As
many of you know, I am particularly fond of the regular Food Facts leaflets
published by the British wartime Ministry of Food throughout the war and for
many years afterwards. Yesterday I gave you a couple of recipes from a 1948
publication. One recipe was for a potato supper dish, and it struck me (yet
again) how intrinsic to British cooking is the potato. It is almost impossible
to imagine the cuisine of the country without the humble but incredibly
versatile spud.
I
thought it might be fun to look at a sample of potato recipes from the Food
Facts leaflets of the wartime Ministry of Food.
Let
us start early in the war, in November 1940: from Food Facts no. 16:
Potato and Watercress Soup.
Potatoes and watercress
are two of the most valuable of the “protective” foods – the foods that help us
resist illness and fatigue. This soup is a true protective dish. Scrub a pound
of potatoes and cut into quarters. Boil in 1 ½ pints of water until soft. Then
put through a sieve, return to the pan, add a bunch of watercress shredded, and
pepper and salt to taste. Simmer very gently for 5 minutes, adding a little
milk if the soup is too thick (This makes
enough for 4 people.)
Reduction
of the consumption of wheat and fat were goals of the Ministry of Food
throughout the war: less wheat imported meant that shipping could be freed up for
military use, and fat was essential for the production of explosives. Many Food
Facts recipes were developed to accommodate these requirements, as in the
leaflet number 28 in early February 1941, which made a feature of potatoes. It
began with the following:
Have you discovered how
often potatoes can replace foods that are now difficult to get? Potatoes can be
served in an endless variety of ways – below are a few suggestions. Potatoes
build up your strength, give you vitality and help you to resist illness – as
they are home-grown. So eat them often.
One
of the included recipes saved wheat, the other, fat:
Potato Pastry.
This is extremely good
with either sweet or savoury dishes. Sieve 8 oz. plain flour with ½ teaspoon
salt. Rub in 4 oz. cooking fat with the tips of the fingers, until the mixture
has the appearance of fine breadcrumbs. Add 4 oz. sieved cooked potato and rub
lightly into the other ingredients. Mix to a very dry dough with a little cold
water. Knead well with the fingers and roll out.
Potato Suet Crust.
This recipe will make
your suet ration go further, and give you a light crust, which is not greasy.
Mix 8 oz. flour, 2 oz. suet, 2 oz. grated raw potato, salt, and a little water.
Then cook your mixture in the usual way.
Potatoes
were the sole topic of the leaflet the following week in February. Number 29
went so far as suggesting that potatoes be eaten three times a day – for breakfast, dinner, and supper. I have
mentioned this particular leaflet, and gave the recipe for Surprise PotatoBalls in a previous story (here) and also gave the recipe for Coffee Potato Scones
in another post.
Leaflet
No. 29 also had the following very simple potato idea:
Parsley Potato Cakes.
Here is a new breakfast
dish which you can prepare the day before.
Boil 1 lb. potatoes and
mash them while hot with a very little hot milk. Season with salt and pepper to
taste.
Next morning, add a
tablespoon chopped parsley. Shape the mixture into little cakes, cover well
with browned breadcrumbs and pan fry in a little hot fat, or bake in the oven.
The
Ministry of Food introduced several cartoon-type characters to encourage vegetable
consumption during the war, and the most famous is probably Potato Pete, who
even had a potato song:
Potatoes
new, potatoes old,
Potatoes
(in a salad) cold,
Potatoes
baked or mashed or fried,
Potatoes
whole, potatoes pied:
Enjoy
them all including chips –
Remembering
spuds don’t come in ships!
I
am sure I will return to this theme of wartime potatoes, but as a final
offering, especially for those of you who have never met a potato they didn’t like,
here is another recipe from the Food Facts leaflet which gave us Potato Devils
yesterday – leaflet number 430, published in September 1948, well after the end
of the war.
Hot Potato Salad.
1½ oz. dripping; 1 level
tablespoon chopped onion; 1½ lb. boiled potatoes, sliced; salt and pepper to
taste; 1-2 level tablespoons chopped parsley.
Heat the dripping and fry
the onion until light brown. Add the potatoes and sprinkle with seasoning. Heat
slowly, stirring frequently, until all the fat has been absorbed. Sprinkle with
the parsley and serve hot.
2 comments:
Being a potato lover, I enjoyed reading these enticements to increased potato consumption. I'm curious, though, as to what starchy food was the norm in Britain before the potato came into favor? Was there a single starch that ruled the table, or were there several that shared the honors?
Hi Pieter B. It was bread, absolutely. And thick (very thick) pie crust. But bread, especially.
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