, for 10 minutes.

 

Then put it upside down onto a cutting board, turn it over, and slice and enjoy!

Good warm or cold, at least to me.

I store mine in the refrigerator (or freezer) if I used butter.

A nice easy turmeric latte

A Relaxing Turmeric Latte

 

Heat at the Latte setting in your milk appliance

         1 cup milk (pref whole) per person

Pour most of it (leave behind the foam for a bit) into a mug for each person.

Sprinkle in to taste

         ground ginger

         ground turmeric

         ground black pepper

         ground cardamom

         plus liquid honey

Stir and then top with the rest of the milk/the foam.

Let it sit for about 5 minutes to meld.

When about to serve, top with

         a bit more cardamom

         some fine coconut

(I was inspired by a recipe in the September-October 2020 issue of Maranda Pleasant's Thrive magazine.)

 

Very nice served with a tropical fruit salad also topped with coconut.

Molly Goldberg, Cook

 I really enjoyed all the Goldberg tv shows from mostly the 1950s, and years ago when I learned there was an interview in this magazine with Gertrude Berg who wrote and played Molly Goldberg, I ordered a copy, and also a copy of her cookbook! I very much recommend Gertrude Berg's work, especially those tv episodes...


GUESS WHAT was in the same magazine?! My favorite retro kitchen's original appearance!




Keeping food hot in 1922

You can gain such interesting insights from primary documents, actual old books and articles and other writing; this is a tiny series from the 1922 collection Kitchen Essays by Agnes Jekyll (the sister-in-law of the famous Gertrude the gardener)....

This harks back to the chafing dish type I shared a bit at http://favoritefoodthisweek.blogspot.com/search/label/chafing%20dishes ....

That long metal food-warmer with spirit lamps...whereon porridge, coffee, and hot dishes can be kept palatable is a great help....[Also] insist on...a small saucepan over a spirit lamp for boiling eggs.

A Satisfying Salad

 Full of interesting flavors...


Just add to a big bowl to taste, toss lightly, and serve with some bread:

chickpeas 

cucumbers 

radishes 

cherry tomatoes

green onions 

sumac, generous

dried dill 

some raisins

some olives 

huge amounts of garlic

creamy herbed cheese little blobs

pistachios, opt 

mayonnaise 

olive oil 

salt


Breakfast paraphernalia in 1922

You can gain such interesting insights from primary documents, actual old books and articles and other writing; this is a tiny series from the 1922 collection Kitchen Essays by Agnes Jekyll (the sister-in-law of the famous Gertrude the gardener)....I added the divisions to make the ideas clearer for us 21st century-ites, though the milk jug still isn't quite clear to me though sounds brilliant:


Insist on a hot-water kettle of real efficiency,
on a tea caddy...
and a small saucepan...for boiling eggs,
with an hour-glass standing sentry near by...
[paraphernalia for] roasting and grinding [coffee]...
a fireproof jug of ample proportions with wide ventilated top should keep the milk hot without boiling over...
a handy toasting-fork...

Toast in 1922

You can gain such interesting insights from primary documents, actual old books and articles and other writing; this is a tiny series from the 1922 collection Kitchen Essays by Agnes Jekyll (the sister-in-law of the famous Gertrude the gardener).

She has amusing comments on making toast that make me thankful for a reliable modern toaster:

Toast, to be good, demands a glowing grate, a handy toasting fork, and a patient watcher -- ...the ideal [toast] rack is like friendship and the immortality of the soul, almost too good to be true. [Someone asked] for a trustworthy recipe [for toast and the expert replied,] "Cut a slice of bread, hold it before the fire, and say incantations."...An electric griller can be used successfully by those who can successfully use such contraptions.
It reminds me of the toaster contraption my grandmother had that totally delighted my brothers and me -- it would pop the toast out so hard it would go halfway across the kitchen! The one she had before then was not automatic at all and I remember lots of burnt toast as a result....

Slow dining

I recently read about slow living and was inspired to live more leisurely, getting the same done but relaxing more along the way. One fun way to do that has been to set my table often for dinner. As you can probably tell, I'm just "shopping my closet," using stuff I already have. Um, my food recently has been mostly just stuff I have to use up, but the setting has made it more enjoyable. The settings are based on the type of food:
for a canned fish salad with chilled sweet potatoes, a "seaside cafe":


for a flatbread type with black beans and lettuce, a "little Mexican restaurant":
 

for a premade entree with salad on the side, a "French bistro":


for Italiany pasta with pesto and a side salad, a "European cafe":
 


British coffee recommendations, 1922

You can gain such interesting insights from primary documents, actual old books and articles and other writing; this is a tiny series from the 1922 collection Kitchen Essays by Agnes Jekyll (the sister-in-law of the famous Gertrude the gardener). Re coffee, which includes reminders of where coffee was grown and exported in those days:

Good coffee may come from Arabia or India, from the Blue Mountains of Jamaica, or via France with an admixture of chicory; but its flavour and excellence will be derived from daily careful roasting and grinding.
She also recommends frothing some cream and pouring it over milky coffee just before serving, yum!

British tea recommendations, 1922

You can gain such interesting insights from primary documents, actual old books and articles and other writing; this is a tiny series from the 1922 collection Kitchen Essays by Agnes Jekyll (the sister-in-law of the famous Gertrude the gardener).

She recommends always having available for breakfast time "a tea caddy which will contain a delicate as well as a pungent blend of tea" and "more than one teapot" of course.

Kingan's Meat Recipe Book, 1930s??

Even the scholars are not sure of the date as far as I have been able to see; there is an interesting list of publications from this enterprising Indiana company at https://indianahistory.org/wp-content/uploads/kingan-and-company-collection.pdf .

By the way, this is the last entry from my humongous collection I got years ago of retro cookbooklets! which I labeled Retro Mailbox Bliss, though some were available in shops when they were published...





Very Easy Refrigerator Rolls! and whole grain baking tips

I finally found a recipe for refrigerator rolls whose batter/dough will last more than a day or two! By the way, if you're having trouble finding flour or yeast these days, I saw this recommended online though note I have never tried them: https://www.bakersauthority.com/collections/flours/whole-wheat-flours .

These are whole grain, which I've found possible to use exclusively -- the two tricks to it I got from a course I took years ago by the very charming Michael Kalanty at Craftsy, "Secrets to Whole-Grain Bread Baking." He had many other tips, but what I found by far most essential were (1) adding 10% more liquid to any recipe using 100% whole grain flour but which was originally a white- or mixed-white-and-whole recipe; and (2) using your fingers dipped into water to generously wipe down the sides of your bowl so you don't have flour just sitting there to dry out, and also adding even more liquid. Also, I read that the longer rise using your refrigerator helps the whole grain flour to really get soaked with liquid; what I read said that it takes longer for whole grain to soak up liquid.



Whole Wheat Refrigerator Rolls
good for 5 days in the refrigerator!
not the lovely chewy texture of Kneadlessly but still decent
especially if add flavors per notes
Stir in standalone mixer bowl with paddle:
3-1/2 cups whole wheat flour
6 tbl sugar
1 envelope yeast
1-1/2 tsp salt
Add and let run with paddle for up to 2 minutes:
1 cup milk plus about 10% (I just eye it in a glass measuring cup)
½ cup water plus about 10% (ditto)
6 tbl olive oil (the original was a solid fat so this already is about 10% more)
1 egg
It will be rather goopy, but not as thin as cake batter.
Keep in bowl; use very wet fingers to push down anything on sides.
Brush olive oil over top with fingers. Cover eg with the mixer bowl's lid.
Let sit in refrigerator at least 24 hours and for up to 5 days total.
to make rolls etc
Get out of the refrigerator what you need a little over 2 hours before you want them, and cut through the dough to help it deflate a little. Note it probably will not really look like it's risen; but it would have been working....
You can leave them plain or flavor these as you wish, eg:
For cinnamon: push out a ½" ish layer onto pastry paper on a pan, then sprinkle with cinnamon-[vanilla]-sugar, drizzle over olive oil, then top with another layer, then push in raw walnuts. Maybe a sprinkle of oats too.
For olive garlic: do same shaping as above but put fresh garlic in the middle with some olive oil, then top with black olives and some olive oil (not a huge amount or it'll smoke). Maybe a little coarse salt too.
Let rise until about doubled, at least 1-1/2 hours, at most a little under 2 hours.
Bake individual rolls about 20 minutes at 350. Bake the larger coffee cakeish shapes also about 20 minutes but at 400.
Much adapted from the 1951 Joy of Cooking's Refrigerator Rolls, pp524-525.

Histories of grocery delivery

I was always impressed with the organization in the 1937 book The Alice Bradley Menu Cook Book: Menus, Marketing, and Recipes, where she says to keep an eye on one's staples "and order more" when needed, and where she lists something under "Market Order" every day but Sunday, with a much larger order for Saturday afternoon or evening. She says her recommended normal daily deliveries are for the most perishables, though she assumes all her readers have refrigerators so she includes items that will last long enough that way. She also mentions to substitute home-grown when available.

Here are histories of grocery delivery I've run across; I've not done research on this myself:
from Boston University: https://www.bu.edu/bhr/2015/02/01/780/
from Wikipedia with a fascinating though just 3-sentence-long worldwide history: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_delivery

A homemade chocolate bar!

My current pandemic-time food suppliers don't carry chocolate boohoo, but then I found out how to make my own, and I adore it!!


homemade chocolate bar!!!

Stir together eg with a silicone spoon:
         ¼ cup cocoa powder (your favorite one; not Dutch process if possible which has a weird aftertaste and anyway has gotten rid of antioxidants)
         ¼ cup coconut oil at room temperature (I actually prefer for this a coconut oil that isn't super coconut-y in flavor, such as Whole Foods brand; but if I were going to make this a coconut chocolate I would use my favorite, Vitacost brand, which is nicely coconut-y) (note if you have coconut butter which is just a version of coconut oil that's a bit harder you may want to try it – I haven't – for a bit harder chocolate bar)
         1 Tblspn or a tiny bit more honey
         ¼ tsp vanilla extract

Spread out a bit on a piece of waxed paper large enough to fold over generously. Then fold over to cover and press out until pretty thin (maybe 1/8"). Score it a bit on top of the wax paper top with a table knife if you'd like.

You could even decorate it a bit at that point (with decorative scoring or, with the "lid" off, things like a few nuts and/or dried fruit and/or coconut).

Be sure it's covered nicely in its paper and refrigerate at least 3 hours.

Unwrap and break apart and store with the same waxed paper torn apart keeping the layers separate. You'll probably have to keep it in the refrigerator.

Much adapted from eatbeautiful.net; they have a nicely detailed alternative I haven't tried that uses cocoa butter if you can source that. But I adore this; it tastes just like the chocolate bars I normally get but costs a fraction of their price! inc that it does not require those expensive moulds (which may not work great with such a thick "batter" as I think they're designed to pour in the chocolate).

A free general food planner in case your food is unusual nowadays

I'm not able to count on getting the ingredients for the vast majority of my recipes, but I'm having healthy and delicious food nonetheless, as I explained in my last post. However, almost all of the many food planners I had or had created didn't work with my current situation. So I've made a more general food planner that specifically includes the fact I'm having more smoothies nowadays, and also that we're all facing challenges. I just made it in black and white so I use as little expensive ink as possible. The planner is available free at https://drive.google.com/file/d/1z53F7EE29Pmp_8Yj-iKnEh14vauICgWW/view?usp=sharing ; feel free to change it and use it and share it in any way except don't sell it please.


How I'm dealing actually retro-ly with current challenges

I'm not young and all that enough to go out to get my own groceries, my old service is horrendously dirty nowadays, and yikes there has been horrifying crime in my area by at least one local delivery man.

So guess what, I'm having food delivered by UPS and FedEx. I tried meal kit services again after fiascoes of years ago, but they still didn't work for me. But I'm so excited -- I've found 4 that seem to work at the moment, and which are so good, and of course I'm so grateful to them, that I might continue them When Things Are OK Again! That's even more likely because I realized goodness I'm spending the same or less on food, and it's ever so much easier! My choices, available where I live in the USA (updated in July):

very basic foods like olive oil, grains, and I must admit sugar: Target

milk and eggs: a local milkman (yes, I am very lucky to have that possibility -- though my milk arrives at 3:30 am and greatly excites the cats who feel it necessary to come jump on my bed so I know creamy goodness they can't even have has arrived!)

(um, I did have a good fruit source but they started using dry ice rather carelessly and it made me sick)

(and I did have a good fresh vegetable source but they started having the opposite problem, having no chilling, so almost everything spoiled)

(so I'm looking into other options!)

Of course grocery delivery was extremely MORE common (at least pre-pandemic) say a century ago, wasn't it...though wasn't ordered online of course.

National Seafood Recipes, 1924

I love the subtitle! And who can resist recipes like "National Surprise" and "Fresh Snow Balls"?!





That Lively Lime Twist, 1983

Sounds like a dance from the '60's. I thought we all could use something lively and fun. I've been sick; hope you have been fine...




Wagner Seasonings, ?1947

(I saw that date on Amazon; my copy looks at least that old, and obviously it was before normal zip codes in the USA...)

I find the differences from today interesting, naturellement!






Fried Eggs with Blue Cheese and Mushrooms


Fried Eggs with Blue Cheese and Mushrooms

Saute in olive oil in a large skillet
         about 1 pkg roughly chopped mushrooms
When they're almost cooked, add on top
         about 10 oz or so of frozen spinach
         about 2 or 3 big cloves of garlic minced
Break over top
         4 or 5 eggs
Then rather generously
         salt and pepper
Then cover and cook until done.
Sprinkle with
         generous blue cheese crumbled
Cover for a bit for the cheese to meld sort-of.

Adapted very much from Marie Simmons' The Good Egg's Spinach and Mushroom Quiche with Pine Nuts and Blue Cheese

Wonderful handmade dishes!

I recently treated myself to a couple beautiful coffee cups -- in my recent grief I've been dropping things left and right in my retro kitchen, and figured it was time to slow down, be careful, take care of myself more consciously....I found this and another and will be checking her shop again, because not only does she make beautiful things, they are safe and very well made: https://www.etsy.com/shop/PotterybyTeresa



An idea for organizing your favorite menus year after year, with free PDFs!

I've made myself a looseleaf 3-ring notebook in which I have a page for each week of the year, to fill in my favorite menus for each meal and snack and such. Here is a sample of the opening pages and of a menu page -- feel completely free to redo to your taste! I like to add pictures to each, including a nice large one for the title page, and also to add my name to the title page.
opening pages: opening pages A Notebook of Favorite Menus

a sample menu page to fill in: sample menu page , though for variety, for some weeks I use free menu pages that I find adaptable to this