Swedish Salad

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With parts of Scandinavia so far north that the dark days of winter are endless, its no wonder that the region has rich December holiday traditions. While some of the old Norse Yule symbology made its way into Christmas around the world, other customs remain specific and regional.

St. Lucia Day is a particularly iconic Swedish holiday that commences the Christmas season. A friend of mine, Baltimore performer Lucia Treasure, recently made a facebook post explaining the holiday:

A pre-Christian Swedish tradition, it is held on December 13th, or the solstice in the old calendar. The meaning of Lucia is light, and so the Swedish celebrate a folk hero who brought food to the poor in the winter as the small point of light on the darkest day of the year. Later, it was co-opted by Christians as their religion spread into the north, and Lucia was martyred in story so they could keep their traditions. Just as Christmas, originally a celebration of winter solstice, was also enfolded into a celebration of the birth of Jesus.

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Baltimore Sun, 1963

From there, the season continues with an array of foods and customs. I recently attended a party and tried some glögg & saffron buns, plus an array of more familiar-to-me favorites like gingerbread cookies (“pepparkakor”) and gravlax.

I searched my recipe database for ‘Swedish’ to come up with some options of what to bring. There are Swedish meatballs of course, but where’s the excitement in that?; “Swedish Cookies” from Somerset County; “Swedish Roll,” from 1906 (which was basically a Swiss roll filled with currants); or a “Swedish Salad” recipe pasted into Olivia Conkling’s personal recipe book from the Maryland Historical Society special collections.

This option intrigued me but I didn’t have time to make it to MDHS so I searched some old newspapers. Conkling’s books were full of clippings from all kinds of sources. She was a granddaughter of one of the owners of the famous Kirk Silver company. She married William Higgins Conkling of Davenport, OH, a bank president who had started his career in business as a coffee importer.

The cookbook may have also been handled or contributed to by their daughter Mary Olivia Conkling Ladd (1874-1953). The items clipped into these books are varied and interesting and I’ll explore them in greater depth later.

Anyway… so that is my tenuous connection to this recipe, which was printed in a multitude of regional newspapers in the early 1890s. The ingredient quantities are very vague, but I assumed this would be some muddled inauthentic 19th-century recipe anyway so I followed my instinct.

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A more elaborate Swedish Salad recipe in the Wisconsin Post-Crescent, 1927

When I brought the salad to the party I was told that it turned out to be pretty authentic and incidentally something enjoyed around Christmastime.

I’ve noticed that some dishes which are enjoyed in the “old world” sometimes become more holiday-associated in America. Holidays are after all a time of family and heritage and seeking out just the right ingredients.

One Swedish custom I will be passing up on this Christmas is the ramped-up cleaning that, according to the Baltimore Sun in 1934, was customary. Every copper utensil “must glisten like gold,” curtains and linens must be cleaned, and chair seats wiped down, wrote Worthington Holiday. “There is a superstition that departed ones return to inspect the houses on Christmas Eve and woe be unto the housewife who is careless and does not please them.”

Dearly departed: I love you and miss you, but you’ll have to excuse the pet hair. God Jul!

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Recipe:

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Ham Timbales, Mrs. Carol Montgomery

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I was recently at the Pratt Library, working on my Maryland recipe database when I hit the milestone of 20,000 recipes. I figured I should make a note of the twenty-thousandth record: “Ham Timbales”, contributed to “Random Ruxton Recipes” (1953) by Mrs. Colin Montgomery.

Timbales, which share etymology with the drum of the same name, appear frequently in cookbooks starting in the late 1890s. Although they tend to be a way to use up leftover meats or vegetables, they can also be served as a fancy hors-d’oeuvre.  French in origin, they were possibly popularized by Charles Ranhofer at Delmonico’s.  His 1894 book “The Epicurean” includes thoughts on timbales as well as a large number of recipes, although, to be fair, the book includes a large number of every kind of recipe.

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Random Ruxton Recipes, 1953, Church of the Good Shepherd (@ Pratt Library)

Specialty timbale pans exist – the individual portion-ones are slightly deeper than muffin pans – but all kinds of pans have been used to make timbales. Somewhere during the 20th century, timbales faded from favor, popping up occasionally thereafter. A 1991 article in the Chicago Tribune declared: “Timbales Sound Exotic, But Actually They Are Easy To Make And Ideal For Entertaining.” A google search will turn up a handful of modern celebrity-chef takes on timbales.

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Timbales in “The Epicurean,” 1894 Charles Ranhofer (Delmonicos)

Mrs. Colin Montgomery, born Carol Spencer Worthington in 1920, was a Baltimore-area society woman through-and-through. She “debuted” at the Bachelor’s Cotillion in 1937, and the Sun reported when she left for Bryn Mawr College that year, as well as when she became engaged to Colin Montgomery in 1941. At Goucher College, she was a lacrosse and field hockey star, and she would return to play games over the next several years. In 1945 she ended up working at the Bryn Mawr (secondary) School where she taught English and coached sports. She also acted in local stage plays.

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Baltimore Sun mentions of Mrs. Colin Montgomery née Carol Worthington, 1937 and 1954

The news stories involving her husband Colin Montgomery were somewhat less glowing. In 1939 he made headlines when he was among a group of men who allegedly attempted to tar and feather a gossip columnist named Count Igor Cassini. The men had apparently taken offense when the columnist wrote of Colin’s parents:

“The reason why a Mrs. Montgomery, from Warrenton [VA], has been invited to the party (for King George and Queen Elizabeth at the British Embassy) is because her brother was a tutor for the British royal family and he requested the invitation for his sister. But Mr. Montgomery, who is a Scotsman, feels very humiliated, for only his wife was invited.” (The Oshkosh Northwestern, 1939)

Yeah…. I have no idea, either. The rich are different from you and me.

Ultimately, Colin’s brother Ian assumed all blame for the incident, citing his motive as trying to find the source of that bit of… juicy gossip(?). As for Cassini, who was largely (physically) unharmed, he went on to do a syndicated column, host a television show, and to be “convicted of being a paid agent of the dictator of the Dominican Republic,” according to Wikipedia.

Mrs. Montgomery died at age 52 in 1972 and Colin in 1975. Count Igor lived to be 86, passing away in 2002. Timbales are still very much with us – within the past few years, there have been online recipes for timbales made with ingredients such as parsnips, seitan, and black quinoa.

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Recipe:

1.5 Cup cooked ham
.5 Cup tomato soup
1 Cup milk
1 Teaspoon grated onion (I minced a garlic clove & added a little onion powder)
.5 Teaspoon mustard
3 eggs
1 dash black pepper black
seasonings (original recipe suggests 1 dash thyme + 4 Tablespoons chopped parsley)

Beat eggs slightly before whisking in seasonings, milk and soup, followed by ham. Pour into greased baking cups and set in hot water. Bake 55 minutes at 350°.

Recipe adapted from “Ruxton Recipes,” Church of the Good Shepherd, 1953

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