Showing posts with label frozen dessert. Show all posts

Vanilla Ice Cream with Marshmallows (c. 1931) ★★★★★


Today I have a menu for "Christmas Dinner," taken from The Settlement Cookbook. This cookbook was originally published in 1901 and was so successful that a further 34 editions were published. Today's excerpt comes from the edition published around 1931, which seems to be one of the more popular editions. In this edition the author, Lizzie Black Kander, includes several menu suggestions, including ones for holidays such as Christmas, St. Patrick's Day, Valentine's Day, Lent, and Washington's Birthday. Since making the whole Christmas menu would be a little...overwhelming, I chose to make just one dish, marshmallow ice cream. The menu didn't indicate a specific flavour, but the book gives a few varieties, including chocolate, coffee, orange, and New York.
What caught my attention while reading this cookbook was that it was written by a Jewish woman who wanted to assimilate young Jewish girls into mainstream American society. One might see Kander's fight for Americanization of immigrants as a negative thing - after all, she was encouraging the abandonment of traditional culinary values. However, it would be difficult not to describe Kander as a strong, courageous woman who actively sought out her goals (despite the fact that she proclaimed the importance of the woman in the domestic sphere).
The focus of the cookbook explains the emphasis on American holidays in the menus section. However, I did notice a few traditional Jewish recipes throughout the book, such as matzo balls, matzo pudding, and kugel. There are also a number of German and Eastern European influences present - in fact, the book is one of the largest collections of Jewish and German recipes published in the United States.
The Settlement Cookbook was also a charity cookbook - its aim was to raise funds for the Jewish Settlement House in Milwaukee, Wisconsin ("settlement work" was a term used to describe charitable work among immigrants). The success of the book meant that charities in Milwaukee benefited from the book's sales for over 75 years.
Overall, Kander's work was extremely influential in Milwaukee and the United States as a piece of socio-cultural history. Indeed, it is still influencing North American society today, in facsimile and new revised editions.

Original Recipe:



The Verdict:
This ice cream is ridiculously creamy. I was shocked at how silky it was on my tongue. I liked the flavour, but I think I might have preferred the chocolate variety a little more. Mr. Man thought it was cream cheese at first. He didn't like it, but that's because he doesn't like marshmallows.
I also happened to accidentally burn a little bit of the mixture while it was on the stove, but it actually gave a nice toasted marshmallow flavour. Really, this recipe is nice the way it is, but next time I would toast the marshmallows beforehand.

Modernized Recipe:
(Adapted from The Way to A Man's Heart ... The Settlement Cook Book)

1 cup MILK
20 MARSHMALLOWS
1 cup CREAM or EVAPORATED MILK
1 teaspoon VANILLA

1. In a medium saucepan, heat the milk. Cut the marshmallows into small pieces and add to the hot milk, stirring until dissolved.
2. To the saucepan, add the vanilla. Let cool.
3. Whip the cream until stiff peaks form. Gently fold into the cooled marshmallow mixture.
4. Put the ice cream mixture into the freezer to set or follow the directions on your ice cream maker.

-----
Sources

Fritz, Angela. "Lizzie Black Kander and Culinary Reform in Milwaukee, 1880 - 1920."Wisconsin Magazine of History 87.3 (2004): 36-49. Wisconsin Historical Society. 2007. Web. 20 Dec. 2012. <http://content.wisconsinhistory.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/wmh/id/42933/show/42910>.

"Lizzie Black Kander." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, 12 May 2012. Web. 20 Dec. 2012. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lizzie_Black_Kander>.

"The Settlement Cook Book." Feeding America. Web. 20 Dec. 2012. <http://digital.lib.msu.edu/projects/cookbooks/html/books/book_52.cfm>.



4 Weeks of Yuletide: Recipe Round-up



The blogs I have listed on my sidebar to the right have some great holiday recipes. I've saved you the hassle by going through and compiling them all here in one post. Some of my upcoming yuletide recipe posts will also be from this list.

Hey, My Mom Used to Make That!
For a Perfect Egg Nog (1936)
Old Time Fruit Cake (Undated)
No-Baking Festive Fruit Cake (1957)
JELL-O Gelatin Jigglers (1980s)
Butterscotch Rolled Cookies (Undated)
Holiday Chocolate Butter Cookies (1992)
Butterscotch Yule Log (1967)
Irresistible Peanut Butter Cookies (1992)
Hot Dr Pepper (1964)
Campbelled Eggs (Undated)
Midori Melon Liqueur Cocktails (1979)
Jellied Cranberry Salad/Cranberry Noel Dessert/Cranberry Orange Relish (Undated)
Bacardi Rum Cake (1992)
Domino Gingerbread Men (1992)
Le Punch (1979)

Vintage Ads (You may need to join the group to see some entries)
Fruit Cocktail Eggnog Pie (1956?)
Trim-a-Tree Dip (1967)
"Philly" Pate (Undated)
Borden's Egg Nog (1951)
Atora's Tough Guy Christmas Pudding (1961)

Dinner Is Served 1972
Holiday Glogg (1973)

Historic Cookery
New Year's Cake (1796)
Twelfth Cakes (1801)

The Old Foodie
Vintage Christmas Recipes (1553 - 1944)
Christmas Charlotte Russe/Bethlehems (1912)
The Christmas Pudding (1852)
A Chilly Christmas Dinner/Potato Hash (1866)
Christmas Bread (1891/1897)
A Bill of Fare for Christmas Day (1674)
Christmas Guests: Menus for Three Days (1930)/Watercress and Celery Stuffing (1956)
Mince Pies (1868)/Roast Goose (1887)
Plum Pudding (1931)
Creole Coffee Pudding (1944)
Christmas Jelly (1904)
Christmas Ice-Cream Pudding (1951)/Christmas Trees on Ice Cream (1952)
Plum Pudding Glace (1879)
Christmas Cakes for Good Children (1870)
Christmas Ham Recipes (1882 - 1953)
Egg Nogg (1862)

Four Pounds Flour
Another Christmas Cookey (1796)
Charles Dicken's Punch (1847)
A Dollar Christmas Dinner (1878)

Gram's Recipe Box
Vintage Holiday Recipes

The Mid-Century Menu
Snowman Cut-up Cake (1975)
Party Cheese Ball (1971)
Dear Santa Cake (1956)
Pork Cake (1950s)
Chill-and-Bake Cranberry Cake (1961)
Cheezy Beans and Onions/Creamy Pumpkin Pie/Jiffy Quick Dressing/Snappy Sweet Potatoes (1967)
Chocolate Marshmallow Punch (1971)

Researching Food History - Cooking and Dining
Black Cake (1823)/Fruit Cake (1840)/Christmas cake (1919)/Black Cake (1845)

Vintage Recipe Cards
Crispy Gingerbread Cookies (1984)
Candy Cane Cookies (1971)
White Fruitcake (1973)
Quick Holiday Fruitcake (1971)
Christmas Confections (1971)
Country Christmas Bread (1984)
Christmas Cake Cookies (1973)
Steamed Holiday Pudding (1971)
Party Cheese Ball (1973)
Shrimp Christmas Tree/Eggnog/Eggnog Cooler (1977)
Outback Ice Christmas Pudding(1972)
Sleigh Cake (1967)
Santas Whiskers (1979)
Christmas Candle Salad (1958)


Banana Split (1907) ★★★★

 August 25th is Banana Split Day!
Okay, okay, so apparently Banana Split Day is also August 10th and June 8th. But we're going to celebrate it today with an old fashioned recipe.

Three places generally claim to have invented the banana split, all in the early twentieth century - Latrobe, Pennsylvania; Boston, Massachusetts; and Wilmington, Ohio. However, we can date these three stories and it seems that a Dr. David Strickler in Pennsylvania was the likely inventor. Strickler was a young apprentice pharmacist who enjoyed concocting recipes at the pharmacy's soda fountain. One day in 1904 he invented the banana split and the dessert soon caught on with local college students.
A year or two after Strickler's invention, an ice cream entrepreneur named Stinson Thomas also came up with the idea of the banana split. In a magazine he was quoted as saying, "My trade here is always looking for something new and so, one day it occurred to me that I might prepare a popular fountain beverage with a banana. I sent my boy out to buy half a dozen bananas, and when he returned I cut off the ends of a banana, split it open, put a portion of ice cream on top and a spoonful of crushed strawberries. It certainly looked swell and I believed that the public would like it." Thomas's version used an unpeeled banana - although Thomas quickly realized that the ladies the dessert was so popular with preferred their bananas peeled.
Lastly, we have Ernest Hazard, a restaurant owner in Wilmington, Ohio. The city claims that in 1907 Hazard developed the banana split as a method of attracting college students during the winter months.
While it seems obvious that Strickler was the true inventor of the banana split, it is still possible that the same recipe was created at the same time in different places by different people. This situation is similar among many inventions.

The banana split as we know it today traditionally includes a split banana with one scoop each of vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry ice cream. The vanilla ice cream is topped with pineapple topping, the chocolate with chocolate syrup, and the strawberry with strawberry topping. The whole thing is then covered with whipped cream, nuts, and crowned with a maraschino cherry.
However, examining historical recipes, advertisements, and magazines shows that this may not have been the original banana split recipe. The recipe below from a 1907 newspaper advertisement only includes vanilla ice cream and excludes any syrupy toppings. Some similar recipes over the next few years do not specify an ice cream flavour or simply call for vanilla, but it still doesn't mean that the triple flavour split wasn't happening elsewhere.


Original Recipe:
Banana Split. A generous cone of vanilla ice cream, resting on a prime, ripe banana—split lengthwise. Topped with fresh, chopped nuts—and a rich red cherry, 10 Cents.
Don M. Munger & Co.
LOGAN HOUSE PHARMACY. 




The Verdict:
Well it's certainly nothing like the banana split we know today. Actually, this reminded me a bit of the Peter Pan Dessert I made a while ago. But at least this one has an appropriate amount of ice cream.I liked this split. It was nice and simple. I used chopped almonds and they were tasty; likewise, the cherry was a nice burst of sweetness and I wished there were more. It's not as fancy as a triple-scoop split with whipped cream and fruity sauces, but it's still a nice way to dress up some plain ice cream.


Modernized Recipe:
(Adapted from Daily Courier, found at The Big Apple)

1 BANANA
1 large scoop VANILLA ICE CREAM
NUTS, chopped
1 CHERRY

1. Carefully peel the banana and split it lengthwise. Place it in a long dish.
2. Fill the split of the banana with a large scoop of vanilla ice cream. 
3. Top with fresh, chopped nuts and a cherry. Serve.


Frozen Passion (1972) ★★★

I'm kind of obsessed with ice cream - even more so since I got my ice cream maker a few months ago. Here's a recipe from the '70s that I found on the great website Click Americana. It seems to be from an advertisement featuring Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk and the Proctor-Silex Electric Ice Cream Freezer. I decided to go with cola for this recipe, because it's one of my favourite pop flavours and because it was included as a suggestion in the advertisement.


Original Recipe:
World’s simplest recipe: Pour 2 cans of Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk and two 28 oz. bottles (or four 12 oz. cans) of soda pop into freezer drum and let the Proctor-Silex Freezer do the rest. Makes two quarts of Frozen Passion in minutes.

If you don’t have an electric ice cream freezer, make Frozen Passion in the freezer compartment of your refrigerator. Pick up a recipe at your supermarket. For small families, cut the recipe in half.


Here's a more recent version of the recipe, from Quick & Easy Desserts (1986), an advertising cookbook for Eagle Brand:


The Verdict:
The taste of this wasn't bad, but it was a little weird to me. The sweetened condensed milk had a very distinct flavour and was really sweet. A bit too sweet for me, I think. By the way, I halved this recipe and it baaaaarely fit into my ice cream maker. It makes a lot! That Proctor-Silex Freezer must have been a beast!
I wonder how this would taste with root beer, orange soda, or even something really tart like lemonade or grapefruit soda. Or maybe cream soda? Anyway, what I liked best was how easy this recipe is. You literally pour in two ingredients and then sit back and relax. It's completely unhealthy, but that's what you get for convenience I guess. I'm giving this 3 stars mostly because I didn't like the flavour combination I chose. With the right pop and perhaps a little less sweetened condensed milk to ease up on the sugar, I think this could bump up to 4.

Modernized Recipe:
(Adapted from Click Americana)
2 cans SWEETENED CONDENSED MILK
56 ounces SODA POP

1. In a very large bowl, blend together the two ingredients.
2. Pour into an ice cream maker and freeze according to directions. Alternatively, pour into a large pan and freeze, stirring every 30 minutes until no liquid remains.


Tutti Frutti Ice (1920) ★★★

I love that this recipe is "naturally" gluten-free and vegan. It's also really simple to make! If you don't want to bother with making your own almond milk, you can just use plain store bought...I did ;)

Original Recipe:

Tutti Frutti Ice
3/4 pound blanched sweet almonds 
12 bitter almonds 
2 pints sugar syrup
1 teaspoonful vanilla
fruit, either fresh or preserved peaches, pineapples, plums, cherries or apricots

Pound the almonds with a little cold water very fine; pour over 1 pint water and let them stand for 1/2 hour; then press them through a hair sieve; mix this almond milk with the sugar syrup and vanilla; put this into a freezer and freeze; when frozen take the paddle of the freezer out and put in different kinds of fruit cut into small dice, either fresh or preserved peaches, pineapples, plums, cherries or apricots.

Cold Sugar Syrup for Fruit Ice
Dissolve 1 pound sugar in 1 pint cold water and use as directed. This is the ordinary syrup of 32 degrees used for fruit ice. If a thicker syrup is wanted dissolve 1 pound sugar in 1/2 pint water.


The Verdict:
This got nice and creamy in my ice cream maker, and then instantly melted into a syrupy mess when I added the warm fruit. Oops. Anyway, almond isn't my favourite flavor, but this isn't bad. Little Y liked it quite a bit. I wish I had chopped the fruit all the same size and smaller though, I think that would've been nicer and easier to eat. It was also reaaaaally sweet and sugary to the point where it was too much, so although the sugar syrup makes enough for half a batch, it's probably a better amount for a full batch. Overall, it was okay, but I won't make it again because we're not really almond lovers.

Modernized Recipe:
(Adapted from Desserts and Salads)

Ice Cream
3/4 pound SWEET ALMONDS, blanched
12 BITTER ALMONDS
or
2 cups ALMOND MILK, unsweetened
4 cups SUGAR SYRUP
1 teaspoon VANILLA EXTRACT
~1 1/2 cups PEACHES, PINEAPPLES, PLUMS, CHERRIES, and APRICOTS, chopped

Cold Sugar Syrup
1 pound SUGAR
1 cup COLD WATER

1. First, make the sugar syrup by mixing together the sugar and cold water. The sugar will probably settle to the bottom, but that's okay. Stir in the almond milk and vanilla.
2. Pour the almond milk mixture into your ice cream maker and freeze according to manufacturer's directions, or freeze it in a pan, stirring every 30 minutes. Once frozen, but not hard, fold in the chopped fruit. Set in the freezer to harden before serving.


Milk Smoothies (1947) ★★

Did you know that Waring introduced the first blender in North America?

Original Recipe:

The Verdict:
I decided to just try three of the smoothies, because the others seem pretty obvious taste-wise, considering the small number of ingredients.

Pineapple Mint: This combination looked really weird and it tasted really weird. But not bad. The shake was really like frothy milk, and I much prefer my shakes to be icy and thick like soft serve ice cream. Also, the pineapple flavour could have been stronger. The flavour combination was actually kind of nice. To improve this, I would use more pineapple and freeze it beforehand, to make a thicker texture. Oh, and I didn't put in marshmallows, but I like sweet shakes, so I think they would have been yummy!

Marshmallow Mint: Marshmallows in a smoothie! But gross, so very gross. Because of the ice it was like watery, vaguely minty, sweet milk. Ew. If there was no ice it might have been like frothy minty milk, which I guess is okay. I think the best thing to do with this would have been to put in a bunch of ice cream, to make a marshmallow mint milkshake, rather than a smoothie.

Chocolate Mint: Annnnd, my blender broke. Sorry folks, haha. I'd wager it would have been like liquidy chocolate mint milk though. Probably would be a lot better with chocolate ice cream instead of ice.

Overall, I would recommend adjusting the amounts for the ice/milk/fruit, because these recipes really just make up liquidy flavoured milk. I have transcribed the original recipes below, so just be aware and don't follow it as written.

Modernized Recipe:
(Adapted from 340 Recipes for the new Waring Blender)

Apricot
1 cup MILK
1 cup CANNED APRICOTS
or
1/2 cup DRIED APRICOTS, soaked
3 tablespoons SUGAR
2 tablespoons SHERRY

Chocolate Mint
1 cup MILK
3/4 cup BITTERSWEET CHOCOLATE SYRUP
4 drops PEPPERMINT EXTRACT

Banana
1 cup MILK
1 medium RIPE BANANA

Marshmallow Mint
1 cup MILK
4 MARSHMALLOWS
4 drops PEPPERMINT EXTRACT

Peach
1 cup MILK
1 cup PEACHES, sliced
or
1/2 cup FROZEN PEACHES, diced
2 tablespoons SHERRY

Plum
1 cup MILK
1 cup RED PLUMS, pitted
1/4 cup SHERRY or PORT
A dash of ANGOSTURA BITTERS

Pineapple Mint
1 cup MILK
1 cup PINEAPPLE, diced or crushed
2 drops PEPPERMINT EXTRACT

Pineapple
1 cup MILK
1 cup PINEAPPLE, diced or crushed

Peanut
1 cup MILK
1/4 cup PEANUT BUTTER
or
1/2 cup PEANUTS, roasted and hulled

Prune
1 cup MILK
1/2 cup PRUNES, pitted and soaked
1 tablespoon MOLASSES

Strawberry
1 cup MILK
1 pint STRAWBERRIES
4 tablespoons SUGAR
or
1 cup STRAWBERRIES, frozen

Melon
1 cup MILK
1 cup HONEYDEW or CANTALOUPE, diced

1. Place all ingredients in the blender, starting with the milk. Add one cup of ice.
2. Blend until combined, up to 2 minutes.
3. If desired, add 1 cup of ice cream or 2 marshmallows.


Frozen Spiced Punch (c. 1923) ★★★★

I've had my ice cream maker (thanks to Mr. Man for that birthday gift!) sitting in the freezer for months now, and I keep forgetting to use it! So when I came across this unique frozen dessert, I knew it was time to finally pull it out and make something. I ended up messing it up a bit, so I poured the half-frozen punch into a 9x9 pan and froze it overnight. Dessert for breakfast anyone? It's got fruit, so it's healthy, right?!

Original Recipe:
Something entirely different in the way of a frozen dessert can be made by making frozen spiced punch according to the accompanying directions. A dessert of this kind is a fitting conclusion to a meal that is somewhat hearty and varied in its nature.

Sufficient to serve six.

6 cloves
2-inch stick cinnamon
1 quart water
2 cups sugar
1/2 cup pineapple juice
1/2 cup orange juice
1/2 cup lemon juice
4 drops wintergreen oil

Put the cloves and cinnamon into the water, place over the fire, bring to the boiling point, and then add the sugar. Cook together for a few minutes, remove from the fire, and cool. Add the pineapple, orange, and lemon juice, strain, add the wintergreen oil, and freeze.

The Verdict:
Oddly...this tasted like rootbeer? Like a really fresh, fruity root beer. Totally was NOT expecting that!
(Okay, I looked up root beer and apparently some common flavours include clove, cinnamon, and wintergreen, so there you go)
I think I overdid the wintergreen juuuust a tad, though. I always second guess myself and end up adding too much of something or cooking something just a bit extra...*sigh*. It got really strong after freezing too, so don't be afraid to be a bit stingy with ingredients. But this is good! It's like a fruity, root beer-y, christmas-y granita. Yum!

Modernized Recipe:
(Adapted from Woman's Institute Library of Cookery, Volume 4)

6 CLOVES (was strong, try with 3-4?)
1 2-inch CINNAMON STICK
4 cups WATER
2 cups SUGAR
1/2 cup PINEAPPLE JUICE
1/2 cup ORANGE JUICE (~ 1/2 a large orange)
1/2 cup LEMON JUICE (~ 1 medium lemon)
4 drops WINTERGREEN OIL (~ 1/8 teaspoon or less)

1. In a medium saucepan, heat the water, cloves, and cinnamon stick until boiling. Add the sugar and cook until dissolved.
2. Remove the water from the heat and let cool. Stir in the remaining ingredients.
3. Freeze in an ice cream maker according to manufacturer's directions or in a large pan in the freezer, scraping every 30 minutes until no liquid remains.