Tag: wartime

Creamed Carrots and Peas

Creamed Carrots and Peas

An easy way to add some variety to your vegetable dishes!

Normandy Beef Hash

Normandy Beef Hash

A very quick and tasty way to use up those leftovers!

Lobster Newburg

Lobster Newburg

You may notice an odd theme when you come to our house at Christmas.

I like to bring a bit of the East Coast to the West Coast, including lobster at Christmas. Lobster Newburg is one of our family’s traditions, which we’ve shared with numerous friends over the years. In 2020, we didn’t get to share it directly, but I will share the recipe here!

Cook Away does have a recipe for Lobster Newburg and so does Wartime Recipes of the Maritimes (listed as “Creamed Lobster”), but I’m going to share my family’s recipe instead!

This is a really simple dish to make, and ends up tasting rich and decadent. I’m going to list amounts below for about 3 people, but it’s easy to make for a crowd too (I’ve made this for upwards of 20 people at a time).


Ingredients

1 lb frozen lobster pieces (go for knuckles and claws - always better than tails)
2 tbsp butter
2.5 cups table cream (15-18%) (can mix equal parts whipping cream and milk)
1/8-1/4 cup sherry
1.5 tsp dried tarragon
Salt and pepper

Instructions

Thaw the lobster, then drain. 

In a large skillet or heavy-bottom pot, melt the butter. Add the lobster pieces, and salt and pepper. Break up larger pieces. Sauté for about 10 mins, until the water/liquid that cooks out of the lobster pieces has evaporated. [Note that the cooked lobster will get tougher (well done) here, and will appear more rubbery. That's okay - it softens again later.] 

Add the sherry and let it cook off slightly. Add the tarragon and the cream. Bring to a simmer, and stir regularly, for at least 30 mins (the longer the better). The cream will thicken up, and become a light coral colour. If it gets too thick, add additional milk/cream to loosen it again. 

Serve over bread/toast. 

Despite being on the wrong coast for it, we’ve been able to find frozen lobster every year. Frozen is absolutely fine for this dish, but if you can find shelled pieces fresh, that work too. Just don’t go for tails. I know, they are often the parts included in fancy meals, but that’s just because they are the biggest chunks. They’re not the best chunks. Especially if someone else is doing the work to shell the crustacean in question, you want to select the knuckles and claws instead.

We’ve also gotten some frozen mechanically separated lobster (kind of macerated pieces) to bulk up our larger party pots of Newburg in past years. It’s pretty inexpensive at about $8-9 for 325 g or so. Those will get you the taste, but not the texture or the look. If this is a special occasion, spring for the $20-30 for a pound of the full pieces.

Thawed lobster meat

You’ll find that the lobster releases liquid as it sautés. Cook that off.

Liquid all cooked off

I had whipping cream this time, so I added 50-50 cream and milk to get the right consistency.

Cream added!

After you add the cream, it’s a matter of bringing it to a simmer and letting it cook as long as you can. (My dad would start this at 5 or 6 am on Christmas morning, and, as a teenager, I’d eat it at 10 or 11 am. And it only gets better with more simmer time. So yummy).

Simmering!

The cream takes on this lovely lobster-y colour and flavour, and the lobster gets tender.

Homemade bread

When it’s finally time to eat, slice up some good bread (toast it if you like) and pile on some lobster and sauce. (You won’t need to butter the bread. Trust me on this one).

The final dish!

The verdict

This dish is a total winner. Tastes like fancy food, but is dead easy to make.

Did you make it? Tell us in the comments!

California Beets

California Beets

A great glazed beet recipe with some unique flavours!

Stuffed Cabbage

Stuffed Cabbage

Stuffing a cabbage with bologna – what wartime cooks came up with to use leftovers and feed families.

Hurry Up Rhubarb Pudding

Hurry Up Rhubarb Pudding

This dish, from Wartime Recipes from the Maritimes, was a last minute weeknight effort to use up some of the rhubarb in our garden (which was suffering a bit from the frost).

This is a chômeur pudding, where a hot, sweet liquid is poured over the batter just prior to going in the oven, and the dish ends up with a cake-like part on top and a sweet sauce on the bottom of the pan.

As far as I can tell, this dish is suitable to make under rationing partly because there is no fat in it (except for the greasing of the dish). Fat was used in the making of explosives during the war, and was both rationed (butter) and collected by citizens (as drippings).

(By the way, there is no explanation for the name of this dish in the book – one imagines that it’s a quick dessert for a hungry crowd!)


Ingredients

1 cup flour
2 tsp baking powder
2 tsp sugar
1/8 tsp salt
2/3 cups milk
2 cups chopped rhubarb
2/3 cups brown sugar
3/4 cup boiling water

Instructions

Preheat oven to 375F. Grease a baking dish. 

Mix flour, sugar, salt, and baking powder in a bowl. Add milk and beat until smooth. 

Make a layer of rhubarb in the bottom of the dish. Spread batter over the top of the rhubarb. 

Dissolve brown sugar in the boiling water, then pore it over the batter in the baking dish. 

Bake for 30 minutes. 

Rhubarb from the garden!
Rhubarb in the buttered baking dish, and dry ingredients, mixed.
The batter on top of the rhubarb.
Pouring the sugar water over the dish.
The final product!

The verdict

Definitely a tasty dessert, and very quick to make! I will make this again for sure.

Ever made a chômeur? Did you try this one? Let us know what you think in the comments!