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"tuna casserole" news and stories

Happy National Macaroni and Grand Marnier Day!

Mac and cheeseI don't know how these two food holidays ended up on the same day, but today is both National Macaroni Day and National Grand Marnier Day.

And, no, I couldn't find a recipe that has both of them as ingredients.

Here are a bunch of macaroni and cheese recipes from AllRecipes.com, and here's some from southernfood.about.com. In England they just call it macaroni cheese, without the "and." And here's a tuna casserole recipe using macaroni. My mom made a variation of this many times when I was a kid.

For dessert, how about some Grand Marnier Cranberry Muffins? For a drink, how about a Grand Romance? Full recipe after the jump.

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Filed under: Trends, On the Blogs, Ingredients, Drink Recipes, Holidays

Twelve (or more) ways to tuna casserole

tuna casseroleTuna casserole is, likely, the ultimate in American food. It's not hamburgers, no, it's not meatloaf, and it's definitely not apple pie. The French invented apple pie, after all, and the Viennese probably developed the precursor to meatloaf. They eat hamburgers everywhere.

But tuna, mixed with noodles, cheese and one of a variety of canned or frozen vegetables: that's got to be America's very own. Tuna casserole is to America what cassoulet is to the French: every homey cook has her own recipe, one of endless variations on a common theme (a blueprint, if you will).

Every tuna casserole has one thing in common: tuna. Let's say, for the sake of argument, two cans of the stuff - that's 12 ounces, or 1 1/2 cups, or about 350g. And let's say every casserole is cooked in a three-quart casserole dish, in a 400F oven for 25 minutes. For most of these recipes, you can basically follow my aforementioned tuna casserole blueprint; I'll point out differences in procedure along the way.

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Filed under: Lists, Retro cookery, Ingredients, How To, Methods

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Slashfood is going retro Tuesday, January 31

retro cookery
When I was focusing on slow cooking last week, I picked up a couple of 1950s and 1960s cookbooks. Immediately all we could talk about on the Slashfood chatline was retro cookery, casseroles, and fifties recipes. We were tittering about "Oriental cookery" and the overuse of canned, condensed soups. We were waxing eloquent about tuna casserole. (Well, I was waxing eloquent about tuna.)

Tuesday, then, we'll be taking you back to the 1940s, 50s and 60s. We'll be making tuna casseroles 20 ways. We'll discuss MSG - then a miracle ingredient called for in nearly every cookbook - and we'll reprise our favorite meatloaf and macaroni & cheese recipes.

We'll take you through a few more vintage cookbooks, we'll explore the wonders of 50s-style Chop Suey, we'll delight in frozen peas & carrots, we'll put "hidden surprises" in everything we can. We'll bring you back 50 years to the era where "housewife" was a designation of pride and little boys wore sailor suits. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have Chicken Pie De Luxe to start baking...

Filed under: Site Announcements, Retro cookery, Ingredients

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