Old-fashioned Eggs Au Gratin

Eggs Au Gratin

HAPPY EASTER!

Yesterday I colored eggs with my grandsons. Today I have lots of hard boiled eggs, so looked for a hundred-year-old recipe that used hard boiled eggs. I found a lovely recipe for Eggs Au Gratin.

The Eggs Au Gratin were tasty and easy to make, and would be a perfect brunch dish. This recipe is a keeper.

Here’s the original recipe:

Recipe for Eggs Au Gratin
Source: The New Butterick Cook Book (1924)

I made a white sauce rather than going with the “yellow sauce” option that contained an egg yolk. Two cups seemed like a lot of white sauce, so when I updated the recipe, I used 1 1/2 cups of milk rather than 2 cups.

Here’s the recipe updated for modern cooks:

Eggs Au Gratin

  • Servings: 3 - 4
  • Difficulty: easy
  • Print

6 hard-cooked eggs

2 tablespoons butter + 2 teaspoons butter

2 tablespoons flour

1 1/2 cups milk

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/8 teaspoon pepper

1/3 cup cheese, shredded (I used cheddar cheese.)

1/4 cup fine bread crumbs

Preheat oven to 375° F. Slice hard-boiled eggs into a casserole dish. (I used a 750 ml dish that holds about 3 cups.)

Put 2 tablespoons butter in a saucepan, then stir in the flour, salt, and pepper. Gradually, add the milk while stirring constantly. Continue stirring until the white sauce begins to thicken. Remove from heat and gently pour over the sliced eggs.

Sprinkle cheese and bread crumbs on top, in that order. Dot with small pieces of butter (a total of about 2 teaspoons). Put in oven and bake until hot and bubbly (about 25 minutes).

http://www.ahundredyearsago.com

1924 Buffet Spread Made Perfect with a Table Stove

Table Stove
Source: Ladies Home Journal (February, 1924)

A hundred years ago technology was rapidly changing. By 1924 many homes had electricity, and lots of electric appliances were available in stores (or through mail order catalogs). One appliance was the electric table stove.

I love to have friends over and cook a meal together. If I’d lived back in 1924, here’s how it could be done using a table stove:

Buffet Spreads Made Perfect

For the woman who entertains informally a delightful acquisition is the combination table stove. Constructed with a double set of heating coils between which the toast drawer or the waffle iron may be inserted, it is possible to cook something over the top grill while other food is browning beneath in the lower grill. All these things can be done at the same time, but it requires more time than if just one thing is being cooked, because this device depends upon a single lamp socket for available electricity, and just so much heat and no more can be procured. When three pieces of work are attempted the heat must necessarily be divided among the three.

The electric table stove is just the things on which to cook the evening spread of chicken a la King, shrimp wiggle or any other favorite creamed dish. Get ready  beforehand a tray filled with everything which will be needed for your cooking, with all ingredients measured out. Sometimes it adds to the interest to leave one or two tasks undone as seen in the illustration. The mincing of the green pepper and the opening of the can of fish have been left for the guests to do, thus making the affair as informal as possible –usually the most successful kind of entertaining. While the foundational white sauce is being made in the deep pan placed on top of the grill stove, the slices of bread may be toasted in the toaster drawer.

Ladies Home Journal (February, 1924)

Old-Fashioned Banana and Nut Salad

Banana and Nut Salad on plate

I was intrigued by a hundred-year-old recipe for Banana and Nut Salad, so decided to give it a try. This recipe was quick and easy to make. Just quarter a banana and roll in finely chopped nuts. The old recipe said to serve on a lettuce leaf and garnish with mayonnaise.

The Banana and Nut Salad was lovely, but I’d definitely skip the mayonnaise if I made this recipe again.

Here’s the original recipe:

Recipe for Banana and Nut Salad
Source: The New Butterick Cook Book

When I was cutting the bananas lengthwise, I accidently broke one of the banana halves into two – but I was pleasantly surprised how much better the presentation looked with the broken banana half, than with the whole half. So I adapted the recipe to indicate that the banana should be quartered.

I put mayonnaise on the Banana and Nut Salad. I didn’t try boiled dressing, and I didn’t try mixing whipped cream with mayonnaise. It seemed like mixing whipped cream and mayonnaise could potentially ruin some perfectly good whipped cream. However, just using whipped cream with no mayonnaise might be a nice addition.

Here’s the recipe updated for modern cooks:

Banana and Nut Salad

  • Servings: 6 (1/2 banana per serving)
  • Difficulty: easy
  • Print

3 bananas

1/2 cup finely chopped nuts (I used pecans.)

lettuce, optional

1/2 cup mayonnaise, optional

Peel bananas and cut each into two lengthwise, then cut each piece again to quarter. Roll each piece in the finely chopped nuts. If desired, place on lettuce leaves and garnish with mayonnaise.

http://www.ahundredyearsago.com

Oven Thermometers: Taking the Hazards and Heartaches Out of Baking

oven heat regulator
Source: Ladies Home Journal (April, 1924)

When baking, many cooks a hundred years ago used a variety of informal ways to figure out whether an oven was very hot, hot, or less hot. However, times were changing and recipes were beginning to indicate the temperature that should be used. This was confusing to some cooks. The April, 1924 issue of Ladies Home Journal advocated for the use of oven thermometers. Here’s a few excepts:

Taking the Hazards and Heartaches Out of Baking: Oven Thermometers Save You Time and Money

Commercial bakers have been using temperature methods these many years in order to produce uniform baking results, while the majority of women who do their own baking still depend upon the hit-or-miss way of oven regulation. The housewife who has used the same range for a long period of time usually judges fairly well, but the inexperienced cook is completely at a loss when she is told to thrust her hand in the oven and count ten, or given some other antiquated method of judging heat.

No longer need women employ such indefiniteness for there are on the market at the present time small portable oven thermometers, reasonably durable in construction, which make guess work in baking a thing of the past, and put the home kitchen on a par with the scientifically correct bakeries of commercial use.

cooking thermometer
Source: Ladies Home Journal (April, 1924)

One can depend on the results every time. There is no chance for burnt or underdone food, once you have learned the control of your oven by temperature. This means a real saving in money because food is not wasted. There’s an added saving, too, for one never need worry about results.

pans for baking cakes
Source: Ladies Home Journal (April, 1924)

Temperature can play a large part in accomplishing perfection in cake baking. A dependable recipe and painstaking mixing are essential, but more cakes are spoiled in the baking than in any other way. This because, by the ordinary method, there has been no way of being absolutely sure that your baking oven today was just like it was yesterday. Luck, good or bad, is a nonessential factor in cake baking if the temperature method outlined is adopted. It becomes an accurate science in which the terrors of possible failure have no place. Different types of cake batter require baking at different temperatures, but the size and depth of the pan also have their effect.

“Cry Babies” Cookies

 

"Cry Babies" CookiesSometimes old recipes have really fun, descriptive names. When I saw a recipe in a hundred-year-year old cookbook for “Cry Baby” cookies, I just knew that I needed to give it a try.

The cookies are an old-fashioned drop cookie with molasses and spices – and lots of raisins and nuts. They were lovely – and I can see why children would “cry” for them. These cookies would be a perfect addition to a child’s (or adult’s) packed lunch.

Here’s the original recipe:

Recipe for "Cry Babies" Cookies
Source: The New Home Cook Book, 1924 Edition (Published by the Illinois State Register, Springfield, IL)

This recipe makes a lot of cookies – probably about 100 cookies. Most modern cookie recipes don’t make that many cookies, so I updated the recipe to make 1/2 of the old recipe.

Here’s the recipe updated for modern cooks:

'Cry Babies' Cookies

  • Servings: approximately 50
  • Difficulty: easy
  • Print

1/2 cup hot coffee

1 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 cup sugar

1/2 cup molasses

1/2 cup shortening

1 egg

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1 teaspoon ginger

dash salt

2 1/2 cups flour

1/2 cup raisins

1/2 cup walnuts, chopped

Preheat oven to 375° F. Dissolve the baking soda in the hot coffee.

Put sugar, molasses, shortening, egg, cinnamon, ginger, salt, and the coffee with baking soda in a large mixing bowl; beat until combined. Add flour, and stir until combined and smooth. Add raisins and walnuts; stir to distribute throughout the dough. Drop heaping teaspoons about 2 inches apart on a lightly greased baking sheet.  Bake 10-12 minutes, or until lightly browned.

http://www.ahundredyearsago.com

Old-Fashioned Corn Beef with Vegetables

Corn Beef with Vegetables on plate

March is the perfect time for corned beef so I was excited when I found a hundred-year-old recipe for Corn Beef with Vegetables. (Is it “corned beef” or “corn beef”? I’ve always called it “corned beef” but the old recipe says “corn beef.”

The recipe called lots of root vegetables – rutabaga, turnips, and carrots – as well as cabbage and onions.

The Corn Beef with Vegetables was delightful. The briny saltiness of the corn beef combined nicely with the earthiness of the root vegetables and the subtle buttery sweetness of the cabbage.

Here’s the original recipe:

Corn Beef with Vegetables recipe
Source: Low Cost Cooking (1924) by Florence Nesbitt

This recipe makes a lot of vegetables and a relatively small amount of corn beef. (I got this recipe from a cookbook called Low Cost Cooking, so that probably explains why the recipe called for relatively little meat). I made this recipe using a 2-pound corn beef brisket as called for in the recipe. In hindsight, I wish that I’d used a larger piece of meat, so I updated the recipe to allow for the use of a larger piece of corn beef brisket if desired.

About half an hour before I wanted to serve, I put the rutabaga, turnips, and carrots into the Dutch oven without removing the meat. After about 20 minutes I removed the meat and added the cabbage and onions for the last 10 minutes. By doing it this way, I didn’t need to worry about the meat getting cold before serving.

Here’s the recipe updated for modern cooks:

Corn Beef with Vegetables

  • Servings: 4 - 8
  • Difficulty: moderate
  • Print

1 corn beef brisket (2 – 5 pounds)

1/2 pound rutabaga (about 1/2 of a medium-sized rutabaga), peeled and cut into 1 1/2 inch pieces

1/2 pound turnips (about 2 medium turnips), peeled and cut into 1 1/2 inch piece

1 pound carrots (about 5 medium carrots), peeled and each cut into 2-3 inch pieces

1/2 pound cabbage (about 1/2  medium cabbage), cut into wedges about 2 inches wide

1 large onion, sliced

Put the corn beef in a Dutch oven and cover with water.  Bring to a boil on high heat. Reduce heat, cover and simmer for 2 1/2- 3 hours (More time is needed for a larger piece of meat.) Add rutabaga, turnip, and carrot pieces. Simmer for an additional 20 minutes. Remove meat from the Dutch oven, and add onion slices and cabbage wedges. Cook another ten minutes. Drain water.

Slice the corn beef and arrange with the cooked vegetables on serving plate.

http://www.ahundredyearsago.com