Cook-O-Rama! Part Two

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Ultramatic

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Formally Recipes: Old and New.  An update of one of my earliest threads. Recipes from vintage cookbooks, food product recipe pamphlets and magazines. While the emphasis is on vintage, new recipes are welcomed also. When available, I will post the name of the publication and year published with the recipe. Food product advertisements containing recipes will continue to be posted in the Vintage Food Advertisements series. As usual, I will start a new part when posts hit 100.

 

Get ready, get set, EAT!

 

 

Recipes: Old and New

http://www.automaticwasher.org/cgi-bin/TD/TD-VIEWTHREAD.cgi?36927 
 
In response to a post in part 1: quark, tvorog/творог, syr — all of these are fairly common in Atlanta.  I would think that cottage cheese would not quite fit the bill; it certainly isn’t very sour, and it has curds that are much like actual cheese.

 

I love tvorog on a bagel, just like cream cheese.  I always sprinkle it with coarse salt.  SO GOOD!
 
 

 

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<h1 class="posttitle"><span style="font-size: 24pt;">Maultaschen Swabian Pockets Recipe</span></h1>

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Do you know the authentic Maultaschen Swabian Pockets Recipe?  This local food specialty from the South of Germany, Swabia, are filled pockets or ravioli with meat and/or vegetable.
The classic filling is a mix of spinach and ground beef. Some recipes are using bratwurst filling, and some are without meat. There are different ways how to serve them. They taste delicious in a beef broth or fried in the pan with roasted onions or bread crumbs. Home made Maultaschen requires some cooking skills and time. You would need a ravioli cutter and a wide enough wooden board - In Germany you use special baking boards that can be easily  adjusted at the table's edge so they won't move around. Happy Cooking!

 



<h2>Ingredients Maultaschen Swabian Pockets Recipe </h2>
Dough
350 g flour
1/2 tsp salt
3-4 eggs
1 tbsp vinegar

 

For the Filling:
150 g fresh or 100g frozen spinach
1 onion
1 1/2  German bun (some days old, not fresh)
200 ml warm milk

 

200 g ground pork or beef
2 tbsp parsley (chopped)
2 eggs, salt, pepper, nutmeg
1.5 l beef broth or water
fresh ground nutmeg and pepper

<h2>Cooking Instructions Maultaschen Swabian Pockets Recipe</h2>
- Beat eggs, 3 tbsp water, vinegar with a whisk and add bit by bit the flour; knead it then until you get a firm, smooth dough.
- Cover dough or wrap it it in foil and let rest for 30 minutes.
- Fresh spinach: Wash thoroughly, remove hard parts like stems and roots. Defrost frozen spinach.

 

For the Filling
- Soak roll in milk and squeeze all milk out. Bun should not have any liquid in it.
- Peel onions and chop it finely.
- Melt butter in a skillet; add onions, chopped parsley, spinach and bun; saute for some minutes
- Add ground beef, spice with salt, pepper and nutmeg, mix well, then take off  and let cool off a bit.
- Now roll the dough (on a wooden board with some flour) and with a special roller make 15cmx15cm (6inches x6inches) squares. Dough should not be thicker than 3mm (1/4 inch).
- Brush water or egg white on the edges.
- Place 1-2 tbsp of the filling on each square.
- Fold the squares to a triangle and press the edges firmly together. Now cook them either in water or broth.
- Bring water with some salt  (or the broth) to a boil and place pockets inside, they are done when they float on the surface.
- Remove them from water by using a slotted spoon.

 

- Melt butter in a skillet and roast them on both sides slightly, in a separate pan roast bread crumbs.
- Sprinkle Maultaschen with parsley and the breadcrumbs.

 

Servings Options
- With roasted onion rings,
- fried in butter.
- with roasted breadcrumbs,
- brown gravy,
- in a broth,
- with potato salad or fried potatoes. Never forget to sprinkle with parsley.
 
Don't laugh at this one....

Here's a recipe that was invented by my Great-grandmother and probably came about as a result of the Depression.  She called it Scalloped Eggs and it has been a Christmas dinner tradition ever since.  If you like eggs and cheese you will like this.  There are really no measurements because it's a taper as you like recipe.  If you have high cholesterol you might want to refrain...

 

6 boiled eggs (may use more if a large dish is used)

1 small block of cheese (we always use Velveeta, size depending on how much cheese you like)

Butter or margarine

Saltine crackers

Milk

 

Slice boiled eggs.  In a deep casserole dish place a layer of saltine crackers on the bottom, followed by a layer of egg slices, then a few slices of velveeta (I make my slices about 1/4 inch thick), and some chunks of butter or margarine.  Repeat beginning with saltines again and continue until the casserole dish is filled with layers.  Top with more cheese and butter.  Heat some milk (amount depends on size of dish) in a pan or the microwave to hot but not boiling and pour over cracker/egg/cheese layers...you want enough milk to soak the dish and it WILL absorb (I like them soupy myself) and then place on a cookie sheet (it will bubble over) and bake in the oven at 350 until bubbly and hot in the middle...approximately 30 minutes+/-.  If it's too dry can always add a little more milk.  These are even better the next day as leftovers in my opinion, but you will have to add a little more milk before reheating them because it will continue to absorb.

 

 

 
 
What a fascinating cookbook that will be!  I already want to try that sandwich spread!  Have you ever seen the recipe for heating cocktail weenies in a crock pot with grape jelly?  Grapes and pork-product must have been a popular combination at one time.

 

The spelling of the word ‘tvaroh’ is really interesting.  It ought to end in ‘g’, but kids and grandkids who heard the word—but didn’t know the language—probably didn’t realize the ‘g’ was there. 

 

It reminds me of a recipe I saw in a church cookbook that called for ‘arsh’ potatoes.  That would be ‘Irish’ potatoes (white potatoes), as opposed to ‘sweet potatoes’.  The recipe must have come from a kid or grandkid who wrote down what grandma said, but didn’t know enough about that wonderful Appalachian accent to understand the word.  I’ve also seen and read ‘anisy’ when ‘anise seed’ was intended.  I’ve seen several other funny spellings, but these are the only two that come to mind right now.
 
It will be an interesting book. There are plenty of modern recipes.
But there are some canning recipes from farm folks, and some old-fashioned recipes such as Mothers Oats Cake and Farina Dumplings.
And of course some nice ethnic recipes like pierogi, prune filling, Hungarian pancakes, Kiffle dough etc.
 
Here are some vintage recipes from the last Cookbook our parish published. The front cover and the local businesses that sponsored the book show its age.

I make the Pineapple Skillet Sponge recipe often, and have swapped peaches in place of pineapple too.

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