Sometimes, leftovers need more than the microwave.
Deep Dish Chicken Pie
Cut chicken into bite-sized pieces, removing skin and bones. Place in the baking dish. Mix stock, flour, and seasonings to taste. Pour around chicken. It should almost but not quite cover all of the meat-- add more if it doesn't. Cut vent slits in the pastry, then lay it on top of the pie. Bake 20 minutes. Then reduce to 350° and bake 30 minutes more. Let rest at least 10 minutes before serving. After removing the pie from the oven, make the gravy to go with it. Brown Sauce: 4 tbsp. butter 4 tbsp. flour 1½ cups stock or water Salt and pepper Lemon juice Worcestershire sauce Cook the butter until lightly browned. Add the flour and stir until it is a deep golden color. Gradually add the stock, a little at a time, stirring very hard to prevent any lumps. Bring to a simmer, then add salt, pepper, lemon juice, and Worcestershire sauce to taste. If desired, half the stock can be replaced with tomato puree (fresh or canned).
Source: Mrs. Mary Martensen's Century of Progress Cook Book (recipes from The Chicago American), 1933, via The Internet Archive
|
I have been exhuming long-forgotten leftovers out of the chest freezer and giving myself time away from the stove. As much as I love cooking, I've really enjoyed not having to come up with fresh nightly answers to "What are we having for dinner?" It's also been really amusing to say "I made this three months ago!" And of course, I've headed off any grousing by saying that if we throw out the leftovers, we're sending grocery money to the dump.
With all that said, I was going to serve this grilled chicken from last year until I opened the container and looked at it.
They look leathery and awful, don't they? I knew they were perfectly good. I remembered how much I liked them the first time. But I absolutely did not want to eat them, not even if I microwaved them. So that night, I made myself a sandwich and left everyone else to fend for themselves.
For reference, the chicken looked like this when we put it away.
Last year's chicken stubbornly remained in the fridge. But even if none of us wanted it, have you seen the price of chicken lately? I nearly ground the meat into unrecognizable sausages, but that was too much work for leftovers.
This brings us to Mrs. Mary Martensen's recipes. I've really come to like this book since I found it on the Internet Archive. Like, really like it. When I saw that whoever scanned it had a copy with a ripped-out page in the middle of the deep-dish chicken pie, I had to have what was missing. And no, I didn't care about Mrs. Mary Martensen's chicken pie until I couldn't have it.
![]() |
| Of course the rip goes right through the baking time. |
There was only one thing to do: get the recipe at no expense to myself.
I poked around online and found a fair number of people selling this cookbook. For a semi-disposable book that was only sold for a few months in 1933 (it was a World's Fair promotion for one of Chicago's newspapers), Mrs. Mary Martensen's Century of Progress Cook Book seems to have had a lot of staying power in its time. These staple-bound handouts usually go in the trash without inspiring too much guilt over throwing out books. So even though there are a lot of short-run pamphlets out there, finding a specific title can be either tricky or impossible.
However, copies of Mrs. Mary Martensen's book steadily flow onto Ebay and other places. And most of them are heavily splattered, suggesting they were used instead of boxed up with the rest of the World's Fair keepsakes.
It is also possible the Chicago American had several boxes of them after the fair, which they gave to anyone who accidentally wandered into the office.
Honestly, I'm not surprised this book is still easy to find. Based on what we've made so far, I wouldn't have thrown it away either.
Back to the pie, I contacted various people selling this book and asked if they could scan the missing page. (They didn't need to know that I don't actually have a copy of the book.) Most of them didn't respond. A couple of people said yes, if you buy the book. But one blessed person sent me scans of both sides of the page, adding a cheery "Hope that helps!"
Even if I wasn't trying to revive leftovers, we couldn't really have made this recipe as written. The directions start with cutting a raw chicken into serving pieces and then simmering for "one to three hours." You need a tough old bird if you want it to be good after cooking it for that long, and you can't get those today without special-ordering (or having a friend who agrees to send you their older hens "cut and wrapped").
Of course, since I hadn't boiled my own chicken, I didn't have any stock for the recipe. I put the butt end of a celery bunch (remember the winter salad?) into the pressure cooker, added an onion because everything needs onions, and let it go for twenty minutes. I didn't even peel the onion because why bother?
A few minutes, we had some surprisingly well-colored vegetable stock. I hadn't expected this to work so well.
The chicken looked better just for cutting it up. This recipe was already doing wonders for our leftovers, and we hadn't even put them in the oven yet.
The directions say to pour "stock which has been thickened with four tablespoons flour" over the chicken. I was going to heat the floury stock until it gelled, but I don't have a pot small enough for something like this. I then decided that people back in 1933 probably wouldn't have perched a teacup-sized pot over a burner anyway.
To my surprise, we were already more or less done. Even after reading the recipe multiple times, I didn't realize that we only have to put chopped chicken into a pan, pour some stock around it, and then lay a crust on top. I did that and muttered "Well that's the recipe, I guess."
Mrs. Mary Martensen says to roll the pastry out a half-inch thick, but we already know that heavy slabs of pie crust are bad. Perhaps she meant to say biscuit dough instead of pie crust. However, I didn't think of that until I had already made the pastry.
I didn't set out to make puff pastry, but it looks like I did anyway. Our crust rose up to a truly stupendous height. I don't know how I ever made a pie before finding my great-grandmother's Perfect Pie article.
After the pie was baked, I figured it needed to rest a bit before cutting (at least long enough to stop bubbling). So I decided that it would be ready to serve by the time the gravy was. I was going to make what the book calls a "Standard White Sauce," but the one below it looked a lot better:
The recipe starts with browned butter, which is an unexpectedly fancy touch. We are next directed to add the flour and "stir until well browned." I didn't know what "well browned" should look like. Really, I haven't made brown gravy since the liver paste. I decided our flour was "well browned" enough when it reached this color:
We're supposed to season this with lemon juice, salt, pepper, and Worcestershire sauce. I can't pronounce that last one, and have long given up. I asked someone else in the kitchen "Where's the bibbleblat sauce?" (Answer: "Top shelf, next to the pancake mix.")
The lemon juice tasted out-of-place. On top of that, the gravy needed a lot more help from the spice cabinet. I added a heavy-handed shake of cayenne, a bit more black pepper, and then a pinch and a half of nutmeg. That last one was exactly what we needed.
Flavor aside, gravy has always been hit-or-miss for me. I either make it far too runny, or it comes out like butter-flavored paste. But I followed Mrs. Martensen's measurements exactly and got perfection.
Now that our pie was ready, let's see what we have got: meaty chunks in gravy under a flaky crust. Some of the flour in the pie settled to the bottom of the pan before it got hot enough to gel, but we still had a really nice sauce on the meat.
This recipe didn't magically transform our leftovers, but it did make them a lot better than they were. And to my surprise, the lemon juice in the brown sauce made sense after pouring onto dinner. It added just a bit of pep to the pie. Some sauces taste fine on their own, but this one is incomplete without dinner under it.
I was thinking this might be a nice way to revive leftover pot roast, which also never seems to be nearly as good when you reheat it. Or I might cut in some raw potatoes next time, which I am halfway sure would be cooked by the time the pie is done.
In closing, this was a nice, simple recipe for a very filling dinner. I'm glad some random antique seller scanned the page for me.











































