In
June 1892, the Queensland Pineapple Company dispatched fifty cases of canned
pineapples to London and Berlin, via the ship Jelunga. The newspaper
reported that it was hoped that this new industry would soon “assume large
proportions,” and that:
The company expect to reach
an annual export trade of 20,000 or 30,000 cases, which should considerably
relieve the local market, and prevent that glutting of the Southern markets
which has been so frequent of late. The method employed is to preserve the
finest pines in juice crushed from smaller fruit. By this means the flavour is
enriched, while only sufficient sugar is added to insure preservation. The practice in Singapore is to preserve with
sugar only, but this system extracts the richness of the pine and renders the
fruit insipid. What will probably prove the favourite style of packing is that
of slicing the pines –nearly two being put up in one tin- and when the fruit
finds its way on to the coast markets, on the diggings, and in the dry west of
the colony it should become very popular.
Fresh
pineapple was so easily available to most Queenslanders living in the tropical
coastal regions that recipes for the canned product were not common in newspaper
columns of those early years. Over time
however, convenience inevitably won out, and canned pineapple became a popular
standby.
Here
are some of my recipe gleanings, especially for those of you a long way from a
cheap fresh pineapple:
Pineapple Sandwiches.
To one quarter cupful
of canned pineapple juice add half a cupful of the canned pineapple pulp put
through a food chopper, one cupful of granulated sugar and one tablespoonful of
lemon juice. Let the mixture come to the boiling point over brisk heat, then
simmer for five minutes and cool before using. Whole-wheat or any bread of
coarse texture is particularly nice to use with this filling.
Cairns Post,
25 October 1926.
Sweet Potato and
Pineapple.
Wash
potatoes and boil until tender. Skin, press through potato ricer, and beat
until smooth and creamy, adding sugar to taste. In a buttered baking dish
arrange a layer of the potato and a layer of drained canned pineapple, using
pineapple for top layer. Heat In oven and serve immediately.
Townsville Daily Bulletin (Qld.) 21 November 1931
Pineapple-Raisin Whirls.
One tin pineapple
cubes; 6 oz. self-raising flour, pinch salt, 1 tablespoon butter, ½ cup milk, 2
tablespoons sugar, 1 egg.
Raisin Filling: Four
ounces chopped raisins, 2 tablespoons brown sugar, ½ teaspoon cinnamon mixed
together.
Pour contents of 1 tin
of pineapple cubes into an oven-proof dish and heat thoroughly. Sift flour,
salt, and sugar together and rub in butter. Beat egg and add to milk, then add
to dry ingredients to make a fairly stiff dough. Roll out into an oblong shape,
cover with raisin filling, then roll up as for Swiss roll. Glaze with a little
milk. Cut into slices 1 inch thick and place on top of hot pineapple, cut side
up. Bake in hot oven 20 minutes. Serve with whipped cream or ice-cream
Australian Women’s Weekly,
2 July 1958
The
Australian Women’s Weekly ran a
competition in 1962 for recipes using canned Queensland pineapple. The final
first prize was to be ₤100 (decimal currency was introduced in 1966), but
“progress prizewinners” received ₤5 for recipes published before the closing
date. The contributor of the following recipe was one of the progress prizewinners.
Steak
Casserole with Pineapple and Ham Dumplings.
One and a half pounds
topside or blade steak, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 teaspoon salt, ¼ teaspoon
pepper, 2 tablespoons butter or substitute, 2 onions, 1 carrot (sliced into
rings), 1 diced green pepper (optional), ½ cup chopped celery, 1 tablespoon
tomato sauce, 1 10oz. can cream of celery soup, 2 cups water or stock.
Pineapple
and Ham Dumplings: One and a half cups self-raising
flour, pinch cayenne pepper, ½ teaspoon salt, 2 oz. butter or substitute, ¾ cup
crushed and drained canned pineapple, 1 dessertspoon finely chopped celery, ½
cup finely chopped ham, 6 tablespoons milk.
Crumb
Topping: One cup soft white breadcrumbs, 2 dessertspons
butter or substitute, 1 oz. grated cheese.
Cut steak into 1 in cubes,
coat with flour, salt, and pepper. Fry in heated butter or substitute until
browned on all sides. Place in deep casserole. Add onions to pan, sauté
lightly. Add to casserole with the tomato sauce, carrots, celery, and green
pepper. Cover, cook in moderate oven 1½ to 2 hours.
Dumplings:
Sift flour with salt and cayenne. Rub in butter, add pineapple, ham, and
celery. Mix to soft dough with milk. Drop mixture in dessertspoonfuls into
boiling casserole, sprinkle with crumb topping made with melted butter, grated
cheese, and breadcrumbs mixed together. Bake uncovered in hot oven 20 minutes.
Australian
Women’s Weekly, July 4, 1962
4 comments:
"One tin pineapple cubes" - this sort of instruction is very common, if unfortunate. Back then there may have only been one size of tinned pineapple available, but nowadays there are quite a few. So many recipes don't specify can size or amount, and it can really make a difference!
Sandra
I noticed when I was stationed in Japan the local fondness for ham and pineapple. Is this an Australasia thing?
Ham and pineapple is indeed a favourite combination here - especially for pizzas!
Still remember on the Naked Vicar Show tapes, this: (Noeline Brown doing a parody Home Beautiful type segment:)
"And now dahlings, something wonderful to do with pineapple pieces! Try and put them together again!"
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