Monthly Archive for May, 2010

Page 2 of 2

Events: The New York 19th C. Pub Crawl

Saturday, May 15th

The New York 19th C. Pub Crawl
Starting at 5:30pm
Meet at Ryehouse 11 W. 17th St. (between 5th and 6th Ave.)
New York, NY
Free, but drinks are additional.  RSVP via Facebook to reserve a spot.

Join us for night of nineteenth-century debauchery at several of New York City’s oldest bars and most notorious dens of vice!  We will meet promptly at 5:30 p.m. at Ryehouse (11 West 17th Street), a new bar that revives and reinvents the classic cocktail. From there, we’ll head to Madame X, The Ear Inn, Onieal’s Grand Street and (should we still posses the fortitude and sobriety) Ward 3.

The perfect outing for cocktail enthusiasts and history lovers alike–come sip drinks in some of New York’s most historic pubs and bars dedicated to the revival of classic drinks.

Appropriate nineteenth century attire is encouraged, but by no means required. Visit www.19thcpubcrawl.com for the most up-to-date information including exclusive drink specials.

See you there!

History Dish Mondays: A Cake Bakes in Queens

Puff Cake, a la Mrs. Osborn.

Today is a very special HDM, because I am collaborating with the lovely Susan LaRosa of a Cake Bakes in Brookyln.  Susan focuses on early 20thcentury cakes and she plans to make several hundred of them from handwritten recipes reclaimed from flea markets in Ohio.

I love the way Susan brings these recipes to life.  Because they are handwritten, each recipe has its own individual character.  They seem to speak about the woman who sat down and penned them 75 years ago or more.

Susan and I decided to trade, and bake cakes from each other’s collections.  I loaned her a cookbook published in the 1880s which has pages of handwritten cake recipes attached in the back (like  “Altogether Cake“).  Susan gave me a stack of her own materials to pick from, but I knew right away which one I wanted:  Mrs. Osborn’s Cakes of Quality.

The book is brittle and crumbling; the pages within are individually typed and simply bound.  The book was sent to housewives across the country who wrote in and requested Mrs. Osborn’s advice.  Who was she?  We don’t really know.  Her writing seems to indicate she was a woman left without means who turned to baking to support herself.  Susan calls her the “Patron Saint of Cakes,” and wrote this post about what she knows about Mrs. O and what she’s trying to find out about this mystery woman.

The introduction to Mrs. O’s book declares:  “If you follow my directions, you simply cannot fail.  You’ll earn the admiration–perhaps the envy, in some cases–of your neighbors.  None of them will be able to make cake which will equal yours.”  Her writing has an air of letting you in on a great secret–and Mrs. Osborn’s cake making techniques are wildly different.  She has you put the cake into a cold oven– a cold oven!!  Mrs. Osborn suggests: “Try Puff Cake first.  This is a fine cake and very easy to make.  This will acquaint you with my system and then you will be ready to make Angel, Klondike, and the others.”  Who was I to disagree?  Puff Cake it is.

***

Puff Cake
From Mrs. Osborne’s Cakes of Quality, by Mrs. Grace Osborne, 1919.

I have a confession: despite my mother constantly admonishing my sloppy measurements as a child, I’ve grown into a sloppy baker.  Baking does take a certain understanding of chemistry, yes; but not until watching Top Chef did I realize outsiders saw it as a secret alchemical art form.  I find baking as easy as cooking: it allows for some improvisation and (thankfully) there is some margin for mistakes.

But Mrs. Osborn threatened me to “…Do exactly as I tell you,” and I did.  I sifted and sifted and leveled my measuring cup with a knife—a practice I’ve not kept up since leaving the watching eye of my mother. The cake mixed well, but I was nervous about trying Mrs. O’s baking techniques.  I have no idea how she monitored her baking temperature so exactly– even using a thermometer.  It seems like it would be an hour and a quarter of constant fussing to get the temperature just right.  I decided to bump my temperature up at the end of each 15 minutes and see what happened.

I ended up pulling the cake out of the oven fifteen minutes early.  After it cooled, I cut it and saw it had gotten a little dark on the bottom–not burned, just browned.  My roommate and I tried a slice: “Tastes like cake,” he said.  It was exactly what I had been thinking.

The cake was very fluffy from the beaten egg whites and had a butteryness that angel food cakes lack.  The browned bottom tasted oddly like a pretzel at first; then, the next day, it tasted downright bitter.  The cake will be disposed of.

Although I’ve had a bit of a disaster with Mrs. O’s baking methods, I’m still tempted to try another cake from her book.  But at the moment, I’m not inspiring any cake-envy.

Cocktail Hour: The Mint Julep — Irresistible!

A julep fit for an emperor!

It is the KENTUCKY DERBY  today, and you know what that means!!  Mint Julep season is kicking off, and in my mind, that means summer has arrived!  Oh, how I love a mint julep!!

The below quotation is from a Captain Marryatt, a “gallant” English seaman with a penchant for the “nectareous drink” we Americans call a julep.  The Captain’s adulation of this cocktail was reprinted in How to Mix Drinks by Jerry Thomas (1862),

“I must descant a little upon the mint julep, as it is with the thermometer at 100 one of the most delightful and insinuating potations that ever was invented and may be drunk with equal satisfaction when the thermometer is as low as 70… I learned how to make them and succeeded pretty well: Put into a tumbler about a dozen sprigs of the tender shoots of mint upon them put a spoonful of white sugar and equal proportions of peach and common brandy so as to fill it up one third or perhaps a little less. Then take rasped or pounded ice and fill up the tumbler… As the ice melts, you drink. I once overheard two ladies talking in the next room to me, and one of them said ‘Well if I have a weakness for any one thing it is for a mint julep!’– a very amiable weakness and proving her good sense and good taste.  They are in fact, like the American ladies, irresistible “

***
Captain Marryatt’s American Mint Julep

Adapted from How to Mix Drinks by Jerry Thomas (1862)

1 heaping teaspoon superfine sugar
1 teaspoon water
5-6 sprigs of mint
1.5 ounces Cognac (whiskey can be substituted here with equally pleasing results)
1.5 ounces Peach Brandy

Place mint, sugar and water in the bottom of a julep cup or rocks glass.  Muddle until the flavor of the mint has been released.  Fill up glass with crushed or shaved ice,  then add alcohol.  Stir vigorously until the outside of the glass is foggy with condensation and cold to the touch.  Enjoy.

This julep is my Derby standby.  Allow yourself the pleasure of the addition of Peach Brandy (or a teaspoon of peach bitters) to your everyday Julep routine.  You won’t regret it.

***
Jerry Thomas’s Mint Julep

How to Mix Drinks by Jerry Thomas (1862)

This is Thomas’s rather decadent first entry in the “Julep” chapter of his book.

1 heaping teaspoon superfine sugar
1 teaspoon water
10-12 sprigs of mint
1 ounce Cognac
1/5 ounce Dark Rum
Orange slices and berries

Place half the mint mint, sugar and water in the bottom of a julep cup or rocks glass.  Muddle until the flavor of the mint has been released.  Fill up glass with crushed or shaved ice,  then add Cognac.  Stir vigorously until the outside of the glass is foggy with condensation and cold to the touch.  Use you stir or spoon to pull out the mint springs; insert fresh sprigs into the ice with their stems downward.  Arrange berries and orange slices within this mint bouquet, pour the rum over top, and sprinkle with sugar.

***

This was the first time I’ve tried Thomas’s julep recipe: Drunk through a straw, the cocktail is actually pretty amazing, albeit a little over the top.  The straw is necessary, so you don’t whack yourself in the face with mint every time you take a sip.  The liquor is sweet and very, very minty.   I think I’ve been skimping on the mint in my juleps: one should pack that glass full for the best flavor.  The fruit on top,  drizzled in rum and sprinkled with sugar, is also special treat.

But one needn’t be so extravagant in their julep enjoyment.  Don’t just savor a Julep this Saturday, but sip  them all season long.  Remember: the Mint Julep is the drink of the summer!