Month: September 2022

Lime Pie with Creme De Menthe – Pieathalon 9!

Greetings Pie lovers!  Welcome to a special midweek edition of Retro Food For Modern Foods.  Today we are celebrating that best of best days of the year – Pieathalon Day. This is the day, where lead by the lovely Yinzerella, bloggers worldwide swap and cook vintage pie recipes.

pieathalon 9

This year I got a recipe for Lime Pie with Creme de Menthe sent to me by Dr Bobb.  Now, call me biased but how pretty are these?  I made lots of little pies because I could not find a large already baked pie crust and at the time I made these I was suffering from double ear infections and a bad back so I was not really up for shopping about.  The one shop I went to had no large pie crusts so I bought two packs of medium. I’m kind of glad.  I think the little pies look adorable.

 

Lime Pie with Creme De Menthe

Lime Pie with Creme de Menthe?

To be honest, though, I was not initially enamoured with the recipe.  Lime yes!  It was the Creme de Menthe I was struggling with.  I have never really tasted Creme de Menthe, all I knew about it was that it was a mint-flavoured liqueur that Poirot sometimes sips.  Hmm…I wonder if that is why Yinzerella sent it to me!  I have a love/hate relationship with mint-flavoured things.  I hate mint tea and mint choc chip ice cream but I love a mint slice biscuit and I love the combo of mint and lime in a mojito.

Looking at the bottle of Creme de Menthe though I couldn’t help feeling I was going to be flavouring my pies with something that looked suspiciously like the mouthwash I use!

I had to keep reminding myself Mojito, not Listerine!

Mojito!  Mojito…And given that I always like to have a song to celebrate Pieathalon, I was singing that “Mojito, mojito” to the tune of the bit in Despacito that goes “Pasito a pasito, suave suavecito”.

(How many of you are not humming despacito now?

Lime Pie with Creme de Menthe2

 

However the real sticking point was not the Creme de Menthe but came when I was half way through making the recipe.  At the exact point when I realised that the original recipe contained egg yolks that were not going to be cooked.

Hard no for me on the raw yolks.

Not the least of which was that I now had 12 little pies. These were going to last us for days. And if the idea of fresh raw yolks was bad, the idea of 4 day old raw yolks was putrid. Plus the mixture was quite runny. I was sure if I left it uncooked, we would have soggy bottoms in no time. And as anyone who watches the Great British Bake Off will know, no one likes a soggy bottom!

So, I popped my little pies into the oven for about 15 minutes.

 

Lime Pie with Creme de Menthe3

Despite my misgivings, these pies were delicious!

Lime Pie with Creme De Menthe – The Recipe

Lime Pie recipe

 

Doctor Bobb, I raise my glass to you and your recipe!


Why not check out what Dr Bobb and all the other pieathletes made per the links below:

(please note some of the links may not be live at the time of posting.  I will update as they become live).

Yinzerella Candy Apple Cheese Pie www.dinnerisserved1972.com
Dr. Bobb praline pumpkin pie http://dbkitschen.blogspot.com/2022/09/pieathalon-9-praline-pumpkin-pie.html
Battenburgbelle Zucchini Pie https://www.kitchenconfidence.co.uk/all-recipes/pieathalon-2022/
S S Yul Brenner’s Pie http://abookofcookrye.blogspot.com/2022/09/pieathlon-ninth-walnut-pie-from-stars.html
Jenny Sagittarius Hamburger Pie www.silverscreensuppers.com
Surly poohs summer pie www.vintagerecipecards.com
Kari Ham Tongue Pie www.thenostalgiccook.com
Poppy Crocker apricot mallow pie https://granniepantries.blogspot.com/
Camilla Chocolate Angel Pie http://culinary-adventures-with-cam.blogspot.com/

If you are wondering who got the pie I submitted, it was Jenny from Silver Screen Suppers!  Good luck Jenny, I hope you enjoyed your hamburger pie!

Thanks as always to Yinzerella for organising this brilliant event!

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Lemon Soufflé – The Incredible Theft

Hello crime readers and food lovers!  Today we are reading (and eating) our way through another short story from the Murder in The Mews collection.  On the menu is a lovely and light lemon soufflé.  Also, an apology for the long break between posts – we had a lovely week away but pretty soon after we got home, I fell ill.  I had an old-school non-covid flu that lasted nearly two weeks and left me with infections in both ears!  A lingering cough from that same flu also lead me to putting my back out!   All up, September has been a month of me either being ill or in pain, neither of which has left me with much energy for cooking or writing.  However, I read this Poirot short story when away and in the small gap of time between my return home and getting ill, I cooked the soufflés.

Lemon Soufflé1

The Incredible Theft- The Plot

.Air Marshal Sir George Carrington calls Poirot to come to the country house of Sir Charles Mayhew where some plans for a new bomber have been stolen.  The bomber will give Britain unparalleled power in the air should war eventuate.  The theft of the plans is a great blow to Britain’s military power.  Attending a house party on the night of the theft was Mrs Vanderlyn, a much-married vamp who is described as being “a very useful person to….a European power – and perhaps to more than one European power”.  Given her marriages have been to an Italian, a German and a Russian, we are not only given the start of a joke where three men walk into a bar but the possible European powers to which Mrs Vanderlyn might be useful!

Pefect Poolside Reading
Perfect Poolside Reading!

Apart from the seductive Mrs Vanderlyn we have

  • A mysterious figure in the shadows
  • A screaming maid
  • A woman with gambling debts
  • A spoiled son in need of some cash
  • Britain’s likely next Prime Minister with something to hide from the populace

Good thing we have Poirot to sort it all out.  Only…do we?   This story is somewhat of an anomaly because only after the denouement do we realise that Poirot actually does very little – all the work is done by….ah…that would be telling!  🙊

The Incredible Theft- The Covers

I could only find two covers for The Incredible Theft – neither of which are very exciting:

Incredible Theft coversInstead, I thought we could all crush on  the divine country manor that features in the Poirot version of The Incredible Theft

And, whilst we are in full drool mode, how about we take a look at Mrs Vanderlyn (and also some more house porn)

That same dress also does not disappoint from the back!

Here is another very glam outfit!

No wonder half of Europe seems to be gaga for Mrs V!

Lady Carrington also knows how to rock a sparkle and lace combo!

 

As much as I could dote on the fashions and locations of Poirot all day, we need to move on to another gorgeous little number, my lemon soufflé!

The Recipe – Lemon Soufflé

Lemon Soufflé3

 

Print

Lemon Soufflé – The Incredible Theft

A lovely light dessert, given a retro twist by serving it in the lemons.

Ingredients

Scale
  • 8 medium-sized lemons
  • 3 eggs, separated
  • 1/2 cup caster sugar
  • 2 tbsp plain flour
  • Pinch of salt
  • 2 Tbsp icing sugar for dusting

Instructions

  • Line an oven tray with baking paper.
  • Trim the base of the lemon so they sit flat.  Cut off the top third of each lemon and, using a teaspoon, remove the pulp from the lemons  (this takes a while) over a bowl lined with a sieve.
  • Squeeze the juice from the pulp and reserve.  Discard the pulp.
  • Place the lemon shells on the prepared tray.
  • Preheat your oven to 180C
  • Combine the yolks, half the sugar, 1/4 cup of lemon juice and the flour in a heatproof bowl.  Beat until thick and pale.
  • Place the bowl over a pan of simmering water and beat for another 8-10 minutes until the mixture is the thickness of a thick custard.  Remove from the heat but continue to beat until the mixture is cool – about another 2-3 minutes.
  • Beat the egg whites to soft peaks, add the remaining salt and the remaining sugar and beat until the mixture is thick and glossy.
  • Whisk one-third of the egg white mixture into the yolk mixture.  Fold the egg white mixture into the yolk mixture with a large metal spoon.  Be as gentle as you can here.  You want to preserve as much of the lightness and air from the whipped whites as possible.
  • Spoon the mixture into the lemon shells, filling to the rims.
  • Bake for 15-20 minutes until the soufflés have risen 2-3 centimetres above the rim of the lemons and are golden.
  • Transfer to serving plates, dust with icing sugar and serve immediately.

Notes

  • Leftover lemon juice can be frozen into ice cube trays to use as you need.
  • Or seeing as life has given you lemons, make lemonade!
  • If you accidentally poke your spoon through the bottom of the lemon as you are removing the pulp, never mind.  Wrap the base of the lemon tightly in aluminium foil for cooking and remove it for serving.  This will prevent any souffle mixture oozing out the bottom!

 

As the butler handed round the souffle, Lord Mayfield leaned confidentially towards his neighbour on the right, Lady Julia Carrington.  Known as the perfect host, Lord Mayfield took trouble to live up to his reputation.  Although unmarried, he was always charming to women.”

– Agatha Christie, The Incredible Theft

Links to The Christieverse

Nothing that I could find.

Lemon Souffle 4

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in The Incredible Theft

  • Dessert
  • Port
  • Breakfast

 

October’s read will be another short story from Murder in the Mews. Get out your sunblock and get ready for some fun and murder in the sun with Triangle at Rhodes.

Happy reading and cooking!

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Roast Lamb Shawarma – (The Other) Death on the Nile

Hello crime readers and food lovers!  Today we are reading (and eating) our way through another Agatha Christie story called Death on The Nile!  And finally, we are getting the lamb I was craving during the first Death on the Nile by way of a Roast Lamb Shawarma.  But first, let’s address the Nile-sized elephant in the room.  Why on earth would you name two stories the same thing?  True, one is a novel, and one is a short story.  One features Poirot and one features Parker Pyne.  I just can’t fathom why one of the most creative writing minds of the 20th century could not come up with two different titles!

Roast Lamb Shawarma

 

Death on The Nile (Parker Pyne)- The Plot

We have not yet met Parker Pyne because, apart from a few instances, where we are diverting into the short stories, I am trying to get through all of the Christie novels first.  So, who is Parker Pyne?  He is a detective but not in the sense that Poirot is a detective.  More of a psychologist, he advertises his services in the newspapers, something, we feel the elitist Poirot would never stoop to do.

 

However, in this version of Death on the Nile, Parker Pyne is not helping people to become happy, he is in Egypt trying to enjoy a relaxing holiday aboard the SS Fayoum as she journeys down the Nile.

Also aboard is Lady Grayle, who Christie dryly informs us

had suffered, since she was sixteen from the complaint of having too much money

Oh to have that complaint!

Roast Lamb Shawarma2

Lady Grayle is petulant and fretful and is initially, not at all happy to have an interloper in the shape of Parker Pyne on the boat she thought was just going to contain her travelling party.  However, before too long Parker Pyne is summonsed by Lady Grayle.  She confides that she suspects her husband is poisoning her. She feels ill when he is around but starts to recover when he is away.  Her Nurse, Miss McNaughton (reminiscent of Amy Leatheren from Murder in Mesopotamia ) confirms that this seems to be the case and is not the imaginings of a hypochondriac.

Lady Grayle then dies of strychnine poisoning, a packet of which is found in her husband’s pocket.

It seems a foregone conclusion that the henpecked husband has finally reached his limit.  But are things as they seem?  It’s a Christie mystery so of course not! Despite being too late to fix any unhappiness on Lady Grayle’s side, it is up to Parker Pyne to reveal the real murderer.

Lamb Shawarma3

 

Death on the Nile – The Covers

Given this is a short story, contained within the book Parker Pyne Investigates aka Mr Parker Pyne, Detective there are no covers specifically for this version of Death on the Nile.  The first cover I have shown is the Cosmopolitan magazine in which this story was first published.  The second is an early cover of Parker Pyne Investigates so readers who are not familiar with the character can get an idea of what Parker Pyne is meant to look like.

 

DoTNPP collage

The Recipe – Lamb Roast Shawarma

Here is Adam Liaw’s recipe for lamb shawarma from scratch. I have made this a few times and can highly recommend it.   However, generally when I make Shawarma, I use the leftover meat from any roast lamb.  (The fussiest eater in the world is very fond of a Sunday Roast and as we are only two people we inevitably have leftover lamb.

The following day I chop up some of that leftover meat, sprinkle it with Adam’s shawarma seasoning and warm the meat in a pan.  After the meat is warmed, I remove that from the pan and then warm the flatbread in the same pan.

After that I assemble my wrap with the warmed bread and lamb, some salad ingredients and a few dollops of Adam’s tahini sauce.

If there is any sauce left over after we have our shawarma, I either dollop it onto some avo toast or mix a big spoonful into some chopped-up hard-boiled eggs and make a sandwich with some crunchy lettuce.

Lamb Shawarma4

 

 

The benevolent figure of Mr Parker Pyne entered the lounge.  Behind him came the picturesque figure of Mohammed, prepared to say his piece.

“Lady, gentlemans, we start now.  In few minutes we pass temples of Karnak right-hand side. I tell you story now about little boy who went to buy a roasted lamb for his father….”

– Agatha Christie, Death on the Nile

Links to The Christieverse

There was nothing I could find here.  Except of course that four years later Agatha Christie would reuse the name of this short story for what would become one of her best-known novels!

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in Death on The Nile

  • Tea

If you would like to taste some Egyptian food, why not try Eggs Hamine?

September’s read will be one of the novellas contained in the Murder in the Mews collection. Not the titular story, I am saving that for November.  Instead, we are going with The Incredible Theft, a Poirot mystery.

Happy reading and cooking!

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