Category Archives: collections

Vintage Victuals: Queen of Puddings

as seen on Instagram

There are so many (millions?) of recipes contained within my cherished cookbooks, it’s difficult to choose which to feature here. I don’t want to focus solely on “unfortunate” combinations of ingredients, but at the same time I don’t often remember to photograph those I do make. What to do? Well, today concludes the first week of the London Games, so let’s return to the London-published Cookery For Girls (19550, 1955). There are a number of recipes in here that I look forward to testing, but let’s start with one that will use up my last 2 eggs.

Queen of Puddings, from the book Cookery For Girls, pub. 1955

Queen of Puddings
½ pint milk
1 oz. butter
1 teacup breadcrumbs
grated rind of 1 lemon
1 oz. sugar
2 eggs
Jam
Heat oven. Grease pie-dish. Crumble bread into bowl and add sugar. Warm milk and butter and pour over bread. Soak 10 minutes. Separate yolks and whites, having whites on a plate. Add yolk to mixture in bowl. Mix all ingredients together and pour into pie dish. Bake in a moderate oven (350°F) for ½ hour. Remove from oven and spread top with jam. Beat whites stiffly, fold in 4 ozs. castor sugar, pile meringue on top of pudding. Bake slowly till meringue is pale brown.

Note that the meringue is made with 4 ozs. of sugar which goes unmentioned in the list of ingredients. Also, that a “teacup” of breadcrumbs is somewhat arbitrary, but approximately 6 fluid ounces. I used a ½ cup measure for this preparation. In addition, the reader has to flip to page 17 to determine what a “moderate” oven temperature is, but I’ve included that rather necessary bit of information for you inline with the directions. As for spreading the top with jam: I used about ¼ cup for a thin, but flavorful, layer. Apply while the pudding is still warm enough to melt the jam for an even layer. “Bake slowly until pale brown” took about 20 minutes at 350° at this mile-high altitude.

hot out of the first stint in the oven

Baking a meringue slowly at this temperature will result in an overall beige-ing rather than the white-with-brown-tips that we are currently accustomed to as a pie topping

My choice of apricot jam leads to a rather monochromatic pudding

Result: I quote the boyfriend as saying, “This is damn tasty.” He also made some pun on “Queen,” but that was 12 hours ago and my memory isn’t that good. My notes for repeating this recipe: less sugar in the meringue, and maybe a smaller-in-diameter baking dish to lend a deeper structure to the finished dessert. Maybe it’s supposed to rise, but maybe not. This one didn’t, and looks shallow.

Go forth and bakeify!

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Bomb Girls

 

Set in the 1940s, Bomb Girls tells the remarkable stories of the women who risked their lives in a munitions factory building bombs for the Allied forces fighting on the European front. The series delves into the lives of these exceptional women – peers, friends and rivals – who find themselves thrust into new worlds and changed profoundly as they are liberated from their home and social restrictions.

What does this have to do with anything? Well, Bomb Girls, starring Meg Tilly and Jodi Balfour, has a direct tie with Tiddleywink Vintage. The original series debuted in Canada in January, but Shaw Media has picked it up and the wardrobe department has selected one—so far—of my dresses (as well as a gorgeous nightgown from the shop of my friend at Theda Bara’s Vintage Boudoir) to use in the production of the second season. Woo!

2-Minute Video: The Wardrobe of Bomb Girls

Season 1 will begin airing in the U.S. on REELZ (check your Dish/DirecTV listings) in September. You can watch a preview as well as the official trailer at the REELZ site.

All photos courtesy of GlobalTV/Bomb Girls

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Vintage Victuals: Christmas In July! Noel Glazed Ham

Noel Glazed Ham, 1967

“Be different! This year make the pacesetter of your company get-together an easy-carve boneless ham roll, glazed and trimmed in the grand French manner.”

Not only does this recipe (from a 1967 Family Circle publication) take 2 days to make, but in the end, you wind up with a baked ham frosted with gelled mayonnaise.

No, YOU try it. I made the ketchup pie, remember?

Noel Glazed Ham
Bake meat first to bring out its juicy-best flavor, then glaze, French style. Only last-minute job is to arrange platter.
Makes 12 servings, plus enough for a second-day treat.

7 to 8 pounds boned rolled ready-to-eat ham
½ red skin apple
4 green-onion tops
8 to 10 whole sprigs of watercress
2 cups cream for whipping
1 tablespoon dried tarragon leaves
½ teaspoon ground ginger
7 envelopes unflavored gelatin
1 cup cold water
2 cups mayonnaise or salad dressing
½ cup lemon juice
4 cups apple cider

1. Two days before your party, place ham on a rack in a large shallow baking pan. (Do not add water or cover pan.)
2. Bake in slow oven (325°) 1 hour and 15 minutes. Lift onto a large platter; cool, wrap, and chill overnight.
3. The next day, pare skin from apple in wide strips; split green-onion tops. Cut tiny flower shapes from each with a truffle cutter; place cutouts and watercress between sheets of damp paper toweling to keep moist.
4. Heat cream with tarragon and ginger just to scalding in a small saucepan; cool to lukewarm; strain through cheesecloth into a small bowl.
5. Soften 4 envelopes of the gelatin in water in a medium-size saucepan; heat slowly, stirring constantly, until gelatin dissolves; remove from heat. Beat in mayonnaise or salad dressing and lemon juice; stir in cream mixture. Let stand at room temperature.
6. Soften remaining 3 envelopes gelatin in 1 cup of the cider in a small saucepan; heat slowly, stirring constantly, until gelatin dissolves; stir in remaining 3 cups cider. Let stand at room temperature for Step 9.
7. Set ham on a wire rack in a large shallow pan. Pour about ½ of the mayonnaise mixture into a small bowl; place in a pan of ice and water to speed setting. Chill, stirring several times, just until as thick as an unbeaten egg white; spoon over ham to coat evenly. Chill ham about 10 minutes, or until coating is set.
8. Repeat Step 7 with remaining mayonnaise mixture, half at a time, to make a thick coating on ham. When top layer is just sticky-firm, press apple and onion cutouts on top of ham and watercress along side to make a festive pattern. Lift ham onto a clean platter, Chill until coating is firm. Wash pan and rack.
9. Pour about half of the cider mixture into a small bowl; place in a pan of ice and water to speed setting; chill until as thick as unbeaten egg white.
10. Return ham to rack in pan; spoon thickened cider mixture over top to coat evenly; chill until firm. Repeat with remaining cider mixture. Spoon any that runs off ham into a shallow pan and chill until firm for garnish. Chill ham until party time.
11. When ready to serve, place ham on a large carving board. Frame with lemon leaves, if you wish. Cut extra gelatin into tiny cubes and pile around ham. Carve ham into slices about ¼ inch thick, as needed.

As a warm-weather treat, this does have the advantage of being served cold. And since it calls for ready-to-eat ham, I think you could skip the part where you bake it for 75 minutes, then chill it again. Maybe that step is required to dry out the ham enough so that the mayonnaise sticks better. Oh yeah, that’s an appetizing thought.

Um, bon appétit?

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Household Hints (1944) AND VOTE FOR ME

EDIT: Just as I was about to publish this rather dry little post today, a text came through on my phone: “Are you aware that your website is listed as a contestant for Lulu’s Vintage people’s choice top 10 vintage clothing websites?” NO, NO I DID NOT. I realize that any ol’ person can write in any ol’ shop, but it is SUCH AN INCREDIBLE HONOR to know that one (or more) of my customers or colleagues submitted Tiddleywink for this annual competition! To be mingling with such fabulous company is just blowing my mind right now. And hey, yeah, vote for me! I do my best to find you pretty, affordable items, to research them thoroughly, and to list them with honesty and integrity. My shop is pretty terrific. :)

I now return you to today’s regularly scheduled programming.

Handy Hints from The Work Basket, Volume 9, No. 4 (January, 1944)

  • To prepare sour milk quickly for use in baking soda recipes use 1 1-3 [sic] tablespoons vinegar in a cup, adding the sweet milk until the combination of milk and vinegar equals the quantity of sour milk required. Mix well. The resulting sour milk will react with ½ teaspoon soda. It can be used in place of sour milk or buttermilk in any baking soda recipe.
  • When buying buckles or buttons to be used on wash dresses, don’t get the kinds that are glued on to the shanks. They will come off in laundering.
  • After towels have been wrung out of last rinse, fold them as you would to put away on shelves, then run them back through wringer. Unfold once and lay towel over line, with crease of fold running along the line. They dry straight and are ready to be put on shelves.
  • To avoid wrinkles in the legs of trousers caused by hanging across wire clothes hangers, cut a piece of fairly stiff cardboard two inches wide and two inches longer than the rack. Notch in one inch from each end and fit to rack. Trousers hung over this do not wrinkle even when left on for months.
  • To make sure fudge will reach its destination in a good creamy condition, pour the warm candy into the box which you have previously lined with waxed paper. Allow to harden without cutting. Seal the top with Scotch cellulose tape.
  • Cook liver first over high temperature to sear. This keeps in the juices. Then lower heat.
  • The flavor of an apple pie is greatly improved if the juice of half a lemon is squeezed over the apples after they have been placed on the lower crust.
  • Buttons which have been torn off children’s rompers or underclothing can be replaced by sewing the button securely to a small piece of strong tape. Push the button through the hole, leaving the new square on the wrong side of the garment. Fell this down to the garment beneath the button. Thus you are patching as well as sewing on the button.

Tomorrow: Christmas in July! A delightfully awful mid-century “glazed” ham that should never grace any holiday table. 

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Handbag Week! Day 5 (finally)

Our week of handbags continues, in chronological order. We lingered on the ’40s and ’50s this week, but today, our final day, the pace is back on track. Get ready for a whirlwind of purses bringing us up into the 2000s! Clicking on any image will bring up a somewhat larger view for detail study.

Evening bag with white and green rhinestones, Caméléon, 1960s

Bamboo handbag with textile interior, Italy, 1970s

Brass and velvet box bag, Lou Taylor, 1980s

Round two-tone leather shoulder bag, French Moon, 1996

Leather bucket bag with unique handle, Aisa Lafour, 2003

This wraps up our Handbag series, and I hope you’ve enjoyed it. I’ll be back on Monday with…something!

CREDITS: Photography by Jenna Bascom and Ken Music Photography. All handbags shown here are from the collection of Tassenmuseum Hendrikje/Museum of Bags and Purses, Amsterdam.

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