Sunday, July 29, 2007

New old recipe: Scalloped Tuna and Potato Casserole

Okay okay I know this sounds really nasty, but for some reason I was craving tuna casserole. I decided to look up a recipe in one of my many old cookbooks. I decided upon The Good Housekeeping Cook Book circa 1942. This is a great old cookbook with lots of WWII/Depression influences such food stretchers, tips on not wasting food, an interesting take on weight loss and fat teens, use of the word cookery (which always makes me giggle), and lots and lots of recipes involving lard and evaporated milk. This is a great book I would recommend you buy if you see it in a thrift store or at a garage sale for under $5. Mine came with all sorts of neat cutouts from old newspapers and a few hand written recipes as well (Gram Whit's Lemon Pie sounds particularly tasty).

Anyway, I had this unholy craving for tuna (which is odd because I hate tuna). So plucked the 1942 GH from the shelf and looked up tuna. On page 305 was a whole myriad of tuna recipes, including Club Tuna Loaf, Tuna and Mushroom Casserole, Tuna Stuffed Peppers, and Scalloped Tuna and Potato Casserole. Although the Tuna and Mushroom Casserole seems the most likely candidate, I had neither the required mushrooms (surprisingly the recipe calls for fresh sauteed ones) nor the required bag of crushed potato chips (how wonderful is that?). Frankly, the Tuna Loaf sounded gross (and funny enough also required crushed potato chips), and the Stuff Peppers were also out of questions as I had no peppers. Turns out that I had everything for the Tuna and Potato casserole (except parsley but who needs parsley). I didn't even need milk as this version has an option for evaporated milk which I did have.

Scalloped Tuna and Potato Casserole

4 c. thinly sliced pared potatoes
2 Tblsp. butter or margarine
1 Tblsp. fat or salad oil
4 Tblsp. flour
2 c. bottled milk or 1 c. evaporated milk and 1 cup water
1 medium onion, minced
3/4 tsp. salt
1/8 tsp. peper
1 Tblsp. minced parsley
1 7 oz. can tuna fish, flaked

Cook the sliced potatoes in boiling salted water for 10 min., drain. Meanwhile, melt butter and fat in top of a double boiler over direct heat. Stir in the flour, then add the milk, onion, salt, and pepper, and cook over hot water while stirring until smooth and thickened. Add minced parsley. Arrange potatoes and tuna fish in alternating layers in a greased or oiled 2 qt. casserole, pour sauce over all and bake in a moderate oven of 350 degree F for 45 mins. Serves 6. Salmon may be substituted for the tuna.

Now it is not the most appetizing looking thing in the world, but, like many a casserole, this dish much better than it looks. It basically tastes like scalloped potatoes, but with this interesting flavor added from the tuna which isn't the fishy nastiness that tuna usually gives off. The tuna also gives it some protein so it is hardy enough for a main dish (though I would suggest a salad or something to go along with it as this probably has very little nutritional value). I used only butter (no fat or oil), used thyme and some garlic pepper instead of parsley, and only boiled the potatoes for seven mins not ten but otherwise stuck to the recipe. I was worried that it would be too sloppy but the potatoes help thicken the entire thing so it was more the consistency of very thick mashed potatoes. This took a fair amount of dishes for casserole (double boiler, pot for boiling potatoes, knives, cutting boards, and a casserole), but at least I got to use my super cute double boiler. This also can be pretty messy with the tuna and white sauce.

All and all I'd say I would try this recipe again and perhaps even serve it to friends, provided any were willing to try it.

Baby!


My air plant is blooming! I totally thought it was dying. That means it will have a baby soon.

Friday, July 27, 2007

I love my aunt

Guess what my lovely aunt sent me for no-day?
She remembered me admiring the Latern Moon needle cases and baskets when she and I dragged my brother to a knitting store during my visit in May. She quite liked the cases herself (and well she has developed a taste for every thing Asian or Asian inspired recently), but as I was on a tight budget I didn't get one.
One popped up in the mail today out of the blue. She had already bought me my present so this is a great bonus. If I recall rightly, this one was even the color I liked best, black with greens and blues (not that it photographed that way ). Clever aunty. Even Pablo likes it (though he seems to like the plastic shopping bag it came wrapped in even more). Now all I need to do is dig around in one of the many plastic bins I keep my knitting stuff in and find those wandering loose needles so that they might go to their new home. Good thing I vaccumed today. :)
Thanks Reva!

Sunday, July 08, 2007

Pablo!


I still have Pablo who was supposed to be a three week guest in my house starting last Fourth of July.

A year with el gato muy loco. I can't say that I relish the catbox odor in my apartment, but I do enjoy having him around (until he attacks and wounds me). He is awfully cute, even when he is disobediently sitting on the kitchen table.

Testing!

So I have had a little bit of thing with buying old cookbooks of late, I can't seem to stop. Really I am buying anything that reminds me of my grandmother's house from cookbooks to aprons to old kitchen gear. As I was picking up a pile of vintage phamplets at the East Bay Depot yesterday with Karrie, she asked when are you going to start making recipes out of these things? Today that's when.

For my first recipe I choose one of the phamplets that I got for 25 cents at the EBD, a Diamond Walnuts advertisement recipe phamplet with no publishing date but titled The New Walnut Cook Book. I would guess from the style of type and illustrations that it would be from the mid 1950's to mid 1960's. I am not one for walnuts myself, but the drawings in the phamplet were super cute, and there was one recipe that caught my eye, Old-Time Penuche. For those of you unfamilar with penuche, it is basically a brown sugar fudge. The penuche at the Fudge House on Pier 39 reminds me of some candies my grandmother used to make when I was a tot so I thought I would give this one a go. The "beating until it is creamy" method also brings me back to watching grandma making my favorite frosting for banana cupcakes, a recipe I have yet to find.

Of course I had to alter the recipe a bit as I had neither walnuts nor enough sugar in the house to make it. (Note that this page also contained one of Sarah's favorite recipes, Rum Ball.)

Here is the recipes in its entirety in case you wish to try it (or alter it) yourself.

Old-Time Penuche

1 lb light brown sugar ( or 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar and 1 cup brown sugar, packed)
3/4 cup light cream or half-and-half
1 Tablespoon light corn syrup
2 Tablespoon butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 to 2 teaspoon grated orange rind (optional)
1 cup coarse chopped Diamond Walnuts

In a large saucepan measure all ingredients except vanilla and walnuts. Stirring constantly, heat to boiling, and boil gently to 238 degrees or until a few drops in cold water form a soft ball. (Don't worry if mixture curdles; beating will make it smooth.) Remove from heat and let stand without stirring until bottom of pan feels lukewarm; then stir in flavoring and walnuts, and beat with spoon until thick and creamy and beginning to lose its gloss. Pour into butter 8" square pan. Cut into squares while warm. Makes a little over 1 lb.

Of course right off I started messing with this recipe as I got rid of the walnuts (which kind of defeats the purpose of this cookbook but I like my desserts like I like my pets: neutered). I also halved the recipe as I didn't need that much fudge, and I didn't quite have a pound of light brown sugar. I also didn't add the orange rind, and I used whipping cream in place of either light cream or half and half. Oh and it didn't say salted or non salted butter so I used the unsalted and threw in a pinch of salt which most of the candy recipes I used before seemed to have. Also note that this recipe doesn't mention at all the temperature at which to cook it or any of the times involved with the activities. Again taking a hint from other candies I have made, I went with a medium to medium low heat. This still cooked up pretty fast, and by the time I got around to getting cold water bath to test the temperature, it was already at the soft ball stage. Of course this could also have something to do with the fact that I halved the recipe, and so the mixture got more contact with the cooking surface. I did taste the little ball of candy that came from the water ball, and it tasted exactly like these caramels my grandmother made when I was a child. I shall have to try this recipe again and make it hardball stage to see if they are similar. The part that seems to take the longest though is the waiting for the mixture to reach the lukewarm stage. I have already cleaned up all my prep dishes and have gotten most of the way through taking pictures and a post, and it is still a few minutes away from lukewarm.
When it was finally cool enough (20-30 minutes approximately), I started beating, and this stage was yet another part of the recipe that took forever (although I think it was only between 5-10 minutes). I had just about reached the point of composing a paragraph on just what I had done wrong when the gloss started to go away, and it finally stopped looking like a caramel and started looking like a fudge. And it also have the texture of fudge when I tasted it. I didn't cut it while it was warm like the recipes suggests. All and all I think this test went pretty well. I don't think there is much more I could have done better the results (which are quite tasty btw). I will note that the times I mentioned above will probably be longer if you do a full or double batch of candy. In addition to halving the recipe, not adding nuts made it so there is about a quarter of the pan full of fudge. This means I won't be eating an entire pan of fudge (again). If I were to try the recipe again, I might add some of the orange rind as that sound intriguing. I think I shall label this test a success and the recipe a keeper.
What should I try next weekend? I think I might have to buy MSG if I want to make most of the savory recipes from many of the cookbooks I have. Not that there is anything wrong with that. Breads are too much trouble for me these days as there isn't a good place in my kitchen to rise it. Perhaps another dessert, perhaps a salad. We shall have to see what the weekend brings but hopefully I should have something interesting to bring to the Firefly marathon on Saturday.

Happy cooking, and if you have a recipe for banana cupcakes that involves a white, hand-beaten frosting (which when slightly modified makes caramels), you will let me know right?

Friday, July 06, 2007

Hurrah Thanks Secret Pal!

Yes. I am a bad blogger. I have a great secret pal though, Brianna in Alaska of Mama Knits . I got this lovely hand knit purse (in PB&J). Several balls of yarn ranging from cotton to wool to some lovely alpaca wool. In colors from green to camel to red/orange to reddish brown to some lovely natural white so that I could try my hand at some dyeing. Also a cute little magnet and some lovely ribbon. All and all a great package.
Thanks Brianna!