Tag: Appetizer

Mediterranean Roasted Grape Salad

Posted March 14, 2024 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 2 Comments

 

 

Have you ever read a book where you know you would be best friends with the main character in real life? That happened to me when I read JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH by Jules Verne. The book is narrated by a young man named Axel, the nephew and research assistant of Professor Lidenbrock, a German geology professor. We find out Axel’s attitude toward food at the beginning of the book, and it endeared him to me immediately.

The first scene begins at dinner time, when the professor rushes in with a runic Icelandic manuscript and skips dinner to start translating it. Axel and the housekeeper are shocked, since the professor never misses meals (Axel eats his uncle’s plate of food as well as his own, since it’s so delicious). After this, Lindenbrock gets so excited about the manuscript that he insists neither one of them will sleep or eat until they translate it. Axel silently rejoices that he ate two dinners.

While the professor is out of the room, Axel accurately translates part of the manuscript, realizing it gives instructions for how to journey to the center of the Earth (roll credits!). Certain the trip would be fatal–and equally certain his uncle would want them both to go anyway–he doesn’t tell the professor he figured out what the manuscript says. Stealing his nerves, he resolves to miss breakfast AND lunch in the name of avoiding a crazy subterranean expedition (spoiler: the professor figures it out anyway 😆).

I laughed SO HARD when I read the first scene, and from that moment on, Axel was my new best friend. That’s when I decided to make a menu for JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH!

Today’s recipe is inspired by the part of the book when the characters are on a Mediterranean island surrounded by fruit trees, including grapes and pomegranates. Drawing inspiration from the region, I decided to make a roasted grape salad, sticking primarily to Mediterranean ingredients. Starting with a spinach base, I added crumbled feta and toasted almonds, topping it all off with fresh pomegranate arils and homemade pomegranate vinaigrette. For the finishing touch, I added some balsamic roasted grapes I made using a recipe by Beautiful Eats & Things.

This Mediterranean roasted grape salad is easy, healthy, and super refreshing. The perfect pick-me-up after a journey to the center of the Earth . . . or a long night of translating an Icelandic manuscript! 😉

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Faraway Pasties: Elijah’s Empanadas

Posted January 4, 2024 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 3 Comments

 

 

Welcome to a new year! May your 2024 be filled with joy, adventure, and (of course) lots of delicious food—just like the inspiration for today’s menu, a delightful book I read last year called MY FINE FELLOW.

MY FINE FELLOW is a gender-swapped version of MY FAIR LADY with a few other notable changes. In this version, instead of a phonetics professor passing off a flower seller as a fine lady at a ball, a young pair of gentlewoman chefs hope to pass off a talented street food vendor as a gentleman chef. Naturally, the book is full of delicious food, and since the main characters come from a mix of cultural heritages, many of the dishes come from around the world. Reading about so many creative dishes ignited my imagination, and I relished the idea of starting the new year with a challenging menu. So here we go!

Today I’m making one of the book’s most iconic recipes: Faraway Pasties. These are Elijah’s signature dish, which catch the attention of Helena and Penelope, setting off a chain of events that lead to Elijah competing in the Royal Culinary Exhibition. Throughout Penelope’s first conversation with Elijah, we get little bits of info about the pasties—enough for us to know that Elijah’s Faraway Pasties are fried Salvadoran empanadas with paprika mixed into the masa dough and filled with beef, potato, and oregano. They sounded SO good, so I knew they had to be the first dish in this menu.

I’m very new to making empanadas, so for today’s post I combined recipes from Jonathan Melendez and Hank Shaw, making a few tweaks for the sake of accuracy to the story. Oh man did they turn out good! They were a huge hit with my kids. My son loved the crisp fried masa dough exterior, and my daughter especially enjoyed the savory, beefy filling. They ate a half batch in one sitting!

I can just imagine how satisfying one of these empanadas would be on a cold, rainy night at the Convent Garden Market, just like when Penelope eats them at the beginning of the story!

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Skeldale House Sausage Rolls

Posted November 2, 2023 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 0 Comments

 

 

I’ve been craving comforting TV shows for the past few months. I’ve had lots of health issues lately, and it’s got me feeling weary in body and soul. When I feel like this, I just want to curl up on the couch and watch something cozy. For me, peak comfort television is ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL. It’s a PBS Masterpiece show about a Yorkshire countryside veterinary practice in the 1930s-40s (based on the memoir of the same name). I just rewatched all three seasons, and the lovable characters, wholesome story, and cute farm animals soothed me to the depths of my heart. Season Four recently released in Britain, but since I’m in the U.S., I have to wait until January. As I eagerly await Season 4, I’m biding my time by making a menu inspired by all the delicious food in the show.

Today’s recipe is sausage rolls, a staple appetizer at every Skeldale House Christmas party. Since the show’s season finales are always set during Christmas, sausage rolls appear in each one. Sausage rolls are especially prominent in the season three finale, where Jenny desperately tries to force a plate of rolls on Gerald to keep him from leaving the party early.

The filling for these sausage rolls is heavily inspired by Rapunzel’s Braided Pastries in my e-cookbook, A LITERARY PICNIC. However, I also took a lot of inspiration from this Jamie Oliver recipe, since I wanted the rolls to be authentically British.

They turned out AMAZING. I love a good sausage roll, and these are top tier (if I do say so myself! 😉).

P.S. If you haven’t read the memoir the show is based on, I highly recommend it. My husband got it for me as a birthday present a couple years ago, and it’s sooo good!

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Bambleby’s Marinated Mushrooms

Posted September 7, 2023 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 0 Comments

 

 

I finished reading EMILY WILDE’S ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FAERIES a couple months ago, and guys. GUYS. It’s sooo good! If you’re a fan of JONATHAN STRANGE & MR. NORRELL, you’ll love this book. It’s my favorite read this year, and I think it’s made dark academia/historical fantasy my new favorite genre combo. Once I finished it, I knew I had to make a menu for it.

Wendell Bambleby is definitely my favorite character. He’s a comfort-loving, clutter-hating dandy who finds himself increasingly dragged into acts of heroism, much to his chagrin. He reminds me so much of Howl from HOWL’S MOVING CASTLE, and the curmudgeonly Professor Emily Wilde is 100% the Sophie to Bambleby’s Howl. I love them both so much! So today we’re starting our menu off with Bambleby’s Marinated Mushrooms.

In EMILY WILDE, the villagers give Bambleby a giant basket of mushrooms when they aren’t sure how to thank him for his help. He isn’t thrilled by the gift, but I doubt he’d let good food go to waste. Instead, I think our ease-loving Bambleby would find the simplest way to prepare them, and nothing’s easier than tossing some mushrooms in some seasoned olive oil!

For today’s post, I drew from recipes from three different sources (No Spoon Necessary, Cooking LSL, and Dish ‘n the Kitchen), cobbling them together to create something new. I loved the flavor of the finished mushrooms—herby and garlicky with a meaty texture—but I’ll admit I didn’t care for them cold. I think they would be perfect warmed up just a little, especially as a side for steak!

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Norwegian Chicken Soup with Dumplings

Posted July 6, 2023 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 3 Comments

 

 

One of my favorite reads so far this year is RONIA THE ROBBER’S DAUGHTER by Astrid Lindgren, the author of PIPPI LONGSTOCKING. It’s such a delightful children’s book, complete with a brave heroine, fierce friendship, and an enchanting yet perilous fantasy world. It’s exactly the sort of book that would have become my entire personality if I’d read it when I was 10 years old! I’ll definitely read it to my own kids when they’re old enough. For now, I’ll content myself with making some of the delicious food from the story. Today, we’re making the tasty chicken soup made by Ronia’s mother, Lovis. Let’s get started!

Since RONIA is set in a fantasy version of Scandinavia, I sought out authentic Scandinavian recipes for this menu. Today I’ll be using a slight variation on a Norwegian chicken soup recipe I found on The Norwegian American. It starts with a rich, homemade stock using roasted chicken bones and lots of aromatics. Then it goes on to add carrot, onion, shredded chicken, and rutabaga (a new-to-me addition, which I loved). In the last ten minutes, you spoon in some quick, from-scratch batter to make dumplings.

I gotta say, I LOVED the final product. I think the rutabaga was my favorite part. I was nervous about it at first, but it has this starchy, lightly sweet quality that I found really pleasant. I think I like it better than potato as a soup add-in, since it doesn’t get grainy or mushy when reheated.

So if you’re huddled up in Matt the Robber’s fort with a storm raging outside and harpies screeching in the sky, just hunker down with a comforting bowl of this Norwegian chicken soup with dumplings! Enjoy!

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Strawberry Scones with Lemon Moscato Glaze

Posted May 11, 2023 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 2 Comments

 

 

Welcome to a menu I’ve been wanting to make for years: one inspired by Brambly Hedge! If you’re unfamiliar with the series, just imagine if Redwall had been written as early chapter books with cozy cottagecore themes and utterly gorgeous illustrations. I have the box set of the Brambly Hedge seasonal stories, and I’ve been itching to make a menu inspired by each season. So let’s get started!

We’ll begin with SUMMER STORY, which follows the events surrounding the wedding of Poppy Eyebright, who runs the Brambly Hedge dairy, and Dusty Dogwood, the local miller. I brought their two crafts together and made a recipe that uses flour, butter, milk, and cream—scones! Strawberry scones to be exact, since fresh strawberries are one of the foods brought to the wedding. To jazz things up, I drizzled my scones with a lemon Moscato glaze inspired by the homemade white wine Basil Brightberry sets aside for the wedding.

I think the glaze might be my favorite part of this recipe. It gives the scones some needed zing, brightening all the other flavors. My son, our resident bread enthusiast, is a huge fan of these scones. He’s already asking when I’ll make them again!

P.S. If you’re a Brambly Hedge fan and are bummed I didn’t make Poppy’s iconic wedding cake, don’t worry. It’s coming! Since we get a beautiful illustration of her cake but no description of the flavor, I decided to combine it with the birthday cake from SPRING STORY, which has a detailed flavor description. So for dessert I’m make Wildfred Toadflax’s strawberry hazelnut birthday cake and style it to look like Poppy’s wedding cake. It will be my 4th Brambly Hedge recipe (the second-to-last one in the menu), so stay tuned!

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Mock Turtle Soup

Posted March 2, 2023 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 0 Comments

 

 

Let me tell you the story of my relationship with TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA. It’s a whale of a tale, I tell you, lads (kudos to anyone who gets that movie reference 😉).

When I was in my early twenties, I bought a copy of TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES because I’d never read a Jules Verne book, and his most famous work seemed like a good place to start.

Reader, I hated it. It was dry, boring, and dragged during what should have been the most exciting scenes. Disappointed, I DNFed it. Several years later, I mentioned my experience to a friend, who pointed out that the English translation could have been the problem, since Verne wrote in French. I did a quick google and couldn’t believe what I learned.

Some of you may already know this, but for those who don’t: the early English translations of Verne’s books are notorious for being utterly horrendous. Whole pages were dropped, paragraphs of description were added, and some parts were just plain mistranslated. The first translation of TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES—by Lewis Page Mercier—is largely agreed to be the worst. I checked my copy of the book, and sure enough, Mercier was the translator. I learned that one of the best translators of TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES is considered to be F.P. Walter. So I tracked down a copy of his translation and gave the book another try.

It was AMAZING. It was exciting, the characters were memorable, and the level of detail Verne put into the technology was incredible. For the first time, I understood why so many people love this book. Of course, it didn’t escape my notice that the book also mentions LOTS of food, and I was intrigued by Captain Nemo’s commitment to only get his food from the sea. Which leads us to today’s delicious soup recipe.

Turtle soup is enjoyed by Professor Aronnax in TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES during his time aboard the Nautilus. We’re making mock turtle soup today since cooking turtle is largely illegal the U.S., but interestingly enough, the mock version has always been more common in the States. I won’t go into the full history of turtle soup here, but I WILL say this soup has a rich, fascinating history that involves Alexander Hamilton, Campbell’s Soup, and even ALICE IN WONDERLAND! If you want to learn more, I highly recommend this Atlas Obscura article by Natasha Frost.

Turtle soup (mock or otherwise) is something I’d never made before, so I used a recipe from Taste of the South Magazine with a few minor changes to suit what I had on hand. I kept tasting it throughout the cooking process and was intrigued by how the flavors evolved. The final soup is unlike anything I’ve ever tasted, though there’s a definite Louisiana quality to it. It’s tomato-y but doesn’t taste like a tomato based soup. The lemon adds some zing, yet the soup somehow reminds me of French onion soup, I think because of the sherry. The Worcestershire and beef ground the soup, giving the sherry and lemon a rich base through which to disperse. I can see why Professor Aronnax loved it!

I gotta tell you, the most exciting thing about this whole experience was discovering a new author to love. I can’t wait to read more Jules Verne. I think this could be the beginning of a beautiful friendship. 😉

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Pepper Poppers

Posted November 3, 2022 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 1 Comment

 

 

Today marks the beginning of a menu I’ve been looking forward to all year! Not only is this my first time making a menu for a computer game, but it’s for my all-time favorite game: STARDEW VALLEY!

For those who are unfamiliar, STARDEW VALLEY is a farming and life simulation role-playing game. There are loads of farming sims out there, but this one is special because it is just so perfectly balanced. It’s well-paced, relaxing but rewarding, easy to play in both short bursts and long hauls, and incorporates fun storytelling and lore. In fact, STARDEW VALLEY is the only computer game I’ve continued to play since having kids (sorry, Sims). On top of it all, the art style and music are beautiful in their simplicity…and the food looks AMAZING. Which is why we’re here today. 😉

Food plays a big roll in STARDEW VALLEY. Many of the recipes provide buffs to the player’s speed, energy, luck, attacks against monsters, and more. There are loads of iconic STARDEW VALLEY recipes so I had a hard time narrowing it down, but I knew from the beginning that today’s recipe needed to make the final cut. Let’s make Pepper Poppers! 😀

Pepper Poppers is probably the food I eat most early in the game. It provides buffs for both farming and speed, making it perfect for when I’m working on building my farm to max capacity. Judging by the recipe’s in-game thumbnail, Pepper Poppers consists of a mix of red and green breaded peppers, which the description states are spicy and filled with cheese.

I chose jalapeños for my green peppers and mini sweet peppers for the red (since my store didn’t have any red chilis). For the filling, I used a mix of cream cheese and shredded Cheddar, then threw in some chopped pepperoni and chives to make it my own. Since this recipe is a favorite of the character Shane—and he’s the one who gives the player the recipe—I decided to create a batter than uses his favorite beverage, beer. My beer batter is loosely based on this Paula Deen recipe.

These were SO satisfying. Crisp on the outside, then a hit of spice, and ultra creamy in the center. I can see why they’re Shane’s favorite!

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Old-Fashioned Wigg Buns with Orange Marmalade

Posted September 1, 2022 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 0 Comments

 

 

Today I’m thrilled to begin a menu for one of the best books I’ve read in a long time: JONATHAN STRANGE & MR. NORRELL by Susanna Clarke. It is a historical fantasy that follows the story of two gentlemen magicians whose partnership and eventual rivalry change their world.

Despite the book’s unbelievable length (over a thousand pages!), I found myself wanting to read as slowly as possible, just so I could stay immersed in Clarke’s world. I love how she takes magical elements and seamlessly weaves them into a realistic 19th-century English setting. The aesthetic is reminiscent of gothic fantasy, making it a perfect autumn read, yet the book is narrated like a biography or piece of academic research, which grounds it. The merger of fantasy and reality is helped by footnotes that reference dark folklore and works of magical scholarship alongside historical figures like Napoleon and Lord Byron.

In keeping with this realistic setting, I wanted today’s recipe to be an authentic historical dish. In the book, Stephen Black, a butler who is more than he appears, is offered a wigg bun with marmalade. Wigg buns are lightly sweetened rolls that were popular in the late 18th century. They were traditionally spiced with caraway. I must confess to hating caraway, so I used other period appropriate spices: allspice, nutmeg, and cloves. The recipe below is an authentic late 18th-century recipe I found on Savoring the Past, which explores historical living (it’s a great source of culinary info from that era. I’ve use their collection of online historical cookbooks for past menus). This was really fun to try, and I especially enjoyed making “barm,” the historical alternative to modern dried yeast.

As for the marmalade that accompanied Stephen’s buns, I used a slightly tweaked version of a recipe I found on Mon Petit Four, since I’d never made marmalade before. I love this recipe because it’s super easy to follow, doesn’t use a lot of ingredients, and successfully avoids the bitterness that can happen in homemade marmalade. It takes a couple hours, but a lot of that time is spent waiting for things to boil. Plus, it’s easy to scale up without much added cook time. It was super delicious, I’ll definitely make it again. Enjoy! 😀

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Wild Salad

Posted July 7, 2022 by Alison's Wonderland Recipes in Book of the Month Recipes / 0 Comments

 

 

Summer is here, and with it comes picnics, firepit cooking, and a banquet of fresh foragables. This abundance is what inspired me to choose MY SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN for my July-August menu. In the book, 10-year-old Sam Gribley runs away from home and lives alone in the Catskill Mountains, foraging and trapping his food. He describes dozens of wild edibles, most notably a “wild salad” of dandelion greens. So that’s what we’re making today!

Sam doesn’t specifically state what’s in the salad (apart from the greens), so I included lots of other items Sam eats in the book like fresh strawberries, apples, walnuts, and bird’s eggs (I used quail eggs). I roasted the walnuts in maple syrup, since Sam makes maple syrup in the book, and I for one LOVE a good candied nut in a salad. Of course, Sam wouldn’t have had any dressing, but I whipped up a quick maple syrup vinaigrette because to me salad just screams to have something holding everything together. I’m glad I did, because I think this is my new favorite dressing! It’s sweet-tart, with just a hint of spice from stone ground mustard. If you want to drizzle something book-accurate on your salad instead, you could whisk some maple syrup with a bit of rendered animal fat.

Full disclosure: I found the dandelion greens a bit bitter, but I would DEFINITELY make this again with a mix of dandelion and other greens.

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