Betty Bolte Shares an 18th Century Recipe
Dishing on Samantha’s Secret Meal – An update to an 18th Century Dinner Idea
In my latest release, Samantha’s Secret, the main character fixes a colonial dish called “Little Fried Birds” to serve to her parents No, not real birds! I’m not sure why it’s titled this way. I found the recipe in a cookbook called Our Founding Foods by Jane Tennant. The original recipe called for lamb kidneys with suet fat, but Ms. Tennant (wisely, in my opinion) substituted dark turkey meat. I’ve made some other changes to her recipe to make the meal a little bit healthier and a lot easier.
First, I’ll give you the Tennant version, then my update to it. The first is obviously more time consuming, too, since you have to make your own pastry dough. I don’t own a food processor for a reason… So I had to make a few adjustments. What I like about this concept is that it can be applied to other fillings with different kinds of meat and veggies. I also like the idea that I’m eating something sort of like what my character would have eaten, if she had lived in the 18th century. See what you think!
Little Fried Birds
2 cups cooked, finely diced turkey dark meat, no skin or tendon
4 tablespoons chopped green onions
4 tablespoons butter
4 tablespoons dry sherry
2 teaspoons mixed herbs, dried
Salt and pepper to taste
Pastry
3 cups all purpose flour
1½ tablespoons sugar
1½ teaspoons salt
3 sticks chilled unsalted butter
9 tablespoons ice water
Peanut oil for deep frying
Directions
Sauté the onions in butter until soft. Add the turkey and turn to coat and cook slightly. Add the sherry and continue cooking until almost dry. Add the herbs, stir briefly to incorporate, and remove from the heat and reserve.
To Make the Pastry: Combine the flour, sugar, and salt in a food processor. Add the diced butter and pulse 10 seconds. Add the water and pulse just until the dough is formed. Wrap and chill for one hour. Roll out the dough to ½ inch thickness, fold in thirds like a business letter, and repeat. Wrap and chill until needed.
Roll the chilled pastry to ¼ inch thickness, and cut into 6 inch squares. Put two tablespoons of filling in each square, moisten the inside edges with water, and fold to make a small parcel, sealing the edges.
Set the deep fryer with at least 3 inches of oil to 365 degrees F and fry the pasties, 3 at a time, until the pastry is brown and appealing. Remove and drain. Serves 6.
Betty’s Chicken Logs
(I changed the title, too!)
2 fresh chicken breasts, diced
2 tablespoons diced yellow onion
2 tablespoons diced celery
1 tablespoon chopped garlic
2 tablespoons olive oil
A dash of Sesame oil
1 can of 8 Pillsbury Crescent Rolls
Directions
Sauté chicken, onion, celery and garlic in the oils until done. Set aside.
Roll out the crescent rolls and separate into 4 rectangles. Press together any perforations.
Divide the chicken into the four rectangles and fold the sides over it to form a sealed log. Place on greased baking sheet and place in preheated oven as directed on the package. Bake until golden brown. Serves 4.
My hubby and I really enjoyed these and I’ll make some more before long. They are easy and tasty! What would you do to adapt this recipe to your taste?
Betty Bolté writes both historical and contemporary stories that feature strong, loving women and brave, compassionate men. No matter whether the stories are set in the past or the present, she loves to include a touch of the paranormal. Get to know her at www.bettybolte.com.
Social Media Links
Website: www.bettybolte.com
Blog: www.bettybolte.com/blog.htm
Newsletter: www.bettybolte.com/newsletter.htm
Betty’s Novel Ninjas Street Team: http://on.fb.me/15usNUf
Facebook: www.facebook.com/AuthorBettyBolte
Twitter: @BettyBolte
Goodreads: www.goodreads.com/bettybolte
Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/bettybolte9
Amazon: www.amazon.com/author/bettybolte
Samantha’s Secret
In 1782, the fight for independence becomes personal in the port city Charles Town, South Carolina.
Midwife and healer, Samantha McAlester returns from the front lines to find Charles Town under British siege and the town’s new doctor at war with its citizens.
Dr. Trent Cunningham intends to build a hospital staffed solely with educated doctors. What he doesn’t need is a raven-haired charlatan spooning out herbs and false promises to his patients, while tempting him at every turn.
Then a mutual friend develops a mysterious infection. Trenton is stumped. Samantha suspects the cure but knows treatment will expose her long-guarded secret, risking all she holds dear… including Trenton.
Buy Links
Kobo: http://bit.ly/1HkamyG
Amazon: http://amzn.to/1AVKyna
iBooks: http://apple.co/1BOdiiB
Google: http://bit.ly/1Dqj7tF
I wouldn’t have been surprised if it really had been little birds, but I’m glad it’s not!
Denise
I agree, Denise! It’s really a mystery to me why it’s called that, unless it has something to do with the shape of the pastry.
The recipes sound great. I wonder if we can bake the birds instead of deep frying them. I love the combination of pastry dough and meat.
I baked mine, so I’m sure you can, Aleen. Enjoy!
Sounds yummy, doesn’t it?
I see she wisely dropped the suet fat as well. Very entertaining and how neat that you found an actual recipe to be used by your character!
Thanks, Ashley! I have many more recipes in the referenced book that I want to try. Who knows? One or more may find their way into other of my books.
Wow, wow, wowy!!! Your blurb sounds amazing! Must go check it out!!! Oh, I’m sorry, but I’m not much of a meat eater, but the recipes looked lovely too! 🙂
Thanks! I wonder if you could use beans or portabello mushroom instead of the meat? That might be good, too!