Posted on 04/14/2016 3:24:45 PM PDT by Jamestown1630
From what I remember, a thermospodium was essentially a combination chaffing dish/samovar (food/drink) used in both kitchen and dining room.
I have kahili ginger growing but it’s not suitable for cooking as far as I know. Nice fragrant flower though
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/440438038530553571/
I love regular cookbooks ! (and regular books in general). The internet is amazing in what you can research and find but I am still drawn to books and buy them at bookstores, library sales, Amazon etc.
Hi everyone...
very pretty blossom. In the forests here in this part of the country a spring wildflower is called wild ginger. I really do not know if it is edible. I love ginger and do a lot of cooking with it. Use the fresh, bottled minced and the powdered that I order from Amazon
I love honey roasted sunflower seeds! They are great sprinkled in sandwich wraps. Spread tortilla with herb cream cheese or goat cheese cream cheese mixture. Layer sandwich ingredients, meat,cheese, veggies on top of herb cheese spread, then sprinkle on the seeds. Roll up sandwich then cut in half to serve. You can also slice these into thinner pinwheels for finger food at cocktail or tea parties. I like BLTs with avocado, yum! The seeds give a little sweet crunch to the mix.
I give my tomatoes a few whirls in the lettuce spinner. The tomatoes are less juicy when used in casseroles, sandwiches, or our favorite tomato pie.
Me too -I much prefer “real” books. I used a kindle for a while, but don’t want to invest too much money in eBooks in case the economy collapses and I lose access to them. Besides, I can’t indulge in a sackfull of used books from the library sale ;)
Afternoon Tea at Harrods Georgian Restaurant, London, England
Three-tiers of perfect afternoon snacks and sweets. At the top were pastries. A mini fruit
tart, some strawberry cheesecake, slices of raspberry coffee cake, and chocolate éclairs
Then scones w/ little glass bowls of the creamiest butter and teeny jars of preserves;
crumbly, buttery inside, smeared with generous globs of butter and strawberry jam.
Then sandwiches. The sandwich bread was thin and delicate, the filling understated: smoked
salmon with caper butter Cucumber and minted yoghurt, ham and piccalilli, cheddar
cheese and Branston pickle, truffled egg salad with cress.
Where Marigold and Mrs. Rumpole went for tea once in a while in the classic tv show Rumpole of the Bailey.
I love they serve Branston Pickle which I love but isn’t good for the waistline.
I had often heard of Branston Pickle, but never really knew what it was; here’s a blurb, and a recipe:
http://www.thekitchn.com/favorite-fall-snack-branston-pickle-197644
http://www.food.com/recipe/the-almost-original-branston-pickle-recipe-246675
Now that I know what it us....Branston Pickle is a must.
It does look very good.
Branston Pickle, which can now be bought in the US at any supermarket, must be served with a good cheddar cheese on brown bread as it is at the National Theater canteen. The sweet and salty combo is very nice.
I’ve found Branston Pickle, as well as Marmite, at Wegmans, the old A&P, ShopRite and Stop and Shop in the int’l section. It’s pretty common in stores now. Whether it’s popular in the US, I don’t know. I happen to really like it.
Got it-—brown bread Cheddar and Branston pickle.
Sounds like a new taste treat.
Let me know if you like it.
BTW, since the original thread was about cookbooks, I decided to go to Ebay and buy some old Gourmet magazines from the 60s and 70s. As my usual bedtime reading, these turned out to be superlative! So much more intellectual and stimulating than the dumbed-down picture-oriented zines of today. While there is a kind of fun pomposity to some of the writing, it reminded me that the old Gourmet was much more a travel magazine than a food magazine. And a history magazine. It had a long piece on Colonial foods and cooking that was interesting and a sad and ironic piece on the glories of Haiti: filled with French aristocrats and ambassadors swanning around the mountains and hanging with Papa Doc! How wonderfully politically-incorrect was the old America.
Will do....btw, how do you use the Marmite?
I’ve never tried it although I have a little bottle. A tiny smear is applied to toast. Nigella writes paeans to it so you might want to google Nigella-Marmite. It’s basically yeast extract, is nutritious and very salty. The Aussies call it Vegemite and it is more expensive. I’ve heard it is an acquired taste and Brits go crazy for it. I keep meaning to try it.
Nigella also has a pasta dish that incorporates Marmite!
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