Auntie Mable’s creamed onions – a Bone family tradition and a tribute to great lady

A Bone family Thanksgiving or Christmas is never complete without Auntie Mable’s creamed onions.  The first time I tasted the creamed onions I was conflicted – I loved the cream sauce, and especially the buttery HiHo cracker topping, but I DIDN’T like the onions.  (Auntie Mable’s recipe calls for HiHo crackers, but I can rarely find them now, so I use Ritz crackers and silently apologize to Auntie Mable as I put the box of Ritz in my shopping cart.)  I would take a serving of the dish, gobble down the crispy topping with the creaming filling, and to not offend my dear Auntie Mable, I would always nibble at the onions – until one day, I found that I liked the onions too.  I have spoken to others of my cousins and siblings, and several went through the same taste progression.

I know for me and my siblings, we look forward to the creamed onions more than we do the turkey or the dressing or the candied yams or just about anything else – with the exception of Mom’s sour cream raisin pie…and that is a tossup, in my opinion.

Interestingly enough – I acquired a taste for sour cream raisin pie, much the same way I acquired a taste for creamed onions.  I loooooooved the filling, but I wasn’t so enamored of the raisins.  I would eat that pie last, after all the other pies were gone.  I would eat around the raisins, suck every last bit of filling off of them, and leave a pile of rejected raisins on my plate.  Over time, it got to be too much of a bother to do it this way, so I just ate the raisins, and over more time, I decided the raisins were good, and the pie became my favorite!  In fact, today I will ignore other pies if any sour cream raisin remains – and sadly, it seems that most of my siblings, their spouses and their children do likewise…the sour cream raisin pie is usually the first to be devoured.

Mom says that the closest she has found to her recipe (she’s not sure if it is EXACTLY the same) is in this book – except hers is the 1953 edition:

Joy of Cooking

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Auntie Mary was the real gourmet chef in the family.  She made amazing dishes.  She made a cranberry sauce with orange juice and walnuts (I think) that was special.  She always had some special dish each time, and they were always very good.  An aside here – she made a dessert that I only tasted once or twice (and only for a cousin’s birthday) that was all creamy and coconutty and caramel-drizzled heaven – but I cannot remember the name of this (as Ira Reid or Uncle JC would say) extry-special confection.  As I said, I’ve only tasted it once or twice, but the memory of it lingers and nothing has ever measured up to it’s special goodness.  It was the rare dish that was visually spectacular, and tasted better than it looked.  I hope my cousin, Doug (or Barbara, or Caroline, or Russell), reads this and provides the name of this taste of paradise in the comments.

The thing about creamed onions (yes, back to that) is they are good the next day, and they are good cold, or reheated.  Each iteration of creamed onions – fresh-made, leftover, cold, reheated – has its own special qualities to recommend it.  And, in my experience, creamed onions never go bad!

Creamed Onions

Since it is Thanksgiving Day, I think a recipe or two is acceptable.  Notice, my sister uses Ritz in this recipe so it is NOT completely, authentic Auntie Mable creamed onions!

Enough pearl onions (or boiling onions) to cover the bottom of a 9×13 baking dish.  (you can cut this recipe in ½ if you don’t want to make this much)
Cover onions with water in sauce pan & bring to boil.  Boil until onions become translucent & centers begin to pop.  Do not over Boil or they will be watery & loose flavor. Cool onions & remove the skins.  Place in baking dish.
 
Cream Sauce
½ Cup butter
½ Cup Flour
4 Cups Cream
 
Melt butter in sauce pan over medium heat, add flour, cook, stirring continually until mixture is bubbly & the bubbles are whitish – maybe 2 or 3 min. after adding the flour.  Remove from heat, add cream.  Return to heat & continue cooking, stirring continually until sauce begins to thicken.  Pour sauce over boiled onions.
 
Topping
Crush until fine, 2 tubes of Ritz crackers.
Melt ½ cup of butter & mix into Ritz crackers until well blended
Spread crumbs over the top of onions & sauce.
 
Bake for 30 minutes or until sauce is bubbly & topping begins to brown.
 
You can prepare this ahead, except do not put on the topping & keep in the frig for a day or two.  Then bake without the topping until the sauce begins to bubble.  Then add the topping & continue baking until topping browns a bit.  This usually will take about 45 min – 1 hr for the baking when starting with refrigerated onions & sauce.
 
ENJOY!!! & think of Auntie Mable!