This day is the ninth birthday of this blog. This is the two thousand four hundred and
forty-fourth post, which I think is a pretty good number. Each year I have to
make the decision whether to celebrate the blog birthday or Hallowe’en. This
year, Hallowe’en won, because I plan to save myself for a big tenth anniversary
birthday bash in 2015.
So, today I give you a Hallowe’en menu and recipes courtesy
of the Paris News [Texas] of October
19, 1939.
Try This For Hallowe’en.
Dinner Menu for Six To Eight Guests Has Holiday
Motif.
A HALLOWE’EN DINNER MENU
Devilled Ham Loaf with
Hot Mustard Sauce
Sweet Potatoes in
Orange Goblin Shells
Hallowe’en Salad
Rolls and Butter
Pumpkin Tarts
Cider or Coffee
Halowe’en Salad
(Serves 6 to 8)
Hallowe’en
Salad
(Serves 6 to 8)
1 tablespoon granulated
gelatin
½ cup cold water
½ cup orange juice,
heated but not boiled
¾ cup orange juice, not
heated
1 tablespoon lemon
juice
¼ cup sugar
Sprinkling salt
½ cup orange pieces,
drained
1 cup shredded raw
carrots
¼ cup chopped walnut
meats
Soak gelatin in cold
water 5 minutes. Add heated orange juice. Stir to dissolve gelatin. Add
unheated orange juice, lemon juice, sugar and orange pieces, carrot and walnut.
Chill in individual molds until firm. Unmould on lettuce. Press seedless raisins
into tops of molds to make faces.
Sweet
Potatoes in Orange Goblin Shells.
(Serves 8)
4 cups boiled or baked
sweet potatoes
2 teaspoons salt
2 tablespoons melted
butter
Orange juice to moisten
and whip.
Whip sweet potatoes
with salt, butter and orange juice. Pack into 8 orange shells o which goblin
faces have been drawn. Keep in moderate oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit) for about
20 minutes or until heated through. Top with a quartered marshmallow for a “hat”
and return to oven to brown marshmallow.
To make orange shells,
cut tops from California oranges. Extract juice. This juice is used to whip
potatoes and in Hallowe’en Salad. Draw goblin faces on shells with India ink or
an eye-brow pencil.
Devilled
Ham Loaf with Hot Mustard Sauce.
1 ½ pounds lean pork
shoulder, ground.
1 ½ pounds smoked ham,
ground
1 ½ cups whole milk
1 whole egg
2 egg whites, beaten
stiff
1 cup cracker crumbs
⅛ teaspoon pepper
Combine all ingredients
and form into a loaf. Bake at 350 degrees Fahrenheit for 1 ½ hours. Serve with:
Mustard
Sauce.
1 tablespoon flour
¼ cup butter or
substitute
½ cup boiling water
1 beef extract cube
½ cup prepared mustard
¼ cup sugar
2 egg yolks, beaten
½ cup lemon juice.
Cream flour and butter
together over low heat. Add boiling water, beef cube, mustard and sugar. When
slightly thickened, carefully add the egg yolks. Cook 10 minutes. Remove from flame
and add lemon juice, stirring well. Serve at once.
3 comments:
Well I'd add a green salad or some broccoli to that, but for a gimmicky menu it actually sounds pretty good!
The ham loaf is a interesting recipe, though I'm not at all sure how they can call it a devil. Most of the deviled recipes I've seen involved at least a pinch of cayenne. The gelatin 'salad' and serving things in orange cups is very much a "thing" for the US, though it started at least 20 years earlier.
Happy birthday to the blog? I think I found you around 2006 or 2007, and have been mostly lurking ever since.
I the sweet potatoes in the oranges - complete with eyebrow pencil - are cute.
Congratulations on your blog milestone!
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