Tuesday, August 30, 2022
University Women: Provoking critical thought since 1976
Saturday, August 27, 2022
Funny Name: La La La! I Can't Hear You! Edition
You know how moms are always supposed to be telling their kids to eat, so the youngsters will grow up to be big and strong? Maybe they mom claims the carrots will give kids X-ray vision, or promises that milk will give them strong and shiny teeth? Fine. I get the importance of good nutrition. Still, I don't want to hear the pep talk Pat LaFrance gave her sons when she served this recipe from Salads Cookbook (Favorite Recipes Press, 1969).
Wednesday, August 24, 2022
A math-and-soy-heavy diet for an overworked planet
Saturday, August 20, 2022
Quit being so judgy about sloppy women
I know the name is just a play on Sloppy Joes, but I can't help but feel the Lower Deer Creek Mennonite Cookbook (Kalona, Iowa, 1977) is being just a little bit judgy about women who don't like to spend their days on cleanliness so they can be closer to godliness.
If this oatmeal, shredded cabbage, and mushroom soup-filled variation of sloppy joes isn't enough to convince you that the Mennonites are casting aspersions on those of us with stacks of dusty books everywhere, there's also a Sloppy Polly Cake.
I have no idea what makes this "sloppy." I initially supposed that this might have a simplified mixing strategy, maybe even mixed in the pan (rather than a separate bowl) to avoid extra dishes, but that doesn't seem to be the case (though it's hard to tell, as this doesn't say exactly what the cake is supposed to be baked in).
In any case, if the Kalona Mennonites knew me, I imagine something would be named Sloppy Poppy before too long, as I clearly have zero interest in keeping things neat. I'm thinking (based on my Pieathalon entries) that it might be a Sloppy Poppy Pie Crust that is prone to falling apart and has to keep getting patched back together, but you can speculate in the comments if you want.
Wednesday, August 17, 2022
A bedraggled Bake-Off castoff
Saturday, August 13, 2022
Trapping the green goddess in a jiggly mess
I've already covered the love that Salads Cookbook (Favorite Recipes Press, 1969) shows for pineapple and bananas randomly added to recipes that probably don't need them. Here's another surprise: the book is convinced that "Green Goddess" is a type of molded salad. I always thought it was a salad dressing so loaded with herbs that it was green, and Wikipedia seems to back me up on this one. (However, it also suggests that "green goddess salad" is an alternate name for Watergate salad, so...) Salads Cookbook insists that Green Goddess is not just any molded salad made with green gelatin, but a really gross one.
Well, the simplest form is probably the most palatable. The sweet gelatin, crushed pineapple, and dairy fat combo is usually an alluring one...
...but the salad dressing and cucumbers seem like unnecessary additions (ones that are unlikely to improve it!) to try to justify calling this thing a salad.
Other versions are probably trying to be a little more true to classic green goddess, as they add more vegetables and include the anchovies common in the dressing.
I'm not sure all that many people really long for lime-gelatin-mayo-and-anchovy cubes over a salad of artichoke hearts, grapefruit, olives, and onions, all drenched in French (not green goddess!) dressing.
But if you really want to put some effort into an impressively misguided salad, there's always the Green Goddess Seafood Mold. It's got TWO layers!
The lemon layer wastes crab and lobster by embedding them in lemon Jell-O. Then it's topped off by the anchovy-flavored lime Jell-O! And serving this will be extra nerve-wracking because it involves unmolding two layers--so twice the chance for a large mold to fall apart, implode, or split!
Making the classic dressing seems like way less work (and probably for a better payoff if you're not a condiment-hating freak like me), but one of the Favorite Recipes Press's versions could definitely make a memorable contribution to a terrible retro-themed potluck!
Wednesday, August 10, 2022
Fruits everywhere, lettuce in the chili, and salad penguins!
Since it's still salad season, let's go for another salad book. Well, Salads Cookbook (Favorite Recipes Press, 1969) to be precise.
The cover suggests there will be canned pineapple. Lots and lots of canned pineapple. The book does come through on that promise.
There's canned pineapple in dessert-y salads that sound pretty good, like Cheesecake Salad.
Sorry, I meant Banana-Tuna Pineapple Salad. I'm not a good gauge because I hate tuna salad to begin with, but I'm guessing people who are more reasonable than I am might also blanch at the mayo-pineapple-banana-canned-tuna combo.
Not everything has canned pineapple though, not even all the "tropical" dishes. Tropical Lamb Salad is shockingly devoid of pineapple.
How does this not incorporate canned pineapple? I'd imagine it would be part of that classic combo of bananas, celery, lamb, mustard, mayo, olives, and almonds.
The book also has some weird little riffs on actual classics. I'm used to taco salads that plop some kind of warm taco meat mixture atop a mostly-cold salad of lettuce, tomatoes, etc. I wasn't quite prepared for Chili Salad, though.
Mix a can's worth of hot chili into lettuce? That just sounds like a way to get sodden lettuce and lukewarm chili... I'm not sure the corn chips would be enough to save it.
How about I really cool things off and end with Antarctic Salad?
You might be wondering what makes this pork and veggie aspic Antarctic. Well, it's the last step, the step that turns a slightly snooty aspic (I mean, it starts with unflavored gelatin instead of sugary lemon or lime and it's flavored with curry powder and juniper berries!) into a fun afternoon craft project. This little mountain of pork and veggies is inhabited by penguins!
I'm really not sure how the red cabbage fits in with the penguins on an iceberg vibe, but I'm always excited by a recipe that ends with the instructions to "Arrange Penguins around mountain, serving 1 Penguin per person."
Well, I'm also glad Mrs. Jessie L. Hawks kept the tropical fruits and chili away from the penguins. I'm sure they're more comfortable around their gelatinous little mountain, though now I'm thinking about how cute they might have been with pineapple ring inner tubes. Of course, if they were tubing down a river of chili, that would have taken it to a terrifying new level...
Saturday, August 6, 2022
A Menu for August with High and Low Notes
Happy August! To distract us from being baked alive, let's check out what the fancy people in 1970s Cincinnati were doing during the summer. That's right: it's time for another installment from Cincinnati Celebrates: Cooking and Entertaining for All Seasons (Junior League of Cincinnati, first printing August, 1974, though mine is from the 1980 fifth printing).
I decided to pick the Summer Opera Encore menu because it sounded like it should be fancy. Plus, who the hell has summer opera parties? I wanted to see what that was all about. Then I decided to see if August was the right month for this party, but Cincinnati's summer opera series actually ends in July, so this menu is a little late. Oh, well! I don't think any readers are seriously planning to have a summer opera encore party based on an ancient Cincinnati menu anyway, so it's here for August.
I guess since this party is so fancy, the invitations should be more restrained than the handcrafted extravaganzas we're accustomed to seeing from the Junior League. This time there are two options, and the first doesn't even require crafting!
Just write the invitation right on the opera program! (Of course, I'm wondering how the Junior Leaguers are getting programs before the opera. I thought programs were given out at the event. Maybe the Junior Leaguers had special sources? Maybe the summer opera just had one program for the entire series that got handed out at every show? Maybe this was just a way to use old programs from earlier shows?)
The other option is still relatively restrained, as the construction paper opera glasses don't even require a special envelope or hand-cancellation at the post office.
The relatively easy invitations mean the preparations for the party have to be a pain in the ass. Each guest has to get a handmade paper maché tray.
And of course, that paper maché needs to be painted and sealed with enamel because we all know that single-use trays need to be sturdy (and take up a lot of time and resources).
The party will also need an inexplicable popcorn topiary centerpiece laden with lemons and ribbons.
I had no idea "lemons and ribbons" could even be a theme, but I guess it is!
For an after-opera party, you might expect some extra-fancy foods, like blini with caviar, but this menu starts out with a Jell-O salad!
The Molded Asparagus Salad doesn't even try to get too fancy, starting with a package of lime gelatin instead of the unflavored variety. Mmm! Sugary lime with asparagus, mayo, green pepper, celery, and green onions!
That's followed with Layered Eggs. What are the eggs layered with?
Creamed chipped beef. That's right! Follow up a night at the opera with shit on a shingle casserole. (Okay, there are no shingles, and I guess the bacon and canned mushrooms are supposed to fancy it up a bit, but this is still not what I expected.)
The English muffins and strawberry tarts are supposed to come from a bakery, I think, as the book offers no recipes, but the Wine Sorbet is supposed to be homemade, and it finally gives us something that seems after-opera fancy.
If you can afford to use champagne in a recipe AND serve it to guests on its own, then maybe guests will kindly look past the asparagus Jell-O and the massive pan of shit-covered scrambled eggs. Or maybe they'll just spread rumors about your déclassé cooking and somebody else will be hosting the after-opera party next summer.