Grandma's Recipes

November 22, 2018 | Author: wendyp5 | Category: Fruit Preserves, Biscuit, Cakes, Butter, Teaspoon
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Grandma’s recipes brings together recipes from a group of women related to the editor. They lived in Toowoomba, Queensla...

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Grandma’s recipes

Edited by Wendy Pang

Grandma’s recipes Edited by Wendy Pang

Thanks Special thanks to Sandra Routley for passing on Lizzie Moo dy’s recipes and sparking the idea that recipes are something that link us to the women in our history. Thanks also to: Irma Gold, University of Canberra, for her guidance through the project Adrienne, Deb, Kate, and Rhonda — fellow editors in the Advanced Editing course, for thoughtful suggestions Michael Pang, for the graphic design Copyright holders for recipe text and photos: Kenneth Draney, Ro y and Spencer Featherstone, Rose Komduur, Gay Middleton, Robert and Wendy Pang, and Sandra Routley.

Grandma's Recipes

ISBN: 978-0-9806119-0-8 (online) ISBN: 978-0-9806119-1-5 (paperback) Publication date: January 2009 Recommended retail price: $0.00

Published and edited by Wendy Pang 17 Cloncurry St Kaleen 2617 ACT Australia [email protected] 61 2 6241 4487

Some rights reserved. Read http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/Catalog-in-publishing http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/Catalog-in-publishing data for m ore information. Computer typeset in Calibri, Cambria and Scriptina Printed in Canberra, Australia and also distributed electronically 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Contents Page Introduction

10

Lizzie Moody

From Yorkshire to Toowoomba in 1910

11

Dot Featherstone

Making do in the Depression – the thirties

16

Sarah Jane Bailey

A widow raising nine children alone – the thirties

23

Elsie McAllan

Holding dreams of better times – the forties

25

Ruth Draney

Raising a family through the church – the fifties

27

Rea Featherstone

The fifties housewife

29

Emmie Featherstone

Country hospitality in town – the sixties

40

Notes

From the editor

42

Cooking terms and ingredients Oven temperatures Photos Index

Permissions

43 44

Introduction  In June 2007, I cooked a nostalgic dinner using favourite recipes from my mother Rea Featherstone. The meal was to celebrate my sister Judy’s visit from the United States. It included my brother Spencer’s and my families. Afterwards, I started to write out my m y mother’s recipes to share with everyone. Then I realised that the recipe book should include recipes from grandmothers, my mother and aunts. My cousin Rose Komduur sent me my grandmother Dot Featherstone’s Depression-era recipe book. My relative Sandra Routley sent me her grandmother’s recipes, reminding me that keeping their recipes alive is a way to remember our grandmothers. In the days when communities were small, most men were remembered for their contribution to the community in an obituary. The contribution our mothers and grandmothers made is rarely recognised this way. Some of them left England never to return, like Dot Featherstone and Lizzie Moody. Others were second-generation Australians like Rea and her sisters Elsie McAllen and Ruth Draney. They were the wives of working men – average Anglo-Celtic Australians. They pass down to us their way of speech, their linen and jewellery, their sewing machines and recipes. I hope you will cook some of these recipes and smile at others, remembering our grandmothers.

Wendy Pang Canberra December 2008

10

Lizzie Lizzie Moody   From Yorkshire to Toowoomba in 1910

Elizabeth Basterfield married John William (Jack) Moody in England, probably i n the 1890s. They had four children before they decided to migrate to Toowoomba, Queensland, on SS Orvieto in September 1911. Their last child, also called John William (Bill) was born in Toowoomba. The family never returned to Britain. They left Britain at a turbulent time. After Edward VII died in 1910, there were extensive strikes of  seamen and miners, dockers and railwaymen. Suffragettes were protesting vigorously. By coming to Australia, Lizzie gained the right to vote earlier than women in Britain. Lizzie settled into life in Toowoomba. Jack had a mixed business in Middlesborough, opposite the Hippodrome, and sold it before they left. In Toowoomba, as a first-class coach painter, he set up a coach-painting business. That business later employed young Bill and his cousin Don Featherstone. Although it isn’t difficult to find out about Jack’s life, it is more difficult to find out about Lizzie. She was a home-maker, and raised five children. She has left us some recipes, and through this tenuous link, we have a picture of Lizzie’s connection to the land of her birth. Lizzie’s granddaughter Sandra Routley, daughter of Lizzie’s son Les, sent me L izzie’s Yorkshire recipes, with a reminder that we should not lose the recipes, as they are our heritage.

11

Lizzie Moody

Lizzie Moody   Moody’’s recipes From Yorkshire to Toowoomba in 1910



Peanut parkins



Popovers



Yorkshire bran loaf 



Yorkshire cheese cake



Yorkshire fruit cake



Yorkshire pudding

12

Lizzie Moody



Peanut parkins

These biscuits are delicious. They cool quickly and need to be lifted off the tray before they cool, because they  shatter.

Ingredients

Directions

1 ¼ cups sugar 1 cup plain flour 1 tablespoon butter 1 tablespoon golden syrup grated rind of orange or lemon ½ teaspoon each of ginger, mixed spice, bicarbonate of soda ¼ cup boiling water a few peanuts

Mix dry ingredients. Melt butter and syrup. Dissolve bicarbonate of soda in ¼ cup boiling water. Mix well. Add peanuts. Place small pieces on a greased oven slide. Bake in a moderate oven (180 C). Leave plenty of room as they spread – 5 or 6 to the tray at a time is plenty.



°

Popovers

When they are done on one side they pop over by themselves. Granddaughter Sandra used to eat them with syrup or jam.

Ingredients

Directions

1 egg ¾ cup milk pinch nutmeg pinch salt ¼ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda ¼ teaspoon cream of tartar 1 cup flour

Beat egg and milk. Add nutmeg, salt and bicarbonate of soda. Sift cream of tartar into flour. Beat well. Fry walnut-sized balls in deep boiling fat.



Yorkshire bran loaf (sticky bread)

Use any cup size.

Ingredients

Directions

1 cup of each of the following: All Bran moist brown sugar seedless raisins milk self-raising flour

Stir first 4 ingredients and leave overnight. Stir in flour. Put into loaf tin and cook for 1–1½ hours at 325 F (160 C). °

13

°

Lizzie Moody



Yorkshire cheese cake

Lizzie’s granddaughter Sandra suggests cottage cheese or ricotta instead of curds. Junket tablet is a source of  rennet.

Ingredients – curds

Directions – curds

(no quantities given) rennet milk

Add rennet to milk and strain, or use sour milk and strain off whey.

Ingredients – cheese cake

Directions – Directions – cheese cake

2 eggs 2 ounces sugar (60 g) 2 teaspoons melted butter, if desired 2 ounces currants (60 g) ½ pound curds (250 g) g) rind of a lemon uncooked plain pastry case nutmeg to sprinkle on top

Beat eggs and sugar and add melted butter, if  desired. Stir in currants. Add curds. Put into an uncooked plain pastry case. Sprinkle with nutmeg. Cook until firm in a fairly slow oven (170 C).



°

Yorkshire fruit cake

To be eaten with cheese. Traditionally all the fruit and nuts are ground. I’ve suggested some directions, as none were provided.

Ingredients

Directions

1½ tablespoons plain flour 1½ tablespoons caster sugar 1½ tablespoons butter 12 eggs 2 pound currants (1 kg) ¼ pound sultanas (125 g) ¼ pound lemon peel (finely ground) (125 g) ¼ pound ground almonds (125 g) ¼ pound cherries (125 g) 1 nutmeg, grated 1 glass rum 1 teaspoon ground mace or black treacle 1 uncooked plain pastry case

Cream butter and sugar. Add eggs. Add flour and spices to ground fruits. Combine all ingredients. Cook pastry case filled with weights such as dried peas, in oven for about 15 mins. Remove peas when cooked. Put mixture into cooled pastry case. Cook in a slow oven (150 C) for a long time – test after 1½ hrs. °

14

Lizzie Moody



Yorkshire pudding

 A savoury pudding, this traditional British dish is to be served with roast meat and gravy. The Yorkshire pudding should rise into hills and valleys. The critical thing is to get the right sized tin for the recipe, and for the fat to be really hot.

Ingredients

Directions

1 egg salt and pepper ½ cup milk 1 tablespoon cold water 2 rounded tablespoons flour

Mix well together and leave in refrigerator for at least an hour. Pour batter into hot fat in a baking tray. Cook in hot oven (230 C). °

15

Dot Featherstone  Making do in the Depression – the thirties

Dot and Joe Featherstone followed her brother Jack Moody and his wife Lizzie a few months later from Middlesborough to Toowoomba. Dot, Joe and their five boys arrived in Australia on SS Themistocles in January 1912. It was the same summer as Roald Amundsen reached the South

Pole and Sir Robert Scott perished on the way back from it. This period of Antarctic exploration has been called the Heroic Age. I think that a woman who takes her family of five boys to the other side of the world, never again to see her eight other brothers and sisters, is heroic. Her sixth son, Ian (pronounced iron but known as Jack), was born in Toowoomba. Dot, born Eliza Dorothy Moody, was thirty-six when she arrived. She had long hair, and wore long dresses and corsets, in the style of the time. She must have been glad when the twenties arrived. Hems went up, corsets were abandoned, and hair was cropped. She started writing her recipe book in 1931, when she was in her fifties. 1932 was the worst year of  the Depression in Australia. By then her boys were young men. Bill and youngest brother Jack, with a few mates, an old truck and an Alsatian dog, made their way from Maryborough in Queensland to Cairns, buying apples in bulk and selling them door-to-door to make a living. The recipes in Dot’s recipe book reflect a time when neighbours called each other ‘Mrs Langsdorff’ or ‘Mrs Featherstone’. In spite of the difficult times, they made eye masks for their beauty routine, and lotions for their hard-working hands. The life of a railwayman’s wife was not easy during the Depression. If people wanted beer or coffee, they made it at home. Visiting the doctor was rare, so housewives had many home remedies for their large families. Dot’s small black recipe book was given to me in 2007 by my cousin Rose. It is a glimpse of a difficult period in Dot’s life.

16

Dot Featherstone

Dot Featherstone  Featherstone’’s recipes recipes Making do in the Depression – the thirties

Recipes

Home remedies



Gem scones with anchovy butter



Cure for chilblains



Mock brains



Cure for indigestion



Tomato salad



Cure for rheumatism



Malt biscuits



Egg mask



Beer



Fruit salts



Coffee



To soften hands



Tonic for nervous and digestive systems

17

Dot Featherstone



Gem scones with anchovy butter

 A gem scone iron is a small metal baking tray with semi-circular depressions for the gem scones, which rise to create ball shapes. This is Dot’s recipe with Rea’s anchovy butter. Serve some gem scones with butter and some with anchovy butter. I have suggested directions.

Ingredients – gem scones

Directions – gem scones

1 tablespoon butter 2 tablespoons sugar 1 egg 1 cup milk 1½ cups flour 1½ teaspoons cream of tartar ¾ teaspoon soda pinch salt

Preheat gem scone irons in hot oven. Cream butter and sugar. Add egg and milk alternately with sifted dry ingredients. Take the gem irons out of the oven. Put a tablespoon of mixture in each of the gem iron holes. Bake in hot oven (230 C) for 10 minutes or less. Serve hot.

Ingredients – anchovy butter

Directions – anchovy butter

1 tablespoon butter ¼ teaspoon dry mustard 2 teaspoons Anchovette or ½ teaspoon anchovy paste pinch cayenne 1 teaspoon vinegar

Mix all ingredients together well.



°

Mock brains

Sounds better than the real thing. From the days when mothers cooked breakfast.

Ingredients

Directions

1 cup rolled oats ½ cup boiling water parsley, chopped onion, chopped 1 egg breadcrumbs salt and pepper

Cook oats in water with parsley and onion. When well cooked and thick, put in basin to set. Then cut in slices and fry to a nice golden brown in egg and breadcrumbs, salt and pepper.

18

Dot Featherstone



Tomato salad

When she was first married, Aussie Rea Featherstone was somewhat shocked by English Dot Featherstone’s Yorkshire approach to tomato salad.

Ingredients

Directions

tomatoes, sliced vinegar

Spread sliced tomatoes out on a serving dish. Pour a generous amount of vinegar over. Serve.



Malt biscuits

Rea’s copy of this recipe shows she was still calling her mother-in-law ‘Mrs Featherstone’ four years after she was married.

Ingredients

Directions

4 ounces butter (125 g) ½ cup brown sugar 1 tablespoon malt extract 1 tablespoon golden syrup ½ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda 1½ cups flour 1½ cups rolled oats 1 cup coconut pinch salt

Put first 4 ingredients into a saucepan and bring to boil. Add bicarbonate of soda dissolved in a little warm water. Have dry ingredients ready in a bowl. Pour hot syrup over dry ingredients and mix into a dough. Make walnut sized balls of dough and flatten on oven tray. Bake in moderate oven (180 C) about 10 minutes or until golden brown. °

19

Dot Featherstone



Beer

Yes, beer. You’ll have to guess how big a packet of hops is, if you make this recipe.

Ingredients

Directions

tin golden syrup large tin malt 3 pounds sugar (1.5 kg) 1 teaspoon salt ½ packet hops about 2 cups yeast

Boil hops in 4 gallons (16 litres) water for 20 minutes. Add salt. Put in syrup and malt when moderately cool. When at blood heat, add yeast and allow to work about 60 hours skimming each day twice. Bottle and cap securely.



Coffee

Two ways to make ‘coffee’. In the Depression, there was no money for luxuries like coffee. Dot didn’t specify  how much treacle is needed.

Ingredients – version 1

Directions – version 1

1 pound wheat (500 g) 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar

Mix all ingredients. Brown in oven. Put through mincer.

Ingredients – version 2

Directions – version 2

2 cups bran 1 cup oatmeal pinch salt black treacle

Damp dry ingredients with treacle and brown well in oven. Put through mincer.



Cure for chilblains

For those frosty Toowoomba winters.

Ingredients

Directions

one fair-sized potato water to cover salt

Peel potato then cut into pieces about ¼ inch (7 mm) thick. Place in basin and cover with salt. Stand for 8 to 12 hours. Strain juice, and keep in a bottle. Sponge affected parts with juice.

20

Dot Featherstone



Cure for indigestion

 A sixpenny coin is like a five cent coin. A shilling is like a ten cent coin.

Ingredients

Directions

½ pound sultanas (250 g) ½ pound dried figs (250 g) sixpence worth syrup of senna sixpence worth Peruvian bark (powdered) two shillings worth brandy

Chop all ingredients and mix with brandy. Dose: 2 teaspoonsful every morning.



Cure for rheumatism

I suggest using cooked rhubarb. The amount of honey is up to you.

Ingredients

Directions

1 ounce sulphur (30 g) 1 ounce cream of tartar (30 g) 1 ounce rhubarb (30 g) honey

Warm honey. Mix thoroughly. Dose: 2 teaspoonsful dissolved in tumbler of  water at night and early morning. Can be flavoured with lemon juice or o r white wine.



Egg mask 

Dot’s beauty treatment is not much different from the ones in women’s magazines today.

Ingredients

Directions

1 egg few drops glycerine honey

Separate white from yolk of egg. Beat white to stiff froth. Add glycerine and apply mixture to face. Steam face for a minute then smooth honey all over the face and leave on for a few minutes.



Fruit salts

Presumably for using in the bath

Ingredients

Directions

¼ pound cream of tartar (125 g) ¼ pound tartaric acid (125 g) ¼ pound bicarbonate of soda (125 g) ½ pound icing sugar (250 g) 4 packets Epsom salts 1 ounce magnesia (30 g)

Mix thoroughly. Keep in a securely corked bottle in a dry place.

21

Dot Featherstone



To soften hands

For hands rough from too much housework. A one shilling coin is like a ten cent coin.

Ingredients

Directions

1 teaspoon powdered starch  juice of a lemon half bottle glycerine (1 shilling size)

Mix starch and lemon juice. Add glycerine and boil till clear. Rub into hands at night.



Tonic for nervous and digestive systems

It makes me nervous to think what this would do to your digestive system.

Ingredients

Directions

1 pound eating prunes (500 g) 1 pound dates (500 g) ½ pound raisins (250 g) ½ pound currants (250 g) ½ pound sultanas (250 g) 1 pound figs (500 g) 1 ounce senna powder (30 g) 4 tablespoons honey

Put all fruit through mincer. Add senna and honey. Dose: 2 teaspoonsful before breakfast and on retiring.

22

Sarah Jane Bailey    A widow raising nine children alone – the thirties

Sarah Jane Risson was born in Australia, of English immigrant parents who settled at Ma Ma Creek, at the foot of the t he Great Dividing Range. She grew up on a dairy farm carved out of the bush by her father, and went to school at the school that her father and others petitioned the government to build. Her husband Thomas Bailey’s story is similar. He was also a first-generation Australian, born of  Scottish parents, who lived in the next valley at Flagstone Creek. When Thomas died after an accident at work as a carter in 1929, Sarah was left to raise those of her nine children still left at home. Through the thirties and forties, Sarah worked as a cleaner and laundress, and her younger children helped by picking up and delivering the laundry. My cousins remember a woman who could never stand seeing an idle child, so she would always give them something to do. She never had a holiday until her youngest daughter Rea took her to the Blue Mountains, after Rea started work about 1940. Sarah was a staunch member of the church, and made sure that all the children attended church and Sunday School regularly. Youngest daughter Rea was awarded an engraved gold brooch, for not missing a day at Sunday School for five years. Rea would walk to church, attend youth group, and walk back to sister Ruth’s home to look after her young cousins while their parents attended church, then she would take the children Sunday School. She would then walk them home, collect washing from a family and take t ake it to her home. She would then return in the evening for another service. She would take the freshly ironed washing back on o n Monday. It is hard to imagine when Sarah had time for fancy cooking, but my cousins clearly remember her beautifully-presented rows of preserved fruit and vegetables on display in the kitchen.

23

Sarah Jane Bailey

Sarah Bailey   SS arah   Jane Bailey’ Bailey  ’s recipe   A widow raising nine children alone – the thirties



Bread and butter cucumbers

Economical and easy to make.

Ingredients

Directions

3 medium cucumbers 1 pound onions (optional)(500 g) 1 large green pepper (capsicum) ¼ cup salt 1 cup brown sugar, firmly packed ½ teaspoon turmeric ½ teaspoon ground cloves 1 tablespoon mustard seed or 2 teaspoons mustard powder if seed unavailable ½ teaspoon celery seed 2 cups white vinegar

Wash cucumbers and cut into very thin slices. Peel onions and cut into thin slices. Put cucumber and onion into a bowl with coarsely grated capsicum. Sprinkle with salt and stand 3 hours. Drain and rinse under cold water. Put brown sugar, turmeric, cloves, mustard seed, celery seed and vinegar in a large l arge saucepan. Stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves and liquid comes to the boil. Reduce heat and simmer 5 minutes. Add vegetables. Bring just to the boil. Remove from heat. Pack into sterilised jars. Pour liquid over and seal. Makes about 6 cups (1½ litres)

24

Elsie McAllan  Holding dreams of better times – the forties

Elsie Bailey was Rea’s eldest sister. There were twenty years between them. Elsie would have been twenty-five when their father Thomas died unexpectedly. Because she was older, Elsie would have been one less for her widowed mother to look after. Rea, the youngest, was only five, and there were seven other brothers and sisters between the two of them. Perhaps because of family responsibilities, or the Depression, Elsie didn’t marry until she was thirtyfour. She married Andy McAllan, a widower with a young son and daughter. Their happiness was short-lived, as Elsie died seven years later. Rea copied this recipe into her recipe book about nine years after her eldest sister had died in 1943. Her recipe for a rich Christmas cake must date from before the war, because the ingredients would not have been available during that time, with wartime rationing. There was no question of making a cake with ten eggs. However, holding on to the dream of better times was important. This recipe and these photos are all I have from my Auntie Elsie.

25

Elsie McAllan

Elsie McAlla  McAllan’n’s recipe  Holding dreams of better times – the forties



Christmas cake

I have suggested some instructions as none were given. This cake should keep well.

Ingredients

Directions

3 pounds dried mixed fruit (1.4 kg ) orange juice 1 wineglass rum 1 pound butter (500 g) 1 pound brown sugar (500 g) 10 eggs ½ packet spice 1 nutmeg, grated cinnamon salt and pepper 1 pound flour (500 (500 g) 2 ounces self-raising flour (60 g) grated rind of a lemon 2 tablespoons milk

Mix dried fruits and soak in orange juice and rum, preferably overnight. Beat butter and brown sugar. Add eggs. Add sifted dry ingredients and lemon rind. Mix well, while adding milk. Stir in fruit mixture. Put in a cake tin, lined with brown paper so that it is taller than the cake tin. Cook in a moderately slow oven (170 C) for 1– 1½ hrs. °

26

Ruth Ruth   Draney   Raising a family through the church – the fifties

Ruth and her older sister Elsie were born at Flagstone Creek, at the foot of the Great Dividing Range where Toowoomba is situated. The girls went to school there before the family moved to Toowoomba. Ruth was twenty-three years old when their father Thomas Bailey died. Ruth married Ray Draney, a fellow church member, the year after Thomas’s death. They had four children, and Ruth raised them all by herself while Ray was away for four years during World War II. Like her mother Sarah, Ruth was very v ery active in the Toowoomba Church of Christ. This church was formed in Australia, and Ruth’s husband Ray became president of the church in Queensland. Ray often used to preach. His dedication included pushing two of his young children in a pram for miles across Toowoomba to preach at Harlaxton church on Sunday afternoons. Ruth assisted with Ladies Groups and the Women’s Ministry. She helped establish Mylo Home for the aged, where she eventually spent her last years. Her son Ken became a minister, and her daughter Aileen was a missionary in Papua P apua New Guinea for many years. Ruth supported her daughter’s missionary work by writing to her every single week. Ruth raised four children in her home in Rome Street. Her recipe will feed a large family.

27

Ruth Draney

Ruth Draney’’s recipe  RR uth   Draney   Raising a family through the church – the fifties



Mexicana mince

Mince was a staple food of Australian households. It was often fatty, so it was normal practice to boil the mince in a pan of water first, to remove the fat. This recipe is the first one in all these hand-written recipe books that  refers to a world beyond English cookery. A sustaining meal to feed the whole family.

Ingredients

Directions

1 cup rice 1 tablespoon margarine 1 large onion 1½ teaspoons curry powder salt and pepper 4 tomatoes, peeled and sliced 1½ pounds mince (750 g) 1– 1½ pints water (700 mls)

Soak rice for 30 minutes. Melt margarine in frypan. Brown sliced onion. Drain rice, add and coat well in margarine. Add curry powder and salt and pepper. Cook for a few minutes. Add tomatoes, sprinkled with sugar if desired. Cook a few minutes. Add mince and water. Cook 30 minutes at 260 F (160 C). Stir frequently and add more water if required. °

28

°

Rea Rea Featherstone  The fifties housewife

Rea married Bill Featherstone in 1948. He was nineteen years o lder than her. Perhaps he did not marry earlier because he was a young man during the Depression, and then he was away serving in World War II. As a child at primary school, Rea’s contribution to the war was to knit socks for servicemen, as she walked around the playground. Rea was a stay-at-home mum, sewing clothes for her four children on her Singer sewing machine housed in a silky oak cabinet made by her brother Stan. She loved to knit, and won a prize at a CWA competition for speed knitting against stiff opposition. She knitted seven complete dresses between the ages of 17 and 19, including a ballgown. Sadly, these dresses are lost to us. Postwar shortages affected the home cook during the fifties, but the shortages gradually eased. Rea has a number of recipes such as ‘mock chicken’, as she ‘made do’ with what she had. She optimistically started this recipe book on the day I was born. In the sixties, we children would come home to homemade slices and biscuits. She involved us all in bottling fruit in the Fowler’s Vacola. These were simple times for the children, if not for the housewife. Rea graduated from boiling the washing in a copper in the t he backyard to using a wringer machine m achine about 1960. It took all Monday to wash and iron for a family of six. So to have a simple recipe for Washday Pudding was handy, because evening meals always included dessert . If it was ‘cook’s night off’, we would eat canned tomato soup with jaffles – sandwiches toasted in an iron jaffle maker heated in the firebox of the wood fire.

29

Rea Featherstone

Rea Featherstone’s recipes The fifties housewife

Nibbles and snacks 

Mock chicken

Main course

Preserves 

Imitation apricot filling



Tomato and passionfruit jam



Crunchy Norwegian casserole

Hints



French cabbage rolls



To polish cutlery and silver



Savoury chops



Ivory knife handles



Shepherd’s pie



For flies



Curly wool

Biscuits cakes and sweets 

123 piecrust with stewed fruit



Delicious lemon cheese for tarts



Eggless chocolate cake



Melting moments



Neenish tarts



Pumpkin fruit cake



Pusher biscuits



Rocky road



Washday pudding



Lamingtons

30

Rea Featherstone



Mock chicken

We frequently ate this spread on our white bread sandwiches for school lunches.

Ingredients

Directions

1 small onion 1 rounded teaspoon butter 1 tomato, skinned and chopped 1 teaspoon dried mixed herbs 1 beaten egg 1 tablespoon grated cheese salt and pepper to taste

Cook onion slowly with butter, for about 10 minutes. Do not brown. Add the tomato and herbs, and simmer for a few minutes. Remove from heat. Add the beaten egg, salt and pepper, and cheese, and beat well. If the egg isn’t quite cooked, put back on the stove for a minute or two. Add 2 crushed shredded wheatmeal biscuits if  required to be thicker.



Crunchy Norwegian casserole

This was a Featherstone family favourite, often served in winter. Substitute chilli sauce if Tabasco is unavailable. Ingredients – white sauce

Directions – white sauce

1 tablespoon flour 1 tablespoon butter 1 cup milk

Melt butter and mix in flour. Heat remaining milk separately. Add a little warmed milk to the butter–flour mixture and stir to prevent lumps. Add more milk, stirring, and then add this mixture to the rest of the warmed milk. Cook until the sauce coats the back of a wooden spoon.

Ingredients – casserole

Directions – casserole

¾ cup green pepper ¾ cup onion 1 cup diced celery 7 ounces tuna (220 g) 3 ¾ ounce tin sardines (110 g) 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 2 drops Tabasco sauce 1 cup thick white sauce

Combine and sauté vegetables. Mix in other ingredients and top with the melted butter and crumbs. Cook in moderate oven (180 C) for 30 minutes. °

Topping

2 tablespoons melted butter 1 cup cornflake crumbs

31

Rea Featherstone



French cabbage rolls

 Another way to serve mince – a cheap family meal. I think the garlic is the reason for the ‘French’ name, as it  was an unusual ingredient in the fifties.

Ingredients – filling

Directions – cabbage rolls

½ pound mince (250 g) ½ cup uncooked rice ½ cup soft breadcrumbs 4 tablespoons finely chopped onions 1 garlic clove ¼ teaspoon pepper 1½ teaspoon salt 2 large tablespoons margarine 12 tender cabbage leaves

Mix together all ingredients except cabbage leaves. Simmer cabbage leaves in boiling water 3–5 minutes. Remove leaves. Drain and cut out rib, then spread with mixture. Roll firmly. Stack closely in oven dish. Put on lid and cook 40 minutes in a moderate oven (180 C). Pour sauce over cabbage rolls. Replace lid and cook another 20 minutes.

Ingredients – sauce

Directions – sauce

2 ounces margarine 2 teaspoons onion 1 garlic clove 2 tablespoon flour stock  juice of a lemon salt and pepper

Cook onions and garlic in melted margarine for 2 minutes. Add plain flour and enough stock to make creamy sauce. Add lemon juice, salt and pepper.



°

Savoury chops

Mutton chops are no longer common, but it was everyday family food then.

Ingredients

Directions

1 pound stewing chops 4 slices bacon 1 carrot 1 onion 2 tablespoons flour plus salt and pepper, to make seasoned flour 2 cups water

Trim chops and cut rind off o ff bacon. Scrape and slice carrot. Peel and slice onion. Roll chops in seasoned flour. Into a pie dish place layers of chops, bacon, carrot and onion. Add water. Cover pie dish and bake in moderate oven (180 C) for 1–1½ hours. °

32

Rea Featherstone



Shepherd’s pie

This traditional dish warmed the family on cold winter nights.

Ingredients – stewed mince

Directions – stewed mince

1 pound mince (500 g) 1 onion parsley 1 small carrot, grated ½ cup water 1½ teaspoons salt pepper 2 tablespoons flour 1–2 tomatoes, sliced

Place meat, chopped onion, parsley and grated carrot in a saucepan. Add water, salt and pepper. Cook over gentle heat until well cooked. Add water if necessary. Sprinkle flour over meat and mix well. Allow to thicken. Pour into pie dish and cover with slices of  tomato, if desired.

Ingredients – mashed potato

Directions – mashed potato

4 large potatoes 1 rounded teaspoon butter 2–3 tablespoon milk

Peel potatoes and cut into chunks. Add to boiling water and boil until very soft. Drain. Return to saucepan. Add butter and a good dash of milk. Beat well until very smooth. To assemble

extra butter, melted

Put the mince into a greased rectangular baking dish, and top with mashed potato. Use a fork to decorate the top, and brush with melted butter. Cook in a hot oven (230 C) for 15 minutes until the top is golden brown. Serve hot. °

33

Rea Featherstone



123 piecrust with stewed fruit 

 As easy to make as it is to remember: 1–2–3. I suggest baking in a moderate oven for 20 minutes.

Ingredients

Directions

1 tablespoon butter 2 tablespoons sugar 3 tablespoons self-raising flour Stewed fruit such as peach or quince

Mix ingredients together with fingers until crumbly and sprinkle it thickly over cooked fruit. Bake in usual way, but not too quickly.



Delicious lemon cheese for tarts

Rea used to say that the lemons must be fully ripe, and that the recipe will not set with Meyer lemons. This is typical picnic food, served in a crumbed biscuit tart shell and eaten with a cup of hot tea while Bill and Uncle Don painted watercolours of gum trees down by the creek.

Ingredients

Directions

1 tin condensed milk rind and juice of 4 lemons egg yolks tart shell made of biscuit crumbs and melted butter, chilled

Mix all ingredients well. Spread mixture in tart shell. Store in ice chest.



Eggless chocolate cake

There are many eggless recipes in Rea’s recipe book. This may be because of post-war shortages.

Ingredients

Directions

1 cup hot water 4 teaspoons golden syrup ½ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda 3 tablespoons margarine ½ cup brown sugar 2 cups self-raising flour 2 tablespoons cocoa pinch salt

Place ingredients in basin in order listed, up to the flour. When margarine has melted, add self-raising flour and cocoa. Mix thoroughly. Bake in a moderate oven (180 C) about 25 minutes. °

34

Rea Featherstone



Melting moments

 A classic biscuit recipe. We often found these in the bikkie tin when we came home from school.

Ingredients

Directions

¼ to ½ pound butter (125–250 (125–250 g) 2 ounces sugar (60 g) 4 ounces cornflour (125 g) g)

Beat butter and sugar to a cream then sift cornflour in slowly. Roll into walnut sized balls in the palms of the hands. Put on a greased paper on biscuit biscuit tray. Use a fork to flatten onto the tray. Bake in a moderate oven (180 C) about 10 minutes. Sandwich pairs together with white icing. °



Neenish tarts

Rea recommends these special-occasions tarts for afternoon tea, or to serve with coffee after dinner. Almond  meal should be used for the pastry, she says, but champagne pastry is good too.

Ingredients – champagne c hampagne pastry

Directions – champagne pastry

3 ounces butter (90 g) ¼ cup caster sugar 1 egg yolk ¾ cup flour ½ cup self-raising flour pinch salt 1 tablespoon milk

Cream butter and sugar. Add egg yolk then sifted flour alternately with milk. Knead. Rest 15 minutes. Roll out thinly. Cut circles for tartlets. Prick with fork after placing on tray to bake. Bake 10 minutes at 375 F (190 C). Makes about 20 small tart shells. Cool before filling. °

°

Ingredients – almond cream

Directions – almond cream

3 ounces butter (90 g) g) 6 level tablespoons icing sugar 1½ tablespoons condensed milk 3 tablespoons honey few drops almond essence

Cream butter and icing sugar, then add the rest of the ingredients. Mix well. Fill the small tart shells with almond cream, smoothing it over so it is even with the tart edges. Chill in fridge.

Ingredients – icing

Directions – icing

1 cup icing mixture 1 tablespoon butter 1½ tablespoons milk

Make the white icing. Halve, and add cocoa to one half to make brown icing.

Brown icing

1 tablespoon cocoa To assemble

Ice each filled tart half with white icing and half  with chocolate icing. 35

Rea Featherstone



Pumpkin fruit cake

This was Rea’s most famous recipe. A beautiful moist golden fruit cake.

Ingredients

Directions

½ pound butter (250 g) 1 cup sugar 2 eggs 1 cup cold mashed pumpkin 2 cups flour 1 teaspoon cream of tartar ½ teaspoon baking soda 1 packet mixed fruit (375 g)

Cream butter and sugar. Add eggs and beat well. Add pumpkin and sifted dry ingredients, and lastly mixed fruit. Bake in a slow oven o ven (150 C) 1½–2 hours.



°

Pusher biscuits

This buttery mix can be pushed through a metal biscuit maker tube using different inserts to make a variety of  decorative biscuits that look good for Christmas. Kids enjoy helping to make these.

Ingredients

Directions

2 ounces butter or dripping (60 g) 2 ounces sugar (60 g) 1 egg 6 ounces self-raising flour (180 g) ¼ teaspoon salt

Beat butter or dripping and sugar to a cream. Add egg and sifted dry ingredients. Mix and put mixture through pusher. If mixture is too stiff for pusher, add a little boiling water after adding flour. Cook in moderate oven (180 C) about 10 minutes. °

Variations

Vanilla fingers: add vanilla essence. Strawberry cream: add strawberry essence and  join biscuits with strawberry icing. Monte Carlos: Add 1 tablespoon honey. Join with raspberry jam and vanilla icing.

36

Rea Featherstone



Rocky road

Rea has many recipes for sweets. The kids helped her make them for school fetes. Instead of Jellettes, make different colours of packet jelly with half quantity of water. When the jellies are set, dice. You can also add  sultanas.

Ingredients

Directions

6 ounces marshmallows 4 ounces white shortening (Copha) ¾ cup sifted icing sugar 2 tablespoons cocoa vanilla ½ cup walnuts or peanuts 3 coloured Jellettes (chopped)

Cut marshmallows into small pieces. Grease 7 inch square tin. Melt shortening over gentle heat – it must only be lukewarm. Add to icing sugar, cocoa and vanilla. Mix till smooth. Fold through marshmallows, nuts and Jellette pieces. Press into prepared tin, chill. Cut into squares. Wrap if desired.



Washday pudding

Even after a day boiling the copper and folding the family washing, the family expected dessert. It needs no sauce as it has enough.

Ingredients

Directions

1½ cups self-raising flour 1 tablespoon butter 2 tablespoons boiling water ½ cup milk ½ cup sugar 1 tablespoon syrup 1 tablespoon butter 1 cup boiling water, extra

Rub flour and butter together. Add boiling water and milk. Mix well. Cover with sugar, syrup, butter and 1 cup boiling water. Stand basin in boiling water and steam ½ hour. Do not cover basin with lid.



Tomato and passionfruit jam

Women used what they had on hand, and adapted adapted recipes to use available ingredients. Rea also made jam  from rosellas, a native fruit.

Ingredients

Directions

2 pounds ripe tomatoes (1 kg) 1 pound peeled and cored apples (500 g) 6 passionfruit 3 pounds sugar (1.5 kg)

Peel and slice tomatoes and add chopped apples and boil together until soft. Add sugar. Stir until dissolved then boil the mixture hard for about 30 minutes. Add the passionfruit pulp. Boil again for 5 minutes. Test the jam and continue to boil till setting point is reached. Bottle in sterilised jars. 37

Rea Featherstone



Imitation apricot filling

This surprising recipe is nice in tarts or biscuits. Don't mention it has choko and no-one will know what it really  is, Rea tells us. It’s important to mash the chokos well.

Ingredients

Directions

1 pound sugar (500 g) 1 pound tree tomatoes (tamarillos) (500 g) 4 or 5 chokos

Slice the tree tomatoes and cover with sugar. Allow to stand overnight. Peel and cook the chokos while sugar and tree tomatoes are cooking. Drain and mash chokos well or puree them. Add to fruit–sugar mixture. Cook until it jells.



Lamingtons

Lamingtons were invented in Toowoomba in 1896. Lord Lamington, the Governor of Queensland, used to spend  each summer at Harlaxton House. His cook, unable to bake the snowball cakes he liked, invented what we now  know as lamingtons.

Ingredients

Directions

½ cup butter 1 cup sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla 2/3 cup milk 2 cups flour 3 teaspoons baking powder ¼ teaspoon salt

Cream butter and sugar, beating until very light. Add beaten eggs and vanilla. Sift flour with baking powder and salt. Add some sifted dry ingredients to the mixture, then some milk. Continue adding flour then milk until it is all used. Bake in greased and floured tin for about 20 minutes at 180 C. Cut cooled cake into squares. Roll each lamington in brown icing and dip in coconut. °

38

Rea Featherstone



To polish cutlery and silver

This imparts a brilliant polish, and cutlery will not require any special treatment if treated in this way every   fortnight. The mixture is also good for household silver.

Ingredients

Directions

1 cup yellow soap 1 cup washing soda 1 cup whiting

Dissolve all ingredients in a saucepan over a slow fire. Pour into a tin. Place the cutlery in a dish with 2 teaspoons of  the mixture, pour in hot water, and wash in the usual way. Dry the cutlery while hot.



For ivory knife handles

Rea received ivory-handled knives for her wedding. You might find some at vintage markets.

Ingredients

Directions

lemon rind salt

Ivory knife handles will turn yellowish if they are allowed to go without a periodical treatment of  being rubbed over with a piece of lemon rind dipped in salt.



For flies

Rea’s answer for a constant problem.

Ingredients

Directions

½ teaspoon black pepper 1 teaspoon brown sugar 1 teaspoon cream

Mix well and place on plate in room.



For curly wool

Rea loved to knit. If one of the kids grew out of a jumper, this was how to recycle the wool.

Requirements

Directions

unravelled wool from an old garment aluminium saucepan

Wind wool round saucepan. Fill saucepan with almost boiling water and allow it to stand with wool round it, while there is any heat in the water. When removed wool is ready to reknit.

39

Emmie Featherstone  Country hospitality in town – the sixties

Emmie Gillam was descended from the family of Charles Gillam, gentleman, of Allora. She loved horses, and rode well. Her daughter Rose inherited her love of animals, and they t hey both share the wonderfully warm sense of hospitality that is typical of country people. Emmie, small and round, married Don Featherstone, tall and thin. They shared a warm relationship, always teasing each other. There was usually a very chatty budgie in the kitchen, who could call the dogs to come for dinner, sounding just like lik e Emmie. There was usually at least one dog underfoot, and our favourite cousin Rose’s cats, cockies and curlews roamed the back yard. When television came to Toowoomba about 1960, Bill and Rea didn’t buy one. Often on a Sunday night, the Ford Prefect with four children in the back would drive over to Don and Emmie’s to watch TV. We were supposed to go home before the movie, but we children would try to get the adults chatting so that they would not notice that the movie had started. Then we would wo uld need to stay for supper, wouldn’t we? Saos with cheese and tomato, and a warm tea cake were Emmie’s favourites – and ours.

40

Emmie Featherstone

Emmie Featherstone’s recipes Country hospitality in town – the sixties



Saos with cheese and tomato

Sometimes the simplest things are the best.

Ingredients

Directions

Sao biscuits butter (not margarine) tasty cheese home-grown tomato salt and pepper

Butter Sao biscuits. Top with sliced tasty cheese and a slice of  home-grown tomato. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Serve immediately.



Tea cake

Served warm, with cinnamon sugar that sticks to fingers.

Ingredients

Directions

1 large tablespoon butter ½ cup sugar 1 egg ½ cup milk vanilla 1 cup self-raising flour

Cream butter and sugar. Add well-beaten egg, milk and vanilla, then flour. Bake in a buttered tin, in a moderate oven (180 C) for about 20 minutes.

Ingredients – topping

Directions – topping

1 teaspoon sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon coconut 1 rounded teaspoon butter

When the cake is nearly ready, mix topping ingredients. Smooth over hot cake. Put back in oven for a few minutes. Serve hot or cold.

°

41

Notes From the editor 

All these recipes came from hand-written recipe books. I have not cooked them all, so I can give no assurance that the recipes work. However, I am sure you can trust these grandmothers, as they used the recipes themselves. I would not suggest you try the home remedies, nor would I suggest that making your own beer or coffee from these recipes is a good idea. As grandma would say, “Just use your common sense!” Where possible, I have provided Australian Standard metric conversions for imperial measurements, based on the Macquarie Dictionary of Cooking , McMahon’s Point, N.S.W. , edited by Judy Jones in 1983. I have not attempted to provide equivalents for things like ‘2 shillings worth brandy’, or ‘large tin malt’.

Cooking terms and ingredients

Cup – use a standard Australian measuring cup, whether you are using imperial measurements or metric. There is little difference. Hops, malt, Peruvian bark, syrup of o f senna – If you wish to prepare recipes using these ingredients, I suggest you do your own research.

Oven temperatures

Moderately slow oven Slow oven Moderate oven Hot oven

330 250 350 450

° ° ° °

F/170 F/150 F/180 F/230

° ° ° °

C C C C

42

Photos Front  cover 

Lizzie Moody © Sandra Routley, Dot Featherstone © Roy Featherstone, Sarah Jane Bailey © Kenneth Draney, Elsie McAllan, and Ruth Draney © Gay Middleton, Rea Featherstone © Spencer Featherstone, Featherstone, Emmie Featherstone © Spencer Featherstone

7

Rose’s wishes © Wendy Pang

11

Jack and Lizzie Moody © Sandra Routley 

12

Lizzie Moody’s Yorkshire fruit cake recipe recorded by Sandra Routley © Wendy Pang

15

Lizzie Moody’s popovers recipe recorded by Sandra Routley © Wendy Pang

16

Dot Featherstone — Darlington, UK, about 1910 © Roy Featherstone

17

Dot Featherstone’s kisses and mock brains recipes © Wendy Pang

19

Joseph and Dot Featherstone, William and Elizabeth Hunt, and boys (L to R): Sydney, William, Joseph Charles, Eric and Maurice © Roy Featherstone Featherstone

22

Dot Featherstone’s recipe book dated 1931 © Wendy Pang

23

Sarah Jane Bailey © Gay Middleton

24

Sarah Bailey’s home at 168A Bridge St Toowoomba — 1960s © Gay Middleton

25

Elsie McAllan © Gay Middleton

26

Elsie McAllan, step-children Hughie and Eunice, and possibly husband Andy — about 1940 © Gay Middleton

27

Ruth Draney — about 1950 © Kenneth Draney 

28

Church of Christ Toowoomba © Gay Middleton

29

Rea Featherstone © Spencer Featherstone

30

Featherstones — Bill, Rea, Spencer (obscured), Wendy, Judy, Roy and dog Andy — Toowoomba, about 1962 © Rose Komduur 

33

Rea Featherstone’s recipe book dated 1952 © Wendy Pang

36

Rea Featherstone’s recipe for sardine scones © Wendy Pang

38

Christmas at home — Toowoomba 1960s © Roy Featherstone

40

Emmie Featherstone — Toowoomba 1970s © Spencer Featherstone

41

Featherstones — Emmie, Don, Dot with Lal and Rose in front — possibly 1950s © Rose Komduur 

45

Wendy Pang © Robert Pang

Back  cover 

Dot Featherstone, William and Elizabeth Hunt — Toowoomba about 1913 © Roy Featherstone

43

Index  ex  Ind     Entree or snacks Gem scones with anchovy butter Mock chicken Popovers Saos with cheese and tomato

Preserves and beverages

18 31 15 41

Beer Coffee Tomato and passionfruit jam

Home remedies and hints

Main course Crunchy Norwegian casserole French cabbage rolls Mexicana mince Savoury chops Shepherd’s pie

Cure for chilblains Cure for indigestion Cure for rheumatism Egg mask For curly wool For flies For ivory knife handles Fruit salts To soften hands To polish cutlery and silver Tonic for nervous and digestive systems

31 32 28 32 33

 Side dishes Bread and butter cucumbers Mock brains Tomato salad Yorkshire pudding

24 18 19 15

Desserts and sweets 123 piecrust with stewed fruit Delicious lemon cheese for tarts Imitation apricot filling Neenish tarts Rocky road Washday pudding

33 34 38 35 37 37

Biscuits and cakes Christmas cake Eggless chocolate cake Lamingtons Malt biscuits Melting moments Peanut parkins Pumpkin fruit cake Pusher biscuits Sticky bread Tea cake Yorkshire bran loaf Yorkshire cheese cake Yorkshire fruit cake

19 20 37

26 34 38 19 34 13 36 36 13 41 13 26 14

44

20 20 21 21 39 39 39 21 21 38 22

Wendy Pang The editor 

Wendy Pang is a baby-boomer, now taking time t ime to reflect on where she came from. She went to school at Toowoomba High School, like her mother, and then to the University of Queensland. Wendy spent a year in France before marrying her Malaysian Chinese husband, Robert Pang, and raising three children – Andrew, Kim and Michael. Wendy and Robert met in Brisbane and spent seven years in Perth, where she taught in high schools, before moving to Canberra in 1984. She  joined the Public Service and worked in computing and departmental libraries before becoming a website manager. She enjoys quilting and founded Australia’s first online quilt group, who later created a Bicentennial figure in her honour. She has won gold medals at the Australian Masters Rowing Championships. She inherited a sweet tooth from her mother, and enjoys cooking cakes and biscuits. Most of the household cooking is done by her husband, and they both agree that this is a good thing.

45

Grandma’s recipes brings together recipes from a group of women related to the editor. They lived

in Toowoomba, Queensland, from 1910 onwards. o nwards. The recipes represent home-cooking through the twentieth century, when the Depression and World War II affected daily lives dramatically. Reading the recipes offers a glimpse of the lives of mothers and home-makers – a role that is hidden from society at large, but represents a big influence on family, friends and neighbours. Wendy Pang presents recipes with metric measurements where possible, so that they can be enjoyed today. There are also recipes that readers will wonder at, but probably not want to recreate  – like recipes for making coffee from wheat. Enjoy the recipes. Cook them, and remember the hard-working women who went before us.

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