In my younger days, I used to bake a great Shrimp de Jonghe dish. The recipe was from the Women's American ORT cookbook "Portal to Good Cooking." ORT stands for Organization for Rehabilitation through Training and is a Jewish charitable group. My Mom, aunts and female cousins all belonged at one time or anther.
The ORT cookbook was like a church cookbook where members contributed recipes. The first edition was published in the late 1950s and unfortunately I no longer can find my Mom's copy. But I have the shrimp de Jonghe recipe.
The reason I don't make this dish any longer is that for two pounds of shrimp, the recipe calls for two-and-a-half sticks of butter! That's enough to raise anyone's cholesterol count off the charts.
I seem to recall reading that Mrs. de Jonghe had a restaurant near 63rd St and south Halsted just about when the Columbian Exposition of 1893 opened. I wonder if the original elevated line ran from Stony Island west to Halsted. It would have been easy for fair-goers to travel the three miles to her restaurant on the El. Or else they could have taken a cable car.
Perhaps someone else might comment on this. But she's often credited for creating the dish right here in Chicago.
Wikipedia has a different take on the origins of the dish. (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrimp_de_Jonghe)
Another source states that the de Johnges were Belgian and had a restaurant on the South Side of Chicago. (
http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory. ... s/126.html)
Any comments?
GP Bob