Food in England, Dorothy Hartley, pg 75
I've already started experimenting with this in the Experimental Mouffette page. Please see:
http://experimentalmouffette.blogspot.ca/2016/01/test-1-neck-of-beef.html
Many older books don't have usable tables of content or indexes. Due to my fascination with historical recipes, I'm devising a searchable blog of recipes that also acts as my recipe journal as I try to reproduce these old recipes and translate them into a more modern idiom.
Monday, 7 March 2016
Food in England by Dorothy Hartley
I don't have the habit of reading cookery books from cover-to-cover. However, exception to the rule, I've devoured Dorothy Hartley's classic Food in England, and I will be transcribing loads of recipes into this blog so that I can work out how I can make them on the farm, using what equipment we have.
Wednesday, 2 March 2016
Test 1 - Galettes de Memère
This is a brand new blog, dedicated to heritage recipes and working through how to translate them into modern cookery language. I am pleased and honoured to add my Memère Maurice's molasses cookie recipe as my very first entry. These cookies are an intrinsic part of my childhood, one of the fondest memories I have of coming to my grand-parents' home after school and sitting at the kitchen table to a collation, a snack, of these cookies and a glass of milk as I chatted with my grandmother as she started to make dinner. Her instructions are, like all good heritage recipes (my little joke), a little vague, essentially: refrigerate overnight. Roll into little balls and lightly flatten. Cook in 350F oven for 10-12 minutes. I've tried to flesh that out a bit. Je t'aime, Memère, et tu me manques.
1-First attempt, an unparalleled success!
1 tasse mélasse verte / 1 cup Blackstrap molasses
1-First attempt, an unparalleled success!
1 tasse mélasse verte / 1 cup Blackstrap molasses
1 tasse cassonade / 1 cup brown or golden sugar
1 tasse saindoux ou beurre / 1 cup lard or butter
1 c. à thé pleine soda / 1 generous tsp baking soda
1 c. à thé plate gingembre / 1 tsp ginger powder
1 c. à thé sel / 1 tsp salt
une demi tasse eau bouillante / 1⁄2 cup boiling water
3 et trois quarts tasse farine / 3 3⁄4 cups flour
Mettre au réfrigérateur pour la nuit. Rouler en petite boule et aplatir un peu. Cuire à 350F pour 10-12 minutes.
- In a mixer bowl, whip together the molasses, brown sugar and butter until it turns pale.
- In a separate bowl, combine the baking soda, the dry ginger, salt and flour.
- When the butter mixture starts to go pale, slow the speed and add the boiling water. Mix thoroughly, then slowly add the dry mixture until combined.
- Cover and refrigerate overnight.
- Roll into balls (1 oz each), set on cookie sheets and flatten slightly.
- Cook in 350F oven for 10-12 minutes.
- NOTE: can divide the dough and freeze a portion for future use.
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