1935 Saskatoon Christmas Recipe - Old Cookbook Show - Glen And Friends Cooking
1935 Saskatoon Christmas Recipe - Old Cookbook Show - Glen And Friends Cooking The recipe today is from the December 20th 1935 edition of the Saskatoon Star Phoenix: Christmas Recipe: Candy Fruit Cake is a bit rich, but good. It's made with: One half cup stoned and chopped dates, 4 tablespoons shredded citron, 4 tablespoons each candied lemon and orange peels, ½ cup pecan nut meats, ½ cup Brazil nut meats, 1 tablespoon orange juice, 2 ounces dipping chocolate, powdered sugar. Put nuts and fruit through food chopper. Mix thoroughly with orange juice. Melt chocolate over hot water and stir into first mixture. Work with a fork until perfectly blended. Pack in a buttered pan. When firm cut in squares and roll in powdered sugar. #LeGourmetTV #GlenAndFriendsCooking #OldCookbookShow Check out our Aviation and Flying Channel: / glenshangar

340 Year Old Apple Pie Recipe From 1685 - Old Cookbook Show - Glen And Friends Cooking

Candy In The 18th Century

1937 Potato Spice Cookies Recipe - Old Cookbook Show - Glen And Friends Cooking

Your Family Will Beg You to Make This Chicken Cacciatore Again and Again

1927 Solid Chocolate Cake Recipe - Old Cookbook Show - Glen And Friends Cooking

Grace Kelly's Marriage Was Much Nastier Than You Thought

Grandma's Recipe Cards: Welsh Cakes

1898 Chocolate Cream Recipe - Old Cookbook Show - Glen And Friends Cooking

Pocket Soup for the 18th Century Traveler

Food That Time Forgot: Tea Caudles

25 The STUPIDEST Car Features Of The 1950s You NEVER SEEN Before!

1938 AppleScotch Pie Recipe - Old Cookbook Show

1939 Anzac Biscuit Recipe - Glen And Friends Cooking - How To Make Anzac Biscuits

Skor Shortbread Crunch Cookies - Glen And Friends Cooking

Hard Times Tomato Soup Cake

80+ Most Beautiful Actresses of the 1980s and 1990 : Then and Now! (Part 2)

Charles Laughton recites President Lincoln's 'Gettysburg Address' - "Ruggles of Red Gap" (1935)

Stop Making Baking So Hard! Easy Blueberry Buttermilk Coffee Cake

America Copied Germany’s Jerry Can — But Missed The One Genius Detail that Made All the Difference

