N or M – Aperol Betty

Hello crime readers and food lovers. Or in this case, cocktail lovers because we are celebrating Agatha Christie’s wartime thriller N or M with an Aperol Betty.  N or M has few references to food. I wonder if Agatha Christie did this intentionally as food was rationed during the war.  Reading about lots of food may have led to readers becoming disgruntled with their Mock Crab and other wartime foods.  I found my inspiration from one of the characters in the novel Betty Sprott, who despite only being a  little girl is key to two pivotal parts of the novel! 

 

Aperol Betty

N or M -The Plot

It is 1940 and Tommy and Tuppence Beresford are disheartened because no one wants them for war work.  Tommy is then approached by Mr Grant, the head of the secret service to hunt out some fifth columnists.  Tommy is sent on a top-secret mission to Leahampton, to search out two Nazi agents, a male and a female, known only by their code names, N and M.  Imagine his surprise then on his arrival at the Sans Souci guesthouse to see Tuppence there!  

We have quite the cast of shady characters including

  • A landlady who may or may not be Irish
  • A German refugee chemist
  • A female resident of the Sans Souci who is watching Tuppence very closely
  • A mysterious Polish woman hanging about the Sanc Souci
  • Little Betty kidnapped 
  • The kidnapper killed by a crack shot from Mrs Sprott
  • Someone hitting Tommy over the head with a hammer
  • Someone holding Tommy captive in their basement

Luckily we have Tommy and Tuppence on hand to figure out who is N and M and save Britain from the evils of Nazism via enemies from within.  . 

This is a thrilling tale that I feel really captures what life might have been like in England during 1940.     I really enjoyed the depiction of “ordinary” life at this time – the talk of the war, everyone having their own theories or having heard “on good authority” what was happening at the front.  The setting for this tale of espionage is perfect and Tommy and Tuppence are as adorable as ever!

Aperol Betty2

N or M  – The Covers

NorM Collage

There are some fabulous covers here, lots of French ones, a Danish one and one that I think might be from Hungary.  

The Recipe – Aperol Betty

The Aperol Betty is a very simple but very tasty cocktail with a strong citrussy taste.  It was even easier for me because I didn’t even have to bother to combine the grapefruit and orange juices in the recipe.  We have a tangelo tree (tangelo  = tangerine x grapefruit) in our garden which is currently laden!  (Also look how pretty that bright orange looks on a grey Melbourne winter day!!!!

But anyway, when life gives you this many tangelos, you don’t go buying grapefruit or orange juice! I walked to the garden and chose some lovely fresh fruit for my drink!

Tangelo Tree

Here’s the recipe with the OG ingredients!

Aperol Betty3recipe

 

Betty had changed her mind and demanded instead:

“Wead me story.”

Tuppence pulled out a rather tattered book from one end of the cupboard – to be interrupted by a squeal from Betty.

“No, no.  Narsty…Bad…”

Agatha Christie – N or M

As an alternative, for anyone who does not drink, the close runner up for this was a Pasta all  N or Ma.  I didn’t make this because I am somewhat allergic to aubergines / eggplants but if you were having an N or M themed dinner, for me, the pasta would be a good choice!

What does Agatha Christie have in with Leonard Dawe? 

First, I hear you ask, who is Leonard Dawe?

Well. he was a crossword compiler for the Daily Telegraph who was investigated by MI5 in 1944 because he published the names of several of the D-Day Landing sites in his crosswords.  

A few years earlier, Agatha Christie got into trouble over the name of one of the characters in N or M.  One of the residents at Sans Souci is Major Bletchley.  In the 1940s, Bletchley Park was the place where code breakers ultimately cracked the German enigma machine.  Of course, neither Dame Agatha nor Leonard Dawe were acting in an untoward manner but they were both investigated by MI5 for their unfortunate choices!  (I really hope that after they questioned her, Dame Agatha then grilled MI5 on their techniques for her next novel)

Links to The Christieverse

There are a few references to the earlier Tommy and Tuppence novel, The Secret Adversary.

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in N or M

  • Whiskey
  • Tea 
  • Bread and Cheese

 

As mentioned, last week, I am currently on holiday in beautiful Port Douglas.  Part of my reading material for the trip is The Body In The Library which will be our September Dining with The Dame read.  Marple fans, this one’s for you!

Have a great week!

 

Mock Crab

Hello, retro food lovers and…war buffs? Today I am sharing a recipe for Mock Crab which was inspired by my reading of N or M by Agatha Christie. The real Dining with the Dame post will come next week but during my reading of this book, I became mildly obsessed with the food of wartime Britain.  I found a fabulous blog called The 1940’s Experiment and decided to give one of the wartime recipes a whirl!  I am also mildly obsessed with “mock” foods so I chose mock crab. 

Mock Crab

Umm…what?  I hear you say.  Mock crab looks like this!  However, it looks to all the world that you have posted a photo of some scrambled eggs on toast. Did you mix your photos up?  Might we finally be getting a post on the bacon and eggs that is mentioned in EVERY Agatha Christie novel but has yet to make an appearance in Dining with the Dame?

Well…no and no.  This my friends is mock crab.

But also yes.  Because this is scrambled eggs on toast.  Albeit some mildly vinegary scrambled eggs on toast.  This recipe perplexed me and I’ll tell you why as soon as I share the link.  Here it is:  Wartime Mock Crab.

Mock Crab3

 

Mock Me Not

So here is what I don’t understand about the mock crab.  Cheesy scrambled eggs are delicious.  And not just for breakfast.  I would eat them at any time of day!  Cheesy scrambled eggs with salad dressing and additional vinegar?  Not so much.  This, for me, was, unfortunately, something that was less than the sum of its parts. I’m also not quite sure why, particularly when you are on rations, you would add anything to cheesy scrambled eggs.  My preference would have been to save the dressing and vinegar for something else (maybe a salad?) and to eat the eggs as scrambled eggs.  

I can only surmise that the addition of the salad dressing and vinegar was to make it taste more crabby.  If so, it didn’t work.   No one in their right mind would mistake the taste of this for crab.  And yet….there was something.  Maybe the texture?  Or possibly the power of suggestion…that made this somewhat reminiscent of crab.  

Mock Crab2

Whilst I didn’t love the mock crab, it was nice to take a peek into war time cooking and imagine the gang at the Sans Souci (from N and M) tucking into a plate of of it for lunch.  

Next weeks post will be on N or M, an Agatha Christie wartime thriller featuring Tommy and Tuppence.  At least I hope it will be.  I will be on holiday, soaking up some sun in the north of Australia so I will  schedule it to run on Sunday.  Fingers crossed it works!

Have a great week!

 

Wine and Song Prune Canapés

Hello retro food lovers and welcome to a surprise mid-week edition of Retro Food for Modern Times.  Today we are taking a teeny little step back into the amazing book that is Kelly Brodsky’s Food For Lovers and making some canapes from her wine and song prunes. When we last spoke about them, it was in the context of breakfast but these little beauties are nothing if not versatile.  My favourite food is finger food so I decided that I would turn these into a canapé based on the vintage hors d’oeuvre Devils on Horseback.  

Wine and Song Canapes1

I have taken the key ingredients from Devils on Horseback and popped them on a round of grilled bread.  

As a reminder, here is the recipe for the Wine and Song Prunes.  These are the starting point for our canape’s.

Wine and Song Prunes

 

Wine and Song Canapes2

Here’s the recipe…if you can even call something so simple that!

Print

Wine and Song Prune Canapés

A delicious canapé for your next retro party.  Or for eating all by yourself!

Ingredients

  • Wine and Song Prunes (as many prunes as canapés you are planning to make)
  • Rounds of chargrilled bread or bought crostini (as many rounds as canapés you are planning to make)
  • Proscuitto – (1/ 3 the number of slices as the number of canapes you are planning to make)
  • Goat’s cheese 
  • Watercress – 1 bunch

Instructions

  • Top your rounds of bread with a sprig or two of watercress, then 1/3 of  a slice of proscuitto.
  • Top this with a piece of goat’s cheese and one of the prunes.
  • Enjoy!

 

 

Wine and Song Canapes3

I’ll get my timing back on track with an N and M adjacent post. The actual post for the Agatha Christie thriller will be posted the following week. It’s a quick read so there’s still plenty of time if you wish to read it. Have a great rest of the week!

July 2003 – What’s In The Fridge?

Hello, retro food lovers!  Let’s take a trip back twenty years to July 2003.  While where there, why not pick up the current copy of  Delicious Magazine and try to make a meal with ingredients that we can find in our fridge.  I set a rule for myself with this one that at least 2 ingredients for each meal had to come from my fridge.  For the purposes of full disclosure, I have also listed items I have used from my freezer, pantry and those I bought for the recipes.  Before we head to the recipes, let’s set the scene for what else was happening in July 2003!

Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl was #1 at the box office, followed by Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines and Bad Boys II.  Doesn’t sounds like I would have been going to the movies a lot in July 2003!  Instead, I was likely staying at home reading the best-selling Da Vinci Code by Dance Brown and listening to Beyonce’s Crazy in Love.  But enough about me, let’s get to our menu!

The Menu – July 2003

 

What's in the Fridge Menujuly

BROCCOLI, PANCETTA AND FETA PIZZA

There was a cheese fondue in the magazine which very nearly became the entree for our July 2003 menu but in the end I chose the pizza.  The recipe comes from an advertisement for Ardmona Rich and Thick Chopped Tomatoes which was absolutely brilliant and why I decided to use this recipe over the fondue.  The advertisements which ran for a number of years featured celebrities not known for their intelligence advertising pureed tomatoes!  Rich and thick tomatoes from the rich and…you get it.  The ad certainly caught my eye!   Also, this was the only recipe in the magazine where I did not have to buy any ingredients, although I substituted a few:

Fridge ingredients

  • Broccolini (subbed for the broccoli in the recipe)
  • Proscuitto (subbed for the pancetta in the recipe)
  • Feta cheese

All of these were leftovers from other things I had made which would have otherwise likley gone to waste

Other ingredients

  • Puff Pastry – from the freezer
  • Tinned tomatoes – from the pantry

Broccoli Pizza

 

Broccoli and Pancetta Pizza Recipe

Pizza recipe

 

Beef Carpaccio with Parmesan, Horseradish and Raw Beetroot

This is a Jamie Oliver recipe that I made to use up some leftover beetroot.  I generally hate beetroot but the fussiest eater in the world likes it so we had half a beetroot in the fridge left over from a roast dinner he had made.  A lot of people, including me, give Jamie Oliver a hard time but seriously…this might be one of the best things I have eaten all year!!!  It was perfectly pitched.  Everything went together so well.  It was an absolute dream of a dish!  10/10 Mr Oliver, this one was outstanding!

Fridge ingredients

  • Beetroot
  • Horseradish (originally from our garden)
  • Sour cream (instead of the creme fraiche in the recipe)
  • Parmesan cheese

Other ingredients

  • Thyme – from the garden
  • Lemon – from the garden
  • Olive oil, salt, pepper – from the pantry

Bought ingredients

  • 1 steak  – I was not going to buy a whole fillet for two people!
  • Rocket -(this cost all of 36 cents!)

Beef Carpaccio

Carpaccio recipe:

Carpaccio Collage

 

Chocolate Chestnut Log

On first reading, I thought this would be a cake.  Instead, imagine a melt-in-the-mouth mousse with a swirl of chestnut surrounded by a swirl of chocolate chestnut.  Delicious but very rich!!!! (Not thick though).  If the carpaccio was something I would gladly eat every day, this is a dish I would save for special occasions. 

Chocolate Chestnut Log

Chocolate Chestnut Log Recipe:

Fridge ingredients

  • Butter
  • Egg

Other ingredients

  • Sugar – from the pantry
  • Brandy from the drinks cabinet
  • A can of chestnut puree which had been in the pantry for far too long!
  • Cocoa powder – from the pantry

Bought ingredients

  • Dark Chocolate 

My Nigella Moment  – Fillet of Beef Bourguignonne

For first-time readers, this refers to the moment at the end of Nigella Lawson’s cooking shows when she sneaks back to the fridge to have another bite of something delicious.  In the context of these Twenty Years Ago posts, it is something contained in the magazine that does not fit with the overall menu theme but I’m sneaking it in either because I made it and it was really good, or I just didn’t have time to make it but it was one of the most appetising things in the mag!

I feel a bit sorry for the cheese fondue recipe in the July 2003 issue of Delicious Magazine.  It got pipped at the post for the starter and again for the Nigella moment.  Those of you who know me, and whose jaws are dropping that I didn’t pick the fondue (twice), take a look at this picture:

Fillet of Beef Bourguignonne (1)

The perfectly cooked beef, the glossy sauce, the wine-soaked onions – this dish looks so beautiful and luxurious to me and something that I would definitely cook if I was having a group of people for dinner.  Something this size though would feed us both for a week.  I’m holding on to this recipe though!  Next time we do magazines in my Foodies club, this is exactly where I am heading!!!! 

Well, the July 2003 issue of Delicious proved to be an absolute treasure trove of recipes and definitely filled the brief of being able to base a meal, largely on ingredients that were in my fridge!  

 

 

The Return of the Australian Vegetable Cookbook

Hello friends, today I am revisiting a book I first wrote about in 2012 – The Australian Vegetable Cookbook. I am taste-testing two recipes from that book – a Cornish Leek Pie and a Roquefort Wedge Salad. The book contains a lovely line drawing and a brief history of each vegetable. So, without further preamble let’s get to the recipes!

Cornish Leek Pie3

Cornish Leek Pie

I was dubious as to how authentic the Cornish Leek Pie would be.  However, I found a few references to a Leeky / Likky Pie which dates from 1865 and is remarkably similar!

I layered boiled leeks and bacon into a pie dish and covered with pastry.  Now, I made a mistake here as the recipe quite clearly says to season the layers with salt and pepper.  I thought the bacon would be salty enough which turned out to be true so I didn’t add salt.  But I totally forgot about the pepper.  But by the time I remembered the pepper, the pie was already in the oven. 

 

Cornish Leek Pie2

Then, the recipe itself got weird.  After cooking for a while, I needed to make a hole in the pastry top and pour in a mixture of cream and parsley. I have never added ingredients to a pie in this way before!  But it did allow me to add the missing pepper in with the cream and parsley.   I thought it would be really hard to cut a hole in the pastry once it was baked so I did this before it went into the oven.  

Cornish Leek Pie4

The recipe which I have linked above adds eggs and cream to the bacon and leek mix which I think would be a lot more sensible.  This would have thickened up on cooking to form a quiche-like filling.  As it was the cream did nothing except make everything a bit wet! It also kept bubbling up out of the hole in the pastry and made a bit of a mess. 

Cornish Leek Pie

There was nothing wrong with the cornish leek pie.  It was just not something I would make, in the format given in the Australian Vegetable Cookbook.  Full marks for the illustrations though!  They are beautiful!  

Cornish Leek Pie – The Recipe

Leek Pie Recipe w frame

Roquefort Lettuce Wedges

The night after I made the Cornish Leek Pie I made the Roquefort Lettuce Wedge from the same book. 

The roquefort dressing was sooo good!  But overall this dish lacked something.  I served it on a gorgeous plate I bought when I was in Darwin earlier this year to try to fancy it up a bit.  Plate 10/10.  Dish…kind of meh…I would defintely make this again,  However, I would add some bacon or croutons or some chives to the salad (or all three) just to make it a bit more interesting!

Roquefort Lettuce Wedge 6

 

They say you can’t step in the same river twice and, to be honest I was disappointed with my revisiting of The Australian Vegetable Cookbook.  There was nothing wrong with either recipe but they were also not amazing.  One or two more ingredients to each one might have brought a bit more flavour or texture or just some va va voom to the dish.  

oquefort Lettuce Wedge 1

Whether this was due to bad recipe choices on my behalf or a comment on the state of vegetable dishes in the 1970s remains to be determined.  There are still a number of recipes I have flagged as “to be cooked”. so I may well have another crack at it in the future.  Just not for a little while!

Roquefort Lettuce Wedge – The Recipe

Lettuce wedge recipe (1)

Roquefort Lettuce Wedge 4

I hope your cooking adventures this week fare a little better!  Have a great week!