Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Out of Old Ontario Kitchens ~ Lindy Mechefske

 

I have some Canadian cookbooks and only a few that are regional... or provincial per se. Adding this book to my collection is heartwarming. It's the paperback version and meant to look like a worn cookery scrap book. You know the kind, old tried and true family recipes stuffed between pages, handwritten or typed. It has a memento or old scrapbook feel to it with snippets of history and stories woven throughout. It also talks about the early settlers, early female food writers and First Nations and Indigenous Peoples, along with multicultural influences.   

The recipes in this cookbook are handed down from people within the communities as heirlooms and some recipes are archived from the provinces food history and culture. Multiple women who had an impact or were influential not only in Ontario but within the culinary history of Canada are mentioned in this book, such as, Emily Pauline Johnson Tekahionwake (poet & crackerjack cook), Dora Fairfield (who at 26yrs old wrote a 311 page cookbook, Dora's Cook Book), Nellie Letitia (Mooney) McClung (food writer, MLA for Edmonton), Flora (McCrea) Eaton or Lady Eaton (nurse and heiress and director of the T. Eaton Company), Winnie Collver (awarded the Excellence in Food and Cookery prize, 1930), Hariot Georgina Rowan Hamilton also known as Lady Dufferin (Governor General of Canada from 1872 to 1878), Isabella Lucy Bird Bishop (travel writer, global explorer, photographer and naturalist), Mary (Allen Clark) Moore (Canadian food columnist), Shirley Jack (beanery queen in the Canadian National Railway's Rainy River station, waitress and also famous for her legendary butter tart) and of course Mrs. Beeton and Queen Victoria get a honourable mention amongst many other predominant and well known women, families and men that helped shape and create either the culinary culture and or history of Ontario and Canada. Many of the recipes collected for this cookbook are familiar... bannock, corn bread, Irish soda bread, scones, Scotch broth, Mulligatawny, Tourtière, apple cake, ginger bread, Canada's War Cake and oatmeal date squares just to name a few.  

Most of the book focuses on the 1800's and early 1900's and recipes are included from historic sources, while others are from private collections and seem to come to an end around the 1950's and or 1960's due to the changes in homestead life, farming, the introduction of supermarkets and prepared foods. 
 
I'm sharing a simple yet charming recipe, that I look forward to making, from Ruth Marian (White) Redmond (Bachelor of Arts Degree and teaching diploma, Bachelor of Library Science Degree, and in the 70's was the chief buyer and cook for Meals on Wheels in Kingston, Ontario). It is noted that "despite this recipe being called a soufflé, the egg whites are not beaten separately, making this more like a savoury carrot pudding than a soufflé." 


Carrot Soufflé
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2 cups cooked carrots, puréed
1 tsp salt
1/4 cup liquid honey
1 1/4 cups rich milk or thin cream
3 tbsp cornstarch
3 eggs, well-beaten
4 tbsp melted butter

Stir into puréed carrots the salt, honey, and milk with cornstarch disolved in it. Then add the well-beaten eggs and last, the melted butter. Pour into a buttered casserole dish and bake 45 minutes at 400ºF. (Done when table knife inserted into the centre comes out clean.) Serves 6 - 8 

Notes: Tbsp = Tablespoon and tsp = teaspoon 

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Baked Oatmeal Coffee Cake

 

Whether you enjoy this rustic baked oatmeal treat for breakfast or brunch, I'll let you decide. It's straightforward and practically effortless, apart from a bit of mixing. Still this scrumptious dense cake does not disappoint and can be devoured on the go or sitting quietly amongst the mornings hustle and bustle. 


Baked Oatmeal Coffee Cake 
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2 cups (200 g) rolled oats
1 teaspoon baking powder
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon cardamom
2 tablespoons ground flax or wheat bran
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 cups 2% milk or almond milk or whole milk
2/3 cup unsweetened applesauce or pumpkin purée
2 tablespoons maple syrup
1 teaspoon vanilla extract



Crumble topping:
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1/2 cup rolled oats
2 tablespoons brown sugar
4 tablespoons cold butter
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon


Icing:
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1/2 cup icing sugar
2 teaspoons milk



Preheat oven to 375ºF (190ºC). 

Grease an 8 x 8 inch square tin or a 9 x 9 inch square tin. Set aside.

In a medium bowl combine the oats, baking powder, cinnamon, cardamom, ground flax and salt and stir together.

Pour in the milk, applesauce, maple syrup and vanilla extract and stir together. The mixture will be very loose and damp, not to worry. Carefully pour the oaty flotsam mixture into the prepared square tin. 

Make the crumble topping, see the recipe above. Place the rolled oats, sugar and cinnamon into a food processor or blender, and pulsing until finely ground. Add the cold butter and pulse a few times until the butter is incorporated and blended into small chunks.

Sprinkle the crumble topping over the oat mixture and bake for 25 - 30 minutes or until the centre is set. 

Once the coffee cake has cooled a bit, prepare the icing and drizzle over the top. Slice and serve with or without fresh fruit. 

Notes: I did line the bottom of the tin with baking parchment however it's probably unnecessary to do so because the mixture is loose and damp.