Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Rum Rasin Ice Cream

Rum Raisin Ice Cream


This is my favorite ice cream. In Utah it is very rare to get this flavor at the local ice cream vendor. Clearly, the local religion did not have "rum raisin" as a flavor of choice for their children.

This is a very simple approach to the recipe. Take the best available vanilla ice cream, mix in rum-soaked raisins and refreeze. (In the photo above, I give credit to photographer Penny de los Santors for the most tasty of photos ever.) The rum-flavored fruitcakes made by my grandmother made me a fan of the rum raisin flavor. A bottle of Bundaberg Rum was the only alcoholic beverage in my grandparent's home, and it was kept in a dark, secret place in the pantry.


Ingredients

1 quart of raisins. The typical box of 24 oz. raisins is a little over a quart

1 cup of dark 70-proof rum

2 quarts of vanilla ice cream (French vanilla is my preference)


First, place the raisins and rum in a half-gallon canning jar and let the mixture sit for a week. I turn the bottle over every day to help the mixing process. Most of the rum will be absorbed by the raisins. If you do not want to wait for a week, adding a little more rum and letting the mixture sit overnight in a sealed container will work.

Place the raisins and ice cream in a bowl and mix wel as the ice cream starts to get soft. Do not let the ice cream melt completely. Place the mixture in a sealed bowl in the freezer. The rum raisin ice cream can be served next day.


                       Our favorite dessert: rum raisin ice cream and Gran's peanut cookies.






The Bundaberg Rum I remember from grandma's cooking has a long and interesting history. Some of my mother's relatives raised sugar cane close to the town of Bundaberg. My grand uncle, Horsley Pashly, owned a sugar cane farm near Bundaberg. I visited the farm on several occasions as a young teenager. Uncle Horsley took considerable time to explain sugar cane farming. He also introduced me to one of the strangest ecological disasters in Australian history, the cane toad.

The Australian Museum reported:
"The natural range of Cane Toads extends from the southern United States to tropical South America. They were deliberately introduced from Hawaii to Australia in 1935, to control scarab beetles that were pests of sugar cane. .....Cane Toads are considered a pest in Australia because they:
Poison pets and injure humans with their toxins; Poison many native animals whose diet includes frogs, tadpoles and frog's eggs; Eat large numbers of honey bees, creating a management problems for bee-keepers; Prey on native fauna; Compete for food with vertebrate insectivores such as small skinks; May carry diseases that can be transmitted to native frogs and fishes."

 The sugar from the sugar cane was produced locally in the Bundaberg area and the byproduct was molasses, which was considered a waste product. In 1888, the local sugar producers combined their resources and started the Bundaberg Rum Distillery as a way to make money from the molasses. This new industry was a success. The patrons are often called "Bundy" drinkers. These patrons have a rowdy reputation in some circles. One recent Wikipedia observation stated:

"Bundaberg Rum has been labelled the drink for yobbos, after some bars reported that 'bundy drinkers are a lot louder, and more disruptive than other patrons.' In 2005, four bars in Brisbane banned the rum products, claiming it makes drinkers aggressive and attracts the wrong crowd."

"Yobbo" is Australian for the USA term "redneck."

Uncle Horsley died in 1982. In checking some of the facts on the Pashley family I came on the following news summary from July 1892. The following depressing series of events generates respect for the daily dangers our pioneers faced. The four-year-old Sydney Pashley was certainly a relative of Uncle Horsley, who was born in 1904.


Taken from The Queenslander: Saturday, July 30, 1892
Queensland News
:
Herberton, July 26
"Michael HICKER, a stream tin miner, from Coolgar, left Herberton with his mate on Saturday evening on his way to camp, and when a short distance out on the Watsonville-road he was thrown from his horse, sustaining a fracture of the base of the skull. He was at once taken to the hospital, but died soon after admission.
Don't know where the following happened, paper damaged, in Qld though.
Mrs. Tremble, wife of a carter and wharf lumper, cut her throat this morning with a razor. She made two deep cuts into the wind-pipe, which bled profusely: and she is in a critical condition, owing to the blood suffusing the lungs. The cause of the attempted suicide was melancholy, arising from her being in an almost destitute condition, and a recent accident to one of her children."
------
Rockhampton: July 22,
"A young man named Richard SEALY, a son of ex-Constable SEALY, died last night from the effects of injuries received through a collision with another horseman at the racecourse on Thursday."
-------
Fatal Accidents at Bundaberg, July 25
"Two fatal accidents occurred on Saturday. A child named Sydney PASHLEY, 4 years old, was run over at North Bundaberg by a bullock dray, its head being severed from it's body.
At Fairymead a workman named Conrad RODEGER fell into a tank of boiling juice. He got himself out, but was fearfully burnt. He was removed to the Bundaberg Hospital, where he expired in fearful agony on Saturday afternoon.
Another fatal accident occurred to-day. A well known farmer named Joseph NEWELL, of Kalkall, was leading a horse which had been newly broken in to harness, when the horse bolted and threw him under the dray, the wheel of which passed over him, killing him instantly, his neck being broken."
--------------
The "tank of boiling juice" responsible for the death of Conrad Rodeger was almost certainly a part of the manufacturing of sugar from the sugar cane.












Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Gran's Peanut Cookies




Gran's Peanut Cookies


In my late teens I was fortunate enough to be welcomed into the Mavor family of Beaudesert in southern Queensland. The younger son, Ian, and I climbed many mountains together. His mother, Agnes, always made me welcome at the family dinner table if I was in the area. Gran, as she became known to children and grandchildren, always had her peanut cookies available ("peanut biscuits" in Australia). In her last years, Ian asked Gran to share her recipe for the "Peanut Biscuits."

In the photo below at a Mavor multi-generational meeting Agnes is standing third from the right with Ian on her left.



Gran's Original Recipe

Ingredients

1/4 pound of butter or margarine

1 teaspoon of Bourneville Cocoa

1 cup of sugar

1 pinch of salt

Vanilla essence drops

1 egg

1 cup of self-raising flour

1 cup of small unsalted peanuts that have been browned and skinned


Mix the ingredients well. Place scoops of the mixture on a baking tray and cook until the desired level of brown is reached.


Al's Adaptions to Gran's Original Recipe

Over time I have made a few adaptions, but the taste has not changed.

Ingredients

First, I doubled the mixture. The cookies never lasted long, and if they did, they kept well in a sealed container.

1/2 pound of non-fat margarine

1 level tablespoon of Hersey's Cocoa

2 eggs or a cup of Egg Beaters

2 cups of artificial sugar

1 teaspoon of vanilla extract

2 cups of self-rising flour. (Australians prefer self-raising flour.) If you want to use plain flour, add a level teaspoon of baking powder.

2 cups of small, unsalted, baked peanuts. I prefer the small peanuts to chopped peanuts. Most large grocery stores carry the small, unsalted, baked peanuts in bulk.

Mix all the ingredients well. I use a 1/4 cup measure to scoop the mixture and either bake as cookies or mini-muffins. Coat the baking sheet or muffin pan with olive oil.


Bake at 400 degrees for 10 minutes. Let sit for at least 30 minutes before eating, if you can protect them for that long.

The mini-muffins are great as a desert with ice cream. Judy and I prefer the mini-muffins with rum-rasin ice cream. This is the greatest cookie with the greatest ice cream.




Ian on one of our many backpacking adventures in the mountains of southern Queensland.


I consider my adoption by the Mavor family in my late teens one of my greatest privileges and learning experiences at a time when I was setting life-long directions.



Saturday, December 15, 2012

Corned Beef and Cabbage Soup

Corned Beef and Cabbage Soup



Corned Beef has nothing to do with corn, while it does relate to "grain." The link is to a grain of salt. "Corn is the Old English word for grain or pebble. Corned beef is salted beef and was a major commodity in 18th and 19th century trading between Ireland and England. Unfortunately, the Irish people did not benefit much because most of the beef was raised on land the English nobility had taken over in Ireland. As a child taken to the local butcher by my grandmother in a little town in outback Australia, I watched the corned beef being made as the butcher hand-pumped brine solution into the slabs of beef with a foot long needle. The end product was important at a time when there was little electricity and home refrigeration, and the non-perishable nature of salted meat made corned beef an important part of the diet. The corned meat also came in canned form such as Spam or "Bully Beef."

Ingredients


 2 1/2  pounds of corned beef. Chop the beef into 1 inch pieces. This should serve 8.

1 medium to large head of cabbage, cored and shredded.

2 large onions, diced

6-8 ribs of diced celery, include the leafy tops

1/2 cup of olive oil

6 cups of diced carrots

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon pepper

8 cups of chicken or beef broth

4 cups of cooked rice. The original Irish recipes probably used barley instead of rice so that is an option.

3 cans of 16 oz. diced Italian tomatoes

1/4 cup of Worcestershire Sauce

2 12 oz. bottles of beer. I prefer Guinness Stout.

If the corned beef brisket came with a packet of spices use them and reduce the spices listed above by half. The spices are basically pickling spices. Typically they include:

•8 allspice berries
•1 teaspoon black peppercorns
•2 bay leaves, crumbled
•2 fresh thyme sprigs or about 1/2 teaspoon dried leaf thyme


Heat the olive oil in the soup pot and add the onions and beef. Stir for five minutes and add every thing except the broth, stout and tomatoes. Stir for another five minutes and add the broth, stout beer and tomatoes. Slow-cook the soup for at least 30 minutes.

To make a complete meal, serve with substantive slices of garlic bread. See the garlic bread recipe in the previous posting.

In the Irish pubs I used to frequent in Boston and New York, this was often the "Friday Night Special" and was served with bread at the bar. No St. Patrick's Day bar celebration was held without Corned Beef and Cabbage Soup on the menu.












Friday, December 14, 2012

Garlic Toast


Garlic Toast




A hearty soup can become a complete meal if it is accompanied by a substantive slice of garlic toast. The secret to a "substantive" slice of garlic toast is a tasty, large amount of cheese on a thick slice of bread. Thick slices of wheat bread or sourdough bread are excellent. A wimpy slice of standard white bread will not make a meal.







For two slices of bread, mix the following:

1 cup of grated Cheddar - I  prefer medium Cheddar. The Pepper Jack and Medium Cheddar is my favorite combination. You may  prefer another combination.

1 cup of grated Pepper Jack cheese.

4 tablespoons of Garlic Olive Oil  (olive oil with 1/2 teaspoon of garlic powder will work)

a dash of salt and pepper to taste

Mix these ingredients well.

Toast the bread lightly, then add the cheese to the lightly toasted bread and return to the toaster. Continue to toast until the cheese starts to brown. Remove and serve.

Do not overdo the olive oil or it will pool up in the bottom of the toaster or oven and could catch fire. You could toast the bread then place the bread and cheese mixture on aluminium foil and place back in the toaster or oven.

The soup above is a ham and bean soup with chopped steamed potatoes, carrots and asparagus pieces. The beans are Great Northern Beans. See the posting for Senate Bean Soup (5/21/12) for an excellent basic ham and bean soup.




If you want serious garlic bread with an extensive history, take a loaf of french baguette bread, slice it down the middle and pile on the cheese mixture and toast. You do not need to lightly toast the bread first. With garlic bread made this way you can place the bread on some aluminum foil and place in the oven and bake for 15 minutes at 300 degrees.  Texas toast is another popular form of garlic bread that is often served with soup.