Christmas Luncheon
Sandringham, 1953.
At this time of year I
usually give you a few Christmas menus from actual events - preferably those
involving notable people or unusual circumstances. Sometimes these ‘menus’ are in the form of simple
descriptions, such as the one I gave
last week in my post on the food situation in the besieged city of Ladysmith
during the Boer war. Today I return to a more formal menu, with the details of
the Christmas luncheon of the royal family at their private Norfolk retreat –
Sandringham Estate.
The menu is from 1936: I
found the menu in the Courier Mail
(Brisbane, Queensland) of December 2, 1953 in an article on “Royal Banquets of
the Past.” This meal took place a matter of weeks after the abdication of Edward
VII.
Christmas
luncheon Sandringham, 1936
Mock Turtle Soup
Norfolk Turkey
Sandringham Beef
Yorkshire Pudding
Asparagus Parsnips
Baked Potatoes French
Beans
Brussels Sprouts
Mince Pies Ice
Cream
Cheese Biscuits Celery
Fresh Fruit
Coffee
As the royal recipe for the day, I give
you a couple of ideas from Mrs. McKee’s
Royal Cookery Book. Alma McKee was “formerly
cook to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II and Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth The
Queen Mother,”
Filet
de Boeuf.
3
lb. undercut fillet of beef ¼
lb bacon fat
Garlic
salt Pepper
and salt
Rub
the fillet with pepper and salt, and sprinkle over a little garlic salt. Tie
the bacon fat round the beef and place it in a hot oven to roast. When brown on
the outside, lower the heat, baste and roast for forty-five minutes. Baste
every fifteen minutes in its own juice. When cooked, untie the bacon, remove
the juice from the pan, cut the beef in thin slices, and place in the middle of
the serving dish.
Turkey
with Walnut Stuffing.
1
turkey (about 15 lbs) ¼
lb. breadcrumbs
½
lb. ground walnuts Salt
and pepper
2
tablespoons cream Nut
oil
2
lbs. sausage meat
Mix
together the walnuts, butter [not listed in the ingredients!] breadcrumbs and
cream, and season. Stuff the neck end of the turkey with the sausage meat, and
the rear end with the walnut stuffing.
Rub
nut oil all over the skin of the bird. Place in a hot oven and roast for
fifteen minutes, then baste. When the turkey has turned a light brown, reduce
the heat, turn on its side, and cook for ten to fifteen minutes per pound.
Roast and turn the turkey every fifteen minutes.
When
cooked, strain the juice and skim off the fat. Garnish with chipolata sausages.
Serve
with cranberry and bread sauce.
For the menu of Christmas dinner at
Sandringham in 1930, go here.
1 comment:
At a time when most "upperclass" menus were in French, this is robustly and straightfowardly English. Interesting.
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