Giblet gravy, anyone? Old-time holiday recipes resurface from Manitoba Hydro - Action News
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Manitoba

Giblet gravy, anyone? Old-time holiday recipes resurface from Manitoba Hydro

Some bygone Manitoba Hydro recipes may provide a clue as to why Santa's belly shakes like a bowl of jelly.

Indulgent ingredients may offer clue as to why Santa's belly shakes like a bowl of jelly

The 17-page booklet is believed to have been originally issued back in the early 1940s by City of Winnipeg Hydro. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

NOTE: This story was originally published onDec. 27, 2017

Gather your turkey drippings,candied cherries,and crates of butter and brown sugar.

Manitoba Hydro has reissued a booklet of classic Christmas recipes that harken back to amore lavish time when there weren't 24-hour fitness centres in every neighbourhood.

"People reading this will know it was done in a different time, before there were concerns of cholesterol or fat content or that type of thing," said BruceOwen, spokesman for Manitoba Hydro.

"Obviously, people like to indulge over the holidays [and] with some of these recipes you are definitely indulging."

One of the recipes, for dark Christmas cake, calls for one pound of butter, three pounds of brown sugar and eight eggs. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

For example, the recipe in the booklettitled An Old-Fashioned Christmasfor darkChristmas cake calls for one pound (nearly half a kilogram) of butter, three pounds (almost 1.5 kilos) of brown sugar and eight eggs.

"Right there, you can feel, 'OK, I'm putting on weight now, just reading about it,'" Owen said.

The 17-page booklet, which Owen believes was originally issued back in the early 1940sby City of Winnipeg Hydro, includes cooking instructions for everything from the main-course turkeyto stuffing, relish, puddings, sauces, salads, pies, pastries, cookies, cakes, candies, icings, tartsand even Norwegian Christmas bread.

A Hydro employee found a copy inside her mom's house earlier this year and brought it to the office. Hydro's social media manager, Riley McDonald, then came up with the idea of republishing a recipe each Thursday on the corporation's Facebook and Twitter pages, Owen said.

"Almost instantly, it became a bit of a hit with our customers," Owen said, noting the posts are being shared many times. "And there were a number of people saying, 'Thanks for posting this recipecan I have the whole booklet, please?'"

Fun for Open Fires

So Hydro reprinted the booklet replete with the old illustrations,games and holiday decorating tips.

If you're interested in the decorations, save your soup can lids for cutting into theshapes of stars, bells andflowers, and then painting with nail polish.

There are also tips for hosting a successful Christmas party, with advice on table settings and name cards, while theFun for Open Firescategory suggestsways to festively colour up the flames in your fireplace.

Use evergreen twigs to create a tiny fence around the frosted cardboard house that will be set up as the centrepiece on the children's table. Mothballs can be turned into dancing snowballs with the help of citric acid, the booklet suggests.

Owen can'tsayfor sure whether the recipes still hold up or not he hasn't heard back from anyone who has tried any of them out.

"No one yetwho'sgone and said, 'Hey, the ornamental frosting recipe was absolutely a smash,' or 'the mock almond icing was also great,'" he said.

"I mean, some of this is stuff you still make now with turkey, you just don't call it giblet gravy anymore. Other stuff in here, I'm not too sure if people have made in a long time."

There are also tips for hosting a successful Christmas party with advice on table settings and name cards. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

Owen can't offer his own reviews, either, because he hasn't tried any himself.

"I'm on kind of a dietary thing. I've gotta watch my weight, gotta watch my figure," he said, but quickly added hewon't promise to hold off.

"I like the chocolate cookies and theChristmasshortbread shortbread you can never have too much of."

The booklet is also available at theManitoba Electrical Museum and Education Centre,680 Harrow St., or bycontacting Hydro through its Facebook or Twitter pages. You can also read it below.

"We're always looking to try to do different things using our social media and engaging our customers. And this has proved to be a surprise hit," he said.

"There's no harm in trying something different but you don't want to be making some of these recipes every day of the year."

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