Cakes & Bakes: Pateley Fritters

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Stack of home-made pateley fritters | H is for Home

Next Wednesday is Ash Wednesday – the first day of Lent. I thought I’d observe the day by making a batch of Pateley fritters. I found the recipe in my recently acquired Yorkshire W.I. Recipe Book. Apparently, Pateley fritters were traditionally eaten on the Wednesday of Shrovetide (Ash Wednesday).

According to the introduction to the recipe:

Each day during that week was known by its own peculiar name – Collop Monday (eggs and collops, an old word for the slices of meat), Shrove or Pancake Tuesday, Fritter or Frutas Wednesday and Bloody Thursday, when black puddings were served.

Two separate fritter recipes – both from Upper Nidderdale – are given, I found the other one already shared here.

Pateley Fritters

Servings 24 fritters

Ingredients
  

  • 15 g/½oz fresh yeast
  • ½ tsp sugar
  • pinch pepper
  • 450 g/1lb plain flour
  • 225 g/8oz sugar
  • 55 g/2oz currants
  • 55 g/2oz sultanas
  • 1 egg
  • pinch salt
  • little grated nutmeg
  • 425 ml/¾pt warm milk

Instructions
 

  • Cree* the yeast with the teaspoon of sugar and a dash of pepper
  • Mix all the other dry ingredients together
  • Make a well in the centre and add the yeast and enough warm milk to make a soft mixture rather thicker than a Yorkshire pudding batter
  • Whisk in the egg
  • Let it rise in a warm place for a few hours
  • Drop tablespoons at a time into a hot, greased frying pan
  • When brown on one side, turn over and cook on the reverse
The addition of pepper to the yeast whilst being creed is an old fashioned method of hastening the process.
*At first I thought the use of 'cree' was a typo. But it was mentioned twice. I looked it up on the internet and the only mention of the term I could find was: 'To cree (North-country) is to expand by slow cooking in water. To plim is the South-country equivalent'.
I then looked up 'to plim' and found: 'To plim. v. n. To swell; to increase in bulk.'
I personally wouldn't advise 'slow cooking' the yeast as anything over blood temperature would probably kill it. I think the recipe calls for it to merely be made into a paste and warmed in a bain marie/double boiler. If you know better - please get in touch!

Cakes & Bakes: Walnut Scotchies

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Home-made walnut scotchies slice | H is for Home #recipe #scotchie #scotchies

I was browsing a bookshelf in Picture House Antiques last week and my eyes fell upon a book that I just had to have. It’s the Yorkshire W.I. Recipe Book published in the late 1950s.

vintage Yorkshire W.I. recipe book from the late 1950s

According to the foreword by Chairman, Eileen Yewdall:

The present edition now being sold out, the Federation has been asked for another reprint, so a small committee has amended and added to the original, now including subjects that have come into favour since 1957, such as Deep Freeze, Cooking with Wine, Yeast Cookery, etc., etc.

page from a vintage Yorkshire W.I. recipe book from the late 1950s

It contains scores of recipes submitted by Yorkshire Women’s Institute members with, rather tellingly of the era, many oven temperatures given in Regulo and seven separate recipes for salad cream!

The first recipe I’ve attempted is one for walnut scotchies, which was provided by the W.I. in Glasshouses. It’s a cake I’d never heard of previously – a sort of shortbread base with a meringue topping… and very tasty!

There are quite a few recipes in the book that I’d not heard of before – far less tasted. I’ll be testing out lots of them in the near future and sharing the results here with you.

Walnut Scotchies

Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes

Ingredients
  

  • 110 g/4oz butter
  • 170 g/6oz caster sugar
  • 2 egg yolks & 2 egg whites
  • 170 g/6oz flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • pinch of salt
  • ½ tsp vanilla essence
  • 60 g/2oz chopped walnuts
  • 110 g/4oz brown sugar

Instructions
 

  • Beat butter and sugar to a cream
  • Stir in egg yolks one at a time and then add the flour sifted with baking powder and pinch of salt
  • Add vanilla essence and mix well
  • Spread ½cm/¼inch thick on well-greased oblong tin about 25cm/10inch x 22cm/9inch
  • Sprinkle with chopped walnuts
  • Beat the 2 egg whites until stiff
  • Lightly mix in brown sugar and spread over the nuts
  • Bake for half an hour in a moderate oven (180°C/350°F/Gas mark 4)
  • Leave till cold and cut into squares