Saturday, December 21, 2024

Happy Holidays! Let's microwave some sugar... Or maybe just buy some candy...

The holidays are coming! You want to make some candy, but all the recipes you find sound too intimidating, with their demands that you own a candy thermometer or at least understand the differences between soft ball, firm ball, and hard ball stages. No worries! Microwave Magic (produced by the staff of Farm Wife News, edited by Annette Gohlke, 1977) offers a couple of options.

If you really miss Thanksgiving (or just have a can or two of leftover cranberry sauce you want to get rid of), make some cranberry candy!

It's easy-- just microwave the sauce with extra sugar and a bunch of raspberry gelatin, flavor with a bit of raspberry extract, and let it stand in a buttered dish overnight before cutting and rolling in granulated sugar. Presto! Red candies for everybody.

If you're more of a chocolate type, go for Chocolate Igloos instead.

These are on the very outermost limbs of the Krispie Treats family tree-- chocolate chips melted and cooked with with sugar and water, then stirred into corn syrup, crispy rice, nuts, and vanilla. How does this large, brown blob become igloos? Drop tablespoonfuls onto waxed paper, and then roll them in confectioners sugar. They're sure to look as much like an igloo as a wad of chocolate Krispie Treats rolled in confectioners sugar! Just tell people they're supposed to be igloos, and they'll see it right away. Or at least pretend to, if they're nice.

And if all else fails, remember that homemade candy is overrated. Nothing tastes better than Reese's peanut butter trees anyway, even if they could just as convincingly be labeled Reese's peanut butter igloos. (You'd think a big company like that would be able to make at least semi-convincing holiday shapes!) Just go out and buy them. Whoever you're feeding will be just as happy.

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Microwave converts!

I've always loved old microwave cookbooks for their insistence that anything can (and should!) be microwaved. I picked up today's book for a little something extra, though.


Okay, partly I'm just a sucker for the overhead view of the spines of nearly a dozen other vintage cookbooks! Guilty as charged. My true reason for wanting this, though, is hinted at in the title: Recipe Conversion for Microwave (Barbara Methven, 1979). The book promises to help home cooks convert their own conventional recipes to microwave recipes, so they can make just about anything in the microwave!

Alongside general instructions, the book also offers traditional versions of recipes with the converted versions, so readers can see how to put the general recommendations into practice.

Think you can't make a homemade microwave lasagna? (And no, the Stouffer's version does not count as homemade!) Here's what the conventional version might involve, along with notes to show what has to change to make this happen in the microwave.


Those are a lot of changes! What would they look like in practice?


You've got to love all the steps that have to be done sequentially. You can't boil noodles and brown cook the ground beef and alliums at the same time. Nope! Those are separate steps because there is only one microwave. And it's soooo speedy to microwave the sauce for 30-40 minutes while the microwaved noodles hang out on the counter, feeling bored. The big payoff is cutting the final cooking time from 40-50 minutes to 20-30 minutes. Of course, the cheese on top won't get brown.


And the procedure for microwaving the noodles is a wee bit tricky...


But it's fully microwaved homemade lasagna! And totally worth all the extra labor that the Stouffer's version would have saved!

Okay, you can make a casserole, but what about something that usually takes quite a long time, like dried beans? I'm glad you asked.


If you look carefully, you might notice that it tells which microwave levels to use for the various steps of simmering the beans, but there's nothing about changing the time.


And that's because it takes about as long to microwave the beans as it would have to cook them the conventional way anyway. I'm not sure what the advantage is to the microwaved version, except that maybe there's a chance they'll boil over when you're not paying attention and that will give you an incentive to finally clean all the dried, crusty bits out of the microwave's interior. (Just joking! You might mop the bean goo off the bottom of the microwave if you're feeling really ambitious, but that's a pretty big if if you're anything like me.)


At least there's no topping for the beans in tomato sauce that would traditionally be browned, so they're not missing out on a nice crust anyway. 

You know what accompaniment to beans could use a nice crust? How about some homemade whole wheat bread?


Yep! Microwave that whole wheat bread too-- from scalding the milk, to proofing, to baking.


I'll have to admit that I am a little intrigued by the idea of microwaving with a cup of water at 10% power for quicker proofing, even if people say longer proofing creates more flavor. (My sense of time passing is much more sophisticated than my palate, so I don't really care about the nuances of flavor in yeasted bread. Just give me a nice warm slice to devour!) Baking in the microwave, though? Sorry, but a little wheat germ coating is not likely to cover up for the lack of a crisp, brown crust. Why go to all the trouble of making homemade bread just to ruin it in the end?


The picture almost looks more like a wan turkey-based loaf than actual bread, but that's what you get for trying to cook it in the microwave!

Even if the conversions aren't always successful at convincing me there's a reason they should exist, at least they're fun to think about. (And there is a slightly-higher-than-zero chance I might try the proofing idea at some point, so I will grudgingly admit that parts of this are more instructive than they might initially seem. Still wouldn't say I'm a convert, though.)

Saturday, December 14, 2024

A non-Jell-O ring mold for Christmas!

I see quite a few Jell-O based holiday "treats" that are labeled as salad but often secretly dessert, so that's what I expected when I saw the title Christmas Ring Mold in Louisiana's Fabulous Foods and How to Cook Them (Lady Helen Henriques Hardy and Raymond J. Martinez, 1960?). That was, however, not the case.

This is a bunch of spinach bound with white sauce and eggs, then baked in a ring mold. 

Sure, that provides the green, but what about the red? This is supposed to be a Christmas specialty, after all, and few people would really think of creamed spinach as being Christmas-specific.

Check out the last line: fill the center with hot buttered beets! Very Christmassy! Plus, the family can have a little extra holiday drama when everybody momentarily freaks out in the next day or so before remembering they recently ate beets. It's the gift that keeps on giving.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Matchlessly confusing recipes from an electric company

Matchless Recipes for Flameless Cooking (undated, but it's from Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company, which was bought by AEP in 1980, so pre-1980, and the mentions of using an "electric refrigerator" suggests it would be earlier than that) is I guess an attempt to get consumers excited about electric (rather than gas) stoves and other electric kitchen appliances like blenders and refrigerators. (Not that I really think consumers needed the electric company to get them excited about easy-to-use kitchen appliances, but considering the booklet's brevity, I'm not sure Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company was all that convinced either.)

The recipes can also seem... well... uninspired. Take the recipe for cauliflower, for instance.

Yep-- it's just telling cooks to steam cauliflower in salted water in a covered saucepan "on electric unit." Not too thrilling, and I'm not sure how many cooks at the time would need these instructions anyway. They probably had experience steaming vegetables and if they didn't, they probably owned general-purpose cookbooks that included these instructions and a LOT more useful information.

However, I discovered that the recipes are often more complicated than they initially seem. If they have multiple steps, there is NO indication at all (in the recipe title or in the first set of instructions) that cooks should go on to the seemingly separate recipe immediately below the first. The cauliflower is actually supposed to be topped with tomato sauce, so that's probably why the seemingly unnecessary recipe was listed. It's the first step to something larger, as the tomato sauce recipe immediately below the cauliflower recipe suggests.

And no, there is nothing to indicate that the Tomato Sauce is supposed to top the cauliflower until the middle of the recipe! So if readers skim through the cookbook in a normal fashion-- checking out titles and reading only the recipes they think they might make, rather than sitting down to read the entire page-- there's a really good chance they would make the cauliflower without ever realizing it was supposed to be topped with sauce. (I could also see people making the tomato sauce for a pasta dish without paying much attention and then wondering why the sauce recipe was suddenly mentioning cauliflower.) 

At least some recipes were a bit clearer about there being multiple steps. You might think that I cut off the name for this recipe, but I did not.

The recipe has no name unless you count "Pineapple Top Layer." At least the name clues cooks in to the fact that there must be other layers too. Still, it would be weird to bring out this dish and tell dinner companions it's Pineapple Top Layer with Lemon Cream Cheese Layer and Raspberry Banana Layer. Cooks better already know it's usually called ribbon salad (in which case they may already have the recipe anyway) or make up a name fast. 

And some recipes are just weird, like Stuffed Pink Pears.

I can't imagine there was a huge market for canned pears refrigerated in "dietetic 'red pop'" and rum extract, then stuffed with cottage cheese flavored with additional rum extract, but apparently Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company thought this was a grand way to get home cooks excited about electric refrigerators. 

I will admit that I have experience with-- but NO warm and fuzzy feelings for-- AEP, but I am very amused by this booklet from their predecessor. It seems like being kind of inept has always been their thing....

Friday, December 6, 2024

Funny Name: Holiday(???) Edition

When you read the title for this recipe from Microwave Magic (produced by the staff of Farm Wife News, edited by Annette Gohlke, 1977), you pretty much have to laugh.

I mean, "Ho Ho Ho" is right there-- for no apparent reason. Also, "Oh Oh Oh," I guess for the less-jolly laughers? Is the "Ho Ho Ho" meant to indicate that this is a Christmas recipe? Maybe. I mean, the custard is green-- one of the two main Christmas colors. Or does the "Oh Oh Oh" negate it? Did Doris Rush just have a weird thing about wanting the beginning and end of a recipe title to be mirror images of each other, and the "Ho"s and "Oh"s are just signs of some OCD tendencies? I have no idea. All I know is...


Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Getting (not terribly) crazy with the herbs and spices

If you need yet another reminder of how little flavor Americans used to expect from their food, Better Homes and Gardens Cooking with Herbs and Spices (1967, though mine is the 1968 second printing) might just do the job.


I was surprised by how many recipes seemed to suggest that "Flavor Magic" simply meant adding a little marjoram, like this recipe for Rice 'n Tuna Pie.


There's a little bit added to the rice-based crust and a little added to the tuna-and-Swiss cheese filling, so this recipe went all out.

The recipe for Oven Roasting Ears gets a little crazier, adding both rosemary and marjoram to the butter used to coat the sweet corn before it's wrapped in romaine leaves(!) and baked in the oven.


The booklet is also a reminder that snack food flavors were WAY more limited in 1960s America. If you wanted a flavor of potato chips other than "salt" and maybe barbecue or onion, you pretty much had to make them yourself. Better Homes and Gardens recommended using thyme, basil, or (surprise!) marjoram.


But to make it stick, you'd need to fix the potato chips nacho-style, with some melty cheese.

And while a lot of recipes are pretty basic, like adding basil to cooked carrots, dill to cucumber pickles, or candied ginger to ginger crisp cookies, there are a few oddball recipes, like this recipe from the "Fast and Flavorful!" section of the booklet.


Since the section heading wasn't too descriptive, I initially assumed that the applesauce and ginger meant Dixie Dandy Bake was a dessert. Then I saw the luncheon meat. And the sweet potatoes. And the apricot jam. And the mustard... So this is clearly one of those overly-sweet main dish dealies that tend to give me the heebie-jeebies, and the title clearly does not help in that regard...

Still, as I make fun of the 1960s households for being so timid and conventional about herbs and spices, I have to admit that I have an entire spice rack full of barely used (and often unopened) spices that I saw on sale or clearance, picked up because I thought they would be fun to try, and then chickened out on because I was worried what my digestive system might think. I like to make fun of these old booklets, but it's more of an act than you might imagine.... (Still, though, I am more adventurous than salt, pepper, and a hint of marjoram.)

Saturday, November 30, 2024

A toast (Okay, really just bread, but you can toast it if you want) to December!

December means it's almost time to say goodbye to our seasonal book of 2024: The Political Palate (The Bloodroot Collective (Betsey Beaven, Noel Giordano, Selma Miriam, and Pat Shea), 1980). Most of the month is classified as Late Autumn (which I already covered in November). The Early Winter section begins at winter solstice, but I already covered that in January. The book does offer a bread chapter that's not tied to any specific season, though, and we're now into the time of the year when people might want to turn on their ovens to warm up the house. I think it's time to cover bread!

I will admit a serious fondness for homemade bread, especially the kind with nuts and seeds and various types of grain. The bread chapter has me covered. There's a Four Grain Walnut Bread packed with oats, rye, various wheat products, cornmeal, and, of course, walnuts.

Or there's Oatmeal Sunflower Seed Bread, full of oats plus sunflower and sesame seeds. (I'm not sure why the sunflower seeds get top billing. I hope the sesame seeds aren't pissed off.)

The first rise is for a long time in a cool place, too-- perfect for winter days when you just want to stay inside. I'm half-tempted to try making one when I'm on winter break.

If you want something more celebratory (as long as you don't plan to celebrate a patriarchal holiday), there's also a Cheese Babka. 

This might be a little on the health-foody side of things, with its raisins and dry cottage cheese, but it's still got plenty of butter, eggs, and sugar! It's a nice little celebration to end the year.

And fine, if you need something seasonally-appropriate, here's a quick bread from the Late Autumn section to end our exploration of Bloodroot Collective's dishes: Chenopodium Gems.

I thought chenopods were just plants that pumped out pollen so my pollen tracker would have something to warn me about, but apparently they have edible seeds, too. In true Political Palate fashion, this recipe entreats readers to collect wild ingredients and then warns, "Be sure you know your wild plants before you eat them." That note seems like the appropriate ending for this book. Eat some wild plants! Be sure you know what you're doing, though. We're not going to help much on that front. Good luck!

The new year will bring a new book with some tie to the calendar and/or seasons-- probably one that expects readers to be a little less skilled in identifying what is (and is not) safe to rip out of the ground and stuff into one's mouth.... Until then, happy late autumn/ early winter!