AJB Temple
Sequoia
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2019
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We have done two big birthday parties for paying guests this last weekend. It's really special to do this as you often get a family with four generations, with great grandparents in their 80's or even 90's, and youngest being toddlers or even still in mum's tum.
We allow guests who book the room for these private events well in advance, to choose what they would like us to cook. This time we went back to 70's and early 80's and foods I don't really remember or know. So recipes's have to be researched and either practised or I (and they) take pot luck. I even bought a handful of Robert Carrier cookery books from Abe and discovered some really weird recipes that we would never dream of cooking today. I like offal and it was clearly eaten a lot back then, but people are sniffy about it today in the UK.
Requests for the past weekend included:
Steamed tripe with chitterlings in a suet pudding. With bread sauce spiced with cloves. Jeepers.
Luckily we have a steam oven which extracts to outside as tripe will never be used to make perfume. It should IMO not be used to make anything. You try buying chitterlings or even finding a butcher who knows what they are.
Marrowfat peas. These cost me 85 pence in ingredient costs for a party of 14, soaked forever, and in my opinion were inedible but were fully consumed with gusto by the oldies with butter, salt and some sugar.
Spotted dick with traditional custard and dark treacle sauce. Seriously, did people used to eat this stuff? Anyway, it was all wolfed down.
Guinness cake as a birthday cake. Actually this was brilliant, though I used a recipe from Anna Hough that is contemporary.
Pigeons cooked in cherries and cream. This was weird really and I had to use tinned cherries as it is the middle of winter.
And finally - prawn cocktail! I don't think I have ever had a prawn cocktail before (I've heard of it of course). It's very weird. Basically pink mayo, chopped lettuce and cold, but cooked prawns. It bears no resemblance to a cocktail. I'm not sure who invented this but ....what were they thinking? One of my young piano students helped with this (it was her family and she wanted to help - which slowed everything down hugely) and she doesn't like prawns according to her mother, but she consumed about 10% of the produce during prep....
So, as 2025 approaches, post your food favourites and past memories. I'm intrigued by what our parents and previous generations thought was the height of cuisine.
We allow guests who book the room for these private events well in advance, to choose what they would like us to cook. This time we went back to 70's and early 80's and foods I don't really remember or know. So recipes's have to be researched and either practised or I (and they) take pot luck. I even bought a handful of Robert Carrier cookery books from Abe and discovered some really weird recipes that we would never dream of cooking today. I like offal and it was clearly eaten a lot back then, but people are sniffy about it today in the UK.
Requests for the past weekend included:
Steamed tripe with chitterlings in a suet pudding. With bread sauce spiced with cloves. Jeepers.
Marrowfat peas. These cost me 85 pence in ingredient costs for a party of 14, soaked forever, and in my opinion were inedible but were fully consumed with gusto by the oldies with butter, salt and some sugar.
Spotted dick with traditional custard and dark treacle sauce. Seriously, did people used to eat this stuff? Anyway, it was all wolfed down.
Guinness cake as a birthday cake. Actually this was brilliant, though I used a recipe from Anna Hough that is contemporary.
Pigeons cooked in cherries and cream. This was weird really and I had to use tinned cherries as it is the middle of winter.
And finally - prawn cocktail! I don't think I have ever had a prawn cocktail before (I've heard of it of course). It's very weird. Basically pink mayo, chopped lettuce and cold, but cooked prawns. It bears no resemblance to a cocktail. I'm not sure who invented this but ....what were they thinking? One of my young piano students helped with this (it was her family and she wanted to help - which slowed everything down hugely) and she doesn't like prawns according to her mother, but she consumed about 10% of the produce during prep....
So, as 2025 approaches, post your food favourites and past memories. I'm intrigued by what our parents and previous generations thought was the height of cuisine.
