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Archive for August, 2007

General update

Friday, August 17th, 2007

The judges have conferred and I’ve just sent emails to all the finalists in the food history competition. I want them to have time to receive their emails, so I won’t post the winners ’til tomorrow morning.

After tomorrow, it’s back to normal. I have a bunch of books that I feel the need to explain, and I’ve been remiss recently in introducing you to exotic (and less exotic) herbs and spices. You need more of my grandmother’s recipes, and I still have to give you my further thoughts on Richard III’s Coronation. I also promised (many months ago) a guide to what makes meat kosher.

The first anniversary of this blog will occur in less than two months. I’d like to celebrate with some of the highlights. If you have a favourite post, tell me in the comments or using the ‘contact’ button and I promise I’ll include it in my overview. That’s the ‘Ghost of Food History past” bit of my celebration.

I’d also like a bit on the future of the blog. If there are any topics that ought to be covered, or any types of cuisines you’d like to see more of, or any type of posts you’d like to see more of, then let’s talk about it over the next six weeks.

I think I’ve run out of announcements. How sad!! Let me leave you with an entirely irrelevant picture.

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Asking historians about food - some hints

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

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I get asked about historical background for fiction by quite a few writers. I hear “I want a Renaissance/Medieval/Victorian dinner - tell me what to do” from an increasing number of people. It’s about time I explained certain basics. Sensible people take these basics into account before they ask me anything. People who are less sensible often don’t get the answers they want or need.

(more…)

Competition update

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

You now have all the top entries. The judges are thinking. When they’ve finished thinking, I’ll report the winners :).

In the meantime, watch this space, because I think I feel a rant coming on.

Irish Stew - competition entry

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

When we were growing up, one of my favourite meals was my Dad’s Irish stew…which is probably one of the most simple meals to cook for a large amount of people. On several occasions, after chopping the onions, layering them into the stew pot with the lamb chops, sliced potatoes and any other vegetables he took a fancy to, along with a bay leaf or two he would pick up the black pepper. Not wearing his glasses, he accidently switched the container to pour instead of shake - managing to empty the better part of the contents of the container into the pot before he realised. None of us could handle spicy hot foods at the time, so we were always extremely annoyed when it happened (and hungry), but we laugh about it now. Because every time, he would just add the water to the pot and cook the stew without even trying to remove the excess pepper. We did think he was doing it on purpose back then, because he’d end up with a week’s worth of hot lunches to take to work, but we know better now that we’re older…and he’s admitted that it was his eyesight that was the problem. Which reminds me of the times he picked up the chili powder instead of the paprika when making his Hungarian goulash…

I don’t know quantities, as we’ve never used them, it’s all pretty much to need/taste:

Lamb chops
potatoes, peeled and sliced
onions peeled and sliced
1-2 bay leaves
Black pepper

sometimes we also add carrots, peas, green beans, broccoli, cauliflower - whatever is available.

Depending on how much time you have, lamb chops may be browned before adding to pot, but this isn’t necessary if you have plenty of time to allow it to cook.

Place ingredients into a large pot, in layers, ie: potato then lamb chops then onion (and carrot if used). Continue layering until all the chops, potato and onion are used. Add the bay leaves, pepper to taste and cover with water. Bring to boil, then reduce heat to a simmer. When potatoes are cooked to crumbling, add any other vegetables, and if necessary more pepper
and salt.

This can be eaten at this point, but I usually cook this down until the potato has very little shape left, almost becomes a gravy. It usually tastes much better reheated the next day.

by Emma W.

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Dad’s Chicken Recipe - competition entry

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

This story is about a recipe my father in law first made when I started going out with their son almost 12 years ago. My mother in law gave me the recipe and I have never looked back. I love to make it not only because it is delicious but the recipe is written in my mother in laws handwriting. She passed away last year on 14 August. It is a family tradition and it makes me sad thinking she is missing it. We call it “Dad’s Chicken Recipe” Recipe follows: 60g butter 2 cloves garlic 1/2 cup dry white wine 300ml carton cream or carnation light evaporated milk 1/4 cup water 1 tablespoon cornflour 1 teaspoon lemon juice salt, pepper to taste 1 tablespoon chopped parsley or 1 teaspoon dry parsley 3 shallots

Melt butter in pan, add crushed garlic and cook 1 minute. Add wine and cream (or milk) and bring to boil, boil rapidly 3-4 minutes. Combine water and cornflour, pour into cream mixture, stir until mixture boils. Add lemon juice, salt and pepper. Add chicken to sauce and cook 2 minutes. Stir in parsley and chopped shallots. Serve over rice or pasta.

Kind Regards and enjoy
Shelley Martin

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The bili bili BBQ - competition entry

Monday, August 13th, 2007

Some meals can never be replicated, because the setting is so important to the food and that setting is a once-only.

Our bili bili BBQ was one of those meals.

The bili bili is a Fijian bamboo canoe, built in a day, used once, then left at the destination or given to somebody else to float downriver. They call them “SS Don’t Come Back�. My family (husband, two kids, cousin and his two kids) stayed three days in a Fijian village to experience the culture and food. We helped to build the bili bili on day two, then on day three we set off down the river.

Lush tropical foliage along the banks, clear running water, shining stones on the river bed; it was a beautiful trip. Along the way the men leapt off the bili bili with small spears and caught our lunch; they’d emerge from the water with huge grins if they were successful, and climbed back on board to cheers.

They built a fire on the back of one bili bili and into it they threw cassava to cook along the way.

It was a long trip, and after two hours it started to pour with rain. Fijians don’t have an interest in “How Long?� so we didn’t know how much further we would be going. We were cold and miserable and getting bored.

Then the cassava came out of the fire. Burnt black on the outside, inside was white, fluffy and sweet, like a tender potato cooked the same way. We took chunks each and ate the lot, burnt skin, tender flesh and all. It was warming and delicious and so very simple.

The bili bili arrived at our picnic place, where a table had been made with bamboo, and a shelter built for us. The fire was burning and the fish were gutted, scaled and thrown straight in. They came out like the cassava; burnt black on the outside, soft, white tender flesh on the inside. They brought the plate to us in our shelter, three whole fish just for us. They brought a bowl of native lime juice, torn red chillies and salt. We picked at the fish with our fingers and dipped the pieces in the dressing. It was the most incredible fish I’ve ever tasted. We were hungry and cold and we were fed like royalty. The children, not usually fish eaters unless it’s battered and fried, picked every last scrap off the bones and dipped their fingers in the hot dressing for the taste of it.

The chief offered me his fish head; I may have been rude to refuse, but I didn’t need (or, let’s be honest, want) it, and he did. He sucked away at it with great enjoyment.

It was an incredible meal to share with my family. It bonded us; we were on an adventure and we had eaten pure, fresh food which lifted our spirits and filled us with satisfaction.

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by Kaaron

Tryst - competition entry

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

I was in high school and had been going out with my girl—this was back in the early sixties, when young women were still called “girls”—for a few weeks, and it was becoming clear that we were about to take our relationship to a new, more adult, level. After some hesitation—this meant, after all, heading into unfamiliar territory—we decided that we were ready.

We would go out on a dinner date.

When the big night arrived, I was—indeed—ready. I wore a sport jacket and favorite turtleneck sweater—very suave, sophisticated, yet with a casually debonair flair that suggested that I dined out with beautiful women all the time. There might have been a suggestion—perhaps even more than a suggestion—of Old Spice, or possibly Canoe, about me. I’ve never been a smoker—but if I had been, there would have been a pipe stuck jauntily in place of a handkerchief in the jacket’s breast pocket.

No ordinary restaurant would do for such an occasion. It had to reflect my worldliness, my impeccable taste—and yet conform to the fiscal strictures imposed by my allowance. There was only one choice: the local Chinese place.

We arrived and were seated in the middle of a crowded dining room. Not one couple in the room was as young or as elegantly dressed as we were—which no doubt explained why the hoi polloi glanced at us covertly, allowing evanescent smiles to cross their faces.

When we were handed the menus, I realized that the time had come to flash some of that famous savoir faire. Not one to dally in the “one-from-column-A-one-from-column-B” section of the menu, I went boldly into the “specials” menu. Without the slightest quaver in my voice, I ordered the Lobster Cantonese.

We gazed deeply into each other’s eyes, while chatting of this and that—as young sophisticates are wont to do—over our Won Ton Soups. The waiter arrived, and with a flourish befitting the extravagance of the occasion, swept the stainless steel cloche from the dish before us.

While I had been in Chinese restaurants many times before—with my parents—never had I ordered anything as exalted as Lobster Cantonese. I fully expected to see something exotic and miraculous.

My expectations were more than fulfilled.

There it was: an entire lobster, in its shell, bright red—a color signifying good fortune to the Chinese—gleaming in a transparent cornstarch-thickened sauce.

We had recently seen the film Tom Jones, and the sheer lasciviousness of the eating scene fired our adolescent passions. At the same time I realized that to simply tear into the crustacean, à la Tom and Mrs. Waters, might not appear sufficiently genteel to the restaurant’s refined clientele. Propriety required us to use utensils of some kind.

I had eaten lobster before, but had always had the help of a veritable toolbox full of nut-crackers, picks and similar implements. I had never before faced such a task, armed only with knife and fork, or worse: chopsticks.

Appetites, of various kinds, were urging me to get on with the task before me—and I suspected that the envious people sitting at nearby tables were watching in awe. I could not let them—or my date—down. “With bold knife and fork,” I approached the shining feast.

When I touched the red shell with the only tools at hand, I noticed something I hadn’t considered before. The sauce was slippery; unbelievably slippery. I was going to have to be firm—but I was a man, and I was ready for anything life could throw at me.

Almost.

When I pressed down on the lobster’s shell, with a masculine confidence and strength that belied my years, the crustacean leapt from the plate. It sailed—slowly, with a kind of remorseless grandeur—through the air, as it has, far too often, in my memory—and landed in the exact center of my turtle-neck-sweatered chest.

There was no sound, not even a gasp. Every eye in the dining room, including my date’s, and—indeed—my own, were on the spiny thing affixed to my sternum. It just clung there for a moment, before slipping, first to my lap, then down to the floor.

by Gary

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Thank you, JM!

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

Thanks to the amazing JM of Fiction Scribe I have a custom designed banner. What’s more, she’s managed to get a joke into it, which exactly suits my approach to history, to food and to life. Thank you, Jaime!!

Lemon meringue pie - competition entry

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

I have quite the weakness for lemon meringue pie, although I have discovered myself to be somewhat discerning in what I will consider to be an acceptable example of the style. When, during my first year of university, I discovered that a large number of members of one of the
clubs I was involved with happened to share this weakness, I foolishly mentioned that it was something I liked cooking. Donations of many, many lemons, some money to cover costs, and a days cooking later, more than 20 people squeezed into my tiny lounge room, and proceeded to demolish the 10 pies provided.

Lemon Meringue Pie (for 5)

Pastry:
1/2 kg wholemeal self-raising flour
1/2 kg white self-raising flour
salt
1/2 kg butter/margarine
4 egg yolks
8-12 tbs iced water.

Pastry:

Sift salt and flour. Rub in butter until it resembles breadcrumbs. Add yolks, mix well. Add water gradually until the mix forms a tight ball. Knead gently, chill at least 1/2 an hour.

When well chilled, cut into four pieces. Roll out each, trim to size, place in pie tray. Collect trimmings, knead. If necessary, add more water, chill again. This makes the fifth pie crust, which will be slightly less perfect than the others. If desired, you can cut the initial dough into five, and then be very careful about rolling out, but I’m just not that interested in the level of care required. The pastry cases need to be baked blind at 190C (375F) for 10-15 minutes or until brown.

Filling:

16 tbsp flour
16 tbs cornflour (~1packet)
8 tsp grated lemon rind
750 ml lemon juice
1 kg sugar
5 cups water
375g butter
16 egg yolks

Sift flour and cornflour together into large saucepan, add sugar. Gradually add water, stirring carefully to avoid lumps. Add lemon rind, lemon juice. Stir over low heat until it boils and thickens (will take quite a while with this much mix - allow 1/2 an hour, but probably doesn’t take that long, it just feels like it). Reduce heat as much as possible* and stir a further 2 mins. Add butter and egg yolks, and stir until completely mixed.

* this assumes you are using gas. If using electric, just turn the heat off.

Meringue:

3/4 cup castor sugar and pinch of salt per 4 egg whites (in convenient sized batches - try and do the amount required to next go in the oven)

Put eggs and salt in small bowl. Beat eggs until soft peaks form. Add sugar gradually, keep beating until it is all dissolved.

Assembling pies:

Take baked cases, spread the filling out between them. If you are using shallow pie dishes, you may have more filling than required, if quite deep, you may have quite a gap. Don’t be tempted to restrict it to fewer cases, and fill them higher, it doesn’t seem to turn out as well. Top with meringue (slap it on, pipe it nicely, go with your artistic temperament). Bake at 180C (350F) for 5-10 mins.

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by A

Jam - competition entry

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

There are many many things I love about jam, but more than anything, I like the experience of cooking it. Although I have many memories of my mother making jam, it is not her jam that I choose to emulate - almost guaranteed that a batch of apricot jam would need to be eaten with eyes closed, as the black flecks through-out were highly off-putting. Instead it is the jam of the mother of a school friend.

My first memory of her jam is swapping sandwiches with my friend, who on one occasion really didn’t want her rhubarb and ginger jam sandwiches, swapping instead for my polony and cheese. And oh, the love. I began to watch our tiny rhubarb plant, in hopes that one day there would be sufficient output to warrant a request for the making of such. But alas, no.

The next jam to come along was lillipilli jam. And my love for rhubarb and ginger jam was forgotten. I knew what lillipillies were, although at that age they were better known as Chinese Apples, as there was a tree outside the school shop (really the local deli) that all the kids used to raid. Some years later, having exhausted other options for keeping myself in a decent supply of lillipilli jam, I obtained the recipe, and now spend much time each fruiting season cutting and
pipping the sods, in order to have plenty of the beautiful magenta stuff to hand.

This year though, I made a supreme sacrifice. It was a busy year, and despite scrounging lillipillies here, there and everywhere, pipping and freezing for later jam making, I had managed a pitiful quantity. And I had really wanted to give jam away as ‘party favours’ at my wedding.
So, in the week leading up to the wedding, I used up all my stored lillipillies, and made about 18 little pots of jam. Argh, nowhere near enough. No trees anywhere to access, no time to pip the dratted things. So, what to do?

The solution, although unorthodox, was a wonderful one. At a very cheap price, I came into possession of 10kg of kiwi fruit. I also had to hand a kiwi fruit conserve recipe I’d been wanting to try for some time. Some time later, enough pots of conserve, in wonderful complementary
colours of red and green. And they were very well received!

Kiwi Conserve

900g kiwi fruit, peeled and sliced
900g sugar

1. Get a large ceramic bowl, and place a layer of fruit in it. Cover
with a layer of sugar. Repeat with layers of fruit and sugar until all
used up. Cover and leave 24 hours.

2. Transfer fruit (and any liquid in the bowl) to saucepan. Bring the
mix slowly to the boil, stirring until all the sugar dissolves. Boil
rapidly for 5 minutes. Leave to cool for 15 minutes, then pot and
cover.

Note: the fruit doesn’t break down during the process, so whatever size
pieces go in, pretty much come out the other end. And it is *very*
sweet, so smaller pieces probably better (although I haven’t tried
this).

Submitted by A.

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Phill’s funny flour (gluten free) - competition entry

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

The first of the competition entries - enjoy!!

Cooking for a family can be challenging especially when there are different and sometimes conflicting dietary requirements. I thought I would share my war story: After my parents came to live with us our household consisted of one normal person (me, of course), one diabetic, one self-deluded coeliac (my husband), one invalid suffering from leukemia who needed masses of calories in very small portions, and two young children with all the usual juvenile food preferences. Meals required strategic planning otherwise yours truly ended up being a short-order chef and people were fed in relays. We ended up with about 15 menus that we would cycle through for everyday meals. I use the word ‘menu’ deliberately because the solution to the conflicting requirements was to put on the table an array of foods so that people could choose a suitable meal. I think my most challenging time was when we had some dear family friends come to stay and they added to the mix a vegetarian, a serious food-allergy sufferer and a toddler!

My husband was convinced he was a coeliac for the first 10 years of our marriage, so I became proficient at baking all manner of foods with substitute ingredients. I developed our own gluten-free flour recipe which we called:

Phill’s Funny Flour
(gluten free)

100 g soy flour
500 g brown rice flour
75 g potato flour
2 tbs guar gum
50 g ground almonds
(optional: 1 heaped tbs carob powder if you want a darker flour)

Happily, it turned out he wasn’t a coeliac and he has almost grown out of his intolerances. I do remind him that he owes me big time for all those years of coeliac cuisine.

I thought I would also include a recipe for both coeliacs and non-coeliacs. We have a tradition in our family that we serve the hot roast turkey and Christmas pud on Christmas Eve night, and on Christmas Day we serve the ham, seafood, salads and pavlova for desert. Here is the dead easy Pavlova recipe from Phill’s family:

Easy Pavlova

2 egg whites
1 1/2 cups castor sugar
1 tsp white vinegar
1 tsp cornflour (not wheaten)
1/2 tsp vanilla
4 tbs boiling water

Place in bowl, water last. Beat with electric beater until meringue consistency, about 12 minutes. Spread onto pavlova plate or tray. Bake for 30 mins at 150 C, reduce heat to 120 C and bake for further 30 mins.

Jennifer Berrie

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“I have a package for you from your mother.”

Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

For four years I’ve been introducing cookbooks to food history students. Every now and then a book has tragedy attached, and I explain the history of the people and why it’s important to remember them and their food and their foodways. Then I add “But there’s one cookbook I don’t own. It’s just too painful.”

Three weeks ago I finally bought this book: I look at it and weep.

“In Memory’s Kitchen” was compiled in Terezin, a Nazi concentration camp in Czechoslovakia. Terezin was a world of wire and absences. It was a place where the actors in a production could be dead two weeks later. It was a world of fear and of starvation. It was the best of the camps. It was the model ghetto.

It had been a real town, but by 1942 it had been turned into a transit station to sure death. The introduction to “In Memory’s Kitchen” puts it simply:

144,000 Jews sent to Terezin
33,000 died in Terezin
88,000 sent to Auschwitz

It was overcrowded and the inhabitants suffered from disease and malnutrition. The number of people who died from starvation was higher even than in the Warsaw ghetto. And yet this was seen as a place of privilege. Important Jews were sent to Terezin: war heroes, artists, industrialists, scientists. The residents did their best to live, and to live at the highest intellectual and creative level. Their achievements were astonishing. Their deaths were awful. It was only a place of privilege compared with other concentration camps.

Mina Pachter was in her seventies and was one of a few very special women who wrote down their favourite recipes and menus and commemorated life and its good things. They wrote a recipe book while they starved to death.

After Mina died, her manuscript was entrusted to a friend.

It took a long time before the package with the book reached Mina’s daughter. This is when she answered the phone and heard a voice say “I have a package for you from your mother.”

It took a long time for this cookbook to reach the world.

Through Mina’s recipes, we find a memory of the humanity of those who died. Although paper was rare and although these amazing women starved to death, they wrote a cookbook. Their spirits leap high across the decades, unextinguishable.

I can’t read the recipes without crying, but I’m glad I own this book.

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Regency Gothic banquet

Tuesday, August 7th, 2007

I’m delaying putting up the competition entries for a day or two, because I still have to get the entries to the judges (tonight, I promise!). This is because things keep happening and instead of swirling round me and leaving me a still pond in which to splash happily and to do my work, they rushed me into a bunch of tasks and I’m a bit short of time.

The food news for Conflux is terrific, though, and worth taking a night off normal posting to celebrate. Our menu for the Regency Gothic Banquet has been approved by a very perceptive chef, and I can answer general questions about it. The exact menu won’t be posted until a bit closer to the event (which is the end of September). After Conflux I will post all the recipes, one course at a time, and you can cook a sumptuous and rich banquet at home.

Right now, people round me (in Canberra) are talking about costumes. Mine will be a deep dusky pink, I think. My great aim with the costume is not to resemble a pink elephant too closely. Garth Nix says he has used Ebay and has the perfect coat. If I get lucky, I might be able to post pictures of people and costumes alongside the recipes, for readers who live too far from Canberra.

The big news, though is about the menu. The chef at Rydges loved it. The testers loved it. We’re all very excited and can’t wait to share it with the world. The sharing will have to wait, but at least I can answer specific questions for people who have food restrictions, and I can do that immediately. So ask away.

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Horseradish

Monday, August 6th, 2007

Horseradish (cochlearia armoracia or armorsacia lapathifolia) is a fabulously pungent root. It really intrigues me that the sixteenth century German use of this root was very similar to the modern Askenazi Jewish use (as a vinegared relish with meats and fish), especially given that the roots of Yiddish are mostly the German of that period.

Eat the root grated very finely with vinegar and perhaps a bit of beetroot. The easy way to make chrain (the relish) is with the liquid from a tin of beetroot and lots of grated horseradish. I guess there is a proper way to make it, but I always do it the easy way. I’m told it goes well with gefilte fish - I know it goes magically with most roasts and most vegetables. it’s also good for clearing the sinuses.

When I was exploring the horseradish web I found a commercial site with rather a good description of making kosher chrain for Passover. It’s worth reading round the ads for the guts of it: kashruth isn’t nearly as complicated as it looks, and neither is horseradish.

The history of horseradish is complicated, however. I’ve seen mentions of it quoted by Pliny and by the Deplhic Oracle, but no-one ever gives the exact source, so I can’t check it out.

In recent centuries horseradish has become the bitter herb of choice for many Passover seders, replacing classics such as rue. This I can check out, and I do, every year at Passover.

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The Carnival is (almost) over

Sunday, August 5th, 2007

What I really meant to say is that the competition is nearly complete. The Seekers have invaded my brain. Also fatigue.

I’ll keep the competition open just two more hours tonight, and then it’s done. From tomorrow I will blog the best of the posts, so you can read them alongside the judges. When the judges have made their decisions, I’ll let you know, I promise. In the meantime, I’ll busy myself with those random draws for The United States of Arugula. You’re not eligible for one if you don’t get me that story and recipe, so you might want to make good use of the contact section of the page in the next two hours (if you haven’t already).

My computer is as tired as I am, so it has taken me two tries to upload pictures of the prizes again, so you can drool over them one last time.

You could win one of the three prizes that Suz’s Space has kindly donated (Suz has also donated the postage - don’t forget to visit her online shop).

suzspace-with-bookends.jpg

What can you win?

place-mat-and-serviette.jpg

1st Prize
A set of 6 serviettes and 6 placemats
ABC Delicious Magazine - Issue 25 March 2004
ABC Delicious Magazine - Issue 22 November 2003

cutlery.jpg

2nd Prize
Set of non-stick kitchen implements
Super Food Ideas - Issue 60 June 2005
Super Food Ideas - Issue 45 February 2004

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3rd Prize
Australian Gourmet Traveller
1 Apron (choice of 4 colours)

In two hours it will all be up to our amazing team of judges

Suz from Suz’s Space (of course)
Farley from Wine Outlook
Jaime from The New Australian and Fiction Scribe
Dave from Pop Buzz UK
Allison from Reality on Bravo

About Food History

A few herbs, a pinch of spice and foods of the past create your perfect foodie recipe at Food History. Expand your palate with everything from hot scones to hot websites without leaving your computer. At Food History there's a gourmet’s delight of food, health, history, and an amazing side of mushrooms. From holiday food customs to any number of fabulous recipes, you can find out anything and everything about your favorite tasty tidbits.

Food History Author(s)
    » Gillian-Polack

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  • Singapore's First Tattoo Show Starts Friday
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  • Jonas Brothers, Blake Lively, Hayden Panettiere Golden Globes Presenters
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  • Random Wordbank Wednesday
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