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Name Something That Your Mother or Grandmother Cooked That Was Your Favorite!

csmorris

New in Town
Messages
18
Location
Calgary Alberta Canada
Mom's Yorkshire pudding. It was made in a rectangular pan, not muffin tins, and was fairly dense and moist. I would rise to about 1" thick in the middle and about 2" around the sides. Great hot with gravy and almost better as a cold leftover with a little salt on it. I've never seen it made the same since; I've only ever seen the big puffy hollow muffin tin variety.
 

crawlinkingsnake

A-List Customer
Messages
419
Location
West Virginia
I had an aunt that made amazing oven fried chicken. Also great bread pudding.
My grandmother could make a meal out of almost anything. Guess that's what you learn to do when growing up in the time she did.
 
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GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,843
Location
New Forest
Mom's Yorkshire pudding. It was made in a rectangular pan, not muffin tins, and was fairly dense and moist. I would rise to about 1" thick in the middle and about 2" around the sides. Great hot with gravy and almost better as a cold leftover with a little salt on it. I've never seen it made the same since; I've only ever seen the big puffy hollow muffin tin variety.
There was a dance school that my wife and I used to teach at on Sunday mornings. After which we would head to a local pub that served traditional roast beef lunches. But instead of one or two small Yorkshire puddings on the plate the whole meal came nestling in a large oblong variety. It was a blissful joy.

The UK had food rationing right up and until 1954, so with a scarcity of meat it was a case of make do. My mother used to make a stew using rabbit, the vegetables were plentiful, like most people we grew our own. But the way my mother used to fill me up was with dumplings, no matter how many she would put on my plate, I would always eat the lot. Nowadays, I can't abide the smell of rabbit being cooked.
 

Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,262
Location
Hudson Valley, NY
My grandmother made awesome chicken soup... pretty much as you'd expect from an old-school (*) Jewish grandmother!

GrandmaGoldfarb@OllinvillePark.JPG

(* Came as an immigrant circa 1905, illiterate, but ran a Manhattan candy store for thirty years!)
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
25,111
Location
London, UK
Nana Marlowe made the most incredible rhubarb tart, tough alas she had to give up the baking in her seventies when her arthritis got bad; she died in 2005 aged 86. She was the grandparent to whom I was closest; I think part of the joy of rhubarb for me to this day is that association.

Cottage pie (that my mum called shepherd's pie though she used minced beef) and lasagna, just enough ricotta cheese. Christmas treats included peanut butter balls and Nanaimo bars (Bing that last one).

My mother rasied us on shepherd's pie, wonderful stuff. We ate a lot of lamb then, possibly more than beef, until my mother got it into her head that our sheep in NI were being 'contaminated' by Sellafield over the water.... then we switched to beef mince instead. At least until the BSE hoo hah....
 

OldStrummer

Practically Family
Messages
552
Location
Ashburn, Virginia USA
My mother made lamb patties. I think she added some smoke seasoning to the ground meat before frying. I've never found another like it.

She also made what she referred to as "risi bisi," but it wasn't like the Italian dish other than it had rice and peas. She would generally just toss in some leftover veggies from the night before and season it up a bit. Delicious!
 

galopede

One of the Regulars
Messages
226
Location
Gloucester, England
My favourite from my mother was another rationing wartime special I suppose, corned beef rissoles. Tin of corned beef (not the same as American corned beef!), mashed potato and raw onions. Mixed up and made into round patties about 1" thick. Rolled in flour the fried in lard until the outside was brown and crisp!

Delicious with HP sauce. Still make them myself occasionally

Gareth
 

Inkstainedwretch

One Too Many
Messages
1,037
Location
United States
My grandmother made the best banana pudding in the history of the universe. When I got interested in cooking in the late '70s I asked her for her recipe but she'd had a stroke and couldn't remember.
 

Stanley Doble

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,808
Location
Cobourg
Don’t have New York style pizza in my neck of the woods.
So I was thinking of DIY.
I found all the right ingredients which can be ordered online.
Now all I need is the right bricks & oven!


Years ago were two brothers (Italian) from New York who
had a small diner. Best pizza in town.They are gone, and they would
never tell me how they prepared the dough. :(
Pizza dough is basically Italian bread dough. There must be recipes online. Use good ingredients to make good pizza. From someone who used to run a pizzaria.
 

Stanley Doble

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,808
Location
Cobourg
Mom's apple pie of course and grandmother's oelbollen a treat we had on new year's eve, if you are not familiar they are a Dutch fritter with peel, raisins, and bits of apple in them, deep fried and rolled in powdered sugar served with coffee (or milk for the little ones).
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
Pizza dough is basically Italian bread dough. There must be recipes online. Use good ingredients to make good pizza. From someone who used to run a pizzaria.

I was able to locate the ingredients but was told by owners of a pizzaria that I require an oven
with at least 900º degrees in order to achieve the same results.
The highest I can go with the stove is about 750º.
 
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Stanley Doble

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,808
Location
Cobourg
Somebody was bullshitting you. 750 is hotter than a self cleaning oven in other words, your pizza will burst into flames and turn into ash in minutes. Pizza ovens are around 450 and that is hot enough to cook a pie in 10 minutes.

In a pizza oven with fire brick floor you start the pizza in a pan then take out the pan and finish the pizza on the fire brick to toast the crust. In a regular oven use a screen instead of a pan for the same 'toasty crust' effect. Otherwise the crust is apt to be limp and soggy.
 
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Messages
10,878
Location
vancouver, canada
Sunday dinner....roast beef, gravy and mashed potatoes. Mom made the best gravy. Her Yorkshire pudding was hit and miss. When it hit it was great but many times it just did not rise up? Yorkshire Pudding with ED!
 
Messages
10,878
Location
vancouver, canada
Mom's Yorkshire pudding. It was made in a rectangular pan, not muffin tins, and was fairly dense and moist. I would rise to about 1" thick in the middle and about 2" around the sides. Great hot with gravy and almost better as a cold leftover with a little salt on it. I've never seen it made the same since; I've only ever seen the big puffy hollow muffin tin variety.
Yes, my Mom always went the muffin tin route....with middling success.
 

robrinay

One Too Many
Messages
1,490
Location
Sheffield UK
I was able to locate the ingredients but was told by owners of a pizzaria that I require an oven
with at least 900º degrees in order to achieve the same results.
The highest I can go with the stove is about 750º.
Unless they were talking degrees Fahrenheit rather than Celsius/Centigrade. In which case they were recommending 480 deg.C when they said 900deg F. But that’s still a bit hot for pizza as 450deg.C is best.
 

Inkstainedwretch

One Too Many
Messages
1,037
Location
United States
My grandmother made the best banana pudding I ever ate. With vanilla wafers and meringue topping. She made it with a double boiler and I've never been able to duplicate it.
 

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