A Sweet Change: Novel Desserts.
After the last few days of heavy-going siege
and prison food, I thought we needed something sweet and delicious. I have
searched Australian newspaper archives for “novel desserts” and here are some
of the treats that I have found:
Baked Bananas, with orange or lemon sauce, make a novel dessert and one easy to
prepare. Peel the skin from one side of the bananas, and loosen it all around,
but do not remove, and lay the fruit in a long baking dish. Dust each one with
sugar, and bake 20 minutes at a moderate heat. To make the sauce, mix a
teaspoonful of corn-starch with a fourth of a cup of sugar. Heat the juice of
three large oranges; add the sugar and corn starch, and cook until it thickens
slightly.
The Week (Brisbane, Qld.) 31 October 1902.
Blanc Mange Surprise.—Make a single layer of plain white cake. In a
similarly sized tin have ready a layer of blanc mange. In a third layer the
same size, have a thick meringue, making this by filling the tin partly full of
water, arranging the uncooked meringue on this, and baking the same as if it
were a pie. To serve, spread the cake with a thick layer of fruit jelly;
reverse the blanc mange on the jelly spread cake, and carefully remove the meringue,
using two cake turners. When cut this novel dessert will be a complete surprise
to all at table, and few will understand how the meringue was baked on the
blanc mange.
Warwick Daily
News (Qld,) 5 November 1919
Oranges may be
used in many delicious dishes from the fruit cocktail to the dessert course.
For a novel dessert to serve six, cut a slice from the top of
six large oranges and cut the pulp. Remove stones from eighteen dates and chop the
dates fine. Mix this with the orange pulp and add two tablespoons cocoanut and
one-quarter pound broken walnut meats. Fill the orange shells with the mixture
and top each orange with a marshmallow. Place the prepared oranges on a baking sheet
and bake in a slow oven until the fruit is heated through and the marshmallow a
golden brown.
Chronicle (Adelaide) 16 May 1929
Novel Dessert with
Quinces.
Porcupine Quinces.
Pare
and core four quinces and cook them until tender in one cupful of water and one
cupful of sugar. Keep tightly covered while cooking on a slow fire until they
become deep pink. As soon as they are done, fill the centres with chopped nuts
and pierce the outside with blanched almonds, cut lengthwise in strips. Add one
teaspoonful of powdered gelatine to the syrup and pour over the quinces.
News (Adelaide) 25th April 1932
Fritters are Appetising
Dessert Recipes
(By "Rosa
Beeton")
The Winner of This Week's Recipe Prize of 10/-
is Mrs. M. Scandrett, of Leader
street, Goodwood, who forwarded a recipe for
novel dessert fritters. Her recipe
which is simply made, appears below with other
entries from readers.
Sweet Fritters
Take three tablespoonfuls of rice; boil until
swollen, then drain well. Mix four ounces of cleaned currants with the rice,add
a little grated lemon peel and sugar to taste. Stir into the mixture three
beaten eggsand make into a good batter with sufficient flour. Fry in hot fat a
tablespoonful at a time until a golden brown. Dust over with sugar and serve.
News (Adelaide) 26 August 1933.
Crisp and Delicious
Fruit Crusties Make Novel Dessert For Table.
Second prize of 10/- is awarded to Miss Merle
Collet, Cyprus-street, North Ipswich, for a novel and delicious sweet— fruit
crusties.
Fruit Pastry.
Chop ½ cup shortening into 2 even cups well
sifted flour, to which ½ teaspoon salt has been added. Then add 4 tablespoons
juice of whatever fruit is to be served with crusties. When thoroughly mixed,
roll out on a floured board and cut into the desired shapes.
Use fruit juices for thinning, as this gives
crusties the advantage over ordinary piecrusts mixed with water. The colder the
fruit juices and the firmer the shortening the crisper the crust will be.
Orange Crusties.
Use orange juice for thinning the pastry. After
cutting the dough, which should be rolled to the thickness of 1 in., spread
with the orange juice, allowing 1 dessertspoon for the top of each crustie. The
orange sauce is madeby mixing the chopped pulp of 2 oranges, free from any
white, with 2 tablespoons powdered sugar and 1 tea spoon ground cinnamon. After
the crusties have been spread with the sauce sprinkle sugar and cinnamon on them,
and on top of this a little grated rind of the orange. Bake in a quick oven and serve cold.
Pineapple Crusties.
Make the sauce with a small size tin of shredded
pineapple or, an equal amount of fresh pineapple, minced fine and mixed with 3
tablespoons powdered sugar and the smallest size bottle of cherries, chopped fine.
Allow 1 dessertspoon for each crustie. Before slipping into the oven sprinkle
each with a little extra sugar and lemon Juice. For thinning the crust either
the liquid from the cherries or pineapple can be used.
Apple Crusties.
The pastry foundation for apple crusties should
be mixed with orange juice and a little nutmeg for extra flavoring. The sauce
for the top of the crusties is made of 1 cup of chopped apples, 1 saltspoon ground
nutmeg, 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon, 2 tablespoons brown sugar, and 2
tablespoons minced raisins, the whole moistened w:th ⅓ cup orange juice. Cook ingredients until the
apple is soft. When cold spread on the crusties, adding a tiny bit of butter,
extra sugar, and the grated rind of the orange. Apple crusties are delicious
with cheese for the afternoon tea. Arrange the cheese four strips on each
plate, crossing them in log fashion.
Prune Crusties.
To one cup stewed prunes, free from skin and
stones, add 1 tablespoon granulated sugar, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, and 1
tablespoon lemon juice. Let these ingredients simmer together for 10 minutes.
When cold spread on the individual crusties cut in oblong strips. The
prune-water is used to moisten the piecrust. Half a blanched
almond can be added to the top of each crustie.
Truth (Brisbane, Qld.) Sunday 11 November 1934
Somehow "crusty" is not a tempting moniker.
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