Monday, July 7, 2008

Ice Cream Recipes from June 1922 Needlecraft Magazine


Time for some old recipes. Here are a couple of ice-cream recipes that I will definitely try this summer. Specially, after I read this post on how to make ice cream at ToddleBits. A great project for the kids.
Caramel Ice-Cream
Put a cupful of brown sugar into a small frying pan and stir over the fire until it melts and begins to smoke a little. Heat together one quart of rich milk and one quart of cream, mix the liquid sugar with them and flavor with a teaspoonful of vanilla. Take from the fire and stir until it cools. Then strain the mixture into a freezer and freeze as usual. the flavor of this cream is varied by the length of time the brown sugar is cooked.

Marshmallow Parfait
Whip half a pint of cream, sweeten to taste and set away on ice. Cut in small pieces two bananas, one orange, one quarter pound of marshmallows and add two tablespoonfuls of shredded pineapple. Beat lightly into the cream and fill tall glasses. Decorate with candied cherries.

Peppermint Ice-Cream
Dissolve a half pound of strong cream or sugar peppermints in two cupfuls of rich milk. Strain and then add two cupfuls of stiffly whipped cream and two egg-whites beaten very stiff with a pinch of salt. Freeze and serve with chocolate sauce.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Corn in a cup.

Picture from wikipedia.
Today I got to read a recent post at Pink Roses where she lists a recipe for Roasted Corn Dip. Check it out; it sounds really good. It made me think of a popular snack in Mexico, "Elote Desgranado." This snack is usually sold at snack stands or from street vendors that walk around the city pushing a cart. Mexican white corn is a bit meatier and not so sweet as yellow corn but any kind of corn will taste good as well. To prepare an elote desgranado:

1 cup of hot cooked white corn kernels. Cut from the cob is best but canned is ok.
1 tbs. of butter
1 tbs. of mayonnaise
1 tbs. of Mexican fresh cream (creme fresche works)
2 to 3 tbs. of shreded Mexican "queso fresco". (mozzarella or any kind of mild cheese is good too)
chili powder and lemon juice to taste
Mix and enjoy!
I guess you could play around with the amount and type of ingredients to make it healthier but the real thing is the best.

I want some sugar in my bowl ... of yogurt.

So I have been diagnosed with gestational diabetes. And I had an Ob/Gyn other than my Dr to give me the news; I started crying and could not stop. I was devastated and was pretty depressed for a couple of days. Nevertheless, that same day I scheduled an appointment with a nutritionist and got on a diet right away. My main concern is what kind of harm I may cause to my baby and how can I prevent it. But also, I know this diagnose throws a 50% chance of me acquiring diabetes in the future, and since diabetes runs in my family, I know I am now at a very high risk of getting diabetes later in life. I guess this only means I will need to watch my diet and make sure I get plenty of exercise so my chances drop.
I been on a low carb diet for about ten days and my glucose has been good for most of the time but mornings are when my glucose levels go a bit high and my Dr has put me on some medication. I am so against taking drugs during pregnancy but she assures me this one does not penetrate the placenta.
And since I am required to have 4 servings of diary every day and I do not like milk; I am having tons of yogurt and cottage cheese. I have made my own granola to add to my yogurt and I love it. It has lots of nuts which count as protein, a must when I consume carbohydrates. Here is the recipe:

Sweet Bea's Granola
4 cups of oatmeal
4 tablespoons of wheat bran
1/4 cup of raisins
2/4 cup of dried fruit, I like a tropical mix (cranberries,pineapple,papaya)
1/3 cup sliced raw almonds
1/3 cup pecans
1/3 cup canola oil
1/3 cup turbinado cane sugar
1/3 cup agave nectar
Preheat oven to 300 degrees
Mix all ingredients except last three. Combine oil, sugar and syrup and add to dry mix. Make sure is well mixed. Spread on baking sheet and bake for 10 minutes. Turn granola to expose uncooked oats and bake for other 10 minutes. Check every five minutes as some areas may over roast depending on your oven. I like mine medium brown but feel free to pull granola before it gets dark. I used some agave syrup because it has a low glycemic index which some claim makes it a good choice for diabetics. A bit expensive but so much better than fake sugar substitutes. And the turbinado sugar is so much tastier than regular sugar though I admit I could have used a bit less. This batch was sweet and great tasting but not so healthy for someone that is supposed to be watching her sugar intake. I will use 1/5 cup of each sugar and nectar for the next one and rely on fresh fruit for sweetness. In the meantime, I am enjoying my cup of yogurt topped with 1/4 cup of sweet nutty crunchy granola.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Summer Recipes from June 1927

Here are a couple of recipes taken from a Needlecraft Magazine. They are suggested for wedding or graduate receptions.

Economical Chicken Salad
1 cup cooked chicken (large cubes)
1 cup diced cooked veal
3 slices crisp bacon
1 cuo mayonnaise
1/2 cup sliced celery
6 sliced olives
Combine all ingredients except the bacon and marinate in oil, salt and paprika with a little of lemon juice. This gives a much moister salad and calls for less mayonnaise. When ready to serve, add the bacon finely minced, mask with mayonnaise, surround with small lettuce leaves and garnish with rose radishes and sliced hard-cooked egg, or halves of stuffed eggs. This salad is extreely good, very good-looking, and less expensive than straight chicken salad. About six portions.

Prohibition Mint Julep
3 cups water
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/2 cup mint leaves
1 pint of charged water
6 lemmons, juice
3/4 cup orange juice
3/4 cup strawberry juice
Boil the water and sugar for ten minutes, then remove from the stove, add the mint leaves, cover and let stand ten minutes before straining. When cool, add the combined fruit juices and allow to blend for an hour. Chill, and when ready to serve, add the charged wqater and a cup of cracked ice. About fifteen small punch cups.
This last drink sounds delicious but I am not sure what charged water is. I imagine is carbonated water. I google for "charged water" and I only got electrically water and healing water results. I will try the recipe with carbonated water and ginger ale and see what comes out.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Food Memories


Some of my favorite books have been books with recipes on them. It is fascinating the way an author uses food to reveal a character's personality, soul and history. Well, who has not been shaped up by food or the lack of it.

I was raised by my grandmother while my mother would work and her cooking was exceptional. Simple recipes with simple ingredients. Staples on the everyday menu were of course, beans and flour tortillas. The best flour tortillas I have ever had; freshly made for breakfast, lunch and dinner every day. She would not make us eat a reheated tortilla. If for any reason, a couple were left from the previous meal, she would try to slip them on the stack of freshly made ones but we always could tell them apart. Reheated flour tortillas smell and taste different than fresh ones (a connoisseur is talking here). No food was ever wasted; her second attempt would be to fry them and put beans on top. We loved them like that. My grandmother would be cooking flour tortillas and bringing them to the table from the stove as we were eating. She never sat down with us to eat. She would eat at the kitchen, standing or at the table after all the family had eaten. I probably asked her once why wouldn't she sit with us and she probably brushed me off with a comment of how she preferred it that way. My mother now does it with her grandchildren but she sits with the adults after she is done cooking.


My grandmother could whip up a meal for 5 with one egg, a tomato and plenty of "chile piquin" (those tiny red hot peppers) from her chili plant. I remember that she would make a very hot sauce and add it to the scrambled egg. Now, I laugh of her resourcefulness. We would dip our tortilla on the "egg salsa" and spoon some beans with it. We would say "esta picoso, guelita" and kept eating. How I miss her cooking, specially those tortillas.

Some books with recipes I have read:

-Like water for chocolate. I have prepared the "Codornices en petalos de rosa"

-Afrodita by Isabel Allende. A collection of memories and recipes.

-Secrets of the Tsil Cafe. A novel about a boy growing up around his mother's and father's cooking; includes 26 recipes.

-Hallelujah! The Welcome Table. This is more of a recipe book with stories. Love the banana pudding, caramel cake, braised cabbage with ginger and the best one of all, smothered chicken.


Thursday, May 15, 2008

May 1927 Needlecraft Magazine Recipes

Ok, time to share some recipes from my personal stack of old magazines. The article is titled Special Recipes for Simple Foods and they list recipes with potatoes, apples, rice, etc. Pretty simple ingredients, ah?
A Potato and Onion Soup, Full of Food Values
1 cup chopped onion or leeks
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
2 tablespoons bacon fat
2 large potatoes
1 bay leaf 1 tablespoon flour
2 tablespoons tomato catsup
1 stalk chopped celery
1 quart cold water
salt and paprika to taste
Cook onion or leeks in the fat for five minutes, but do not brown. Add the cold water and seasonings, cover and let simmer for twenty-five minutes. Add tje potatoes pared and diced and cook until they are soft. Then pour in the milk; thicken with the flour smoothed with the cold water, and stir until smooth. Serve with toasted whole wheat bread, and stewed fruit and cookies for dessert and you have a supper fit for a king and so good for a child!
Apple Indian Pudding
2 cups quarted apples
1/4 cup yellow cornmeal
1/2 cup molasses
2 tablespoons butter
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon salt
4 cups milk
cinnamon and nutmeg
Scald the milk, and pour it over the cornmeal; add the remaining ingredients, mux well, pour into a buttered baking dish and cook in a slow oven about three hours.
This last recipe makes me think of winter. I love the smell of cinammon and nutmeg during Christmas and it sounds like a great way to warm the house when is cold outside. I have to believe that up north days are still cold during May bacause there is no way I am preparing this recipe here in Texas where our days run in the 90's F. at this time.
Now, this next one sounds not very appetizing to me; never mind an adolescent. Yes, I remember how selective I was with my food.
An Iron Soup for Adolescents
Put three slices of graham bread, two heads of lettuce and a slice of onion through the bread chopper. Simmer for half an hour, covered, in four cups of water or meat stock. Thicken with four egg yolks well beaten (do not boil) heat over a low flame for 2 minutes. Just before serving add the stiffly beaten egg whites, salt and pepper and half a lemon sliced.
If you try it, let me know how it turned out.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Happy Mother's Day!



I've decided to take the blogging matter easy. I will post as I feel comfortable. It is certainly not easy to find interesting things about what I do all day. Mostly is taking care of my two princesses. I am as many may say an overdoer on the mothering role. I believe in constant supervision, I mean constant. I wish I was not the anxious kind and be more relaxed but I am working on it. My poor first child was never put on the floor until she was almost 9 months. I was affraid she would slip and bang her precious little head. Her pediatrician had to tell me "She will be fine." But I most say in my favor that, eventhough my heart is constantly jumping, I decided a long time ago to evaluate and observe until they get into a not so safe situations for me to interfere. That I've become good at. My wish of wanting to transmit confidence to my children is greater than my fears.
I want to wish a very Happy Mother's Day to all blogging Moms which I must say inspired me to start my own blog. Also, Feliz Dia, Mama! Te quiero y tus nietas tambien.
I am proud to say I was raised by two wonderful women. My grandmother, Lupita and my mother, Juanita. My grandmother was a lady with strong convictions of what she wanted for her children, specially her daughters. She had 5 daughters and 2 sons. She learned to earn her living since she was five from her mother who was not exactly a loving or kind woman. She was poor and overworked for a good portion of her life. Living in a time,place and class status, where everything would stand against a woman, she managed to provide trades and education to all her children. A natural born economist, she always provided plenty of food,clothes and shelter to all. She worked from home making flour tortillas (the best I've ever tasted), bread, sewing, washing clothes, ironing (yes, coal iron)and anything that could make a decent peso. My mother remembers that my grandmother would often miss school presentations because she did not own a good pair of shoes. Poor and with so many needs but she never sent her daughters to clean other people's homes where they could be abused and molested by the owner. A risk she would not take.
My mother is my other hero. A woman that inherited her mother's strong convictions and honesty. Add to that generosity and servitude and you have a woman with a big open heart. She helped her mother to provide education for her younger siblings from the time she was 15 and started studying to become a teacher. A hard working woman who had her share of struggles thru life but decided to always present a brave face to us, her children.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

April 1921 Needlecraft Magazine recipes

I always have loved to read cooking books. I do not cook much but I like to read recipes as if they were short stories. Now, that I have a good selection of old magazines, I love to see what women used to prepare for their families. It surprises me how simple many of these recipes are. Here are a couple of them.
Egg-and-tomato Entree
Heat to the boiling point one cupful of canned tomatoes, season with salt and pepper, and add a teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce, a saltspoonful of bicarbonate of soda (cooking-soda). Two cupfuls of grated cheese and three-fourths of a cupful of milk and cream. Stir until the cheese is melted, take from the fire, add two well beaten eggs, pour into individual casseroles or into one large baking dish. cover the top with bread-crumbs and brown in a hot oven.
Celeried Oysters
Cook one pint of oysters in their own liquor until their are plump. Drain and then strain the oyster-liquor and to it add enough cream to make one and a half cupfuls. Melt six tablespoonfuls of butter, add five tablespoonfuls of flour and stir to a paste. Pour in the liquor gradually and beat until creamy. Season with salt, pepper and celery-salt. Add the parboiled oysters and cook until just at the boiling-point. Season with salt and pepper. Pour this over slices of hot buttered toast and sprinkle with finely chopped celery.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Old time recipe




Last year I bought about 50 Needlecraft magazines ranging from the 1920s and 30s. I love them they are full of crochet, tatting, embroidery and old time recipes. My only frustration is that many of the sewing and embroidering patterns are only advertised and not explained. Still they are pretty to look at.
Here are a couple of recipes from the March 1920 issue.

On Cooking for the Sick.



Ordinary Beef-Tea



Take one pound of rump-steak and remove all fat and gristle, cut into strips and shred it by scraping on a board with a knife until all the pulp is removed, and there is only a stringy white mass left in the hand. Put the pulp into a bowl and pour on it one pint of cold water and allow it to soak for twenty minutes or half an hour; then pour it into a jar and cover it securely, first with the lid, then with strong paper. If there is no lid to the jar, then with strong, greased paper. Stand this in a saucepan of boiling water for three hours (by cooking in this way it never boils). When done, stir it once or twice, then pour it off against the lid, not strain it, which would remove the brown particles. Remove the fat by drawing soft paper over the surface, or if it is left until cold it will come off in a cake. Serve in a cup with toast on a side.

My grandmother would make us chicken soup when we were sick but I had never heard of beef tea until now. I found very similar recipes called English beef-tea, no wonder I never heard about it growing up. I think I would love it on those days after a stomach flu. Or even now when I get bad nausea, I will add my Mexican taste to it and squeeze a few drops of lemon and maybe a slice of jalapeno, just for a bit of fresh spiciness.



Peach-Foam

Peel and cut in small pieces three or four choice and very ripe peaches; or you can substitute canned ones of the best grade. Put one cupful of this into a bowl, with a half cupful of powdered sugar, and the white of one egg. Beat with a fork for half an hour, when it will be a thick, perfectly smooth, velvety cream, with a delightful peach flavor.

I am not sure I would like this if sick. But I know I will not like to prepare it if it takes half an hour of beating.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Happy Valentines Day!


What a great excuse to show your love to the people around you.
I hate giving in into the marketing maddness but I must confess I bought some cards for my 4 year old to send to her classmates. I have been so tired lately that I am not up to crafting at all. This pregnancy has been hard on me but so the last one so I should not be surprised. I must admit I knew what was comming.

Also, I really wanted to make something special for my honey but I have been so busy surviving every day that I just couldn't think of anything else but keeping my food down if I was lucky to manage to eat.

Oh but I will use the pregnancy for forgiving. Oh, yeaaaah. "What a better Valentine present than a baby, honey?" lol.
Well, have a wonderful day full of love!!
Que gran excusa para demostrar amor a la gente que nos rodea.
Odio dejarme envolver en la gran mercadotecnia del dia de San Valentin pero debo confesar que le compre tarjetas a mi hija de 4 anos para que le mandara a sus companeritos. Simplemente, no me siento con ganas de hacer ninguna manualidad. Este embarazo no me ha sentado nada bien pero tampoco el ultimo asi que debo admitir que sabia lo que me esperaba.
Tambien, queria preparar algo especial para mi esposo pero he estado tan ocupada sobreviviendo dia con dia que no pude pensar en nada mas que el mantener mi comida en el estomago.
Ah, pero voy a usar el embarazo como excusa. Oh , siiiii. " Que mejor valentin que un bebe, corazon?"

Feliz Dia de San Valentin!

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Mixed Media


I am taking a mixed media class at the Southwest School of Arts and Crafts. The school is located downtown San Antonio and it used to be an Ursuline School during the 1800s. Now, it operates a great selection of art departments and complete with its original kitchen where they prepare a delicious chicken salad sandwich (well, that is my favorite and I stick to it). You may go here for more information.
You have to love a school that offers free classes for children with access to great facilities and instructors. I can't wait for my little ones to get a bit older so they can start their programs.

Estoy tomando una clase the tecnicas variadas en la escuela de arte en San Antonio. La escuela esta localizada en el centro de San Antonio en donde solia ser una escuela de las Ursulinas por los 1800s. Ahora, opera una gran seleccion de tecnicas del arte y junto con su cocina original donde preparan un delicioso emparedado de ensalada de pollo (mi favorito). Puedes ir aqui para mas informacion.

Happy New Year!


A bit late on the wishes but hearfelt. I have been pretty busy with the kids being sick during November and part of December and then I had to get sick with a bad bronchitis and ear infection.
I am fine now and healthy but a bit pregnant so I do not feel that healthy. I do not know why they call it morning sickness since in all my pregnancies it has been pretty much all day and night sickness. Yes, I even wake up during the night with terrible nausea.
Oh, but I may confess I am so excited to see my tummy get bigger every month. Nothing like pregnacy to make a woman feel so close to divinity. To be such a direct extention of The Creator.
For me the problem starts after the pregnancy, then I do not feel so divine. More like the bottom of the barrel.


I was also busy all December getting myself a few things on ebay, mainly magazines. I found Needlecraft magazine issues from the early 1900s till the 1930s and I am sure I own at lest half of what they put out there. I just loved them. They are full of embroidery, tatting and crochet patterns. They have hundreds of pictures of clothing and house designs that I feel very tempted to design women and children's aprons as well as other articles inspired by all what I see. And I can even imagine a few vintage style bibs.