Today, in the Northern hemisphere, it
is May Day – a day traditionally associated with the rites of spring and other
sunny frolics. Today, in Sunny Queensland where, to quote the state government’s
tourism authority, it is “Beautiful one Day, Perfect the Next”, it is autumn,
and it is decidedly not sunny. We are in the midst of what is promised to be
three days of torrential rain, and so far the weather bureau and the weather
gods are in complete agreement.
In spite of the seasonal dissonance,
I am going to stick to my plan of giving you recipes from Australian newspapers
for May Day, and thought that something from the little island state of
Tasmania might just work. Tasmania, for those of you who don’t know, is the
little island state off the south-eastern coast of Australia, which is
decidedly not tropical because it is too far south (to state the obvious), so
is surrounded by waters and buffeted by winds which are cool thanks to its
somewhat distant neighbor – Antarctica.
This is what the Advocate (Burnie, Tasmania) of 5th May 1945 had to say about May Day:
MAY DAY BRINGS SCALLOPS!
May Day is still associated with the picturesque custom of
rural England of the yearly crowning of the Queen of May, a greatly coveted
honor among the pretty country maidens of nearly a century ago, when life was a
much simpler thing than the chaotic conditions of to-day. When reading lilting
verses of this May Day crowning ceremony of Old England, it is easy to
visualise the simple und happy scene. It was followed by the dancing of light
hearted lads and lasses on the village green, as they revelled in quaint folk dances;
also the traditional and pretty “Maypole Dance" and the infectious and
colorful "Floral Dance," so graphically presented in song by Peter
Dawson.
But here in Tasmania, May 1 (or May
Day) heralds something far more practical and prosaic than the crowning of the
Queen of May. The daily papers solemnly announce the tidings that "the
scallop season opens to-day!"
Scallops gratify the popular taste. Their
reappearance is welcomed by many. The catch is good in the broad waters of
Southern Tasmania, but the tasty shellfish, plentiful in Hobart, comes to the North-West
Coast in more restricted quantities. The best-known method of cooking scallops
is perhaps that of thickening them with white sauce, parsley sauce or curry.
They should be carefully cleaned und washed before use, to dispel their “fishy”
odour, which savors of the briny. Today's cash prize goes to Mrs. C.B Dunham,
Launceston, who has sent a trio of scallop recipes.
SCALLOPS IN SAUCE. – Two dozen scallops, or as many as
required. Wash in salt and water. Sauce: One pint of milk, piece of butter the
size of a walnut, a little chopped parsley, pepper, and salt to taste, or, if
preferred, one teaspoonful of curry powder mixed with one dessertspoon of
cornflour and a little of the milk from the pint. Boil sauce for two or three
minutes, drop in scallops and again boil for three minutes only.
SCALLOPS IN BATTER.-To same quantity of scallops as in above
recipe. Make a rather thin batter of one egg (well beaten, 1 cup flour, a
little milk, pepper and salt to taste, also a little chopped parsley. Have pan
ready with boiling fat. Dip each scallop into prepared batter and fry quickly.
SCALLOPS FRIED. – Eighteen scallops, 1 egg, ½ oz. butter, 2
oz. flour, 1 gill milk, pepper, salt, cayenne, frying fat, parsley. Wash and drain
scallops on a clean cloth, sift flour into a basin, add a pinch of salt, melt
butter, beat up egg, stir both into flour, add milk and work until quite smooth.
If too thick, a little more melted butter or milk may be added. Let batter
stand for one hour, then stir in 1 dessertspoon chopped parsley. Season
scallops with a little salt, a good pinch of white pepper, and a small pinch of
cayenne. Dip into batter, drop them one by one into the hot fat, fry to a
golden brown. Drain on a cloth, pile up on a hot dish, garnish with parsley,
and serve with tomato sauce.
Mmmm scallops. Was looking for a seafood recipe for tonight, must try one of these; perhaps some fried scallops as an entre. Keep up the good work, excellent blog.
ReplyDeleteMmmm scallops. Was looking for a seafood recipe for tonight, must try one of these; perhaps some fried scallops as an entre. Keep up the good work, excellent blog.
ReplyDeleteJust had #3 - Scallops fried - as per recipe, though had to look up what a "gill" of milk is and substituted frying "fat" for oil. They were the good ole days - a saucepan of yesterdays hardened lard that slowly melted into a heart-warming (and perhaps artery heart-hardening) "frying fat".
ReplyDeleteJust love scallops ...
ReplyDeleteInteresting article too, thank you.
All the best Jan