Showing posts with label lamb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lamb. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 April 2023

Hawaiian Chops

Thanks Vicky from Unusual Coleslaw !    

Adapted from http://unusualcoleslaw.blogspot.com.au/

4 leg chops;  1 cup breadcrumbs;  1 cup chopped tomatoes;  1 cup shredded pineapple;  1 dessertspoon brown sugar;  Salt & pepper;  4 lightly grilled bacon rashers

Method: Lay chops in casserole with a little water to prevent sticking. Mix crumbs, tomato, pineapple and sugar. Divide into four portions and put one on each chop, cover and cook in moderate oven for 1 hour. Then add bacon rashers and cook further 15 minutes without lid. Serve with rice and minted peas.





Source: contributed by Carola Grantham Penneshaw Area School: Culinary Creations (Penneshaw Area School Welfare Club, Kangaroo Island: 1998), p.38.

Sunday, 20 February 2022

Pineapple Curry Royale!

Thanks again Vicki, http://unusualcoleslaw.blogspot.com/


Curry Royale

1kg (2 lbs.) lean boneless lamb (cut into small pieces); 2 tablespoons oil; 2 onions; 2 apples; 2 carrots; 1 tin pineapple pieces (drained, retain juice); 3/4 cup sultanas or raisins; 1 tablespoon curry powder; Salt and pepper; Golden Syrup (1 heaped tablespoon)

Method: Toss lamb in plain flour, heat oil and toss meat into pan, brown. Make sure heat is not too severe -- about 250F. Chop apples, onions, carrots and toss in, add drained pineapple, raisins or sultanas, and sprinkle over curry powder, salt and pepper. Mix well with wooden spoon, tossing more flour over so that it will thicken, add pineapple juice and golden syrup, then add enough hot water to make correct consistency, then simmer until meat is tender. Fresh apricots, plums and grapes can be added to this curry. Bananas with coconut plus chutneys can be served with this curry, but do not add them to the curry as it takes away the flavour.

Source: contributed by Mrs. J. H. Gooch (Broadview) in The Adelaide Children's Hospital Recipe Book 1982 (Adelaide: 1982), p.26.

Friday, 5 November 2021

Lamb and pineapple casserole

Thanks to Unusual Coleslaw for this tasty recipe 

http://unusualcoleslaw.blogspot.com/2021/10/casserole-of-steak-lamb-or-veal.html

Casserole of Steak (Lamb or Veal)

2 lb blade steak (lamb or veal); onion; carrot; 1 cup diced pineapple

Cube meat and place in casserole dish with layers of onion, carrot and pineapple.

Sauce:

2 heaped tabspns plain flour; 1 heaped tabspn sugar; 1/2 level tspn mustard; 1/2 level tspn curry powder; 1/2 level tspn mixed spice; 1 round tspn salt; 2 tabspn tomato sauce; 1/2 cup claret (optional)

Mix together with 1 cup cold water and pour over meat etc.

Bake in casserole dish at 300F for 2&1/2 to 3 hou[r]s. 

Source: contributed by Bronwen Jones in The Embroiderers' Recipe Book. Compiled by members of The Embroiderers' Guild of South Australia Incorporated ([Adelaide], n.d.), p.30.


Thursday, 21 May 2020

Lamb Rolls Billabong


One of this week’s jobs was to sort a lifetime of recipe clippings. Today I came across this souvenir cookbook of the 1964 bake-off. It was an insert in the Woman’s Day of July 13, 1964.  Ruby Borrowdale was one of the judges and there is a photo of her with the other judges.



And who was second senior grand champion? Mrs Charmaine Solomon, home cook and mother of three. 500 pounds prize, which was a fortune.

Bob and Dolly Dyer were the hosts.

I have a hard copy Best of the Bake-Off Recipes 1969 which I actually use, and some of the ones from 1964 are in it. Very disappointing that the cooks’ names are not listed with the recipes, or in fact anywhere. The recipes are “from the finalists and prizewinners of over one hundred thousand recipes submitted…”  Glad I didn’t have to sort and rank those! Ann.



Best of the Bake Off Recipes, edited and compiled by Trevor Wilson 1969 Sydney

Main Dishes: Lamb Rolls Billabong

Serves 6

12 lamb chops; 6 rashers bacon; 1 egg; 12 pineapple rings; plain flour; breadcrumbs; cooking oil

Remove bones from chops. Trim and shape each chop into a round. Wrap ½ rasher bacon round each, then secure with small wooden stick. Dip each into flour, then beaten egg and breadcrumbs. Brush with oil. Place on oven tray and bake in moderate oven 15 to 20 minutes. Serve each lamb roll on a ring of pineapple ad garnish with parsley. Serve with green peas, duchesse potatoes, glazed carrot straws and Sauce Supreme.

Sauce Supreme: 4 oz mushrooms; 1 cup canned tomato soup; ¼ cup dry white wine; ½ cup cream; 1 tblsp butter; ½ cup finely chopped shallots; 1 chicken cube; black pepper

Fry sliced mushrooms with crumbled chicken cube in butter about 5 minutes. Add shallots, soup and wine, season with black pepper. Simmer 20 minutes. Add cream and serve.


I was worried about it falling apart in the oven.  I used leg steaks and instead of wrapping the bacon I placed it on the top of the meat, no toothpick, and crumbed it all together.  After five minutes in the oven I thought “Oh No, the bacon is going to curl up as it cooks and my efforts will be wrecked.” So I turned two of them (I made four) upside down to keep the bacon flat, but all four turned out perfectly, no curling or lumpy bacon. And I only crumbed it once. Often I would crumb twice (flour, egg and crumbs, then egg and crumbs again) but had run out of egg by that stage.
 
And the flecks in my sauce are some parsley. As you can see I didn’t bother with the duchesse potatoes, carrot straws and peas. Ann. 

Sunday, 12 May 2019

Naringal Lamb with Pineapple Stuffing

A Bedside Cookbook, Sheila Scotter 1978 Australia




Naringal Lamb with Pineapple Stuffing



What you need for the stuffing: 1 crushed clove garlic; 2 tblsp chopped parsley; ½ tblsp chopped fresh ginger; 1 cup crushed pineapple (drained); 1 dstsp brown sugar; 1 ½ cups soft white breadcrumbs; melted butter (large knob)



What you do: Combine all the above ingredients together with salt and pepper to taste, and stuff a 3kg (approx. 6 lb) boned leg or shoulder of lamb.



Melt about 125g (4oz) butter in a roasting pan and put in lots of rosemary and brush it all over with the melted butter.



Put in a very hot oven for 10 minutes then reduce the heat to 180⁰C (350⁰F) and cook for a further 1 ½ hours.



Before serving sprinkle with salt and freshly ground pepper. It carves well and there is enough tasty stuffing with each slice.


Ready for the oven.


And, ready to serve.

Thursday, 3 May 2018

Grilled pineapple with lamb shanks

The Australian Book of Meat Cookery, sponsored by the Australian Meat Board, recipes by Tess Mallos, Photographs by Norman Nicholls, Sydney 1970


Pineapple Barbecued Lamb Shanks
Serves 4
8 lamb shanks; 1 x 12oz (350g) or 30oz (850g) tin pineapple slices
Marinade: 1 cup pineapple juice; 2 tsp curry powder; 2 tblsp brown sugar; 1 clove garlic, crushed; 1 tspn salt; freshly ground black pepper; 2 tblsp salad oil
Make sure shanks are from the forequarter of the lamb. If you have difficulty obtaining shanks, order well ahead or save them in your freezer from shoulders and forequarters which you may purchase. Wipe shanks with and damp cloth and place them in a single layer in a glass, earthenware or enamel dish.
Mix marinade ingredients, adding to them the liquid drained from the pineapple slices. (Store slices in an air-tight plastic container in refrigerator until barbecue time). Pour marinade over shanks and marinate for at least 4 hours, turning them occasionally.
To barbecue place shanks over glowing coals and cook for 25–30 minutes, turning often and basting with marinade. Place pineapple slices on barbecue 5 minutes before shanks are cooked.
TIME 25-30 minutes
GARNISH with barbecued pineapple slices
SERVE WITH salad and French bread and butter

Tuesday, 21 November 2017

Cooking Better Pineapple

Cooking Better Electrically, prepared by the Home Advisory Service, State Electricity Commission of Victoria, 1974 Melbourne




Pineapple Stuffed Shoulder of Lamb
1 boned shoulder of lamb; 1 ½ cups soft breadcrumbs; grated lemon rind; 1 tblspn shortening; salt, pepper; 1 rasher bacon, finely chopped; 1 well beaten egg; ½ cu[p finely chopped pineapple
Rub shortening into breadcrumbs. Add salt, pepper, bacon, pineapple, and bind with egg. Lay shoulder flat and spread on seasoning, roll up tightly and secure. Wrap in foil, place in greased baking dish in oven.

Baked Pineapple and Rice
3 cups cooked rice (just cooked); 1 ½ tblspn butter; ¾ cup pineapple juice; 1 medium can crushed pineapple; ½ cup brown sugar
Place 1/3 of the rice in a greased ovenware dish, cover with 1/3 of the drained pineapple, dot with 1/3 of the butter and sprinkle with 1/3 of the brown sugar. Repeat layers until all ingredients are used, carefully add pineapple juice, Cover and place in oven. Serve hot or cold with ice-cream.


Tuesday, 17 October 2017

Pineapple "Indian-style"

Excite the Appetite, Recipes from Sydney’s Top Restaurants Chefs and Celebrities, 1970s



Entrée Recipe from Channel 9’s Midday Show, Glynn Christian


Maharajah’s Gilded Fruit Pulau


Ingredients: 6 tblspn butter; 6 whole cloves; 6 cardamom pods, lightly crushed; 1 tspn mustard seed; 1 tspn cumin seed; 1 tspn coriander seed, lightly crushed; ¼ tspn or more saffron threads; 1 cinnamon stick; 2 tspn salt; 350g basmati rice; 500ml stock or water; 750g trimmed weight fresh fruit – peaches, plums, apples, pineapple, etc; edible gold leaf (optional)

Method: Put the butter and spices into large casserole with a tight fitting lid. Cook on high for 3 minutes. Stir in the salt and the rice until evenly coated. Pour on the stock or water, stir, cover and cook on high for 9 minutes.

The fruit should be in big generous pieces, no less than eights for apples, peaches, for instance. Put these on top of the rice, cover again and cook on high for 6 minutes. Let rest 3 minutes or more, then spoon out onto a large platter, mixing in the fruit without breaking it up. Add edible gold leaf if you wish and serve with any sort of Indian meal. Serves 6 – 8


Thanks for tracking down the edible gold leaf Ky !! He found it in Essential Ingredients.



Cooking with Fruit, compiled by Mary-Lou Arnold,1985 Sydney






Mixed Fruit Raita


2 cups yoghurt; 2 tblspn cream; ½ mango, diced; ½ banana, diced; 1 slice pineapple, diced; 1 tblspn finely chopped mint; salt


Whip yoghurt and cream together until smooth. Mix in remaining ingredients. Chill thoroughly.


Serves 6

Encyclopaedia of Creative Cooking, a step-by-step guide to the world’s best cooking, Volume 5 Vegetables, Sydney 1979
Lamb & Pineapple Curry, India
2 ripe bananas; 1 sweet potato, peeled and diced; juice 1 lemon; 1 large onion, chopped; 1 green pepper, deseeded and chopped; 1/8 cup oil; 1 tblspn curry powder; 2 tblspn flour; 1 tspn turmeric; 1 clove garlic, chopped; 2 tblspn fruit chutney; ¾ cup pineapple cubes; 1 medium cooking apple, peeled, cored and diced; 1 large tomato, skinned and coarsely chopped; 1 cup corn kernels; 2 cups meat stock; 2 cups, diced cooked lamb; salt and freshly ground (milled) black pepper; 1 1/4cups long grain rice, uncooked;
For the garnish: parsley sprigs; few lemon slces
1 Mix the banana, sweet potato and lemon juice in a bowl and set aside for 10 minutes
2 Lightly fry the onion and green pepper in the oil
3 Add the curry powder, flour, turmeric, garlic, chutney, pineapple, apple, tomato, corn kernels, and the banana and sweet potato mixture
4 Pour in the meat stock, add the cooked lamb, and season to taste. Simmer gently for 2 minutes
5 Meanwhile, boil the rice in salted water until cooked. Drain and arrange in a circle on a heated serving dish. Spoon the curry into the middle of the rice ring, and garnish with sprigs of fresh parsley and quarters of lemon slices
Serves 4

Curries from the Sultan's Kitchen: Recipes from India, Pakistan, Burma and Ceylon, Doris M Ady, illustrations by Inge Fernando, 1976 Sydney


Pineapple Mustard Relish

Ingredients: 1 small tin crushed pineapple; 1 tblsp Indian or Ceylon ground black mustard; 2 cloves garlic; 1cm piece of green ginger; 1 ½ tsp sugar; ½ tsp salt; ¼ cup vinegar

Preparation: Pound, or put through a mouli, the garlic and ginger.

Combine all ingredients, except the pineapple. Mix well and taste for salt and sugar.

Put the drained pineapple into a dish, and pour the mustard dressing over.

Serves 8


Encyclopaedia of World Cookery, Elizabeth Campbell, London 1958


Pineapple Balls (Anglo-Indian)
2 eggs; 4 tblsp sifted flour; a pinch of salt; ½ cup milk; 2 tblsp finely chopped pineapple; fat for deep frying; castor sugar
Make a thick batter of the flour, eggs, salt and milk, add the pineapple, mix well. Have the fat smoking hot, drop in the mixture a dessertspoonful at a time. Fry until golden brown, drain well and serve with castor sugar sifted over them. They should puff up into golden balls.

Wednesday, 15 February 2017

Pineapple, Beautiful

Found some fabulous magazines from the 1950s that Mum had kept, one even contains a recipe for pineapple . . . Anne

Home Beautiful: Australia's How-To-Do-It Magazine, February 1956

 


 
Tropical Lamb Chops (to serve six)

Ingredients: 6 chops cut from large end of lamb loin about 2 in. (6cm) thick

Stuffing: 1 cup drained, crushed pineapple; 1 tspn grated orange rind; 2 tblspn finely chopped mint; ¼ tspn dry ginger; ½ tspn salt; 1 tblsp Soy Sauce if liked

Method: Cut pocket in fat side of chops. Mix stuffing and place 1 or 2 tablespoons in pocket of chops. Reserve remainder. Place stuffed chops in greased shallow baking pan. Bake in moderate oven, 350°F degrees (180°C), for 45 minutes to 60 minutes. Heat remainder of stuffing ingredients with ½ cup drained juice from pineapple, and 2 tablespoons wine vinegar. Serve this as sauce. This is delicious served with creamed potatoes, green beans and side salad.

Judge's comment: “Lamb chops done this way provide a joint that can be used up in one meal with no left-overs and no waste. It is a good tender nutritious cut. Its seasoning is most unusual and offers a specially welcome change for people who have a surfeit of lamb or mutton, because it gives such a piquancy to familiar ways of serving the meat. This dish is particularly suitable for a small dinner party. It can be prepared before-hand, and put in the oven until serving time.

It is also easy to enlarge the number of chops for a larger party. It is a complete dish in itself, and served with potatoes, beans and salad is a complete course.”



Home Beautiful: Australia's How-To-Do-It Magazine, October 1955
 








!!!!!

Australian House and Garden May 1953
 

Australian House and Garden Annual 1959