‘Household Hints’ always catch my eye. Perhaps therein lie solutions
to problems I never knew I had? An
alphabetic list of almost anything is also pretty hard for me to resist, perhaps
because of my love of words, but also because I love to see how the writer solves
the problem of the letter ‘X’.
Today, just for fun, I give you an alphabetical list of household
hints from a book published by a Brisbane newspaper, the ‘Truth’ and ‘Daily Mirror’ Cookery Book, (c 1943) under the name
of Ruth Cilento.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
THE KITCHEN ALPHABET
A pinch of baking
soda added to any boiled syrup will prevent it crystallising.
Before heating
milk rinse the saucepan with cold water and it will not scorch so easily.
Cut bread lengthwise
instead of across, when cutting sandwiches, it saves the bread.
Don’t pile
leftover potatoes together, spread them on a large dish to prevent them going
sour.
Efficient
equipment is necessary in the kitchen. How are your spoons and strainers wearing?
Fish should be
included on the menu once a week.
Gelatine is
the modern housewife’s magic; learn the
many ways of using it.
Honey can be
used to mix nuts for sandwiches.
If syrup goes
back to sugar, reheat, and add a small piece of butter and it will be useful as
a soft sugar.
Juice left over
from tinned fruits is useful in preparing jellies.
Keep all fat not
suitable for cooking, and use for making soap.
Liquid from
mustard pickles can be added to salad dressing in place of fresh vinegar and mustard.
Marmalade spread
between two thin slices of buttered toast is delicious for breakfast.
Nuts are most
nutritious, and there are many ways of using them in the daily menu.
Oranges
baked are excellent for a cold. Cut a slice not quite through to form a lid,
then put in a teaspoon of lime juice, bake until heated through.
Peas too hard
for serving plain may be cooked until tender, then pressed through a sieve and
used for soup.
Quite a good
plan, when cooking rice, is to have some left over; it can be used in many
appetising ways.
Rubber rings
from fruit jars should be kept and used for standing dishes on the ice to
prevent slipping.
Salt frequently
curdles milk, so it should always be added last in cooking.
Thermometers always
mean good results in baking cakes.
Use up yolks of eggs
– when whites only have been used – for scrambling.
Very few
housewives know the food value of dates; they are excellent in salads and des[s]erts.
When cooking
vegetables, cover those that grow under the ground, and leave uncovered those
that grow above ground.
X,Y, Z. These are
teaser, which the cook can discover for herself while the dinner is cooking.
So, the author clearly wimped out on Y, and Z as well as X. Or perhaps
it was because the text would not then have fitted so neatly onto one page. I
challenge you to complete the list.
As the recipe for the day, I give you an interesting version of
pickled onions, from the same book.
Pickled Onions in Sauce.
Five lb. onions, 1 quart
vinegar, 1 lb. brown sugar, ½ oz. ground cloves, ½ oz. allspice, 2 big
tablespoons flour, ½ dessertspoon mustard, 1 tablespoon curry powder, 2
teaspoons turmeric.
Cover the onions with salt
and water, and allow to stand 24 hours. Put the vinegar and sugar on fire to
boil, and when it just comes to the boil, add all the other ingredients, which
have been mixed to a paste with cold vinegar. Boil till it thickens, then pour
this over the onions [which presumably have been drained from the brine!]. Keep
for three weeks before using so as to
allow the flavour of this sauce to go into the onions.
This recipe is very
economical because the sauce can be used as well as the onions.
Quotation for the Day.
The only think I like better than talking about
Food is eating.
John Walters
John Walters
2 comments:
Xanthum Gum is used by people who are allergic to gluten to add volume and viscosity to bread and other gluten-free baked goods.
Yams are excellent when baked. I prefer mine with brown sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg and butter, but my sister likes them roasted and mashed with olive oil and rosemary.
Zesting citrus fruits means only getting the outside coloured bits. Avoid the bitter white pith.
Xecute xactly all xpected instructions – no xceptions!
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