I usually focus on pre-1980s cookbooks (partially because the presentation and photography started getting slicker in the 1980s, and I prefer the more homespun look of older books, and partially so there's a cutoff date to keep me from being tempted to buy everything I see at a thrift store or antique mall). But sometimes a newer collection slips through, and I'm not going to waste it just because it's a little new. Today is one of those slightly-newer-book days. We're looking at the April 1990 issue of Women's Circle Home Cooking.
This issue is partially about Easter, as it was mid-April in 1990, so we get a ham recipe that I am tempted to call "Pig in a Blanket."
Baked Ham in a Blanket features a 12-15-pound ham-- so only one pig!-- and I'm pretty sure the blanket is not supposed to be eaten. It's just there for seasoning and insulation. The booklet expects cooks to know that, though, as the instructions end at "Bake at 300 degrees, allowing 25 minutes per pound of ham." (I figured out that the dough is not edible mainly because the it had no fat-- so it's likely to be hard. Plus, Jenny of Silver Screen Suppers mentioned this technique a while ago...)
Since Catholics in the audience will be going meatless on Fridays in the weeks before Easter, the booklet dedicates its Microwave Magic section to Lent-appropriate dishes. I'm most interested in their adorable "Microwave Magic" mascot, tbh.
How could I resist the little guy, with the reflection face and microwave-sized chef's hat? There's a pretty boring recipe for Salmon Casserole (mostly just a can of salmon mixed with bread crumbs and minced celery and onion bits, topped with a couple slices of cheese, and microwaved until hot) in case you want the microwave to stink like fish, but I was more intrigued by the Quiche Stuffed Peppers.
Peppers loaded up with feta and a custard of eggs mixed with half-and-half sound pretty good (well, if you like onions, or if you'd allow me to swap them out for something I'd prefer, like a half-can of petite diced tomatoes)! That is, assuming they actually work out. This is one of those recipes that sounds like it will be good in theory and a mess in practice-- a pepper won't balance quite right and will fall over, knocking over the next nearest pepper, and next thing you know, the domino effect means the filling is spilled everywhere. Or maybe they would just boil over before the eggs could set? In any case, this seems like a recipe that would end with a lot of scrubbing...
And if ingesting all that dairy fat on "fast" days when you're avoiding meat, and later gobbling down pounds of ham and Easter candies leads to unwanted weight gain, the magazine offers up a "Tasty Trimmers" section, complete with this recipe for a "diet" custard dessert.
You might wonder why I decided to include a fairly standard custard, but check out what the "Sweet Milk" entails: soaking 2/3 of a cup of raisins in a couple cups of "reconstituted nonfat milk" overnight, and then straining them out to leave 1-1/2 cups of milk that "should be an ivory color" to use as the sweetener. I don't think I've ever seen this trick before, and I have no real idea of whether this would actually save more calories than just using a small amount of regular sugar in the custard. I guess the fact that raisins were employed is supposed to make this healthier!? And maybe the cook will burn a negligible number of extra calories straining the milk...
In any case, Home Cooking editors seemed to think that April was a good time for fiddly little recipes-- a time for making throwaway dough blankets, leaky peppers, and milk full of mushy raisins that need to be strained out before the liquid is fit to use. I guess you need something to do inside when the weather decides to dump inches of rain on you before and/or after getting 40 degrees warmer and/or cooler in five hours flat... (Not that my spring has been like that so far...)























