This is something I wrote over ten years ago – gosh, how time flies!!
I wonder how many of the up-to-date gadgets we buy for our kitchens will still be in use in a hundred years time, or even fifty? When my parents first married, although my dad was a scientist, his pay was actually very low and we lived in rented accommodation, a lovely ground floor flat with a very big garden but rented, not our own. My mum didn’t go to work until my sister and I were old enough to look after ourselves for an hour or so when we got home from school, so as a family we were always very careful with money.
My dad had the use of all of the garden of the flat, so half of it was a vegetable patch and he grew everything we needed. My mum was a great cook, and in those days there was no such things as convenience or ready meals; we didn’t even have a fridge, let alone a freezer. She had two cookery books, Mrs Beeton and the Be-Ro flour baking book.
Looking at my copy of Mrs Beeton which was printed in 1912, I was interested to see these adverts in the front cover. We often had steamed puddings, both savoury (steak and kidney) and sweet (jam, treacle or fruit) but they were just cooked in a pudding basin, wrapped and tied in a cloth and boiled for hours on end… we didn’t have the sophisticated “Queen’s” pudding boiler or a gourmet pudding steamer. We didn’t have a separator, although very useful, and although we had lots of cake tins of different sizes – some of which I still have, we didn’t have sprung tins.
However, we did have a mincer; it wasn’t a slicer as shown here, although there were attachments which would slice; the mincer was principally used to mince left over meat from the Sunday roast, to make rissoles and shepherd’s or cottage pie. I can see my mum now, whizzing the handle round so the pinky-grey mince came churning out, and then feeding in carrots and onions to add to the mix.
We recently acquired a going-free-to-a-good-home Mouli purée maker… I remarked that it would save the electricity used with an electric blender, and of course, in past times, equipment such as mincers used no power except muscle-power!

Yes … those savoury and fruit puddings made with suet which steamed away wrapped in cloth for hours.
And the hand worked mincer …. a fascination of mine, mincing up raw meat and for that matter the roast left overs.
I took my turn at the machine but would soon get bored and escape.
Not so the endless standing with arms outstretched while mother wound up wool into balls.
In our house there was a clear distinction in who made the mince stew. Dad added cornflour and made a heavy, thick mass which sat on the plate, while mother’s was lighter made with just gravy or Nana’s which was equally lighter but with the addition of peas from the garden and cloves.
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Yes, I actually bought a retro mincer – the problem was the clamps on one were too close together for the table, and on the other I was worried about it damaging the table despite pads because it had to be clamped so tightly!
I’m interested in the addition of cloves to savour dishes – we had them in puddings and fruit pies, but used in savory dishes isn’t what mum did – I absolutely love the flavour of cloves, so that will be an addition in future!
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Yep Nama put them in apple sause and apple pies
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perfect partners, apple and clove! Maybe they have a detective agency for small domestic difficulties – Clove & Apple, they’ll solve the mystery of your deflated soufflé, and the puzzle of the carrotless carrot cake!
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