The Pillsbury's Best 12th Grand National Bake-Off Cookbook doesn't actually have a date printed on it as far as I can tell, but the winner is Dilly Casserole Bread, which won in 1960, so this was probably printed in late 1960 or early 1961. (Don't tell me that I could figure out the year by knowing that the Bake-Off started in 1949. Then I would have guessed that this was from 1961 because I would have used simple subtraction, not taking into account that both the first year AND the most recent year would count. I wasn't a math major!)
Most of the recipes are fairly-tasty-sounding baked goods and as such, of relatively little interest to me... It's not like a small twist on cinnamon rolls or pound cake is likely to be too exciting or revolting.
The small section of main dishes held some interest, though. To feed my fascination with all recipes that claim to have some type of Asian influence but were clearly dreamed up by white people whose main experience with any kind of Asian cuisine was that they may once have heard another white person describe something they ordered at a Chinese-American restaurant a couple years ago and only vaguely remember, there's Oriental Celery Crunch.
Anything that starts with a cup and a half of shredded cheddar just doesn't sound so "Oriental" to me... Fold some of that cheese into a white sauce loaded with celery and add the rest to a cheese nut pastry to be baked on top of the saucy celery, and I am left wondering what exactly made anyone think the title applied. Usually, "Oriental" means that something has soy sauce, rice, and/or chow mein noodles in it. This has none of the usual suspects, and so much cheese and pastry that it could more credibly be labeled French... Maybe it's the MSG? The almonds? Your guess is as good as mine.
Speaking of pastry, this chapter also has one of those recipes-doubling-as-craft-projects that I love. In this case, it's Seafood Sunfish.
I love the idea of home cooks spending the better part of a day carefully cutting pastry out with a crabmeat can, then cutting and placing fins and tails, adding filling, topping it off with additional crust, carefully scoring all the details, adding olive eyes... Recipes this cute are usually reserved for children's foods, but I can't imagine most kids getting too excited about crabmeat and capers. Maybe this is intended for a ladies' luncheon? Or maybe it's just something for mom to make when she gets bored and wishes she had gotten that art degree instead of getting married and having a passel of children? (And a warning to the rest of the family to tread lightly because mom is in one of those moods again...)
I initially thought the recipe for Hamburger Hotcakes was going to be regular hotcakes with a hamburger-based sauce in place of maple syrup.
Nope! These hotcakes actually have the hamburger mixture baked right into them, to be served "hot, with a mushroom sauce or sandwich-style with a cheese slice between pancakes." I'll bet the "mushroom sauce" was just code for "heated-up cream-of-mushroom soup," and I kind of wonder if anyone ever went crazy and did both at once. Cheese between the top and bottom layer, then sauce over the whole thing would be a savory version of the sweet stuffed pancake stacks people eat now.
It should be no surprise that the nastiest-sounding recipe is Cook's Choice Casserole. "Cook's choice" was always code for "hastily-thrown-together-odds-and-ends-we-need-to-use-up-soon" when it showed up on our elementary-school menus, and it seems to be the animating force in this recipe too.
I love well-prepared Brussels sprouts (especially roasted ones!), but the fact that this recipe starts out by fully cooking frozen Brussels sprouts according to package directions (which were likely "Boil them into submission. Then boil a couple more minutes just to make sure.") and then preparing to bake them for another 20-25 minutes does not bode well. Adding the sulfurous smell of the hard-cooked eggs is unlikely to help... (Maybe the cheese will do some good. It's the only hope.) I'd think the biscuit topping would also help, but it's swirled with mushy and musty canned deviled ham... In short, this definitely has that "I've gotta use this shit up" vibe, which, while an admirable goal, is not really something I'd generally associate with a contest-winning recipe (or even a recipe that the family will accept a second time).
I will close with one baked good, though, as those are the book's main focus. Since I am a licorice hater, here are Licorice Snaps.
I saw the jar full of licorice candies in the picture and immediately wondered what pieces of actual licorice would do to the texture of the cookies. If you check the recipe, though, these have no actual licorice candies in them-- just anise seed. So these are actually better than expected (which isn't saying much). The recipe is just a slightly-more-pleasant-than-I-imagined way to waste yummy pecans.
I guess the judges agreed with me that these weren't necessarily tops in the competition. These cooks didn't win prize money-- just a new range and mixer, a recipe in an official Pillsbury publication, and a good story for anybody they could get to listen. So they are still winners, which is nice in a world where it is so easy to lose.















































