Category: Dining With The Dame

They Came To Baghdad – Cabbage Rolls

Hello, crime readers and food lovers! In today’s Dining With The Dame, we are heading to Iraq. They Came to Baghdad is a standalone thriller from 1951.  I am not a fan of Christie’s adventure novels, I far prefer the mystery puzzles and, honestly, I didn’t love They Came To Baghdad. However, this is offset by the menu item. I LOVE Middle Eastern Food and today’s recipe for Cabbage Rolls with Merguez Sausage is no exception.

Cabbage Rolls with Merguez

They Came To Baghdad – The Plot

“The belief in a superstratum of human beings – in Supermen to rule the rest of the decadent world – that Victoria is the most evil of all beliefs. For when you say, “I am not as other men” – you have list the two most valuable qualities we have ever tried to attain: humilty and brotherhood” 

Agatha Christie – They Came to Baghdad

Our heroine, Victoria Jones meets the handsome Edward Goring in a park in London where she is eating a lettuce and tomato sandwich.  He invites her to the pub for a sausage lunch.  I swear, I disliked both of these just based on their eating choices.  Who eats a lettuce and tomato sandwich?  And “Hey love, want a sausage? is no kind of chat up line – now, in 1951 or ever. 

Victoria who is later described as “An amiable nitwit with a lot of common sense” decides that she is in love with Edward.  (So maybe the “Hey love, fancy a sausage?” line is not as bad as we initally thought.  Who knew?)  Only thing is…He’s off to Baghdad on the morrow.  Undaunted Victoria decides to travel to Baghdad to find Edward and true love.  

Cabbage Rolls with Merguez2

Unfortunately, she finds a lot more.  We have:

  • A world wide summit of superpowers about to occur in Baghdad
  • A secret organisation trying to destroy the political status quo
  • A mysterious blonde called Anna Scheele
  • An explorer found dead in the Nile
  • A nearly dead spy in Victoria’s bed whose last words are ” Lucifer…Basra…Lefarge” 
  • Victoria being chloroformed, kidnapped and waking up with platinum blonde hair

This is not anywhere near the best Christie novel I have read.  BUT…it travels along at an abolsutely rollicking pace so even while recognising some of the silliness, you are also kinda, sorta gripped by the story.  And the saving grace is Christie’s absolutely vivid scene descriptions which put you EXACTLY into the time and place:

Outside in Bank Street it was sunny and full of dust and the noises were terrific and varied.  There was the persistent honking of motor horns and the cries of vendors of various wares.  There were hot disputes between small groups of people who seemed ready to murder each other but were really fast friends; men boys and children were selling every type of tree, sweetmeats, oranges and bananas, bath towels, combs, razorblades and other types of merchandise carried rapidly through the streets on trays.  There was also a perpetual and ever renewed sound of throat clearing and spitting, and above it, the thin, melancholy wail of men conducting donkeys and horses amongth the stream of motors and pedestrians” 

They Came To Baghdad – Agatha Christie

They Came To Baghdad – The Covers

They Came To Baghdad

Sadly no Arabic covers but these are all brilliant!  I really can’t pick a favourite! 

Cabbage Rolls with Merguez3

The Recipe: Cabbage Rolls

They Came To Baghdad Cover (1)

Fermented Chilli Sauce Recipe

I love the funkiness that a fermented chilli sauce brings to this recipe but you may choose to use a regular chilli sauce or, leave it out altogther.  If you are making your own, please bear in mind that it you need to let it ferment for around a month.  This recipe which comes from Eat California by Vivian Lui is absolutely deicious at any time and defintely worth the effort (and the wait) to make it!  And, as an added bonus you also get one of my notes to self about the recipe!

Fermented Hot Sauce

Victoria started by drinking a large glass of water and then fell to the rice, the bread and the cabbage leaves which were full of a rather peculiar tasting chopped meat.  When she had finished everything on the tray she felt a good deal better” 

They Came To Baghdad – Agatha Christie

Links to the Christieverse

Nothing that I found.  Please let me know if you found anything. 

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in  They Came To Baghdad

October’s read will be A Murder is Announced.  

Have a great week!

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Crooked House – Tarte Tatin

Hello, crime readers and food lovers! Today’s Dining With The Dame delves into “Crooked House,” which is an absolute belter of a read! Typically, I prefer the Poirot or Marple novels, and standalone novels often fall short for me. However, this one is a delightful exception! The storyline is captivating, and Christie truly outdoes herself in crafting the villain.

Speaking of captivating, let’s transition to our culinary companion for this episode: Tarte Tatin. I selected this classic French dessert for a few reasons. Firstly, apples, a prominent motif in “Crooked House,” provided a thematic link. And, dare I say, there is a bad apple in the crooked house!  Also, with the Paris Olympics in full swing, a touch of French flair seemed fitting. And finally, a well-executed Tarte Tatin is magnifique!

Tarte Tatin

Crooked House  – The Plot

“I think people more often kill those they love than those they hate . Possibly because only the people you love can really make life unendurable to you”

Agatha Christie – Crooked House

The plot of Crooked House is somewhat similar to Taken At The Flood which I covered last month.  This time, we meet the Leonides family, the patriarch of which, Aristide Leonides has just been murdered.  Someone, swapped his insulin for Eserine, a deadly poison contained in his eye medicine.   Aristide had built up considerable wealth and members of his family stand to  inherit a lot of money. 

The family, and list of suspects include:

  • Brenda, Aristides young second wife, who may or may not be romatically involved with the tutor of his grandchildren, Laurence Brown
  • Roger and Clementine Leonides, one of Aristides brothers and his wife
  • Phillip Leonides and his wife, Magda West a (tryhard but largely unsuccessful actress played by Gillian Anderson in the 2017 adaptation)
  • Edith de Haviland, the sister of Aristides first wife who has lived with them since her sister’s death in order to take care of the children (played to perfection by Glenn Close in the 2017 adaptation)  
  • Sophia Leonides, Aristides eldest grandchild and daughter of Phillip and Magda
  • Eustace Leonides the teenage son of Phillip and Magda
  • Josephine Leonides, the 12 year old daughter of Phillip and Magda
  • Laurence Brown, Eustace and Jospehine’s tutor

Charles Hayward, Sophia’s fiance is our amateur detective, working closely with Chief Inspecor Taverner and Detective Sergeant Lamb to find the killer.

Tarte Tatin2

Before we get there though, many things happen including

  • A missing will
  • Embezzlement
  • Josephine being attacked
  • Hidden love letters coming to light
  • The children’s nanny being poisoned by some deadly hot chocolate
  • The wrong people being arrested
  • A missing notebook that may hold the key to everything

It might not be a good thing that we have Charles trying to discover (as one of the covers below asks) who put the poison in the hypo.  He is not, as they say, the sharpest tool in the shed. Despite the abundance of clues scattered throughout the text, he repeatedly overlooks them.

In fact, I found myself uncovering an unusual number of clues while reading “Crooked House,” far exceeding the usual number in Christie’s works. This abundance of hints led me to speculate on whether it was a deliberate strategy on Christie’s part. Given that “Crooked House” was published in 1949, I imagine the revelation of the villain must have been a truly shocking experience for readers of the time. It’s possible that Christie meticulously planted these clues to soften the impact of the eventual reveal for contemporary audiences.    If you have read this, please let me know your thoughts on this!!!!

Crooked House – The Covers

Crooked House Collage1 (1)

I was very happy to be able to include a Greek cover here as the Leonides family are Greek in origin.  I was also very glad to see that one of the covers featured an apple.  This, vindicated my somewhat unusual choice of dish!  There are lots of crooked houses which are to be expected, including one growing out of a ladies head, which is not.  I don’t understand the rather scruffy looking chicken.  And as for the creepy hell clown? No.  Just no.  

The Recipe: Tarte Tatin

There was no one in sight as we drove up to the front door.  I paid the taxi and it drove away.  I felt uncertain whether to ring the bell or to walk in.  The front door was open.  As I stood there hesitatiing I heard a sound behind me.  I turned my head sharply.  Josephine, her face partially obscured by a very large apple was standing in the opening of the yew hedge looking at me” 

Agatha Christie – Crooked House

Tarte tatin recipe

 

I broke off.  Josephine had emerged from the door leading to the drawing room.  She was eating the inevitable apple, and over its round rosiness her eyes sparkled with a kind of ghoulish enjoyment.  

“Nannie’s been poisoned,” she said.  “Just like grandfather.  It’s awfully exciting, isn’t it?”

Agatha Christie – Crooked House

Tarte Tatin 3

Links To The Christieverse

None that I picked up on – but please let me know if you found something!

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in  Taken At The Flood

In September, we’re going Marple-ing.  A Murder is Announced will be our next read.  

Have a great week!

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Taken At The Flood – Vienna Steak

Hello crime readers and food lovers!  Today’s Dining With The Dame dives into “Taken At The Flood” (also known as “There Is A Tide”).  This is a classic Agatha Christie mystery full of death and dastardly doings but also somewhat a mystery is our chosen dish – Vienna Steak!

Now, at first glance, this dish might have had you thinking schnitzel, a more familiar Austrian offering. But here’s the twist: Vienna Steak is actually more akin to a bunless hamburger. Traditionally, it’s served alongside fried onions and potatoes, a hearty, comforting but economical, combination.  However, I couldn’t resist putting my own spin on this wartime dish. Who can resist a good peppercorn sauce, right? So I jazzed up my version with a rich, flavorful sauce that adds a bit of glamour to the Vienna Steak.

Speaking of twists, a lightbulb moment just struck! Given the title of the book, wouldn’t “Vienna S-Taken At the Flood” be a great pun? (Okay, that one’s a stretch…) But you know how much we love a little food-related wordplay here at Retro Food For Modern Times!  

Vienna Steak

Taken at The Flood – The Plot

There were waves in the air of feeling – a strong electrical current of – what was it?  Hate? Could it really be hate?  Something at any rate – destructive.  

Lynn thought suddently, “But that’s what the matter everywhere.  Ive noticed it ever since I got home.  it’s the aftermath the war has left.  Ill will.  Ill feeling.  It’s everywhere.  On railways and buses and in shops and amongst workers and clerks and even agricultural labourers.  And I suppose worse in mines and factories.  Ill will.  But hereit’s more than that.  Here it’s particular.  It’s meant!

Agatha Christie – Taken at The Flood

It’s autumn 1944, and an air raid rattles the Coronation Club in London. Here, amidst the chaos, we meet Major Porter, the club bore. He regales Hercule Poirot with the tragic news of Gordon Cloade’s death. A German bomb has recently obliterated Cloade’s London house, taking his life in the process.

However, a twist emerges. Cloade died intestate, meaning he hadn’t updated his will after his recent marriage. This leaves his entire estate to his second wife, Rosaleen. But Rosaleen’s past holds a potential complication. Before marrying Cloade, she was the wife of a man named Robert Underhay. Underhay’s fate remains shrouded in mystery – appearently he died years ago in Africa, but concrete proof is absent.

Major Porter has just revealed that Underhay had spoken about faking his death and assuming a new identity as Enoch Arden when, he realises, much to his embarrassment that  Jeremy Cloade, Gordon’s brother has overheard his conversation.  

Vienna Steak2

The narrative then leaps forward in time. Spring 1946 sees Mrs. Lionel Cloade, another member of the Cloade family, seeking out Poirot. Convinced by a recent ouija board session, she pleads with him to locate Robert Underhay. Finding Underhay alive would invalidate Rosaleen’s marriage to Gordon, thereby jeopardizing her inheritance of the Cloade fortune. Poirot, however, remains unimpressed by this reliance on the spirit world and politely dismisses Mrs. Cloade.

But fate, it seems, has other plans. Just a few days later, news arrives that  a man named Enoch Arden has been found dead…

I included the above quote on ill will on purpose as Taken with the Flood is full of crimes and misddemeamours.  My copy is only 192 pages yet in that we have (In no particular order)

  • Murder
  • Attempted Murder
  • Death by misadventure
  • Death by Bomb blast
  • Accidental Death
  • Death by Suicide
  • Death by overdose
  • Eavesdropping
  • Bribery
  • Embezzlement
  • Perjury
  • Impersonation of persons living or dead
  • Drug addiction
  • Casual racism
  • General cattiness
  • A very red flag raising romance

And to lighten the tone a little bit of cross dressing! 

Good thing we have Poirot on hand to unravel all the threads and get to the bottom of what is going on with the Cloade family!

Taken at The Flood – The Covers

 

TATFCollage (1)

As usual there are some amazing covers here and quite the variety  This is quite a complex story and as many aspects of it are in these covers.  The ouija board, the items found in  Enoch’s hotel room, Enoch’s body on the floor with the murderer seen absconding out the window, a very egg shaped head on Poirot, the blitz. 

And because it is Dining With the Dame we also have a wacky cover from Sweden showing a house sinking into a bog and some grassland in the shape of a girl’s face.  The Swedish translation is “High Water” which may explain the cover!  Either way, I love it!

The Recipe: Vienna Steak

“And every year things get worse and worse  No Service! Food uneatable! Vienna Steak indeed!  A steak’s either Rump or Fillet – not chopped up horse!” 

Agatha Christie – Taken at the Flood

Print

Vienna Steak with Mashed Potatoes, Fried Onions and Peppercorn Sauce

A tasty throwback to a pub meal from 1940’s Britain as described in Taken at The Flood.

Ingredients

Scale

For The Vienna Steak:

  • 500g minced Beef
  • 1 onion, finely chopped
  • 1 slice of white bread, crusts removed and torn into small pieces
  • 1 tbsp of milk
  • 1 tsp Herbes of Provence
  • 1/2 tsp nutmeg
  • Oil for frying the onions and the “steaks”
  • Salt and Pepper

For The Fried Onions:

  • 2 large onions, thinly sliced
  • 2 cups buttermilk
  • 1 cup flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp black pepper, ground
  • 1/41/2 tsp cayenne pepper

For the Mashed Potatoes:

  • 500g potatoes, peeled and chopped into quarters
  • 50ml milk
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • Salt and Pepper to taste

For The Peppercorn Sauce:

  • 1 tbsp butter
  • 1 shallot finely chopped
  • 50ml brandy
  • 150ml Beef stock
  • 100ml cream
  • 2 tbsp green peppercorns from a tin or jar, slightly crush these with the back of your knife

Instructions

For The Fried Onions

  • Place the onions in a shallow bowl and cover with the buttermilk.  
  • Cover and place in the fridge for about an hour.
  • Place the flour, salt, pepper and cayenne in a ziplock bag and stir to combine.  
  • After the hour, heat the oil to 180C in a deep saucepan.  
  • Take a handful of onions from the bowl and shake off the excess buttermilk. Add them to the ziplock bag and shake.  Remove the onions from the bag and shake to remove any excess flour.  
  • Place in the oil and fry until they are a deep golden brown (2-3  minutes).
  • Remove from the oil with a slotted spoon and drain the onions on paper towel.
  • Repeat with the rest of the onions until they are all used up.
  • Serve sprinkled on top of the Vienna Steaks.

For The Vienna Steaks:

  • Heat the oil and saute the onions until golden brown.  Set aside to cool.
  • When cool, add to the rest of the ingredients and mix well.  
  • Shape into four burger patties.
  • Place in the fridge for around an hour.
  • Heat the oil in a frying pan over high heat.  Add the patties.  Sear for a minute on each side then lower the heat  to medium and and allow to cook through, turning once during cooking.  Cook to your preferred state of doneness
  • Remove from pan and keep warm while you make the peppercorn sauce.  

For The Mashed Potatoes:

  • Place the potatoes into a saucepan and cover with water.  Add salt.
  • Cook for approx 15 minutes or until the potatoes are tender. 
  • Drain the potatoes.  Leave to dry for a minute or two the pop back into the pan.  Mash well ensuring there are no lumps of potato left.  
  • Add the butter and milk and mash again.
  • Season to taste with salt and pepper.

For The Peppercorn Sauce:

  • Melt the butter  over medium heat in a small pan.
  • Add the chopped shallot.  Cook for around 5 minutes until softened, stirring every few minutes.
  • Add the peppercorns and stir for 1 minute.  
  • Increase the heat to medium high.  Add the brandy and cook until this is amost entirely reduced.
  • Add the stock and simmer until reduced to about half (3-5 ) minutes
  • Reduce the heat to medium low, Add the cream and heat to your desired consistency.  Do not allow to boil.  

To serve, place a big spoonful of mashed potatoes on a plate.  Place a Vienna Steak on top of the mash.  Pour the sauce around the mash.  Sprinkle the onions on top of the “Steaks”. 

Vienna Steak4 - Taken at The Flood

 

He stood for a moment in the hall looking from the glass -enclosed empty office to the door labelled in firm old-fashioned style COFFEE ROOM.  By experience of country hotels Poirot knew well that the only time coffee was served there was somewhat grudgingly for breakfast and that even thena good deal of watery hot milk was its principal component/  Small cups of a treacly and muddy liquid called black coffee were served not in the COFFEE ROOM but in the lounge.  The Windsor Soup, Vienna Steak and Potatoes and Steamed Pudding which comprised dinner would be obtainable in the COFFEE ROOM at seven sharp.  

Agatha Christie – Taken at the Flood

Vienna Steak3 - Taken at The Flood

 

Links To The Christieverse

Superintendent Spence says to Poirot “And then your anonymous A B C lunatic killed….(no spoilers here”).  This might refer to the killer in the earlier Poirot mystery The A.B.C Murders.

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in  Taken At The Flood

Our August read will be Crooked House.  

Have a great week!

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Negroni Sbagliato: Witness for The Prosecco

Hello friends, apologies for the long break between posts.  My father passed away at the end of last month and getting regular posts out suddenly didn’t seem so important.   However, I wanted to close out Witness for The Prosecution as planned.  There is also a link, albeit tenuous between Witness for the Prosecution and my dad.   So if there was ever going to be a right time to honour him, this was it.  We’ll get there but for the moment, let’s focus on the Negroni Sbagliato.  

Negroni Sbagliato

Sbagliato…Say What?

In 1972, Milanese bartender Mauritio Stocchetto accidentally reached for prosecco instead of gin while creating a negroni, thus inventing the “sbagliato”.  The word means  “mistaken” in Italian – pronounced Spah-li-art-toe.. Bar Basso, the scene of this mishap is still open and of course, Negroni Sbagliato’s are still on the menu!  

The main flavours in the drink are bitter from the Campari and sweet from the Vermouth.  I think this fits well with the tone of the story.  

 

Negroni Sbagliato1

Negroni Sbagliato – The Recipe

Print

Negroni Sbagliato

A bittersweet cocktail, perfect to accompany watching Witness for the Prosecution

Ingredients

Scale
  • 25ml Campari
  • 25ml sweet vermouth
  • Prosecco to fill glass
  • Orange twist to garnish

Instructions

  • Add the campari and vermouth to a mixing glass full of ice.  Stir to chill. 
  • Strain into your drinking glass.
  • Top with Prosecco.
  • Garnish with an orange twist

 

Witness for The Proscecution – The Film (Spoilers Galore)

ilmed in 1957, Witness for the Prosecution starred Tyrone Power as Leonard, Marlene Dietrich as his wife, and Charles Laughton as his lawyer.

The film’s ending dramatically differs from the book. In the book, Christine confesses she knew about the murder and lied to protect Leonard. The filmmakers, however, thought audiences in the 1950s wouldn’t accept a murderer going free. So, the film takes a darker turn: Christine kills Leonard upon learning he’ll leave her for another woman despite her sacrifice.

witness-1

Some great advertising and images from the film, above.  They certainly play up the suspense and the glamour couple of Power and Dietrich!

My Personal Link to Witness for the Prosecution

My father was named Tyrone, after Tyrone Power.  We all think my  nana must have had quite the crush on Tyrone Power!  And, as you will see from the posters above, Tyrone Power was one of the stars of the 1957 version of Witness for the Prosecution.   

Today would have been my dad’s 83rd birthday so it seemed like the right time to honour his passing.   I don’t know when I will feel up to getting back to a regular posting schedule.  I’m still finding it hard to wake up and not spend the first hour of my day crying.  So my posts may be a bit erratic in the coming weeks.  I’ll do what I can when I can.  Starting with this one.  

These are my two favourite photos of my dad, and, I know I am biased but I think, maybe my nana named him right because he was kind of movie star handsome when he was a young man!  The first is him, maybe in his late teens or very early twenties.   He was so proud to have been an excellent rugby player and even played for Sri Lanka, (then Ceylon) in a match against India.  In this picture he is wearing one of his beloved team jerseys.  

Dad01 Front

This next one is me and him on holiday.  I can’t remember even remember where but it looks pretty cold! Incidentally, my name, Taryn is the feminine version of Tyrone and is also the name of one of Tyrone Power’s daughters.  

Dad02 Back

My ask of you?  If you decide to watch Witness for the Prosecution with a Negroni Sbagliatio in hand (and I really think you should do this) maybe raise a little toast to the lesser known Tyrone as well as the more famous. 

Have a great week, I’ll be back when I can.  

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Witness For The Proscuitto and Melon

Hello crime readers, foodies and lovers of terrible puns!  Today’s Dining With The Dame comes to us via another short story, Witness For The Prosecution.  This story appears in the Hounds of Death collection.  We have already featured The Red Signal from this collection. I also have a French version of this story!  Today, I am pairing the story with a classic starter, Proscuitto and Melon.  We love a twofer here at Dining With the Dame so later this week, we will also be celebrating a very special occasion with a cocktail also inspired by this story.  

Proscuitto and Melon 1

 

Witness For The Prosecution- The Plot

“Supposing I tell you that he did not come in that night at twenty past nine, but at twenty past ten?  You say that he tells you he knew nothing about the money coming to him.  Supposing I tell you he knew all about it, and counted on it, and committed murder to get it?”

Agatha Christie – The Witness for The Proecution

Young, handsome but hard up, Leonard Vole finds himself accused of murdering the elderly lady, Emily French, in order to inherit her wealth.  The facts seem stacked against Leonard.  Mr Mayherne his solicitor is certain that Leonard is innocent.  The only person who can provide an alibi for Leonard is his wife Romaine. 

My Mayherne goes to see her, despite knowing that a court is unlikley to give much credence to the evidence of a devoted wife.  He gets the a terrible shock when Romaine not only tells him she detests her husband but that he is not actually even her husband!  She was married to another man in her home country of Austria but he was locked away in a madhouse so the two could not marry. 

Therefore double jeopardy does not apply

She also says that Leonard committed the murder and confessed so to her. 

How can Mr Mayherne save Leonard when even his own wife is determined to see him hanged?

Proscuitto and Melon 2

The Witness for the Proscution – The Covers

WFTP Collage (1)

I could not find many covers for Witness for The Prosecution as it is usually part of a collection such as The Hound of Death.  We’ll look at some of the playbills and movie posters next time and talk a bit more about the 1957 movie next time.  

The Recipe: Proscuitto and Melon

I’m not entirely sure we need a recipe for somerthing as simple as this, but our old friend The A-Z of Cooking has one so here it is!  

Proscuitto and Melon4

I decided to sit my melon slices on some Romaine lettuce in honour of Leonard’s wife!


Proscuitto and Melon 3

Links To The Christieverse

None that I could find but please let me know if you spotted any!

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in The Witness for The Prosecution

  • Brandy

Our June read will be Taken at the Flood.  Yay, it’s a Poirot! 

Have a great week!

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