Sunday, December 17, 2017

Molly House Rolls

Finger foods like these rolls have long been a welcome addition to any party or meal. Pasta wraps, stuffed with all kinds of mixtures were introduced with other oriental delights to the English people and incorporated into their everyday cuisine by the mid 18th century. These are designed to honor an important part of LGBT history: The Molly Houses of London. Please read the short article after the recipe.


Warm rolls of savory mustard sausage to be dipped into an Asian pear sauce! Excellent bites to start the appetites or just to stave off the “hungries”!


Ingredients:
Rolls
1 lbs pkg uncooked bratwurst
½ onion chopped
2 tbs yellow mustard
1 pgk egg roll wrappers
1 egg


Sauce:
1 can pears in heavy syrup
1 cup teriyaki sauce
¼ cup scallions
spiced rum optional

Directions:


 Do your cutting: chop the onions finely.


For the sauce:
drain the pears and chop finely, cut up the scallions, set aside.

Make the sauce:


In a medium sauce pan heat the sauce with the chopped pears, stirring to blend and thicken (let simmer on low heat for 10 minutes. Set aside (add the scallions & rum just before serving)

Split the bratwursts down the side and empty the sausage out.


In a medium skillet, lightly brown the meat (about 10 minutes) break apart as it cooks, and drain.



Add onions to skillet. Stir occasionally as they soften. Stir in the mustard and let cook for about 7 minutes, or until mustard is well absorbed.


Remove to plate and Let cool completely. 
 
From the egg roll wrap package:

Assemble the rolls:
Lay out some waxed paper.
Beat 1 egg yolk into a small bowl with 1 tbs water. Get out your pastry brush.
Set up a rack to hold the rolls before cooking.

Lay out the stack of wrappers with a point towards you.



Add spoonfuls of mixture in the center of each wrap and “paint the two side points and the top.
Fold up lower point and fold in each side. Then roll it up. The egg wash will be a glue to hold it all together.

Stack on a rack as you finish the rolls.


Heat oil in a clean large skillet. Fry the rolls in batches so they are not crowded in the pan. Once the oil is hot it will only take 1 minute on each side. Flip when golden.



Set them in a 200 degree oven to stay warm as you cook.

When ready: set out the sauce and stir in the scallions and serve as a dipping sauce. May be heated if you wish. 
 

Enjoy!
The sweet pear sauce makes a perfect counter point to the mustard sausage in the rolls.
What a treat!


So happy to be serving my Master Indy!

socialslave

To satisfy and restore.
To nourish, support and maintain.
To gratify, spoil, comfort and please,
to nurture, assist, and sustain
..I cook!

Please buy slave's cookbook:

The Little Black Book of Indiscreet Recipes 

by 








==========
How did they survive?

Throughout history humans have shown basic needs. The need for air and food. The need to love and to have sex. These fundamental drives fuel growth and behaviors. They are essential for life.

For a moment, imagine yourself as a young gay man born back in 17th century England. A time when King Henry VIII proclaimed any type of gay sex punishable by death!

You had felt the urges but knew nothing about them. There was no place to learn what they were. No internet nor electricity. Few printed pages existed but not about that. In fact the chances are, you were never taught to read. How did you live? Find others? Fill your basic needs? Just because guys did not have the same tools we have today doesn't mean they were stupid. Never confuse knowledge with intelligence.

So young gays sought out large groups of men: joined the army or navy, or even became a priest or monk. If you were smart you found a way to teach or perform in entertainments that were the only available media at the time. There you found others!

Large groups of men at times offered chances of sex but also chances of extreme violence. You had to keep up your guard.

They developed their own gay language (Polari), so that finding others was less dangerous. Clubs or meeting places were established throughout London that were known as “molly houses”. The age of molly houses did not last long but established many things that allowed the development of what we now know as gay bars.

Molly Houses
In 1709, the London journalist Ned Ward published an account of “the Mollies Club.” In his descriptions of the “Gang of Sodomitical Wretches” is the clear image of a social club that sounds like a really good time. 
 

A “molly” was a common term for gay, bisexual or queer. A whole molly underworld found its home in London. The clubs and bars where these men congregated were scattered across the city.

The 1533 Buggery Act, sentenced those found guilty of “unnatural sexual act against the will of God and man” to death. In practice, this came to mean any kind of sexual activity between two men. At first, the law was barely applied, but as attitudes changed, enforcement became more vigorous.

Oscar Wilde called homosexuality “the love that dares not speak its name,” others saw it as a crime too shocking to name, with “language ... incapable of sufficiently expressing the horror of it.”

Most writers of the time, trying to wrangle with the idea, seem incapable of getting beyond the impossible question of why women would not be sufficient for these men.
Gay sex remained a capital offense until 1861. In this context, molly houses came to be the scenes of raids and arrests, and their customers the ideal target for blackmailers.

Loopholes in the buggery act

In order to obtain a conviction, it was necessary to prove that both penetration and ejaculation had occurred, and two witnesses were required to prove the crime.

Both the "active" and "passive" partner could be found guilty of this offense. But due to the difficulty of proving actual penetration and ejaculation many men were prosecuted with the reduced charge of “assault with sodomitical intent”.

From the late 1690s, the Societies for the Reformation of Manners, actively pursued: “prostitutes, Sabbath breakers and homosexual men”, through the means of spies to dismantle molly houses and prosecute individuals. The peak of this prosecution was the raid on the most famous molly house, Mother Clap's in 1726.

Molly houses were the most organized phenomenon of London's 18th century homosexual subculture. They were enclosed, private spaces where individuals gathered with a common purpose: socializing and seeking pleasure with partners of the same sex.


Tonight's recipe is to honor these 

establishments and the craftiness of the 

wonderful gay men and women that survived 

in much tougher times. In an era of hatred 

and fear, love flourished bravely! 
 

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