I
have been musing lately on the development of our national identity as
expressed through the cookery columns of old newspapers, and thought I would
share a few snippets with you over the next week or two. There are many stories
about early settlers from Britain (the better-off ones, at least, who could
afford to choose) resolutely resisting the concept of foods with any indigenous
taint, and sticking imperiously to the food of “home,” to the extent of importing
preserved salmon and meat to a colony rich in both.
My
first dips into newspaper archives for “Australian Recipes” brought up the
following article, from The Sydney Mail
and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW) of 8th February 1879. I noted too late
that it referred to Australian tested
recipes, and included a Bengal-type chutney and an American bread. The search
for the beginnings of the concept of Australian cuisine has clearly only just
begun!
The
Household.
AUSTRALIAN
TESTED RECIPES.
We beg to remind our lady readers
that we depend entirely upon their personal assistance to maintain this
department useful and trustworthy, and have once or twice lately been without
any recipes to publish. We are always thankful to receive even one or two
proved recipes, and will publish them without fail for the benefit of all
housewives. Besides the batch in this issue, we have in hand only one
additional lot from ' Lassie,' who will please accept our best thanks. We are
quite confident that a large proportion of the domesticated and sensible among
our lady readers really appreciate the opportunity of getting practical common
sense family recipes, suitable for Australian use and climate. It each would
contribute one or two of her own which she has not seen in our columns, she
will return the value received from others.
RECIPES.
By C. A.
S. (Tried and found satisfactory.)
Tomato
Sauce. — Take 6
lbs. of ripe tomatoes, 1 lb. of onions, ½ oz. of garlic. Boil together until
the skins are clear from the tomatoes, then strain through a colander. Add a
pint of vinegar, 2 teaspoonfuls of cayenne pepper, ¼ lb. of common salt, ½ oz.
of ground ginger, a few cloves; then boil again till thick, constantly
stirring. When cold, bottle it close.
Bengal
Recipe for Making Chutney (like Mango Chutney). — 1½ t lb. of moist sugar, ¾ lb.
of salt, ¼ lb.of garlic, ¼ lb. of onions,
¾ lb. of powdered ginger, ¼ lb. dried chillies, ¾ lb. of mustard seed (common
mustard will do), ¾ lb. of stoned
raisins, 2 bottles of good vinegar, 30 large unripe sour apples or 60 green tomatoes.
The sugar must be made into a syrup; the garlic, onions, and ginger be finely
powdered in a mortar; the apples peeled, cored, sliced, and boiled in a bottle
and a-half of the vinegar. When all this is done and the apples are quite cold,
put them into a large pan, and gradually mix the whole of the rest of the
ingredients, including the remaining half -bottle of vinegar. It must be well
stirred until the whole is thoroughly blended, then bottle for use; cork it
tight. Both this and the tomato sauce will keep for years.
American
Cake. — Two cups
of sugar, ½ cup of butter, 2 ½ cups of flour, 1 cup of milk, 3 eggs, a few
currants and some candied peel chopped very fine, 1 teaspoonful of soda, and 1
of acid; the two last to be mixed into the milk, but not till directly before
using it. Beat the butter to a cream, then beat the sugar into it, then the
eggs, then the flour and milk, the currants and peel; the last can be omitted.
2 comments:
Any thoughts on why the cake would have been called American Cake? I don't recognize it as like any cake I've ever eaten or seen in America.
I have no idea, Joe. There is not a lot of logic attached to this sort of name! Maybe someone brought the recipe back from a visit to America, or from a relative there, and that's what they began to call it.
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