Deviled Eggs 3 Ways

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“The Baltimore Sun rises to remark that its idea of a ‘sane Fourth [of July]’ is ‘oodles of fried chicken, deviled eggs and chocolate ice cream. It may be all right for the Fourth, but it does not argue well for a comfortable fifth.” – Racine Journal, WI, July 4, 1911

For a while now I’ve been wanting to do a post where I compared some of the many deviled egg recipes in my collection. This post is hopefully part one of at least two.

When I pulled my various recipes for “Deviled Eggs,” “Picnic Eggs,” or “Stuffed Eggs,” I found some surprising trends. The “Stuffed Eggs,” as most 19th century recipes called them, were often broiled, baked, or even… deep fried. The fried eggs were typically seasoned then the halves reassembled, bound together with raw egg, and then breaded and fried. I decided that type of recipe was another category altogether so I set those aside for another day. 

Other “Stuffed Eggs” recipes pretty much resemble a deviled egg with the added step of heating the eggs up. I’m not sure why exactly this fell out of favor – it may have been because deviled eggs became associated with picnic food.
The concept of “deviling” dates as far back as 1786, allegedly referring to the spicy mustard or cayenne pepper used to season foods.

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The term was not limited to eggs and the wildly-popular deviled crab.

The 1845 UK cookbook “The Cooks Oracle” follows a recipe for an anchovy toast spread, adding that a “Deviled Biscuit” could be made with the same spread on a warm biscuit “with a sufficient quantity of salt and savoury Spice, Zest, Curry Powder, or Cayenne Pepper sprinkled over it.”  In Maryland cookbooks, I have found recipes for deviled: oysters, turkey, fish, tomatoes, clams, ham, lobster, chicken, pecans, crackers, and cheese.

Eggs are probably one of the easiest items to “devil,” and as a result, the most enduring. Early 20th-century newspaper recipes offer a few variations – meats mixed in, using the vinegar from pickled beets. It was in the mid-century that people really started getting creative with deviled eggs. For this post, I present two 19th century recipes*, served cold, plus one from nearly a century later. 

“Chutney Eggs,” from the Park School cookbook contain a salty-sweet mixture combination that was not as weird as I first expected. One taster commented that they tasted like “peanut butter and jelly.”

Next go-round, I’ll take a stab at some of the hot and deep-fried eggs. Maybe I will discover why they didn’t remain popular!

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Stuffed or Picnic Eggs:

  • 19 eggs, hard-boiled
  • ham, chopped
  • .5 Cup cream
  • 1 raw egg, beaten
  • .5 Teaspoon salt
  • .5 Teaspoon pepper
  • 1 Teaspoon mustard powder
  • .5 Teaspoon sugar
  • .5 Cup vinegar

Boil nineteen eggs twenty minutes, then put in cold water, when cool take off the shells, and cut in half, remove the yolks and fill the whites with this mixture: one cup fine chopped ham, yolks of seven of the boiled eggs moistened with a salad dressing of one-half cup cream, one egg, one-half tea- spoonful of salt, one-half teaspoonful black pepper, one level teaspoonful of mustard, one half teaspoonful sugar, beat all together, andthe last thing, add one-half cup sour vinegar, set in a kettle of boiling water and stir till it thickens.

Recipe from “The Favorite Receipt Book and Business Directory,” Ladies Aid Society of the Church of the Holy Comforter, 1884

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🐔🐔🐔

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Deviled Eggs:

  • 12 hard-boiled eggs
  • a piece of butter the size of an egg
  • salt to taste
  • .5 Teaspoons sugar
  • .5 teaspoons mustard powder
  • 1 tablespoon vinegar
  • parsley

1 dozen eggs; boil 20 minutes; throw into cold water to cool; peel and cut exactly in half; take out yolks; put them in small saucepan; add to them a piece of butter the size of an egg, a little salt, ½ teaspoonful of sugar, ½ teaspoonful of mustard, 1 tablespoonful of vinegar. Stir all together over fire until well mixed. When mixed put back into the place from which the yolk was taken so as to look like the natural egg; cut off the lower end of the egg, so as to make them stand on the dish. Dress with parsley; if used for breakfast put in oven and brown lightly.

Recipe from “Tried Recipes”, The Ladies Guild of the Associate Reformed Congregation, 1896

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🐔🐔🐔

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Chutney Eggs:

  • 12 hard-boiled eggs
  • ¼ to ½ Cup chutney
  • 6 slices cooked, crumbled bacon
  • 3 Tablespoons mayonnaise

Halve eggs. Mash yolks and add next 3 ingredients. Stuff eggs.

Recipe from Mrs. George Dalsheimer in “The Park School Cookbook,” 1964

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* Special thanks to Atomic Books/Eightbar for hosting a deviled egg gathering, and to Kristina Gaddy for successfully creating the 1896 recipe for deviled eggs – accompanying photos c/o Gaddy.

Spinach Deluxe, Victoria Frank Albert

Once again I turned to The Park School Cookbook for some low-stress dinner ideas. I’m getting a surprising amount of mileage out of this little book.

The recipe comes from Victoria Frank Albert, who was actually a grand-daughter of the school’s founder, Eli Frank, Sr.

In my decades of living in Baltimore, I’ve noticed the assortment of private schools that serve the city’s well-to-do, with The Park School vaguely distinguished as the “Animal Collective school.”

Eli Frank Sr & Eli Frank Jr, Jewish Museum of Maryland

As it turns out, The Park School was actually founded in response to some controversial decisions from our old racist pal Mayor Preston in regards to the school board. 

I actually have no way of judging the wisdom of Preston’s firing and replacement of school board officials including Eli Frank. It certainly caused a newspaper stir, and many people questioned whether Preston should be courting controversy so soon after his narrow victory. The actual policies and records of the school board officials are largely left out of the news stories.

The end result was, according to The Park School website:

“In March of 1912, Eli Frank Sr., a Commissioner who was fired by Preston; Goucher Professor Hans Froelicher Sr. and General Lawrason Riggs, who both resigned, and a group of 13 men, convened a meeting to discuss the founding of a new school. Knowing that many Jewish parents, seeking to enroll their children in private schools, faced quotas if not outright refusal, the founders created Park as the first non-sectarian independent school in Baltimore. The school embraced progressivism and became a national leader in the Progressive Education movement.”

The school opened that September in its original location on Auchentoroly Terrace across from Druid Hill Park.

The Park School on Auchentoroly Terrace, parkschool.net

The curriculum took advantage of the location with outdoor instruction – in 1921 they even had a shoemaker design a shoe for active children in the local climate, the “Park School Shoe.”

In 1954, the year Victoria Frank graduated, the school began to accept African American pupils. (They were one of the first private schools in the region to do so, for whatever that is worth.) In the 1960s and 70s, they welcomed lecturers and performers who educated the student population on poverty and segregation as well as black theater and the arts.

I couldn’t find out as much about Mrs. Albert herself – I believe she may have moved to Connecticut, where her husband, Leonard Albert, is from.

I used fresh spinach for this recipe. I was surprised to find everything including the mushroom soup at the organic store where we refill our detergent, so this turned out to be a rather *upscale* version of this mid-century recipe. Spinach deluxe deluxe.

We’ll be revisiting the Park School Cookbook yet again soon with a recipe from another Jewish family who had a hand in the history of Baltimore.

  • .5 Lb medium noodles
  • 2 lbs spinach, cooked and chopped
  • .75 Cup cream of mushroom soup
  • .25 Cup milk
  • black pepper
  • .5 Teaspoon paprika
  • .5 Lb coursely grated Swiss cheese

Cook spinach. Drain and chop. Cook noodles as directed on package. Rinse in cold water. Mix soup and milk over low heat. Stir in spinach. In a greased baking dish, arrange ½ of noodles, sprinkle with ½ of cheese & seasonings. Spoon over all of spinach mixture. Add remaining noodles, top with remaining cheese. Bake in 400° oven for 15 minutes or until cheese bubbles.

Mrs. Zanvyl Krieger’s Shrimp Fried Rice

Nothing could be more emblematic of the spirit of Baltimoreans than the passionate and swift reaction to the fire at the Book Thing earlier this month (March 2, 2016). Word spread like, well… fire, and Book Thing patrons including yours truly felt immediately compelled to share what we can to help restore this institution. Baltimore writer Patricia Schultheis penned a wonderful homage in the Sun, deftly describing the appeal of our beloved musty warehouse full of free books.

When I reached for a quick weeknight meal from my Maryland cookbook collection, I happened to see that book thing stamp on the inside cover of “The Park School Cook Book.” Not surprising really. A significant chunk of my collection has found its way to me through Book Thing.

When I originally found this particular community cookbook -first printed in the 1930s and then expanded several times- I appreciated the mix of modern and quaint recipes. I also took note of names like Wyman, Meyerhoff, Rothschild, and Krieger.

The Kriegers, kriegerfund.org

The Park School was founded in 1912, according to Wikipedia, “by a group of parents, primarily social and educational progressives in Baltimore’s German Jewish community.”

Baltimore residents and Johns Hopkins alumni know the name of Zanvyl Krieger if only for the School of Arts and Sciences that bears his name.

Krieger’s fortune has had a lasting impact on the Baltimore region – The Kennedy-Krieger Institute, American Visionary Arts Museum, Sinai Hospital, the Jewish Community Federation of Baltimore, and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra are just a few examples of beneficiaries.

This recipe for ‘Shrimp Fried Rice’ was contributed to the Park School Cook Book by Mrs. Zanvyl Krieger. I sadly could find little information about Mrs. (Isabelle) Krieger. Born Isabelle Lowenthal in New York in 1910, she was 36 years old when she married Zanvyl. She passed away in 1989; he survived her by another 11 years. The organization they left behind bears the name “Zanvyl and Isabelle Krieger Fund.”

This recipe was perfectly tasty (as I made it) and notable for two main reasons. The first is the interesting inclusion of both A-1 sauce AND Worcestershire in addition to soy sauce.

The second is the extreme quantity of shrimp!

I made this with 1/3 the shrimp because frankly I’m on a budget, but it was more than plenty. I can’t imagine this dish made with the entire three pounds of shrimp called for. I guess its a bit unnecessary to say “wow, all that shrimp, they must have been rich!”

In the 1970s, Mr. Krieger began to distribute his wealth to charities.

“I
did it because it gives me a great deal of satisfaction to be able to
benefit others,” he said in a 1996 Sun interview. “I think the basis of
life is satisfaction. We all do things to satisfy ourselves. If you have
money, you might as well be able to enjoy it. I enjoy giving.”

To make up for the less shrimp I added an extra egg. I also couldn’t find canned bean sprouts so I used fresh plus some bamboo shoots… which completely changed the flavor. Plus I used a lot more onion. Basically I ignored everything. I have never felt more like more of an enemy to authenticity than when I strayed from the recipe for this Baltimore German-Jewish-American Shrimp Fried Rice. Nonetheless I’ll present the recipe below as it appeared in the book.

“It gave [Zanvyl Krieger] great joy to be able to give,” said a daughter, Betsy L. Krieger of Roland Park. “He always said, `Giving money away was more fun than buying a Rolls-Royce.’” – Sun Obituary, September 2000

But the Krieger family sure didn’t scrimp when it came to shrimp. Okay I’ll shut up now. If you’re feeling inspired to share your own wealth today, the Book Thing donation page is here: http://www.bookthing.org/

Recipe:

  • 3 Lb shrimp, cleaned and peeled
  • 3 Cups cooked rice
  • 1 Tablespoon chopped onion
  • 3 Tablespoon soy sauce
  • dash A-1 sauce
  • dash Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 fried eggs
  • 1 can bean sprouts
  • .5 Teaspoon salt
  • black pepper

Sauté onions lightly in 2 tablespoons butter until translucent. Add shrimp and cook until shrimp is pink, about ten minutes. Add drained bean sprouts, rice and seasonings. Fry two eggs thoroughly and chop and add. Taste and correct seasonings.

Recipe adapted from “The Park School Cook Book”

Sources: Community Cookbooks

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Community cookbooks are a mixed blessing for me.
On one hand they’re such a fantastic window into the kitchens of the more middle-class citizens as opposed to the fabulous lifestyles of “Eat, Drink & Be Merry in Maryland” or “Fifty Years in a Maryland Kitchen.”

Flipping through the pages you can see changing trends, adventurous cooking and old family recipes, and pride and love expressed in (mostly) housewives feeding their family and friends.

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The Park School Cook Book (1964), Art Work Miss Grace Van Order

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Loyola Recipes(1974), sketches by Eileen F. Bolgiano

On the other hand there are HUNDREDS and HUNDREDS of these books, churches and schools making slight updates, revising year after year and it’s a bit hard to keep up with or to fit into bookshelf and budget.

According to “Food & Wine”:

The first community cookbook was published during the Civil War. Yankee women determined to raise money for field hospitals organized themselves into what they called “Sanitation Commissions” and devised a way to make their domestic skills marketable: At a fair held in Philadelphia in 1864, they offered their own recipes under the title A Poetical Cook-Book…

After the war, women’s clubs organized cookbook projects to benefit widows, veterans and orphans. By 1915, as many as 6,000 community cookbooks had been published in the United States, and women were raising money to fund kindergartens and promote temperance and other political causes.

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Magician in the Kitchen(1980), Federated Garden Clubs of Maryland. drawing: Mrs. David MacTaggart, Jr., Gibson Island

One of the oldest Maryland community cookbooks available on Google Books is “Tested Maryland Recipes,” compiled and published by the Ladies of the Presbyterian Church, Chesapeake City Maryland, that book contains assorted classics of Maryland cooking such as white potato pie as well as household advice such as tips “to keep ice.”

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Tested Maryland Recipes

Queen Anne Goes to the Kitchen is perhaps one of the more famous of Maryland Community Cookbooks. It was first published in 1962 by The Episcopal Church Women of St. Paul’s Parish in Queen Anne’s County. That book bears many Maryland ancestral names and an assortment of contemporary and family recipes as well as some nice illustrations.

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Queen Anne Goes to the Kitchen, Artwork: Stephanie Thompson, Sally Clark, Hallie Rugg

However, it takes an assortment of these types of cookbooks to compile a reasonable cross-section of Maryland food. In some school cookbooks we might find a more diverse array of names suggesting the ongoing immigrant contribution to Maryland menus.

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Magician in the Kitchen(1980), Federated Garden Clubs of Maryland, Recipe Sketch Mrs. William G. Hill, Jr., Garden Club of Frederick

For the time being, I try to draw the line at buying books published after 1990. It’s a pretty arbitrary rule although it is likely that the proliferation of food blogs, cooking websites, and the internet recipe commentariat have chipped away at the vitality of a community cookbook in a typical household in that span of time. Meanwhile, thousands of community cookbooks continue to float around indefinitely, finding their way into the hands of historians and fanatics.

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Black-Eyed Susan Country(1987), Published by the Saint Agnes Hospital Auxiliary, art James E. Toher, M.D.

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Mrs. Jas S Hopper (Ella Griffith), editor of “Tested Maryland Recipes, Bethel Cemetry, Chesapeake City (findagrave.com)

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