Dorothy & Francis Portfors (siblings), 1927 |
Betty
Crocker, Pillsbury, Kraft Foods, Better Homes and Gardens, etc. – It seems as
though they’re all touting recipes like your grandmother made. My expectation
is to see some recipes from the era of my grandmothers, even my mother, whereas,
they’re really talking about ME! Yes, I am now grandma. But the recipes I feature
here are mid-century or before.
The
following three recipes were delicately written by my mother on a piece of
scratch paper. I can't help but wonder about the circumstance that saw her writing recipes onto scratch paper. Whatever it was, she decided not to copy the one for "smothered chicken."
She decided against smothered chicken. |
Bran
Muffins
· At night, mix
well:
1
¼ c bran
3
T melted fat
1
well-beaten egg
· Add: ½ c raisins
and 1 c milk; cover; store in refrigerator.
· Also mix and sift:
¾
c flour
4
t baking powder
2
T sugar
¼
t salt
· Cover.
· Grease muffin
pans. Cover.
The
next morning, stir dry and moist ingredients together just enough to combine.
Fill muffin pans 2/3 full and bake in hot oven (400 degrees) for 20 minutes.
Brown
Betty
(Yes,
here’s another recipe for Apple Brown Betty, somewhat different from the
previous one I posted.)
Page 2 |
After
breakfast, melt ¼ c butter and stir in 2 ½ c soft bread crumbs. Place a layer
of crumbs in the bottom of greased shallow baking pan. Arrange a layer of
thinly slice apples. Sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon. Repeat process.
Add ½ c water. Finish with a layer of bread crumbs and set in refrigerator.
Before dinner, bake in a moderate oven (350) about 40 minutes or until apples
are tender and top is browned.
Baked
Ham
Place
ham in a roaster. Add 2 c water and cover roaster. Bake in a slow oven (325) at
25 minutes per pound. When ham is done, remove from oven. Lift off rind. Score
surface and dot with cloves. Rub with mixture of ½ c brown sugar and 1 T flour.
Brown uncovered for 20 minutes in a moderate oven (400). KW
2 comments:
I was reading (bedtime book this week) Beatrice Ojakangas' Great Holiday Baking Book and she mentioned that printed recipes for fruit Betties have been found dating back to 1864.
Excellent! Thank you for sharing that "Betty" trivia. I'll make a note of it.
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