Old style tangy tomato sauce

Tomato Sauce

This tomato sauce recipe can be made either tangy or sweet, depending on your choice of vinegar.

Published in 2012 in “The Downstairs Cookbook. Recipes from a 1920’s Kitchen” (originally published as The Margaret Powell Cookery Book in 1970).

Ingredients

1 lb or 480gm of tomatoes – chopped

1 small onion – chopped

2oz or 60gm of diced ham

4 teaspoons of butter

1 bay leaf

cayenne pepper

pinch of salt

6 teaspoons vinegar (I used white wine vinegar for a tangy sauce but a sweet balsamic vinegar would also be very nice)

2 1/2 Australian/UK tablespoons or 3 US tablespoons of corn flour (known as corn starch in the US)

Method

Put the tomatoes, onions, ham and seasonings in a saucepan and cook over a gentle heat for 5 minutes.

Add the vinegar and simmer until all the ingredients are completley softened.

Turn off the heat and either rub through a coarse seive or remove thebay leaf and blitz in a blender.

Return the mix to the saucepan if you removed it :)

Mix the corn flour to a paste with some water and add to the cooked mixture.

Stir over a low heat until thick.

Serve with meat or use in a recipe that calls for tomato sauce.

Eggless Fruit Loaf

Eggless Fruit Loaf

Originally published in The Mercury (Hobart), on the 21st of August 1952. This recipe is not only great for anyone who can’t eat eggs, it’s also dairy free and with one little substitution it’s vegan too!

The cup sizes in this recipe are 240ml, although you can use a metric cup.
Each tablespoon is 20ml or 4 teaspoons.

Ingredients

2 cups of water

2 cups sugar

2 cups of mixed fruit

2 tablespoons (8 teaspoons if you’re in the US) of beef dripping. If you want to make a vegan cake you can use vegetable shortening.

4 cups of flour

1 teaspoon each of:
Cinnamon
Mixed spice (or allspice)
Nutmeg
Baking soda (also kown as bicarb soda in some countries)

A pinch of salt.

You’ll also need a 22cm or 9″ diameter springofrm pan or large loaf tin

Butter or margarine to grease your tin

A piece of baking paper cut to the shape of your cake tin

Method

Preheat your over to 180°C or 350°F

Grease and flour your cake tin.

Put the water, fruit, sugar, shortening and baking soda in a saucepan and boil gently for 5 minutes.

Allow to cool.

Sift all of the dry ingredients together.

Mix the fruit mix into the dry ingredients.

Pour into the cake tin and cover the top of the mixture with baking paper. This will stop the top of the cake from overcooking.

Bake for 1 hour or until cooked. The time it takes will depend on your oven and the shape of the cake tin you’ve chosen.