The topic of fondue arose recently, as it does now and then among friends when drink has been taken.
Everyone in the room recalled their parents’ fondue set and its occasional outings along with the funky pantsuits and false eyelashes of yore. But there was general disagreement about what fondue actually involved - some purists insisted that only cheese and bread was called for, while others of us recalled boiling oil and lumps of meat.
Serendipitously, the day after this conversation my beloved spied this book at a market and swooped. I suspect we will never actually use it, but it does make an entertaining conversation starter if you leave it on the coffee table. Published 1971, and in mint condition, Fondue and Table Top Cookery by Marion Howells runs the gamut of things-cooked-at-table, from your trad cheese fondues to your Oriental Fondue (meat in stock) to some rather desperate inclusions such as omelettes and dubious-sounding desserts (Apricots Jubilee, anyone?).
On fondue, Marion tells us that:
This popular dish originated in Switzerland. Many stories are told of the villagers being isolated in the long winter months, and supplies of food becoming short, they were forced to rely on local produce like cheese, wine and home made bread. As the cheese became dry they melted it in their wine.
So there we have it - a yicky gloopy mix borne of near-starvation becomes a classic fad for ‘entertaining of the more intimate type’, and into the bargain produces perhaps the earliest example of Fusion Food. As evidence, I leave you with the list of ingredients for my favourite recipe in this collection.
Fondue Bengali
- 1 clove garlic
- 1.5 cups dry white wine
- 1 tsp lemon juice
- 4 cups grated Gruyere cheese
- 2 cups grated Emmenthal cheese
- 2 tsp cornflour
- 2 tablespoons curry powder
- 3 tablespoons Kirsch
- white pepper, cayenne pepper
- mango chutney
- French bread

Okay, so
As I passed the excellent
Don’t get me wrong, I love tofu. In good Thai and Japanese restaurants, or when somebody skilled cooks it for me. Agedashi tofu is one of my favourite things in the world. And at our favourite Thai, the beloved Ploy, there are a couple of tofu dishes to die for - one stir-fried tofu with bean sprouts, and the other a divine larb tofu salad.
I dried and fried the tofu cubes first, then drained them on kitchen paper - then did the rest of the stirfry and then tossed the tofu back in at the end with the fish sauce and basil. The result? Pretty damn fine! So here is the befuddled recipe, which can obviously be mixed and matched and altered as you wish.




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