Hamburgers Diane, Lynette M. Nielsen

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Hamburgers are one of those foods that are possibly under-represented in cookbooks due to their sheer simplicity. Although recipes for “hamburgh sausage” or “hamburg steaks” appear in cookbooks dating as far back as 1758, most of the hamburger recipes in my Maryland cookbooks come from the 1950s and 1960s. It was a time when there was a little more experimenting going on in home kitchens, and these recipes tend to have some special touch or sauce.

“Queen Anne Goes to the Kitchen” (1962), the source for this recipe, also contains recipes for “Belmost Sauce” and “Aloha Sauce” for hamburgers. “Hamburgers Diane” is a twist on Steak Diane, a popular dish at the time which, according to Wikipedia, “was considered dated by 1980.” Steak Diane’s origin isn’t entirely clear but it is often attributed to Chef Beniamino Schiavon of the Drake Hotel in New York. Table-side flambé, as seen in this recipe, was a popular fad in the mid-20th century. 

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Washington College yearbook, 1959

One completely baffling aspect to this recipe was an instruction to salt the pan and heat until the salt turns brown. I’m pretty sure that salt does not brown? Maybe the salt used in 1962 had some different impurities? I honestly don’t know so I ignored that instruction.

These burgers would be fine on a bun (brioche perhaps? to keep it fancy…) but I already had the wild rice thing going so we went bun-less.

All in all it was a tasty burger, but that is always going to come down to the quality of the meat and how you salt and cook it… not some gimmicky sauce.

The recipe contributor, Lynette Morgan Nielsen was born Esther Lynette Morgan in Montreal, 1912. Her mother, Esther Judson appears to have come from money. 

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Dealth of Lynette Nielsen’s grandfather, 1910, Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)

Lynette’s grandfather Edward Barker Judson, Jr., according to one obituary, “was one of the grand men of Syracuse.” He was “the son of a wealthy father and the inheritor of a large fortune from his uncle” and became president of First National Bank of Syracuse. At some point Lynette married Orsen N. Nielsen, a U.S. Diplomat. The two traveled the world as he served in Russia, Sweden, Germany, Ireland, Iran and Australia. Orsen Nielsen retired from the U.S. Foreign Service in 1952 and the family settled in Centreville.

There, Lynette served as a trustee of Washington College. An annual art prize was named in her honor. She contributed to Atkins Arboretum at Tuckahoe State Park, and a mental health services annex of Queen Anne’s County Health Department, which was named in her honor. She passed away in 1984.

Lynette’s well-traveled and philanthropic life is yet another example of the many citizens who contributed to “Queen Anne Goes to the Kitchen,” now a classic Maryland cookbook whose reputation has spread throughout the state.

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Recipe:

  • 1 Lb good beef, ground
  • 2 Tablespoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 Tablespoons  cognac
  • chives or onion pieces
  • butter

Shape beef lightly into cakes, sprinkle with pepper and press pepper into cakes. Let stand 30 minutes. Sprinkle a light layer of salt over bottom of a heavy frying pan. Turn heat to high, and when pan is hot [or when “salt begins to brown” according to the recipe??] add hamburgers.
Cook until well browned on each side, reduce heat and cook until done to taste. Place a pat of butter on each burger, pour cognac over top and set ablaze.
Sprinkle cakes with chives or dried onions before serving.

Recipe adapted from “Queen Anne Goes to the Kitchen”

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One Hundred Dollar Fudge

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In 1971, a woman in Fruitland, MD, recovering from an illness, took out an ad in the Salisbury Daily Times to express gratitude towards the “many friends who contributed in any way” towards her recovery. She thanked friends, neighbors, ambulance drivers, doctors, her Pastor, and she praised the Lord. She also thanked “Bill Phillips and the many Party Line listeners” – for the cards, flowers, phone calls and cash donations that they provided in her time of need.

For over thirty years, Party Line was one of the most popular radio shows on the Eastern Shore. Hosted by onetime station manager William Phillips on the WICO country music station, “Party Line” served as a forum where listeners could call in to buy, sell and swap anything from outboard motors to exotic birds. The idea of Craigslist as a morning talk show may seem confusing, but by all accounts, the show’s popularity could be attributed to Phillips himself, who charmed listeners with “folksy chit-chat” – and a sense of community so strong that it mobilized listeners to care for one-another in times of need. An oft-repeated anecdote about the show involves a woman who called to report that her husband lost his dentures on the beach – later found by another Party Line listener, of course.

The nature of radio broadcasts is somewhat ephemeral – and an on-air flea-market even more so. But the show has left behind a lasting legacy in the form of a beloved cookbook sourced from its many listeners. Eastern Shore natives still seek out copies and share memories of the tattered copies of this book serving faithfully in their family kitchens. According to the book’s preface, “What is Cooking On Party Line” received 1400 contributions from listeners.

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The resulting book gives an overview of what was cooking in Eastern Shore kitchens around 1983. From the first recipe for “Cheddar Cheese Balls” to the final recipe, “Red Pepper Jelly,” the collection demonstrates that food habits from a particular time and place can’t be easily pigeonholed or stereotyped. While there are many convenience recipes associated with the 1970s, featuring processed ingredients such as Kool-Aid and Cheez-Whiz, there are also recipes that have obviously been passed down for generations, for pickling and preserving, or serving up game like muskrat, possum, and woodchuck. Eight different corn pudding recipes are included. There are, of course, nearly 40 recipes featuring crab. The book also weaves prayers throughout, a constant reminder of spirituality and its ties to the kitchen.

My own copy has a previous owner’s index of favorite recipes hand-written in the back cover- mostly for some of the cakes. When the compilers of “What is Cooking on Party Line” received multiple submissions of very similar recipes, they attribute the recipe to multiple names. It’s interesting to observe the way the recipes had spread and been shared, even before this popular cookbook was published.

I decided to make one of the more ‘popular’ recipes and so I made “One Hundred Dollar Fudge,” a recipe with seven names listed underneath. I didn’t have marshmallow fluff so I made it from marshmallows. I would actually recommend this step to others who make the fudge. The corn syrup in the fluff controls sugar crystallization, and my fudge came out so smooth that it got comments on that fact.

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1966 ad for a political appearance on “Party Line”

William Phillips passed away in November 1994, and the show came to an end. WICO Program Director Dave Parks recalled “he was one of the last local superstars in radio. One of a dying breed. He was known all over the Eastern Shore. He was like a Hollywood star here. He endured because of his personality. He really was Mr. Radio.”

Some younger cooks who have inherited copies of the book may have never heard the show, but many people still recall it fondly and can sing the jingle by heart.

“Hello.
Is this the party line?
Yes, it’s your party line and it’s time for all the gossip on your party line.
What’s goin’ on, tell us who, when and how?
Well, just listen in to your party line now.
WICO Radio brings you the latest on your party line, party line.”

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Recipe:

  • 2 sticks margarine or butter
  • 4 ½ c. sugar
  • 1 can evaporated milk

Cook over medium high heat and bring to a rapid boil, stirring constantly. Boil exactly 5 minutes, remove from heat and add:

  • 3 c. (18 oz.) chocolate chips
  • 9 oz. jar marshmallow creme

Stir until melted. Add:

  • 2 Tbsp vanilla
  • ½ c. nuts
  • 1 c. peanut butter (optional)

Pour into buttered 13 x 9 inch baking pan. Set in refrigerator overnight. Then set out two hours before cutting or it will crumble. Makes 5 lbs. of fudge.

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2nd Annual Eastern Shore Tomato Tasting

Jack’s Market, Hebron

As I hopefully made clear last year, the results of the “Eastern Shore Tomato Tasting” are in no way definitive. Taste and quality can vary from year to year, day to day, and tomato to tomato.

Why bother, then? For fun.

This year I roped in some assistance from Kit Pollard, local food writer and author of the Mango & Ginger blog, as well as Erik Morgan, a Maryland pal who is a chef at Aldine in Philadelphia, and occasionally presents enviable culinary artistry on Instagram.

The usual panel of anonymous friends was also present, plus a baby who hated all of the tomatoes.

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Not much has changed along Tomato Alley, with the exception of last year’s nameless stand now identified as Cosquay Farms. (A historical Maryland farm in fact!)

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Demonstrating the fickle nature of this endeavor, Wrights Market was this year’s favorite – last year it was second from last. S & H and Oakley’s continue to be strong contenders. Oakley’s was an early favorite, but the variety between tomatoes took them down a peg.

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Wright’s Market, Hebron

A few notes on the tomatoes..

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Cosquay Farms:

“[The] only one that has an aroma.”

“Attractive, rich red. Smells ‘like a tomato.’”

“Not much aroma.”

Oakley’s Farm Market:

“Super sweet!”

The Farmer’s Wife:

“More flavor. Good texture.”

“Light mottling on the inside, good deep red. Nice bite.”

“Pleasant, lingering tomato musk.”

Wright’s Market:

“Very red! Good amount of goo. Tart! Mild sweetness, good lingering umami.”

“Tangy! Interesting.”

“Acidic but lots of flavor.”

“Tomato-ey”

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Wright’s Market, Hebron

An Eastern Shore Tomato Tasting

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When I think of an emblamatic Maryland food – something that represents the abundance that Marylanders have enjoyed, the unique terroir, a key component of past economy – I think of Eastern Shore Tomatoes. My passion for Eastern Shore tomatoes (and watermelons) cannot be over-stated.

Three standard meals fed us during the summers at my grandparents’ Chincoteague trailer. Scrapple folded into a piece of white bread was a typical breakfast. A feast of the days’ haul of flounder was often fried up dinner. And lunch and/or an afternoon snack: sliced, salted tomatoes – sometimes between two slices of white bread.

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I’m forever chasing the flavor of those tomatoes. Even with our CSA in full swing, I can’t pass through the Eastern Shore in August without coming home with some tomatoes. This week I took that to extremes.

The tomato corridor along route 50 can be daunting. Stand after stand of tantalizing produce.

interactive map!

We stopped at the first ten stands on the westbound side of 50, starting at Rt 13. A few more stands exist after that but this is Tomato Alley, mostly located in Hebron, MD.

This is far from a thorough survey and we may not be experts. I used a wine-tasting guide as an outline.

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Tomatoes can vary in flavor from year to year, plant to plant, and even fruit to fruit. One example of the questions raised by this sampling is the difference in rating between The Farmer’s Wife and S&H Farms. As it turned out, these stands are operated by the same people. Yet we found the Farmers Wife tomatoes to be most attractive in appearance but not up to the flavor of the S&H tomato.

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We generally agreed that the tomatoes from Oakley’s Farm Market and S&H were the best, at least on this day. It’s fascinating trying them all side by side and seeing how different they really are. Some have little to no aroma, some smell like tomato vines, some are perfumey and floral. All were superior to a grocery store tomato.

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The Delmarva Chicken Festival

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“In June 1948 an enthusiastic three-mile parade wended its way through the tiny town of Georgetown, Delaware, as the final event in the improbably named (to contemporary ears) “Del-Mar-Va Chicken of Tomorrow Festival.” The parade celebrated a remarkable event that had been building for several years – the national “Chicken of Tomorrow” contest…The winner, the Vantress Hatchery in California, was able to grow a heavier, meatier chicken faster than any other entrant.“ – Putting Meat on the American Table: Taste, Technology, Transformation By Roger Horowitz

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U.S. Rep. Bill Roth of Delaware (Delmarva Poultry Industry archives)

According to legend, the Delmarva poultry industry got its start due to a “shipping error,” in 1923 when Cecile Steele of Ocean View ordered 50 chicks and received 500, which she raised and sold around the region.

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Raising chickens was nothing new to most households, for the same
reasons it is experiencing a resurgence now, but the Delmarva Poultry
Industry represents the modern era of breeding chickens for certain
traits, and industrial farming techniques.

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Other facets of the Del-Mar-Va Chicken festival eventually became better known than the quest to breed a bigger bird. A pageant crowned the Del-Mar-Va chicken queen. The cooking contest was introduced in 1949 – Edna Karlik (1903 – 1987 ) from Salisbury, MD won that contest with her buttery, paprika-covered “Broiled Chicken Deluxe.”

The contest grew to attract cooks from all over the country. The annual cookbooks of contest winners are unique snapshots of what creative home cooks were doing. The combined 1949 & 1950 winners book includes standards such as fried chicken, barbeque, fricassee, and some adventurers using almonds. Paella, Indian Masala seasoning, and “Oriental Oven-Fried Chicken” placed in 1958. The 1971 book, from which I cooked “Pizza Chicken” demonstrates a contemporary pizza obsession, but also “exotic” sauces featuring pineapple, peppermint, grapefruit, and teriyaki.

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National Bohemian Spokesman Frank Hennessy’s 1960 recipe

Another famous highlight of the Chicken Festival was the gigantic frying pan. The 10-foot pan held 180 gallons of oil and used to fry 800 chicken quarters at a time for festival-atendees consumption. There is some debate over whether this pan was truly the world’s largest, but it remains the festival’s most famous attraction.

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As the poultry industry’s star rose on the Delmarva Peninsula, the environmental effects could be devastating. Attempts to deal with the effects of this have been in and out of the news for decades.

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The final DelMarVa Chicken Festival was held on June 21st, 2014. The Delmarva Poultry Industry felt the festival had run its course. The effort and investment put into promoting chicken awareness to the public was diverted towards furthering industry interests in political and legislative ways.
The decision may have paid off as Governor Hogan was elected soon after, shortly enacting regulations that the Delmarva Poultry Industry found favorable.

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Chicken remains a popular choice for frugal Maryland meat-eaters. Many are now eschewing Delmarva chickens and turning to smaller farms (and eating smaller chickens.) Some are even taking it back to their own backyards with a sentiment that much like our fruits and vegetables and other food that was “improved” in the last century, the improvements may have come at too high a price.

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