Champagne Cocktail – Dead Man’s Mirror

Hello food lovers and crime readers!   Welcome to the first Dining with the Dame of 2023!  We are celebrating the new year with a classic Champagne Cocktail and the final story from the Murder in the Mews Collection.  I improvised here as there is no food mentioned in Dead Man’s Mirror. However, the sound of a cork popping features in the story so a Champagne cocktail feels fitting. Besides, who doesn’t love a Champagne cocktail?

Champagne Cocktail 1

 

Dead Man’s Mirror- The Plot

Hmm…we have a dead man in a locked room. If it sounds familiar is because it is also kinda, sorta what happened in  Hercule Poirot’s Christmas which was last month’s read. This time the patriarch who meets an untimely end is Sir Gervase Chevenix-Gore.  Sir G as we will call him because if I have to type Sir Gervase Chevenix -Gore every time I name him, I’ll be writing this into next year summons Poirot to his home at Hamborough Close.   Much like Simeon Lee from last month, Sir G is obsessed with not having an heir to carry on the family name.  He is also a bit of a martinet when it comes to timeliness.   For instance, dinner is announced by a gong which is sounded twice – the bangs being seven minutes apart.  Guests who are late for dinner are not invited back! On this night Sir G himself does not appear by the second gong. He is found, shortly thereafter,  in his locked study, with a bullet in his brain and a pistol lying on the carpet by his body.  A piece of paper with the word “Sorry” written on it lies on the desk in front of him.  A clear-cut case of suicide.

Or is it?

We have

  • For the bullet to have smashed the mirror, Sir G must have shot himself at a very odd angle
  • As in Hercule Poirot’s Christmas, we have a woman picking up something from the floor of the crime scene
  • Ruth, Sir G’s adopted daughter.  Sir G was keen for her to marry her cousin Hugo Trent which would keep the family line going.  Only Ruth has some secrets.
  • A lack of footprints in the flower bed

Champagne Cocktail 2

Luckily we have Poirot around to solve the mystery of the Dead Man’s Mirror!

Dead Man’s Mirror – The Covers

Dead Man's Mirror CollageAs expected, many of the covers feature a broken mirror.  I particularly like the one in the top which shows the dead man in the mirror, holding the note in his skeleton hand.  However, my absolute favourite is the one on the far right which shows the Egyptian head and scarab beetle, in reference to Vanda, Sir G’s wife who believes she is the reincarnation of the Egyptian pharaoh Hatshepsut and a priestess from Atlantis.  It’s such a minor plot detail but makes an amazing cover! The broken mirror around her eye also gives it a bit of a steampunk look, decades before there was such a thing!

The Recipe – Champagne Cocktail

I am using the from a book called Fantastic Cocktails and Mixed Drinks.  I have added a garnish of an orange wedge and a maraschino cherry to make it look prettier!

Champagne Cocktail Recipe

Champagne Cocktail 3

 

“You see, I thought the first gong had gone, so I hurried up with my dressing, came dashing out of my room, heard, as I thought, the second gong and fairly raced down the stairs.  I’d been one minute late for dinner the first night I was here and Hugo told me it had about wrecked our chances with the Old Man, so K fairly hared down.  Hugo was just ahead of me and then there was a queer kind of pop-bang and Hugo said it was a champagne cork but Snell said “No”to that.

Dead Man’s Mirror – Agatha Christie

Links to The Christieverse

Mr Satterthwaite, who we last met in Three Act Tragedy makes an appearance in this story.  He not only mentions that case but also that he has seen Mary Lytton Gore recently.

Champagne Cocktail 4

 

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in Dead Man’s Mirror

  • None

If you are wondering why this post is unusually early, it is because later today we are going to see The Arctic Monkeys, then tomorrow we are flying to Darwin for a week to celebrate the Fussiest Eater in The World’s birthday.  Neither of us has been there before so it will be an exciting trip for us.  It is by far the farthest north in Australia we have ever been!  Also, just to put the distance in perspective, Darwin is about 400km closer to Singapore than it is to Melbourne! I am expecting some delicious seafood, tropical fruit, and some spectacular scenery

I may have to delay next week’s post due to the holiday. However, we have all the more time now to get stuck into February’s read – Appointment with Death.

 

Oysters with Caviar

Happy 2023 everyone!  Today I am sharing a “recipe” for a starter that is low on fuss and time but high on elegance!  Oysters with caviar will bring the luxe to a formal dinner party or some glam to your backyard barbecue. We had these as a little snack before heading out to dinner on New Year’s Eve.  I am actually using salmon roe instead of caviar for my oysters.  I may like to eat like a posh person but my budget does not spread to a 1/4 cup of real caviar.  If you would like to use the real stuff though go right ahead!  Oh and please invite me to your party!

Oysters with Caviar2

 

 

Australia’s Favourite Recipes – The Book

A few months ago, we decided to use charity shop books as a theme for our Tasty Reads Cookbook Club.  Most of our club members met for breakfast and then went looking through the local op shops for some culinary treasures.  The book I chose, Australia’s Favourite Recipes is a monster of a book.  I regretted buying it almost the minute I got it home because it is so big it does not fit into any of my bookshelves and so can only be accommodated lying flat.  It is also very heavy which makes it quite cumbersome which probably explains why I have not cooked from it a lot. For context, it is about shoulder height for Holly who is a small beagle.

Holly v Book

One thing I did make from this book was a lovely Apricot Meringue Dacquoise for the Cook Book Club meeting.

Apricot Meringue Dacquoise

Actually, on reflection that Dacquioise was amazing.  Even if I do say so myself!  I’ll throw in the recipe for that too as it would also be perfect for entertaining!

And speaking of recipes, here is the one for the Oysters with Caviar if you can even call something this simple a recipe!  I guess though when you are using some luxe ingredients like Oysters and Caviar, you want to keep things simple!  The last thing you would want to do is to overshadow them!

Oysters with Caviar3

 

I used the Yarra Valley caviar infused with Four Pillars Bloody Shiraz Gin for these.  The dark colour of the gin-infused salmon roe is so pretty and festive!

The Recipe – Oysters with Caviar

Oysters with Caviar Recipe

I really liked the pop of the salmon roe in this.  Which got me thinking…for Christmas, the Fussiest Eater in the World bought me a Finger Lime tree.  These are Australian native limes but instead of the normal lime flesh when you open them up your get these lovely pearls as in the picture below.

 

They are very slow growing so it will likely be a few years before my little tree bears fruit. But I already have plans to celebrate my first lime by remaking this recipe using a finger lime instead of a lemon for a double pop!  We have the variety called pink ice which is the middle one in the picture above.  Here is our little tree.  And in another comparison, here is the large book next to the small tree.

Finger Lime Tree

Ok, I promise that will be the last time I compare one thing of a size you don’t know to another thing of a size you don’t know.  🤦 Here’s the recipe for the Dacquoise!

Apricot Meringue Dacquoise

 

Oysters with Caviar4

To all of you, thank you so much for reading and commenting!  Have a wonderful, safe and happy new year!

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Avocado and Crab Finger Sandwiches

Hello friends!   Welcome to the latest post on “What Posh People ate in the ’80s”. This recipe for Avocado and Crab Finger Sandwiches comes from the Vogue Entertaining Guide from Autumn 1986.  The article features a mother and daughter who love to entertain after a match or two on their private tennis court.  When I said posh I meant swish enough to have a house with its own tennis court!

Avocado and Crab Finger Sandwiches

I would LOVE to be invited to a spot of doubles followed by an elegant afternoon tea!  (Note to friends – can one of you please get rich so we can do this?  And can we also wear gorgeous tennis dresses like these?)

Tennis Dresses

The whole thing reminded me very much of the John Betjeman poem called A Subaltern’s Love Song:

Miss J.Hunter Dunn, Miss J.Hunter Dunn,
Furnish’d and burnish’d by Aldershot sun,
What strenuous singles we played after tea,
We in the tournament – you against me!

Love-thirty, love-forty, oh! weakness of joy,
The speed of a swallow, the grace of a boy,
With carefullest carelessness, gaily you won,
I am weak from your loveliness, Joan Hunter Dunn

Miss Joan Hunter Dunn, Miss Joan Hunter Dunn,
How mad I am, sad I am, glad that you won,
The warm-handled racket is back in its press,
But my shock-headed victor, she loves me no less.

Her father’s euonymus shines as we walk,
And swing past the summer-house, buried in talk,
And cool the verandah that welcomes us in
To the six-o’clock news and a lime-juice and gin.

Avocado and Crab Finger Sandwiches2

Rather than lime juice and gin, this article waxes lyrical about a boysenberry daiquiri served with the afternoon tea:

One of Helena’s specialties is the delicious boysenberry daiquiri which is smooth in texture, with a wonderful colour and just enough zing in it to revive tired tennis bodies

And even includes a large picture of said daiquiris:

Boysenberry Daiquiri

But, back in 1986, if you had a tired tennis body and needed the reviving properties of a boysenberry daiquiri, you would have been SOL as the Vogue Entertaining Guide did not give you the recipe for it!  It’s the opposite of Chekhov’s Gun.  Even today, with full use of the internet, the closest thing I could find is this recipe for a berry daiquiri from the BBC.  Never let it be said that I don’t give you something to soothe your tired tennis body! I mean it’s not boysenberries but what can you do?  Maybe boysenberry daiquiris only exist in the realms of people who have their own tennis courts and would never dream of publishing their recipe on something as mucky as the internet!

The Recipe – Avocado and Crab Finger Sandwiches

The article made no mention of who Margie is/was so neither shall we.  These were very yummy and delicate sandwiches.  And whilst I don’t want to drag Agatha Christie into every post, they were certainly something I could imagine people eating after a hit of tennis in one of her novels.  Whilst someone was being stabbed in the drawing room.

Avocado and Crab Finger Sandwiches

Avocado and Crab Finger Sandwiches3

I added a sprinkle of chives from the garden and some chive flowers as a garnish for my sandwiches.

The Saratoga Torte which I featured a while back is from this same article.

I am now going to go dream of a life that includes

The traditional charm of a tennis afternoon tea expressed through the use of gleaming family silver and old lace

 

 

Have a wonderful week!

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Christmas Cocktail Party – 2002

.Hello Friends and welcome to Twenty Years Ago Today!  Today I am planning a Christmas Cocktail Party based on recipes from the December 2002 Edition of Australian Table. The Christmas Martini featured in the magazine felt like a perfect way to kick off the festivities!

Christmas Martini 2 (1)

 

Dec 2002 Menu

 

The Christmas Martini

I had to check my dates to see if the Christmas Martini was created at the height of Sex And The City and thus was leaning into the Cosmo craze that show generated.  It was a little late for that so now think that the use of cranberry juice in a martini was more due to its festive colour than a call back to the show.

I admit to being a bit worried about this  – I thought it might be too sweet. I used a no-added-sugar cranberry juice to try to counter this and to my mind, this recipe really worked.  The Christmas Martini is definitely sweeter than a regular martini but the tannins in the cranberry helped to keep it from being sickly.  I also liked the combination of the slightly sweet drink and the salty olives.  So this was a winner for me!

Christmas Martini 1

Christmas Martini Recipe

Christmas Martini Recipe

The Other Recipes (and My Variations)

Parmesan Chilli Biscuits with Roasted Cherry Tomatoes

If I were making these, I might be tempted to swap out the baby spinach leaves for basil leaves and pipe a little splodge of goat’s cheese onto each biscuit not only to add some more flavour but also to anchor the tomato to the biscuit a bit better!  No one wants a stray balsamic-covered cherry tomato rolling off their biscuit and staining their cocktail dress!

Here’s The Recipe:

Christmas Cocktail Party1

Cured Salmon with Fresh Herbs

I made this and the salmon was amazing!  So good and so easy!  To fit in with my cocktail party theme, instead of serving it in long strips with potato salad, per the recipe, I cut the salmon into chunks and served it on crackers with some cream cheese, thinly sliced shallots and the capers and herbs suggested by the recipe.  These would work perfectly with the Chrirtmas Martini too!

Cured Salmon2

 

Cured Salmon 3

 

Here’s The Recipe:

Cured Salmon Recipe

Fillet of Beef with Salsa Verde

For cocktail party serving, I would make cut the beef into nice bite-size chunks, place it on a grilled bit of crusty bread and drizzle with the salsa verde.

Salsa Verde Beef

Mixed Berry Tarts

A great alternative, if, like me, you are not a  fan of the traditional mince pie!  These would be a lovely ending to your Christmas cocktail party!

Mixed Berry Tarts

My Nigella Moment

For first-time readers, this refers to the moment at the end of Nigella Lawson’s cooking shows when she sneaks back to the fridge to have another bite of something delicious.  In the context of these Twenty Years Ago posts, it is something contained in the magazine that does not fit with the overall menu theme but I’m sneaking in because it was really good!  This month’s item of irresistibility was a Peach, Watercress and Blue Cheese Salad. This was sensational!  (If it looks a little bit familiar, we ate this as a side dish to last week’s Stilton and Leek Souffle.

Peach, Watercress and Blue Cheese Salad2

 

Peach, Watercress and Blue Cheese Salad

Here’s the recipe:

Peach, Watercress and Blue Cheese Salad recipe

I hope this has given you some inspo for your own Christmas Cocktail Party.  Have a wonderful, safe and festive holiday period!

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Rose Petal and Nasturtium Leaf Salad

Hello friends and welcome to the latest edition of Things Posh People Ate in the 90s.  This week’s fancy dish comes from the pages of  Vogue Entertaining from March 1990.   And what could be posher than a salad made of flowers?  Or more pretty?  This Rose Petal and Nasturtium Leaf Salad would make a lovely addition to a spring or summer lunch.

Rose Petal and Nasturtium Leaf Salad

This would also be a delightful addition to your Christmas dinner table, ideal for a girl’s night or a romantic dinner à deux!  The rose petals don’t add a heap of flavour (that comes from the rosewater in the dressing) but the nasturtium leaves are nice and peppery.  The pea shoots bring some freshness, the olives some briny bitterness, and some depth to what is otherwise pretty much all sweetness and light.  The orange dressing is refreshing and not too sweet.

Also, if like me you do not grow your own roses or nasturtiums, please make sure they come from a reputable source and have not been sprayed with any pesticides or other things you do not want to eat!  My petals and leaves came direct from my mum’s garden.

Rose Petal and Nasturtium Leaf Salad.2jpg

Rose Petal and Nasturtium Leaf Salad – The Recipe

Rose Petal and Nasturtium Leaf Salad Recipe2

Additions

You could add any (or all) of these to this salad depending on your preference or how big you want your salad to be:

  • Toasted flaked almonds for some crunch
  • Goat’s cheese for some creaminess
  • Wafer thin slices of fennel for crunch and a little hit of aniseed

 

 

Serving Suggestions

Vogue Entertaining serves this with a seafood salad with a creamy pesto dressing.  Far be it for me to contradict them but pesto can pack a punch of flavours (which s what makes it so delicious) but may overpower the delicate nature of this salad.

I would go with

  • Chicken – either poached or roasted
  • A grilled salmon fillet or
  • Some grilled prawns or scallops

Fun Facts

The article containing the Rose Petal and Nasturtium Leaf Salad was called Culinary Canvas and featured the artist Mary Pinnock.

Mary Pinnock - Article

 

“I dig cooking with them because they are so available,” she says, reaching through the kitchen window and plucking a handful from a hanging pot.

Mary Pinnock on nasturtium leaves.

I had a quick look online for Mary and you can still buy her artwork for a very reasonable price.  This one, featuring nasturtium leaves has a  price guide of only $150-250 which is an absolute bargain!  If it was actually for sale I might be tempted to buy it myself!

 

 

Rose Petal and Nasturtium Leaf Salad.4jpg

 

Have a great week!

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