In the two previous posts I wrote about Genevieve Callahan's The California Cook Book for Indoor and Outdoor Eating. Click here to see the post with the dressing in it.
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Found on archive.org. An amazing source! |
She mentioned a "Fluffy Fruit Dressing" several times but does not have a recipe specifically named that. One clue she left was that it was in the dressing section, so after reading all the recipes carefully, I concluded that what she really meant was the "Women's Club Fruit Dressing." (Pages 38-39) It is a cooked, flavored dressing that is blended with whipped cream just before serving, thus "fluffy".
To be fair, it could also be the recipe above it, "Old Fashioned Cooked Dressing" because it, too, is mixed with whipped cream when used with fruit salads. But its main flavors are vinegar, mustard, and celery seed whereas the Women's Club dressing's flavors were mainly currant and lemon.
This seemed just right to go with the persimmon and pineapple salad. And, as you saw in the previous post, it was!
My Notes
I could not find currant jelly at the store, but I did buy a jar of currant preserves -- currants in a sweetened syrup. So I drained the syrup off the fruit by pressing it through a sieve and used 1/2 cup of the syrup. I did not need to melt it because it was already liquid.
I think it is better to beat the egg whites with the salt and sugar before cooking the lemon, sugar, and yolks mixture. That way you don't overcook the mixture while beating the whites and it is still hot when the whites are mixed in.
The yolk mixture never got thick while cooking, but it did thicken, so I call that a win. After it chilled, it was thick.
I used 1 1/4 cups heavy whipping cream that was, after beating, mixed with most of the cooked dressing.
The cooked dressing ingredients
With the currant syrup.
Folding in the egg whites. |
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