1904 Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
1904 Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
The Blue Ribbon Cook Book
Jennie C. Benedict
Sweet potatoes
Butter
Cream
A little sugar
Cinnamon
Sherry wine
Select good, firm sweet potatoes. Wash well and boil until tender, remove from fire, cut in half, take out most of the potato, leaving the skin firm enough to stuff. Mash potato well, season with butter, cream, a little sugar, and cinnamon and sherry wine to taste. Fill shells with potatoes and put in oven to brown a little.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Yes
Note: I had tiny little sweet potatoes so could not stuff the shells.
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1888 Mustard Ginger Snaps
1888 Mustard Ginger Snaps
Centennial Cookery Book
The Woman's Centennial Association of Marietta, Ohio
GINGER SNAPS
¾ cup lard
1 pint molasses
1 tbs ginger
1 tbs soda
1 tsp mustard
Flour
Stir the soda, dissolved in a little warm water, in the molasses and mix with the melted lard, adding flour. Roll as thin as possible. Mrs. J. L. Reckard.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Probably not.
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1904 Cocoanut Pie Filling
1904 Cocoanut Filling (Pie)
The Blue Ribbon Cook Book
Jennie C. Benedict
½ cup butter
2 cups sugar
5 egg yelks
1 cup milk
1 tbs flour
1 cup grated cocoanut
Vanilla
2-3 egg whites
One half of a cup of butter, two cups of sugar, mixed well. Add the yelks of five eggs well beaten, one cup of milk, one tablespoon of flour, and one cup of grated cocoanut. Flavor with vanilla and cook until thick. When cold, fill (cooked) pie crust and cover with meringue and put in the oven to brown.
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make it again? Yes
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1908 Jelly & Walnut Marguerites
1908 Jelly & Walnut Marguerites
One Thousand Favorite Recipes
The Ladies Auxiliary
Marguerites or Tea Biscuits
Salted wafers
Jelly
Meringue
Chopped walnuts
Small salted wafers; spread jelly on thick; make meringue of whites of eggs, add chopped walnuts and bake to light brown. Carrie A. Fortlouis.
Did we eat them? A few of them.
Would I make them again? No.
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1908 Black Bean Soup
1908 Black Bean Soup
Famous Old Receipts
Contributed by Mrs. Charles A. Farnum, Philadelphia, Pa.
1½ pint beans *unsoaked
1 tsp summer savory
1 onion
1 lemon sliced
4 eggs boiled hard
½ tumbler wine
½ cup tomato catsup
One and one-half pint of beans *if you do not soak them over night, 1 pint if you do, 1 teaspoon summer savory, 1 onion, if you like, a small bit of pork and boil with a beef bone, turkey or chicken bones. Put in your soup dish 1 lemon sliced, 4 eggs boiled hard and sliced, ½ tumbler wine, ½ of a large cup tomato catsup.
Did we eat it? Most of it.
Would I make it again? Probably not.
Notes: Tasted more like baked beans.
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1904 Swiss Salad
1904 Swiss Salad
The Blue Ribbon Cook Book
Jennie C. Benedict
1 cup cold cooked chicken
1cucumber
1 cup chopped walnuts
1 cup French peas
French dressing
Mayonnaise
Mix one cup cold cooked chicken, cut in cubes, one cucumber pared and cut in cubes, one cup chopped English walnut meats, and one cup French peas. Marinate with French dressing, arrange on serving dish, and garnish with mayonnaise dressing.
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make it again? Yes
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1887 Lemon Sponge Fingers
1887 Lemon Sponge Fingers
Miss Parloa's Kitchen Companion
6 eggs
1 scant cupful of powdered sugar
1 cupful flour
Grated rind of 1 lemon
a little extra sugar will be required for sprinkling over the fingers. Have large sheets of paper spread on tin sheets. Rub them over with washed butter. When this has been done, dredge the paper with powdered sugar. Into a large pastry-bag put a tin tube about half an inch in diameter at the small end, and put a small stopper in the outer end of the tube. See that the oven is properly heated It must be a very moderate heat. Put a piece of white paper in the oven, and if at the end of five minutes it is a yellow color, the oven is all right for the sponge fingers. Should the oven be too hot the cake will rise and then fall. Still, it must be hot enough to form a crust on the cakes quickly, else they will spread an, of course, be spoiled. Now that everything is ready, make the cake. Grate the rind of the lemon on the sugar. Beat the yolks of the eggs very light. Add the sugar to them, and beat with a spoon until the mixture is smooth and light. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff, dry froth. Add the beaten yolks and sugar to the whites, a spoonful at a time. Do not stir the mixture; cut it in lightly. Now sprinkle in the flour, a little at a time, and cut it lightly into the preparation, which must be kept dry and light. If it be stirred it will become liquid and heavy. When the flour has been added, pour the preparation into the pastry-bag. There should be enough to fill about 2/3 of the bag. Twist the cloth at the top, and continue twisting until the cake mixture is pressed well down. Remove the stopper from the tube. Hold the top part of the bag in the left hand. Place the right hand under the bag and near the tube, having the thumb come on top. Bring the point of the tube close to the buttered paper mentioned in the first part of the receipt, and apply a slight pressure with the thumb and fingers of the right hand. This will force the past out of the bag on the paper. Draw the bag toward you very slowly, continuing the pressure all the while. When the sponge fingers are long enough, remove the pressure, and tip the point of the bag up. This will stop the flow of the mixture. The fingers should be four or five inches long. Press them out in rows on the paper until all the preparation has been used. Dredge them thickly with powdered sugar, and bake for about twelve minutes; then remove from the paper, and spread on a dish to cool.
Did we eat them? No
Would I make them again? No
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1908 Mrs. Roosevelt's Receipt for Spice Cake
1908 Mrs. Roosevelt’s Receipt for Spice Cake
Contributed by Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt
Famous Old Receipts
1 cup butter
2 cups sugar
1 cup milk
4 eggs
4 cups flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp ground cinnamon
½ tsp nutmeg
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make it again? Yes
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1889 Allspice & Raisin Hermits
1889 Allspice & Raisin Hermits
Journal Cook Book
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 cup butter
1 cup chopped raisins
3 eggs
1 tsp allspice
1 tsp soda
Make as thick as ginger snaps. Mrs. M. E. Grovenor's Corner.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Yes
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1908 Sweet Potato Pone
1908 Sweet Potato Pone
Miss Sara Rutledge, Charleston, S. C.
Famous Old Receipts
1 qt. grated potato
¾ lb sugar
10 oz butter
½ pt milk
3 tbs powdered ginger
Grated peel of 1 orange
Rub the ingredients well together, and bake in a shallow plate in a slow oven.
Did we eat it? Most of it
Would I make it again? No
Note: I did not use as much sugar, butter or ginger as it called for.
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1910 Jelly Jumbles
1910 Jelly Jumbles
Recipes From the Old Country and the New
1/2 cup butter
1 cup sugar
1/4 tsp salt
1 well beaten egg
1 tsp soda dissolved in the milk
1/2 cup sour milk
Flour for a soft dough
Jelly
Mix and let chill on ice. Pat into shape, a small piece at a time, cut with a round cutter, cut 3 holes in half the rounds with a thimble. Spread the plain rounds with jelly, cover with the others, press the edges together slightly, and bake in a quick oven. Mrs. Elizabeth Yoder.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Yes
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1914 Jelly Roll (Sort of)
1914 Jelly Roll (Sort of)
For the Bride
JELLY ROLL MADE AND BAKED IN TEN MINUTES
4 eggs
1 cup sugar
1 level tsp cream of tartar
½ tsp soda
1 large cup flour
Jelly
Four eggs and one cup sugar beaten very lightly. Sift one level teaspoonful of cream of tartar and half teaspoonful of soda into one large cup of Capitola flour and add to the eggs, beating all five minutes. Bake in a quick oven in a large pan so it will be thin when baked. Turn out on a paper sprinkled with sugar. Spread quickly with jelly and roll.
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make it again? Yes
Notes: As you can see, I could not get it to roll. I think I spread the batter too thick.
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1904 Croquettes of Peas
1904 Croquettes of Peas
The Blue Ribbon Cook Book
2 tbs butter
2 tbs flour
1 pint cream
1 egg yolk
2 cans of peas
Salt and pepper
Celery salt
1 tsp onion juice
Melt butter and flour together, then add the cream and seasonings and the well-beaten yelk of egg, and then the peas, which have been put through a puree strainer. Pour out onto a platter to cool, roll into croquettes, and fry.
Did we eat them: Most of them
Would I make this again: Sort of
Notes: This recipe didn't work for me at all. I needed barely any cream and had to add more flour which made them gummy. We liked the taste of the peas though. If I made this again I would use a combination of peas and potatoes and change up the recipe similar to other croquettes that came out well.
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1920 Mystery Cookies with Lemon Raisin Filling
1920 Mystery Cookies with Lemon Raisin Filling
Cakes Cookies and Confections
California Home Economics Association
Mysteries
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup shortening
1 egg
1/2 cup milk
3 1/2 cups flour
2 tsp cream of tartar
1 tsp soda
1 tsp vanilla
Mix and roll thin and shape. Place cookies in greased pan and place a little filling on each, not allowing to spread over the edge. Place another cookie on top and press down edges. Bake in moderate oven.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Maybe
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1847 Cinnamon Snippi Doodles
1847 Cinnamon Snippi Doodles
Mrs. Crowen's American Lady's Cookery Book
Snippi Doodles
1 cup sugar
1 tbs butter
1 cup flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1 egg, beaten
1/2 cup milk
Sprinkle of sugar
Cream together one cup of sugar and a tablespoon of butter, then add one cup of flour, a teaspoon of baking powder, and a teaspoon of ground cinnamon; mix well and add one beaten egg and half a cup of milk. Spread very thin on a buttered baking sheet. When nearly done sprinkle the surface with sugar and when brown remove from the oven, cut into squares, and remove quickly with a knife. These are thin crisp cookies and unusually good.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Maybe
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1915 Red Cabbage
1915 Red Cabbage
The Belgian Cook-Book
Mrs. Brian Luck
½ a red cabbage
A little water
Salt and pepper
3-4 potatoes
5 lumps of sugar
A bit of fat pork or gravy
1 dessert-spoonful vinegar
Take half a red cabbage of medium size, chop it very finely and put it in a pan ; add a little water, salt, and pepper, three or four potatoes cut in fine slices and five lumps of sugar. Let it all simmer for two hours with the lid on. Then take off the cover and let it reduce. Before serving it, add either a bit of fat pork or some gravy, with a dessert-spoonful of vinegar. Stir it well before sending it to table. Mrs. Emelie Jones.
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make it again? Yes
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1922 Hard Egg Cookies & Jam
1922 Hard Egg Cookies & Jam
Prague Chapter Book of Recipes
HARD EGG COOKIES
8 hard-boiled eggs
1 lb sweet butter
1 cup sugar
Flour
Jam
Boil hard eight eggs, then mash the yolks very good, add one pound sweet butter, one cup sugar and enough flour to make medium stiff dough. Then roll out thin, cut them the size of a small glass and put jam on top. Bake in quick oven. Mary Poch.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Yes
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1912 Self-Frosting Lemon Pie
1912 Self-Frosting Lemon Pie
Friday Club Menus
1 cup sugar
1 tbs flour
Butter size of an egg
Yolks of 2 eggs
Juice and grated rind of 1 lemon
1½ cups milk
2 egg whites
Pie crust
Cream together one cup sugar, one tablespoonful flour, butter size of an egg. Then add beaten yolks of two eggs, juice and grated rind of one lemon, one and one-half cups milk. Stir in lightly the whites of two eggs beaten stiff and pour into a good-sized pie plate lined with pastry. Bake in a moderate oven to a beautiful brown. Mrs. E. E. Colburn.
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make I again? Probably not
HearthRecipes.com
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1911 Lemon Pecan Cookies
1911 Lemon Pecan Cookies
The Club Woman's Cook Book
The Ramblers Club
PECAN COOKIES
1 cup pecan nuts
2 tbs butter
1/4 cup sugar
1 egg
2 tbs milk
1 tbs lemon juice
1/2 cup flour
1 tsp baking powder
Chopped nuts
Flour
1 cup pecan nuts quite fine, 2 rounded tbsp. butter to a cream, 1/4 cup sugar, beat 1 egg light and add mixture with 2 tbsp. milk and 1 tbsp. lemon juice, 1/2 cup flour, with 1 level tsp. baking powder; add chopped nuts and enough more flour to make a stiff drop batter. Drop by tsp. on buttered tin. Mrs. M. G. Rodearmel.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Maybe
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1915 Raspberry Jam Filled Cookies
1915 Raspberry Jam Filled Cookies
Benson Woman's Club Cook Book
FRUIT COOKIES
1/2 cup butter
1 cup sugar
2 cups flour
1 tbs milk
2 eggs
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
Flavoring
Raspberry jam
Mix all ingredients except raspberry jam. Roll thin and cut in rounds, 1 teaspoon jam on half the rounds. Cover with other half, press edges together. Bake as other cookies. Mrs. Louis Kolb, Omaha.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Yes
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1922 Pineapple Cookies
Pineapple Cookies
1922 Pineapple Cookies
Delta Gamma Cook Book
Lambda Nu Chapter
Pineapple Cookies
3/4 cup butter, scant
2 1/2 cups flour
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
1/2 cup pineapple
2 tablespoons cream
1/2 cup pineapple juice
2 teaspoons baking powder, heaping
1 teaspoon vanilla
Cream butter and sugar, add eggs, slightly beaten, then pineapple and juice. Sift into this flour and baking powder. Add cream and vanilla. Drop from spoon onto buttered pan and bake in moderate oven. If not stiff enough to make good drop cakes, add more flour. Irma Child Browne (Beta).
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? Yes
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1909 Dinner Menu: Date Buns, Chicken with Green Peppers, Shaker Pie..
1909 Lunch Menu
Good Housekeeping Family Cookbook
Date Buns
Cauliflower and Beet Salad
Escalloped Chicken with Green Peppers and Tomatoes
Shaker Pie
Date Buns
Bread dough
Soft butter
Chopped dates
Roll light bread dough out quite thin, spread it with soft butter, and then with chopped dates. Roll the bread up and cut with a sharp knife into pieces half an inch thick, lay them in a buttered pan, let them rise until double in bulk, and bake in a hot oven.
Did we eat it? Yes.
Would I make it again? Yes
Cauliflower and Beet Salad
1 head cauliflower
1 tbs lemon juice
2 tbs cold boiled beets
1 tbs parsley
1 tsp minced sorrel
French dressing (oil and vinegar)
Carrots and beets for garnish
Boil a head of cauliflower in a piece of fine cheesecloth, until tender. Remove from the fire and break into flowerets, sprinkling with a tablespoon of lemon juice. When cold, arrange neatly in a dish, adding two tablespoons of cold boiled beets cut into dice, a tablespoon of chopped parsley and a teaspoon of finely minced wild sorrel. Mix them lightly with a French dressing, and garnish the base of the salad with a border of boiled carrots and beets, cut into fancy shapes.
Did we eat it? Most of it.
Would I make it again? No
Escalloped Ohichen with Green Peppers and Tomatoes
1 lb chicken
Butter
2 green peppers
1 large ripe tomatoe
2 boiled potatoes
Bread crumbs
Bone the legs of the chicken and cut into neat blocks. Prepare butter sauce and mix with fowl. Take two green peppers, cut in strips, one large ripe tomato and two boiled potatoes, cut them the same as the chicken; mix all together in the sauce and simmer thirty minutes. Pour the mixture in a baking dish, cover with fine bread crumbs, butter the top and bake a nice brown. Serve with baked new potatoes.
Did we eat it? Yes.
Would I make it again? Yes
Shaker Mince Pie
3 quarts sour apples
1 quart beef
A little butter
1 pound raisins
1 cup grape jelly or 2 cups grape juice
2 lbs sugar
1 tbs salt
2 tbs cinnamon
1 tbs each ground clove, ginger, and allspice
2 tbs grated nutmeg
A little boiled cider or juice and grated rind of lemon
To three quarts of sour apples, pared, cored and chopped, allow one quart of beef, boiled tender and chopped fine; if very lean put in a little butter. Add a pound of seeded and a pound of seedless raisins, one cup of grape jelly, or two of grape juice, two pounds of sugar, a tablespoon of salt, and cook all together until the apple is soft. When cool add two tablespoons of cinnamon, one each of ground clove, ginger and allspice, and two grated untmegs; the spices should be mixed together carefully before being added to the rest. If the mincemeat is not tart enough, flavor with a little boiled cider or the juice and grated rind of a lemon. More sugar or salt may be added if desired.
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1916 Lemon & Raisin Monkeys
1916 Lemon & Raisin Monkeys
Mary Jane's Cook Book
The Boston Traveler
Monkeys
Sugar, 1 cup
Butter, 1 heaping tablespoon
Egg, 1
Sour milk, 2/3 cups
Soda, 1 tsp
Flour, 2 cups
Lemon extract, 1 tsp
Raisins
Cream butter and sugar, add beaten egg and remaining ingredients in order given. Drop from spoon onto buttered floured pan, press three raisins into each (2 for eyes and one for mouth) and bake till lightly browned. M. D., Fitchburg.
Did we eat them? Yes
Would I make them again? No
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1913 Dinner Menu: West India Pilau, Sour Chicken, Mocha Cake...
1913 Dinner Menu
Around-The-World Cook Book
Mary Louise Barrol
Washington Rolls
Apple, Cress, and Celery Salad
West India Pilau
Sour Chicken
Mocha Cake
Washington Rolls
Pastry flour, ¾ cup
Sweet milk, ½ cup
Sugar, 2 tbs
Yeast-cake, ½
Salt, ¼ tsp
Butter, 2 tbs
Egg, 1
Grated lemon-rind
Scald the milk, and add the sugar and salt, and let it cool. Add the flour and the yeast-cake, which has been dissolved in 2 tablespoons of lukewarm water. Cover, and let it rise overnight ; and then add 2 tablespoons of melted butter, 1 egg well-beaten, the grated rind of 1 lemon, and flour enough to knead. Let it rise again, and when light, roll out ½ inch thick, and shape it the same as rolls. Let it rise still another time, and when light, bake in a rather hot oven.
Did we eath them? Yes
Would I make them again? Yes
Note: I used the amount of yeast as instructed on the jar I was using.
APPLE, CRESS, AND CELERY SALAD
Celery,
Watercress,
Apple,
French dressing.
Arrange on individual service plates, a bed of shredded celery and cress. In the center stand a tart tender apple, which has been pared, sliced and cored with a slender knife, so as to retain its original shape. Tuck a bit of the cress in the top of the apple, and pour over all a French dressing. Do not pare the apple till almost ready to serve, as it will discolor with waiting.
West India Pilau
Green peppers, 3
Onion , 1 small
Boiled rice, 1 cup
Stock or gravy, 1 pint
Butter, 2 tbs
Seed the peppers, cut them in pieces, and fry in the butter. Take them out, and fry the sliced onion in the same butter. Chop the peppers and onion, add the rice, and add the stock. Place it all in a deep dish and allow it to remain in the oven until very hot, when it is then ready to serve.
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make it again? Yes
SOUR CHICKEN (GERMAN)
Chicken,
Vinegar,
Bay leaves,
Cloves,
Onion,
Browned flour.
Cut the chicken in pieces, stew it in salted water, until tender; and when the water has somewhat boiled down, pour in the vinegar, add a few bay leaves, cloves, and a small sliced onion. Boil until tender, and thicken the gravy with browned flour.
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make it again? Yes
Notes: It did not say how much vinegar. I put in only about 2 tbs.
MOCHA CAKE
Flour, 1 cup,
Sugar, 1 cup,
Eggs, 2,
Milk, ½ cup
cup.
Butter, 2 tablespoons.
Baking-powder, 1 teaspoon,
Vanilla, 1 teaspoon.
In making the layers, stir the sugar and eggs together, then add the flour. The milk and butter should be heated and put in last. Bake in 2 layers. This makes a small cake.
Filling for Mocha Cake
Confectioner's sugar, 1 cup,
Cocoa, 2 teaspoons,
Butter, 1/4 cup,
Strong-made coffee, 2 tablespoons.
Put the filling between the layers, and on top.
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make it again? Yes
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1917 Curried Rice and Kidney Beans
Curried Rice and Kidney Beans
Recipe From: Telegram Conservation Cook Book (1917)
½ c rice
1 c kidney beans
½ c minced onion
4 T grated cheese
1 T salt
¼ t pepper
1 t curry powder
? t (dash) paprika
1 T drippings (sausage or bacon)
Parsley for garnish
Will serve 6 persons for .... $0.1925 or 3¼ cents a portion.
Cook beans over night; boil in 4 quarts of fresh boiling water, to which has been added 1 t salt; cook until tender, which varies from 2 to 8 hours. Drain and keep in double boiler on back of stove or over simmerer. Cook rice as usual with 1 teaspoonful salt. Put drippings in frying pan, add onion, fry but do not brown. Mix curry powder with ½ cup of cold water. Add to onion, boil until it thickens slightly. Add salt, pepper and paprika to season, then add grated cheese. Cook but a few minutes longer or cheese will be stringy. Place beans in center of platter, rice around the edge and where they meet the onion and curry sauce. Sprinkle rice with paprika, garnish with parsley.
Did we eat it? Yes
Would I make it again? Yes but without the beans.
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