Month: August 2011

Foodie Friday: Gateau of Fish from 1921

Foodie Friday: Gateau of Fish from 1921

Perfect for Old School Pastry on a Foodie Friday: make a gateau of fish! This recipe comes from A Modern Manual of Cooking by Marion Harris Neil, published in 1921. The original recipe for the oyster sauce called for chopped eggs but none were included 

War Cakes & Depression Cakes, and Wartime Cookery

War Cakes & Depression Cakes, and Wartime Cookery

Many old cookbooks have one or more different versions of a ‘war cake’ or depression cake’. These cakes were specially created to bake without eggs, butter, milk, and sometimes even sugar, as all these ingredients were saved for the soldiers during the war. It may 

Old Time Tips for Fruit Pies from 1832

Old Time Tips for Fruit Pies from 1832

Miss Leslie, in her book Seventy-Five Receipts, gives great tips for fruit pies still applicable today. Her book’s fourth edition (printed in 1832) has these tips:

  • Stone peaches and plums by cutting in half first, not cutting around the pit. Same with cherries. (Although modern kitchens will use a cherry pitter.)
  • Use the reddest and ripest of cherries in pies.
  • Cut apples in thin slices. Apple pies are improved by the addition of lemon peel. Use sweet-tart apples for pies, not solely sweet apples.
  • If you are stewing apples for a pie, don’t cook until they are mushy, but only until they are tender.
  • Stewed or simmered fruits, such as dried cherries, dried apples, or dried cranberries, should be done so with very little liquid, and always use the mixture cool when filling pie shells to prevent a soggy or wet crust.
July 2011 List for Most Expensive Rare Books Sold On AbeBooks

July 2011 List for Most Expensive Rare Books Sold On AbeBooks

AbeBooks is an awesome place to come hang out. I’ve found both rare ichthyology books and collective old cookbooks. While none of these top last month’s list, the top 10 include works of Paris, from Picasso, and about the body, the ubiquitous medical book Anatomy: