Sunday, October 31, 2010

Home on the Range


This little cookbook was published in 1953 as a promotion for Wear-Ever aluminum cookware sets. The recipes are standard 50’s fare, but the book is attractively illustrated and nicely designed.

Something I found interesting? Two pages of instructions on how to use aluminum pots and pans in the different types of kitchen stoves that were in wide use back then, including coal ranges. The gas and electricity we take for granted today were still not common in rural areas.

“Use First Section over Fire Box:

• To heat all utensils for browning meats
• To brown roasts, steaks, chops.
• To pan broil steaks, chops.
• To start fresh fruits, vegetables until cover becomes hot to touch.
• To steam dried foods over water until water boils.
• To heat #825 rectangular roaster when used as an oven.* See baking directions
• To start direct top of range baking. See banking directions.
• To heat pan for baking griddle cakes.

Use Back of Range or Less Heated Section:

• To cook all meats after browning.
• To cook fresh fruits, vegetables after cover becomes hot to touch
• To steam dried foods over water after water boils
• To do direct top of range bakin after utensil has been heated. See baking directions.
• To bake griddle cakes.”

*Part of the set was a roaster that could be used as a top-of-range baking device for those who had coal ranges with no ovens. You were to preheat the roaster over high and then move to a medium heat source once the cake or pie was placed inside. Rather a handy idea for camping, I think.

Someone’s hand-written recipes were tucked inside. Here are her directions for ham loaf.

2 lbs lean pork steak—ground
1 ditto smoked ham
Salt & pepper
1 c. cracker crumbs
2 eggs

"Mix well & add ½ can tomato soup. Dent top & pour in milk so that it will run over the top. Bake slow about 1 ½ hours.”

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Caturday!

Friday, October 29, 2010

Murphy's 1st Law of Travel

The order in which you climb into the airport shuttle is never the order in which you have to climb out.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

On the Road (Again)


Who knew that being a living bulwhark against the forces of evil required so dang many conferences? Blogging will resume on Caturday.

Sewing - A Hostess Gown from 1949


From Smart Sewing, 1st Edition, 1949, a hostess gown to make of some soft, warm fabric for these chilly autumn nights. The diagram and sewing directions are on my Flickr account.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Sunday, October 24, 2010

A Tale of Two Sundays – October

In 1927 our dinner menu consists of grape-fruit as an appetizer, roast young chicken, gravy, stuffing, duchesse potatoes, string beans, currant jelly and celery, with cinnamon apples and nut bread for desert. I’m not sure about the grapefruit but everything else looks delicious. The potatoes would have been a bit of extra work, but worth it.

Duchesse Potatoes. Mash freshly boiled potatoes with butter, hot milk, pepper and salt until like a thick cream. They must be beaten free from lumps. Put through the pastry tube, and carry the mixture around and around to make attractive little baskets. Brush these with the yolk of egg beaten with milk, and set in oven until browned.

The 1953 dinner is robust, but not quite as elegant. Clear tomato soup, beef a la mode, cabbage and potatoes, fruit salad in orange ice rings, and damson plum pudding. Hmmm…the dessert book for the series doesn’t list damson plum pudding, but there is an English Plum Pudding in the Steamed Desserts section.

English Plum Pudding

¾ cup sifted cake flour
1 t. salt
¾ t. baking soda
1 t. cinnamon
¼ t. nutmeg
½ t. mace
½ pound raisins, chopped
¼ pound citron, chopped
1/8 pound lemon peel, chopped
1/8 pound blanched almonds, chopped
½ cup fine bread crumbs
¾ cup hot milk
½ pound brown sugar
5 eggs, separated
½ pound suet, chopped
¼ cup fruit juice, any kind (I guess you could use damson juice, if you could find it)
½ glass currant jelly

Sift flour, salt, soda and spices together; stir in fruit and almonds. Soften crumbs in milk 10 minutes. Beat sugar into beaten egg yolks; add suet and crumbs; stir into flour-fruit mixture. Add fruit juice and jelly and mix well; fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into greased mold, cover tightly and steam for 3 ½ hours. Serves 12.

(All those chopped ingredients makes me think of Calvin Trillin’s snarky comment that the reason the British boil their food to death is in case a dinner guest should happen to arrive without his teeth).

I’ll vote for the 1927 dinner, even with the grapefruit.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Man's Best Friend

The spousal unit is assembling the computer desk we bought this afternoon, and Babyface is cowering under my feet.

Me: I don't know why she's always so terrified when you get out the power tools. I'm not terrified when you get out the power tools, and I have far more reason.

Caturday!

Friday, October 22, 2010

She's Talking To The Wrong People


Scene: bi-monthly staff meeting. The division managers are in the conference room discussing upcoming holiday activities.

Communicable Diseases Supervisor: My division is going to wear CD-themed costumes next Friday for Halloween.

Me: Great. I’ll come as a herpes virus.

CD Supervisor: It has to be tasteful.

Admin Chief: Can I staple condoms all over my dress?

CD Supervisor: And subtle.

Quote of the Day


Aprons are Defences; against injury to cleanliness, to safety, to modesty, sometimes to roguery. From the thin slip of notched silk, which some highest-bred Housewife has gracefully fastened on; to the thick-tanned hide, girt round him with thongs, wherein the Builder builds; or to those jingling sheet-iron aprons, wherein your otherwise half-naked Vulcans hammer and smelt in their smelt-furnace—is there not range enough in the fashion and uses of this vestment? ~ Thomas Carlyle

Thursday, October 21, 2010

The Online Bookshelf - Derby Day in the Yukon


By Canada's answer to Banjo Patterson. Available on Project Gutenberg.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Caturday!

Friday, October 15, 2010

Quote of the Day


...we do pray for mercy; and that same prayer doth teach us all to render the deeds of mercy. ~ William Shakespeare

Thursday, October 14, 2010

The Online Bookshelf - The Secret of the 9th Planet


Oh, for the days when books had covers like this. Available on Project Gutenberg.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

We're Back

The young man from Best Buy (the one I almost refused to speak to because he had no idea who the Virginian was*) thinks our problem has something to do with Windows 7 not liking sleep mode. I think we have a bad monitor cable.

(*seriously, I should take advice from someone that ignorant?)

Friday, October 8, 2010

I Expected Better of Hewlett Packard

The new PC we purchased one month and three days ago refuses to start four tries out of five. It's headed back to the shop tomorrow.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Lissen Up, Yew Maggots!

I gave a presentation on triage to some nursing students this morning. Thing One went with me. As we were crossing the parking lot on our way out, I was trying to figure out why I hadn’t gotten more audience feedback on what is really a pretty interesting topic.

“Did I talk too fast?” I asked him.

“No. But you know? You get really military when you’re telling people things.”

The Online Bookshelf - Stories of London


Stories of London, by E.L. Hoskyn. Lovely illustrations, available on Project Gutenberg.