Showing posts with label vintage baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage baking. Show all posts

Friday, March 29, 2019

Banana Loaf Recipe - Flop-Proof Baking

My mother, Sandra, has had this Stork margarine baking book for many years, and in fact, it has stained pages from a lot of baking projects!



If you are in the mood for a delicious banana loaf bread - then try this recipe:

Banana Loaf (Flop-Proof Baking)

1/3 packet Stork Margarine (approximately 166 grams)
2/4 cup sugar
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla essence
3/4 cup mashed banana
2 cups self-raising flour
1/2 teaspoon salt


1. Heat the oven to moderate (180 degrees Celsius)
2. Grease a loaf tin
3. Cream the Stork and sugar well
4. Add the eggs one at a time and beat well
5. Add the essence and mashed banana to the Stork mixture and blend
6. Sift the flour and salt
7. Add the dry ingredients to the banana mixture and blend well

8. Bake in the prepared tin for 1 hour
9. Remove from oven and leave for 5 minutes
10. Turn onto a cooling rack and cool



Enjoy!


Friday, March 23, 2018

Eve's Pudding - 1930's

As our balmy summer afternoons change to the coolness of Autumn, my thoughts turn to a warming pudding as an evening treat.

Looking through my collection of vintage cookery books, I came across the bright red cover of "Reliable Cookery - Notes, Rules and Recipes" by Mrs Lawrie. The book is undated but is believed to be from the 1930's. Created as a school subject book, no doubt in home economics, it was published by McDougall's Educational Company Ltd, Edinburgh.

The preface reads:
"The need for a reliable cookery book for use in schools, which provides straightforward, clear, concise recipes, as well as notes and rules on the different methods used, has been a long-felt want.
In order to obviate the necessity for note-taking, which uses up valuable time so much needed for practical work, Notes and Rules have been provided as well as good variety of Recipes, and the scope of the book is such that it provides for a course extending over three or more years.
The book is compiled in such a way that girls should be able to follow its directions, and work with intelligence and self-reliance, and not depend on constant demonstrations."

Not much is known about the knowledgeable Mrs Lawrie, but she was clearly highly skilled in the domestic arts, as she originally the Superintendent of Domestic Subjects, Glasgow Education Authority.

From Mrs Lawrie's "Reliable Cookery - Notes, Rules and Recipes" I chose to make the delightful sounding Eve's Pudding:
Eve's Pudding

Ingredients

6 oz. flour (170 grams)
3 ozs. butter or margarine (85 grams)
3 ozs. sugar (85 grams)
pinch of salt
1/2 spoonful baking powder
grated lemon rind
1 to 2 eggs
milk to mix
1 lb apples (+/- 453 grams)
2 to 3 oz (57 - 85 grams)

Method

1. Have oven in readiness, and grease a pie-dish.
2. Wipe, peel, core, quarter, and slice the apples.
3. Place half the apples in the dish, then the sugar and the rest of the apples. (I added half a teaspoon of cinnamon and half a teaspoon of nutmeg to the sugar to give it extra flavour)
 
4. Mix the dry ingredients and lemon rind together, and rub in the butter.
 
5. Beat the egg and add enough milk to mix to a dropping consistency. 
6. Pour the mixture on top of the apples, and bake in a fairly hot oven till well risen and brown, 1/2 to 3/4 hour.





   Delicious served hot with custard! Enjoy!

                    The Vintage Kitchen 




Thursday, February 15, 2018

Banana Bread - 1956

Have you got some overripe bananas in your kitchen? Then you have the ideal opportunity to whip up some banana bread, courtesy of the Methodist Women's Auxiliary (Cape District).
Cook With Confidence was first published in November 1957, during the 150th year of Methodism in South Africa.

If you have ever been to an event catered by the Women's Auxiliary then you know that these ladies can cook and bake! WA food is always exceptional! 

Submitted by the Knysna WA is this delicious banana bread recipe:

Banana Bread 

2 cups flour
1 cup sugar 
3/4 cup milk
1/2 cup butter
1/2 teaspoon baking powder 
3/4 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda 
Pinch salt 
2 eggs 
Vanilla essence 
3 ripe bananas 

Cream butter and sugar with mashed bananas. Add milk, flour, etc. (dissolve soda in milk). Bake in greased bread tin for about 3/4 hour in slow oven. 
(Note: 180°C degrees for 30 - 40 mins depending on your oven)

Enjoy!

The Vintage Kitchen 


Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Vintage Lemon Sponge Pudding - The Sunshine Recipe Book

Continuing in our series of lemon, is a recipe from the noted South African cook and cookery researcher Hilda Gerber.

The esteemed Ms Gerber partnered with the Citrus Board to editor The Sunshine Recipe Book, a comprehensive volume of “350 ways to using citrus fruit.”
 If you love citrus as much as I do, you will certainly love the gems in this book.
Our featured vintage recipe is Lemon Sponge Pudding.

Lemon Sponge Pudding
A baked pudding to be served cold

1 cup sugar
3 tablespoonfuls flour
3 tablespoonfuls lemon juice
2 eggs, separated
1 cup milk
A pinch of salt

Sift together all dry ingredients.
Add lemon juice, egg-yolks and milk and beat well.
Add stiffly beaten whites.
Pour into a buttered glass baking dish. Set dish in pan of hot water and bake at 325 deg. for 1 hour.

Cool and serve with top milk, custard or whipped cream. 

Enjoy!

The Vintage Kitchen 

Thursday, October 19, 2017

Lemon Meringue Pie 1959

The joy of hunting for vintage recipe books is coming across unusual books to add to my collection. One such book is the ‘Kenya High School Recipe Book’.


Dating from 1959, this book was produced as a fundraiser for the building of the Kenya High School Chapel.


"The Kenya High School had its beginnings in 1910 when a co-educational school called the Nairobi European School began in buildings designed for police Barracks. In 1931 the boys were separated from the girls. In 1935, the school was renamed The European Girls Secondary School and had its first Headmistress, Miss Kerby appointed. The buildings consisted partly of temporary wooden huts located on the compound of the present Nairobi Primary school, with whom the secondary school shared the present buildings. Staff housing was scattered in the vicinity of Protectorate Hill. In 1939, the school was renamed The Kenya High School." http://www.kenyahigh.ac.ke/

The fundraising was obviously successful as the school chapel was dedicated in 1959. 

One of the aspects I enjoy in vintage recipe books are the adverts:

  

For a quick and easy Lemon Meringue Pie, using a precooked pie shell, G.Baskin contributed this recipe:

Lemon Meringue Pie

1 cooked 9” pie shell
2 eggs
1 tin condensed milk
Sugar for meringue
½ cup lemon juice

Mix the condensed milk, egg yolk and lemon juice together. Pour into pie shell and top with egg whites beaten to meringue with sugar.
Place in oven for 2 to 3 minutes until the meringue is golden brown.

Delicious served with cream. 


Happy Baking!

The Vintage Kitchen