The Australian Women's Weekly of 22nd May, 1937 had a feature on
‘Baltimore girl’ Wallis
Simpson who had won the heart of King Edward VIII, thus precipitating a constitutional
crisis when he abdicated the throne to marry her.
If The Weekly is to be believed, “that
American Woman” as Wallis was not very affectionately known by the English
aristocracy, was quite a dab hand in the kitchen. Part of the article reads:
Mrs. Wallis Simpson, or Miss Wallis Warfield, as she
now desired to be known until her marriage to the Duke of Windsor, makes
chocolate cake and other famous Maryland dishes for former King Edward.
“Cooking is an art” she said [in a recent
interview.]”I would not be so ridiculous as to say cooking is an element of
happiness, but it is a great art.”
Like other women of Baltimore, Mrs. Simpson is proud
of her ability to make the native dishes of Maryland.
A
clipping from an American newspaper published during the dramatic climax in
England tells of Edward’s liking for cake:
Cake for King.
LONDON:
Mrs Wallis Simpson baked a chocolate cake for King Edward on Monday, as intense
cold and fog kept the King’s guests indoors at Fort Belvedere, his country
estate. Mrs
Simpson’s chocolate cake has become a favorite delicacy of His Majesty, who
also praises her salads and luncheon dishes.
As
King Edward is partial to American cooking, business methods, and music, Mrs.
Simpson’s cookery appeals greatly to the royal palate.
The
article goes on to eulogise about Maryland food in general:
The
natural geographic and climatic advantages of the Chesapeake Bay State have
given Maryland a variety of excellent foods – terrapin and canvas back ducks,
oysters and soft crabs, watermelon, yams, turkeys, corn bread, beaten biscuit (scones
to us), fried chicken, corn fritters and corn pudding, big “beefsteak” tomatoes
and shad roe – to mention a few.
And finally,
it gets around to the recipes, including the favourite of the King:
Chocolate
Sandwich Cake.
Two
and one-quarter cups flour; 2 ¼ teaspoons baking powder; ¾ teaspoon salt’ ½ cup
butter; 1 cup sugar; 2 eggs, well beaten; ¾ cup milk; 1 teaspoon vanilla.
Sift
the flour; measure, and sift three times with the baking powder and salt. Cream
the butter, add sugar gradually, and cream until light and fluffy.
Add
eggs and beat well. Add flour alternately with the milk, a little at a time,
beating after each addition until smooth. Add vanilla. Bake in 2 greased inch
layer pans in moderate oven (375 deg. F.) for 25 minutes. Spread chocolate
frosting between layers and over cake.
All-round
Chocolate Frosting.
Four
tablespoons butter; 3 cups icing sugar; ¾ teaspoon vanilla; ¼ teaspoon salt; 3
squares unsweetened chocolate, melted; 4 tablespoonfuls hot milk
(approximately.)
Cream
butter well; add part of sugar gradually, blending after each addition until
smooth. Add vanilla, salt, and chocolate and mix well. Add remaining sugar
alternately with the milk, until of the right consistency to spread, beating
after each addition.
I have
to take issue with the good old Australian
Women’s Weekly on its opinion on beaten biscuits or scones. About the worst
thing you can do with scones is to be heavy-handed with the dough. I have never
eaten beaten biscuits, although I intend to remedy this while I am in Maryland
this week. They may well look similar
to scones, and the ingredients are the same, but the technique is so different
I can hardly believe that beaten biscuits have the same texture.
I give
you the recipe for beaten biscuits from article about Wallis and her cooking,
and let the English scones experts amongst you decide for yourselves.
Maryland
Beaten Biscuits or Scones.
One
half-pint of flour; ⅓ teaspoon salt; ⅓ tablespoon shortening; ice water and
milk, combined in equal amounts, to make a very stiff dough.
Add
salt to flour and rub in the shortening with the hands. Slowly add the liquid
to make a very stiff dough, kneading all the while.
Beat
with a hatchet, stick, or flatiron for half an hour (hard work, but it’s what “makes”
the biscuits): cut into small biscuits and prick the tops with a fork.
Bake
at 350 deg. F. for 20 minutes or until lightly browned.
3 comments:
I think our baking powder/buttermilk biscuit is closer to your scones. If you are heavy handed with buttermilk or baking powder biscuits you end up with rocks.
Beaten biscuits are an old Southern specialty, found in any regional cookbook of any pretensions to the name.
Why...I have no idea. Never had one, myself.
The beaten biscuits are not really like scones/soft biscuits. They were beaten to get some height, they lasted much longer,much sturdier, and they were used to serve thin slices of country ham, although I think most people use scones/biscuits now. They remind me of a Carr's water cracker and a scone if they had a baby.
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