View Full Version : Swank Recipes
lashbear
01-20-2005, 09:10 PM
What food would YOU serve to Swanksters who drop in ??
I'd be breaking out the wooden cactus centrepiece and putting lots of cheese and cocktail onions on toothpicks all over it. (It has holes drilled into it for this purpose - I will get a picture of it for your delight.)
I would also roll prunes in bacon and grill them, and best of all, I would roll Mashed Potato in slices of ham and secure them with toothpicks.
Not forgetting the Stuffed Eggs and smoked oysters.
Groovy Finger Food Baby !
Scrooge McSam
01-20-2005, 09:25 PM
Interesting thread idea, Lash
Let's see...
Warmed brie served with orange marmalade, sliced apples, pears and various crackers
Pate on toasted baquette slices sprinkled with capers and onions for the swank factor
and my fudge
sleepyjeff
01-20-2005, 09:36 PM
Cornbread, beans, and a big ol glass of ice tea ;)
Not Afraid
01-20-2005, 09:44 PM
Let's see.........
The easy cocktail party would feature:
Baked Brie in puff pastery with brown sugar and walnuts
Regular and Seeded baguettes, sliced
Fresh, mixed berries
A Variety of Grapes
Kalamata, Siclian and Spanish olives
Cornichons
A collection of cheeses on a cheese board:
Stilton
Machango
Emmenthaler
Chevre with pepercorn
Aged Gouda
Pepper Jack
Pate or Fois Gras
Vegetable Terrine
A selection of water and other crackers
Baby Carrots
Asparagus Spears Hummus
Artichoke with garlic (and a bit of butter added for stickiness;) )
After that, I start adding salads of mixed varieties and additional breads.
Scrooge McSam
01-20-2005, 09:49 PM
Chevre
{Homer} Chevre... aaaarrrr {/Homer}
Not Afraid
01-20-2005, 09:51 PM
Where's my blank face/clueless smilie? ;)
Mousey Girl
01-20-2005, 09:57 PM
I am feeling very redneckly unswank right about now...
lashbear
01-20-2005, 11:19 PM
Let's see.........
The easy cocktail party would feature:.....*snip*..After that, I start adding salads of mixed varieties and additional breads.
OK NA - I'm coming over to YOUR place first ! :cool: ;)
...then off to sample all the others ! :)
lashbear
01-31-2005, 05:51 PM
How retro...
Crab Devil Rolls
Small dinner rolls
Devilled Ham Spread
Large Crab meat chunks marinated in French Dressing
To serve:
Remove soft part inside rolls.
Spread inside of rolls with Devilled Ham
Add Chunk of Crab, close roll.
Bake in 350F Oven for 5 minutes, and serve immediately.
Source: "The Texas Cookbook" (1965 - the year I was born) by Mary Faulk Koock. P.89
wendybeth
01-31-2005, 06:00 PM
Uh, I'm pretty sure it would be catered- by a very swanky caterer, of course!
I can do basic holiday-type stuff, but I leave the gourmet to the professionals.
NirvanaMan
01-31-2005, 06:09 PM
In-N-Out
cirquelover
01-31-2005, 06:25 PM
I want to go to NA's for that spread!
Lets see, I'd have to drag out the fondue pots and do something like my mom used to.
Little smokies in special sauce in one pot
Swiss cheese fondue
Another cheese fondue
Meatballs in another
Veggie trays and fruit trays
sliced baguettes and many cheeses
Peppermint fondue, chocolate fondue and some other flavor
And a whole lot of stuff for dipping!!
UvaGirl
01-31-2005, 06:47 PM
Fairy Bread:D
Prudence
01-31-2005, 07:26 PM
Visitors to Chez Prudence are likely to find themselves sampling from a variety of recipies recorded before 1650. So many tasty treats!
Egredouncye (a beef stew spiced up with vinegar and cinnamon - sweet and sour!),
Tart de bry (egg and brie pie!),
Frytours blaunched (ground up almonds and spices fried in pastry, served with honey/wine reduction -- also called "wonder crunchies"),
Yrchouns (also called "hedgehogs" -- little meatballs decorated to look like hedgehogs with currants for eyes and almonds for spines),
Raviolis (filled with white cheese and slathered in butter),
Sallets for fish daies (chopped carrot topped with salad shrimp and oil/vinegar),
Tart for an embre day (onion tart that tastes so sweet and mellow with no onion bite),
Fustaqiya (shredded chicken with ground pistachios),
Tarte of strawberyes (shortbread crust with crushed strawberry filling),
and all topped off with a refreshing glass of sekanjabin (refreshing minty beverage -- medieval Kool-Aid!)
No one leaves hungry.
€uroMeinke
01-31-2005, 07:35 PM
I am just delighted by wonder crunchies
wendybeth
01-31-2005, 07:38 PM
I am just delighted by wonder crunchies
I like Captain Crunch- but it has to have the crunchberries.
Actually, those wonder crunchies don't sound half-bad....
Prudence
01-31-2005, 09:38 PM
Wonder crunchies totally rock.
Take almaundes blaunched, and grynde hem al to doust withouten eny lycour. Do thereto powder of gyngeuer, sugur and alt, do this in a thynne foile. Close it therinne fast, and frye it in oile, clarifie hony with wyne, and bake it therwith.
32 wonton wrappers
1 ˝ cup blanched almonds
˝ cup sugar
˝ tsp salt
1 tsp ginger
Grind almonds in food processor to as fine a dust as possible, taking care not to make almond butter. Mix with sugar, salt and ginger.
Place a tablespoon of almond mixture on a wrapper and form into ravioli envelope (seal well with warm water.) Place in hot olive oil and fry until golden brown and slightly puffed, being sure oil is deep enough to cover. Drain on paper towels.
Sauce:
2 cups red wine
˝ cup honey
Place in saucepan and reduce by half to less than 1 cup.
wendybeth
01-31-2005, 10:33 PM
They had won tons back then?
(I may actually try that one, Prudence- I thank thee!)
Mousey Girl
02-01-2005, 12:34 AM
Hehehe
My "parties" tend to feature tri-tip that has been marinated overnight in my wonderful kitchen sink concoction, garlic bread featuring my special garlic butter and then whatever else I feel like doing. The appetizer is usually linguisa and hotwings.
I know, not very swank, but it is very tastey!!
lashbear
02-01-2005, 07:11 AM
Especially For Prudence.
Mince Pyes - For Pyes of Mutton or Beefe: Shred your meat and Suet together fine, season it with cloves, mace, Pepper and and some Saffron, great Raisins, Corance and prunes, and so put it into your Pyes.
Ingredients for filling:
1 1/2 lb Lean Mutton or Beef (raw)
4 oz Suet
1/2 tsp Ground Cloves
1 tsp Ground Mace
1/2 tsp Black Pepper
Pinch of Saffron
2 oz Raisins
2 oz Currants
2 Oz Stoned Prunes, Chopped
For the Pastry:
1 lb plain flour
2 tsp salt
4 oz lard
1/4 pt water
4 tblsp milk
For the Glaze:
1 Tblsp each of Butter, Sugar & Rosewater melted together.
METHOD:
Preheat oven to 425°F
Mince the meat and mix in the suet, spices, pepper, saffron & dried fruit. Set aside.
To make the pastry, sift the flour and salt together into a large mixing bowl and make a well in the centre.
Heat the lard, water and milk until boiling and pour it into the well.
Quickly beat the pastry mixture together with a spoon to form a soft dough, and knead until smooth on a lightly floured board.
Cut off a quarter of the pastry, and keep covered until required for the lid.
Mould the larger piece of pastry into the base and sides of a loose-bottomed tin, 8" diameter, 2" deep.
Pack the filling into the pie, and dampen the edges of the pie wall.
Roll out the remaining pastry to make a lid, and press firmly in place. Trim the edges, using any surplus pastry for decoration, and cut a small hole in the centre of the lid.
Bake in the centre of the oven at 425°F for 15 minutes then
Reduce oven temperature to 350°F and cook for a further 75 minutes
Remove the sides of the tin, brush over the glaze, and return to the oven for a further 15 minutes.
Serve cold.
This is an Original (and tasty) Receipt from the Tudor Period. Tis from one of me favourite reciept books, that being "A Book of Cookrye Very necessary for all such as delight therein."
I have made and enjoyed this one personally, and can vouch for it. It is unusual, but yet strangely compelling. Beef tastes better than Mutton in my opinion.
-Rob.
Prudence
02-01-2005, 08:56 AM
They had won tons back then?
(I may actually try that one, Prudence- I thank thee!)
Well, you could make your own flour/water dough, roll it out nice and thin and even, and cut it into shape -- or you could buy a package of pre-formed wonton wrappers. The choice is yours.
By the way -- they also make a good substitute for homemade raviolis and other filled pasta. They're made from basically the same ingredients as any other pasta dough. Fill with your desired filling, seal, boil briefly, and presto! Homemade filled pasta. Impress your dinner guests and retain your sanity!
Prudence
02-01-2005, 09:04 AM
Especially For Prudence.
Mince Pyes - [i]For Pyes of Mutton or Beefe: Shred your meat and Suet together fine, season it with cloves, mace, Pepper and and some Saffron, great Raisins, Corance and prunes, and so put it into your Pyes.
YUM! :snap: :snap:
I wonder if I have time to bake this weekend?
I didn't have that source in my collection. Fortunately, some good soul has transcribed it to the web. Now I have more things to play with!
Cadaverous Pallor
02-01-2005, 11:19 AM
Cool thread.
NA's list is so complete because she and € throw nothing but the swankiest parties. They were swank before any of the rest of us caught on. ;)
I'm still not too suave on the party front. I do have a fondue pot though. That must count for something, even if I haven't used it in over a year. :p
Betty
02-01-2005, 02:23 PM
Are cocktail weiners in sauce swank? ;)
lashbear
02-01-2005, 05:37 PM
I'm still not too suave on the party front. I do have a fondue pot though. That must count for something, even if I haven't used it in over a year. :p
Here's something to do with it..... I know it's a bit "Halloweeny" but a rich Caramel fondue with chunks of Apple to swirl in the caramel is just heaven-on-a-stick. :cheers:
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