Not too sure of this one…

More from the National Mark Calendar of Cooking… I mentioned yesterday that many of the recipes are very practical and still to our taste today… however, some are not really… This is what i wrote some time ago about some March recipes:

The National Mark Calendar of Cooking was written in the early 1930’s and the edition I have is from 1936. As you might imagine it is a season recipe book, following the months and the fresh produce available. I have tried many of the recipes and enjoyed nearly all of them. However… there are a few which just sound too unusual and not to modern tastes…

For example, I love Brussels sprouts, and all the new and different recipes I have tried for them, from salads to stir fries I have enjoyed. The National Mark cookery book has Brussels sprouts au gratin, yes, very nice, Brussels sprouts with chestnuts, yes especially nice at Christmas time, and Brussels sprouts purée in the March list of recipes which actually seems to be Brussels sprouts soup… I’m not too sure…

Here it is:

Brussels sprouts purée

  • sprouts
  • 1 oz flour
  • 1 oz butter
  • 1 small onion finely chopped
  • 1¼ pints of milk and water
  • pepper and salt
  • fried bread or toast diced
  1. fry the onion in the butter but do not let it brown
  2. add the flour, cook for a few minutes then add the milk and water and simmer for 5 minutes
  3. prepare and sieve the sprouts (I guess that means cook and sieve them,  or use left over already cooked sprouts)
  4. add to the soup and season
  5. serve very hot with the toast or fried bread
  6. spinach soup can be made in exactly the same way

There is rather a nice little note ‘with the aid of National Mark canned vegetables, a variety of soups can be prepared all the year round in little more than ten minutes should an emergency arise.’

My featured image is of delicious Brussels sprouts with chorizo and black pudding! … and here is the recipe:

https://loiselsden.wordpress.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=19827&action=edit

 

2 Comments

  1. David Lewis

    I love Brussels Sprouts but can’t seem to be able to grow them.I could eat them seven days a week but my wife insisted that we have something else so she got parsnips. At first I hated them but a girl at the YMCA told me that you have to try them at least twelve times before you can say with conviction that you really don’t like them. Now they are one of my faves behind guess what?

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    1. Lois

      I love sprouts too – the only one in the family so we rarely have them. I once had a marvellous recipe for curried parsnip chutney (sounds weird but it was delicious!) I have never been able to find it since, and others I have tried have not been as nice… Whenever we have a roast dinner my daughter loves to have honey roast parsnips!

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