Good Tidings & Good Eats

Here’s another recipe from Marjorie Standish’s Cooking Down East. This recipe is exactly the way my 84 year old aunt makes it. If you don’t want to buy fresh salmon, using canned red salmon works just as well (as the recipe calls for). As for sides, I would recommend mashed potatoes (light, fluffy, REAL mashed potatoes) and peas. A good hearty meal for the first snowfall of Maine winter. I would serve this with a very basic white cream sauce rather than an egg sauce.

SALMON LOAF

1 large can red salmon
1/2  teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon paprika
1/4 teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons lemon juice
3 egg whites
1/4 cup melted butter or margarine
3 egg yolks
1 1/2 cups firmly packed soft bread crumbs
1 1/2 cups scalded milk

Remove skin and bones from salmon and mash very fine. Mix salmon, paprika, pepper, salt and lemon juice, melted butter, beaten egg yolks and bread crumbs. Add hot milk, fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into greased loaf pan. Bake at 375 degrees for 1 hour. Serve with egg sauce. Serves 8.

Image courtesy of jimbown0306, Flickr Creative Commons

Vintage finds from a late summer estate sale!

I live in the historic section of Saco, Maine. A few months ago I was taking a walk and came upon an estate sale. The house owners had lived there for 60+ years. The son fondly recalled family camping trips taken throughout Maine.

 

These books are books I clearly remember reading myself. It brought me back to my grandmother’s house reading on her couch as a kid. I sadly remember the day Howdy Doody went off the air. I miss Buffalo Bob and Clarabell! I’ll always be a member of the “peanut gallery.”

 

THESE are Christmas lithographs from a children’s book by Margaret Evans Price. What a find! The faces are so innocent and sweet. Such a simpler time!

Enjoy Life While Living It

“The assumption that a large amount of property is essential to enjoyment leads many to expend all their energies in efforts to get rich. They toil without rest or recreation, and deny themselves many pleasures easily within reach. Finally, they die from worry and overwork. We should enjoy life while living it.”

-Advice to Maine farmers–1896

From Cooking Down East by Marjorie Standish

Cooking with Marjorie Standish

I own several Marjorie Standish cookbooks. I fondly remember her columns in the Maine Sunday Telegram. For a Greek girl used to working with garlic, onions, and olive oil at every turn–Marjorie Standish was a refreshingly simple down home cook. She was a purist.

Marjorie Standish began writing for the Maine Sunday Telegram in 1948. She sold many, many cookbooks and was beloved. She was the Julia Child of Maine!

From the foreword to Cooking Down East.

“Some of these recipes I learned from my mother who got them from her mother. Others came from family members, neighbors, friends or acquaintances. Many were used by me in cooking schools when I worked for the Central Maine Power Company. Others were given to me by Maine housewives while I gave a range demonstration in their homes. Many have been sent from all over Maine by column friends. Or the telephone rings and someone has a recipe to share…

There is something special about a Maine recipe. It is remembering the smell of beans baking or seeing yeast rolls rising in their pans in a warm place…”

-Marjorie Standish, November 1968

Here’s one of my favorite Marjorie Standish recipes:

Maine Blueberry Pie (from Cooking Down East)

Pastry for a 2-crust pie.

4 cups blueberries
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons flour
Dash of salt
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 cinnamon
1 tablespoon butter

Line pie plate with pastry. Mix sugar and flour, spread about one fourth of it on lower crust. Fill with blueberries. Sprinkle remainder of sugar mix over them. Add salt, sprinkle with nutmeg and cinnamon. Dot with butter. Place top crust on pie, flute edges and cut slits. Bake at 425 degrees for 40 minutes.

Image by thebittenword.com

The Biddeford-Saco Elks Christmas Fair

Today was my first official Christmas fair as a crafter! I thought I’d take the leap a few weeks ago when in the local paper I spied an ad calling for crafters at the local Elks Lodge. I was excited! I’d never done anything like this before despite always making things and loving crafty things. The question was, since I’m interested in thousands of things, what would be my craft? What do I love? What can I create? Dishes! Beautiful, fabulous, most often vintage, incredible, dishes! And not just any dishes. Dishes on a pedestal!

In Country Living a few weeks ago I saw an article about upcoming women entrepreneurs. One of them took vintage dishes and placed them atop candlesticks, glasses, or other glassware and created the most beautiful surprise: a pedestal dish that could be used as a mini cake stand, to hold soap or business cards, for display, candles… anything really. My curiosity was piqued, and I thought… “I can do this!” I love dishes, I love old things, I love glassware, I have a vast supply of all of these things lovingly collected over the years.

All in all, the craft fair was a success! It was fun, the people were lovely, I sold several pieces, and it was great to connect with other crafters. I will continue to make pedestal dishes, and I also make them custom to order. Email me at bdiamondm [at] gmail.com for more information.

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