Title: Lowney's Cook Book
Author: Maria Willett Howard
Release date: August 14, 2016 [eBook #52800]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Emmy, MWS and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive)
We are giving the public in this new edition eighteen admirable colored plates on three inserts which show the two most common methods of cutting beef, a chapter on economical dishes, one on Southern or Creole dishes, and about fifty new receipts, in addition to the same superfine cook book that has been received with so much favor.
It is our aim to improve the book in every way and keep it abreast of the times. No one—not even the United States government—has ever attempted such expensive illustrations of cuts of meat, and we believe they will be appreciated by every one who has occasion to order provisions.
The price of the book remains the same, and we are glad to furnish a greatly improved cook book of increased cost as our recognition of the friendly attitude of the great public toward our goods.
Boston.
We present this cook book with confidence that it brings up to date the modern possibilities of the table. It is prepared by a woman who has devoted her life to scientific and artistic cooking, and who has recently been honored by appointment to full charge of the culinary department of one of the most advanced colleges for self-supporting women in the country. She speaks with knowledge and authority.
We hope the book will contribute something to the fine art of living in many homes, making those homes the happier and more attractive for the husband and children, and solving many a problem for brides and beginners.
Thousands of our most valued customers cannot afford to prepare many of these dishes very often for their tables. But there are special occasions when we all feel that we can have the best for ourselves and our guests. This book will stand the strain of such occasions.
There are hundreds of simple dishes here for all tastes, suitable for all pocket-books. With this book as a guide, it will be possible for any woman to live within her means and still have that infinite variety on the table which means so much for appetite and health, which we all wish for and which we wish for you all.
Boston.
PART I | ||
PAGE | ||
Value of Food to the Body | 3 | |
Methods of Cooking | 7 | |
Just How | 10 | |
Carving | 15 | |
Marketing | 18 | |
Dinners and Luncheons | 25 | |
Butler’s Duties | 31 | |
Garnishings | 32 | |
Weights and Measures | 33 | |
PART II. RECEIPTS | ||
CHAPTER | ||
I. | First Course Dishes | 37 |
II. | Soups | 42 |
III. | Fish | 69 |
IV. | Meats | 82 |
V. | Vegetables | 103 |
VI. | Cereals | 115 |
VII. | Eggs | 118 |
VIII. | Sauces for Meat and Vegetables | 124 |
IX. | Entrées | 134 |
X. | Bread | 164 |
XI. | Salads | 181 |
XII. | Sandwiches | 197[viii] |
XIII. | Desserts | 203 |
XIV. | Cake and Cookies; Frostings and Fillings | 258 |
XV. | Frozen Dishes | 293 |
XVI. | Beverages | 306 |
XVII. | Fruits and Nuts and Candy | 313 |
XVIII. | Preserving | 318 |
XIX. | Chafing Dish Delicacies | 340 |
XX. | Cookery for the Sick and Convalescent | 349 |
XXI. | Creole Dishes | 360 |
XXII. | Economical Receipts | 372 |
Bibliography | 385 | |
Glossary | 387 | |
Index | 389 |
“Food is that which when taken into the body tends either to build tissue or to yield energy.”
The chief offices of food are to build the material of the body, to repair the waste which is continually going on and to yield heat to keep the body warm.
Foods may be divided into tissue-building foods and fuel foods.
The tissue-building foods are such foods as milk, eggs, cheese, wheat, meat and the legumes. The fuel foods are sugars and starches and fats and oils.
In order to keep the body in a good condition a combination of the tissue-building foods and the fuel foods is necessary, with a supply of water to dissolve them. About 125 grams of tissue-building foods and 550 grams of the fuel foods is the amount required daily. A mixed diet, therefore, is the ideal diet for the healthy adult.
The changing of the tissues and the assimilation of food are very rapid in childhood and youth, so that the system demands at that time an abundant supply of such foods as meat, milk and eggs. When middle age is reached, the amount of such food should be decreased. Otherwise the tax on the organs which take care of the wastes will be so great that disease will follow.
Thus it is clear that people of different ages require different combinations and amounts of food. The kinds of food required to nourish the healthy body vary also with the sex, occupation and climate, as well as with the[4] age and peculiarities of the individual. In order to judge of the relative value of food to the body it is necessary to find out what percentage of each nutritive constituent the food contains, how much energy it is capable of yielding, how much of the food eaten is digested, how much is absorbed, and whether the nutritive constituents are obtained at a reasonable cost.
Farmers’ Bulletin No. 23, published by the United States Department of Agriculture, will be found interesting to those caring to study foods from the above standpoints.
Mr. W. O. Atwater, Ph. D., writes in Farmers Bulletin No. 142, on “Food and Food Economy,” the following table:—
Nutritive Ingredients (or Nutrients) of Food
Food as purchased contains: | Edible portion e.g., flesh of meat yolk and white of eggs wheat, flour, etc. Refuse. e.g., bones, entrails, shell, bran, cellulose, etc. |
Water Nutrients— |
Protein Fats Carbohydrates Mineral matters |
Uses of Nutrients in the Body
Protein | Forms tissue | — | All serve as fuel to yield energy in the forms of heat and muscular power. | |
e.g., white (albumen) of eggs | ||||
curd (casein) of milk | ||||
lean meat | ||||
gluten of wheat, etc. | ||||
Fats | Are stored as fat | |||
e.g., fat of meat, butter, olive oil | ||||
oils of corn, wheat, etc. | ||||
Carbohydrates | Transformed into fat | |||
e.g., sugar, starch, etc. | ||||
Mineral Matters (ash) | Share in forming bone, assist in digestion, etc. | |||
e.g., phosphates of lime | ||||
potash, soda, etc. |
Thus foods have different functions. The proteid or nitrogenous foods build up and repair the tissues; mineral matter and water are also necessary for this purpose. The tissues of the body cannot be kept in a healthy state unless these constituents of food are taken into the system regularly; only the proteid foods can repair the waste of the living tissue. The proteid foods, together with the fats and carbohydrates, may supply both power and heat for the body, but the special functions of the carbohydrates and fats are to keep the body warm and to supply energy.
The amount of proteid food required for a healthy adult is very difficult to determine. It is safe to state that too much proteid brings about undue strain upon the digestive apparatus, and that too little proteid reduces the working equipment of the body. The amount of fats and carbohydrates needed depend largely upon occupation and climate. The proteid foods are many, and contain the same chemical elements as the bodies which they are destined to feed; also they seem to be more completely taken care of in the body than the carbohydrate foods. Milk, cheese, eggs, meat, and fish are proteid foods. Of these milk is regarded as a typical food, as it contains all the nutritive constituents required by the body,—proteid, carbohydrates, fats, mineral matter, and water,—but it does not contain these constituents in the correct proportion. It is too rich in proteid and fat and too poor in carbohydrate to be a perfect food. It is a perfect food for the infant, because an excess of proteid and of fat is needed for the growth of the child. For the healthy man about eight pints daily would be required for complete nutrition. This, it is apparent, would be a very bulky food, and the system would be burdened with too large a proportion of water. Milk, on the other hand, is the cheapest source of proteid. It is claimed that one quart of good milk is[6] equivalent in proteid to a pound of beefsteak, and that when combined with the correct proportion of carbohydrate food it possesses great nutritive and economic value. All of the proteid foods are deficient in starch, so must be combined with carbohydrates to properly nourish the body.
According to Mr. Atwater the proteid foods are more completely digested than the carbohydrates. This is probably because there is found in all carbohydrate foods a large proportion of cellulose or indigestible material enveloping the starch and sugar. The nutritive value of the carbohydrate foods is large if the starch and sugar, of which they are composed, can be separated from the cellulose. The normal diet is one which contains proteid foods, carbohydrate foods, fatty foods, with the correct proportion of mineral matter and sufficient water to moisten them.
The proper diet depends largely upon the occupation. People of sedentary habits and brain workers need more digestible food than the day laborer—therefore, the necessity of mixed diets; but diets should be varied as well as mixed, and the true housekeeper in planning meals thinks what was served at the preceding meal.
The cheapest diet is that which yields the largest amount of nutriment for the least expenditure of money. The most economical diet is that which is cheapest and at the same time best adapted to the needs of the user. The most expensive diet is not necessarily the most nutritious.
Every good housekeeper should know approximately the composition of the various foodstuffs, and so be able to make proper combinations of foods and substitutions when necessary. Hunger and thirst are provided by nature as guides in the choice of food, and if the bodily conditions are normal, these, as a rule, are safe guides to follow.
The nutritive value of many foods depends upon how they are cooked. Many raw foods are indigestible, but these same foods cooked are nutritious. The importance of proper cooking cannot be overestimated. Cooking changes the food so that the digestive juices can take care of it; cooking improves the flavor and the appearance, thus making the food more appetizing; and cooking kills disease germs, parasites, and other dangerous organisms.
Proper cooking and dainty serving make even cheap foods more palatable. This stimulates the digestive juices; hence food should be made appetizing in order to obtain the greatest nutritive value from it.
Boiling point is the temperature at which a fluid is converted into vapor, with the phenomenon of ebullition. The boiling point of water is 212 degrees Fahrenheit. In cooking, the term boiling means the cooking of food in a boiling liquid, and water is the liquid generally used. Rapidly boiling water is no hotter than when the agitation is less, but in some cases, as in the boiling of rice, violently boiling water is recommended for the purpose of keeping the grains of rice separated. The boiling point of water once reached can be held with a moderate amount of heat.
Food is generally boiled by putting immediately into boiling water. This sears the surface, and keeps in the juices; but if the water is to be used for soups, gravies, and so forth, the food is put into cold water and brought slowly to the boiling point. Salt is added to the boiling water ordinarily when cooking food, as it tends to keep the flavor in the food.
Roasting, truly speaking, is cooking food before an open fire, so that roasting is seldom accomplished in modern kitchens.
Baking is cooking food by dry heat in an inclosed oven. The oven should be very hot when the food is first put in, then the heat reduced.
In baking meats, basting frequently with hot fat will drive the heat to the center and make the meat juicy.
Stewing is cooking food in water kept below the boiling point, and is similar to simmering.
Fricasseeing is a combination of sautéing and simmering. The food is first sautéd and then simmered until tender.
Moist steaming is accomplished by placing the food in a perforated dish over a kettle of boiling water and cooking until tender.
Dry steaming is accomplished by placing the food in the top of a double boiler and keeping the water boiling in the lower part until the food is cooked.
Simmering is cooking in water at 185 degrees Fahrenheit or 27 degrees below the point of boiling. This method of cooking is employed where long, slow cooking is desired, as in making stews, soups and so forth; also for cooking tough cuts of meat.
As a rule, in both boiling and simmering, the kettle should be tightly covered.
Braising is a form of cooking generally adopted for cooking tough meats. The food to be braised is placed in a kettle with a few slices of salt pork, some vegetables, seasonings and a small amount of liquid, either water or stock. The kettle is then covered closely and the food cooked until tender. Braising is a long, slow process.
Frying is cooking food in hot fat, deep enough to cover the food. Lard, olive oil, cottolene or drippings may be used. The fat should be heated hot enough to brown a piece of bread a golden brown in forty seconds for cooked food, and in sixty seconds for uncooked food. There are various theories about the digestibility of fried food. The latest seems to be that food properly fried and drained may not be very indigestible. To prepare fat for frying, fill frying kettle one half full, and heat gradually. Avoid frying too much at a time, as the temperature will be reduced and the food much more liable to absorb fat. Reheat fat after each frying. Drain the food on brown paper.
Sautéing is cooking food in a frying pan in a small amount of fat. Food is less digestible cooked in this way than fried food.
Broiling is cooking the food on a greased broiler before hot coals or the gas flame. The broiler should be held[10] very near the flame at first to sear the surface of the food, and should be turned every ten seconds for the first minute of cooking, and afterwards occasionally.
Pan broiling is cooking the food in a hissing-hot frying pan without fat. It is employed where it is impossible to broil, and may be better accomplished where two frying pans are used, and the food turned from one to the other every ten seconds for the first minute and afterwards occasionally, as in broiling.
For crumbing, dried bread crumbs which have been pounded or rolled until fine and then sifted are best. The bread may be broken in pieces and dried in the oven or merely allowed to stand in the open air until dried.
To prepare the egg, break into soup plate, beat until yolk and white are well blended, season with salt and pepper, dilute with two tablespoons cold water and use for dipping.
Food to be fried should be dried as much as possible, then dipped in crumbs, then placed in the egg, and thoroughly covered with the egg, then drained and dipped again in crumbs.
It is an economy of time to crumb all of the pieces to be fried, then egg all, and when drained, to crumb all. This may be done in the morning and the food fried when wanted. In this case, allow the prepared food to stand in kitchen fifteen or twenty minutes before frying. When fried always drain on brown paper.
Legs and loins of lamb and mutton are the meats ordinarily boned. The butcher will do it; but if it must be done at home, wipe the meat, and with a sharp knife scrape the meat from the bone, being careful not to cut through the skin. Fish to be boned generally have the heads cut off; then remove the flesh from one side of the backbone, and then from the other.
To bone birds, chickens, or turkeys, select undrawn birds, with head and feet left on. Remove pin feathers and singe. Draw tendons from legs by making an incision just below the knee joint, and with a strong skewer draw the tendons out one at a time. Loosen the skin near the feet and cut off feet. Make an incision through the skin from the neck to the tail, the entire length of the backbone. Scrape the flesh from the bones until the shoulder blade is found, then continue scraping around the wing joint. Scrape down the backbone to the thigh, then around the second joint and leg, cutting tendinous portion when necessary. When one side of backbone is boned, bone the other, then remove flesh from breastbone, on either side of bird. When flesh is all separated from bone, discard carcass, wipe flesh and skin, and arrange in original shape. The birds may be seasoned and broiled; or stuffed, sewed into shape and steamed. Small birds are generally prepared the former way, and large birds the latter way.
When through frying, add a pared potato, cut in slices, to the fat, and let stand on back of range until potato has browned. Remove potato and strain fat through a cheese cloth. Fat clarified in this way may be used indefinitely.
Let melted butter stand in a dish on back of the range until the salt has settled, then pour off butter, leaving sediment in the bottom of the dish.
When fat is put on the range to heat for frying, put in a cube of bread. If the fat is forgotten, the bread will burn first, and the odor of the burned crumb will attract the attention. The burned flavor cannot be removed from burned fat.
Cut the suet in small pieces, place in top of double boiler, cover, and cook over hot water until all the fat is tried out; strain through a cheese cloth. This can be done in the oven if the top of the range is crowded.
Larding is accomplished by cutting strips of salt pork lengthwise with the rind two inches long and one quarter inch wide, and with aid of the larding needle drawing these pieces through the surface of the meat, taking a stitch an inch long and a quarter inch deep.
Heat the fat. When a blue smoke begins to appear, drop in a cube of bread; if the bread browns a golden brown in forty seconds, the fat is hot enough for any food which has previously been cooked. Uncooked food requires a longer, slower frying; the cube of bread should brown in sixty seconds for such food.
Food cooked in fat tested in this way should never soak fat if one is careful to put a small enough quantity of food in at a time—not enough to cool the fat.
For meat croquettes, cold cooked meat should be freed from skin and gristle, and cut quite fine, then mixed with a thick sauce to as soft a consistency as it is possible to handle. Chill before shaping. For vegetable croquettes the vegetables should be boiled, then mashed and seasoned. Chill before shaping.
To Shape.—Allow one rounding tablespoon of croquette mixture for each croquette, roll into a round ball, roll ball in crumbs, then shape either like a cylinder or pyramid; when all are perfect and uniform, dip in egg, then in crumbs.
Soak in cold water from the time they come from the market until used. Drain, cover with two cups cold water, add four cloves, one and a half teaspoons salt, two tablespoons vinegar or lemon juice, and a slice of onion; simmer for one half hour, drain, cover with cold water, remove tubes and membranes. Broil whole; or if for larding, dip in egg, wrap in cheese cloth, and press under weight over night.
Select a large refrigerator, of simple construction and of hardwood,—the lining of zinc or marble and the shelves of slate or hardwood.
To keep the refrigerator clean, remove instantly any food spilled in any of the compartments. Wash the ice compartment and food chambers at least once a week with hot soapsuds, and for economy’s sake do this when the ice is low. Pour boiling water down the waste pipe. Sal soda dissolved in the water tends to keep every part sweet and clean.
Shelves and all portable parts, when washed and scalded, should be placed in the sun to dry; if this is impossible, dry before a fire.
Keep a good supply of ice in the ice chamber; it is cheaper in the end.
Never keep the doors or covers of the refrigerator open unnecessarily long; it wastes the ice.
A good refrigerator properly cared for should last at least twenty-five years.
Place sugar in clean agate-ware frying pan, and stir continually until the sugar becomes a golden brown sirup.
Place food to be poached in frying pan half filled with boiling salted water. Cook below the boiling point from three to eight minutes.
Place butter in bowl, and mash against the sides of the bowl, with a spoon, until of a creamy consistency.
Pour mixture into bowl, and cut through and through mixture with a spoon, then take up some of mixture in spoon, and turn spoon completely over, and fold under mixture. Continue this process until mixture is blended.
When frosting is nearly cold, cut with a silver knife, wiping knife after making each crease.
To master the art of carving one must understand the anatomy of the meat to be carved.
The carver should insist upon having a sharp knife, a large platter, and sufficient space to move his arms.
The carving of fish is extremely simple. Run the knife the whole length of the back, then cut from the back to the middle of the fish; the flesh may then be separated from the bone. When one side is served, turn the fish over and carve the other side in the same way.
The center of the fish is considered the best, as it is the fattest portion. The meat around the head and neck is decidedly gelatinous.
Medium-sized fish, like mackerel, salmon, trout, and so forth, are cut through the bone, thus giving a piece of fish on either side of the backbone for each serving.
Small fish are generally served so as to make four fillets,—two fillets on either side of the backbone.
For carving roast beef, a long, broad-bladed knife is required. Always cut across the grain of the meat; never with the grain.
The joint of beef known as the Porterhouse roast or sirloin roast consists of the sirloin, the tenderloin, and the flank. The flank is tough, and if roasted with the meat, is generally used for some made dish, such as croquettes, or hashed meat on toast; it is seldom carved at the table.
The tenderloin and sirloin must be carved across the grain. Cut thin slices parallel to the ribs or at right angles with the backbone, then cut close to the backbone,[16] thus separating the slices. Rib roasts are carved in the same way as the sirloin.
Rolled ribs and round of beef are carved in round slices as thin as possible, each slice having considerable fat mixed with the lean.
Beefsteaks are carved across the grain.
Sirloin Steak.—Cut slices at right angles to the vertebræ in both the sirloin and the tenderloin, then separate.
A leg of mutton is considered by many the most difficult piece of meat to carve. If the hip bone is removed, the carving of this joint is simple, but it is usually left in. Place the leg on the platter, with the skin side next the platter. Carve from the hip bone across the leg; these will be the largest slices, as they come from the part of the joint which has the most meat. The portions near the knuckle are to be carved in the same way; they will not be so rare as the thicker slices. Chops may be cut from the upper part of the leg.
Fore Quarter of Mutton or Lamb.—Remove the fore leg and the shoulder, then separate the rib chops. Every part of the fore quarter of lamb is sweet and tender, but the neck in the fore quarter of mutton should be used only for stewing. In carving the shoulder of either lamb or mutton, one must study the meat before cooking.
The Saddle of Mutton.—There are several ways of carving this joint. The fat, tenderloin and kidney should all be removed in one piece.
The most popular way is to cut long slices parallel with the backbone, on the portion nearest the tail, and slices diagonally on the portion nearest the neck.
The Loin of Mutton.—Generally this joint is carved by merely separating the chops, but it may be carved in the same manner as the saddle of mutton.
Fillet of Veal.—This cut is carved like the round of beef.
Shoulder of Veal.—The shoulder is often boned and stuffed. In that case, cut through the meat from side to side. If the bone is left in, carve in the same manner as the shoulder of mutton.
Loin of Veal.—-This cut is often stuffed, and the kidney is always cooked with the meat. Carve the same as the sirloin of beef, in large, thin slices.
Pork Spareribs.—Serve one rib to each person.
Loin of Pork.—Chops may be carved and served, or the roast may be carved exactly like the sirloin of beef.
Roast Ham.—Cut through the meat to the bone, using the portion nearest the knuckle first. Ham should be cut in very thin slices.
Tongue.—The small end of the tongue is inferior to the thicker portion. Cut slices crosswise of the tongue and serve a slice from both portions to each person.
Roast Pig.—Place the head of the pig at the right hand of the carver. Cut off the ears, then the head; cut the head in halves. Cut the whole length of the backbone, dividing the creature in two pieces.
Cut off the leg of one half, then separate the shoulder from the body. Carve the ribs and loin at right angles with the backbone. Cut the other half in the same way. Young pig meat is very tender and the bones are soft, so that carving is an easy matter.
To carve Poultry.—Place the bird on the platter, with the head to the left and the side toward the carver. Insert[18] the fork across the center of the breastbone. Remove the wing, then the leg, then the side bone between leg and body. Cut slices from the breast, running from breastbone to place from which wing was removed. Remove wishbone by cutting from end of breast to the left of the wing joint. Make an incision to the right of breastbone for removing stuffing.
Remove fork from breastbone and cut the leg in small portions. Serve a slice of light and a slice of dark meat to each person.
Serve one side of bird before carving the other side.
Broiled Chicken.—Cut through the breast and cut in halves at right angles with the top of leg. But if birds are small, serve one to each person.
To carve a Duck.—Cut off the wing and the leg the same as for poultry. Cut the breast meat parallel with the breastbone, beginning at the side between the wing joint and the thigh.
To carve a Goose.—Carve in the same manner as a roast duck, but cut the leg in several portions.
Grouse and Partridge.—These birds are carved like duck, although sometimes the breast is separated from the bone and one half breast is served to each person.
Pigeons, quails, and small birds are served whole and generally on toast.
The term marketing means to the ordinary housekeeper the buying of meats and vegetables only, but the buying of all articles necessary for housekeeping should be included under this head.
1 NECK 2 CHUCK RIB 3 PRIME RIB 4 SIRLOIN 5 BACK OF RUMP 6 MIDDLE OF RUMP 7 FACE OF RUMP 8 AITCH BONE 9 ROUND 10 VEIN 11 HIND SHIN 12 FLANK 13 RATTLE RAND 14 BRISKET 15 FORE SHIN |
In order to market well the housekeeper must know what articles to buy in quantity and when to buy to the best advantage.
It is much more economical proportionately to buy for a large family than for a small one.
Staple articles such as bread flour, rice, spices, and so forth, should be bought in large quantities. Vegetables which keep well, such as potatoes, squashes, turnips, and so forth, should be bought in the early fall to last until spring, provided there is a cool, dark place in which to keep them. Meats must necessarily be purchased as needed, unless one has a large refrigerator in which to hang them.
Fish, with the exception of salt or smoked kinds, should be bought only when absolutely fresh. Fruits such as apples and pears may be bought in large quantities, but perishable fruits in small amounts only.
The beef creature is first divided into halves the length of the backbone, then each half is separated into the fore quarter and the hind quarter.
In the fore quarter we have in Boston markets—
Parts | How Cooked | ||
Brains | Stewed or Scalloped | ||
Tongue | Boiled, Fresh or Corned | ||
Neck | Stewed | ||
Sticking Piece | Stewed or Baked | ||
Five Chuck Ribs | Roasted or Broiled | ||
Five Prime Ribs | Roasted | ||
Fore Shin | Stewed | ||
Rattle Rand | —Corned | Boiled | |
Brisket |
In the hind quarter we have in Boston markets—
Parts | How Cooked |
Sirloin | Roasted or Broiled |
Rump | Roasted or Broiled |
Round | Roasted or Broiled |
Hind Shin | Stewed |
Flank | Braised or Boiled |
Tail | Stewed for Soups |
Other parts of the beef creature used as food are—
Parts | How Cooked |
Heart | Braised |
Liver | Braised, Fried, Sautéd |
Kidneys | Sautéd, Braised, Stewed |
Tripe | Stewed, Broiled, Fried |
Suet | Sautéd and used for Frying |
A side of beef weighs on the average about 450 pounds.
Beef when first cut is dark purple, but turns red on exposure to the air. Good beef has a heavy layer of fat on the outside, which is yellowish white and crumbly; the inside fat is white. Best quality beef has a large percentage of fat and a small proportion of water.
In the Boston markets, the part marked (4) in the side of beef in Plate A has three ribs left on and the whole piece is called the sirloin. It is divided by the butcher into the tip which has one muscle only, the middle and the first cut. The fillet or tenderloin of beef is found just under the first rib. It begins in a small point and increases in thickness as it runs back. It ends in an obtuse point at the hip bone. It is always covered with a thick bed of suet and the kidneys are embedded in this suet at the end near the ribs. Sirloin roasts are considered by many the best roasts. They are expensive cuts as they contain considerable bone, and in a large creature, a large amount of tough flank, but as they are tender, juicy and of good flavor they are popular pieces.
Porterhouse Steaks are sirloin steaks cut from the sirloin nearest the rump; they always have a large piece of tenderloin. They are generally a few cents per pound more than the sirloin without the tenderloin. Sirloin Steaks are cut from all parts of the loin.
The rump joins the sirloin as shown in Plate A. The[21] back of the rump is the best piece for roasting as it contains no bone; it is more economical than the sirloin roasts, but as the flavor is different it is not so popular. The middle and face of the rump are both used for roasts, but are less juicy and tender than the back. Both of these pieces are often used for beef à la mode.
1 NECK 2 CHUCK 3 RIB ROAST 4 LOIN 5 RUMP 6 ROUND 7 BOTTOM OF ROUND 8 HIND SHIN 9 FLANK 10 PLATE 11 NAVEL 12 CROSS RIBS 13 BRISKET 14 CLOD 15 FORE SHIN |
Rump Steaks are cut with the grain of the meat and across the grain; the former are tough and the latter are generally tender and juicy; they are cut from the part marked (5) in Plate A. In the cross cut rump steak there is a piece of tenderloin.
The aitch bone, number (8) in Plate A, contains a large proportion of bone; if a large roast is cut, a portion of the rump and a part of the round is included, so considering the price, which is as many cents per pound as there are pounds, it is not an expensive piece as it can be used for a roast one day and made into a stew the next.
The round of beef as shown in Plate C is divided into the top and the bottom. The top is used for steaks and roasts. The first few slices are quite tender. The third slice is the best for steak as it has only one muscle. The farther down the leg the steak is cut the tougher it becomes. The bottom of the round must necessarily be tough because of the large number of tendons. It may be easily distinguished from the top as it contains two muscles. It is used principally for making beef tea or Hamburg Steak.
The vein is used for roasting or braising. The meat is usually stringy but of very good flavor.
The hind shin is used only for stews or soup stock. The fore shin contains less meat but is sometimes used for the same purposes as the hind shin. The pieces marked 12, 13, 14 in Plate A are usually corned.
Number (3) in Plate A is the rib roast. It contains five ribs, the first three ribs being the best part of the piece.[22] Number (2) in Plate A is the chuck rib piece. This contains the shoulder blade and is consequently tough. It is best for stews or braising, although it may be used for roasting. The bones are frequently removed and the piece tied into a round roast, but at best it is tough although the flavor is good. The neck is used principally for soup stock, stews and beef tea.
If we consult Plate D representing the New York cuts of beef, we find that the part marked (3) is called the Rib Piece. The thirteen ribs are left in this piece. It takes in part of what is called Sirloin in the Boston markets. In New York the ribs are cut much longer than in Boston and the price per pound is less, but as this gives a tough portion of the flank, the cost, in reality, is just as great. The part marked (4) is the sirloin and is used both for roasts and steaks. When there is a large piece of tenderloin on the steak it is called a Porterhouse Steak, but when there is only a small piece of tenderloin it is called Short Steak or Delmonico Steak. From this cut nearest the rump we get the hip bone, the flat bone, and the round bone steaks. There are three round bone steaks, which are generally rather inferior. The flat bone steaks are also three in number and better than the round bone steaks. The hip bone steaks are the best of these three and contain a small piece of tenderloin. The rump (5) is divided into two pieces, one piece having the hip bone and the other the backbone. It is generally corned. The round furnishes meat for steaks, which are of excellent flavor, but not very tender. It also makes a good piece for braising. The bottom of the round is a much poorer cut, it contains so many muscles and tendons. It is tough and so only suitable for stock or beef tea.
The Cross Ribs, number (12), make a good roasting piece. It is economical as it is solid meat, and it is quite tender as[23] the muscles all run in one direction. The Shoulder Clod, number (14), has tendons running in all directions; it is consequently tough. It is used for Hamburg Steak or for any dishes which require long slow cooking. Numbers 9, 10, 11 and 13 are used for corning and numbers 8 and 15 are used for soup stock.
Lamb and mutton are divided into halves, or “sides,” by cutting the entire length of the backbone the same as beef.
The fore quarter is divided into the—
Parts | How Cooked |
Shoulder | Boiled, Steamed, Roasted |
Neck | Stewed, Braised |
The hind quarter is divided into the—
Parts | How Cooked |
Leg | Roasted, Braised, Boiled |
Loin | Roasted, Broiled |
Saddle | Roasted |
The best lamb is from a creature eight to twelve weeks old. Lamb may always be distinguished from mutton by the inner redness of the bone. Mutton should have a large amount of white hard fat, and the flesh should be fine-grained and pink to red in color.
The strong mutton flavor may be lessened by removing the pink outer skin, and also by taking off the caul before cooking the leg.
Veal is cut similarly to lamb.
The fore quarter is divided into—
Parts | How Cooked |
Head | Boiled |
Breast | Stewed |
Shoulder | Stewed or Roasted |
Ribs | Stewed or Roasted |
Neck | Stewed |
[24]The hind quarter is divided into—
Parts | How Cooked |
Loin | Stewed, Sautéd, Roasted, Broiled |
Leg | Stewed, Sautéd, Roasted |
Other parts of the veal creature used as food—
Parts | How Cooked |
Tongue | Boiled, Braised |
Brains | Stewed, Scalloped |
Heart | Baked, Braised |
Liver | Broiled, Sautéd |
Kidneys | Boiled, Stewed |
Sweetbreads | Stewed, Sautéd, Fried |
The best veal is from a calf six to twelve weeks old. The meat should be pinkish white, fine-grained, and tender, and there should be a large amount of fine white fat on the legs and around the kidneys.
Fresh pork is not so popular a meat as corned or salted, although fresh pork from a pig which has been carefully fed before killing is a delicate meat.
The upper part of the fore legs, or the shoulders, and the upper parts of the hind legs, or the hams, are salted and smoked. The sides of the pork creature are salted and smoked for bacon.
The fat is removed from the loin and ribs, and these are sold for roasts or chops; the fat is pickled and used for salt pork.
The head is used for making souse and cheese.
The feet are sold fresh or pickled.
The brains, livers, and kidneys are also used the same as those of beef.
Poultry includes all domestic birds.
In buying poultry, select birds which have been freshly killed and hand-picked.
Pin feathers are found on young birds, and hairs on older birds. The birds should be short and plump, with considerable meat on the breast, fat, but not too fat.
Young birds have the cartilage at the end of the breastbone soft and pliable.
For roasting, buy poultry from three months to a year old. For braising, stewing, and slower methods of cooking, buy older birds, as they contain a larger proportion of meat than the younger birds.
Game includes animals that are hunted in field or forest.
Venison is cut like mutton. The meat is much darker than beef meat, and the fat is whiter; it is cooked in the same ways as mutton.
Birds are sold with the feathers on, but have the market man remove them. All game is expensive, and so is a delicacy. In buying game, that which has hung three weeks or more is considered best.
A formal dinner generally consists of ten courses, but may be eight or twelve. In order to have one harmonious whole, the different courses must blend well with each other. Avoid repetition; if oysters appear in the first course, they must not appear again. Observe these two points particularly in arranging the table: first, have the[26] table linen immaculate and without folds; and second, arrange the covers with mathematical exactness.
The table may be square, oblong, or round; it must be covered with a soft pad, and then with the tablecloth, which should hang over the sides of the table at least one quarter of a yard on every side.
The selection of guests for a formal dinner is extremely important, and the seating at the table so that all are congenial takes some time to plan. Name cards should be placed at each cover. Each gentleman should be given a card, on entering the dressing room, with the name of the lady whom he is to escort to the dining room, and the letters R or L, also on the card, indicating to the right or left of the hostess.
When dinner is announced, the host with the guest of honor leads the way to the dining room, followed by the other men with their ladies, and the hostess with the gentleman of honor brings up the rear. The guests all stand behind their chairs until the hostess makes a move to be seated; then the men push up the chairs for the ladies, each lady seating herself from the left of her chair.
The decoration of the table should be simple and low in design and in the center of the table. A small flower may also be placed at the right of each cover. Of course the colors of the flowers must harmonize with the china, but otherwise individual taste should be exercised.
The illumination of the table is most important. If candles are used, they must be so arranged as not to interfere with the guests, and the shades so placed that they will slip down as the candle burns. If candle light is insufficient, try if possible to have the lights come from the side rather than from above.
The Cover.—The place for each guest and the necessary plate, silver, glasses, knives, and napkin is called the cover.
Arrangement of Cover.—Allow twenty inches for every person. Place a ten-inch service plate, having decorations, right side up, in the center of this space, and one and one half inches from the edge of the table.
Arrange knives, edges toward plate, in the order in which they will be needed, beginning at the right. At the right of knives, place soup spoon, bowl up; at the right of soup spoon, the oyster fork, with tines up; the other forks, with tines up, at the left of the plate, in the order in which they will be needed, beginning with the extreme left.
If there are too many courses to admit of all the silver being put on at once, extra silver may be placed at each cover just before serving the course requiring it.
The glass for water should be placed just above the center of the plate, to the right, the wineglasses to the right of the water glass, in the order in which they are to be used. Place the napkins either to the left of the forks, or over service plate. They should be so folded as to hold a bread stick or dinner roll.
The name card is generally placed on top of the napkin or over the plate.
Serving the Formal Dinner.—The dinner maybe served from the butler’s pantry, having each course arranged on individual plates, and placed by the waitress, on the right side of the guest, with the right hand, and anything which is to be served with the course, passed on a tray to the left of the guest and low enough and sufficiently near to the guest, to be easily taken with the right hand. Served in this way, there is less interruption to conversation.
Or each dish may be so arranged on a platter or serving dish on a tray that the guest may easily serve himself. Served in this way, the waitress places plates before each guest before passing the courses.
At present the service plate is quite universally used;[28] that is, the space in front of the guest is always occupied with a plate. When the waitress removes the course plate with the left hand, she places another plate with the right hand. In this way of serving, the tray, if used at all, is only used when the food is passed, not for removing dishes.
Removal of Courses.—When every one has finished, the waitress removes one plate at a time, beginning with the hostess or with the guest at the right of the hostess.
Before the dessert, everything not needed for this course should be removed from the table; if there are crumbs, they should be carefully brushed with a napkin on to a plate or tray. After this is accomplished, place the dessert dishes from the right. While the dessert is being eaten, the finger bowl, filled one third full of tepid water, with a slice of lemon or a geranium leaf or a flower in it, set on a doily on a plate, may be placed in front of and above the dessert plate. When the dessert plate is removed, the finger bowl is moved into the space. If fruit follows the dessert, the guest removes the finger bowl and doily from the plate and uses that plate for the fruit.
If coffee is served in the dining room, the finger bowls are not placed until after the coffee, but coffee is usually served in the drawing room.
Order of Service.—The guests on the right of the host and hostess are served first in the first course, in the second course the guests on the left, in the third course the second guest on the right of the host and hostess, and so on in rotation, so that no guest is served twice first. Some hostesses insist upon being served first. If the different courses are passed rather than served from the butler’s pantry, this may be a good plan, but otherwise there seems to be no reason for it.
First Course.—Appetizers, cold hors-d’œuvres, eaten preliminary to the dinner, supposed to stimulate the flow of the digestive juices and create an appetite.
Second Course.—Oysters or Shellfish. Salt, pepper, cayenne, Tabasco sauce, and tiny brown-bread sandwiches are passed with this course.
Third Course.—A Clear Soup. Hors-d’œuvres, such as celery, olives, radishes, or pimolas are passed with this course.
Fourth Course.—Fish, boiled, fried, or baked; sometimes potatoes, and generally cucumbers or tomatoes dressed, are served.
Fifth Course.—Entrées.
Sixth Course.—The Meat Course, one vegetable besides the potato.
Seventh Course.—Frozen Punches or Cheese Dishes.
Eighth Course.—Game or Poultry and Salad.
Ninth Course.—Hot Desserts or Cold Desserts.
Tenth Course.—Frozen Desserts, Cakes, and Preserves may be passed with this course.
Eleventh Course.—Fruits.
Twelfth Course.—Coffee and Liqueurs.
The hostess serves the soup, and the host the fish and the roast. Vegetables, sauces, and entrées are served from the side.
Either the host or hostess makes the salad, and the hostess serves the dessert and the coffee.
The cover is arranged the same as for the Formal Dinner.
The table may be covered or bare. If bare, use doilies for plates and glasses.
The arrangement of the cover is the same as for the Formal Dinner.
Lighter dishes are served for luncheon than for dinner; entrées take the place of the roast.
Soup or bouillon is served in cups. Fruit may be served for the first course instead of canapés.
The hostess sometimes serves the salad and the coffee, but it is better to have all serving from the side.
This really is the same as the Formal Luncheon except that men are invited with the ladies, and coffee is served throughout the meal.
Like the Informal Dinner except that the roasts are omitted.
When luncheon is announced, the first course may be on the table, and the dishes required for the remaining courses arranged on the side table.
Seldom more than three courses are served.
Tea, coffee, or cocoa are served throughout the meal.
A butler is generally given full charge of the dining room, as well as of the other men servants.
He waits on the table at breakfast, usually alone; but if the family is large or there are guests present, he may be assisted.
He directs the washing of dishes and the cleaning of the silver. He prepares the salad. He attends to the bell, to the fires, to the lighting of the house. He makes and serves afternoon tea and sets the table for dinner.
He announces all the meals, serves the dinner, does all the carving. If he is assisted, he serves the principal dishes, and the assistant serves the vegetables and sauces.
He is responsible for the safety of the silver, for the arrangement of the flowers and fruits, and for the proper serving of the wines. He has full charge of all refreshments served in the evening and is responsible for the locking of the house at night.
He alternates with the footman or waitress in answering the bell in the evening.
It has been said that “what appeals to the eye generally appeals to the palate.”
Use care and taste in serving; dainty service will make the simplest food most attractive.
Never allow any food which looks unsightly to be served. Toasted bread, burned on one side, may take away the appetite, but toasted a golden brown on both sides, with crusts cut off and then cut in strips and served in between the folds of a fresh doily, will appeal to the most fastidious.
Parsley is always used to garnish meats. Meats should be skewered into shapely pieces before being cooked, and served on dishes to display them well.
Steaks and chops should be trimmed before cooking, then broiled evenly on all sides—never burned.
Rib chops should be garnished with chop frills.
Slices of lemon, hard-cooked eggs cut in strips, chopped pickles, and parsley are used for garnishing fish.
Cold sweet dishes are garnished mostly with jellies cut in cubes, and candied fruits, red cherries, and angelica being the most popular.
Nuts and raisins are also used.
Ice creams are garnished with meringues and spun sugar.
Cakes are garnished with nuts and plain and fancy frostings put through a pastry bag and tube.
Whatever garnishing is used, avoid overdoing the matter; the simplest is always the most attractive.
4 gills make | 1 pint |
2 pints make | 1 quart |
4 quarts make | 1 gallon |
1 measuring cup | = | 2 gills |
4 measuring cups | = | 1 quart |
2 measuring cups | = | 1 pint |
All measures in this book are level.
To measure a spoonful of dry material fill spoon and level off with a knife.
One half spoonful is measured by cutting one spoonful through lengthwise.
3 teaspoons = 1 tablespoon |
4 tablespoons = ¼ cup |
2 tablespoons butter = 1 ounce |
1 cup solid butter = ½ pound |
2 cups flour = ½ pound |
9 large eggs = 1 pound |
1 cup liquid to 3 cups flour for bread |
1 cup liquid to 2 cups flour for muffins |
1 cup liquid to 1 cup flour for batters |
1 teaspoon soda to 1 pint sour milk |
1 teaspoon soda to 1 cup molasses |
¼ teaspoon salt to 4 cups custard |
2 teaspoons salt to 4 cups water |
¼ teaspoon salt to 1 cup white sauce |
⅛ teaspoon pepper to 1 cup white sauce. |
Canapés are made from white, graham, and brown bread, sliced very thin and cut in various shapes. They may be dipped in melted butter, toasted or fried. The slices may be covered with any of the following mixtures. Served hot or cold.
Cut bread in slices one quarter inch thick, cut in circles, dip in melted butter, sprinkle with salt and cayenne, spread with anchovy paste, and sprinkle with a few drops of lemon juice.
Cut bread in quarter-inch slices, cut slices four inches long and two inches wide. Fry in deep fat, or toast. Spread toast with caviare paste, sprinkle with a few drops of lemon juice and paprika. Garnish with finely chopped green or red pepper.
Cut bread in quarter-inch slices, spread lightly with French mustard, sprinkle with grated cheese and finely chopped olives. Or brown in oven before sprinkling with olives.
Cut bread in slices one quarter inch thick, three inches long, and one inch and a half wide. Spread with butter and brown in oven. Mix one cup chopped crab meat, one tablespoon lemon juice, two drops Tabasco, one half teaspoon salt, a few drops of onion juice, and two tablespoons olive oil. Mark the bread diagonally in four sections and spread them alternately with melted cheese and crab mixture. Separate sections with finely chopped pimento.
Cut bread in triangles one fourth inch thick, sauté in bacon fat. Spread with French mustard, cover with cooked bacon finely chopped, and sprinkle with finely chopped pimolas.
Cut bread in slices one quarter inch thick, then in circles. Sauté in butter. Spread with finely chopped ham mixed to a paste with creamed butter and seasoned highly. Sprinkle with finely chopped, hard-cooked eggs.
Cut bread in one-fourth-inch slices; shape with doughnut cutter. Cream two tablespoons butter, add one cup finely chopped lobster meat, one teaspoon mustard, few drops Worcestershire sauce, few grains cayenne, and six olives finely chopped. Sauté bread in butter and spread with above mixture.
Shape bread, cut one fourth inch thick, with a cooky cutter. Spread with butter and brown in the oven. Arrange around the outer edge of the circle finely chopped[39] truffles. Next finely chopped white of egg. Next yolk of egg which has been pressed through a sieve. Then finely flaked salmon. Garnish salmon with a small sprig of parsley.
Just before serving pour over a few drops of olive oil or place a teaspoonful of mayonnaise on the salmon.
Cut brown bread in circles, spread with butter, and heat in the oven. Pound sardines to a paste, add an equal amount of finely chopped, hard-cooked eggs, season with lemon juice and Worcestershire sauce. Spread on brown bread. Garnish each canapé in the center with a circle of hard-cooked white of egg capped with a teaspoonful hard-cooked yolk.
Fry circles of bread in deep fat. Fry slices of tomato in deep fat. Place one slice of tomato on each circle of bread. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Garnish each slice with one slice of cucumber and hard-cooked white of egg cut in shape of petal, to represent a daisy.
Cut bread in crescents. Fry in deep fat. Mix equal quantities of chopped nuts and olives, with enough mayonnaise dressing to spread. Spread on fried bread, and garnish with small diamonds of pimentoes.
Toast triangles of graham bread, spread with butter. Cut slices of cooked tongue in small pieces, mix with creamed butter to a paste, add two tablespoons capers to each half cup of tongue. Spread on bread. Sprinkle with salt and cayenne, and garnish with chopped water cress.
Place clams in shallow dish after removing the black parts. Mix other ingredients. Pour over clams, and let stand for several hours. Serve ice cold in small glasses, as a first course.
The clams may be mixed with the sauce and served in halves of grape fruit, in lemon shells, or tomato cups. Set on a bed of ice.
Follow receipt for Clam Cocktail, using one pint small oysters drained from their liquor in place of clams.
Substitute one pint shrimps for clams, and proceed as for Clam Cocktail.
Cut lobster meat in small pieces and place in shallow dish. Mix other ingredients. Pour over lobster meat and let stand one hour. Serve ice cold in cocktail glasses; just before sending to table sprinkle with powdered lobster coral.
Open oysters; loosen. Serve in shell on bed of ice, having the small ends of the shell point toward the center of the dish. Wash lemons, cut in halves, remove seeds, and serve one half in the center of each plate. Garnish with parsley. Mix horseradish, salt, vinegar, and tomato catsup, seasoned with paprika and cayenne. Serve in small glass dish and pass to each person.
Follow receipt for Oysters on Half Shell, substituting clams.
Spread crackers with butter, sprinkle with salt and cayenne, and brown in oven.
Spread crackers thinly with butter, sprinkle with salt and cayenne, and cover with grated cheese. Cook in oven until cheese is melted.
Spread bread with butter or dip in melted butter. Sprinkle with seasonings. Remove crusts and cut in long narrow strips. Brown in slow oven.
Rings may be cut from the prepared bread and browned in the oven. Three of the narrow strips may be inserted in each ring.
Cut bread one fourth inch in thickness, remove crust. Cut slices in strips, and strips in cubes. Dip in melted butter, brown in the oven or fry in deep fat.
Melt butter, add water, and cook two minutes; add seasonings and flour, boil until mixture forms in a mass in center of pan. Cool slightly, add eggs unbeaten, one at a time, add cheese, drop from teaspoon into hot fat, drain, and serve immediately.
Mash yolks of eggs, add seasonings, and enough yolk of egg to form a paste. Shape into balls the size of a walnut, dip in slightly beaten white of egg, dip in flour or cracker crumbs, and fry in deep fat. Drain and serve with soup.
Press rice through sieve, add flour, egg and seasonings. Roll in balls, allowing a teaspoon for each ball. Cook in boiling salted water until they harden on the outside. Serve hot with soup.
Cook marrow in frying pan, strain, beat, add egg, seasonings, and enough bread crumbs to make of a consistency to shape. Form in small balls and poach in hot water.
Melt butter and lard, add milk; when boiling, add flour and seasonings; cook two minutes, stirring constantly; add cheese and eggs, cool, drop from teaspoon into hot fat, drain, and serve with soups.
Beat egg. Add seasonings and enough flour to make a stiff dough. Work on floured board until smooth and elastic. Cut a small portion and roll thin as a wafer. Cut in fancy shapes and cook in boiling salted water or soup stock twenty minutes. Serve hot in soups.
This paste may be spread on the bottom of inverted dripping pans and baked in a quick oven. Crease before removing from pan.
Use Noodle Mixture, allowing less flour, shape into round marbles, and cook in boiling salted water twenty to thirty minutes. Serve hot in soups.
Mix yolks of egg, whole egg, peas and seasonings, add hot stock. Pour into buttered tin to the depth of one inch, set into hot water, and bake in slow oven until mixture is firm. Cool, cut in cubes, and serve in soups.
Chop chicken and press through a sieve. Soak bread in milk, press through sieve, add melted butter, egg slightly beaten, chicken, seasonings, and milk to make of the consistency to shape. Shape between two spoons, and poach in boiling salted water.
Chop fish and press through a sieve. Add unbeaten white of egg and cream beaten until stiff; add seasonings, and poach in boiling water.
This mixture may be rolled in balls or shaped in teaspoons.
Brown soup stock is made from beef and vegetables, or from beef, veal and fowl, and vegetables.
Veal with onion and celery and seasonings makes white stock; or veal and chicken together, with celery, onions, and seasonings, are used for white stock.
Cream soups are generally made without stock, milk or cream being the liquid used, the foundation made from fish or vegetables.
Chicken Stock is made from fowl, resembles white stock, but not quite so rich.
The meats used for soups are the poorer parts of the creature—the shin, the round, the neck of beef, the knuckle of veal, and the whole bird of fowls.
A bouquet of sweet herbs is used for seasoning soups;[46] it is composed of parsley, bay leaf, cloves, peppercorns, thyme and marjoram.
Skill, patience and good materials are necessary for the making of good soup. In order to draw out and dissolve the nutritive and flavoring qualities of meat, cut the meat into small pieces, cover with cold water, and let stand at least an hour, then heat very gradually.
For a rich stock allow one pint of water to each pound of meat and bone, having only one quarter pound bone and three quarters meat. One kind of meat may be used, or several kinds. If soup is made from remnants of cold meat, be sure to add a small amount of fresh meat to give added flavor. Remember that if the contents of the soup kettle are allowed to boil for any length of time, it will be almost impossible to secure a clear soup from the stock.
Allow the white and shell of one egg for two quarts of strained stock. Beat the white, add crushed shell and the cold stock, pour into kettle, set over the fire, and stir constantly until the boiling point is reached; boil three minutes without stirring, then simmer for ten minutes, strain through sieve, then through a cheese cloth; reheat and serve. If these directions are followed, an absolutely clear soup will be the result.
When the stock is ready to strain, strain into several receptacles; a coating of fat will form on the top, which serves to keep out the air. This fat must be removed before clearing the stock. Stock with a coating of fat will keep a week in summer and several weeks in winter. If the weather is very warm, scald the stock, then cool quickly.
Wash asparagus if fresh and break off tips; break remainder of stalks into small pieces. Cook tips and stalks in cold water separately. When tender, drain; reserve water. Keep tips for garnishing soup. Press stalks through a purée sieve. Scald milk with onion, remove onion, add asparagus water, and thicken with flour and butter cooked together. Bring mixture to boiling point; add cream and seasonings. Pour over tips and serve.
Note.—If canned asparagus is used, drain, add water and cook in milk in a double boiler twenty minutes. Then drain and proceed as with fresh asparagus.
Cook artichokes and onion in water till tender. Drain, press through sieve, and return to water. Melt butter; add flour and scalded milk. Cook until mixture thickens. Combine mixtures, add seasonings, and just before serving pour on to beaten egg.
Soak beans over night. Cook beans, onion, parsley, celery and carrot in cold water; when tender rub through a sieve. Melt butter; add flour, milk and seasonings; cook five minutes. Combine mixtures and serve.
One cup stewed tomatoes added to this soup makes a pleasant variation.
Use receipt for Bean Soup, substituting kidney beans for Lima beans and adding one tablespoon vinegar.
Cook beans in water ten minutes; press through a sieve. Cook onion in butter five minutes; add flour and seasonings. When well blended, add tomato, cook five minutes, strain, add bean mixture, reheat, and serve with chopped pickles.
If beans are very sweet, it may be necessary to add one to two tablespoons of lemon juice or vinegar.
Chop cabbage, add water, and cook until tender; press through a sieve. Melt butter, add chopped onion, cook slowly five minutes, add flour, scalded milk, cabbage mixture; cook five minutes. Add seasonings, strain and serve.
Chop enough carrots to make two cups. Cook in water until tender. Press through sieve, reserving liquor. Cook rice in milk in double boiler. Cook onion in butter; add flour and seasonings. Mix carrot mixture with rice and milk and pour on to butter and flour; bring to the boiling point, strain and serve. Garnish with chopped parsley. If this soup seems too thick, thin with cream or milk.
Cook cauliflower in cold water until tender; drain, press through a sieve, add scalded milk. Cook onion in butter, add flour; when well blended, add cauliflower mixture, seasonings; cook five minutes, strain, add yolk of egg slightly beaten, and cheese.
Chop celery; cook in water until tender. Cook onion and mace in milk twenty minutes; strain. Melt butter; add flour and seasonings. Combine celery and milk mixtures, thicken with butter and flour cooked together, cook five minutes and serve.
Note.—Pieces of celery not suitable for the table may be utilized for this soup. The leaves and root of celery make a very good soup.
Cook chestnuts in cold water until tender, press through a sieve, and add scalded milk. Cook onion in butter five minutes, add flour, seasonings and chestnut mixture. Cook five minutes, add cream, strain and serve.
Note.—To shell chestnuts, make a cross on either side of the nut with a sharp knife. Put one teaspoon melted butter in dripping pan; add chestnuts and cook in oven until shells come off easily.
Chop cucumbers and celery; add onion and pepper; cook in milk in double boiler twenty minutes. Add flour and butter cooked together, and seasonings. Cook five minutes, strain, add cream, reheat and serve.
Cook corn in cold water twenty minutes. Press through a sieve; add scalded milk. Cook onion in butter, add flour and seasonings, corn mixture, cook five minutes, strain, add beaten cream, and serve. Garnish with popped corn.
Chop onions, cook in two tablespoons butter five minutes; add water, cook thirty minutes, press through a sieve. Melt remaining butter, add flour, scalded milk and seasonings, cook five minutes. Combine mixtures, add egg yolks slightly beaten, Parmesan cheese and pimento.
Cook peas, bay leaf, onion, and cold water twenty minutes. Press through a sieve. Make a white sauce of butter, flour, and milk. Combine mixtures, add seasonings, and serve.
Note.—Cold cooked peas may be used instead of canned peas.
Cook rice, onion and pepper in cold water until rice is tender. Press through a sieve. Melt butter, add flour, cream and seasonings; boil five minutes. Combine mixtures. Add parsley and serve.
Cook onion and sorrel in butter five minutes, add water, cook thirty minutes. Cook milk and flour in double boiler twenty minutes, add cream, beaten eggs, catsup and strained sorrel mixture. Season and serve.
Cook spinach in water thirty minutes. Press through a sieve, scald milk with onion and bay leaf, add butter and flour cooked together, strain, add seasonings and spinach mixture; cook five minutes and serve. Garnish with beaten cream.
Cook onion in butter five minutes, add flour, extract, seasonings, and milk in which bay leaf has been scalded, cook five minutes; add squash, strain, add two tablespoons of butter and serve. Garnish with beaten cream.
Cook onion and carrot in butter five minutes, add flour, milk, seasonings; cook in double boiler twenty minutes; add mashed potato, and serve after straining. One cup stewed and strained tomatoes or one fourth cup tomato catsup may be used to vary this soup.
Melt butter, add flour. Cook remaining ingredients together twenty minutes. Press through a sieve and thicken with flour mixture. If tomato lacks flavor, season highly with Worcestershire sauce and Tabasco sauce.
Melt butter, add onion, cook five minutes; add flour, milk and seasonings, cook in double boiler twenty minutes. Cook tomatoes, press through a sieve, add soda. Combine mixtures and strain. Serve immediately. If tomato is very acid, it may be necessary to add more soda to neutralize.
Melt butter, add green pepper and onion, cook five minutes; add tomato, horse-radish, stock and seasonings. Thicken with butter and flour cooked together. Simmer ten minutes, strain, add macaroni and serve. This soup unstrained would be a purée.
Mix turnip, potato and scalded milk. Melt butter, add flour, salt and pepper; when well blended add turnip mixture and onion cut in small pieces. Cook in double boiler twenty minutes, stirring occasionally; strain and serve.
Cook cress, butter and onion together five minutes; add flour and seasonings. When smooth add milk in which extract has been mixed, cook twenty minutes, strain, serve and garnish with whipped cream.
Parboil potatoes ten minutes. Melt butter, add vegetables, cook ten minutes, stirring occasionally. Add milk and cook in doubler boiler until vegetables are tender. Season, strain, garnish with parsley and serve.
Soak beans over night, drain, add water and cook until tender—four or five hours. Press through a sieve; cook pork in a frying pan, add onion, cook five minutes; add bean mixture, melt butter, add flour and seasonings; combine mixtures, strain. Garnish with egg cut in slices and lemon.
A ham bone cooked with the beans is considered by many to be an improvement.
Soak peas over night, drain, cook until tender. Cook onion and salt pork together ten minutes; add to pea mixture. Press through a sieve, melt butter, add flour, milk, seasonings, and cook five minutes. Combine mixtures, and serve.
Prepare the same as Split Pea Purée, substituting one and one half cups lentils for split peas.
Cook salt pork in frying pan ten minutes; add onion, cook ten minutes. Put a layer of parboiled potatoes in kettle, cover with onions and salt pork, and so continue until all potatoes and onions are used.
Cover with water and simmer until potatoes are tender. Melt butter; add flour, milk and seasonings. Cook five minutes. Combine mixtures.
If potatoes are very old, it is better to parboil them before putting them with the onion.
Cook salt pork in frying pan five minutes; add onion and cook until yellow. Parboil potatoes five minutes; add to onion with corn and water; cook twenty minutes. Thicken milk with butter and flour cooked together. Combine mixtures; add cracker crumbs and seasonings, and serve.
Succotash may be substituted for corn.
Remove heads from clams and chop. Parboil potatoes. Cook onion and salt pork together ten minutes. Arrange clams, potatoes, onion and salt pork in layers in the kettle; cover with boiling water, and simmer until tender. Thicken milk with flour and butter cooked together; add fish mixture and seasonings, and serve.
Remove head and skin and cut fish into fillets. Cover head, skin and bones with cold water; simmer twenty minutes; strain. Reserve liquor.
Parboil potatoes ten minutes. Cook onions in salt pork until yellow. Arrange in layers, fish, potatoes, onions and salt pork; cover with water in which bones were cooked, and simmer until potatoes are tender. Thicken milk with butter and flour cooked together, combine mixtures, add seasonings, and pour over buttered crackers which have been previously soaked in cold milk.
Caution.—Do not allow onion or salt pork to burn.
Cook onion in salt pork fat until yellow; add clams or fish free from bone; simmer twenty minutes. Parboil potatoes, drain, and add to fish with boiling water. Cook until potatoes are tender.
Melt butter; add flour, tomatoes and seasonings. Combine mixtures, and pour over buttered crackers which have been previously soaked in cold milk.
Cook onion in salt pork fat; melt butter; add flour, milk and seasonings, and cook in double boiler with lobster cut in cubes twenty minutes; add strained salt pork fat, hot cream, and serve.
Prepare the same as Lobster Chowder, substituting crab meat for lobster meat.
Prepare the same as Lobster Chowder, substituting shrimps for lobster meat.
Soak codfish in cold water one hour; drain. Parboil potatoes ten minutes. Cook onions in pork fat, add drained potatoes, fish, and one cup of boiling water; cook until potatoes are tender. Melt butter; add flour, milk, cream and seasonings. Combine mixtures, cook five minutes, and serve with crackers which have been previously soaked in milk.
Chop clams, and cook in stock twenty minutes. Melt butter, add onions, cook five minutes; add flour, strained clam liquor, cook five minutes; add seasonings, cream, and serve.
Boil crabs in water to cover twenty minutes. Remove meat, add rice, and cook in two tablespoons butter five minutes; add onion, cook five minutes, and press all through a sieve. Scald mace in milk. Thicken milk with butter and flour cooked together; add seasonings.
Combine mixtures, reheat and serve.
Cook lobster, rice and white stock twenty minutes; press through a sieve. Thicken milk with flour and butter cooked together; add seasonings. Combine mixtures and thin with cream to desired consistency. Garnish with lobster coral pressed through a sieve.
Cook oysters in white stock until edges curl. Strain, reserve liquor and chop oysters; press through a sieve; add butter and flour cooked together, seasonings and cream; cook five minutes, add to egg slightly beaten and serve.
Substitute clams for oysters and proceed as for Oyster Bisque.
Cook oysters in their own liquor until edges shrivel. Drain, reserve liquor; chop oysters. Melt butter, add cracker crumbs and milk. Cook five minutes, add seasonings, combine mixtures, strain thoroughly. Add beaten egg and chicken meat.
Cook shrimps and vegetables in butter; add seasonings, white stock, and boil five minutes. Press through a sieve. Add wine and serve immediately.
By adding one cup of cream and two tablespoons of butter a much richer and smoother soup may be made.
Cover meat and bones with cold water; simmer four hours. Sauté vegetables in butter; add to stock with seasonings except sherry. Cook one hour longer, strain, cool, remove fat and clear. Add sherry and serve.
Is made like bouillon, with the addition of three sprigs of parsley, one sprig of thyme and omission of the sherry. If the stock is not sufficiently brown, add one teaspoon Kitchen Bouquet for each quart of stock, or one teaspoon of caramelized sugar.
Many prefer browning a portion of the meat before covering with cold water, to give color to the soup.
If this method is employed, use one quart less water.
Reserve one fourth cup of peas for garnishing; cook remainder of peas, onion, bay leaf and parsley in stock ten minutes; mash through a sieve. Make a white sauce of butter, flour and milk; combine mixtures, cook five minutes, add peas, and serve with sippets of bread.
Simmer beef, veal and fowl in water four hours; add vegetables, salt, and herbs tied in a bag; cook slowly one hour. Strain, cool, remove fat and serve.
Consommé is the foundation for all clear soups, each soup taking its name from the garnishing which is used.
Cook barley in boiling water until tender; add salt, reheat in consommé and serve.
Poach eggs in salted water. Place in a tureen and pour hot consommé over them.
Cook cinnamon in consommé; add claret and hot water. Beat egg yolks; add hot mixture slowly to them. Cut and fold in the beaten whites. Serve immediately.
Cut carrots and turnips in inch straws, add remaining vegetables, and cook in boiling salted water until tender; add consommé, reheat and serve.
Cook spaghetti in boiling salted water; when tender, cut in rings. Cut mushrooms in slices and sauté with spaghetti in melted butter. Heat consommé, add spaghetti and mushrooms, and serve.
Cook rice in boiling salted water until tender; drain, pour over rice six cups boiling water to wash off starch and separate kernels; drain, add hot consommé and serve.
Melt butter, add vegetables and cook until yellow. Cook in boiling water until tender, being careful not to overcook. Drain, add hot consommé, chestnuts and chicken. Season with salt and pepper if necessary.
Cover fowl with cold water, bring to the boiling point, then simmer four hours; add vegetables and seasonings, and simmer one hour. Strain, cool, remove fat, clear and serve.
If all the stock is not needed at once, remove fat from portion required only, as fat prevents the stock from spoiling.
Reheat consommé and add macaroni rings.
Scald milk with onion and bay leaf. Strain; beat egg slightly; add seasonings and milk. Bake in shallow pan until firm. Cool; remove from pan; cut in fancy shapes. Heat consommé, add custard and serve.
Break the knuckle of veal in small pieces; add cut and disjointed fowl and water, allowing one quart to each pound of meat and bone. Cook three hours, keeping below the boiling point. Add remaining ingredients; simmer one hour; strain; cool; use as needed.
Break knuckle in pieces; add chopped veal; cover with water; let stand one hour. Simmer four hours; add vegetables; simmer one hour; add seasonings and strain.
The meat used in this receipt or in White Soup Stock No. 1 may be chopped and used for croquettes, soufflés, veal loaf, or hash, but as it lacks flavor, the dishes must be highly seasoned to be palatable.
Make a white sauce of butter, flour and cream. Add white stock, cooked rice, seasonings; reheat and serve.
Cook a fowl in cold water to cover; add seasonings, strain, and use for stock.
Chop peanuts in meat chopper. Cook chopped nuts, onion and celery in white stock twenty minutes. Melt butter; add flour, milk and seasonings; cook five minutes. Combine mixtures, strain and serve.
Clean and chop mushrooms; cook in water until tender; press through a sieve. Melt butter; add flour, white stock; cook five minutes; add mushroom mixture, cream and seasonings; reheat, strain and serve.
Cook salt pork in frying pan five minutes; add chicken, and sauté a golden brown. Remove chicken; add onion, garlic, okra cut in slices, and sauté one half hour. Add to chicken and cover with boiling water. Add red pepper, seasonings, and cook slowly until chicken is tender. Melt butter; add flour and cream; cook five minutes; add chicken mixture. Serve garnished with rice.
Melt butter, add chicken, and sauté. Remove chicken; add onion, okra, pepper. Cook ten minutes. Add to chicken and cover with boiling water. When chicken is tender, add oysters and cook until edges curl. Melt butter, add flour, and thicken soup. Serve garnished with rice.
Prepare same as Chicken Gumbo, substituting one quart crab meat for chicken and using the crab liquor.
Melt butter, add vegetables, and cook five minutes. Add remaining ingredients, except lemon, and cook one half hour. Serve garnished with lemon.
Separate the green fat from the rest of the turtle. Cut fat in cubes. Cook turtle and herbs in four cups of stock one half hour. Melt butter; add onion, flour, salt, cayenne and two cups stock; boil five minutes; add turtle mixture; cook five minutes; add fat cubes. Pour into tureen, and garnish with lemon; add sherry. Serve.
Cook terrapin, stock and mace twenty minutes. Melt butter, add flour, cream and egg yolks; combine mixtures, add sherry, and garnish with rice balls.
Cover calf’s head with cold water, add vinegar, vegetables, seasonings, and simmer two hours. Remove one cupful of meat. Simmer two hours longer. Strain; cool; remove fat. Brown butter; add flour, and brown; add brown stock, strained liquor, chopped ham, calf’s head meat, lemon, Madeira and mushrooms. Reheat and serve.
Should it be necessary to keep the soup hot, delay adding wine until serving.
Cut ox-tails at joints, add onion, and sauté in pork fat; add cold water, and simmer four hours; add vegetables and seasonings; simmer one hour. Strain; cool; remove fat. Brown butter; add flour and brown; add strained stock, brown stock and meat cut from bones. Reheat, add Madeira, and serve.
For convenience’ sake we divide fish into two classes—vertebrate and shellfish.
The freshness of fish is best determined by the odor. If the flesh of the fish is soft and flabby, the fish has been frozen, or has been kept too long.
Fish fillets are the flesh of vertebrate fish separated from the bone and cut into large or small pieces.
Is the flesh of fish finely chopped and pressed through a fine sieve before being cooked.
Is the seasoned liquid in which fish has been cooked.
Parsley, lemon slices, lemon baskets, lemon slices sprinkled with finely chopped parsley, chopped red or green pepper, potato balls, olives, hard-cooked eggs, capers, and pickles cut lengthwise and spread to resemble a fan; mashed potato and mushrooms, cucumbers and tomatoes; maître d’hôtel butter and water cress.
Wash and wipe fish. Cover with boiling water and add remaining ingredients; bring quickly to the boiling point, and keep just below the boiling point until fish separates slightly in flakes—about thirty minutes.
A fish kettle is the most convenient receptacle for cooking fish whole. If one is not available, use a piece of cheese cloth just large enough to cover fish and tie loosely with string.
All other boiled fish may be cooked in the same way as boiled cod.
Wrap four pounds of salmon in a piece of cheese cloth. Set in a plate in a steamer and cook until fish separates from bone—from forty-five to sixty minutes, according to thickness of fish.
All other fish may be steamed in the same way.
Wash and wipe fish; grease a wire broiler with clarified butter, lard, or pork fat. Season fish with salt and pepper, place on greased broiler and broil over clear fire, turning every five seconds. If the fish is a thick one, hold at quite a distance from fire until fish is cooked through, then hold nearer embers to brown. Separate, first skin side, then flesh side, with sharp knife from the broiler. Remove to hot platter, butter, garnish and serve.
Wash, dry thoroughly, and sprinkle smelts with salt, pepper and flour; dip in beaten egg which has also been[71] seasoned with salt and pepper; drain and dip in flour, meal, or sifted bread crumbs.
The fish must be completely covered with egg and crumbs. Fry in deep fat, first testing fat with a crumb of bread, which should brown delicately in one minute.
Smelts may be cooked with their heads on, or the backbone may be removed and the fish rolled up in the shape of a muff, or they may be skewered in the shape of a ring.
When fried, drain on brown paper and serve on hot platter; garnish with lemon baskets filled with Mayonnaise Dressing and parsley.
Any small fish may be fried in the same way; large fish are generally cut in fillets, prepared and fried in the same way.
Melt butter, add remaining ingredients, and stir lightly with a fork until heated through. If a dry stuffing is preferred, omit liquid.
Wash and wipe bluefish, stuff, and sew. Cut three gashes on either side of fish and insert a slice of salt pork in each gash (if desired fancy, pink the edges of the salt pork). Season with salt and pepper, brush with melted butter, and dredge with flour. Place on a greased fish sheet, or on two four-inch-wide pieces of cheese cloth. Set in dripping pan, surround with finely chopped pork; bake, allowing fifteen minutes to the pound; baste with salt pork fat. There should be sufficient in the pan; if not, try out an additional quantity of pork.
When the fish is browned on one side, it should be turned, basted and browned on the other. To avoid this turning, many prefer to skewer the fish in the shape of the letter S, and place as if swimming in the pan.
Drain oysters; mix crumbs, melted butter and parsley. Season highly with salt and pepper. Sprinkle oysters with salt and pepper and mix with crumbs.
Remove head, tail and bone from haddock. Season with salt, pepper and lemon juice. Stuff with oyster stuffing and sew. Place on fish sheet or strips of cheese cloth in baking pan, dot with butter, and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Bake, allowing twelve minutes to the pound, basting with melted butter, or after fish is stuffed, place in pan; cover with buttered cracker crumbs and baste.
Remove from pan to hot platter; garnish with parsley and pickles, and serve with Tomato, Hollandaise Sauce, or Egg Sauce.
Wash and wipe fish. Place one slice on a buttered fish sheet, brush with melted butter, sprinkle with salt and pepper, cover with oyster stuffing. Place second slice on top of oysters, season, and brush with butter. Bake forty minutes, basting frequently with melted butter, turning pan often in order that the fish may be uniformly browned.
Remove to hot platter; garnish with potato balls, parsley, and lemon; Hollandaise, Tomato, or Béchamel Sauce.
Wash the fish, put flesh side down in dripping pan, cover with cold water, let stand on back of range ten minutes. Drain and rinse with cold water. Place on platter, cover with milk, and bake twenty minutes.
Wash and wipe fish. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, dip in olive oil, roll in cornmeal, and sauté until brown, and crisp in butter or lard. Drain on brown paper. Serve on hot platter, and garnish with lemon and cress. All kinds of small fish may be cooked in the same manner.
Mix mustard, lemon juice, Worcestershire sauce, salt and paprika. Wipe and broil the fish, spread with mustard mixture, roll in crumbs, and broil until crumbs are brown. Serve hot, with Sauce Tartare or Tomato Tartare.
Prepare the fillets, sprinkle with salt and pepper; spread with remaining ingredients blended. Roll fillets, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, fry in deep fat, and drain on brown paper. Serve on a napkin and garnish with lemon and water cress.
Fillets prepared in this way may also be baked in the oven with white wine, and served garnished with French fried potatoes and parsley.
Prepare fish as for Baked Finnan Haddie. Flake the fish, moisten with thick White Sauce, season with Worcestershire Sauce. Shape in croquettes, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat.
Wipe shad; place skin side down on oak plank. Sprinkle with salt and pepper; spread with butter. Cook in hot oven twenty to thirty minutes. Brown with a salamander. Spread with parsley and catsup or white wine. Garnish with highly seasoned hot mashed potato pressed through a pastry bag and tube. Also radishes cut in shape of roses, lemons cut in shape of crescents and dipped in chopped parsley, and sprigs of parsley.
Dry whitebait in towel; sprinkle with salt and pepper; dredge napkin with flour. Shake whitebait in napkin until each little fish is covered with flour. Dip frying basket in hot fat; cover bottom of frying basket with floured whitebait; plunge into hot fat; fry until a golden brown; drain on brown paper. Serve on napkin. Garnish with lemon and parsley. Brown bread is served with these fish.
Clean oysters. Butter a baking dish; arrange a layer of oysters in the bottom of the dish. Mix butter and bread crumbs; sprinkle oysters with crumbs, parsley, celery, paprika, salt and two tablespoons of cream. Continue arranging in layers until dish is filled, having crumbs for the last layer. Just before baking, add wine and bake twenty minutes. Oysters are best baked in a shallow dish so as to have two layers of oysters only.
Arrange fish, oysters and White Sauce in alternate layers. Cover with buttered crumbs and bake until crumbs are brown.
Drain oysters from liquor; heat liquor to boiling point. Skim. Scald milk in double boiler; add liquor and oysters; cook until edges of the oysters shrivel; add butter, salt and pepper. Serve at once.
If cracker crumbs are used, combine butter and cracker crumbs and add to oyster mixture.
Oysters and oyster liquor must not be added to milk until just before serving, as the mixture is apt to curdle if the oysters are allowed to stand in the milk.
Drain oysters from their liquor and dry between towels. Cut the bacon in pieces half the size of the oysters. Arrange the oysters and bacon in alternate layers on wooden skewers, being careful to pierce the hard muscle. Place in a hot pan and bake in a hot oven until bacon is done. Ten minutes should suffice.
Serve one skewerful on each slice of buttered toast. Many persons like the liquor of the oysters heated, strained, and poured over the toast just before serving.
Look over oysters, reject shells, and dry oysters between towels. Dip in melted butter or olive oil seasoned with salt and pepper. Heat broiler; grease; arrange oysters on broiler; broil over a clear fire four to six minutes, turning often. Serve on squares or rounds of toasted bread spread with butter and slightly moistened with oyster liquor. Garnish with a sprig of parsley and one quarter slice of lemon.
Melt two tablespoons of butter in hot frying pan, add one pint of cleaned and drained oysters, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and cook in hot oven until edges shrivel. Serve on hot buttered squares of toast with strained liquor from oysters. Garnish with finely chopped parsley.
Pick over, drain, and dry oysters; dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, season with salt and pepper. Melt one tablespoon each of lard and butter in frying pan. When hissing hot, cover bottom of pan with prepared oysters and sauté until[77] a golden brown on both sides. Drain on brown paper; reheat in oven if necessary. Serve on hot platter and garnish with parsley, lemon and Sauce Tartare.
Fried oysters are prepared same as Sautéd Oysters except they are fried in deep fat.
Melt butter; add onion; when yellow, add flour; when well blended, add liquids and seasonings. Cook five minutes; add chicken, yolks of eggs beaten until thick and cream beaten until stiff. When thick, cool. Parboil oysters; drain and dry. Cover oysters with chicken mixture, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in hot fat. Drain. Serve on hot dish and garnish with lemon and Mayonnaise Dressing.
Clams may be cooked and served in all ways like oysters.
Wash and scrub clam shells; place in kettle; add water, allowing one half cup of water for each peck of clams. Cover kettle and cook until shells open. Serve hot with melted butter.
Kettle should be removed from the range as soon as shells open, otherwise clams will be overcooked.
Combine ingredients in order given; let stand ten minutes. Remove clams from shell, cut off heads, cover with batter, and fry until golden brown in hot fat. Drain on brown paper. As clams contain so much water, only a few should be put into the fat at once.
Oysters in batter may be prepared in the same way as Clam Fritters.
Wash, drain, and parboil scallops. Season; dip in flour, egg and crumbs and fry in deep fat. Drain and serve with Sauce Tartare. Garnish with parsley and lemon.
Parboil scallops, and proceed as with Clam Fritters.
Parboil scallops. Drain and cut in slices. Melt butter; add onion and mushrooms, cook five minutes; add scallops, cook five minutes; add liquids, cook until thick.
Place mixture in buttered baking dish or scallop shells; dot with butter; cover with buttered and seasoned crumbs; bake until crumbs are brown.
To open a lobster: wipe lobster, break or sever small and large claws from the body. Separate tail from body portion by twisting and pulling at the same time. Remove meat from body portion carefully, picking edible portion from small bones. Reserve liver and coral if there is any; discard stomach, or “lady.” Meat from the body of the lobster is the sweetest and tenderest, but is often thrown away because of the difficulty in removing it.
Break the large claws, or if the shell is tender, cut with scissors and remove meat whole.
Crush the tail shell and remove the meat in one piece. Cut entire length of the tail meat and remove the intestinal canal.
The small claws are attractive for garnishing, and should be reserved.
Make a White Sauce of butter, flour, seasonings and cream. Parboil red pepper, add to sauce with lobster meat, reheat, and serve on rounds of buttered toast.
Use receipt for Creamed Lobster and bake in lobster shell, scallop shells, ramekins, or baking dishes, covered with buttered and seasoned cracker crumbs. Garnish with small lobster claws and parsley.
Prepared same as Creamed Lobster, with addition of one teaspoon each of onion juice, Worcestershire sauce, mustard, few grains of cayenne and a few drops of Tabasco.
Shrimps and crabs may be creamed, scalloped, or deviled, like lobster, garnished and served in the same way.
Melt butter, add flour, mustard, salt and pepper; when blended, add stock; cook five minutes; add egg yolks, crab meat and chives. Arrange in crab shells or in ramekin dishes. Cover with Worcestershire Sauce and bread crumbs. Bake until crumbs are brown.
Parboil red peppers. Make a White Sauce with butter, flour, cream and seasonings. Add crab meat, fill peppers with crab mixture, cover with buttered and seasoned soft bread crumbs, and bake until crumbs are brown.
Select a heavy lobster. Cut with a quick, sharp thrust the whole length of the body from the mouth down. Remove the stomach and intestinal canal; reserve the liver or tomalley and coral, if there is any. Crack large claws and place on greased broiler, inserting skewers between the sides of the lobster to keep it open. Place in oven for twenty minutes, then broil over hot coals about five minutes. Serve immediately, plain or with Deviled Sauce.
Melt butter; add onion; cook until yellow; add flour, curry, liquid; cook until thickened; add eggs, salt and pepper, and coral, if you have it; strain over lobster meat.
Serve on a bed of rice garnished with parsley.
Prepare the sauce as for Suprême Oysters, substituting two cups of chopped lobster for oysters.
Prepared same as Crabs in Red Peppers, substituting one pint lobster meat for crab meat.
Prepare crabs by removing sand bags. Raise apron; cut from crab; remove spongy substance surrounding apron. Wipe; season with salt and pepper; dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs; fry in hot fat about three minutes. Serve immediately with Tartare Sauce.
Meat is expensive; therefore every housekeeper should inform herself in regard to the different cuts in different creatures, and the prices of these cuts.
Various methods are employed in cooking meats; but this fact should be remembered, that all meat should be subjected to a high temperature for a short time, in order to sear the surface and shut in the juices, whatever method of cooking is used.
Tough meats should have long, slow cooking.
Dry meats, like the fillet, should be larded to give flavor.
As a rule, dark meats are more palatable and digestible if cooked rare, and white meats are considered better if thoroughly cooked.
Remove all meats from paper as soon as sent from the market. Set on plate and keep in ice chest or cool place until ready to use.
Never put meat in cold water, but always wipe with a damp cloth to remove any foreign matter, before cooking.
A description of the various meats will be found in the chapter on Marketing.
The flank is one of the best pieces for boiling.
Select a five-pound piece; wipe; remove membrane, shape, stuff, tie, and skewer. Cover with cloth; place in[83] kettle; cover with boiling water; bring to the boiling point, and cook just below the boiling point five or six hours, or until tender. Simmered beef would be a more correct term than boiled beef, but it is ordinarily known as boiled beef.
Season with salt one half hour before serving. Reserve liquor for making gravies and soups.
Boiled beef should have a rich, highly seasoned gravy served with it.
An iron, or agate-ware kettle, with closely fitting cover, is absolutely necessary for perfectly cooking braised beef.
Select six pounds of round of beef, or any tough, inexpensive piece. Try out one cup salt pork cubes; add one cup each of chopped celery, carrot, onion and turnip. Wipe meat; sprinkle with salt and pepper and dredge with flour. Place meat on bed of vegetables and cook in covered kettle twenty minutes; add two pints hot water and cook slowly until tender, about four hours, turning meat and basting occasionally. It may be necessary to add more water, for there should be about a pint and a half when meat is cooked. Thicken gravy with four tablespoons flour, blended with two tablespoons butter, added twenty minutes before serving. A bouquet of sweet herbs may be added to improve the flavor.
The tenderloin of beef is known as the fillet.
Trim into shape a fillet of beef weighing about four pounds, removing tendinous portions and veins. Tie and skewer into a pear-shaped piece. Lard top; sprinkle with salt and pepper, and dredge with flour. Cover the bottom of a small dripping pan with cubes of salt pork. Set trivet on top of pork, and meat on trivet. Bake[84] from twenty to thirty minutes in hot oven, basting frequently.
Serve with gravy made from fat in pan, flour and hot water. Same as receipt for Brown Gravy, under Roast Beef.
Cut slices about two inches thick from fillet. Shape in circles. Place on greased broiler and broil over hot coals from four to six minutes, turning every ten seconds. Serve on hot platter; garnish with slices of broiled tomato and brown Mushroom Sauce.
Broil steak according to receipt; place on hot platter; sprinkle with salt and pepper; cover with oysters; dot with butter; and bake in oven until edges of oysters curl. Serve immediately, garnished with parsley and lemon.
Sauté steak two minutes. Mix two tablespoons Worcestershire sauce, one half teaspoon salt, one quarter teaspoon mustard, one tablespoon melted butter, and one tablespoon chopped pimolas. Spread on both sides of steak, dip in bread crumbs, and sauté until crumbs are brown.
Wash beef; place in kettle; cover with cold water; bring to the boiling point, then simmer until tender; allow thirty-five minutes for each pound. Cool partially in water in which it was cooked; place in square pan; apply pressure and serve cold.
Chop beef; add an equal amount of cold boiled potatoes, chopped; season with salt, pepper and a few drops of onion juice.
Melt one tablespoon butter in an iron frying pan; add beef and potatoes and sufficient milk or hot water to make the mixture quite soft. Cover frying pan and cook slowly until a brown crust is formed. Turn like an omelet on to a hot platter. Garnish with parsley.
Pieces used for roasting are sirloin, rib, back of the rump, face of the rump, and upper round.
Eight to ten minutes a pound should be allowed for cooking the meat moderately rare.
Wipe the meat; place on rack in dripping pan; dredge meat and pan well with flour, then sprinkle well with salt and pepper.
Cook in hot oven for fifteen minutes, until flour is well browned. Reduce heat and continue roasting, basting every ten minutes until cooked.
Baste with fat tried out from the meat. If that is not sufficient, add beef suet, beef drippings, or butter.
Avoid the use of water in the pan, as by its use the meat is steamed rather than roasted.
Serve with brown gravy, made by browning four tablespoons of fat from the pan, adding four tablespoons flour. When brown, add one and one half cups water or beef stock and cook five minutes.
Beat eggs; add flour and salt, gradually; continue beating. Add milk and continue beating five minutes. The mixture should be perfectly smooth. One half hour before meat is done, pour this mixture into dripping pan under meat and baste when basting meat, turning pan that pudding may be golden brown throughout.
Yorkshire pudding cooked in this way is considered by many to be too rich. A very good substitute is obtained by cooking in hissing hot gem pans, thirty minutes.
Serve pudding, cut in squares, on platter around beef.
Wash and wipe six pounds of any inexpensive piece of beef; cover with boiling water; bring to the boiling point, then simmer until meat is tender, adding, the last hour of cooking, one cup each of carrot and onions, a bouquet of sweet herbs tied in a bag, pepper, and one half tablespoon salt. Remove meat and reduce liquid to one and one half cups.
Shred meat, add liquid, and press in bread pan, packing closely. When cold serve in thin slices.
Cut beef taken from the round in small squares; cover with boiling water, and simmer until meat is tender, four or six hours. Season with salt and pepper one hour before serving. Remove meat and thicken liquid, allowing one and one half tablespoons of flour for each pint of liquid.
Wipe a six-pound piece of beef; put into hot frying pan, and sear until brown; then lard the upper surface. Place in tightly covered kettle or bean pot; add one cup of water. Cook slowly in oven until meat is tender, keeping only enough water in kettle to prevent burning. When nearly done, sprinkle with salt and pepper. Serve with a Brown Gravy made with water in the pan.
Wipe three pounds from the flank or round. Cut into small cubes; dredge with salt, pepper and flour. Brown meat in hot frying pan, being careful to avoid burning.
Remove meat to kettle with close-fitting cover. Brown four tablespoons butter; add four tablespoons flour, and continue browning; add one and one half cups stock or water, one half cup each of carrot and onion; season with salt and pepper and simmer one and one half hours.
Use a slice cut from the rump, round, or sirloin, cut one and one half inches to two and a half inches thick. Wipe meat; place on hot broiler, and broil over a clear fire from five to ten minutes, turning every ten seconds. Serve on a hot platter, spread with butter, and season with salt and pepper.
If there is a large amount of fat on the steak, be sure it is well browned before serving.
Heat a frying pan hissing hot. Put in beefsteak, searing first on one side, then on the other; cook five minutes; season with salt and pepper; add onions which have been cooked one half hour in boiling salted water. Cover and simmer twenty or thirty minutes.
Remove steak to platter, spread with butter, and season with salt and pepper. Season onions with salt, pepper, and butter, and serve around steak.
Put meat and suet through meat chopper; add finely chopped onion, and season with salt and pepper. Shape[88] in balls; roll in crumbs, and broil over a clear fire, or pan-broil. Serve on hot platter with brown gravy, Tomato Sauce, or Spanish Sauce. Garnish with parsley.
Six pounds of veal taken from the leg, from the loin, or from the breast.
Skewer meat into shape; dredge with flour, and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Cover top with slices of salt pork. Allow twenty minutes to the pound, bake in a hot oven, and baste every ten minutes with fat from the pan. If there is not sufficient fat in the pan, try out some pork on top of the stove and use that for basting.
Remove pork slices from top of meat one half hour before it is done, and brown.
A gravy may be made from the fat in the pan, same as Brown Gravy.
Select a shoulder of veal and have the bone removed; stuff with same stuffing used for Baked Fish, adding one cup chopped mushrooms. Sew up stuffed meat and roast same as Roast Veal.
Cut meat in small pieces, sauté in melted butter. Cover meat with boiling water and cook slowly until meat is tender.
Melt four tablespoons butter or pork fat. When brown, add one fourth cup flour browned, and four cups of water in which veal was cooked. Season with salt, pepper, onion juice and lemon juice.
Just before serving add one fourth cup cream, or two tablespoons butter.
Serve veal in center of hot platter and surround with hot sauce. Garnish with parsley.
Dumplings may be served with this fricassee, in which case it is ordinarily called a stew.
Choose only the tenderest of veal for cutlets. Cut meat from leg, shape either in individual cutlets or one large cutlet. Cover veal with oil and let it stand one hour. Drain; cover with boiling water and simmer until tender, having only sufficient water in stewpan to keep cutlets from burning. Remove from stewpan; cool; sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour, dip in egg and crumbs, and sauté in pork fat or fry in deep fat.
Serve on hot platter with Brown Sauce, Tomato Sauce, or Mushroom Sauce.
Remove the bone from veal; wipe meat, and season with salt and pepper. Roll and tie in shape.
Cook bones in water to cover, one hour. Melt butter; add vegetables, except potatoes, peas and cauliflower; cook five minutes. Try out salt pork; add veal, and brown.
Place veal in dripping pan; surround with pork fat, onion and carrot, and cook three hours. To the melted butter add flour. When well blended, add water in which bones were cooked.
Season with salt, pepper and lemon juice. Cook cauliflower, peas and potatoes separately in boiling salted[90] water. Place cooked meat in center of platter, pour over sauce, and arrange vegetables in mounds around the meat.
Use rule for Braised Beef, substituting six pounds of the shoulder of veal.
Wipe chops taken from the rack of veal; make an incision, and put in a few drops of onion juice, lemon juice, salt and pepper. Dip in flour, egg and crumbs, and sauté in pork fat until tender. Serve on hot platter with Tomato Sauce and parsley.
Trim off the outside fat from a fore quarter or loin. Place in kettle; cover with boiling water and cook until tender, allowing fifteen minutes to the pound. Serve with Caper Sauce made from the water in which mutton was boiled. Reserve the remainder of the water for soup for next day.
The leg, loin, saddle, and shoulder are used for roasting.
Allow twelve minutes to the pound, if liked rare, fifteen if desired well done, basting every ten minutes.
To roast a leg of mutton, first remove the pink outer skin, as this contains the strong flavor. Never roast with the caul left on. The bone from the leg may be removed and the cavity stuffed and edges sewed; or the leg may be roasted without removing bone. In either case wipe meat, dredge with flour, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and place on rack in dripping pan. Dredge pan with flour, and if the mutton flavor is desired, place pieces of mutton fat in the pan, or salt pork may be substituted.
Remove the bone from the leg or fore quarter. Stuff and follow rule for Braised Beef.
Use breast or fore quarter of mutton, or cold cooked mutton, and follow receipt for Beef Ragoût.
The saddle is what the name implies—the back. In large pieces the tail is included.
Wipe meat; remove pink skin, kidneys and fat. Fold flanks inside and tie in shape. Place on rack; dredge meat and pan with flour, and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Cook in hot oven; allow ten minutes to the pound basting frequently.
Serve with Currant Jelly Sauce.
Or Rack of Mutton. Prepare the loin as for French chops and arrange like a crown, rolling the loin backward. Tie securely. Cover each chop bone with thin strip of salt pork to prevent burning. Place on rack in dripping pan with a bowl in center of the crown to preserve its shape. Dredge with flour, sprinkle with salt and pepper, basting frequently, and allowing nine minutes to the pound for roasting.
Serve on hot platter, with potato balls, green peas, French fried potatoes, or purée of chestnuts in center of crown. Paper frills on chop bones and parsley around the base.
Prepare loin or French chops as for broiling. Dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs and fry in deep fat. Drain on brown paper and serve.
Prepare French chops. Cut through meat to the bone, making a pocket; fill pocket with Mushroom Mixture; close with skewer; and broil.
Melt two tablespoons butter, add two tablespoons flour, one tablespoon finely chopped onion, one half cup chopped mushrooms, one teaspoon salt, and cream to make of consistency to shape. This is sufficient to stuff eight chops.
Prepare eight French chops. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, spread with Soubise Sauce, and broil.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add two tablespoons flour, one half teaspoon salt, three small onions which have been boiled and pressed through a sieve, a dash of cayenne, and sufficient cream to make of consistency to spread.
Prepare as for Broiled Chops with Soubise Sauce; dip in buttered crumbs; wrap in buttered paper cases. Bake thirty minutes in hot oven. Serve with Tomato or Olive Sauce.
Wipe chops, shape, place on broiler, and cook over a clear fire, turning every ten seconds, allowing eight minutes for chops cut one inch thick.
Serve on hot platter. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and spread with butter.
Arrange chops in circle, overlapping each other, or around a mound of vegetables.
Lamb or mutton chops trimmed of superfluous fat, the bones scraped and cut uniformly, are called French Chops. Broil like Lamb or Mutton Chops.
Trim loin chops, skewer in rounds, and proceed as with Broiled French Chops.
Prepare as for Broiled Chops. Heat frying pan hissing hot; place chops in pan. Do not grease pan. Sear one side and then the other, and continue turning every ten seconds, for five minutes if liked rare, and eight minutes if liked well done.
Select sparerib, loin, or shoulder for roasting. Wipe meat; place on pan; dredge meat and pan with flour. Sprinkle with salt and pepper.
Bake in a moderate oven, allowing twenty-five minutes to the pound.
Serve with cooked apples in some form—Apple Sauce, Apple Jelly, or Fried Apples.
Clean, wipe, and stuff a three-weeks-old pig. Skewer into shape; place on rack in pan; rub with butter, dredge with flour, and sprinkle with salt and pepper.
Place in moderate oven; when heated through increase heat, baste every ten minutes with melted butter, turning often to cook and brown uniformly.
Cook from three to four hours, according to size of pig.[94] Serve on hot platter on a bed of parsley. Garnish with Apple Sauce in red apple shells, lemon and parsley.
For broiling, chops should be cut very thin and broiled at least fifteen minutes, holding the broiler some distance from coals, to avoid burning.
Prepare as for Broiled Pork Chops and cook in hot oven twenty minutes, turning when half cooked.
Cook chops in hissing hot frying pan in small amount of fat. Drain and serve.
Cut ham very thin, cover with cold water, heat slowly to the boiling point. Drain, dry, and broil.
Select a medium-sized ham; soak over night in cold water. Clean and wipe; cover with cold water; bring to the boiling point, and then simmer until tender, allowing thirty minutes to the pound. Cool in water in which it was cooked. Take off the skin, sprinkle with sugar, and cover with seasoned cracker crumbs. Bake twenty to thirty minutes. Decorate with cloves, garnish with parsley and lemon, and serve hot or cold.
A more aromatic flavor is given to the ham if a bouquet of sweet herbs and one half cup each of onions, carrots, and turnips are boiled with it. Many baste the ham, when baking, with cider.
Lay thin slices of bacon on a hissing hot frying pan. When transparent, turn. When dry and crisp, drain and dry on brown paper.
Place thin slices on broiler and cook over dripping pan in hot oven. This method requires more time, but is much more wholesome.
Buy the best. Pierce several times with skewer. Cook in hot frying pan in hot oven, fifteen to twenty minutes. Many prefer to cover sausages with boiling water after piercing and boil twenty minutes, then brown in frying pan on top of range. Always drain on brown paper before serving. Serve around a mound of mashed browned potatoes.
Clean, stuff, truss, and wrap chicken in cheese cloth; cover with boiling water, and cook until tender, below the boiling point. Serve on hot platter, sprinkle with chopped parsley, and garnish with Oyster Sauce.
Allow twenty minutes to the pound for cooking.
Braised chicken is generally a fowl.
Wipe, stuff, sew, skewer, and place on rack in kettle with tight-fitting cover.
Place six slices of salt pork on bottom of kettle, add one fourth cup each, carrot, onion, turnip, and celery, bit of bay leaf, sprig of parsley, one teaspoon peppercorns, two teaspoons salt, and three cups boiling water.
Cover kettle, and cook in oven three to four hours,[96] always keeping enough water in kettle to prevent vegetables from burning. When fowl is tender, brush over with melted butter, dredge with flour, and brown in oven.
Serve with gravy and vegetables pressed through sieve. Garnish with parsley.
Clean, wipe, and split down the back, a young chicken. Sprinkle with salt and pepper; place on greased broiler, and cook over dripping pan in hot oven twenty minutes. Remove from oven, and broil over clear fire until golden brown. Remove from broiler, spread with melted butter, sprinkle with chopped parsley, and serve on hot platter on bed of water cress.
Cut chicken in pieces for serving. Dip in water, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour. Try out two tablespoons salt pork cubes. Cover bottom of frying pan with pieces of chicken. Cook until a delicate brown on one side, then turn and brown on the other. Drain on brown paper.
Take three tablespoons of fat from the pan, brown, add three tablespoons flour and brown, add one fourth teaspoon each of salt, nutmeg and paprika, and a cup and a quarter of cream. Cook five minutes, pour around chicken, and garnish with parsley and toast points.
Cut chicken in pieces for serving; dip in milk, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dip in flour or in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat. Drain on brown paper; serve on slices of buttered toast with Béchamel Sauce, Allemande, or Mushroom Sauce.
Cut chicken in pieces for serving; sprinkle with salt and pepper, dip in egg, and crumbs taken from the center of the loaf; arrange in baking dish, baste with melted butter, and cook in hot oven twenty to thirty minutes.
Arrange on a hot platter; garnish with thin slices of crisp bacon, parsley and Cream Sauce.
Cut chicken in pieces for serving, cover with Fritter Batter, and cook in deep fat. Drain on brown paper. In order that chicken in batter be cooked sufficiently, the bird must be young and tender.
Cold chicken meat may be dipped in the same batter and fried.
Cut a chicken in pieces for serving; season with salt and pepper. Melt four tablespoons butter, add one fourth cup finely chopped onion, chicken, and sauté until golden brown. Remove chicken; add four tablespoons flour, two cups chicken stock, two cups stewed tomato, one red pepper finely chopped, one half cup celery, and salt to taste. Replace chicken in sauce, and simmer until tender.
Arrange on dish; surround with sauce; garnish with cooked macaroni and parsley.
Cut chicken in pieces for serving, season with salt and pepper, brown in butter or pork fat. When golden brown cover with boiling water; add six cloves, a bit of bay leaf, a sprig of parsley, and simmer until tender.
Melt four tablespoons butter, add four tablespoons flour, and two and one half cups water in which chicken was cooked. Cook ten minutes; add one cup cream or two egg yolks.
Arrange chicken on platter, pour sauce around, and garnish with toast and parsley.
If a brown sauce is preferred, brown the butter and brown the flour, adding one more tablespoon.
Cut a chicken in pieces for serving. Melt four tablespoons butter or use the same quantity of pork fat. Add one fourth cup onion, a sprig of parsley, bit of bay leaf, four cloves and one tablespoon salt.
Put in chicken and cover with boiling water; cook until tender. Arrange chicken in baking dish; cover with strained and thickened stock. Cover whole dish with mashed potato or pastry crust. Bake until potato is brown or crust is done.
Cover chicken, cut in pieces for serving, with boiling water, add two sprigs of thyme, one sprig of marjoram, bit of bay leaf, two sprigs parsley, tied in a bag. Simmer gently until tender.
One half hour before chicken is done, add one half pound bacon cut in small pieces.
Arrange on the bottom of baking dish slices of hard-cooked eggs, cover with sautéd mushrooms, then a layer of chicken meat, and continue until dish is filled. Add three cups of sauce made from the liquor in the pan and thickened with two tablespoons butter and four tablespoons flour cooked together; reheat in oven, and garnish with pastry points cut in the shape of triangles, and parsley, and serve.
Bone according to direction for boning chicken. Stuff until plump with forcemeat, sew, press body into natural[99] shape, truss, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour, and follow directions for Roast Chicken, allowing twenty minutes for each pound.
Remove pinfeathers, singe, take out tendons, draw skin back from neck, cut off neck close to body, cut out oil bag. Make an incision between the legs, running from the breastbone down, and through this opening draw the entrails.
If care is taken, all of the internal organs can be removed at once by separating the membrane inclosing the organs from the body.
Draw windpipe and crop through the neck opening. Never make an incision in the breast.
Wash inside of bird with cloth wrung out of cold water, removing all clots of blood. Wipe, stuff, sew up openings, truss, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour, place on rack in dripping pan, and cook fifteen minutes in very hot oven. Then dredge pan with flour, reduce heat, and baste every ten minutes until chicken is done, turning often.
Allow fifteen minutes to the pound for roasting.
Prepare the same as Roast Chicken, allowing twelve minutes to the pound for roasting.
Mix ingredients in order given. If a moist stuffing is desired, add hot water until of the right consistency; but[100] many prefer a dry stuffing. For a stronger flavor of onion, cook one tablespoon chopped onion in butter and add to crumbs.
Press meat from one quart boiled chestnuts through purée sieve. Moisten with butter, and season with salt and pepper.
Parboil oysters, dip in melted butter, add remaining ingredients, and use for stuffing chicken, turkey, or goose.
Cook the onion and the pork until yellow; add remaining ingredients. Use for stuffing chicken, turkey and goose.
A green goose should never be more than four months old. Dress same as chicken. If strong, wash out with soapsuds, and carefully rinse in several waters.
Stuff, truss, sew, flatten the breastbone, and roast the same as chicken. Allow eighteen minutes to the pound for roasting.
If the goose is more than four months old, it is better to braise than roast it. But if roasted, allow twenty-five minutes to the pound.
Prepare same as chicken; stuff with chopped celery. Allow ten minutes to the pound for duckling and twenty for an old duck.
Dress, clean, and stuff turkey and follow directions for Roast Chicken. Some prefer to rub the surface of the turkey with butter and flour creamed together instead of dredging with flour.
Melt two tablespoons butter, add one tablespoon chopped onion, three cups soft bread crumbs, chopped liver and heart, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon poultry seasoning, one tablespoon chopped pickles, and one quarter teaspoon pepper.
Prepare turkey for roasting; stuff, sew, truss. Bake in hot oven, allowing fifteen minutes to the pound. Baste frequently. Dredge and season twice during cooking.
Boned Turkey is prepared in the same way as Boned Chicken.
The heads of wild duck are usually left on when cooked. Make a slit in front of the wishbone. Clean the bird; remove entrails, crop and windpipe; draw the head through the neck opening. Truss, sprinkle with salt and pepper inside and outside. Bake in a very hot oven[102] eighteen to twenty minutes, basting with hot water during cooking. If the strong flavor of wild duck is objectionable, cook an onion or an apple in the cavity, removing it before serving.
Serve with the wild duck, fried crescents of rice or hominy and Currant Jelly.
Ruddy Duck, Butterballs, Bluebills, Broadbills, Teals, Coot, Grouse, Partridge, Prairie Chicken, Quail, Woodcock, Reedbirds and Pheasants are roasted in the same way as Wild Duck, or are broiled the same as Broiled Chicken. The small birds are usually served on pieces of buttered toast and garnished with water cress, parsley and a highly seasoned sauce.
Truss four pigeons, tie two slices of bacon around each pigeon. Put one cup each of carrot and onion, cut in dice, in the bottom of a stewpan; place pigeons on vegetables; add two cups water or stock, cover, and cook in oven until pigeons are tender. One half hour before serving add one teaspoon salt. Serve on buttered toast.
Lard a saddle of venison, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour. Place in dripping pan and baste with melted butter. Allow ten minutes to the pound for roasting. Serve with Madeira or Currant Jelly Sauce.
Broiled or pan-broiled same as beefsteak or lamb chops, and serve with some acid sauce.
All green vegetables should be washed in cold water and cooked in boiling water. Salt may be added first or last according to preference. Allow one tablespoon salt to each quart of water.
The time required for cooking depends upon the age and freshness of the vegetables.
Artichokes | 45 to 60 minutes |
Asparagus, young | 15 to 20 minutes |
Asparagus, old | 30 to 50 minutes |
Beans, fresh | 1 to 2 hours |
Beans, dried | 2 to 4 hours |
Beets, young | 60 minutes |
Beets, old | 3 to 5 hours |
Brussels sprouts | 15 to 20 minutes |
Cabbage, young | 30 minutes |
Cabbage, old | 2 to 3 hours |
Carrots, young | 30 minutes |
Carrots, old | 1 to 2 hours |
Cauliflower | 30 to 60 minutes |
Corn | 5 to 20 minutes |
Dandelions | 2 to 3 hours |
Onions | 60 to 90 minutes |
Parsnips | 1 to 2 hours |
Peas | 20 to 40 minutes |
Potatoes | 30 minutes |
Salsify | 30 to 60 minutes |
Squash, summer | 20 to 60 minutes |
Squash, winter | 60 to 90 minutes |
Spinach and other greens | 20 to 60 minutes |
Sweet potatoes | 30 to 60 minutes |
Turnips | 40 to 60 minutes |
Soak in cold water. Remove lower leaves and cut ends of others. Cook in boiling salted water forty-five minutes or until the leaves pull out. Drain. Serve with Béchamel or Hollandaise Sauce or with Drawn Butter.
Arrange in a scallop dish and bake until crumbs are brown.
Wash and scrub. Cook in boiling salted water. Serve with melted butter or White Sauce. They may be marinated with French Dressing and served cold.
Wash stalks, snap off all white tough part. Tie in bunch. Cook in deep kettle of boiling salted water. Stand bunch upright for the first ten minutes. Cook twenty to thirty minutes. Drain. Serve on buttered toast, spread with butter, and sprinkle with salt and pepper. White Sauce or Hollandaise may be served.
The asparagus may be broken in inch pieces, cooked until tender, mixed with White Sauce, and served on toast.
Cook in boiling water until tender. Add salt after the first hour. Time of cooking depends upon age of beans. Drain. Serve with butter or cream or White Sauce. Lima, kidney, or agricultural beans may be cooked in this way.
Remove all strings. Cut in inch pieces. Wash, cook in boiling water fifteen minutes. Add salt and cook until tender. Drain, add butter, salt and pepper. A piece of salt pork cooked with beans is considered by many an improvement.
Remove outside leaves and soak in cold water for half an hour. Drain. Cook in boiling salted water until tender, changing the water at least once during cooking. Serve Brussels sprouts whole with butter and salt or with White Sauce. Chop the cabbage when cooked, season with salt, pepper and butter, reheat and serve, or mix one cup cabbage with one cup White Sauce, cover with buttered crumbs and bake until brown.
Shred cabbage finely. Soak in acidulated water. Drain, and cover with Cream Dressing. Serve very cold.
Scrub beets, but do not break skin. Cook in boiling water—young beets about an hour, old beets until tender. Slip skins off as soon as taken from stove. Serve hot with butter, salt and pepper. Serve cold beets for garnishing Potato Salad.
Wash, scrub, and scrape. Cook in boiling salted water. Drain, cut in slices, and serve with White Sauce; or they may be cut lengthwise and sautéd in butter.
Cut stalk close to flower, remove green leaves and soak in cold salted water one hour. Cook in cheese cloth bag[106] thirty to forty minutes. Remove from bag and serve with Hollandaise or White Sauce, or scalloped with White Sauce and crumbs.
Celery is usually eaten raw as a relish. Or it may be scraped, cut in inch pieces, cooked until tender, and served in a White Sauce, or drained and fried in deep fat. It may also be scalloped with chopped red pepper, White Sauce and crumbs.
Generally served sliced thinly and eaten raw. But if too old to serve in this way, they may be pared, cut in quarters, boiled, drained, mashed, and seasoned with salt and pepper.
Or they may be cut in quarters, dipped in batter, and fried in deep fat.
Remove husks and silk. Cook in a small amount of water from five to twenty minutes. Cover while cooking with the inside green husks. Serve on the cob; or cut from the cob and serve with salt, pepper and butter.
Corn may be made into fritters (see receipt) or mixed with beans for succotash. Also served as pudding mixed with eggs and milk.
Beet tops, dandelions, spinach, Swiss chard, young cabbage sprouts, cowslips, may all be prepared in the same way. Wash in many waters until all grit and sand are removed. Cook in boiling salted water until tender. Drain, chop, and serve with butter and salt. Lettuce may also be cooked and served in this way. Garnish greens with hard-cooked eggs.
Cut in slices one half inch thick. Remove skin, sprinkle with salt, pile slices one on another, cover with plate and weight, let stand over night. Drain, wash in cold water. Dry, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, or in batter, and fry in deep fat.
Soak over night and cook in boiling water until tender. Mash, season with salt, pepper and butter, and serve; or make in balls and sauté in butter.
Wash, cut off ends of pods, cover with boiling salted water, and cook until tender. Season with butter, salt and pepper. Okra is more often stewed or scalloped with tomato than served plain.
Peel, cover with boiling salted water. Change water every ten minutes until tender. Drain, and add milk to cover. Reheat, season with butter, salt and pepper; or serve with White Sauce; or scallop with White Sauce and crumbs; or stuff. When boiled, remove hearts, and fill the space with finely chopped peppers. Surround with White Sauce. Bake, and baste with butter.
Scrape, wash, and cook until tender. Drain, mash, season, and sauté in butter; or cut in inch lengths, dip in Fritter Batter, and fry in deep fat.
Wash, scrape, and cook in boiling salted water until tender. Cut in halves, spread with salt and butter, and serve hot; or mash, season, and sauté in butter.
See receipts under head of Vegetable Entrées.
Break in inch pieces and wash. Cook in boiling salted water until tender. Drain, season with salt, pepper and butter, and serve hot.
Prepare as for Boiled Macaroni. Drain, and reheat in Cream Sauce, Tomato Sauce, or Béchamel Sauce.
Prepare boiled macaroni. Drain, arrange in layers in a buttered baking dish with White Sauce and cheese. Cover with buttered crumbs, and bake until crumbs are brown.
Arrange layers of cooked macaroni, stewed and seasoned tomato, and chopped green pepper. Dot each layer with butter. Cover all with buttered cracker crumbs. Bake in hot oven.
Wash one cup rice and drain. Fill a four-quart saucepan one half full of boiling salted water. Place on hottest part of range. When boiling rapidly, sprinkle in the rice slowly, not to stop the boiling. Cook until tender, adding more water if needed. Drain in a colander, and place in the open oven to dry.
Rice cooked in this way will have every grain separate.
Wash and cut in quarters. Cook in boiling salted water until tender. Drain in cheese cloth. Add butter, salt and pepper. Reheat and serve.
Cut squash, remove seeds, and steam or boil until soft. Remove squash from shell. Add butter, salt and pepper. Reheat and serve.
Cut in pieces for serving. Remove seeds and stringy portion, brush with molasses, season with salt and pepper. Bake until soft, add butter, and serve in shell.
Cut tomatoes in halves. Sprinkle each half with salt, pepper and fine bread crumbs, and broil five minutes. Slip on to hot platter, dot with butter, place in the oven for five minutes. Serve hot.
Cut tomatoes in quarters lengthwise; season with salt and pepper, dip in batter, and fry in deep fat.
Slice tomatoes; season with salt and pepper. Dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and sauté in hot frying pan. Serve on hot buttered toast.
Arrange in layers canned tomatoes and bread cut in cubes, sprinkle each layer with salt and pepper, dot with butter. Bake one half hour. For variety rub dish with onion before putting in tomato.
Cut a thin slice from smooth end of tomatoes. Scoop out pulp, mix with an equal quantity of cold cooked rice, macaroni, or bread crumbs. Add salt, pepper, butter and[110] a few drops of onion juice. Refill tomato shells, cover with tops, and bake one half hour.
Cook peas in boiling water. Use just enough water to keep them from burning. Add salt fifteen minutes before taking them from the fire. Season with butter and pepper.
Peas may be used for croquettes or may be used with White Sauce and served in Croustade Cases.
Equal quantities of chopped carrots and peas served together are delicious.
Wash and pare; cut in pieces. Cook, mash, and season; or cut in cubes, cook in boiling salted water until tender, and serve in White Sauce.
Potatoes may be boiled with skins on, or may be pared and boiled in salted water. Old potatoes should be soaked in cold water at least an hour. Potatoes should be boiled gently and not furiously.
When tender, drain thoroughly, dry on back of range. Shake saucepan, cover with coarse towel until ready to serve.
Serve in open vegetable dish, never in a closed one.
Cook potatoes in boiling salted water. Drain, mash. To each cup of mashed potato, allow one tablespoon butter, one half teaspoon salt, one eighth teaspoon pepper, and hot milk to make of creamy consistency. Beat with a fork until light.
Add to one pint hot mashed potatoes, one eighth teaspoon celery salt, one teaspoon chopped parsley, salt, pepper, and butter to taste, and enough hot milk to make of consistency to shape. Form into smooth round balls, bake in hot buttered pan; or sauté in butter; or fry in deep fat. Or they may be sautéd in sausage fat, which gives an appetizing flavor.
Cut two cups cold boiled potatoes in very thin slices, or in cubes. Add one cup White Sauce. Season highly and reheat in double boiler. Serve in hot dish sprinkled with finely chopped parsley.
Mix two cups potato cubes with two tablespoons butter, two cups milk, salt and pepper.
Dredge with two tablespoons flour and cook twenty minutes in double boiler.
Mix two cups potato cubes with two cups White Sauce, cover with buttered bread crumbs, and bake thirty minutes in hot oven. A few drops onion juice may be added.
Melt two tablespoons butter. Add one tablespoon finely chopped onion. When onion is yellow, add two cups potato cubes. Season with salt and pepper, cook until potatoes are heated through, and sprinkle with finely chopped parsley, and serve.
Pare small raw potatoes, divide in halves, and cut each half in three pieces; cover with boiling water and let stand three minutes. Drain dry between cloths, and cook in frying basket in hot fat ten minutes. Drain, sprinkle with salt, and serve.
Slice raw potatoes, cover with cold water, and let soak over night. Drain dry between towels and fry in frying basket in hot fat about ten minutes. Drain and sprinkle with salt. Care must be used when lowering the basket into the hot fat, as the potatoes contain so much water it causes violent ebullition.
Prepare two cups hot mashed potato. Add one half cup milk, two well-beaten yolks, two tablespoons butter. Salt and pepper to taste. Beat well; add beaten whites of two eggs. Pile lightly in buttered baking dish and bake until puffed and brown.
Sprinkle two cups cold boiled potato cubes with salt and pepper. Melt one tablespoon butter; add one tablespoon flour and one half cup brown stock. Cook five minutes; add potato cubes; cook ten minutes, stirring, without breaking potatoes. Melt one tablespoon butter in another frying pan. When brown, turn in potatoes, spread evenly, and cook ten minutes; fold like an omelet, and serve hot.
Bake six potatoes. When done, cut a lengthwise slice; scoop out the potato with a spoon. Mash; add one tablespoon butter, salt, pepper, one half cup milk, and two egg-whites[113] beaten stiff. Refill skins with this mixture. Pile lightly, do not smooth, and bake until potatoes are puffed and brown.
Cut two cups of potato balls with French potato cutter. Parboil ten minutes, drain, and fry in deep fat.
Cook two cups potato balls in boiling water until tender. Drain, and serve with Maître d’Hôtel Butter.
Mix two cups hot mashed potatoes, one teaspoon onion juice, one tablespoon finely chopped parsley, one egg yolk well beaten, four stiffly beaten whites, one half cup grated cheese, and salt and pepper to taste. Pile lightly in baking dish and bake until brown.
Pare six medium-sized potatoes; parboil five minutes. Place on grate under roast beef. Baste with beef fat, and bake from twenty to thirty minutes, turning often.
Wash and scrub six potatoes of uniform size. Place in dripping pan, and bake in hot oven forty-five minutes to one hour, turning when half done. Pierce with skewer, and serve immediately.
Cut cold boiled sweet potatoes in lengthwise slices, sprinkle with salt and pepper. Brush with butter and sprinkle with brown sugar. Brown in hot oven.
Cut cold boiled sweet potatoes in lengthwise slices. Arrange in layers in buttered baking dish. Cover each layer with brown sugar, dot with butter, sprinkle with salt and pepper, add one cup boiling water, and bake in hot oven.
Wipe one quart tomatoes, plunge into boiling water, let stand two minutes, remove skins. Cut in pieces. Cook slowly twenty to thirty minutes. Season with butter, salt and pepper and cook five minutes longer. A few drops of onion juice and one half cup crackers, added when the seasonings are put in, give a variety.
Mix the cereal very gradually with the amount of boiling salted water, and cook in double boiler until done. To hasten the cooking, cook in single boiler or saucepan for the first part of the time, stirring constantly to keep grain from sticking.
As a rule, cook steam-cooked cereals twice the time given on the package.
Coarse cereals, like rice and hominy, should be cooked in a large quantity of water, and stirred as little as possible.
Fine cereals, like wheatena, wheat germ, and others, are more easily kept from lumping by first mixing them with a small amount of cold water, and then adding to the boiling water.
Mix all ingredients, and cook in double boiler thirty minutes to one hour.
Mix ingredients, and cook in double boiler six to eight hours.
Cook all ingredients, stirring occasionally, for one hour.
Mix ingredients and cook six to eight hours, or, instead of boiling, cook in double boiler all day.
Mix ingredients and cook in double boiler from three to five hours.
The receipts given on the packages for all prepared cereals may be followed, doubling the amount of time given.
Salt water, add rice a few grains at a time, so as not to stop the boiling, boil rapidly one half hour. When grains are tender, drain in colander, and pour boiling water over rice to wash starch from grains. Serve immediately.
Place rice in earthen dish, add salt and boiling water, and steam two to three hours. Cooked in this way, every grain should be separate.
Salt water, add corn meal, a little at a time, until all is used, boil five minutes, and cook in double boiler three hours.
Cook in the same way as Corn Meal Mush, pour while hot into greased bread pan or baking powder box. When cold, slice and sauté in pork fat, first on one side and then on the other; or fry in deep fat.
A fresh egg sinks when immersed in water. A stale egg, owing to evaporation which has taken place through the pores of the shell, floats.
Place eggs in saucepan, cover with boiling water, and let them stand in saucepan on the back of the range three minutes; in this way the white and the yolk are slightly coagulated.
Fill saucepan one half full of boiling water; when boiling violently, place eggs in gently with a tablespoon; when water bubbles, remove saucepan from fire and let the eggs remain in water five minutes. Eggs cooked in this way have the albumen delicately hardened throughout.
Place eggs in saucepan, cover with cold water, bring to the boiling point, when they will be soft-cooked.
Cover eggs with boiling water and cook below the boiling point for forty minutes. Remove from pan, cover with cold water, and wipe before serving.
Butter baking dish or platter, or individual ramekin dishes. Break each egg into a cup and drop into baking[119] dish, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and bake in a moderate oven—five minutes for soft-cooked and ten for hard-cooked. Eggs are more delicately cooked if dish is placed in a pan of hot water in the oven, and water kept below the boiling point during cooking.
Chopped red or green pepper sprinkled over top of baked eggs is delicious.
Break eggs in cup; butter muffin rings. Place in shallow pan and cover with boiling water. Allow two teaspoons of salt to each pint of water. Drop eggs into rings, and cook from five to eight minutes, keeping water below the boiling point during cooking.
Remove the eggs on a buttered skimmer or pancake turner, and place on a round of buttered toast, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and garnish with parsley.
Beat the white until stiff; add a few grains of salt; place in a buttered ramekin dish or saucer; put a piece of butter in center of white, and place unbroken yolk on top. Set the egg dish in pan of boiling water; cover and cook three minutes. Serve immediately.
Fill a saucepan three fourths full of boiling water; add salt and vinegar, stir the boiling water vigorously with a spoon. Break egg in cup and drop deftly into eddy formed by swift stirring of water. When white is firm, remove with buttered skimmer, trim, and serve.
Cut a piece from the stem end of a tomato; remove pulp; set in ramekin dish; sprinkle with salt and pepper, drop[120] egg into tomato cup; cover with buttered paper. Set in a pan of water and bake in a moderate oven until firm.
Beat egg slightly, enough to blend yolks and whites; add seasonings, parsley and milk. Melt butter in frying pan, add egg mixture, and cook slowly, lifting carefully with a spoon to keep mixture uniformly delicate.
Prepare the same as Scrambled Eggs No. 1, beating yolks and whites separately. Many persons have better success scrambling eggs in a double boiler instead of in a frying pan.
Scrambled eggs can be varied in appearance and flavor by adding various chopped meats, condiments, vegetables, cheese, or mushrooms.
Melt butter, bacon fat or pork fat in frying pan; when it bubbles, turn in egg, which has been previously broken into a cup; when white is set, baste with liquid fat. If desired hard, turn and cook on both sides.
Beat eggs well; add salt and milk. Melt butter in frying pan; add egg mixture; shake pan vigorously until egg begins to brown on under side; then let it stand until[121] golden brown, on part of range where it will not burn. If moist on top, place in oven to dry. Separate omelet from sides of pan with knife, and beginning at side near the handle, roll omelet slowly and carefully into the shape of a jelly roll; turn on to a hot platter, garnish, and serve.
Omelets may be varied in the following ways:—
Bacon Omelet, by adding finely chopped cooked bacon before folding.
Cheese Omelet, by adding grated cheese before folding.
Creamed Salt Fish Omelet, by combining creamed salt fish and finely chopped red pepper, and adding to omelet before folding.
Kidney Omelet, by adding stewed kidneys, highly seasoned.
Mushroom Omelet, by adding mushrooms.
And continuing through a multiplicity of combinations.
Same ingredients as for first omelet, beating yolks and whites separately and combining ingredients in a way to produce a foamy appearance before pouring into omelet pan.
Melt butter; add flour, milk, and yolks of eggs, beaten until lemon-colored and thick. Beat whites until stiff, cut, and fold into first mixture; add seasonings; pour into buttered pan, and cook as first omelet. Turn on to a hot platter; garnish with White Sauce, and parsley.
Note.—For a sweet omelet add one fourth cup sugar to the yolks of eggs of above omelet.
Remove shell from eggs; chop whites finely; add to White Sauce. Press yolks through sieve and add seasonings. Pour White Sauce over toast arranged on a platter, and garnish with yolks of eggs and parsley.
This dish may be very attractively arranged by placing spoonfuls of finely chopped ham around the toast.
Cut eggs in halves lengthwise, remove yolks, and mash. Add meat and seasonings; moisten with White Sauce; press in shape of ball and return to white. These eggs may be placed in a dish, covered with White Sauce and buttered crumbs, and baked; or covered with a small square of paraffine paper daintily twisted at the ends, for a picnic dish.
Melt butter in frying pan, add well-beaten eggs, to which seasonings and hot water have been added. Cook on cool portion of range, lifting mixture as for Scrambled Eggs. When creamy, pour into a hot buttered frying pan, brown delicately, fold, and serve. Garnish with parsley.
Mix eggs, flour, seasonings; add cream, and beat all five minutes. Melt butter, pour in egg mixture, and cook until delicately browned underneath. Turn, fold, and serve.
Use receipt for French Omelet, and garnish with Spanish Sauce.
Sauté two tablespoons each of chopped onion, green pepper, a clove of garlic, in four tablespoons butter until yellow; add one cup of tomato.
Season with salt, pepper and cayenne, and cook until thick. One half cup mushrooms sautéd with onions is an improvement.
Melt butter, add flour, seasonings and liquid. Stir until the boiling point is reached. Boil five minutes, beating constantly.
Melt the butter and cook until brown, add flour and seasonings, and stir until brown. Add liquid, little at a time, and boil five minutes, stirring all of the time.
Use same ingredients as for Velouté Sauce, adding the yolks of two eggs and one teaspoon chopped parsley. Cook one minute.
Sauté vegetables in butter. Remove vegetables, add flour and remaining ingredients, boil two minutes, and simmer ten minutes.
A richer sauce is made by adding one half cup cream.
Mix yolks and water; add butter and set in a dish of hot water; stir constantly until mixture thickens; add seasonings and serve immediately.
To Béarnaise Sauce add one fourth cup tomato purée.
Both Béarnaise and Tomato Béarnaise Sauces must be cooked at a low temperature, otherwise the mixture will not be smooth. The sauce should be creamy and of the consistency of Mayonnaise Dressing.
Scald milk with seasonings, cook twenty minutes, strain; add crumbs and butter, cook twenty minutes, and serve with game.
Use same rule as for Bread Sauce, adding one cup crumbs, which have been sautéd a light brown in butter.
Brown butter, add remaining ingredients. Heat and serve.
Melt the two tablespoons butter, add flour, seasonings, and water. Cook ten minutes; add capers and just before serving a tablespoon butter.
Use receipt for White Sauce, using instead of one cup of milk, one half cup of milk and one half cup of water in which celery was cooked.
Add just before serving two cups of chopped celery which has been boiled until tender.
Add to Brown Sauce, one half cup of champagne and two tablespoons finely chopped pimentoes.
Melt butter; add flour and seasonings. When smooth, add stock; boil five minutes; add chestnuts; reheat and serve.
To Brown Sauce add one half cup currant jelly, one teaspoon lemon juice and a few drops onion juice. Boil five minutes and serve.
Add to White Sauce one tablespoon curry and a few drops of onion juice. There is less liability of the curry lumping if blended with the flour before adding to butter.
Grate two cucumbers to pulp; add one teaspoon salt, one fourth teaspoon pepper, few grains cayenne, few drops onion juice, and two tablespoons vinegar.
To White Sauce add two hard-cooked eggs finely chopped.
To White Sauce add few drops of onion juice and the yolks of three eggs; salt and pepper if necessary.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add two tablespoons each of onion, celery, ham, red pepper and parsley, three tablespoons flour, one half teaspoon salt, few grains cayenne and two cups white stock. Cook one hour. Strain, serve.
Put all ingredients, except the lemon juice, into a saucepan; set saucepan into a larger one of hot water. Beat constantly until mixture thickens, keeping water below the boiling point all the time. Add lemon juice and serve immediately.
Cream butter; add lemon juice, yolks of eggs, one by one. When well blended add seasonings and cook over boiling water, just long enough to thoroughly heat the[128] mixture. Should the mixture become overcooked, add two teaspoons cold water and beat vigorously.
Mix horse-radish, bread crumbs, salt, paprika and White Sauce. When hot, add lemon juice and vinegar.
To Hollandaise Sauce add a few drops of onion juice and five tablespoons grated horse-radish.
To White Sauce add one half tablespoon lemon juice, one cup chopped lobster meat, and the dried and pounded lobster coral.
To Hollandaise Sauce add few gratings of nutmeg, one cup chopped lobster meat, and the dried and pounded coral.
Combine all ingredients, except Madeira; simmer one half hour. Add Madeira and serve.
Cream the butter and add remaining ingredients.
Cook mushrooms, capers and anchovy in butter five minutes. Add flour, stock, seasonings, and simmer one half hour. Add wine and serve.
Wash mint, remove leaves, and chop; add remaining ingredients; let it stand one half hour. Serve hot or cold.
Melt butter; add flour, mustard, salt, sugar and cayenne. When well blended, add stock, simmer twenty minutes, add vinegar, and serve.
Chop mushrooms, sauté in butter, add egg yolk and kitchen bouquet; when well blended add Brown Sauce. Reheat and serve, seasoning if necessary.
Chop mushrooms and sauté in butter; add to White Sauce; cook ten minutes. Add remaining ingredients and serve.
To Brown Sauce add one teaspoon chopped onion and one half cup stoned, chopped and boiled olives.
To one cup White Sauce add one half cup cream and one cup boiled onions, finely chopped. Simmer twenty minutes.
Melt butter; add flour, mustard, salt, stock, cook ten minutes; add Currant Jelly, cook five minutes; add orange juice, rind, and wine. Serve when hot.
To Hollandaise Sauce add juice and rind of one orange and few grains of cayenne.
Parboil oysters; drain and reserve liquor. Make a White Sauce with butter, flour, seasonings and oyster liquor; add chopped oysters and serve. Should there not be sufficient oyster liquor make up amount with milk.
To Brown Sauce add two tablespoons chopped pepper, one tablespoon chopped onion, or a clove of garlic, one teaspoon parsley, one teaspoon Kitchen Bouquet. Simmer one half hour, strain and serve.
Brown the butter; add the flour; when browned, add stock. Cook chives, capers, pickles, olives and pepper in vinegar five minutes. Add to sauce and simmer twenty minutes.
To White Sauce add one half cup cream; when boiling pour on to two egg yolks slightly beaten, cook one minute; add one tablespoon butter, one tablespoon chopped parsley, and two tablespoons lemon juice.
To Brown Sauce add two tablespoons butter in which have been cooked one tablespoon onion, one tablespoon Worcestershire Sauce, and one half cup Port wine.
Melt four tablespoons butter; add one half cup onion. Add to one cup of Béchamel Sauce, with one tablespoon each of minced and pounded chives, tarragon, parsley and thyme. Strain and serve after reheating.
To Hollandaise Sauce add one cup washed and chopped sorrel.
Melt butter; add flour. When well blended, add hot water, cook thirty minutes; add seasonings and pour on to the slightly beaten yolks of eggs; add shrimps broken in pieces and serve.
To White Sauce made with white stock, add one half cup of cream, two tablespoons butter, one teaspoon lemon juice. Cook twenty minutes and add one fourth cup wine.
To Hollandaise Sauce add one cup finely chopped cooked and seasoned onion.
To one cup of Mayonnaise Dressing add one tablespoon each of finely chopped parsley, finely chopped olives, finely chopped pickle, and one teaspoon finely chopped chives.
Melt butter; add onion, carrot and parsley. Cook five minutes. Strain. To butter add flour; when well blended add stock and tomato. Simmer one half hour. Serve.
Melt butter; add celery and onion, cook five minutes; add tomatoes; cook ten minutes. Strain; add soda. To White Sauce add Kitchen Bouquet and Worcestershire Sauce; cook five minutes.
Combine Tomato Sauce and White Sauce; add lemon juice and serve.
To Hollandaise Sauce add one half cup sautéd mushrooms and two tablespoons wine.
Melt butter; add mushrooms, flour, salt, nutmeg and white stock; simmer ten minutes. Add cream and cook in double boiler one half hour. Just before serving add one tablespoon butter.
Mix ingredients in order given, stir well and serve cold.
Chop meat and press through a sieve. Soak bread in milk; add it with remaining ingredients to chicken; season highly and use as a filling in fontage cups, or shape in balls and poach in hot water, or shape in balls, roll in flour, and sauté.
Melt butter; add onion, cook three minutes; add remaining ingredients, cook ten minutes. Use as filling for fish sandwiches, or spread over fish chops, or poach and serve with White Sauce.
Boil consommé with lemon juice until reduced to one quart. Season well and clear. Soak gelatine in two tablespoons cold water and dissolve in hot water, add to clear consommé, strain, and use as a mold for fish, meats and salads. It is very necessary that the consommé be highly seasoned, as the success of the aspic depends on the flavor.
A quick and satisfactory aspic is made by dissolving three tablespoons Liebig’s beef extract in one quart boiling water, seasoning well with lemon juice, onion juice, sherry wine, salt and pepper. Clear; add two tablespoons dissolved gelatine, and use the same as Aspic Jelly.
Melt butter; add flour, seasonings, stock, cream, chicken, mushrooms, bread crumbs; cook ten minutes; add egg yolks and cut and fold in whites beaten until stiff, and the sherry. Bake in buttered baking dish forty minutes. Serve immediately with or without Mushroom Sauce.
Chop meat and press through sieve; add remaining ingredients and fill buttered timbale molds which have been previously sprinkled with finely chopped pickles or olives. Bake in pan of hot water twenty minutes. Remove and serve with Hollandaise Sauce or Parmesan Sauce.
Heat chicken stock; add seasoning, gelatine which has been soaked in cold water. When dissolved, add chicken finely chopped, beaten cream; beat well; cut and fold in the beaten whites; pour into buttered molds and chill for two or three hours. Serve as a salad with Mayonnaise.
Lobster Mousse may be prepared in the same way as Chicken Mousse, substituting lobster meat for chicken.
Chop fish and press through a sieve; add onion juice, lemon juice, salt and pepper. When well mixed add whipped cream, almonds finely chopped, and egg whites beaten to a stiff froth.
Fill buttered timbale molds with this mixture, set in pan of hot water, and bake ten to fifteen minutes. Serve hot with Cucumber or Tomato Sauce, or cold, with Mayonnaise Dressing.
Melt butter; add flour, milk, seasonings and parsley; cook five minutes. Add fish, boil two minutes; add egg yolks. Cool. Fold in stiffly beaten whites. Fill molds with this mixture. Set in a pan of hot water and bake twenty minutes.
Remove from mold and serve at once with Lobster, Shrimp, or Hollandaise Sauce.
Follow receipt for Fish Timbales, substituting one cup of lobster meat for fish and adding one half cup mushrooms finely chopped. Cook same as Fish Timbales. Serve with Béchamel Sauce, garnish each timbale with a sprig of parsley, and sprinkle coral pressed through a sieve over all.
Chop livers; sauté pork cubes; add livers, flour, stock and mushrooms. Cook five minutes, season to taste, and serve in fontage cups.
Melt butter; add flour, seasonings, cream, livers, and eggs finely chopped; cook five minutes; add rice; reheat and serve in fontage cups.
Melt butter; add flour, seasonings and cream; cook five minutes. Cover sweetbreads and mushrooms with oil and vinegar, and let stand twenty minutes, drain, add to sauce, reheat, and serve in fontage cups.
Substitute one half cup cold cooked chicken cut in small pieces for the one half cup of mushrooms, and proceed as for Sweetbreads and Mushrooms in Fontage Cups.
Melt butter, add oysters and cook one minute. Remove oysters, add remaining ingredients except wine, cook until thick, add oysters and wine, and serve in fontage cups.
Melt butter; add onion, flour, stock and lemon juice; cook five minutes; season with salt and pepper; add cream, in which yolk of egg has been beaten, and lobster meat. When hot, serve in fontage cups.
Substitute two cups crab meat cut in fine pieces for lobster meat and proceed as for Creamed Lobster.
Substitute two cups shrimps broken in small pieces for lobster meat, and follow rule for Creamed Lobster.
Cut shad roe in small pieces; add seasonings, sauce and yolks of eggs. Shape; dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs; fry.
Mix ingredients in order given; shape in croquette or chop form; dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs. Fry in deep fat. If in chop form, make incision and insert small lobster claw.
Mix ingredients in order given; shape; dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs; fry in deep fat.
Mix ingredients in order given until smooth, strain, and let stand over night in a warm place. Heat fontage iron in hot fat, drain, dip in batter, place in hot fat, and fry until a delicate brown. Remove from iron, invert, and drain.
These cups are used for all kinds of creamed mixtures and forcemeats, and are used instead of patty shells and croustades.
Melt butter; add flour, seasonings and milk. Cook until thick. This sauce is sufficient to thicken two cups of meat, for all kinds of croquettes. It may be varied by adding two egg yolks or one egg.
Cut meat in small pieces; add seasonings and Croquette Sauce. Shape, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat. These croquettes may be varied by adding one fourth cup of chopped mushrooms, ham, sweetbreads, or truffles. More or less sauce is required according to the dryness of chicken.
Sauté mushrooms in butter; add sweetbread, seasonings, sauce. Shape, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry.
Mix all ingredients; add more lemon juice if needed. Shape, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, fry in deep fat.
One cup tomato may be substituted for the one cup milk or stock in Croquette Sauce.
Make eight fillets from the flounder. Melt butter; add lemon juice and parsley. Dip fillets in this mixture; roll and skewer fillets; put in baking dish; sprinkle with salt, pepper and cayenne. Cover with cream and cook in oven until tender. Arrange on platter, pour around the fillets Béchamel Sauce, and garnish with lemon basket in the center, filled with sauce, yolks of eggs pressed through ricer and whites cut in shape of petals.
Melt butter; add onion; when yellow add flour, curry and cream. Cook five minutes. Season; add egg yolks and lobster meat. Sprinkle with finely powdered coral if there is any. Fill Rice Timbale Cases, reheat, and serve.
Wash rice; add seasonings and milk. Cook in double boiler until milk is absorbed and rice is tender.
Fill timbale molds, press rice in firmly, cool, scoop out center, and fill with any creamed mixture.
Use rule for Curried Lobster, substituting two cups flaked salmon for lobster meat, and one half cup olives finely[142] chopped for curry. Line one large mold with cooked rice, fill with creamed salmon, cover top with rice, and steam one half hour. Serve, garnish with individual Rice Timbales, parsley, and Tomato Cream Sauce.
Select a mold large enough to hold chicken, cover bottom of mold with Aspic Jelly, and set on ice to harden. Cut hard-cooked white of eggs in slices, cut yolk in slices, and stamp out small rounds with a vegetable cutter. Cut white of egg slices to resemble petals. Arrange on top of the hardened jelly in the form of daisies, taking up each piece on a needle and dipping in liquid jelly before placing. Cover with jelly mixture, adding by spoonfuls to avoid disturbing the design.
When hard place chicken on jelly, breast downward, cover with liquid jelly, and set away to harden.
The sides may be decorated in the same way as the bottom if more elaboration is desired.
Unmold, place on bed of parsley or lettuce, and garnish with pimentoes or olives.
Cover bottom of mold with Aspic Jelly; decorate with truffles cut in fancy shapes. Cover this with liquid aspic; when hard place roasted quail or any of above on jelly, cover with liquid jelly and chill. Decorate sides of top layer with hard-cooked white of egg cut in crescents. Unmold, garnish with cress, and serve with Mayonnaise Dressing.
Chop two cups of cold cooked veal; add one fourth teaspoon salt, one fourth teaspoon onion juice, and one teaspoon lemon juice. Mix one half cup finely chopped cooked ham, one fourth teaspoon mustard, few grains cayenne, two tablespoons cracker crumbs, and moisten with white stock. Sauté one fourth cup cracker crumbs in one fourth cup butter; add to chopped veal and moisten with white stock.
Line a mold with slices of hard-cooked eggs, fill with alternate layers of ham mixture and veal. Pack tightly, cover with buttered paper, and steam one hour. Cool and serve in thin slices.
The success of this dish depends on careful seasoning, and more may be needed than is given in the receipt.
Chop two pounds of lean veal and one fourth pound salt pork; add one cup cracker crumbs, three beaten eggs, one teaspoon salt, few grains cayenne, one teaspoon onion juice, and one tablespoon lemon juice.
Moisten with well-flavored beef or veal stock. Press in buttered bread pan, cover. Baste occasionally during baking. Bake one hour.
Cut one pint cooked veal in small pieces; add one tablespoon salt, one quarter teaspoon pepper, one tablespoon lemon juice. Melt three tablespoons butter; add two tablespoons finely minced onion, three tablespoons flour, and three fourths cup milk or veal stock. Boil five minutes. Add two eggs well beaten. Stir constantly until thick. Mix with veal mixture and cool. Shape, allowing a rounding tablespoonful for each croquette.[144] Dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat. Serve with or without White Sauce.
Cut three onions in pieces; sauté in four tablespoons butter; cover with one cup white stock; add one half teaspoon salt, one teaspoon chopped parsley, one teaspoon lemon juice. Cook one half hour.
Cut liver in one half inch slices; sauté in four tablespoons butter; add sauce; cook five minutes.
Serve; garnish with parsley and slices of lemon.
Wash and clean the tongue, cover with boiling water; add one fourth cup each of carrot, turnip and onion, a bouquet of sweet herbs, four cloves and two peppercorns. Simmer until tongue is tender. Cool in kettle, remove the skin, brush with melted butter, cover with buttered bread crumbs after placing in dripping pan.
Bake twenty minutes, basting often with chicken stock or Port wine. Cool, cut in thin slices, and garnish with slices of buttered toast sprinkled with finely chopped pimolas.
Boil the feet until tender, cut in halves, brush with melted butter, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and cover with buttered bread crumbs. Broil over a clear fire and serve with Piquante Sauce.
Remove the bone from a shoulder of veal, brush with melted butter, and stuff with sautéd mushrooms or sweetbreads. Cover bone broken in pieces with cold water; add one fourth cup each of carrot and onion, a[145] bit of bay leaf, sprig of parsley, four cloves, and six peppercorns. Add stuffed and rolled veal, and simmer until tender. Cover with slices of bacon; bake in a hot oven, basting often. Serve with Olive Sauce.
Cut the bones four inches long; cover each end with a round of dough to keep in the marrow.
Tie the bones in a cloth, cover with boiling water, and boil one hour. Remove cloth and paste, and serve on or around tenderloin steak; or the marrow may be removed from bone when cooked, and spread on slices of hot buttered toast. Cayenne and salt are always served with marrow bones.
Cut tenderloin steak three fourths inch thick. Cut and roll in rounds, broil over clear fire five minutes.
Mix one tablespoon mustard, one tablespoon Worcestershire Sauce, and two tablespoons chopped pimento. Spread on beef, dip in fine bread crumbs, and broil until crumbs are brown. Serve with Béarnaise Sauce.
Cut some lambs’ kidneys in quarter-inch slices. Season with salt and pepper, dip in olive oil. Arrange on a skewer with alternating slices of bacon.
Dip in oil, in bread crumbs, and broil over a clear fire, or sauté in butter. Serve with Piquante Sauce.
Remove skin from four lambs’ kidneys. Cut in two lengthwise. Cook two tablespoons chopped onion, one shallot finely chopped, four tablespoons butter, one fourth teaspoon salt, and a few grains cayenne together five minutes.[146] Add one cup tomato. When hot, add one cup oysters. Keep hot while broiling kidneys. Arrange kidneys on platter and pour sauce over them.
Mix yolks of eggs and sugar; moisten the cornstarch with small amount of cold milk, scald the remainder; add cornstarch mixture to scalded milk; cook twenty minutes, add egg mixture, butter, salt and seasonings, cook one minute. Pour into shallow buttered dish. Cool; cut in squares or diamonds; dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs; fry in deep fat.
Wash heart; fill with chicken stuffing; sprinkle with salt and pepper; dredge with flour. Place on rack in dripping pan and cook in hot oven from two to three hours, basting while cooking, with beef stock, pork fat, hot water, or butter.
Serve with Tomato Sauce or on a bed of boiled onions.
Cut three ox tails in four-inch pieces; add one half cup carrot, one half cup onion, and four tablespoons butter. Cook ten minutes; add four tablespoons flour and four cups water or stock. Cook one hour; season with salt and pepper. Serve vegetables in the center and ox tails around the edge; garnish with potato balls and parsley.
Cut the meat from cold cooked game. Break the bones and cover with cold water. Sauté two tablespoons[147] onions in four tablespoons butter and brown; add one tablespoon Worcestershire Sauce and four cups of the liquor in which the bones have been cooked. Season with salt and pepper, color a delicate brown with Kitchen Bouquet, add two cups cold game, simmer ten minutes.
Serve on slices of fried bread and garnish with a potato border and parsley.
Prepare the same as Salmi of Game, adding one tablespoon curry powder. Serve in rice border.
Bake bread dough in muffin pans; when cold cut off tops, remove soft portion leaving shell. Butter inside and out, and brown in the oven. Fill with any creamed mixture.
Wash tripe and cut in pieces for serving. Cover with boiling water and cook until tender. Drain, wipe, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and broil over a clear fire. Serve with Maître d’Hôtel Butter.
Wash one pound of tripe and cut in two-inch strips for serving. Sauté in two tablespoons butter, two tablespoons onion, add tripe, cook ten minutes, add one cup each of tomato and celery cut into inch pieces, and simmer until all are tender. Serve, garnish with toast points.
Cook two tablespoons onion in two tablespoons butter. Add two cups cooked tripe cut in small strips; cook ten minutes. Serve on buttered toast; sprinkle with salt and pepper, dot with butter and garnish with finely chopped parsley.
Cut cooked tripe in three-inch strips. Soak ten minutes in olive oil. Drain, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dip in Fritter Batter, and fry in deep fat.
Soak sweetbreads in cold water; lard; place on slices of salt pork in dripping pan; cover with milk or stock; cook until tender and serve with Tomato Sauce.
Prepare six fillets; sprinkle with salt and pepper and dredge with flour. Arrange on slices of bacon; dot with butter; baste with cream while baking in a hot oven. Serve with Béchamel Sauce.
Arrange in the bottom of a buttered baking dish one fourth cup each of chopped carrot, celery, onions and salt pork. Place parboiled sweetbreads on top of vegetables; cover with stock and bake slowly three quarters of an hour in tightly covered dish. Remove vegetables to serving dish and serve sweetbreads on top of them.
Parboil brains; cut in two-inch pieces. Cover with French Dressing. Let them stand one hour. Drain, dip in Fritter Batter, fry in hot fat. Serve with Tomato Sauce.
Parboil brains; sprinkle with salt, pepper and lemon juice. Cut in inch pieces. Arrange in layers in buttered baking dish, alternating with Tomato Sauce. Cover with buttered and seasoned cracker crumbs and serve with chopped pickles.
Parboil brains and cook in muslin bag in boiling acidulated water one half hour. Drain. Cool and cut into four-inch pieces. Sprinkle with salt, pepper and lemon juice, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in hot fat. Serve with Piquante or Hollandaise Sauce.
Skin the frogs’ legs, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dip in butter, then in flour, and fry in hot fat. Serve with Sauce Tartare.
Remove skin from legs, season with salt and pepper, melt four tablespoons butter, add frogs’ legs and one half cup mushrooms, and sauté. Serve on slices of buttered toast with Béchamel Sauce.
Remove skins from frogs’ legs, season with salt, pepper and lemon juice, and cook in butter five minutes. Add one cup white stock, and simmer until tender. Serve on hot buttered toast with Allemande Sauce.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add one tablespoon lemon juice, one fourth teaspoon salt, few grains cayenne, two tablespoons chopped pimolas. Add one cup crabs and let simmer ten minutes. Serve in croustades.
Cook oyster crabs in butter. Cut bread in slices, shape with doughnut cutter, toast, butter, and place in buttered ramekin dishes, fill the rings with cooked crabs, break an egg on top of each, sprinkle with grated cheese, and bake ten to twelve minutes.
Parboil four slices of calf’s liver, remove skin, chop, and press through a sieve. To each cup of liver add one fourth cup soft bread crumbs, one tablespoon butter, one teaspoon salt, one half teaspoon paprika, few grains cayenne, and two eggs. Mix well, pour into a buttered mold, place in a pan of hot water, and bake one hour. Serve hot with Vinaigrette Sauce, or it may be served cold as a salad.
Use the cooked liver loaf mixture. Mash, add butter to make of consistency to spread, arrange on rounds of buttered toast, and garnish with yolks of hard-cooked eggs pressed through a ricer, and slices of pimolas.
Cut crusts from a brick loaf of bread. Scoop out center of loaf, leaving walls an inch thick on all sides. Brush with melted butter, and brown in oven; or, omit butter and fry in deep fat. Brush with white of egg slightly beaten, and fill with any creamed mixture. Set on a bed of parsley and garnish with toast points.
Small croustades may be made in the same way, by using thick slices of bread.
Mix forcemeat, chopped pimolas, salt, pepper and onion juice. Put a teaspoon of this mixture in the center of each puff paste round; brush the edges with water; fold edges together, making a half round; press edges together firmly; dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat.
Prepare the same as Chicken Rissoles, and add one cup chopped cooked oysters.
Use one half rule for Chicken Rissoles. Add one cup sweetbreads cooked and cut in pieces, and one fourth cup chopped pimentoes.
Use one half rule of Chicken Rissoles. Add twelve boned sardines cut in pieces and two tablespoons lemon juice.
Use rule for Chicken Forcemeat, substituting veal for chicken, and proceed as for Chicken Rissoles.
Use rule for Chicken Forcemeat. Add one fourth cup lamb and one fourth cup ham, each finely chopped, and proceed as with Chicken Rissoles.
Beat whites until stiff, add other ingredients, put a teaspoon of this mixture on rounds of pastry; and proceed as for Chicken Rissoles.
Place a teaspoon of creamed mushrooms in the center of a round of pastry; proceed as for Chicken Rissoles or instead of frying bake in a quick oven.
Place a teaspoon of creamed lobster in the center of each round of pastry, and proceed as for Chicken Rissoles, baking in a quick oven instead of frying, if desired.
Mix one fourth cup cold cooked chicken, one fourth cup mushrooms and one fourth cup cheese. Add one fourth cup White Sauce, season with salt, paprika and lemon juice. Fill Bouchées and serve garnished with parsley.
Melt butter, add flour, onion juice, lemon juice, salt and cayenne; when well blended add cream and chicken stock. Boil one minute, add chicken, when heated through add Madeira and serve in hot pâté shells.
The wine may be omitted, in which case add one teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce.
Substitute two cups small oysters for one cup chicken meat and follow the receipt for Chicken Pâtés.
Melt butter; add vegetables; cook ten minutes. Remove vegetables; add forcemeat, stock, salt and flour; cook until stiff; add yolks of eggs and lemon juice.
Spread this mixture on the chicken legs. Dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, place in baking dish, and cook in hot oven until chicken is tender, basting with cream. Serve around slices of tomato garnished with Mayonnaise.
Divide each chicken breast into four fillets, separating the large fillet from the small fillet; brush large fillet with butter; spread with forcemeat; cover with small fillet; score small fillet diagonally; insert thin slices of truffles in each gash. Cut slices of tongue half an inch larger than large fillet and place in baking dish with fillet on each piece.
Mix Croquette Sauce, consommé, chopped mushrooms, and cook ten minutes, add more seasoning if required, and pour around cooked fillets.
The fillets may be steamed until tender or cooked in the oven and basted with cream.
(We include Chop Suey as a novelty and not because we especially like it.)
Put two tablespoons peanut oil in a frying pan, add the chestnuts, celery, onion, mushrooms and chicken;[154] cook until tender,—when about half done add bean sprouts and cook all until tender.
Mix two tablespoons oil and two tablespoons flour, add one cup liquid, stock or water, season with salt and pepper and the gee yow, a Chinese Sauce which can be purchased from any Chinese dealer together with the water chestnuts and bean sprouts.
Arrange chicken and vegetables in the center of platter; pour the sauce over these and serve.
Artichokes may be procured both canned and fresh.
If canned, drain, wash in cold water, drain again, then let them stand in French Dressing for one half hour. Drain, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat, or dip in Fritter Batter and sauté in pork fat or butter. Serve with Hollandaise Sauce.
Cut asparagus in inch pieces and boil according to rule for Boiled Asparagus, drain, add one cup Thick Cream Sauce, and serve in bread croustades.
Boil one cauliflower until tender. Separate flowerets and chop tough parts. Arrange in buttered shells, or ramekins with White Sauce, sprinkle with grated cheese, cover with buttered and seasoned crumbs, and brown in a quick oven.
Remove the tops from two bunches of celery, leaving the bunch about six inches long. Wash, trim, and scrape[155] root to a point. Cook in salted boiling acidulated water five minutes. Drain. Melt three tablespoons butter; add three tablespoons flour and a cup and a half of water in which celery was cooked. Season with salt, pepper and a few drops of Worcestershire Sauce; add cooked celery and simmer thirty minutes.
Arrange celery in center of hot dish, strain sauce over it, and garnish with finely chopped pimento.
Mix ingredients in order given. Shape, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs; fry in deep fat, drain and serve.
Wash, pare, and cut into cubes three large cucumbers.
Arrange a layer in the bottom of a buttered baking dish. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and with one teaspoon finely chopped onion, and continue thus until dish is filled, then add one cup milk or chicken stock, cover with buttered and seasoned crumbs, and bake in hot oven until brown.
Pare four cucumbers, parboil four minutes, drain and let them stand in ice water one half hour. Cut in thin slices, cover with Béchamel Sauce, cook until tender, and serve on buttered triangles of toasted bread. Garnish with olive in center of each triangle and toast points.
Remove skin from six bananas, cut in halves lengthwise and crosswise. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and lemon juice, dip in flour, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep[156] fat. Drain on brown paper, serve on folded napkin. Garnish with lemon and parsley. Serve with or without Lemon or Sherry Sauce.
Wash four carrots, scrape, cut in three inch pieces, cook in saucepan with two slices onion and a very small amount of water. When tender, drain, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat.
Mix milk and chicken stock, add farina or hominy, and cook in double boiler forty minutes. Add remaining ingredients, cool, shape in balls or crescents, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs. Fry in deep fat.
Serve as an entrée with a sweet sauce or as a garnish with game.
Boil twelve sticks of macaroni in salted water until tender, cut in rings. Line thickly buttered timbale molds with macaroni rings. Fill center with creamed macaroni, creamed fish, or Welsh rarebit mixture. Cover with macaroni rings. Set molds in a pan of hot water and bake twenty minutes. Remove from molds and serve with Béchamel, Allemande, or Hollandaise Sauce as an entrée; or line a large mold and fill with creamed mushrooms, creamed sweetbreads, creamed chicken, veal or turkey, adding several beaten eggs to give the mixture right consistency.
Prepared in this way it may be served for luncheon.
Mix the above ingredients and beat until smooth. Line patty tins with pastry, fill with cheese mixture. Bake in a moderate oven twenty minutes.
Sift flour, baking powder and salt; add well-beaten eggs, lemon juice and milk. Beat well, strain if lumpy, and leave standing several hours, over night if possible.
This receipt may be used for cooked parsnips, carrots, cauliflower, raw corn and nearly all fruits.
Dip prepared vegetables or fruits in the batter, drain whole vegetables and fruits on a fork, fry in deep fat, and drain on brown paper. Mix small or chopped vegetables or fruit with the batter and drop in spoonfuls into hot fat.
Cut the corn through the kernel with a sharp knife and remove pulp; add remaining ingredients with enough flour to shape into small cakes. Sauté in butter or pork fat or fry in deep fat.
Press one pint cooked peas through a sieve; add four tablespoons milk or soup stock, few drops of onion juice,[158] salt, pepper, cayenne, and the whites of three eggs, beaten until stiff. Press into buttered timbale molds, set in a pan of hot water, and bake in a slow oven until firm. Unmold, serve on hot platter. Garnish with a piece of parsley on the top of each timbale and Béchamel Sauce.
Boil four egg plants twenty minutes. Cut in halves lengthwise. Scoop out center. Drain in cheese cloth. Mix one half cup bread crumbs, one quarter cup minced chicken, one quarter cup egg plant, two tablespoons butter, salt, paprika, and cayenne, and one egg.
Fill egg plant shells with this mixture, cover with buttered and seasoned crumbs, and bake in a slow oven about one hour.
Wash, scrub, sprinkle with salt and pepper, twelve large fresh mushrooms. Broil over a clear fire. Place on twelve rounds of bread toasted on one side. Sauté in two tablespoons butter, one cup chopped mushrooms; season with salt and pepper and add one fourth cup heavy cream. Reheat and pour over mushrooms on toast.
Wash, scrub, sprinkle with salt and pepper, twelve large fresh mushrooms. Remove stems, sauté in butter, add one cup chicken stock or cream, simmer fifteen minutes. Place on rounds of bread, on a buttered platter; cover and cook in oven fifteen minutes, basting once during cooking with melted butter. A few gratings of nutmeg is considered by many an improvement.
Wash, scrub, and remove stems of twelve large fresh mushrooms. Sauté in butter five minutes. Place on[159] rounds of buttered toast, gills upward; sprinkle with salt and pepper, dot with butter. Decorate each with an oyster and sprinkle with buttered crumbs. Bake fifteen minutes in a hot oven, basting every five minutes with hot butter.
Mix one teaspoon mustard, few grains cayenne, one teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce, and half teaspoon paprika.
Cover broiled mushrooms with this mixture and serve on slices of toast.
Wash, scrub, and peel one pound of fresh mushrooms. Sauté in butter. Arrange in layers with White Sauce in buttered baking dish; when filled cover with cubes of bread which have been dipped in butter. Brown in the oven and serve.
Wash, scrub, and peel one half pound of fresh mushrooms. Break in small pieces and sauté in butter. Wash and remove skins from six tomatoes.
Slice tomatoes and arrange in layers with sautéd mushrooms in buttered baking dish or in ramekins. Cover with Tomato Sauce, well seasoned with onion. When dish is filled sprinkle with buttered cracker crumbs and bake until crumbs are brown.
Cut in slices one lamb’s kidney. Sauté in melted butter. Remove from butter, and sauté twelve mushrooms, cleaned and cut in slices. Melt two tablespoons butter; add two tablespoons floor, one and one half cups tomato, few drops onion juice, one and one half teaspoons Worcestershire Sauce, one half teaspoon salt, and few grains[160] pepper. Cook ten minutes; add mushrooms and kidney, and cook until kidney is tender.
Serve in center of hot platter, and garnish with hot cooked rice or with macaroni with Cream Sauce.
Sweetbreads, chicken, or veal may be substituted for kidney, but make a much more expensive dish.
Peel and parboil twelve medium-sized onions; drain; chop. Melt two tablespoons butter; add two tablespoons flour, one fourth teaspoon salt, one and one quarter cups cream, or chicken stock, four tablespoons soft bread crumbs, one tablespoon finely chopped parsley. Boil five minutes; add one egg well beaten and the chopped onion. Cool slightly; add the beaten whites of two eggs; add more seasoning if needed and bake in buttered ramekin dishes twenty minutes in a moderate oven. Serve immediately.
Mix two cups hot mashed potato, two tablespoons butter, one teaspoon salt, one fourth teaspoon paprika, few grains of cayenne and celery salt, two teaspoons chopped parsley, few drops onion juice. Beat well; add two egg yolks; form into croquettes; dip in flour, egg and crumbs; fry in deep fat; drain on brown paper and serve.
These croquettes may be formed in the shape of a ball, then shaped like a cup, and filled with any creamed mixture; cover the top of cup with mashed potato. Dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, fry in deep fat. These are known as Surprise Croquettes.
Cut the tops from eight red or green peppers; remove seeds; cover with boiling water; leave standing five minutes.[161] Fill with any of the following stuffings. Cover with buttered bread crumbs, arrange in baking dish, and bake one half hour.
Mix one cup tomato pulp drained from juice, one half cup bread crumbs, and one cup stock; add two tablespoons flour and two tablespoons butter which have been cooked together. Season with salt, cayenne, paprika and onion juice.
Chicken Stuffing prepared in the same way as Tomato Stuffing, substituting chicken for tomato.
Cook one cup rice or macaroni in chicken stock until tender; add one fourth cup onion finely chopped, two tablespoons red pepper finely chopped, two tablespoons melted butter, four tablespoons finely chopped mushrooms. Season with salt and pepper. In filling add more chicken stock or hot water if necessary.
Cook one cup of rice in two cups of water or chicken stock in a double boiler until tender, and the liquid is absorbed. Season with salt, pepper and onion juice; add four tablespoons butter and two egg yolks.
Cool, form in croquettes, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat.
Cook two tablespoons chopped onion in two tablespoons butter five minutes; add one tablespoon red pepper, sprig parsley, four cloves, and one and one half cups tomato;[162] cook five minutes. Add one cup water or chicken stock, pour into double boiler, add one half cup washed rice, and cook until rice is tender and liquid absorbed. Season with salt, pepper and paprika; add two egg yolks and four tablespoons grated cheese.
Shape, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat.
Cook rice in milk; when milk is absorbed add cheese, seasonings, and egg, and enough sauce to make of the consistency to shape. Shape, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat.
Cook one cup rice in two cups milk in double boiler, until liquid is absorbed and rice is tender; add one fourth cup sugar and one half teaspoon salt. Cool, add two egg yolks, shape in form of nests, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat, hollow downward. Drain on brown paper; fill nests with cubes of jelly.
Cook one cup rice with one cup each of stock and tomato; when tender sauté in four tablespoons butter, season with salt and paprika. Serve hot on buttered toast.
Mix two cups tomato, four cloves, two slices onion, two peppercorns, one half teaspoon salt and one fourth teaspoon paprika. Cook ten minutes and press through a sieve. Melt three tablespoons butter; add one fourth cup[163] cornstarch and strained tomato mixture; boil ten minutes. Cool slightly, add one egg, pour into buttered pan, chill, cut in squares, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, fry in deep fat. Drain on brown paper. Serve.
Melt butter; add flour and cheese; when well blended add milk, onion juice, and seasonings. Cool, add macaroni; shape, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat.
Beat yolks; add corn, milk, butter, salt and pepper. Pour into a buttered baking dish; add beaten whites and bake in moderate oven one hour.
Mix all ingredients; taste, add more seasoning if needed, shape in a bread pan and bake one hour in a moderate oven, covering with a tin cover for the first half of the time. Baste three times during the cooking with melted butter. Remove from pan and serve with Brown Sauce to which one fourth cup chopped nuts have been added.
Boil water and hops five minutes. Strain; add grated potatoes; boil five minutes; add sugar and salt; when lukewarm add yeast or yeast cake which has been dissolved in one fourth cup lukewarm water; let rise for six hours; pour into scalded stone jug; cork tightly; keep in cool place.
Put butter, lard, sugar and salt in mixing bowl. Add scalded milk. Dissolve yeast cake in one fourth cup lukewarm water. Add to milk mixture when lukewarm. Add flour, knead until smooth. Cover tightly and let rise until double its bulk, in temperature of sixty-eight degrees.
Knead; shape into loaves or biscuit; let rise in pans until double its bulk. Bake in hot oven: biscuit twenty to thirty minutes, loaves sixty minutes. This bread may be made without kneading by omitting one cup flour and beating ten minutes.
Substitute water for milk in Milk Bread.
Use one cup water and one cup milk, and proceed as for Milk Bread.
Mix one cup milk, sugar and salt, and one cup of flour; beat well and let rise over night. In the morning beat, add other two cups of flour, the other cup of milk, cover, let rise again. When light, add the entire wheat to knead, shape in loaves, let rise in pans and bake.
Mix milk, molasses and salt. When lukewarm add dissolved yeast cake, sifted white and graham flour. Beat well.
Let rise until almost double its bulk, beat again, place in buttered bread pans or shape in biscuit, let rise, and bake in an oven which is a little cooler than for white bread,—loaves one and one quarter hours and biscuit thirty minutes.
Mix milk, sugar or molasses, and salt. When lukewarm add dissolved yeast and flour. Beat well, let rise until double its bulk, beat, let rise in buttered bread pans until double its bulk, and bake one hour in moderately hot oven, or bake in gem pans thirty minutes.
Put butter, sugar and salt in mixing bowl; add scalded milk; when lukewarm, add dissolved yeast cake and white flour.
Let rise until of spongy consistency; add rye flour and knead. Let rise again, shape into loaves or rolls. Rise again and bake the same as Graham Bread.
Mix water, milk, salt and butter. When lukewarm, add dissolved yeast cake, egg well beaten, and gluten. Let rise, when spongy beat well, add enough more gluten to shape. Knead, let rise, shape in loaves, let rise, and bake one hour.
Add one cup chopped dates to Graham or Entire Wheat Bread.
Add two cups chopped nuts to Graham or Entire Wheat Bread, just before putting into pans.
Sift the soda through a very fine sieve, add to dry ingredients and sift again. Add molasses and sour milk, beat well. Pour into buttered molds and steam three hours. If a hard crust is desired, remove bread from molds and bake fifteen minutes.
Pour boiling water on corn meal. When lukewarm add dissolved yeast cake and remaining ingredients. Beat well, let it rise over night, beat and pour into a buttered brown-bread tin. Bake in moderate oven from one and one half to two hours.
Sift the soda through a very fine sieve, add to dry ingredients and sift again. Add molasses and milk, beat well. Pour into buttered mold and steam three hours.
Mix salt, sugar, butter and milk. When lukewarm, add dissolved yeast cake, yolks well beaten, whites well beaten and flour. Knead thoroughly; let rise over night; knead, roll into flat cake, fold in three pieces. Knead and fold in this way four separate times. Add one cup cleaned currants. Cut off small pieces, shape into rolls, and brush with butter; let rise. Bake in a moderate oven thirty minutes; brush with molasses or sugar dissolved in milk; return to the oven to dry.
Scald milk; when lukewarm add dissolved yeast cake; add remaining ingredients and beat well for one half hour. Let rise to double its bulk; cut down; keep in ice box over night; in the morning, shape.
For Coffee Cakes, make into biscuit, then into finger shapes, twist ends in opposite directions, shape in crescents, let rise in pan. Bake in moderate oven. Brush with confectioners’ sugar dissolved in boiling water.
This mixture may be used for Buns.
Mix scalded milk, when cool, with dissolved yeast cake. Add two cups flour; beat thoroughly and let rise.
When spongy add remaining ingredients and flour to knead. Knead; let rise; when double its bulk, shape into balls; lay on buttered sheet; cover with dripping pan.[169] When risen to double their bulk, press with floured handle of wooden spoon almost dividing the biscuit. Brush one half with butter; press the two halves together; place on buttered tin; let rise. Bake when light ten to fifteen minutes.
Use Parker House Roll mixture; make in small balls; roll balls into long sticks; fasten three ends together and braid. Cut braids into four-inch lengths; let rise; bake. When done, brush with melted butter.
Shape Parker House Roll mixture into balls then into sticks. Roll sticks in shape of crescents, let rise, and bake.
Mix butter, sugar, salt and milk. When dissolved, add yeast cake, white of egg well beaten, and enough flour to knead. Let rise to double its bulk, knead, shape, let rise again, and bake in hot oven.
Melt butter in scalded milk; when lukewarm, add dissolved yeast, salt, eggs well beaten and flour to knead. Let rise; roll into a sheet; brush with melted butter;[170] dredge with cinnamon and sugar; sprinkle with citron and currants; roll like jelly roll; cut in one half inch slices; place on buttered sheet; let rise. Bake one half hour.
Mix milk, butter, sugar and salt; when lukewarm, add dissolved yeast and enough flour to make a drop batter. Let rise over night. In morning add eggs, yolks and whites beaten separately. Place buttered muffin rings on buttered griddle or dripping pan; fill rings two thirds full, and cook on griddle on top of stove or in dripping pan in oven.
Mix oatmeal, scalded milk, sugar and salt. When lukewarm, add dissolved yeast cake. Add flour to make a stiff batter; beat five minutes. Let rise over night. Beat and fill buttered gem pans, one half full; let rise; and bake in moderate oven one half hour.
Mix dry ingredients; add egg well beaten, molasses, milk and melted butter; beat well and bake in buttered gem pan twenty to thirty minutes in moderate oven.
To one half the rule for Milk Bread, add two eggs well beaten. Shape in small balls; place close together in baking pan; let rise until very light; brush with sugar dissolved in water; sprinkle with sugar. Bake.
Rusks must be very light before being baked.
Cut rusks into slices one half inch thick. Dry in oven until a golden brown.
Remove the crust from a loaf of bread and tear the crumb in pieces. Place in oven and dry until crisp all through.
Use any of the receipts for bread, using one yeast cake instead of amount of yeast given. The bread should be made and baked in five hours’ time.
Add one cup stewed and sifted squash to Milk Bread.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients. Add shortening and chop with knife until mealy. Add milk gradually until a soft spongy dough. Turn on to a floured board; toss with knife until whole surface is floured; pat lightly with rolling pin until one half inch thick. Cut in rounds and bake immediately on buttered sheet in quick oven, about twelve minutes.
Use receipt for Baking Powder Biscuit, using enough milk to make a drop batter.
Drop into buttered muffin pans and bake in hot oven.
Roll Baking Powder Biscuit mixture to one fourth inch; brush with melted butter; sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar and chopped raisins and citron.
Roll like a jelly roll; cut in one half inch pieces; place on buttered tin; brush with melted butter; sprinkle with brown sugar. Bake in hot oven.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients. Add beaten yolks, butter and milk. Beat well; cut and fold in the stiffly beaten whites. Turn into gem pans; bake in hot oven ten to fifteen minutes. Three tablespoons sugar may be added if desired.
Use receipt for Egg Muffins, using three eggs instead of two, and bake in cake pan instead of muffin pan.
Cream butter; add sugar, yolk well beaten, flour mixed and sifted with dry ingredients, milk, white of egg beaten until stiff, and berries. Bake in buttered muffin pans or in buttered cake pan.
Use rule for Egg Muffins. Spread mixture one half inch thick on buttered pans. Lay apples cut into eighths in two rows on top of dough. Sprinkle with sugar; bake in hot oven thirty minutes. Serve with Lemon Sauce or as a tea cake.
Cream butter; add sugar, yolks well beaten, flour mixed and sifted with corn meal, baking powder and salt, milk and beaten whites. Bake in buttered muffin tins twenty-five minutes in hot oven.
A very good muffin may be made by using only two tablespoons butter and one egg.
Mix and sift dry ingredients, and combine in order given. Bake in hot muffin pans twenty to twenty-five minutes.
Mix and sift dry ingredients; add remaining ingredients; beat well. Bake in hot gem pans twenty to thirty minutes.
Cook hominy, salt, butter and boiling water twenty minutes. Cool. Scald corn meal with hot milk, add sugar and hominy, yolks of eggs; beat well; add baking powder and beaten whites of eggs. Bake in hot buttered gem pans twenty to thirty minutes.
Mix corn meal, salt and baking powder; add rice and work with fingers until well blended. Add egg well beaten, milk and butter. Beat well. Pour into hot buttered gem pans, and bake one half hour.
Mix and sift dry ingredients twice; add well-beaten egg and cream; beat well. Butter an agate pan; heat very hot; pour in mixture; pour milk on top. Bake thirty minutes.
Mix all ingredients and beat five minutes. Pour into hissing hot buttered gem pans and bake in hot oven twenty minutes.
Mix and sift dry ingredients; add remaining ingredients; beat well. Drop from a spoon into hot fat. Fry like doughnuts.
Mix flour, sugar, baking powder, salt; add oatmeal and work until well mixed. Add remaining ingredients. Beat well. Bake in hot buttered gem pans twenty minutes.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients. Add butter and lard and chop until thoroughly blended. Add milk. When thoroughly mixed, divide in halves; put each half into a round, buttered cake tin. Flour hand and pat to fit the tin. Bake ten to twelve minutes in hot oven. Separate the upper portions from the lower portions of each cake with a fork—never cut with a knife. Spread with butter, fill with filling, and arrange in layers, with filling between.
Peel oranges, cut in slices. Sweeten to taste and use for filling for shortcake.
Peel, cut in slices, and sweeten three cups of peaches. Add two tablespoons lemon juice, spread between layers of shortcake. Garnish top layer with peaches and beaten cream.
Hull, cut in pieces, and sweeten two boxes of strawberries. Let them stand several hours. Arrange between layers of shortcake and garnish top with whole strawberries and beaten and sweetened cream.
Raspberry, Blackberry, and Pineapple shortcake may be made in a similar way.
Mix in order given, beat well. Heat a griddle; when hissing hot, grease with piece of salt pork on end of fork. Drop a tablespoon of batter from tip end of spoon on hot griddle. When full of bubbles, turn; when cooked on both sides, serve on hot plate.
If sour milk is very rich, the eggs may be omitted.
Scald milk, and pour on to graham flour. When cold, add remaining ingredients; beat well and cook as Griddle Cakes.
Pour milk on to bread crumbs and let stand several hours. Add dry ingredients, mixed and sifted, yolks and whites beaten separately, and cook as Griddle Cakes.
Pour scalded milk on to rice; let stand over night. Add dry ingredients, eggs well beaten, and last of all, cold milk. Beat well and cook as Griddle Cakes.
Substitute hominy for boiled rice, and cook as Rice Griddle Cakes.
Mix and sift dry ingredients, add yolks well beaten, milk, whites well beaten, and melted butter. Cook as Griddle Cakes.
Mix buckwheat, corn meal, and salt; add dissolved yeast cake, molasses and water; beat well. Let rise over night. In the morning beat, add soda, beat, and fry.
A pitcher is the most convenient dish for raising these cakes.
Scald meal with milk; add butter, and when lukewarm, add remaining ingredients; let mixture rise over night. In the morning cook as Griddle Cakes.
Sift dry ingredients; add yolks well beaten, milk, butter and stiffly beaten whites. Beat well and cook on hot waffle iron. The waffle iron should be heated fifteen or twenty minutes before using and greased thoroughly with salt pork fat.
Roll dough to one half inch in thickness, sprinkle with cinnamon, cut in diamonds; raise; fry in deep fat; serve with sirup.
Beat yolks until lemon colored and thick; add flour and salt. Cut and fold into this mixture, the beaten whites. Add milk; pour into greased baking dish. Bake in moderate oven, twenty to thirty minutes. Serve immediately.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients; add beaten yolks, lemon rind, and milk. Beat, cut and fold in the beaten whites of eggs and use for all kinds of fruits.
Core and pare apples, cut in round slices. For each eight apples, mix one fourth cup sugar and four tablespoons lemon juice. Let apples stand in this mixture for one hour; dip in Fritter Batter; fry in hot fat; drain on brown paper. Sprinkle with sugar.
Remove skins from four bananas. Cut each one in four equal parts. Sprinkle with four tablespoons sugar, four tablespoons lemon juice, or wine, and let stand one hour. Dip in Fritter Batter; fry in deep fat; drain on brown paper. Serve.
Are all made in the same way as Banana Fritters.
Wash cumquats; cut in halves; let stand in Fritter Batter one hour; fry in deep fat; drain on brown paper.
Beat egg; add remaining ingredients. Drop by spoonfuls into deep fat. Fry six to eight minutes. Drain and serve hot. Canned corn may be used if fresh corn is not available.
Separate the flowerets of cold, cooked cauliflower. Sprinkle with salt and pepper; dip in olive oil, then in Fritter Batter; fry in deep fat.
Cut cold, cooked vegetables in small pieces. Prepare the same as Cauliflower Fritters.
Melt butter; add onion and pepper, cook five minutes, add cornstarch, tomatoes, cloves, bay leaf and salt. Cook until thick. Strain. Add beaten egg. Cool in buttered tin. Cut in any shape desired. Dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat.
Mix butter, fruit juice, rind and water; boil two minutes. Add sugar and flour. Beat until mixture leaves sides of pan. Cool. Add eggs, one at a time, and beat five minutes between each addition. Drop by spoonfuls into hot fat and fry ten to twelve minutes. Drain on brown paper, sprinkle with sugar, and serve with Chocolate, Caramel, Orange, or Wine Sauce.
Success in making a Mayonnaise Dressing generally depends upon all the ingredients being of the same temperature.
Mix salt, cayenne, mustard and paprika. Beat yolks well, and add to seasonings; beat until mixture is thick, adding olive oil, drop by drop, for the first four tablespoons, then more rapidly until oil is used, thinning as needed with lemon juice and vinegar.
Mash hard-cooked yolks; add raw yolk, salt, mustard, paprika and cayenne. Stir until well blended; beat while adding four tablespoons oil, drop by drop, then the remainder by teaspoonfuls, thinning by adding lemon juice and vinegar as the mixture becomes too thick to handle.
Use same ingredients as Mayonnaise Dressing No. 2, omitting yolk of raw egg, and using one whole egg.
Add one half cup cream beaten until stiff to Mayonnaise Dressing No. 1.
Melt butter; add flour, mustard, salt, cayenne and milk. Cook in double boiler five minutes. Pour on to the beaten eggs; add vinegar, and cook in double boiler until mixture thickens.
Rub bowl with onion; mix salt, pepper, cayenne; add paprika, oil and vinegar. Stir with a piece of ice.
Mix onion, salt, mustard, paprika and cayenne. Mash until of a creamy consistency; add oil and vinegar alternately, beating all the time.
Mix the dry ingredients; add lemon juice and oil alternately, and beat until quite thick.
Mash the yolks; add salt, vinegar and mustard. Beat the cream until stiff; add the beaten cream, little at a time, to the egg mixture; when stiff, add cayenne.
Cream butter; add seasonings and hot milk; pour on to the egg yolks. Cook in double boiler until thick; add vinegar, strain, and serve.
Melt butter; add flour, seasonings, egg and vinegar; cook until thick; add beaten cream. Beat well, chill, and serve.
Beat eggs slightly; add gradually oil, salt and mustard; when smooth, add vinegar, then milk. Cook in double boiler, stirring constantly until mixture thickens.
Beat cream until stiff; add remaining ingredients and serve.
Beat cream until stiff. Add remaining ingredients, and serve.
Serve small molds of Aspic Jelly on crisp lettuce leaves. Garnish with curled celery; marinate with French Dressing, and garnish with Mayonnaise Dressing.
Cover beans with French Dressing and let stand one half hour. Drain, sprinkle with onion juice, mix with Cream Dressing. Arrange on serving dish and garnish with slices of hard-cooked eggs, cut lengthwise, and parsley.
Cut beets in cubes; marinate with French Dressing; let stand one hour. Chop the whites of the eggs until fine; press yolks through a sieve. Arrange beets on salad dish in a mound. Garnish base of mound with alternating rows of white and yolk of egg, and parsley.
Prepare, dress, and garnish the same as Butter Bean Salad.
Wash, scrape, and cut in small pieces, one bunch of celery, using the top leaves and upper part of stalks for garnishing. Cut the stalks in two-inch pieces and curl both ends. Mix the celery with Mayonnaise Dressing; let it stand in the ice chest one half hour. Garnish with Mayonnaise, curled celery, and celery leaves.
Mix one cup and a half of cabbage and one cup and a half of celery; add one tablespoon chopped onion, one teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce, and one cup Boiled Dressing. Chill and serve.
Remove the center from a heavy white cabbage, leaving a shell. Shred center and mix with Cream Dressing or Mayonnaise. Chill, fill cabbage shell, arrange on a thick bed of parsley, and garnish top of shell with a border of parsley.
Marinate one cup cold boiled cauliflower with a French Dressing. Drain, add boiled dressing. Chill. Serve on bed of water cress and sprinkle with grated Edam cheese.
Remove stones from two cups cherries. To cherries add one cup chopped English walnuts, one cup chopped celery, and three fourths cup Mayonnaise. Chill, arrange in lettuce nests, and garnish with one whole cherry on top of each nest.
Mix two cream cheeses with one cup walnut meat. Moisten with cream; shape into balls. Chill. Marinate[186] two heads of lettuce; arrange in nests; place five balls in each nest; sprinkle with finely chopped and dried parsley. Pass French Dressing with this salad.
Mix two cream cheeses with one half cup chopped pimento. Season with salt and cayenne; moisten with cream. Line a shallow baking pan with paraffine paper; press cheese mixture in this pan to the depth of one inch; cover with paraffine paper, and put under pressure, on ice. When thoroughly chilled, cut in squares; arrange on lettuce leaves; garnish with strips of pimento, radiating from the center. Pass French Dressing with this salad.
Cut two cups of boiled chestnuts in small pieces. Add two cups oranges, cut in small pieces, one tablespoon lemon juice, and one cup Mayonnaise. Chill, serve on lettuce, and garnish with grated orange rind.
Mix two cups boiled chestnuts, one cup celery, and one half cup sour cherries, with one cup Cream Dressing. Chill and serve on water cress. Garnish with cherries, walnuts and dressing.
Mix two cups chicken meat cut in small pieces, two cups celery, also cut in small pieces. Marinate with French Dressing. Chill. Arrange in salad bowl. Mask with Mayonnaise and decorate with hard-cooked eggs, cut in slices, capers, and Mayonnaise pressed through a pastry bag and tube.
Mix one cup each, cold cooked chicken cut in pieces, cucumber cut in cubes, and celery cut in pieces. Marinate with French Dressing. Chill, drain, mix with one half cup Mayonnaise. Arrange in salad bowl; garnish with pimolas, yolks of eggs put through a strainer, whites of eggs chopped fine, Mayonnaise and curled celery.
Cut celery into one-inch pieces, and pieces into straws, until one cup is obtained. Remove the pulp from grapefruit, making one cup. Remove the skin, and slice four medium-sized tomatoes. Break chicory leaves into pieces for serving. Marinate all separately with French Dressing. Arrange in separate mounds on a serving dish. Garnish each with chopped chives, green peppers cut in strips, and parsley. Pass French and Mayonnaise Dressing.
Separate leaves; marinate with French Dressing. Serve crisp and cold.
Cut four cucumbers in strips, lengthwise, then in half-inch pieces. Add one cup sweetbreads cooked, and cut in small pieces. Mix with Cream Dressing, chill, and serve on crisp lettuce.
Cut six small cucumbers in slices, not quite severing them. Cover with French Dressing, chill, and serve one to each person.
Mix one cup each of cucumber cut in cubes, cooked oysters cut in pieces, and celery cut in pieces. Add one cup Cream Dressing. Chill. Arrange on lettuce leaves in salad bowl.
Marinate two cups crab meat with French Dressing. Drain; add one half cup Mayonnaise Dressing; arrange in crab shells. Chill. Garnish with pimolas and Mayonnaise Dressing.
Cut six hard-cooked eggs in slices, crosswise. Cut twelve radishes in crosswise slices. Marinate each, and arrange in layers on a bed of lettuce. Garnish with Cream Dressing and radish roses.
Cut six eggs in halves, lengthwise; remove yolks; add an equal amount of cold cooked ham, chopped; moisten with Cream Dressing, return to whites, and serve on a bed of water cress, chicory, or shredded lettuce. Pass Cream Dressing with this salad.
Remove the yolks from six hard-cooked eggs, leaving the whites in rings. Mash yolks; add an equal amount of cold cooked veal or lamb, cut in small pieces. Moisten with French Dressing; add one teaspoon chopped chives; shape into balls, and arrange on bed of lettuce. Garnish with white egg rings.
Marinate leaves of endive with French Dressing. Chill one hour, and serve crisp. Sprinkle with chopped chives.
Prepare the same as Endive Salad, and sprinkle with finely chopped green peppers.
Separate the leaves from two heavy heads of lettuce. Wash, drain, chill; marinate with French Dressing. Chill;[189] replace in former shape, making one head out of the two, having all green leaves on the outside.
Remove leaves from lettuce. Wash, drain and dry. Place leaves together, roll, and cut in narrow ribbons. Marinate with French Dressing. Arrange in nests, with a tablespoon of Mayonnaise in each nest.
Marinate four cups lobster in French Dressing. Chill, drain, mix with one cup Mayonnaise Dressing, and arrange on white lettuce leaves. Garnish with Mayonnaise and pounded lobster coral.
Mix two cups lobster meat with four hard-cooked eggs, chopped fine. Marinate with French Dressing. Drain; add Mayonnaise; serve on lettuce; garnish with chopped olives and sprinkle with finely chopped chives.
Mix equal parts of cucumbers cut in cubes, lobster cut in pieces, tomatoes cut in pieces, with Mayonnaise Dressing. Chill; arrange on lettuce leaves; garnish with alternate slices of tomatoes and cucumbers; and Mayonnaise Dressing put through the pastry bag and tube.
One cup each of string beans, green peas, carrots and celery. Sprinkle with salt and cayenne, and marinate with French Dressing. Chill one hour. Arrange in mounds on salad dish, and separate mounds with cold cooked cauliflower which has been separated and marinated.
Any combination of cold cooked vegetables may be prepared in the same way.
Peel six Bermuda onions. Slice, and let them stand one hour in ice water. Drain, sprinkle with sugar, and marinate with French Dressing. Serve ice cold on cress.
Cut raw potatoes in balls with French vegetable cutter. Cook three cups of these balls with one sliced onion in boiling salted water until tender. Chill, marinate with French Dressing, cover with boiled dressing, arrange on salad dish. Sprinkle with chopped chives, and garnish with a daisy made of hard-cooked eggs, cut lengthwise.
Marinate one cup each of cold cooked potatoes, cut in dice, cold cooked turnip, also cut in dice, and cold cooked beets, finely chopped. Arrange in salad dish, separating each vegetable with small leaves of parsley.
Mix one cup each of celery, carrots and rice. Marinate all separately with French Dressing. Arrange on lettuce leaves in shape of a mound, having rice at the bottom and carrots at the top. Garnish with spoonfuls of Mayonnaise on the lettuce.
Remove bones from one dozen sardines; mix four hard-cooked eggs finely chopped, twelve pimolas finely chopped, and three pickles finely chopped. Marinate with a French Dressing. Serve sardines on lettuce and dot over them spoonfuls of the egg mixture.
Prepare the same as Lobster Salad No. 1.
Prepare and serve the same as Lobster Salad No. 2.
Mix two cups cold cooked salmon with enough Mayonnaise Dressing to make it creamy. Pack in timbale molds, chill; remove from molds. Serve on lettuce, and garnish with marinated slices of cucumber and Mayonnaise Dressing.
Mix two cups of cold cooked scallops cut in small pieces, one cup of celery cut in shreds, with Mayonnaise Dressing. Chill one hour. Serve in nests of lettuce. Garnish with Mayonnaise, chopped olives and chopped chives.
Marinate two cups each of cucumber and cooked shad roe. Chill one hour; add one half cup Mayonnaise. Arrange in salad bowl; garnish with marinated slices of cucumber and crisp lettuce leaves. Sprinkle the slices of cucumber with chopped chives.
Marinate two cups of shrimps with French Dressing. Add one half cup each of olives and pimentoes. Chill one hour. Drain; add one half cup of Mayonnaise Dressing; serve on lettuce and garnish with whole shrimps.
Mix two cups cold, cooked, and seasoned spinach, with four hard-cooked eggs, finely chopped. Press into timbale molds; chill; remove; arrange in nests of lettuce; cover[192] with French Dressing. Garnish top and edge of salad with egg, arranged like daisies. Pass Cream or Mayonnaise Dressing with this salad.
Marinate one cup each of cold cooked sweetbreads, celery and cucumbers. Chill one hour. Drain; mix with Mayonnaise; serve on lettuce, and garnish with pimento.
Mix two cups sweetbreads and two cups cucumbers cut in small pieces, with Mayonnaise Dressing; add one teaspoon gelatine, which has been dissolved in water. Press in timbale molds. Chill; remove from molds, and serve in individual nests of lettuce. Garnish with Mayonnaise Dressing and chopped parsley.
Heat chicken stock; season highly; dissolve gelatine in stock; add chicken, ham, pickles, pimentoes, lemon juice and parsley. Remove a slice from the top of each tomato, scoop out the pulp, fill the shells with the chicken jelly. Chill and serve on crisp lettuce leaves.
Remove the skin from eight tomatoes; scoop out the inside. Chill shells. Drain pulp; add equal quantity of celery, shrimps and cucumber, mixed with Mayonnaise Dressing. Refill shells; serve on cress, and garnish with Mayonnaise Dressing.
Remove the skin from eight tomatoes; scoop out the inside; mix the drained pulp with equal amount of chopped walnuts and one fourth cup chopped green peppers. Add Mayonnaise Dressing or Cream Dressing. Refill tomato shells; serve in lettuce nests, and garnish with Mayonnaise Dressing.
Remove the skin and seeds from one cup of white grapes. Cut three bananas in cubes and cover immediately with lemon juice. Remove the skin and white from six oranges and cut in small pieces. Mix with Mayonnaise Dressing; arrange in nests of white lettuce leaves, or serve in halves of oranges. Garnish with Mayonnaise Dressing.
Cook a two-pound slice of halibut with one onion cut in slices, four slices of carrot, two tablespoons vinegar, six cloves, bit of bay leaf, and four peppercorns, in water to cover, until tender. Chill, and marinate with French Dressing. Cook four cups potato balls in boiling salted water, with two slices onion and four cloves. When done, drain and cover with hot salad dressing. Marinate two cups each of French peas and flageolettes with a French Dressing. Cut three tomatoes in slices, and marinate with French Dressing.
When all these ingredients are thoroughly chilled, rub the salad dish with onion; lay slice of halibut in center; garnish with Cream Mayonnaise; arrange potatoes at either end of slice, and sprinkle with finely chopped parsley. Arrange a mound each of flageolettes and peas on either side of halibut; cover halibut with slices of tomato[194] overlapping each other; garnish with the heart leaves of lettuce, arranged at intervals around the dish. Pass Mayonnaise Cream Dressing.
Mix one cup cold cooked potatoes, one cup Tomato Jelly cut in cubes, and one cup cold cooked peas. Marinate with French Dressing; arrange on a salad dish; mask with Mayonnaise or Cream Dressing, and garnish with slices of tomato around the edge, and mounds of peas alternating with mounds of chopped pimolas.
Mix two cups cold cooked salsify, cut in small pieces, with a French Dressing; let it stand one hour. Rub salad bowl with clove of garlic. Arrange bed of cress in salad bowl; cover with two tablespoons Cream Dressing. Cover with drained salsify, and cover whole with Cream Dressing. Garnish with radish roses.
Mix one cup each of small pieces of celery, apple cut in balls, and English walnuts broken in small pieces. Add one teaspoon salt, two tablespoons orange juice, and the grated rind of one orange. Add one cup Mayonnaise Dressing. Serve in lettuce nests or in apple cups, made by scooping out the pulp. Garnish with Mayonnaise Dressing and pieces of the apple skin cut in fancy shapes.
Scoop out the center of eight red apples with a vegetable scoop. Mix with equal parts of finely chopped celery and Boiled Dressing. Fill apple shells and serve on bed of curled celery.
Mix equal quantities of grape fruit and English walnut meats, with one half cup Mayonnaise Dressing. Serve in grape fruit cups in lettuce nests.
Shred four green peppers, two red peppers, and two grape fruit. Mix with one cup chopped celery and one cup Cream Dressing. Serve on marinated water cress and garnish with stars of red and green peppers.
Use same ingredients as for Grape Fruit Salad, substituting Wine Dressing for Mayonnaise Dressing.
Marinate eight oranges cut in slices with French Dressing. Season highly with cayenne. Serve on water cress.
Cut thin round slices of orange without removing skin; arrange in layers in salad bowl. Serve on bed of water cress, and marinate with French Dressing.
Cut six oranges in halves, take out the pulp, and remove veins and sections. To the pulp add one fourth cup powdered sugar, one fourth cup chopped mint, and two tablespoons each of wine, lemon juice and orange juice. Serve in champagne glasses, and garnish with one red cherry and a bit of angelica.
Shred one pineapple; add same amount of white grapes, skinned and seeded, equal amount of celery cut in small[196] pieces, and one half cup castana nuts shredded finely. Moisten with Cream Mayonnaise. Serve on lettuce leaves and garnish with red cherries.
Use same ingredients as for Pineapple Salad, substituting a Wine Dressing for Cream Mayonnaise Dressing.
Soak gelatine in cold water. Cook the remaining ingredients fifteen minutes, strain, add gelatine, when dissolved pour into individual molds or into a border mold. When cold, turn out and garnish with Mayonnaise Dressing or Celery Salad.
The best sandwiches are made from bread which is fine grained and one day old.
Always cream the butter for buttering the bread.
Spread the loaf with butter before cutting the slice from the loaf. Cut each slice as thin as possible. After cutting, spread the slice with the sandwich mixture, and cover with another slice. Press the slices together firmly; cut off all crust and cut in rounds, triangles, or any shape desired.
Keep sandwiches wrapped in a cheese cloth which has been thoroughly dampened with cold water, and pack in a closed box until ready to use.
Remove the bones from one dozen anchovies; add the yolks of three hard-cooked eggs, and pound to a paste.
Mix two tablespoons Parmesan cheese with a few grains of cayenne; add to anchovy mixture, with enough cream to make of the consistency to spread.
Use for a filling between slices of buttered white bread.
Mix three tablespoons lemon juice, three tablespoons olive oil, and one quarter pound Russian caviare. Beat until creamy. Spread between thin slices of bread.
Mix one cup finely shredded celery, one fourth cup finely chopped nuts, and one fourth cup chopped olives. Moisten with Mayonnaise and spread between thin slices of brown bread.
Mix one cream cheese with an equal amount of chopped walnuts; add a few grains of cayenne, season with salt, and moisten with cream. Use for a filling for graham sandwiches.
Pound one quarter pound American cheese with two tablespoons butter, a few grains cayenne, and one teaspoon mustard; moisten with tarragon vinegar, and spread between thin slices of white bread.
Mix one cream cheese with an equal amount of chopped pimolas; season with salt and cayenne, and moisten with cream or Mayonnaise.
Use for a filling for white or brown bread sandwiches.
Mix one cup chopped chicken with one fourth cup Mayonnaise. Spread between thin slices of buttered bread.
Mix one cup chopped chicken with one cup chopped almonds; moisten with cream; season with salt and paprika. Use for filling for entire wheat bread sandwiches.
Slice one cucumber; marinate with French Dressing. Sprinkle thin slices of white bread with cayenne; spread with marinated cucumbers, and cover with white bread cut in thin slices.
Chop two hard-cooked eggs; add olive oil and seasonings until of the consistency to spread. Use for a filling for graham bread sandwiches.
Mix one cup chopped lobster meat with Mayonnaise. Marinate crisp lettuce leaves. Arrange drained leaves on thin slices of bread; cover with lobster, and cover lobster with bread; sprinkle dried lobster coral on top of each sandwich. Prepare just before serving; if allowed to stand they will be unsatisfactory.
Cream two tablespoons butter, add one half cup grated American cheese, two tablespoons anchovy essence, one fourth teaspoon each of paprika and mustard, and one half cup finely chopped olives. Season with salt and spread between thin slices of bread.
Marinate crisp lettuce leaves. Butter thin slices of bread; arrange on bread one lettuce leaf, on leaf a thin slice of tongue spread with Mayonnaise, on top of this a slice of tomato spread with Mayonnaise, and cover with a thin slice of buttered bread.
Mix twelve boned and skinned sardines, one tablespoon chopped pimolas and one tablespoon lemon juice. Use for filling between buttered slices of white bread.
Mix one cup chopped ham, one teaspoon vinegar, one teaspoon French mustard, one teaspoon horse-radish and one tablespoon olive oil. Spread between buttered slices of white bread.
Mix one quarter cup mayonnaise with one quarter cup horse-radish. Sprinkle slices of tomato with salt. Spread thin slices of bread with horse-radish mixture, and put sliced tomato between.
Spread thin slices of white bread with Mayonnaise; use the petals of nasturtium flowers for filling, allowing some of the petals to come beyond the edge of the bread.
Spread buttered bread with jelly and sprinkle jelly with chopped nuts. Cover with buttered bread, and shape.
Use finely chopped Canton ginger for a filling for graham bread sandwiches.
Use orange marmalade for a filling for white or whole wheat bread sandwiches.
Make an equal number of white bread and brown bread sandwiches; place sandwiches together in alternating colors. Wrap in damp cheese cloth and press over night. Cut in thin slices, then in strips.
When cut, these sandwiches give the appearance of marbled bread.
Stew figs, season with wine and lemon juice, and use for a filling for white or graham bread sandwiches.
Mix one cup each of chopped peanuts and walnuts with two tablespoons Mayonnaise Dressing. Spread between buttered slices of brown bread.
Melt two ounces Lowney’s Premium Chocolate. Add two tablespoons hot cream (or hot milk), two tablespoons wine (or one teaspoon vanilla), and enough confectioner’s sugar to make of the consistency to spread. Use for a filling between crackers, or thin slices of bread or cake. Finely chopped nuts slightly salted may be added to the chocolate mixture.
Cut stale bread in thin slices, cut slices in fancy shapes, butter each slice and spread with Chocolate Mixture.
Melt one fourth cup Lowney’s Premium Chocolate, add two tablespoons sugar, two tablespoons hot water, cook over hot water five minutes, add one teaspoon butter and one half teaspoon vanilla.
Spread Chocolate Mixture on saltine crackers, sprinkle with chopped walnuts and cover with saltine crackers.
Lettuce, water cress, sardines, shrimp and oysters may be mixed with French Dressing or Mayonnaise, and used for filling for sandwiches.
Soak the gelatine in cold water; mix sugar, chocolate and eggs; add scalded milk, and cook in double boiler until a coating is formed on a spoon; add to soaked gelatine; when dissolved, add salt and vanilla; pour into mold and chill. Serve with sugar and cream, beaten cream, or Soft Custard.
Soak Irish moss in cold water twenty minutes; drain, and pick over. Put milk in double boiler; add moss, and cook without stirring thirty minutes. Melt chocolate; add sugar and water; boil two minutes; add to first mixture. Strain, mold, chill, and serve with sugar and cream.
Mix cornstarch with cold milk; add sugar, salt, scalded milk, and the melted chocolate, mixed with two tablespoons sugar. Cook in double boiler twenty minutes, stirring constantly. Cool slightly, cut, and fold in the well-beaten egg whites, keeping the mixture as fluffy as possible. Add vanilla. Decorate the bottom and sides of an oval mold with halves of almonds arranged in the shape of daisies. Pour in the cornstarch mixture, chill, remove from mold, and garnish with candied cherries and beaten cream, sweetened and flavored.
A more fancy dish is obtained by making double the receipt and putting the chocolate into half the mixture, keeping the other half white. Mold the white in small glasses or timbale molds and arrange around the oval mold. Garnish each small mold with half cherry, and the spaces between with cream forced through the pastry bag. See colored illustration, Plate I, opposite.
Melt the chocolate over hot water, or mix the cocoa with one quarter cup hot water; add sugar, cream whipped until stiff, whites of eggs beaten until stiff, salt and flavoring.[205] Line a mold with lady fingers or sponge cake; fill with cream mixture, and chill at least one hour. This mixture may be molded in individual molds; then one half hour will be sufficient to chill it. See colored illustration, Plate II, opposite.
Melt chocolate; add sugar, eggs and milk; cook in double boiler until mixture thickens; soak gelatine in cold water; dissolve in egg mixture, strain, cool, and when beginning to harden, fold in whip from two cups of cream. Pour into mold to harden. Unmold and garnish with beaten cream and cherries. See colored illustration, Plate III, opposite.
Melt chocolate; add sugar and water; cook until smooth. Soak gelatine in cold water; dissolve in boiling water; add chocolate mixture. Chill partially; add vanilla, and whip from cream. Mold, chill, and serve, garnished with beaten cream and cherries. See colored illustration, Plate IV, opposite.
Melt sugar in clean omelet pan; when golden brown, add to scalded milk; when dissolved pour on to eggs, which have been slightly beaten, add salt, vanilla, and chocolate which has been melted over hot water.
Strain into individual molds. Set in a pan of hot water and bake in a moderate oven until firm. Chill; unmold, and serve with Chocolate Sauce or Caramel Sauce.
Mix cocoa, sugar, yolks of eggs; add light cream and cinnamon, and cook in double boiler until mixture begins to thicken. Add to gelatine which has been soaked in cold water, and stir until dissolved.
Add salt, vanilla, and whites of eggs beaten until stiff; when well blended, add heavy cream beaten until thick with Dover egg beater. Mold, chill; and serve with cream.
Use receipt for Cocoa Cream and add one cup blanched, chopped, and browned almonds just before molding.
Use receipt for Cocoa Cream. Add one half cup macaroons which have been dried in the oven and pounded, and one cup candied cherries cut in small pieces; or one half dozen marshmallows and one half dozen raisins, and one tablespoon each of citron and candied cherries, chopped fine, may be added just before molding.
Boil one quart French chestnuts; remove shells, press through potato ricer; add sugar, salt, cream and flavoring.
Fill individual molds with this mixture. Chill. Remove from molds and serve around the Chocolate Cream Mixture.
Beat the one cup heavy cream in above receipt; add powdered sugar, chocolate and flavoring. Arrange in the shape of a pyramid; garnish with candied cherries and angelica, cut in small pieces.
Mix cornstarch with three tablespoons cold milk; add salt, sugar and two cups milk. Cook in double boiler twenty minutes, stirring constantly. Add cocoanut and cut and fold in the whites of eggs, beaten until stiff. Turn into molds, chill, and serve with Chocolate Sauce.
Cook all ingredients in double boiler, stirring constantly until the spoon is coated. Serve hot or cold.
Beat the whites of eggs until stiff, using fork or flat beater; add remaining ingredients very slowly, and beat constantly.
Serve with beaten cream, flavored with wine or vanilla. The above mixture may be taken up in spoonfuls and poached in hot water, or may be used for éclairs, cream puffs, or cream pie, or served plain in frappé glasses.
Melt chocolate; add boiling water. Crush junket tablet; dissolve in one tablespoon cold water. Scald milk; add sugar, flavoring; when cool, add dissolved junket tablet and melted chocolate; pour into serving cups; let stand in warm place until of consistency of jelly, then chill. Serve with sugar and cream.
Soak gelatine in cold water; add boiling water. Mix cocoa, sugar, lemon juice and rind; add gelatine mixture; strain into a cold bowl. When mixture thickens, beat until frothy; add well-beaten whites, and beat until mixture will stand alone. Drop spoonfuls on serving dish and garnish with Vanilla Custard.
Scald the milk in double boiler. Mix eggs, sugar and salt; add scalded milk to them; return to double boiler, and cook until mixture thickens and is of a smooth and creamy consistency.
Strain into a cold dish and flavor when cold. Should the custard begin to curdle, set immediately into a dish of cold water and beat briskly with a wire whisk or egg beater.
Soft custard may be made with whole eggs, but it is not so velvety.
Scald milk; mix arrowroot and sugar; add to scalded milk, and cook ten minutes. Beat egg yolks slightly; add salt; pour milk mixture on to eggs; return to double boiler; stir constantly until thickened.
Cool, flavor, and serve in custard cups.
Arrange slices of bananas in bottom of serving dish, sprinkle with lemon juice, and cover with Soft Custard.
Prepare the same as Banana Custard, using one fruit or a combination of fruits.
Use receipt for Soft Custard. When cold, add one cup of crushed and sweetened strawberries. Serve ice-cold and garnish with Strawberry Meringue.
Use rule for Soft Custard, adding one fourth cup ground coffee to milk before scalding.
Use receipt for Soft Custard, adding one half cup caramelized sugar to milk before scalding.
Scald milk and add to eggs, sugar and salt, mixed together. Strain, add vanilla, and bake in one large buttered mold, or small ones, set in a pan of hot water, in a slow oven. Should the water boil during baking, the custard will be of a porous consistency. To test the custard thrust a silver knife through the center. When it comes out clean the custard is done.
Use rule for Baked Vanilla Custard, flavoring with one tablespoon sherry wine.
All other flavored custards may be made the same way, by substituting special flavorings.
Caramelize the one cup of sugar. When a delicate brown color, pour into a well-buttered charlotte russe mold or into individual cups; set away to cool.
Scald milk; mix eggs, one fourth cup of sugar, and salt,[211] add milk; strain into mold on to cold caramel; add seasoning and bake the same as Baked Vanilla Custard. Unmold and serve with Caramel Sauce.
Scald milk; caramelize sugar and add to scalded milk. Beat eggs slightly, add salt, milk mixture and flavoring. Strain into buttered dish and bake like Baked Vanilla Custard. Unmold and serve with Caramel Sauce.
This rule may be made with three eggs, but will be less rich and will break when unmolded.
Follow rule for Soft Custard; flavor with lemon juice, and garnish with a meringue made of the whites of four eggs, four tablespoons powdered sugar, and one teaspoon vanilla, beaten until stiff.
The meringue may be first poached in water in spoonfuls, then dropped on top of custard; or may be placed there without being poached, and teaspoons of Currant Jelly placed on top of each island.
Make the same as Floating Island and add to the meringue the sweetened juice of two cups of strawberries.
Soak the moss; tie in cheese cloth, and cook in milk in double boiler thirty minutes without stirring. Remove[212] moss without pressing bag; add other ingredients, strain into wet molds, chill, and serve.
See Chocolate Blanc Mange No. 2.
Use receipt for Irish Moss Blanc Mange, and flavor with two teaspoons coffee extract.
Mix cornstarch and sugar; scald milk, add to cornstarch, stir constantly until it thickens; cook one half hour, stirring occasionally. Add the beaten egg whites, beat well, flavor, and mold. Chill and serve.
Follow receipt for Cornstarch Pudding No. 1, substituting three egg yolks for three egg whites.
Add one cup of any kind of cooked fruit to Cornstarch Pudding No. 1 just before molding.
Add one cup of shredded cocoanut to Cornstarch Pudding No. 1, and serve with Custard Sauce.
Add one can pineapple to Cornstarch Pudding No. 1, and serve with Custard Sauce.
Soak the tapioca in milk one hour, cook in double boiler one half hour. Mix egg yolks, salt and sugar; add tapioca mixture, and cook until mixture thickens. Cool slightly, add stiffly beaten whites. Cool, flavor, and serve.
Cover one cup pearl tapioca with boiling water. Cook in boiling water until transparent. Add three tablespoons sugar, the juice and grated rind of one lemon. Serve cold with sugar and cream.
Cook the tapioca in boiling water until transparent; add one half teaspoon salt and lemon rind.
Core and pare apples, arrange in baking dish, fill cavities with sugar and lemon juice, cover with tapioca, and bake until apples are tender, adding one teaspoon butter before taking from oven.
Use rule for Apple Tapioca No. 1, arranging tapioca and apples cut in slices, in layers.
Use rule for Apple Tapioca No. 1, substituting one half cup sago for tapioca.
Soak tapioca in water several hours, and cook in same water until transparent. Add remaining ingredients. Mold, chill, and serve.
Season Soft Custard with two tablespoons wine. Arrange in layers one dozen macaroons, one dozen lady fingers and one dozen cocoanut cakes.
Cover with Soft Custard and sprinkle with grated cocoanut.
Core apples and bake until tender. Make a custard of the remaining ingredients; pour over baked apples. Cover with meringue made of the whites of the eggs and three tablespoons powdered sugar.
Boil chestnuts; press through strainer; add lemon juice, rind and custard. Turn into frappé glasses; cover with whipped cream sweetened and flavored.
Soak gelatine in cold water, add boiling water; when dissolved, add sugar and lemon juice. Mold and chill.
Soak the gelatine in cold water; add boiling water and lemon rind; let it stand ten minutes. Strain; add sugar and lemon juice. Mold in shallow dish. When hard, cut in squares and serve with boiled custard.
Soak gelatine in cold water; add boiling water, fruit juice, sugar, and strain. Mold, chill, and serve.
Make the same as Grape Fruit Jelly, substituting orange for grape fruit juice.
Use rule for Orange Jelly. Cover the bottom of a charlotte russe mold with jelly. Chill, decorate with sections of oranges, add another layer of jelly, decorate the sides as well as bottom, and so continue until dish is filled.
Prepare as for Lemon Jelly. Chill and serve.
Soak gelatine in cold water, add a small amount of coloring to boiling water, pour on to soaked gelatine, add sugar and fruit juice. Strain, if the liquid is satisfactory color; if not deep enough, add more coloring matter before straining. Mold, chill, and serve.
Soak gelatine in cold water. Boil sugar and boiling water ten minutes. Add soaked gelatine and fruit juice. Strain, add egg whites, and beat with Dover egg beater until cold. Serve with beaten cream, sweetened and flavored.
Soak gelatine in cold water; dissolve in boiling water. Add sugar, fruit rind, and juice, and the whip from cream. Decorate a melon mold with sections of oranges. Pour in trifle mixture. Chill, cool, remove from mold, garnish with orange jelly and beaten and sweetened cream.
Scoop out center of a round sponge cake; fill with fresh peaches, sweetened and cut in pieces. Cover with beaten[217] and sweetened cream, put on with a pastry bag and tube. Garnish with small pieces of peaches.
Whip cream; mix other ingredients, add whip, and serve in frappé glasses. Garnish with small bits of red cherries.
Mix sugar and fruit juice. Add beaten whites and cream. Continue beating until stiff. Arrange sliced strawberries in the bottom of frappé glasses, add cream mixture, and garnish with slices of strawberries on top.
Cook prunes and remove stones. Soak gelatine in cold water. Add boiling water. Strain; add lemon juice, sherry and sugar. Pour into a mold. When mixture begins to harden, add prunes cut in pieces and walnuts broken in pieces. Stir occasionally to keep fruit from settling. Mold, chill, and serve with Soft Custard.
Use Wine, Orange, or Lemon Jelly. Pour jelly in mold to depth of one half inch. Decorate bottom of mold with a slice of banana, and radiating from it halves of[218] blanched almonds. Cover with jelly, and arrange in alternating layers, English walnuts, candied fruits, figs and jelly. Chill; serve and garnish with whipped cream.
Soak the gelatine in cold water; dissolve in hot cream; add sugar. When the mixture begins to thicken add the whip from one pint of cream. Cut and fold in this cream; do not stir. When nearly stiff enough to drop, mold.
Use rule for Bavarian Cream, substituting one fourth cup strong boiling coffee for one fourth cup cream.
Soak gelatine in cold water, dissolve in boiling water. Add fruit juice and sugar; stir until mixture begins to thicken. Cut and fold in the whip from the cream.
Line a mold with halves of strawberries; pour in cream mixture. Chill; garnish with beaten cream and strawberries, and serve.
Prepare the same as Strawberry Bavarian, adding two tablespoons lemon juice, and substituting raspberry juice for strawberry juice.
Prepare the same as Strawberry Bavarian, and substitute one can grated pineapple for strawberry juice.
Use rule for Strawberry Bavarian, using one pint crushed peaches or apricots for strawberry juice, and garnish with halves of peaches or apricots.
For Chocolate Bavarian see special receipts for Lowney’s Chocolate, p. 205.
Mash the bananas. Soak gelatine in cold water; dissolve in boiling water; add sugar, banana pulp and orange juice. When mixture begins to thicken, cut and fold in the whip from the cream. Mold, chill, and garnish with beaten cream, bananas and cherries.
Use rule for Banana Bavarian, substituting one cup preserved ginger, and adding one quarter cup sherry wine.
Soak gelatine in cold water; scald milk; mix yolks and sugar, add milk and salt; cook until mixture begins to thicken; add soaked gelatine, chill, and as mixture thickens add the beaten whites of eggs. Mold, chill, and serve. Any flavorings used for Bavarians may be used for Italian Creams.
To Italian Cream add one cup almonds which have been blanched, chopped, and browned and two tablespoons lemon juice.
To Italian Cream add one cup caramelized sugar to custard before adding gelatine.
Add one cup maple sugar to hot custard in Italian Cream before adding gelatine.
Line a mold with Strawberry Bavarian, one inch thick, set another mold on top of this Bavarian and pour in Strawberry Bavarian to the top of the mold. Chill. When hardened, remove second mold and fill with alternate layers beaten cream, chopped nuts and chopped fruit.
Use rule for Plain Bavarian, and divide into three parts before adding the cream.
Into one third stir one quarter cup strawberry juice and color pink; into another third add two tablespoons chopped almonds and color green; flavor the other third with vanilla.
Add one third of the whipped cream to each of these thirds and arrange in layers in charlotte russe molds. Chill and garnish with beaten cream, strawberries and nuts.
One must work quickly to keep the gelatine mixture from hardening. Should it harden before it can be used, set the dish containing the gelatine mixture into a pan of hot water and stir until liquefied.
Cook rice in milk in double boiler until rice is tender, and milk is absorbed. Add sugar, salt, and gelatine which has been soaked in cold water and dissolved in hot water. Add flavoring, cool slightly, and add whipped cream. Mold, chill, and garnish with Wine or Orange Jelly cut in cubes.
Line a mold with Lemon Jelly to the depth of one inch. Place a smaller mold on top of jelly and surround smaller mold with Lemon Jelly. When jelly is hard, remove, mold and fill with any flavored Bavarian Cream.
Soak gelatine in cold water; dissolve in hot cream. Add sugar, whites of eggs beaten until stiff, mashed bananas and lemon juice. Chill; as it begins to thicken, fold in the whipped cream. Line a melon mold with lady fingers, add cream mixture, chill, and serve. Garnish with cream beaten and flavored, cherries and angelica.
Cook dates in boiling water until tender; press through a sieve. Beat whites until stiff; add sugar, lemon juice and salt. Carefully fold in the date pulp, pile lightly on a buttered baking dish, and bake thirty minutes in a moderate oven. Serve with Soft Custard or with whipped cream.
Substitute two cups prunes, for dates, in Date Whip, and follow rule for Date Whip.
Crush the berries; add sugar and lemon juice. Beat eggs until stiff, and continue beating while adding strawberry mixture. Serve with Soft Custard or beaten cream.
Beat cream until stiff; add sugar, flavoring, and egg whites, beaten until stiff. Line a mold with slices of sponge cake or lady fingers; fill with mixture. Chill and serve.
Use rule for Vanilla Charlotte Russe No. 1, substituting one cup caramelized sugar for the powdered sugar.
Add to Vanilla Charlotte Russe No. 1 one dozen marshmallows finely chopped, one dozen almonds blanched and chopped, six walnuts chopped, two tablespoons candied cherries finely chopped, and one tablespoon brandy.
Crush two cups strawberries, add one cup sugar, and add to Vanilla Charlotte Russe No. 1.
Pare and core the apples. Arrange in baking dish, fill apples with jelly, and surround with rice, mixed with hot milk, egg yolks, butter, raisins and flavoring. Cook in oven until apples are tender. Remove from oven and cover with a meringue. Serve hot or cold.
Mix cornstarch, sugar, salt and milk; melt chocolate; add water, cornstarch mixture, and cook in double boiler thirty minutes; cool; add well-beaten egg whites, flavoring, and mold. Chill and serve with sugar and cream.
Dissolve junket tablet in cold water. Heat the milk until lukewarm; add junket tablet, sugar and flavoring; fill frappé glasses, let stand in warm room until set; then chill and serve.
Soak gelatine in cold water; dissolve in boiling water; add wine and sugar. Stir until mixture thickens. Carefully fold in the whip from cream. Mold, chill, and serve with figs and beaten cream.
Soak the gelatine in cold water; dissolve in boiling water; add sugar and lemon juice. Stir till mixture thickens, then add the beaten whites of eggs and continue beating until stiff enough to drop. Mold, chill, and serve with Custard Sauce.
Soak figs in water, then press into shape. Mix sugar and water, boil until sirupy, add lemon juice. Arrange figs on serving dish; cover with sirup; garnish with sweetened cream, beaten until stiff, pressed through pastry bag and tube.
Mix sugar, eggs and pineapple; bake in slow oven until set. Unmold, garnish with beaten cream, the leaves of the pineapple and cherries.
Soak bread in scalded milk until soft. Add cocoanut, sugar, cocoa, lemon juice and salt; beat well; add yolks of eggs slightly beaten, and cut and fold in the well-beaten whites. Turn into well-buttered pudding dish and bake in a moderate oven 30 minutes. Serve hot or cold.
Wash quinces, cut in quarters, remove seeds and chop; add lemon juice. Beat yolks of eggs; add sugar and cream; when blended, add beaten whites and quince mixture. Pour into buttered pudding dish and bake until firm. Serve hot or cold.
Mix all ingredients, beat well, pour into buttered dish, and steam two hours. Serve with cream.
Melt butter; add flour; when smooth, add milk; cook five minutes; add sugar and salt. Melt chocolate; add hot water and flour mixture; cook five minutes; cool; add yolks of eggs beaten well; cut and fold in the well-beaten whites. Flavor; bake in a buttered baking dish in a moderate oven twenty to thirty minutes. Serve immediately with sugar and cream, or beaten cream, or butter and sugar sauce.
Mix all ingredients in the order given. Pour into a buttered baking dish, set into a pan of hot water, and bake one hour in a moderate oven; stir twice during the baking to keep chocolate from rising to the top.
Soak cracker crumbs in milk, add remaining ingredients, turn into a buttered pudding dish, and steam four hours. Serve either hot or cold with Cream Sauce.
Cream butter; add chocolate and sugar, flour in which baking powder and salt have been sifted, and milk; beat well, cut and fold in beaten whites of eggs. Pour into individual molds or popover cups and steam forty minutes. Serve with Chocolate Sauce.
Mix first seven ingredients; when well blended, cut and fold in the whites of eggs; pour into individual molds, and bake twenty to thirty minutes. Serve hot with Cream or Fruit Sauce. See colored illustration, Plate V, opposite p. 226.
Soak rice in milk one half hour; add salt and cook in double boiler until rice is tender. Mix butter, sugar, chocolate, raisins and vanilla; add cooked rice, cream and beaten whites. Fill buttered baking dish, cover with a meringue, brown in a moderate oven, and serve either hot or cold.
Milk may be substituted for the beaten cream if a less rich pudding is desired. See colored illustration, Plate VI, opposite p. 226.
Chop suet, figs and bread crumbs in meat chopper. Add remaining ingredients, and steam three hours. Serve with Hot Chocolate Sauce, or cream sweetened and flavored. See colored illustration, Plate VII, opposite p. 227.
Mix first five ingredients and boil two minutes. Beat yolks of eggs until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar, beat five minutes; add nuts, then add to chocolate mixture. When well blended, cut and fold in the whites of eggs beaten until stiff. Pour into buttered mold and steam one and one half hours. Remove from mold and serve with Hard Sauce.
Melt butter; add flour, chocolate, salt and milk; cook five minutes. Beat egg yolks until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar and almonds; when well blended, add chocolate mixture, and cut and fold in the beaten whites.[229] Pour into a buttered mold, and steam one hour. Serve immediately with sugar and cream.
Sift flour, baking powder and salt; work in lard and butter; when well mixed, add water. Cut paste in eight rounds, place apple in center of round, fill cavity with sugar and flavoring. Draw paste around apple; place in baking pan rough side down. Bake forty-five minutes. Serve with Lemon or Molasses Sauce.
Beat eggs; add sugar, flour in which baking powder has been sifted, and milk. Beat well; add apples; pour into buttered baking dish and bake in a moderate oven one hour. Serve with Italian Sauce.
Remove the core from eight apples of uniform size. Place in baking dish, add one fourth cup water, and baste frequently, during baking, with sugar and water.
Core eight apples, arrange in baking dish, fill cavities with butter and sugar, bake until tender, basting with sugar and water. When done, arrange in serving dish; sprinkle with granulated sugar.
Pare and core the apples; boil sugar and water together ten minutes; arrange apples in buttered baking dish two inches apart; add sirup; cover and bake until apples are tender. Be careful to preserve shape of apples.
Remove from dish; boil sirup until thick; fill cavities with jam, pour sirup around them, and just before sending to table pour over them brandy or rum. Light and serve.
Wipe apples; arrange in baking dish; add sugar and water, and cook until tender, turning so that all sides may be evenly cooked. Be sure and preserve the shape.
Remove skin in a way to leave bright coloring on the apple.
Boil sirup until thick, add fruit juice and rind, pour around apples, and garnish with beaten cream.
Steam apples; add butter, sugar, yolks of eggs and flavoring. Cool, cut and fold in beaten whites, turn into buttered pudding dish, and bake forty-five minutes in a moderate oven. Serve with sugar and cream.
Arrange crumbs and apples in layers, in a buttered pudding dish, having crumbs on the top layer. Sprinkle each layer with sugar and cinnamon and dot with butter; add lemon juice, lemon rind and water, just before sprinkling on the last layer. Bake in slow oven one hour.
Mix and sift dry ingredients except sugar. Add milk. Fill a buttered pudding dish with apples, add sugar, water, lemon rind, cover with flour mixture, and steam one and one half hours. Serve with Lemon Sauce.
Arrange cored and pared apples in a buttered baking dish. Mix sugar, flour, milk; add yolks of eggs; when well blended, the well-beaten whites. Pour this mixture over apples and bake in a moderate oven until apples are tender.
Prepare the same as Scalloped Apple, adding one half teaspoon cloves, one half teaspoon allspice, one half cup molasses, and one cup raisins seeded and chopped. Bake in slow oven one hour.
Dip bread in melted butter; butter mold; cut bread into strips an inch wide and the height of the mold. Line bottom and sides of mold with bread. Pare and cut up apples; add sugar, water and lemon juice; cook until apples are soft. Add chopped almonds, one tablespoon butter; pour into lined mold, cover with slices of buttered bread, and bake thirty minutes. Serve with Lemon Sauce or Hard Sauce.
Press rice into charlotte russe mold; reheat in steamer. Pare and core apples; cook in sirup made of sugar and water until tender. Remove apples; boil sirup until thick; unmold rice; arrange apples around rice, fill cavities in apples with jam, and pour sauce around them.
Prepare in the same way as Apples on a Bed of Rice, except quarter oranges and omit jam.
Mix sugar, salt, flour, eggs and milk. When smooth, add apples; pour into buttered baking dish, and bake[233] in a moderate oven one hour. Serve immediately with Wine Sauce.
Follow the rule for making Apple Batter Pudding, substituting peaches for the apples.
Mix ingredients in order given. Line a pudding dish with Plain Paste, fill with apple mixture, and bake forty-five minutes in a moderate oven. Serve with butter and sugar.
Scald milk; pour on to Indian meal; add remaining ingredients; pour into buttered baking dish, and cook in slow oven four hours, keeping dish covered until the last hour, stirring occasionally.
Pare and core eight apples. Arrange in baking dish; fill cavities with Apple Jelly and chopped raisins. Cook until tender, basting with hot water, sugar and lemon juice. Ten minutes before removing from oven, spear all over with slivers of blanched almonds.
Make a white sauce with flour, butter, salt and milk. Beat yolks of eggs; add sugar and white sauce. Cut and fold in the well-beaten whites. Bake in individual ramekin dishes in a moderate oven, twenty to thirty minutes. Serve immediately with Orange or Sherry Sauce.
Beat yolks until lemon-colored and thick. Add sugar, fruit juice and rind. Carefully fold in beaten whites. Pour into buttered dish, and bake fifteen to twenty minutes in moderate oven. Serve with Strawberry Sauce.
Soak bread in milk; add beaten eggs and remaining ingredients. Bake one hour. Serve with hard sauce.
Use rule for Bread Pudding, using whites of four eggs for meringue, and the yolks in the pudding instead of the three eggs. Before spreading on meringue, cover pudding with a layer of jam. Brown meringue slightly in the oven, and serve pudding hot or cold with cream.
Substitute one and one half cups cracker crumbs for bread crumbs in Bread Pudding, and add one cup seeded raisins cut in small pieces. Bake the same as Bread Pudding.
Butter twelve slices of bread; arrange in baking dish. Cover with four cups milk, four slightly beaten eggs, three fourths cup sugar, one half teaspoon salt, and the grated rind and juice of one lemon. Bake one and one half hours in slow oven. Serve with Hard Sauce.
Use rule for Buttered Bread Pudding, sprinkle each bread layer with shredded cocoanut and chopped and seeded raisins. Serve with hard sauce.
Mix flour, baking powder and salt; add butter, mix until mealy; add milk. Put sugar, berries and vinegar in bottom of buttered baking dish. Cover with flour mixture and steam forty-five minutes. Serve in dish in which it is cooked.
Prepare in the same way as Steamed Blueberry Dumpling, using four cups of raspberries instead of blueberries.
Substitute blackberries for blueberries, and proceed as for Steamed Blueberry Dumpling.
Substitute two quarts cherries, in rule for making Blueberry Dumpling.
Use rule for Blueberry Dumpling, substituting one quart peaches for blueberries.
Use receipt for making Snow Puffs. When done, sprinkle with powdered sugar and garnish with Cherry Sauce.
Cook in steamer until water is absorbed and each kernel is separated. The time depends upon the age of the rice.
Cook rice in milk, in double boiler, two hours; then add salt, eggs slightly beaten, and orange rind. Caramelize the sugar. When a golden brown liquid, pour into a hot pudding mold, coating the whole inner surface. Add rice mixture, cover and cook in oven in a pan of water twenty minutes. Remove from oven, let stand five minutes, turn on serving dish, and serve with Soft Custard.
Cream butter; add sugar, flour, baking powder and salt alternately with milk. Beat well; add the stiffly beaten whites; steam forty-five minutes in buttered popover cups. Serve with Strawberry Sauce.
Use rule for Snow Puffs and serve surrounded by a sauce made by cooking two cups blueberries and one cup sugar together twenty minutes.
Cream butter and sugar together; add yolks of eggs beaten until thick, flour in which baking powder and salt have been sifted, alternately with milk; beat well and add the well-beaten whites. Pour into a well-buttered pudding dish. Bake forty-five minutes. Serve with Lemon, Vanilla, or Wine Sauce.
Prepare the same as Cottage Pudding. Pour into buttered mold; steam one and one half hours. Serve with Lemon or Strawberry Sauce.
Mix soda with sour milk, add other ingredients, pour into buttered mold, and steam four hours. Serve with Molasses Sauce.
Scald one pint of milk with corn meal and cook twenty minutes; add remaining milk and rest of ingredients. Pour into deep earthen dish and bake, set in a pan of hot water, in a slow oven, four hours. The afternoon fire is the one best suited for cooking this pudding.
Mix ingredients in the order given, pour into deep baking dish, set in a pan of hot water, and bake two hours. Stir once during cooking.
To Indian Rice Pudding, add two cups pared and quartered apples.
Soak tapioca in cold water over night. Cook Indian meal and scalded milk in double boiler twenty minutes; add tapioca, molasses, butter, salt. Pour into buttered baking dish; cook two hours in slow oven.
At the end of the first hour, add the cold milk. Serve hot with butter or cream.
Mix first six ingredients; pour into buttered pudding dish; cook in a slow oven two hours, stirring occasionally the first hour. At the end of two hours add the cold milk and cook half an hour longer.
Serve with sugar and cream.
Mix ingredients; pour into buttered mold; cover and steam four hours; bake in oven one half hour. Serve with Wine Sauce.
Beat egg; add liquids, flour in which soda has been sifted, fruit, spices and melted butter. Pour into buttered baking powder tins and steam four hours. Serve with Brown Sugar Sauce.
Cover bread crumbs with milk. Chop figs and suet together, add other ingredients, pour in buttered melon mold and steam from three and one half to four hours. Serve with Stirling Sauce.
Use rule for Fig Pudding, adding one cup each chopped dates and shredded almonds, and omit figs.
Roll pastry or a baking-powder biscuit dough very thin, about one eighth of an inch in thickness, spread with jam,[240] blackberry, black currant, or raspberry. Roll like a jelly roll, press, and close the ends as tight as possible. Tie in a floured cloth, and cook in boiling water two hours, or steam in steamer one hour. Remove from cloth and serve on hot platter with Foamy Sauce.
Mix cornstarch and cold milk, add hot milk, and cook in double boiler until mixture thickens. Add eggs well beaten, sugar, almonds and vanilla. Cook two minutes. Pour into shallow pan; chill; cut into squares or rounds; dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, fry in hot fat. Drain on brown paper, roll in powdered sugar, and serve. Serve with Lemon Sauce.
Cream butter; add remaining ingredients; pour into buttered mold; steam four hours. Serve with Brandy Sauce or Foamy Sauce.
Boil all ingredients ten minutes.
Cook all together ten minutes. Strain, add more lemon juice if needed.
Boil sugar and water ten minutes. Mix remaining ingredients and pour hot sirup on to them. Beat well and serve hot.
Mix butter and sugar until creamy, add wine and cream. Cook over hot water until liquefied.
Mix egg yolk and sugar; add white of egg beaten until stiff, flavoring, and just before sending to the table the beaten cream. Serve cold.
Cook sugar and water ten minutes; beat yolks; add cream, brandy, salt, orange rind gratings. Add sugar and water slowly and beat until mixture thickens.
Mix butter, sugar, yolks and cream; cook in double boiler until mixture thickens; add wine, and serve.
Caramelize sugar in clean saucepan. When a light brown color, add water, and simmer fifteen minutes.
Remove stones from cherries and cook all ingredients together until sirupy. Strain and serve.
Boil sugar and water until sirupy, add claret, and serve hot or cold.
Mix eggs, sugar, salt, and coffee, and cook in double boiler until mixture thickens. Chill; add beaten cream and serve cold.
Boil sugar and water until sirupy; add currant juice and lemon juice. Serve hot or cold.
Boil sugar, water and cinnamon until sirupy. Remove cinnamon; add jelly; when melted, strain and serve.
Make a custard of milk, egg yolks, sugar and salt; when thick, add butter, flavoring and beaten whites. Serve cold.
Heat the milk. Beat egg whites until stiff; add sugar, continue beating; add milk and flavoring, continue beating. Serve when foamy.
Cream butter; add sugar, yolk of egg and wine. Cook over hot water until hot. Remove from fire and add beaten whites of eggs.
Beat whites until stiff; add sugar and flavoring and continue beating, adding hot water very gradually. Serve hot or cold.
Mix arrowroot, sugar and water; boil ten minutes, stirring constantly. Add fruit juice and cook until sirupy, and serve hot.
Boil sugar and water until sirupy. Add lemon and fruit juice and pulp. Serve hot without straining.
Boil all together until sirupy. Serve hot or cold.
Cream butter; add sugar by the teaspoon, and beat until light and creamy. Flavor and serve.
Cream butter; add sugar and cream alternately, flavoring, and serve very cold.
Mix sugar, wine and milk, and warm in double boiler or over hot water. Add to creamed butter slowly. Do not permit the sugar mixture to become hot, only warm.
Use rule for Stirling Sauce, substituting one fourth cup kirsch for wine.
Mix arrowroot or cornstarch with sugar. Add boiling water and cook twenty minutes. Add flavoring and butter. Serve hot.
Beat yolks until thick; add maple sirup and cook until it thickens. Add beaten cream, salt. Chill and serve.
Mix sugar, arrowroot and boiling water; boil ten minutes. Add maraschino. Chill and serve.
Beat whites until stiff; add remaining ingredients. Serve cold.
Make the same as Lemon Sauce, substituting the juice and rind of two oranges for lemon.
Mix sugar, yolks of eggs and rum, then the stiffly beaten whites. Cook until thick; add the beaten cream. Chill and serve.
Mix all ingredients and, just before serving, cook over hot water until it begins to thicken.
Mix all ingredients and cook over hot water, stirring constantly until mixture thickens.
Cream butter; add sugar, egg white; beat well; add strawberries crushed to a pulp. Serve.
Cream butter; add sugar, beaten cream and flavoring. Heat over hot water until all is liquid. Serve hot.
Mix cream and brown sugar, and add to creamed butter very gradually. When of creamy consistency, add flavoring.
Cream butter; add sugar and cornstarch, yolks of eggs well beaten, and boiling water; boil three minutes; add remaining ingredients and serve.
Cook all the ingredients except vanilla twelve minutes; add vanilla, and serve hot. This sauce is especially good served with Vanilla Ice Cream, but is good with any gelatine dessert.
Melt chocolate in top of double boiler; add butter, stir until well mixed; add egg yolks, one at a time, sugar, and milk. Cook until thickened, add orange juice and rind, and serve at once.
Melt chocolate; add sugar and boiling water; cook until glossy. Cool. Beat cream until stiff; add chocolate mixture gradually; cut and fold in beaten white. Flavor and[248] serve. One half cup Lowney’s Cocoa may be substituted for the chocolate.
Roll the paste one quarter inch thick. Cut paste an eighth of an inch larger than plate. Cut strips three quarters inch wide for a rim. Cut upper crust at least one eighth inch larger than plate. Arrange lower crust on plate, wet edges with cold water, lay strips of paste or rim on this, taking care to lap and seal the ends with cold water. Fill the pie with whatever material is to be used. Cut little slits in center of upper crust. Lay on pie; wet edges of rim. Have all edges even, leaving fullness in center to allow for shrinking. Press edges lightly but firmly.
Roll paste one eighth inch thick. Cut one inch larger than plate. Spread on plate; fold edge under, making paste the size of plate. This edge may be fluted or plain. Chill before filling.
Perforated tin pie plates secure a well-baked under crust. Place pie in hot oven at first, reducing heat after crust becomes hardened. Turn frequently while baking, and bake until a golden brown—about forty-five minutes.
Sift salt and flour; add lard and butter when thoroughly chilled. Chop until like meal; add cold water to make a stiff dough. Chill; roll on a floured cloth or molding[249] board into a rectangular shape; fold ends towards center, double, turn halfway round, and roll again.
This paste is a superior one. Chill before rolling for pies.
Use same rule as for Chopped Paste. Chop lard into sifted flour; when thoroughly mixed, add salt and water to form dough. Chill; roll in rectangular piece; place butter which has previously been shaped, flattened, and chilled on middle of one side of paste; fold over other side, press edges together, and fold one end under and one end over butter, making six layers. Roll again into rectangle; fold in same way, and so continue three times. If butter begins to soften, roll paste in cheese cloth and place on ice until hard enough to roll easily. Be careful not to wet the cheese cloth.
Shape and flatten butter into a round cake. Chill. Sift flour several times; add cold water to form a dough a little stiffer than for baking powder biscuit. Chill. Place butter in same way as directed in Plain Paste and roll paste seven times. Chill if necessary between each rolling.
Use either Puff or Plain Paste. For filling for a medium-sized pie tin, use three cups pared and sliced apples, one half cup sugar, one eighth teaspoon salt, one tablespoon butter, one fourth teaspoon cinnamon, one tablespoon lemon juice, and grated rind of one half lemon.
Use either Puff or Plain Paste. For filling use rule for Apple Sauce, and season to taste.
Line a deep perforated tin with Plain or Chopped Paste; brush with water or white of egg. Fill with floured blueberries; add sugar, butter, salt and vinegar. Allow one cup of sugar to three cups of berries, one tablespoon butter, one eighth teaspoon salt, and one half teaspoon vinegar. Cover with crust and bake.
Use rule for Blueberry Pie, omitting flour and vinegar.
Use Plain or Chopped Paste. Fill with two cups cranberries, one and one half cups sugar, one quarter cup water, and one tablespoon butter. Cover with upper crust or a lattice of paste strips; or bake without any upper crust. Decorate when done with pastry baked in fancy shapes.
Use Plain Paste. For filling, mix one and one quarter cups chopped cranberries, one half cup chopped raisins, one cup sugar, one quarter cup water, and one tablespoon butter.
This is sometimes called Mock Cherry Pie.
Use Plain Paste. For filling, mix two cups cleaned, fresh currants, two cups sugar, two tablespoons flour, two eggs, and one eighth teaspoon salt.
Bake with two crusts; or omit upper crust and cover with meringue when cooked.
Use Plain or Chopped Paste. For filling, mix three eggs, one fourth cup sugar, one eighth teaspoon salt, one[251] eighth teaspoon nutmeg, and two cups milk. Bake in slow oven.
Use Plain or Chopped Paste. For filling, mix two cups seeded raisins chopped, two cups citron chopped, one and one half cups sugar, grated rind of one lemon, four tablespoons lemon juice, one eighth teaspoon salt.
Line a plate with Plain Paste; fill with following mixture: two cups milk, three egg yolks, one half cup sugar, two tablespoons cornstarch, one cup grated cocoanut, one fourth teaspoon salt, grated rind and juice of one lemon, and one tablespoon butter.
Use Plain Paste. Add one and one half cups of dates, which have been cooked in boiling water until tender and pressed through a sieve, to Custard Pie filling.
Use Plain Paste. For filling, mix two tablespoons cornstarch, one cup sugar, and one half cup boiling water, boil five minutes, add one tablespoon butter, juice and rind of one lemon, and two eggs well beaten.
Use Plain Paste. For filling, mix one cup sugar, yolks of four eggs, one eighth teaspoon salt, one cup milk, grated rind and juice of one lemon, and the whites of four eggs beaten until stiff. Cover with meringue when done.
Use Plain Paste for under crust, fill with mince-meat, cover with Puff Paste.
Use Plain or Chopped Paste. For filling use two cups peaches, cut into eighths, one cup sugar, one tablespoon butter, one eighth teaspoon salt, and two tablespoons water.
Use Plain or Chopped Paste. Remove stones from two cups plums; add one half cup sugar; dredge with flour; add two tablespoons lemon juice and one tablespoon butter.
Substitute prunes for plums and follow rule for Plum Pie.
Line pie plate with Plain Paste. For filling, mix one and one half cups stewed and strained pumpkin, one and one half cups milk, one egg, three fourths cup brown sugar, one tablespoon butter, one half teaspoon each of salt and ginger, and one teaspoon cinnamon.
Melt two squares Lowney’s Chocolate or one half cup Lowney’s Cocoa, add sugar, cornstarch, egg yolks, salt and milk. Cook in double boiler till thick, stirring constantly; flavor with vanilla. Pour into a baked pie crust shell, cover with a meringue made by beating egg whites till stiff and adding two tablespoons sugar; brown in oven and serve cold. See colored illustration, Plate VIII, opposite p. 227.
Use Plain Paste. For filling, mix two cups rhubarb cut in inch pieces, one cup sugar, two tablespoons each of butter and flour, one egg, one eighth teaspoon salt, and one teaspoon lemon juice.
Use Chopped Paste. For filling, mix one cup stewed and strained squash, one half cup sugar, one half teaspoon salt, two eggs, one half teaspoon cinnamon, one fourth teaspoon nutmeg, and one half cup milk.
A very good pie may be made by using one and one half cups of the squash left from dinner, sweetening and seasoning it without adding eggs.
Mix all ingredients except brandy and sherry, and cook two hours; add liquor; let stand in crock for a week before using.
Roll Puff Paste one half inch thick. Cut out in desired shape, wet edges, and place one inch rim on wet edge. Prick several times in center that paste may rise evenly. Chill. Cut cover the size of space inside the rim. Decorate top of cover with paste circles, crescents, or diamonds,[254] always wetting under surface with cold water before arranging. Chill before baking.
Roll Puff Paste one third inch thick; shape with round cutter; cut rings from one half the rounds. Place rings on rounds, using cold water to hold them together. Chill until stiff before baking.
Roll Puff Paste one fourth inch thick. Cut with small round cutter; make impression on round with smaller round cutter. Chill until stiff before baking.
Roll Puff Paste a little less than one fourth inch in thickness. Cut in rounds, squares, or diamonds; put on rim, wetting edges. Chill and bake.
Cover the outside of a charlotte russe mold with Puff Paste, cut one fourth inch thick. Prick surface of paste, chill, and bake. Cut a cover for vol-au-vent to fit mold; prick, chill, and bake. Remove vol-au-vent from mold immediately after baking.
Always chill Puff Paste before baking. Place in very hot oven; protect upper surface of paste, if necessary, at first.
Pâtés should be baked in twenty-four minutes; after the first fifteen, decrease heat.
Vol-au-vent should bake forty-five minutes to one hour, and should be turned frequently. Remove soft inside[255] portion as soon as taken from oven. Tarts and bouchées should be baked the same as pâtés.
Cover fluted patty tins with Puff Paste. Make covers a little larger than patty tins. Bake in a hot oven. Fill with Frangipane Cream. Cover with meringue, and decorate with cherries, angelica, and blanched and browned almonds.
Mix two tablespoons flour, one fourth cup powdered sugar, and one fourth cup cream until smooth. Cook ten minutes, stirring constantly; add four egg yolks, one tablespoon each of sherry, lemon juice, lemon rind, and chopped citron. Cook in double boiler until mixture thickens.
Roll Puff Paste one eighth inch thick. Brush with white of egg, sprinkle with shredded almonds and powdered sugar. Cut in strips one half inch wide and three inches long. Bake in a quick oven.
Roll Puff Paste—trimmings will do for this purpose—one eighth inch thick. Sprinkle with salt, cayenne pepper, and grated cheese. To keep these ingredients on the paste, pat and fold in three layers. Roll again, spread, fold, and roll as before. Cut in strips half inch wide and five inches long. Bake in a quick oven.
Make tarts and fill with the following cooked mixture: mix for filling, one cup seeded and chopped raisins, one cup sugar, three tablespoons cracker crumbs, one egg, one[256] tablespoon butter, one eighth teaspoon salt, juice and rind of one lemon.
Roll Chopped Paste one fourth inch thick; cut in three inch squares. Put one and one half teaspoons Banbury mixture on one side of square, wet edges, fold to make a triangle, prick, and bake.
Fill tarts with Apple Sauce to which has been added one tablespoon butter.
Fill tarts with cranberry filling used for Cranberry Pie.
Fill tarts with Lemon Cream used for Lemon Pie, cooked in double boiler until thick.
Cook two cups peaches cut in eighths, one cup sugar, one tablespoon lemon juice, one tablespoon butter, and a few grains salt, until peaches are tender. Cool and fill tarts.
Cook one cup grated pineapple, one fourth cup sugar, two egg yolks, grated rind and juice of one lemon, and few grains of salt, until thick. Chill and fill tarts.
For this tart cover the outside of a round agate-ware baking dish with Chopped Paste. Chill, bake. For filling, mix four cups gooseberries, one cup sugar, few gratings[257] lemon rind, few gratings nutmeg. Stew until gooseberries are tender; add two tablespoons butter. Use hot or cold in paste shell. Serve with cream or Soft Custard.
Cut Puff Paste in strips four inches long, one inch wide, and one fourth inch in thickness. Chill and bake. Arrange in pairs with Lemon Filling between.
Prepare the same as Lemon Crisps, using Orange Filling.
Fill tarts with Strawberry Jam; serve with whipped cream.
Roll Puff Paste one eighth inch thick. Cut in strips two inches wide and four inches long. Spread one half with jam or jelly, fold over other half, press edges together, bake in hot oven. Brush with white of egg, sprinkle with almonds. Brown in oven.
1st. Get all materials needed together.
2d. Attend to fire, making sure, if it is a coal fire, that there is sufficient coal to last through the baking.
3d. Measure all ingredients with same cup, dry ones first.
4th. Mix and sift all dry ingredients except sugar; if soda is used, sift through a very fine sieve before sifting with other ingredients.
Cream Butter.—Cream butter, that is, beat it with a spoon until it is of a creamy consistency; then add sugar very gradually; when well blended, add yolks of eggs which have been beaten with a Dover egg beater until lemon-colored and thick.
When the ingredients are thoroughly incorporated, add sifted dry ingredients alternately with the milk. When all milk and flour have been used, beat well; then cut and fold in the stiffly beaten whites of eggs. Pour into buttered and papered pan, having mixture a little higher on the sides than in the middle.
Cutting and Folding.—Cut through and through the mixture with a knife or side of a wooden spoon, fold by turning the spoon completely over, thereby blending the materials without breaking the air bubbles. Never stir or beat after cutting and folding.
Beat yolks of eggs until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar and continue beating; add flour; when well blended, cut and fold in the stiffly beaten whites of eggs. Pour into buttered and papered pan; bake in a round pan with a tube in the center.
For baking both sponge and butter cakes divide the time into quarters. The first quarter, the cake should rise; the second quarter, form a crust and begin to brown; third quarter, continue browning; and fourth quarter, finish browning and shrink from the pan. When baked, this may be determined by pressing crust with the finger; if a depression is left the cake is not done; if the cake springs back and leaves no depression, it is done. Take from oven, invert on a cake cooler, remove paper, turn right-side up and cool. When cold, frost.
Thin cakes and individual cakes require from twelve to fifteen minutes to bake; loaf cakes from thirty to sixty minutes according to size.
If the cake rises unevenly, the mixture is too thick or the oven is too hot.
If the oven seems too hot, when the cake is ready for the oven, put the cake in the oven, but do not close the oven door for the first five or ten minutes of baking.
Warm pans slightly; brush with melted lard, suet, or clarified butter; cover bottom of pan only with tissue paper, then grease the paper.
Lard or suet is less apt to brown than butter, but[260] many object to their use; if so, clarify the butter, by melting butter, letting stand until salt has settled to the bottom, then pouring off the liquid butter.
Cream the butter; add the sugar very gradually, yolks of eggs well beaten, flour in which the baking powder and salt have been sifted, milk, and chocolate mixed with water. Beat well; add beaten whites, pour into buttered pans, and bake forty to fifty minutes in a moderate oven. This cake may be baked in small cakes by omitting one fourth cup flour.
Melt chocolate, add boiling water, and cook over hot water until smooth. Cream butter; add sugar gradually; when of a creamy consistency, add chocolate mixture, yolks of eggs well beaten, flour in which salt and baking powder have been sifted, and milk. Beat well; cut and fold in well-beaten whites; add flavoring. Pour into buttered pans and bake in a moderate oven thirty or forty minutes. Frost with White or Chocolate Frosting.
This mixture may be used for layer cakes by omitting one fourth cup flour and baking in layer cake pans.
Cream butter; add sugar gradually, grated chocolate, raisins, cinnamon, baking powder and salt sifted with flour, milk. Beat well; add flavoring and well-beaten whites of eggs. Bake in deep buttered pans, forty minutes. This amount will make two loaves. The wine or brandy may be omitted, in which case, use one cup of milk instead of three fourths cup.
Cream butter; add sugar gradually, yolks of eggs beaten until thick and lemon-colored, flour, citron, salt. Beat well; cut and fold in whites of eggs beaten until stiff. Pour into buttered pans and bake one hour in a moderate oven. This cake may be baked in a buttered dripping pan and when cold cut into fancy shapes and iced.
Cream the butter, add the sugar, the chocolate melted, eggs well beaten, flour sifted with baking powder, salt[262] and spices, and the milk. Beat well, and bake in angel cake pan. Frost with Chocolate or Marshmallow Frosting.
Mix in the order given and beat well for five minutes. Bake in buttered pan thirty to forty minutes in moderate oven.
Cream butter; add sugar, yolks of eggs well beaten and flour in which baking powder has been sifted, milk, and chocolate which has been moistened with hot water; beat well and add walnut meats. Bake in buttered jelly cake pans about twenty minutes.
Spread one cake with one half cup of Lowney’s Sweet Chocolate Powder moistened with one fourth cup boiling water and flavored with one teaspoon vanilla. Sprinkle with broken walnuts, cover with other cake, and ice with White Frosting. See colored illustration, Plate IX, opposite.
Beat yolks until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar and continue beating. Mix chocolate with water, add to sugar mixture; cut and fold in flour, salt and beaten whites. Flavor and bake in buttered pan in a moderate oven three quarters of an hour. See colored illustration, Plate X, opposite p. 262.
Cream butter; add sugar, flour in which baking powder has been sifted, and milk, and beat well; add whites of eggs beaten stiff and nut meats; then add chocolate and vanilla. Pour into buttered gem pans and bake in hot oven twenty-five minutes.
Follow directions for making Butter Cake, and bake in a loaf in a moderate oven forty minutes, or in rounds twenty minutes.
Add one cup currants to Simple Butter Cake. Bake in loaves or rounds.
Bake Simple Butter Cake in four square shallow pans. Fill with Lemon Cream, Cocoanut Cream, Chocolate Cream, or Jelly.
Follow directions for Butter Cake, and bake in loaves or rounds.
Follow directions for mixing Butter Cake. Bake in loaves or rounds in moderate oven.
Add one cup chopped walnuts to Silver Cake mixture, and flavor with vanilla instead of almond.
Mix as Butter Cake, and bake in two-layer cake pans twenty minutes. Cool, fill with Orange Filling, and cover with Orange Frosting.
Use rule for Orange Cake. Fill with Cream Filling, and sprinkle top with powdered sugar.
Mix and sift dry ingredients, add butter, sugar, eggs and milk, and beat until smooth. Bake in a moderate oven forty minutes. One cup chopped raisins, or one cup chopped dates may be added to this cake.
Cream butter; add sugar, yolks of eggs beaten until thick, flour in which baking powder has been sifted, alternately with milk and egg whites, beaten until stiff. To one third of this mixture add the spices. Pour into pan the light and dark mixtures irregularly.
Sift baking powder and salt with flour, and follow directions for making Sponge Cake. Pour into medium-sized buttered dripping pan to depth of one half inch. Bake in a moderate oven ten to twelve minutes; turn on to a wet cheese cloth sprinkled with confectioner’s sugar. Cut off edges of cake, spread with warm Jelly, and roll. Work quickly.
Cream butter; add flour. When well blended, add yolks of eggs beaten until thick, then sugar with nutmeg, whites of eggs beaten until stiff, and wine and brandy. Bake in loaves or small cakes.
Cream butter; add sugar, eggs well beaten, and remaining ingredients. Pour into buttered and papered pans. Steam three hours and bake two hours.
Mix all ingredients except eggs and fruit. Raise over night. In the morning add eggs and fruit; cover and raise again; pour into buttered and papered pans; let it rise one hour. Bake in moderate oven one and one half to two hours.
Mix as Butter Cake, adding fruit last. Bake in buttered and papered pans in a moderate oven one hour.
Use rule for Orange Cake. Bake in layers. Fill with Fig Filling, and sprinkle with confectioner’s sugar.
Bake Silver Cake in layers. Fill and frost with Marshmallow Frosting.
Add four squares melted chocolate to Silver Cake. Bake in layers, and fill and cover with Marshmallow Frosting.
Use rule for Hot Water Sponge Cake. Bake in layers. Cool; cut in rounds; arrange in three layers, with confectioner’s frosting between; spread sides and top with Mocha Frosting; sprinkle sides with cocoanut, and garnish top with Mocha Frosting put through pastry bag.
If a coffee cake is preferred, substitute hot coffee for hot water in Hot Water Sponge Cake.
Beat yolks ten minutes; add sugar; beat five minutes; add lemon juice and flour; when well blended, add stiffly beaten whites, cutting and folding them in.
Pour into angel cake pan and bake in a moderate oven one hour.
Beat yolks until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar, rind and juice of lemon. Cut and fold in the well-beaten whites, also the sifted flour. When thoroughly blended, pour into buttered and papered pan and bake thirty to forty minutes.
Beat egg yolks until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar and continue beating. Add flour, mixed and sifted with baking powder and salt, hot water, and whites of eggs beaten until stiff, with lemon juice added.
Mix cocoa, spice, flour, baking powder, and salt; beat the yolks of eggs until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar and beat well; add lemon juice and rind; when well blended, add chocolate mixture and the beaten whites of eggs. Bake in buttered shallow pans twenty minutes in a moderate oven. When cool put together with Chocolate Frosting or Currant Jelly or White Mountain Cream.
Beat yolks of eggs until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar, rind and juice of lemon, water, flour in which salt and baking powder has been sifted. When well blended, cut and fold in the beaten whites of eggs. Bake in two pans thirty to forty minutes.
Cook water and sugar until it threads. Beat egg yolks until lemon-colored and thick. Add sugar sirup, lemon juice and rind, and beat until mixture is cold. Cut and fold in the beaten whites and flour. Bake in an angel cake pan forty to fifty minutes.
Follow directions for making Sponge Cake. Bake in a deep pan forty to sixty minutes.
Beat egg whites on platter with wire beater. When foamy, add cream of tartar; when stiff, add sugar gradually. Sift flour four times with salt. Cut and fold into egg mixture. Add vanilla, bake one hour in moderate oven in angel cake pan. Invert pan on cake cooler and allow it to drop out itself. If too brown, wrap in wet cheese cloth for ten minutes; then brown may be easily removed.
Beat yolks until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar and flavoring and continue beating. Mix and sift flour and cream of tartar four times. Cut and fold in stiffly beaten whites, alternately with flour. Bake in an angel cake pan one hour in a moderate oven.
Follow rule for mixing Butter Cake and bake in loaf or rounds in moderate oven.
Use rule for Silver Cake. Bake in shallow pan; sprinkle with powdered sugar and chopped almonds. Bake twenty to thirty minutes in moderate oven.
Use rule for Silver Cake and bake in angel cake pan forty to sixty minutes.
Make as Butter Cake and bake in buttered lemon queen pans twenty to thirty minutes.
Boil sugar, water and butter one minute; add flour all at once. Beat until mixture leaves side of the pan in a mass, add eggs, one at a time, beating thoroughly. When all eggs are used, beat five minutes; drop from tip of tablespoon on to a buttered sheet and bake one half hour in quick oven. Fill with Cream Filling, Strawberry Filling, Chocolate Filling, or Whipped Cream.
Use rule for Cream Puffs. Put mixture in pastry bag or shape in strips three and one half inches long and one inch wide, on buttered sheet. Bake twenty to thirty minutes in quick oven.
Fill with Cream, Chocolate, Coffee, or Strawberry Filling, and brush tops with melted Fondant, Chocolate Frosting, or Confectioner’s Frosting.
Beat yolks until lemon-colored and thick; add sugar and continue beating. Add lemon rind and the egg whites, beaten to a stiff froth. Cut and fold in the flour and salt. Shape on buttered sheet, using tablespoon or pastry bag and tube, four inches long and one inch wide. Sprinkle thickly with powdered sugar.
Bake twelve minutes in a moderately hot oven.
Use rule for Lady Fingers. Drop from a tablespoon in rounds the size of a silver dollar on buttered sheet. Sprinkle with powdered sugar and bake as Lady Fingers.
Cream butter; add sugar, yolks well beaten, flour, baking powder, and salt, milk, and whites beaten to a stiff froth, and enough more flour to make of consistency to roll. Cut off a small piece of dough, roll on floured board, sprinkle with granulated sugar, shape with cooky cutter, and bake ten minutes. Save all trimmings until the last. Do not mix trimmings with fresh dough.
Cream the butter, add sugar, and when creamy the remaining ingredients. Chill. Roll, cut in rounds and bake in a quick oven.
Mix as sugar cookies; roll; shape with doughnut cutter; brush with water or white of egg; sprinkle with cinnamon mixture. Decorate with halves of almonds. Bake in a quick oven.
Mix like Sugar Cookies. Add nuts; drop from a teaspoon on to buttered sheet. Decorate with halves of nuts. Bake in quick oven.
Mix in the order given. Chill, roll, brush with white of egg, sprinkle with granulated sugar, cut, and bake in a quick oven.
Put all ingredients in bowl and beat until well mixed. Spread evenly in buttered baking pan. Bake and cut in strips.
Mix all ingredients in bowl; beat well. Fill small buttered fluted tins one half full. Decorate with pecans. Bake twelve to fifteen minutes.
Mix ingredients in order given. Roll mixture one quarter inch thick. Shape with cooky cutter. Put one raisin in center of each round. Bake in moderate oven twelve to fifteen minutes.
Mix in the order given. Beat well. Pour into buttered pans in thin layers. Bake in quick oven six to eight minutes. Cut in long narrow strips while hot, and serve cold.
Cream the butter and add other ingredients. Spread on inverted buttered tins. Bake in quick oven, cut in squares, and roll. If this is done on top of the range, there will be less danger of the wafers breaking.
Sprinkle finely chopped nuts on the wafers just before baking.
Mix in the order given, toss on to a floured board, and roll to an inch in thickness. Cut out with a doughnut cutter. Just before putting into the oven, dust over with granulated sugar and bake ten minutes. See colored illustration, Plate XIII, opposite p. 274.
Cream butter; add dry ingredients, milk and flavoring. Spread on inverted pans which have been well buttered. Sprinkle with chopped nuts. Bake in moderate oven. Crease immediately on removing from oven. See colored illustration, Plate XIV, opposite p. 274.
Cream butter; add sugar, eggs, raisins, flour in which baking powder has been sifted, chocolate melted in water, salt and cinnamon. Drop from a teaspoon on to a buttered baking sheet, put a raisin in the center of each hermit,[276] and bake in a moderate oven. See colored illustration, Plate XV, opposite p. 275.
Beat the whites of eggs until foamy; add cream of tartar, sugar and cocoa. Continue beating until spoon will stand up in mixture; add vanilla and fold in the flour. Bake in buttered shallow pans in a moderate oven about twenty minutes. Put cakes together with following filling, and decorate top with filling and candied fruit and nuts.
Melt one half pound marshmallows. Cook one cup sugar and one third cup boiling water until, when dropped from tip of a spoon, a thread is formed. Pour slowly on to melted marshmallows, add one half teaspoon vanilla, and beat until thick enough to spread. Put between and on top of cakes. Sprinkle with chopped nuts, raisins, cherries and angelica. This may be made in one large cake or cut in small ones the shape of dominoes and decorated in the same way. See colored illustration, Plate XVI, opposite p. 275.
Shape Wafers as soon as taken from the oven. Fill with Whipped Cream, or Cream Fillings of various flavors.
Mix the ingredients with enough orange juice to make the mixture of the consistency to spread. Knead on a sugared board. Cut in shape of dominoes, coat with melted chocolate, and decorate with pieces of almonds.
Beat whites; add cream of tartar and sugar, and continue beating. Cut and fold in salt, chocolate, flour. Flavor and drop by spoonfuls on to a buttered sheet; sprinkle with confectioner’s sugar and bake in a moderate oven.
Cream butter; add remaining ingredients. Chill, roll, and shape. Bake in a moderate oven.
Mix almond paste and sugar, until the mixture feels like meal; add whites of eggs, one at a time, and work with a spatula until there are no lumps; add chocolate, salt and vanilla. Drop from a teaspoon on to a buttered paper; bake twenty to thirty minutes in a slow oven. Remove from paper as soon as cooked. If baked in a quick oven, they will not be a success.
Mix ingredients in order given. Chill, roll ¼ inch thick, and shape with cooky cutter. Bake in moderate oven.
Cream butter, add remaining ingredients, spread on buttered sheets, and bake ten to fifteen minutes. Cut in squares as soon as taken from oven.
Make a round of meringue mixture size of a quarter. Shape stems by drawing mixture upward. Sprinkle tops with cocoa. Bake in moderate oven. Remove from paper and press stems into bottom of rounds to resemble mushrooms.
Mix almond paste and sugar until like meal. Add one egg white at a time and mix thoroughly. When well blended, shape on buttered paper in small rounds. Bake on inverted dripping pan in a very slow oven. Remove from paper immediately.
Beat eggs; add sugar, dry ingredients sifted, and milk. Beat well. Add flour to make a soft dough. Chill over night if possible.
Roll to one inch thickness; cut with doughnut cutter; fry in hot fat, turning often. Drain on brown paper.
Add to doughnut mixture two tablespoons butter. Roll one quarter inch thick. Cut in pieces four inches long and two inches wide. Make two slits in each, twist slightly, and fry in hot fat.
Cream butter; add remaining ingredients. Spread quarter inch thick on buttered inverted dripping pan. Roll with creased rolling pin. Bake in quick oven. Cut in squares. Cool and keep in air-tight receptacles.
Pour boiling water over butter; add remaining ingredients, using sufficient flour to make a drop batter. Drop[280] from tablespoon on to buttered tin. Bake in moderate oven fifteen minutes.
Cream butter; add flour. Add remaining ingredients and beat ten minutes. Bake in buttered bread pan forty-five to sixty minutes.
Add salt to eggs; beat until very stiff. Add two tablespoons sugar, beat five minutes. So continue until half the sugar is used. When very stiff, cut and fold in the remaining sugar. Drop by spoonfuls on to wet paper on inverted dripping pan. Bake in slow oven thirty minutes. Remove from paper; take out uncooked portion; dry in oven. Cool and fill with Whipped Cream or Ice Cream. Arrange in pairs.
Substitute one half cup Lowney’s Premium Chocolate for the one half cup cocoanut in the receipt for Cocoanut Meringues.
Add one half cup Lowney’s Premium Chocolate to the receipt for Cocoanut Meringues.
Beat the whites until dry, add sugar, and continue beating. Cut and fold in remaining ingredients. Shape, using pastry bag and tube. Bake in a very moderate oven.
Mix ingredients in order given. Beat well and bake in loaf thirty minutes, or in muffin pans twenty minutes.
Mix and sift dry ingredients; add remaining ingredients, beat well, pour into buttered pan, and bake twenty to thirty minutes.
Mix and sift dry ingredients; add remaining ingredients. Bake twenty to thirty minutes.
Melt the beef drippings, add remaining ingredients, beat well, and bake in deep bread pans in a moderate oven.
Boil shortening and molasses two minutes. Add remaining ingredients, mixed and sifted. Beat well; chill over night. Roll very thin. Shape with knife or cutter. Bake on buttered pan in quick oven eight to ten minutes.
Beat white of egg, sugar and cocoa for five minutes. Add flavoring, milk and melted butter. Spread on cake when cool.
Mix cocoa and sugar; add hot coffee. Stir over fire five minutes. Add salt and spread on cake.
Mix chocolate, add other ingredients, and cook until, when dropped in water, a soft ball is formed.
Melt chocolate, add other ingredients, and spread on cake. One cup chopped walnuts makes a chocolate walnut frosting.
Note.—Confectioner’s sugar varies in thickening properties. Should this frosting be too thick, dilute with a small quantity of hot water or milk.
Boil sugar and water until it threads; pour on to the beaten egg white, pouring in a steady stream and very slowly, adding, while beating, cream of tartar, lemon juice and vanilla; stir until thick. Spread on cold cake.
Follow rule for cooking Boiled Frosting No. 1.
Mix ingredients and beat until thick.
Same ingredients as Confectioner’s Frosting No. 1, omitting vanilla, and flavoring with strawberry, raspberry, or orange juice.
Add sufficient sugar to liquid to make of consistency to spread; add flavoring and use.
Boil sugar and cream till it begins to thread; add caramelized sugar and spread.
Mix ingredients except vanilla, and boil without stirring until a soft ball can be formed; add vanilla. Beat until creamy. Spread.
See p. 282.
Follow directions for Confectioner’s Frosting No. 1.
Cook sugar, milk and chocolate six minutes; add butter; cook six minutes; add vanilla, and beat until of consistency to spread.
Add one cup shredded nuts to Fudge Frosting, just before removing from fire.
Soak gelatine in cold water; add boiling water, stir until dissolved; add sugar until of consistency to spread. Flavor and use.
Use rule for Fudge Frosting; add one cup shredded cocoanut.
Boil sugar, water and cream of tartar until thread is formed. Pour on to the beaten white, and continue beating until of consistency to spread.
Melt marshmallows in double boiler. Cook sugar and water until thread is formed. Pour on to the beaten white. Add melted marshmallows, flavoring, and beat until of consistency to spread.
Add one cup shredded walnuts or castañas to Marshmallow Frosting.
Add one cup mixed candied fruit and nuts to Marshmallow Frosting.
Soak rind in fruit juice one half hour; strain; add remaining ingredients until of consistency to spread.
Brown almonds in oven. Caramelize four tablespoons sugar, add almonds, cool, and pound. Boil sugar and water until it threads, add almond powder, pour on to the beaten whites, and beat until thick enough to spread.
To Confectioner’s Frosting No. 1 add one cup figs which have been boiled in one half cup water until tender, and chopped until fine.
To Boiled Frosting No. 2 add one tablespoon Madeira or sherry wine, and omit vanilla.
Boil sugar and water until a soft ball can be formed. Wash sides of saucepan with moist cheese cloth, as fast as the sugar crystallizes. Pour on to marble. When it begins to harden, work with a spatula until creamy. Chill, flavor, melt, and use for frosting.
To egg whites add three tablespoons sugar. Beat five minutes, add sugar in small quantities, beating five minutes between each addition. Continue thus until frosting[287] is stiff enough to spread. Use pastry bag and tube to decorate cake with this frosting.
Make the same as Boiled Frosting.
Heat marshmallows in oven; when puffed arrange on top of cake and pour Boiled Frosting over them.
Cream butter; add confectioner’s sugar. Beat eggs; add granulated sugar, flour, salt, milk, coffee and chocolate. Cook in double boiler ten minutes; cool, flavor, and add to creamed butter. Use for filling and frosting for mocha cakes.
Melt chocolate; add hot water. Mix sugar and cornstarch, add yolks of eggs and milk, and cook in double boiler until mixture thickens, stirring constantly. Add flavoring, salt, and chocolate mixture.
Melt chocolate, add remaining ingredients except flavoring, and cook in double boiler until it thickens, stirring constantly. Cool and add flavoring.
One cup chopped nuts or one cup shredded cocoanut or one cup mixed fruit may be added to this filling.
Mix nut meats, egg yolk and powdered sugar; add cream beaten until stiff. Boil sugar and hot water until a thread is formed. Pour sugar mixture on to slightly beaten white of egg; add cream of tartar and flavoring, and beat until thick enough to spread. Add nut mixture, beat well, and spread over cakes.
Note.—If this mixture becomes too thick, it may be thinned by adding a small quantity of hot water.
Cook butter, sugar and cream together until it threads. Add caramelized sugar and flavoring. Cool and fill.
Mix cornstarch, sugar and egg yolks; add milk, butter, and cook twenty minutes, stirring occasionally; add lemon rind, juice and cocoanut.
Use rule for Cocoanut Filling, substituting one half cup black coffee for cocoanut, omitting lemon, and cooking after addition of coffee until mixture thickens.
Mix cornstarch, sugar and eggs; add milk and butter; cook in double boiler twenty minutes, stirring constantly. Cool, add salt, flavoring, and spread between cakes.
Use rule for Cream Filling, adding one tablespoon orange curaçoa.
Remove stones and cut dates in small pieces; add remaining ingredients and spread between cakes.
Cook ingredients in double boiler until of consistency to spread.
Boil sugar and cream until it threads. Pour on to the whites of eggs; add chopped dates and almonds. Cool and use for filling.
Boil sirup until it threads; pour on to the beaten white; add cream, salt, and beat until thick enough to spread.
Melt marshmallows in top of double boiler; when liquefied, pour on to the beaten white, beat until thick.
Cover gelatine with cold water; dissolve in boiling water; add to beaten whites with sugar, rind and juice.
Beat egg; add powdered sugar, beaten cream and nut meats; add mixture to Boiled Frosting. Beat until thick enough to spread.
Seed raisins and chop until fine; add chopped nuts. Beat egg until stiff; add sugar, nuts, raisins and lemon juice.
Mix fruit juice and grated rind, butter, Cream Filling and orange pulp. Spread on cake.
Mix all ingredients and let stand on back of range until mixture liquefies. Boil until a soft ball is formed. Beat until creamy. Spread between cakes.
Add one cup chopped nuts to Fudge Filling.
Add one and one half cups chopped nuts and candied fruits to Fudge Filling.
Melt one half pound marshmallows in double boiler and add to Fudge Filling.
Mix ingredients, spread between cake.
Mix pineapple, fruit juice and rind, and enough confectioner’s sugar to make of consistency to spread.
Select a reliable freezer and one which runs easily. Keep the gearing well oiled.
Adjust the freezing can in the freezer, making sure that all parts fit and that the crank turns readily. Place ice in bag made of ticking or strong sacking, and with a wooden mallet, pound until very fine. Surround the freezing can with ice and rock salt, using three measures of ice and one of salt, for ice cream and sherbets; two measures of ice and one of salt for sorbets, frappés, etc.; equal measures of ice and of salt for molding and for freezing mousses, bombes, and parfaits.
For freezing ice cream, when the freezing can is cold, pour in mixture to be frozen, let stand five minutes, then turn the crank slowly for eight or ten minutes, then more rapidly until mixture is frozen. Remove dasher, scrape cream from sides of freezing can to the middle and press down so as to have the cream one solid mass; let stand to season, or if to be molded, pack in the mold.
A one-pound baking powder can makes an excellent mold if one has no brick mold.
Have the mold chilled; press the frozen mixture well into the sides and bottom of mold, packing solidly until overflowing; put on cover, making sure that it fits securely; if in doubt, brush with lard or butter. Tie on cover and immerse in ice and salt, using equal parts of each; let stand one to three hours, depending upon degree of hardness desired. Mousses and parfaits are put directly into the mold, filled to overflowing, covered according to directions, and allowed to stand from four to six hours in ice and salt.
Frozen desserts are divided into:—
Philadelphia ice cream, which is cream sweetened, flavored, and stirred in freezer while freezing; plain ice cream, a custard of different degrees of richness, with or without cream, and stirred while freezing.
Mousses, parfaits and biscuits are made with and without eggs, with beaten or whipped cream, and frozen without stirring.
Water ices are divided into sherbets, frappés, and punch, all stirred while freezing.
Bombes are combinations of ice cream and sherbet, or sherbet and charlotte russe mixture.
Melt chocolate, add sugar and one half cup cream, cook until smooth, add remaining ingredients, and freeze, stirring occasionally while freezing to keep figs from settling to the bottom.
Note.—If figs are soaked in wine, the flavor of the cream is much better, and there is less liability of the figs being lumpy.
Melt chocolate, add remaining ingredients, and freeze.
Scald milk; add melted chocolate and sugar; cook three minutes; cool. When lukewarm, add junket tablet which has been dissolved in cold water. Add cream and freeze.
Two squares of chocolate give a very delicately flavored cream.
Mix chocolate, cinnamon, sugar, salt, arrowroot; add milk; cook ten minutes; add vanilla, sherry, and freeze. Serve in frappé glasses, and garnish with cream flavored and beaten, and candied cherries.
Three cups of milk and one cup strong coffee may be used instead of all milk. See colored illustration, Plate XII, opposite p. 263.
Scald one cup of cream; add to melted chocolate and cook three minutes, or until mixture is smooth and glossy; add sugar, salt, vanilla, and the remaining three cups of cream which has been beaten stiff. When well blended, add beaten yolks of eggs. Freeze.
Beat eggs; add flour, one cup sugar, and milk; cook in double boiler twenty minutes. Melt chocolate; add sugar, boiling water; cook until glossy, then add to egg mixture; cool; add cream, salt, and freeze.
Make a soft custard of milk, sugar and yolks of eggs. When cool, add cream whipped, salt and flavoring. Freeze.
Mix the ingredients and freeze without cooking.
Add to French Ice Cream one cup brown bread crumbs dried. Freeze.
Add the pulp of four bananas and two tablespoons lemon juice to Philadelphia Ice Cream. Freeze.
Mix cocoa, flour, sugar and salt; add eggs slightly beaten. When well blended, add scalded milk. Cook in double boiler, stirring constantly, twenty minutes. Add nuts finely chopped, flavoring and cream. Freeze.
Blanch and chop one cup almonds. Caramelize four tablespoons sugar; add chopped almonds. When cold, pound to a powder. Add to French Ice Cream with one teaspoon almond extract. Freeze.
Add to French Ice Cream, one cup of caramelized sugar. Cool and freeze.
Add one cup black coffee to French or Philadelphia Ice Cream. Freeze.
Add one cup preserved ginger chopped fine, two tablespoons lemon juice, and three tablespoons ginger sirup to Philadelphia or French Ice Cream. Freeze.
Add one cup dried and pounded macaroons to French or Philadelphia Ice Cream; flavor with one half teaspoon almond extract, one tablespoon sherry, and one half teaspoon vanilla. Freeze.
Mix cocoa, sugar and cornstarch or arrowroot; add scalded milk, and cook twenty minutes in double boiler. Beat eggs; add cream, or milk and butter; pour on to this mixture, cornstarch mixture. Add vanilla and freeze.
One cup raspberry juice added just before freezing gives a pleasant variety. See colored illustration, Plate XVII, opposite.
Melt chocolate; add sugar and one cup cream; boil one minute. Mix gelatine with cold water, add to boiling mixture; when cool, add flavoring, salt and whip from cream. Pour into mold, pack in equal parts of ice and salt, let stand four hours. See colored illustration, Plate XVIII, opposite.
Melt chocolate; add sugar, salt and boiling water; cook five minutes; add scalded milk and flavoring; when cool, freeze. Serve with cream sweetened and flavored, either plain or whipped.
Cook first five ingredients until mixture thickens; add beaten whites, chocolate, and cream beaten until thick. Pour into serving dish, and pack in equal parts of ice and salt. Let stand three hours.
A very good way is to put serving dish in lard pail, then surround pail with equal parts of ice and salt.
See colored illustration, Plate XIX, opposite.
Prepare as for Soft Custard.
This is the simplest and cheapest ice cream made. One pint of cream added is an improvement.
Freeze according to directions for freezing. See colored illustration, Plate XX, opposite.
Make a cream the same as for Cocoa Nut Cream, except omit the nuts. Brown in the oven two dozen macaroons. Crumb in meat chopper; add macaroon crumbs and ¼ cup sherry to cream mixture. Freeze.
Make a cream the same as for Cocoa Nut Cream, except omit the nuts, and add one cup of shredded cocoanut and the rind and juice of one lemon. Freeze.
Add one cup maple sirup to French or Philadelphia Ice Cream. Freeze and serve with Maple Sauce.
Add one half cup each of chopped walnuts, almonds, and filberts, to French or Philadelphia Ice Cream. Flavor with one teaspoon vanilla and one teaspoon almond. Freeze.
Add one cup orange juice and one half cup orange pulp to Philadelphia Ice Cream. Flavor with one teaspoon vanilla and one tablespoon lemon juice. Freeze.
Add two cups stewed and strained peaches to Philadelphia Ice Cream. Flavor with one teaspoon lemon juice. Freeze.
Add two cups pineapple juice and pulp to French or Philadelphia Ice Cream. Freeze.
Mix one half cup Pistachio nuts chopped fine, and one cup almonds chopped fine with Philadelphia Ice Cream. Color a delicate green and flavor with one teaspoon almond. Freeze.
To Philadelphia Ice Cream add one cup dried and pounded Plum Pudding. Flavor with one tablespoon brandy. Freeze.
Add two cups strawberry juice and pulp to Philadelphia Ice Cream. Freeze, and serve with Strawberry Sauce.
Add two tablespoons sherry or Madeira to Philadelphia Ice Cream. Freeze.
Whip the cream, add sugar and coffee, turn mixture into a mold, pack in ice and salt, and let stand five hours.
Substitute four ounces melted chocolate for coffee in Coffee Mousse, pour into mold, pack in ice and salt, and let stand four hours.
Substitute two cups mashed berries for coffee, and proceed as for Coffee Mousse.
Mix two cups of any fruit pulp, with powdered sugar to sweeten, with the whip from one pint cream. A small amount of lemon juice brings out the flavor of other fruits. Mold. Pack and let stand in ice and salt four hours.
Boil sugar and water until it threads. Pour on to the beaten whites of eggs, add the whip from cream, flavoring, pack in ice and salt, and let stand four hours.
Boil sugar and water together ten minutes; pour sirup on to cocoa which has been beaten with the egg yolks; cook over hot water until of the consistency of soft custard. Beat until cold; add the cream which has been beaten until stiff, vanilla, and salt. Turn into mold, cover, and pack in equal measures of finely crushed ice and rock salt. Let stand four hours. Remove from mold and garnish with cream, sweetened and flavored, and press through the pastry bag.
The parfait may be served in champagne glasses and garnished with beaten cream and candied cherries. See colored illustration, Plate XI, p. 263.
Cook sugar and water five minutes. Pour slowly on to the beaten egg yolks, add whip from cream, turn into mold and pack in ice and salt, and let stand four hours.
Add one fourth cup black coffee to Golden Parfait and freeze as Golden Parfait.
Substitute maple sirup for boiled sugar and water in Golden Parfait. Mold, pack in ice and salt four hours, and serve with chopped browned almonds.
To Golden Parfait add one cup boiled chestnuts mashed, one cup candied fruit soaked in wine, one cup chopped pineapple. Flavor with one teaspoon vanilla, one tablespoon sherry. Freeze, pack, mold, and serve with Rum Sauce.
Mix one cup pounded macaroons, two tablespoons sherry, two tablespoons caramelized sugar pounded, with Golden Parfait. Pack in paper boxes, pack boxes in pail, and pack pail in equal parts ice and salt, for four hours. Serve in boxes, sprinkle with brown chopped almonds.
Add two tablespoons maraschino, two tablespoons sherry, to Golden Parfait. Fill paper boxes, pack boxes in pail, pack pail in ice and salt, and let stand in ice and salt four hours.
Mix yolks of eggs, lemon juice, rind, sugar and salt. Cook until thick. Cool; add beaten whites and cream beaten until stiff. Add wine, fill paper cases, pack cases in pail, and pack pail in ice and salt four hours.
Boil sugar and water; beat until cold. Add egg whites beaten until stiff and flavoring. Freeze.
Add the grated rind of one lemon and the juice of three lemons to Water Ice. Freeze.
Add rind of one orange, one half cup orange juice, two tablespoons lemon juice, to Plain Water Ice.
Add two cups pineapple chopped and pressed through a sieve, with two tablespoons lemon juice, to Plain Water Ice.
The same as Water Ice, omitting the whites of eggs. All fruit sherbets made in the same way.
Line a mold with Strawberry Ice Cream, fill with Pineapple Water Ice. Pack in ice and salt four hours. Serve with Strawberry Sauce.
Line a mold with Raspberry Water Ice. Fill with Vanilla Ice Cream, or whipped cream sweetened and flavored. Pack in ice and salt four hours.
Line sultana roll molds, or one-pound baking powder boxes, with Pistachio Ice Cream. Sprinkle with candied fruit which has been soaked in brandy over night, and fill with Vanilla Ice Cream or with Silver Parfait, or beaten cream sweetened and flavored. Pack in ice and salt four hours. Serve with Claret Sauce.
Use rule for Philadelphia Ice Cream. When frozen add one cup Jamaica rum. Serve in glasses.
Freeze to consistency of mush. Serve in frappé glasses with whipped cream on top.
Boil sugar and water five minutes, add other ingredients, and freeze to a mush. Serve with orange sirup and sprinkle with candied orange peel, finely chopped.
Substitute one cup grape juice for orange juice, and freeze to a mush.
Melt two squares Lowney’s Premium Chocolate, add sugar and boiling water, boil two minutes. Scald the milk with coffee, strain, and add to chocolate with salt and brandy. Beat with Dover egg beater and serve with beaten cream.
Melt two squares Lowney’s Premium Chocolate, add sugar, salt and boiling water; boil two minutes, add scalded milk and beat with Dover egg beater to prevent scum from forming. Serve very hot.
Mix two teaspoons Lowney’s Always Ready Chocolate Powder with boiling water; boil three minutes, stirring all the time; add scalded milk and cook in double boiler ten minutes; add a few grains of salt and more sugar if[307] needed; beat and serve. This may be made without cooking so long.
Melt chocolate; add sugar, salt, and boiling water in which has been mixed the condensed milk. Boil five minutes. If condensed milk has been sweetened, omit sugar.
Mix cocoa, sugar and salt. Add cold water, then boiling water, boil five minutes, add to scalded milk. Beat well with Dover egg beater and serve.
Melt chocolate over hot water, add sugar and water, boil ten minutes. Add salt and scalded milk, beat well. Add vanilla and serve with whipped cream.
Mix four tablespoons Lowney’s Breakfast Cocoa, four tablespoons sugar, and one fourth cup boiling water; when smooth, add four cups scalded milk and cook in double boiler twenty minutes; add one tablespoon brandy and salt; beat and serve; garnish with beaten cream.
Mix two tablespoons Lowney’s Breakfast Cocoa, two tablespoons sugar, one eighth teaspoon salt; add two cups boiling water gradually; when smooth, boil five minutes; add two cups scalded milk, beat with a Dover egg beater until frothy.
Mix four tablespoons Lowney’s Breakfast Cocoa with one cup boiling water; boil two minutes; add one and one half cups boiling water which has been mixed with one half cup condensed milk and a few grains salt; bring to the boiling point and serve with or without whipped cream.
If condensed milk has not been sweetened, add two tablespoons of sugar to the cocoa.
Scald an agate-ware teapot; put in as many teaspoons tea as cups required. Cover with as many cups of boiling water as there are teaspoons of tea. Serve immediately.
Prepare tea, serving a thin slice of lemon and sugar with each cup.
Prepare tea as for Russian Tea and serve with a thin slice of lemon and lump sugar soaked in brandy.
Make tea. Serve in glasses with crushed ice, with one tablespoon lemon juice in each glass.
Mix coffee, egg and one half cup cold water, add boiling water, boil hard five minutes. Set on back part of range, add other half cup of cold water, let stand five minutes, and serve with hot milk, cream and sugar.
Use rule for Boiled Coffee, using six cups cold water instead of boiling water.
Put coffee in cheese cloth bag. Tie, allowing room for coffee to swell. Place in scalded coffee pot, cover with cold water, and boil ten minutes. Remove bag, let stand two minutes on back of range, and serve with hot milk, sugar and cream.
Place coffee in strainer, add boiling water gradually, and refilter, if liked very strong.
Add hot milk to black coffee, flavor with vanilla, and sweeten to taste. Chill; serve in glasses with a tablespoon of chopped ice in each glass.
Allow two tablespoons of coffee for each cup of boiling water. Always make in French coffee pot.
Mix coffee, chicory, egg and cold water, add boiling water and boil five minutes; let stand five minutes on back of range where it will keep hot. Serve without sugar or cream.
These same ingredients may be used in the French coffee pot, and the liquid may be poured through the coffee until the required strength is obtained.
Boil two cups of sugar and four cups water until a rich sirup is formed. Add one cup lemon juice. Dilute with ice water.
Make the same as Lemonade.
Boil sugar and water five minutes; add fruit, ice, Apollinaris, and water to make the punch right strength. One cup maraschino cherries may be added.
Boil sugar and water five minutes; add tea, juice, lemons and oranges sliced, and a large piece of ice.
Put two lumps of ice in glass; add sugar, milk and wine; shake, strain, and add nutmeg.
Chop mint; add ice water; let stand over night. Boil sugar and water; chill; add lemon juice and mint water. Serve with crushed ice; garnish with mint leaves.
Put three sprigs mint with one half teaspoon orange bitters in a glass; add one sherry glass Vermouth and one half cup whisky; shake well; add one half cup crushed ice, stir to crush the mint. Add two slices orange, two or three strawberries, and a few sprigs of mint. Add more ice and serve when the outside of the glass is frosted.
Boil cloves and water ten minutes. Beat yolks and sugar together; add water, wine, lemon juice, and stiffly beaten whites. Serve hot.
Fruit is especially wholesome, although not nutritious. The best time to eat fruit is in the morning. Most fruits are improved in flavor by being chilled.
A dish of different fruits attractively arranged makes a very acceptable center piece.
Apples should be washed and wiped dry. Berries should be looked over very carefully, and, if dirty, washed by putting in a colander and allowing cold water to run gently over them, or place the colander in a bowl of cold water and raise up and down several times, then drain thoroughly and chill before serving.
Cherries should be looked over, and served with their stems on.
Bananas should be wiped and chilled.
Currants should be washed and drained, and served on the stem.
Figs, if the dried ones, should be washed, drained, and chilled.
Grape fruit should be cut in halves, the pulp loosened from the skin, and the pith cut out, then chilled; it may be served plain, or sugar and wine may be poured over it just before chilling. Serve one half grape fruit to each person.
Grapes should be washed if dirty, but the bloom is then[314] lost; if picked on one’s own vines, it may not be necessary to wash them; but when bought in the market, it is better to wash and drain, and chill them.
Peaches and plums should be wiped with a soft cloth, and chilled before serving.
Quinces are never served raw.
Strawberries are often served with their hulls on around a mound of sugar; but if they are to be served with sugar and cream, of course they must be hulled and chilled.
Oranges may be chilled and served in the natural state; or prepared the same as grape fruit, and one half served to each person; or peeled and the sections almost, but not quite, separated; or the orange may be cut in the shape of a basket, the pulp removed, the membrane cut off, and the basket refilled with the pulp, which may be sweetened or not.
Pineapples may be served in various ways; perhaps the most popular way is to cut off a slice from the top of the pineapple, then scoop out the center with a fork, and return pulp to pineapple, put on cover, chill, and serve.
Pineapples may be cut in slices, the outer skin be removed, and the tough pith taken out, then serve one or two slices to each person.
If the pineapples are not fully ripe, it is better to remove the skin, pull the pulp in pieces with a fork, then cover with sugar, and chill over night.
Pears should be carefully wiped and chilled before serving.
Melons should be thoroughly chilled. Cantaloupes should be cut in halves, have the seeds removed, and be served one half to a person. Watermelons should be cut in halves, then each half cut in pie-shaped pieces; serve one piece to a person.
Nuts are ordinarily served only at dinner. Hard-shelled[315] nuts should be cracked, served in the shell, or without the shell.
Almonds are cracked, and a portion of the shell discarded, or they may be blanched and salted, and served with the bonbons.
Pecans, filberts, peanuts and walnuts are treated in the same way as almonds.
Castañas or Brazilian nuts are cracked and served in the shell.
Boil all ingredients until a thread is formed when dropped from a spoon. Pour into hot buttered pans, crease, and let stand until hard.
Cook in the same way as Butter Scotch No. 1.
Cook all ingredients until brittle when tried in cold water. Pour into hot buttered pans, crease, and cool.
Cook sugar, water and cream of tartar until brittle when tried in cold water; add vanilla; pour on to greased platter or marble. Pull as soon as it can be handled.
Cook sugar and cream twelve minutes; add butter and cocoanut. Pour into greased pans, crease, and cool.
Cook all ingredients until brittle when tried in cold water. Pour on to hot buttered platter; pull when cool enough to handle; shape in a sheet two inches wide, cover with a layer of fondant, then with a layer of molasses candy, press together and cut in inch pieces.
Boil ingredients until brittle when tried in cold water. Pour into hot buttered pan; pull when cool enough to handle.
Boil until brittle, pour into greased pan, crease, and cool. One cup nut meats may be added just before pouring into pans.
Melt sugar; when a golden brown, add chopped nuts; pour into hot buttered pan, crease, and cool.
Canned fruits are now more popular with most people than preserved fruits.
The expense in preparing them is less, and the natural flavor is retained.
To prepare fruit for canning, look over carefully, reject imperfect fruit, and be sure that the fruit is clean.
The fruit may be cooked in a saucepan with just enough sugar to make it palatable and water to keep the fruit from burning, and transferred to sterile jars; or it may be put into sterile jars in the first place, and cooked by steam,—the latter method preserves the color and flavor better.
To sterilize jars, put jars into cold water, bring water to the boiling point, and boil ten minutes; fill jars with cooked fruit, and pour in sirup to overflowing; adjust rubbers and covers. Invert and let stand on folded cloth until cold; if there are no air bubbles, place jars in a cool dark closet to keep. If air bubbles are present, take off cover, reheat, and add more hot sirup and proceed as before.
Pare and core the apples; cover with cold water. Boil sugar and water five minutes; add apples and simmer until tender; add lemon juice and rind; place apples in sterilized[319] jars; fill to overflowing with sirup; adjust rubbers and covers; set in a cool place until cool then keep in dark dry closet.
Pare, core, and cut the apples in rings. Cut pineapple in slices, remove skin and eyes, and cut pulp into squares, being careful to reject the core. Boil sugar and water five minutes; add pineapple; cook until tender; then cook apples until tender; add lemon rind; fill jars which have been sterilized with apple and pineapple, adjust rings, fill jars with sirup, adjust covers, seal.
Place sugar and berries in preserving kettle, let stand several hours, then cook slowly until the boiling point is reached; boil five minutes; fill sterilized jars and seal.
Blueberries are canned the same as Blackberries, allowing one half cup water for every four pounds of blueberries.
Stone the cherries or not as preferred. Place sugar and cherries in preserving kettle, let stand two hours. Cook until tender, fill sterilized jars, and seal.
Wash, stem, and cover currants with sugar; let stand in preserving kettle over night. Cook slowly until boiling point is reached, skim, fill sterilized jars, and seal.
Stem and wash gooseberries, cover with sugar, and let stand over night; if green, add one quarter cup water; bring quickly to boiling point, fill jars, and seal.
Huckleberries are canned in the same way as Blackberries.
Pare peaches and cook in sugar and water, either whole or in halves, until tender. Arrange in jars, fill with sirup, and seal.
Pears, pineapples, and plums are canned in the same way as peaches.
Cook sugar and water until sirupy. Pare and quarter quinces; let stand in cold water. Cook in boiling water until tender, then cook in sugar and water sirup five minutes. Arrange quinces in jars, fill with sirup, and seal.
Pare and quarter quinces and apples, let stand in cold water to prevent discoloration. Cook in boiling water until tender, then simmer in sugar and water sirup ten minutes. Arrange fruit in jars, fill with sirup, and seal.
Arrange berries and sugar in alternate layers in glass jars; set jars on trivet in large boiler two thirds full of water; cover and cook until the water in boiler boils vigorously. Remove jar; if berries have settled, refill from another jar, and seal.
Prepare in the same way as Canned Raspberries.
Prepare string beans as for boiling. Cook in water one half hour. Fill sterilized jars with beans, adjust rubbers, fill with cold water, and put on covers. Arrange on rack in boiler, fill boiler two thirds full with water, cover boiler, and boil hard two hours. Seal and remove jars.
Cut fresh young corn from the cob. Pack sterilized jars to overflowing with corn. Seal, set on trivet in boiler, surround with cold water, and boil five or six hours, having boiler covered all of the time. Keep in dark, cool place.
Cook shelled peas in boiling water one half hour. Fill sterilized jars with cooked peas, then pour in cold water until jar will hold no more. Set jars on trivet in boiler, surround jars with cold water, cover boiler, and boil four hours. Seal, and keep in cool place.
Remove skins from tomatoes; boil hard twenty minutes; fill sterilized jars, being careful to keep seeds away from rubbers. Seal, and keep in cool place.
Equal weights or amounts of fruit and sugar are used in preserving.
Select perfect fruit, weigh or measure absolutely accurately, and always cook the fruit long enough to kill all life,—small fruits, one hour, and large fruits until thoroughly tender.
Wash, pare, and quarter apples; keep in water until ready to use. Cook sugar and water five minutes; add apples, cook until tender; add lemon juice and rind. Fill jars with apples, then with sirup, and seal.
Wash crab apples, and cook in sugar and water sirup until tender; add lemon juice, fill jars with fruit, then with sirup, and seal.
The fruit is much more attractive if the skin is left on, but may be removed if preferred.
Look over berries and wash. Cover with sugar and let stand two hours. Simmer until the boiling point is reached, boil one minute; cool, bring to the boiling point again, boil one minute; fill jars first with fruit, then with juice, and seal.
Preserved strawberries, raspberries, thimbleberries, and gooseberries are prepared in the same way.
Wash cherries; remove stems and stones. Cover cherries with sugar, let stand two hours; then set on stove, and bring slowly to the boiling point; cook until cherries are tender. Fill jars first with cherries, then with sirup; seal.
Preserved currants and huckleberries are prepared in the same way.
Wash citron, cut in halves, remove seeds; cut each half into eighths, cover with salt, then with water; let stand over night, then drain. Cover with cold water, let stand over night. Drain, remove skin, and cook in sirup of sugar and water until citron is tender. Remove each piece carefully to a platter. When cool, fill jars with citron, and then with boiling sirup. Seal.
If the citron lacks flavor, the juice and rind of four lemons and a small piece of ginger root may be boiled with the sirup.
If the citron is placed in the jars while it is hot, the pieces will not keep their shape.
Pare, cut in halves, and take out stones. Arrange peaches and sugar in layers in preserving kettle; let stand over night. In morning simmer until peaches are tender; fill jars with fruit, boil sirup five minutes, fill jars with sirup, and seal.
Prepare in the same way as Preserved Peaches.
Wash, pare, and cut pears in halves. Put in cold water. Make a syrup of sugar and water; cook only enough pears to fill a jar at a time; when tender fill jars with fruit, then with sirup, and seal.
Prepare in the same way as Preserved Pears.
Pick over and prick plums. Arrange alternate layers of plums and sugar in bowl, let stand over night; in the morning drain off sirup, boil, and skim; add plums and cook until tender. Cool plums on platter, fill jars with plums, then with boiling sirup, and seal.
Wash, wipe, pare, core, and cut quinces in quarters. Put in preserving kettle, cover with boiling water. Simmer until tender. Cool on platters. Mix sugar with one pint of water in which quinces have been cooked; boil ten minutes. Add quinces a few at a time, cover kettle, and cook slowly until quinces are of a rich red color. Fill jars with quinces, then with boiling sirup, and seal.
One half quinces and one half apples may be used in this receipt.
Wash tomatoes and cut in slices; add sliced lemons, sugar, water and ginger root. Simmer two hours, cool, then simmer two hours more. Pour into jars and seal.
Prepare in same manner as Preserved Green Tomatoes, except that the tomatoes must have skins removed before slicing them.
Cut peaches in halves, remove stones, and cook in sugar and water sirup five minutes; take out, remove skins, and cook again in sirup five minutes. Remove kettle from range, and let peaches stand in sirup over night. In morning reheat, pack peaches in jars, and fill jars with an equal quantity of sirup and brandy. Seal.
Prepare in the same manner as Brandied Peaches, but prick plums with knitting needle several times before cooking.
Pare and cut peaches in small pieces; add cider and lemon juice, boil until thick, stirring constantly; add sugar, if not sufficiently sweet. Fill jars and seal.
Cook all together until thick; press through a sieve to remove seeds. Fill glasses and seal.
Put the orange pulp into an earthen crock; add one pound sugar, and two tablespoons alcohol; add this same amount of sugar and alcohol every time a pound of fruit is added. Keep covered with a cloth and tight-fitting cover.
Wash and wipe fruit. Remove stems; cut in pieces, put in preserving kettle, nearly cover with cold water; cook very slowly until apples are tender. Pour into jelly bag and drain thoroughly, but do not squeeze. Measure juice, allow one pound of sugar to every pint of juice. Boil juice twenty minutes; add sugar which has been heated on a platter in the oven; stir until sugar is dissolved; boil five minutes or until it jellies. Skim when necessary. Have jelly glasses standing in hot water; pour jelly into them; let stand until hard and cover first with paper or melted paraffine and the tin cover, or paste white paper over the glass. Keep all jellies in cool, dry, dark place.
A rose geranium leaf cooked with the apples gives a pleasant flavor.
Mash blackberries and squeeze in jelly bag. Measure juice, allowing one pound of sugar to each pint of juice. Follow directions for Apple Jelly.
Damson, strawberry, cherry, and raspberry jellies are made in the same way.
Wash cranberries, mash, add water, and boil twenty minutes. Press through sieve, add sugar, and cook three minutes. Pour into glass and cover.
Pare the cucumbers and cut in small pieces. Peel the onion and slice. Cover onion and cucumber with cold water and cook until tender. Press through a sieve, add the gelatine and seasonings. Chill, and serve with Mayonnaise Dressing.
Wash and drain currants thoroughly. Do not remove stems. Mash a few in the bottom of the kettle. Cook until the juice seems to be extracted from the currants, and the currants look white. Press through a coarse colander, then drip through a jelly bag, but do not squeeze.
Allow one pound of sugar for each pint of juice. Boil juice twenty minutes. Add hot sugar and boil hard three[328] minutes; skim when necessary. Strain into hot glasses; let stand till stiff. Cover.
Use equal parts of currants and raspberries, and proceed as for Currant Jelly.
Use two quarts of apples for every four quarts of barberries and just enough water to keep berries from burning. Follow directions for Currant Jelly.
Remove stems from grapes, wash and crush, put in preserve kettle, add all ingredients, except sugar. Cook until mixture begins to look white. Strain through jelly bag. Measure juice, allow one pint of sugar for every pint of juice. Cook juice twenty minutes, add sugar, boil three minutes. Pour into glasses, cover when cold.
Remove stems from grapes. Mash; boil twenty minutes; strain, but do not squeeze; proceed as for Currant Jelly. Half ripe and half green grapes make the best jelly.
Follow receipt for Apple Jelly. Allow four sprigs of mint for every four quarts of fruit. When the juice has cooked twenty minutes, color with leaf green, add sugar, and proceed as with Apple Jelly.
Wipe and cut quinces in thin slices, and follow directions for Apple Jelly.
A delicious jelly is made by using one half quinces and one half Porter apples.
Pare, core, and chop apples; wash, remove seeds, and chop lemons; add sugar and ginger root, and cook very slowly six hours. Pour into glasses and cover.
Pare, core, and chip pears; wash lemons, remove seeds, and chop; add chopped ginger and sugar; cook very slowly four hours. Pour into glasses and cover.
Remove stems from currants, mash, cook thirty minutes, and strain in jelly bag. Cook sugar and juice ten minutes, add raspberries, bring to the boiling point, fill jars first with berries, then with juice, and seal.
Apples with considerable flavor are best for marmalade. Wash, core, and cut apples in slices; put in kettle, add enough water to keep apples from burning. Cook slowly until mushy, press through a sieve, add equal amounts of sugar and apples, and flavor with orange or lemon juice. Cook until water is evaporated; fill glasses, and cover.
All fruits may be made into marmalades by following the above directions. If the fruit lacks flavor, lemon juice, lemon rind, or ginger root may be cooked with the fruit.
Peel oranges, cut peel in quarters, cover with boiling water, and cook until tender. Drain, scrape to remove white, and cut scraped peel in shreds. Slice oranges, rejecting seeds and stringy portions; add sugar, cook slowly forty minutes; add rind, cook two hours. Pour into jars or glasses. Seal, and keep in cool place.
Slice oranges and lemons in very thin slices, reject seeds, cover with sugar, and cook slowly until of a thick consistency, about two hours. Pour into jars or glasses. Seal, and keep in cool place.
Wash oranges and lemons and slice in thin slices, remove seeds. Cover with cold water, and let stand two hours. Add rhubarb cut in one half inch pieces; cook one hour; add sugar and simmer three hours. Fill glasses, seal, and keep in cool place.
Remove skin from oranges and cook in boiling water until soft; drain; scrape off white part and cut peel in strips. Cut oranges and lemons in slices, remove pith and seeds. Cut rhubarb in inch pieces. Cook oranges, lemons, and rhubarb one hour; add sugar and peel and simmer two hours. Pour into glasses and cover when cold.
Wash grape fruit, slice thinly, remove seeds and pulpy portion, add sugar, and cook slowly two or three hours. Pour into glasses and cover.
Wash the fruit and cut in thin slices, removing the seeds and as much of the white skin as possible. Cover with water and let stand over night. Cook slowly two hours; add sugar and simmer until thick. Fill glasses, seal, and keep in cool place.
Wipe and cut peaches in halves, remove stones, cut peaches in pieces; add sugar and cook slowly two hours; add lemon juice. Pour into glasses and cover.
Quince, apricot, plum, and prune marmalade may be made like Peach Marmalade.
Wash and pick over blackberries, heat, then press through a sieve. To this purée add sugar and boil one half hour. Pour into glasses and cover.
Stem currants, crush slightly; add sugar, let stand over night; in the morning cook slowly one half hour, stirring often. Turn into glasses and cover.
Wash and stem grapes. Separate skins from pulp. Cook skins until tender, press through a sieve. Cook pulps ten minutes, press through a sieve. Combine purées; add one pound of sugar to every quart of purée; boil one half hour, stirring often. Pour into glasses and cover.
Mash berries; add sugar; cook thirty minutes, stirring very often. Pour into glasses and cover.
Wash tomatoes and cut in pieces; add remaining ingredients and cook until clear, about two hours. Strain through coarse strainer to remove seeds. Fill sterilized jars and seal.
Remove stems and wash currants, add remaining ingredients, and boil twenty minutes. Keep in stone jar.
Tie spices in bag. Cook vinegar and sugar five minutes. Add spice and remaining ingredients, cook slowly one hour. Keep in stone jar.
Boil sugar and vinegar. Scald peaches, remove skins, and cook in sirup. Tie spices in bag and cook with peaches. When peaches are tender, pour into stone jars, reheat sirup every day for a week, pouring when boiling over peaches.
All kinds of small fruits may be spiced in this manner.
Slice tomatoes, add onions and salt, and let stand twelve hours. Drain, add water and two cups vinegar, and boil one half hour. Drain; to tomatoes add remaining ingredients, and cook one half hour. Keep in stone jar in cool, dry place.
Sweet pickles are prepared from every fruit that can be preserved. Spices are generally tied in a muslin bag and[334] kept in the pickle jar, and the sirup is rich in order to preserve the pickle. Sour pickles should always be cooked in granite or agate-ware kettles, and if desired green, put on to cook in cold vinegar and brought gradually to the boiling point. Alum added to the pickles keeps them crisp.
Cut skin from watermelon; cut rind into small pieces about two inches square; cover with water and cook until tender. Boil sugar and vinegar ten minutes; add spices tied in a bag, simmer until sirupy, about two hours; add melon and simmer one hour. Fill jars and seal.
Wash pears, but do not pare. Stick the cloves into the pears. Make a sirup of sugar and vinegar; add spices, when boiling, add a few pears at a time and cook until tender. Fill jars and seal.
Prepare in the same way as Sweet Pickled Watermelon, substituting cantaloupe.
Soak the cucumbers in a brine for two weeks; drain, and slice lengthwise. Cook in a sirup made by cooking six pounds sugar and four quarts of vinegar; boil twenty minutes. Keep in tightly covered crock.
Boil water and salt together; pour over cucumbers and peppers. Let stand over night; in the morning drain. Make a new brine, using same proportion; repeat this process twice, then drain and wash cucumbers and peppers in cold water. Place cucumbers and peppers in crock; cover with boiling vinegar.
Twelve whole cloves and twelve peppercorns may be tied in a bag and kept in the pickle jar.
Arrange cabbage, onion, and peppers in layers in an earthen crock; cover each layer with salt. Let stand over night; in the morning drain; then arrange cabbage, onion, and peppers in layers, with cloves and mustard seeds. Cover with cider vinegar; let stand twenty-four hours.
Cook all ingredients until cabbage is tender. Keep in stone crock.
Arrange cucumbers and salt in layers and let stand over night. Arrange onions and salt in layers and let stand[336] over night. In the morning drain; put a layer of cucumbers in an earthen crock, cover with olive oil and mustard, then a layer of onions, and so continue until all are used. Cover whole with cider vinegar; let stand covered closely for two months, when it is ready for use.
Mix all ingredients; stir every morning for a week. Keep in a cool, dark place.
Boil vinegar, spices, and sugar five minutes, add remaining ingredients, and simmer until thick. Keep in crock in cool place.
Peel onions and cook twenty minutes. Drain and cool. Arrange cauliflower, broken in small pieces, cucumbers, peppers and onions in kettle. Cover with brine made of salt and water. Let stand two days. Drain thoroughly,[337] then cover with vinegar, cayenne and mustard. Boil slowly one hour. Keep in Mason or Lightning jars.
Tie spices in a muslin bag. Chop the vegetables, cover with salt and water, let stand over night. Drain thoroughly, cover with hot vinegar, add spice bag, and let stand until the next morning. Reheat vinegar and pour over pickles; do this for three days, then keep in earthen crock tightly covered.
Run a needle through soft walnuts; cover with strong brine of salt and water; let stand in brine for a week, draining off brine every day, and covering with fresh brine. Then drain and wash walnuts, cover with vinegar, boil ten minutes, add a bag of spices, cover closely, and keep in cool place three weeks.
For bag of spices, mix four tablespoons each of whole cloves, peppercorns, mace, celery and mustard seed.
Mix all ingredients, add more salt if needed, and boil slowly until thick. Keep in air-tight jars.
Mix all ingredients and cook gently all day. Cool; then boil hard five minutes, stirring constantly. Fill sterilized jars and seal.
Peel tomatoes, and cook all ingredients six hours, stirring often. Pour into sterilized bottles and seal.
Cook tomatoes one hour; press through a sieve; add all ingredients, except alcohol, and cook until thick; boil one minute; add alcohol, and bottle. The cooking will take six or eight hours; stir occasionally to keep from burning.
Arrange layers of mushrooms and salt in preserving kettle; let stand on back of stove for twelve hours. Press through a sieve. Measure. For each quart of mushroom liquor add one pint vinegar, one tablespoon salt, two tablespoons each of cloves, allspice, mace, and mustard seed. Boil until thick, then bottle.
Grate cucumber and onion, add remaining ingredients, boil five minutes, bottle, and seal.
Chop the rhubarb; add lemon rind and water; let stand three days. Strain, add sugar, pour into crock, cover with muslin, let stand for two weeks. Cover tightly, at the end of a month it will be ready to bottle.
Wash and mash grapes; add water and boil ten minutes; strain. For every quart of juice add two cups sugar. Boil sugar and juice eight minutes, bottle and seal while hot.
Remove seeds from peppers; cut peppers in narrow strips, using scissors. Cover with boiling water, keep on back of range ten minutes, but do not boil. Drain, cover with ice water, and let stand ten minutes. Repeat this process twice. Boil sugar, vinegar and salt twenty minutes. Drain peppers, pack sterilized jars with peppers, add sirup to fill jars. Seal and keep in cold place.
The chafing dish is composed of the blazer and hot water pan, set in a standard with a small lamp underneath. Some lamps have an electric attachment, but alcohol is the fuel most used. The best alcohol is the most satisfactory, although many use wood alcohol.
Every kind of dish which is usually prepared in a saucepan or double boiler can be made in the chafing dish, but ordinarily oyster, mushroom, fish, egg, and cheese dishes are the ones most popular.
When preparing for a chafing dish supper, arrange the chafing dish on a tray, have the lamp filled, and matches at hand. A wooden spoon or regular chafing dish spoon and a wire whisk are convenient and really necessary utensils. It is well to have all the ingredients measured and neatly arranged on a tray. If butter is to be used, butter balls, each representing a tablespoon, are a convenient and attractive way in which to serve it.
If toast is to be used, have the bread cut in small rounds or triangles and toasted a golden brown. It should be kept hot until ready to be used.
Light the lamp and have the water boiling before the supper is announced, then the compounding of the dish may be done quickly.
Heat one tablespoon olive oil in chafing dish; add one cup blanched and dried almonds. Stir until evenly colored. Drain and sprinkle with salt.
Melt one tablespoon butter in chafing dish. Add one tablespoon chopped red pepper, one tablespoon onion, one half teaspoon salt, and one cup blanched almonds. Cook until almonds are brown.
Melt two tablespoons butter, add two tablespoons green pepper, one tablespoon onion, one teaspoon each of salt and lemon juice, one tablespoon flour. Spread on rounds of cold roast beef and sauté in butter; or add one half cup tomato and reheat beef in sauce.
Cut six chicken livers in slices, sprinkle with salt and pepper. Add an equal amount of sliced bacon. Cook together until livers are tender. Add two tablespoons flour, one half teaspoon salt, one cup stock or tomato. Season with Worcestershire and serve hot on toast.
Wrap eight mushrooms in eight slices of bacon. Cook in chafing dish until mushrooms are tender. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and serve.
Make a Brown Sauce; add two cups sliced cooked livers and one cup chopped mushrooms. Reheat and serve on toast. Two tablespoons wine may be added.
Melt one tablespoon butter, add one tablespoon chopped red pepper, two teaspoons chopped pickles, one teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, one fourth teaspoon salt. Add four bananas cut in four equal parts. Cook five minutes.
Melt one tablespoon butter, add one tablespoon flour and one half pound dried beef. Cook five minutes, add one half cup stock, few drops onion juice, one half teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce, two eggs well beaten. Cook two minutes and serve.
Make Brown Sauce; add one cup Currant Jelly and twelve thin slices rare roast beef. Cook until hot and serve.
Cut twelve thin slices of bread and remove crusts. Cut in halves, cover with a thin slice of American cheese, sprinkle with salt, paprika and cayenne; cover with another slice of bread and sauté on both sides in butter. These are more easily prepared small than large.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add one teaspoon each of salt, mustard and paprika. Add two cups cheese, one half cup soft bread crumbs, and one cup milk. Cook five minutes. Add two eggs well beaten; when thoroughly blended, pour on to bread toasted on one side.
Melt one tablespoon butter; add four eggs slightly beaten, four tablespoons milk, one half teaspoon salt, one cup grated cheese. Cook like a French Omelet over hot water. Serve with or without Tomato Sauce.
Melt one teaspoon butter, add one teaspoon each of salt, mustard and paprika; add two cups American cheese.[343] When melted, add one half cup cream or ale. Stir vigorously until smooth, and pour over hot buttered crackers or toast.
Melt one tablespoon butter; add three sliced tomatoes, one half cup milk, one teaspoon salt, two cups cheese. Stir continually until cheese is melted. Add three eggs well beaten. When hot, serve on hot buttered toast.
Melt two tablespoons butter, add four tablespoons chopped pepper, one half tablespoon chopped onion, one fourth cup grated cheese, one fourth cup cream, four eggs slightly beaten. Cook until well blended and serve on buttered slices of toast.
Make a White Sauce; add one and one half cups chicken meat, cut in cubes, one half cup mushrooms, cut in slices, and one red pepper, finely chopped. Add more seasoning if required and serve on hot toast.
Turkey, veal, lamb, or game may be served in this way.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add two tablespoons flour, one cup cream, one half teaspoon salt. Add one cup each of cold cooked chicken, cut in pieces, and cooked mushrooms, also cut in pieces.
Serve very hot on buttered toast. A few drops of Tabasco may be added.
Add one tablespoon curry powder to Chicken à la Crême.
Cut four hard-cooked eggs in slices, add to two cups creamed chicken with two tablespoons sherry.
Two cups Béchamel Sauce, mixed with four hard-cooked eggs, cut in slices; one half cup sautéd mushrooms. Cook all together five minutes; serve on hot toast.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add two tablespoons flour, one fourth teaspoon salt, few grains cayenne, one cup cream. Cook until thick, add two egg yolks and six hard-cooked eggs, cut in pieces, and serve hot on toast.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add one tablespoon each of chopped pepper and onion, one cup cooked tomato, one half teaspoon salt. When hot, add four eggs slightly beaten; when scrambled, serve on toast.
May be prepared in chafing dish.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add one fourth teaspoon salt, few grains cayenne, two tablespoons flour, one cup cream, few gratings nutmeg. Cook ten minutes, add meat from a two-pound lobster cut in small pieces, the grated coral, and one tablespoon butter. One teaspoon Worcestershire and one teaspoon mustard may be added.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add one tablespoon flour, one teaspoon salt, few grains cayenne, one cup cream. Cook five minutes; add three egg yolks well beaten, the meat from a two-pound lobster, and just before serving, two tablespoons each of sherry and brandy.
Mix one cup Brown Sauce, one cup sliced pimolas, two hard-cooked eggs cut in slices, one fourth teaspoon salt, few gratings nutmeg, and two tablespoons sautéd mushrooms, with two cups lobster meat. Serve when hot with slices of brown bread toast.
Melt three tablespoons butter; add one cup fresh mushrooms, cut in slices, few drops onion juice, two tablespoons flour, one cup cream or Chicken Stock; meat from a two-pound lobster and salt, pepper, and cayenne to taste. Serve when hot.
Mix two cups cold cooked lamb, cut in small pieces, two hard-cooked eggs, chopped fine, two tablespoons olive oil. Let stand two minutes. Melt two tablespoons butter; add two tablespoons flour, one teaspoon mustard, one teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce, and one cup Lamb Stock, or milk. Cook five minutes. Add lamb and eggs and serve on graham toast.
Season four dozen large oysters with salt, pepper, onion juice and lemon juice. Dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and sauté in butter.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add one tablespoon flour, one half finely chopped onion, one cup mushrooms, broken in small pieces, one cup Chicken Stock or one cup oyster liquor. Cook five minutes and add two cups oysters drained from their liquor. Reheat; season with salt, pepper, cayenne and Worcestershire Sauce. Serve with Brown Bread Sandwiches.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add two cups each of celery and oysters. Season with salt, cayenne and lemon juice. Serve hot with crisp toast.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add one can tomatoes; simmer until of purée consistency. Season highly with salt, pepper and onion juice. Add two cups shrimps which have been marinated in French Dressing for one hour. When hot, serve on hot buttered toast.
Cut cooked sweetbreads in inch pieces. Sprinkle with salt, cayenne, lemon juice and onion juice. Wrap in slices of bacon. Skewer, sauté in butter. Serve with Brown Sauce, and garnish with finely chopped celery.
Cut two cups cooked brains in small pieces. Marinate with French Dressing. Melt two tablespoons butter; add four tablespoons chopped peppers, one half cup chopped mushrooms, few drops onion juice, two tablespoons flour, and one cup Chicken Stock. Cook five minutes; add brains; season with salt, cayenne, Tabasco and Worcestershire.
Melt one half cup butter; sprinkle six sliced tomatoes with salt and pepper; put in chafing dish; cover and cook twenty minutes. Serve on toast.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add one quarter teaspoon salt, few grains cayenne, one tablespoon lemon juice, one cup Currant Jelly, one half cup sherry; cook five minutes. Keep hot while cooking slice of venison steak in chafing dish eight minutes. Serve sauce with venison.
Cut one slice venison steak in inch pieces. Cover with Chicken or Veal Stock; simmer until tender, about fifteen minutes; season with salt and pepper; add one cup Currant Jelly and serve.
Peel and cut four bananas in four pieces; melt two tablespoons butter, add two tablespoons sugar, and one half cup sherry; when hot, add bananas, and cook until bananas are hot and tender.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add four tablespoons sugar, one quarter cup water, and one quarter cup lemon juice; add two cups mixed fruit, apples, bananas, figs and cherries; when hot, serve with cream sweetened and beaten until stiff.
Melt two tablespoons butter; add two cups peaches with skin and stones removed; cook ten minutes; add[348] sugar and lemon juice, and serve on slices of sautéd bread or Sponge Cake; garnish with cream.
Substitute two cups shredded pineapple for peaches, and follow directions for Peach Canapé.
The preparation of food for the sick and convalescent person is even more important than the preparation for the strong and well. Certain points should always be considered. The food should be freshly prepared, daintily served, and if possible different dishes for each meal.
The arrangement of the tray is often of great importance. Select attractive dishes and arrange them so that the patient can reach them without trouble. Serve everything which should be hot, very hot, and cold dishes, ice cold.
Wash, pare, core, and cut apple into pieces; add water and simmer until tender; strain, add sugar to water, cook five minutes, chill, and serve. If apple is not tart, a small amount of lemon juice may be added to give a more agreeable flavor.
Pears, peaches, plums, figs, prunes, raisins, and rhubarb may be used in the same way.
Mix barley with a small amount of cold water, add to boiling water, and simmer twenty minutes. Season with salt and sugar. Lemon juice may be added if desired.
Break cinnamon in small pieces, add water, and boil twenty minutes. Strain and serve hot or cold.
Mix jelly and water, strain, chill, and serve.
Cranberry, strawberry, raspberry, blackberry, and plum water may be prepared in the same way.
This may be prepared at home by attaching one end of a curved tube to the spout of the teakettle, and having the other end placed in a jar. The jar should be placed in a kettle of cold water. This condensed steam is distilled water.
Boil flaxseed and water one hour, strain, sweeten, and flavor. Serve hot or cold.
Wash grapes, mash, add water, simmer ten minutes, strain, chill, and serve.
Mix ingredients, add crushed ice, and serve ice-cold with straws.
Boil all ingredients twenty minutes, strain, cool, add water to make of pleasant consistency.
Let tamarinds stand in water one half hour, strain, chill, and serve.
Dry and brown in the oven very thin slices of white or graham bread, break into small pieces, cover with boiling water; when cold, strain and season with salt.
Boil two minutes, keep in preserve jar, and use when needed.
Pick over and soak moss in cold water to cover for one half hour; drain, cover with two cups cold water, and cook ten minutes; strain, add lemon juice and Sugar Sirup to taste.
Sweeten milk to taste, add salt and liquor, and pour from one tumbler to another until frothy.
Beat yolk; add milk, liquor and sugar, pour into glass; add well-beaten white of egg, stir lightly, and serve.
Beat white of egg until stiff; add beaten cream and liquor, then well-beaten yolk mixed with sugar and salt.
Milk or hot water may be substituted for the cream, and the yolk and white may be beaten together just slightly if a foamy eggnog is disliked.
Heat four cups milk; cool; when lukewarm, add one fourth yeast cake dissolved in one fourth cup lukewarm water, and two tablespoons sugar. Pour into bottles with patent stoppers, fill two thirds full, cork tightly. Shake; let stand in kitchen six hours, then on ice for twenty-four hours; serve ice cold.
Beat white until frothy; add cream and continue beating; add remaining ingredients and serve immediately.
Prepare as Egg Cordial, omitting wine and cream, and using the juice of one orange.
Beat white until frothy; add salt and milk, and continue beating; strain and serve.
Beat egg, add remaining ingredients, and serve cold.
Scald milk; add wine; let stand until curds separate from whey. Strain and serve hot or cold. Lemon or Vinegar Whey may be prepared in the same way; allow one tablespoon vinegar or two tablespoons lemon juice.
Mix barley with cold water and salt; add boiling water and cook in double boiler one half hour; add milk and cook ten minutes more; if too thick, thin with hot milk or cream.
Mix wheat and cold water, add boiling water and salt, and cook in double boiler one to two hours. Milk may be substituted for water.
Mix crumbs and milk and cook in double boiler twenty minutes; add salt and serve.
Dried bread crumbs may be substituted for cracker crumbs.
Mix corn meal, salt and milk; add boiling water and cook in double boiler two hours.
Mix flour with cold water, add scalded milk and salt. Cook in a double boiler thirty minutes, stirring often.
Knead two cups flour into a ball, adding water to form a stiff dough. Tie ball in a linen cloth and boil in deep saucepan ten to twelve hours, keeping the cloth covered with boiling water all of the time. Dry in cloth, remove cloth, and dry ball in oven. This will keep for years. Scrape two tablespoons from the ball; add one fourth cup cold water and two cups scalded milk; cook in double boiler ten minutes, add salt, and serve.
Mix oatmeal with cold water; add salt and boiling water, and cook two hours, or better still over night, in[355] double boiler. Strain and serve; thin with hot water or milk if not of the desired consistency.
Add one egg yolk and one tablespoon brandy or sherry to Oatmeal Gruel.
Mix rice and cold water; add scalded milk and cook in double boiler two hours, stirring occasionally. Strain, add salt, and serve.
Cut stale bread in one quarter inch slices; remove crust or not as preferred. Dry in oven; place on toaster and toast over clear fire, first on one side and then on the other, having both sides a golden brown. Arrange in toast rack or cover with napkin.
Prepare bread as for Dry Toast, and spread with butter as soon as taken from toaster.
Prepare bread as for Dry Toast, dip in hot salted water, drain, and spread with butter.
Toast bread according to receipt for Dry Toast. Mix flour and cold milk; add to scalded milk and cook in double boiler twenty minutes, stirring constantly at first;[356] add salt and butter; dip toast in sauce; serve in hot dish; add remaining sauce.
Prepare in the same way as Milk Toast, substituting cream for milk.
Cut brown bread in thin slices; dry in oven, then toast; butter each slice, and cover with scalded milk.
Remove the crust from fresh bread and tear the center in small pieces. Dry in slow oven; the center of biscuits may be prepared in the same way.
Cut bread in thin slices; remove crusts; spread with creamed butter; put two slices together; cut in desired shapes. Arrange on fancy plate.
Cut bread in thin slices; remove crusts; shape and spread with raw beef. Serve as soon as made.
Buy bottom or top of round of beef; wipe, then scrape with a teaspoon; there should be nothing but fiber left when all meat is scraped.
Fill bread and butter sandwiches with stewed figs.
Buy one half pound from top of round; wipe, and set in oven five minutes; cut in thin slices, squeeze, using meat[357] press or lemon squeezer. Serve in warm, not hot cups, with salt or not.
Wipe one half pound of round steak; remove all fat; cut in small pieces; add one cup cold water; place in preserve jar, cover, and let stand ten minutes; place jar on trivet in saucepan surrounded with cold water. Heat gradually on back of range; keep water just simmering for one hour. Strain, add salt, and serve in hot cup.
Wipe one half pound round steak; remove fat; chop very fine; place in fruit jar; cover, place jar on trivet, surround with cold water, and keep water just bubbling for one and a half hours. Strain, press meat to extract all juice, season, serve in hot cup.
Prepare Beef Tea, pour into glass, surrounded with ice and salt, and freeze, turning glass often, and scraping the frozen part into the liquid.
Prepare scraped beef according to rule. Season; shape in round balls about the size of marbles; cook in hissing hot frying pan; keep pan constantly in motion, and cook balls two minutes. Serve on small strips of toasted bread; garnish with parsley.
Wipe two pounds neck of mutton; remove all fat and cut off skin; cut meat in small pieces. Put meat and bones in kettle; add four cups cold water, and simmer gently several hours; add salt to taste. Strain, let stand[358] over night to cool; in the morning remove fat, reheat, and serve with two tablespoons cooked rice in broth.
Cut up a three-pound fowl; remove skin and all fat. Put in soup kettle; add ten cups cold water, and simmer until meat falls from bones. Strain; let stand over night to cool; remove fat; reheat, season with salt, and serve with Boiled Rice or Croûtons.
Wash one dozen clams, put in kettle, cover, and cook until shells open. Strain clam liquor through cheese cloth and serve very hot.
Mix sugar, brandy and salt. Heat milk until lukewarm; add rennet and other ingredients; pour into serving dish and let stand until a firm curd is formed, then chill. Serve with cream and sugar.
Cook the calf’s foot in cold water, slowly, for four hours. Skim often while cooking. Strain; let stand over night. Remove fat; add whites of eggs slightly beaten, and bring slowly to the boiling point, stirring all of the time; boil one minute, strain through cheese cloth, add remaining ingredients, and pour into molds. Chill and serve.
Hull and wash the strawberries, add sugar and lemon juice. Beat the whites of eggs until stiff, add other ingredients, and serve ice-cold in frappé glasses.
Mix arrowroot, salt and sugar; add milk, a little at a time, until the mixture is smooth, then add the remainder, and cook in double boiler one half hour, stirring all the time. Add flavoring, pour into molds, and serve with Soft Custard or cream.
Wash prunes; soak over night in water to cover; cook slowly, in same water, until tender. A small amount of sugar and lemon juice may be added if desired.
Wash figs; cut in pieces; for each cup of figs add one quarter cup cold water, simmer one hour; add sugar and lemon juice if allowed.
Mix butter and milk; when cool, add remaining ingredients. Roll very thin, shape in squares, and bake in a slow oven.
Mix salt and corn meal, add boiling water, let stand ten minutes. Add baking powder and sufficient milk to make a stiff batter. Grease a griddle; when hot, drop the mixture by spoonfuls on to it. When brown put a piece of butter on top of each cake and turn.
Butter pan; sprinkle with dry meal. Mix corn meal, salt, and water. Heat pan, pour in pone mixture, and bake in hot oven.
Cook meal in boiling water twenty minutes. Mix and sift dry ingredients and add alternately with milk. Add eggs well beaten, and melted butter. Cook as waffles.
Mix the lard with the hot hominy; when cool, add cream, eggs well beaten, corn meal mixed and sifted with baking powder, melted butter, and salt. Bake in buttered agate-ware pan thirty to forty minutes.
Dress the fowl and cut in pieces for serving. Pour pork fat into frying pan, when hot add onion, seasoned fowl, and cook until fowl is brown and tender; add remaining ingredients and cook one hour.
Parboil potatoes. Remove heads from clams. Put pork fat in kettle, add onion, soft part of clams, potatoes, tomatoes, and water. Cook slowly one hour. Melt butter, add flour, and add to clam mixture. Cook five minutes, add seasonings and oysters; serve as soon as oysters are heated through.
Melt butter; add onion and pepper, and cook five minutes; add flour; when well blended add tomatoes cut in pieces; cook two minutes; add scalded milk and crab meat; cook until heated through, season, pour over croûtons, and serve.
Chop ham, onion, chicken and red pepper, and sauté; add consommé and cook one hour. Slice okra, add with tomato to consommé, cook one half hour. Add oysters, cook until edges shrivel, season and serve.
Cut terrapin meat in dice, cover with cold water, and cook slowly one half hour. Mix the yolk of one hard-cooked egg with one teaspoon butter, add one fourth cup cream, season with salt, nutmeg, paprika; add terrapin meat, cook five minutes; add one tablespoon sherry, and serve on toast.
This amount is right for one terrapin.
Dress a hare. Disjoint, season with salt and pepper, and dredge with flour. Cook one quarter cup salt pork cubes in a frying pan, add hare, and cook until brown. Arrange layers of hare, chopped onion, and salt pork cubes in deep baking dish; add one cup each of stock or water and stewed tomato. Cook in slow oven three hours.
Remove hare, strain liquor, and thicken with two tablespoons each of butter and flour cooked together; add one[363] half cup sherry and pour around hare. Garnish with Boiled Rice and serve.
Melt butter; add pepper and onion, cook five minutes; add flour; when blended, add stock and tomato; when mixture boils, add remaining ingredients; when meat is heated through, serve on a hot platter and garnish with Boiled Rice.
Chop the chicken meat. Chop peppers and onion and soak in vinegar one hour. Drain, add remaining ingredients. Shape like croquettes. Roll in corn meal and wrap in corn husks. Tie the ends to keep the mixture in. Steam three hours. Dry in oven ten minutes.
Cut a summer squash in halves. Scoop out pulp, strain in cheese cloth. To the pulp add an equal amount of cracker crumbs and twice as much chopped ham or veal or shrimps. For four cups of the above mixture, add the following: Melt two tablespoons butter, add two tablespoons finely chopped pepper, one tomato cut in pieces, and one beaten egg. Add the squash mixture, and cook ten minutes. Fill squash shells and bake ten minutes.
Cream the butter, add sugar; when creamy add remaining ingredients, beat well, pour into a buttered pan, and bake one hour in a moderate oven.
Melt butter, add remaining ingredients, cook ten minutes, and serve on hot buttered toast.
Boil the crabs, remove the meat. Melt butter, add onion and cook until yellow; add flour; when smooth add tomatoes. Cook ten minutes; add seasonings and crab meat. Serve on slices of hot buttered toast and garnish with strips of red pepper.
Chop onions very fine. Pare and slice cucumbers, sprinkle with salt, cover with ice water and let stand one hour. Drain, add onions, sprinkle with cayenne, and dress with cream and vinegar mixed together. Serve on lettuce leaves.
Peel the oranges, and remove as much of the white skin as possible. Slice in very thin slices. Mix olive oil, vinegar, and salt. Pour over oranges; let stand one half hour. Remove oranges, and pour over them wine and sugar. Let stand in refrigerator one hour. Serve on shredded lettuce. This salad is especially good to serve with game.
Cut six potatoes into uniform cubes. Cover cubes with boiling water; add two slices onion, one and one half teaspoons salt, and cook until potatoes are tender. Drain, cover with French Dressing when cool, chill and serve on shredded lettuce.
Mix all the ingredients and marinate with French Dressing. Drain, arrange on crisp lettuce leaves and garnish with Mayonnaise Dressing.
Peel onions and cook in boiling water ten minutes. Drain. Boil salt and water five minutes; add the vegetables, and let stand twenty-four hours. Drain. Put in preserving kettle; add remaining ingredients, and simmer two hours. Put into sterilized jars and seal.
Cream butter; add sugar. Beat yolks and whole egg; add salt, and add to sugar mixture. Mix and sift flour and baking powder, and add to egg mixture alternately with milk. Beat whites until stiff; add flavoring; add to egg mixture. Bake in buttered layer cake pans twenty minutes. Fill with Baltimore Filling, and frost with Boiled Frosting.
Boil sugar and water until a thread is formed. Pour on to the beaten whites; add lemon juice, and beat until creamy; add nuts and cherries and use for filling.
Cream butter, add sugar; when creamy add eggs well beaten, and remaining ingredients. Bake in an angel cake pan about two hours.
Cream butter; add sugar, flour in which baking powder has been sifted, alternately with milk; beat well, add well-beaten eggs and finely chopped orange peel. Drop from a teaspoon on to a buttered sheet; bake in a quick oven.
Mix and sift flour, sugar and cocoa; add butter, chop until well blended. Roll very thin, sprinkle with granulated sugar, cut with cooky cutter, bake on a buttered sheet in a moderate oven.
Heat molasses and suet; when well mixed add remaining ingredients. Drop from a teaspoon on to a buttered sheet; bake in a slow oven.
Mix and sift dry ingredients; add eggs well beaten and lemon juice. Roll in small marbles, dip in cinnamon and sugar. Bake on a sheet in a quick oven.
Boil sugar and water together, add nuts and butter; cook five minutes, remove from stove, beat one minute, then drop by spoonfuls on to a buttered pan.
Mix all ingredients and boil until the whole mixture is a mass of bubbles. Pour on to a buttered platter or marble slab and mark when cool.
Mix the ingredients, sweeten to taste, and chill. Serve Raspberry Sherbet in bottom of champagne glasses, pour over sherbet fruit mixture, garnish with raspberries.
Arrange chilled shredded pineapple, bananas cut in cubes, and preserved peaches or pears in champagne glasses, sprinkle with lemon juice, pour over whole Chocolate Sauce, and garnish with beaten cream, angelica and candied cherries.
Scald milk, cool slightly, add sugar, water and chocolate; when thoroughly dissolved add crushed junket tablet, salt and wine. Turn into serving dish, keep in warm place until thick, then chill. Garnish with beaten cream and chopped nuts.
Melt butter, add remaining ingredients, except chocolate; when thoroughly mixed add melted chocolate. Pour into buttered individual molds. Cover and steam one and one half hours. Serve with Cream Sauce.
Beat yolks of eggs, add sugar and salt. Scald the milk, pour on to egg mixture, cook in double boiler until mixture thickens. Beat whites of eggs until stiff; place in purée sieve. Pour over them one quart of boiling water to which has been added the lemon juice. Arrange the custard and whites of eggs in layers in serving dish, sprinkling each layer with sherry wine. Have the whites of eggs on the top layer, dredge with granulated sugar, chill and serve.
Pour milk over bread crumbs. Beat eggs, add other ingredients. When blended add bread and milk mixture. Steam in individual molds or one half pound baking powder boxes three fourths of an hour. Remove to serving dish; garnish with slices of orange and Hard Sauce served in Orange Baskets.
Line a mold with Lemon Jelly. Make a custard with milk, eggs and sugar; add gelatine, and stir until mixture begins to thicken, then add fruit and nuts. Pour this mixture into the center of the mold, leaving the Lemon Jelly border. Chill, and serve with sweetened cream.
Mix flour, salt and baking powder, add lard, and chop until fine like meal; add milk, shape in oblong piece spread with oranges and orange peel, and sprinkle with sugar. Roll like a jelly roll, pinch the edges together. Place on plate in steamer and steam one and one half hours. Serve with Orange Sauce.
Shell the chestnuts, boil and mash. Scald milk; add sugar and eggs, and cook until of a creamy consistency. Mix gelatine and cold water. Add to custard mixture. When well blended add chestnuts and flavoring. Pour into mold, chill, serve garnished with beaten cream.
Mix pineapple, sugar, and one half cup water. Cook twenty minutes; add gelatine which has been soaked in one quarter cup water. Strain, set on ice to chill. When it begins to thicken add seasonings and beaten whites. Beat until stiff. Mold, chill and serve.
Soak beans over night, drain, cover with cold water and simmer until tender when pierced with a darning needle. Drain, pour one half of beans into bean pot; add salt, sweetening and mustard. Place salt pork which has been scored on top of beans, cover with remaining beans and cover whole with boiling water.
Cover bean pot and bake in a slow oven eight hours. Uncover the last hour of cooking.
Many people cook one small onion with the beans. To score pork, cut the pork rind into small squares.
Scald milk; add oatmeal and shortening; let stand until cool. Dissolve yeast in lukewarm water, add molasses, combine mixtures, add entire wheat and salt, knead, let rise, knead, shape, let rise, and bake.
Beat egg, add remaining ingredients, drop from a teaspoon on to a buttered sheet. Bake in a moderate oven.
Substitute one and one half cups flaked rice for the rolled oats, and follow the directions for Oatmeal Wafers.
Remove leaves, reject stalks, wash in several waters. Cook in boiling salted water. Drain, season, and serve like spinach.
Chop cabbage and soak in cold water. Melt bacon fat, add onion, cook five minutes; add cabbage, salt, cayenne and nutmeg, cook until cabbage is tender. It should steam, and no water should be added. Add sugar and vinegar, cook five minutes, and serve.
Melt butter, add flour; when blended, add tomato, cook five minutes, add remaining ingredients, chill, shape, and fry.
Soak the mackerel over night in cold water to cover. In the morning drain, wash, rinse in cold water, and place flesh side up in dripping pan.
Cover with milk, and cook in a moderate oven about twenty minutes. Melt butter, add flour; when well blended, mix with milk in pan, and cook five minutes. Serve on hot platter and pour sauce over fish, sprinkle with pepper.
Shred the codfish and press into the cup, put the potatoes in a saucepan, add fish, and cover with boiling water. Cook until potatoes are tender but not mushy. Drain in a colander, mash thoroughly. Add salt, pepper and butter, beat with a fork until light and fluffy, add egg well beaten and beat again. Shape into balls or drop from a tablespoon. Fry in deep fat, drain on brown paper, serve hot.
Soak the fish one or two hours. Drain, cover with cold water, and simmer until fish is tender. Drain and chop. Add mashed potato and seasonings, beat well, shape into round flat cakes, and sauté in hot pork fat. Serve on hot platter and garnish with crisp cubes of fat salt pork.
Substitute two cups of cooked fresh fish for the salt codfish, and proceed as for Salt Fish Cakes.
Mix fish and potatoes and beat well, add cream and seasonings. Beat yolks of eggs until lemon-colored and thick, add to fish mixture, when thoroughly blended add stiffly beaten whites, carefully cutting and folding them in. Pour into a buttered baking dish, bake in a moderate oven about thirty minutes.
Melt butter, add flour, when blended add scalded milk and codfish, cook two minutes. Beat yolks of eggs until lemon-colored and thick; add fish mixture. Beat whites until stiff, cut and fold beaten whites into fish mixture. Cook like Foamy Omelet.
Press the fish through a purée sieve, season, add White Sauce, and beat well. Beat yolks of eggs until lemon-colored and thick, add to fish mixture. Cut and fold in the stiffly beaten whites of eggs, and bake in moderate oven twenty minutes.
Cover herring with boiling water. Let stand twenty minutes. Drain, skin, and broil over a clear fire ten minutes, or bake in oven fifteen minutes. Spread with butter and serve hot.
Mix all the ingredients. Grease an iron frying pan, heat, add hash, spread evenly, cover, and cook slowly one hour. Fold, turn, and serve.
Melt the fat in an iron frying pan; when hissing hot, pour in the above ingredients, spread evenly, cover, and cook slowly one half hour. Fold, turn, and serve.
Brown the onions in hot fat, cut meat in two-inch pieces, add to onions, cover with hot water, and simmer two hours. Parboil potatoes. Add rice when meat has cooked one hour. Add parboiled potatoes one half hour before serving. Add tomato ten minutes before serving. Season with salt and pepper. The tomato may be omitted and one cup of water substituted.
Arrange the macaroni, mutton, and Tomato Sauce in layers, sprinkle each layer with salt and pepper, cover the top with the cracker crumbs which have been mixed with the butter, bake until the crumbs are brown.
Remove the bones from the lamb and tie in a roll. Place lamb on trivet in dripping pan, and pour the remaining ingredients over it. Cook in moderate oven, baste every ten minutes. Allow twenty minutes to the pound for cooking.
Serve with Tomato Sauce.
Mix the ingredients and shape into balls. Sauté in salt pork fat. Cover with Curry Sauce and cook in oven one hour. Serve on a bed of rice or macaroni.
Remove thin skin from kidneys and cut in small pieces; soak in cold water to cover for one hour. Drain, add two cups water and onion, and simmer until kidneys are tender. Melt butter, add flour and seasonings, and thicken water in which kidneys were cooked; cook five minutes.[378] Arrange kidneys on toast, and strain sauce over them. Serve immediately.
Wash the hearts (calves’ or lambs’ hearts are the most tender). Sprinkle with salt and pepper and dredge with flour. Sauté in pork fat, adding onion when half sautéd. Cover with water and cook in covered dish in a slow oven for about three hours, adding more water if needed. Arrange hearts on platter, strain gravy over them, and garnish with toast points.
Wash the heart, stuff-with Cracker Stuffing. Sew. Arrange one half cup each of onions and carrots in the bottom of a baking dish, place the heart on this bed. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour, and bake two hours. Baste often with pork fat. Remove from pan and make a brown gravy, using three tablespoons of the fat from the pan, adding three tablespoons flour and one and one half cups boiling water. Serve gravy around heart.
Wash the liver and chop, cook in boiling water five minutes, drain, add bread crumbs and chop, add remaining ingredients, and press into bread pan. Cover, and bake one hour in slow oven.
Soak the crumbs in milk until soft, add remaining ingredients. Pour into bread pan, baste with water, butter, or pork fat, and bake one hour. Serve hot or cold with Tomato Sauce.
Wipe, roll, and skewer the forequarter of mutton from which the bones have been removed. Brown in a small amount of fat in a hot frying pan. Parboil four potatoes. Drain. Put a layer of potatoes in deep pudding dish, cover with a layer of sliced onions, sprinkle with flour, salt, and pepper. Put the meat on the vegetables and add one cup water or stock. Cover and cook in a slow oven three hours. Add more liquid if needed, but if the oven is right, no more should be necessary.
Cut salt pork in one fourth inch slices, cover with boiling water, and cook five minutes. Drain, arrange in frying pan, and cook slowly for five minutes, then more rapidly until crisp and brown on both sides.
Cut salt pork in thin slices, cover with boiling water, and cook five minutes. Drain and sauté, or dip in Fritter Batter, and sauté in pork fat or fry in deep fat.
Remove the thin skin from the kidneys, and cut in one fourth inch slices. Wash, soak in acidulated water one half hour. Drain, season, dip in butter, then in crumbs, and broil five minutes. Serve on hot platter with Maître d’Hôtel Butter.
Season a solid piece of beef, either the round or vein, with salt and pepper. Dredge with flour. Brown in a frying pan with a small amount of fat. Place in kettle, add one cup boiling water, cover closely, and cook in slow oven until meat is tender. If the water cooks away, add just enough to keep the meat from burning. Serve hot with Brown Gravy or Tomato Sauce.
Put meat in casserole, add salt and pepper to taste, and the hot water. Mix the remaining ingredients with the mashed potato, and spread on top of meat; bake in hot oven until potato is brown.
Arrange rice and cheese in alternate layers in buttered baking dish, add remaining ingredients, allowing sufficient milk to moisten. Cover with buttered cracker crumbs. Bake until crumbs are brown.
Pour sour milk into a cheese cloth. When all of the whey has drained through, season the curd with salt, add a[381] very small amount of butter or cream, and form into balls. Chill and serve. If the curd is not thick, it may be necessary to heat the sour milk, but heat is apt to make the curd tough.
Boil sugar and juice seven minutes, add butter, and serve.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients three times. Beat egg, add cream, molasses, and remaining ingredients, and beat until smooth. Pour into buttered pan and bake in moderate oven twenty to thirty minutes.
Cover peaches with cold water and soak over night. Cover tapioca with cold water and soak two hours. Drain tapioca, add boiling water and salt, and cook in double boiler until transparent. Drain peaches, add sugar, and cook in double boiler until tender; add lemon juice. Put peaches in bottom of baking dish, pour over tapioca mixture, and bake twenty minutes. Serve hot or cold with sugar and cream.
Prepare the same as Peach Tapioca, substituting one cup apricots for the peaches.
Arrange ingredients in layers, having crumbs on top layer. Dot over with butter. Cover and cook one hour.
Soak tapioca over night. Cook in boiling water until transparent. Cook gooseberries and sugar together until soft; add lemon juice. Combine mixtures and serve cold.
Mix and sift dry ingredients, add shortening, and chop until mealy; add well-beaten eggs and cranberries. Pour into popover bowls and steam one and one half hours. Serve with Cranberry Sauce.
Soak tapioca over night. Cook in double boiler until transparent. Soak prunes over night. Drain, add one cup water, and simmer until tender. Remove stones and cut prunes in pieces. Add seasonings to tapioca. Arrange tapioca and prunes in layers in a buttered pudding dish. Cover, bake in a moderate oven one half hour. Serve with sugar and milk.
Butter the bread, arrange buttered bread, rhubarb cut in small pieces, and sugar in layers in buttered baking dish. Steam one hour and bake uncovered one half hour.
Cook sugar and water together ten minutes. Pare, core, and cut apples in thick round slices. Add lemon slices to sirup, and cook apples, a few slices at a time, until all are cooked. Arrange rice in bottom of serving dish. Arrange slices of apple overlapping each other, on top of rice. Boil the sirup until thick, and pour over apples. Cool and serve. Pears, peaches, or oranges may be substituted for apples.
Scald milk, add cornstarch which has been mixed with a small amount of cold milk, cook ten minutes. Mix other ingredients, add to cornstarch mixture, cook one minute. Pour into serving dish. Chill and serve.
We also call attention to the following economical dishes given elsewhere in the book and to be found in the Index.
A. B. Z. of our own Nutrition | Horace Fletcher |
A Cook Book for Nurses | Sarah C. Hill |
Bacteria Yeasts and Molds in the Home | H. W. Conn |
Boston Cook Book | Mary J. Lincoln |
Boston Cooking School Cook Book | Fannie M. Farmer |
Canning and Preserving | S. T. Rorer |
Century Cook Book | Mary Ronald |
Cereals in America | T. F. Hunt |
Chemistry of Cookery | Mattieu Williams |
Chemistry and Economy of Food | Atwater |
Cost of Food | Richards |
Cost of Living | Richards |
Dainty Breakfasts | Phyllis Browne |
Dietetic Value of Bread | Goodfellow |
Elements of the Theory and Practice of Cookery | Williams & Fisher |
Fish as Food | U. S. Department of Agriculture |
Food and its Functions | James Knight |
Foods and their Adulterations | Wiley |
Food and the Principles of Dietetics | R. Hutchison |
Food Products of the World | Mary E. Green, M.D. |
Handbook of Invalid Cooking | Mary A. Boland |
Home Science Cook Book | Anna Barrows and Mary J. Lincoln |
Hostess of To-day | L. H. Larned |
How to Cook for the Sick and Convalescent | H. V. Sachse |
I Go A-marketing | “Henrietta” |
Luncheons | Mary Ronald |
Made Over Dishes | Mrs. Rorer |
Marion Harland’s Complete Cook Book | Marion Harland |
Practical Cooking and Serving | Janet McK. Hill |
Salads, Sandwiches, and Chafing Dish Dainties | Janet McK. Hill |
Vegetarian Cookery | A. G. Payne |
Young Housekeeper | Maria Parloa |
Anchovy—A fish caught in the Mediterranean.
Anchovy Essence—Consists of pounded anchovies cooked with water, vinegar, spices, and mushrooms.
Angelica—A plant, the stalks of which are preserved, used for decorating.
Appetizers—Cold hors d’œuvres, side dishes, served preliminary to the dinner, supposed to create an appetite for something more substantial.
Aspic—Savory jelly.
Au, Aux—To or with.
Baba Cakes—Sweet Cakes raised with yeast.
Bain-marie—A double boiler.
Bisque—A paste or purée.
Blanch—To scald.
Bombe—Ices in a mold, an outside coating of one kind, a filling of another.
Bouchée—Mouthful.
Bouillon—Beef broth.
Brioche—A bread made rich with eggs.
Brochette—A skewer.
Canapé—Pieces of toast or bread, spread with some mixture.
Caviare—Salted and smoked sturgeon roe.
Curaçoa—A cordial.
Cutlets—Steaks of veal, lamb, mutton, or pork.
Entrée—A made dish served as a course or between courses.
Foie-gras—Fat liver; especially the liver of fat geese.
Fondue—Cheese and eggs cooked together.
Fondant—Cooked and beaten sugar, ready to flavor and mold for centers of bonbons.
Française—In French style.
Frappé—Half frozen.
Fricassee—Originally meat fried and served with a sauce.
Gherkins—Small cucumbers.
Giblets—The neck, liver, gizzard, and heart of poultry or game.
Glacé—Glossed over.
Hors d’œuvres—Side dishes.
[388]Italienne—In Italian style.
Jardinière—Mixed vegetables.
Koumiss—Fermented milk.
Macedoine—A mixture of several fruits or vegetables.
Marinade—A pickle composed of vinegar, oil, salt, and pepper.
To Marinate—To pickle in a French Dressing.
Marrons—Chestnuts.
Mayonnaise—Salad sauce.
Meringue—Mixture of sugar and white of egg beaten together.
Mignon—Small.
Mousse—Moss, froth, something light and spongy.
Mulligatawny—Curry soup.
Noir—Black.
Papillote—Paper.
Parfait—Perfect.
Pâté—Paste.
Pilaf—Turkish dish of rice and tomatoes.
Potage—Soup.
Printanière (à la)—With young spring vegetables.
Purée—Ingredients rubbed through a sieve.
Ragoût—A highly seasoned fish or meat dish.
Rissoles—Something crisp.
Riz—Rice.
Roux—Butter and flour mixed and used for thickening.
Sabayon—A custard flavored with wine.
Salamander—An iron, similar to a large poker, used for browning surfaces, which cannot be placed in the oven.
Salmi—A rich stew, generally of game.
Scones—Scotch name for baking powder biscuit.
Sippett—Small cubes of fried bread.
Sorbet—Frozen punch.
Soufflé—A puff, something light and fluffy.
Syllabub—Old English name for whipped and flavored cream.
Are known and sold almost everywhere. The reason they have the largest sales in the world is that they are superfine goods at reasonable prices. They are made of Mother Nature’s own fruits and saps and nuts—pure.
Owing to their purity you can eat them freely and still be happy. They are safe for children.
The dinner table is not complete without a dish of bonbons to decorate it, and to enjoy at dessert.
LOWNEY’S BONBONS ARE UNIFORM, DELICIOUS, PURE
Read it thoroughly, especially the introductions to chapters and the whole of Part I, where the sections on Marketing, Methods of Cooking, and Just How will be helpful to everybody and the other sections useful for special purposes. It is important to know the difference between frying and sautéing and between boiling and simmering; how to clarify fat; how to egg and crumb, and many other things that are treated in Part I and cannot be repeated in the receipts.
At the beginning of the chapter on Cereals, for instance, will be found general directions for their preparation for which there is no room in each receipt, and the same is true of the section on Pastry under Desserts and the chapters on Meats, Fish, Vegetables, Sandwiches, Frozen Desserts, etc.
Don’t confine your use of a cook book to merely consulting an individual receipt as it is wanted.
The Index is a valuable part of the book and use of it should be made always to save searching. Most receipts are entered there twice. For instance, Green Turtle Soup will be found under “Soups” and also under “Green” and Dutch Apple Cake will be found under “Cakes” and under “Dutch.”
The Glossary, page 387, will give definitions of most of the French words and technical terms used in the book.
The Bibliography, page 385, will furnish the names of thirty or more books that will be useful to those who want a small library on culinary science. Or any one of them can be ordered of the nearest bookseller if the title and author’s name is furnished. Lowney’s Cook Book is the only book on sale by The Walter M. Lowney Company.
Follow the Receipts exactly. Every rule in Lowney’s Cook Book has been tried at least twice for this book in order to insure accuracy of measurements. You will get the best results by using the materials carefully measured just as prescribed in the receipts. The table of weights and measures on page 33 will be helpful. The only possible excuse for departing from the quantities called for is where you suspect your materials to be of less strength than pure materials should be.
The rules for length of time in cooking should also be carefully observed.
Some kitchens do not contain all the condiments, etc., called for in the book. We can only say that you will not be able to get such delicious, satisfying results without them; but you may get fair results, especially if you use good judgment and have cultivated your skill in making dishes taste right. But nothing will take the place of the spice bag in making soups or of proper seasoning in a host of other dishes.
Cocoa and chocolate are the roasted and ground product of the beans of a delicate tropical tree, usually grown in the shade of larger and hardier trees and known as “Theobroma Cacao.” This name was given to it by the distinguished botanist, Linnæus, out of compliment to its delicious flavor and nutritious qualities,—the word meaning “the food of the gods.” The beans are obtained from large pods shaped somewhat like cucumbers, which grow on the trunk and lower branches of this tree.
Cocoa has nothing whatever to do with the cocoanut, the fruit of a variety of palm tree; nor with coca, a nerve tonic derived from a variety of South American flax; nor with cocaine, a dangerous anæsthetic.
Cocoa differs from chocolate only because a portion of the cocoa butter has been pressed out of cocoa; whereas chocolate retains the full amount of this remarkable vegetable fat, which is extremely nutritious and has the quality of never becoming rancid. To the latter fact cocoa butter owes its popularity as a cosmetic.
Chocolate had been known to the Aztecs and had been a favorite drink with them—and especially with their king, Montezuma—long before the conquest of Mexico by Cortez, who was the first to introduce it into Europe.
The Spaniards, desiring to keep a good thing to themselves, were very secretive about the new beverage and its preparation, and this attitude accounts for the remarkable[414] slowness with which it became known to Northern Europe. Moreover, its price was almost prohibitive in those days. It took two centuries for it to become really known in London, and it is only in modern times that cultivation and improved methods have brought it into general consumption at a low price. When we consider its nutritive value as a food in addition to its delicious flavor as a beverage, cocoa is the cheapest beverage there is. Chocolate has several times the value of beef per pound and the same is true in only a slightly less degree of cocoa; and cocoa has the added advantage of being so very digestible that it is suited for the use of children and invalids.
After the pods containing the beans are collected, they are cut open, and the beans—some twenty-five or more to each pod—are scooped out, together with a small amount of the pulp surrounding them and are very slightly fermented in tanks or pits. This process of fermentation largely determines the flavor and their selling value.
After being dried thoroughly in the sun they are packed in bags and shipped to the northern markets. Some of the highest quality of beans come from Venezuela, Trinidad and Ecuador, but they are cultivated also in many of the West India islands, in tropical South America, the west coast of Africa, Ceylon, Java, and even in some of the islands of the Pacific.
The process of manufacture begins with roasting the beans to just the right degree to produce the best flavor, after blending the different varieties so as to insure a fullness and richness of taste. These two processes are most important in determining the quality of cocoa. The roasted beans are placed in a crusher and the shells are winnowed out, leaving the nibs. The shells are either thrown away, as we treat them, or are sold for a trifle to[415] make a beverage which distantly resembles cocoa at a great cost of fuel.
The nibs are ground in large mills and immediately turn to a heavy liquid like molasses, owing to 50% of the beans being vegetable fat. In making cocoa, this liquid is poured into hydraulic presses and a considerable part of the cocoa butter pressed out. The dry cakes of powder remaining are pulverized, bolted and packed in cans for sale.
To make chocolate, the liquid above mentioned is molded in pans without abstraction of any cocoa butter and without the addition of any flavor or sugar. These cakes are the “Premium Chocolate” used in cooking, which used to be known as “Bitter Chocolate” because of its being unsweetened.
Milk Chocolate and Vanilla Sweet Chocolate, for eating purposes, are sweetened before being molded, and in the case of Lowney’s Milk Chocolate, has the richest cream from our own blooded Jersey cows added to it. The Vanilla Sweet Chocolate is sweetened and flavored with vanilla beans of the best quality, which we buy and grind ourselves.
The growth of the consumption of cocoa in its powdered form of recent years has been remarkable. It is superseding the old method of boiling for hours the cracked cocoa nibs at a great cost of fuel and with far less satisfactory results both as to flavor and as to the nutritive qualities of the cocoa.
Cocoa and chocolate differ from tea and coffee because they hold in solution one of the most nutritious foods known to man; whereas tea and coffee are simply infusions, that is to say, hot water plus the flavor, and have no nutritive value whatever except so far as they are mixed with sugar and cream.
Moreover, besides being a food, cocoa and chocolate differ from tea and coffee in giving the least possible stimulus, if any, to the nerves, and consequently are followed by the slightest, if any, reaction. Theobromin, the alkaloid which forms the essential flavor of cocoa and chocolate, although very similar chemically to the alkaloids, thein and caffeine, which are the natural flavoring elements of tea and coffee, differs from them in not being an excitant to the nerves.
You should remember in using cocoa and chocolate as beverages that they are strong foods and consequently just so much less other food should be taken when cocoa is used rather than other beverages. Otherwise, a case of overeating may ensue without your knowing what the matter is.
Many persons use hot beverages for two chief purposes: first, to wash their food down and save themselves the trouble of thorough mastication; and second, to get something hot into the stomach and revive the nerves. Such persons should remember that cocoa and chocolate are like soups in their nutritive value and not to be used like water, tea, or coffee.
Cocoa or chocolate with bread would be a sufficiently nutritive diet to prolong life indefinitely. In fact one woman in Martinique lived on chocolate exclusively for many years. This was possible because it contains all of the elements necessary to sustain human life. Under these circumstances, we urge that cocoa and chocolate shall be considered and treated as foods, as well as most delicious drinks.
For those who care for a scientific analysis of the cocoa bean, we will add the approximate figures of one chemist:
Water | 3% |
Protein | 15% |
Fat | 50% |
Starch | 13% |
Other non-nitrogenous matter | 11½% |
Woody fiber | 3% |
Ash | 4% |
Based on such analyses as these, food experts accord to chocolate and cocoa a very high food value as producers of energy and heat. The ratio of fat and protein is so fortunately balanced to the needs of the human system that all experts agree on its being one of the most nutritious of known foods, and it is on this fact that we base our claim that it is cheap as a beverage, as well as most delicious. It has a fine delicate flavor of the tropics of which one never tires and is wholesome, strengthening, and harmless. It is especially suited to children, for whom it should be the only hot beverage provided.
Lowney’s Milk Chocolate is a delicious confection and a most nourishing food. It is made of pure chocolate, the finest cream from our own herd of blooded Jersey cows, and pure vanilla, sweetened with the best granulated sugar, powdered in our own factory.
IT IS GOOD FOR SCHOOL LUNCHES, PICNICS,
AND AFTER MEALS
The Reason this chocolate has a more refined flavor than others, is owing to the quality of the cocoa beans and the costly vanilla beans used. Price is a secondary consideration in buying the materials for this eating chocolate. The main thing is to make it perfect. Each of the materials is used as Mother Nature grew them. There is no “treatment” nor adulteration of any kind whatever.
THAT IS WHY THE LOWNEY PRODUCTS
ARE SO DIGESTIBLE
Lowney’s “Always Ready” Sweet Cocoa Powder has a rich chocolate flavor—especially when boiled five minutes—for drinking, and besides makes the simplest and best icing for cake, by simply pouring hot water over it. It is delicious as flavoring for ice cream.
IF YOUR DEALER DOES NOT KEEP IT, ASK
HIM TO GET IT FOR YOU
Lowney’s Premium Chocolate goes further than other cooking chocolates, because it is absolutely pure, and is made of the choicest and highest-priced cocoa beans, especially selected and blended. It is what used to be called “bitter chocolate,” because it is unsweetened. It is very economical to use in cooking, because every atom of it is the choicest chocolate,—no adulteration in Lowney’s.
INSIST ON HAVING LOWNEY’S PREMIUM CHOCOLATE
THE DEALER CAN GET IT EASILY IF YOU INSIST
Is made from the choicest cocoa beans—the highest priced—ground very fine, with a part of the cocoa butter pressed out to make it more digestible. Every atom of it is cocoa. It contains not one particle of adulterant, substitute, coloring matter, or chemical.
Lowney’s Cocoa has a perfect natural flavor.
Good food means health
Variety in food induces appetite and good digestion
Pure food should be insisted on. It goes further, nourishes more, and saves doctors’ bills
You can eat freely of Lowney’s Chocolate Bonbons, because they are pure
Lowney’s Cocoa is all cocoa
The Lowney Products are all wholesome as well as delicious
Obvious punctuation errors repaired. Six blank pages one presumes for recipes and notes of the book’s owner, were originally located after page 422.
Page 21, “a là” changed to “à la” (beef à la mode)
Page 29, “Maitre” changed to “Maître” (Maître d’hôtel Butter)
Page 54, “hops” changed to “chops” (Cook chops in hissing)
Page 231, “cup” changed to “cups” (cups bread crumbs)
Page 310, “coffe” changed to “coffee” (1 cup coffee)
Page 311, Orangeade recipe, the amount of orange juice required was missing its measurement. After consulting an earlier edition of this cookbook, ⅔ was added before “orange juice” for this recipe.
Page 349, “tablespo” changed to “tablespoon” (tablespoon prepared barley)
Page 390, “Bombé” changed to “Bombe” (Bombe Glacé, Raspberry)
Page 392, “Carrott” changed to “Carrot” (Carrot Fritters)
Page 399, “232” changed to “332” (Green Tomato, 332)
Page 416, “caffein” changed to “caffiene” (and caffeine, which)
Page 420, “d’Hotel” changed to “d’Hôtel” (la Maître d’Hôtel)