Real vegetarian food, served in an imaginary world...

Thursday, 11 September 2025

Fantasy Veggie Dinner Guest - ELIZABETH VON ARMIN


Mary Annette Beauchamp was born in Australia in 1866 but spent her formative years travelling around Europe with her family, marrying a member of the Prussian aristocracy.

Living at her husband's estate with three young children, she wrote Elizabeth and her German Garden, published in 1898, becoming 'Elizabeth' from that time forward.

Her most famous and loveliest novel was published in 1922. 
The Enchanted April is the tale of four very different women who find contentment and purpose on a holiday to Italy.

Italian food is initially a challenge for them, as played to great effect in the 1991 film version:

LEMON AND GARLIC SPAGHETTI with AIR FRYER GOOEY 
CHEESY BREAD
Serves 2

Put a pan of water on to boil.
Then, prepare the bread.
Mix 120g cream cheese with 100g grated cheddar, chopped chives, 2tsp mixed herbs, salt and black pepper.
Cut large sections from a baguette and split open.
Spread the filling very generously, then close up.
Wrap in foil and place in the bottom of the air fryer.
Cook for 10 to 15 minutes at 200C.

Meanwhile, when the water has boiled, start the pasta.

Bring a pan of water to the boil and add the spaghetti. Cook for about 10 minutes.
Heat 1tbsp butter and 1tbsp olive oil in a pan. Stir in 2tsp garlic flakes and cook for about 30 seconds.
Add the spaghetti and a dollop of the cooking water.
Stir in 1tsp chopped basil and 2tsp lemon juice.

To serve:

Unwrap the bread pieces...
...to make this lovely side:
Put the spaghetti in a bowl
Can be served with pangrattato and basil leaves.

Fantasy Veggie Dinner Guest - RICHARD NIXON

Richard Milhous Nixon was the 37th President of the United States and could, indeed, be remembered not for his resignation, but for his many achievements: his first term in office oversaw the beginning of the withdrawal of American troops from the chaos of the Vietnam War and the Apollo 11 moon landing; as a Quaker, Nixon could have avoided active service in World War II, yet he joined the US Navy; in the US Senate in the 1950s, he voted for Civil Rights and foreign aid.
When he was first elected President in 1969, he advocated peace: In these difficult years, America has suffered from a fever of words; from inflated rhetoric that promises more than it can deliver; from angry rhetoric that fans discontents into hatreds; from bombastic rhetoric that postures instead of persuading. We cannot learn from one another until we stop shouting at one another, until we speak quietly enough so that our words can be heard as well as our voices.
Yet, he failed to live up to the 'glamour' of the Kennedy years and journalists from newspapers which had not overtly questioned possible covert practices in the 1960s, began to  
increase their scrutiny of the politicians of the 1970s.
In 1974, after the infamous Supreme Court Case, United States v. Nixon, the 'Watergate Tapes' were ordered to be delivered up.
So, with a great deal of irony - which I'm sure he would have appreciated, Zelda will be serving

QUORN SUPREME


Serves 2

1tbsp oil
4 quorn fillets
1 onion, chopped
8 mushrooms, sliced
parsley, chopped finely
2 cloves garlic, crushed
200ml vegetable stock
½tsp mustard
2tbsp fat free yogurt (or replace with double cream if you're feeling decadent)
black pepper


Spray oil in a pan and fry the fillets until slightly browned on each side.

Remove from the pan. Fry onion and mushrooms and cook very gently until softened.
Add garlic and cook further.
Pour in stock mixed with mustard and sprinkle in half the parsley. 
Replace the quorn fillets.
Reduce and then cool slightly before mixing in the yogurt and the rest of the parsley along with the black pepper.
Lovely with lots of healthy vegetables.