As restaurateurs, home cooks, and food bloggers work
increasingly frenetically to find that elusive new insight or new spin on their
topic of choice, I thought it might be interesting to see what constituted a
new idea in food over the last century or so. I have made today’s selection
from Australian newspapers and magazines. In all of the examples, the column
header proclaimed that these were ‘novel recipes.’
Queen Tomato Sauce.
Simmer
over a slow fire 6 whole tomatoes, 2 turnips, 2 apples, 2 onions and 2 small
carrots, for 25 minutes. Let cool, then strain through a fine sieve. Add 2
tablespoons tarragon vinegar, 2 of Chili vinegar. Mix the ingredients well
together and keep in a cool place. This is very fine.
Leader (Melbourne, Vic) 15 November 1902.
A Biscuit Custard.
Place a
layer of sweet biscuits in a buttered pie dish. Sprinkle plenty of currants on the
layer. Nearly fill the dish with stewed apples; sprinkle again with currants
freely. Beat an egg with a quarter pint of milk, and pour over apples. Place
some small Ratafia biscuits on the top, and sprinkle with some grated nutmeg. Bake
in a moderate oven.
Leader (Melbourne, Vic.) 23 June 1906.
Broiled Oranges on Toast.
Peel oranges,
cut in one-half-inch slices and remove seeds. Brush over with melted butter,
place in a buttered broiler, and broil over a clear fire five minutes, turning
frequently. Remove to circular pieces of sauted bread or sponge cake and
sprinkle with grated sweet chocolate. Serve with whipped cream.
Daily Herald (Adelaide, SA) Saturday 30 May 1914
(In a feature on Novel Recipes for Oranges.)
Apple Soup.
For
this unusual, but delicious soup you will need,
2lb.
apples.
2in.
stick cinnamon.
5 pints
of water.
Sugar.
Half
lemon.
2
tablespoons fine sago.
Pare,
core and slice apples and put them into a lined saucepan with a small quantity
of the water. Add the cinnamon and the thinly-peeled rind of half a lemon and
stew slowly until reduced to a pulp. Then rub the apple through a fine sieve,
adding the rest of the water (which may be boiling). Return the puree to a
clean saucepan, bring to the boil, sweeten to taste and sprinkle in the fine
sago. Cook until this is quite clear, then add the lemon juice and some white
wine if desired.
The West Australian (Perth, WA) 18 September 1936
(In a feature on Novel Recipes for Apples.)
Tangerine and Marshmallow
Cake.
Take 2
eggs, their weight in sugar and flour, the rind and juice of 1 tangerine; whisk
the eggs, sugar, grated rind and juice for a quarter of an hour over a pan of
hot water. Lightly stir in the flour and a pinch of salt. Grease and flour two
sandwich tins, half fill each with the mixture and bake until pale gold in
colour in a quick oven. For the icing you will need 2oz. sugar, a tablespoon of
water, 8 chopped marshmallows, 1 white of egg. Boil the sugar and water until
they thicken to a syrup, add the marshmallows, and as soon as they are melted pour
this on to the well-whisked white of egg. Spread a layer of this between the
two cakes and pour the rest over the cake top. This cake looks especially good
decorated with a few slices of glace orange. This is really a tangerine cake
with a marshmallow filling and icing.
Examiner (Launceston, Tas.) 10 December 1937
Ginger Jelly.
Prepare
a lemon jelly square according to instructions, but instead of adding hot
water, boil up a pint of ginger beer and use this.
The Australasian (Melbourne, Vic.) 15 January 1938
Maori Wishes.
Two
dessertspoons butter, 1 heaped cup flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, ½ cup
chopped walnuts, 1 cup dates 1 egg, 1 dessertspoon cocoa, juice of 1 lemon.
Beat
butter and sugar to cream, add egg, then flour and cocoa, lastly chopped dates,
nuts, and lemon juice. Put in teaspoonfuls on a floured tray, and bake 10
minutes. When cooked put together with the following filling: ¼ lb. icing
sugar, 1 tablespoon butter, a little cocoa, and vanilla essence.
Mrs. P.
Holmes, Adelaide.
Australian Women’s Weekly of Saturday 7 December, 1940.
Cocktail Biscuit Savory.
One
tablespoon fresh lemon juice, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 tomato, 1 tablespoon
sugar, 1 banana, and wafer biscuits.
Whip
butter and sugar together, bruise the banana and tomato, after peeling, and add
to butter with the lemon juice. Beat all together smoothly. Pile on the
biscuits in fancy shapes, and decorate with gherkin, olive, or chilli.
Mrs. D.
Coulter, W.A.
Australian Women’s Weekly of Saturday 7 December, 1940.
I am soooo glad we now have blenders and food processors! All that "rub through a fine sieve" work would have driven me crazy!
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