A fantastic toasted cheese sandwich!

I saw the idea for this combination in a retro cookbook I haven't been able to relocate, but I wanted to share my version with you:


a delicious toasted cheese sandwich

Make your favorite way with, in order,
         your favorite bread for this
         country mustard
         some frozen grilled red pepper (jarred would work great too)
         your favorite cheese for this
         smoked paprika

Refreshing served with coleslaw (I found a nice one in Jamie's America).

The Little Book of Excellent Recipes and Cooking Tips, 1932

By "The Mystery Chef," sponsored by the R.B. Davis baking powder company in Hoboken, New Jersey. The cover is from abebooks' seller The Book Store by Jim Thorpe in Pennsylvania; my copy is missing a cover. A few years later the book cover had color....






It's quite a generous book -- and there's a generous archive offering pictures of some other items from the same company, accessible through https://hoboken.pastperfectonline.com/bysearchterm?keyword=R.B.+Davis+Company :

My book sometimes calls for Cocomalt, which seems to be a chocolate milk mix rather like Ovaltine, if I understand correctly. Here's an old brochure from the same company:



delicious soft whole wheat rolls

These are what I've been looking for – easy healthy rolls you can keep the dough for in the refrigerator and break off bits to bake when you want them!

A standalone mixer is quite necessary here so you can easily work with very sticky dough near the beginning. You'll also need a reliable instant-read thermometer (I adore mine from thermoworks.com, bought directly from the company, which offers good prices and of course then you'll be sure it's not counterfeit like some at a certain big retailer). You'll also want to make sure you have room for a big bowl in your refrigerator before you start. 

You'll need to start these at least 5 hours or so in advance. You can keep the dough in the refrigerator for at least 48 hours; that's the longest I experimented with, and the old recipe didn't mention a maximum time (nor a minimum time, in fact).

This is very adapted from "Master Icebox Roll" in the booklet Baking Is Easy with These Master Recipes from Omega Flour by H.C. Cole Milling Co. in Chester, Illinois, found just this past weekend at an antique shop. It's c1940. There's more about the booklet at http://vintage.recipes/index.php/Cookbook/Baking-is-Easy .



I also followed the fantastic idea from a cooking class I took to add 10% more liquid to whole wheat doughs if one is adapting a recipe for all white flour; the whole grain needs more liquid, though it takes a while for it to absorb.

Sprinkle over 4.5 Tbl of 110F water in a small bowl
         1 package dry yeast
Let sit a couple minutes then stir to dissolve.

Meanwhile, heat to 110F in a small pan
         1 cup plus 1.5 Tbl milk (skim is fine though I'm sure fattier would be even better)
Mix in
         4.5 Tbl olive oil

Stir together in the big bowl of your standalone mixer until well mixed (you can use the paddle or the dough hook until you have added much flour in a moment):
         2 eggs
         ¼ cup sugar
         1 tsp salt
Mix in both of the above mixtures from the bowl and pan.

Start adding gradually
         about 5 cups whole wheat pastry flour, preferably Bobs Red Mill (I know, it's not bread flour, but it's delicious and makes nice soft rolls)

Knead with your dough hook 5 minutes once the flour has been incorporated. If the dough is quite thin add more flour (you want enough so that it would be hard to stir with a spoon but you don't want to add so much the rolls will be dry).

Keeping the dough in the same bowl, wet your fingers very well and push down any dough on the sides until the sides are quite clean.
Then pour over some olive oil on the top and spread it out to cover the top.
Cover the bowl with a smooth kitchen towel wrung out in hot water.
Let rise at room temperature about 1 hour (it might not be doubled, but you have raw eggs and milk in this dough at this point so you don't want to risk any health problems).
Stir or push down to deflate.
Cover the bowl well eg with its lid.
Put in the refrigerator for at least 3 hours, up to at least 48 hours (it's fun to use up the dough over a couple of days, not all at once).

When you're ready to eat hot rolls in about 1.5 hours, take off what dough you need and shape it as you wish into an oiled pan; ideas are below. Let rise, covered, just 1 hour (again, for the eggs and milk safety issue). Bake at 400F for 15 to 25 minutes, until the rolls etc are lightly browned including the bottom (times are also mentioned below). Wait about 5 minutes then enjoy! They refrigerate and freeze nicely.

some shaping and additional flavor ideas
my favorite: cinnamon-raisin "cake"
Place about 1/3 of the dough in an oiled 8x8 or 9x9 pan (preferably glass; it bakes nicely in glass and you can check that the bottoms are done). Don't worry about making it smooth; it's actually better a little rustic.
Gently press in maybe ¼ cup raisins over the top.
Sprinkle/pour over top
         about 1 Tbl melted butter
          about 1 tsp cinnamon
        a generous Tbl or so of sugar (not the white normal kind but the tan-colored "natural" type that's not too finely ground)
Let rise 1 hour, covered.
Bake at 400 for about 25 minutes; it should be nicely but not darkly browned. Let cool 5 minutes then eat – amazing still warm from the oven, but also fabulous heated a bit in the microwave! Store leftovers in the refrigerator because of all the butter.

my next favorite: butter rolls
Place about 1/3 of the dough in an oiled 8x8 or 9x9 pan (preferably glass; it bakes nicely in glass and you can check that the bottoms are done).
Cut into about 12 rolls with sharp kitchen scissors. They don't have to be completely separated.
Pour over top
         about 1.5 Tbl melted butter
Let rise 1 hour, covered.
Bake at 400 for about 25 minutes; they should be nicely but not darkly browned. Let cool 5 minutes then eat – luscious still warm from the oven, but also fabulous heated a bit in the microwave or even cold! Store leftovers in the refrigerator because of all the butter.

straightforward rolls
You can shape the rolls with oiled hands and put them in/on an oiled pan. I prefer mine placed not too far apart so they rise up against each other to be torn apart to serve. For soft rolls I prefer a pan 1 to 2" deep rather than say a cooky sheet.
Let rise 1 hour, covered.
Bake at 400 for about 15 minutes, depending on the size of the rolls; they should be nicely but not darkly browned. Let cool 5 minutes then enjoy. You don't have to refrigerate unless you want to keep them for quite a few days or your kitchen is very humid or hot.

You can get very creative -- how about orange zest and cinnamon and a bit of brown sugar on top maybe?...or roll out, put light fillings on the dough, then roll up and cut for spiral filled rolls...

These are soft and wonderful; I also like crisp and chewy rolls – for that see the incomparable Kneadlessly Simple by Nancy Baggett.

Harvest Home

Last night I read a very interesting history of the first so-called (American) Thanksgiving, which said many of its attendees were not in fact religious and thanking any deity, but that they simply were celebrating being alive and having food! Though some people seem very much to disagree; I've ordered copies of primary sources to check out for myself...

Meanwhile I've read accounts of the traditional British+ Harvest Home, which at least some scholars believe the first "Thanksgiving" really was with all its 1600s British people....

A wonderfully done book on old train dining cars in USA

and other information, written very well, researched thoroughly --

Dining by Rail: 
The History and the Recipes of America's Golden Age of Railroad Cuisine
by James D. Porterfield
He's done other books I'll check out asap...

I remember with great fondness walking with my kids to the dining car and enjoying a relaxing meal on tablecloths with good service even on Amtrak from New York -- especially lovely when we were seeing mansions by the Hudson!...


"How to Serve Meals" in 1889

I have for years found Alessandro Filippini very generous with his ideas on food. Today my copy of The Table: How to Buy Food, How to Cook It, and How to Serve It arrived and I've been learning that at a nice dinner you would want to...

Keep the dining room "neither too hot nor too warm; the temperature should never exceed 60 degrees"! Brr!

You'd want salt at each place. Why? So your guests don't need to ask your servants for it, of course.

You'd have a floral centerpiece, of course, but also, at each place, a "bouquet" for each lady and a boutonniere for each man. I vaguely remember having a fancy meal in Philadelphia in the 1970s where this was still done.

You'll want a menu card at each place as well.

Also on the table:
  • a plate of radishes and/or olives
  • a plate of celery (without this and the above, it would "look like a boarding house table"!)
  • little dishes of black pepper and of red pepper
  • 2 fruit stands, 1 on each side of the floral centerpiece, with the best seasonal fruit
  • assorted cakes next to the fruit (though the fruit and cakes aren't actually eaten until late in the meal)
  • your wines, liqueurs

The glasses at each place include a green one for the sauterne and a red one for the Rhine wine, of course, plus glasses for sherry, Champagne, Latour wine, Chambertin red wine, and water (the last one is placed closest to each person's plate).

You may wonder if there's room for the rest of the food on the table. Well, probably not; M. Filippini suggests your servants hand it around and serve it, and gives detailed instructions.

Yes please! home design

There's a wonderful home, still available as I write, that has "a separate kitchen wing with both a breakfast room and a snug"! as reported in, well, next month's The English Home US edition. You can see much more at its realtor's site: http://www.jackson-stops.co.uk/cgi-bin/properties/summary-details.pl?propID=81976 , which mentions more food glories: "Lying between the drawing room and study is an internal corridor with steps up to a cloakroom and apple store with original safe. The study has a cosy feel and has steps down to the wine cellar with brick divisions providing storage bins." And if you like me realized I never really knew what a snug was outside of a pub, here are ideas: https://www.houseandgarden.co.uk/gallery/stylish-snug-idea .


Homemade TV Dinners!

September 10 is National TV Dinner Day! Last year I sort-of missed it and really wanted to make my own this year! I ordered trays from https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B012BZDOHC/ that turned out to be perfect for this! Here's my first try:


It was really tasty!! But a bit too much food! I got the ideas from the 1972 edition of the Betty Crocker Do-Ahead Cookbook, pictured here with a Sweet Peas Meals! bit and a menu I made up for us for a little health concern:

BUT so far the only thing I've used from the book are the TV dinners ideas, which basically are to put these in a covered oven-safe divided dish:
MEAT: Always cooked. Either have a very tasty juicy meat (like the leftover sausage patties we had) or have one with a sauce.
VEGETABLES: Use frozen ones, put some butter on top. (We had carrots and green beans plus a marvelous potato latke -- a potato pancake with onion -- we find here sometimes.)
RICE: Use instant/Minute rice in the proportions of 3 tbl rice to 1/4 cup water plus some salt, pepper, and if you'd like a flavoring like a bit of curry powder. (We had instant brown which I hadn't actually frozen, but I think that was ideal because it takes longer to cook and this way it was perfect.)

To cook: 450 in a convection oven for about 25 minutes (in a normal oven same if you only have 1 tray, otherwise maybe 5 more minutes).

Of course my favorite part of TV dinners was always the desserts!! For any that need a crust to get crispy near the end, the tops of these pans would not work really because you'd need to uncover a bit, though I guess you could put the crusty food in a corner and turn the pan's lid to the side?

In this age of microwaves, though, I wondered, how in the world did my mom keep us kids from burning ourselves on the pans on the rare days she served TV dinners?! I've asked her...

A fabulous source of templates for your menus!

and other wonderful planning fun! I learned about it through the extremely generous www.printablesandinspirations.com -- she also pointed me to thehungryjpeg.com for fun art, though I have not tried it yet.

The source of templates is www.canva.com/templates -- you can sign up for free, though there is a premium service available as well.

Mulberry and Almond Muesli

Toast in a big skillet until starting to get golden (along with any below seeds or nuts that haven't already been toasted):
   1-1/2 cups barley flakes (I like these, which I found at www.vitacost.com/shiloh-farms-organic-barley-flakes :)

   1/2 cup quinoa flakes

Add when completely cool:
   1/4 cup pumpkin seeds, toasted, preferably sprouted
   heaping tablespoon sucanat or brown sugar
   1/2 cup dried mulberries (I like these, also found at www.vitacost.com/sunfood-raw-organic-white-mulberries :)
   1/4 cup almonds, toasted, left whole
   heaping tablespoon powdered milk
   plus a little salt if your almonds and/or seeds were not salted already


Very adapted from Gluten-Free Muesli in Rachel Khoo's great Muesli & Granola book


Trader Joe Eggs!

Trader Joe Eggs!

Can easily be doubled etc.

Scramble in olive oil mixture of
2 eggs
splash milk
up to 1 oz Trader Joe's Unexpected Cheddar
handful arugula, cut up (Trader Joe's is the freshest)
(note no salt nor pepper)

Top with
    Trader Joe's dukkah


Changed a lot from the March 2018 delicious. magazine's recipe for Watercress Eggs

Candies of the month!

seen on Pinterest, unfortunately no source nor date given...I'm guessing 1950s....


My favorite aprons by far!

...are all from the Vermont Apron Company. I completely need an apron that doesn't pull on my neck (so whose "supports" are against my back rather than neck), doesn't look silly since I wear it for hours most days (so isn't in unattractive colors), actually protects my clothes (so isn't tissue-thin), and doesn't require contortion to put on or take off (so has big-enough openings for my big head). I've been looking for ages for such a well-designed apron, and that is also well-made with well-finished seams, in material that doesn't fade nor wrinkle more than is just natural, and I found more than one at their site, https://www.vermontapron.com/ . Not every single one would work for me, but I'm unique, and I am so very happy with this company! My current favorites -- the rose one is incredibly pretty in person, because the colors are even nicer than in the picture:


I love that you can get them in various lengths. I like a few aprons in shorter lengths for summer weather, and ones like the rose one are so darling short, but otherwise I prefer longer to protect my clothes since I'm so messy!

Delicious savory eggs

These were amazing, though I didn't take a fabulous photo...


delicious savory eggs

Fry in olive oil on one side then turn over:
            egg(s)
            some salt

Top with in this order and cover with lid:
            arugula
            blue cheese
            mustard

When cooked, top with:
            black pepper





New big storage ideas for a retro kitchen

I learned a lot the past month or so about kitchen storage, and we've ended up with a much more useful and fun kitchen as a result!

First I learned Don't Overload Your Wall Cabinets. I was unknowingly asking it to hold 2.5x more than is the standard (15 pounds per square foot) of the official Kitchen Cabinet Manufacturers' Association, due to tall stacks of plates that weighed over 2 pounds each! As a result one cabinet started leaning out from the wall! It's fixed now, but those plates and similar weighty items could not go up there any more.

We already didn't have as much kitchen storage in this house as we had ever since we got married zillions of years ago, but to remodel the kitchen would have cost the earth and it would not have been to the taste of those who will inherit this house. So we started looking for additional standalone storage.

I wanted all hardwood, but those who made it for our area were getting awful reviews and charging ever so much, so we compromised for these colorful ones which are almost all real wood and are so cute, actually from Target! We got 2 islands and 1 "jelly cabinet" (the last one, sorry, but it sounds like they're getting more; they're in the Windham line by Threshold). They blend more than I expected, though I believe would look better with knobs that match the permanent cabinetry better. Also, these at least when I looked came in different colors.

I also learned that if an item goes on sale at Target not long after you buy it, you can get a refund! Thank you so much, Target! I appreciated that so much that when my coffee grinder (sourced years ago from someone else) stopped working a day later I immediately ordered a replacement from Target, which gets things to me quickly and at a fabulous price -- and not used!, which has been a problem with a certain unnamed giant online retailer and with a certain unnamed luxury kitchen retailer!

We actually have more storage than we need now, partly because we cut down when we got this smaller kitchen! I learned the great pleasure and usefulness of the wide drawers on those islands (they look like 2 drawers but are 1 each island) -- now I can actually put in 1 stack each the papers I use to organize grocery shopping, food storage, and meal planning.

Luscious Mushroom Green Bean Vegetarian Main

very adapted from one of my favorite retro cookbook sources...which I admire for including some vegetarian mains when that wasn't very common, and without fanfare.


Luscious Mushroom Green Bean Vegetarian Main

Do to taste and per # of people.

Saute in olive oil & butter:
         onion chopped
         mushrooms sliced (Portobello is very tasty)
Meanwhile cook
         green beans (in mw or steamer)
Combine the above then add to make a bit of a sauce (not too much liquid though)
         a bit of seasoned salt if required
         black pepper
         bit of flour (for thickening)
         half and half (milk will not be as luscious but should work too) (don't use a huge amount)
Simmer gently just until flour is cooked, a couple minutes maybe. Don't let it boil a lot and therefore curdle.
Serve over
         a grain (for a fancy meal do baked puff pastry!)
Top with
         roasted salted cashews
         grated Parmesan

Very adapted from Green Bean, Cashew, and Mushroom Casserole in the Volume 8 of Woman's Day Encyclopedia of Cookery, 1966



A Tasty Walnut Shake


Just blend…
    3 tbl toasted walnuts
    2 dates torn up
    ½ frozen banana
    2 tbl coconut
    7/8 cup milk


Some people like this with cinnamon and honey too, but this is very tasty to me…

A delicious baked fish

that warmed up my wintry kitchen!



a delicious baked fish

adapted from the 1951 Joy of Cooking's "Fish Baked in a Covered Dish"


Spread olive oil over the bottom of a large casserole dish with a cover.
Lay in
            about 2 pieces adding up to 1 lb of fish eg salmon.
Put a little
            butter on the fish.
Sprinkle with
            smoked paprika
            nutmeg.
Cover. Put into a 325 oven. Set a timer for about 30 minutes (if your fish is very thin, you could try just 20 minutes; it took my 1" thick salmon about 30 minutes).

After about 10 minutes, add around the fish
            up to 2 tbl sweet white wine.

Meanwhile, put into a bowl in this order:
            a small bunch of parsley, cut
            at least 1 tbl capers
            about 1 tsp or more caper juice
            about 1 tbl butter, cut so it will fit nicely down the center of your piece(s) of fish.
When the fish looks like it might be done in 5 or 10 minutes, remove the fish from the oven and increase the oven temperature to 375. Upend the bowl's ingredients over the fish. Put the fish back in the oven without a cover.

When the fish is at least 145 inside, it's done. If you check and it's not done, it won't hurt the "sauce" for it to keep cooking.

Nice served over whole wheat couscous, and with some vegetables such as broccoli and carrots.

Some exquisite food from 1931

From an extremely well done novel from the 1930s...


While the last of the fogs went wherever fogs go to when there is no wind...Sir Herbert Livewright [fresh back to London from a vacation in the South of France] remained in his library [with] a fire burning briskly on the open hearth, exercising his brain....When...his butler came quietly into this...atmosphere and announced that luncheon was served, Sir Herbert...pushed his little table away and rose to his feet and...washed his...hands;...and then Sir Herbert Livewright went through into his dining room, and consumed, with every appearance of relish,
a little something of egg,
and some roast chicken with every kind of appurtenance,
including salad,
and a large portion of a distinctly heady trifle,
and some biscuits
and some celery
and some cheese.
And during this repast Sir Herbert Livewright also drank
some exceedingly good still Moselle,
and a cup of excellent coffee,
and a noggin of admirable cognac.

- Denis MacKail, The Square Circle, 1931

A delicious festive porridge!


a festive porridge

Delicious and pretty; also note it's helpful when one is having a dental moment, as it's not crunchy…
Enough for 2, but I think I'll double it next time, it's that good. Just microwave leftovers in the next days.

Put into a pot then refrigerate overnight; no real need to stir yet:
            up to 2 tbl coconut oil
            3 small red apples, quite finely chopped
            heaping ½ tsp cinnamon
            heaping 1 cup old-fashioned oats
            up to ¼ cup smooth almond butter
            about ¼ cup rinsed frozen cranberries (or fresh)
            ½ cup milk (skim is fine)
            1-1/2 cups water

In the morning, simmer, stirring occasionally, until everything is tender (maybe 10 minutes). You may need to stir in
            about ¼ cup more water.

Pour into bowls and top with
            generous flavorful honey (up to 2 tbl/bowl)


Adapted from Megan Gordon's Whole-Grain Mornings' Warm Farro Breakfast Bowl with Apples, Cranberries, and Hazelnuts