Eat me. Drink me. The Mad Hatter’s tea party. The Queen of Hearts’ jam tarts. Alice in Wonderland an Alice Thr0ugh The Looking Glass are so much about the food. Little surprise then to discover The Alice in Wonderland Cookbook: A Culinary Diversion by John Fisher, first published in 1977 — a collection of recipes, illustrated by John Tenniel’s original illustrations. So dinner tonight will be Ambidextrous Mushrooms, The Cheshire Cat’s Cheese Whisker, Drink Me Soup, Pebble Cakes, Eggs Bonne Alice, Bread-and-Butter-Fly Pudding and more (but go easy on the mushrooms).
And lest you not know how to eat the stuff of Alice’s dreams, there are two of writer Lewis Carroll’s essays, Feeding the Mind and Hints for Etiquette: Or, Dining Out Made Easy, published 10 years before Alice in 1855 – a riff on the best-selling Hints on Etiquette and the Usages of Society; With A Glance At Bad Habits by a “lady of rank”, first published in 1834 and reprinted 28 times until 1854.
LOOKING GLASS CAKE
1 pound flour | ½ pound butter | 4 ounces currants | 4 ounces mixed peel | 3 ounces raisins | ½ pound castor sugar | 2 teaspoons baking powder | 3 eggs | 1 teaspoon mixed spice | milk
Cream butter and sugar until fluffy.
Beat eggs and whisk gradually into the creamed mixture.
Sift flour and baking powder and fold into the mixture by degrees.
Finally mix in fruit and spice.
The mixture should now be of such a consistency that it will drop easily from the spoon. Add milk only if necessary.
Turn into a cake tin approximately 7 ½ inches in diameter lined with greaseproof paper.
Bake for 2-3 hours in a slow oven at 300 degrees Fahrenheit, Gas Mark 2.
Test with a skewer to see if cooked. Insert it in the centre. If it comes out clean, the cake is ready to be placed on a wire rack to cool.
Cut it first and hand round afterwards.
HOT-TEMPERED MUSTARD
– 3 tablespoons mustard powder / 1 tablespoon castor sugar / 1 beaten egg / 1/2 (half) pint pure malt vinegar / 1 tablespoon olive oil / 1 pinch of salt
Mix mustard, salt and sugar together in a basin. Stir in the beaten egg until smooth. Add the vinegar, beating until smooth. Transfer to a saucepan and stir over a gentle heat for five minutes. Leave to cool before stirring in the olive oil. Serve with your savoury dishes to make their appeal “otherwise” than what it might appear to have been.
FLOWER SALAD
acacia flowers | marrow flowers | rosemary flowers | borage flowers | cowslip flowers | elderflowers | marigold petals | nasturtium petals and trumpets | green salad | olive oil | vinegar
All the flowers listed were once commonly accepted for culinary purposes. So:
Scald the petals with hot water.
Leave to cool.
Arrange a bed of green salad including lettuce, parsley, thyme, chives, sorrel leaves, sliced raw cabbage or spinach, according to availability.
Add the flowers to the centre.
Serve with oil and vinegar dressing, proof that some flowers, at least do have the edible qualities of the other flour.
THE CHESHIRE CAT’S CHEESE WHISKERS
– 2 ounces flour / 2 ounces butter / 3 ounces grated Cheddar cheese / 1/2 teaspoon baking powder / 2 ounces grated breadcrumbs / 1/2 saltspoon salt / 1/2 saltspoon pepper / paprika
Sieve flour, salt and pepper into a basin. Stir in the breadcrumbs and cheese. Rub in the butter with the fingers until you get a smooth paste, adding a little milk if the texture proves difficult. Dust work surface with flour and roll out pastry into a strip about 4 inches wide. one-eighth of an inch. Cut pastry into so many thin strips. Place on a greased tin and bake in a steady oven at 375ºF, gas mark 4 until crisp and brown. Serve hot, sprinkle with paprika. Then sit back and smile contentedly at your achievement, if only to remind yourself that long ago Cheshire Cheeses were moulded into the shape of a grinning cat prior to being sent to Bristol for export. Hence, maybe, the origin of the phrase ” grin like a Cheshire cat ” Perhaps Alice should have asked her question of the Duchess’s cook?
A TOAST TO ALICE
1 flagon cider | 8 lumps sugar | 2 oranges | 8 cloves | 1 teaspoon grated nutmeg | 1 cinnamon stick | 8 teaspoons water | 1 lemon | 1 sherry glass of rum | 1 sherry glass of brandy
Rub the sugar against the rind of one of the oranges to remove zest.
Cut the orange in half, and squeeze out juice into a saucepan.
Cut the orange into 8 segments.
Stick a clove in each and sprinkle with nutmeg.
Add to the pan with the water and cinnamon.
Cut lemon rind into strips and add this also.
Heat over a gentle flame until sugar dissolves.
Simmer for 5 minutes.
Take away from heat to cool.
Remove cinnamon stick.
Add cider and reheat.
Add rum and brandy.
Serve hot in a heated punch bowl.
“And welcome Queen Alice with ninety-times-nine!”
Carroll counsels in Hints for Etiquette: Or, Dining Out Made Easy:
As caterers for the public taste, we can conscientiously recommend this book to all diners-out who are perfectly unacquainted with the usages of society. However we may regret that our author has confined himself to warning rather than advice, we are bound in justice to say that nothing here stated will be found to contradict the habits of the best circles. The following examples exhibit a depth of penetration and a fullness of experience rarely met with:
I
In proceeding to the dining-room, the gentleman gives one arm to the lady he escorts– it is unusual to offer both.
II
The practice of taking soup with the next gentleman but one is now wisely discontinued; but the custom of asking your host his opinion of the weather immediately on the removal of the first course still prevails.
III
To use a fork with your soup, intimating at the same time to your hostess that you are reserving the spoon for beefsteaks, is a practice wholly exploded.
IV
On meat being placed before you, there is no possible objection to your eating it, if so disposed; still in all such delicate cases, be guided entirely by the conduct of those around you.
V
It is always allowable to ask for artichoke jelly with your boiled venison; however there are houses where this is not supplied.
VI
The method of helping roast turkey with two carving-forks is praticable, but deficient in grace.
VII
We do not recommend the practice of eating cheese with a knife and fork in one hand, and a spoon and wine-glass in the other; there is a kind of awkwardness in the action which no amount of practice can entirely dispel.
VII
As a general rule, do not kick the shins of the opposite gentleman under the table, if personally unacquainted with him; your pleasantry is liable to be misunderstood — a circumstance at all times unpleasant.
IX
Proposing the health of the boy in buttons immediately on the removal of the cloth is custom springing from regard to his tender years, rather than from a strict adherence to the rules of etiquette.
More Alice magic on the site.
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