Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Beckert?
A collection of favorite recipes and signature dishes
of friends and family
These are special recipes from the Spraggs, Reed, Schwab, and Wilson families
plus a few other favorites.
Rich Spraggs
December 21, 2008
Piqua, Ohio
rich.spraggs@gmail.com
www.whatscookingatbeckert.blogspot.com
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CONTENTS
Drinks
Soups
Salads
Side Dishes
Entrees
Breakfast
Miscellany
NOTES
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-4-
SNACKS, STARTERS, AND SAUCES
Split open the dates. Blend equal amounts of cream cheese and chutney. Stuff the dates with the
mixture and wrap with thin strips of prosciutto (they will stay together without toothpicks).
[If you do not have Mrs. Ball’s Chutney, you can substitute another chutney and call the appetizer “A
Date with a Pig”.]
Mix the above ingredients and simmer together. Baste chicken while roasting in oven or rotisserie.
1 qt. hamburger dill pickle chips, drained 1 small onion, finely chopped
3-4 tbsp. vinegar 1 ½ c. sugar
1 heaping tsp. celery seed
Mix the vinegar and sugar and refrigerate until the sugar dissolves. Then mix in the pickles and other
ingredients in. Keep refrigerated.
Chicken Dip
Brooke Miller
A favorite of the Beckert “Big Brother” fans, Summer 2008
-5-
1 can (12.5 oz.) chicken (drained, chopped) ¼ tsp. garlic powder
2 8 oz. pkgs. cream cheese 8 tsp. lemon juice
8 tbsp. butter 8 tbsp. onion, minced
4 tsp. Original Hidden Valley Ranch (dry mix)
Melt the butter and cream cheese in microwave. Mix in other ingredients. Serve warm in crock-pot
with crackers.
Mix ingredients together. Pour into a shallow baking dish. Bake at 325 degrees for 20 minutes.
Serve with crackers, chips, or raw vegetables.
Wad up an anchovy and shove it into the hole in the prune created by the pitting process. Arrange on
a platter and garnish with parsley sprigs and red pepper rings.
Guacamole
Adapted by Rich Spraggs from www.foodnetwork.com (Alton Brown)
A Tom Wesfall favorite
In a large bowl place the scooped avocado pulp and lime juice; toss to coat. Drain (reserving the lime
juice) after all of the avocados have been coated. Using a potato masher add the salt, cumin, and
cayenne and mash. Then, fold in the onions, tomatoes, cilantro, and garlic. Add 1 tablespoon of the
reserved lime juice. Let sit at room temperature for 1 hour and then serve.
-6-
This really good, but if you don’t have a lot of time, I have found mixing avocados with lime, cilantro,
and ¼ c. per avocado or so of the fresh refrigerated super-market style salsa is really good too (just
leave out the salt, cumin, cayenne, onion, tomatoes, and garlic). Wondering what to do with the pits?
See the “Miscellany” section.
*Rothschild products can be purchased at Fulton Farms in Troy or at the Hotel Gallery on Main Street
in Tipp City.
Mustard Sauce
Margaret Hinsch
Mix the sugar, mustard, and egg yoke. Scald the cream in a double boiler. Pour over the dry
ingredients. Return to double boiler, add salt, and stir until thick and smooth. Serve at room
temperature. [Using a microwave is much easier than risking burning the cream during the scalding
process. Margaret Hinsch would make this mustard sauce and serve it with ham at the Hinsch family
and friends annual Christmas tree decorating party. Margaret used an heirloom silver spoon to serve
the mustard – She told me it had been re-silvered a couple of times.]
Pesto
Brenda Wilson
Place the basil, garlic, pine nuts, oil, salt, and pepper in a food processor and blend for about 20
seconds to make a smooth, even puree. Transfer to a bowl and, using a wooden spoon, beat in the
grated cheese and butter. If using the pesto as a pasta sauce, place it in the serving bowl and add 2
tbsp. of the cooking water from the pasta and blend. Toss the drained pasta with the pesto sauce.
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Pesto can be stored in a glass jar, topped with a little olive oil, and covered with plastic wrap (press
directly onto the surface to prevent discoloration). It will keep refrigerated for several months or
frozen up to 3 months.
Place half of the cream cheese spread in medium bowl. Add pesto; mix until well blended. Stir in half
of the sour cream. Place remaining cream cheese spread in separate medium bowl. Add peppers;
mix well. Stir in remaining sour cream. Cover both bowls and refrigerate at least 2 hours.
Spoon the pesto mixture into the center of a serving dish or platter. Spoon the red pepper mix around
the pesto mix. Serve with the crackers. Makes 4 1/2 cups total. The two bowls of dip can be stored
in refrigerator up to 24 hours.
Salsa
Rich Spraggs
Combine all ingredients in a large mixing bowl suitable for serving. Place in refrigerator for 12 hours
prior to serving. Serve with tortilla chips.
Spam Pâté
Rich Spraggs
-8-
pinch of thyme ½ teaspoon of hot pepper sauce
½ teaspoon of basil fresh parsley
¼ cup of finely chopped onion
Combine everything except the fresh parsley in a blender or use an electric mixer until the mixture is
creamy. Find a suitable mold (such as small Dixie cups or 1 ½” paper nut cups) and put the mixture
into them. Refrigerate for at least three hours. At serving time, invert the molds onto serving platters,
garnish with fresh parsley sprigs, and serve with a variety of crackers.
Spinach Dip
Jeanne Reed
Defrost spinach and squeeze out liquid. Mix all ingredients together and refrigerate overnight. Serve
with Bugles or fresh vegetables.
[Bugles come in a bag now, so if you are looking for a box – you will not find them.]
1 8oz. pkg. cream cheese, softened (1st layer) 12 oz. jar strawberry salsa (3rd)
1 onion, diced (2nd layer) 8 oz. pepper jack cheese, shredded (top)
Layer in an oven-proof baking dish the above ingredients in the order listed. Bake at 350 F. for 30
min. Serve with tortilla chips.
Taco Dip
Steve and Sandy Reed
Mix together 1 big can of refried beans, ½ tsp. chili powder, and ½ tsp. garlic salt. Spread over the
bottom of a 10x13” baking dish.
Brown 1 lb. hamburger with a pkg. of taco seasoning mix and spread over the bean layer.
Spread about 1 ½ c. of grated cheese on top (cheddar, Colby, or whatever you have on hand).
-9-
Train Smash
cooksister.typepad.com
Heat the oil in a saucepan; add the onions, tomatoes, and sauté gently until softened. Add the
remaining ingredients and cook for 2 minutes. Mix the cornstarch with a little cold water to form a
paste then add to the saucepan and continue to cook, stirring constantly until thickened. Serve as a
sauce with meats or fish.
[I have to admit I have never heard of Train Smash even though it is a South African concoction. I
have included it because it sounds good.]
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DRINKS
Coffee
Rich Spraggs and www.chemexcoffeemaker.com
If you appreciate great-tasting coffee, then this is my recommendation. Even supermarket coffee
tastes good when prepared using the Chemex method.
The Chemex® Coffeemaker has been chosen as one of the 100 best-designed products of modern
times and can be found in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Smithsonian
Institute, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. In addition, I have spotted it in Monica’s kitchen on the
set of the TV show Friends, the kitchen of Miss Morrow’s swanky Manhattan apartment in the Doris
Day-Rock Hudson 1959 movie Pillow Talk, and during an Andy Rooney segment on the CBS show
60 minutes.
Because of its purity, Chemex-brewed coffee can be covered and stored in the refrigerator for
reheating without losing its flavor. The best coffee, however, in my humble opinion is Community
Coffee’s “Louisiana Dark Roast”. You could make a coffeemaker similar to this with a large
Erlenmeyer flask and a large, non-plastic funnel.
Brewing Instructions:
1. Open the Chemex Bonded Coffee Filter into a cone. One side should have three layers.
Place the cone in the top of your coffeemaker with the thick portion toward the pouring spout.
2. Using Regular or Automatic Grind coffee only (or grind your own but not too fine). Put one
rounded tablespoon of coffee per 5 oz. cup into the filter cone. If you prefer stronger coffee,
use more as there is never any bitterness in coffee brewed using the Chemex method.
3. When the water is boiling, remove it from the heat. Allow to cool to about 200º F. – a perfect
brewing temperature. Pour a small amount of water over the coffee grounds, just enough to
wet them without floating. This is important because it allows the grounds to "bloom" so the
desirable coffee elements can be released.
4. A few minutes after this first wetting simply pour in more water, soaking the grounds each
time, but keeping the water level well below the top of the coffeemaker. Once the desired
amount of coffee is brewed, dispose of the spent grounds by lifting the filter out of the
coffeemaker.
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Cranberry Punch
Brenda Wilson
Cook one pound of cranberries until soft in four cups of water. Put through food mill. Cook with two
cups sugar for 5 minutes. Cool and then mix with juice of six oranges and three lemons. Serve with
7 up.
Use a blender on the highest speed possible until smooth. Serves 4. Altering the recipe is not
permitted.
Margarita
Rich Spraggs
Slice a lime into wedges. Use a split wedge to moisten the rim of a tall glass. Salt the rim with
kosher salt or coarse sea salt. Place in freezer.
Pour in 2 or so fingers of tequila (I use “El Toro” – a compromise of cost and quality) into a martini
shaker (more if the person will not be driving for awhile). Add a splash of triple sec, a handful of ice,
and fill to within 1” of the top of the glass with margarita mix (I use the cheapest grocery-store type).
Shake it as if you are an English nanny and then pour into the chilled glass. Fill to the top with ice
cubes and garnish with a lime wedge. Add a cocktail umbrella if you feel especially festive.
Water from
from the
the Faucet - Improved
Rich Spraggs
A Brita or similar water filter/filtering system works well, but if you don’t have one I’d recommend
keeping water in a pitcher with a wide, open top without a lid in the refrigerator for drinking. The idea
is to let the chlorine evaporate. I came to this conclusion after realizing that water heaters in homes
with wells last on average twice as long as water heaters in homes with city water. It’s the chlorine
added by the water treatment plant. So if it corrodes away the insides of water heaters, imagine what
it is doing to you.
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SOUPS
French Onion
Onion Soup
Adapted by Rich Spraggs from www.foodtv.com (Alton Brown)
Trim the ends off each onion then halve lengthwise. Remove peel and finely slice into half moon
shapes. Set electric skillet to 300 F. and add butter. Once butter has melted, add a layer of onions,
and sprinkle with a little salt. Repeat layering onions and salt until all onions are in the skillet. Do not
try stirring until onions have sweated down for 15 to 20 minutes. After that, stir occasionally until
onions are dark mahogany and reduced to approximately 2 cups. This should take 45 minutes to 1
hour. Do not worry about burning.
Add enough wine to cover the onions and turn heat to high, reducing the wine to a syrup consistency.
Add consume, chicken broth, apple cider and herbs. Reduce heat and simmer 15 to 20 minutes.
Cut bread into squares. Place on a baking sheet and broil for 1 minute.
Season the soup mixture with salt, pepper, and cognac. Remove herbs and ladle soup into crocks
leaving one inch to the lip. Place croutons on top of soup and top with grated cheese. Broil until
cheese is bubbly and golden – about 1 to 2 minutes.
Cooking the onions makes a huge stink that seems to hang around for days, so I cook this outside in
an electric skillet.
Gazpacho
Adapted by Rich Spraggs from www.foodtv.com (Alton Brown) and en.wikipedia.org
“What’s in the Gazpacho?” asked Ivan. “Tomatoes” answered Pepa*.
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1 ½ lb. vine-ripened tomatoes, peeled, seeded and chopped
Fill a 6-quart pot halfway full of water, set over high heat and bring to a boil.
Make an X with a paring knife on the bottom of the tomatoes. Drop the tomatoes into the boiling
water for 15 seconds; remove and transfer to an ice bath and allow to cool until able to handle
(approximately 1 minute). Remove and pat dry. Peel, core and seed the tomatoes. When seeding
the tomatoes, place the seeds and pulp into a fine mesh strainer set over a bowl in order to catch the
juice. Press as much of the juice through as possible and then add enough bottled tomato juice to
bring the total to 1 cup.
Place the tomatoes and juice into a large mixing bowl. Add the cucumber, bell pepper, red onion,
jalapeno, garlic clove, olive oil, lime juice, balsamic vinegar, Worcestershire, cumin, salt, and pepper
and stir to combine. Transfer 1 ½ cups of the mixture to a blender and puree for 15 to 20 seconds on
high speed. Return the pureed mixture to the bowl and stir to combine. Cover and chill for 2 hours
and up to overnight. Serve with chiffonade (thinly-sliced leaves) of basil.
*Then rent and watch the movie Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (Mujeres al Borde de
un Ataque de Nervios), have a margarita, and enjoy. This 1988 Spanish comedy film, written and
directed by Pedro Almodóvar, stars Carmen Maura and Antonio Banderas. It was nominated for the
1989 Academy Award for “Best Foreign-language Film”, and won five Goya Awards including “Best
Film” and “Best Actress in a Leading Role” for Maura. It is subtitled in English, but it would not matter
if were not.
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SALADS
7-Up Salad
Jeanne Reed
Dissolve 2 boxes of lemon Jell-O with 2 c. boiling water. Add 2 c. of 7-Up. Let cool.
[Jeanne would always make this when Rodger was coming for a meal.]
Beetroot Salad
Rae Spraggs
Arrange beetroot and onion together in a shallow pie-type serving dish. Add vinegar. Refrigerate
before serving.
Coleslaw
Coleslaw
Rich Spraggs
Dressing (or use your favorite coleslaw dressing, such as Marzetti’s, to taste):
¾ c. mayonnaise 2 tbsp. sour cream
1 tbsp. sugar (or to taste) 2 tbsp. white vinegar
1 tsp. dry mustard 2 tsp. celery salt
salt and pepper to taste, freshly ground 1 tbsp. horseradish (grated)
Separate the cabbage leaves. The center section of the cabbage (where it is more vein than leaf) will
not make good coleslaw, so do not use. Cut out the coarse vein from each leaf, leaving two half-
leaves. Stack the leaves and cut into fine slices – as fine as you can (using a very sharp knife is a
necessity). Toss with the onion and carrot and then either add your favorite coleslaw dressing until
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you get the right consistency or prepare the above dressing.
Salad: Dressing:
½ c. almonds ½ tsp. salt
3 tbsp. sugar ¼ c. olive oil
½ head Iceberg lettuce 1 tbsp. parsley, chopped
1 c. celery, chopped 3 tbsp. sugar
2 whole green onions, chopped 3 tbsp. vinegar
1 small can Mandarin oranges dash of Tabasco sauce
Combine the ingredients for the dressing. Cook the almonds and sugar over medium heat in a small
saucepan stirring constantly until almonds are coated (being careful as it burns easily). Mix the
lettuce, celery, chopped onions, and Mandarin oranges. Toss with dressing and almonds prior to
serving.
Pea Salad
Jeanne Reed
½ head lettuce, chopped/torn 1 pkg. (10 oz.) frozen peas - do not defrost
½ celery stalk, chopped 1 can (4 oz.) sliced water chestnuts cut in half
¼ cup thinly sliced mild onion or green onions
Layer the salad in the above order (lettuce on the bottom, then celery, onion, peas, water chestnuts)
in a bowl and seal the top with the dressing. Let the salad sit 24 hours in the fridge. Mix up before
serving.
[Jeanne would always make this for my birthday and Barb continues the tradition.]
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Peasant Stock Salad
Dayton Daily News, May 06, 2007
In a large bowl, mix together lettuce and celery. Layer all the remaining ingredients over the lettuce
and celery in the order listed (spinach, onions, eggs, peas, sugar, salt, pepper, mayonnaise, cheese,
bacon). Cover and refrigerate for 8 hours. Toss together just before serving. Yield: 8 servings.
Toss the cabbage and onions with 1/3 c. of sugar. Mix the remaining ingredients and bring to a boil.
Pour the boiling mixture over the cabbage. Let set; in 5 minutes mix together. Chill in refrigerator
and serve on leaves of romaine lettuce. Hudson’s Seven Day Slaw is excellent with seafood. This
slaw is called “Seven Day Slaw” because without any mayonnaise it will last for seven days.
[*See my coleslaw recipe on page 15 for a good way to prepare a cabbage for coleslaw.]
Spinach-
Spinach-Bacon Salad with Warm Dressing
Jeanne Reed
Trim the spinach of coarse stems and blemished leaves and wash. Pat dry. Tear into bite-sized
pieces. Put into large serving bowl with the mushrooms and onions.
Cook the bacon in a microwave or in skillet over moderately high heat until crisp – about 5 minutes.
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Drain on paper towel. Pour off all but 5 tbsp. of the drippings.
Reduce the heat to low and add the mustard, sugar, vinegar, Worcestershire Sauce, and lemon juice
to the drippings. Stir to mix well.
Pour the dressing over the salad, crumble the bacon over it, and toss it thoroughly. Serve
immediately.
Strawberry Jell-
Jell-O Salad
Gladys Boylan
Dissolve one large package of strawberry Jell-O in 1 ½ c. boiling water. Set aside.
Blend in blender:
1 pkg. frozen strawberries, thawed
2 bananas
1 small can crushed pineapple (with juice)
Make a bed of lettuce in a large bowl. Top with the fruit and nuts and toss with poppyseed dressing.
Sweet Potato
Potato Slaw
Rich Spraggs
In a bowl, combine the mayonnaise, sour cream, honey, lemon juice, lemon peel, salt, and pepper;
blend until smooth. In a large bowl, combine potatoes, apples, and cranberries. Add dressing and
toss to coat. Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour. I recommend labeling it – people will think it is
carrot salad (and that stuff is gross).
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A variation on this would be to use boiled and cubed 2/3 sweet potatoes and 1/3 red or fingering
potatoes to make “Sweet Potato Salad”.
Veggie Pizza
Barb Spraggs
Crust:
2 (8 oz.) package refrigerated crescent rolls and preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Roll out
crescent rolls onto a large non-stick baking sheet. Stretch and flatten to form a single
rectangular shape on the baking sheet. Bake 11 to 13 minutes in the preheated oven, or until
golden brown. Allow to cool.
Whip together well the above ingredients. Spread on the cooled crust.
Spread the toppings and gently press into the dressing. Sprinkle the top with 1 ½ c. of finely
grated cheddar cheese.
[*1 tsp. of finely chopped onion is not very much – it could be 1 tsp. of onion powder.]
Combine in a glass or plastic container suitable for table use. Shake it as if you are an English
nanny.
Although runny, this is a low-calorie, great-tasting, sweet-and-sour dressing that goes well on green
salads topped with dried cranberries, grated feta cheese, and croutons.
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SIDE DISHES
Apple Yams
Jean Wilson Reed
Bake the yams or sweet potatoes (with pierced skin) for 40-60 minutes at 400 F. or boil in salted
water for 30-35 minutes (until tender but not overly soft). Drain, cool, and remove skins. A 2 ½ lb.
can of yams can be substituted for the 6 yams or sweet potatoes.
Grease 1 ½ quart baking dish. Alternate layers of yams and apples, sprinkling each layer with the
brown sugar, butter, and cinnamon mixture. Arrange a layer of apple slices attractively over the top
and bake at 350 F. 30 min.
Mix eggs, cornstarch, sugar, and half the milk. Add the corn and then the remaining milk. Bake at
350 F. for 60-90 min.
[Aunt Barbara usually left something out of the recipe, so you do not have to follow it too closely.]
Heat the beans, onions, vinegar, Worcestershire Sauce, lemon juice, and brown sugar on the “high”
setting in a large crock-pot at least for 4 hours (allowing steam to escape, stirring occasionally). 2
hours prior to the meal, add the ketchup and mustard. Simmer on the “low” setting for 1-2 hours,
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stirring occasionally.
[Barb has been making these beans every Memorial Day and Labor Day for over 25 years.]
3 16 oz. cans of baked beans 1 lb. can of apricots (drained and cut up)
½ lb. bulk sausage (fried and chopped up) ¼ c. diced sweet green pepper
1/3 c. brown sugar 1 tsp. onion flakes.
1 tsp. dry mustard
[Pat made this for the block parties we used to have during the late 1980’s to early 1990’s at the end
of Park Avenue before the street extended through to Westview.]
Broccoli Casserole
Barb Spraggs
Microwave the peas and broccoli together according to the instructions on the packages. Drain and
place in casserole. Cover with Velveeta slices. Crumble crackers and mix with melted butter. Place
over pea and broccoli mixture. Bake at 350 F. for 30 minutes.
Cranberry Mold
Adapted from a recipe in The Joy of Cooking
A Jennie Spraggs favorite
Place cranberries in saucepan. Cover with 2 c. boiling water. As soon at the water begins to boil
again, cover with lid. Boil the berries 3 or 4 minutes or until the skins burst. Run them through a
Foley food mill.
Stir the sugar into the puree. Place over heat and bring to a rolling boil for about 5 minutes for firm
berries (very ripe berries will require a few minutes longer of cooking). Skim; then pour into a wet
mold. Refrigerate.
[This works best when Mimi’s special mold and plate are used.]
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Crock-
Crock-pot Corn
Jean Wilson Reed
Boil the potatoes; let cool and peel. Mash the potatoes well and mix in the sour cream, bacon, butter,
salt, pepper, green onions, and half of the grated cheese.
Transfer potato mixture loosely into a baking dish and cover with the other half of the grated cheese.
Cover and bake at 350 F. for 25-30 min. This recipe may be made and stored in the refrigerator a
day ahead.
Grilled Corn-
Corn-on-
on-the-
the-cob
Rich Spraggs
Cut the excess silk off the ends of fresh corn but do not remove the husks. Place the corn in a clean
bucket of cold water with ½ c. sugar per 6 ears mixed in. Let soak 1 hour. Give each ear a good
shake and place on hot grill (a Weber kettle grill works best). Cook for about 25 minutes, turning 3
times. Wear heavy-duty gloves and remove the husks and silk. Season with butter and salt to taste.
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Topping:
1 c. brown sugar 1/3 c. melted butter or margarine
½ c. flour 1 c. pecans, crumbled
Crumble topping evenly over potato mixture. Bake uncovered at 350 F. for 35-45 min.
Pineapple Casserole
Jean Wilson Reed
Combine the sugar, flour, eggs, and pineapple. Pour into in buttered casserole dish. Spread crumbs
on top and press down. Bake uncovered at 350 F. for 45 minutes.
Potato Casserole
Brenda Wilson
2 lb. pkg. frozen hash browns ½ cup onion, peeled and chopped
½ cup margarine, melted 2 cups cheddar cheese, grated
1 (10 1/4 oz.) can cream-of-chicken soup 1 teaspoon salt
1 pint sour cream 1/4 teaspoon pepper
Preheat oven to 350°F and spray an 11 x 14 baking dish with cooking spray. Mix the above
ingredients together, place in dish and bake for 45 minutes or until brown on top.
Potato Pancakes
Adapted by Barb Spraggs from the Betty Crocker Cookbook
Wash potatoes, peel, and remove eyes. Shred enough potatoes to measure 4 cups. Drain potatoes
thoroughly.
In a small mixer bowl, beat egg until thick and lemon-colored. Mix in potatoes, onion, flour, and salt.
Melt butter over large skillet over low heat. Shape potato mixture into 8 patties; place in skillet. Cook
over medium heat, turning once, about 5 minutes or until golden-brown. Makes 8 servings.
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[Barb uses leftover mashed potatoes, omits the flour and salt, and uses much less onion. She may
sprinkle some flour on them before cooking, though.]
Scalloped
Scalloped Cabbage
Jean Wilson Reed
Par-boil cabbage approximately 5 minutes and place in a strainer. Season with salt and pepper.
While cabbage is straining, make the following cream sauce:
Melt 4 tablespoons of butter
Add 4 tablespoons of flour – stir well
Slowly add 2 cups of milk
Cook the sauce until it is smooth and medium thick, stirring constantly. Mix cabbage and cream
sauce. Put into buttered, flat casserole dish. Top with buttered cracker crumbs (4 tbsp. melted butter
and crumbs of 20 single Saltine or Zesta crackers). Sprinkle with paprika and bake at 350 F. until
bubbly – approximately ½ hour to 45 minutes.
I sometimes dab cabbage with paper towel to eliminate excess moisture while baking.
Skin and wash about 4 sweet potatoes (I like the smaller ones). Cut into ½” slices. Heat cooking oil
in skillet and add potatoes. Cook at medium-high heat. The cooking oil should cover them. Get a
good sizzle going. Turn regularly. They will cook faster than regular potatoes so be careful not to
burn or cook too long. They are good with some salt or serve with butter and brown sugar.
Preheat oven to 350 F. Combine soup, sour cream, and ground pepper in 2-quart shallow baking
dish; stir until well blended. Add vegetables, 2/3 cup French Fried Onions, and 1/2 cup cheese; mix
well.
- 24 -
Cover; bake 30 minutes or until heated through and vegetables are tender. Stir; sprinkle with
remaining 2/3 cup onions and ½ cup cheese. Bake 5 minutes or until onions are golden.
Tomato Pudding
Jean Wilson Reed
Place bread cubes in 2-3 quart casserole dish. Pour melted butter over the bread cubes. Simmer the
tomato puree, brown sugar, and water for 15 minutes. Be sure not to use tomato paste or tomato
sauce. Pour the simmered puree over the bread cubes. Bake at 350 F. for 1 hour.
In KitchenAid-type mixer bowl, dissolve 1 pkg. yeast in ½ c. warm water (not hot). Add 1 tbsp. sugar
and 1 tsp. baking powder.
Warm 1 c. milk for 20 sec. in microwave and add to the yeast mixture. Add 1/3 c. softened butter or
margarine, 1/3 c. sugar, and 2 beaten eggs.
Grease or spray with Pam a large airtight bowl or container. Place the dough into the container. Pam
or lightly oil the top of the dough and cover with lid. Refrigerate overnight or up to 2 days.
Roll out the rolls 2 hours before baking. To shape as crescents, flour the countertop, punch down
dough in bowl, cut dough in half, lightly flour the dough, and roll out a large circle. Cut in pinwheels.
Shape each roll from large end to small and place on cookie sheet. Allow to rise in warm kitchen for
2 hours (covered by Pam-coated plastic wrap placed lightly over the rolls on cookie sheets while
rising). Makes 2 doz. large crescent rolls or 4 doz. small.
Remove the plastic wrap and bake at 375 F. for 9-10 minutes until golden.
Variation: this dough recipe makes 4 pans of cinnamon rolls. Roll dough in rectangle, cover dough
with softened butter and lots of sugar and cinnamon. Roll up from sides so it is one long tube. Use a
piece of thread to wrap around dough to cut in 1” slices. Place the slices in greased round cake
pans. Bake at 375 F. for 9-10 minutes until golden-brown
Note: The dinner rolls can be baked in advance. Allow to cool and then freeze in an airtight
container. When needed, place in cake pans, cover with foil, and reheat until warm. People can be
fooled that they are freshly-baked rolls!
- 25 -
ENTREES
Beef Tenderloin
Jeanne Reed
Broil for 5 minutes on each side 2” from boiler. Close the oven and bake at 400 F. for 20 minutes.
[Notes jotted down on Jeanne’s recipe card include “beef loin”, “peeled”, and “butt tenderloin”).
Jeanne prepared this for special events such as Christmas and I think this was Sam Heitzman’s
method of cooking tenderloins as well.]
This is not a specific recipe. It is, however, an attempt to summarize a few of the things I have
learned over the years through trial and error. The two most important things I can think of are “cook
steaks at a very high temperature” and “don’t overcook”.
Get the broiler, cast-iron skillet, or grill – whatever you are using – as hot as possible to sear the beef.
You can drop the temperature later for roasts. See page 45 for my method to a cook steak.
Use a meat thermometer with probe (so the oven stays closed) to make sure it does not get
overcooked and remove from the heat 10-20 F. below your final desired doneness. For rare, I usually
remove at 105-110 F. Let it rest for 10 minutes before serving and it will come up to the right
temperature. And, never use a fork to turn beef – use tongs instead. Be sure and check your
thermometers for accuracy.
Although people might say they like beef “well-done” or “medium-well”, if given a choice, they will
select a slice less done than they tell you that they want it. So my advice is to prepare the beef with
some rare and some medium-rare. The ends tend to be perfect for those who like medium. If it is too
rare or some guests prefer a higher degree of doneness, you can briefly broil those slices or simmer
in broth. A broth or au jus can be made on the stovetop or under the broiler by adding a can of beef
broth or beef consume to the pan drippings after the beef is removed.
In addition, wash, pat-dry, marinate 4-12 hours with canola oil, kosher salt, and freshly-ground
pepper, and allow the beef to come to room temperature before cooking. And, use sharp knives for
carving! Let the cutting edge do the work. Sharp knives are safer than dull knives. Electric knives
baffle me as much as the drive-through at fast food restaurants, but some people like them.
Using a food processor, grind the bread slices into crumbs. Add salt and pepper and mix together.
Dip the chicken breasts in the melted butter and then dredge through the bread crumbs thoroughly
coating each one. Drizzle any remaining margarine over the coated chicken steaks. Arrange in a
baking dish and bake at 350 F. for 40minutes.
Bobotie
(Ba-bwore-tee)
(South African Curried Meatloaf)
Rae Spraggs
Beat 2 eggs with 1 ½ c. milk; pour half of this over the hamburger mixture. Mix well. Place into
greased oven dish and pour the rest of the egg and milk onto the top. Bake for 45 minutes at 350 F.
Serve over rice with sliced bananas, pineapple chunks, and chutney or apricot jam.
Bourbon Chicken
www.recipezaar.com (Lin Marie)
A Julie Spraggs favorite
2 lbs. boneless chicken (breasts and/or dark meat) 1/3 cup light brown sugar
1-2 tablespoon olive oil 2 tablespoons ketchup
1 garlic clove, crushed 1 tablespoon cider vinegar
¼ teaspoon ginger ½ cup water
¾ teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes (optional) 1/3 cup soy sauce
¼ cup apple juice
Cut the chicken into bite-sized pieces. Heat oil in a large skillet or wok. Add chicken pieces and cook
until lightly browned. Remove chicken. Add remaining ingredients, heating over medium heat until
well mixed and dissolved. Add chicken and bring to a hard boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 20
minutes. Serve over hot rice. Serves 4.
[Rice from a rice-cooker tastes much better than instant rice. The leftover sauce makes an excellent
baste for roasted or rotisserie chicken.]
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Brats ‘n
‘n Beer
Rich Spraggs
Sear brats in a skillet and then add about 2/3 of the beer. Simmer uncovered for at least 30 minutes.
These can also be cooked in a pan on the grill. Serve on toasted buns with your favorite toppings –
the more the better.
Brining - Poultry,
Poultry, Fish, Pork
Adapted by Rich Spraggs from www.foodtv.com (Alton Brown), www.virtualweberbullet.com
This is not a specific recipe but rather a method to improve flavor and reduce drying-out. While
traditional brining was meant to preserve meat, the purpose of flavor brining is to improve the flavor,
texture, and moisture content of lean cuts of meat. This is achieved by soaking the meat in a
moderately salty solution for a few hours to a few days. Flavor brining also provides a temperature
cushion during cooking. If you happen to overcook the meat a little, it will still be moist.
Lean cuts of meat with mild flavor tend to benefit most from flavor brining. These include:
Chicken (whole, butterflied, or pieces) Turkey (whole, butterflied, or pieces
Pork (chops, loin, tenderloin, fresh ham) Seafood (salmon, trout, shrimp)
Brine for poultry (example is for a 14-16 lb. Turkey – adjust quantities so that the bird is covered):
1 cup kosher salt ½ tablespoon allspice berries
½ cup light brown sugar ½ tablespoon candied ginger
1 gallon vegetable stock 1 gallon iced water
1 tablespoon black peppercorns
Combine all brine ingredients, except ice water, in a stockpot, and bring to a boil. Stir to dissolve
solids, then remove from heat, cool to room temperature, and refrigerate until thoroughly chilled.
Early on the day of cooking, (or late the night before) combine the brine and ice water in a clean 5-
gallon bucket. Place thawed turkey breast side down in brine, cover, and refrigerate or set in cool
area (like a basement) for 6 hours. Turn turkey over once, half way through brining.
And, do not forget to load the cavity with aromatics rather than dressing (high and prolonged
temperatures are needed to cook the dressing which can dry out and overcook the bird – the result
will be much better if the dressing is cooked separately. Traditional stuffings soak up meat juices,
meaning a potential for the presence of salmonella unless the temperature of the stuffing reaches
165˚F. That increases the cooking time of the turkey, which means dry meat. If you want stuffing,
cook it in a casserole dish then spoon it into the cavity prior to serving.
Aromatics:
1 red apple, sliced 4 sprigs rosemary
1/2 onion, sliced 6 leaves sage
1 cinnamon stick Canola oil
1 cup water
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Combine the apple, onion, cinnamon stick, and cup of water in a microwave safe dish and microwave
on high for 5 minutes. Prior to cooking, remove bird from brine and rinse inside and out with cold
water. Discard brine. Coat bird with canola oil and follow you favorite poultry recipe.
To check for doneness, insert a probe thermometer into the thickest part of the breast. Remove at
161 F. A 16-18 pound bird should arrive at the target temperature in 2 to 2 ½ hours. Let stand 10 to
30 minutes before carving. The amount of time required for resting varies with the size of the cut of
your meat. During this resting time, the meat continues to cook (meat temperature will rise 5 to 30
degrees after it is removed from the heat source (if not exposed to drafts) and the juices redistribute.
A 12-lb. turkey can easily handle 60 to 90 minutes of resting.
Brine for pork and fish (example is for a 6-8 lb. pork Boston butt):
8 ounces or ¾ cup molasses 2 quarts bottled water
12 ounces pickling salt
Combine molasses, pickling salt, and water in 6 quart non-metallic container. Add Boston butt
making sure it is completely submerged in brine; cover, and let sit in refrigerator for a minimum of 8
hours. 12 hours is ideal. Then cook or smoke according to your favorite recipe.
To check for doneness, insert a probe thermometer into the thickest part. For pork, remove from heat
at 140 F. Note: Trichinella spiralis die at 137 degrees. In addition, T spriralis have been nearly
eradicated from the American hog population through the use of better feeds; the only instances of
trichinosis in recent years involved wild game such as bear and puma.
Calucci’s Barbeque
Ken and Tara Wicklund
Brown the hamburger and drain off fat. Add the remaining ingredients and simmer for 30-45 minutes.
Serve on hamburger buns. It goes well with tater tots, pickles, and coleslaw.
[Ken was my college roommate in Michigan (1977-1979). This recipe was originally from a restaurant
in Rockford, Illinois.]
Chicken Casserole
Jeanne Reed
Mix all of the above ingredients well and place in buttered casserole dish. Refrigerate overnight.
The next day, sauté in 2 tbsp. butter 1 c. cereal (any kind, crushed), ¾ c. slivered almonds. Spread
on top and bake at 325 F. for 30 minutes. Serves 6-8.
1 kg vetkoek1 dough (bread dough made with yeast) 1 tin tomato & onion mix2
2 cups steamed spinach 1 cup grated cheddar cheese
1 cup grated mozzarella cheese 1 cup crumbled feta cheese
1 cup fried mushrooms 1 whisked egg
Aromat [all-purpose seasoning] Garlic flakes (optional)
Roll out the dough into a rectangle about 1 cm thick. Spread the tomato & onion mix over the
surface. Spread the spinach and mushrooms in the same way. Cover with a mixture of the three
cheeses. Keep a little cheese for later. This should look like a pizza now. Sprinkle Aromat and garlic
over. Roll up like a Swiss roll/log. Slice, keeping slices about 3 fingers apart. Turn over and place in
a greased baking tray, remember to leave spaces between the buns...they grow. Brush egg over the
top and sprinkle with left over cheese. Bake in pre-heated oven at 180 C. degrees for about 35 min
or until brown.
1
From www.en.wikipedia.org:
Vetkoek (pronounced FET-cook) is a traditional Afrikaner pastry and literally means “fat cake”.
It is dough deep-fried in cooking oil and either filled with cooked mince or spread with syrup or
honey or jam. It is similar in taste to Mexican Sopaipillas. In a traditional South African braai,
or barbecue, vetkoek may be served alongside boerewors (South African sausage).
Koeksisters are made from a similar but sweeter dough, but are braided in long strips then
coated in a sticky sweet syrup. [I think that the Pillsbury pre-made pie crusts (the ones folded
up in a box, not the ones that come frozen in the pie dish) could be substituted. Colleen is my
cousin, by the way.]
2
See “Train Smash” at the Snacks, Sauces, and Starters section. You could probably substitute
salsa.
Cranberry Chicken
Rae Spraggs
4 whole chicken breasts, boned (about 2 lbs.) 1 can whole cranberry sauce
4 oz. Italian salad dressing 1 pkg. dried onion soup mix
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4 oz. Catalina salad dressing
Mix the Italian and Catalina dressing, the cranberry sauce, and the onion soup mix. Place the
chicken in a large, flat baking dish and cover with the dressing mixture. Allow to marinate covered
12-24 hours.
Bake uncovered at 350 F. for about 60 minutes (until bubbly and slightly browned). Serve over rice.
Serves 8.
Curried Eggs
Rae Spraggs
Sauté:
2 oz. butter or margarine 2 large apples, peeled and chopped
1 large onion, chopped ½ c. raisins (regular or golden)
Mix:
2 tbsp. cornstarch “a little” water
Add the cornstarch mixture to the curry mixture and stir. Add 2 c. water and bring to a boil while
stirring gently.
Arrange the sliced eggs over 4 slices of toast. Pour the sauce over the egg and toast. Serve with
any or all of the following garnishes in separate containers, allowing guests to select their favorites:
sliced banana, apricot jam, chutney, coconut. Curried eggs can be served over hot rice.
Dishwasher Salmon
Jennie Spraggs
Cut two 12-inch square sheets of heavy-duty aluminum foil. Grease the shiny side of the foil with the
oil. Place 2 fillets side by side on each square and fold up the outer edges.
Drizzle 1 tablespoon lime juice over each fillet. Season with salt and pepper.
Fold and pinch the aluminum foil extra tightly to create a watertight seal around each pair of fillets.
Make sure the packet is airtight by pressing down on it gently with your hand. If air escapes easily,
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rewrap. Place foil packets on the top rack of the dishwasher. Run dishwasher for the entire "normal"
cycle. When the wash cycle is complete, take out salmon, discard foil, and serve. (Remove before
the heat or air dry cycle begins).
[Poaching fish in the dishwasher is a good way to surprise your friends, prepare a great meal, and do
the dishes all at the same time. Jennie made this for me one time when I went to visit her.]
Frikkadels
(Meatballs)
Althea Baker and www.3men.com
Heat 15 ml of the butter in a large frying pan and sauté the onion in it for about 5 minutes. Soak the
bread in a little water and squeeze dry, then mash with a fork. Combine the onion with the mince,
bread, eggs, salt, pepper and allspice and shape into balls. Heat the remaining butter, margarine or
oil in the frying pan and brown the frikkadels, a few at a time for about 5 minutes on one side. Turn
them over and brown the other side, then turn down the heat slightly and continue cooking the
frikkadels for about 10 minutes, or until cooked through. Serve hot with mashed potatoes and an
onion and tomato sauce such as Train Smash2.
[Don’t these sound good? My grandmother used to make them and would always serve with mashed
potatoes. I think it would be fun to try the recipe using metric measurements.]
1
Metric conversion chart at the “Miscellany” section.
2
Recipe for Train Smash at the “Snacks, Starters, and Sauces” section.
In a large saucepan over medium heat, sauté the minced garlic in olive oil. Add chopped chicken, the
cooked and drained pasta, pesto sauce, and then mix well. Top with toasted almonds. Serve warm
or cold. *The pesto can be omitted from the mixture but used as a topping to individual taste.
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Ironed
Ironed Cheese Sandwich
Emily Spraggs
Spread both sides of bread slices with butter or margarine. Insert a slice of cheese between two
slices of buttered bread. Preheat clothes iron to the highest setting. Place a couple sheets of waxed
paper over the sandwich and cook until golden-brown. Turn over and repeat.
Kayakatina Casserole
Rae Spraggs
1 ½-2 lb. stewing beef, fat trimmed off, cut up 1 tsp. Worcestershire Sauce
3 tbsp. flour 1 tsp. “Gravy Master” (gravy browning)
½ tsp salt 1 beef bouillon cube
¼ tsp. pepper 4 potatoes, peeled and quartered
2 c. water 4 onions, halved
3 tbsp. ketchup 4 carrots, cut into 2-3” lengths
Mix the flour, salt, pepper. Roll the meat cubes in this coating them well. Place the meat and flour
mixture in a casserole dish.
Mix the water, ketchup, Worcestershire Sauce, gravy browning, and bouillon cube. Pour over the
meat and let marinate 2-4 hours before cooking.
Add the potatoes, onions, and carrots. Cover with foil and bake at 325 F. for 90 minutes, stirring
occasionally so that the gravy thickens and does not stick to the bottom of the dish.
[I do not ever remember eating this, but decided to include it because it was with some recipes mom
gave to me when I got an apartment in 1978. I bet it smells good while cooking.]
Kedgeree
Rae Spraggs and www.3men.com
In a saucepan, heat the butter over medium heat. Add the fish and rice and stir gently to combine.
Chop the egg whites and add to the pan, along with salt, pepper, and milk. Stir gently until heated
through. To serve, garnish with egg yolks, passed through a fine wire sieve.
[I have not used this recipe, but came across “Cape Kedgeree” while searching the Internet for
another South African recipe. I remember mom talking about kedgeree years ago – she described it
as “leftover fish salad” and I thought it was served cold. I told Barb about it and tried making it years
ago with mayonnaise, but it was gross – rice and mayonnaise just do not go together. So I forgot
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about kedgeree until now. I think if you used tuna and called it “Tuna Casserole”, people would go for
it.]
Lasagna
Rae Spraggs
[I had come home from college for one of the holidays back in the 1970’s – craving mom’s home-
cooking and to my delight she made lasagna. I raved about it and asked for the recipe. After I asked
a second time for the recipe, mom somewhat reluctantly pulled the trash container out of the cabinet
and produced three empty Stouffer’s lasagna packages. I guess you cannot argue with ease-of-
preparation! I still get a chuckle when thinking about my dad calling mom “my little I-talian gal” (with
emphasis on the “I” as in “eye”).]
While frozen, remove contents from the original container and arrange in a large rectangular baking
dish (one end-for-end and two side-by-side). Cook according to the instructions on the package.
Serve in the baking dish at the table so it looks as if you made it.
Maid Rite
Rite Sandwiches
Jeanne Reed
Cook all ingredients in a double-boiler stirring occasionally. Simmer for about an hour. Serve on
hamburger buns with ketchup, prepared mustard, diced onions, and pickles.
[There are many variations on this recipe from the Maid Rite Restaurant of Greenville, Ohio, but this
is the one Mimi used. I did find, however, a recipe that called for 6 oz. of beer rather than the pickle
juice – which sounds good too. All recipes seem to stress the importance of using a double boiler
and simmering for an hour.]
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Mix hamburger, bread crumbs, onion, milk, egg, parsley, salt, Worcestershire Sauce, and pepper.
Gently shape into 1 inch balls. Cook meatballs in shortening until brown (or broil). Remove from
skillet; drain. Heat chili sauce and jelly in skillet stirring constantly, until jelly is melted. Add meatballs
and stir until coated. Simmer uncovered 30 minutes (or in crock-pot on low for 1-2 hours).
Meat Loaf
Barb Spraggs
Mix well and pour in loaf pan. Bake at 350 F. for 60 minutes.
[This recipe was originally from Margaret Hinsch. *She used a mixture of 50% ground beef and 50%
ground pork (and the cooking time was 90 minutes).]
In a heavy skillet, heat oil. Sauté onions and garlic until soft. Add remaining ingredients, mix well,
and simmer for a few minutes. Fry or grill the steaks separately. When done frying spoon the sauce
over the steaks. Serve with rice. Makes 8 Servings
[I do not have Ann’s recipe, but heard she had a good one. The origins of the dish are shrouded in
mystery and have nothing to do with monkeys or monkey body parts. I’ve read that it was joke
applied by a French chef that was lured to Johannesburg to cook at the Carlton Hotel early in the
1950’s to a version which claims to be the real story: “The Rand Easter Show used to be held at
Milner Park, prior to the take over of the site by the University of the Witwatersrand. The Show in
1936 was particularly big and more international than usual. To provide fare at the fair for foreigners,
the organizers brought over a French chef. In those days, South African palates were even less
sophisticated than today. The chef was horrified when almost all his patrons ordered steak, steak,
and more steak, well done, and then slathered it in [ketchup]. At the end of the Show, he was asked
to create a signature dish to commemorate his tenure at the Rand Easter Show. He replied that he
would make something that those ‘Monkeys’ could appreciate. He concocted a steak drowned in
spicy sauces, which he named ‘Monkey Gland Steak’”.]
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Natchitoches Meat Pies
Pies
www.explorenatchitoches.com (Mrs. L.J. Melder)
Melt shortening in heavy pot. Add meat. Cook until pink is gone. Add vegetables and season to
taste (seasoning well, as meat will lose seasoning during frying). When meat is completely done and
vegetables glazed, remove from heat and drain excess liquid. Stir in 1 tablespoon flour.
Sift dry ingredients together. Cut in shortening. Beat egg and add to milk. Work gradually into dry
ingredients until proper consistency to roll. Break into small pieces and roll very thin. Cut into rounds
using a saucer as a guide.
Place about 2 tablespoons of prepared meat along edge and halfway in the center of round dough.
Fold the other half over, making edges meet and seal with water. Form edges with fork. Drop in
deep fat and cook until golden brown. Drain and serve hot.
[I did not think anything could be better than an Upper Peninsula Michigan pastie until I had a
Natchitoches meat pie in New Orleans. I have not made this, but sure intend to. This is the official
recipe of the Natchitoches (Louisiana) Meat Pie Festival. Meat pies are GREAT with lots of ketchup.
Variations on the recipe include baking (“Place on a greased cookie sheet or pan. Make small slits in
dough to vent steam, egg-wash entire pie and bake thirty minutes at 400 F.”), but I think the deep-
frying has something to do with making them extra-good. I would not go to all that trouble, however,
of making the dough – just use Pillsbury pre-made piecrusts (get the ones folded up in a box, not the
ones that come frozen in the pie dish). Let the crusts warm up to room temperature before unfolding
so they do not crack. Roll them out and size however you want. I have noticed Natchitoches meat
pies are smaller than pasties, so you will have some extra dough to ball up and roll out again.]
Pasties
(PAST-eez)
Rich Spraggs
Spread out four Pillsbury pre-made pie crusts (2 packages of the ones folded up in a box, not the
ones which come frozen in the pie dish) after allowing the crusts warm up to room temperature. Cut
into 10” diameter circles. With the leftover dough, wad up and roll out into a fifth crust.
Divide the meat mixture into 5 portions and place on one side of each crust. Fold the crust over into a
half-circle. Push down on it to spread the meat mixture as close to the edge as possible. Pinch
closed and use a fork to make a nice-looking imprint on the edge. Make 4-5 ¼” slits in the top.
Gently place the pasties on a large greased cookie sheet and bake at 350 F. for about 1 hour until
golden-brown. This method will make five large pasties.
Serve with lots of ketchup and a tall glass of cold milk. True pastie-lovers would NEVER eat it with
gravy, as gravy ruins pasties.
To freeze pasties, bake at 350 F. for about 15 minutes (to prevent the potatoes from darkening).
Prior to serving, partially thaw and then bake at 350 F. for about 45 minutes until golden-brown.
Pasties were popular with the Cornish miners of England and many emigrated to other parts of the
world including South Africa (coal mines) and the upper peninsula of Michigan (copper mines). My
dad remembers his mom making pasties for his father’s lunch (he worked in the coal mines of
Johannesburg). She would mix potatoes and vegetables with whatever meat was leftover, bake in a
crust, and wrap up in a piece of newspaper. When I went to college in the upper peninsula of
Michigan, we would often go to the Rainbow Café in Houghton for lunch to eat pasties with lots of
ketchup and drink milk from tall glasses.
Sprinkle the chicken with the seasoned flour. Mix together the oil, garlic, coriander or parsley, dry
chicken-stock powder, chili, and lemon juice to make a paste. Toss the chicken into the mixture to
coat. Stir fry in a hot frying pan in the olive oil for 5-8 minutes until the chicken is just cooked. Add
the potatoes and Peri Peri Sauce and warm through. Serve with extra Peri Peri Sauce, rolls and
fresh salads such as chopped onion, cubed avocado, diced cucumber, cubed tomato, or cubed
pineapple.
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[Other hot sauces such as Tabasco may work as a substitute, but you can get Peri Peri Sauce at
Jungle Jim’s in Fairfield, Ohio. You can also get some from me because I have a good supply of
several Peri Peri sauces. Africa's hottest chili is the peri-peri pepper, also known as the African birds-
eye chili. It is a thick, rich South African hot sauce from Nando's Chickenland Restaurant. It’s made
the same way that Portuguese explorers did it in the 14th century with chilies plus fresh sun-ripened
lemons, garlic, and an exotic mix of herbs and spices.]
Pickled Fish
www.3men.com
Clean and fillet the fish and cut it into portions. Combine all the other ingredients in a deep saucepan
and simmer for 20 minutes. Add the fish and simmer for a further 20 minutes, taking care not to
break the fish. Remove with a slotted spoon and layer into a glass dish. Pour the curry sauce over.
Leave to cool, then cover tightly and leave to mature in the refrigerator for at least 3 days before use,
but preferably longer. Serve with brown bread and butter.
[I remember eating cans of pickled fish as a kid in South Africa and it was pretty good. Years later,
we ordered a can from one of those South African mail order places, and it was disgusting. I might
try making this sometime…I included it here because I didn’t want to loose the recipe.]
Pot Roast
Adapted by Barb Spraggs from www.elise.com (Elise Bauer)
Use a thick-bottomed covered pot (oven-proof if you intend to cook in oven), such as a Dutch oven,
just large enough to hold roast and vegetables. Heat 1 tbsp. of oil on medium high heat (hot enough
to sear the meat). Sprinkle and rub salt, pepper, and Italian seasoning all over the meat. Brown
roast in pot, all over, several minutes on each side. Don't move the roast while a side is browning, or
it won't brown well.
When roast is browned, lift up the meat and add garlic and chopped onion to the bottom of the pan.
Let the roast sit on top of the onions. Add ½ cup of red wine. Cover. Bring to simmer and then
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adjust the heat down to the lowest heat possible to maintain a low simmer when covered.
Alternatively, you can cook the pot roast in a 225 F. oven; once you have browned it on the stovetop,
and brought the liquid to a simmer (make sure to use an oven proof pan).
Cook for 3 ½ to 4 hours, until meat is tender. Near the end of the cooking, add carrots and potatoes,
cook until tender, about an additional 10-20 minutes.
After cooking 3 ½ hours, before adding the carrots and potatoes, note how much liquid has been
released by the meat. This comes from slow cooking at a very low temperature. If your pot roast is
too dry, make sure the pan you are using has a tight fitting lid and that you are cooking at the lowest
possible heat to maintain the low simmering. Serves 4.
Sausage Rolls
Rae Spraggs
A Bill Spraggs favorite
Thaw 2 packages of “Pepperidge Farms Puff Pastry” sheets. Roll out to make even and seal folds.
Cut each sheet in half length-wise to make 8 sheets.
Drain off fat. Divide into 8 portions. Lay each portion down the center of each pastry strip. Fold over
and seal.
Place on un-greased baking sheet and brush the top of each pastry with milk. Cut through the top
only of each pastry in order to make 6 “rolls” per strip.
Bake at 425 F. for 15 minutes or until lightly-browned. Cool on rack. Cut through both crusts to
serving portions. Be careful not to overcook. Serve with ketchup, Worcestershire Sauce, or Mrs.
Balls Chutney.
[These make a great appetizer when cut into small sizes. I’ll never forget how upset my dad was that
“those Afrikaans boys” devoured a platter of sausage roll appetizers that my mom had made before
he had a chance to have a few at a party for South Africans in Hilton Head during the early 1990’s.]
Savory Mince
Mince
Rae Spraggs
- 39 -
Brown the beef in a skillet; add onions, carrots, and remaining ingredients. Reduce heat when the
sauce bubbles. Simmer for 30-40 minutes. Add a small amount of water if it seems to dry out too
much.
[This really is a “no recipe” dish, and I made up the amounts. It is like Sloppy Joe with carrots. I think
Jeremy used to call it “Sloppy Freddy”.]
South African
African Curried Beef Gratin
Adapted by Jennie Spraggs from The New Complete International Jewish Cookbook
by Evelyn Rose (Robson Books)
Preheat oven to 350 F. In heavy-based skillet, toast pine nuts, almonds, or cashews over moderate
heat, tossing frequently, until they smell toasty, about 3 minutes. In large skillet over moderate heat,
heat oil and cook onion, stirring, until golden brown, about 5 minutes. Add ground beef and fry,
stirring once or twice, until well-browned, about 3 minutes. Add salt, pepper, curry, apricot preserves
or mango preserves, and lemon juice. Cook gently for 5 minutes, and then stir in the toasted nuts.
Transfer to casserole or small gratin dish, and keep warm while you make the custard topping.
Custard:
3 large eggs 1/2 tsp. paprika
1 1/3 c. canned coconut milk pinch of chili powder
1 tsp. salt 10 grinds black pepper
2 tsp soy sauce 2 or 3 bay leaves
To make custard: In bowl, whisk eggs with coconut milk. Add salt, soy sauce, paprika, chili powder,
and black pepper. Mix well, then pour custard (it will be thin) evenly over meat mixture. Arrange bay
leaves on top. Bake for 30 minutes, until top has set and is golden brown. Allow to cool for 5 minutes
before serving with rice and a green vegetable. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
This ground beef custard is sweet with coconut milk and apricot preserves yet hot and savory with
spices and curry flavors.
[From www.en.wikepedia.org, anything that can be sliced thin, layered with a cream sauce, and
baked is material for a gratin.]
Spaghetti Bolognese
Adapted by Rich Spraggs from www.foodnetwork.com (Emeril Lagasse)
A Pat DeJean favorite
In a large pot, heat the oil over medium-high heat. Add the bacon and cook, stirring, until browned
and the fat is rendered, 4 to 5 minutes. Add the onions, carrots, celery, and cook, stirring, until soft, 4
to 5 minutes. Add the garlic, salt, pepper, bay leaves, thyme, oregano, cinnamon, and nutmeg and
cook, stirring, for 30 seconds. Add the beef and sausages, and cook, stirring, until no longer pink,
about 5 minutes. Add the tomato paste and cook, stirring, for 1 to 2 minutes. Add the wine and cook,
stirring, to deglaze the pan and remove any browned bits sticking to the bottom of the pan, and until
half of the liquid is evaporated, about 2 minutes. Add the tomatoes and their juices, the tomato
sauce, beef broth, and sugar and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer, stirring
occasionally, to keep the sauce from sticking to the bottom of the pan, until the sauce is thickened
and flavorful, about 1 ½ hours. Add the cream, butter, and parsley, stir well, and simmer for 2
minutes. Discard the bay leaves and adjust the seasoning, to taste. Remove from the heat and
cover to keep warm until ready to serve.
Meanwhile, bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the pasta and return the water to a low
boil. Cook, stirring occasionally to prevent the noodles from sticking, until al dente, 8 to 10 minutes.
Drain in a colander.
Add the pasta to the sauce, tossing to coat. Add ½ cup of the cheese and toss to blend. Divide
among pasta bowls and serve with the cheese passed tableside. (Alternatively, toss only the desired
portion of pasta with a bit of the sauce at a time in a serving bowl, reserving the remainder for another
meal.)
This seems like a lot of work, but it is very good and you can freeze it.
Select at least 1” thick steaks (thicker is better). Coat in canola oil and season with freshly ground
pepper and sea salt to taste. Cover and allow to come to room temperature for 2-3 hours prior to
cooking. Before cooking, wipe off excess canola oil.
Heat a cast iron skillet in a 500 F. oven. Turn on one of the burners and let get red-hot. When the
- 41 -
oven is up to temperature, remove skillet, place on hot burner, put the streak(s) in, and sear each
side for 30 seconds turning with tongs (I do each side for 60 seconds for those who want medium-
rare or above).
Place skillet back in 500 F. oven and cook each side for another 1-2 minutes (depending on thickness
and desired doneness; medium and over may require 3 minutes or longer). Removing at 105-110 F.
for rare is good. Remove from skillet and let rest for 5-10 minutes covered with foil. It will continue to
cook while resting, so don’t freak out if it’s too rare when you remove it.
This method is sure to stink up the house and will likely set off smoke alarms, but it is as close to
restaurant-style steak cooking as is possible in the home. Steaks cooked outside are good, but you
can not get a grill this hot.
Toad-
Toad-in-
in-the-
the-Hole
Rae Spraggs
A Jennie and Julie Spraggs favorite
3 eggs ¾ c. water
½ tsp. salt 1 ½ c. flour
¾ c. milk 1 ½ tsp. baking soda
8 sweet Italian sausages
Beat well the eggs and salt. Add remaining ingredients and beat well together.
Skin 8 sweet Italian sausages. Arrange in greased casserole dish. Pour the batter over the
sausages. Bake at 400 F. for 50-60 minutes (testing with a toothpick). Pour off the excess fat and
allow to stand for 5-10 minutes before serving.
Walleye
Ron Meyer
Spray Pam on a sheet of heavy-duty aluminum foil. Grind up crackers and add garlic powder to
taste. Rinse fillets and pres both sides into the cracker mixture. Place on foil with pats of butter on
top of the fish fillets here and there. Completely seal the foil packets. Cook on a grill at medium heat
for 12 minutes.
[Ron uses this method for freshly-caught Lake Erie walleye, but it could be used for any fish.]
- 42 -
2 med. onions, chopped 4 cups chicken broth
2 cloves garlic, minced 1 can beer (or less)
1 can chopped green chilies 1-2 cups shredded Monterey or Cojack cheese
Drain beans. Heat oil in large pot; add onions and sauté about 10 min. Stir in garlic, chilies, cumin,
oregano, and salt. Sauté 2 more min. Add beans, broth, and beer and bring to a boil. Cook for
about 1 hour stirring occasionally. Add chicken and cheese; heat throughout.
Note: I used a little more cumin, fresh oregano, and only about ¾ cup of beer. I also used 3 cans of
Bush Northern Beans and the larger can of chilies (green chilies will be in the Mexican food section –
I use Ortega.).
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DESERTS AND SWEETS
Almost Candy
Jennie Spraggs
Preheat oven to 350 Degrees. Grease your pan (I use a 10.5x15 Pyrex, but anything 9x13 or bigger
should work; it will puff up as it bakes). Melt butter and mix with condensed milk and cake mix. This
will be a bit difficult, as the mixture is thick. You can add some water to make it easier to mix up.
Dump mixture into a greased pan. Flatten the mixture with a spatula. Mix together remaining
ingredients and spread over the top of the cake mixture. Cook for 20-30 minutes. Let cool before
you try to cut into pieces.
Beet Cake
Adapted by Rich Spraggs from Family Circle Magazine, April, 1981
Beat butter with sugar until light and fluffy. Add eggs; beat well. Blend beets in blender or food
processor until smooth. Add sifted dry ingredients alternately with beets to butter mixture, mixing well
after each addition. Fold in walnuts. Turn batter into 2 greased and floured cake pans. Bake at 350
F for 45-55 minutes or until cake tests done. Cool on rack for 30 minutes before removing from pan.
Ice with lots of cream cheese frosting.
I made this in 1981 and kept the torn-out page from the magazine. The original recipe called for
sifted confectioner’s sugar and cooked in a 9” Bunt pan, but it’s much better with cream cheese
frosting (similar to a carrot cake). It is really good and the color is rather distinctive…do you
remember the “groom’s cake” in the 1989 movie Steele Magnolias?
*I did check and Aunt Nellie is still making her sweet and sour beets, although she’s putting them in
smaller jars now.
- 44 -
Boston Tea Party Cake
Joe Wilson, Piqua Bicentennial Cookbook
Pour into one well-greased 9” round layer pan. Bake at 350 F. for 30-35 minutes.
Blend in 1 egg yoke. Gradually add 1 c. milk. Mix thoroughly. Cook over medium heat stirring
constantly. Remove from heat and add:
1 tbsp. butter ½ tsp. vanilla extract
Fold in:
1 tbsp. sugar ½ tsp. vanilla extract
Split the cake (making two round sections). Cover one section with the butterscotch mixture. Cover
with other section of cake and then top the whole cake with the whipped cream mixture.
Chocolate Pie
Barb Spraggs
Melt chocolate. Combine margarine, sugar, vanilla, and 1 egg. Beat for 5 minutes. Add additional
egg and beat another 5 minutes. Pout into pre-made pie shell and refrigerate.
Christmas Cookies
- 45 -
Barb Spraggs
Cream together the butter, sugar, and vanilla. Add the 2 eggs and beat well. Add the flour and salt
and mix until blended.
Press through cookie press onto un-greased cookie sheet. Bake in a preheated 400 F. oven for 10-
12 minutes.
Sift together:
1 ½ c flour 1 tsp. cinnamon
2 tsp. baking powder 1 c. sugar
pinch of salt
Add:
¾ c. dates, pitted and halved 3/4c cherries, pitted and halved
¾ c. milk
Stir wall and add Christmas charms* (one for each family member) and one dime. Pass the bowl
around to family members to stir and make a wish.
Heat:
2 ½ c. water 2 tbsp. butter
1 ½ c. sugar 2 tsp. cinnamon
Spread the dough mixture in the center of a large greased baking dish. Pour the warm syrup over the
mixture and around the sides. Bake at 350 F. for 45 minutes or until the pudding is cooked in the
center. It should be moist, though.
Scoop out servings with a spoon. Hopefully each family member will find charm or the “Lucky Dime”.
Can be served warm or cold and is good with custard sauce.
[*Christmas charms: we used the pieces from the Monopoly game – they were metal back then
(actually probably lead and we didn’t know the risk we were taking). I’d suggest leaving out the
charms, but this is the way mom did it in the 1960’s and 70’s, and it was fun.]
Coconut-
Coconut-Oatmeal Cookies
Brenda Wilson
- 46 -
Cream together (in mixer):
2 cup real butter & 2 cup margarine 1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 cup granulated sugar 2 eggs
1 cup brown sugar
Sift together:
2 cups flour 2 tsp. baking powder
2 tsp. baking soda 1 tsp. salt
Stir in:
2 cups coconut 2 cups Quick Oats
Bake on greased cookie sheet at 325 F. for 12-15 minutes. (I usually just bake for 12 minutes.)
Scald the milk in a heavy 4 to 5-quart saucepan. Remove from heat and allow to cool for about 5
minutes. Then add the bread, raisins, and melted butter and mix thoroughly. In a separate bowl,
beat the eggs and add the sugar, vanilla, cinnamon, nutmeg, and salt. Mix until thoroughly blended.
Then add to the bread mixture and blend well.
Butter a 3-4 quart earthenware or china casserole thoroughly on all inner surfaces (or use a baking
dish about 3-4” deep). Pour the mixture into it and stir to distribute the ingredients evenly. Bake
uncovered in a preheated 350 F. oven for 1 hour and 10 minutes or until knife inserted in the center
comes out clean and the tip begins to brown and form a rough crust. Allow to cool to room
temperature. Serve warm or chilled with Whiskey Sauce. Yields 8 or more servings.
Whiskey Sauce
1 ¼ lbs. butter ½ cup half and half
1 lb. sugar 4 tsp. corn starch mixed in ½ cup of cold water
9 egg yolks 2 ½ oz. bourbon
Melt butter and dissolve sugar over double boiler. Add egg yolks and whip vigorously so that egg
yolks do not curdle. To this mixture add half and half and corn starch mixture. Let cook over double
boiler for 5 minutes. Remove from heat and add whiskey. Serve 2 oz. per serving of bread pudding.
- 47 -
[Bread pudding is one of my favorites, but I have never made this recipe (although I did have some at
this restaurant). I decided to include it because Barb and I had such a nice time at this wonderful
New Orleans restaurant and Barb remembered that her mom and dad had been there in the 1960’s.]
Fochville Tart
Rae Spraggs
Cream 1 cup of sugar and 3 ½ tbsp. of butter or margarine. Add 3 eggs (1 at a time) and beat. Add 1
c. flour, 1 tsp. baking powder, pinch of salt, and ¼ c. evaporated milk. Beat well together.
Place 1 can of apple pie filling or 6 or more of peeled and sliced apples in a buttered Pyrex dish.
Cover with batter.
Boil the remaining evaporated milk from the 13 oz. can with ½ c. sugar and 1 tbsp. butter or
margarine to make the caramel sauce.
Prick the baked tart while still warm and pour over about half of the hot sauce – allowing the sauce to
be absorbed. Use the remaining sauce when serving. It’s best served warm.
Fruit Slush
Barb Spraggs
Boil the sugar in 3 c. of water; let cool. Mix the crushed pineapple with the cherries, bananas, orange
juice concentrate, and water. Add the sugar and water and place in the freezer. Stir every hour until
frozen. Remove from freezer and partially thaw prior to serving. Ice cube trays work well if it won’t be
served all at once (thaw 3-4 cubes per person prior to serving).
Jell-
Jell-O Wedges
Rich Spraggs
Cut the oranges in half and remove the juice and pulp (perfect when done with a juicer). Prepare the
Jell-O according to instructions on the package and pour very carefully into the orange halves
arranged in a dish so they will not roll around. Refrigerate to set the Jell-O. Prior to serving, cut the
halves into quarters and little kids will be amazed at how you got the Jell-O to stay in the orange
quarters.
- 48 -
Kitty Litter Cake
Adapted by Rich Spraggs from www.wikihow.com, www.catlady99.tripod.com,
Prepare the cake mix according to the directions on the box. Use any size pan. Allow the cake to
cool to room temperature.
Prepare the pudding mix and put it in the refrigerator for now.
Crumble the white sandwich cookies in small batches in a food processor (scrape often to get every
little piece) or by hand in a bag. Set aside all but about 1/4 cup.
Measure ¼ cup of cookie crumbs and add a few drops of green food coloring to it. Mix with a fork or
shake everything in a jar.
Crumble the room-temperature cake into a large bowl. Toss it gently with half of the remaining white
cookie crumbs and enough chilled pudding to moisten (not soak) the crumbs.
Put the cookie crumbs and pudding mixture into a brand new, clean litter box.
Heat three unwrapped Tootsie Rolls in a microwave safe dish and until they're soft and pliable. Pinch
the ends so they are no longer blunt – you want them to look convincingly like cat’s you-know-what.
Repeat this process with as many Tootsie Rolls as you'd like to add, microwaving them in batches of
three. Bury the shaped Tootsie Rolls in mixture and sprinkle them with the other half of the cookie
crumbs. Careful while shaping – they’re hot out of the microwave.
Scatter the green cookie crumbs lightly over the top. This will mimic real litter, where many of the
grains are often blue or green.
Shape 3 more Tootsie Rolls and scrape them on top of the cake. One can hang over the side of the
litter box. Sprinkle them lightly with cookie crumbs.
Place the box on a newspaper and sprinkle a few of the cookie crumbs around. Serve with a new,
washed litter scoop for that extra touch.
Lemon Squares
Squares
Sam Heitzman
Crust:
1 c. flour ½ c. butter
¼ c. powdered sugar
- 49 -
Sift the flour and sugar into a bowl. Mix in the butter. Press into an 8x8” greased baking dish and
bake at 350 F. for 20-25 min.
Filling:
3 eggs, beaten ½ tsp. baking powder
1 c. sugar
2 ½ tbsp. lemon juice [Sam always recommended juice from freshly-squeezed lemons.]
Pour over the baked crust. Return to oven (350 F.) for 20-25 min. Allow to cool for 30 minutes and
cut into squares.
Lemonade Cake
Beth Spraggs
Mix the Jell-O and boiling water until dissolved. Let cool. Mix cake mix, eggs, oil, and Jell-O mixture.
Spray a Bundt pan with Pam. Pour contents in and bake at 325 F. for I hour.
Mix the frozen lemonade and sugar together. Spoon it over the cake as soon as it comes out of the
oven.
Crust - combine:
1 cup flour 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
½ cup sugar 1 egg yolk
Work together quickly. Put into plastic bag and chill at least 1 hour. Roll out 1/8” thick and
place over greased bottom of 9 inch spring-form pan. Trim off extra dough. Bake in 400˚ F.
oven for 20 minutes or until golden (watch closely – this burns easily). Cool. .
Note from Brenda Wilson: I have better results with the crust if you can chill it just slightly then
roll it out between 2 pieces of wax paper and chill it already rolled. If refrigerated too long, it
gets very dry and breaks apart easily. To line the sides of the pan, cut the crust in strips the
same depth of the side of the pan. I also make a double recipe of the crust to ensure that
there is enough to cover the spring foam pan.
Filling:
2 ½ pounds cream cheese (softened) ¼ teaspoon vanilla
1 ¾ cup sugar 5 eggs
- 50 -
3 tablespoons of flour 2 egg yolks
1 ½ teaspoon grated orange rind ¼ cup sour cream
1 ½ teaspoon grated lemon rind
Add ingredients separately, beating after each addition with a mixer until smooth and creamy.
Butter the sides of the spring-form pan and place over the base. Roll remaining dough 1/8 inch thick
and line sides of greased pan, making sure the bottom and side edges are sealed. Place filling in
pan. Place pie in preheated 500˚ F. oven and bake 12-15 minutes. Reduce heat and bake at 200˚ F.
for 1 more hour. Watch closely toward the end and if it gets too brown on top, cover with foil.
Refrigerate before cutting and serve chilled.
M&M Bars
Rae Spraggs
Mix the above ingredients and press into 9x13” Pyrex baking dish which has been greased and
floured.
2 c. flour 1 c. margarine
½ c. powdered (confectioner’s) sugar
Melktert
(South African Milk Custard Tart)
Rae Spraggs
Filling:
Scald 5 ½ c. milk in saucepan on stove (or in bowl in microwave for about 10 minutes).
Whisk 3 eggs; add 4 tbsp. cornstarch, 4 tbsp. flour, 1 c. sugar, 1 tbsp. almond extract.
Pour half of the scalded milk into the bowl with the egg mixture. Whisk, and then pour it all
back into the bowl with the rest of the milk. Heat again, stirring continuously until it thickens (or
about 6 min. in microwave). It will be lumpy, so beat in a bowl until smooth. Stir in 2 tbsp.
butter and 1 tsp. vanilla extract.
Cool the filling slightly and pour into the baked crusts. Dust with cinnamon.
- 51 -
Merry Widow Pudding
Jeanne Reed
A Bill Reed favorite
Melt the chocolate in a double boiler. Add the water. Beat in 1 egg at a time.
Arrange the Lady Finger cookies on a large round plate. Drizzle a thin layer of chocolate over each
layer. Keep layering until a round mound is achieved. Refrigerate for 24 hours. Cover with whipped
cream or Cool-whip.
Nice’s Fudge
Althea Baker
Mix together the sugar, Golden Syrup, butter, condensed milk, and water. Boil for 20 minutes, stirring
constantly. Boil another 20 minutes, still stirring3. Remove from stove and add the tartaric acid,
stirring an additional 10 minutes. Add the vanilla extract toward the end.
Pour into buttered pans or dishes [such as a 10x13” baking dish – it will result in a layer about ¾-1”
thick]. Cut into squares when nearly cold.
1
Lyle’s Golden Syrup: amber-colored liquid sweetener is popular among South African, British,
Caribbean, and Creole cooks. You can get it at Jungle Jim’s in Fairfield, the Internet, or I have some.
A possible substitute according to www.foodsubs.com is a mixture of equal parts honey and corn
syrup. According Rae, however, there is no substitute.
2
Tartaric acid: used in wine and beer-making; available at home-brew shops or the Internet. There is
no substitute. Tartaric acid is added to other foods to give a sour taste, is the principal acid in wine,
and is the component that promotes graceful aging and crispness of flavor. One of the by-products of
tartaric acid is cream of tartar, which is used in baking and candy-making.
3
At the risk of ruining a good thing, this part seemed strange to me – why not just boil for 40 minutes
stirring constantly? So while doing Internet research, I found a nearly identical recipe as a reply to a
post from someone requesting a “Russian Toffee” recipe. It starts out “boil the sugar, syrup, and
water together for 20 minutes stirring constantly, making sure that the syrup has dissolved before
reaching the boiling point. Now add the butter and condensed milk and continue to boil stirring
constantly for up to 20 minutes.”
- 52 -
[I have made this and it is very good. “Nice” was the name I gave to my grandmother (Althea Baker –
Rae’s mother) as a child and it stuck. The fudge was known as “Russian Toffee”, but in doing
Internet research, I found that is actually a Scottish recipe (Nice’s maiden name was Cummings). In
addition, we would think of it as fudge rather than toffee – so I’ve changed the name. When I asked
mom for the recipe, she found it handwritten behind the cover page in a cookbook that her Aunty
Madge (Nice’s sister) had given her in 1953. Mom noted, however, that she has no recollection of
ever making it. While visiting us in Connecticut in 1970, Winnie Flower, a family friend from South
Africa, made Nice’s Fudge and described it as “pure goodness” (38 years later, I can remember her
saying this). The recipe may have originally been Winnie’s father’s – a confectioner who left Scotland
in the early 1900’s and began a candy-making business and shop in South Africa.]
Heat oven to 350° F. Beat together margarine and sugars until creamy. Add eggs and vanilla; beat
well. Add combined flour, baking soda, cinnamon, and salt; mix well. Stir in oats and raisins; mix
well. Drop by rounded tablespoonfuls onto un-greased cookie sheet. Bake 10-12 minutes or until
golden brown. Cool 1 minute on cookie sheet; remove to wire rack.
Oatmeal Fudge
Emily Spraggs
Butter a baking pan thoroughly and set aside. Combine the butter, sugar, cocoa, and milk in a
medium-sized saucepan and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Allow to boil vigorously for about
1 minute. Turn down the heat to medium and stir in the peanut butter. Mix with a rubber spatula until
the mixture is smooth. Add the oats and stir until thoroughly coated. Pour into the baking pan and
set aside for several hours (until it sets up). Cut into squares and serve. Yield: about 30 squares.
Mix as directed a regular size (9x13) brownie mix. Pour into small pizza pan. Bake at 350 F. for 18-
- 53 -
20 minutes. Let cool.
Spread over the brownie mixture. Break up 4-6 Reese’s Cups and sprinkle on top. Drizzle chocolate
syrup on the top.
Cream together the sugar, eggs, and shortening. Add milk alternatively with dry ingredients. Mix
thoroughly. Drop by spoonfuls onto cookie sheet. Bake at 430 F. for 10-15 minutes.
Snickerdoodles
Betty Crocker Cookbook
A Julie Spraggs favorite
Heat oven to 400 F. Mix thoroughly butter, shortening, 1 ½ c. water, sugar, and the eggs. Blend in
flour, cream of tartar, soda, and salt. Shape dough by rounded teaspoonfuls into balls.
Mix 2 tbsp. sugar and the cinnamon; roll balls in mixture. Place 2” apart on un-greased baking sheet.
Strawberry Breasts
(Fragomammella)
www.bigoven.com (Two Fat Ladies)
- 54 -
3 tbsp. Campari
1 tbsp. caster sugar (ground granulated sugar from a food processor)
Set aside 16 small strawberries and cut the rest into small pieces. Put in a bowl with the lemon juice
and caster sugar and leave to soak for one hour. Push the ricotta through the smallest sieve of a
Mouli [stainless steel food mill – like a Foley], add the cream and Campari, and mix well. Sieve the
icing sugar into the mixture to taste, put a third of the mix aside and mix the strawberries into the
leftover ricotta. Prepare the pink desert plates and divide the mixture into 16 breast- shaped moulds,
two per plate. With a moistened spatula smooth ricotta over the moulds and place a strawberry on
top. You can make the moulds three hours before and store in the fridge.
[I’ve never made this, but remember fondly the British cooking show Two Fat Ladies on PBS back in
the early 1990’s. Check them out on www.youtube.com sometime. A substitute (although not exact)
for the Campari could be Port, Brandy, Armangnac, Gran Marinier, Cointreau, or orange juice
concentrate.]
Cake:
1 c. melted margarine 1 tsp. baking soda
1 c. water ½ tsp. salt
¼ c. cocoa powder 2 eggs
2 c. granulated sugar ½ c. sour cream
2 c. flour
Mix melted margarine, water, and cocoa together in KitchenAid-type mixer bowl. Mix in other
ingredients. Bake in a large baking dish at 350 F. for 20 minutes.
Icing:
½ c. margarine (not melted) 6 tbsp. milk
¼ c. cocoa powder 1 tsp. vanilla
1 lb. confectioner’s sugar ½ c. chopped pecans (optional)
In a large bowl, cream together the butter, brown sugar, and white sugar until smooth. Beat in egg
and brandy. Combine the flour and baking soda and then stir into the sugar mixture. Mix in the white
chocolate chips and cranberries. Drop by heaping spoonfuls onto cookie sheets. Bake at 375 F. for
8-10 minutes.
For best results, remove from oven while still doughy. Allow to cool on the cookie sheets for 1 minute
before transferring to wire racks. Makes 2 dozen cookies.
- 56 -
BREAKFAST
Remove ½ c. of the above for the topping and then add to the remaining:
2 c. buttermilk
1 heaping tsp. baking soda
Topping:
½ c. of the reserved batter 1 tsp. cinnamon
2/3 c. brown sugar
Pour over the cakes and then drizzle ¾ stick of melted butter over the cakes. Bake at 350 F. for 25-
30 min.
Christmas Breakfast
Breakfast Soufflé
Barb Spraggs
Grease a 9x13 baking dish. Mix the eggs, milk, and cheese. Place half the bread cubes in the dish,
then pour the egg mixture over it, and then add the remaining bread cubes. Drizzle the margarine
over the contents.
Refrigerate overnight. Bake uncovered in a pan of hot water (creating a “double-boiler” effect) at 375
F. for 45 min.
[We’ve been having this for breakfast on Christmas day since the early 1980’s.]
Fluffy Pancakes
Brenda Wilson
- 57 -
Separate 5 eggs; beat whites in small mixing bowl until stiff peaks can be formed; beat yolks in large
bowl until thick and fluffy. Add 2 2/3 cups of buttermilk and 1 ½ tsp. of baking soda to yolks.
Sift together and beat in 2 ¼ cups flour, 1 ½ tablespoons sugar, 1 ½ tsp. baking powder, and 3/4 tsp.
of salt.
Mix margarine, brown sugar, and cinnamon; spread out on bottom of 9x13” baking dish. Add bread in
two layers. Beat eggs with milk and pour over the bread. Bake uncovered at 350 F. for 30-40
minutes.
Beat together the eggs, milk, and salt. Heat a lightly-greased griddle. Soak the bread slices in the
egg mixture and place on griddle. Brown both sides. Serve hot with your favorite toppings.
Spam ‘n Eggs
Rich Spraggs
“I don’t Like Spam” – Mrs. Bun (Graham Chapman)
“I’ll have your Spam; I love it!” – Mr. Bun (Eric Idle)
“Monty Python’s Flying Circus”, December 15, 1970
1 lg. can Spam “Classic”, sliced ¼" thick salt and pepper to taste
eggs bread, sliced, toasted, cooled, buttered
Fry up the Spam slices turning occasionally until almost done in a large, thick-bottomed skillet. Move
the Spam slices to the edges of the skillet, preserving the liquid that is left behind to cook the eggs in.
Turn down the heat to medium and break open 1-2 eggs per person. Fry the eggs “sunny side up”
with a pinch of salt and a grind of pepper over everything. When the eggs are sizzling and snapping
in the Spam liquid and browning at the edges, they’re probably done. Put eggs on toast slices, and
return Spam slices to center of skillet and continue to cook if not already golden brown.
- 58 -
This is a great camping breakfast, but you may have to forgo the toast. Although it is possible to
make toast over an open flame!
Swedish Pancakes
Ken Wicklund’s Mother
- 59 -
MISCELLANY
A Tribute to Spam
The Internet (author unknown)
- 60 -
How to Embarrass Tom Westfall in an Elevator
Rich Spraggs and various Internet sites
- 61 -
How to Grow an Avocado Tree
www.avocado.org
You can grow a beautiful houseplant or even your own tree following these simple steps.
Wash the seed. Using three toothpicks, suspend it broad-end-down over a water-filled glass to cover
about an inch of the seed.
Put it in a warm place out of direct sunlight and replenish water as needed. You should see roots and
stem sprout in about two to six weeks.
When the stem is six to seven inches long, cut it back to about three inches.
When the roots are thick and the stem has leafed out again, plant it in a rich humus soil in a 10-1/2"
diameter pot, leaving the seed half exposed.
Give it frequent, light waterings with an occasional deep soak. Generally, the soil should be moist but
not saturated. Yellowing leaves are a sign of over-watering; let the plant dry out for a few days.
The more sunlight, the better. If leaves turn brown and fry at the tips, too much salt has accumulated
in the soil. Let water run freely into the pot and drain for several minutes.
When the stem is 12 inches high, cut it back to 6 inches to encourage the growth of new shoots.
Don't expect your house plant to bear fruit. Although this does occur occasionally, it usually requires
grafting. A plant grown from seed will take anywhere from five to 13 years to flower and bear fruit.
Fruit on trees grown from seeds are seldom good to eat.
This information was provided by Dr. Mary Lu Arpaia, Extension Subtropical Horticulturist, Kearney
Agriculture Center, Parlier, CA. and Dr. Ben Faber, Farm Advisor, Soils and Water, Avocados and
Subtropicals, Ventura County, CA.
[Barb hates it when I grow avocados – they’re smelly and take up room in the kitchen. I don’t know
why I keep trying to grow avocados. We all have our flaws, I suppose.]
- 62 -
How to Make
Make a Potato Gun
Rich Spraggs and www.dangerouslyfun.com
Materials needed:
A. Flint igniter (lantern lighter)
B. 4" PVC cleanout plug
C. 4" PVC fitting cleanout adapter
D. 4" PVC coupling
E. 4" x 24" PVC pipe
F. 2" x 4" PVC increaser reducer
G. 2" x 48" PVC pipe
H. PVC cleaner, primer, & cement
I. Sack of potatoes
J. Aerosol Hair spray (“Aqua-Net works best)
Tools required:
K. Drill
L. Hand saw
M. File
Cut the PVC components to length and clean and prime the joints. Cement components C thru G
together.
Drill a hole for the lantern lighter in the middle of pipe E and then install the lighter with its included
hardware. These lighters are very compact and use flint to produce a strong spark. You can find
them in the camping section of large department stores.
With the file, sharpen the circumference of pipe G. both inside and out. This makes shoving the
potato in easier because the pipe will cut off the excess potato and ensures a tight fit within the barrel.
Firing instructions:
- 63 -
1) Find a very large, open area to launch the gun (or point upwards as we do at Beckert).
2) Load a potato. Use a stick or rod to plunge it most of the way down the barrel.
3) Spray the hair spray into the fat end of the gun – about 3-4 second or so. If you use too little
the potato won’t go far; too much and it won’t launch at all because there isn’t enough oxygen
in the chamber.
5) Hold the gun at your side, aiming in a safe direction. Give the lighter a quick flick, as if
you’re snapping your fingers.
If you use your imagination, all kinds of fun can be had with a potato gun and it’s possible to launch
more than just potatoes.
Whether you buy a quality wood cutting board or you're using a homemade model, it can last virtually
forever. If it's well taken care of, that is. This informative article will show you how to properly clean
and season your wood cutting board.
If your wood cutting board is brand new, then you'll need to start its care right away. Before you cut
anything on its wood surface, you should "season" the wood. "Seasoning" your cutting board means
that you'll apply a coating of oil to protect it. The oil will help keep food particles out of the pores of
the wood. It will also help the wood resist stains and odors. In addition, it will help prevent the wood
from drying out and shrinking. Do not use a cooking oil, though, as it will turn rancid over time.
Instead, use walnut or mineral oil.
To properly clean and season your wood cutting board, warm an eighth of a cup of walnut oil (or
mineral oil) in your microwave. Use a clean, soft cloth to liberally apply the oil to the wood board.
Rub the oil in the direction of the wood grain. Allow the walnut oil to soak into the wood for a minute
or two. Then, apply another coat. You can't use too much oil to season your wood cutting board.
Because, once the wood is saturated, the excess oil will remain on the surface.
Finally, wipe off the excess oil, and your cutting board is seasoned and ready for use.
Now, to keep your wood cutting board in good shape, not to mention clean and sanitary, you'll need
to wash it in hot, sudsy water after each use. Rinse it with plenty of hot tap water, and then dry it with
a clean, soft towel. To properly clean and season your wood cutting board, allow it to dry completely
before you put it away. Set it up on its edge to allow both sides to air dry.
[Instructions from a board purchased at IKEA include the following recommendations: “Oil the
chopping board once, on both sides, and wipe off any surplus. Repeat the treatment 24 hours later.
This should be repeated regularly, at least 5-6 times per year. To recondition the product, simply
sand down the surface with fine sandpaper and re-oil it.”]
- 64 -
Table of Cooking Conversions
www.botanical.com, www.howtodothings.com, and www.frenchatatouch.com
- 65 -