Titanic Recipes For Your Home Menu (2024)

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Re-create some of the famous dishes in which that first class passengers indulged before the ship went down.

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Don’t worry if you couldn’t book passage at this year's Titanic culinary events. Host your own Titanic dinner party instead with the help of Chef Stephen Proctor and Chef Greg Ziegenfuss, who have shared heirloom period recipes along with one from the Campbell House Museum.

See related article: Titanic Last Meals Commemorate Centennial

The following vintage recipes were featured on the Titanic’s last menu and are updated for home cooks who wish to prepare their own commemorative dinners.

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Canapés A L’Amiral
(Courtesy of Fox Executive Chef Stephen Proctor)

  • 1/2 thin baguette loaf
  • 1 teaspoon limejuice
  • 10 small shrimp, halved lengthwise, cooked
  • Fresh flat leaf parsley, or chervil
  • 2 tablespoons flying fish roe, or your favorite caviar

Shrimp Butter

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  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
  • 1 large shallot, minced
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 8 ounces shrimp in the shell
  • 1/4 cup brandy
  • 4-ounce cream cheese
  • 2 tablespoons butter, softened
  • 1tablespoon tomato paste
  • 1/2 teaspoon each salt and pepper
  • Dash vanilla

For the butter: in a sauté pan, heat the oil over medium heat, add the shallot and garlic, cook, stirring often for 5 minutes or until soft. Add the shrimp, continue cooking for an additional 3-4 minutes or until the shells are pink and flesh is opaque. Remove shrimp mixture to bowl of food processor. Return pan to stove and add the brandy and reduce down to a glaze, Add to the shrimp Puree the shrimp mixture until finely chopped, add the cream cheese, butter, tomato paste, salt, pepper and vanilla. Process until almost smooth, press the mixture through a sieve set over a bowl, discarding the shells

Slice the baguette into 20 thin slices, place on baking sheet and toast under the broiler for about 1 minutes until lightly browned.

Drizzle the limejuice over cooked shrimp halves and reserve.

Place shrimp butter in a piping bag fitted with a star tube. Pipe the butter onto toasts. Top each with a shrimp half and a parsley leaf. Top each with the caviar or roe and serve. Makes 20 canapés

Chicken Fricassee
(Courtesy of Greg Ziegenfuss, Executive Chef at Butler’s Pantry)

  • 8 skinless chicken thighs
  • 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon white pepper
  • 1 teaspoon dried thyme
  • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1 1/2 cups assorted fresh mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 cup onion, diced
  • 1 tablespoon finely minced garlic
  • 1 3/4 cups chicken stock
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 1 tablespoon parsley, minced

Combine flour, salt, pepper and thyme. Dredge chicken with flour mixture. Reserve unused flour. Melt butter in a heavy skillet; add chicken and brown on both sides. Remove chicken; add the onions, mushrooms and celery, sauté until just tender yet still crisp. Add garlic and sauté for a minute. Add reserved flour to mixture and slowly whisk in the chicken stock; cooking until thickened. Add cream, bring to a boil, add chicken, and reduce heat to a simmer. Cover and allow to simmer for 25 minutes or until chicken is tender and juices run clear (internal temperature should be 165 degrees). Transfer to a platter, garnish with chopped parsley. Served with rice pilaf or buttered pasta. Makes 4-6 servings

Haddock Veronique
(Courtesy of Greg Ziegenfuss, Executive Chef at Butler’s Pantry)

  • 4 (6-8 ounce) haddock filets
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • juice and zest on 1 lemon
  • 1 cup clam juice or seafood stock
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 2 tablespoons finely chopped shallots
  • 1 teaspoon minced garlic
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 1 tablespoon fresh chopped tarragon
  • 1/2 cup each red and green grapes, halved

Lightly season filets with salt and pepper. Place filets in a single layer on a shallow sauté pan. Combine the wine lemon juice, lemon zest and clam juice; then pour over the fish. Place over a medium high heat and bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, cover and simmer until fish is almost cooked, about 4 minutes.

Remove fish and place in a baking dish to keep warm. Bring the poaching liquid to a boil; reduce by half, strain through a fine mesh strainer. In a small saucepan melt butter; add shallots and garlic, sauté for about a minute. Whisk in flour to form a blonde roux; cook for 2 minutes. Slowly whisk in reduced poaching liquid and bring to a boil. Stir in heavy cream, cook for 3 more minutes. Remove from heat, stir in tarragon, taste and adjust seasoning with salt and pepper. Pour sauce over filets, top with grapes and place in the broiler for about a minute or until sauce begins to lightly brown. Serve immediately. Makes 4 servings.

Roman Punch was part of the eleven course meal served on the Titanic. It was also a popular Victorian recipe and appears in the 19th century handwritten recipe collection of Virginia Campbell, housed at the Campbell House Museum.

Roman Punch
(Courtesy of The Campbell House Museum and Suzanne Corbett, Food Historian)

  • 1 cup cold water
  • 1 cup white sugar
  • 4 large lemons
  • 1 large orange
  • 3 egg whites
  • 6 ozs. champagne or sparkling wine

Place water in a heavy saucepan over a low heat; sprinkle in sugar and swirl until it dissolves. Bring to a boil for five minutes. Grate zest of lemons and oranges and add to sugar water mixture. Squeeze juice form lemons and orange, and add to sugar mixture. Let stand until cool. Beategg whites with a whisk until foamy, but not to the soft peak stage. Add to sugar / juice mixture. Strain into a non-aluminum container, add champagne and freeze. When mixture begins to freeze, stir occasionally until completely frozen. Cover. Serve scooped into small glass bowls or saucer champagne glasses. Serves 4. Will kept in the freezer for several days.

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More from Fenton-High Ridge

Titanic Recipes For Your Home Menu (2024)

FAQs

What was the food menu on the Titanic? ›

On the evening of April 11, 1912, first-class passengers aboard the Titanic enjoyed a decadent feast. At dinner that night, they ate oysters, salmon with hollandaise sauce, beef, squab, lamb with mint sauce, roast chicken and many other upscale dishes. The ship struck an iceberg three days later.

What was the food list on the Titanic? ›

Curried chicken, baked fish, spring lamb, mutton, and roast turkey were common menu items, as was pudding for dessert. The night the Titanic sank, the doomed second class passengers had plum pudding, also known as Christmas pudding.

How much is a Titanic menu worth? ›

Aldridge, managing director for the auction house, told the newspaper. A first-class dinner menu from onboard the Titanic the night of April 11, 1912, a day after the ship set sail, sold at a U.K. auction on Saturday for £83,000 ($102,000). Photo courtesy of Henry Aldridge & Son.

What did 3rd class eat on the Titanic for breakfast? ›

On the day that Titanic sank, third-class passengers enjoyed oatmeal porridge and milk, vegetable stew, fried tripe and onions, bread and butter, marmalade, Swedish bread, tea, and coffee for breakfast.

What did 1st class eat on the Titanic for lunch? ›

LUNCHEON (April 14, 1912)
  • FROM THE GRILL. Grilled Mutton Chops. Mashed, Fried & Baked Potatoes. Custard Pudding. Apples Meringue Pasty.
  • BUFFET. Salmon Mayonnaise Potted Shrimps. Norwegian Anchovies Soused Herrings. Plain & Smoked Sardines. Roast Beef. ...
  • CHEESE. Cheshire, Stilton, Gorgonzola, Edam, Camembert, Roquefort, St. Ivel,

What did 1st class eat on the Titanic for breakfast? ›

1st Class Breakfast
Baked Apples 1Fresh FruitStewed Prunes
Quaker Oats 2Boiled Hominy 3Puffed Rice 4
Fresh Herrings
Findon Haddock 5Smoked Salmon
Grilled MuttonKidneys & Bacon
13 more rows

What did 2nd class eat on the Titanic for breakfast? ›

For breakfast, most 2nd class passengers can enjoys Yarmouth bloaters (smoked herring), ox kidney and bacons, sausages, grilled ham and fried eggs. Fried potatoes, Vienna rolls & Graham rolls, soda scones, buckwheat cakes, maple syrup and various conserve jams, and of course tea and coffee.

What did 2nd class eat on the Titanic for lunch? ›

Second Class Food

If you look at the second class menu you can see that they had less minced meat loaves and rare meats than first class. They had more common meats such as chicken and turkey with elaborate sauces. As you can also see, they had less choices and groups to choose from.

What is the most expensive thing found on the Titanic? ›

Perhaps the most valuable item lost during the sinking of the Titanic, Merry-Joseph Blondel's painting, La Circassienne au bain, would be worth around R55 million if it wasn't at the bottom of the ocean.

What was 1st class like on the Titanic? ›

First class

The more energetic passengers could play deck games, such as shuffleboard, and use the gym, squash courts and swimming pool on board. Games such as chess and backgammon could be played on the deck. Titanic had 39 private suites located at the top of the ship.

How much did Titanic cost in today's money? ›

Built at an estimated cost of $7.5 million in 1912, in today's dollars it would cost roughly $400 million to construct. The vessel sat untouched at the bottom of the North Atlantic Ocean for more than seven decades until it was discovered by a joint American-French expedition in 1985.

What did they drink on the Titanic? ›

Cargo manifests from the Titanic chronicle a grand selection of spirits available aboard the ship — wine, vermouth, Champagne, Cognac, brandy, and whiskey were all on offer.

How much was a first class ticket on the Titanic? ›

The first class tickets ranged enormously in price, from $150 (about $1700 today) for a simple berth, up to $4350 ($50,000) for one of the two Parlour suites. Second class tickets were $60 (around $700) and third class passengers paid between $15 and $40 ($170 - £460).

Did the Titanic have a pool? ›

The Titanic had a swimming pool on board

In first class there were many new attractions such as squash courts, a Turkish bath, a gymnasium, a barber shop and also the first swimming pool on board a ship. Even the cheaper third class cabins were of a better standard than those on other liners.

What did 3rd class eat on the Titanic for lunch? ›

The lunch menu consisted of Bouillon soup, roast beef and brown gravy, boiled green beans, potatoes, cabin biscuits, bread, and prunes and rice. Finally, for dinner, the menu was Rabbit pie, baked potatoes, bread and butter, rhubarb and ginger jam, Swedish bread, and tea.

What was the third class lunch menu on Titanic? ›

On the other hand, the Third class passengers were served Porridge, Roast Beef, Boiled Potatoes, Brown Gravy, Rice Soup, Cabin Biscuits, Sweet Corn along with Fresh Bread & Butter, Smoked Herrings, Jacket Potatoes, Ham & Egg, and Swedish bread.

What did they eat in 1912? ›

Ordinary people ate food that was far more mundane. Red flannel hash — it's corned beef hash with extra vegetables — was popular, and so were sandwiches of every variety. More expensive fare might include a hot turkey sandwich or half of a broiled guinea hen.

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