Mennonite Men Can Cook, Too: Celebrating Hospitality with 170 Delicious Recipes
By Willard Roth
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About this ebook
In this book are recipes inspired by the food made by his Mennonite mother and grandmothers. Other recipes are inspired from the monasteries he’s visited in Ireland and England. There are recipes of the food he’s eaten in Ghana, Jamaica, Cyprus, the Netherlands, India, and Nepal.
Roth mixes his keen food memories with his years of experience in the kitchen to create recipes that work for the home cook. Among his Soup recipes are Thai Coconut Shrimp, Chilled Melon Mint, and Hawkeye Corn and Chilies Chowder. His Small Plates recipes include Cheese Grits with Chunky Tomato Sauce, and Corn Leek Bake. Among his Mains are Lemon Turkey Stir-Fry with Pasta, Monastery Cornbread Casserole, Hearty Polenta Florentine, and Pecan Crunch Salmon Bake. Plus Beer-Braised Short Ribs and Balsamic Honey-Glazed Lamb Chops.
Cooks will also find Chutneys, Cordials, Rum Sauces, and Relishes. And lots of Vegetables and Salads. You’ll love the tons of Cakes, Candies and Cookies, Pies and Puddings, and Fruit and Frozen Desserts.
Willard Roth breathes hospitality and gives us the tools to practice it ourselves, along with unforgettable, easy-to-prepare recipes.
Skyhorse Publishing, along with our Good Books and Arcade imprints, is proud to publish a broad range of cookbooks, including books on juicing, grilling, baking, frying, home brewing and winemaking, slow cookers, and cast iron cooking. We’ve been successful with books on gluten-free cooking, vegetarian and vegan cooking, paleo, raw foods, and more. Our list includes French cooking, Swedish cooking, Austrian and German cooking, Cajun cooking, as well as books on jerky, canning and preserving, peanut butter, meatballs, oil and vinegar, bone broth, and more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.
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Mennonite Men Can Cook, Too - Willard Roth
Cues from the Cook’s Kitchen
Blend color, texture, and taste as you plan.
As a literarily deprived child, I devoured nursery rhymes with special fondness for lean Jack Spratt, tubby Peter the pumpkin eater, Miss Muffet who hated spiders, and the supper soloist Tommy Tucker. Now that I am older I find similar intrigue in recipes, whether old or new.
A yellowed undated Elkhart Truth clipping in my files is headlined Mesopotamian Clay Tablets Hold World’s Oldest Existing Recipes.
Recipes inscribed on three Mesopotamian clay slabs dating to 1700 BC are probably the oldest cookbooks in existence, according to the curator of Yale University’s Babylonian Collection of which the slabs are a part. The tablets provide instructions for dozens of stews, vegetable dishes, and meat pies revealing a cuisine of striking richness, refinement, sophistication and artistry,
a French scholar commented (Biblical Archaeology Review, March 1985). The first printed cookbook appeared in an undated edition around 1475 in Paris. The first cookbook published in America was a 1742 reprint of an English tome titled The Compleat Housewife. Printed cookbooks continue to be bestsellers in a Kindle age.
In a September 2012 cover feature story, USA Today writer Bruce Horovitz anticipates how an American kitchen might look thirty years ahead. Chef Cat Cora, the first woman to be inducted into the American Academy of Chefs Culinary Hall of Fame, projects that every home will have a computerized kitchen where the cook will walk in, talk to the appliance, and it will do whatever asked. Healthy food will dominate: burgers will be super-lean and low in fat with whole-grain buns; fries, often made of sweet potatoes, will be baked; salads will be local and sustainable. The home-cooked meal will become more commonplace. As technology evolves in the kitchen, at-home cooking also will be easier than ever,
Horovitz predicted; Dinner increasingly will be eaten at home, because it will be so nutritious and simple to prepare.
Thus it would appear that old fashioned home cooking will not go away soon. To keep the tradition going, home cooks do well to take time to plan their endeavors. Planning ahead enables premeditated shopping to maximize dollar value, to balance nutrition, and to enhance sensual appeal—cheap, healthy food no one will eat is not a good plan. I anticipate how colors, textures, and tastes fit together as I plan. If food looks good and smells good I wager it will also taste good.
Along with a seasonal farmers market, I comparison shop two supermarkets, taking advantage of weekly and seasonal specials, coupons, and house labels. I put non-perishables in my cart first, then frozen and dairy items, and finally fresh produce. I plan for double duty: foods that fit two different recipes; double use of oven with two different dishes; double portions for planned-over’s the second time around.
I use my culinary common sense in my planning. I plan with flexibility to take advantage of last-minute invitations to be entertained or eat out. My bottom line: what comes from my kitchen must be nutritious, economical, appetizing to the eye, and appealing to the palate.
STARTERS
APPETIZERS
Pennsylvania Railroad Stuffed Celery
MAKES: 6 servings
PREP. TIME: 15 minutes
CHILLING TIME: 15 minutes
INGREDIENTS:
6 oz. low-fat blue cheese
3 Tbsp. butter, softened
6 ribs celery, washed and trimmed
¼ cup finely chopped almonds
1. In bowl, blend cheese and butter.
2. Fill each celery rib with a generous mound and coat with almonds.
3. Refrigerate at least 1 hour. Cut each rib into 3 or 4 pieces before serving.
Trains have long been my choice for distance travel. In a pre-Amtrak era, dining-car eating capped the experience. To get taste buds salivating, Pennsylvania Railroad’s relish plate always had this quality but uses simple staples, easily reproduced and multiplied for at-home entertaining.
Crab Dab on Home-Baked Chips
MAKES: 12 servings (of 4 each)
PREP. TIME: 15 minutes
BAKING TIME: 15 minutes
CHILLING TIME: 4 hours or overnight
INGREDIENTS:
¼ cup low-fat cream cheese
¼ cup sliced green onions, with tops
2 Tbsp. light mayonnaise
2 Tbsp. fresh lemon juice
1 tsp. ground cumin
½ tsp. sea salt, divided
¼ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
6 oz. fresh crabmeat, strained
½ cup fresh corn kernels, uncooked
6 6 ½" corn tortillas
2 Tbsp. olive or canola oil
48 fresh parsley leaves
1. Combine cream cheese, green onions, mayonnaise, lemon juice, cumin, ¼ tsp. salt, and pepper in small bowl.
2. Stir in crabmeat and corn. Refrigerate up to 24 hours.
3. Stack tortillas and trim edges to 5" square. Brush each side with oil. Restack and cut into 4 squares; halve each square to make triangles.
4. Arrange triangles on baking sheet; season with salt. Bake at 350˚ until golden brown, about 12 minutes. Cool on sheet. (When cool, may be stored in an airtight container up to 24 hours.)
5. At serving time, top each baked triangle with 1 tsp. of crab mix and garnish with parsley leaf.
Yield not to the temptation of shortcuts, using canned crab or store-bought tortilla chips. Fresh seafood and chips from the cook’s oven transform this offering from ordinary to extraordinary.
Shrimp Ball in Sunflower Seeds
MAKES: 18 servings
PREP. TIME: 15 minutes
CHILLING TIME: 1 hour
INGREDIENTS:
8 oz. low-fat cream cheese
¼ cup finely chopped red onion
½ tsp. garlic powder
½ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
1 tsp. sea salt
1 Tbsp. chopped fresh basil
1 Tbsp. chopped fresh chives
1 Tbsp. ground horseradish
¾ cup frozen baby shrimp, chopped
¾ cup sunflower seeds, roasted
miniature crackers
1. Combine all ingredients except sunflower seeds and mix in bowl.
2. Form into ball and roll in sunflower seeds.
3. Cover and let rest in refrigerator for at least 1 hour.
4. Serve with miniature crackers.
Parmesan-Stuffed Mushrooms
MAKES: 24 servings
PREP. TIME: 15 minutes
BAKING TIME: 20 minutes
INGREDIENTS:
1 ½ lbs. fresh mushrooms, medium size
8 oz. low-fat cream cheese, softened
¾ cup + 2 Tbsp. freshly shredded Parmesan cheese
¼ tsp. sea salt
¼ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
¼ tsp. ground nutmeg
½ tsp. Worcestershire sauce
1. Clean mushrooms with paper towel; remove stems. (These may be used in other recipes, at cook’s discretion.)
2. Place mushroom caps facing up on greased baking pan.
3. Combine remaining ingredients, except the extra Parmesan, and mix well.
4. Spoon cheese mixture into caps; sprinkle with extra Parmesan.
5. Bake at 350˚ for 20 minutes. Serve warm.
Salmon Pecan Pâté
MAKES: 24 servings (2 ½ cups)
PREP. TIME: 20 minutes
CHILLING TIME: 1 hour
INGREDIENTS:
15-oz. can wild-caught pink salmon, drained, dark skin removed, and flaked
1 Tbsp. fresh lemon or lime juice, plus zest
8 oz. low-fat cream cheese
2 Tbsp. light mayonnaise
2 Tbsp. finely chopped onion
1 Tbsp. finely chopped fresh parsley
¼ tsp. hot pepper sauce
2 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper
½ cup finely chopped pecans
fresh parsley
sesame sticks, or fresh vegetable sticks
1. Put salmon in bowl, and add lemon juice and zest. Mix in cream cheese, then mayonnaise, onion, parsley, hot pepper sauce, Worcestershire sauce, and black pepper.
2. Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour.
3. Dish into serving bowl, top with pecans, and garnish edges with parsley.
4. Serve with sesame sticks or fresh vegetable sticks.
Water Chestnut and Spinach Dip
MAKES: 24 servings
PREP. TIME: 10 minutes
CHILLING TIME: 2 hours or overnight
INGREDIENTS:
16 oz. frozen chopped spinach
8-oz. can water chestnuts, drained and chopped fine
¾ cup light mayonnaise
¾ cup plain Greek yogurt
1-oz. package Knorr’s powdered vegetable soup mix*
12-oz package pretzel sticks
1. Cook spinach 1 minute in microwave and squeeze dry.
2. Mix cooked spinach in bowl with water chestnuts, mayonnaise, Greek yogurt, and soup mix.
3. Cover and refrigerate for several hours, preferably overnight.
4. Serve with pretzel sticks.
Poet Leslie Ullman, a fellow graduate of the University of Iowa, explained that her midwestern mother’s highly pragmatic recipe turns out like a Jackson Pollack painting: Rather colorful with the water chestnut and vegetable soup bits; especially delicious when you are starving at 2 a.m.
*Note: use only this brand to maintain quality
Down Under
Crusty Cheese Cubes
MAKES: 8 servings
PREP. TIME: 10 minutes
BAKING TIME: 10 minutes
STANDING TIME: 6 hours, optional
INGREDIENTS:
2 or 3 slices stale bread
2 eggs
5 Tbsp. melted butter
¼ tsp. garlic salt
1 cup grated cheese of choice
1. Cut bread in 1" squares.
2. In bowl, beat eggs with butter and garlic salt.
3. One at a time, dip bread cubes in egg mixture, roll in grated cheese, and set on ungreased baking sheet 1" apart.
4. Bake at 400˚ until golden, about 10 minutes. Serve hot.
Tip: Cubes can be prepared ready for baking and refrigerated up to 6 hours ahead.
Elizabeth Godfrey and I bonded on our first meeting at the Quaker retreat center beside the Cadbury chocolate factory in Bourneville, England. We shared food tales, mostly hers, growing out of her long-running cooking show on Australia TV. This recipe comes from The Best of Carefree Cooking, her paperback of 100 recipes collected from 450 programs. She inscribed on the cover: For Willard Roth, with happy memories of cooking at Woodbrooke, March 1982.
Orange Cream Dip with Fresh Fruit
MAKES: 24 servings (about 2 ½ cups)
PREP. TIME: 10 minutes
CHILLING TIME: 2 hours
INGREDIENTS:
1 ¼ cups milk
3-oz. package instant vanilla pudding mix
6-oz. can frozen orange juice, thawed
6 oz. vanilla Greek yogurt
3 Tbsp. triple sec liqueur, optional
assorted fresh colorful finger fruits of choice
fresh mint leaves
1. Place milk in bowl and add pudding mix until dissolved, then add undiluted orange juice. Mix with electric beater about 2 minutes.
2. Stir in yogurt and liqueur. Cover and chill at least 2 hours.
3. Arrange dip in center of platter and surround with fruit. Garnish with mint leaves.
Louisiana Sweet Potato Cheese Ball
MAKES: 24 servings (about 3 cups)
PREP. TIME: 45 minutes
CHILLING TIME: 8 hours
INGREDIENTS:
8 oz. cream cheese, softened
2 cups sweet potatoes, cooked, mashed, and cooled
¼