I have something short and sweet for
you today. Or should that be short and savoury? I do love an idea that turns a regular idea upside down, so today may I give you Pea Shortcake and Savoury
Eclairs?
Pea Shortcake.
The countryman knows there’s logical
reason why peas are the first crop he puts in. It’s because green peas,
fresh-picked from the garden, are the best crop he raises. There are, of
course, some peculiar souls who place sweet corn, or tomatoes, or even green
cucumbers ahead of peas. Occasionally one hears of a gardener who rates carrots
and beets toward the top of the list, but most farmers agree that these two
edible roots are winter grub.
The time has come to spread good
tidings to a food-conscious world regarding another way of eating green peas.
Admittedly they are sweet and delicious served in a cereal dish with plenty of
the water in which they were cooked. A pint of peas plus a cupful or two of the
juice is an acceptable side dish. But for the genuine, superlative, mouth-watering
method of consuming peas that have tarried no more than thirty minutes from
vine to table, no process yet invented equals pea-shortcake.
One starts with a deep soup plate. On
the bottom place the four halves of two home-made biscuits. The biscuits should
have firm, crunchy brown crusts; the interiors should be fluffy white and
piping hot. Spread butter generously over these four pieces and pause two
minutes while the butter soaks into them. Then take the potful of peas and pour
the green nuggets and their flavorful juice over the buttered biscuits. The
fragrance that rises to the nostrils is better than all the perfumes of Araby.
It’s a spicy, tantalizing, nostril-tickling aroma that’s compounded of peas,
butter, biscuits, and anticipation.
Two heaping soup plates of this plus a quarter
of a fresh rhubarb pie and a glass or two of cold creamy milk, and a man is
refreshed for the afternoon’s work. Pea shortcake isn’t in the cookbooks. But
when the countryman gets around to writing that book of recipes, he will give
the dish the prominence it deserves.
New York Times, May 19, 1945.
Savoury Eclairs.
Ingredients: Cream puff recipe; 2 oz.
cooked ham; 1 oz. butter; salt and cayenne; 1 tablespoon tomato sauce; 2 oz.
cooked tongue; 2 oz. cooked corn beef; ½ oz. flour; little nutmeg; ½ pint milk.
Method: Make cream puff mixture [choux
paste]. Force through a bag on to a buttered tray and bake 25-30 minutes. Mince
meats, melt butter in a saucepan, then stir in flour, salt, and pepper until
smooth. Add milk and nutmeg and stir over heat until boiling. Cook for three
minutes. Add sauce to meats and fill into eclairs as you would cream into cream
puff.
The Mercury
(Hobart, Tasmania) of 2 September, 1954.
Regarding the "Shortcake" it took me a minute to get my head around shortcake/ biscuit, then I recalled strawberry shortcake and the idea that it's rather like baking-powder raised short crust. Or what goes on top of a cobbler. Would you agree?
ReplyDeleteHi kitchencounterculture! Yes, I agree - although 'shortcake' in this form is not an Australian or British concept at all! (Nor are the American and British/Australian concepts of 'biscuit' the same!)
ReplyDelete