Ruth Berolzheimer. - The American Woman's Cook Book
Ruth Berolzheimer. - The American Woman's Cook Book
A MERICAN
From the collection of the
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From the
DELINEATOR COOK BOOK
Edited by
Delineator Institute,
Mildred Haddocks Bentley, Director
Published for
Copyright,
MCMXXVIII
MCMXXXIV
by
Butterick Publishing Company
Entered at Stationers' Hall, London, England
Copyright,
MCMXXXVIII
by
Consolidated Book Publishers,
Incorporated
PAGE PAGE
Useful Facts about Food - 1 Salad Dressings - - 446
How to Buy Food - 35 Cakes - - - - - 451
Food Values and Meal Cake Fillings and Frost -
Planning
- - - - 39 ings ----- 472
Menu Making - 47 Cookies, Doughnuts, Gin-
The Scliool Lunch - 60 gerbread, Small Cakes - 483
Table Setting and Service 64 Candies - 502
- 83
Carving Fruit Desserts - - - - 517
Garnishes - - - - 88 Custards, Gelatin and
Cereals ------ 92 Cream Desserts - - 525
Yeast Breads 97 Hot and Cold Puddings - 539
- - - 117
Quick Breads -
Frozen Desserts - - - 557
Sandwiches - - - - 131 Sauces for Desserts - - 579
Toast ------ 156 Pastry and Meringues - 585
- - - - - 158
Appetizers French Recipes - - - 615
Soups ------165 Hot and Cold Beverages 635
Soup Accessories - - - 186 Food for Invalids - - - 650
Fish - - - - 191 High Altitude Cooking - 657
Meat - 228 Canning, Preserving and
Poultry and Game - - 274 Jelly Making - - - 658
Stuffings for Fish, Meat, Pickles and Relishes - - 687
Poultry and Game - - 303 Casserole and Oven Cook-
Sauces for Fish, Meat, ery 701
Poultry, Game and Cooking for Two - - - 710
Vegetables - - - - 307 Cooking at the Table - - 718
Entrees and Made- Over Food Equivalents - - - 722
Dishes ----- 326 The Friends Who Honor
Vegetarian Dishes - - - 351 Us - 724
Egg Dishes - - - - - 360 Herbs, Spices, Extracts - 730
Cheese 374 Foreign Words and Phrases 734
Vegetables - - - - - 383 Wine Seasons Fine Food - 737
Salads 424 Index 759
List of Illustrations
IV
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
AT YOUR SERVICE
Unless otherwise specified, all recipes are based on service for six
persons. When cooking for more, multiply the ingredients in direct
proportion. When fewer are to be served, divide by two or three
as necessary. A full discussion of the problems of small quantity
preparations is found in the chapter entitled "Cooking for Two"
VI
m
m
p II
THE FORMAL
TEA PARTY IS THE
OPPORTUNITY FOR AIL
YOUR DAINTIEST. TOUCHES
The editor wishes to acknowledge the gen-
All color plates, end papers and illustrations on the jacket are
by courtesy of
THE CARNATION MILK COMPANY
and
LAND 0' LAKES CREAMERIES
USEFUL FACTS ABOUT
FOOD
USE OF RECIPES
a good cook requires more than the blind follow-
TO become
ing of a recipe. This is frequently illustrated when several
women living in the same community, all using the same
recipe, obtain widely differing results. It is the reason so
many
cooks say, "I had good luck with my cake to-day," or "I had
bad luck with my bread yesterday." Happily, luck causes
neither the success nor the failure of a product. To become a
good cook means to gain a knowledge of foods and how they
behave, and skill in manipulating them. The recipe by itself,
helpful as it is, will not produce a good product; the human
being using the recipe must interpret it and must have skill in
handling the materials it prescribes.
Some of the lessons which the person desiring to become a
good cook should learn are given in the following pages. They
will not be learned all at once; but if they are
gradually
mastered, luck will play a less important part in culinary con-
versation.
Fahrenheit. At
this temperature water will bubble vigorously
and as these bubbles come to the surface of the water steam
is
given off. (In mountainous regions, where the boiling-point
is affected by atmospheric pressure, allowance must be made
for the variation.)
SIMMERING is
cooking in water at a temperature of 180 F.
to 210 or below the boiling-point of water. Only an oc-
F.,
casional bubble is formed and rises slowly to the surface.
STEWING is cooking in a small amount of water. The water
may boil or simmer, as indicated for the food that is to be
cooked.
STEAMING is cooking in the steam generated by boiling water.
PRESSURE COOKING is
cooking in steam at a pressure of 5 to
30 pounds and at temperatures 228 F. to 274 F. The rise
in the temperature of the steam is caused
by holding it under
pressure. A
special cooker is necessary for this cooking. From
10 to 15 pounds (240 to 250 F.) is the pressure ordinarily
used for household purposes.
is cooking over or under or in front of a fire of
BROILING
or a gas or electric burner, or other direct heat.
live coals
FIRELESS COOKING
cooking by heat that has been retained
is
KNEADING A
stretching motion applied to dough when
more to be added than can be either stirred or beaten
flour is
COOKING BY TEMPERATURE
For best results in cooking, exact temperatures should be
known and followed. This requires the use of thermometers
such asan oven thermometer or an oven-heat regulator for all
sorts of baking, and special thermometers for sugar cookery,
deep-fat frying, and roasting meats.
AUTOMATIC MECHANICAL OVEN-HEAT REGULATORS which
control temperature automatically by regulating the supply of
heat are available in both gas and electric ranges. These are of
great assistance alike to the experienced cook who would always
obtain the same results with a given recipe and to the beginner
who has nothing to guide her in estimating the length of time
required to get the slow, moderate and hot stages in her oven.
HEAT REGULATORS OR TEMPERATURE CONTROLS must al-
ways be built into a gas range at the factory, and they must
usually be built into electric ranges. For both types of stove
they may be set to control a desired temperature automatically.
Once set, they will maintain the temperature to within a few
degrees Fahrenheit of that indicated, for an indefinite period.
TIME CONTROLS now quite common on modern ranges
are
and even on cookers, and, in combination with the
fireless
Degrees Fahrenheit
Slow oven 250 to 350
Moderate oven 350 to 400
Quick or hot oven 400 to 450
Very hot oven 450 to 550
TABLE I
Temperature of Oven
Degrees Fahrenheit Baking Period
Yeast, white (loaves) 400 to 375 Minutes 60
graham or whole wheat
"
(loaves) 400to350 60
Baking-powder (quick bread,
"
loaves) 400 40 50
Corn bread (sheets) 400 Minutes 20 25
Biscuits, baking-powder 450 460 12 15
Muffins, yeast 400 425 20 30
baking-powder 400 425 20 25
Popovers 450 to 350 35 40
Rolls, yeast 400 425 20 25
Temperature of Oven
Cake Degrees Fahrenheit Baking Period
Angel 275300 Minutes 60 75
"
Butter, plain loaf 350 375 4560
sheet or cup 375 20 30
layer 375 20
"
pound 350 6075
Fruit, small 325 7590
large 275 Hours 3 4
Molasses, sheet 350 375 Minutes 25 30
cup 350375 1525
Sponge, loaf 300325
"
4060
sheet 325 30
Cookies
Drop 375 400 1215
Filled 400 425 1015
Ginger snaps 375 810
Macaroons 250 300 1520
Molasses 350375 1820
Thin, rolled 350375 1012
Gingerbread 350375 30 40
Pastry
Cheese straws, etc 500 Minutes 10
Cream puffs and eclairs 400 to 350 45
Meringues, cooked separately . .250 300 4060
on pies and puddings 300 350 S 10
Pie crust, shells, large pies . . . .450 500 20 40
tarts 400 450 1520
Pies, double crust with fruit
"
filling 450to425 40
single crust, (custard,
pumpkin, etc.) 450 to 325 40
Turnovers, etc 450 15
TABLE II
Puddings
Batter, cottage, etc 375 400 35 45
Bread 250350 4560
Indian 250350 Hours 23
Rice or tapioca 250 350 1 2
Scalloped Dishes
(not potatoes) 350 400 Minutes 15 30
Souffles
Timbales
(surrounded by water) 250 325 35 45
TABLE III
All boned cuts require longer cooking time than those with
the bones left in. Allow about 10 minutes per pound longer for
Poultry
Chicken 325 350 F. 2230
Duck, Goose 325 350 F. 2025
Turkey 300 350 F. 1525
Fish Total, mins.
Large 425 to 350 F. 1520
Small or riHets 425 to 350 F. 2030
SIMMERED OR BOILED
210
Simmering temperatures range from 180 F. to F.
o-1
Pot roasts (3-4 Ibs.)
Swiss steak
Total, hrs.
It tt
2
j
6
Ox 3 4
tongue
Poultry
Chicken (3 pounds) -
1V2
Fowl (4 to 5 pounds)
3 5 l/2
Turkey (10 pounds)
Fish
Small, thin Mins. per Ib. 5 10
Large, thick
1015
USEFUL FACTS ABOUT FOOD
BROILED OR SAUTEED
Meat Cooking Period
Chops, lamb or mutton Total, mins. 15 20
pork or veal 2030
Liver, calves or lambs 10 15
Steak, 1 inch thick (rare to medium) 1Q
" "
l /2 inch thick (rare to medium)
l
. 815
Poultry
Chicken 2030
Quail 10 20
Squab 10 20
Fish
Fillets 515
Shad, whitefish, bluefish, etc. 1520
FRIED
For fried meats, poultry and fish, see Table IV, following
TABLE IV
FRIED FOODS
Deep Fat Frying
Temperature of Fat
Degrees Fahrenheit Cooking Period
Croquettes
And all previously cooked foods 375 390 Total, mins. 2 5
Doughnuts, Fritters
And all raw batter and dough
mixtures 360 370 Total, mins. 2 3
Fish
Fillets (sole, cod, etc.) 390 46
Frogs' legs 390 23
Small fish (smelts, etc.) 375390 25
Medium sized fish (trout, etc.) . 390 25
Fishballs 375 390 25
Clams 390 12
Crabs 360 35
Oysters 375390 25
Scallops 360 2
_ Temperature of Fat
Meat and Poultry Degrees Fahrenheit Cooking Period
Chicken 375390 Total, mins.
" "
57
Chops or cutlets, breaded 375 400 5 8
"
Timbale Cases 390 "
11 y 2
Vegetables
French fried potatoes, onions,
etc 395 " "
6
4
TABLE V
EGGS
BOILED
Temperature of Water
Degrees Fahrenheit Cooking Period
Soft 212 Total, mins. 2 4
"
Hard 212 2030
CODDLED
Soft 180 200 Total, mins, 6 10
Hard 180200 30 45
BAKED
Temperature of Oven
Degrees Fahrenheit
Soft 250350 Total, mins.
" "
610
Hard ..250360 25 40
TABLE VI
FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
BOILED
Fruits Cooking Period Fruits Cooking Period
Apples, cut Mins. 5 8 Prunes, dried
whole 1525 (soaked 1 to 6
dried Hrs. 1 4 hours) Mins. 10
Apricots, dried . . . Hrs. /4
l
2 Pears, summer Mins. 10 20
Berries and small winter 60
fruits Mins. 10 15 Pineapple 20
Cranberries 10 Plums 12
" "
Figs, dried 20 Quince 15 40
" "
Peaches 12 Rhubarb ... 5
'USEFUL FACTS ABOUT FOOD II
Asparagus 15 30 "
Okra 20 40
Beans, shell or
1535 Macaroni, spa-
string w
Lima, green . . 15 35 ghetti, etc. . . ., 2535
Navy and Onions, young
"
other dried. . . Hrs. 3 4 (scallions) 815
Beet greens Mins. 1 5 30 old
"
2040
Beets, young 3050 Parsnips 20 40
old Hrs. 24 Peas, green
"
10 30
Broccoli Mins. 15 25 dried Hrs. 34
Brussels sprouts . . 1520 Potatoes,
Cabbage 520 white. . . Mins. 20 45
Carrots, young. . 1525 sweet 25 3O
old 2035 "
30 4O
Cauliflower .... 1530 Pumpkin (cut) . .
"
1530 Rice 2030
Celery 10
Spinach 5
Corn 7 12 "
Cucumber 520 Salsify 2045
Dandelion greens 2035 Squash, summer. 10 20
"
Dasheen 1535 winter 20 30
"
Eggplant 1520 Tomatoes
"
515
Kohlrabi . 2545 Turnips 15 40
BAKED
Temperature of Oven
Fruits Degrees Fahrenheit Baking Period
Apples 350375 Mins. 20 40
"
Bananas 400 450
"
1520
Pears 350375
"
4560
Rhubarb . .350 375 20
12
BAKED
Temperature of Oven
Vegetables Degrees Fahrenheit Baking Period
Beans, with pork 250 350 Hrs. 6 8
Cauliflower 375 400 Mins. 30
"
Eggplant (stuffed) 350375 30
"
Mushrooms 400 450 15
"
Onions, whole (stuffed) 400 450 60
"
sliced 400 450 30
Peppers (stuffed) 350375 30
Potatoes, sweet, in skins 400 450 30 40
white, in skins, large 450 500 45 60
small to medium 450 500 30 45
scalloped 350400 Hrs. 1 l /2
J
TABLE VII
CANDIES
Fondant (soft ball stage) 238 240
Fudge and Marshmallow (thread to soft ball stage) .... 230 238
Caramels and Nougat (stiff ball stage) 246 250
Molasses taffy and soft candies to be pulled (hard ball
stage) 245260
Hard (medium crack stage)
candies to be pulled 272 290
Toffee and butterscotch (medium to hard crack stage) . . 280 300
Clear brittle candies (hard crack stage) 290 310
BOILED FROSTING
1 egg-white to 1 cup sugar (soft to medium ball stage) 238 242
2 egg-whites to 1 cup sugar (stiff ball stage) 244 248
3 egg-whites to 1 cup sugar (hard ball stage) 254 260
USEFUL FACTS ABOUT FOOD 13
MEASUREMENTS
LEARN TO MEASURE ACCURATELY All the measurements in
this book, and in most modern cook-books and magazines, are
level. It will not do to use a heaping
teaspoon, tablespoon or
cup when a level one is meant. To change proportions by
wrong measuring causes poor results, for example:
Too much flour will make a cake dry and crumbly, bread
solid and heavy, sauces thick and pasty.
Too much fat will make cakes oily and may cause them to
fall; it willmake grease-soaked doughnuts and greasy gravies
and sauces.
Too much sugar make a cake with a hard crust, or a
will
sticky cake; it makes
a soft, sticky jelly.
Too much liquid will make a cake that falls easily.
Too much soda gives a disagreeable taste and bad color to
breads and cakes.
/z tablespoon flour or
l ( Makes a very thin sauce, which may
/z teaspoon corn-starch
l
(
be used in making thin cream soups.
Makes a thin sauce, which may be
1 tablespoon flour or used in making cream soups of aver-
1 teaspoon corn-starch )
age* thickness.
Makes a medium sauce, which may be
used for creamed meats or vegetables,
2 tablespoons flour or scalloped dishes, gravies or other
2 teaspoons corn-starch sauces where a medium thickness is
desired. It has about the thickness
of heavy cream.
CARAMEL
1 cup granulated sugar 1 cup boiling water
Put the sugar into a pan and melt slowly over direct heat.
Cook until dark brown, being careful not to scorch. Add the
hot water and cook slowly until a thick sirup is formed. (Be
USEFUL FACTS ABOUT FOOD 21
sure that the water is hot. Cold water will make the hot sugar
spatter.) This will keep indefinitely in a covered glass fruit
jarand is a popular flavoring for desserts, soups, meat sauces
and confectionery.
(Milk Product)
Cream (Vegetable Product)
Vegetable shortening compounds
easily and, properly cared for, they can be used over and over
again.
SOLID SHORTENINGS AND COOKING FATS Lard and meat
drippings for shortening and cooking date from the time when
all fats were prepared in the home.
Drippings are not possible for deep fat frying, because they
burn so easily; unless they are clarified and combined, when they
become a good mixed fat. They may be used for saut&ng or in
seasoning.
In the solid vegetable compounds, vegetable oils cottonseed,
corn, and sometimes peanut are solidified by a special process.
This gives certain characteristics of both the original oil and.
the solid fat, i.e.: they do not smoke or burn except at a high,
temperature. This makes them desirable for deep fat frying.
They do not easily melt which makes pastry making easy in ordi-
nary temperatures.
BUTTER Probably butter will never lose its place as the
favorite for eating. Its texture and flavor are particularly
Shortening
The term shortening includes fat of any kind that is used
in pastry, doughs, and batters. Any clean, sweet fat may be
used. The best known and most commonly used are butter,
solid vegetable fats, margarine, salad and cooking oil, lard and
BANANA FRIT-
TERSCAN BE
DONE IN A
SHALLOW PAN
USEFUL FACTS ABOUT FOOD
_^>-V^/-v_/^y\^v^^^^/'^*\^-V^^XV^^_rv^XV^/-v_/N^
at one
time, because (a) when the very hot fat cooks the food it
causes the moisture in the food to boil and this vigorous bub-
bling may cause the fat to bubble over the edge of the kettle,
with risk of fire; and (b) too much food may so cool the fat
as to delay the cooking and increase absorption of fat thus
4. When
the food is cooked to the desired brown color, re-
move at once, drain over the kettle for a few seconds, then
place on soft paper to finish draining.
5. After frying is completed, let fat cool until it is safe to
not seriously flavor the fat in which it is fried and the fat is
then useful for frying foods other than fish.
croquettes, fish balls, etc., (375 to 390 F.) the bread will
brown in 40 to 50 seconds.
HAVE THE RIGHT TEMPERATURE IN FRYING If fat is too
hot, it scorches the food, or does not cook it through, or spoils
the fat. If it is too cool, the food becomes soaked with fat. Fats
of low smoking temperature will naturally soak into food a
little more than fats of high smoking temperature, because the
food must remain longer in the fat.
clients, the egg in a batter and dough mixture will permit the
addition of more fat. If a cake is so rich that it has a tendency
to fall, the addition of another egg may cure the difficulty. If
it is not rich enough, yet falls when more fat is added, putting
in another egg permits the use of more fat. If richer muffins
are desired, the same rule holds good; eggs as well as fat may
need to be added if the product is to retain its lightness. In
fancy yeast breads such as zwieback, brioche, rusks and fancy
rolls, the large amount of fat present does not reduce the light-
ness of the mixture, in part at least because of the effects of the
egg present.
EGG INCREASES POWER OF BATTER OR DOUGH TO HOLD
LIQUID Egg causes the liquid to be distributed in smaller
particles throughout a batter and dough mixture. This makes
it possible for the mixture to hold more liquid, without inter-
fering with its lightness, than it could hold if the eggs were
absent. Therefore, a bread or cake dough made with egg can
be made softer than one in which egg is not used. This adds
to the delicacy of the product. The popover is the most in-
teresting illustration of a batter that is very light in spite of the
large amount of liquid present.
3 egg-yolks /
Good foundation for ice-cream if less than one-
fourth to one-half its bulk of cream is to be used.
by the fat, and the yolk is leathery where touched by the fat.
stops frothing, coats the spoon, and has the thickness of cream.
Remove at once.
TO PASTEURIZE MILK
If there is any question about the cleanliness of fresh milk
to be used for drinking, it should be pasteurized or boiled.
Infants or small children should never be fed any milk about
which there is the slightest doubt.
FLASH PROCESS Put it into a covered container set over hot
water. Heat until the milk reaches a temperature of 160 to
165 F. Hold at this temperature for one-half to one minute.
Cool as quickly as possible and keep in a cold place.
HOLDING PROCESS Heat untilmilk reaches 140 to 150 F.
Hold at this temperature for about 30 minutes.
Pasteurized milk, if kept too long, is apt to putrefy instead
of becoming sour. If any pasteurized milk is left over and
there is danger of its spoiling before it can be used, it may be
mixed with a little sour milk and set in a warm place until
it all becomes sour. Sour milk may be kept for some days.
TO BOIL MILK
FLASH METHOD Put it into a shallow pan and cook quickly
over direct heat so that the milk brought as rapidly as possible
is
making the figure eight with the spoon, as this brings the spoon
the greatest number of times in contact with the part of the
kettle receiving the most heat.
When the milk has boiled up once, remove from the fire
and cool as rapidly as possible.
*
THE MACHINE BEATS TIME
j AS WELL AS BATTER WHILE
* YOU SUPPLY THE BRAIN THAT
| MAKES THE CAKE
;''*
C
-. *llf!
fwita
X
A LITTLE LEMON
DOES THE TRICK
WHEN YOU'RE WHIP-
PING MILK OR CREAM
INTO SHAPE
Irradiated Evaporated
Milk Institute
USEFUL FACTS ABOUT FOOD 33
TO WHIP CREAM
To whipeasily cream must be thick. This requires that it
must contain not less than 20 per cent butter fat. Best results
are obtained when it contains 25 to 40 per cent butter fat.
Fresh cream does not whip well even when it contains more
than 20 per cent butter fat. This is because lactic acid is
produced as cream ages, and the acid thickens the cream. The
addition of one-half teaspoon commercial lactic acid to each
pint of cream will do the same thing that is accomplished by
twelve to twenty-four hours standing.
Warm cream will not whip well because warmth thins cream.
As cream is chilled, the fat congeals and the cream thickens.
Cream set on the ice for two hours will whip easily, if it is rich
enough and old enough. The best temperature for whipping
cream is between 35 and 50 Fahrenheit. Cream is doubled in
bulk after whipping.
\u
ft H\
HOW TO BUY FOOD
PHOUGHT should be given to the expenditure of the money
* allotted to food, as a balanced diet, so necessary to health,
depends on the wise apportionment of that allowance. The fol-
lowing rules apply to the average healthy family; they may be
modified by each housewife to meet her own special needs.
Milk
Spend as much for milk as is necessary to secure for each child
three-quarters of a quart to a quart of milk a day and for every
one else in the family from one-third to one-half quart of
milk a day. If you can not afford whole milk, buy skim milk
for the children. Cheese may replace a part of the milk for
adults if they prefer it. Two
ounces of cheese may be substi-
tuted for about one-third of a quart of milk.
Cereals
Buy cereals in variety. Be sure to include a generous pro-
portion of cereals made from the whole grain. These contain
elements of nutrition that are lost when the outer coat is
removed, and also furnish part of the necessary roughage in the
diet. Such cereals are especially desirable when it is difficult to
use as great a quantity of vegetables and fruits as these rules call
for.
35
Fat
For each grown person, every day, buy at least one and one-
half ounces of fat (butter, cooking fat, cream, fat from meat,
etc.). For children buy at least one-half as much, unless the
chUd getting a quart of whole milk daily; in that case2 he
is is
Sweets
Buy only moderate amounts of sugar, molasses, honey or
sirup.
keep a record of good and poor grades so that she may ask for
the quality she prefers. Canned goods that are used frequently
should be purchased in case lots, as a wholesale or reduced price
can be obtained in that way.
The canneries have the sizes of cans well standardized and the
housewife will find it to her advantage to know the common
sizes. The following list gives the size of the can by numbei
together with an approximate estimate of its contents:
*
Supplies a small amount of Vitamin D
t When irradiated, an excellent source of Vitamin D
ft An excellent source of Vitamins A and D
Supplies a small amount of Vitamin D
t When irradiated, an excellent source of Vitamin D
FOOD VALUES AND MEAL PLANNING 43
FOOD CALORIES
Chocolate eclair 260-400
Chocolate fudge, 1-inch cube 80-90
Chocolate malted milk, large glass 465
Coleslaw, 3^ cup 50
Corn bread, average piece 120
Corn flakes, %
cup 100
Crackers, graham 100
Crackers, soda 85
Cream, heavy, per teaspoon 60
Cream, whipped, per teaspoon 35
Cream, thin, per teaspoon 30
Cucumbers
Currants, dry, 34 cup 182
Cup custard, ^
cup 150
100
Dates, 3 or 4
Doughnut 200
Duck, small helping 120
Egg 70-75
Eggnog, 1 cup 200
Farina, cooked, % cup 100
Fig, average, dry 100
Filberts, 8 to 10 100
French dressing, 1 teaspoon 67
Grapefruit, 3^, average size 70
Grapefruit, ^, average size, with honey or sugar 140
Grapefruit juice 45
Grape juice 100
Grapes, large bunch 100
20 to 25 100
Grapes, Malaga,
'.
Lunch or Supper
An egg, cheese or milk dish.
Succulent vegetable or salad.
Bread and butter, toast, muffins, or plain sandwiches.
Milk for children. Any preferred beverage for adults.
MENU MAKING 49
Dinner
Meat or other flesh or an egg or cheese dish. Dried beans
may be used if milk or eggs are provided in the meal.
Potatoes, unless the meal includes dried beans, macaroni or
rice.
SIMPLE MENUS
Breakfasts
Strawberries with Cream Baked Pears
Corn Flakes Graham Muffins French Toast Maple Sirup
Coffee Milk Coffee Milk
Sliced Oranges
' COtS
66 and Bacon
Scrambled Eggs
r
_ A ToastT
,
Corn-meal Mush Buttered
Coffee Mi[ k
Coffee Milk
Luncheons or Suppers
Banana and Nut Salad Cream of Potato Soup
Muffins Honey Milk Tea Toasted Cheese Sandwiches
Fresh Fruit
Grapefruit
Scalloped Oysters Tunafish Salad
Toasted English Muffins French Fried Potatoes
Canned or Fresh Fruit Graham Gems
Tea Milk Floating Island Custard
DINNERS Continued
Pork Chops Baked with Apples Tomato Soup Bread Sticks
Scalloped Potatoes Baked Ham
String Beans Bread Southern Sweet Potatoes
Indian Pudding Green Peas Rolls
Lettuce Salad French Dressing
Fish Chowder with Water Wafers Meringues with Fruit and
Grapefruit Salad Whipped Cream
Graham Bread and Butter Coffee
Queen of Puddings
Cream of Corn Soup
Broiled Chicken Riced Potatoes Baked Hash Spinach with Egg
Corn Fritters Rolls Chocolate Bread Pudding
Tomato Jelly Salad Coffee
Apple Pie with Cheese
Salmon Loaf with Creamed Peas
Meat Pie with Potatoes, Carrots Mashed Potatoes
and Turnips Apple and Celery Salad
Tomato Salad Bread Banana Cream Pie
Prune Whip Custard Sauce
Fruit Cocktail
Broiled Halibut Stuffed Turbans of Flounders
Creamed Potatoes French Fried Potatoes
Chili Sauce Creamed Peas Bread or Rolls
Cole Slaw Brown Bread Tomato Salad
Rice Custard Fruit Ice Cakes Coffee
First Course
THE APPETIZER Any one of the following types of dishes,
with proper accompaniments, serves to whet the appetite:
Canapes or tiny open sandwiches made with highly flavored
mixtures. Raw oysters or clams; oyster or clam cocktails.
Grapefruit or fruit cocktail; avocado served with lemon-juice;
cantaloup, watermelon or similar fruit. Soup, preferably a
clear stock soup.
Second Course
ToSATISFY THE APPETITE For dinners, the piece de resis-
tance, or main course, may be any one of the following roasts
of meat, poultry, baked fish or game, with the proper accom-
paniments of vegetables and a starchy food such as rice or
macaroni.
For luncheons, the main course may be any one of the fol-
lowing a small steak, chops, made dishes or entrees of meat,
fish, poultry, game, eggs, or cheese, served with a succulent
Third Course
LIGHT, REFRESHING AND CRISP The salad course maybe
any simple vegetable salad with a suitable accompaniment of
MENU MAKING 55
Fourth Course
THE SWEET OR Bonne Bouche This course may consist of
any frozen dessert, sponge, whip, meringue with fruit, or any
individual tart or pastry.
Fifth Course
To KEEP THE SWEET FROM BEING Too WELL REMEMBERED
This course includes a demi-tasse of coffee, with sugar, and
cream if desired. It may include fruit or crackers and a cheese
with high flavor.
Order of Courses
The courses in a meal are served in the following order:
'
1. Appetizer 6. Salad
2. Soup 7. Dessert
3. Fish 8. Crackers and Cheese with Coffee
4. Roast 9. Nuts and Raisins
5. Game 10. Fruit
For the place of the entree, see chapter, Entrees and Made-
Over Dishes.
Thanksgiving Dinners
No. 1
No. 2
Grapefruit Baskets
Olives
Baked Guinea Hen with Gravy Crabapple Jelly
Candied Sweet Potatoes Cauliflower au Gratin
Tomato Jelly Salad Graham Bread Sandwiches
Individual Pumpkin Pie with Whipped Cream
Candied Orange Peel
Coffee
No. 3
Grapefruit
Baked Loin of Pork with Gravy Browned Potatoes Apple Sauc
or Baked Ham with Southern Sweet Potatoes
Tomato and Celery Salad French Dressing
Thanksgiving Plum Pudding Foamy Sauce
Coffee
Christmas Dinners
No. 1
.-*
&
No. 2
Cream of Celery Soup Bread Sticks
Salted Peanuts Stuffed Olives
Roast Beef Yorkshire Pudding
Potato Souffle Spinach in Eggs
White Grape Salad with Guava Jelly, French Dressing
Toasted Crackers
Plum Pudding, Hard Sauce Bonbons
Coffee
Wedding Menus
No. 1
Bouillon
Chicken a la King Buttered Rolls
Olives Celery
Molded Fruit Salad
Ice-cream Bride's Cake Groom's Cake
Coffee Candies
No. 2
Creamed Sweetbreads in Ramekins
Buttered Rolls Olives
Grapefruit Salad Wafers
Ice-cream in Fancy Molds
Bride's Cake Groom's Cake
Coffee Candies
No. 3
Hot or Iced Bouillon in Cups
Creamed Lobster or Shrimps in Croustades
Hot Buttered Rolls Asparagus-tip Salad
Bride's Cake Strawberry Ice-cream Groom's Cake
Candies Cdffee
No. 4
Molded Chicken Salad with Mayonnaise
Olives Radishes
Buttered Rolls
Frozen Strawberries with Whipped Cream
Bride's Cake Groom's Cake
Nuts Coffee Mints
Afternoon Tea
Assorted Sandwiches Small Cakes
Tea passed with Sugar, Cream and Sliced Lemon
Bonbons Nuts
Japanese Tea
Sweet Wafers Toasted Sponge Cake
Tea with Sliced Lemon
Nougat Candy Salted Nuts
No. 2
Chicken Salad
Olives Rye and White Bread Sandwiches
Ice-cream or Fruit Ice
Maple Cake Coffee
No. 3
Chicken Salad Sandwiches
Olives
Ice-cream Petits Fours
Fruit Punch Coffee
No. 2
Welsh Rarebit Toasted Crackers
Water Cress Salad with French Dressing
Olives Coffee
MENU MAKING 59
Children's Party
Fruit Cocktails
Chicken Sandwiches Jam Sandwiches
Vanilla Ice-cream Small Cakes
Birthday Cake with Name, Date and Candles
Orangeade Candy
School Reception
Fruit Ice or Ice-cream Small Cakes Candies
Punch Nuts
For Hikers
Bridge Supper
Jellied Meat Loaf
Vegetable Platter with Sour Cream Dressing
Toast Melba Clover Leaf Rolls Saltines
Marron Mousse Coffee
Crystallized Fruit Salted Nuts
Cocktail Party
Assorted Cocktails and Dry Wines
Salted Almonds Olives Potato Chips
Assorted Canapes
THE SCHOOL LUNCH
MENU SUGGESTIONS
(Milk appears in some form in each lunch.)
1. 4.
Cream of Spinach Soup (in Boston Brown Bread Sandwiches
vacuum container) with Cottage Cheese Filling
ra(
Raisin and x
u . . , ? n
Nut Bread i
and Butter
Cocoa, (in vacuum container)
A , c
Sandwiches Apple Sauce
r ,
Graham or Oatmeal Crackers
Apple Sauce
2. *
3'
6.
Cream Cheese Sandwiches Celery ,. ,
Scramb] ed Egg Sandwiches
Tomatoes and Rice (in vacuum
Lettuce Sandwiches
container)
Custard with Jelly and Graham Milk (in container. See next page)
Crackers Orange Molasses Cookie
62
Preparation of Food
SANDWICHES Since sandwiches form a main part of the
school lunch, their preparation is most important.
Wholesome breads should be used for sandwiches. Graham,
whole wheat, oatmeal, brown, raisin, and nut bread are ex-
cellent.Cold bran or whole wheat muffins or filled rolls are
often tempting.
Fillings for the sandwiches for the school lunch require some
special preparation. The filling should be abundant in amount
and should play an important part in the sandwich.
Cheese, meat, eggs, nuts, dried fruits or vegetables should be
put through the food-chopper. Cream cheese, peanut butter
and other compact substances should be thinned with cream.
Ground meats, eggs, and vegetables should be moistened with
a small amount of salad dressing or cream and vinegar. Suc-
culent vegetables should be provided, if possible. Finely
chopped celery, lettuce, water cress or sliced tomato may be
used alone or with cottage cheese. Finely cut pineapple or
orange may be used in sandwiches.
Jellies, jams and conserves make sweet sandwiches or a tiny
jar of the fruited sweet may be tucked into the lunch box.
Dried figs, dates, raisins, thoroughly washed and steamed in a
small sieve or strainer over boiling water for thirty minutes and
then ground and moistened with a small amount of fruit- juice
or salad dressing, make excellent sandwiches.
Pickles, chow-chow and relishes should take a subordinate
place in the school lunch box.
The chapter on Sandwiches (See Index) , gives full directions
and recipes for a variety of sandwiches.
HOT DISHES Special vacuum containers make it possible to
send hot cocoa or hot soup with the lunch, also a creamed
vegetable, a hot pudding or other hot food. These containers
should never be filled the night before the lunch is prepared.
If foods prepared for dinner are to be used for the school
lunch, these foods should be kept in a cool place, uncovered,
over night and reheated in the morning.
MILK If there is
any possibility that the milk will not keep
sweet for three hours, it may be put while cold into the vacuum
container. Good milk properly kept should be in good con-
dition if carried in a milk bottle or small glass fruit-jar.
THE SCHOOL LUNCH 63
glass, and linen furthers the art of gracious living in the house-
hold.
CHINA
Perhaps in greater degree than any other domestic appoint-
ments, does china present an opportunity for indulgence of per-
sonal whim and the exercise of good taste on the part of the hos-
tess. Today there are patterns for every occasion. Breakfast
china is gay, sprightly; color runs rampant upon it; often whole
gardens shine on its face. But it would not be used for a
dinner, which demands fine china of exquisitely fine design.
Luncheon is still another thing. Its china may vary as the
season or as the whim of the hostess.
Modern day impatience with formula and rite is nowhere
more eloquently expressed than in the growing custom of using
different patterns for different courses, all related by the thread
of harmony. The hostess of today considers sameness identical
with boredom. If she uses a cobalt and gold service plate, she
may elect to use a simple gold-banded entree plate. The fish
plate perhaps may have yellow bands to match the flowers in
the center. The roast plate may present a pattern border,
touched with gold, and yellow, and blue. Her dessert plate will
be utterly different from any of the foregoing: it may strike
an entirely new note; but it will not be discordant or jarring.
Obviously, all dishes used in one course should match.
PLACE PLATE (also called cover plate, service plate, lay plate) .
10 to 11 inches.
DINNER PLATE 10 inches, but seen as large
(roast plate).
as 1
1
/2 inches. Theof the dinner plate is fairly large, due
size
to the current practice of placing attendant vegetables on the
plate with the meat. The day of side dishes, each bearing a
particular variety of vegetables, has definitely passed.
ENTREE PLATE. 8 1/2 to9 l/2 inches. A
most convenient size,
for, in addition to its use in serving entrees, it is often employed
as a salad plate, or a fish plate: even a dessert plate when the
finger bowl is borne in with the dessert silver on the plate, the
finger bowl being removed later.
DESSERT PLATE. 7 /2 to 8 inches. Used for miscellaneous
l
soup plate with wide, flat rim. There is also a bowl soup plate^
or "coup" soup, which has no rim at all. Soup plates are not
as commonly used as at one time, due to the spreading favor
accorded the cream soup cup and the bouillon cup for luncheons
and informal meals.
GLASS
Of late years, an awakening appreciation of the charm of
glass has taken place. Perhaps the appeal of glorious color,
66
\s*s
Kinds of Glasses
GOBLET. The goblet is the aristocrat of table glass. In its
usual form it is a flaring round bowl resting on a tall slender
stem. In certain styles, however, the "stem" becomes a mere
button. Goblets are always provided with a foot, however
small. The goblet is the dominant member of the "place glass"
group, and all glasses of a service take their shape from it, fol-
lowing contours very closely.
its
OTHER PLACE GLASS. In addition to the goblet, there may
be placed at each cover at least one other glass for the cup or
other beverages. At very formal dinners two extra glasses are
often placed, but never more.
The shapes and sizes of these supplementary glasses vary as
their purposes. On the continent, for example, there is a
definite type of glass placed for certain wines. Thus a glass for
sherry is differently shaped from one for claret: it is more
sharply tapered and considerably smaller.
For the most part the glasses of this type that we see in
America are either the claret, or the tall shallow champagne
glass. The claret, whose capacity makes it a fine utility glass,
isused for almost any kind of cup. On the other hand the tall
champagne glass is often placed for its high decorative value.
Few glasses are as graceful as this shallow bowl on its slender
shaft.
SHERBET. The sherbet glass is a medium depth broad bowl
on a short stem. In it are served sherbets, ice-cream, frozen
(desserts. Much used now, however, for this purpose is the tall
TABLE SETTING AND SERVICE 67
SILVER
The silver on your a declaration of your taste.
table
is
entree knives and forks, and salad knives and forks (or, if you
prefer, individual salad forks,) and fruit knives, or preferably,
fruit knives and forks.
Spoons
Accompanying the medium
size knife and forkj and of a
size between a teaspoon and a tablespoon, is the dessert spoon,
the spoon of a variety of uses, from eating soup and cereals,
to eating desserts such as pudding and compote of fruit.
Teaspoons have a great variety of uses, and while these are
the first kind of small spoon to be bought you will want
to add when you can, orange spoons, bouillon spoons, ice-cream
spoons, coffee spoons, five o'clock teaspoons, and iced tea spoons.
Berry Spoon. A
very convenient Cake fork
serving-spoon which can be Sardine Server
used in serving berries, large Ice Tongs
vegetables, casserole dishes, Ice Spoon
and puddings
Sugar Spoon
Jelly Server, for jelly, marmalade,
Sugar Sifter for powdered sugar
honey, etc. Ice-cream Knife or Ice-cream
Preserve Spoon
Server
Long Handled Fork and Spoon,
for serving salad from a cen- Cheese Server
tral bowl Melon Knife
Pickle Fork, usually two-tined Grape Scissors
LINEN
White linen damask is the classic covering for the dinner-
table. Linen and lace are often combined and sometimes
elaborate all-lace table-cloths are used. When a lace cloth is
Table-cloths
Before you buy your table-cloths, carefully measure your
table, and allow a twelve- to fifteen-inch hangover for your
dinner cloths, and an eight- to twelve-inch hangover for your
luncheon cloths.
Table-cloths should be French-hemmed, with the hem three-
eighths of an inch to one-half an inch wide, and napkins, also
French-hemmed, have hems of from one-eighth of an inch to
one-quarter of an inch wide.
A white linen damask cloth is as appropriate to the formal
or informal luncheon as to the formal or informal dinner. Gay
colored sets of damask or of less formal materials are often
used. Linen runners, with small luncheon napkins to match*
are popular, especially on long tables like refectory tables. An
especially beautiful table is sometimes left bare except for the
lace rounds under the centerpiece, plates, and glasses. Damask
napkins are used with these.
Luncheon sets are appropriate for use at breakfast, luncheon^
an informal dinner on the porch, or an informal supper.
For the tea table one may use an embroidered or hemstitched
teacloth, or a simple or elaborate lace cover^ or a combination
of linen and lace.
Napkins
Table-cloths and napkins should match. For formal dinners
an unusually large napkin is smart, but nowadays napkins, like
most other "furnishings," have shrunk, and one rarely en-
counters dinner napkins larger than twenty-eight inches and
usually not larger than twenty- four inches.
Luncheon napkins are from thirteen inches to eighteen inches
square. White hemstitched luncheon napkins are often used
with a white linen damask cloth.
TABLE SETTING AND SERVICE ft
Monogramming
The pattern or design of the cloth and napkins and the type,
design, and size of the monograms embroidered on them should
make a perfect unity.
For table-cloths, the size of the monogram should be from
two and one-half to five inches. For dinner napkins from one
to two inches. For luncheon and breakfast napkins and doilies,
from three-quarters of an inch to an inch and a half.
When the bride-to-be is marking her trousseau linens, it is
best form for her to use the initials of her maiden name. How-
ever, there is no hard and fast rule for this marking, and she
may if she prefers use the initials of the first and last names o
her maiden name and the initial letter of the groom's last name.
If an initial is used instead of a monogram it should be the
initial of your last name. When only one letter is used, it is
TABLE DECORATION
Have in mind a definite plan.
Consider carefully the artistic height for your table decora-
tions: table decorations that are too high are awkward, and
those that are too low become monotonous to the eye.
No table decorations should obstruct the view of the guests
(although at large, formal dinners, when the conversation can-
not be general anyway, they may be tall).
All tall decorations should be narrow (e. g. candles).
Avoid over- decoration and inappropriate decorations. Don't
crowd your table or make it look heavy.
Discriminate between a formal party and an informal party,
and adapt your decorations accordingly.
Keep in mind the color-scheme of your room, and the colors
of the food in your menu, and harmonize the color of your
table decorations with these.
Adapt your flowers to the type and proportions of your
flower-container.
Centerpieces
Centerpieces are of infinite variety, their beauty and dis-
tinction being limited only by one's imagination and one's
budget. Flowers are still and probably always will be the
most lovely decoration for the center of the table. The fashion
of supporting a few flowers in flower-holders in low silver or
glass bowls makes possible simple and very effective arrange-
ments. Unusual effects may be obtained with central mirrors
TABLE SETTING AND SERVICE 73
should be as handsome
your circumstances permit. Service
as
Place Cards
Place cards are used at formal dinners and luncheons for con-
venience in seating the guests. A
place card should be simple
(plain white ones are best) of about the size of a visiting-card.
It is sometimes engraved with the hostess' monogram or crest
embossed in plain white. Sometimes at feature parties, such as
Hallowe'en or Valentine's Day, decorative place cards are used to
carry out the motif of the entertainment. The name of the
guest is written on the card, the title Mrs., M/'ss, or Mr. be-
fore the name. Place cards are usually placed above the cover
so that they do not conceal the beauty of either the place plate
or the napkin.
The Napkin
The napkin usually placed at the left of the forks and
is
Finger Bowls
There are three methods of placing finger bowls:
FIRST, if the finger bowl is needed after fruits at the begin-
ning of a meal, or after corn on the cob, artichokes, and other
food that demands the use of the fingers, it may be placed to
the left of the cover when the table is laid or it be
may brought
76
*v^s^
in toward the end of the course and placed to the left of the
cover.
SECOND, if the dessert plate and finger bowl are served to-
gether, the finger bowl is placed on the dessert plate, usually
with a small fine white or cream doily between it and the plate,
and the dessert silver placed on the sides of the plate, the fork on
the left and the knife or spoon (depending on what the dessert
may be) on the right. The guest removes the silver, placing
the spoon or knife to the right, and the fork to the left, of the
cover. Then he removes the finger bowl and doily and places
them on the left of the cover, leaving the plate ready to receive
the fruit or dessert.
THJRD, if the dessert is served in individual portions, say
in a sherbet glass or some other container, which
precludes the
placing of the finger bowl on the dessert plate, the finger bowl,
on a doily on a plate, is placed in front of the guest after the
last course.
If especially beautiful glass or silver
finger bowls and plates
are used, many hostesses now omit the
doily between, maintain-
ing that it destroys the harmony between the bowl and the
plate.
The bowls, half-filled with tepid water, may be placed on
the side table before the meal is announced.
it is parallel to the edge of the table with the handle toward the
right. Salt and pepper sets should" follow this rule of placing,
as should the handles of dishes that are placed on the table, and
of silver is placed on a dish at the table (for instance,
if a piece
the spoon on the plate under the fruit cocktail) it too should
be placed parallel to the pieces of silver at the sides of the
plate.
There are several other important rules for setting a cover^
and the basic idea of these rules applies to informal meals as
much as it does to formal meals.
KNIVES, since they are used in the right hand, are placed at
the right of the plate, with the cutting edge toward the plate.
SPOONS, with the bowls up, are placed at the right of the
knives.
FORKS are placed at the left of the plate, with the tines up.
This because the fork is held in the left hand when the knife
is
the forks so that it willbe on a line with the water glass. The
butter spreader is placed on the bread and butter plate parallel
TABLE SETTING AND SERVICE 79
to the edge of the table, the handle toward the right and the
cutting edge down.
THE PLACE CARD is best placed above the plate.
THE EDGE OF THE SERVICE PLATE, the tips of the handles
of the silver utensils, and the lower edge of the napkin should
be placed in exact alignment, usually one inch from the edge
of the table. Some hostesses prefer that the silver be placed
two inches from the edge of the table, so that there is a mini-
mum of danger of its being brushed off the table.
SALTS AND PEPPERS are usually placed between every two
covers, or individual sets may be placed, or, if there are only a
few covers, sets may be placed at the ends of the table.
SALTED NUTS may be placed in small individual dishes above
the covers, or in silver or glass compotes.
COVERS should be placed directly opposite each other.
THE CHAIRS are placed so that the line of the table-cloth
is not broken.
TABLE SERVICE
Styles of Service
There are three styles of service:
RUSSIAN: In this style of service all the food is served from
the kitchen, by attendants. The host and hostess take no part
in the service. No food is put on the table except the decorat-
ing dishes of nuts, candy, and fruits. The food may be placed
in individual portions before the guest, or may be separated
into portions and arranged on serving-dishes for each guest to
help himself.
ENGLISH OR FAMILY TYPE: In this service all the food is
served at the table by the host, hostess, or both.
COMBINATION OR MIXED SERVICE: In this service the main
course is usually served at the table, while the soup, salad, and
dessert are served from the kitchen. Sometimes, the salad is
served from a large salad bowl, and the hostess serves the dessert
at table.
Service Suggestions
METHODS There are three methods of table service. Th
one often preferred is the left hand service, that is, the placing,
passing, and removing of all dishes at the left. Beverages are,
8o
rvs^y
TO CARVE BEEF
Beefsteak
First separate the meat from the bone by cutting along the
edge of the bone with the thin point of the knife.
Beginning with the wide or bone end of a porterhouse or
sirloin steak, and following the grain of the meat, divide each
section into portions an inch or slightly more in width,
depend-
ing on the number to be served.
In porterhouse and similar steaks, the tenderloin and the
wider section are more tender and have a finer flavor and text-
ure than the narrow section. Give a
serving of the finer quality
meat and one of the less choice meat to each person.
The small or flank end of a porterhouse steak is of poor
83
84
>W/"
Roast Beef
Carve all roasts across the grain of the meat. The thickness
of the slices varies with the kind of roast that is being carved,
and be influenced by the personal preferences of the people
may
for whom the carving is being done. Generally the slices
should be thin, but whether thin or thick, they should be even
and attractive looking.
FILLET OR TENDERLOIN ROAST Hold the roast firmly with
the fork and cut the meat squarely across the grain in slices
slightly less than one-half inch in thickness. Begin with the
thick or forward portion. Serve one slice to each person.
LOIN, ROUND OR RUMP ROAST Cut across the grain, as
with a tenderloin roast, but carve the slices as thin as possible,
because the meat is less tender than the fillet.
STANDING RIB ROAST Place the roast cut side up on a platter
with the ribs to the left. Thrust the fork firmly into the side
below the upper bone and cut slices l/$ to %
mcri thick toward
the fork, across the grain, until the bone is reached. Cut several
slices and then separate from the bone by cutting down with the
ing the knife horizontally, cut thin even slices across the entire
roast.
Remove the skewers one at a time as you reach them in
carving, and move the fork downward from time to time as
necessary.
Crown of Lamb
Carve down between the ribs and serve one rib to each per-
son.
Saddle of Mutton
Let the roast rest on the platter with the bone down and
the end diagonally toward you. Make a cut through the
center the entire length of the backbone, separating the meat
into two similar parts. Remove the meat from the bone on
each side by running the knife point between the meat and
the bone. Carve the meat into slices slightly less than half
an inch thick, cutting across the grain.
LEG O'LAMB IS CARVED
AGAINST THE GRAIN
National Live Stock and
Meat Board
TO CARVE POULTRY
Roast Turkey or Chicken
Let the bird rest on its back on the platter, with the drum-
sticks pointing toward your left. Grasp the carving-fork
firmly in the left hand, with the tines pointing toward the
bird's neck and the tips turned from the bird. Insert it into
the leg so that one tine goes diagonally through the drumstick
and the other through the second joint.
Cut all around the hip joint. Press against the side of the
bird with the flat of the knife and use the fork as a lever to
bend the leg back. This will separate the hip joint and the leg
can be lifted off without difficulty.
Without removing the fork, lay the leg down flat, with
the open end pointing, toward "the left, and insert the knife
from right to left between the tines of the fork. Press the
knife down and it should go through the joint. At first you
may have to do a little feeling around to locate the joint, but
with practice you will learn how to insert the fork so that when
the knife is placed between the tines it will fall directly over
the joint.
Next thrust the fork into the side of the bird, rather low
down, and cut the breast downward in thin even slices.
Slice the meat from the second joint and serve a slice of
white meat and a slice of dark meat to each guest.
If more portions are needed, turn the bird so that it is
lying with the carved side down. Separate the second leg in
the same way you did the first, and slice the breast.
If the wings are needed they may be cut from the bird and
divided in the same manner as the legs.
Ordinarily the tips of the wings and the drumsticks are
not served with the roasted bird but are reserved for other uses.
Roast Ducks
Follow the same method as for turkeys and chickens, but
keep in mind that a duck's joints are much farther toward the
back than those of turkeys and chickens.
WITH WILD DUCK, only the breast is served. Half a breast
is usually removed in one portion and served to one
person.
CARVING 87
Broilers
Arrange the bird on the platter so that the neck is toward
you. Insert the fork in the second joint; cut the flesh around
the hip joint; bend the joint over sharply with the knife and
separate it from the body. Separate the drumstick from the
second joint or leave them together, as you prefer. Split the
breast in two. Serve half the breast and a second joint or
whole leg to each person.
TO CARVE FISH
Special carving sets are procurable for fish. If such a set is
not at hand, the best thing to use is a dinner knife, with silver
plated or stainless steel blade, and a silver fork^ preferably of
the type known as a cold meat fork.
In carving any fish try to serve as little bone as possible and
avoid breaking the flakes of the fish.
Split Fish
When fish are split down the back and broiled or sauted,
divide them through the middle, lengthwise, then divide each
half into as many portions as are needed. Very small fish are
served whole.
GARNISHES
Storage of Cereals
With a suitable storage place, cereals and flour may be kept
for several months. Unless there is a cool, dry place for storing
them, they should be purchased only in amounts that can be
used in a few days. This is especially true in warm weather.
Cereal products are liable to spoilage for two reasons: they
may become wormy, or they may become rancid. Products
made from the whole grain are more subject to spoilage than
the refined products, because the whole products contain the
germ, which is high in fat, and it is this that becomes rancid;
it is this, also, that offers suitable material for the development
of eggs laid by insects.
Cereals should be purchased from a merchant whose store is
known to be kept in a sanitary condition. Closed glass jars
are excellent for keeping cereals. If package cereal is purchased,
it should be placed in closed glass jars after it is opened, thus
insuring against infection by insects.
Pre-Cooked Cereals
Cereals were formerly bought uncooked, but by modern
methods of manufacture they may be partly or entirely cooked.
Thus we have, in oats or wheat, a partly cooked product; and
the long list of ready-to-eat cereals or entirely cooked products
which need only a few minutes of reheating to be ready for the
table.
Cooking Cereals
Two of the important secrets in cooking cereals so that they
are acceptable are:
1. To allow enough water to swell and soften all the starch.
2. To cook them long enough to swell the starch and soften
the cellulose present so that the starch may be exposed to the
action of heat and water.
Cereals high in starch and low in cellulose or bran absorb
more water than do cereals containing proportionately less
starch and more cellulose or bran. Also, coarsely ground or
unground cereals require more time to cook than the finely
ground ones. These facts determine the method used in cook-
ing. Arefined cereal will require a proportionately larger
amount of water than a whole cereal, though it will require
less time in the cooking; a coarsely ground cereal will require
In General:
Rolled cereals, such as rolled oats or rolled wheat, require about
1.
times; and finely ground and refined cereals swell from five to
six times.
TIME NEEDED FOR COOKING Cereal products have a nat-
urally delicious although not pronounced, which is
flavor,
brought out by long slow cooking, and the right proportion of
water and salt.
Long slow cooking used to mean four to six hours, but manu-
facturing processes have cut the time considerably to fifteen
or twenty minutes in the case of some of the fine grained wheat
products, and even three to five minutes for partially cooked
cereals. However, a longer cooking only improves them.
In trying a breakfast cereal for the first time, follow the
directions on the package; then if you wish, adapt them to
the consistency and saltiness you prefer.
Some cereals may be boiled notably rice, and those partially
cooked products that need only three to five minutes cooking,
and so demand but little constant attention. The standard ways
of cooking cereals are steaming in a double boiler or baking
in a slow oven, as in making creamy rice and Indian puddings.
The baking method has obvious advantages, and can well be
extended to include cereals for breakfast or entrees, omitting
the sugar and flavoring.
If cereal is cooked in the
evening for the following breakfast,
it may stand in the double boiler all night and be heated in the
morning. It is well not to stir it in the morning until it is
thoroughly hot, because stirring when cold is apt to cause
lumps which resist being made smooth.
Envelope:
4 cups yellow corn meal 2y2 cups stock
l
1 teaspoon salt /2 pound fat
1 pound cornhusks
filling is prepared.
Boil both meats in water to which have been added one small
onion, a clove of garlic and two bay leaves. When meat is tender
remove and drain stock, setting it aside to use in making en-
velope. Cut meat into small cubes. Heat 3 tablespoons of fat,
add meat and brown. Mash 2 cloves of garlic and add to meat.
Stir the chili powder and spices with hot water and mix well
with the meat. Cook mixture 10 minutes.
To make the envelope: Mix 4 cups yellow corn meal, salt,
half the stock and all of fat. Beat well with a wooden spoon
and then add remainder of the stock. It is very important that
the mixture be well beaten to make it Kght. Dry cornhusks on
the inside, spread thinly with mixture; add one teaspoon of
chili meat filling and roll up like a cigarette. Fold both ends
down. Stack in a steamer and cook until well done. If a steamer
is not available, place an ordinary kitchen pot lid on bottom
of a deep kettle. Cover with husks and stack tamales over this
in "pyramid" style. Pour four cups of boiling water over
tamales, cover tightly and cook over a low flame for 45 minutes
or one hour. Always serve tamales hot.
YEAST BREADS
as a universal article of food has much in its favor.
BREAD
Flour, its chief ingredient, is not quickly perishable and
is rather easily stored and transported. Bread itself keeps well,
is mild in flavor, is inexpensive and furnishes material needed
by the human machine.
Excellent bread can be made of good bread flour, salt, water
and yeast. Better bread can be made if sugar and fat are added.
It is in the handling of the dough, not in the proportions of in-
A
GOOD PASTRY FLOUR differs from bread flour in contain-
ing more starch and not only less gluten but a less elastic gluten
than bread flour. It has an oily feeling when rubbed between
the fingers, and holds its shape when pressed in the hand.
Pastry flour can not be used successfully in making bread.
WHOLE- WHEAT or entire-wheat flour, combined in right
proportions with white flour, can be made into excellent bread.
GRAHAM FLOUR, although coarse, may, rightly combined
with white flour, be made into excellent bread.
Amounts of Yeast
From one-sixth of a cake to four cakes of compressed yeast
may be used to one cup of liquid in making bread. The amount
of yeast within this range does not affect the flavor of the bread
if the dough is handled properly. With the minimum amount
of yeast, the process will take six hours or more; with the maxi-
mum amount of yeast, it may, with skillful handling, be com-
pleted in one hour and twenty minutes. From two tablespoons
to one cup liquid yeast may be used for each loaf of bread.
in the crust and to hasten the activity of the yeast. Too much
sugar slackens or softens the dough. In making large quantities
100
*^/vy
used.
SALT is used to improve the flavor of bread. Too much salt
SPONGE METHOD
Add one-half of the flour to the liquid-and-yeast mixture
and beat thoroughly. Set in a warm place. When the batter
is
light, add the remaining flour, or enough to make a dough
of the desired stiffness, and knead thoroughly until it no
longer sticks to the board.
back edge over to the center. Press the dough away with the
palms of your hands, exerting sufficient force to cause the part
folded over to adhere to the mass under it, and repeat folding.
Turn dough one-quarter around and repeat kneading. Con-
tinue turning, folding and kneading until dough is smooth
and elastic and will not stick to an unfloured board.
FIRST RISING OF DOUGH Put the dough into a greased
receptacle large enough to hold at least three times the bulk of
the dough. Grease the top of the dough, cover the receptacle
and set in a warm place. Let the dough rise until it trebles its
bulk.
SECOND RISING OF DOUGH Remove dough from receptacle,
bring the top around the under side and fold edges together.
This leaves a ball-shaped mass, round and smooth on the upper
surface. Bread carefully shaped in this way seems to give a
much better product than seamy rough dough. Put back in
receptacle. Grease the dough, cover the receptacle, return to
warm place to rise again. This second rising is not essential
but is worth while because it improves both the texture and
the flavor of bread.
SHAPING INTO LOAVES Shape by folding the sides of a piece
of dough under while pressing the dough so as to lengthen it.
The top should be kept perfectly smooth and the only crease
in the dough should be on the under side as the loaf is placed
center of the loaf with the knuckles; if the elasticity and mois-
ture are right, the loaf should spring back to shape.
The crust should be smooth without large holes on the bot-
tom and without a split on one side of the loaf. If the top
crust is rough it may be due to insufficient kneading or to
putting the dough into the tins before it is perfectly smooth.
FLAVOR AND ODOR A
well-made, well-baked loaf will
taste slightly sweet, neither too fresh nor too salty, and will
have no suggestion of acidity, rawness or mustiness.
Scald milk, add salt, sugar and shortening and cool. When
lukewarm add the softened yeast. Add flour to make a stiff
batter, beating well. Add flour enough to make a firm but not
stiff dough. Mix and turn on to a floured board. Knead until
YEAST BREADS 105
the mixture is smooth and elastic to the touch and until it does
not stick to the hands or to the unfloured board. Put into a
greased bowl, brush over top with melted fat. Cover and set
in a warm place to When
has almost trebled in bulkj
rise. it
fold it under and let it rise again. When light,
shape into loaves
and put into greased bread tins.
Let rise until almost treble in
bulk. Bake in a hot to moderate oven (400 F. to 375 F.) for
fifty to sixty minutes. Remove from pans and cool as quickly
as possible. Well-made and thoroughly baked bread should
keep from five to ten days in a thoroughly clean, well-aired
bread -box.
POTATO BREAD
l
/z cup boiling water 1 cake yeast softened in
1
1 /2 teaspoons salt /2 cup lukewarm water
l
POTATO YEAST
(Liquid, Railroad or Starter)
'6medium-sized potatoes ]/3 cup sugar
4 pints boiling water 3 tablespoons salt
1 cup flour 1 yeast cake softened in
l
/2 teaspoon ginger 1 cup lukewarm water
Pare potatoes and cut in small pieces. Cook in the boiling
water until well done. Mash the potatoes or force them
through a colander.
Mix sugar, salt, ginger and flour. Pour over these ingredi-
ents the hot, cooked, mashed potatoes with the water in which
they were cooked. When lukewarm add the softened yeast.
Keep at room temperature twenty- four hours.
Pour into sterilized crock or jar. Cover and store in a cool,
dark place. Liquid yeast may be used for two weeks. It is
not desirable to keep it longer. When making new liquid
yeast, use tme cup of the old liquid yeast or a compound yeast
cake to start it.
io6
CORN BREAD
l
l
/2 cup corn-meal /2 cake compressed yeast,
l 3/4 cup warm
l
cups water softened in /$
l
l /2 teaspoons salt water
2 tablespoons sugar 2% to 3 cups flour (enough
1 tablespoon shortening to make medium dough)
Cook the corn-meal in the water ten minutes; add salt, sugar
and fat to the mush. Cool until
lukewarm, stirring occasionally
to prevent a film. When cool add the yeast and beat well.
Add the flour and mix well. Knead, using as little flour on
the board as possible. Put into a greased bowl, let rise until
it almost doubles in bulk. Work it down and let k rise again.
Mold it into loaves, place in pan and let rise until it has almost
doubled in bulk. Bake in a moderate oven (400 to 350 R).
RAISIN BREAD
l
2 cups scalded milk /z to 1 yeast cake softened in
cup warm water
l
2 tablespoons shortening /2
l
/4 cup molasses White flour to make a medium
1
1 /2 teaspoons salt dough
% cup raisins, chopped and floured
Follow general directions for making bread, either sponge
method (page 100) or straight dough method (page 100). Add
raisins after the bread is kneaded.
GRAHAM BREAD
l
2 cups scalded milk /2 to 1 yeast cake softened in
cup warm water
l l
l/2 teaspoons salt /z
2 tablespoons molasses or 1 cup wheat flour
2 tablespoons sugar About 5 cups graham flour
WHOLE-WHEAT BREAD
2 cups scalded milk 5 cups whole-wheat flour
2 to 4 tablespoons sugar 2 to 3 cups white flour
1 to 2 tablespoons shortening
enough to make a medium-
1
1 /2 teaspoons salt stiff dough
RYE BREAD
Follow recipe for whole-wheat bread, using rye flour instead
of whole-wheat and adding caraway seeds if desired.
ROLLED-OATS BREAD
1 cup rolled oats 1 tablespoon melted shortening
2 cups boiling water /2
l
to 1 yeast cake, softened in
cup molasses or brown or
l
/2 /2 cup lukewarm water
l
Let the rolled oats steam for an hour in the boiling water.
Cool and add the yeast, molasses, salt, and melted fat. Then
stir in the flour and set away to rise. When light, beat
thoroughly, place in greased bread-pans, let rise again, and bake
in a moderate oven (400 to 350 F.) one hour. If a less moist
bread is desired, add enough white flour in the beginning to
make a medium dough and follow directions for straight dough
method (page 100).
GLUTEN BREAD
2 cups scalded milk 2 egg-whites
1 yeast cake softened in l
l /z teaspoons salt
/
l
2 cup lukewarm water 4 cups gluten flour
REFRIGERATOR ROLLS
y2 yeast cake 1^/2 teaspoons sugar
2 cups sifted flour %. cup milk
l
ys teaspoon salt /2 cup butter
Crumble yeast into sifted dry ingredients and mix well. Add
cold milk and make into a soft dough. Turn onto a lightly
floured board and knead until light and elastic. Roll into a long
narrow strip l/$ inch thick. Divide butter into 5 portions. On
half of strip place 1 portion of hard butter, thinly sliced. Fold
over remaining half of strip and press down firmly. Let stand
10 minutes in refrigerator. Repeat 4 times. After last rolling
wrap in waxed paper and chill in refrigerator overnight. In
morning cut dough into portions. Roll out each portion /2 inch
l
Scald the milk and cool it. Cream the shortening and sugar,
add the milk and salt. Add the dissolved yeast, the egg- white,
well beaten, and the flour. Knead and let it rise. Shape into
sticks about the size of a lead pencil. Put into a floured pan,
far apart; the sticks must not touch one another after they have
risen. When light, put into a hot oven (400 F.) then de-
crease the heat so that the sticks may become dry and crisp.
Add the scalded milk to the salt, sugar and fat. When luke-
warm add the yeast. Add one-half the flour and beat well.
Let rise until very light. When light add the egg and the re-
maining flour and beat well. Let rise. Divide the dough into
112
f^f^^^r
two parts and shape each in a long, round piece and form two
placing the circles on a baking-tin. Brush with white
circles,
of egg and sprinkle with finely chopped nuts. With a large
pair of scissors cut toward the center of the ring, but not quite
to the center, at intervals of two inches, placing the cut section
each time flat on the tin, giving it a petal-like appearance.
When light, bake in a hot oven (400 R).
RUSKS
1
l
cup scalded milk % teaspoon salt
/2 to 1 yeast cake softened in 2 tablespoons sugar
cup warm water
l
54 /2 cup shortening
3 l/z to 4 cups flour (enough 1 egg
to make a soft dough)
Cool the milk, add the yeast and one-half the flour. When
light add salt, sugar, shortening, egg and remaining flour. Knead
lightly on well-floured board. Let rise until double in bulk,
roll out and cut with biscuit-cutter. Place on well-oiled pans,
let rise and bake in hot oven (400 F.).
Pour the boiling water over the corn-meal and let stand until
it swells. Soften the yeast in the lukewarm water. After the
corn-meal is cool, add the molasses, salt, yeast and flour. Beat
thoroughly and set in a warm place to rise over night. It
should rise and fall again by the morning. Then add a teaspoon
of soda dissolved in the hot milk^ stir well^ and bake on a hot
griddle.
When the cakes are desired frequently (say, three times a
week), fresh yeast will not be required after the first making,
if a little more than a
pint of the batter is reserved each time
and kept in a cool place to be used instead of the yeast. Mo-
lasses in buckwheat cakes
helps to give them a good color in
frying. Without it, they may be gray and unattractive.
MAKE CRUMPETS OR MUFFINS
FOR YOUR ENGLISH COUSIN
AND HONEY SANDWICH BREAD
AS A TREAT FOR THE FAMILY
Wheat Flour Institute
Modern Science Institute
1
FOR GAY DAYS DO A
HONEY TWIST, SWEDISH
TEA RING OR PECAN
CARAMEL ROLLS
ROU.S
VABIATIOHS
YEAST BREADS 113
RAISED MUFFINS
1 cup scalded milk 1 yeast cake softened in
y4 teaspoon salt % cup warm water
4 tablespoons sugar 3 1/2 cups flour
2 tablespoons shortening 1 egg
Add the scalded milk to the salt, sugar and shortening. When
lukewarm, add the yeast and one and one-half cups flour.
Beat thoroughly. When very light, add the beaten egg and the
remaining flour. Mix well and let the dough rise until double
in bulk. Shape into portions small enough to fit into muffin-
tins. Brush the top with egg-white slightly beaten and sprinkle
with chopped nuts. Let rise in a well-oiled tin and bake in
a hot oven (400 -42 5 K).
COFFEE CAKE
1 cup scalded milk % cup sugar
1 cake yeast softened in % teaspoon salt
With a sharp knife cut a cross on top of each bun. Bake about
twenty minutes in a hot oven (400 F.). Just before remov-
ing from the oven, brush with sugar and water. Fill the cross
with a frosting.
plain cup of A
raisins may be added to the
dough, if desired.
BRIOCHE
2 yeast cakes
1 cup milk, scalded
2^ cup butter % cup lukewarm water
4 eggs, well beaten
2 teaspoons salt
Melted butter
l/2 cup sugar
4y2 cups bread flour
Scald milk and add butter, salt and sugar; stir until butter
dissolves. When tepid, add yeast previously soaked in water,
and beaten eggs. Sift flour before measuring, beating well into
mixture. Allow to rise in warm place six hours. Refrigerate
over night or until ready to use. Form quickly into small balls
to !/3 size of muffin tins or glasses. Brush tops with melted
butter and let rise until double in bulk. Bake in hot oven
(400 F.) for 20 minutes.
FOR BRAIDS Dust a bread-board lightly with flour and roll
brioche dough gently into a sheet about one-half inch thick.
Cut the dough in strips one-half inch wide, leaving one end
uncut. Place on greased baking-sheet and brush the cut edges
with melted fat. Fold the strips over each other to form a
braid. Pinch both ends of braid together, flatten, and press
down on pan to prevent strips separating and losing shape.
To MAKE BOW-KNOTS Twist strips of brioche dough lightly
and tie in a bow-knot. Bring the ends down and press to the
pan.
FOR A DESSERT A
very good simple dessert is made by bak-
ing this mixture in small shapes in muffin-tins and serving it
with chopped fruit and a fruit sauce poured over it.
RAISED DOUGHNUTS
1 cup scalded milk 1 yeast cake softened in
1 teaspoon salt Y4 cup lukewarm water
3
/4 cup sugar 3 /2 to 4 cups flour
1
HONEY TWIST
1 cup milk, scalded % cup sugar
1/4 cup butter 1 teaspoon salt
n6
-/
Pour hot milk over butter, sugar and salt. Crumble yeast
into lukewarm water to soften. Cool milk to lukewarm, add
yeast and well-beaten eggs. Beat in flour to make a soft dough,
then turn out on a floured board and knead until smooth. Form
into a ball and place in a greased bowl. Cover and let rise until
double in bulk. When light, shape into a long roll about one
inch in diameter. Coil the roll into a greased cake pan, begin-
ning at the outside edge and covering the bottom. Brush with
honey topping. Let rise until double in bulk and bake in mod-
erate oven (375 F.) 25 to 30 minutes.
Honey Topping:
1/4 cup butter 1 egg white
2/
cup confectioners' sugar 2 tablespoons honey, warmed
scoop out soft center and pack the shell tight with any good
canape paste: anchovy butter, sardine paste, deviled lobster
paste, Roquefort cheese, or any other favorite. Wrap in wax
paper and keep in refrigerator. When needed slice thin, arrange
carefully on a tin and brown lightly under the broiler. Garnish
with olive rings, radish slices or parsley.
QUICK BREADS
breads are those breads or bread-like mixtures which
are made up and baked at once. The essentials of quick
breads are a liquid and flour, When leavening agents are used
they act quickly and make the mixture light without a long
period of waiting.
Quick breads may be improved in flavor and texture by the
'addition of salt, sugar, eggs, shortening, etc., in various com-
binations and proportions. Shortening and eggs contribute
liquid to the mixture, which explains apparent discrepancies in
proportions given in various recipes for quick breads.
READY-TO-USE FLOURS Prepared flours which contain
leavening and other ingredients require only milk or water to
make excellent griddle cakes. The addition of eggs and shorten-
ing produces a batter suitable for muffins, waffles, and similar
quick breads.
Mix the flour, salt and sugar. Gradually add the milk and
the well-beaten eggs. Beat thoroughly. Have ready some small
ramekins or muffin-pans, well greased and piping hot. Fill
them about half full of the batter and bake in a hot oven
(450 F.) for twenty minutes. Lower to 350 F. and bake
fifteen to twenty minutes more.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients and add the milk, gradually,
beating constantly to make a smooth batter. Add the beaten
egg and the fat and bake on a hot griddle. This makes a thick
bready cake. If a thinner cake is desired, use more milk.
Soak the crumbs in the milk and melted fat until they are
soft. Add the eggs, well beaten, and the dry ingredients,
mixed and sifted. Bake on a hot, greased griddle. The cakes
are very tender and should be turned carefully.
RICE GRIDDLE-CAKES
1 cup boiled rice \ /2 cups flour
l
CORN-MEAL GRIDDLE-CAKES
1 cup corn-meal 1 /2
1
cups milk
1 tablespoon sugar 2 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt 4 teaspoons baking-powder
2 cups boiling water 2 eggs
Put the meal, sugar, and salt into a mixing-bowl, and pour
over them the boiling water. Let stand until the meal swells,
then add the cold milk. When the mixture is quite cool, stir
QUICK BREADS 121
FLANNEL CAKES
1 tablespoon shortening 1 teaspoon salt
2 cups flour 4 teaspoons baking-powder
2 cups milk 2 eggs
Rub the shortening into the flour, and add the salt and bak-
ing-powder. Beat the yolks of the eggs light, add the milk
to them and beat well. Add the liquid to the flour mixture,
stirring until quite smooth. Beat the whites light, add them
to the batter, and bake on a hot greased griddle.
APPLE FLAPJACKS
1 1
tablespoon shortening teaspoon baking-powder
1 1 fine
tablespoon sugar cup apples, chopped
2 eggs Cinnamon
l /2
l
cups flour Milk
Cream the shortening and sugar, add the beaten eggs, the
flour sifted with the baking-powder and cinnamon, and the
122
*vx^-sy
POTATO PANCAKES
2 cups grated potato Salt
1 egg Pepper
2 tablespoons flour Onion-juice
Milk
Scrub and pare the potatoes and grate into cold water to
keep them from discoloring. Drain well and add the egg, well-
beaten, the flour, and sufficient milk to make a stiff batter.
Season with salt, pepper and onion-juice. Cook in a frying-
pan with hot fat to the depth of about one-half inch. A large
spoonful of batter makes a good-sized cake. Cook until well
browned and crisp and serve as a vegetable with meat and
gravy. Especially good with a stew.
WAFFLES
1Yz cups flour 1
cup milk
l
/2 teaspoon salt 2 eggs
3 teaspoons baking-powder 1
tablespoon shortening
Mix the flour, salt and baking-powder, add the milk grad-
ually, then the eggs, beaten until very light, and the melted
shortening. Be sure that both sides of the waffle-iron are hot
and that it is well greased. After baking each waffle, let the
iron heat a minute before putting in batter for the next.
CREAM WAFFLES
2 eggs 1 tablespoon corn-meal
2 cups sour cream 1 teaspoon soda
l
2 cups flour /z teaspoon salt
Beat whites and yolks of the eggs separately. Mix with the
beaten yolks the cream, flour, corn-meal, soda and salt, and
finally the egg-whites, beaten until stiff. Bake at once on a
hot waffle-iron.
APPLE-FILLED FLAPJACKS OR
WAFFLES HOT OFF THE GRID-
DLE WILL GET EVERYBODY UP
PROMPTLY
JCESEVERAL KINDS
COFFEE CAKE AT
HE SAME TIME, SUCH
AS THESE STREUSEL, .')
CHERRY AND FROST- IP
ED. POPOVER BATTER
SHOULD HAVE A
WARMHEARTED RE-
EPTION BY SIZZLING
HOT BUTTERED PANS
OR CLASS CUPS
Wheat Flour Institute
QUICK BREADS 123
BUTTERMILK WAFFLES
1 cup corn-meal 1 cup wheat flour
1 /2 cups water
1
%
l
teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon salt /2 cup sweet milk
1 tablespoon shortening Buttermilk
2 eggs
Mix and sift the flour, salt, sugar and baking-powder. Add
the milk gradually, the well-beaten egg and melted fat. Pour
into well-greased muffin-tins, filling the tins two-thirds full.
Bake in a hot oven (400 -42 5 F.) from twenty to twenty-
five minutes.
GRAHAM MUFFINS
2 cups graham flour % teaspoon soda
2 tablespoons sugar \/2 cups sour milk
l
Sift the flour with the other dry ingredients, and turn the
bran back into it. Add the milk gradually^ the well-beaten
egg, and the melted shortening. Fill well-greased muffin-tins
about two-thirds full and bake in a hot oven (400-42S
F.)
from twenty to twenty-five minutes.
124
CORN-MEAL MUFFINS
1 cup corn-meal 1 cup milk
1 cup flour 1 egg
l
/2 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons shortening
4 teaspoons baking-powder
CORN-MEAL ROLLS
1
l
%
cups bread flour % cup milk
/4 cup corn-meal 1 tablespoon sugar
3 teaspoons baking-powder 2 tablespoons shortening
1 teaspoon salt 1 egg
Mix and sift dry ingredients and cut in the fat. Beat the
egg and add it to the milk. Combine the liquid with the dry
ingredients. Knead slightly, roll out and shape as Parker House
rolls. Bake in a hot oven (400 -42 5 F.) for twenty to twenty-
five minutes.
QUICK BREADS 125
RICE MUFFINS
l
/4 cup sugar 1 cup milk
% cup boiled rice 5 teaspoons baking-powder
1 egg 2 l/4 cups flour
2 tablespoons shortening 1 teaspoon salt
Mix sugar, boiled rice, egg, melted shortening and milk. Sift
baking-powder, salt, and flour together, and add. Bake in
greased muffin-pans in a hot oven (400 -42 5 F.) for thirty
minutes.
RAISIN BRAN MUFFINS
1 cup bran 1 tablespoon melted short-
*/4cup flour ening
4 teaspoons baking-powder /2
l
cup seeded raisins
/
l
2 teaspoon salt /2
l
cup milk
1
1 /2 tablespoons molasses 1 egg
Mix and sift the flour, baking-powder and salt, stir in the
bran, add the molasses, the melted fat, raisins and the milk
gradually. Then add the well-beaten egg and bake in muffin-
tins in a hot oven (400 -42 5 F.) for thirty minutes.
DATE BISCUITS
Add one-half cup dates, stoned and quartered, to the recipe
for baking-powder biscuits.
SODA BISCUIT
2 cups flour 1 teaspoon salt
l
/2 teaspoon soda 2 tablespoons shortening
1 cup thick sour milk
SCONES
2 cups flour 4 tablespoons shortening
4 teaspoons baking-powder % cup milk
1
teaspoon salt
SALLY LUNN
l
/2 cup shortening 2 cups flour
l
/4 cup sugar 1 cup milk
4 teaspoons baking-powder 1 egg
Cream the shortening with the sugar. Mix and sift together
the flour and baking-powder and add to the creamed mixture,
QUICK BREADS 127
alternating with the milk. Add the beaten egg and bake in a
loaf or in muffin-pans, in a moderate oven (3 50 -400 F.).
When fresh huckleberries are in season, one cup stirred in
just before baking will be an agreeable addition.
Sift the flour with the salt. With the tips of fingers work
in shortening and moisten to a dough with equal quantities
stiff
Mix the water and corn-meal and bring slowly to the boil-
ing-point. Cook five minutes. Add the milk, shortening, salt
and well-beaten eggs. Beat thoroughly and bake in a well-
greased pan for twenty-five minutes at 400 F. Serve from the
same dish with a spoon.
brown
Mix and sift the dry ingredients. Beat the egg light, add
the milk, shortening and sirup. Stir into the dry mixture and
beat well. Pour into a well-greased, shallow pan and bake
at 400 F. twenty-five to thirty minutes.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients together. Add the nuts,
mix, and add milk, honey and beaten egg. Beat thoroughly.
Pour into a greased oblong bread -pan and bake one hour at
400 F.
BOSTON BROWN BREAD
1 cup corn-meal 1 teaspoon salt
1 cup rye flour % CU P molasses
1 cup graham flour 2 cups sour milk or
% tablespoon soda 1% cups sweet milk
Mix and sift the dry ingredients. Mix the molasses and milk
and add to the dry ingredients. Beat thoroughly and turn into
well-greased molds, filling each mold about two-thirds full.
Cover and steam three hours. Remove the covers and bake the
bread (375 F.) long enough to dry it off.
RAISIN BREAD
2 cups corn-meal 1 1
/2 cups sour milk
1 cup Graham flour 1 egg
l
1 teaspoon salt /2 cup molasses
l
/2 teaspoon soda 3 tablespoons baking-powder
1 cup raisins
Mix and the dry ingredients, add the raisins and toss
sift
Mix the dry ingredients, add the nuts and raisins, add the
milk and egg and beat thoroughly. Turn into a greased pan.
Let the dough rise for fifteen minutes. Bake one hour in a
moderate oven (3SO-400 F.).
130
Sift the dry ingredients together, add the dates, toss lightly
together and add the milk. Mix well and add beaten egg and
melted fat. Turn into a greased pan or mold and cover with
oiled paper. Steam for three hours.
/2
l
cup sugar Yolk 1 egg
4 teaspoons baking-powder 1 cup milk
Serving Sandwiches
Garnishes of fine parsley, cress, celery plumes, stuffed or ripe
olives, or slices of lemon or pickle are effective on the serving-
dish. Barberries and leaves, fresh nasturtium leaves and
blossoms, or something to indicate the kind of sandwich may
be used as a garnish.
economical when the crusts are to be cut off, but any loaf of
comparatively fine grain may be used.
The Bread
ALL SORTS OF BREADS are made into sandwiches white,
brown, rye, graham, whole-wheat, raisin, date, nut, etc. Some-
times two or more kinds are used together. Long narrow rolls
are attractive when sliced lengthwise, buttered and filled. For
picnics, where a substantial filling is desirable, the crumb of the
roll may be removed and the hollow filled with sandwich ma-
terial. Thin salt wafers and crackers are often used instead of
bread for paste sandwiches.
FOR FANCY SANDWICHES, to be used for tea or receptions?
or as an appetizer at the beginning of the meal, or to be served
with the salad, the bread should be cut into slices as thin as
possible and the crusts should be removed. Use a sharp knife,
so that there will be no ragged edges.
PICNIC AND LUNCH-BOX SANDWICHES are cut somewhat
thicker than fancy sandwiches, and the crusts are generally
left on.
Butter and Filling
The filling and butter for sandwiches should be increased in
proportion to the thickness of the slice of bread.
PREPARING THE BUTTER The butter should be thoroughly
creamed before it is used or it will not spread evenly over the
bread. To cream butter, place it in a warm bowl and mash
and beat it until it is soft. It will then spread well even on
fresh bread. Sandwich butters are often made by creaming
one cup of butter with one-half cup of cream. One-half cup
of butter, creamed, will spread a two-pound sandwich loaf
cutting forty to forty-five slices.
RELISHES such as mustard, salt, grated horseradish, chopped
parsley, chives and curry may be added to creamed butter for
use in sandwiches of meat, tomato, game, chicken $ fish, cheese
or eggs.
> SPREADING BUTTER AND FILLING A poorly buttered sand-
wich is very unpalatable. Spread the butter to the very edges
of the slices^ on the sides that are to be put together, being
careful, however, not to let the butter spread over the edges
So that it is untidy. If the slices need not be fitted together,
it is often easier to spread the bread before cutting it from the
SANDWICHES 133
around the rolls and put them in a cold place until needed. The
butter will harden and hold the rolls together.
Keeping Sandwiches
Sandwiches are best prepared just before serving, especially
if the filling is of a kind that will become limp or soak into the
134
w^v
bread. When it is necessary to make sandwiches several hours
before they are to be used, they may be wrapped in paraffin
paper or a slightly dampened cloth or placed in a stone jar.
blade with several tiny slices instead of one thick one in each
sandwich. Fancy butters are excellent with sliced meat.
All kinds of potted and minced meats are used between slices
of bread with or without mayonnaise. Salted meat and fish
fillings are improved by lemon-juice, chopped pickles or capers.
Pastes of fresh fish and meat require high seasoning.
All forms of meat may be used with lettuce or cress, between
two slices of buttered bread, with or without salad dressing.
The slices should be pressed together and the crust trimmed, if
desired. Lettuce may be used in large, crisp leaves, or in "rib-
bons," to make the sandwich easier to eat. Where mayonnaise
dressing is used, the sandwiches should be made at the last
moment, and served promptly. Tomatoes and cucumbers with
lettuce and mayonnaise make delicious salad sandwiches.
PETITE MARMITE
Yeast bouillon, on the market as cubes or paste, makes an
excellent spread for sandwiches, hors d'oeuvres and appetizers.
It may be used alone or mixed with butter or other pastes. Its
Rub the yolks of the eggs to a smooth paste with the an-
chovies and butter and add paprika to taste.
HAM BUTTER
cup cooked ham
l
/2 Yolks of 2 hard-cooked eggs
5/2 cup butter Pepper
Grind the ham and pound smooth with the butter and the
yolks of the eggs and season with pepper.
SHRIMP BUTTER
1 cup cooked shrimps 1 cup butter
Salt About l/4 cup tarragon vine-
% teaspoon cayenne gar or lemon- juice
Pound the shrimps in a mortar with salt and cayenne. Add
the butter and moisten the mixture with the tarragon vinegar
or lemon -juice.
ALMOND SANDWICHES
No. 1
Chop the almonds fine, mix with the salt and lemon- juice
and use with thin slices of bread, buttered. Cut into small
ovals, pressing a blanched almond in the center of each sand-
wich.
No. 2
Use the same quantities as for No. 1. Toast the almonds a
light brown and grate them. Form into a paste with the lemon-
juice^ add the salt and spread over the bread.
No. 3
l
/3
l
cup almonds % cup shredded celery
/4 cup mayonnaise
Chop the almonds fine and mix them with the celery. Spread
between thin, buttered slices of bread. Sandwiches filled with
this mixture are an excellent accompaniment to salads or cold
meats. When served with meats the celery and almonds may
be moistened with a few spoonfuls of mayonnaise.
MARRON SANDWICHES
Grind marrons glaces (candied French chestnuts) fine,
spread on rounds of buttered bread and cover with rounds of
bread from which the centers have been cut. Fill the centers
with whipped cream, sweetened and flavored, and decorate with
blanched and chopped pistachio nuts or tiny candied violets.
No. 2
Grate sapsago and Parmesan cheese and sprinkle thickly
over a slice of buttered bread. Then dust with a mild red
pepper and add another slice of buttered bread.
No. 3
Yolks of 3, hard-cooked eggs Paprika Salt
2 tablespoons salad oil 1 tablespoon vinegar
No. 4
l
/z pound American full cream % cup cream
cheese, grated /2
l
teaspoon dry mustard
2 tablespoons melted butter Paprika Salt
No. 2
Make a pulp of the bananas and mix with the softened cheese.
I [
140
Mix the cheese with the onion. Use with mayonnaise and a
crisp lettuce leaf between slices of buttered bread.
RUSSIAN SANDWICHES
l
/2 cup cream cheese % cup chopped pimiento
1/4 cup chopped olives % cup mayonnaise
Lettuce leaves Boston brown bread
EGG SANDWICHES
No. 1
Slice the eggs and lay the slices between thin buttered slices
of bread. Season to taste with salt, pepper and paprika and
add a layer of chopped capers or pickles if desired. These are
good for lunches for traveling or picnics.
No. 2
1 cup chopped, hard-cooked Chopped capers or pickles
egg /4 cup mayonnaise
l
Mix the chopped egg with the mayonnaise and add salt,
pepper and chopped pickles or capers to taste. Use between
thin buttered slices of bread.
CHICKEN SANDWICHES
No. 1
Chop the chicken meat very fine, mix with the mayonnaise,
and spread thin slices of bread, buttered or unbuttered, with
the paste.
142
No. 2
2 egg-yolks 1 cup minced, cooked chicken
1 teaspoon melted butter Salt Pepper
1 teaspoon lemon-juice 1 teaspoon stock
No. 3
1 cup cooked white meat of 6 tablespoons thick cream
l
chicken /z teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon gelatin Dash of paprika
1 tablespoon cold water
Chop the chicken very fine and pound to a paste, adding salt
and a dash of red pepper. Soak the gelatin in the cold water
for fifteen minutes, and add the thick cream. Dissolve the
gelatin over boiling water, beat it slowly into the chicken
and add salt and paprika. Set aside to cool, smoothing into an
even mass. When cool, divide into squares, cut these squares
into very thin slices and arrange on thin buttered slices of bread.
Cut into fancy shapes, removing the crusts.
No. 4
3
/4 cup cooked chicken meat Y4 cup chopped almonds
/4
l
cup chopped stuffed olives % cup mayonnaise
Cut the chicken meat into small bits and add the almonds and
olives. Moisten with mayonnaise and spread on thin, buttered
slices of bread.
Mash the chicken livers, add the chopped bacon, salt, pepper,
tabasco sauce, lemon-juice and sliced truffles. Use between
slices of bread spread with creamed butter mixed with minced
celery.
No. 2
1 tablespoon pate de foie gras 2 tablespoons butter
l
/4 cup boiled chestnuts
Mash the butter and chestnuts to a paste, add the pate de foie
gras and mix well. Spread very thin on slices of buttered bread.
144
BEEF SANDWICHES
l
1 1
/4 cups cold roast beef /z teaspoon Worcestershire
1 teaspoon salt sauce
/2 tablespoon tomato catchup tablespoon melted butter
l
1
HAM SANDWICHES
No. 1
Slice boiled ham very thin and use several tiny slices between
thin slices of buttered bread, adding a little mustard if desired.
No. 2
cup ham teaspoon mustard mixed
1 l
/z
1 tablespoon salad oil with l/4 teaspoon water to
1 tablespoon lemon-juice a smooth paste
Pepper
Chop the ham fine and season with salad oil, lemon-juice,
a dash of pepper and the mustard. Spread between thin, but-
tered slices of bread.
No. 3
Chop cold mutton or lamb very fine, add salt, capers, chopped
mint, pepper and lemon- juice. Use between thin buttered
slices of whole-wheat bread. Serve on a bed of lettuce leaves.
TONGUE SANDWICHES
l
/z pound cooked tongue Salt
l
/4 cup mayonnaise or prepared Pepper
mustard Cayenne
VEAL SANDWICHES
l
l /4 cups chopped veal 1 tablespoon lemon-juice
1 teaspoon salt Mustard Pepper
Chop the veal, and season with salt, lemon-juice and a little
pepper and mustard. Spread mixture between thin buttered
slices of bread.
Chop the olives and mix with the anchovy paste. Add the
butter or cream and use between thin buttered slices of bread.
CAVIAR SANDWICHES
l
/2 cup caviar 2 teaspoons lemon-juice
OYSTER SANDWICHES
Large oysters Pepper
Salt Tabasco sauce
Horseradish Lemon-juice
Worcestershire sauce Cress
SALMON SANDWICHES
1 cup cold boiled or canned % cup mayonnaise
salmon
Mix the salmon with the mayonnaise until a fine even mix-
ture is obtained. Remove the soft crumb from French rolls and
fill the space thus made with the salmon mixture.
SARDINE SANDWICHES
12 large sardines % cup mayonnaise or a little
1 hard-cooked egg Worcestershire sauce, if de-
Pepper desired
Lemon-juice Salt
Shrimp butter, i desired Creamed butter, if desired
Drain the oil from the fish, remove the skins and pound the
fish to a paste with a little salt, pepper and lemon- juice. Use
between thin buttered slices of bread. Shrimp butter may be
mixed with the sardine paste and the flavor may be varied by
the addition of Worcestershire sauce or mayonnaise or both.
148
^xvyvy
Cook the roe and mash it together with the yolks of the
hard-cooked eggs. Add an equal amount of creamed butter,
the paprika, tabasco sauce, anchovy paste, and salt to taste.
Spread between thin buttered slices of bread. Slices of lemon,
peeled and salted, may be put between rounds of buttered bread
and passed with the shad roe sandwiches.
CUCUMBER SANDWICHES
No. 1
desired.
No. 2
ONION SANDWICHES
Pour salted water over thin slices of onion (or chopped
onion) and let it stand for a time to extract the very strong
flavor. Then drain the onion and use between buttered slices
of bread, seasoning with pepper, salt, and a little mustard if
desired.
SANDWICHES 149
WATERCRESS SANDWICHES
1
1 /4 cups cress 2 tablespoons lemon-juice or
Paprika y4 cup mayonnaise
Sprinkle cress with salt, paprika, and lemon-juice, or mix
with mayonnaise. Lay between slices of brown bread.
HOT SANDWICHES
The hot sandwich is now frequently used as a supper or
luncheon dish with a salad. It is sometimes served as a break-
fast dish and even a dessert may now be served in sandwich
form, as, for instance, slices of ice-cream between slices of
sponge cake.
There are several types of hot sandwiches. Some are made
from plain bread and served with hot sauce; in others the
framework of the sandwich is toast, sauted slices of bread,
French-fried toast or fresh slices of bread baked with the sand-
wich-filling; and in still others hot baking-powder biscuit or
crisp toasted crackers are used.
Then besides the regulation kind of sandwich a filling be-
tween two slices of breadstuff there is the open-faced kind,
in which the top slice is left off and a garnish of cut parsley,
152
v^/v^
TURKISH SANDWICHES
1 cup cooked chicken cut in% CU P cream
small pieces 1 teaspoon onion-juice
1 tablespoon butter *4 CU P walnut meats
l
/2 cup stock Paprika Salt
1 tablespoon flour Thin slices of toasted bread
Make a sauce of the stock, cream, flour, and butter. Add the
other ingredients, and heat thoroughly. Place on slices of toast.
Brush with melted butter and garnish with thin rings cut from
stuffed olives. Serve immediately on a hot platter.
crispon both top and bottom. Break do not cut the biscuits
apart and butter the halves. On one side place a thick slice
of tomato, then a layer of mayonnaise dressing and then one of
minced bacon. Cover with the other half of the biscuit, press
lightly together and serve at once.
SAVORY SANDWICHES
Spread of whole-wheat or graham toast with butter.
slices
Over these slices of crisply cooked bacon.
place Sprinkle
generously with chopped pickle and horseradish. Serve with
sliced tomatoes.
154
Cut a slice from the stem end of each tomato. Sprinkle with
salt, pepper and bits of bacon. Bake until the tomatoes are
SANDWICHES 155
the door open. When it is entirely dry, close the oven door
and brown slightly.
TOAST MELBA
Cut bread in one-eighth-inch slices and toast until it is
crisp.
BUTTERED TOAST
Toast bread until crisp and a rich brown on both sides. But-
ter whilehot and serve at once.
WATER TOAST
Toast bread until crisp and brown. Pour into a soup-plate
one cup boiling water and one teaspoon salt. Dip the toast
into this water and remove at once. Spread lightly with butter
and serve immediately.
MILK TOAST
No. 1
Toast bread, butter it well, sprinkle with salt and pour scalded
milk over it.
No. 2
6 slices buttered toast 2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour 2 cups milk
Salt
Make a white sauce of the flour, butter, milk and salt and
pour it over the buttered toast.
156
TOAST 157
CREAM TOAST
6 slices buttered toast 1 cup scalded cream
1 tablespoon flour Salt
1 cup scalded milk 1 egg
Make a white sauce of the milk, cream, flour and salt. Pour
this hot liquid over the beaten egg. Pour over the toast and
serve immediately.
Beat the eggs, add the milk and salt. Dip slices of bread into
the mixture and saute in a little hot fat until a delicate brown
on both sides. Serve hot. Sprinkle with powdered sugar or
serve maple sirup with the toast.
CINNAMON TOAST
Spread hot toast with butter and sprinkle generously with a
mixture of sugar and cinnamon. Place on the top shelf of the
oven or under the broiler just long enough to melt the sugar.
>:;..;,,:,,;
USE THE SAME SANDWICH DE-
SIGNS FOR TOAST, OR ROIL 4.
^RNUCOPIA WITH A CHEE||,
NCUE FOR THE FESBW
CASION
Wheat Flour Institute
APPETIZERS
OTRICT convention in England and America at one time
^ decreed that the formal dinner should begin with soup,
but that custom is no longer binding even in the most formal
household. Other dishes to introduce the meal have crept in
and because of their savory qualities have found ready and
general acceptance. Appetizers, they are usually called. Some-
times they are referred to as relishes or as hors d'ceuvres, because
they are often a glorified edition of the old side dish now given
a conspicuous place as a separate course by itself.
arrangement of a tray:
1. Acrab salad. 2. An onion and green pepper salad. 3. Three or
four olives on a small lettuce leaf. 4. Asandwich made of cress and
brown bread and butter. 5. An oblong or square of aspic jelly on a
lettuce leaf with an anchovy or sardine on the jelly. 6. Half of a,
deviled egg on a lettuce leaf or in a bed of cress. 7. Cream cheese balls
rolled in chopped chipped beef. 8. Cream cheese balls rolled in caviar.
9. Large stuffed olives filled with sharp cheese, wrapped in bacon and
broiled until bacon is crisp. 10. Center celery stalks stuffed with
Roque-
fort cheese paste or anchovy
paste. 11. Small sweet pickles rolled in
cream cheese then in a strip of smoked salmon, fastened with
toothpick.
12. Rolled anchovies in broiled mushrooms. 13- Caviar in broiled
mushrooms. 14. Tiny meat balls in broiled mushrooms. 15. Chicken
liver balls rolled in
chopped chipped beef.
Shell Fish
Canapes
PREPARED BREAD FOR ALL CANAPES
Canapes are made from stale white bread, cut in quarter-
inch slices and then shaped with a cutter into circles two and
one-half or three inches in diameter or cut into squares, strips,
triangles or other fancy shapes. These portions of bread may
then be fried in deep fat and drained on absorbent paper, or
sauted in just enough fat to keep them from burning, or toasted
or set in the oven until they turn a delicate brown. When
finished they should be nicely browned on both sides. They are
then ready to be covered with the mixture preferred.
ANCHOVY CANAPES
6 portions prepared bread 3 teaspoons lemon-juice
3 tablespoons anchovy paste 2 hard-cooked eggs
Whole anchovies for garnish (may be omitted)
Remove skin and backbone and flake the sardines with a fork.
Or chop cooked lobster meat very fine. Season with lemon-
juice, salt and a few drops of Worcestershire sauce. Spread
the prepared bread with the mixture and decorate by placing
in the center of each canape a small circle of pickled beet. Cut
a slice from the end of a large olive so that it will stand firmly
and place this in the center of the beet. A narrow border of
minced beet may be placed around the edge of the canape
with good effect. Garnish the plate with four thin slices of
lemon placed symmetrically.
Crab meat, shrimps or any smoked or canned fish, highly
seasoned and attractively garnished, may be utilized for canapes
instead of the sardines or lobster meat.
CAVIAR CANAPES
6 portions prepared bread 3 tablespoons white onion
3 tablespoons caviar chopped fine
Garnish of green pepper or hard-cooked egg
raw onion and the other half with the caviar. The striking
difference in the colors veryis effective. A sliver of green pep-
per may lie just where the two mixtures meet and little points
of the green pepper extend out on each side, or a circle of the
white of hard-cooked egg may decorate the center of the half
covered with caviar and a little mound of the riced yolk orna-
ment the section covered by the chopped onion.
Carefully clean, cook and chop chicken livers and mash them
to a paste with a wooden spoon. Chop the onion fine and fry
in the fat till yellowed. Place the livers, the fat and the onion
in a cup, mix well and season with pepper and salt, and either
mustard or celery salt, according to taste. Place at once on ice.
This preparation makes excellent sandwiches.
162
Fruit Appetizers
Fruit cocktails may be made from mixtures of almost any
fruits, canned or fresh. As a rule, combinations of a sweet
and a sour fruit are most piquant in flavor. All fruit appetizers
should be thoroughly chilled. The trays of the mechanical
refrigerator are excellent for this purpose.
GRAPEFRUIT COCKTAILS
No. 1 GRAPEFRUIT ON THE HALF SHELL.
Cut grapefruit in half, crosswise. Witha pair of sharp
shears or with a grapefruit corer, cut a circular piece from the
center of each half, being careful not to cut through the skin.
Then with a sharp knife loosen each section from the mem-
brane and skin. Sprinkle with sugar and set in the refrigerator
to chill. Pink the edges of the skin if you prefer, and remove
the pieces of membrane between the sections of fruit if you
have time. In this way the shell is left with only edible portions
of the fruit. In any case each mouthful of fruit should be en-
tirely detached from the shell. Serve a half grapefruit on a
plate or in a special grapefruit glass, embedded in ice.
APPETIZERS 163
Separate the orange into sections and remove the thin skin
with a pair of scissors. Chill thoroughly, place in glasses,
sprinkle with powdered sugar and add the lemon -juice mixed
1 64
'^VXV^
CHERRY COCKTAIL
1 pound cherries 6 tablespoons strawberry- juice
cup chopped almonds
l
/2 6 tablespoons powdered sugar
3 teaspoons lemon- juice
Pit the cherries, sprinkle with chopped almonds and pour
over them a sirup made by mixing strawberry- juice with
powdered sugar and lemon- juice. Chill and serve ice-cold in
cocktail glasses. Decorate the plate with two or three whole
cherries and a leaf or two.
Slice off the tops of the oranges and scoop out the inside,
being careful not to break the inside white skin of the orange-
peel. Put the orange cups into a bowl of ice-water. Cut in
small pieces the banana and pineapple, mix these with the
orange pulp cut in small pieces, add the lemon-juice, sweeten
to taste, and fill the orange shells. Set each one in a small bowl,
filled with crushed ice.
The mixed fruit pulp that remains after the orange skins
have been filled may be kept in the refrigerator and served as
sauce with ice-cream or used in any other way that circum-
stances suggest.
FOR THE HOSTESS WHO
WOULD DEVELOP A SPE-
CIALITE DE LA MAISON
THERE ARE BACON-
OLIVE-CHEESE, CREAM
CHEESE COATED IN
CHIPPED BEEF, OR THE
INDIVIDUAL CHECKER-
BOARD LOAF
SOUPS
OOUPS may be roughly divided into two groups. In the
^ group belong the
first soups that are always made from
meat stock. These are the various modifications of brown
and white stocks, bouillons, consommes and broths. In the
second group belong the soups that may be made either with
or without meat stock. These are the various modifications of
cream soups, purees and bisques, of chowders and stews and of
vegetable soups.
pot was kept on the stove day in and day out; but with the
gradual change from coal to gas and electricity as fuels, and
with the perfecting of modern commercial canning and con-
densing methods, the long slow process of stock making has
become less common in home kitchens.
For the small family, the canned soups are almost indispen-
sable, and in the making of sauces and gravies, where only a
small amount of stock is required, a can of soup supplies the
required foundation at a minimum of trouble and expense.
tops, etc., for those given above. After the stock is made,
left-
over vegetables, cereals, hard-cooked eggs, small pieces of meat,
etc., may be diced or chopped and served in the soup.
CONSOMME.
1 pound lean beef 1 clove
l
1 pound veal /2 teaspoon sweet herbs
1 /4
1
quarts cold water or Sprig parsley
1 pint cold water and 1 tablespoon each, celery, car-
1 pint chicken stock rot, onion
2 peppercorns 1 teaspoon salt
WHITE STOCK.
l
2 pounds chicken or knuckle /2 teaspoon sweet herbs
of veal 1 tablespoon, each, of onion
l /4
l
quarts cold water and celery
2 peppercorns 1 teaspoon salt
1 clove
Fish stock needs to be cooked for only half the time required
for other stock.
VARIATIONS OF CONSOMME
CONSOMME PRINCESSE Consomme served with shreds or
small dice of cooked chicken and green peas.
CONSOMME A LA ROYALE Consomme served with tiny
blocks of royal custard.
CONSOMME JULIENNE OR JULIENNE SOUP Consomme
served with carrot, onions, turnips and celery cut into shreds
about as thick as a match.
The vegetables should be boiled in clear water before being
added to the consomme.
170
Unthickened Soups
Soups suitable for serving as the first course of a meal with
a substantial main course are found in this group. Any of the
variations of soup stock or consomme may be used for this
purpose. The following recipes give directions for other soups
of this variety.
CLAM BROTH
12 clams in the shell 2 cups water Paprika
Purchase large clams in the shells. Scrub them thoroughly
with a brush, place them in a kettle with cold water, closely
covered, and bring water to the boiling-point. As soon as the
shells have opened, remove them from the broth. The clams
may be served at once, in the half-shell, or taken from the
shells and kept to be served in form desired. Let the broth
any
settle, strain, being careful not to pour out the sandy sediment,
reheat, add a little red pepper or paprika, and serve hot. Twelve
good-sized clams should make enough broth for six persons,
but if there does not seem to be sufficient, add a little boiling
water or milk. Clam broth seldom needs added salt. Water
wafers heated in the oven, or divided crackers toasted on their
broken surfaces, buttered and heated for a few minutes in the
oven, are generally served with this broth.
Clam broth may be served, hot or cold, in cups with a heap-
ing teaspoon of whipped cream, into which has been beaten a
little salt and
pepper^ placed upon the top of each cup. The
cream adds richness to the flavor of the soup and increases its
nourishing properties.
MODERN MILK PRODUCTS ADD
GREATLY TO THE SUCCESS OF
MAKING CREAMY THICK SOUPS
Irradiated Evaporated Milk
Institute
*
JELLIED SOUP
1 quart clear brown, or white 2 tablespoons gelatin
stock, or tomato or chicken /z cup cold water
l
soup
Soften the gelatin in the cold water, add to the boiling hot
soup, chill and serve in cups. The trays of the mechanical
refrigerator are excellent for chilling soups.
BEAN SOUP
bacon
3 slices 1 tablespoon flour
2 cups baked or boiled beans 1 tablespoon butter
4 cups cold water Salt, pepper, paprika
Cook bacon. Add to beans. Add cold water and cook until
beans are soft, then rub through a strainer. Place on the fire
and add a little more water, if needed, as the soup must not be
too thick. Bind with the flour and butter. Cook two or three
minutes. Season with salt, a dash of pepper, and paprika.
172
Soak the beans over night. Next morning, drain them and
cover with the cold water. Add sliced onion, which has been
browned in the fat, also stalks of celery broken into inch pieces.
Simmer until beans are soft, adding more water from time to
time. Press through a sieve, again bring to the boiling-point,
and then add seasoning of mustard, pepper, salt, and paprika to
taste. Bind with roux of butter and flour to prevent the soup
from separating. Cut the eggs and lemon in thin slices, and add
these to the strained soup just before serving.
BORSCHT
(A Famous Russian Soup)
1 bunch beets l
/2 pound breast of beef
1 cup tomatoes, fresh or 1 tablespoon lemon-juice
canned % CU P sugar
4 cups water % teaspoon salt
1 small onion 4 eggs
Pare the beets and cut them into long strips. Strain the toma-
toes, over the beets, not letting any seeds through. Add water.
Put in the onion and meat, cut into small pieces, and simmer
for thirty minutes. Add lemon- juice, sugar, and salt. Boil one-
half hour more. Beat the eggs with a pinch of salt. Add the
hot borscht to this, a little at a time, stirring well to prevent
the separating of the eggs. This will behave more or less as in
any soft custard mixture. Serve at once, while very hot.
BOUILLABAISSE
This is a mixture and greatly esteemed by epi-
famous fish
Put the oil and chopped onions into a large fish-kettle and
cook until the onions are brown. Add the fish, cut in slices,
two slices of lemon, a bay-leaf and the tomato, peeled and cut
into quarters. Pour the boiling water over this mixture after
it has simmered for ten minutes, and let all boil for another ten
minutes. Skim, add oysters or clams and chopped parsley,
also the meat of the boiled lobster, cut in large pieces, and cara-
mel, salt, and pepper. Each portion served should include a
large crouton, about two inches square, a piece of each kind
of fish, a piece of lobster, and a couple of oysters.
CHICKEN GUMBO
This recipe,if followed as given, will provide the main dish
for dinner. Chicken gumbo may be made by using leftovers,
or the remainder after making chicken salad or boned chicken.
1 fowl (3 to 4 pounds) 2 sprigs parsley
l
/z cup salt pork fat 3 cups boiling water
1 onion /2 teaspoon pepper
l
CHICKEN SOUP
This recipe provides a large bowl of substantial soup, as well
as a cooked fowl, and when the soup is served the rest of the
dinner should consist of light dishes. For more economical
recipes see Index for chicken or turkey bone soup, and chicken
broth for invalids.
1 fowl (3 to 4 pounds) 1 cup milk
/2 pound ham
l
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1 onion Salt and pepper
2 to 3 quarts water 1 tablespoon flour
54 cup rice 1 tablespoon chicken fat
Cut up fowl into quarters, with the ham and onion, and add
the water. Let this simmer until the meat is very tender, then
strain, reserving the meat to be used in any way desired. Re-
move all possible fat, and to one and one-fourth quarts of this
soup (the remainder can be used for sauce with the meat) add
well washed rice, chopped parsley, salt and pepper. Simmer
until the rice is tender, add milk, then add roux made of flour
and chicken fat. Cook until the mixture is thickened (about
five minutes), season and serve.
from a boiled or baked ham, will flavor pea soup quite as well
as a piece bought especially for the purpose.
2 or 3 pounds ham end 3 quarts boiling water
1 carrot 1 cup split peas
1 onion Salt and pepper
2 potatoes 2 tablespoons catchup
Purees
Purees are made in the same way as cream soups, but are
somewhat thicker. They are often served under the name of
"Cream Soup."
Bisques
The name bisque usually given to a cream soup made from
is
Chowders
Chowders were probably the common ancestors of the more
refinedcream soups, purees, and bisques. The word chowder
comes from the French cbaudiere, meaning caldron. The
chowder originated as a community fish stew to which each
neighbor contributed something; milk, fish, potatoes, crackers,
pork or some seasoning. These contributions were all cooked
together in the common caldron, from which chowder derives
itsname, and each contributor withdrew his share of soup when
it was ready.
The chowder of today is much the same as the old chowder,
and consists of pieces of different vegetables or of fish and po-
tatoes and various seasonings cooked in milk with crackers added
just before serving.
Fish Stews
Fish stews are made of milk and the juice of the fish which
gives flavor to the soup. They differ from the cream soups in
SOUPS 177
that they need not be thickened, though they often are, and
from the chowders in being less complex in composition.
Put the corn into a double boiler with one quart of the milk
and cook for twenty minutes. Make a white sauce of the milk
and corn, flour, and fat, add salt and pepper and cook five
minutes. Rub the soup through a strainer, beat the yolks of the
eggs well, and add to them the remaining cup of cold milk;
stir this mixture into the soup, cook for a minute or two, stirring
Brush, wash and skin the mushrooms. Put the skins to sim-
mer in a little water. Cut the mushroom caps and stems into
very small pieces; add one pint of water and simmer until
tender. Make a sauce of the fat, flour, salt and milk and add
the water in which the mushroom caps, stems and skin were
cooked.
Make a white sauce of the liquid, flour, and fat and combine
with the potato and onion pulp. Season with chopped parsley,
salt and pepper. Beat with an egg-beater and serve with crou-
tons.
Purees
PUREE OF ONION
3 large or 6 small onions 2 or 3 tablespoons butter or
2 cups white stock other fat
2 cups milk Salt and pepper
2 or 3 tablespoons flour 1 tablespoon chopped parsley
Make a white sauce with stock, milk, flour, and butter. Cook
onions in water until very tender. Drain, and rub through a
sieve. Combine onion and sauce. Season with salt, pepper,
and chopped parsley. Beat with egg-beater and serve.
Use three tablespoons flour when increased thickness is de-
sired.
FISH PUREE
1 quart milk 4 tablespoons butter or
1 small onion, minced other fat
4 tablespoons flour 2 cups cooked fish
Salt and pepper
milk, flour, and butter. Rub the cooked fish through a sieve.
Combine the fish and sauce. Season and serve.
Soak peas or beans all night, then put them over the fire with
water and bring to a boil. Cook slowly, until soft. Rub
through a sieve, heat, and thicken with roux of flour and
fat. Season with salt, pepper, celery salt, and onion-juice.
Stir or beat until smooth and serve with croutons.
CHERRY PUREE
Juice from 1 quart of tart 2 teaspoons arrowroot
cherries, freshly stewed or Grated rind of 1 lemon
canned
ORANGE PUREE
l
2 cups orange-juice /2 cup sugar
1 teaspoon corn-starch 1 teaspoon grated orange-
2 tablespoons cold water rind
RASPBERRY PUREE
/2 cup granulated tapioca
l
2 cups raspberries
6 cups water Sugar
l
/2 cup currant-juice
Bisques
BISQUE OF CLAMS
24 clams in the shell 2 cups water
2 cups rich milk or white 1 tablespoon chopped celery
stock or part of each 1 teaspoon chopped parsley
1 tablespoon butter Salt and pepper
1 tablespoon flour
Make a white sauce of the milk, flour, and butter. Scrub the
clams thoroughly, then pack into pot with a tight-fitting lid,
using /2 cup water to steam. When all
l have popped open,
l82
^-^N>-^^
remove, cool in their own liquor. Detach clams from shells, put
through food chopper and add strained liquor. Add water,
chopped celery and parsley and cook ten minutes. Press through
a sieve and add to the white sauce. Season, beat with an egg-
beater, and serve.
BISQUE OF LOBSTER
1 medium-sized lobster 1 cup cold water
1 quart milk Red pepper
4 tablespoons butter Salt and pepper
4 tablespoons flour
BISQUE OF OYSTERS
1 pint oysters 1 sliceonion, chopped fine
2 cups milk 1 stalk celery, diced
1 cup stale bread-crumbs 1 stalk parsley, chopped fine
1 tablespoon flour 1 bay-leaf
1 tablespoon butter Salt and pepper
2 cups water
Scald milk with bread crumbs, onion, parsley, and bay leaf.
Remove seasonings and rub through a sieve. Cook tomatoes
with sugar fifteen minutes, add soda and rub through a sieve.
Reheat bread and milk to boiling-point, add tomatoes, and pour
at once into tureen over butter, salt, and pepper. Serve with
croutons or crisp crackers.
Chowders
CLAM CHOWDER
l
50 clams /2 teaspoon thyme
4 ounces salt
pork 3 potatoes
1 medium-sized onion 1 pint milk
l
2 tablespoons flour /2 teaspoon pepper
l
/2 teaspoon salt 3 pilot biscuit
CORN CHOWDER
2 slices fat salt pork 2 cups boiling water
1 onion 1 cup cooked corn, fresh
Cut the pork into small pieces and try it out. In this cook
the sliced onion. Strain the fat into another receptacle, and put
the potatoes into the strained fat. Add boiling water, corn
which has been cooked till tender, and hot milk. Season with
salt and white pepper, bring to the boiling-point, and serve with
a cracker on each soup-plate.
FISH CHOWDER
l
/4 pound fat salt pork, sliced 3 cups boiling water
2 cups raw fish, cut in dice 1 pint milk
6 small potatoes, sliced 3 pilot biscuit
2 onions, chopped fine
OYSTER CHOWDER
1 quart oysters 2 tablespoons butter or
6 potatoes other fat
1 onion 1 tablespoon flour
1 cup water Salt and pepper
3 cups milk 3 pilot biscuit
CLAM STEW
Make in same way as oyster stew, using clams.
CRAB STEW
6 hard-shell crabs 1
pint rich milk
1 tablespoon butter 1
quart water
1 tablespoon flour Salt and pepper
1 onion Parsley
OYSTER STEW
UNTHICKENED
1 Salt, pepper, paprika
pint oysters
4 tablespoons butter 1
quart rich milk
THICKENED To
the ingredients given above, add from four
to eight tablespoons of flour, and, if desired, a little onion-juice
and mace. Scald the oysters in their own liquor. Make a white
sauce of the milk, flour and butter and season as desired. Com-
bine the scalded oysters and oyster liquor with the white sauce
and serve at once.
YEAST BOUILLON
In recent years several varieties of autolyzed yeast have ap-
peared on the market to be used as bouillon or in sandwich
pastes. They have the flavor of strong meat extract but have
the advantage of being of pure vegetable origin. If purchased
in jars use according to direction. When in cubes use like any
other bouillon cube. Of peculiar value for the high content of
vitamins B and G, it is also called petite marmite.
SOUP ACCESSORIES
O
^ OUP may be served with many accompaniments, such as
CROUTONS
Cut stale bread into slicesabout one-third of an inch thick,
and remove all crust. Spread with butter, cut in cubes and
bake in the oven until delicately browned. If preferred, these
cubes of bread may be fried in deep fat or sauted in just enough
fat to keep them from burning. Put into soup at time of serv-
ing, or pass in a separate dish, permitting each person to put as
many croutons as he may wish in his portion of soup.
MOCK ALMONDS
These are merely croutons shaped to represent almonds.
VARIATIONS
Use the cookie cutters in any small design to cut sliced bread
for toasting on a cookie sheet or large pan. Or use the cutters
on biscuit dough and bake or fry in deep fat.
NOODLES
l
1 egg /2 teaspoon salt Flour
EGG BALLS
No. 1.
No. 2.
Mash the four cooked yolks to a paste, season, and mix with
the uncooked egg-yolk. Form into small balls. Roll them in
the uncooked egg-white, then in flour, and poach in hot water.
These are attractive in consomme.
I
P ACCESSORIES
D SALADS, BUY
i88
PATE A CHOUX
1 teaspoon butter 1 egg
2 l/2 teaspoons milk Salt
*4 cup flour
CUSTARD ROYALE.
2 egg-yolks Saltand pepper
1 egg Cayenne
l
/2 cup beef stock
Beat the yolks of the eggs slightly and then beat into them
the one whole egg. Add beef stock, a little salt, pepper and a
SOUP ACCESSORIES 189
CHICKEN FORCEMEAT
WHITE
2 breasts chicken (uncooked) 1 cup milk
5/2 teaspoon salt /2
l
blade mace
1 cup dry bread-crumbs % teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons butter 2 egg-whites
FISH FORCEMEAT
Free any kind of delicate fish from skin, fat and bone.
Pound, strain, use one-half pint fish and proceed as for chicken
forcemeat.
OYSTER FORCEMEAT
12 oysters Cayenne
2 cups dry bread-crumbs 1 teaspoon parsley
3 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon lemon-juice
2 egg-yolks 3 tablespoons oyster-juice
1 teaspoon salt Nutmeg
Chop the oysters fine and add the bread-crumbs, butter, salt,
cayenne, minced parsley, lemon- juice, oyster- juice,^ the yolks
of raw eggs and a grating of nutmeg. Pound to a smooth
190
~^*j~~f
m
V jf j|
mm
* -/ E A FfSiST A R S "flm&T R
FISH
To Skin a Fish
Remove the cut off a strip of skin along the backbone,
fins,
and cut the skin around the gills. Pull the skin off with the
hand. If the flesh is soft, work slowly and closely follow the
skin with the 'knife, to avoid tearing the flesh.
Boiled Fish
For boiling a large fish whole, a fish-kettle with strainer, a
large kettle with a wire frying-basket or a steamer is needed.
A plate in a piece of coarse muslin or cheese-cloth, kept for
194
this purpose, may be used for fish in small pieces. Clean the
fish, rub a little salt over it, wrap it in a cloth and place it in
the container in which it is to be boiled or steamed.
The fish must not be putinto cold water, as that extracts
the flavor, nor into boiling water, as that breaks the skin, but
should be put into hot water, which may then be quickly
brought to the boiling-point. After the water boils, decrease
the heat so that it will simmer.
Use enough water to cover the fish, add one teaspoon of salt
and one tablespoon of vinegar or lemon- juice to every two
quarts of water. These whiten the flesh and make it firm as
well as season it. After the water begins to simmer, allow five
to ten minutes to the pound for small thin pieces and ten to
fifteen minutes to the pound for large thick pieces.
PICKLED SALMON
4 to 5 pounds salmon 1 grated nutmeg
2 quarts vinegar 6 blades mace
1 ounce peppercorns 1 tablespoon salad oil
BONED HERRINGS
6 large herrings Parsley
Pepper Vinegar
Salt 6 slices buttered toast
Broiled Fish
To broil a whole fish, split the fish down the back, dry
thoroughly, sprinkle with salt, pepper and lemon- juice. Place
fish, flesh side down, on a well-greased wire broiler. Turn and
broil on skin enough to crisp the skin. Large fish are
side just
cut into slices one inch thick, and broiled on both sides evenly.
ig6
BROILED SMELTS
12 smelts 1 tablespoon salt
l
3 tablespoons butter /2 tablespoon pepper
1 tablespoon lemon-juice 3 tablespoons flour
Small smelts are not always split open and cleaned, but the
entrails are squeezed out carefully so as not to bruise the fish,
and the heads are sometimes left on. When the smelts are
large, however, cutting down the belly to remove entrails is
more satisfactory. Put butter, lemon-juice, salt and pepper in
a deep plate on the back of the stove where the fat will slowly
melt. On another plate, place the flour. Wash and wipe the
fish and roll it in the melted, seasoned fat, and then lightly in
the flour. Arrange on a double broiler and cook four or five
minutes over clear coals. Serve on a warm dish with remoulade
sauce.
Baked Fish
WHOLE LARGE FISH Dress and stuff the fish (See chapter
"Stuffings for Fish, Meat, Poultry and Game.") and sew up
the opening with a trussing-needle. If a white or medium fat
TYING PUTE AND SALMON IN
CHEESECLOTH WHEN BOILING,
WILL PRESERVE ITS BEAUTY
it
WHETHER BAKED OR PLANKED, ONLY
CAREFUL HANDLING
WILL BRING FISH
TO THE TABLE ^
LOOKING
ITS BEST
m
FISH 197
fish is used, cut three or more slits in its sides and insert a strip
of salt pork in each. Fat fish needs no larding, it has fat enough
in itself.
Place a cloth or a rack in the bottom of a baking-pan. Upon
the cloth place a thin layer of minced salt pork and a few slices
of onion and tomato. Upon these place the fish itself. Dredge
with salt, pepper and flour and lay on more salt pork; place in
a hot oven (425 F.) add a cup of boiling water and cover.
Cook fifteen to twenty minutes to each pound, basting fre-
quently, adding water after each basting if necessary. After
the first fifteen or twenty minutes reduce the heat to 350 F.
Milk may be used instead of water in baking dry fish steaks. If
a dripping-pan is used, it is not necessary to add water, and fish
has more flavor if cooked without water.
SMALL FISH OR FILLETS Follow directions for whole large
fish, allowing a total baking period of twenty to thirty minutes.
Cusk Lemon
Flounder Egg sauce Egg
Haddock Oyster sauce Lemon
Halibut Brown, Hollandaise, Tomatoes, peas, parsley
tomato or mush-
room sauce
Mackerel (horse) Lemon
Salmon Lemon sauce Parsley and lemon
Sturgeon Drawn butter Parsley and lemon
Tile Tomato sauce
needed.
Rub together flour and butter; add onion, bay -leaf, chicken
stock, and salt and pepper as needed. Simmer gently twenty
minutes and then add lemon-juice, strain the sauce and pour
it over the fish. Season lightly with salt and pepper, sprinkle
bread-crumbs over the sauce and fish. Bake twenty minutes in
a hot oven (425 F.) and serve at once in the same dish.
HALIBUT CREOLE
2 pounds halibut 1 slice onion
2 cups stewed tomatoes 2 tablespoons butter
1 cup water 1 tablespoon flour
pan, put sliced lemon on top, then pour half the tomato sauce
around the fish and bake in a hot to moderate oven (425 to
350 F.) for thirty to forty minutes, basting three times with
the remainder of the tomato sauce. Pour the sauce remaining
in the bottom of the pan around the fish on the serving platter.
six minutes. For variety, cut the fillets up, simmer half of the
small fillets in salted water from six to ten minutes and then
serve with the fried ones, having the boiled ones in the center
of the dish. Serve with a white sauce, or with Tartar sauce.
Planked Fish
Scale the fish. Split it down the back, clean, wash and wipe
dry Prepare a plank of oak or hickory, about one and
as usual.
one-half inch thick, and put in the oven to heat. If using a
gas stove, place it directly under the gas in the broiler, having
the side which is to hold the fish nearest the flame.
Rub the fish all over with oil, salt and pepper. Lay it skin
side down on the plank, and put the plank on the upper grate
of the oven, or under the broiler of a gas stove. Cook about
one-half hour, spreading melted fat over the fish while it is
in the oven if there is a tendency to dryness. If the fish has
roe, the roe may be broiled on the plank beside the fish, or the
roe may be boiled, mixed with a little white sauce, well seasoned,
and spread over the thinnest part of the fish, five minutes before
it is finished, and covered with crumbs.
Have ready freshly mashed potato and form a border of this
around the fish by pressing it through a pastry-bag. Set the
plank in the oven until the potato has browned, then send to
table garnished with lemon and parsley.
The of the plank will depend on the size of the oven,
size
but it must be at least three inches wider than the fish. White-
fish and shad are best for planked fish.
To
Prepare Roe for Use
Parboil it in salted, acidulated water (one tablespoon vinegar
or legion- juice to one quart water) and simmer eight to ten
minutes. Drain, cool, and pick out the pieces of membrane;
the roe is then ready for any recipe.
FISH 201
Milt
The part of the male fish that takes the place of the roe
of female fish is called the milt, and may be prepared and
cooked in just the same way. The blue vein that runs through
the center of salmon milt should be removed before the milt is
cooked.
BROILED ROE
Wipe, sprinkle with salt and pepper, put on greased wire
and broil five minutes on each side. Serve with maitre
broiler,
d'hotel sauce.
Mash the cooked roe very carefully, then mix with the salt.
SCALLOPED ROE
1 to 2 pounds shad roe Bread-crumbs
1 cup medium white sauce Chopped parsley
Egg-yolk Saltand pepper
Lemon-juice
Mix cold cooked fish with mashed potatoes, milk, salt and
pepper. Stir in one egg, well beaten. Put into an oiled mold
or dish and set in the oven until hot. Beat the white of the
other egg stiff and stir into it the beaten yolk seasoned with salt
and pepper; heap this over the fish and brown.
FISH TIMBALE
1 cup cooked fish, fresh or 2 cups milk or cream
canned l
/2 cup butter or other fat
/2 cup cooked mushrooms Salt, pepper and nutmeg
l
SALMON PUFFS
l
2 cups cooked salmon, fresh /2 cup soft bread-crumbs
or canned 1 tablespoon lemon-juice
Salt and pepper 3 eggs
Remove the skin and bones from the salmon, chop the meat
fine, and add salt, white pepper or paprika, soft bread-crumbs,
FISH 203
SALMON AU GRATIN
1
cup cooked salmon, fresh or Salt and pepper
canned 2 tablespoons lemon-juice
1 cup drawn-butter sauce Bread-crumbs, cheese
Flake the cold salmon, mix with the drawn butter, salt, pep-
per and lemon -juice. Fill little earthen dishes with the mixture,
cover with fine bread-crumbs, with or without cheese, and
brown in the oven at 400 F.
SALMON LOAF
2 cups cooked salmon, fresh 4 tablespoons butter
or canned Salt and pepper
2 eggs Minced parsley
l
/2 cup fine bread-crumbs
Flake the fish, add the eggs beaten lightly, the melted butter,
the bread-crumbs, salt, pepper and minced parsley. Put into a
greased mold, and steam for an hour. When cold, arrange on
a platter and garnish with slices of lemon, cucumber, and pars-
ley.
TUNAFISH WITH CAPER SAUCE
2 cups cooked tunansh, fresh 1
1
/2 cups milk
or canned 3 tablespoons capers
2 tablespoons butter Paprika
2 tablespoons flour 1 tablespoon minced parsley
l
/2 teaspoon salt
KEDGEREE
2 cups cooked fish, fresh or 1 cup cooked rice
canned Salt and pepper
4 tablespoons butter or other 2 hard-cooked eggs
fat
Free the fish from skin and bone. Melt butter in a saucepan,
add the fish and stir gently. Put in the rice, the whites of the
hard-cooked eggs, and season to taste with salt and pepper.
Move gently about over the fire until thoroughly hot, and serve
on a flat dish with the yolks of the eggs, pressed through a
ricer, over the top.
SCALLOPED FISH
2 cups cooked fish, fresh or 2 hard-cooked eggs
canned 2 tablespoons butter
/z cup mashed potatoes Salt and pepper
l
Separate the fish into very small pieces and leave in cold
water for three hours, changing the water three times. Heat
the milk in a double boiler. Add the codfish, well drained, and
FISH 205
cook for ten minutes. Mix the butter with the flour until a
smooth paste is formed, then stir it into the milk. Cook ten
minutes. Take the dish from the heat, add the beaten egg, stir
well and serve without further cooking, adding a sprinkling
of pepper just before dishing. If the sauce is cooked after the
egg is added, the milk is likely to curdle. The egg may be
omitted.
CODFISH A LA MODE
1 cup salt codfish 2 eggs
2 cups mashed potatoes 54 cup butter or other fat
2 cups milk or cream Pepper
Pick very fine and freshen salt codfish as in preceding recipe;
mix with mashed potatoes, milk or cream, well-beaten egg, but-
ter and pepper. Turn into a baking-dish and bake twenty or
twenty-five minutes in a moderate oven (3 50 -400 F.).
CODFISH BALLS
1 cup salt codfish 2 tablespoons butter or other
4 cups sliced raw potatoes fat
2 tablespoons milk or cream 1 egg
Pepper
If the fish is not already shredded, pick out all the bones and
shred the flesh. Simmer the fish and the sliced potatoes to-
gether in plenty of water until the potatoes are soft. Drain,
mash, and beat until fine and light; then add the pepper, fat
and milk, and the egg, well beaten. Mix all thoroughly with
a spoon. Shape into balls. Fry in a frying-basket in deep fat,
(375-390 F.) for two to five minutes.
CODFISH SOUFFLE
1 cup salt codfish 1 tablespoon butter or other
2 cups raw potatoes fat
2 tablespoons milk or cream Pepper
2 eggs
Soak fish over night, cook in fresh water, flake. Make a white
sauce with the fat, flour and milk. Add the flaked fish to the
white sauce and pour on to a warm platter. Cut the eggs into
slices and arrange in a circle on top. Serve at once.
SALT MACKEREL
BOILED
1 salt mackerel 4 tablespoons flour
2 cups milk 4 tablespoons butter
Pepper
Clean the fish by scraping off rusty-looking portions and also
the thin black membrane found on the inside, and leave it over
night in plenty of cold water, with the skin side up. In the
morning, drain the fish and place it in a frying-pan, skin side
down, cover with fresh water, and slowly heat to the boiling-
point. Drain off this water, add just enough fresh water to
cover the fish and simmer until tender. Lift the mackerel out
carefully (a pancake-turner will be found convenient for such
work) and place it on the serving-dish in the oven to keep
hot while the gravy is being prepared.
To one cup of the water left in the frying-pan after the
removal of the fish, add the two cups of milk. When the
liquid boils, add the flour stirred to a paste with the fat, and
season with salt and pepper. Let the gravy boil slowly three
or four minutes, stirring constantly until smooth. Pour it
over the mackerel.
BAKED Prepare the fish as for boiling but place it in a shal-
low baking-pan just large enough to hold it, and pour over it
the milk. Bake twenty minutes in a hot oven (400 -42 5 F.)
stirring into the milk at the end of fifteen minutes a smooth
FISH 207
Oysters
Oysters, to be safe and palatable food, must be perfectly
fresh. Buy them in the shells, if possible, and when purchas-
ing them without shells be sure that the liquor is clear; if it
is
cloudy, the oysters should not be used.
OYSTER COCKTAIL
30 medium oysters 1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons prepared horse- 2 tablespoons vinegar
radish 4 tablespoons lemon-juice
3 tablespoons tomato catchup % teaspoon tabasco sauce
PANNED OYSTERS
1 pint large oysters % CU P oyster-juice
6 slices buttered toast
Season the oysters with salt and pepper. "Wrap one oyster
in each slice of bacon and fasten with a toothpick. Heat a
frying pan and put in the oysters. Cook on one
and then side
on the other just long enough to about five
crisp the bacon,
minutes. Cut slices of toast into quarters and place one oyster
on each small slice of toast. Serve immediately, garnished with
parsley.
CREAMED OYSTERS
1 pint oysters 6 tablespoons flour
4 tablespoons butter or other 1 pint rich milk
Heat the oysters in their own liquor until the edges curl.
Make with the fat, flour and milk.
a white sauce Combine the
oysters and sauce, add seasoning and serve.
OYSTERS A LA POULETTE
1 pint oysters Nutmeg
1 /4 cups milk or
1
cream 2\ egg-yolks or 1 whole egg
1 tablespoon butter 2 tablespoons flour
Salt and pepper Cayenne
FRIED OYSTERS
1 pint oysters 2 eggs
1 y2cups milk 2 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
Scald oysters in their own liquor, and drain them
the
thoroughly on a cloth. Make a batter with the milk, egg, flour
and salt and dip the oysters in it. Fry a light brown, in deep
fat (375-390 F., two to five minutes) drain and serve.
Seasoned bread-crumbs may be used instead of the batter.
OYSTERS EN BROCHETTE
30 large oysters 6 slices toast % pound bacon
Cut the bacon into thin strips and cut the strips into pieces
an inch or an inch and a half square. String the oysters and
bacon squares alternately on six long, slender steel skewers,
being careful to run the skewers through the hard part of
the oysters. Place the skewers across a narrow, deep baking-
tin so that the oysters will hang down but not touch the bottom
of the tin; leave space between the skewers so that the heat will
pass evenly around them. Cook in a very hot oven (450-
475 F.) for five minutes, or long enough to crisp the bacon.
Place a skewer on each slice of toast. Pour the juice in the
pan over the toast and serve immediately.
BROILED OYSTERS
30 large oysters Salt and pepper
Butter Bread-crumbs, if desired
Dry the oysters on a towel; sprinkle them with salt and pep-
per and lay them in an oyster broiler (a fine-mesh broiler).
FISH 211
Drain the oysters and put them into a hot pan. Cook until
the edges begin to curl, then remove to a hot dish. Make a
sauce by adding to the oyster liquor the juice from the mush-
rooms, and enough milk to make a pint. Thicken this with
the flour blended with the butter or other fat and cook two
to five minutes. Add chopped mushrooms, onion-juice, lemon-
juice and a little salt.
Beat the yolks of the eggs; add a little of the hot mixture,
slowly, then all of it. Add the oysters, and cook over hot
water until the sauce thickens, stirring constantly. Remove
from the fire and serve at once.
OYSTERS SAUTEED
30 oysters Saltand pepper
Bread or cracker-crumbs Fat for sauteing
Drain the oysters well, season with salt and pepper and roll
in fine bread or cracker-crumbs. Place two or three tablespoons
fat in a saucepan and when it becomes very hot drop in enough
oysters to cover the bottom of the pan. When one side is
browned, turn the oysters carefully to brown the other side.
Add more fat as needed. The iron pancake griddle is often
used for this purpose, when many oysters are to be cooked at
one time. Serve very hot on toast.
SCALLOPED OYSTERS
1 pint oysters 6 tablespoons butter or other
2 cups soft bread-crumbs fat
l
/4 cup milk Salt and pepper
Oil a baking-dish; put in a layer of crumbs, then a layer of
oysters, butter or other fat in little pieces, salt and pepper.
Repeat, ending with a layer of crumbs, with small pieces of fat
dotted over them. Do not have more than two layers of oysters.
Moisten with milk and oyster liquor mixed together. Bake in
a moderate oven (350-400 F.) until brown, about half an
hour, and serve in the same dish.
OYSTER CASINO
30 oysters in the shell Pepper and salt
Lemon-juice 30 one-inch squares sliced
Buttered crumbs bacon
Wash and open the oysters. Into each shell put a half -tea-
spoon of strained oyster liquor, a few drops of lemon- juice,
then the oyster sprinkled with pepper and salt and covered with
buttered crumbs. On each lay an inch square of bacon and set
in a hot oven (400 -450 F.) for ten or twelve minutes. Shal-
low ovenware dishes, with the half -shells embedded in coarse
salt, are excellent for this purpose. The salt keeps the shells
from tipping during baking. Where shells are not available.
FISH 213
Drain the oysters, chop them, not too fine, and drain again.
Make a white sauce with two tablespoons of the fat, the flour
and the milk, remove from the fire and add the beaten yolks,
the salt, pepper and parsley, and then the oysters. Fill small
ramekins with the mixture, sprinkle lightly with soft bread
crumbs, dot with fat, arrange in a baking-pan, and brown in a
quick oven (400 -42 5 F., about seven minutes).
Clams
Clams, like oysters, should be purchased in the shell whenever
possible. The shell opens when the animal dies, making it easy
to discard the bad ones. A
dead clam is dangerous food.
If obtained the day before they are to be used, cover the
clams with cold water and sprinkle corn-meal over the top of
the water, using about one cup of corn-meal for a peck of
clams. Let them stand over night.
To open clams steam in tightly covered vessel and if the
clams are not to be served at once, remove them from the shells
and drop them into cold water, to keep them from becoming
tough. A peck will yield about a quart of clams without the
shells.
Cut off the siphons
of large clams,, as that part is very tough,
and the clams have not been treated with corn-meal, open
if
the stomachs with a pair of scissors and
scrape out the debris.
Wash the clams well, to remove all sand.
CLAM COCKTAIL
Follow recipe for oyster cocktail. (See Index. )'
214
down the edges with stones. Leave for two or three hours;
remove the cloth and the top layer of seaweed, and rake out
the clams and other foods as needed.
The same materials may be cooked in a large kettle at home
using cheese-cloth between the layers, but will lack the fine
flavor of the real clam-bake.
FISH 215
CREAMED CLAMS
1 cup clams 2 tablespoons flour
1/2 cup milk 6 slices toast
1/2 cup clam-juice Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons butter or other Parsley
fat
DEVILED CLAMS
25 clams, fresh or canned 2 tablespoons bread-crumbs
1 tablespoon butter or other 2 egg-yolks
fat 1 tablespoon chopped parsley
2 tablespoons flour Salt and pepper
1 cup milk or cream
Drain the clams and rinse them in cold water. Make a white
sauce with the fat, flour, and milk or cream, and put in the
crumbs, the raw egg-yolks, and the parsley. Remove from the
add the chopped clams, pepper to taste and salt if needed,
fire,
fill clam shells, or small ramekins, with the mixture,
scallop or
brush them over with beaten yolk of egg, sprinkle with bread-
crumbs, and brown in a hot oven (400 K).
SCALLOPED CLAMS
18 opened clams 48 very small dice of fat
6 large clams in shell bacon
White pepper 4 tablespoons cracker-dust
2 tablespoons minced celery 2 tablespoons butter or other
fat
Have the clams opened carefully, so that the shells will not
be broken. Clean the shells well with brush and water. Lay
two clams in each half shell, dust with white pepper, and one-
half teaspoon of minced celery, and add four of the bacon
dice; cover with a very thin layer of cracker-dust, put a half
teaspoon fat on top and bake in the oven (3 50 -400 F.) fif-
teen to thirty minutes.
Scallops
The nearly round, ribbed shell of the scallop is known to
many who have never seen the scallop itself. Only those who
live in seashoretowns ever see the whole bivalve, as the non-
edible portions are discarded before the edible part, the large
adductor muscle, is sent to market.
FRIED SCALLOPS
1 pint scallops, fresh or Cracker-crumbs
canned Beaten egg
Salt and pepper
BROILED SCALLOPS
Use recipe for broiled oysters. (See Index.) Either fresh or
canned scallops may be used.
I
s.
FISH 217
CREAMED SCALLOPS
1 pint scallops, fresh or 1 pint thin white
canned sauce
"Wash and drain the scallops, add them to the sauce and cook
about fifteen minutes in a double boiler.
Sea Mussels
Sea mussels are as agreeable to the taste as oysters, and may
be eaten when oysters are out of season. Canned mussels are
obtainable nearly everywhere. When fresh mussels are used,
the shells may be opened by steaming, or with a knife. The
horny "beard" must be removed and discarded.
PANNED MUSSELS
30 mussels in the shell Cayenne
2 tablespoons butter Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons flour Lemon-juice
Wash the shell with a brush in cold water, and open by steam-
ing. Remove the mussels from the shells, place them in a
saucepan, add the butter, salt and pepper, cayenne, and a dash
of lemon-juice. Mix the flour with an equal quantity of cold
water and rub out all the lumps, then add more water to make
it about as thick as rich cream. Pour in a thin stream into the
hot mixture, stirring constantly. As soon as the boiling-
point is reached, remove from the fire and serve. Mussels, like
oysters and clams, are made tough by over-cooking.
FRIED MUSSELS
Use recipe for fried oysters. (See Index.)
CREAMED MUSSELS
Use recipe for creamed oysters. (See Index.)
Lobster
Lobsters are in season from June to September, and it is possi-
ble to obtain them at any time of the year. The shell of a live
218
r**r\*r^r
lobster is
usually a mottled dark green. Boiling makes the shells
of lobsters turn bright red.
all
wise, remove the stomach and intestinal canal, crack the large
claws and lay the fish as flat as possible. Brush the meat with
fat; season with salt and pepper, place in a broiler, with the
shell side down, and broil slowly until of a delicate brown.
Boil the lobsters and cut the meat into small pieces. In open-
ing the lobsters be careful not to break the body or tail shells.
Make a white sauce with the milk, butter and flour. Remove
from the fire and add the crumbs, parsley, lobster, salt and pep-
per, a grating of nutmeg and the yolks of the eggs mashed very
fine. Mix all well together. "Wash the shells and wipe them
dry, and with a pair of scissors cut off the under part of the
tail shells. Join the large ends of both tail shells to one body
shell, to form a boat-shaped receptacle. Put the lobster mixture
into this boat, brush over the top with beaten egg, sprinkfe
lightly with bread-crumbs, and bake in a moderate oven (350-
400 F.) fifteen to thirty minutes.
Make a white sauce with the fat, flour and milk. Add sea-
food cut into small pieces and the salt and pepper. Some cooks
add a teaspoon of curry-powder.
22O
No. 2.
2 cups fresh or canned 3 eggs
lobster 2 teaspoons anchovy sauce
1 cup milk 3 tablespoons cream
1 cup soft bread-crumbs Salt, pepper and cayenne
Cut the meat of the boiled lobster into small pieces and mash
the coral with a tablespoon of fat. Rub the flour and the rest
of the fat to a smooth paste. Add boiling water and cook five
minutes, then add the coral and butter and lemon- juice. Sim-
mer for four minutes. Strain the sauce over the lobster meat^
place the whole on the fire and boil up once.
FISH 221
No. 2.
Crabs
The blue crab, found on the Atlantic Coast and in the Gulf
of Mexico, is about two and one-half inches long by five inches
wide. The Dungeness crab of the Pacific Coast is much larger.
Crabs go through a molting season, in the Spring and Summer.
During the few days between the shedding of the old shell and
the hardening of the new one, they are called soft-shell crabs.
At other times, they are called hard-shell crabs.
Oyster crabs are tiny, almost transparent, grayish-white
crabs found in the shells with oysters. They are often served
in oyster stews.
Dressing Crabs
All uncooked crabs should be vigorously alive when pur-
chased, or the meat is not good. To prepare them for cooking,
proceed as follows:
SOFT-SHELL CRABS The back of the crab tapers to a point
at each side. Lay the crab on its face, take one of these points
between the thumb and forefinger of the left hand and pull the
shell back about half-way. Pull off all the spongy substance
which is thus exposed. Repeat the operation at the point on
the opposite side. Pull off the tail (apron) which laps under
the crab, and the spongy substance under it. Wash the crabs
in cold water, and they are ready for cooking.
HARD-SHELL CRABS Throw the live crabs head first into
rapidly boiling water. After five minutes, add one tablespoon
of salt and boil for thirty minutes. When cold, break off the
apron, or tail. Take the crab in both hands, with the thumbs
at the tail end, and pull the upper and lower shells
apart. Dis-
222
wx>^
card the material that sticks to the upper shell and pull off
allthe orange waxy material and white spongy substance be-
tween the halves of the body and at each side. The edible part
of the crab lies in the two compact masses remaining, and in
the small flakes that may be extracted from the large claws.
The latter must be broken with a cleaver or hammer.
DEVILED CRABS
12 hard-shell crabs or 1 cup milk or cream
shells. Sprinkle with the crumbs and place the remainder of the
butter, cut in small pieces, on top of the crumbs. Cook on the
grate in a hot oven (400 F.) until the crumbs are brown.
Serve on a bed of parsley, garnishing with the claws.
CRAB COCKTAIL
Follow recipe for oyster cocktail. (See Index.)
CREAMED CRABS
12 hard-shell crabs or 1 tablespoon butter or other
2 cups canned crab-meat fat
1 tablespoon flour Salt and pepper
cup milk
l
/z Cayenne
SCALLOPED CRABS
l l
/2 cups crab-meat, fresh 2 cups milk
or canned Parsley
5 tablespoons butter or other 1 teaspoon onion-juice
fat Salt and pepper
4 tablespoons flour 1 cup soft bread-crumbs
CREAMED SHRIMPS
2 cups cooked shrimps, 4 tablespoons flour
fresh or canned 2 cups milk
2 tablespoons butter or other Salt and pepper
fat
Make a white sauce with the fat, flour and milk, add shrimps,
whole or broken into small pieces. When
thoroughly heated,
add seasoning and serve.
SCALLOPED SHRIMPS
2 cups cooked shrimps, 1
cup bread-crumbs
fresh or canned 2 cups boiling water
4 tablespoons butter or other 1
teaspoon lemon-juice
fat 1 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons flour 1/2 teaspoon pepper
1
teaspoon mustard
low scallop-dish, cover with the bread-crumbs and dot with the
half-tablespoon of butter broken into little bits. Bake for
twenty minutes in a moderate oven (350 F.).
DEVILED SHRIMPS
1 cup shrimps, fresh or canned 3 hard-cooked eggs
3 tablespoons butter or other Paprika
fat 1 tablespoon chopped parsley
Prepare shrimps as directed. Melt the fat, add the flour and
stir untilsmooth. Add the milk, heat, stirring constantly, and
when it begins to thicken, add the eggs, which have been put
through the sieve. Cut the shrimps with a silver knife, and
add to the sauce; season with the paprika, parsley, and onion-
juice. Put the mixture in ramekins, cover with seasoned
crumbs, and brown in a quick oven.
Fresh-Water Crawfish
Crawfish, or crayfish, look like lobsters, but are much smaller.
They may be prepared and served in the same way as lobsters.
Cook the crawfish in boiling salted water, drain, and remove
the shell. Take out the intestines by pinching the extreme end
of the center fin and jerking it suddenly. This removes the
gall-cyst, which is
very bitter.
Frogs
Frogs' legs (hindquarters only) are considered quite a deli-
cacy. The skin can be turned over and slipped off the legs,
like a glove taken off inside out.
pressure, and the shells separate easily. It will take from thirty
to sixty minutes. It should be cooked until the skin is like
jelly. Remove the turtle from the water, and after it has cooled
a little, place it on its back with the head away from you, and
loosen and remove the under shell.
The liver, gall bladder and sand bag will be found near the
head end, the gall being attached to the left side of the liver.
Take out the gall as you would that of a chicken, being care-
ful not to break it. Remove the entrails and throw them away.
Take out the eggs, if there are any, remove the slight mem-
brane and drop them into cold water. Cut all the meat very
fine, saving any water that may collect in the shells. The turtle
is now
ready to use in a stew or in other ways.
If terrapin is used, wash and plunge it alive into boiling
salted water, and cook for about ten minutes. Then plunge
it into cold water, rub off the toe nails and dark skin, place
it again in salted boiling water and cook until the legs are
tender, from thirty to sixty minutes. Clean the terrapin ac-
cording to directions for turtles, but instead of throwing away
the small intestines, cut them in very small pieces and use them
for food. Discard the thick, heavy part of the intestines.
FISH 227
Mash the yolks of the hard-cooked eggs and mix them with
the fat. Put the cream or rich milk into a double boiler; when
scalded, stir in the egg and fat mixture and beat till smooth;
it is
SHRIMP CREOLE
1/2
medium-sized onion, Dash of cayenne
chopped y4 teaspoon thyme
y2 cup chopped mushrooms 1 bay leaf
2 tablespoons butter 2 pimientos, chopped
2 tablespoons flour 2 cups cooked shrimps
1
cup mushroom broth 4 wheat biscuits
1
cup water Butter
1/2 teaspoon salt 3 sprigs parsley
y & teaspoon pepper
SELECTION OF MEAT
There are certain characteristics of good meat which serve
as a guide to the purchaser. Flecks of fat all through the fibers
indicate tenderness and flavor. Thin connecting tissue means
a tender cut; thick tissue, a tough one. Meat well ripened or
hung some time after slaughter is more tender than freshly
killed meat. Meat of any kind should have a fresh odor and
no dark, dry edges or spots.
Beef
Good beef should have a bright red color and a moist juicy
surface when freshly cut; firm, fine-grained muscle; dry,
crumbly suet, white in color; and a thick solid edge of straw-
colored fat.
Veal
Veal should be at least six weeks old before slaughter. The
sale of "bob" veal is prohibited in many states; it is soft and
of poor flavor. Prime veal should be a faint pink color with
littleor no edge of fat. Flecks of fat in the meat should show
a pinkish tinge. Milk-fed veal is particularly good.
Pork
Pork should have firm white flesh with a faint pink tinge.
The Pork of dull appearance, with
fat should be clear white.
Cuts of Meat
Animals dressed for market are divided lengthwise through
the backbone into two parts, each of which is called a side.
Each side is divided again into two parts, the forequarter and
the hindquarter. Each quarter is then divided into smaller
cuts which are sold in the retail market.
Leg of Lamb
(Three cuts from one leg)
Roast Broil Stew. Braise
Square Cut
Lamb
Shoulder
Arm Blade
Lamb Chop Lamb Chop
Broil Roost
Cushion Saratoga
Lamb Shoulder Lamb Chops
Roast Broil
Hind Shank
Soup or Simmer
Rolled Short
Beef
;he Plate Ribs
Simmer or Braise Standing Rolled Rib
Rib Roast Rib Roast SteaR
KnucRle crosscut
Soup Bone Fore ShanR Boneless ChucR Shoulder
Pot-Roast Fillet
soup or Braise
Broitt
English Cut Arm Pot Roast Arm SteaR Rolled Necft Boneless NecR
Bfaiff of St*w
2to5
Bacon Loin Chop
Canadian^Styte
Blade Arm
Veal Roast Veat Roast
Roost or Braise
'
with a damp cloth, or the meat may be rubbed with soda, kept
for a few minutes in boiling water, wiped with a damp cloth
and then cooked.
of heat. Broil on one side until nicely browned, turn and finish
broiling. Season. Chops and tender steaks as porterhouse, sir-
loin and first or second cut of round are the most desirable for
broiling.
PAN BROILING Meat
is placed in a sizzling hot skillet and
are best cooked by this method which softens both tissue and
fiber.
The best cuts for stews are those containing both fat and
lean and some bone. The shank is the most economical of all
cuts for this purpose. Other cuts used are the neck, plate, flank,
heel of the round and the short ribs. The brisket and the rump
are sometimes used. Occasionally a cut like the round is used,
as in beef a la mode.
In making stews^ one-fourth pound of clear meat or one-
half pound of meat and bones should be allowed for each
serving. One to two potatoes, one to two medium-sized car-
rots, one small onion, one-fourth medium-sized turnip and one
stalk of celery may be used for each person served. Any or
all of these
may be omitted.
BRAISING Use a thick-walled kettle or frying pan. Brown
sliced onion and snip of garlic in a small amount of fat and sear
meat thoroughly in this. If cooking is to continue on top of
stove, leave meat in the kettle. For oven finishing, transfer to
casserole or baking dish. Season, add a small amount of water
or tomato juice and simmer. Pot roast is the most familiar
braised meat.
FRYING AND SAUTEING Some meats, such as chops and cut-
lets,may be crumbed and fried in deep fat. Ham, liver and
some other meats are sometimes sauteed in a small amount of
fat at low temperature, after the first searing.
PRESSURE COOKING utilizes live steam in a special kettle.
FIRELESS COOKING continues cooking with no additional
heat.
COOKING GLANDS AND ORGANS All glandular organs re-
quire careful cooking at low temperature. Overcooking
toughens them and destroys their delicate flavor, making them
almost tasteless.
Beef
BROWNED BEEF BRISKET
6 pounds beef brisket 6 or more medium- sized
Celery salt boiled potatoes
Garlic Salt and pepper
If the piece has much bone, part may be removed for soup,
stock, or gravy to be used with the meat when warmed
over.
Simmer the solid part of the meat in a little water until tender,
MEAT 235
with a dash of celery salt and garlic added, turning it once dur-
ing the cooking, which will take not less than three hours for
the amount given. Remove the meat from the liquor; place
it in a shallow pan with skin side up, and score several times
across the top. Have boiled potatoes (hot or cold) in readi-
ness and drop them into the kettle to take up some of the fat;
then place them around the meat and brown all in a hot oven
(400 -450 F.) about ten to twenty minutes. Make a gravy
with the remaining liquor and serve separately. The meat
should slice as firmly as cheese and be tender and appetizing.
BRISKET OF BEEF
3 pounds beef brisket y2 cup diced celery with
1/2 cup
sliced onions leaves
Cover beef with hot water, add vegetables and simmer, cov-
ered, until meat is tender, about 2 l/z to 3 hours. Do not boil.
Add salt when half done and more water if necessary. Remove
meat from broth, slice and serve with Horse-radish Sauce (page
324) or Onion Sauce (page 315). Allow /2 pound per serving.
l
pepper. Place beef brisket on top. Cover with water and cook
slowly until tender, about 3 hours.
3. Omit vegetables listed. For the last hour of cooking add
1
quart sauerkraut, 1 cup vinegar and 3 tablespoons brown
sugar. Cover and finish cooking. Stir in a grated uncooked
potato 10 minutes before serving.
TO CORN BEEF
Neck, brisket and navel are usually used. Rub the beef with
saltand pack it in a clean hard wood barrel or crock. Pour
over it the following pickle^ enough for twenty-five pounds,
2 l/2 pounds salt /2
l
ounce saltpeter
Yz pound sugar 4J/2 quarts water
Mix the pickle thoroughly, boil it, remove the scum, and
cool the liquid. Place a heavy weight on top of the meat to
236
r^r^^f
keep it in the brine. The meat may be left in the brine for a
month, but it is at its best after ten days of curing.
Soak the meat one hour in cold water. Drain, put into a
kettle with carrot and onion, using enough cold water to cover
well. Add to each quart of water one teaspoon of vinegar.
Simmer until tender. Thirty to forty minutes for each pound
is a fair allowance of time. Let it remain in the liquor twenty
minutes after it is done. Then drain and serve. Butter rubbed
over the meat just before serving improves corned beef pre-
pared in this way.
l
brisket % cup cubed turnips
/4 cup flour 4 cups potatoes, cut in
1Yz teaspoons salt quarters
J4 teaspoon pepper
Wipe meat, remove from bone, cut in cubes of about one and
one-half inch. Mix flour with salt and pepper and dredge the
MEAT 237
cubes of meat with it. Cut some of the fat from the meat
and heat in a frying-pan. When part of the fat has tried out,
add the cubes of meat and brown the surface, stirring con-
stantly to prevent burning. Put this meat, with the melted
fat in which it was browned, into the stew-kettle. Add enough
boiling water to cover the meat or a pint of tomatoes, stewed
and strained, and simmer until the meat is tender (about three
hours) .
The carrots and turnips are to be added during the last hour
of cooking, and the potatoes twenty minutes before serving
time. Fifteen minutes before serving time, add the dumplings
to the stew.
DUMPLINGS No. 1.
No. 2.
Sift together the dry ingredients and rub in the fat. Add
enough milk to moisten the flour, but do not make the mixture
too wet. Roll out the dough on a board, making it about one
inch thick, and cut with a biscuit cutter. Put the pieces on a
plate in a steamer and steam twenty to thirty minutes. It is
better not to steam the dumplings over the stew, as the rapid
boiling required reduces the gravy too much. These dumplings
may be cooked on top of the stew, as in the recipe above, but
they will be lighter if steamed.
238
s^-X^^^-^^-N^-S-'-V^N^'S-'^X-N^-V^
BEEF GOULASH
3 pounds beef chuck 1 teaspoon salt
l
Vinegar /2 teaspoon paprika
Summer savory 8 onions
SAVORY BEEF
2 pounds beef, plate, shank, % teaspoon ground cloves and
rump or round
'
thyme or Summer savory
3 large onions, sliced 1 pintbrown stock or boiling
3 tablespoons fat water and meat extract
3 tablespoons flour 2 tablespoons vinegar
1 tablespoon catchup
1 teaspoon salt
54 teaspoon black pepper
Brown the onions slowly in the fat. Increase the heat. Cut
meat into sizes desired for serving, add it to the onions, and
brown. Mix the flour and the dry seasonings. Sprinkle this
MEAT 239
mixture over the meat. Add the stock, vinegar and catchup.
Cover closely. Simmer until meat is tender, allowing at least
two hours for shank or plate and one and one-half hours for
rump or round.
portions.
VARIATIONS 1. Add uncooked pared
potatoes, carrots, green
and onions just long enough before serving to cook
beans, celery
them. They may be whole, quartered or sliced.
2. Use tomatoes or tomato juice in
place of water.
3. After browning, pour l/4 cup horse-radish over meat.
4. Before cooking, cut slits in the meat and insert stuffed
SMOTHERED BEEF
3 pounds rump 2 tablespoons mild prepared
Flour mixed with salt and mustard
pepper 1
teaspoon celery seed
3 large onions, sliced 1
cup strained tomatoes or y2
3 tablespoons fat can tomato soup
Dredge the meat with flour and brown it in a heavy pan.
Brown the onions in the fat; add the mustard, celery seed and
tomatoes. Pour this sauce over the meat and simmer three hours
or more.
SWISS STEAK
2 pounds 2y2 inches
steak cut Salt and pepper
thickfrom shoulder, rump y2 green pepper, chopped fine
or round 2 cups boiling water or
y2 cup flour 1
cup water and
2 tablespoons fat 1
cup strained tomatoes
Few slices onion
Season the flour with salt and pepper and pound it into the
meat with a wooden potato-masher, or the edge of a heavy
THE PROPE
ROAST
SQUARE C
CHUCK, RU
ROUND
A HEAVY METAL
POT WITH A
TIGHT COVER AND
GRILL IS THE
PROPER SETTING
FOR BRAISING THE
ROAST
BROWN TH
CAREFULI
ALL SIDES
SON AS
BROWN
THE GRILL
ER THE ROAST
ADD A SMALL
UNT OF WA-
OR TOMATO
E
COVER CLOSELY
AND SIMMER OVER
LOW HEAT, RE-
NEWING LIQUID
OCCASIONALLY
VEGETABLES,
R CLOSELY
PREPARE FOR
ISCIOUS DIN-
!. Bureau Home
mics
240
N^-S^^X-
meat mallet. Heat the fat and brown the meat in it. Add the
onions, green pepper, boiling water and tomato. Cover closely.
Simmer for 2 hours. This may be cooked in a casserole in a
moderate oven (350F.) about 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Vegetables may
be added as desired. Serves 6.
STUFFED STEAK
2 pounds flank or round steak 1 tablespoon chopped onion
1 cup crumbs 1 small turnip, diced
l
/2 cup stock or water /2
l
cup chopped celery
1 teaspoon salt 1 small carrot, diced
/
l
4 teaspoon pepper Flour
The meat should be cut from one-half inch to one inch thick.
"Wipe the steak, remove the skin and lay the meat out flat on
a board. Make a dressing of the crumbs, stock or water, salt,
pepper, chopped onion and a small amount of celery and spread
It on the meat. Roll the steak with the grain, so that when it
is cut it may be cut across the
grain of the meat. Place the
diced vegetables in a roasting-pan and on them lay the rolled
steak. Add two or three cups of water, depending upon the
size of the pan. Cover and bake in a slow oven (350 F.) for
three hours, or until tender.
If you prefer to cook this meat on top of the stove, melt one-
half cup of suet in the bottom of a flat-bottomed iron or
heavy aluminum kettle, flour the meat thickly and lay the roll
in the kettle. Turn from side to side until it is well browned,
then add hot water nearly to cover, and simmer slowly for
three hours.
Whenthe meat is cooked, remove it from the kettle or roast-
ing-pan and thicken the broth, using one to two tablespoons of
flour to each cup of gravy.
BRAISED OX-TAIL
1 ox- tail (cut in two-inch 2 tablespoons flour
pieces) 1 cup hot water
2 tablespoons fat 1 cup tomatoes
2 small onions 3 bay-leaves
1 carrot 3 whole cloves
1 tablespoon chopped celery Salt and pepper
Saute the pieces of ox-tail in the fat. Add the sliced onion*
and carrot and the chopped celery, and brown all together.
MEAT 241
BRAISED BEEF
% to 3 pounds brisket or 1 chopped onion
round of beef 1 chopped carrot
Drippings or other fat for 1 tablespoon chopped parsley
BEEFSTEAK PIE
2 pounds rump, flank or Sliced potatoes
chuck steak Butter or other fat
Pie paste Flour
Chopped onion Egg
Salt and pepper
Cut the meat into strips two inches long by one inch wide.
Put them with the bone, just cover them with water and sim-
mer about an hour. Line the sides of a baking-dish with pie
paste; put in a layer of meat with a few thin slices of onion,
and sprinkle with salt and pepper; next add a layer of sliced
potatoes,with bits of butter dotted over it. Alternate the steak
and potato layers until the dish is full. Thicken the gravy
with browned flour and pour in, put on a top crust, brush it
with beaten egg and bake at 450 F. until quite brown about
thirty minutes.
242
and tie it into shape. Rub the lean parts with drippings and
rub the whole with salt, pepper and flour.
Place the standing or rolled rib roast fat side up in an open
roasting pan. Then the roast will baste itself. Insert meat
thermometer so that bulb reaches the center of the largest
muscle, taking care that it does not rest on the fat or bone.
Roast in a slow oven (300-350 F.) or, if a brown crust is
wanted, start in hot oven (500 F.) for 20 minutes, then reduce
to 300 F. until done as desired. The thermometer will read
140 F. for rare, 160 F. for medium, 170 F. for well done.
The time per pound needed is 18-22 minutes for rare; 22-25 for
medium and 27-30 for well done. For making gravy, see page
314.
YORKSHIRE PUDDING
1 cup flour 1 cup milk
1/2 teaspoon salt 2 eggs
Put flour, salt, milk and eggs together in a bowl. Beat well
with a rotary egg-beater. Pour drippings to the depth of one
inch into a shallow pan. Have the drippings hot and pour in
the mixture quickly. Bake for one-half hour in a hot oven
(400 -42 5 F.). The pudding may then be placed under the
trivet that holds the roast beef and left for about fifteen min-
utes to catch the gravy that flows from the roast. If a trivet
isnot used, cut the pudding into squares and lay them around
the roast in the pan. Serve the pudding with the beef.
FILLET MIGNON
Beef fillet Salt and pepper
Salt pork Flour
Butter or other fat
The fillet isthe under side of the loin of beef, the tenderloin.
The skin and fat should be removed with a sharp knife, and
also every shred of muscle and ligament. If the fillet is not
then of a good round shape, skewer it until it is so. Lard the
upper surface with strips of fat salt pork and rub the entire
surface with soft butter or other fat. Dredge well with salt,
pepper and flour, and place the fillet, without water, in a small
MEAT 243
BROILED STEAK
1
porterhouse, sirloin Salt and pepper
or club steak 2
tablespoons butter
BROILING TIME
Degree of
Doneness 1 inch thick 1 /2
1
inches thick
WITH MUSHROOMS
Use mushroom caps, whole or sliced. Saute slowly in hot
butter 5 to 10 minutes, stirring frequently. Allow 2 tablespoons
y
butter for 2 pound mushrooms.
WITH ONIONS
Slice onions into water and drain. Place in a shallow sauce-
pan, cover closely, and cook over a slow heat for fifteen or
twenty minutes, till tender. No water or fat should be used,
WITH YOUR THfRMOM-
ftAT THE HEART 6f THE
ROAST AND YOU NEED NEVER
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THE PLANKED STEAK ARI
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Meat Board
244
\XN^/'
WITH OYSTERS.
1 quart oysters 3 tablespoons butter or other
1 tablespoon sifted flour fat
Set the oysters, with a very little of their juice, over the fire;
when they come to a boil, remove any scum and stir in the fat
in which the sifted flour has been rubbed. Boil one minute^
pour over the steak and serve at once.
PLANKED STEAK
1 tender steak, 2 inches thick Butter
Duchess potatoes Minced parsley
Various kinds of cooked Salt
vegetables Paprika
Trim the fat and make outline of the steak even. Sear it on
bothsides on a hot griddle or pan, using no fat, or on a broiler.
Cook fifteen minutes, turning frequently. Oil a heated plank
(see directions for planked fish), place the steak on the plank,
and arrange border of Duchess potatoes around it. Arrange
other cooked vegetables, such as stuffed tomatoes or green
peppers^ small boiled onions, peas, string beans and cubes of
carrot or turnip, around the steak, also, so that the board is
entirely concealed. Place the plank in the oven until the potato
border is browned and all the vegetables are heated through.
After removing it from the oven, spread the steak with butter
into which has been rubbed minced parsley^ salt and paprika.
Send to table upon the plank.
HAMBURG STEAK
2 pounds chopped beef Onion-juice
l
/4 pound suet Flour
Butter Salt and pepper
Have the butcher chop the beef and suet together twice.
Press it into a flat steak about three-fourths of an inch thick,
sprinkle with salt, pepper, a little onion-juice and flour. Broil
on a fine wire broiler or saute in a little fat. Spread with butter
MEAT 245
Have the meat put through the grinder twice. Add the
bread, the onion, seasonings to taste and the two uncooked
eggs, well-beaten. Arrange the hard-cooked eggs end to end
across the middle of the meat and roll the meat mixture around
them. Place the roll in a baking-pan, pour over it a sauce com-
posed of the tomatoes, sliced onions, butter or other fat and
water, and bake in moderate oven (350-375 F.) for about
two hours^ basting frequently with sauce. In serving, slice the
roll crosswise. The hard-cooked eggs may be omitted.
BEEF BALLS
pounds beef from
l
l /z the 1 egg
shank Flour
/3 cup bread-crumbs
l
Salt and pepper
3 tablespoons soft fat 1 teaspoon lemon-juice
1 cup stock Nutmeg
Put the meat twice through a food-chopper, add bread-
crumbs, salt, pepper, lemon- juice, a little nutmeg and the beaten
egg. Shape into balls lightly and let them stand for half an hour
or more to become firm, then roll them in flour and brown them
in the frying-pan with the fat. Take out the meat balls, add to
the fat a tablespoon of flour and a cup of stock. Season well, put
the meat balls into this mixture, cover the frying-pan closely
and simmer for an hour and a half.
246
BEEF LOAF
l
l /2 pounds chopped beef 2 teaspoons salt
2 eggs Additional seasonings to suit,
l l/2 cups bread-crumbs such as chopped celery or
2 tablespoons chopped parsley onion, poultry seasoning, a
/2
l
teaspoon pepper dash of thyme, savory, sage,
etc.
BEEF MIRONTON
Sliced cooked beef 6 onions
1 cup bouillon or 1 to 2 tablespoons fat
1 cup water mixed with 1 tablespoon flour
canned tomato sauce 2 tablespoons vinegar
Salt and pepper Bread-crumbs
the top and bake for ten minutes in a hot oven (400 F.).
MEAT 247
FRICASSEE OF BEEF
l
Sliced cooked beef /2 teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons flour 2 cups water
3 tablespoons fat 1 teaspoon onion-juice
l
l /z teaspoons salt
Season the meat with salt and pepper. Make a sauce of the
fat, flour and water, and remainder of the seasonings. Add the
cold meat and cook gently for three minutes, if it is rare beef,
mutton or game; if the meat is veal or poultry, it may cook
longer. Serve on a hot dish with a border of ricej mashed po-
tatoes or toast.
BEEF HASH
2 cups chopped cold roast 1 cup beef gravy or hot water
Put the fat into a frying-pan and then put in the meat and
potato, salt and pepper, moisten with beef gravy or hot water
and cover. Let it steam or heat through throughly, stirring
occasionally to mix it evenly and also to keep it from sticking.
When done, it should be neither watery nor dry, but just firm
enough to stand well when dished. If a drier hash is liked,
reduce the liquid, and after the hash has been thoroughly
heated through remove the cover and allow the hash to brown.
If onion is liked, fry two or three slices in the fat before the
hash is added, or mix a little chopped onion with the meat
and potatoes.
place it where the hash will cook slowly for half an hour. There
should then be a rich, thick crust on the bottom. Do not stir
248
^NXN^NX
2 cups milk
Place the butter or other fat and one and one-half cups of
milk in a small frying-pan. When hot, add the beef, shredded.
Cook three minutes. Rub the flour smooth in one-half cup
cold milk, add a dash of pepper and stir into the beef. As
soon as it thickens, draw the pan back, simmer five minutes,
add the well-beaten egg and serve at once. The hot gravy will
cook the egg sufficiently* The egg may be omitted.
Veal
BRAISED VEAL
5 pounds veal 1 tablespoon sliced onion
2 tablespoons butter or other Salt and pepper
fat 4 cups boiling water
VEAL PIE
2 pounds veal 2 tablespoons fat
Puff paste or other rich paste 1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons flour Pepper
Cut the meat into small pieces and stew until tender. Line
a baking-dish with paste. Set a small inverted cup in the middle
of the dish. Put in the meat, dredge it with flour, add fat and
seasoning, and nearly cover with the stock in which the meat
was cooked. Cover with paste. Bake thirty minutes in a quick
oven (450 F.). pound of good salt pork or ham
If one-half
is cut in thin and parboiled with the veal, a nice flavor is
slices
added and very little, if any, butter need then be used, nor is
any other salt necessary. Hard-cooked eggs cut in slices and
arranged in layers on the veal and ham are an addition to this
dish. When serving, lift the inverted cup and let the gravy
flow back into the dish.
Wipe the cutlets, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dip them first
in beaten egg and then in fine bread or cracker-crumbs, and
saute' in drippings until brown. If preferred, they may be cut
250
FV/SSNS
VEAL COLLOPS
2 pounds veal Cracker-crumbs
Egg Salt and pepper
Cut the veal in pieces the size of an oyster, dip in beaten egg,
roll in cracker-crumbs and season with salt and pepper. Fry in
deep fat (375-400 F.).
Fry the ham, using no fat unless the meat is unusually lean.
Remove the ham and place on the serving-dish. Cook the veal
in the juices left from the ham, frying without covering until
it is a deep brown. Put the veal on the same dish with the
ham, add a little water to the gravy, season with salt and pepper,
and pour it, without thickening, over the meat.
MEAT 25I
ROAST VEAL
4 pounds veal Flour
Salt and pepper Fat or salt pork or bacon
A roast may be cut from the leg, the loin, the rack, or the
shoulder, or the breast may be boned for a roast. A
fillet of
five or six pounds from the heaviest part is the most economical
for roasting. If the leg is used, it should be boned at the market,
and the bone should be used for stock.
Stuffing improves many
roasts of veal (see recipesbelow) .
Wipe the meat, dredge with salt, pepper and flour and place
it in a pan with some fat. Place in a slow oven (300 F.) and
roast uncovered and without adding water until tender. Allow
25 to 30 minutes per pound. If desired make an incision in meat
and insert a roast meat thermometer so that the bulb reaches
the center of the fleshiest part. When the thermometer registers
170 F. the veal will be well done. Allow about %
pound per
serving.
Have the kidney end of the loin carefully boned and cut
into a long shape like a flap. Line it with slices of boiled ham and
hard-cooked eggs. Remove all the skin and fat from the kidney,
chop and mix with bread crumbs, thyme, parsley, lemon
fine
rind, salt and pepper. Add beaten egg and blend thoroughly.
Spread over the veal on top of the sliced ham and eggs. Roll
the meat and sew or fasten tightly with skewers. Arrange strips
of salt pork or bacon over roll. Place in a slow oven (300 F.)
and roast without covering and without adding water until
tender, 25 to 30 minutes per pound. If a meat thermometer is
used it will register 170 F. when meat is well done. Allow l/$
pound per serving. Serve with brown gravy. This is delicious
served cold. Garnish with spiced peaches or apricot halves in
pineapple rings.
252
VARIATIONS Add l
/z cup cooked pitted prunes, apricots or
seedless raisins to the stuffing.
Stuff breast with cooked and seasoned rice or noodles.
VEAL LOAF
l
2 /z pounds veal, knuckle 1 cup water or stock
or shin 1 egg
l
/4 pound salt pork /2
l
teaspoon sage
2 teaspoons salt 2 tablespoons butter or other
1 teaspoon chopped onion fat
1 cup cracker-crumbs
Chop the veal and pork very fine and add salt, onion,
crumbs, one-half of the water or stock, the egg and sage. Mix
all well together. Oil a small pan and press the mixture into
it like a loaf, making it about six inches
high. Cook for two
and one-half hours in a moderate oven (350 F.) basting with
the remainder of the water or stock, in which the butter or
other fat has been melted. This may be served hot or cold. If
served hot a white sauce may accompany it.
JELLIED VEAL
A knuckle of veal Stalk of celery
l
/2 onion Salt and pepper
Few slices carrot
and pepper, and other seasoning if desired. Pack the hot mix-
ture into a mold, cover with oiled paper, cover and let stand
until set. Slice thin and serve cold.
BARBECUED ROAST
3 or 4-pound roast lamb, 4 cups beef stock
mutton, pork or beef % teaspoon dry mustard
Dash pepper
y2 cup salad oil
2 tablespoons vinegar % teaspoon celery
about
salt
Wipe the pork chops with a damp cloth and dust with flour.
Sear on both sides until browned, then place 1 tablespoon sauce
on each chop. Reduce heat, cover and cook slowly 5 to 8
minutes. Turn chops and place 1 tablespoon of sauce on other
side. Cover and cook slowly until tender. Serve with sauce.
BARBECUE SAUCE
4 tablespoons minced onion 1
tablespoon salt
1
cup tomato puree 1
teaspoon paprika
% cup water 1
teaspoon chili powder
3 tablespoons vinegar !/2 teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons Worcester- y 4 teaspoon cinnamon
shire sauce Dash ground cloves
Combine all ingredients in order listed. Heat to boiling and
use as directed above.
254
^-^N^-SXX^N^\-/'V^^^/%^'-Vr^-\^^^-x.
Wipe leg of lamb with damp cloth, rub with salt and dredge
with Place in a roasting pan and surround with onion.
flour.
Combine remaining ingredients, mix well and pour over meat.
Roast in a 3 5 F. oven 3 minutes for each pound. Baste every
20 minutes with the sauce. Serves 8.
LAMB STEW
2 pounds lamb cubes, shank, 6 potatoes
breast, neck or shoulder 6 carrots
2 tablespoons flour 3 onions
2 tablespoons butter or other 4 white turnips
fat 1
cup fresh peas
Salt and pepper 3 tomatoes
Hot water Flour
Dredge lamb with flour and brown well in hot fat. Season
withsalt and pepper, cover with water and simmer until nearly
tender, 1 to 1 J/z hours. Add peeled vegetables, except tomatoes,
whole or cut in cubes and simmer 30 minutes longer or until
tender. Add tomatoes and simmer 10 minutes longer. Mix a
little flour with water to a smooth paste and add
enough to the
liquid to thicken slightly. Serves 6.
MEAT 255
Mutton chops should be not less than one inch thick. The
bestway to cook them is to broil them. Sprinkle with salt
and pepper, oil on both sides and broil, turning very often.
Have them slightly underdone, and serve on a hot chop-dish,
garnishing with French fried potatoes and sprigs of parsley.
If preferred these chops may be breaded. Select chops with
little fat, or trim off the fat, dip them in well-beaten
egg, roll
in cracker crumbs, and fry in deep fat (375-400 F.). Serve
with tomato sauce.
A crown
is
usually prepared at the market and is made by
shaping the ribs (12-15) into a crown and frenching or scrap-
ing the rib ends. Season with salt and pepper. Fill center of
crown with stuffing. Wrap rib ends with salt pork or bacon
slices. Place crown on a rack in an open
roasting pan and roast
in a moderately slow oven (300 to 350F.) until as well done
as desired, allowing 30 to 35 minutes per pound. To serve,
remove salt pork from rib ends and slip paper frills over them.
Allow 2 ribs to each serving.
VARIATIONS Do not stuff. Roast crown upside down with-
out wrapping ribs. To serve, turn right side up and fill center
with vegetables: mashed potatoes, potato balls, peas, diced
carrots or cooked whole cauliflower.
A CROWN ROAST OR
LEG O'LAMB HELPS CEL-
EBRATE THE SPRING
B
BREAST OF LAMB
READY FOR STUFF-
ING.
ROAST ON RACK,
NO COVER, NO I
WATER. SERVE f
WITH STUFFED
ONIONS I
U. S. Bureau Home
Economics
MEAT
Trim the cutlets and remove the fat, dip them in cold water,
season with pepper and salt and sprinkle flour on both sides.
Wet the inside of a thick saucepan with cold water, leaving
about two tablespoons of the latter in the pan. Lay the cutlets
in flat, place over a gentle fire and simmer for one hour or
more, turning the cutlets when half done. Unless cooked slowly,
the cutlets will not be tender or good. Season and serve with
pan gravy. A little water may be added to the gravy, if
necessary.
meat frequently the last hour of roasting with l/2 cup grape
jelly melted in /2 cup hot water.
l
Pork
PORK TENDERLOIN
1
pound tenderloin 3 tablespoons bacon drippings
Flour Salt and pepper
% cup sour cream
Cut tenderloin crosswise into 2 -inch slices. Flatten out and
dredge with flour. Place in hot skillet containing drippings.
Brown on both sides and season with salt and pepper. Reduce
temperature, add cream, cover and simmer until tender, about
20 minutes. Serves 6.
VARIATIONS Place unflattened slices on a baking sheet.
Spread with a thick layer of catchup and bake in a moderate
over (350 F.) until tender, about 45 minutes.
BROILED Do not flatten. Broil as for steaks, (page 243).
MEAT 259
ROAST SPARERIBS
2 pounds spareribs Salt and pepper
PORK PIE
2 or 3 poun,ds thick end of Salt and pepper
loin of pork 1 or 2 tablespoons catchup
1 cup stock or water Parsley
Plain pie paste Onion
Cut pork into thick slices three inches long by two wide.
Put a layer on the bottom of
a pie-plate and sprinkle chopped
parsley and onion, salt and pepper over it. Repeat until the
dish is full and then pour in stock or water and catchup. Put
a strip of good plain paste around the edge of the dish, cover
with the paste, cut an opening in the center, and set the pie
in a hot oven (450 F.). When the crust rises and begins to
color, place the pie in the bottom of the oven, put a piece of
paper over it and bake at a lower temperature (350 F.) for
two hours. Often the meat is partly cooked before the crust
is
put on.
Simmer the piece of pork one and one-half houra. Cook the
vegetables in the same kettle until they are soft, then remove
them and finish cooking the meat. Cut the pork into thin
slices. Arrange them side by side down the middle of a large
platter, and make a border of the cabbage, quartered, and the
other vegetables cut into lengths.
BOILED.
' PIGS FEET
'
6 pigs' feet l /2
l
tablespoons salt
Scrape and wash the feet thoroughly and tie each separately
in a piece of cheese-cloth. Put them into a kettle or stew-pan,
MEAT 261
cover with boiling water and add the salt. Let the water boil
up once, then set back on the fire and simmer for six hours.
Cool in the water. When cold, drain, but do not take off the
cloth, and place the feet on a platter. The next day they will
be ready for broiling, frying or pickling.
BROILED.
6 boiled pigs' feet Flour
Salt and pepper Butter
Split each foot, dredge with salt, pepper and flour and broil
over clear coals for ten minutes. Serve on a hot platter, season-
ing with butter, salt and pepper.
f
FRIED.
6 boiled pigs' feet 1 egg
Split the feet and season well with salt, pepper and lemon-
juice. in beaten egg, then in bread-crumbs and fry five
Dip
minutes in deep fat (375-390 F.). Drain and serve imme-
diately.
BROWNED.
6 boiled pigs' feet Butter or other fat
cup crumbs
l
/z 2 cups boiled beets, fresh or
1 egg canned
PICKLED (SoucE).
4 good-sized boiled pigs' feet, 1 tablespoon broken cinnamon
with uppers % cup salt
1 quart strong vinegar 2 teaspoons pepper
4 bay-leaves /2 onion
l
Place the vinegar on the fire, adding bay -leaves, cloves, cinna-
mon, salt, pepper, onion cut in eighths, and mace. Steep slowly
in the vinegar for forty-five minutes, but do not allow the
vinegar to boil rapidly at any time. Remove the fat cake from
the top of the water in which the feet were boiled, and save it
for cooking purposes. Add about one quart of the water to
the vinegar; if the vinegar is not very strong, less water must
be added, so that the vinegar may not be too much diluted.
Strain the liquid through a sieve to remove the spice, etc., and
pour it over the meat in the jar, helping it through the meat
with a knife and fork until the two are thoroughly mixed. Set
the jar in a cold place for two days.
SCRAPPLE
1 hog's head Corn-meal
Saltand pepper Buckwheat flour
Powdered herbs
Scrape and clean a hog's head, then split it and take out the
eyes and brain. The butcher will do this, if requested. Clean
the ears and scrape them well. Put all on to boil in plenty of
cold water and simmer gently for four hours, or until the bones
will easily slip from the meat. Lift out the meat and bones into
a colander, remove the bones and chop the meat fine. Skim
off every particle of grease from the water in which the meat
was boiled, and return the meat to the boiling stock in the
kettle. Season highly with salt and pepper and powdered herbs.
Add enough corn-meal and buckwheat flour, in equal quantities,
to make a soft mush, stirring constantly for the first fifteen
minutes, then lower the heat and cook for one hour. Pour
into bread pans, cool, and keep in a cold place until needed.
The scrapple may be served cold or may be cut into slices,
dipped in egg and cracker-crumbs and sauted.
HEAD-CHEESE
1 hog's head with ears and Sage
tongue Sweet marjoram
Salt and pepper Powdered cloves
BOILED HAM
1 ham Brown sugar Whole cloves
Wash ham thoroughly, cover with boiling water and sim-
mer, partially covered, for 25 to 30 minutes per pound, or until
meat is tender. When cooked the internal temperature will be
(160 F.). If ham is to be served cold, let it stand in water
until it is cold, then peel off skin and serve. If it is to be
served hot, peel off skin, rub with brown sugar, stick in a few
cloves and bake in a hot oven (400 F.) to brown. When-
ever possible follow packers cooking directions.
BROILED HAM
Place the slices on broiler and turn them frequently. Either
boiled ham or raw ham may be used for broiling.
264
add a cup of milk to the fat in the pan. When this boils,
thicken it to a cream with one or two tablespoons of flour mixed
to a smooth paste with a little cold milk, season with pepper,
then turn the gravy over the ham. A more simple gravy is
made by adding a little hot water to the fat in the pan and
pouring this over the meat.
SAUSAGES
1 pound sausage 1 cup milk
1 tablespoon flour Salt and pepper
shape the sausage meat into balls with the hands. Place them
in a hot frying-pan and fry until brown, adding no fat, as
there will generally be plenty in the meat. When done, re-
move the sausage to a platter. Pour off all but one tablespoon
of fat, add one tablespoon of dry flour and cook one minute,
stirring all the time; then gradually add one cup of milk,
still
,
MEAT 265
sistency, add salt and pepper to taste, pour the gravy over the
sausage and serve.
POTTED HAM
1 cup cold cooked ham Powdered mace
Cayenne pepper Mustard
Mince some cold, cooked ham, mixing lean and fat together,
and pound in a mortar, seasoning with a little cayenne pepper,
mace and mustard. Put into a baking-dish and place in the
oven (350 F.) for one-half hour; afterward pack it into pots
or little stone jars, covering with paraffin and paper,, This is
convenient for sandwiches.
Cut the slices thin and place them in cold water. After they
have soaked one hour, drain well and dry them on a napkin.
Heat the frying-pan very hot. Place one-half cup (8 table-
spoons) of flour on a plate and dip each piece of meat in it.
Fry until crisp. Drain off all but two tablespoons of the fat
and stir two tablespoons of flour into that
remaining in the
pan. Cook two minutes, stirring well, then reduce the heat
and slowly add one pint of milk. When the
gravy is smooth,
cook one minute and add pepper and salt, if needed. Turn the
gravy over the meat and serve.
266
^N^^^-^_^N^^^^V--^V-^-X-^^-N^^_^V-^-V-'
LIVER CASSEROLE
1
pound calf's liver 1
teaspoon Worcestershire
% cup tomato sauce sauce
Dash salt and pepper
cover so that salt pork may brown. Thicken gravy in pan and
serve with meat. Serves 8.
around it as a garnish. Put flour into the hot fat in the pan
and stir until brown. Make a medium sauce of this browned
flour and water. Season with salt and pepper, and pour the
gravy over the liver and bacon.
SWEETBREADS
PREPARING SWEETBREADS Sweetbreads should be plunged
into cold water as soon as they are received, and soaked for one
hour, then they should be parboiled in acidulated, salted water
(one teaspoon salt and one tablespoon vinegar to one quart
water) for twenty minutes. After draining they should be
plunged into cold water again to make them firm. The little
strings and membranes, which are easily detached after parboil-
ing, should be removed.
BROILED.
2 pairs sweetbreads Lemon-juice
Butter Saltand pepper
FRIED.
2 pairs sweetbreads Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons flour Egg
1 cup milk Bread or cracker-crumbs
CREAMED.
2 pairs sweetbreads 1 teaspoon minced
parsley
4 tablespoons butter or other 2 cups milk or cream
fat Salt and pepper
4 tablespoons flour
LARDED.
2 pairs sweetbreads 1 pint seasoned stock
Salt pork for larding 6 slices toast
the cords and artery cases, and use only the lean portions. Place
the chopped heart in a saucepan, add the water and bay-leaf, a
dusting of salt and pepper, and simmer gently for ten minutes.
Rub the flour and butter or other fat together, add them, with
sliced lemon, stir thoroughly for five minutes, and serve at
once.
MEAT 269
Wash the heart well, remove the large veins and arteries from
the inside and take out every particle of blood. Add the celery
to the stuffing and stuff the cavity of the heart. Tie the heart
about with twine, and wrap it in a cloth, sewing the ends to-
gether to keep the stuffing in. Place in a small stewpan with
the point of the heart down, and nearly cover with water boil-
ing hot. Place the lid on the stew-pan and simmer gently for
three hours. When done, there should be about one pint of
water in the pan. Remove the cloth and place the heart on a
platter. Thicken the liquor in the pan with flour or corn-
starch mixed with a little cold water, and season with salt and
pepper. Pour tjie gravy over and around the heart.
fourth hour. Place on a dish with the sauce, garnish with slices
of lemon and sprigs of p?.rsley and serve.
Tongue may be jellied and served cold.
BRAIN RISSOLES
2 cups brains or 2 tablespoons chopped green
1 whole brain pepper
l
Pie paste or short biscuit /z cup thick white sauce
dough % teaspoon salt
Put the brains into a bowl of cold water, with salt, for
thirty minutes. Cover with water and simmer fifteen minutes.
Remove fiber and outer membrane. Drain, chop or put
through the meat grinder, add seasoning and white sauce.
Form into small balls. Roll pie paste or short biscuit dough
quite thin. Place the balls on the paste equal distances apart.
Place another sheet of paste over all. Stamp out with round
cutter or cut them apart and press upper and lower crusts to-
gether. Bake in hot oven (450 F.) for fifteen minutes.
Brown in deep hot fat or oil (375-390 F.) before serving.
STEWED KIDNEYS
3 cups veal or beef kidneys 2 tablespoons flour
2 bay-leaves 2 tablespoons butter or other
/2 lemon
l
fat
Salt and pepper
Split the kidneys and cut out the hard, white substances and
fat from the center. Wash them well and soak for three or
four hours in cold water, changing the water as soon as it be-
comes cloudy. Then put the kidneys into a granite pan, add
enough cold water to cover them and heat slowly. When just
at the boiling-point, pour off the hot water and again just
cover them with cold water, once more heating slowjy and again
changing the water when hot. Change the water in this way
three times, then simmer (twenty minutes for small kidneys;
forty minutes for a beef kidney.) Set away to cool. If the
stew is to be used for a breakfast dish, this
preliminary cooking
must be done the day before. When ready to prepare, separate
all the cords and veins from the
kidneys, leaving only the lean
part. Cut this into small pieces. Place the chopped kidneys
MEAT 271
Cut the kidneys into halves, remove the white tubes and fat
and cover with cold water for thirty minutes. Drain and dry
on a piece of cheese-cloth. Brush with, or dip into, cooking
oil. Broil slowly until brown on both sides. Remove from the
broilerand put in pan, sprinkle with salt, pepper and a little
melted butter. Cover the pan and set over a slow fire for a
few minutes. Serve garnished with slices of lemon and sprigs
of parsley.
SAUTEED KIDNEYS
Remove the skin from the kidneys, cut them into thin round
and soak them in salted water for thirty minutes. Drain
slices,
and wipe. Saute until tender in butter or other fat. Serve with
brown sauce or tomato sauce.
If preferred, cut the kidneys in half after skinning, remove
the white tubes and fat and then slice the kidneys lengthwise.
TRIPE
PREPARING TRIPE Tripe is usually sold in the city markets
already cleaned. not so obtainable, wash well through
If
several boiling waters, then put it in cold water and let it soak
over night.
Simmer the tripe and onions in salted water for three or four
hours. Drain. Chop the cooked onions very fine, place them
in hot milk, and season with salt, pepper and butter. Pour this
over the tripe and serve at once.
STEWED WITH TOMATO SAUCE
2 pounds tripe Salt and pepper
1 onion 1 tablespoon butter or other
2 cups tomatoes fat
2 tablespoons flour
Buy liver in solid piece, wash thoroughly, dry and lard with
strips of fat pork (page 3). Cut lean salt pork in pieces and
try out slightly; add liver and brown on all sides. Add hot
water, vegetables and seasonings, cover and bake in moderate
oven (350 F.) until liver is tender, or about 1 hour for veal
liver and 2 hours for beef liver. Serve on hot platter surrounded
SAVORY LIVER
iy2 pounds beef liver, sliced 2 tablespoons flour
thin % teaspoon salt
REINDEER
Government breeding of reindeer has brought the meat back
on the market in modern form. It is shipped frozen and may be
thawed at low temperature or put directly under the broiler or
in the oven, when additional time for cooking must be allowed.
It is very much like beef or veal, with less fat, and has a pleas-,
ant gamy flavor. The round is the desirable cut and steaks,
pot roast, oven roast, chops and cutlets are prepared like beef
or veal except that they need larding more often.
POULTRY AND GAME
T)OULTRY all the domesticated birds that are used
includes
-- for food chicken and fowl, turkeys, squabs and pigeons,
geese and ducks. Game includes wild birds ducks, geese,
partridge, reed birds, quail, plover, etc., and animals suitable
for food which are pursued and taken in field or forest, as the
deer, moose and rabbit.
The of game, except that of partridge and quail, is dark
flesh
in color and has a fine strong flavor. The flesh of wild birds,
except that of wild ducks and geese, contains less fat than the
flesh of poultry.
Poultry and game unless they are in cold storage, should not
be kept long uncooked. They should be drawn as soon as pur-
chased, and should be kept in a cool place.
Unless hen turkeys are young, small and plump, cock turkeys
are more satisfactory.
Geese should have an abundance of pin-feathers, soft feet
and pliable bills.
There is more meat in proportion to the amount of bone in
E S BEST D R ESS^E D
-
BEFORE TUCKING
AWAY IN THE
ROASTERA COVER
THE FOWL WITH
BODY FAt AND A
FAT- SATURATED! I
CHEESEqLOTH. !
j
BEGINNING AND
Y04I WILL HAVE
A SELF RASTE
-Institute American'
Poultry Industries
I
C IS SIMPLER THAN
,K TRUSSING WITH
^USS BUCK-HEADED PINS.
EMOVE THE PINS AFTER
**mNC AND THE STRING
S OFF
titute American Poultry
length of the bird. Lay the bird open and remove the contents.
Cut the tendons or break the joints. Cut out the rib-bones and
remove the breast-bone, to facilitate carving.
To MAKE FILLETS Remove the skin from the breast and
with a sharp knife make an incision close to the breast-bone,
beginning at the end next the wish-bone and cutting through
the entire length. Following the bone closely, remove all the
meat, cutting it away from the wing joint. This fillet may
be separated into two parts, the upper or larger muscle making
the "large fillet" and the smaller "fillet mignon."
To CUT UP A FOWL Remove pin-feathers, singe the fowl,
cut off the head, tendons and oil-bag.
Cut off the legs at the thigh joint. Separate the first joint
or drumstick from the thigh.
Cut the wings from the body. Cut off the tips of the wings.
Separate the breast from the back by cutting clear down both
sides of the bird below the ribs.
Remove the heart, liver, gizzard, entrails and fat all together.
Remove windpipe and crop. Carefully remove the lungs and
kidneys from the back-bone.
Cut back and breast into two pieces each, cutting crosswise.
The back is sometimes further divided by cutting lengthwise.
The wish-bone may be removed by inserting a knife under the
tip and cutting downward, the knife following the bone.
To Clean Giblets
Cut the fat and membrane from the gizzard. Make a gash
in the thickest part, cutting to, but not through the inner lin-
ing. Remove the inner sac and throw it away. Carefully
separate the gall bladder from the liver and cut off any part of
the liver that has a greenish color. Remove arteries and veins
from the top of the heart and squeeze out the clot of blood.
Chickens
ROAST CHICKEN
1
roasting chicken Salt and pepper
Stuffing Flour
Fat
Wash, singe and draw the bird, rub it with salt and pepper
inside and out, and stuff with any desired stuffing. Bread
stuffing, chestnut stuffing and celery stuffing are particularly
good. Truss and tie the fowl. Brush skin with melted or soft-
ened fat. Turn breast side down and cover bird with a cloth
dipped in fat. Place in a moderate oven (325 to 350 F.). Cook
uncovered breast side down about one half the total time. Turn
breast side up. Place any strips of body fat removed in dressing
over breastbone. Bacon or salt pork strips may be used. Baste
with extra fat. The cloth may be removed toward the end of
the cooking if the bird is not well browned. Allow 30 minutes
per pound for small birds; 22 to 25 minutes per pound for
larger birds.
BROILED CHICKEN
Unless you are quite certain the chickens are tender, it is
wise to steam them before broiling. This may be done as fol-
lows: Set the dripping-pan in a moderate oven (350-400
F.) and nearly fill it with boiling water. Place two sticks across
the pan, extending from side to side, and upon them lay the
chicken. Invert a tin pan over it, shut the oven door and let
the chicken steam slowly for thirty minutes. This process
relaxes the muscles and makes the joints supple, besides preserv-
ing the juices that would be lost in parboiling.
Transfer the chicken from this vapor bath to a wire broiler,
turning the inside to the fire first. Broil until the chicken is
tender and brown, turning it frequently. If the chicken is
small, it will cook in twenty minutes or less. Do not have too
hot a fire. Lay the chicken on a warmed platter, spread it with
butter, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and serve.
PANNED CHICKEN
1 chicken . Salt and pepper
l/4cup fat 1 tablespoon cracker or
Flour bread-crumbs
1
cup hot milk Onion-juice
Cress Chopped parsley or tarragon
and pepper both sides, strew once more with bits of fat, dredge
with flour and return to the oven to brown slightly on both
sides, the under side first.
When the chicken is thoroughly done, place it on a hot
platter with the skin side uppermost, cover, and set it where
it will be kept warm. Pour hot milk into the pan and add
cracker or bread-crumbs. Season with salt and pepper, if neces-
sary, and add a few drops of onion-juice or a teaspoon of
chopped parsley or tarragon, as preferred. Stir the gravy
vigorously, let it boil one minute and turn it over the chicken.
Garnish with cress or parsley and serve.
PLANKED CHICKEN
2 large broilers 1 teaspoon minced onion
l
/4 cup fat Salt and pepper
1 teaspoon minced parsley 1 pint sauted mushrooms
1 teaspoon minced green 1 quart seasoned mashed
pepper potato
1 teaspoon lemon-juice Garnishes for plank
FRIED CHICKEN
No. 1 SOUTHERN STYLE
2 small chickens Flour
Salt and pepper l/4 cup fat
Cut each chicken into four or six pieces, dip each piece
quickly in cold water, then sprinkle with salt and pepper, and
roll in plenty of flour. Saute the chicken in a little fat until
each piece is brown on both sides, and admits a fork easily. Drain
the pieces well and arrange on a warm platter, setting the dish
in a hot place to keep the meat from cooling while the gravy
is being made, as on page 279.
No. 2
Dip the chicken into fritter batter and fry in deep fat
(375-390 F.) until brown. Transfer to a casserole or baking
dish and bake in a moderate oven (250 F.-350 F.) for 30-60
minutes. If the chicken is not young, parboiling before cutting
will shorten the baking time.
SMOTHERED CHICKEN
2 small chickens or 1 large one 2 or more tablespoons fat
Salt and pepper Flour
Take neck and split the chicken down the back, wiping
off the
it with a damp towel. Season inside and out with salt and
pepper, and dredge on all sides with flour. Lay the chicken,
POULTRY AND GAME 281
BOILED CHICKEN
is no better way to prepare chickens than
In "Winter there
to simmer them whole and pour over them oyster or parsley
sauce. The chicken should be well secured in a wet cloth that
has been generously sprinkled with flour, then plunged into
boiling water and simmered (not boiled) gently until the
chicken is done. Allow twenty to thirty minutes to each pound
of chicken. A large, tough chicken may be made very palatable
by preparing it in this way.
CHICKEN POT-PIE
1 chicken 1 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons flour 1 cup milk
Salt and pepper
PRESSED CHICKEN
1 chicken 1 tablespoon gelatin to each
Salt and pepper pint broth
from the bones. Lift the pieces from the kettle with a skimmer
and scrape all the meat from the bones, separating the white
meat from the dark and taking out the pieces of skin. Season
with salt and pepper.
Soften gelatin in two tablespoons of water for each tablespoon
of gelatin and add to the boiling chicken broth. Place the meat
in the dish it is to be pressed in, laying the white and dark in
alternate layers, and adding from time to time a little of the
broth to moisten all well. When all the meat is in the dish$
pour over it enough of the broth to cover it; lay a plate on top
of it; place a heavy weight upon the plate and set away in a
cool place. This makes an attractive dish for luncheon, sliced
and garnished with parsley.
BROWN
1 chicken Salt and pepper
2 or 3 small slices salt pork 1 teaspoon onion-juice, if
2 tablespoons flour desired
1 pint boiling water
cover the pan, and simmer gently until the chicken is tender,
then add a teaspoon of onion-juice, if desired, and serve at
once. The gravy will be thick enough, and if the pan has a
tight cover, it will not be diminished, even after long cooking.
CHICKEN PIE
1 chicken Salt and pepper
Pie paste Flour
Milk
ting the first slice, carefully slip the knife under the ramekin
and release the gravy which is held there by suction. Additional
gravy should be served in a gravy-dish.
CURRY OF CHICKEN
1 chicken (l /2 or 2 pounds)
l
2 tablespoons fat
1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon to 2 tablespoons
2 onions curry-powder
1 egg-yolk 1 tablespoon flour
Cut up the chicken as for fricassee, put in a saucepan with
sufficientwater to cover it, and simmer until tender, keeping
the pan closely covered. Remove from the fire, take the chicken
out and pour the liquor into a bowl. Put the onions into the
saucepan with the fat and saute until brown, then skim them
out and put in the chicken fry for three or four minutes, then
;
POULTRY AND GAME 285
SAVORY CHICKEN
/2 cups strained tomatoes
T l
/4 cup fat l
SCALLOPED CHICKEN
2 cups cooked chicken meat 2 tablespoons flour
1 pint broth in which chicken Salt and pepper
was cooked Bread-crumbs
Fat 2 cur>s sliced, cooked potatoes
Cut the cooked chicken meat into dice. Thicken the broth
with a paste made of the flour and two tablespoons of fat and
season with salt and pepper. Fill a pudding-dish with alternate
layers of bread-crumbs, chicken and potatoes. Cover the top
with crumbs. Pour in the gravy and add a few bits of butter
or other fat and bake fifteen to thirty minutes in a moderate
oven (350-400 F.).
286
CREAMED CHICKEN
2 cups cooked chicken Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons fat 1
tablespoon parsley
2 tablespoons flour 1 egg-yolk
1 cup milk or cream
Make a white sauce of the fat, flour and milk. Season with
salt and pepper. Add the parsley and chicken and cook until
the sauce is thoroughly hot again. Beat the egg-yolk, adding
two tablespoons of milk, and pour into the mixture. Cook
two minutes, stirring constantly, and serve in a border of riced
potatoes or in croustades.
Creamed chicken may be varied in a number of ways: by
substituting mushrooms or chopped cooked eggs for part of
the chicken or by adding chopped pimientos and olives.
Capons
Capons plump young roosters, especially fattened
are large,
for the table. They are prepared for cooking in the same way
as chickens. For stuffing, choose a delicate flavoring such as
oysters or chestnuts. Mushrooms or truffles are especially good
with capon.
Turkeys
ROAST TURKEY
Dress as directed for roast chicken and roast in an uncovered
roaster in a slow oven (300 F.) allowing 15 to 25 minutes per
pound, depending upon age and size of bird. The larger birds
require less time per pound than the small birds. Baste the bird
at half hour intervals. Serve with giblet gravy.
BRAISED TURKEY
1 turkey
l
/2 cup onion
Stuffing 1/2 cup turnip
l
/2 pound salt pork 4 cups water or stock
l
/2 cup chopped celery Salt and pepper
l
/z cup chopped carrots
This is a
very satisfactory way of cooking an old turkey that
is unfit for roasting. Stuff the body and breast with any de-
POULTRY AND GAME 287
6 tablespoons oil
egg, and once more in the crumbs. Set in the refrigerator. Put
the white stock into a saucepan; add rice, onion-juice and
one-half teaspoon salt^ and simmer slowly until the liquid is
absorbed.
When the rice is tender, add butter and grated cheese,^ and
season with salt and pepper. Cover and let it stand at the
side of the fire until the fillets are ready. Heat salad-oil or
cooking fat slowly in a frying-pan to 375-390 F., and cook
the fillets to a nice brown. Mound the rice in the center of a
hot dish and arrange the fillets about it.
TURKEY CURRY
6 tablespoons fat 3 tablespoons flour
J/3 cup onion, finely chopped y2 teaspoon salt
1 large
apple, peeled, diced 1 to iy2 teaspoons curry
1 large can mushrooms or powder
1
pound fresh mushrooms 1 l/2
cups turkey stock and top
3 cups turkey, diced milk, or cream
Goose
ROAST GOOSE WITH POTATO STUFFING
1 goose (about 8 pounds) Salt and pepper
Potato stuffing Flour
Salt pork if goose is not fat
Cook the giblets until tender, chop and add to stuffing made
by mixing bread-crumbs, onion, fat, sage, salt and pepper.
After cleaning and washing the goose thoroughly, stuff, and sew
the neck and back. Roast for fifteen minutes at 500 F., then
reduce the heat to 350 F. and cook about three hours. Wash
and core six to eight apples; sprinkle with brown sugar, stuff
with mashed and seasoned sweet potato; bake until tender and
serve hot with the goose.
DEVILED GOOSE
1 goose 1 teaspoon pepper
Ducks
ROAST DUCK
Epicures prefer young ducks rare, and without stuffing.
Some people consider that ducks have too strong a flavor, and
to absorb this flavor lay cored and quartered apples inside the
body. These apples are removed before the duck is sent to the
table. Celery and onions also may be placed inside the duck to
season it and improve the flavor, two tablespoons of chopped
onion being used to every cup of chopped celery, which may
consist of the green stalks that are not desired for the table.
This stuffing is also removed from the bird before it is sent to
the table. Should filling be preferred, use potato stuffing, put-
ting it in very hot.
Truss the duck, sprinkle it with salt, pepper and flour, and
roast in a very hot oven (500 F.) fifteen to thirty minutes,
provided the duck is young and is desired rare.
Full-grown domestic ducks are roasted in a moderate oven
(350 F.) allowing 20 to 25 minutes per pound. Bake uncov-
ered. Baste every half hour with drippings in pan. Serve with
giblet gravy and applesauce or grape or currant jelly. Green
peas should also be served with roast duck.
BRAISED DUCKS
1 brace ducks Parsley
3 slices bacon Salt and pepper
1 carrot 1 small turnip, diced
1 onion stuck with cloves Oil or cooking fat
Thyme Flour
DUCK A LA CREOLE
2 cups cooked duck Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons fat Paprika
1 tablespoon flour l /2 cups
l
consomme or
2 tablespoons chopped ham bouillon
2 tablespoons onion 1 clove
Guinea Fowls
snipe, and woodcock are dark meat and are preferred by the
epicure cooked rare and served very hot.
The methods of cooking all these birds are substantially the
same, except as to the degree of rareness desired. They should
never be washed, but simply wiped with a damp towel, all shot
being carefully picked out of the flesh with a sharp-pointed
knife. Small birds are often skinned when the birds are
cleaned. There is a difference of opinion among epicures as to
the drawing of these birds ; sometimes they are cooked undrawn.
The English do not draw woodcock, regarding the entrails as
edible, and some American housekeepers copy them in this
respect.
BROILED BIRDS
Clean the birds and split them down the back. Sprinkle with
salt and pepper, dust with flour to keep in the juices and broil
in a wire broiler, laying the inside first to the fire. Allow about
ten minutes for quail, twenty-five to forty minutes for par-
tridges and pheasants. When done, lay them on a warm dish
and butter or oil them plentifully on both sides. During the
broiling, if the breasts are quite thick, cover the broiler with
a pan, and see that the fire is not too hot.
POULTRY AND GAME 293
PANNED BIRDS
Clean the birds and split them down the back. Dip them
quickly into hot water and sprinkle with salt, pepper and flour.
The water causes the seasoning to adhere more thickly to the
meat. Place the birds in a small baking-dish with the inside of
each upward; place a teaspoon of butter or other fat in each
bird, add a cup of water, and roast in a very hot oven (500 F.)
allowing fifteen to twenty minutes for quail and proportion-
ately longer for larger birds. After the first fifteen minutes re-
duce the heat to 3 5 F. Baste every five minutes after the first
fifteen.Thicken the gravy, add salt and pepper if necessary,
and pour over the birds.
ROASTED BIRDS
Clean, truss and stuff the birds. Roast in an uncovered
pan moderate oven (350 F.) until meat is tender and bird
in a
is well browned. Baste every half hour with butter or other
fat and water. Thicken the gravy and pour it over the birds.
Serve with bread sauce.
LARDED GROUSE
Grouse are rather dry birds and need to be larded to be palat-
able. Clean and wipe with a damp towel. On each bird lay
thin slices of bacon, covering the bird entirely and keeping the
bacon in place with crossings of soft twine. Place in a roasting-
pan and pour over them boiling water, sufficient to use for bast-
ing the birds while cooking. Cook in a very hot oven (500 F.)
fifteen to twenty-five minutes, basting three times. Reduce
the heat after fifteen minutes. When
done, remove the strips
of bacon, brush the birds with oil, melted butter or other fat,
dredge with flour and place in the oven again until a rich brown.
The liquor in the pan may be thickened, seasoned, and used as
a gravy. Arrange the birds on a platter and garnish with rings
of sauted green peppers and the strips of bacon used to cover
the birds while roasting.
294
ROAST QUAIL
6 quail Flour
6 large oysters Salt and pepper
Strips of bacon Butter or other fat
Dress, clean and truss the birds. Stuff each with one large
oyster. Lard breast and legs with strips of bacon. Bake as di-
rected for larded grouse, allowing fifteen to twenty minutes for
cooking.
GAME PIE
6 birds 2 tablespoons browned flour
Sa4tand pepper 2 tablespoons fat
/4 cup minced parsley
l
2 cups diced potatoes
l
/2 chopped onion Rich paste for side and top
2 whole cloves crust
l
pound diced salt pork
/4
Clean the birds thoroughly. Halve them, put them into one
quart of water and bring to boiling-point. Remove the scum,
add salt, pepper, parsley, onion, cloves and salt pork. Simmer
until tender, carefully keeping the birds covered with water.
When the birds are done, thicken the liquid with the browned
flour and let the gravy come to a boil. Add the fat, remove
from the fire and cool.
Put the paste around the sides of a greased pudding-dish, lay
in some of the birds, then some potatoes, and repeat until the
dish is full. Pour in the gravy, put on the top crust, slashed
in the center, and bake in a hot oven (450 F. to 425 F.) for
thirty-five to forty-five minutes until done.
BROILED SQUAB
6 squabs Butter
Salt and pepper Toast
Split the birds down the back, flatten the breast, wipe inside
and out with a damp cloth. Put on a broiler, season with pepper
and salt, and when nicely browned, pour a generous amount
of melted butter over them. Serve on toast.
POULTRY AND GAME 295
Clean and cut pigeons into small portions and let them cook
a short time in the fat in a saucepan, being careful not to
brown them. Next add to the contents of the pan the stock
or gravy, the mushroom catchup, and salt, pepper and cayenne
to taste. Simmer an hour, or until tender, add the mushrooms,
simmer ten minutes more, and then stir in the cream. Arrange
the mushrooms around the pigeons on a hot platter.
POTTED PIGEONS
6 pigeons Chopped parsley
3 slices bacon Hot water or stock
Any simple stuffing % cup fat
1 diced carrot /4
l
cup flour
1 diced onion Buttered toast
Clean and dress pigeons, stuff, truss, and place them upright
in a stew-pan on the slices of bacon. Add the carrot, onion,
and a little parsley, and cover with boiling water or stock
Cover the pot closely and let simmer from two to three hours,
or until tender, adding boiling water or stock when necessary.
Make a sauce of the fat and flour and two cups of the stock
remaining in the pan.
Serve each pigeon on a thin piece of moistened toast, and pour
gravy over all.
PIGEON PIE
6 pigeons Flour
Bread stuffing Rich pie paste
Salt and pepper 3 hard-cooked eggs
Fat
Stuff each pigeon with bread stuffing. Loosen the joints with
a knife, but do not cut them through. Simmer the birds in
a stew-pan, with water enough to cover, until
nearly tender,
then season with salt and pepper. Make a medium thick gravy
with flour, fat and liquor in which pigeons have cooked and
296
V/N/N/
Ducks
Nearly wild ducks are likely to have a fishy flavor, and
all
Venison
Venison is prepared and cooked in the same way as mutton.
The roasting pieces are the saddle and the leg. It should be
served underdone, allowing ten to twelve minutes to the pound,
for cooking, and served with tart jelly and green salad.
Wipe carefully, and draw off the dry skin. Lard the lean
side of the leg with strips of the pork, then soften the fat, rub
it over the meat, and
dredge with salt, pepper and flour. Lay
the leg on the rack in a baking-pan, sprinkle the bottom of the
pan with flour, place it in a very hot oven (500 F.) and
watch carefully until the flour in the pan is browned, which
should be in five minutes. Add boiling water to cover the bot-
tom of the pan Baste the venison well every fifteen minutes,
298
sx\^v
until the meat is done, renewing the water in the pan as often
as necessary. Reduce the heat after fifteen minutes. If a double
roasting-pan is not necessary.
used, basting is
Rub the steak with a mixture of salt and pepper, dip in wheat
flour or cracker meal and cook a rich brown on both sides in
one-half cup of hot fat. Place on a dish and cover to keep
warm. Dredge two teaspoons of flour into the fat in the pan
and stir until brown (but not burned), add a cup of boiling
water with one tablespoon of currant jelly dissolved in it, stir
a few minutes, strain the gravy, pour it over the meat and
serve.
age. Also, be sure that they are fresh and free from any un-
pleasant odor. Neither hares nor rabbits should be drawn be-
fore hanging, as they may become musty. In Winter, select a
dry place for hanging, and they may remain for some time.
POULTRY AND GAME 299
black and soak in warm water; this will draw out the blood.
Skewer firmly between the shoulders, draw the legs close
to the body and fasten with skewers.
Skin and clean the rabbit or hare, wipe dry, split down the
back, and pound flat; then wrap in oiled paper. Any tough
white paper may be oiled. Place on a greased gridiron and
broil over a clear, brisk fire, turning often. Remove the paper
300
/^xv^vy
Dressas directed and put into boiling water. Boil ten min-
utes and drain. When cold, cut into joints, dip into beaten
egg, then in bread-crumbs and season with salt and pepper.
Saute in any good fat over a moderate fire. Thicken the gravy
with the flour and pour in milk or cream, boil up once and
pour over the rabbit. Garnish with sliced lemon.
ROAST SQUIRRELS
Squirrels Pepper and salt
Salad oil Onion-juice
Lemon-juice or tarragon Oil
vinegar Brown stock
1 cup bread-crumbs Worcestershire sauce
Cream Paprika
1 cup button mushrooms
BRUNSWICK STEW
2 squirrels 6 potatoes
1 tablespoon salt 1 teaspoon
pepper
1 minced onion 2 teaspoons sugar
1 pint Lima beans 1 quart sliced tomatoes
6 ears corn l
OPOSSUM ROAST
Opossum is very fat with a peculiarly flavored meat. To
dress, immerse in very hot water (not boiling) for 1 minute*
Remove and use a dull knife to scrape off hair so that skin is
not cut. Slit from bottom of throat to hind legs and remove
entrails. Remove head and tail if desired. Wash thoroughly
inside and out with hot water. Cover with cold water to which
has been added 1 cup salt. Allow to stand overnight; in the
morning drain off the salted water and rinse with clear, boil-
ing water.
Make stuffing as follows: Brown 1 large, fine-chopped onion
with 1 tablespoon butter. Add chopped opossum liver and cook
until tender. Add 1 cup bread crumbs, a little chopped red
pepper, a hard-cooked egg, finely chopped, dash Worcestershire
sauce, salt and water to moisten. Stuff opossum with mixture,
fastening the opening with skewers or by sewing. With 2 table-
spoons water roast in moderate oven (350 F.) until meat is
tender and richly browned. Baste constantly with the opossum's
own fat. Remove skewers or stitches, serve on heated platter.
Skim fat from gravy and serve with baked yams or sweet
potatoes.
STUFFINGS FOR FISH, MEAT,
POULTRY AND GAME
O TUFFING does not necessarily have to be baked in the fowl
*^ small or there some
or meat. If the bird is if is stuffing left
over, may be baked or steamed in a well-greased ring mold,
it
BREAD STUFFING
No. 1.
No. 2.
Melt the fat in the frying-pan; add the onion, and saute
until tender. Add the bread-crumbs and seasonings and mix
well. Then add the milk or stock. This makes a loose, light
stuffing much preferred
by many to the soft moist or compact
type. It can be variedby leaving out the onion or the sage,
by adding chopped celery or by adding two tablespoons of
seeded raisins.
303
304
wx>s
No. 3.
/2
l
cup milk Y4 teaspoon pepper
2 cups grated bread-crumbs % teaspoon thyme
l l/2 tablespoons melted fat l
/2 teaspoon powdered sage
l
1 egg /2 teaspoon chopped onion
l
/2 teaspoon salt % teaspoon summer savory
Pour the milk on the crumbs and let stand about one hour,
then add the seasonings, the fat, and the egg slightly beaten.
l
fat % teaspoon poultry seasoning
/4 cup boiling water
Melt the fat and mix with the crumbs. Add the water, and
then the seasonings. When this stuffing is used, a greater allow-
ance than usual must be made for swelling.
POTATO STUFFING
2 cups hot mashed potato 1 teaspoon sage
1 cup bread-crumbs 4 tablespoons melted butter or
l
/2 teaspoon pepper other fat
1/2 tablespoon salt 2 tablespoons onion-juice
CELERY STUFFING
2 cups chopped celery 1 teaspoon salt
l
2 tablespoons fat /2 teaspoon pepper
2 cups stale bread-crumbs
Chop the celery fine. Melt the fat, add the crumbs and mix
well. Add the celery, salt and pepper.
OYSTER STUFFING
2 cups oysters 2 cups dry bread-crumbs
1 teaspoon salt *4 CU P ^ at
}4 teaspoon pepper
PINEAPPLE-NUT STUFFING
4 cups stale bread, l/> inch 1
teaspoon paprika
cubes 1
pimiento
% cup celery, finely chopped Dash cayenne
% cup pineapple, small iy2 teaspoons salt
pieces % CUP butter
y2 cup walnuts, chopped fine 2 eggs
SAUSAGE STUFFING
l
/2 pound sausage-meat 1 tablespoon onion-juice
2 cups dried bread-crumbs 1 tablespoon minced parsley
Salt and pepper
MUSHROOM STUFFING
3 cups bread-crumbs
stale 2 teaspoons salt
6 tablespoons butter or other l
/z teaspoon powdered thyme
fat 1 teaspoon minced parsley
cup chopped mushrooms
l
/2
RICE STUFFING
1 cup milk 4 cups cold boiled rice
cup soft bread-crumbs
l
1 /z pound sausage
1 chopped onion Sage
1 tablespoon butter or other Parsley
fat Sweet herbs
Salt and pepper
Pour the milk over the crumbs. Cook the onion in the fat
untilbrown, then add the rice, the soaked crumbs, the sausage,
and seasonings to taste.
306
^/wv/\^rvirv/v>\/
CHESTNUT STUFFING
No. 1.
1 quart chestnuts 1 tablespoon salt
l
3 tablespoons butter /2 teaspoon pepper
No. 2.
1 quart chestnuts 2 tablespoons cream
l
/4 cup bread-crumbs Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons butter or other Onion-juice, if desired
fat
RAISIN-NUT STUFFING
2 cups stale bread crumbs y2 CUP broken walnut meats
% cup butter, melted 1 teaspoon salt
y2 cup chopped seeded % teaspoon pepper
raisins l/> teaspoon sage
To Make a Roux
FOR A WHITE SAUCE The American method of making a
roux for white sauce is to melt the fat, add the flour and cook
only until the, mixture bubbles before adding the liquid. This
saves time, but at the expense of the flavor of the sauce. The
French method is to melt the fat, add the flour and cook, with
constant stirring, for five minutes, before, adding any liquid.
This removes the raw taste of the flour.
FOR A BROWN SAUCE Melt the fat and allow it to brown
307
308
vX-v-^_x->
BECHAMEL SAUCE
No. 1.
Use one-half cup of meat stock instead of half of the milk
in mediumor thin white sauce. If an acid flavor is desired, add
one teaspoon of lemon juice to each cup of sauce.
No. 2.
Slice the onion, place the fat in a saucepan and slightly brown
the onion and ham in it. Add the flour and, when well mixed,
the milk. Stir until it boils, then cook over hot water for ten
minutes or longer. Add seasonings, strain and use.
CHAUD-FROID SAUCE
WHITE Soak one tablespoon gelatin in cold water and add
to one cup of hot veloute sauce. Mix well; strain, if necessary;
let cool and use to coat cold meats.
PINEAPPLE-ORANGE SAUCE
6 tablespoons sugar 1
cup orange juice
y2 tablespoon cornstarch Grated rind 1 orange
1
cup water i/3 cup crushed pineapple
POULETTE SAUCE
1
cup veloute sauce 2 egg yolks
1
cup cream
CAPER SAUCE
Follow the recipe for maitre d'hotel sauce, omitting the
parsley and adding three tablespoons capers. This is excellent
with fish.
(For another recipe for caper sauce, see Variations of White Sauce, page 309.)
IMITATION CAPER SAUCE
y2 cup chopped pickles 2 cups drawn butter sauce
To the drawn butter sauce add pickles, cut into tiny cubes
of a uniform size and well drained. Boil for one minute. Serve
with fish or chops.
BEARNAISE SAUCE
4 tablespoons fat 1
tablespoon tarragon vinegar
Yolks 4 eggs 1
teaspoon onion juice
1/2 teaspoon salt 1
teaspoon chopped tarragon
y2 teaspoon pepper 1
teaspoon chopped parsley
Stir the fat until perfectly soft and creamy. Place the egg
yolks and the salt and pepper in the top of a double boiler and
beat light with an egg beater, then add one-third of the fat and
beat until smooth, add another third and beat again, and then
add the remainder and beat until all is perfectly smooth. Add
the vinegar and onion juice and beat again. Place over boiling
SAUCES FOR FISH, MEAT AND VEGETABLES 313
water and cook for three minutes, beating constantly with the
egg-beater. Remove from the fire, put in the chopped parsley
and tarragon and use immediately.
Cook the shallot in the vinegar for five minutes. Wash the
butter and divide, it into thirds. Add one of the thirds to the
vinegar, with the egg-yolks, lemon-juice and meat extract.
Cook over hot water, stirring constantly. As soon as the butter
is melted, add the second
piece, and then the third piece.
When the sauce thickens, add the grated horseradish.
GIBLET GRAVY
Giblets and neck of fowl 2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons chicken fat Salt and pepper
Place the giblets (liver, heart and gizzard) and the neck in
a saucepan and cover them with cold water. Simmer slowly
and when they are tender remove the flesh from the neck and
chop it fine with the giblets. Save the stock in which the giblets
and neck were cooked. Heat the fat in a small saucepan on
top of the stove and when it is hot stir in the flour. Cook two
minutes, then add one cup of the stock pouring it in gradually
so that it will not thin the gravy too much. If the gravy seems
too thick, add a little, hot water. Last, put in the chopped
giblets and season to taste with salt and pepper.
BREAD SAUCE
1 cup stale bread-crumbs 1 onion
2 cups milk 3 tablespoons butter
Salt Pepper
This sauce is generally served with small birds. It may be
served with roast chicken or duck. The crumbs must be entirely
white. Sift them through a coarse sieve, place the ones that
pass through in the milk, add the onion and place in a stew-
pan on the fire to cook. Cook for twelve minutes, remove the
onion and add one tablespoon of butter with salt and pepper
to taste.
BROWNED CRUMBS Place the remaining butter on the fire
in a frying-pan, add the coarse bread-crumbs and fry them
until brown, being careful to have the fat very hot before
putting in the crumbs. Stir vigorously for two or three min-
utes, but do not allow the crumbs to burn. Serve the sauce in
a gravy-dish and sprinkle with the browned crumbs.
No . lm
BROWN SAUCE
1
tablespoon chopped onion 2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons fat 1 cup brown meat stock
Pepper Salt
MADE GRAVY
2 small onions Butter or other fat
1 carrot Flour
Small piece of lean beef, size Pepper
of egg, or 1 beef cube or Salt
1 teaspoon beef extract Catchup
Cut up onions and carrot, place them with the lean beef or
extract in a stew-pan with the fat and brown all together. Add
enough water to cover the mixture and stir slowly until the
SAUCES FOR FISH, MEAT AND VEGETABLES 315
Slice the onion and cook in the fat till it begins to color,
thepi add the flour and herbs and stir until brown. Add the
vinegar and the stock and simmer twenty minutes. Strain,
skim off all the fat, put in the jelly and stir until it is melted.
This sauce is used with game.
MUSHROOM SAUCE
4 tablespoons fat 1 cup mushrooms, fresh or
4 tablespoons flour canned
2 cups stock Salt and pepper
Make a brown sauce of the fat, flour and stock. Add one
cup mushrooms and cook until hot. If mushrooms are over-
cooked they will become tough. Three or four minutes is
sufficient for those that have been canned and five or six min-
utes for fresh onejS.
This sauce is used with any kind of roasted, broiled or braised
meat, particularly with beef.
ONION SAUCE
l
cup minced onion /2
1
/z 1
cups beef stock
3 tablespoons fat 1 tablespoon minced parsley
3 tablespoons flour
Cook the onion with the fat until slightly browned. Stir in
the flour, then add the stock and parsley, stirring constantly.
Serve with beef.
SAUCE PIQUANTE
2 tablespoons butter or other 2 cloves
fat 1 clove garlic
2 onions 2 tablespoons flour
2 carrots 1 cup beef or veal stock
2 shallots /2
l
cup vinegar
Thyme Salt and pepper
1 tablespoon minced parsley
Melt fat, slice into it onions, carrots and shallots. Add a little
thyme, minced parsley, cloves and clove of garlic. Let this
mixture cook until the carrot is soft, then add flour. Let it
cook for five minutes more, and add beef or veal stock and
vinegar, skim, and strain through a sieve. Add salt and pepper
when boiling.
SAUCE ROBERT
6 onions 1 tablespoon mushroom
2 tablespoons fat catchup
2 tablespoons flour Salt and pepper
1 cup stock Mustard
1 tablespoon lemon-juice
CURRY SAUCE
1 tablespoon fat 1 pint stock, milk or water
2 teaspoons chopped onion 1 tablespoon flour
1 teaspoon curry-powder Salt and pepper
SAUCE SUPREME
2 tablespoons fat 2 tablespoons lemon-juice
2 tablespoons flour 2 teaspoons chopped parsley
1 cup chicken stock
OLIVE SAUCE
2 dozen olives 2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons salad oil 1 pint stock
1 slice onion Salt and pepper
1 lemon
SPANISH SAUCE
1
tablespoon minced lean raw 2 tablespoons flour
ham 1/2 cup stock
1 tablespoon chopped celery' /2
l
cup tomato- juice
l
1 tablespoon
chopped carrot /2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon chopped onion l
/% teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons fat
Melt the fat. Add the ham and vegetables and cook until
they are brown. Make a sauce of this mixture and the flour,
salt, pepper and liquid.
CHATEAUBRIAND SAUCE
3 tablespoons fat Pepper
1 tablespoon lemon- juice 1 teaspoon minced paisley
1 teaspoon salt 2 cups Spanish sauce
TOMATO SAUCE
1 quart fresh or canned 3 tablespoons fat
tomatoes 3 tablespoons flour
1 slice onion Salt and pepper
8 cloves
Set thei tomatoes, onion and cloves on the fire and cook for
twenty minutes. Brown the fat in the frying-pan, add the
flour, and cook until smooth and brown, stirring constantly.
Add the tomatoes, cook for three minutes, season with salt and
pepper and pass through a strainer fine enough to hold back
the seeds. This makes a very thin sauce. Use more flour if
you prefer a thick sauce.
1/2
No. 1 can mushrooms
Chop the bacon or ham, and cook with onion and carrot
for five minutes. Add bay-leaf, thyme, parsley, cloves, pepper-
corns, nutmeg, and tomatoes, and cook five minutes. Mix the
flour with five tablespoons of cold water and rub out all the
lumps; then add enough water so that the batter can be poured
in a thin stream. Add to the sauce, stirring constantly. As
the sauce thickens, dilute it with the stock. Cover, set in the
SAUCES FOR FISH, MEAT AND VEGETABLES 3 J9
oven (300 F.) and cook one hour. Strain, add salt and
RAVIGOTE SAUCE
1 cup thin white sauce 1 tablespoon minced chervil
% cup lemon-juice 1 tablespoon minced tarragon
1 tablespoon tarragon vine- leaves
BROWNED BUTTER
Place a piece of butter in a hot frying-pan and toss about
untilit browns. Stir browned flour into it until it is smooth
and commences to boil. This is used for coloring gravies,
sauces, etc.
BROWNED FLOUR
Spread flour on a pie-tin and place on the stove or in a very
hot oven (450 -5 00 F.). When it begins to color, stir con-
stantly until it is evenly browned throughout. When cold,
cork closely in jars.
No L CRANBERRY SAUCE
1 quart cranberries 2 cups boiling water
2 cups sugar
Boil the sugar and water together for five minutes. Remove
any scum may have formed. Add the cranberries and
that
cook without stirring until they are thick and clear.
No. 2 Cook the cranberries and water together until the
skins of the berries are broken. Add the sugar and simmer
for five or ten minutes. Chill before using.
No. 3 If a strained sauce is desired, cook the cranberries
and water No. 2 and rub through a sieve. Return the
as in
strained portion to the fire, add the sugar and simmer for five
or ten minutes.
SPICED CRANBERRIES
4 cups cranberries 5 allspice
5 cloves 2 sticks cinnamon
3 cups sugar 2 blades mace
No . !. APPLE SAUCE
4 quarts sweet cider 2 quarts apples
No. 2.
MINT SAUCE
1 tablespoon powdered sugar % cup minced mint leaves
/2
l
cup vinegar
Dissolve sugar in vinegar. Pour this over minced mint
leaves and where it will keep warm but not hot. Allow it
set
to infuse for half an hour. If vinegar is very strong, dilute
with water.
Separate jelly into pieces, but do not beat it. Add chopped
mint leaves and orange-rind shavings. Serve around roast.
CUCUMBER SAUCE
2 cucumbers Salt and cayenne
l
/2 cup stock Celery essence
l
/2 tablespoon vinegar
ANCHOVY SAUCE
l
/4 cup fresh butter Cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon anchovy paste
Melt the butter and stir in the anchovy paste and the cayenne
pepper. Warm and stir thoroughly and serve with either boiled
or fried fish.
BEURRE NOIR
2 tablespoons butter 1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1 tablespoon vinegar */>
teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon lemon-juice % teaspoon pepper
PARSLEY BUTTER
3 tablespoons butter 1 tablespoon chopped parsley
l
/2 to 1 tablespoon lemon-
l
/2 teaspoon salt
l
juice /s teaspoon pepper
LOBSTER BUTTER
I lobster coral 3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons chopped lobster Seasoning
Lobster butter is used in lobster soups and sauces to give
color and richness. Pound the coral of a lobster to a smooth
SAUCES FOR FISH, MEAT AND VEGETABLES 323
MUSTARD SAUCE
1 tablespoon dry mustard 1
tablespoon vinegar
1/2 teaspoon sugar 1 tablespoon melted butter
l
/4 teaspoon salt /4
l
cup boiling water
Mix dry ingredients, add liquids, mix well and serve.
JELLY SAUCE
1 glass currant or grape 1 teaspoon dry mustard
jelly 1 teaspoon salt
Turn the currant or grape jelly out into a deep plate and
beat it to a foam. Then add dry mustard and salt and beat
again thoroughly.
REMOULADE SAUCE
2 hard-cooked egg-yolks 7 cups oil
1 raw egg-yolk 1 teaspoon mustard
l
3 tablespoons tarragon vinegar /z teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons cider vinegar 1 teaspoon parsley
Put the cooked yolks of eggs through a coarse wire sieve, and
then put them in a dish with the raw yolk and the seasoning.
Add two tablespoons of the vinegar and beat thoroughly five
minutes. Next add the oil, one teaspoon at a time, beating
the mixture two or three minutes at a time after each addition
of oil. When five teaspoons have thus been added, the rest of
324
N^^SX
mayonnaise.
TARTAR SAUCE
1 cup mayonnaise dressing 1 tablespoon chopped
1 teaspoon onion-juice cucumber pickle
1 tablespoon capers
Makq the mayonnaise rather more sour and with a little more
mustard than for salad, and mix into it the capers, pickle and
onion- juice. Set in the refrigerator until needed. It should be
quite thick when served.
L HORSERADISH SAUCE
1 teaspoon mustard Salt
3 tablespoons cream Horseradish
1 tablespoon vinegar
Mix the first four ingredients and add as much grated horse-
radish as needed to make it the desired thickness.
No. 2.
l
/4 cup heavy cream 1 tablespoon vinegar
3 tablespoons grated horse- % teaspoon salt
radish Sprinkle of cayenne or pepper
Whip the cream stiff. Mix the other ingredients and beat
them gradually into the whipped cream. Serve on baked ham.
BUTTER-ORANGE FLUFF
1/4 pound butter y2 cup brown sugar
1
teaspoon grated orange rind
Cream the butter until light and fluffy. Add brown sugar
gradually, beating the mixture to a light, fluffy mass. Stir in the
grated orange rind. Use for waffles and pancakes.
SAUCES FOR FISH, MEAT AND VEGETABLES 325
VINAIGRETTE SAUCE
1 salt 1 tablespoon chopped pickle
teaspoon
Y4 teaspoon paprika 1 tablespoon chopped green
Few grains pepper pepper
1 tablespoon tarragon vinegar 1 teaspoon chopped parsley
2 tablespoons cider vinegar 1 teaspoon chopped chives
6 tablespoons olive oil
CREOLE SAUCE
2 tablespoons chopped Salt and pepper
onion 2 tomatoes or ]/2 cup canned
4 tablespoons minced green tomatoes
pepper 1
cup bouillon
2 tablespoons butter J4 ^P s ^ ce<i mushrooms
3 tablespoons flour
FRONTIER SAUCE
3 tablespoons flour % cup tomato juice
2 tablespoons butter % ^P liquid drained from
1/2 teaspoon salt stewed or canned mush-
1-/2 teaspoon paprika rooms
Dash of tabasco 2 tablespoons heavy cream
Hot Entrees
CREAMED MIXTURES These are the most simple and easily
prepared of the hot entrees. Any well-seasoned creamed mix-
ture may be use,d. It must be kept hot and transferred at the
last possible moment to the container in which it is to be served.
This may be merely a slice of toast, an individual case such
as a ramekin, patty shell or timbale case, or a border formed
of bread, rice or potato.
FORCEMEATS These should have a smooth^ velvety texture.
They call for more effort in preparation than any other type of
entree. They are made of cooked or uncooked meat or fish
in finely divided form, those made of the uncooked material
being considered the more choice. Such foods as chicken and
326
ENTREES AND MADE-OVER DISHES 327
I
ham, shell fish and any finewhite fish make typical forcemeats.
Forcemeats may be use,d in combination with other materials
or cooked alone to form cutlets and timbales. The cutlets are
cooked in shallow, chop-shaped molds and the timbales in deep,
straight sided molds.
CROQUETTES Croquettes are made of cooked and chopped
ingredients held together, usually, by means of a thick sauce.
When the mixture is cold, it is made into shapes of uniform
size, which are coated with flour or sifted crumbs, then rolled
in an egg mixture so that the egg forms a continuous film, then
rolled in crumbs again. The egg mixture is made by adding
two tablespoons of water or milk to each egg required, and beat-
ing just enough to break up the white of the egg. The cro-
quettes may be allowed to stand until dry or may be fried at
once in deep hot fat. This is a good way to use left-over cooked
foods.
Croquettes are made in the form of balls, rolls, cones, nests
or cups, cutlets or flat cakes. Whatever shape is desired, it is
usually easier to attain it by making the mixture into a ball
first, thus insuring a compact mass from which the chosen
form may be readily molded.
CUTLETS This word, as used in this chapter refers to the
form in which the food is cooked rather than to a distinct type
of food. Sometimes cutlets are made by packing forcemeat
into shallow, chop-shaped molds, but more often they are cro-
quettes, cut or shaped to look like breaded chops or cutlets.
The term may be extended to include boiled cereal, such as
rice or cornmeal, which has been packed into a shallow dish,
left until cold, and then cut into
pieces, rolled in egg and crumbs
and fried or sauted.
FRITTERS These may be composed of a piece, of fruit en-
closed in a batter, then fried in deep hot fat and served with
an appropriate sauce; or chopped fruit, chopped vegetable, or
other chopped food, such as clams or lobster, stirred into the
batterand fried by spoonfuls.
TIMBALES This term is sometimes used to describe force-
meat cooked in straight-sided deep molds. More frequently
perhaps it refers to sugarless custards cooked in timbale molds.
In timbales of this type, where egg is the thickening agent,
savory seasonings are used, and the milk which ordinarily forms
an important component of custard is replaced in part or en-
tirely by meat stock or vegetable puree.
328
s^r
Cold Entrees
Asdics Aspic is a spiced tart jelly made from brown or
white meat stock alone or in combination with gelatin. It is
used to enclose a variety of foods in a mold or to give a trans-
parent coating of shining, sparkling finish. Various foods may
.4.
ENTREES AND MADE-OVER DISHES 329
RICE CROUSTADES
Cook one cup of washed rice in white stock instead of in
water. Drain well, mix with a thick white sauce, and spread
in a greased pan to the depth of about two inches. Cover
with oiled paper and place weights on top, so that the mix-
ture may become very compact when cold. When it isper-
fectly firm, cut it in circles,- make a cavity in the center of
each, dip the case thus made in fine bread-crumbs, then in egg,
and again in crumbs, and fry in deep fat (375-390 F.).
POTATO BORDER
9 medium-sized potatoes 1 tablespoon salt
more. Beat the yolks of the eggs with the cream or milk and
stir in. Grease a border mold, pack the rice firmly into it, let
it stand eight to ten minutes in a warm (not hot) place and
turn out on a hot platter. Fill the center with any meat
TIMBALE ROSETTES
l
1 egg /2 cup flour
10 tablespoons irradiated y8 teaspoon salt
evaporated milk iy2 teaspoons sugar
Beat egg slightly. Add milk. Sift flour, then measure. Re-
sift with salt and sugar into the egg and milk mixture. Stir
until batter is smooth. It should be about the consistency of
heavy cream. Use a deep, heart-shaped timbale iron. Dip in the
hot fat to heat, then in the batter, being careful that the batter
does not come up over the top of the iron.
Have ready a small, deep kettle of fat, place the iron in it
and heat until the fat is hot enough to brown a piece of bread
while counting sixty (370 F.). The fat should be deep
enough to cover the mold end of the iron. Take out the, heated
iron, remove surplus fat with a piece of absorbent paper and
lower the iron into the batter until it is covered not more than
three-fourths its height. This is necessary to allow for the
rising of the batter during cooking. If only a thin layer of
batter adheres to the iron, plunge it in again, and repeat if
necessary until there is a smooth layer of partly cooked batter.
Plunge it quickly into the hot fat and cook from two to three
minutes. Remove from the fat, slip the case from the iron
on to absorbent paper and continue until you have the required
number of cases.
A fluted iron is easier to work with than a plain one, be-
cause the case does not slip off until thoroughly cooked. A
properly cooked case, however, should slip easily from the
mold. If the cases are not crisp, the batter is too thick and
should be diluted with milk.
These cases may be filled with a creamed vegetable, creamed
oysters, chicken or sweetbreads, or with fresh or cooked fruit
topped with whipped cream or powdered sugar. When sweet
fillings are used, they are served as a dessert. This recipe makes
about 20 cases with an iron of average size.
332
RISSOLES
These are practically little turnovers, filled with a highly
seasoned mixture of chopped chicken and ham or other deli-
cate meat moistened with white sauce. Roll puff -paste very
thin and cut in circleiS. Place a teaspoon of the mixture in the
center of each circle,; moisten half the circumference with cold
water, and fold the other half over? pressing the edges closely
together. Dip in slightly beaten egg mixed with a tablespoon
of water. Fry in deep fat (3 60 -370 F.) and drain
thoroughly.
BOUCHEES
Small pastry shells or cases filled with creamed meat or game
are called bouchees, and are much in vogue for entrees. They
provide an excellent way of utilizing left-overs of chicken,
sweetbreads, fish, etc. Paper cases, bought at the confectioner's,
may be used instead of the pastry shells.
PATTY CASES
Roll puff -paste to the thickness of one-half inch and with
a cookie cutter shape circles two and one-half to three inches
in diameter. With a tiny cutter, remove the centers from half
of the circles. Brush the edges of the complete circles with
water and lay the rings on top. Chill thoroughly? then bake
in a hot oven (400 -450 F.) from fifteen to twenty minutes.
At the same time, bake the small centers removed from the
upper layers of the cases, and use them as lids for the filled
patties.
VOL AU VENTS
A vol au vent is a large patty. The French name signifies
something that will fly away in the wind. Roll out puff -paste
one and one-half inches in thickness, and cut a circle about
six inches in diameter, using a cutter or, with a sharp knife,
cutting around the edge of a plate laid on the paste. Place the
circle on a baking-tin and^ with a sharp pointed knife or a
smaller cutter, cut a circle around the top about one and one-
half inches from the edge and about an inch deep. Do not
remove the center but bake the entire circle in a large, flat pan
in a hot oven (450-500 F.) from thirty to fifty minutes.
p
When the outer crust is cooked, lift out the center, remove the
uncooked paste from below, and the shell is ready to be filled.
It may be filled with lobster meat, oysters, chicken, or any
kind of dedicate meat or fish chopped and seasoned, and heated
in Bechamel, white, brown or mushroom sauce, or with sweet-
meats of any kind or fresh berries, sweetened. In using fish,
always add one teaspoon of lemon- juice, to the mixture after it
is taken from the fire.
HOT ENTREES
Creamed Mixtures
PATTIES
Patty cases are usually made ahead of time and must be
thoroughly heated before they are filled. To heat them, place
them in a moderate oven (350-400 F.) fifteen or twenty
minutes before they are to be filled.
Chicken Fill hot patty cases with creamed chicken.
Clam Fill hot patty cases with creamed clams (See Index) .
CHOP SUEY
2 pounds uncooked chicken- 2 cups onions cut into threads
breast cut into pieces one- 2 cups bamboo shoots cut
sixteenth inch by one inch into pieces the same size
CHINESE GRAVY
1 cup primary soup or Sugar Salt
chicken stock 1 teaspoon Chinese sauce
1 teaspoon corn-starch (can be bought ready pre-
Sesamum seed oil pared)
Mix the corn-starch in a little cold water, stir in the primary
soup or chicken stock and let it boil until it thickens. Add the
Chinese sauce, a few drops of sesamum seed oil and sugar and
salt to taste. Stir well.
PRIMARY SOUP
l
/2 pound lean pork 1 pint water
/2
l
pound chicken
Chop the meat into small pieces and simmer two and one-
half hours, then strain through several folds of cheesecloth.
SCOTCH WOODCOCK
2 tablespoons fat 1 tablespoon anchovy paste
1 tablespoon flour /2
l
teaspoon salt
1
cup milk 6 slices of bread
5 hard-cooked eggs
Prepare a white sauce with fat, flour and milk, add eggs
chopped fine^ anchovy paste and salt. Have the bread toasted
and lay it on a hot dish. Pour the hot mixture over it and
serve immediately.
Croquettes or Cutlets
BEEF CROQUETTES
1cup cooked beef 1 egg
Chop cold roast or corned beef fine and mix with well-
seasoned hot mashed potatoes. Beat the egg, work it in with
the mass and shape the mixture into little cakes. Roll either
in flour, fine crumbs or egg and crumbs and fry in deep fat
(37S-390 F.) from two to five minutes.
336
No L .
CHICKEN CROQUETTES
2 tablespoons fat /4
l
teaspoon celery salt
% cup flour 1 teaspoon lemon-juice
1 cup milk Few drops onion-juice
iy4 cups cooked fowl 1 teaspoon chopped parsley
Salt and pepper Egg and crumbs
Make a white sauce with the fat, flour and milk. Add fowl,
seasoned with celery salt, lemon-juice, onion-juice, parsley, salt
and pepper. Cool, shape, dip into flour or fine crumbs, then into
egg and again into crumbs, and fry in deep fat (375 -3 90 F.)
from two to five minutes. White meat of fowl absorbs more
sauce than dark meat.
No. 2.
CHEESE CROQUETTES
(See Index.)
CRAB CROQUETTES
Follow recipe for lobster croquettes, using crab flakes in-
stead of lobster meat.
ENTREES AND MADE-OVER DISHES 337
EGG CROQUETTES
l
2 cups chopped, hard-cooked /% teaspoon pepper
eggs Dash of cayenne
1 cup thick white sauce Egg and crumbs
l
/2 teaspoon salt
FISH CROQUETTES
2 cups cooked fish Egg and crumbs
/z cup drawn-butter sauce
l
HAM CROQUETTES
2 cups mashed potatoes Cayenne
1 tablespoon fat 1 cup cooked ham
Mix two
eggs and cayenne, beat until
potato, fat, yolks of
smooth, then set to the ham, mix with the other
cool. Chop
yolk, cook until the mixture thickens, and turn out to cool.
When thoroughly coo!2 take a tablespoon of the potato mix-
ture, make a hole in it,put a large teaspoon of the chopped
ham inside, close the hole and form a ball. Dip into flour,
then into egg, roll in crumbs, and fry in deep fat (375-390
F.) from two to five minutes.
338
LOBSTER CROQUETTES
2 tablespoons fat 1 teaspoon lemon-juice
54 cup flour l
/4 teaspoon mustard
1 cup milk Egg and crumbs
2 cups cooked lobster meat
Make a white sauce, using the fat, flour and milk. Add
chopped lobster meat, which has been seasoned with lemon-
juice and mustard. Cool, shape, dip in flour, then in egg; roll
in crumbs and fry in deep fat (375-390 F.) from two to five
minutes. Serve with tomato cream sauce.
OYSTER CROQUETTES
1 pint oysters 1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon fat 1 tablespoon parsley
2 tablespoons flour l /2 tablespoons lemon-juice
l
1 egg-yolk
Egg and crumbs
Cle,an the oysters (see Index). Heat in their own liquor
until the edges begin to curl, stirring all the time. Strain the
liquor and chop the oysters. Rub together fat and flour. Add
the oyster liquor and cook until thick. Then add the chopped
oysters and the well-beaten egg-yolk. After taking from the
fire,add salt, minced parsley and the lemon-juice. When stiff,
mold into desired shape. Dip in crumbs, beaten egg and crumbs
again, then fry in deep fat (375-390 F.) from two to five
minutes. Serve with horseradish sauce.
. i. SALMON CROQUETTES
1 3/4
cups cooked salmon, fresh Salt and pepper
or canned Cayenne
2 tablespoons fat 1 teaspoon lemon-juice
% cup flour Egg and crumbs
1 cup milk
Make with the fat, flour and milk. Add salt,
a white sauce
a little white pepper, and a few grains of cayenne,. To this
cream foundation add cold flaked salmon and lemon- juice.
Spread on a plate to cool. Shape; roll in fine crumbs, then in
egg and again in crumbs and fry in deep fat (375-390 F.)
from two to five minutes.
ENTREES AND MADE-OVER DISHES 339
No. 2.
SURPRISE CROQUETTES
2 cups mashed potatoes Salt and pepper
4 tablespoons cream Cooked meat, cheese or vege-
1 teaspoon
onion-juice table
2 egg-yolks Crumbs and flour
1 egg-white
SWEETBREAD CROQUETTES
2 pairs sweetbreads 2 tablespoons fat
/4
l
cup mushrooms 4 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoon lemon-juice 1 cup milk or cream
l
/2 teaspoon parsley 2 eggs
Salt and pepper Egg and crumbs
VEAL CROQUETTES
2 tablespoons butter or other 1 egg
fat 2 cups minced veal
/2 cup chopped ham
l
3 tablespoons flour
1 cup milk y 4 cup mushrooms, truffles
1 teaspoon onion-juice or sweetbreads
Salt and pepper Egg and crumbs
Paprika
RICE CROQUETTES
1 cup boiled rice Grated lemon-peel
l
/4 cup milk 1 egg
1 tablespoon sugar Egg and crumbs
1 teaspoon salt
RICE FAN-TAN
l
/2 cup rice 1
egg
2 cups milk /2
l
cup candied fruits
5/2teaspoon salt Egg and crumbs
2 tablespoons sugar Powdered sugar
Cook rice in milk until very soft. Stir in salt, sugar and
wejl-beaten egg, and remove at once from the fire. Mix in
cut up candied fruits cherries, apricots, pineapple, etc. and
turn into a shallow, well-oiled pan to cool. When firm, cut
into strips about one and one-half inches wide and three inches
long, dip into egg then into bread-crumbs and brown delicately
on both sides in butter or other fat. Drain, dust with powdered
sugar and serve hot.
OF YOUR SI USEFUL
USING UP SMALL
CLAM FRITTERS
24 soft clams 1 cup milk
2 cups flour /2
l
cup clam liquor
2 teaspoons baking-powder 2 eggs
l
/2 teaspoon salt Salt and pepper
CORN FRITTERS
2 cups corn, fresh or canned 1 teaspoon melted fat
1 teaspoon salt 1/2 cup milk
l
/% teaspoon pepper 2 cups flour
1 egg 2 teaspoons baking-powder
Chop the corn very fine and add salt, pepper, well-beaten
egg, melted fat, milk, flour and baking-powder. Fry two to
three minutes in deep fat (360-370 F.).
ENTREES AND MADE-OVER DISHES 343
OYSTER FRITTERS
l
l /z cups oysters 2 cups flour
2 eggs 2 teaspoons baking-powder
1 cup milk Yz teaspoon salt
PARSNIP FRITTERS
3 parsnips 1 cup milk
2 eggs 1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon fat 3 tablespoons flour
Boil the parsnips tender, grate fine or mash and pick out all
the fibrous parts. Beat the eggs light, and stir into the parsnips,
beating hard. Add the fat, milk, salt and flour. Drop by
spoonfuls into deep fat (3 60 -3 70 F.) and fry two to three
minutes.
RING MOLDS
The ring mold is one of the most satisfactory ways of serving
entrees since it is decorative, permits endless variety in appear-
ance but involves no additional labor. Any recipe baked in a
loaf may be used in the ring mold. Grease the mold as any pan
for baking and unmold on the plate to be used for serving. The
center may be filled with another cooked vegetable, a stew,
creamed fish or poultry, or a china, glass or silver bowl of the
exact size may be slipped into the center and filled with the
sauce or dressing to be served with the ring,
KIDNEY A LA FRANCAISE
1 beef kidney Bit of bay-leaf
Flour Salt and pepper
Fat Y4 inch slice of lemon
Soak a beef kidney in cold water for one hour, changing the
water two or three times as it colors; then place on the fire in
cold water and gently heat to the boiling-point. Drain off this
ENTREES AND MADE-OVER DISHES 345
water and put on fresh cold water for a second heating. Again
heat and again change the water.
In the third water simmer the kidney for ten minutes. Then
remove it from the fire, and when cool enough to handle,, cut
out the cords and most of the center fat. Slice thin^ dip each
piece in flour and saute in fat until brown.
Remove the meat from the pan, add flour to the fat, stir
well, and brown thoroughly. Add boiling- water, stirring until
a smooth sauce is formed. Return the meat to the pan, add
bay-leaf, salt, pepper and slice of lemon from which the peel
has been removed. Simmer for one hour with the pan covered,
adding more water if it reduces too much. There should be
only enough water to form a rich sauce. Remove the bay-leaf,
and serve on a heated platter.
KIDNEYS EN BROCHETTE
Split the kidneys, put over the fire in cold water and bring
to the boiling-point rapidly. Drain, wipe and slice each half.
Arrange these slices on small metal skewers, alternating with
slices of fat bacon the same size,. Broil quickly and serve on
toast, leaving the skewer in.
SWEETBREADS EN BROCHETTE
Prepare the sweetbreads (See Index), cut into pieces about
one inch square and one-half inch thick, season, dip into melted
fat and then into flour and string on small skewers alternately
with thin squares of bacon. Broil, or lay the skewers across
a narrow pan and cook in a hot oven (400 -450 F.).
this liquid boils, stir in the meat extract and seasonings. Cook
for five minutes and strain over the sweetbreads. Cover the
pan and cook oven (350 F.) for one hour, bast-
in a moderate
ing every fifteen minuteswith the gravy in the pan. Arrange
the sweetbreads on pieces of toast on a warm dish^ and pour
mushroom sauce around them.
Vegetable Entrees
STUFFED PEPPERS
PREPARING PEPPERS FOR STUFFING Cut off the tops of the
peppers or cut them in two lengthwise, and remove the inner
fibers and seeds. Drop into boiling water, remove from the
fire, let stand ten to twelve, minutes, then drain.
No. 2.
Cut a slice from the stem end of each pepper. Remove seeds
and parboil peppers ten minutes. Mix minced cooked meat
with moistened bread-crumbs, add salt, pepper, melted fat and
the onion, grated. Stuff the peppers with this mixture and
stand them in a dripping-pan. Add watqr or stock. Bake in
ENTREES AND MADE-OVER DISHES 347
CHEESE STUFFING
6 green peppers 1 tablespoon melted butter
1 cup crumbs or other fat
Y2 cup chopped cheese Salt
SHRIMP STUFFING
2 cups cooked shrimps, fresh Nutmeg
or canned Celery seed
1 tablespoon butter or other 1 egg
fat 1/2 cup bread-crumbs
/2
l
teaspoon mustard 6 green peppers
Pepper
SWEETBREAD STUFFING
1 cup cooked sweetbreads cup brown or white stock
l
/2
6 peppers (preferably chicken)
2 tablespoons butter or other 2 tablespoons cream
cup button mushrooms
l
fat /2
2 tablespoons flour Worcestershire sauce
Crumbs Salt, pepper and paprika
Prepare the sweetbreads (See Index) Melt fat, add flour, salt
.
and pepper. Mix smooth, add stock and cream. Cook until
thick. Stir in the sweetbreads and mushrooms, cut into small
pieces, and the, seasoning. Fill prepared peppers, cover with
buttered crumbs and bake for thirty minutes in a moderate
348
^\>^x
ASPARAGUS TIMBALES
1 bunch asparagus 54 teaspoon salt
1 cup bread-crumbs Few grains of cayenne
% cup hot milk 1 l/z tablespoons melted fat
2 eggs 5/2 tablespoon onion-juice
1 tablespoon parsley
COLD ENTREES
ASPIC JELLY
2 pounds beef Salt and pepper
5/2 pound ham or bacon 1 egg-white
Sweet herbs 2 tablespoons lemon-juice
Put the beef into the pot and, if desired, veal or beef bones
also, though they require longer boiling to dissolve the gelatin.
Add the ham or bacon and all the sweet herbs, such as thyme,
basil, parsley and marjoram, and salt and pepper to taste. Boil
for three or four hours; strain and put away to cool. When
cold, take off all the fat and sediment. Throw into it the
slightly beaten egg-white, and the lemon-juice, place again
on the fire, boil for a few minutes and strain through a jelly-
bag.
This is used for molding cold meat.
i
ENTREES AND MADE-OVER DISHES 349
"Wash and scrub the tongue well in salt water and simmer
(180 -2 10 F.) it until tender. Remove the, skin, and place
the tongue in a stew-pan with onion, celery, cloves, salt and
pepper. Cover it with the liquor in which it was boiled and
add sugar, mace, thyme and parsley. Simmer for two hours.
Take out the tongue. Add to the liquor gelatin, soaked in the
cold water, boil for two minutes, stirring constantly, strain and
pour over the tongue. Serve cold.
CHICKEN MOUSSE
2 cups ground cooked chick- % cup heavy cream,
en whipped
1/2
cup salad dressing Salt, pepper
2 tablespoons lemon juice l^ tablespoons gelatin
% teaspoon ground celery Lettuce
seed Brussels sprouts, carrots and
1/2 cup cold chicken stock parsley
HAM MOUSSE
Follow the directions for chicken mousse, substituting cooked
ham for the cooked chicken. Chopped mushrooms are a deli-
cious addition to this dish, and mushrooms may be mixed with
the sauce when ready to serve, and also may be used as
decorations.
CHESTNUT CROQUETTES
2 cups hot mashed chestnuts Few drops of onion-juice or
4 tablespoons fat 2 tablespoons minced onion
2 eggs Egg and crumbs
Salt and pepper
PEANUT BALLS
1 tablespoon fat Pepper
2 tablespoons flour 2 cups cooked rice
cup milk
l l
/2 /4 cup ground peanuts
l
/2 teaspoon salt 1 egg
Make white sauce from fat, flour, milk and seasoning. Mix
rice, peanuts, white sauce and beaten egg, and shape into small
351
352
*V/VXN^
PEANUT SCRAPPLE
1 cup hot milk 1 /4
1
teaspoons salt
1 quart boiling water % teaspoon paprika
1 cup yellow corn-meal 1 1/2 cups chopped peanuts
Mix peanut butter with hot milk and seasoning, mixing to-
gether thoroughly. Dip slices of bread into the peanut-butter
mixture. Saute in hot fat. Garnish with pickles and olives.
This dish offers both adequate protein and iron,
BAKED PEANUTS
4 cups shelled raw peanuts 4 tablespoons salad oil
Cover peanuts with cold water and soak over night. In the
morning, place them over the fire, and boil ten minutes. Re-
VEGETARIAN DISHES 353
move from water and dry. Add oil and mix well. Place the
mixture in a greased baking-dish and bake (400 F.) until the
peanuts are soft and well browned.
If extra seasoning is desired, a small quantity of catchup,
salt, molasses and mustard may be added during the baking,
as for baked beans.
PEANUT SOUFFLE
1 tablespoon fat Few drops lemon-juice
/2 cups scalded mlik
1
6 tablespoons flour 1
Melt the fat and add the flour, peanut butter and seasoning.
Cook for three minutes, stirring constantly. Add scalded milk,
and continue cooking until the mixture reaches the boiling-
point. Remove from the fire, pour the, hot mixture over the
well-beaten egg-yolks, mixing thoroughly. Cool, and fold in
the egg-whites that have been beaten until stiff and dry. When
the ingredients are thoroughly combined, place in a ring mold,
set in a pan of water in a slow oven (375 F.) and bake thirty
minutes. Serve immediately.
This is a hearty main dish, but, because of its texture, should
have something crisp or solid served with it.
MOCK SAUSAGE
1 cup dried Lima beans or 3 eggs
3 cups cooked beans of 2 tablespoons fat
any kind /2
l
teaspoon sage
% cup bread-crumbs Salt and pepper
Pick over and wash beans, cover with water and let soak over
night. Drain, cook in boiling salted water until tender, then
force through a strainer. Add remaining ingredients, shape
into the form of sausages, roll in crumbs, egg, and crumbs again.
Saute until brown. Serve with tomato sauce.
This recipe makes six to eight sausages, three inches long and
thre,e-fourths of an inch thick. It should be accompanied by
some milk, egg or cheese dish.
354
PEANUT CHOPS
6 half -inch rye bread
slices /2
l
teaspoon salt
1 cup peanut butter */& teaspoon paprika
s/4 cup top milk Cracker-crumbs
2 eggs
peanut butter on both sides of each strip. Add milk and season-
ing to the eggs and beat thoroughly. Dip strips of bread into
the mixture, remove and dip into sifted cracker-crumbs. Put
into a greased bread -pan and bake in a hot oven (400 -450
F.) until golden brown. This is a good main dish.
BEAN ROAST
1 cup roasted shelled peanuts % cup milk
2 cups seasoned mashed 1 egg
potatoes 1 teaspoon salt
2 cups cooked Lima beans, */& teaspoon paprika
fresh or canned 1 teaspoon onion-juice
VEGETABLE LUNCHEON
2 cups cooked tomatoes, fresh
1 pound kidney beans
1 cup diced carrot or canned
l
cup rice
1 green pepper, chopped /2
1 large onion /2 dozen large
l
mushrooms
into greased ring mold, set in pan of hot water and bake in
moderate oven (350 F.) until firm about 40 minutes. Un-
mold on a hot plate; fill center with hot cooked peas.
356
NUT LOAF
2 cups soft bread-crumbs 2 eggs
1 cup milk 1 teaspoon salt
2 cups chopped nut-meats 1 teaspoon paprika
PEANUT ROAST
1 tablespoon chopped onion 1 cup bread-crumbs
1 tablespoon chopped celery 1 cup green pea pulp, fresh or
2 tablespoons fat canned
YZ cup hot water Juice of half a lemon
1
1 /2 cups chopped peanuts 1 teaspoon salt
1 egg Dash of pepper
Cook onion and celery in fat until golden brown. Add hot
water and simmer until vegetables are tender. Mix other in-
gredients, adding the egg last. Combine the mixture with the
celejry and onion mixture. Pack into greased baking-dish and
bake (350 F.) until golden brown. Serve with cream sauce.
BOSTON ROAST
1 Y2 cups dry kidney beans 2 tablespoons chopped onion
3 tablespoons salt 1 cup bread-crumbs
cup milk
l
1 to 2 cups grated cheese /z
cup milk
l
/2 sauce
1 cup cooked cereal Buttered crumbs
1 teaspoon salt
Cook onion in fat until delicately brown. Mix with all the
other ingredients and moisten with milk. Cover with buttered
crumbs and brown in oven (400 F.). Serve hot with tomato
sauce.
Serve with some crispy food such as celery.
VEGETABLE LOAF
l
/2 cup cooked green peas 1 cup soft bread-crumbs
l
/2 cup cooked green, string /2
l
teaspoon salt
beans /8
l
teaspoon pepper
/2
l
cup chopped boiled carrots
l
/2 teaspoon paprika
l
l /2 cups milk 1
egg
PEA TIMBALES
1 y2 cups pea pulp 3 eggs, well beaten
2 tablespoons melted butter Salt and pepper
dip the water over it carefully until it is coated with white. Re-
move with a skimmer or perforated ladle and slip on to a thin
Poached eggs are often placed in clear soup, one egg being
FRIED EGGS
No. 1 Heat cooking-fatin a frying-pan and slip in the
eggs. Cook as eggs at one time as will fill the pan with-
many
out touching one another. Baste with some of the fat, to cook
the yolk. Cook slowly, for if the fat becomes very hot the eggs
will be tough and hard to digest but if the temperature of the
fat is kept down, the egg may be made as delicate as if poached
in water.
Eggs may be fried very successfully by covering the pan as
soon as the eggs have been added, and then placing it in the
oven or over a very slow fire, so that the eggs will cook very
slowly.
Saute the eggs in one tablespoon butter until set, season with
saltand pepper, and place on a platter. Brown two tablespoons
butter in the pan, add one teaspoon vinegar, and when hot, pour
over the eggs.
BAKED EGGS
No. 1 Use individual baking-dishes and melt one teaspoon
of butter in each dish. Break the, eggs into the dishes, allow-
ing one or two eggs to a dish. Sprinkle with salt and pepper,
and place a tiny piece of butter on each. Bake in a slow oven
(250-350 F.) until the eggs are set but not hard. Serve in
the baking-dishes.
No. 2 SHIRRED Use small ramekins or egg-shirrers. Grease
each dish, put in a layer of buttered crumbs, break an egg over
the crumbs, season with salt and pepper and cover with buttered
362
'V-' 'V^X>
I
PLAIN OMELET
PUFFY
4 eggs Salt and pepper
4 tablespoons hot water Butter or other fat
Beat the egg-whites until stiff. Beat the yolks until thick
and lemon-colored, beat into them the hot water and add salt
and pepper. Cut and fold together the, yolks and stiffly beaten
whites. Melt enough fat in an omelet-pan to grease the bottom
and sides of the pan. Turn the egg mixture into the pan and
cook ove,r a slow fire until it is puffy and a light brown under-
neath, then place in the oven until the top is dry. Touch the
top of the omelet lightly with the finger and if the egg does
not stick to the finger the omelet is done. Do not overcook
it it will shrink or be tough.
or
Loosen the edges of the omelet, cut through the center, slip
a spatula or flexible knife under the side next to the handle of
the pan, fold one-half over the other and press slightly to make
it stay in place, slip on to a hot plate and serve at once.
FRENCH
6 eggs 2 tablespoons fat
Salt and pepper
Beat the eggs just enough to mix the whites and yolks, and
add salt and pepper. Heat the fat in an omelet-pan, pour a
little of it into the beaten eggs and allow the remainder to
get
hot. Turn the eggs into the pan and as the mixture cooks on
the bottom and sides, prick it with a fork so that the egg on
top will pene.trate the cooked surface, and run under the sides.
The work must be done quickly and carefully so that the eggs
are not all stirred up like scrambled eggs. While the eggs are
still soft, but
slightly thickened, fold ovqr, let stand a few
minutes to brown, and turn on to a hot dish.
FOR THE HOLIDAY BREAKFAST,
SLIP YOUR POACHED EGG INTO
A BREAD CROUSTADE THAT
HAS BEEN HALF-FILLED WITH
CHEESE SAUCE, OR DO A FLUFFY
OMELET WITH MUSHROOMS
AND ASPARAGUS
BEAUTY IS NOT ONLY
-IN THE EYE OF THE
BEHOLDER WHEN
THESE EGGS REACH
THE BREAKFAST TABLE g
Institute American
Poultry Industries |
*^L '4
MUSHROOM OMELET
cup mushrooms /2
l
1 teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon fat 1 tablespoon flour
/2 cup milk or cream Plain omelet
l
1 teaspoon salt
Use fresh or canned mushrooms cut into bits. Melt the fat
in a saucepan, add the mushrooms, the milk or cream, salt,
pepper and flour which has been mixed to a paste with a little
cold milk. Cook for five minutes, then set aside until the
omelet is made. Spread the mushroom mixture over the omelet
just before folding.
Strain the tomato, add the onion, sugar, salt and pepper and
cook several minutes, then add the mushrooms, sliced very thin.
Make a plain omelet of the eggs and milk. Pour part of the
sauce over the omelet just before folding; fold; place on a hot
plate pour the remainder of the sauce around it and serve.
;
OYSTER OMELET
12 oysters 1 cup cream
l
/z tablespoon flour 6 eggs
2 tablespoons fat Salt and pepper
Chop the oysters. Make a sauce of the flour, fat, and cream.
Add the well beaten eggs, season with salt and pepper, stir in
the oysters and cook as a plain omelet.
POTATO OMELET
4 cold boiled potatoes Y8 teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons bacon fat 2 eggs
l
/2 tablespoon salt 2 tablespoons milk
Cut thej potatoes into tiny cubes and cook in the bacon fat
with the seasonings for five minutes. Beat the eggs slightly
and add the milk, then pour over the potatoes. Cook slowly
until set, fold, and turn on to a hot plate.
366
Crumble the bread and allow it to soak in the milk while the
eggs are being prepared. Beat the eggs until light, add season-
ings and then the bread and milk mixture. Bake quickly
(360 F.) in a well-greased shallow pan and when done roll as
you would a jelly-roll.
LITTLE OMELETS
6 eggs /4 teaspoon
l
pepper
l
/2 teaspoon salt 1 cup milk
SPANISH OMELET
1 medium-sized tomato Olives
1 small green pepper Mushrooms
y2 onion Salt and pepper
2 sprigs parsley 4 eggs
1 stalk celery
Peel the tomato, add the pepper, onion, parsley, celery, olives,
mushrooms, and chop all together in a chopping-bowl. Place
the mixture in a saucepan, add seasonings and stew for two or
three minutes. Beat the eggs, put them in the omelet-pan and,
as soon as they begin to cook, add the chopped vegetables.
Finish as for plain omelet.
EGG DISHES 3 67
TOMATO OMELET
3 tomatoes 4 to 6 eggs
2 tablespoons fat Seasoning
Peel tomatoes, remove the seeds and cut into dice. Saute in
the fat until tender. Make the omelet in the usual way, first
stirring the tomato into the beaten egg.
CUBAN EGGS
l
6 eggs /2 teaspoon salt
cup sausage meat
l
/4 Pepper
1 teaspoon chopped onion
Cook the meat and onion together for five minutes. Beat the
add the seasonings, and pour into the pan with
eggs until light,
the meat. Cook slowly, stirring constantly, until the eggs are
thick and creamy. Serve with buttered toast or poured over
slices of toast.
EGGS A LA CARACAS
1 tablespoon fat Salt and pepper
l
/4 pound dried beef 4 eggs
1 tablespoon grated cheese Onion-juice
1 cup tomatoes
Melt the fat in a frying-pan and, when hot, add the dried
beef and cheese. Toss lightly until the beef is slightly frizzled,
add the tomatoes, the seasonings, and the eggs beaten until
light. Stir and cook gently until of a creamy consistency.
EGGS A LA SUISSE
6 eggs 1 cup cream
2 tablespoons butter or other Salt
fat Cayenne
l
/2 to 1 cup grated cheese
Fry onion and pepper in the fat until slightly brown, then
pour into a baking-dish. Break the eggs into the dish, being
careful not to break the yolks. Mix the crumbs with the cheese
and sprinkle over the eggs. Bake in a slow oven (250 -3 50
F.) until the eggs are set, but not hard. Serve in the dish in
which they were baked.
PLANKED EGGS
1 cup minced cooked ham or 6 poached eggs
corned beef Garnish of tomato slices
1 cup crumbs Green-pepper rings
Cream 1 quart mashed potato
Mix the meat with the crumbs and enough cream to make a
paste. Spread the mixture on a heated plank of suitable size.
Around the edge of the plank make a narrow border of mashed
potato and inside the border make six nests of the potato. Slip
a poached egg into each nest and set in the oven until the potato
turns a delicate brown. Garnish with alternate slices of tomato
and green -pepper rings.
Cover the fish with cold water and soak overnight. Drain,
flake, and saute with the fat for a few minutes; sprinkle with
the flour; add the milk, and cook until smooth. Stir in the
uncooked eggs, slightly beaten, and cook three minutes more.
Serve on a platter garnished with the chopped parsley and the
hard-cooked eggs cut in quarters.
Two additional tablespoons of flour may be substituted for
the uncooked eggs, if desired. For creamed codfish, omit the
hard-cooked eggs.
EGG DISHES 369
Cut the onion into small pieces and place with the tomato in
a shallow pan. Stew very slowly for ten minutes. Add salt
and pepper, then reduce the heat until the tomato stops bub-
bling. Break the eggs and slip them on top of the tomato, being
careful not to break the yolks. Cook slowly until the whites
of the eggs are set, then prick the yolks and let them mingle
with the tomato and the whites. The mixture should be quite
soft, but the red tomatoes should be quite distinct. Serve at
once on buttered toast.
SPANISH EGGS
1 slice onion 6 eggs
1 tomato 1 teaspoon salt
1
tablespoon fat % teaspoon pepper
Rub the onion over the inside of a frying-pan. Pare the
tomato and cut it into small pieces. Melt the fat in the fry-
ing-pan, add the tomato and cook for five minutes, stirring it
now and then. Beat the eggs well and add to the tomato, then
add salt and pepper and cook slowly, stirring constantly, until
the eggs thicken like scramble,d eggs. Pour into a hot dish
and serve at once.
APPLE OMELET
5 tart apples Cinnamon or other spice
l
/z tablespoon fat 2 eggs
l
/2 cup sugar
This is a very delicate dish to serve with broiled spareribs or
roast pork. Cook the apples until very soft, then mash them
and add fat, sugar, eggs and spice. Bake (250 -3 50 F.) in a
shallow pudding-dish or pie-tin until brown.
DEVILED EGGS
COLD Cut hard-cooked eggs in half, either
( PICNIC EGGS)
EGG TIMBALES
1 tablespoon fat 3 eggs
1 tablespoon flour Salt and pepper
% cup scalded milk Cayenne
1 tablespoon chopped parsley Celery salt
Make a white sauce of the fat, flour, and milk, and add the
egg-yolks, slightly beaten. Add all the seasonings, then fold
in the stiffly beaten egg-whites. Fill greased baking-dishes two-
thirds full of the mixture. Set dishes in a pan of hot water and
poach in a slow oven (250-350 F.) until firm. Arrange
on a platter and serve with tomato cream sauce.
SAVORY EGGS
6 hot hard-cooked eggs Chopped parsley
Salt and pepper Anchovy paste
/4 cup hot cream
l
6 slices hot buttered toast
1 cup hot thin white sauce
Cut the eggs in two lengthwise and remove the yolks. Mash
the yolks, add seasonings, cream, parsley, anchovy or any de-
sired relish, and refill the whites. Place on slices of toast and
pour the white sauce over them.
EGG FARCI
6 hot hard-cooked eggs /4
l
teaspoon pepper
/2
l
teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon butter
1
1 /2 cups white, Bechamel, 4 tablespoons milk
curry or tomato sauce Onion-juice
Remove the shells from the eggs and cut them in half cross-
wise, then cut an even slice from the end of each half so that
it will stand up in a pan. Remove the yolks, mash, and add the
salt, pepper, butter, milk and a few drops of onion-juice. Mix
thoroughly and heap into the hollow of the whites. Set in a
EGG DISHES 37 1
EGGS A LA GOLDENROD
6 hard-cooked eggs Salt and pepper
2 cups thin white sauce Paprika
8 slices toast
the
Separate the yolks from the whites of the eggs; chop
whites very fine, and add to the white sauce, with salt, pepper,
Remove the shells from the eggs and cut each egg into six
SCALLOPED EGGS
Butter Salt and pepper
6 hard-cooked eggs Milk or cream
Crumbs
Grease a baking-dish and place in it a layer of crumbs, then a
layer of slices of hard-cooked eggs. Dot with bits of butter,
sprinkle with salt and pepper, and add another layer of crumbs.
Repeat in this order until the dish is full, having a layer of
buttered crumbs on top. Pour cream or milk over the whole
until itcomes about halfway to the top of the dish, and brown
in a moderate oven (350-400 F.).
372
EGG FRICASSEE
tf hard-cooked eggs 3 tablespoons fat
3 cups stock 3 tablespoons flour
Minced parsley 1/4 cup cream
Chopped onion Salt and pepper
EGGS AU GRATIN
6 hard-cooked eggs 2 cups medium white sauce,
Salt and pepper or tomato sauce or yellow
Grated cheese sauce
Buttered crumbs
Remove the shells from the eggs and slice them. Arrange
the in a greased baking-dish. Season with salt and pepper
slices
and pour the sauce over the top. Sprinkle with grated cheese
and cover with buttered crumbs. Bake in a moderate oven
(350 F.) until the sauce bubbles and the crumbs brown.
EGGS A LA DUCHESSE
1 onion 2 teaspoons chopped parsley
Fat 4 tablespoons grated cheese
1 cup milk Paprika
6 hard-cooked eggs Salt and pepper
2 uncooked egg-yolks l
l
/z tablespoons lemon-juice
Slice the onion and cook it in a very little fat until brown,
then add to it the milk and the eggs cut in halves. Stir over
the fire for three or four minutes, then add the slightly beaten
egg-yolks, the parsley, cheese and seasonings. Stir over hot
water for about eight minutes, add the lemon- juice and serve
very hot.
PICKLED EGGS
24 cloves /2
l
teaspoon salt
6 hard-cooked eggs /2
l
teaspoon pepper
2 cups vinegar /2
l
teaspoon ground mustard
Shell the eggs and stick four cloves into each egg. Heat the
vinegar and when boiling add the salt, pepper and mustard
EGG DISHES 373
mixed with a little cold vinegar. Put the eggs in a glass fruit-
jar and pour the boiling vinegar over them. Cover and let
stand two weeks before using. Serve with broiled steak.
FLUFFY EGGS
12-18 strips
bacon 1/2 teaspoon salt
6 eggs % teaspoon pepper
6 slices toast, square or round 1
cup grated cheese
Butter Paprika
EGGS ROMANOFF
Cut a small section from the pointed end of a hard-cooked
egg. Remove yolk, fill with caviar, and replace the cap. Place
on a slice of tomato on shredded lettuce and surround with
pieces of cold boiled lobster. Serve with Russian dressing, page
449, or Cucumber Cream dressing (below).
Varieties of Cheese
Thereis a cheese for every taste. The housekeeper should
know the ways in which various kinds of cheese are used and
choose the variety best suited to the need of the moment. The
intensity of flavor desirable in a cheese depends, among other
things, on the food with which it will be served. Roque-
fort, Gorgonzola, Limburger and related types will satisfy many
people better than the milder cheeses. Strong, old Cheddar
cheese may be served with ginger snaps. From the chemist's
standpoint, there is no basis for the statement often made that
the highly flavored cheeses of strong odor have undergone
putrefactive decomposition.
variety meant.
LONG HORN, YOUNG AMERICA, DAISY and FLAT are Cheddar
cheeses of varying shapes and sizes.
CALIFORNIA JACK is the Cheddar cheese of California.
BRIEis a soft cheese, ripened by molds from the outside. The
cheeses have a red coloration on the surface and vary in size from six
to fifteen inches in diameter and from two to three inches in height.
The largest weighs from five to six pounds. The interior varies in
consistency from waxy to semi-liquid and has a very pronounced odor
and a sharp characteristic taste. The cheese is dipped out of the
container with a spoon. It is used as a dessert with coffee and wafers
or it may be added to salad dressing.
CACIOCAVALLO is a hard Italian cheese shaped something like a
gourd and weighing three to five pounds. It is white in color and
is so hard that it is necessary to grate it. It is served in small dishes
to be sprinkled in soup, spaghetti, etc. It is also added to these
dishes, during the cooking.
CAMEMBERT is a soft cheese, ripened by molds from the outside, so
spoon. It has a strong odor and flavor and is used in the same way as
Brie. The entire cheese is eaten by those who like a moldy cheese.
CHESHIRE is the English Cheddar cheese. It is yellow, grainy,
highly colored and highly salted and often more highly flavored than
American Cheddar. It is used practically in the same ways as Ameri-
can Cheddar cheese.
CREAM CHEESE. See Neufchatel.
CLUB CHEESE is made from strong, well-ripened Cheddar
usually
cheese which ground and mixed with butter and condiments. It
is
WELSH RAREBIT
1 tablespoon fat % teaspoon mustard
1 tablespoon flour % to 1 pound of cheese
1 cup milk (according to richness de-
1/2teaspoon salt sired)shaved or cut fine
Few grains pepper 6 slices buttered toast
MEXICAN RAREBIT
l
/2 tablespoon fat % teaspoon salt
Melt the fat in the top of the double boiler over direct
heat. Add the chopped pepper and cook until slightly softened,
but not browned. Set over hot water, add the cheese and stir
constantly until the cheese is melted. Mix beaten egg, salt
and corn and stir into the cheese mixture ; then add the chopped
tomatoes and crumbs. Allow the mixture to heat through and
serve on toasted bread.
Mix tomatoes, soda and seasonings and stew for about five
minutes; then strain and thicken with the flour, mixed to a
paste with a little cold water. Add the cheese and stir until
smooth. Poach the eggs and place on the toast on a platter.
Pour the sauce around the eggs. Sprinkle with the paprika
and garnish with parsley.
CHEESE FONDUE
ON TOAST
1 cup grated cheese Paprika
3 tablespoons melted fat 6 eggs
l
/z teaspoon salt 6 slices toasted bread
Mix the grated cheese with the fat and add salt and paprika.
Beat the eggs until light, add to the cheese mixture, pour into
a saucepan, set the pan in another pan of boiling water and
cook, stirring constantly, until the cheese is smooth and creamy.
Lay the toast on a hot plate, pour the fondue over it and serve
at once.
CHEESE IN ANY FORM IS THE
GOURMET'S DELIGHT WHETHER
ON A SERVICE TRAY OR IN
-
'
fctoJ&r'
% l%i;i
;
j
CHEESE
BAKED
1 cup grated cheese % teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons fat 3 eggs
1 cup milk Cayenne
1 cup soft bread-crumbs
or 1 cup cooked rice or
other cereal
Scald the milk and pour it over the crumbs or cereal, then add
the fat, the cheese and seasonings. Beat the egg-yolks slightly
and add to the mixture, then fold in the stiffly beaten whites
and turn the mixture into a greased baking-dish. Set in a pan
of water and bake in a moderate oven (375 F.) until firm
on top.
CHEESE SOUFFLE
1 cup cheese 3 tablespoons fat
3 eggs /2
l
teaspoon salt
1 cup milk Pepper
3 tablespoons flour
Beat the eggs very light and add to them the warm milk, the
grated cheese, pepper, paprika and salt. Grease small timbale-
molds, fill with the mixture, set in a
baking-pan of boiling
water and bake in a slow oven (250 -3 25
F.) until the egg is
set. Turn out carefully on a hot platter. Serve at once, as they
soon fall. They may be served with tomato or
pimiento sauce.
LUNCHEON CHEESE AND EGGS
1 cup cream 2 tablespoons grated cheese
6 eggs Salt and pepper
Put the cream into a frying-pan and let it heat to the boiling-
point, then break in, carefully, the eggs. Lower the heat under
the eggs and cook until they are set, as in poaching, spooning
the cream over the top of the eggs while they are cooking. Put
them on a hot platter. To the cream left in the frying-pan,
add the grated cheese and seasonings. Stir until melted and pour
the mixture over the eggs.
Pour one cup of boiling water over the corn-meal and let it
stand until it swells, then add the remainder of the water, with
the salt, and cook over the direct flame for five minutes, stirring
constantly. Turn it into a double boiler or fireless cooker and
cook two hours; or into a greased baking-dish and bake in a
slow oven (250-350 F.) for two hours. Just before taking
it from the fire, add the cheese and cook until it melts.
CHEESE CROQUETTES
5/2 cup soft cheese 1 egg-white
2 tablespoons fat 54 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons flour 5/4 teaspoon paprika
5/2 cup milk Crumbs
2 egg-yolks
Make a white sauce, using the fat, flour and milk. Add tHe
slightly beaten egg-yolks, the cheese cut in small bits, and the
seasonings. Stir until the cheese is melted. Allow the mix-
ture to cool* then shape, roll in crumbs, then in the egg-white^
which has been diluted with one tablespoon of water, then in
crumbs again and fry in deep fat (375-390 F.).
CHEESE 381
CHEESE CUTLETS
% cup grated cheese 1 cup cooked Lima or navy
2 cups mashed potatoes beans, ground
4 tablespoons minced pimiento 1 teaspoon salt
CHEESE BALLS
3 egg-whitjes Salt
1 tablespoon flour Cayenne
1
l
/2 cups grated cheese Crumbs
CHEESE WAFERS
Spread grated cheese on thin crackers, season with a bit of
paprika and heat in a quick oven until the cheese is melted.
Serve with soup or salad. Thin slices of toasted bread may be
used instead of the crackers.
Fold over the other half and roll out again. Sprinkle with
cheese and proceed as before; repeat three times. Cut into
very narrow strips and bake for ten minutes on the top shelf
of a very hot oven (500 F.).
CHEESE BISCUITS
cup grated cheese Cayenne
cup flour 1 egg-yolk
cup shortening
Mix the cheese and flour, then cut the shortening into this
mixture; add a little cayenne pepper and moisten with the yolk
of the egg. Roll out to one-fourth inch thick, cut into long,
narrow strips and bake in a very hot oven (500 F.) five to
seven minutes.
If you prefer use the ordinary recipe for baking-powder
biscuits, making the biscuits in two layers and sprinkling grated
cheese between the layers.
CHEESE TORTE
2 cups fine zwieback iy2 teaspoons grated
crumbs lemon rind
iy2 cups sugar 1 cup cream
1 teaspoon cinnamon iy2 pounds cottage
y 2 cup melted butter cheese
or margarine 4 tablespoons flour
4 eggs y4 cup chopped nut
y8 teaspoon salt meats
iy> teaspoons lemon juice
Selection of Vegetables
Care of Vegetables
clean. A
vegetable brush is almost a necessity. Soak wilted
vegetables before peeling them. Vegetables that are soaked
after they are peeled lose some soluble food materials. Dry
winter vegetables may be improved by soaking them for several
hours. Scrape thin-skinned vegetables; pare thick-skinned
vegetables or remove the skin after cooking. Make thin par-
ings except in the case of turnips, from which a thick layer of
corky material should be removed. Discard decayed vegetables.
Many vegetables, particularly of the bud, head and fruit
groups, need to be immersed for a period in cold salt water.
This freshens the fiber and drives out any insects that have
taken refuge in crevices. Leaf vegetables need to be washed
in several waters, the first of which should be salted for the
same reason. The leaves should be lifted out of the water rather
than the water poured off. This permits any sand to sink to
the bottom of the pan. A
tablespoon of liquid ammonia added
to the last gallon of wash water will remove the last film that
carries an earthy flavor.
BAKING is the best method to secure all these results and still
1. The green vegetables are best cooked in water that is slightly alkaline.
If there is any doubt, add a bit of baking soda the size of a pinhead.
No drinking water would be acid enough to need more. Use an un-
covered kettle and cook only until tender to the fork. If overcooked,
green vegetables turn brownish because of chemical changes in the
coloring matter, the fine flavor is ruined, while food values are lost.
2. White fresh vegetables such as cabbage, cauliflower, and onion are
strong flavored, due to their special oils. Hard water changes these oils
so that the white color turns to yellow or brown. To prevent this, add
1 teaspoon of lemon juice or white vinegar. Drop the vegetable into
enough rapidly boiling water to cover and cook with the kettle uncovered
until just tender to the fork. Add the drained water, if any, to your
soup stock.
3. The red color in vegetables is produced by acid and needs to be kept
that way. Tomatoes usually have enough acid of their own to keep the
color, but beets and red cabbage need a teaspoon of lemon juice or
white vinegar. Cook in a small amount of water in a covered kettle.
4. Yellow vegetables are among the most valuable and stable. That rich
yellow color is not only beauty but actually the foundation of Vitamin
A. Not much damage can be done to it although the minerals and other
Vitamins can still be destroyed if the vegetable is carelessly handled.
ARTICHOKES
The FRENCH artichoke is boiled in salted water, served hot
with brown butter or Hollandaise sauce, or cold with mayon-
VEGETABLES 389
naise. The spiny choke below the leaves and above the heart
must be discarded. The JERUSALEM artichoke is washed, pared,
boiled like a potato and dressed with seasoning, melted butter
and minced parsley.
ASPARAGUS
Trim off hard and scales to the head. Tie in bunches,
stalks
stand upright in boiling salted water. After 10 minutes turn
into loaf pan and continue with heat under the stems. Serve
with browned butter or Hollandaise.
SOY-BEANS
Of the many varieties of soy-beans grown in this country,
the yellow variety is the most popular for cooking purposes,
though the black and green beans are used, and are particularly
good in soup. Soy-beans require longer cooking than white
beans, but the length of time required is lessened if the beans
are soaked for twelve hours before cooking.
BAKED SOY-BEANS
2 cups yellow soy-beans 2 tablespoons molasses
1 tablespoon salt 1 teaspoon mustard
1 small onion % pound fat salt pork
Soak the beans for twelve hours, then heat to boiling and
simmer until tender. Unless the beans are tender before they
are baked, they will not be good. Prepare as directed for
"Baked Beans." Eight to ten hours will be required to bake
them.
BOILED LIMA BEANS
1 quart green Lima beans or 1 tablespoon fat
2 cups dried Lima beans 1 cup milk or cream if
Salt and pepper desired
If the green beans are used, put them into just enough boil-
ing water to cover, and boil slowly until tender. Salt the water
just before cooking is completed. Add fat and salt and pepper
to taste. If desired, a cup of milk or cream may be added and
the beans allowed to simmer in it for a moment.
If dried beans are used they may be soaked twelve hours
in plenty of cold water, and boiled in the same water with one-
eighth teaspoon of soda added for each quart of water; or
the process may be hastened by soaking them for one hour and
simmering them for two hours. If they are not soaked at all,
they can be made tender by simmering for two and one-half
hours. The water should be drained off before the milk or
cream is added.
STRING BEANS
1 quart string beans Salt and pepper Butter
Wash beans, string and snap or cut into short pieces. Cover
with least possible amount of boiling water and cook gently
/ pHE YOUR PUNGENT VEGETABLES SNUGLY INTd
IF VEGETABLE PARCHMENT BEFORE PLUNCIN|
4 Itlr*--. INTO BOILING WATER. IT KEEPS THE HOUSt
'i*^' SMELLING SWEET
mm
BEET GREENS
Carefully wash and clean young beets, leaving roots and tops
together. Put them into a kettle with very little boiling water
and allow them to cook until just tender. Salt the water just
before cooking is completed. Drain as dry as possible, in a col-
ander. Chop, if desired. Serve hot with vinegar or with butter,
salt and pepper.
BROCCOLI
Broccoli is a variety of cauliflower that is
green instead
of white. It was very popular in Colonial
gardens and con-
tinued to be grown and sold along the east coast but
gained
popularity very slowly among native Americans. Within the last
ten years growers on the west coast have
promoted it and it is
now as popular and often more abundant and lower priced than
cauliflower. Shipped in from early cuttings, even the largest
ice
stalks are often tender. Choose heads and leaves that are bright
green and crisp. Cut off only such portions of the stalk as are
392
NX^^Vrf
too hard and tough to admit the knife. Wash under running
water and refrigerate, if not to be used at once. When ready
to cook, use a deep kettle just large enough for the head or heads
and bring salted water to a rapid boil. Insert carefully, stem
end down, leave uncovered and when the water stops boiling
add soda the size of a small pea to the water around the stems.
The heads should not be submerged. When water boils up
again they will cook more slowly than the stems and both will
be tender in 15-25 minutes. If the heads are under water, they
cook so much more rapidly that they will be mushy before the
stems are tender. Broccoli heads, stems and leaves are valuable
sources of vitamins A
and G, as well as iron and calcium.
Serve with brown butter sauce, brown butter and crumbs,
Hollandaise sauce or au gratin. Broccoli can be used instead
of spinach for cream soup, especially when the green color
is wanted.
BRUSSELS SPROUTS
Pick off the dead leaves from the sprouts, soak the sprouts
in cold salted water for one-half hour, wash them and
put
them on the fire in plenty of boiling water. Boil in an un-
covered saucepan until tender. Just before they are done,
saltthe water. Drain in a colander. Reheat; season with salt
and pepper, and serve with cream sauce or melted butter.
BOILED CABBAGE
Cut the cabbage into desired shapes. Place it in a kettle with
a generous amount of water. Cook uncovered until just tender.
Add salt to the water just before cooking is completed. Drain,
add butter or bacon fat, salt and pepper.
Alittle milk or cream
may be added or it may be creamed or
scalloped or served au gratin.
CARROTS, TOASTED
To serve carrots as a separate vegetable, scrape and wash;
leave young carrots whole and cut old carrots in slices length-
wise or crosswise. Boil them until tender (15-30 minutes) in
water containing one teaspoon sugar. Just before cooking is
completed, salt the water. Drain, add butter, and seasoning or
roll in butter, then in corn flakes and brown in oven at 350 F.
No 1
CARROTS AND PEAS
2 cups cubed, cooked carrots 3 tablespoons butter or other
1 cup cooked peas, fresh or fat or
canned Medium white sauce
Combine the carrots and peas, reheat and serve with melted
butter or any savory fat such as bacon fat; or combine with a
white sauce. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
No. 2 WITH GREEN MINT Combine the carrots and peas,
as directed above, add one-half cup mint leaves and a little boil-
ing water and boil for five minutes. Drain, add salt and pepper,
a generous amount of butter and a sprinkle of sugar. Set in
the oven until the sugar melts. Serve with a garnish of fresh
mint leaves.
CARROT MOLDS
2 cups grated raw carrot 1 teaspoon salt
cup bread-crumbs
l
/2 2 tablespoons melted fat
2 eggs /2
l
cup milk
Wash, scrape and grate the carrots and mix with the crumbs.
Beat the eggs and add to them the salt, fat and milk. Add this
mixture to the carrot and crumb mixture. Fill a greased ring
mold or popover cups, set in a pan of hot water and bake in a
slow oven (250-325 F.) until firm.
BOILED CAULIFLOWER
Remove the green leaves from the cauliflower and cut off
any bruised or dirty spots. Place it, top downward, in a deep
394
r^^r^f
bowl of cold, salted water and allow it to stay there about half
an hour to draw out dust and other impurities. Cook it, whole
or broken into flowerets, in boiling water, uncovered. Just
before cooking is completed (15-30 minutes) salt the water.
Lift out the cauliflower carefully and allow it to drain in a
warm place. Pour medium white sauce over it or send the
sauce to the table in a sauce-boat, or serve it with melted butter
and paprika.
Sometimes hot boiled cauliflower is sprinkled with grated
cheese and then with buttered crumbs and baked to a light
brown in a moderate oven (400 F.), or it may be sprinkled
with the grated cheese and served without baking.
SCALLOPED CAULIFLOWER
1 medium cauliflower 1 /2
1
cups medium white sauce
2 hard-cooked eggs or Bread-crumbs
4 tablespoons grated cheese
"Wash the stalks clean and cut them into pieces. Place the
celery in a stew-pan, cover with boiling water and boil until
tender (about half an hour), by which time the water should
be reduced to about one-half cup. Make a sauce with the
celery water, milk, flour and butter. Add the cooked celery
and season with salt and pepper.
SCALLOPED CELERY
Stew celery, as directed in the preceding recipe, using all milk
in the sauce instead of part celery water. Turn the creamed
VEGETABLES 395
CELERIAC
Notevery housewife knows celeriac, but it is well worth
adding to her list of vegetable acquaintances. It is a variety of
celery grown for its turnip-like root instead of for the blanched
stalks. The flavor is similar to that of celery.
To prepare celeriac, trim off the tops, wash and pare the bulb,}
drop it into boiling water and cook about one-half hour, or
until tender. Add the salt just before cooking is completed.
It may then be prepared in the same way as creamed or scalloped
CORN SOUFFLE
1 tablespoon fat Pepper
1 tablespoon flour 1 boiled pimiento
cup milk
l
/2 2 cups corn pulp
1 teaspoon salt 2 eggs
54 teaspoon paprika
Make a white sauce, using the fat, flour, milk and seasoning.
Rub the pimiento through a sieve and add it to the sauce.
Add the corn to the mixture. Cool slightly, then add the well-
beaten egg-yolks and fold in the stiffly beaten egg-whites. Turn
into a greased baking-dish, set the dish in a pan of hot water,
and bake in a moderate oven (375 F.) until the egg is set,
about thirty minutes.
396
CORN OYSTERS
2 cups corn pulp 2 tablespoons fat
2 eggs Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons flour
CUCUMBER CUPS
This makes a dainty dish for luncheon. Cut the unpared
vegetables into sections two inches long and cook until tender
in water salted just before cooking is completed. Scoop out the
\ MIDSUMMER
NIGHT'S DREAM
COME TRUE IN
THE DELICATE,
TEMPTING FLAVOR
OF CORN ON THE
COB
National Dairy Council
-tfflOff
COOKED CAR-
ROTS ROLLED IN
BREAD CRUMBS
AND BAKED ARE
EASY TO MAKE
AND SERVE
1 CARN ISH :
VEGETABLES 397
STEWED CUCUMBERS
3 cucumbers 1 cup boiling water
6 slices toast l
/z teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons fat Pepper
2 tablespoons flour iyz tablespoons lemon-juice
CUCUMBER SAUTE
4 cucumbers Salt and pepper
Butter Minced parsley or chives
Flour
Pare and quarter the cucumbers and boil them, without any
water, for three minutes. Drain; season with salt and pepper;
roll in flour and saute in a little butter until tender. Sprinkle
with parsley or chives just before the cooking is completed.
DANDELION GREENS
2 pounds dandelion greens 1 tablespoon butter
Salt and pepper
crumbs, and saute in hot fat. Put a pan in the oven or in some
other place where it can be kept hot; lay a piece of absorbent
paper in the pan, and upon it place the slices as they come crisp
and brown from the frying-pan. Serve on a hot platter with
the slices overlapping.
STUFFED EGGPLANT
cup water
l
1 eggplant /2
2 tablespoons butter 2 cups crumbs
Salt and pepper
Cut the eggplant in half lengthwise and scoop out the center
pulp, leaving the rind about one-half inch thick so that the
shape may be firm. Cover the shells with cold water. Chop
the pulp fine, season it with salt, pepper, and butter, and cook
in a frying-pan for ten minutes, stirring well, then add water
and one cup of bread-crumbs. Drain the shells, sprinkle the
interior of each with salt and pepper and fill them with the
mixture. Spread the remaining crumbs over the tops. Place
the halves in a baking-dish or deep pan, and pour enough hot
water into the pan to come one-third up the sides of the plant.
Bake in a moderate oven (350-375 F.) one-half hour, and
serve hot.
KALE
Kale may be cooked and served in the same way as spinach,
or tied in a bundle like asparagus and served on toast with a
generous allowance of butter or white sauce.
CREAMED KOHLRABI
6 kohlrabi Paprika
2 tablespoons fat 2 cups milk
2 tablespoons flour 1 egg-yolk
Salt
Wash and pare the kohlrabi. Cut into half -inch cubes, drop
into boiling water to cover and cook until tender. Just before
cooking is completed, add salt, then drain and shake over the
fire to dry slightly. Make a white sauce from the flour, fat,
milk and seasonings, adding the egg-yolk last, and pour it over
the vegetable.
SAUTEED LENTILS
1 pint lentils Salt and pepper
l
/s teaspoon soda 2 tablespoons fat
Wash the lentils and soak over night. In the morning, drain
them, cover with warm water in which the soda has been dis-
solved, and bring them quickly to the boiling-point. Boil
gently for one hour, drain, cover them again with fresh boil-
ing water, and boil gently until tender; this generally requires
from two to three hours longer. Test by mashing a lentil
between the fingers. If it crushes quickly, they are done.
Drain in a colander.
Melt fat in a frying-pan; add the lentils, with salt and pepper
to season; stir them over the fire for fifteen minutes. Two
minced onions may be added, if desired.
MACEDOINE OF VEGETABLES
2 cups mixed cooked vege- /2
l
cup water
tables Salt and pepper
1 teaspoon beef extract or 2 tablespoons butter or other
l
/z cup stock fat
1 teaspoon sugar
Mix all the ingredients together and cook eight or ten minutes
over a hot fire, shaking the pan now and then. Serve hot.
4oo
MUSHROOMS
To PREPARE MUSHROOMS for cooking by any method, cut
off the stalks, pare the caps, or brush well if they are fresh and
tender, and drop them into a bowl of water which contains
the juice of half a lemon or a tablespoon of vinegar if you wish
to keep them from darkening. If the stalks are solid and tender,
they may be peeled, cooked and served with the caps, otherwise
cook them with the peelings in a small amount of water, for
mushroom stock.
Too much cooking toughens mushrooms. Three or four
minutes will heat canned mushrooms, and five or six minutes
will cook fresh ones, usually.
VEGETABLES
\j
CREAMED MUSHROOMS
No. 1.
/2
l
cup cream 2 cups mushrooms, fresh or
% teaspoon pepper canned
No. 2.
1
1
/2 tablespoons fat Salt and pepper
/ /2 cups cooked mushrooms
l 1
1 2i tablespoons
flour 1
Select mushrooms that are plump and are truly little cups.
Prepare caps as directed. Place them upside down in a baking-
dish, sprinkle with salt and pepper and place a bit of butter in
each cup. Set the pan in a quick oven (400 -450 F.) and
cook for fifteen minutes. The cups will be filled with their
own liquor. Serve on toast, very hot.
BOILED OKRA
No. 1.
Test the okra by breaking off the tips of the pods. If there
are tough strings that will not break easily the pod is too old to
be served as a vegetable and should be kept for a soup or sauce
which is to be strained. The pods of okra are so sticky that
special care is needed to avoid breaking them during the clean-
ing. Wash them
well, and remove the stems, place in sufficient
boiling water to cover them and boil until tender (20-40 min-
utes) Add salt just before cooking is completed. Okra should
.
ing dish. Melt the butter, add the vinegar and a little salt and
pepper; mix well, and pour the sauce over the okra.
No. 2.
Test and wash the okra as above; remove stems and cut the
pods into slices, crosswise. Place in a granite stew-pan, just
cover with boiling water and simmer until tender (20-40 min-
utes). Add the tomatoes, peeled and chopped, and stew for
ten minutes longer. Add butter, salt and pepper, and serve.
BOILED ONIONS
Peel the onions. If they are very large cut them in quarters.
Cook in boiling water, uncovered, until tender (30-60 min-
VEGETABLES 403
CREAMED ONIONS
In peeling the onions remove all of the green leaves, for they
should be as white as milk when served. Drop them into boil-
ing water and boil uncovered for ten minutes. Drain, add
freshly boiling water and continue cooking until tender (30-
60 minutes) Just before cooking is completed, add salt. Drain
.
STUFFED ONIONS
6 medium to large onions l
/z cup milk
cup chopped ham or
l
/2 Pepper
l
chopped green pepper /2 teaspoon salt
l
/2 cup soft bread-crumbs 1 tablespoon fat
Fine dry bread-crumbs
Remove a slice from the top of each onion and parboil the
onions until almost tender. Drain and remove the centers, leav-
ing six little cups. Chop the onion that was scooped out and
combine with it the ham and soft crumbs. Add seasoning and
the onion cups. Place them in a baking-dish, cover with
refill
crumbs, add the milk, and bake in a quick oven (400 -450
F.) until tender.
CREAMED PARSNIPS
12 medium-sized parsnips 2 tablespoons flour
1
cup milk 2 tablespoons fat
Salt and pepper
Young parsnips are most desirable, but old ones may be used
if the
woody center is removed.
Wash and scrape the parsnips, and boil them until tender.
Drain and cut them into small pieces. Make a sauce of the
fat, flour, milk and seasonings. Add the cooked parsnips and
serve.
404
FRIED PARSNIPS
12 medium-sized parsnips Salt and pepper
Flour or fine crumbs
Scrape and boil the parsnips until tender. If old, remove the
woody centers. Drain, and when cold, cut them in long, thin
slices about one-third of an inch thick, and season each slice
with salt and pepper. Dip the slices in flour or fine crumbs and
saute in fat or oil until both sides are thoroughly browned.
Drain well and serve very hot.
BOILED PEAS
2 quarts peas in the shell 2 tablespoons butter
Salt and pepper
Fresh peas should not be shelled until just before they are
needed for cooking. Look them over carefully after shelling,
taking out any tendrils that may be mixed with them. Wash
and cook until tender in a covered pan in just enough boiling
water to prevent scorching. Add salt just before cooking is
completed. Young peas will cook in ten to twenty minutes
but those that are more mature require a longer time. Most
of the water should have cooked away. If any remains, drain
carefully. Let the peas stand in the drainer over hot water.
Melt the butter, add salt and pepper and the drained peas.
Mix well, reheat, and serve.
CREAMED PEAS
2 cups cooked peas 1 cup medium white sauce
Mix peas with white sauce. Reheat and serve.
BHUGIA
2 cups peas 2 tablespoons oil or melted fat
4 medium potatoes Salt
Chopped green peppers
This is a popular dish in India and is usually served with the
dinner roast. Boil the peas and potatoes separately. When the
potatoes are thoroughly done, drain and let them cool enough
VEGETABLES 405
Boil the rice and peas separately. Chop the onions fine and
fry them in oil until tender. Add the cooked rice and peas.
BOILED POTATOES
Select potatoes of uniform size. Wash, pare, if you wish,
and drop into cold water. Cook in boiling water until tender
when pierced with a fork. Just before cooking is completed,
add the salt. The water should be kept boiling constantly.
When done, drain and shake the pan over the fire to dry the
potatoes. Serve in an uncovered dish or cover with a folded
napkin. Old potatoes should be soaked in cold water for an
hour or so before boiling. When they are pared, potatoes lose
much vitamin and mineral content in boiling. It is better,
therefore, from the nutritional standpoint, to wash them
thoroughly, scrubbing with a brush, and boil them with the
skins on. They may be peeled quickly before they are served,
or served with the skins on.
RICED POTATOES
Force hot, freshly boiled potatoes through a ricer or coarse
strainer. Sprinkle with salt and pile lightly into the serving-
dish. Serve at once in an uncovered dish.
BAKED POTATOES
Select smooth, medium-sized potatoes, scrub, remove the eyes
and any blemishes, place in a baking-pan or on the rack in a
very hot oven (450-500 F.) and bake until tender (30-60
minutes). Be sure to have the oven hot before the potatoes
are put in. To test the potatoes, do not pierce them with a fork,
but squeeze them with the hand wrapped in a towel. When
soft, break the skin to keep them from being soggy, and serve.
406
STUFFED POTATOES
Follow directions for potatoes on the half-shell, adding one-
half cup peanut butter and two egg-whites to the potato mix-
ture.
POTATOES SUZETTE
6 medium-sized potatoes 6 tablespoons buttered crumbs
/2 cup hot milk
l
1 tablespoon grated cheese
2 tablespoons melted fat Salt and pepper
6 eggs
Prepare as for potatoes on the half shell. Refill the shell al-
most to the top, break an egg into each opening, season with
pepper and salt and sprinkle with buttered crumbs that have
been mixed with grated cheese and bake in a slow oven (250-
350 F.) long enough to set the egg and brown lightly (about
six minutes).
SCALLOPED POTATOES
6 medium-sized potatoes Milk
2
tablespoons flour Salt and pepper
4 tablespoons butter
Pare raw potatoes and cut them into thin slices. Place in a
baking-dish a layer of the potato one inch deep, season with
salt and pepper,
sprinkle a portion of the flour over each layer,
add a part of the butter in bits. Then add another layer of
the potato and seasoning, as before, and continue until the re-
quired amount is used. It is advisable not to have more than
VEGETABLES 47
two or three layers because of difficulty in cooking. Add
milk
until it can be seen between the slices of potato, cover and
bake
(350-400 F.) until potatoes are tender when pierced with a
fork (1-1//2 hours). Remove the cover during the last fifteen
minutes to brown the top. Serve from the baking-dish.
FRANCONIA POTATOES
Select medium-sized potatoes, pare and place them in the
baking-pan with the roast, allowing an hour and a quarter for
their cooking. Turn them often and baste with the gravy from
the roast. Serve them arranged about the meat on the platter.
If you wish to shorten the cooking time, parboil them for fifteen
minutes before putting them into the roasting-pan, and allow
forty-five minutes for the roasting.
DUTCH POTATOES
6 potatoes 6 slices fat salt pork or bacon
6 frankfurter sausages Pepper
To the mashed potatoes add the fat, the egg-yolks which have
been beaten until very light, and the milk. Stir until well
blended and then fold in the stiffly beaten egg-,whites. Mix
lightly and pile the mass in a well-greased baking-dish. Set in
a pan containing hot water and bake in a moderate oven (375
F.) twenty to thirty minutes. Serve at once.
DESIGN FOR EATING . . .
BRUSSELS SPROUTS IN
CHICKEN RING MOLD
f L A N K E & WITH WHO IF
CARROTS AND ACCENTS OF
fARSlEV AND PIMfENTO
pr
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LITTLE
CAME FR0M
MARKET TO NEST
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FLUFFY WHITE "TA-
TERS"
Cut the raw, pared potatoes into long match-like strips. Cook
them in boiling water until tender. Drain and turn into a
warm dish. Brown the chopped onion and the herbs in the
fat. Add the flour, stirring thoroughly, add the milk, salt and
pepper and cook in a double boiler twenty minutes. Strain and
pour over the cooked potato. Sprinkle with grated cheese and
serve.
MASHED POTATOES
6 medium-sized potatoes 2 tablespoons butter
Hot milk or cream Salt and white pepper
Pare and boil the potatoes. Drain, and set the saucepan in a
warm place with the cover off for a minute or two to dry the
potatoes thoroughly. Mash the potatoes in the saucepan in
which they were boiled, or turn them out into a warm dish
and put through the ricer into the same saucepan. Work
quickly so that they will not get cold. Add the butter, season
to taste, and beat, adding milk or cream a little at a time until
the potatoes are light and moist.
FOR POTATO CUPS Pile into a large teacup and make a hol-
low with the bottom of a smaller tumbler or bottle. Slip out
carefully onto the serving plate. Keep hot until filled and
served.
VEGETABLES 409
Add fat, seasoning and eggs to the hot riced potatoes. Beat
until light and mound on a baking-dish. Cover with grated
cheese and then with buttered crumbs. Bake (400 F.) ten
minutes, or until the crumbs are brown.
DUCHESS POTATOES
2 cups riced potatoes 2 egg-yolks
2 tablespoons fat Salt and paprika
French fried potatoes. Baste them with more fat during bak-
CREAMED POTATOES
No. 1.
Cut potatoes into small pieces and mix with the white sauce.
Cook together gently until the potatoes are thoroughly heated
through. Season to taste.
Small new
potatoes are delicious when served with a cream
sauce. Scrape the potatoes until no speck of the skin remains,
boil until tender and drain. Add salt just before cooking is
completed.
Make a sauce of the fat, flour, milk and seasonings. Place
DELMONICO POTATOES
2 cups cooked potatoes, diced Salt and pepper
2 cups medium white sauce Buttered crumbs
Mix potatoes and sauce, add salt and pepper, and pour into a
buttered baking dish; cover with crumbs and bake ten minutes
in a hot oven (400 F.).
412
POTATOES AU GRATIN
Creamed potatoes No. 1 2 to 4 tablespoons grated
1 teaspoon minced cheese
parsley
1 cup buttered crumbs
POTATO DROPS
2 cups mashed potatoes 2 eggs
(without any milk) Salt and pepper
Mix the mashed, seasoned potato and the beaten eggs. Drop
the mixture from a spoon into the hot fat(375-390 F.) and
fry until a golden brown, (2-3 minutes) then drain on brown
paper and serve with a garnish of parsley. If the spoon is
dipped into boiling water after every using, each drop will re-
tain the shape of the spoon.
POTATO O'BRIEN
6 medium-sized potatoes Chopped pimientos
Salt Onion-juice
Wash, pare and cut potatoes into half-inch dice. Dry be-
tween towels. Fry in hot fat (395 F.) until a delicate brown.
Drain on soft paper, sprinkle with salt, then saute them in just
enough fat to keep them from burning, adding minced pi-
mientos and a few drops of onion-juice. They should be tossed
frequently during cooking, and not pressed close to the pan.
POTATOES PERSILLADE
12 small new potatoes or Butter
6 medium-sized old pota- Juice of one-half lemon
toes /2
l
cup minced parsley
These are dependent upon parsley, not only for their name
but for their attractive appearance. Scrape new potatoes. Pare
old potatoes and cut the size of a small egg or with a vegetable
scoop cut them into balls. Boil until tender. Add salt just
VEGETABLES 4*3
Add more fat if necessary. When done, turn the potatoes out
upon a hot dish, sprinkle parsley over the top, and serve hot.
SPANISH POTATOES
1 tablespoon minced onion 2 cups cold boiled potatoes,
2 tablespoons chopped green diced
/2 cup cold cooked ham,
l
pepper
2 tablespoons chopped chopped
pimiento 1 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons oil or cooking l
/2 teaspoon paprika
fat
Saute the onion, pepper and pimiento in the fat until light
brown, add the diced potatoes, the chopped ham and seasonings
and cook until thoroughly heated through.
Mix cold mashed potato with the beaten egg-yolk and shape
the mixture into balls. Place the balls in a greased pan and
make a depression on the top of each, put a bit of butter in each
depression and brown in the oven (400-450 F.).
PRINCESS POTATOES
2 cups cold mashed potatoes Melted fat
1 egg
If the potato is cold and firm, cut into strips two inches long,
one inch wide and one-half inch thick, otherwise shape into
414
*v^^v/>
flatcakes one-half inch thick. Dip the strips or cakes first into
the melted fat and then into the egg, which has been slightly
beaten, and lay them carefully on a greased pan. Cook in a hot
oven (400 -450 F.) until brown.
Boil the potatoes with the skins on. When cool, peel and cut
them in an inch thick. Mix honey and
pieces one-quarter of
hot water. Just cover the bottom of a baking-dish with the
mixture, add the sweet potatoes and sliced pineapple. Pour the
remaining honey mixture over them and bake for ten minutes
in the oven (400 F.).
CREAMED RADISHES
l
\ /2 cups large, strongly 1 cup milk
flavored radishes 2 tablespoons fat
2 tablespoons flour Salt and pepper
"Wash, pare and slice the radishes. Boil until tender. Make a
white sauce of the flour, milk and seasonings. Combine
fat.,
radishes and sauce and serve. The flavor is not unlike spicy
turnips and they make a pleasant novelty served with steak or
chops.
BOILED RICE
1 cup rice 3 quarts water or more 1 tablespoon salt
Wash the rice; drop it into the salted boiling water; and boil
rapidly, uncovered, for fifteen or twenty minutes, or until the
kernels are soft when pressed between the thumb and finger.
Place in a colander (saving the water for soup) and pour boil-
ing water over the rice to remove the loose starch and separate
the grains. Drain and place in the oven with the door open
for a few minutes, to allow the cereal to dry out. The grains
should be separate and distinct.
CURRY OF RICE
1 cup rice 1 to 2 tablespoons curry-
2 tablespoons fat powder
1 teaspoon chopped onion 2 teaspoons salt
l
2 /z cups boiling water % teaspoon pepper
Wash the rice well. Place fat and onion in a stew-pan and
cook them until the onion is
yellow, add the rice and stir the
VEGETABLES 4*7
whole over a hot fire for five minutes. Draw the pan out of
the heat, season with the curry-powder, salt and pepper, stir
well and pour in the boiling water. Cover the stew-pan and
boil rapidly for ten minutes, then cook very slowly for forty
minutes.
Curry of rice is appropriate with any kind of meat dish that
has been prepared with a sauce.
RICE A LA CREOLE
1 onion 2 cups cooked tomatoes
1 slice cooked ham Salt
1 tablespoon fat Paprika
1 cup boiled rice Bread-crumbs
Chop onion and ham very fine. Add fat, boiled rice, and
tomatoes seasoned with salt and paprika. Mix thoroughly, put
into a baking-dish, cover with bread-crumbs and bake (400
F.) for fifteen minutes.
FRIED SALSIFY
Follow directions for fried parsnips (See Index) .
FRIED SQUASH
2 white squash Egg and crumbs Salt and pepper
The white "button" squash, about four inches in diameter^
when fried. Pare and cut the squash into thin slices,
are best
4i8
VX^V^
BOILED SPINACH
No. 1 AMERICAN STYLE
2 pounds spinach 3 tablespoons butter
Salt and pepper
SPINACH MOLD
1
peck spinach, cooked and y4 CUP butter
chopped iy2 cups bread crumbs
3 unbeaten eggs y^ teaspoon pepper
y4 cup milk 1
teaspoon salt
VEGETABLES 419
CREAMED SPINACH
2 pounds spinach Salt and pepper
1 tablespoon butter 2 tablespoons cream
2 hard-cooked egg-yolks
SPINACH SOUFFLE
2 cups cooked spinach, fresh or canned 2 eggs
spinach. To
the spinach add egg-yolks beaten, place in a
granite saucepan, heat and stir over the fire until the egg setS|
then remove from the heat and when cold add the beaten egg-
whites. individual baking-dishes one-half full of this mix-
Fill
ture. Set the dishes in a pan of hot water and bake in a moder-
ate oven (375 F.) from twenty to thirty minutes. Serve at
once to prevent falling.
SPINACH IN EGGS
2 cups boiled spinach Mustard
6 eggs Butter
Salt Vinegar
Red pepper
SUCCOTASH
2 cups green corn or Salt and pepper
1 cup dried corn 1 cup milk
2 cups fresh Lima, string or 4 tablespoons butter
butter beans or 1 cup dried
Lima beans
If fresh vegetables are used, cut the corn from the cob. Cover
the beans with the least possible amount of boiling water, to
prevent scorching, and cook until tender. Drain off the water,
add the corn and the milk and cook slowly until the corn is
tender. Add the butter and other seasoning.
When dried corn and beans are used, soak both separately
over night. In the morning, cover the beans with fresh water,
and boil them very gently until tender. Do not drain the water
from the corn, but reduce heat so it will cook slowly. When
the beans are tender, drain and add them to the corn, allowing
only water enough to cover. Cook slowly until tender and drain
off water to save for soup. Add the milk and seasoning.
STEWED TOMATOES
6 tomatoes, fresh or canned Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons butter Crumbs or flour
FRIED TOMATOES
6 tomatoes Crumbs Salt and pepper
BAKED TOMATOES
6 tomatoes 1 cup bread-crumbs
4 tablespoons fat 1 teaspoon sugar
Salt and pepper
BROILED TOMATOES
6 tomatoes Melted butter
Salt and pepper
SCALLOPED TOMATOES
6 large fresh tomatoes or Bread-crumbs
1 quart cooked tomatoes, Butter or other fat
fresh or canned Grated cheese, if desired
Salt and pepper
Skin fresh tomatoes and cut them into slices. If using cooked
tomatoes, drain off the juice, using only the pulp. Place a layer
of tomato in a greased baking-dish, add a seasoning of salt and
pepper then a thin layer of bread-crumbs. Cut the fat into
tiny pieces and lay on the crumbs. Then add another layer of
tomato and proceed until the materials are used, having crumbs
for the top layer. Add bits of fat and bake for thirty minutes
in a moderate oven (3 50 -400 F.). Serve in the baking-dish.
Grated cheese may be added to each layer, or to the top one
only.
422
\X\^>>NXNX V/V/ V>'VXVX'W^.
1 1
STUFFED TOMATOES
No. 1.
Y4 teaspoon pepper
Cut the tops from the tomatoes and remove the pulp. Wash
the rice carefully, put it into a saucepan with one-half cup
salted boiling water and the tomato pulp and cook until the
rice is soft. Add the fat, the bread soaked in the milk, the
mashed egg-yolk and seasonings. Stuff the tomato shells with
this mixture, replace the tops and place in a baking-dish.
Bake in a moderate oven (3 50 -400 F.) until the tomatoes
are soft (about twenty minutes). The curry-powder gives an
unusual flavor to the tomatoes, but may be omitted.
MASHED TURNIPS
1
pound white or yellow 3 tablespoons butter
turnips Salt and pepper
Wash, pare and slice the turnips and cook in boiling water
until soft, adding salt just before the cooking is completed.
Drain and mash the turnips in the stew-pan and stand the pan,
VEGETABLES 423
uncovered, over a low fire for ten minutes to dry the turnips
well, stirring them frequently. Add butter and pepper and
more salt if needed.
TURNIPS IN CREAM
1 pound white or yellow 4 tablespoons flour
turnips 4 tablespoons fat
2 cups milk Salt and pepper
MOLDED SALADS
Among the most decorative ways to serve jellied salad are the
form mold and the ring mold. The latter lends itself to many
additional touches since the center may be used for decorative
vegetables, a pile of cut jelly of contrasting color or the bowl
of salad dressing. Of exact size to fit, the bowl may be of glass,
china or silver. Be sure the plate onto which the ring is un-
molded is
large enough for all the decoration planned. See page
344.
COLD MARINADE
3 tablespoons oil 1 teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons lemon- juice or l
/2 teaspoon pepper
l
vinegar /z teaspoon onion-juice
Vegetable Salads
ASPARAGUS SALAD
6 rings cut from green pepper Lettuce leaves
or lemon French dressing
24 stalks cold boiled aspara- /2 tablespoon tomato
l
ill
DESIGNED TO
COAX JADED
APPETITES
COOKED VEGE-
TABLES WITH A
PALATE-TEAS-
ING HOLLAN-
DAISE SAUCE
FRESH AS THE DEW ON YOUR
GARDEN FLOWERS IS THIS DE-
LICIOUS SALAD BOWL
jit* Ji
428
NXV/V^
teaspoon mustard
l
/2 head cabbage 1
CARDINAL SALAD
2 large beets Mayonnaise made with vine-
2 tablespoons vinegar gar from beets
/2 cup wax beans
l
Lettuce
l
/2 cup peas Radishes for a garnish
l
/2 cup asparagus tips
Boil beets until tender, slice, cover with vinegar and let stand
until the following day. Drain off the vinegar and use it in
making the mayonnaise. Arrange beans, peas, asparagus tips
and mayonnaise in little rose-like nests of lettuce leaves, and
garnish with radishes.
CARROT SALAD
1 cup grated raw carrot 1 tablespoon lemon-juice
cup chopped raw cabbage
l
1 /2 teaspoon salt
or celery, or cabbage and Mayonnaise or boiled dressing
celery combined Lettuce leaves
Cook the cauliflower in boiling water, drain, and put it, head
down, into a bowl. When cold, place it, stem down, on a shal-
low dish and cover with mayonnaise. Garnish with lettuce ar-
ranged to resemble the leaves of the cauliflower, and add little
clusters of shrimps.
CELERY SALAD
2 cups celery Strips of pimiento or green
/2
l
cup mayonnaise pepper and celery curls
After thoroughly washing the celery allow it to crisp in cold
water. Then wipe it dry, cut it into inch lengths and these
into lengthwise strips. Place them in a salad-bowl, and add
sufficient mayonnaise dressing to moisten the whole. Garnish
43
Ny^./V-'
with the pimiento or pepper and the celery curls. Serve at once.
Celery salad admits of a wide range of additions, any cold meat,
fish or fowl left from a previous meal being palatable served
in it.
CRESS SALAD
1 pint water cress 1 onion French dressing
Pick over the leaves of the cress carefully, removing all
bruised or wilted ones, wash and drain, and with the fingers
break the stems into two-inch lengths. Lay the cress in a salad
bowl, chop the onion very fine, strew it over the cress, add
French dressing and serve.
CUCUMBER SALAD
3 cucumbers Salt French dressing
Cut about an inch
off the point of each cucumber, and pare
carefully. very thin, sprinkle with a little salt, and let
Slice
stand ten minutes. Serve with French dressing.
SALADS 431
LETTUCE SALAD
Choose for
this the crisp center of the lettuce. "Wash it, dry
itwell, pull to pieces or cut it into four or six sections, and
arrange it in a salad bowl. Pour over the center of the dish
any dressing preferred. Mayonnaise is frequently used, and
Russian dressing is used even more frequently, perhaps, but
with a heavy dinner the French dressing is to be preferred to
any other.
The following vegetables may be used instead of or with let-
tuce: endive, peppergrass, water cress, nasturtium leaves, spin-
the green
Strip off, and set aside for some other purpose,
leaves of lettuce. Wash the hearts, pull them to pieces or cut
into sections, and drop into ice-water to crisp them. Peel
the Spanish onion and cut it into thin shavings. Shake the
lettuce in a colander or wire basket to free it from water or dry
on a towel. Fill the salad bowl with alternate layers of the
lettuce and onion slices, sprinkling on each layer a little French
dressing.
432
^Ny^^^/^^K^V^X^-N^^^N^^^^^X-N^^.
POTATO SALAD
No. 1.
Boil the potatoes with skins on and allow them to cool before
peeling, as it is considered a good thing to have potatoes waxy
rather than mealy for salad. Peel potatoes, cut into small pieces
or thin slices, and mix with parsley, onion, and French dressing.
Set in a cool place for two hours before serving.
No. 2.
SPINACH SALAD
1 2 hard-cooked eggs French dressing
pint spinach
Wash spinach carefully. Select only thick, tender leaves (save
others and stems for cooking)If too large, tear to size. Shake
.
Scald the tomatoes, remove the skins and chill the tomatoes.
Just before serving time, cut them in halves, crosswise, and
place one piece, with the outside upward, on each serving-plate
with one or two leaves of white, crisp lettuce underneath. Pour
over each portion a tablespoon of French dressing.
No. 2.
Select firm tomatoes of a good size, scald, peel and chill, cut
a slice from the top ofeach, and scoop out all the seeds and
soft pulp, being careful not to break the sides. Cut celery into
small dice, mix it with mayonnaise dressing, fill the shells with
mixture, place one teaspoon .of the dressing on top of each
tomato and serve individually on a bed of lettuce leaves, plac-
ing three or four small leaves on each plate and the tomato in
the center.
Soak the gelatin in the cold water, melt it over steam, and
beat it into the mayonnaise. Add the sugar to the cream and
SALADS 435
m:' ^v
'
"
:;.,
,
*
*?.*V-
AS IF BY MAGIC A
STUFFED TOMATO
WITH SPOONED PET-
ALS OF CREAM CHEESE
BECOMES A ROSE
LOVELY TO LOOK AT,
DELIGHTFUL TO EAT
J-
f Jfc
43^
\^^^/
Peel the oranges and cut the sections from the membrane
with a sharp knife or a pair of shears. If the fruit is allowed
to stand in cold water after peeling, the bitter white membrane
will come off easily.
Peel the bananas and cut in quarter-inch slices. Remove the
skins and seeds from the grapes. Break in small pieces, but
do not chop, the walnut-meats. Mix these ingredients
thoroughly and place on ice. When ready to serve, place or
lettuce leaves and serve with French dressing.
GRAPEFRUIT SALAD
Peel grapefruit and free the sections from all membrane and
seeds. Cut sections in half, crosswise; lay on bed of lettuce
leaves and serve with French dressing. Sprinkle with tarragon
leaves or with mint if desired.
Peel grapes and remove the seeds by cutting the grapes almost
in two, with a thin sharp knife. Arrange on lettuce leaves
and serve with French dressing or mayonnaise.
SALADS 437
ORANGE SALAD
Peel oranges and free the sections entirely from the mem-
brane. Remove seeds, cut sections in halves crosswise, lay on
bed of lettuce leaves, and serve with French dressing. Sprinkle
with tarragon or with minced green pepper, if desired. Minced
celery may be added.
PEAR SALAD
No. 1.
No. 2.
6 pears /2
l
cup broken walnut-meats
6 stalks celery and stoned olives, chopped
Mayonnaise Lettuce leaves
Salt and pepper
Select well-formed pears and cut off a bit of the broad end
so that the pear will stand steadily on the plate. With a potato-
ball cutter remove the center, leaving enough of the pear to
make a thick cup. Cut the celery into dice, add broken walnut-
meats and chopped olives and mix all together with mayonnaise,
adding a pinch of salt and pepper. Fill the pear cups and serve
on lettuce leaves.
Place the half pears on crisp lettuce leaves. Stone the cherries
and arrange them around the pears. Serve with preferred dress-
ing.
438
TROPICAL SALAD
1 cup cantaloup balls Any desired dressing
6 slices tomatoes Lettuce leaves
Garnish of red pepper
WALDORF SALAD
1 cup diced apple French dressing
1 cup diced celery Lettuce leaves
l
/2 cup broken walnut-meats Mayonnaise
Fold together the apple, celery, and nuts with French dress-
ing and serve on lettuce leaves with mayonnaise. Do not allow
SALADS
this to stand long before serving, as the nuts will discolor the
fruit.
WASHINGTON SALAD
% cup chopped celery % cup canned cherries
% cup bottoms of artichokes, % cup diced grapefruit pulp
chopped Cheese straws
Mix cream cheese with chopped celery and olives and form
into balls about the size of a large hickory nut. Roll each
440
37\SV
Peel a whole melon. Cut a slice from end and remove seeds.
Fill center with fruit gelatin and refrigerate until gelatin is
firm. Slightly soften cheese with milk and frost the entire out-
side of melon. Serve in slices on crisp chicory, with dressing.
Cut the eggs in half lengthwise, remove the yolks and com-
bine with chopped peanuts or peanut butter and mayonnaise to
moisten. Fill the whites with this mixture. Put two halves
of egg on a plate, surround with curls of celery. Put two
tablespoons of mayonnaise dressing over each egg and garnish
with peanut halves. Lay a halved peanut on each celery
curl.
SALADS 441
SALAD EGGS
6 hard-cooked eggs 1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon butter 1 tablespoon anchovy paste
1 tablespoon cream Lettuce or cress
l
/2 teaspoon mustard Garnish of radishes and small
Pinch cayenne onions
Remove the shells from the cold, hard-cooked eggs and cut
a large piecefrom the top of each, take out the yolks and mix
them to form a paste with butter, cream, mustard, cayenne,
salt and anchovy paste. Put this mixture back into the hollows
and lay the eggs on a dish of lettuce or cress. Garnish with
radishes and small onions.
DAISY SALAD
6 hard-cooked eggs l
/2 cup mayonnaise
12 lettuce leaves
Cut the whites of eggs into rings and mix the yolks with the
mayonnaise. On a platter arrange lettuce leaves to form cups.
On these cups arrange the egg rings to simulate daisy petals and
heap the yolks in the center. Cold string beans, boiled whole,
may be used to simulate foliage if desired.
CRAB SALAD
1 cup crab-meat, fresh or Garnish of crab claws, hard-
canned cooked eggs, parsley, celery
French dressing tops, etc.
Mayonnaise
If fresh crabs are used, prepare as directed. (See Index.)
Cut up an amount of celery equal to crab-meat. Marinate
with French dressing. Place the mixture in the salad-bowl,
pour over the top a mayonnaise dressing and garnish with crab
claws and hard-cooked eggs in alternation with bits of green,
such as parsley, and the leaves of the celery.
Canned crabs make very good salad. If there is any oil in
the can, drain it off; sprinkle the crabs well with salt and vine-
gar, and drain again before adding the dressing.
SALADS 443
FISH SALAD
1 pound flaked, cooked fish 1 cup chopped celery
2 tablespoons oil Lettuce
1 tablespoon vinegar Mayonnaise
LOBSTER SALAD
1
1
/2 cups diced lobster meat Mayonnaise
l
/2 cup diced celery Lettuce
Vinegar
OYSTER SALAD
1 quart oysters 2 tablespoons vinegar
1
tablespoon oil 1 tablespoon lemon-juice
l
/z teaspoon salt 1 pint celery
l
/s teaspoon pepper yz cup mayonnaise
Clean the oysters (see Index) and place them in a stew-pan
on the fire, adding no water. When they are boiling, drain
444
vxv^v^
SALMON SALAD
1 cup cold boiled salmon, 1 cup shredded cabbage or
fresh or canned chopped celery
Mayonnaise Lettuce leaves
SARDINE SALAD
% cup sardines Lettuce leaves
% cup hard-cooked egg Mayonnaise or French dressing
1 cucumber
Remove the skin and bones from sardines and mix with
chopped hard-cooked eggs. Cut cucumber in thin slices and
arrange on lettuce leaves. Add sardine and egg mixture. Serve
with mayonnaise or French dressing.
SHRIMP SALAD
1 pint cooked shrimps or Lettuce, shredded celery, or
prawns shaved cabbage
Marinade Maynonaise or other dressing
Drain the spinach and season with salt, pepper, and either
vinegar or lemon- juice. Pack tightly in twelve small molds
to cool. Place slices of cold boiled ham on young lettuce leaves
and place two molds of spinach on opposite sides of each slice
of ham. Serve with my salad dressing desired.
SWEETBREAD SALAD
1 pair sweetbreads Ys teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon vinegar 6 heart leaves lettuce
/2 tablespoon oil
l
1 cup celery, thinly sliced
/2 teaspoon salt
l
1 cup mayonnaise
TUNAFISH SALAD
Follow directions given for fish salad, on page 443.
French Dressing
French dressing, made from oil and acid, is the most widely
used dressing. Vinegar is the acid generally used with the oil
in vegetable and meat salads, while in fruit salads the juice of
lemons, grapefruit or oranges is used.
The choice of oils to be used in dressing is an individual
matter. Olive oil has the most distinct flavor. With cotton-
seed or corn oil the amount of condiments used may be slightly
increased if desired.
Serve French dressing with chicken, fish, meat, vegetable and
fruit salads.
FRENCH DRESSING
sugar to %
CU P- Add /z l
teaspoon Worcestershire sauce and
omit pepper and garlic.
446
SALAD DRESSINGS 447
garlic. Makes
cup dressing.
1
No. 2.
1"
egg yolk, hard cooked y4 teaspoon Worcestershire
1
egg yolk, uncooked sauce
y2 teaspoon sugar 1
cup salad oil
RUSSIAN DRESSING
iy2 tablespoons lemon juice 1
tablespoon Worcestershire
2 sauce
tablespoons thick chili
sauce 1/2 cup mayonnaise
Mix the lemon juice, chili sauce and Worcestershire thor-
oughly and add the mayonnaise.
BOILED DRESSING
No. 1.
1/2cup vinegar
l
/2 teaspoon mustard
l
1 teaspoon fat /s teaspoon salt
3 egg-yolks 1/16 teaspoon cayenne
1 tablespoon sugar Whipped cream, sweet or sour
ture of the cake.In recipes calling for egg whites alone or for
more whites thanyolks, the number of whites cannot be reduced
without changing the texture of the cake. If an egg white is
used instead of a yolk, one teaspoon of shortening should be
added. When fewer whole eggs are to be used than a recipe
calls for, add one-half teaspoon of baking powder instead of
each egg omitted, after the first one. Eggs improve the quality
of the texture of batters, and while a fairly good plain cake can
be made with only one egg, additional eggs give a lighter, more
delicate texture, improve the flavor and produce a smoother
crust.
FLOURIn the cake recipes given in this book, cake flour has
been used. Cake flour has a low gluten content and therefore
makes a finer textured cake. Although cake flour is preferred
for cakemaking, successful cakes are made with all-purpose
flour. If all-purpose flour is used for cake flour, reduce the
amount of flour used by 2 tablespoons per cup of flour called
for and do not beat the batter as long as when using cake flour.
Always sift flour before measuring. Fill cup lightly. Resifting
with dry ingredients as directed.
LEAVENING AGENTS The most usual leavening agents in
cakemaking are eggs and baking powder. When 1 egg is
omitted from a recipe the baking powder should be increased
l
by /2 teaspoon. If the liquid used is sour milk or cream, use /2
l
baking.
A MOIST STICKY CRUST caused by an excess of sugar.
is
baking.
COARSE GRAINED CAKES are caused by insufficient mixing,
too slow baking, too much baking-powder, or too much fat.
FALLING is caused by insufficient flour, too much fat, under-
baking, or opening or jarring the oven early in the baking
period.
AN UNEVEN COLOR is caused by too fast baking or insuf-
ficient mixing.
ONE-EGG CAKE
1/4 cup shortening ]/4 teaspoon salt
1 2.y2 teaspoons baking powder
cup sugar
1
egg, unbeaten % cup milk
2 cups sifted cake flour 1
teaspoon vanilla
Cream shortening, add sugar gradually and cream until fluffy.
Add egg and beat thoroughly. Sift dry ingredients together 3
times and add alternately with milk and vanilla. Pour into
greased pans. Bake in a moderate oven (3SOF.) 25 minutes.
Makes 2 (9 -inch) layers.
IN-A-JIFFY CAKE
iy2 cups sifted cake flour % cup milk
%. cup sugar 1
teaspoon vanilla
1/4 teaspoon
salt
1^ cup melted shortening
2 teaspoons baking powder 1
egg, beaten
Cream the sugar and shortening together. Add the sirup and
stir Add the milk and flour alternately. Fold in the
well.
beaten whites and bake in an oblong pan (350-375F.) 45-60
minutes. When the cake is baked and cool, place it on an
inverted cake pan and cover with Maple Sugar Frosting, No. 2.
Cream shortening, add sugar slowly and beat until light and
fluffy. Add
unbeaten egg yolks and beat vigorously. Sift dry
ingredients together 3 times and add alternately with milk to
creamed mixture. Stir in chocolate, nuts and vanilla and mix
well. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into waxed-paper-
lined loaf pan and bake in a moderately slow oven (325F.)
about 50 minutes. Makes 1 loaf (4x8 inches). When cool,
spread top and sides with Marshmallow-Cream Frosting (page
482) or Boiled Frosting (page 479).
COFFEE CAKE
2 tablespoons shortening % cup flour
1/2 cup sugar 2 teaspoons baking powder
1
egg % cup milk
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
Cream the shortening and sugar, add the beaten egg yolk
and the sifteddry ingredients alternately with the milk. Add
vanilla. Fold in the stiffly beaten egg white. Spread one half
of the mixture in a deep greased piepan.
FILLING
y2 cup brown sugar 1 cup chopped walnuts
2 teaspoons cinnamon 2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons melted fat
Mix all the ingredients thoroughly and spread one half over
the batter in the pan. Add the rest of the cake batter and spread
the remainder of the filling over the top. Bake in a moderate
oven (350-375F.) 45-60 minutes.
shortening 1
cup sour milk
1 2 eggs, beaten
teaspoon ginger
NUT CAKE
l 2 teaspoons
/2 CU P shortening baking powder
1
cup sugar 1/2 cup milk
2 eggs, separated 1
teaspoon vanilla
ll/2 cups sifted cake flour
1
cup chopped nut meats
WHITE CAKE
% cup shortening 1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cups sugar 1
cup milk
3 cups sifted cake flour 1
teaspoon vanilla
3 teaspoons baking powder 5 egg whites, stiffly beaten
GOLD CAKE
% cup butter or other 2y2 cups sifted cake flour
shortening 3 teaspoons baking powder
1]4 cups sugar y4 teaspoon salt
8 egg yolks, beaten % cup milk
1
teaspoon vanilla
Cream shortening and sugar until light and fluffy. Add egg
yolks and continue creaming. Sift dry ingredients together 3
times; add alternately with liquids to creamed mixture. Beat
until smooth. Pour into cake pans lined with waxed paper.
Bake in a moderate oven (350F.) 18 to 20 minutes. Makes 3
(9 -inch) layers.
ORANGE CAKE
% cup shortening 4 teaspoons baking powder
iy2 cups sugar %. teaspoon salt
3 eggs y2 cup orange juice
Grated rind of 1 orange 1
tablespoon lemon juice
3 cups sifted cake flour y2 cup water
LAYER CAKE
1/2 cup shortening 1^ teaspoon salt
1
cup sugar 2y2 teaspoons baking powder
2 eggs, separated % cup milk
2 cups sifted cake flour 1
teaspoon vanilla
MARBLE CAKE
1/3 cup butter or other 2 teaspoon baking powder
salt
shortening !/2 teaspoon
1
cup sugar 1/2 cup milk
2 eggs, well beaten 1 ounce (1 square)
1/2 teaspoon vanilla chocolate, melted
1% cups sifted cake flour
Cream shortening, add sugar gradually and cream until light
and fluffy. Add eggs and vanilla and mix thoroughly. Sift dry
ingredients together 3 times and add alternately with milk to
creamed mixture, beating until smooth. To of the batter %
add chocolate and blend thoroughly. Place by spoonfuls in a
greased tube pan, alternating light and dark mixtures. Bake in
a moderate oven (350F.) 1 hour.
BLITZ TORTE
1
1/2 cup shortening teaspoon baking powder
1/2 cup sugar 4 egg whites
l/g teaspoon
salt
3^ cup sugar
4 egg yolks, beaten light y2 cup sliced blanched
1
teaspoon vanilla almonds
3 tablespoons milk 1
tablespoon sugar
1
cup sifted cake flour y2 teaspoon cinnamon
CREAM FILLING
1/3 cup sugar 2 egg yolks
3 tablespoons cornstarch 2 tablespoons butter
OLD-FASHIONED POUNDCAKE
1
pound butter (2 cups) 10 eggs, separated
1
pound sifted cake flour 1
pound sugar (2 cups)
(4 cups) 1
teaspoon vanilla
SPICE CAKE
l/2 cup shortening 1
teaspoon baking soda
2 cups brown sugar 2 teaspoons cinnamon
3 eggs, separated 1
teaspoon cloves
2 cups sifted cake flour y 2 teaspoon nutmeg
Y4 teaspoon salt 1
cup thick sour cream
Cream shortening and sugar together until fluffy, add beaten
yolks. dry ingredients together 3 times and add alternately
Sift
with cream to first mixture, beating thoroughly after each addi-
tion. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into cake pan lined
with waxed paper. Bake in moderate oven (350F.) about 50
minutes. Makes 1 cake (9 inches square).
DELICIOUS FRUITCAKE
4 cups sifted cake flour 1
pound citron, sliced
1
teaspoon mace 2 cups blanched almonds,
WEDDING CAKE
2 pounds butter iy2teaspoons salt
1
pound granulated sugar 1
teaspoon cloves
% pound brown sugar 2 teaspoons cinnamon
20 eggs 2 tablespoons nutmeg
2 oranges, juice and grated 2 tablespoons mace
rind 1
glass tart jelly
1 lemon, juice and grated rind 3 pounds seeded raisins
1
teaspoon soda 2 pounds seedless raisins
1
cup molasses 5 pounds currants
1
cup black coffee 1
pound almonds
1
cup fruit juice 2 pounds citron
2 pounds flour 2 cups flour (for the fruit)
Cream the butter till very soft, add the white sugar and the
sifted brown sugar and mix thoroughly. Add the beaten yolks
and mix again with the grated rind. Add one half the soda
to the molasses, stir until foamy and add, with the coffee and
fruit juices, alternating with the two pounds of flour, the rest
of soda, the salt and spices sifted together. Break the jelly into
pieces and stir in. It is not necessary to have the jelly
thoroughly mixed in.
Look over the raisins and currants, wash if necessary, drain
and dry. Blanch the almonds and slice. Save half the nuts to
sprinkle on the bottom and top of cake. Cut the citron in thin
strips. Mix the two cups of flour thoroughly with this fruit.
Candied orange or grapefruit peel may be used for citron.
Mix the prepared fruit with the batter. This may be added
from time to time with the flour. When all is thoroughly com-
bined fold in the stiffly beaten egg whites.
This amount makes about twenty four pounds of cake, and
can be baked in small loaves or in one large one. Whatever
size is chosen line the greased pans with three layers of paper
(bottom and sides) having the top layer well greased. Sprinkle
the bottom with about one third of the reserved nuts. Put the
mixture into the pan making sure that the corners are well filled
and that the top is level and smooth. Sprinkle the remaining
nuts on the top. If made into one large cake steam four hours
and then bake one hour in a very slow oven (250 -2 75 F.). If
made into small cakes they can be baked without steaming first.
Bake in a slow oven (250 F.) for two hours. Let cool in the
pan, but have it stand on a rack so as to have a circulation of
air underneath as well as on the top and sides.
CAKES 467
Turn out and remove the paper. Cool and store in a cool dry
place tightly covered. A
few sound apples placed in the con-
tainer where cake is stored will help keep the cake moist if it
must be kept long, but they must be watched and replaced if
they begin to show decay, or if they become^ shrivelled.
As there is so much preparation involved, the fruits and nuts
can be gotten ready several days before the cake is to be baked.
Even after the cake is entirely mixed and in the pan or pans
it can stand overnight if kept in a cool place.
CHRISTMAS FRUITCAKE
1
pound butter 1
pound citron, sliced
add yolks and vanilla; beat. Sift dry ingredients together and
add alternately with water and pulp. Bake in a cake pan (8x8
inches), lined with waxed paper, at 350F., 45 minutes.
APPLESAUCE SPICE CAKE
No. 1.
TRUE SPONGECAKE
1
cup sifted cake flour 5 egg yolks, beaten until
y4 teaspoon salt thick and lemon-colored
Grated rind y2 lemon 5 egg whites
11/2 tablespoons lemon juice 1
cup sugar
Sift flour and salt together 4 times. Add lemon rind and juice
to beaten yolks and beat until thick and light. Beat egg whites
until stiff, but not dry. Fold in sugar, a small amount at a
time, then add egg yolks. Fold in flour, sifting about %
cup at
a time over surface. Bake in ungreased tube pan in moderate
CAKES 469
MERINGUE SPONGECAKE
y2 cup water 1
tablespoon lemon juice
iy4 cups sugar 6 egg yolks, beaten thick
% cup egg whites (6) iys cups sifted .cake flour
1
teaspoon cream tartar y4 teaspoon salt
ANGEL CAKE
1
y4 cups sugar 1
teaspoon cream of tartar
1
cup sifted cake flour l/>teaspoon salt
1
cup egg whites % teaspoon vanilla
(8 to 10 eggs) y4 teaspoon almond extract
Sift % cup sugar and flour together 4 times. Beat egg whites,
cream of tartar and salt to a stiff foam. Add remaining sugar,
a little at a time, beating it in, preferably with a rotary beater.
Add flavorings. Fold in flour, sifting a little at a time over egg
white and sugar mixture. Pour into a large ungreased tube pan;
cut through batter with a spatula to remove large air bubbles.
Bake in a moderate oven (350F.) 45 to 60 minutes. Remove
from oven; invert pan 1 hour.
470
^^^^XNv^N-^^-X^^-v^-S^-S^-V^^V-^^^N^V^V
ROLLED CAKES
5 eggs y2 CU P sif te<i ca ke flour
Y4 teaspoon salt 1
teaspoon vanilla
1
cup jelly or jam, slightly beaten
Combine eggs and sugar and beat .only until blended. Place
over hot water and heat until mixture is slightly hot (140F.).
Remove from heat and beat until mixture holds a limp peak.
Combine salt and flour and fold into egg mixture. Fold in but-
Blend in vanilla. Pour into a jelly
ter a tablespoonful at a time.
roll pan (15 x 10 inches) lined with waxed paper. Bake in a
moderate oven (350F.) 15 to 20 minutes. Turn quickly onto
waxed paper covered with confectioners' sugar. Remove bottom
paper and trim sides. Spread quickly with jelly and roll; or
roll cake and when cold unroll and spread with jelly. Wrap in
waxed paper and cool. Just before serving sprinkle cake with
confectioners' sugar. Makes 1 roll.
Beat eggs very light, add sugar gradually and beat until
fluffy. Add cream and
vanilla and beat. Sift dry ingredients
together times and add to egg mixture, beating until smooth.
3
Bake in a square pan (8 -inch) lined with waxed paper, in a
moderate oven (350F.) about 35 minutes.
DON'T RUN
AROUND IN
CIRCLES THINK-
ING OF NEW
DESSERTS
THIS CHOCO-
LATE MARSH-
MALLOW ROLL
DOES IT FOR
YOU
i8Sr^
-
IT'S NO GIFT
TO BAKE THIS
BEAUTIFUL
LAYER CAKE IF
YOU FOLLOW
THE SIMPLE
DIRECTIONS
OUT OF THE OVEN AND READY
TO SERVE WHEN YOU BAKE
YOUR FRUITCAKE IN CLASS
CAKE FILLINGS AND
FROSTINGS
A TABLE
its
giving the temperatures of boiling sugar sirup at
various stages will be found on page 12.
soft filling should not be used for a cake that is to be kept any
considerable time before it is eaten because the filling will soak
into the cake and make it soggy. Sometimes the shape of a loaf
cake makes it desirable to put the frosting on the bottom crust.
The frosting extend over the top of a cake only or may
may
be spread over the sides. A
well-made boiled frosting should
be soft, but not soft enough to run. A
frosting may be put on
with a very smooth surface, may be left rough, or may be
scored in ridges or designs.
Fillings
APPLE FILLING
2 apples 1 lemon 1 cup sugar
Pare two large, sour apples and grate them into a saucepan^
add the juice and grated rind of the lemon, and the sugar.
Cook for five minutes, stirring constantly. Cool before spread-
ing on cake.
CARAMEL FILLING
1/4 cups brown sugar 1 cup milk
l
1 tablespoon butter 1 /z teaspoons vanilla
2 teaspoons corn-starch
CHOCOLATE FILLING
No. 1.
Melt the chocolate over hot water, in a double boiler; add the
milk, and cook together, stirring until the mixture is thick
and creamy. Add sugar and beaten egg-yolk, stir until smooth
and cook five minutes. Add the butter. Beat well. Remove
from heat and add flavoring. Cool before spreading on cake.
o. 2.
l
l /2 squares chocolate 1 cup powdered sugar
cup cream
l
}/3 /z teaspoon butter
l
1 egg-yolk /2 teaspoon vanilla
No. 2.
Beat the egg-whites stiff and add the sugar and coconut
gradually. Spread the mixture thickly over the cake. If you
like, sprinkle the surface with dry shredded coconut.
l
increase sugar to 1 /z cups.
COFFEE Scald milk with two tablespoons ground coffee,
and make same as cream filling, omitting liquor.
strain,
ORANGE Use half orange-juice and half milk and add two
tablespoons grated orange rind to ingredients above, omitting
the liquor. If you like, add one tablespoon lemon-juice.
FRUIT FILLING
1/2 pound single or mixed fruit 1
cup sugar
1
cup water 1
teaspoon vanilla
Chop the fruit fine and boil in the water, if necessary, until
tender. Add sugar and cook slowly until smooth and thick.
Remove from the heat, add vanilla and cool.
476
Mix the raisins, nuts and coconut and add them to the stiffly
beaten egg-white. Spread the layers of cake with a thin layer
of currant jelly, then with a thick layer of the filling, and put
together.
TUTTI-FRUTTI FILLING
l
/4 pound seeded or seedless Chopped walnuts
raisins % pound maraschino cherries
l
/4 pound figs /4 pound maple sugar
l
/2 cup water
l
Yz pound dates
No. 2.
3 egg-yolks Juice and grated rind of
1 cup sugar 2 lemons
l
/2 cup butter or other fat
Beat the egg-yolks until thick, add the other ingredients and
cook in a double boiler, stirring constantly, until the mixture
is thick and smooth. Cool before spreading on cake.
ORANGE FILLING
2 tablespoons butter 1 tablespoon grated orange
l
/4 cup granulated sugar rind
2 eggs beaten 1 tablespoon lemon-juice
l
/2 cup orange-juice
PRUNE FILLING
l l
/4 pound prunes /2 cup rhubarb-juice or
l
/2 tablespoon gelatin pineapple-juice
4 tablespoons cold water l
/z cup whipped cream
l
/2 cup sugar
Wash the prunes, soak over night in water to cover, and cook
slowly until soft. Remove pits and rub pulp through a coarse
sieve. Soak the gelatin in cold water. When soft, add it to
478
/V/V^N^
1
the hot prune pulp and stir until the gelatin dissolves. Add
sugar and fruit- juice. When the filling has cooled^ fold in the
whipped cream.
WALNUT FILLING
2 cups brown sugar /2
l
teaspoon vanilla
l
/2 cup water /2
l
cup chopped walnut-meats
2 egg-whites
Frostings
CONFECTIONERS' FROSTING
1) egg- white /2
l
cup confectioners' sugar /2
l
teaspoon vanilla
Beat the egg-white stiff and add the sugar gradually; con-
tinue beating until the mixture is smooth and light. Add
flavoring.
enough.
Any fruit-juice or flavored liquid such as strong coffee or
maple -sirup may be used instead of milk or water.
Crushed berries mixed with the sugar give a pleasing frosting.
Two tablespoons cocoa may be mixed with the sugar.
One-half square of melted chocolate may be added.
CAKE FILLINGS AND FROSTINGS 479
BOILED FROSTING
1 cup sugar 1, 2, or 3 egg-whites
l
cup water
l
/2 /z teaspoon vanilla
Cook the sugar and water together, stirring until the sugar
has dissolved. Then cook without stirring. For one egg-white,
cook to 238 F.; for two egg-whites, cook to 244 F.; and for
three egg-whites, cook to 254 F. Remove from the fire and
allow it to cool while you are beating the egg-white stiff, then
pour the sirup in a thin stream over the stiff white, beating the
mixture constantly until thick enough to spread.
2 egg-whites
Boil sugar and water without stirring until the sirup will
form a soft ball in cold water (234 F.) ; add very slowly to
beaten egg-whites; add flavoring and cream of tartar and beat
until smooth and stiff enough to spread. Put over boiling
water, stirring continually until icing grates slightly on bottom
of bowl.
SEVEN-MINUTE ICING
1 unbeaten egg-white 3 tablespoons cold water
7
/% cu p granulated sugar
l
/z teaspoon flavoring extract
CARAMEL FROSTING
1 cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla or
/2 cup water /
l
2 teaspoon lemon extract
l
2 egg-whites
Make a sirup of the sugar and water and cook to the soft-ball
stage (238 F.). Remove from the fire and cool while the
480
^/v>%^
CHOCOLATE FROSTING
1 square chocolate 1 egg-white
3 tablespoons granulated 8 tablespoons confectioners'
sugar sugar
1 tablespoon water /2 tablespoon vanilla
l
COFFEE-BUTTER FROSTING
l l
l /z cups confectioners' /y cup butter
sugar 1 tablespoon strong coffee
1 tablespoon dry cocoa
Cream the butter and add gradually the sugar and cocoa
mixed together. Beat well. Stir in the coffee. Ornamental
designs may be made by forcing the frosting through a pastry-
bag or syringe, using the various tips to produce the desired
designs.
FUDGE FROSTING
2 cups sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla
l
/2 cup milk 6 marshmallows or 2 heaping
1
1 /2 tablespoons butter
tablespoons marshmallow
2 squares chocolate whip
1 tablespoon corn sirup
;-;
FINISH TOP
_J
TRANSFORMA-
TION BEFORE
YOUR EYES
THIS IS HOW
IT'S DONE
SUITBOTH SIDES
OF THE HOUSE
BY DOING TWO
FROSTINGS ON
THE SAME CAKE
(ABOVE) "THE
FLOWERS THAT
BLOOM IN THE
SPRING, TRA
LA," ARE MADE
FROM FROST-
INGS OF DIFFER-
ENT COLORS
(BELOW)
CAKE FILLINGS AND FROSTINGS 481
HONEY FROSTING
1 cup honey 2 egg-whites
Boil the honey about ten minutes (238 F.). Remove from
the and cool while the egg-whites are beaten stiff, then
fire
pour the honey in a thin stream over them, beating the mixture
constantly until thick enough to spread. Cool before spread-
ing.
MAPLE-SUGAR FROSTING
No. 1.
the heat too great, as this mixture will burn easily. Remove
from the fire and beat until thick enough to spread.
No. 2.
No. 3.
Make a sirup of the maple sugar and water and boil to the
soft-ball stage (238 F.), remove from the fire and cool while
the egg-whites are beaten stiff, then pour the
sirup in a thin
stream, over the stiff whites, beating the mixture until it is
thick enough to spread. A
rough surface may be obtained by
spreading the top of the cake with the back of a spoon before
the frosting is set.
482
Cook the sugar and water together, stirring until the sugar is
dissolved; then cook without stirring to the soft-ball stage
(238 F.) add the marshmallow to the hot sirup, pressing it
under the surface so that it will melt. If marshmallow candies
are used, cut them into small pieces. Pour the sirup in a thin
stream on to the stiffly beaten egg-whites, beating the mixture
constantly with a spoon. Add vanilla. Cool before spreading.
MARSHMALLOW-CREAM FROSTING
% cup sugar 6 marshmallows or 2 table-
cup milk spoons marshmallow cream
l
/4
2 tablespoons hot water l
/z teaspoon vanilla
Put the milk and sugar into a saucepan, bring slowly to the
boiling-point and boil for five minutes. Place the marshmallow
in a double boiler with hot water and vanilla. Stir until the
mixture is smooth, then add the milk and sugar sirup gradually^
stirring constantly. Beat until cool, then spread.
MILK FROSTING
l
1 teaspoon butter /2 cup milk
l
l /z cups sugar 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
Put the butter into a saucepan and, when it is melted, add the
sugar and milk. Stir until the boiling-point is reached and then
boil for ten minutes without stirring (235 F.). Remove from
the fire, add vanilla, and beat until of spreading consistency.
MOCHA FROSTING
15/2 teaspoons Mocha extract 1 cup confectioners' sugar
or strong coffee 2 tablespoons water
Mix the extract or coffee with the sugar and stir into the
water, gradually, rubbing out all lumps. After the frosting is
spread on the cake, three-fourths of a cup of chopped nut-
meats may be sprinkled over the top.
COOKIES, DOUGHNUTS,
GINGERBREAD AND
SMALL CAKES
Cookies
KIE doughs range from very soft to very stiff. What-
ever the degree of stiffness, a cookie dough is always easier
to handle if it is allowed to stand for a time (ten to thirty
minutes) in a cold place before it is rolled. This allows the
moisture to be thoroughly absorbed and hardens the fat, and
both of these conditions tend to prevent the dough from being
sticky even
though it is soft.
MATERIALS USED IN COOKIES Butter or any other shorten-
ing preferred may be used in cookies. See Index for materials
used in cake making.
SOFT DOUGHS may be dropped from a spoon on to a baking-
sheet or may be rolled and shaped with a cutter, a knife or a
pastry wheel. They are more difficult to roll out than stiff
doughs, and some practise is necessary to obtain perfect results
in manipulating them in this way.
STIFF DOUGHS are usually rolled out and shaped by cutting.
Sometimes they are made into small balls and flattened by
pressure from the hand, a broad knife or a rolling-pin.
FROSTED DELIGHTS
1/2 cup shortening iy2 cups pastry or cake flour
1 1 teaspoon baking powder
cup granulated sugar
l
2 eggs /2 teaspoon vanilla extract
salt
1/2 teaspoon
Cream shortening and sugar until light and fluffy. Add beat-
en eggs and sifted dry ingredients. Add vanilla and mix well.
Spread the batter onto a baking sheet as thinly as possible and
frost with the following:
Remove lumps from 1 cup brown sugar and fold into 1 stiff-
ly beaten egg white. Spread onto cookie batter, sprinkle with
1
SUGAR COOKIES
% cup shortening 2 teaspoons baking-powder
1 cup sugar % cup milk
l
2 eggs /2 teaspoon salt
3 cups flour /
l
2 teaspoon vanilla
Cream the shortening and mix well with the sugar, add the
beaten egg, then the flour, baking-powder and salt sifted to-
gether, alternating with the milk. Roll and cut in any desired
shape. Sprinkle with sugar before baking. Bake in a moderate
oven (350-375 F., 10-12 minutes).
RICH COOKIES
l
/2 cup shortening % cup flour
% cup sugar
l
/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 egg well beaten Raisins, nuts or citron
SAND TARTS
l 2 teaspoons baking-powder
/2 cup shortening
1 cup sugar % teaspoon cinnamon
1 egg Nuts or raisins
1/4 CU P S
CARAWAY COOKIES
l 2 teaspoons baking-powder
/2 cup shortening
l
1 cup sugar /2 teaspoon salt
1 egg Y4 cup milk
l
2 cups flour l /2 tablespoons caraway seeds
Cream the shortening with the sugar; add beaten egg. Mix
and sift the flour, baking-powder, and salt, and add alternately
with the milk to the first mixture. Add caraway seeds. Toss
on lightly floured board. Roll out about one-half inch thick
and cut in fancy shapes. Place on greased baking-sheet and
bake in moderate oven (350 F.).
ICEBOX COOKIES
% cup butter 1 teaspoon salt
% cup other shortening 1 teaspoon cinnamon
2 cups medium brown sugar 2 teaspoons baking-powder
4 eggs 5 cups flour
LEMON WAFERS
1 cup shortening 3 tablespoons lemon-juice
2 cups sugar Flour
3 eggs
FILLED COOKIES
1 cup sugar 3 cups flour
% cup shortening 3
l
teaspoons baking-powder
2 eggs /z teaspoon salt
J4 cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla
FILLING
l
/2 cup sugar 1 cup chopped raisins, dates,
1 tablespoon flour figs, prunes, apricots or
1/2 cup water marmalade
LN.
VARJATICJM?
NUT
CX>CONUT
TROSTI
c
?":./
^4 -.
COOKIES, DOUGHNUTS, ETC. 487
BROWNIES
l
2 squares chocolate /2 teaspoon salt
l l
/4 cup shortening /z cup flour
cup nuts
l
1 cup white sugar /2
1 egg
they will harden as they cool. Remove from the pans when
cool. Serve with afternoon tea. These resemble fudge in taste
and appearance.
NUT COOKIES
l
/4 cup shortening 2 teaspoons baking-powder
l
/2 cup sugar
l
/2 teaspoon salt
2 eggs 1 tablespoon milk
1 cup flour 1 cup chopped nuts
1 teaspoon vanilla or almond
Cream shortening and sugar, add eggs well beaten. Sift dry
ingredients together and add alternately with milk. Stir in nuts
and flavoring and mix well. Drop from teaspoon on a greased
baking-sheet and place a nut on top of each. Bake in a moderate
oven (375-400 F., 12-15 minutes). This makes about three
dozen cookies.
488
Cream the shortening and the sugar and add the molasses and
milk. Mix well and add dry ingredients mixed and sifted to-
gether. Mix thoroughly. Roll the dough thin and cut in
rounds. Chilling the dough before rolling makes it easier to
handle. Bake in greased sheet in moderate hot oven (375 F.).
GINGER SNAPS
1, cup molasses 3 cups flour
l
/2 cup shortening 1 teaspoon soda
l
/4 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons ginger
Heat the molasses and shortening. Mix and sift the dry in-
gredients and add to first mixture. Thoroughly chill, toss on
COOKIES, DOUGHNUTS, ETC. 489
lightly floured board, and roll out very thin. Cut as desired.
The bowl containing the remaining dough must be kept in a
cool place or it will be necessary to add more flour. Excess
flour will make the cookies hard and unattractive. Put on
greased baking-sheet and bake in a moderate oven (375 F.,
8-10 minutes).
Cream the shortening with the sugar and add the eggs, well
beaten. Mix andsift the dry ingredients and add them to the
RAISIN ROCKS
1 cup shortening 1 teaspoon ginger
1 cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon soda
1
teaspoon salt 2 cups molasses
Flour 1 cup seeded raisins
MAPLE-SUGAR ROCKS
1 cup shortening 3 eggs
1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 /21
cups maple sugar
1 cup walnuts 2 /2l
cups flour
Melt shortening, add crushed maple sugar, eggs, and cinna-
mon. Mix together and add chopped nuts and flour.
Drop
by spoonfuls on greased pans, and bake in a moderate oven
(375 -400 F.).
49
HERMITS
/a cup shortening 1 tablespoon molasses
teaspoon each of various
l
/2 cup sugar 1
HONEY HERMITS
1% cups strained honey 1 cup chopped raisins
/2 teaspoons cinnamon
1
*/3 cup shortening 1
l
2 eggs /2, teaspoon cloves
l
cup milk
l
/2 5 /2 cups flour
HONEY GINGERNUTS
1 cup strained honey 1 egg
1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon ginger
1 cup melted shortening 1 cup chopped nuts
2 teaspoons baking-powder Flour
SOUR MILK
1 cup sugar 1 teaspoon baking-powder
2 tablespoons sour cream l
/2 teaspoon salt
or shortening /2 teaspoon lemon extract
l
Mix the sugar with the cream and add the beaten eggs and
sour milk. Sift the other dry ingredients with one
cup of flour
492
x^v^x
FRITTER BATTER
1
l
% cups flour % cup milk
/4 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons powdered sugar
2 teaspoons baking-powder (for sweet fritters only)
1 e gg
Sift dry ingredients, add egg, well beaten, and milk. The
batter should be just thick enough to coat the article it is in-
tended to cover. If it is too thin, add more flour; if too thick,
add more liquid.
APPLE FRITTERS
1 cup milk 2 cups flour
2 eggs 1 tablespoon baking-powder
1
teaspoon sugar Apples
Salt
the salt. Then fold in the stiffly beaten whites. Add sliced
sour apples, being careful to get the batter all over them. Drop
by spoonfuls into deep fat (3 60 -3 70 F.) and fry two to three
minutes. Serve with powdered sugar or foamy sauce.
BANANA FRITTERS
6 bananas 3 tablespoons orange-juice
2 tablespoons sugar Fritter batter
Peel bananas, cut each in two and split each half. Place the
pieces in a bowl with sugar and orange- juice and let them stand
for one hour. Drain the
fruit, dip in batter and fry in deep
fat (3 60 from two to three minutes. Serve with
-3 70 F.)
powdered sugar or foamy sauce.
PEACH FRITTERS
Peaches Fritter batter Powdered sugar
Peel the peaches, split them in two, remove the stones, sprinkle
powdered sugar over them, dip each piece into fritter batter
and fry two to three minutes in deep fat (3 60 -370 F.).
Serve with powdered sugar or foamy sauce.
RASPBERRY FRITTERS
1 cup flour 2 eggs
1 teaspoon baking powder 2 to 3 tablespoons water
1 teaspoon salt 1 cup raspberries
2 tablespoons sugar
SOFT MOLASSES
l
/4 cup shortening /2
l
teaspoon salt
1
cup molasses 1 tablespoon ginger
1 tablespoon vinegar 1 cup sour milk
1
egg 2 cups flour
1 teaspoon soda
HOT WATER
Yz
l
cup shortening l /2
l
teaspoons ginger
/z cup boiling water 1 teaspoon soda
1 cup molasses /
l
2 teaspoon salt
2 /2
l
cups flour
NUT CAKES
2 eggs 2 teaspoons baking-powder
l l
/2 cup molasses /2 teaspoon salt
l
/2 cup sugar 1 tablespoon shortening
cup chopped nut-meats
l
1 cup flour /z
Beat the eggs slightly and add the molasses and sugar. Mix
and sift the flour, baking-powder and salt, and stir them into
the first mixture. Add
melted shortening and nuts, and half
fill shallow greased molds with the mixture. Place a nut-meat
in the center of each. Bake in a moderate oven (375 F.) for
twenty-five minutes.
TEA CAKES
2 tablespoons melted shorten- 1 cup milk
ing 3 teaspoons baking-powder
l
/z cup sugar 2 cups flour
1 egg 1 cup chopped nuts
Cream the shortening with the sugar; add the beaten egg;
then add the milk alternately with the sifted ingredients. Add
the floured nuts last. Bake in greased muffin-pans in a moderate
oven (375 F.). Split each cake, butter it, and sprinkle with
sugar and cinnamon or with grated maple sugar and chopped
nuts. Serve hot with afternoon tea.
/z cup milk
l
1 teaspoon baking-powder
2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla
Cream the shortening, add the sugar slowly, then the beaten
egg-yolks. Melt the chocolate and add. Add flour and baking-
powder sifted together, alternating with milk, then add vanilla
and fold in stiffly beaten egg-whites. Bake in greased muffin-
pans in a moderate oven (375 F.).
496
MOCHA TORTE
4 eggs /2
l
cup flour
1 cup sugar /2
l
teaspoon vanilla
1 tablespoon melted butter 1 teaspoon baking-powder
1
cup ground nuts /2 teaspoon salt
l
Separate the eggs and add sugar to the yolks, beating until
creamy. Beat in the butter and add the flour sifted with the
baking-powder and salt. Add vanilla. Beat the whites of the
eggs, thenadd the ground nuts, stirring them into the first
mixture. Bake in two layers for fifteen minutes in a moderate
oven (350 R).
FILLING
pint cream
l
/2 1 tablespoon confectioners'
1 tablespoon essence of coffee sugar
Beat the cream until it is stiff enough to hold its shape, add
the coffee and sugar and put the filling between and on top
of the layers. Use a pastry tube to make it decorative.
PETITS FOURS
4 eggs 1 cup flour
1
1 cup sugar 1 teaspoons baking-powder
/2
3
l
tablespoons cold water % teaspoon salt
1 /z tablespoons corn-starch Flavoring
To the beaten yolks of the eggs, add sugar and cold water.
Sift the corn-starch with the flour, baking-powder and salt.
Add to first mixture. Beat well and add the stiffly beaten whites
of the eggs and any flavoring desired. Bake for one-half hour
in a moderate oven (375 F.) in shallow pans. When cool,
cut in small circles, split, scoop out a little of the crumb from
the center of each and fill cavities with whipped cream, custard,
or any preferred filling. Press together in pairs, dip in melted
fondant, decorate with nuts, glace fruits, and so forth, and place
each little cake in a paper case.
HALLOWE'EN CAKES
Cover the bottom of individual cake-tins with any good plain
cake batter, place a prepared emblem in the center of each and
cover with batter, filling tins not more than two-thirds full.
A CLAMOROUS
CREAM-FILLED
TORTE COMES
FORTH IN A BLAZE
OF GLORY TO SHED
ITS RADIANCE ON
YOUR ANNIVER-
SARY OR JUNIOR'S
BIRTHDAY
Irradiated Evapo-
rated Milk Institute
B 1
1*1 1
i
x
IP
//
-it/, -*,
ANY KIND OF BER-
RJES TAKES THE
CAKEMAKE IT
SHORT AND SWEET
Cut slices of angel cake into rounds. Moisten the figs with
the ginger sirup, and spread the paste over each round of cake.
Place a marshmallow in the center of each and bake in a mod-
erate oven (375 F.) until the marshmallows spread. Decorate
with maraschino cherries.
DATE SURPRISE
Bake any good plain cake batter in a cake-tin with a center
tube or remove the centers from cup cakes. Cover the outside
with plain white icing and fill the centers with date filling.
Garnish with whipped cream and candied cherries.
DATE FILLING
1
cup steamed and chopped 6 marshmallows cut in small
dates pieces
l
/2 cup chopped walnuts 1 cup sweetened whipped
l
/2 teaspoon vanilla cream
CREAM PUFFS
1 cup boiling water 1 cup flour
l
/z cup shortening 4 eggs
ECLAIRS
Make cream-puff batter (sometimes called choux paste) and
press it through a pastry bag on to a greased tin, forming strips
three and one-half inches long and one inch wide. Keep the
strips a little distance apart. Bake and cool as directed for
cream puffs, then split lengthwise, and fill with cream filling or
whipped cream. Frost the top half of the eclairs by dipping
while hot into boiled frosting, flavored with chocolate, vanilla,
or coffee.
LADY FINGERS
5 tablespoons powdered sugar /2
l
teaspoon vanilla
3 egg-whites % cup flour
2 egg-yolks /4
l
teaspoon salt
SPONGE DROPS
Formlady-finger batter in a circular shape bake, and dip the
;
meringues glacees.
COCONUT KISSES
4 egg-whites /z teaspoon lemon extract
l
l
/2 pound powdered sugar Moist coconut
Beat the egg-whites stiff, add sugar and beat until light and
white, then add the lemon extract, and enough coconut to make
it as thick as can be
easily stirred with a spoon. Drop on greased
paper and bake in a slow oven (250-300 F.).
KORNETTES
1 egg-white % cup chopped pop-corn
l
/$ cup light brown sugar % teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons shortening /2
l
teaspoon vanilla
Beat the white of the egg very stiff and, still beating, mix in
the sugar. Melt the shortening and into this stir the chopped
pop-corn, salt and vanilla. Fold the two mixtures together and
drop by spoonfuls on a greased baking-sheet. Bake in a slow
oven (250-300 F.).
500
shape, then beat in the sugar gradually. Fold in the nuts and
raisins and drop from a spoon on to the baking-pan. Bake in
a slow oven (250-300 R).
ALMOND- MACAROONS
l
pound sweet almonds
l
/2 /z pound powdered sugar
2 egg-whites
COCONUT
1 egg-white J/3 cup condensed milk
1% cups moist coconut
l
/z teaspoon vanilla
Beat the egg-white until stiff, then fold it into the mixture
of coconut and condensed milk. Add flavoring. Drop by
spoonfuls on a greased baking-sheet and shape into cakes. Bake
in a slow oven (250-300 F.) until lightly browned.
BROWN SUGAR
1 egg-white 1 cup chopped salted nuts 1 cup brown sugar
Beat the sugar into the stiffly beaten egg-white, and add the
nuts. Drop by spoonfuls on a greased pan and bake in a slow
oven (2SO-300 F.).
NUT OATMEAL
1 egg % cup chopped walnuts
l
/2
l
cup sugar % teaspoon salt
/4 teaspoon vanilla 2 teaspoons melted shortening
% cup rolled oats
Beat egg until very light, add sugar slowly, beating con-
stantly. Add flavoring, oats, salt, nuts and melted shortening.
COOKIES, DOUGHNUTS, ETC. 501
LACE CAKES
2 eggs 1 tablespoon butter or other
cup brown sugar
l
/2 shortening
l
1 cup rolled oats /2 teaspoon vanilla
l
/4 teaspoon salt
Beat the eggs, add the sugar and, when these are well mixed,
add the oats and salt. Melt the shortening and stir into the
mixture. Add vanilla. Drop by spoonfuls on a greased bak-
ing-sheet and spread very thin with the back of the spoon.
Bake in a moderate oven (3 50 -400 F.) ten to twelve min-
utes.
BUTTERSCOTCH STICKS
l
/4 cup butter 1 cup sifted flour
1 cup brown sugar *4 teaspoon salt
1 egg 1 teaspoon baking-powder
% cup broken pecan meats 1 teaspoon vanilla
Y4 cup sugar
Beat the egg-whites, and add the other ingredients. Drop
from a teaspoon on a greased baking-sheet. Bake in a mod-
erate oven (400 F.) until browned.
CANDIES
TV7HEN sugar and a liquid are boiled together, a sirup is
VV formed which grows thicker as the boiling continues.
The thickness of the sirup determines the general type of candy
that will result.
CHOCOLATE FUDGE
2 cups sugar % cup milk
1 or 2 squares chocolate 1 teaspoon vanilla
MARSHMALLOW FUDGE
To the recipe for chocolate fudge add three tablespoons of
marshmallow cream just after taking it from the fire. Beat
well and pour into buttered pans.
MAPLE FUDGE
2 1/2 cups maple sugar l
/z cup boiling water
1 cup cream or milk 1 cup broken nut-meats
Break the maple sugar into small pieces and heat it in a
saucepan with the water. When it is dissolved, add the milk.
Boil to the soft-ball stage (238 F.). Remove from the fire
CANDIES 55
and cool. When it is lukewarm, beat until it creams and add
the nut-meats. Spread it in a buttered pan and when it hardens
DIVINITY FUDGE
2 cups sugar 2 egg-whites
l
/2 cup corn sirup % cup blanched almonds
tablespoon almond or
l
/2 cup water 1
Put the sugar, water and corn sirup into a saucepan. Stir
itwhile it dissolves over the fire, then let it boil without stirring
to the light crack stage (265 F.) While it is cooking, beat the
.
whites of eggs stiffly and when the sirup is ready pour it over
them, beating constantly. Beat until creamy, add nuts, cherries
and extract, and pour into buttered tins.
PANOCHA
3 cups brown sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup milk 1 cup nut-meats
2 tablespoons butter
Put the sugar and milk into and cook to the soft-
a saucepan
ball stage, or 238 F. Remove from
fire, add butter and
the
vanilla, and cool without stirring. When it is lukewarm, beat
until it is creamy. Stir in the broken nut-meats. Hickory
nuts, walnuts or pecans are especially nice. Pour into a buttered
pan and when it hardens mark into squares.
MAPLE PRALINES
2 cups sugar 1
cup maple sirup
34 cup milk 2 cups pecan-meats
Boil the sugar, milk and maple sirup until the mixture
reaches the soft-ball stage (238 F.). Remove from the fire
and cool. When it is lukewarm, beat until it is smooth and
creamy. Add any kind of broken nut-meats and drop on
buttered paper from the tip of a spoon, making little mounds.
FONDANT
2 cups granulated sugar 2 tablespoons corn sirup or
1
cup water 8 teaspoon cream of tartar
y
1
teaspoon vanilla
Put the sugar, corn sirup and water in a saucepan and heat
slowly. Do not begin to boil until the sugar is dissolved.
let it
Wash down the sides of the pan with a fork wrapped in a damp
CANDIES 507
cloth or else cover and cook for two or three minutes so that
the steam will carry down the crystals that have been thrown
on the side of the pan. Remove the cover and continue to boil
slowly without stirring to the soft-ball stage (238 F.). While
cooking, keep the cover on part of the time so the steam can
help to keep the crystals washed down.
Remove from the fire and pour at once on large platters or
slabs which have been dipped into cold water, and let it stand
until it is lukewarm. Stir with a spatula or a fork till it is
creamy; then knead with the hands until it is smooth and free
from lumps.
Fondant is better if allowed to ripen for several days before
being used. Itmay be wrapped in waxed paper and put into a
tightly covered jar. When it is to be used for centers of dipped
bonbons the centers should be shaped by hand or in molds and
allowed to stand in the air until the surface loses all stickiness.
HONEY FONDANT
cup water
l
2 cups granulated sugar /$ cup honey 1
MARSHMALLOWS
2 tablespoons gelatin /8
l
teaspoon salt
l
/4 cup cold water 1 teaspoon vanilla
% cup boiling water Confectioners' sugar
2 cups sugar
Soak the gelatin in the cold water until it has taken up all the
water. Boil the sugar and water to the soft-ball stage (238
F.). Add vanilla and salt to gelatin. Pour the sirup slowly
over the gelatin, beating constantly with a whisk until cool and
thick. Butter a shallow pan slightly and dust with confection-
ers' sugar. Turn the marshmallow mixture into the pan and
smooth the top evenly. Dust with confectioners' sugar. Let it
stand over night. In the morning cut it into small squares and
roll in confectioners' sugar.
VANIIXA- CARAMELS
2 cups sugar 4 tablespoons butter
/2 cup corn sirup
l
1 cup cream or condensed
MOLASSES TAFFY
2 cups molasses 4 tablespoons butter or other
1 cup granulated sugar fat
%
l
cup water /2
l
teaspoon vanilla
/s teaspoon soda
WHITE TAFFY
2 cups granulated sugar 2 /2
l
tablespoons vinegar
/2
l
cup water 1 teaspoon lemon or vanilla
1 extract
teaspoon glycerin
Boil together half of the sugar, half of the water and half of
the corn sirup to the stiff-ball stage (246 -2 50 F.). Remove
the sirup from the fire and pour it slowly over the well-beaten
whites and continue beating until it is cool. While beating,
cook the remaining half of the ingredients to the stiff-ball stage.
Remove and add at once to the first mixture, beating while
adding. When cool, add the vanilla, nut-meats and candied
cherries and pour into buttered pans. Smooth over the surface
and let it stand over night before cutting. In the morning cut
and wrap in waxed paper.
BUTTERSCOTCH
1
cup granulated sugar % cup butter
1
cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla or lemon
l
/4 cup light corn sirup extract
1
cup water
Put sugar, sirup and water into a saucepan and set over
direct heat. Stir until the sugar is dissolved, then cook without
stirring to the stiff ball stage (250 F.). Add fat and cook to
the medium crack stage (280 F.), for soft butterscotch, or to
the hard crack stage (300 F.) for brittle candy. Remove from
fire, add the flavoring and pour on a greased slab. Mark while
still warm and when cold break into pieces.
MAPLE SCOTCH
1 cup maple sugar 1
teaspoon vinegar
l
/2 cup water 4 tablespoons butter
Boil together the maple sugar, water and vinegar to the stiff-
ball stage (246 F.). Then add the butter and cook to the
medium-crack stage (280 F.). Turn into a well-buttered
pan. Mark while still warm, and when cold break into pieces.
CANDIES 5"
No. 1.
POP-CORN BALLS
3 quarts popped corn 1 cup water
1 cup sugar % teaspoon salt
J/3 cup white corn sirup 1 teaspoon lemon or vanilla
No. 2.
PEANUT BRITTLE
2 cups granulated sugar 1 teaspoon salt
1 pint chopped peanuts
Put the sugar into an iron frying-pan and heat slowly, stirring
constantly, until the sugar is melted and turns a light brown
color (slightly above 300 F.). Spread the chopped peanuts
in a buttered tin, sprinkle them with the salt, warm the tin
COCONUT CONES
2 cups sugar 3 egg-whites
%
l
cup water 2 cups moist coconut
/2 teaspoon vanilla
Boil the sugar and water together to the soft-ball stage (238
F.). Add the vanilla and pour it slowly over the stiffly beaten
whites of the eggs beating constantly until light and foamy.
Stir in the coconut and drop on buttered tins by teaspoonfuls.
MARZIPAN
2 egg-whites 1 cup confectioners' sugar,
1 cup almond paste more or less
/2 teaspoon lemon or
l
vanilla
Beat the egg-whites and mix with the almond paste. Add
the flavoring and enough sugar to make the mixture stiff enough
to handle. After it has stood over night, it may be molded into
small shapes of fruits or vegetables such as pears, apples or car-
rots and colored with vegetable colors, or it may be cut into
CANDIES 513
/8
l
cup corn sirup 5 allspice berries
% cup water % teaspoon maple flavoring
3 to 6 cloves Chopped nut-meats
Soak the prunes over night, after washing them thoroughly.
Drain off the water; add the sugar, sirup, water and spices and
simmer slowly until the sirup is all absorbed by the prunes.
Cut a slit along one side of each prune, slip out the stone and
fill the cavities with chopped nut-meats moistened with a little
TUTTI-FRUTTI CANDY
1 pound raisins 1 pound figs
3
pound walnut-meats
l
/4 /z pound prunes
1 pound dates Confectioners' sugar
Soak the prunes over night. Steam until they are soft and
remove stones. Wash the figs, and steam them twenty min-
utes. Wash the dates and remove the stones. Put the fruit
and nuts through a food-chopper. Put confectioners' sugar on
the board and with the hands work the fruit and nuts until
well blended. Roll to about one-quarter inch thick, using the
sugar to dredge the board and rolling-pin. Cut in any desired
shape, roll in sugar, pack in layers in a tin box, using waxed
paper between the layers.
CANDIED FRUITS
SIRUP FOR CANDIED FRUITS
2 cups sugar % cup light corn sirup
1 cup water
Boil together until the sirup spins a thread when dropped
from the spoon (234 F.).
screen and allow them to dry until they are no longer sticky.
Pack between sheets of waxed paper and place in a tin box or
a glass jar.
SPUN SUGAR
2 cups sugar 1
cup water
y$ teaspoon cream of tartar
PULLED SUGAR
2 pounds loaf sugar 1
teaspoon glucose
1 cup water y4 teaspoon cream of tartar
Fresh Fruits
"PRESH fruits are the simplest and easiest of all desserts to pre-
*-
pare, and furnish one of the most wholesome sweets. They
are at their best when served ripe and in season. When fruit
comes from the market it should be looked over and kept in a
cool place. All fruit should be washed before it is served.
FRESH BERRIES
Turn the berries out of the container and spread them on a
platter or board so that they are not piled up on one another.
If there are any noticeably soft or moldy, remove them and
set the rest in the refrigerator or other cool place until they
are to be prepared for serving. Then pick them over carefully,
wash and drain. Strawberries are usually hulled, but when
very large and perfect they may be served with the hulls on and
dipped into powdered sugar when they are eaten.
MELONS
All melons should be served very cold. They may be laid
on chopped ice when served but the ice should never be placed
in or on the edible parts of the melon.
CANTALOUP Cut the cantaloup in half and with a spoon
remove the seeds without injuring the flesh. Each half may be
served alone or it may be filled with fresh berries or other fruit
or with ice-cream. When used as an appetizer at the beginning
of a meal, a quarter of a large cantaloup is enough. Chilled
melon balls are often served.
HONEYDEW AND CASABA MELONS These are usually cut
lengthwise and served in sections two or three inches wide.
WATERMELON Toserve a whole watermelon at the table,
cut it in half, crosswise, and cut a slice from each end to make
it stand on a
platter. Garnish the platter with green leaves.
The melon may be served in round slices, or in half or quarter
slices from which the rind may or may not hav.e been removed;
the pulp may be shaped in balls or dice and served in glasses^
517
or it may be scooped out in large spoonfuls and served in a
watermelon tub shaped from the rind.
For other suggestions for serving melons, see Index.
GRAPEFRUIT
See Index.
ORANGES
Cut oranges in half crosswise. With a sharp knife, loosen
the pulp from the center and from the dividing fiber. Serve
two halves to each person.
An attractive dessert is made by cutting oranges crosswise in
quarter-inch slices and laying the slices in an overlapping row
on a glass plate, allowing about four slices to each person. The
slices may be sprinkled with sugar and moist coconut or served
plain.
ICED ORANGE JUICE
small glass cups with strained orange- juice and set each
Fill
in the center of a plate filled with cracked ice. This makes a
delicious and beautiful fruit course for breakfast.
STUFFED PEACHES
Pare large peaches and cut a slice from the top of each. Re-
move the pits without breaking the fruit and fill the hollow
with nuts or with any chopped fruit, such as apples, citron or
raisins. Sprinkle with sugar and a little cinnamon or nutmeg.
Pour custard over the peaches and bake. Or serve cold soft
custard with the uncooked chilled fruit.
SLICED BANANAS
Chill and
well ripened bananas, serve with cream or
slice
Peel and dice the pineapple, bananas and oranges. Wash and
hull the strawberries. Mix all together, with the lemon-juice
and sugar, and set in the refrigerator until very cold.
FRUIT DESSERTS 519
No. 2 Peel and slice oranges and arrange in a glass dish al-
ternate layers of oranges and sugar until all the fruit is used.
Whip some sweet cream very stiff, sweeten and flavor it and
spread it over the oranges. Serve very cold.
Crushed pineapple and sliced bananas may be added, if de-
sired.
No. 3.
With a sharp knife cut the orange and pineapple into thick
slices,then cut them into bits free from seeds and membrane.
Slice the bananas thin. Arrange alternate layers of the different
fruits in a deep dish and sprinkle each layer with sugar and
coconut. Over the whole pour any fruit- juice. Serve very
cold.
MACEDOINE OF FRUIT
cup diced watermelon
l
3 peaches /z
3 pears 1 cup raspberries
l l
/2 cup diced pineapple /$ cup sugar
Pare and slice peaches and pears, cut pineapple and melon in
small pieces, mix fruit and sugar, and chill for one hour. Serve
in glasses, adding one tablespoon whipped cream to each glass
just before serving. A berry or piece of pineapple placed on
the cream gives color to the dish.
APPLE SAUCE
No. 1: Wash,- pare, quarter and core sour, juicy apples.
Placethem in a porcelain kettle with just enough water to keep
them from burning and boil until tender. Add sugar to taste
and few minutes longer. Serve hot or cold.
boil a
A few whole cloves or a dash of cinnamon or nutmeg or a
little lemon- juice or a few seedless raisins may be cooked with
the apples. Brown or maple sugar may be used instead of
white.
No. Prepare as for No. 1 but place in a baking dish with
2
fust enough water to start them cooking. Sprinkle with sugar.
Cover and bake in a moderate oven (350-375 F.) until the
apples are soft but not broken. Add more sugar and a little
boiling water if necessary, and cook, uncovered, until the top
is
slightly browned.
No. Wash, quarter and core but do not pare apples. Cut
3
out any bad spots. Stew until tender with just enough water
to keep them from sticking to the pan. Rub through a colander
or coarse strainer, add sugar to taste, and stir until the sugar
is dissolved.
BLUSHING APPLES
6 red apples l /2
l
cups water
1/4 cups sugar Juice of 1 lemon
Juice and grated rind of Whipped cream
1 orange
Wash and core the apples. Cook until they are tender in
sirup made of the sugar and water, turning so that they will
FRUIT DESSERTS 5 21
cook evenly. Carefully remove the skin, scraping the red pulp
from it and pasting it back on the sides of the apple. Put the
apples in a serving dish. Boil the sirup down to one cup
and
add the grated rind and the juice of one orange, the juice of
one lemon, and, if desired, nuts, candied orange peel or raisins.
Pour sirup over the apples and serve with whipped cream.
JELLIED APPLES
Pare and core the requirednumber of apples and bake, steam
or boil in sirup until tender. Cool. Cover the bottoms of indi-
vidual molds with lemon jelly, put in apples and cover with
jelly. Unmold and serve with meringue or whipped cream.
BAKED APPLES
sound apples; core them and place from one teaspoon
Select
to one tablespoon of sugar in each cavity. Place the apples in
a baking-dish, add water to cover the bottom of the dish, and
bake in a moderate oven (350-375 F.) until tender.
Sour apples cook more quickly than sweet ones, and summer
or fall apples take less time to cook than winter apples.
Baked apples may be varied by filling the centers with brown
sugar and of bananas, red cinnamon candies,
raisins, sections
marshmallow, marmalade or jelly, honey or corn sirup and
lemon-juice, nuts, candied orange-peel, candied pineapple, pre-
served ginger, canned or fresh berries, peaches and other fruits
or left-over fruit-juice. Meringues, custard sauce, whipped
cream or marshmallow sauce may be used as garnish.
STEAMED APPLES
Core the apples, fill cavities with sugar and put in a saucepan
with hot water about an inch deep. Cover and cook slowly,
turning the apples over once. This will steam the apples and,
if they are red, will preserve their color. These resemble baked
apples and the same variations may be used.
MERINGUED PEARS
6 large pears Candied ginger
6 tablespoons sugar 3 egg-whites
Grated lemon-rind % cup powdered sugar
Pare and core the pears, place them in a baking-dish and fill
the center of each with one tablespoon sugar and a little grated
lemon-rind or candied ginger. Add three or four tablespoons
of water and bake until tender. Cover them with a meringue
made with the stiffly beaten egg-whites and the sugar. Brown
quickly.
STEWED RHUBARB
Wash, but do not peel, the rhubarb and cut it in one-inch
pieces. Add one-half as much
sugar as rhubarb, put in a sauce-
pan with just enough water to keep the fruit from burning.
Very little water is needed, as rhubarb provides its own moist-
ure. Cook rapidly until tender.
BAKED RHUBARB
Prepare as for stewing, using same proportion of sugar and
rhubarb, and bake in a moderate oven (350-375 F.). Bake
until the rhubarb is reduced to a soft, red pulp.
Dried Fruits
If prepared carefully, most dried fruits retain their flavor.
Except for some of the vitamins, none of the food values of
FRUIT DESSERTS 523
Mix pulp, lemon juice and salt together. Beat sugar into egg
whites, fold in fruit mixture and serve garnished with chopped
nuts. If desired this mixture may be piled lightly into a buttered
baking dish and baked in a slow oven (275 F.) 30 to 45
minutes.
STEAMED FIGS
1 8 pulled figs 3 teaspoons confectioners'
2 tablespoons water sugar
1
orange /4
3
cup cream
Wash the figs and cut out the stem end. Soak several hours,
or overnight. Cook in a double boiler slowly until tender.
Arrange the hot figs in individual dessert dishes around a central
small mound of orange portions which have been skinned and
sprinkled with sugar. Border with sweetened whipped cream
slightly flavored with orange juice.
524
KNICKERBOCKER FIGS
Y2 pound figs
l
/4 cup orange-juice
Maraschino cherries 3 tablespoons sugar
Pecan meats 2 teaspoons lemon- juice
juice, sugar, and lemon -juice, add the figs, cover and simmer
until the figs are tender. Drain, cool and serve in individual
paper cases.
"Wash and peel rhubarb and cut in 1-inch pieces; add sugar,
orange rind and salt, mixing well. Cut sponge cake in thin
slices; line bottom of greased baking dish with 3 or 4 slices;
cover with l/4 of rhubarb. Continue to make alternate layers of
cake and fruit until material is used. Cover and bake in mod-
erate oven (350 F.) for 30 minutes. Beat egg whites until
stiff; add sugar slowly, beating until blended. Pile on baked
Custards
A custard is a mixture of cooked egg and milk, flavored.
Starchy material is sometimes used to replace part of the eggs.
Custards are classified according to the method used in cooking
them; those cooked over hot water and stirred throughout the
cooking process are known as soft or stirred custards erro-
neously, as boiled custards; those set in hot water and cooked in
the oven (oven-poaching) are firm or baked custards.
The firmness of a custard depends on the proportion of eggs
to milk. (See "Useful Facts about Eggs.") The finest-grained
custards are those in which the yolks predominate.
If fresh milk is not available, an unsweetened canned milk or
milk powder may be used with excellent results.
Scald the milk in the top of the double boiler. Beat together
slightly the eggs, sugar and salt. Add the hot milk to the
egg mixture, mix thoroughly and return to the top of the
double boiler. Cook over hot water, stirring constantly until
the egg coats the spoon.
FLOATING ISLAND
2 cups milk 6 to 8 tablespoons sugar
l
3 eggs /2 teaspoon vanilla
l
/s teaspoon salt
CARAMEL PUDDING
1 cup brown sugar *4 cup flour
2 cups milk 2 eggs
Mix sugar and one and one-half cups of milk. Scald in double
boiler until sugar is dissolved. Mix flour with beaten egg-yolks
and the remaining half cup of milk and add to the hot milk,
stirring constantly until it thickens. Remove from fire and fold
in stiffly beaten egg-whites. Chill and serve with whipped
cream.
ORANGE FOOL
6 oranges Sugar
3 eggs Nutmeg
2 cups cream Cinnamon
Squeeze and strain the juice from the oranges. Beat the eggs
and add to them the cream and the orange-juice. Sweeten to
taste. Add a sprinkle of grated nutmeg and powdered cinna-
mon, and cook in a double boiler, stirring constantly until the
mixture coats the spoon. Pour into glass dishes and chill
thoroughly before serving.
Scald the milk. Mix sugar, eggs, salt and flavoring and com-
bine with scalded milk. Pour into custard cups or baking-dish
set in pan of hot water and poach in a slow oven (300 F.)
until firm. A
knife blade run into the center of the custard
will come out clean.
LEMON JELLY
ounce (2 tablespoons) /4 cups ice- water
l
1 2
LEMON SPONGE
Reduce the ice-water in lemon jelly to two cups. When
the jelly begins to congeal, whip until light and frothy and fold
in the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs. Serve with cream or
soft custard.
ORANGE JELLY
1 ounce (2 tablespoons) 1 cup ice- water
granulated gelatin l /2
l
cups orange-juice
l
/2 cup cold water 3 to 4 tablespoons lemon-juice
l
/2 cup boiling water A little grated orange-rind
1 cup sugar (may be omitted)
Combine as directed for standard gelatin jelly.
530
ORANGE WHIP
When orange jelly begins to congeal, whip until light and
frothy. Mold.
ORANGE SPONGE
Reduce the ice-water in orange jelly to one-half cup. When
the jelly begins to congeal, whip until light and fold in the
stiffly beaten whites of two eggs.
COFFEE JELLY
1 ounce (2 tablespoons) l
/2 cup boiling water
granulated gelatin 1 cup sugar
l
/z cup cold water 3 cups strong coffee
Combine as directed for standard gelatin jelly. Particularly
good served with whipped cream.
Cut the crystallized ginger and figs into tiny pieces. Dissolve
the granulated sugar in the water, and add the powdered ginger,
CUSTARDS, GELATIN, ETC. 531
the crystallized ginger and the figs. Place all in a double boiler
and simmer slowly all day. The entire mass must form a soft
pulp so that the ingredients will scarcely be recognized. Soften
the gelatin in the cold water and stir into the mixture while
hot. Turn into high-stemmed glasses and serve ice cold with
whipped cream.
Cut the grapefruit in half, crosswise, and scoop out the pulp
being careful not to cut the skins. Drop the shells into cold
water until needed. Simmer a few sprigs of fresh mint in the
boiling water until the flavor is extracted. Follow the standard
directions for making jelly. When jelly is firm, cut it into
cubes, pile the cubes in the grapefruit shells and garnish with
sprigs of mint and cherries.
Decorating Jelly
Have the mold thoroughly chilled. Pour in a
layer of jelly
about one-half inch deep. Chill. When firm,
arrange a design
of fruit or nuts or both,
dropping a few drops of on each jelly
532
^-^-^^-^N.
Heat the milk in the top of a double boiler. Add the gelatin
softened in the cold water. Stir constantly, adding the sugar
a little at a time. Cook over hot water for fifteen minutes
CUSTARDS, GELATIN, ETC. 533
CHOCOLATE CREAM
6 tablespoons cocoa l
/z teaspoon salt
pint cream
l
/$ cup sugar 1
3 tablespoons water 1
egg
Mix
cocoa, sugar and water, and cook over the fire, stirring
until thick and smooth. Cool slightly and pour over stiffly
whipped cream, and beat thoroughly with a spoon. Add egg
and again beat well. Chill in refrigerator, allowing an hour
and a half or two hours for a mechanical refrigerator and longer
for an ice-cooled refrigerator.
No . 1. VELVET CREAM
l
/2 ounce (1 tablespoon) 4 tablespoons powdered
granulated gelatin sugar
pint cream
l
/4 cup cold water 1
SPANISH CREAM
1 ounce (2 tablespoons) % teaspoon salt
Soak the gelatin in cold water until soft. Make a soft custard
of the milk, egg-yolks, sugar and flavoring. Stir the softened
gelatin into the hot custard. When the gelatin has dissolved,
strain and cool. Whip the cream and fold it in as the mixture
congeals.
RICE BAVARIAN
l/2 pints milk
l
1 ounce (2 tablespoons)
Lemon-peel granulated gelatin
l l
/2 cup rice /2 cup cold water
cup heavy cream
l
/4 teaspoon salt 1
l
/2 cup sugar Strawberries
1 teaspoon flavoring
Put the milk and a few thin cuts of lemon-peel into a double
boiler. When hot, stir in the well -washed rice and salt.
it is
Cook until the rice is perfectly tender. The milk should be
nearly absorbed, leaving the rice very moist. Add to the hot
cooked rice the flavoring, the sugar and the gelatin, which has
been soaked in the cold water, and mix carefully. When the
mixture is beginning to set, fold in the cream, whipped stiff.
Pour into a mold and chill. Serve with sweetened crushed
strawberries. The white mold with red sauce makes a charming
combination.
MONT BLANC
1 pound large chestnuts % cup sugar
Whipped cream
l
/2 teaspoon salt
Put the chestnuts into the oven for a moment, until the shell
and inner skin can be easily removed. Boil the skinned chest-
nuts in water with the salt and three tablespoons of the sugar,
until they are very tender. Add one-half cup sugar to the
water and chestnuts and let stand until thoroughly cold. Re-
move chestnuts from this sirup and run them through a potato-
ricer on to a platter, mounding it high. Save a few of the finest
whole pieces to decorate the dish. Top the mound with a
CUSTARDS, GELATIN, ETC. 535
MACAROON BISQUE
1 cup heavy cream 18 macaroons
Powdered sugar 6 maraschino cherries
Vanilla
PINEAPPLE AMBROSIA
1 fresh pineapple or 1 cup heavy cream
can crushed pineapple
1 2 tablespoons sugar
/z pound marshmallows
l l
\ /z tablespoons lemon-juice
FRUIT FLUFF
1 cup powdered sugar 4 cups sliced peaches or
1 cup thick cream apple sauce or berries
2 egg-whites
Add half the sugar to the cream, stir until the sugar is dis-
solved, and then add the whites of the eggs beaten stiff. Place
the sliced peaches in a dish, sprinkle them with the remainder
of the sugar, pour on the cream mixture, and serve at once.
The success of this depends upon its being thoroughly chilled
when served. The cream, egg-whites and fruit should be
chilled for at least two hours before the dish is to be prepared,
and the finished dessert should be kept in the refrigerator until
needed.
VARIATIONS ON A
FAMILIAR THEME-
BRING YOUR PASTRY
GUN INTO PLAY AND
CUT YOUR HARD
SAUCE IN STRIPS TO
DECORATE CUSTARDS
A COOL CREAMY
SLICE OF CHARLOTTE
RUSSE RISES TO
OCCASION ON A Hi
SUMMER DAY
-^Irradiated Evaporated
^
\. Milk Institute
SMOOTH, CHILLED
MELON MOLD OF
BAVARIAN CREAM
IS THE FITTING
CLIMAX TO A
WARM-WEATHER
MEAL
536
FIG PUFF
1 cup cream 2 tablespoons powdered sugar
1 egg-white Chopped figs
1 tablespoon grapefruit mar- Maraschino cherries
malade Shredded almonds
Whip the cream until thick. Beat the egg-white until stiff,
then combine with the cream and add the sugar and marmalade.
Stir chopped figs into the mixture until it becomes very thick.
Pack in long-stemmed glasses. This may be garnished by
sprinkling the top with macaroon crumbs. Arrange a half
maraschino cherry with radiating strips of almonds in the center
of each.
CHARLOTTE RUSSE
No. 1 Line a number of small molds, or one large deep
mold, with a thin layer of cake. Thin sponge cake that has
been cut with a sharp knife, when cold, into two layers of equal
thickness is considered attractive, but halved lady fingers or
pieces of any plain cake cut one-half inch thick may be used.
Charlottes are made with and without tops, according to taste
or convenience.
Fill the forms with whipped cream sweetened with powdered
sugar and any desired flavoring. To make sure that the cream
is sufficiently stiff, fold into it lightly the stiffly beaten whites
of two eggs to eacli pint of cream. Keep the charlottes on ice
until needed, and serve on chilled plates.
CHOCOLATE FILLING.
4 eggs 3 tablespoons water
l
/2 pound sweet chocolate 3 tablespoons sugar
Melt the chocolate in a double boiler, add the sugar and the
water with the yolks of the eggs, well beaten. Cook slowly
until thick and smooth, stirring constantly. When cool, add
the stiffly beaten egg-whites.
MOCHA FILLING.
1 cup hot milk */8 teaspoon salt
l
/4 cup ground coffee 3 eggs
l
/2 cup sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla
2 tablespoons corn-starch
Pour the hot milk over the coffee and let stand where it will
keep hot for ten minutes. Strain. Mix corn-starch, salt and
sugar in a double boiler, add the egg-yolks, well beaten, stir
in the coffee infusion
gradually. Cook slowly until thick and
538
*^/v^/
LEMON FILLING.
l
1 cup rich milk /2 cup sugar
1 tablespoon butter 3 eggs
1 teaspoon corn-starch Juice of 1 lemon
Place corn-starch, sugar, egg-yolks, slightly beaten, milk and
butter in a double boiler. Cook slowly until thick and smooth^
stirring constantly. Add the lemon- juice. Remove from the
fire and cool slightly. While still warm, fold in the stiffly
beaten egg-whites.
Soak the bread in the milk until it is very soft, then mash
it fine. Heat together until nearly boiling. Beat the eggs until
light and add to them the sugar, salt and vanilla. When well
mixed, stir this into the bread and milk, pour the whole into
an earthenware baking-dish, set in a pan of water, and bake
in a slow oven (250-350 F.).
CHOCOLATE BREAD PUDDING Melt two squares of chocolate
over hot water and add this to the soaked bread and milk.
COCONUT PUDDING
l
/2 cup bread-crumbs 3 tablespoons sugar
/2
l
cup moist coconut /2
l
teaspoon salt
2 cups milk 1 tablespoon butter or other
1 egg fat
Soak the bread and coconut in the milk until soft, then mash
and add the sugar, salt and melted fat. Beat the white and
539
540
~*r^~r
yolk of the egg separately; add the yolk to the mixture, then
fold in the white. Pour into a greased baking-dish, set in a
SPICE PUDDING
l
1 cup raisins /z teaspoon cloves
l
1 egg /z teaspoon allspice
l
/2 cup sugar % teaspoon nutmeg
2 cups milk 1 teaspoon melted butter or
1 /2 cups fresh bread-crumbs
1
other fat
teaspoon cinnamon
l
1 /$ teaspoon salt
Seed the raisins and cut them in half. Beat the egg light,
add the sugar and then the milk and pour the whole over the
crumbs. Add the spice, fat, salt and raisins, stir well, pour into
a baking-dish, set in a pan of water, and bake until firm in a
slow oven (250 -3 50 F.). Serve hot or cold, with any de-
sired sauce.
QUEEN OF PUDDINGS
2 cups stale bread-crumbs Currant jelly or plum jam
1 quart scalded milk 2 tablespoons sugar for
3 eggs meringue
l
/z cup sugar
Soak the crumbs in the hot milk until soft then add the egg-
;
CREAM TAPIOCA
l
l /2 tablespoons granulated 2 eggs
tapioca /
l
4 teaspoon salt
2 cups scalded milk 1 teaspoon vanilla
l
/3 cup sugar
Add the tapioca to the milk and cook in a double boiler until
the tapioca is transparent. Add half the sugar to the milk and
half to the salt and the egg-yolks, slightly beaten. Pour the
hot mixture slowly over the egg mixture; return to the double
boiler and cook until it thickens. Remove from the heat and
add the stiffly beaten egg-whites and the flavoring. Turn into
the serving dish and serve hot or cold.
542
,>v
SCALLOPED PEACHES
1 % cup brown
teaspoon butter or other fat sugar
1 cup peaches % cup bread-crumbs or cake-
1 quart apples crumbs
/
l
4 teaspoon salt % CU P water
Grease a baking-dish with the fat. Chop the peaches and put
half of them in the bottom of the dish. Pare and quarter the
apples and lay half of them over the peaches. Sprinkle with
salt, add the other half of the peaches, and then the apples, and
sprinkle again with salt. Scatter the sugar over the top, then
the crumbs, then pour the water over all. Cover the dish and
bake in a slow oven (250-350 F.) from forty- five to sixty
minutes, removing the cover after thirty minutes. Serve hot
or cold, with or without whipped cream or marshmallows.
VANILLA.
1 cup scalded milk 5/3 cup sugar
4 tablespoons flour 3 eggs
l
2 tablespoons fat /2 teaspoon vanilla
Make a sauce of the milk? flour, fat and sugar. Add the
beaten egg-yolks and flavoring. Fold in the beaten egg-whites,
pour into a greased baking-dish, set this in hot water, and bake
in a moderate oven (375 F.) until the egg-white is set. Serve
at once with lemon sauce or cream.
HOT AND COLD PUDDINGS 543
CHOCOLATE.
1 cup scalded milk 1 tablespoon fat
3 tablespoons flour Y$ cup sugar
2 ounces grated chocolate 3 eggs
COFFEE.
Substitute coffee for milk in vanilla souffle and omit vanilla.
LEMON.
l
5eggs /4 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons sugar 3 tablespoons lemon-juice
Grated rind of l/2 lemon
Beat egg-yolks until light. Add sugar and beat again. Add
lemon-juice and rind. Beat egg-whites with salt until stiff and
dry. Fold the egg-yolk mixture into the beaten whites and
bake as directed for vanilla souffle. Serve at once.
OMELET.
3 eggs 1 /2
1
tablespoons powdered
Vanilla or lemon flavor sugar
Beat the egg-whites until stiff and dry and the yolks until
light. Add the sugar and flavoring to the yolks, then fold in
the whites, and pile the mass as high as possible in a greased
baking-dish. Smooth the top of the mound, make a slit down
the center and bake as directed for vanilla souffle. Sprinkle
with powdered sugar and serve.
CUSTARD.
1 cup milk 2 tablespoons butter or other
2 tablespoons flour fat
2 tablespoons sugar 4 eggs
Make a white sauce of the milk, flour and fat. Stir in the
sugar, allow the mixture to cool slightly, then add the beaten
egg-yolks, mix thoroughly and fold in the stiffly beaten whites.
Pour into a greased baking-dish and bake as directed for vanilla
souffle. Serve at once.
544
COTTAGE PUDDING
l l
\ /2 cups flour /2 cup milk
3 teaspoons baking-powder 1 egg
/2
l
cup sugar J4 cup shortening
l
/2 teaspoon salt
BLUEBERRY PUDDING
Add one cup blueberries to cottage pudding batter and bake
in muffin tins at 400 F.
BROWN BETTY
This pudding is usually made with apples, but almost any
other fruit may be used instead of or in combination with them.
Peaches, apricots and rhubarb are especially good. Serve hot
with cream or with any preferred sauce, or without a sauce.
No. 1.
l
cup fruit-juice or water
l
/4 cup melted butter /z
1 pint bread-crumbs */2 cup sugar or molasses
1 pint sliced apples or other Juice and grated rind of a
fruit lemon or orange, if desired
Cinnamon or other spices
No. 2.
1 cup bread-crumbs 1 cup water
3J/2 cups chopped apples or 1 apple, washed, cored and
other fruit sliced to form rings
l
/2 cup honey
Mix the crumbs and chopped apples or other fruit and place
in a deep baking-dish. Bring the honey and water to a boil
and pour over the fruit and bread mixture. Sprinkle a few
dry crumbs on top and lay the apple rings around the edge.
Bake in a slow oven (250-350 F.) as directed for No. 1.
APPLE CHARLOTTE
Slicesof stale bread, /4
l
inch Stewed tart apples, mashed
thick and seasoned with sugar
Melted butter and nutmeg
Chopped almonds, if desired
PEACH PUDDING
6 sliced peaches, fresh or 2 cups milk
canned, /
or l 2
cup dried /2
l
teaspoon vanilla
peaches, soaked and stewed 3 eggs
l
/4 cup sugar Stale bread
l
/2 teaspoon salt
Add the sugar, salt and vanilla to the milk and stir in the
eggs, well-beaten. Dip slices of stale bread into the mixture
and line a quart baking-dish with it. Arrange layers of bread
and sliced peaches to fill the dish. Pour any remaining liquid
546
'VSXN^'
over the top. Set dish in a pan of ihot water and bake in a
slow oven (325-350 F.) until firm (about 30 minutes).
Serve hot with any sauce.
Soak the macaroons in the milk. Beat the eggs and add to
them the sugar and the grated rind of one orange. Stir the
mixture carefully into the macaroons and milk and add the
juice of the oranges. Pour into a greased mold and set on a
trivet in a kettle of boiling water. Simmer steadily for an hour.
Serve hot with orange sauce.
whites and fold into the mixture. Melt the fat in a baking-
stiff
dish and half of it into the pudding mixture, spreading the
stir
rest over the inside of the dish. Pour the mixture into the bak-
No. 2.
Slowly add the meal, moistened with cold water, to the hot
milk, stirring constantly, and cook to a thick mush. Add the
other ingredients and mix well. Turn into a greased baking-
dish and bake in a slow oven (250-350 F.) for two hours
and a half. Serve hot with any sauce desired.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients and work in the shortening
with the fingers or a knife. Gradually add enough milk to
make a soft dough, mixing with a knife. Toss the dough on
to a floured board and tap and roll to one-half inch thickness.
548
*\^/v/
Mix the suet, the fruit and the chopped peel and dredge with
some of the flour. Mix together the remaining flour, crumbs,
spices and sugar, and add the well-beaten eggs. Stir the fruit
and suet into this mixture and mix the whole thoroughly. Put
into greased molds or into pudding cloths. Drop into a kettle
of boiling water and boil from five to seven hours, according
to the size of the pudding. Serve with hard sauce or any desired
liquid sauce.
HOT AND COLD PUDDINGS 549
Steamed Puddings
APPLE, OR OTHER FRUIT ROLY-POLY
Make a baking-powder biscuit dough and roll it into a
sheet about one-fourth of an inch thick. Spread it thickly
with sliced apples, and sprinkle over them sugar and cinnamon.
Roll up the dough as for jelly roll, pressing the overlapping parts
of the dough well to the body of the pudding and also press the
ends well to prevent the escape of the juices. Roll and tie in a
cloth, leaving room for the pudding to expand, place on a plate,
cover carefully and set in a steamer over a kettle of hot water
and steam one and one-half hours. Serve hot with apple sauce
or any other sauce desired.
This may be baked if apples that cook quickly are used.
Cherries, cranberries or other fruit may be used instead of
apples.
CARROT PUDDING
1 l
/z cups crumbs l
/z cup chopped dates or
l
1 tablespoon shortening or /2 prunes
cup fine chopped suet J/2 cup raisins
l
/4 teaspoon salt
l
/2
l
cup chopped figs
/2 cup grated carrots /2
l
cup ground nuts
1 teaspoon baking-powder /2
l
lemon
1 cup molasses
Brown the crumbs and mix them with the fat. Salt the car-
rots, which have been grated or put through the meat-grinder,
and add them to the crumbs. Next add the molasses, the fruit,
nuts, lemon-juice and grated rind. Mix all well together and
stir in the
baking-powder. Turn into a well-greased mold and
steam for four or five hours. Serve with a raisin sauce.
FRUIT PUDDING
3}/2 cups mixed fruit and juice 2y2 cups flour
1/2 c-up shortening 4 teaspoons baking-powder
1 cup sugar 1 cup milk
2 eggs Cream, sherry wine
Place fruit in deep baking dish, cover and boil. Cream the
shortening and sugar, add the beaten eggs and beat well. Sift
together the flour and baking-powder and add to the first
mixture alternately with the milk. Add flavoring. Mix to
smooth batter and pour over boiling fruit mixture. Cook 40
TOP YOUR RENNET-
CUSTARD WITH
FLUFFY MERINGUE OR
D E L I CAT
EL Y
BROWNED COCONUT
SHREDS
PUDDING IS
DY FOR DINNER
Wheat Flour
Institute
MONARCH OF ENGLISH
COOKERY, THIS FLUM
PUDDING ALSO HOLDS
COURT IN MANY AMERI-
CAN HOMES
550
A/\/^-
Chop the dates and suet very fine. Mix the suet with the
bread-crumbs. Add the dates and the sugar. Stir in the egg,
add milk, and flour sifted with the baking-powder. Put in a
greased mold and steam for three hours. Serve with any de-
sired sauce.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients, excepting the white flour.
Add molasses and milk to cracklings. Combine mixtures. Mix
white flour and raisins and add to mixture. Turn into greased
HOT AND COLD PUDDINGS 551
No. 2.
1 cup graham flour 1 cup molasses
1 cup white flour 1 cup sour milk
1 teaspoon salt 1 egg
%. teaspoon soda 1 cup raisins
Beat the shortening and sugar, add the flour and baking-
powder, sifted together, and the eggs, well beaten. Mix well.
Spread the marmalade in the bottom of a mold, pour the batter
on top, cover the mold and steam for one and one-half hours.
placed over it and must not allow it to fall below the boiling-
point at any time while the pudding is cooking.
Sift the flour, salt and baking-powder together, rub in the
shortening and add the milk. The result will be a dough too
soft to roll out. Peel and stone the peaches and cut them into
rather thick slices. Place the sliced fruit in a greased pudding-
dish, spread the dough over the fruit and set the dish in a
steamer over a kettle of rapidly boiling water, covering the
steamer tightly. Steam for one hour. Turn the pudding out
without breaking. This brings the peaches uppermost, when
the pudding is sent to the table. Serve with hard sauce or any
liquid sauce.
55*
Cold Puddings
RICE PUDDING
l
2 eggs l /4 cups cooked rice
2 cups milk
l
%
l
teaspoon salt
/2 cup raisins /z cup sugar
J
/s teaspoon cinnamon or 1 tablespoon powdered sugar
nutmeg
Separate the whites and yolks of the eggs, add to the yolks two
tablespoons of the milk and place the rest of the milk on the
fire in a double boiler. Wash the raisins, put them in the milk
and cook until soft (about fifteen minutes). Add the rice,
cook five minutes longer, then stir in the yolks of the eggs and
the salt, sugar and spice. Stir well, cook for two or three
minutes, remove from the fire and pour the pudding into the
serving-dish. Beat the whites of the eggs light, add sugar,
spread the meringue on top of the pudding and brown delicately
in the oven. Serve cold.
Cut the apples into small pieces and simmer in a saucepan with
the fat and sugar and enough water to cover. Wash the rice
HOT AND COLD PUDDINGS 553
and cook in boiling salted water until soft, then drain. Line
the bottom and sides of a mold with the rice, fill the center with
the apples, and spread the marmalade over them. Cover the
mold with rice and bake in a slow oven (300-350 F.) for
fifteen minutes. Let stand until cold, then unmold and turn
on to a platter. Serve with any desired sauce.
Apricots or other fruit may be substituted for the apples.
PEAR CONDE
1 cup rice 3 pears
2 cups boiling water 1 quart raspberries or straw-
1 teaspoon salt berries
1 cup milk 1 cup sugar
Wash the rice and cook it in the boiling water until the water
is absorbed, then add the salt and milk and continue cooking
until the rice is soft. Put into small molds and chill. Turn out
and serve on a platter surrounded by halves of pears. Fill the
pear cavities with one-half the fresh raspberries or strawberries,
crushed and sweetened. Pour the remainder of the crushed*
sweetened berries over the rice and pears. spoonful of A
whipped cream with each serving is a great addition to this
dish.
FRUIT CHARLOTTE
Line cups with triangular pieces of sponge cake and choco-
late cake,alternating. Fill the center with slices of orange
and peach. Chill, turn out on a serving-plate and surround
with whipped cream and blackberries. Put a spoonful of
whipped cream on top and serve very cold.
Cream the fat, add the sugar gradually, continuing the cream-
ing process until all is added. Separate the eggs. Beat the yolks
until creamy, add to the shortening and sugar mixture and mix
well. Sift the flour, measure, add the baking-powder and salt
and sift again. Add the flour and milk alternately. Beat the
whites of the eggs until stiff and fold into the mixture. Pour
into two well-greased layer-cake tins and bake in a moderate
oven (375 F.). Turn out and cool. Spread one sheet with a
layer of sweeterred, crushed berries or diced fruits. Cover with
the other sheet and cover the whole with more fruit. Top with
whipped cream, if desired. Serve at once.
RENNET-CUSTARDS
1 rennet tablet 1 pint milk
3 tablespoons sugar 1
teaspoon vanilla
Set out 4 or 5 dessert glasses. Dissolve rennet tablet in 1
tablespoon of cold water. Warm the milk, sugar and vanilla
slowly, stirring constantly, until lukewarm (110 F.) not
hot. A
few drops of milk on the inside of your wrist should
feel only comfortably warm. Remove from stove. If desired,
add small pinch of sak. Add dissolved rennet tablet and stir
quickly for a few seconds only. Pour at once, while still liquid,
into dessert glasses Let set until it thickens about 10 minutes.
Chill rennet-custards in refrigerator. Serve in same glasses.
HOT AND COLD PUDDINGS 555
CHOCOLATE
Corn-starch blanc mange 1
cup milk
2 eggs 5
tablespoons sugar
cup grated chocolate
l
/2 1
teaspoon vanilla
PRUNE
3 tablespoons corn-starch 1 /2
1
cups hot pulp and juice
l
made from cooking /2
'
l
/2 cup sugar
/2 cup cold prune-juice
l
pound prunes until tender
1
teaspoon cinnamon 2 tablespoons lemon-juice
Chocolate, maple and coffee are the most popular flavors for
parfaits.
BISCUITS A
biscuit is a yellow parfait mixture to which
beaten egg-whites are added. It is stirred until it is partly
frozen and then packed in small paper serving cases. The cases
are laid in the trays of the mechanical refrigerator or in con-
tainers which are placed in a freezing mixture.
to the action of the salt. Snow may be used instead of ice, but
it is advisableto mix a small amount of water with the snow to
hasten the melting process. Rock salt is best for use in freezing.
Mix the ice and salt before putting them into the freezer, and
fill the freezer well above the line of the mixture in the ice-
cream container.
The Automatic Freezer
This variety of freezer requires no turning. The wall of the
outer compartment is constructed with an air-space which helps
to keep the warm air from entering and the cold air about the
ice from escaping. The ice-cream is placed in the smaller con-
tainer, covered and packed in ice and salt in the larger container.
At intervals the cover is removed and the contents scraped from
the side and beaten well with a spoon or paddle. It requires
the minimum amount of ice and work to do the freezing and
the frozen product is of a satisfactory quality, although not so
smooth as that made by the freezer in which the mixture is
stirred while freezing.
Preparation of Ingredients
USE MORE FLAVORING in all mixtures that are to be frozen
than in mixtures that are to be served unfrozen, because the
flavor freezes out to some extent. Stir well and thoroughly
dissolve sugar before freezing.
CRUSH FRUIT for fruited creams or put it through a food-
chopper. Large pieces of icy fruit are difficult to eat. Partly
freeze the mixture before adding the fruit, otherwise the milk
or cream may curdle and the fruit may settle to the bottom.
56o
/**r>
Ice Creams
VANILLA ICE CREAM
PHILADELPHIA
quart thin cream
1 %
cup sugar
l
/2 tablespoon vanilla
Dissolve the sugar in the cream, add the vanilla and freeze.
AMERICAN.
1 pint milk 2 egg-yolks
2 tablespoons flour 1 cup heavy cream
2 tablespoons water 1 teaspoon vanilla
% cup sugar
Scald the milk, stirring constantly. Mix the flour and cold
water to a smooth paste and add to it slowly the scalded milk,
FRENCH.
6 egg-yolks %
CUP sugar
5 cups medium cream Vanilla bean
Scald the cream with a piece of vanilla bean. Beat the egg-
yolks,add the sugar and pour the cream slowly on the mixture,
beating constantly. Cook in a double boiler until it thickens,
watching it carefully. Cool, chill, and freeze.
No. 2.
1 cup dried apricots 2 cups thin cream
1 cup sugar 1 cup milk
Soak the apricots over night and stew them until tender. Put
them through a sieve. Add the sugar to the hot apricots, stir-
ring until dissolved. When cold, add the cream and then
the milk, stirring constantly. Freeze.
AN IRRESISTI-
BLE SUMMER
SYMPHONY
OF AND
FRUIT
ICE CREAM V
FROZEN DESSERTS 567
No. 2.
Mash the berries and sugar together, and let them stand for
an hour. Rub through a strainer, add the cream, and freeze.
No L BAKED ALASKA
Vanilla ice-cream 4 egg-whites
Sponge cake 4 tablespoons powdered sugar
Pack a mold in salt and ice and spread the strawberry ice-
cream smoothly over the bottom. If it is not very firm, cover
and let it stand for a few minutes. Spread a good layer of
orange ice upon it, and as soon as this hardens, spread over it
the pistachio ice-cream. Cover and freeze.
570
Frozen Puddings
FROZEN PUDDING
2 eggs 2 /2
l
cups milk
1 cup sugar 1 cup heavy cream
Pinch salt 1 cup candied fruit or nuts
Make a custard of the eggs, sugar, salt, milk and cream. Cool
and freeze. Fill a mold with alternate layers of the frozen
cream and candied fruit or nuts. Cover and freeze.
MOCHA BISCUIT
l
1 quart milk /z cup sugar
l
/2 cup pulverized coffee 2 tablespoons flour
6 eggs
Put the milk into a double boiler, drop into it a muslin bag
containing the pulverized coffee and let it infuse for fifteen
minutes, keeping the milk at the scalding point. Beat the eggs
and sugar together until smooth. Remove the bag of coffee
from the milk, add the flour stirred with a little cold milk or
water and cook fifteen minutes. Pour over the egg mixture
and return to the double boiler to cook until smooth and thick.
When cold partly freeze, then fill paper cases with the mixture
and complete the freezing. Serve garnished with whipped
cream.
NESSELRODE PUDDING
3 cups milk 3 tablespoons pineapple sirup
cup almonds
l
l /z cups sugar 1
and pack in ice and salt for two hours, or pack and freeze in
the trays of the mechanical refrigerator. This is often served
in individual paper cases with a bit of candied fruit on top of
each.
PEACH MERINGUE
l
/4 teaspoon gelatin % cup cream
1 tablespoon cold water 2 egg-whites
l
/4 cup boiling water 1 teaspoon vanilla
l
/4 cup sugar Peach ice-cream
Soak the gelatin in the cold water and dissolve it in the boil-
ing water. Add sugar and stir until it is dissolved. Add the
cream. When it begins to thicken, pour slowly over the beaten
whites of eggs and continue beating until it is the consistency
of whipped cream. Add vanilla. Line a round mold with
frozen peach ice-cream and fill the center with the meringue.
Pack in ice and salt, and let stand three to four hours, or pack
and freeze in the trays of the mechanical refrigerator.
Whip and drain the cream. Mix with it the pulp of any
fruit drained free of juice and sprinkled well with powdered
sugar. Add vanilla, mold, and pack in ice and salt for three
hours, or pack and freeze in the trays of the mechanical refrig-
erator.
MAPLE MOUSSE
l
l /4 cups maple sirup 2 tablespoons gelatin
*4 CU P c ld water
l
/2 cup sugar
5 cups cream
Combine maple sirup, sugar and one cup of cream and bring
to a boil, stirring constantly. Add the gelatin softened in water
and dissolved over heat. Strain, cool in ice-water until the
mixture thickens, then add the remainder of the cream,
whipped stiff. Place in a mold, pack in ice and salt and let
stand for four hours, or pack and freeze in the trays of the me-
chanical refrigerator.
572
MAPLE PARFAIT
3
/4 cup maple sirup 3 egg-whites 1 pint cream
Cook maple sirup to the light crack stage (270 F.). Pour
the sirup over the beaten whites of the eggs and beat until cold.
Fold into the stiffly whipped cream. Mold and pack in ice and
salt for four hours, or pack and freeze in the trays of the me-
chanical refrigerator. Serve in par fait glasses with whipped
cream.
MARSHMALLOW MOUSSE
1 pint cream 7 maraschino cherries, cut in
1 cup top milk pieces
6 marshmallows */2 teaspoon vanilla
l
/2 cup chopped nut-meats 1 egg-white, beaten
% cup powdered sugar
BISCUIT GLACE
1
l
cup sugar 3 %cups cream
/4 cup water 1 teaspoon vanilla
4 egg-yolks Pulverized macaroons
Make a thick sirup of the sugar and water. Beat the yolks
of the eggs and add the sirup and one-half cup of the cream.
Place all in a saucepan over a slow fire and stir constantly until
itforms a thick coating on the spoon. Empty into a mixing-
bowl, set on ice, beat until it is cold and stiff, and then add
the remainder of the cream beaten very stiff. Flavor with
vanilla or any preferred extract.
Pack the mixture in small paper boxes, sprinkle with pul-
verized macaroons, and set in a covered container. Pack in ice
and salt and let stand for four hours, or pack and freeze in the
trays of the mechanical refrigerator.
BAKED ALASKA, A TOOTHSOME
TREASURE WORTH PROSPECT-
ING FOR IN ANY COUNTRY
Irradiated Evaporated Milk Institute
v
v
HI i
MORE MOLD MAGIC IN
THIS SUMPTUOUS BOMBE
OF CHOCOLATE AND VA-
NILLA ICE CREAM ^
Irradiated Evaporate
Milk Institute
FROZEN DESSERTS 573
CHARLOTTE GLACE
l
/4 cup powdered sugar /2
l
tablespoon gelatin
1 pint thick cream 4 tablespoons cold water
1 teaspoon vanilla
CRANBERRY ICE
1 quart water 1 quart cranberries 3 cups sugar
LEMON ICE
1 quart water 2 cups sugar % CU P lemon-juice
Make a sirup by boiling the water with the sugar for five
minutes. Add the strained lemon-juice, cool and freeze.
ORANGE ICE
1 quart water 2 grated orange-rinds
2 cups sugar /4
l
cup lemon-juice
2 cups orange-juice
Make a sirup as for lemon ice. Add the fruit- juices and
grated rind. Strain, cool and freeze.
half cup of the sugar over them, stir well and let stand for one
hour. Strain through a fine sieve or cheese-cloth. Make a
sirup of the remaining sugar and the water. Add the fruit-
juice, strain, cool and freeze.
GRAPE ICE
% cup sugar 1
1
/2 cups water
1 cup grape-juice 2 tablespoons lemon-juice
% cup orange- juice
and water together for five minutes.
Boil the sugar Mix all
LEMON SHERBET
No. i WITH WATER.
1 quart water % cup lemon-juice
3 cups sugar 2 egg-whites
Mix together the lemon-juice and sugar and add to the milk
slowly, stirring constantly. If the ingredients are cold, and the
acid is added slowly to the milk, rather than the milk to the
acid, there is little danger of the mixture curdling. However,
if it does curdle slightly the quality of the sherbet will not be
affected. Strain and freeze.
PINEAPPLE SHERBET
1 quart water 2 cups crushed pineapple,
2 cups sugar fresh or canned
1 lemon 2 egg-whites
Boil water and sugar together for five minutes. Scald the
pineapple in the boiling sirup, and rub through a sieve. Cool,
add lemon- juice and freeze to a mush. Add the beaten whites
of the eggs and continue freezing.
RASPBERRY SHERBET
1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon lemon-juice
1 quart raspberries 1 egg-white
CRANBERRY SHERBET
1 quart water 2 lemons
2 cups sugar 1 pint cranberry- juice
1 tablespoon gelatin
Boil the water and sugar together for five minutes. Add
the gelatin, which has been softened in cold water and dissolved
over heat, the lemon-juice, and cranberry-juice. Strain, cool
and freeze.
GINGER SHERBET
2 quarts water % cup sirup from Canton
3 cups sugar ginger
6 lemons 1 teaspoon powdered ginger
1 tablespoon gelatin 2 egg-whites, if desired
Boil sugar and water together for five minutes, add the gela-
tin softened in cold water. When the mixture is cold, add the
peach pulp, which has been pressed through a sieve, and the
juice of lemon and oranges. Freeze.
RASPBERRY SHERBET
2 tablespooons gelatin 2 cups sugar
3 cups cold water 1
cup strained raspberry
1 cup boiling water juice
3 tablespoons lemon juice
l
Soften gelatin in /z cup cold water; dissolve in boiling water,
and add sugar, fruit juices and remaining 2 1/2 cups cold water;
strain and freeze (page 558). Yield: 2 quarts sherbet.
STRAWBERRY SHERBET
Use 1 cup strained strawberry juice; freeze.
RHUBARB SHERBET
Use 1 cup stewed, sieved, pink rhubarb, and omit lemon
juice; freeze.
CARDINAL ICE
1 quart raspberries 3 cups sugar
1
quartcurrants 2 cups water
add fruit juices, cool, strain and freeze (page 558). Yield: 3
pints ice.
BOMBES
PEACH BOMBE Line a melon mold evenly with peach ice
cream; center with peach mousse mixture; cover, pack in ice
fill
Cream butter. Add sugar and cream until fluffy. Beat in egg.
Soften gelatin in 2 tablespoons water. Scald 1 cup milk. Add
gelatin to milk. Stir hot gelatin-milk mixture into butter-sugar
mixture. Add remaining water, milk, salt and vanilla. Freeze.
To MAKE CHOCOLATE Heat 2 ounces finely chopped bitter
chocolate with one cup of the milk, add softened gelatin and
dissolve. Proceed as above, with ingredients as for Vanilla.
SAUCES FOR DESSERTS
APRICOT SAUCE
% cup apricot pulp %. cup heavy cream Sugar
BUTTERSCOTCH SAUCE
l
l
/2 cups light brown sugar l
/2 tablespoon lemon-juice
54 cup water /2
l
cup chopped nut-meats
4 tablespoons butter
Boil sugar and water together to the soft ball stage (234-
240 F.) Add butter, lemon -juice and nut-meats.
CARAMEL SAUCE
1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon corn-starch
1tablespoon cold water 1 tablespoon butter
1% cups hot water 1 teaspoon vanilla
Place the sugar and cold water in a pan and stir until the re-
sulting sirup is a clear brown, but not so dark as caramel; then
add the hot water and stir until the whole is well blended.
Add the corn-starch mixed with a
little cold water and boil for
CHERRY SAUCE
l
1 cup sugar /2 cup water
l
/2 cup butter /2
l
cup cherry-juice
1 tablespoon corn-starch
Cream the sugar and the butter, add the corn-starch and the
liquid, and boil over hot water for five minutes, stirring con-
stantly. Continue cooking for twenty-five minutes.
579
No. 1. CHOCOLATE SAUCE
1
1 /2 cups sugar 4 squares unsweetened choco-
5/2cup water late
54 cup rich milk or water /2
l
teaspoon vanilla
Let sugar and water boil in a saucepan for five minutes. Cool
partly and gradually stir in the chocolate which has been melted
over hot water. Add the vanilla. Place in a double boiler or
in a pan over hot water until ready to serve. At the last mo-
ment, add the milk. (If to be used with ice-cream, use water
instead of milk.)
No. 2.
COFFEE SAUCE
1 cup clear black coffee 3 egg-yolks 54 cup sugar
CUSTARD SAUCE
Use recipe for soft custard (See Index). If a thinner sauce
is desired, the custard may be thinned with a little cream.
FOAMY SAUCE
5/2 cup butter 2 tablespoons hot water
1 cup confectioners' sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla
1 egg
Cream the butter and gradually add the sugar, the egg, well
beaten, and the hot water. Heat over hot water, beating con-
tinually until it thickens. Add the vanilla and serve.
SAUCES FOR DESSERTS 581
HARD SAUCE
l
/$ cup butter 1 teaspoon vanilla or other
1 cup powdered, granulated, flavoring
brown or maple sugar
Cream the butter until very soft, then stir in the sugar and
the flavoring. Set in a cool place until required for use. A
grating of lemon-rind or nutmeg, or a sprinkle of powdered
cinnamon may be used instead of the vanilla. Cream or milk
may be added, with more sugar to make more sauce. This
sauce may be used with a hot pudding of any kind.
HONEY SAUCE
tablespoons butter
1
1 egg 1 /2
l
/2 cup honey
l
/z lemon, juice and grated
1 cup hot water rind
Beat the egg, and add the other ingredients in the order
given. Cook over hot water for about fifteen minutes, stirring
constantly.
LEMON SAUCE
y2 cup sugar Nutmeg Salt
1 tablespoon corn-starch 2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons lemon-juice 1 cup boiling water
Mix the sugar and corn-starch, add the boiling water and a
pinch of salt and boil until thick and clear. Continue cooking
over hot water for twenty minutes. Beat in the butter, the
lemon-juice and nutmeg. A
grating of lemon-rind may be
added.
MAPLE SAUCE
l
/2 cup water 1 pound (2 cups) maple sugar
/2
l
cup walnut-meats or 2 cups brown sugar
Add the water to the maple sugar and boil until it reaches
the thread stage (230 -2 34 F.). Add the walnut-meats
broken into small pieces. This sauce is good with ice-cream,
blanc mange or custard. It may be used hot or cold.
582
MARSHMALLOW SAUCE
% cup sugar
l
/2 pound marshmallows
*4 cup milk 2 tablespoons water
Boil the sugar and milk to the thread stage (230-234 F.).
Cool and beat until thick and white. Set in boiling water
and stir until thin enough to pour. Stir the marshmallows with
the water in a double boiler until smooth. Pour the sirup over
the melted marshmallows and beat together. Keep warm, but
not hot.
FRUIT MARSHMALLOW SAUCE
Thin commercial marshmallow whip with fruit -juice.
MOLASSES SAUCE
1 cup molasses 1 tablespoon lemon-juice or
l /2 tablespoons butter
l
vinegar
Boil the molasses with the butter for about five minutes. Re-
move from the fire and slowly stir in the lemon- juice or vinegar.
This sauce is
especially good with brown betty or Indian pud-
ding.
ORANGE SAUCE
5 tablespoons butter 3 egg-whites
/2 cup sugar
l
Juice of 2 oranges
/z tablespoons lemon- juice
l
1/2 cup boiling water l
Cream the butter with the sugar. Put into a saucepan over
hot water and add the boiling water. Then beat in the stiffly
beaten whites of the eggs, the orange-juice and lemon-juice and
continue beating until light and foamy.
SAUCES FOR DESSERTS 583
Cream the butter and powdered sugar. Add the cider and
the well-beaten yolks of the eggs. When well mixed, stir in
the milk or cream. Cook in a double boiler until it is as thick
as a custard and then gradually pour it into the beaten whites
of the eggs, beating constantly.
RAISIN SAUCE
/2
l
cup seeded raisins /4
l
cup chopped citron
1 cup boiling water 1 teaspoon corn-starch
3
/4 cup sugar 1 tablespoon butter
l
/2 teaspoon lemon-juice
SUGAR BRITTLE
Stir one-fourth cup of sugar without any water in a saucepan
over the fire until melted and of an amber color. Turn on to
an oiled pan. When cold, pound in a mortar or in several folds
of cloth. This may be sprinkled over any ice-cream.
VANILLA SAUCE
Use the recipe for lemon sauce (page 581) substituting one
teaspoon vanilla for the lemon-juice and grated rind.
YELLOW SAUCE
1 egg 3 tablespoons milk
2 teaspoon vanilla
l
3 tablespoons sugar /
Beat the white of the egg stiff, add the sugar, mix well and
add the yolk of the egg, then the milk and flavoring, beating
after each is added until the whole is smooth. This sauce is de-
licious on almost any pudding.
Mix well the sugar, flour and a pinch of salt. Add boiling
water gradually, stirring continuously. Then add the butter
and cook for five minutes. Remove from the fire and stir in the
nutmeg. Serve hot on apple dumplings, bird's-nest or berry
puddings that have been made with biscuit dough.
and for some other dishes. There are two kinds of pastry;
plain pastry and puff pastry.
PLAIN PASTRY is usually used for pies. It may be made
either crisp and crumbly or light and flaky.
PUFF PASTRY is not used for under crusts of pies because it
rises or puffs up too much. It is sometimes used for rims where
extra height is desirable, or for upper crusts of rich pies. It
is used for tarts of various kinds, for cases, such as patty shells
585
586
>^f-^^f
Baking Pastry
Place pastry in a hot to very hot oven
(400-500 F.) so
that the shortening will be cooked into the flour without first
becoming oily. If the shortening becomes warm and oily be-
fore going into the oven, or after
being put into the oven,
the pastry will be tough or hard instead of
crisp or flaky. When
the crust begins to brown, the be reduced.
temperature may
(See table of cooking periods and temperatures, page 6.)
Some fillings, such as lemon, chocolate and cream fillings,
A LIGHT
TOUCHAND
NOT TOO
MUCH OF IT,
IN THE KNEAD-
I N G AND
ROLLING
FINISHING
TOUCHES
SNUGLY RUF-
FLED AND
LIGHTLY
BRUSHED
588
f\^\^V^
are cooked and put into a baked crust. This insures a dry,
flaky under crust. Some custard pies are made
or in this
crisp
way, but the flavor is not so good as when the uncooked custard
is put into the uncooked crust and both are cooked at the
same time.
Sift flour and salt. Mix in fat with fork or finger-tips until
the mixture has about the consistency of corn-meal. Add water
gradually, tossing the moistened lumps of dough aside, so that
the water may reach the dry material. When the dough clings
together so that the bowl is clean, chill, remove two-thirds of
it to a slightly floured board and roll out,
keeping the paste as
nearly circular as possible. Use this for the lower crust. For
the top crust of a two-crust pie, use the remaining paste with
the trimmings of the lower crust. This amount should make
two shells of medium size, or one two-crust pie.
WITH VEGETABLE OIL Use oil in the proportion of y2 cup
PASTRY AND MERINGUES 589
oilto 2 l/4 cups flour with 1 teaspoon baking powder. Mix the
shortening into the sifted dry ingredients with a fork. Less
water is necessary to make the dough cling together. Otherwise
the method is the same.
No. 2.
Pour the boiling water over the fat and beat with a fork
until it becomes a smooth liquid. Sift the flour,
baking powder
and salt into this mixture. Stir together, chill and roll out. This
mixture keeps well in the refrigerator.
WITH CORNSTARCH x
WITH ALMONDS
iy2 cups flour y2 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons pulverized y2 cup shortening
almonds 1 egg
Take out one-half of the dry mixture. Add water to the re-
mainder. Roll out in circular form. Place one-third of dry
part in a row across the center of the dough and fold over from
each side to make three layers. Turn half way round and roll
out. Repeat twice more, until all of the dry mixture is used.
Bake as usual.
PUFF PASTE
1 pound butter or other Ice- water
shortening 14 ounces bread flour or
2 teaspoons salt 1 pound pastry flour
SUET PASTE
1 teaspoon baking-powder 1 cup chopped suet
2 cups flour 1 cup cold water
l
/2 teaspoon salt
APPLE PIE
4 to 6 tart, juicy apples 1 teaspoon lemon-juice
1 cup sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon or nut-
1 teaspoon butter nieg, if desired
Line a pie-pan with any plain crust and fill with thinly
sliced apples. Add the sugar, lemon-juice, and spice, and dot
PASTRY AND MERINGUES 593
pinch edge to the edge of the paste that lines the sides of
its
Stew the fruit and sweeten to taste. Mash, and season with
nutmeg. Line a pie-pan with paste, turn in the filling and bake
without an upper crust, for forty minutes in a hot to slow oven
(450 F. for ten minutes, then reduced to 325 F.). Add
powdered sugar and vanilla to stiffly beaten egg-whites. Spread
over the pie and put back into the oven till the meringue is
browned. Serve cold. This amount makes one pie.
594
partly cooled, and arrange strips of pastry across the top. Put
on another rim around the edge and bake forty minutes in a
hot to slow oven (450 F. for ten minutes, then 325 F.).
No. 2.
Line a pie-pan with crust and brush with white of egg. Add
berries,and sprinkle with sugar and corn-starch mixed together.
Dot with butter, and cover with upper crust. Bake forty min-
utes in a hot oven (450 F. for ten minutes, then 425 F.).
CRANBERRY PIE
l /2
l
cups cranberries % cup sugar /2
l
cup water
Cook cranberries, water and sugar for about ten minutes.
Cool, place in one crust with a high rim and bake in a hot to
slow oven (450 F. for ten minutes, then 325 F. for thirty
minutes). Put strips of paste, lattice fashion, across the top.
CHERRY PIE
1 quart cherries 1 tablespoon flour
5/2 cup sugar Powdered sugar
The common sour red cherries are the best for pies. Line a
deep pie-pan with good plain paste, fill nearly full with stoned
cherries, sprinkle with sugar, sifted with the flour.
Cover with an upper crust, which should be rolled as thin
as possible, make a vent in the center, and press the edges to-
gether so that the juices will not escape during the baking.
Bake in a hot oven (450 F. for ten minutes, then 425 F. for
A DOUBLE PLATE,
BEANS, RICE OR VEGE-
TABLE TAPE WILL
YOUR PIECRUSTS
IN GOOD SHAPE
WHILE BAKING
THIS PIE IS
AIR-CONDI-
TIONED WITH
A LATTICE-
WORK TOP
CRUST
I I 1 1,
THIN PIECRUST,/
WITH YOUR
VOR1CE JAM FO'R
TIDBITS
Wheat Flour
Institute
AND PEACHES
ARE THE FAVORITE
FRUITS FOR DUMP-
LINGS
PASTRY AND MERINGUES 595
thirty minutes) . Serve cherry pies the same day they are baked,
or the under crust will become heavy. Sprinkle powdered
sugar over each piece just before serving.
Follow the same directions in using any small fruit for pies.
"Wash and drain the berries and sift a very little flour over
them, dredging carefully, until each berry is lightly coated.
Stir the sugar well into the fruit, and turn into a pie-pan lined
with crust. Cover with an upper crust and bake about forty
minutes in a hot oven (450 F. for 10 minutes, then 425 F.
for 30 minutes). Serve cold, with sugar sifted over the top.
Flouring the berries as directed will make just enough thicken-
ing to counteract the excessive amount of juice.
PINEAPPLE PIE
l
2 cups crushed pineapple /2 cup sugar
2 tablespoons corn-starch Juice /2 lemon
l
l
/2 teaspoon salt 2 egg-yolks
Scald the pineapple. Mix corn-starch, salt and sugar, and stir
into the pineapple. Stir and cook ten minutes. Add lemon-
juice and beaten yolks slowly. Cover and let cook five minutes.
When cool, turn into baked crust, and cover with whipped
cream or a meringue made from the whites of the eggs, or orna-
ment with baked circles, crescents, or other figures cut from
remaining crust.
596
PEACH PIE
2 cups cut up peaches 1 cup sugar
/4
l
cup water 1 teaspoon butter
^8 teaspoon allspice, if
desired
Pare peaches and slice thin. Put in pie-pan lined with paste;
sprinkle with sugar and spice, add water and dot with butter.
Cover with upper crust and bake forty minutes in hot oven
(450 F. 10 minutes, then 425 F. 30 minutes).
FIG PIE
% 1
pound dried figs 2 tablespoons granulated
1 /2 cups boiling water sugar
2 eggs y2 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons powdered sugar
Cut the figs fine, add boiling water and cook about one-half
hour, or until the skins are tender. Beat the egg-yolks, add the
granulated sugar and the salt, stir into the figs and cook until
the egg thickens. Turn into a baked crust. Cover with a
meringue made of the stiffly beaten egg-whites and the powdered
sugar. Brown in a slow oven (300 -3 50 F.).
RHUBARB PIE
No. 1, DOUBLE CRUST
2 cups cut up rhubarb Flour 1 cup sugar
Wash and peel the rhubarb and cut it into small pieces.
Flour the pieces until they are quite white, then add sugar.
Line a pie-pan with paste, put in the rhubarb, with the sugar
well stirred into it. Cover with the upper crust and bake about
forty minutes in a hot oven (450 F. for 10 minutes, then
425 F. for 30 minutes).
Line a pie-pan with plain paste. Wash and peel the rhubarb,
cut it into small pieces, and dredge with flour until each piece
PASTRY AND MERINGUES 597
STRAWBERRY PIE
1
cup sugar 1
quart strawberries, washed
21/2 tablespoons flour and hulled
}4 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons lemon juice
1 recipe Plain Pastry
(page 588)
Mix and salt together. Mix with strawberries
sugar, flour
and lemon Line pie plate with pastry and fill with fruit
juice.
mixture. Adjust top crust, gash to allow for escape of steam.
Bake in a very hot oven (450 F.) for 10 minutes, then reduce
to moderate (350 F.) and bake 30 minutes longer.
Mix the sugar and flour, add with the seasonings to the beaten
egg, add the raisins and liquid. Cook in double boiler until
598
'WN^N^-
mixture thickens. Cool, then pour into pastry lined pie plate,
adjust top crust. Bake in a hot oven (450 F.) for 10 minutes
then reduce to 350 F. and bake 30 minutes longer.
BUTTERSCOTCH PIE
\ l/2 cups milk 2 eggs
1 cup brown sugar 2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons corn-starch 2 tablespoons powdered sugar
Heat one cup of milk with the sugar until the sugar is free
from lumps. Mix the corn-starch, one-half cup milk and egg-
yolks and add to the hot mixture slowly. Cook in a double
boiler until thick, stirring constantly; then continue to cook
for ten minutes longer, stirring occasionally. Remove from
fire and add butter. When cool, pour into a baked pastry
shell. Cover with meringue made from the stiffly beaten egg-
whites and the powdered sugar. Brown in a slow oven (300-
350 F.).
As AN ATTRACTIVE VARIATION, cover the top of the pie with
halves of marshmallows instead of meringue, and brown in the
oven. In this case, use one whole egg instead of two yolks.
CUSTARD PIE
2 or 3eggs or 4 to 6 yolks
l
/s teaspoon cinnamon or
l
/z cup sugar nutmeg
J/2 teaspoon salt 2 cups hot milk
Beat the eggs, add sugar, salt, cinnamon and milk. Mix well
and pour into unbaked crust. Place in a hot oven (450 F.)
for ten minutes to bake sides and bottom of crust. This will
help to prevent a soggy crust. Decrease the heat and cook (at
325 F.) until a silver knife inserted in the center will come
out clean (about thirty minutes). The custard must not boil
at any time. If it does, it will be watery.
Beat the eggs and sugar together until light, then add the
milk, nutmeg, coconut and salt. Line a deep pie-pan with
crust, pour the mixture in and bake at 450 F. for ten minutes.
Then reduce the heat to 325 F. and bake until a silver knife
inserted in the center will come out clean (about thirty min-
utes). These quantities will make one thick pie or two
thin
pies.
Whipped Cream
Beat egg yolks until thick and lemon colored; add /z cup of
l
l
/z teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon vanilla
PUMPKIN PIE
1/4 cups prepared pumpkin 1 teaspoon salt
% cup brown sugar 2 eggs
1 teaspoon cinnamon 2 cups milk
l
/2 teaspoon ginger
MINCE PIE
1
recipe Plain Pastry 2l/> cups mincemeat
(page 588)
Line pie plate with pastry. Fill with mincemeat. Cover with
top crust which has several slits in it to allow steam to escape.
Moisten edges of lower crust with cold water, fold upper crust
under lower crust and press edges together with floured fork.
Bake in a very hot oven (450 F.) for 10 minutes, reduce to
350 F. and bake 30 to 40 minutes longer or until crust is
browned. Makes 1 (9 -inch) pie. Serve hot or cold.
MINCEMEAT
2
3 pounds lean beef pounds sugar
suet 2 cups cider vinegar
1/2 pound
6 pounds sour apples 2 cups molasses
3 pounds seeded raisins 1
tablespoon cloves
2 pounds seedless raisins 1
teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 pound citron,
minced 1
teaspoon mace
1 nutmeg, grated 1 tablespoon salt
Cut meat in cubes, coyer with water and simmer until tender.
Cool. Force meat, suet and pared and cored apples through a
food chopper. Add remaining ingredients plus 2 cups stock
and simmer 1 hour, stirring frequently. Fill into sterilized jars,
seal and keep in a cool place. Makes about 9 quarts.
PASTRY AND MERINGUES 603
MOCK MINCEMEAT
6 green tomatoes /2
l
cup minced citron
6 tart apples 2 tablespoons orange rind
54 pound seedless raisins 1 teaspoon salt
54 pound seeded raisins 1
teaspoon cloves
1
tablespoon cinnamon }/2 teaspoon allspice
PASTRY SHELLS
No. 1Roll plain or puff paste thin and cut with a biscuit-
cutter. With
a smaller cutter remove the centers from one-
half of these circles and lay the rings thus made on the whole
circles, in this way building a wall around the shell. Bake in a
quick oven (400-450 F.). When these shells are used, small
pans are not required. With puff paste, if a deep shell is de-
sired, remove the centers from two circles and lay both rings on
top of the uncut circle.
No. 2 tins, cover with crust
Invert patty pans or muffin
and bake in a
quick oven (400-450 F.). Patty cases made
in this way make very attractive individual pies, a varia-
tion from the usual large pies. They may be made ahead of
time and warmed Any pie mix-
in the oven to freshen them.
canned fruit, jelly, marmalade, or whipped cream
ture, fresh or
mixed with nuts and fruits may be used for filling. Do not
fillthe shells until just before they are to be served. The
moisture in the filling will soften the crust if they stand too
long. Use the cookie cutter for cover decorations.
APPLE TARTS
5
l
apples % cup granulated sugar
/z cup cold water 2 tablespoons butter
3 eggs 2 tablespoons powdered sugar
1 lemon
Pare, core and cut up tart apples and cook them in the water
until soft, stewing them
very slowly. Beat this sauce smooth,
partly cool, then add beaten egg-yolks, lemon-juice and grated
rind and the granulated sugar,
increasing the amount of sugar,
PASTRY AND MERINGUES 605
BANANA ROLL
Peel bananas and cut in halves crosswise. Roll puff or flaky
paste one-eighth of an inch thick. Cut into pieces. Dip each
piece in ice-water and wrap around a half banana. Place on a
baking-sheet and bake in a quick oven (450 F.). Serve with
strawberry sauce, No. 2. See page 583.
BANBURY TARTS
1 cup cHbpped raisins 1 tablespoon melted butter
1 cup sugar y8 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons cracker-crumbs 1 lemon, juice and rind
1 egg, beaten
CHEESE PASTRIES
4 eggs 1 package cream cheese
1 tablespoon cream % CUP sugar
No. 2.
1 cup milk 2 egg-yolks or 1 whole egg
1 tablespoon corn-starch 1 teaspoon vanilla
l
/4 cup sugar Chocolate fudge frosting
1 teaspoon salt
Mix the cheese with the other ingredients until creamy. Line
a dozen deep molds with puff or flaky paste. Prick and fill
with the cheese mixture. Bake in a hot oven (450 F.) for
ten minutes. Then reduce the heat (to 325 F.) and bake
until golden brown and firm. When done, turn upside down
on a sheet of paper and leave to cool. Spread each tartlet with
apricot or currant marmalade, quince or apple jelly or green-
gage jam.
'
1
PASTRY AND MERINGUES 607
RAISIN STICKS
/2 teaspoon cinnamon
l l
/4 recipe puff or flaky paste
Seedless raisins 2 tablespoons sugar
Butter
GOOSEBERRY TARTS
Remove stems and tails of green gooseberries, stew slowly
in very little water till the fruit breaks, then sweeten well and
set aside to cool. When cold, turn into pastry shells cover with
a top of puff paste and bake in a very quick oven (450 F.).
Brush each over while hot with beaten egg and set back in the
oven three minutes to glaze. Serve cold.
GRAPE TARTLETS
l
1 cup grapes /2 cup white grape-juice
1 cup sugar 1 teaspoon corn-starch
cup whipped cream
l
/2 ciap water 1
LEMON TARTLETS
2 lemons 2 eggs
2 cups sugar 1 cup sponge cake crumbs
Mix the juice and grated rind of the lemons with the sugar,
eggs and sponge cake crumbs. Beat until smooth. Put into
twelve patty-pans lined with paste and bake in a hot oven
(400-450 F.) until the crust is done (15-20 minutes).
MACAROON TARTS
2 eggs 1 lemon
/2
l
cup sugar 1 tablespoon butter
/2
l
dozen dry macaroons
Mix the yolks of the eggs with the sugar and beat until light.
Roll the macaroons, add to the egg and sugar mixture, and
flavor with the grated rind and juice of the lemon. Mix this
with the melted butter. Beat until smooth and then fold in
the beaten whites of the eggs. Cover inverted patty-
stiffly
tins with puff or flaky paste, prick thoroughly and bake in a
hot oven (400-450 F.). When cool, put a spoonful of
marmalade or jelly into each and cover with the macaroon mix-
ture. Place for a moment, or two in the oven until the tops
brown. This amount will make six to eight tarts.
MARMALADE STRIPS
Place a thin layer of crust on an inverted baking-pan. Spread
with thick marmalade or any filling that does not run. Cover
with another thin layer. Cut into strips four inches by one
and a half. Bake in a quick oven (400-4SO F.). When
cool, spread with a thin icing made of confectioners' sugar and
water. Sprinkle with finely chopped nuts.
NAPOLEONS
Divide puff paste into three portions and roll each portion
into a sheet as thin as possible without breaking. Prick
thoroughly and chill. Bake a delicate brown in a hot oven
^(400
-450 F.), cool and spread the sheets with cream fill-
ing. Spread the top with confectioners' frosting. When ready
to serve, cut in blocks two inches wide by four inches long.
6io
ORANGE TARTS
2 oranges 1 tablespoon butter
% cup sugar iy2 tablespoons lemon- juice
1 teaspoon corn-fltarch
PASTRY PINWHEELS
2 cups flour 2 tablespoons sugar
3 teaspoons baking powder 4 tablespoons shortening
1/2 teaspoon
salt 1 egg
% cup milk
baking powder, salt and sugar together. Cut in
Sift flour,
shortening. Beat egg and add milk. Add to dry ingredients
to make a soft dough. Turn out on floured board and knead
gently or pat and fold 4-6 times. Roll out /$ inch thick. Cut
l
PEEK-A-BOOS
Cut thin pie-crust in rounds about three inches in diameter.
Prick one-half of the rounds with a fork. In each of the other
irounds cut three holes, to form a triangle, using a thimble or
some other small cutter. Bake in a quick oven (450 F.).
Spread jelly on the pricked rounds, cover with the perforated
ones, putting in extra jelly through the holes. Sprinkle with
powdered sugar.
PASTRY AND MERINGUES 6il
PINEAPPLE TARTS
Roll puff or flaky paste about one-half inch thick. Cut
rounds with a biscuit-cutter. Dip half of these in ice-water
and place in a greased pan. Cut holes in the centers of the
other circles. Dip the rings in ice-water and place on top of
the rounds in the pan. Put a small piece of butter in each center
and bake in a hot oven (400 -450 F.) fifteen to twenty
minutes. Before serving, fill the centers with crushed pine-
apple and cover with whipped cream.
PRUNE TART
Fresh or dried prunes
1 tablespoon cream
Sugar /2 ^P su ar
CUP cake-crumbs
1
3
tablespoon flour
eees
$ ^P powdered sugar
/4
% teaspoon vanilla
Line a baking-dish with paste and fill the middle with fresh
or soaked dried prunes that have had the stones removed.
Sprinkle with sugar and the flour and bake in a hot oven (450
F.) for ten minutes. Then reduce the heat to 325 F. and
bake till the fruit is tender. Pour over it the yolks of the eggs,
mixed with the cream, one-half cup of sugar and the cake-
crumbs. Bake at 325 F. until the custard is set. Cover with
meringue made from the egg-whites, powdered sugar and va-
nilla. Brown and serve.
SWEET RISSOLES
Cut circles of puff or flaky paste three inches in diameter
from a sheet rolled not more than one-fourth inch thick. Wet
the edges of each circle for one-half inch all around, lay one
teaspoon of any thick stewed fruit or marmalade on one side
of the circle and fold the other half over upon this until the
edges meet. Pinch the edges together, brush over with beaten
egg and fry in deep fat at 3 60 -370 F. Dust with sugar and
serve.
PASTRY ROLLOVERS
Cut thick rolled paste from four to five inches in
circles ot
diameter. Prick thoroughly, spread with jelly and sprinkle
with finely chopped nuts. Roll closely over and over. Place
on an inverted pan, having the lapped side of the rollover un-
derneath to keep the roll in place. Bake in a quick oven (400-
450 F.) and brush with milk just before removing from
the oven.
Meringues
A meringue a very light, delicate preparation made by
is
liquid and will not beat up well. Such eggs, therefore, are un-
desirable for meringues, although they may be usable for other
purposes.
VARIETIES OF SUGAR FOR MERINGUES The sugar for me-
ringues may be powdered, fine granulated or brown. It should
be sifted to free it from lumps and to keep it from being com-
pact.
PROPORTION OF SUGAR TO EGG WHITE For pie and pud-
ding meringues, use from one to three tablespoons of sugar to
each egg-white. For kisses and meringue shells, use from four
to five tablespoons of sugar to each egg-white.
sugar to
is be used for each egg-white, beat two-thirds of it in
as directed, and fold the last third carefully into the mixture.
More beating may make the egg-white fall.
2 egg-whites % l
teaspoon vanilla or /% tea-
2 tablespoons sugar spoon lemon extract
Few grains of salt
No. 2.
2 egg-whites
4 tablespoons sugar y3 teaspoon vanilla or y8 tea-
Few grains of salt spoon lemon extract
Directions for making are given on pages 612 and 613.
No. 3.
2 egg-whites y2 teaspoon vanilla or 4 y
6 tablespoons sugar teaspoon lemon extract
Few grains of salt
PLAIN SOUP
6 tablespoons rice 2 large potatoes
Boiling water 1 large onion
GREEN SOUP
2 bunches water cress 2 slices bread
2 diced potatoes 2 tablespoons butter or other
2 hard-cooked egg-yolks fat
Cook the water cress until almost done, then add potatoes
and cook until they are soft. Press through a sieve and add
the puree to the water in which it was cooked. Brown the
bread slightly in one tablespoon of the fat, and cut into small
cubes. Add the minced egg-yolks and the remaining table-
spoon of butter or other fat to the soup, season to taste, add
the cubes of bread and serve hot.
ter or other fat, add enough hot water to cover, season with
salt and pepper, and cook until tender. Drain, press through
a sieve and return the pulp to the water in which the
vegetables
were boiled. Serve hot with small squares of toasted bread.
Canned vegetables may be used.
CODFISH A LA BENEDICTINE
1 pound fresh codfish Butter or other fat
4 medium-sized sweet potatoes Juice of 1 lemon
Salt 1 cup cream or milk
Pepper Bread-crumbs
CRAB A LA CREOLE
12 small live hard-shell crabs 4 tablespoons butter or other
or l/2 pound crab-meat fat
3tablespoons lemon-juice 1 teaspoon salt
2 red peppers % teaspoon pepper
Boil the crabs twenty minutes; open and clean them and
reserve the yellow fat. Pour the lemon- juice over the crab-
meat. Melt the butter or other fat and the crab fat in a fry-
ing-pan and add the crab-meat, seasoning, and chopped peppers.
Cook for twenty minutes.
Clean the crabs. Cut off and crush the legs, and cook in
boiling salted water for about an hour. Strain the juice and
pour it over the rice. Let stand for half an hour and then
cook until rice is tender. Cook the chopped onion and carrots
in the fat until slightly browned and then add the crab-meat.
Season with salt and pepper, add the rice and cook together for
several minutes. Serve hot.
This is an old provincial recipe and has a particularly delicious
taste that makes it a favorite.
6i8
SALMON A LA MORNAY
4 cooked potatoes Buttered crumbs
l
/2 cup Swiss cheese 1 cup medium white sauce
1 egg-yolk 2 cups boiled salmon
FISH FRITTERS
1 pound of small fish Salt and pepper
3 eggs Minced garlic
3 tablespoons flour Minced parsley
Cook the fish and mash them. Beat the yolks of the eggs
until light and thick then add, little by little, the flour, salt,
pepper, the minced garlic and parsley, and the fish. Lastly add
the whites of the eggs beaten to a froth. Drop spoonfuls of
this mixture into hot fat (3 60 -370 F.) and fry to a golden
brown.
CREOLE FISH
l
l /2 pounds fish Salt and pepper
1 lemon /2
l
cup tomato-juice
1 teaspoon butter or other Grated lemon-rind
fat 1 small pimiento
Select a fish with firm flesh, clean the skin and rub well with
a slice of lemon. Melt the fat, add the onion and the fish and
cook to a golden brown. Season with salt and pepper, add the
tomato-juice, a bit of lemon-rind, and the pimiento finely cut.
While the fish is cooking, cook the rice in boiling salted water
until tender. Make a crown of rice on a platter, place the
fish in the center, pour the gravy over it, and
garnish with thin
slices of lemon.
FISH LOAF
2 cups cooked fish 2 eggs
1 teaspoon salt 1 cup thick white sauce
Drain the fish and tear into small bits. Add the salt, the
beaten egg-yolks, the white sauce, and the beaten egg-whites.
FRENCH RECIPES 619
FISH EN COQUILLES
1 cup left-over fish 1 chopped onion
8 mussels or clams Salt and pepper
1/2cup bread-crumbs 3 tablespoons butter or other
10 tablespoons milk fat
1 clove garlic Buttered crumbs
1 teaspoon chopped parsley
Chop the fish with the mussels or clams. Add the crumbs
which have been soaked in two tablespoons of milk, and the
garlic, parsley, onions,
salt and pepper. Melt the fat and when
hot add the mixture and cook several minutes. Stir in one-
half cup of milk and fill small ramekins or scallop shells. Cover
with buttered crumbs and bake in a moderate oven (3 50 -400
F.) about fifteen minutes. Serve the dishes on
a platter or on
individual plates.
.
RECHAUFFE
2 cups cold cooked meat Grated cheese
2 cups boiled rice Salt and pepper
Butter or other fat Milk or soup stock
Any pieces of left-over meat may be used for this dish. Cut
the meat in small pieces and moisten with a little milk or stock.
Spread a layer of rice in a greased baking-dish. Put several
small pieces of fat on top and sprinkle with grated cheese.
Season with salt and pepper. Then add a layer of chopped
meat and again add several small pieces of fat and a little
grated cheese. Spread the rest of the rice on the meat, then
put fat and grated cheese over it more abundantly than be-
fore. Put in a moderate oven (3 50 -400 F.) for fifteen or
twenty minutes. Serve very hot.
One can improve this dish by mixing some good tomato
sauce or cream sauce with the meat.
No. 2.
1 large onion 1 cup tomatoes
1 tablespoon fat Left-over pork, beef, mutton
Salt and pepper or chicken
1 /2
1
cups uncooked rice
Slice the onion and brown it with the fat. Wash the rice
well and add it, with salt and pepper, to the onion. Cook
slowly, stirring constantly until the rice is slightly brown.
Press the tomatoes through a sieve and add to the rice mixture,
together with the meat. Cover with boiling water and sim-
mer for about one-half hour.
No. 3.
l
3 small onions /z teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons butter or other */$ teaspoon pepper
fat 3 diced potatoes
l
1 cup stock /2 cup carrots
l
5/2 cup gravy /z cup prune-juice
cup left-over meat /2 cup stewed prunes
l
1
Slice theonions and fry in the fat until brown. Add the
stock, gravy, meat, salt and pepper and vegetables. Cook
slowly until the vegetables are tender. Add the prune- juice
and boil five minutes. Turn the stew on to a platter and sur-
round with cooked prunes.
FRENCH RECIPES 621
Fry the liver with the bacon until brown, then add the rice
which has been soaked in water for one-half hour. Cover with
hot water or stock, add the parsley, carrots and onions, salt and
pepper. Simmer slowly until tender, about forty minutes.
HAM LOAF
l
/4 pound lean ham % pound grated cheese
2 tablespoons flour 3 eggs
2 cups milk Salt and pepper
Cook the ham and chop it fine. Mix the flour with the milk
and cook for few minutes; then add the ham, cheese, the egg-
a
yolks slightly beaten, and the stiffly beaten egg-whites. Season
with salt and pepper, pour into a mold, set the mold in a pan
of hot water and bake in a moderate oven (375 F.) until
firm (20-30 minutes). This may be served with or without a
thin white sauce.
Cut the onions into cubes and fry in the fat until brown.
Slice the beef and add to the onions, then add the potatoes and
stock. Season and cook about fifteen minutes.
FRENCH RISSOLES
2 cups chopped veal or 1 cup water
chicken (white meat) 1 tablespoon melted butter or
1 onion other fat
Salt and pepper 4 cups flour
1 e gg
Chop the onion and add it to the meat. Season with salt and
pepper. Mix this well with the yolk of the egg.
m
msr".--
HOLLANDAISE
SAUCE WILL GIVE
ASPARAGUS A
FRENCH ACCENT
OR SAUSAGES AND
CORN AU CRATIN
ifel
622
j^f
Mix together the water, a little salt, the white of the egg
and the melted fat. Pile up the flour, make a well in the center
and pour in, little by little, the liquid mixture. "Work the
dough thoroughly until it is smooth, then cut it in slices and
rollout into thin strips with a rolling-pin.
Place the chopped meat here and there on these strips and
season with salt and pepper and a little chopped onion. Fold
the strips in the center and press the edges together. Cut with
a small biscuit-cutter, making small rissoles. Boil these in
slightly salted water for five minutes, remove them from the
water, drain, and put them in the oven (400 F.) for ten
minutes to form a yellow crust on top. Serve hot.
CAMBRISSON SALAD
1 cup cooked beef 4 anchovies
2 hard-cooked eggs 1 small head lettuce
2 tomatoes
Cut the beef into small pieces, add the sliced eggs and to-
matoes, and the anchovies cut up into small pieces. Serve on
lettuce with French or mayonnaise dressing.
Season with salt and pepper and cook until the meat is slightly
brown. Remove the meat and add the onion to the fat in the
pan and cook until brown, then add the garlic and parsley, the
stock and vinegar. Return the meat to the pan and simmer
slowly until tender.
Rabbit, hare, lamb or young partridge may be prepared in
the same way.
CHICKEN VICTORY
1 chicken Thyme
2 tablespoons salad oil /2
l
bay-leaf
9 onions 3 large tomatoes
l
/2 pound bacon 1 cup stock
Parsley ;} pound mushrooms
Select a nice red cabbage, discard the outer leaves and soak
for a short time in cold water. Drain, and slice in thin shreds.
Melt the fat in a saucepan, add the jelly and the cabbage, the
water, salt and pepper. Cook very slowly until tender.
At the same time, boil some French chestnuts; take off the
skin and add them to the cabbage. Cook all slowly for about
two hours, until the liquid has evaporated.
STUFFED CABBAGE
1 cabbage Spices
Cooking fat 1 cup bread-crumbs
Butter 3 eggs
Parsley 1 chopped onion
Place a thin piece of cheese-cloth in the bottom of a bowl
and lay the large cabbage leaves in it. Chop the middle of
the cabbage fine and saute it in the fat until it is yellow. Re-
move it from the fire, add a little chopped parsley, spices,
bread-crumbs, eggs and onion. Place this mixture inside the
large cabbage leaves, and tie up the cabbage by tying together
the four corners of the cloth.
Place in a pan of boiling salted water and boil until the cab-
bage leaves are tender (about thirty-five minutes). When
done, remove from the cloth, pour a little melted butter over
it, and some fine bread-crumbs, and bake for five minutes.
Serve with tomato sauce.
EGGPLANT ORIENTAL
2 green peppers 6 ripe tomatoes
2 eggplants 3 teaspoons salt
3 tablespoons cooking oil 1 teaspoon paprika
Remove the seeds from the peppers, and cut the peppers into
small pieces. Pare the eggplants and cut into small pieces. Cook
the eggplant and peppers in the fat until slightly brown, then
add the tomatoes and seasonings and continue the cooking until
the eggplant is done. Serve very hot.
FRENCH RECIPES 625
Cook the leeks in boiling water; boil and slice the potatoes;
arrange the vegetables in a baking-dish, and pour the white
sauce over them. Add the cheese, bread-crumbs and seasoning,
and bake (350 F.) for fifteen minutes.
MUSHROOMS AU GRATIN
pound mushrooms /2 cup bread-crumbs
l l
/2
1 sliced onion 1/16 teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons cooking oil % teaspoon paprika
2 tablespoons flour 1 tablespoon butter
1 cup mushroom stock
l
/2 teaspoon salt
(made from stems) Juice of 1 lemon
POTATO PATTIES
6 potatoes 2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour 1 tablespoon grated Swiss
Salt cheese
Tomato sauce
Boil the potatoes in their jackets; peel and mash them and add
flour, butter, grated cheese and salt. Mix well and shape in
626
ns*^**r
*Wash, pare and cut potatoes in dice. Saute in the bacon fat
until brown. Remove potatoes and fry the chopped garlic
and parsley in the fat remaining in the pan. Add flour, milk
and seasonings, and cook until thickened (about five minutes).
Add potatoes and cook three minutes.
Pare the potatoes, bake in the oven until tender, then cut in
halves lengthwise. Scoop out the centers. Chop the meat, gar-
lic, onion and parsley together; add the salt, fill the potatoes
with the mixture and reheat. The pulp removed from the po-
tatoes may be seasoned with salt, pepper, and butter, and baked
in the oven with tomato sauce.
POTATO FRITTERS
3 large potatoes Lemon or orange flavoring
3/4 cup powdered sugar % cup flour
Pare the potatoes and boil in salted water. Mash them; add
the sugar and flavor with a little lemon or orange. Allow the
mixture to cool. Then add the flour and knead the dough
until itis very firm.
POTATOES A L'ARCHIODOISE
4 cups potatoes, sliced thin 1 /2
1
teaspoons salt
2 cups tomato sauce 1 teaspoon paprika
2 minced garlic cloves
Wash and chop the spinach. Add the parsley and cook in
the fat for ten minutes. Add well-beaten eggs to the milk,
and pour over the spinach. Add cheese and seasoning; turn
into greased baking-dish and bake in a moderate oven (350-
400 F.) one-half hour.
SPINACH A LA REINE
l
/2 tablespoon chopped onion Salt and pepper
l
/2 tablespoon fat 3 l/2 tablespoons grated cheese
1 quart spinach 3 eggs
1 tablespoon flour 6 cooked shrimps
1 cup milk
Cook the onion in the fat, add the spinach, which has been
washed and chopped, and fry quickly. Add flour and milk,
and cook until it thickens. Season with salt and pepper and
add the grated cheese. When it starts to boil remove from the
fire and add well-beaten egg-whites, then the beaten yolks,
turn into a baking-dish and bake in a very hot oven (450-
500 F.) for ten minutes. Garnish with the shrimps.
628
STUFFED TOMATOES
8 tomatoes 5/2teaspoon salt
5 medium-sized onions */$teaspoon pepper
4 cloves garlic 5 tablespoons fat
1 piece thyme 2 tablespoons flour
l
1 bay-leaf /z pound sausage-meat
Cut off the tops of the tomatoes and remove the pulp. Cook
the pulp and four of the onions chopped fine, with the season-
ings for twenty-five minutes, then add three tablespoons of
the fat mixed with the flour. Cook the mixture for twenty
minutes. Brown the rest of the fat in a pan and fry a chopped
onion in it, add the sausage-meat to it, cook for ten minutes
and add this mixture to the tomato pulp. Stuff the tomatoes
with the mixture and bake (at 350 F.) for twenty-five min-
utes. Serve in the baking-dish.
TURNIP LEAVES
Select the leaves of young turnips, wash carefully and boil
in salted water until tender. Drain, chop very fine, and season
with salt, pepper and butter. Serve hot.
Peel the turnips, cut them in slices, and boil them for about
fifteen minutes in boiling salted water. Make a white sauce
FRENCH RECIPES 629
with the fat, flour, milk, salt and pepper. Pour this over the
turnips and sprinkle the grated cheese on top. Bake for ten
minutes and serve hot.
DANDELION OMELET
1 cup dandelion hearts 4 eggs Butter or other fat
EGGS FLORENTINE
2 quarts spinach 1 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons butter 6 hard-cooked eggs
cup tomato sauce
l l
/2 teaspoon pepper /2
Wash, cook and drain the spinach and add the butter and
the seasonings. Arrange a nest of spinach at each end of a
small platter. Put three eggs in each nest and pour the tomato
sauce between the nests.
Beat the eggs and milk together and add the grated cheese
and seasonings. Pour the mixture into a greased baking-dish,
set in hot water, and bake at 375 F. until it is firm. Turn out
on a platter, and garnish with chopped parsley.
630
MIMOSA EGGS
6 hard-cooked eggs % cup boiled ham
Lettuce Mayonnaise
Cut Remove the yolks and
the eggs in halves lengthwise.
stuff the whites with chopped ham. Lay the eggs on a plate
lined with lettuce leaves and cover with mayonnaise dressing.
Decorate with sifted yolks of the eggs.
EGGS AU GRATIN
l l/2 cups milk /2 cup grated Swiss cheese
l
Put the fat and flour into a pan and when blended add the
hot milk, the salt and pepper, and the grated cheese, stirring
quickly to melt the cheese. When the mixture is getting cool,
add first the yolks, then the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs.
Put the mixture into a greased baking-dish, set in a pan of hot
water and bake in a moderate oven (350 F.) 45 to 50 minutes.
Serve at once.
CHEESE TOAST
1 egg Y 4 pound grated cheese
l
l /z tablespoons cream Salt and pepper
l
l /2 tablespoons flour Slices of bread
Mix first five ingredients well together and work the mix-
ture until firm. Spread this mixture on slices of bread two
FRENCH RECIPES 631
and one-half inches thick. Fry in deep hot fat (375-390 F.)
putting the cheese side down first; then turn over. Remove
when the toast is a golden brown. This dish is quickly made,
delicious and not costly.
GNOCCHI
4 tablespoons butter or other 3 eggs
fat Salt and pepper
1 cup milk 2 ounces grated cheese
2 cups flour 1 cup medium white sauce
Melt the fat in a pan. Put in the milk, bring to a boil, and
add the sifted flour. Stir six to nine minutes. Let it cool
slightly, then work in the eggs, one at a time, beat well, and
season to taste. Add the grated cheese. Put the dough on the
board or on a platter and cut into squares or small fingers.
Drop these into boiling salted water and poach them for
about ten minutes. When they are cooked, drain them and
place in a baking-dish. Pour over them the white sauce to
which may be added, if desired, one ounce of grated cheese,
and put the dish in the oven (250-350 F.) for fifteen min-
utes. Serve hot. The gnocchi can also be served with tomato
sauce.
2 eggs 1
tablespoon clarified
1
tablespoon wine vinegar butter
1
teaspoon parsley, finely chopped
FRENCH CAKE
1 cup sugar 3 cups flour
1 egg 1 teaspoon soda
2 teaspoons cocoa 1 tablespoon melted grape
1 teaspoon cinnamon jelly
2 cups milk or cream Nuts
Beat together the sugar and egg, then add the cocoa and
cinnamon and the milk or cream very slowly. Stir in the flour,
then add the soda, dissolved in the jelly. Pour into a loaf-pan
and scatter some nuts over the top. Bake in a moderate oven
(350-400 F.) about forty minutes.
FONDANT CAKE
% cup cream 2 cups flour
2 eggs Chopped almonds or grated
2 cups powdered sugar lemon-rind
CHESTNUT DESSERT
2 pounds chestnuts 4 or 5 apples
l
/2 cup sugar 1 tablespoon butter
l
/4 cup water 1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon vanilla 2 tablespoons apricot jelly-
Blanch and peel the chestnuts and cook until soft, then rub
through a sieve. Make a sirup of the sugar and water, add
the vanilla and chestnuts and stir until the mixture is smooth.
Place in a ring on a plate. Cook the apples until soft, mash
them, add the butter, cinnamon, and apricot jelly. Put this
mixture in the center of the chestnut ring and garnish with
preserved fruits.
FRENCH RECIPES 633
MOCHA PUDDING
% cup butter or other fat % cup cold strong coffee
1 cup brown sugar % teaspoon vanilla
3 egg-yolks 12 lady fingers
Cream the fat and add sugar gradually, then the egg-yolks.
Add coffee little by little, and vanilla. If coffee is added
quickly, the mixture will curdle. Line a mold with the lady
fingers. Turn the mocha mixture into the middle, and chill.
Unmold and serve on a platter.
Heat the milk slowly until it separates, and drain the whey
from the curd. Add the eggs, powdered sugar, and lemon-
juice to the curd, and beat thoroughly. Caramelize the granu-
lated sugar and pour it into a mold. Add the curd mixture
and bake the pudding for twenty minutes.
BREAD PUDDING
l
6 or 8 slices stale bread /z cup seeded raisins
Salt 1 quart milk
/2 teaspoon cinnamen
l
2 eggs
54 cup sugar 1 teaspoon lemon extract
Buying Coffee
The size is not important, since that differs
of the coffee bean
with each variety; the however, may be, because this indi-
color,
cates the amount of roasting to which it has been subjected.
A light-colored bean is likely to be mild in flavor; a medium
one, somewhat stronger; while a very dark one may be bitter.
unground coffee and grind it at home
If possible, purchase
as it needed.
is It is much more economical to use finely
ground coffee, because more strength can be obtained from a
given amount than from that which is coarser. If one has
equipment for using pulverized coffee, that will be the most de-
sirable.
of the caffein has been extracted are on the market. These are
sold under trade names. Together with cereal beverages they
are used by those who prefer them to coffee or who may find
coffee too stimulating.
INSTANTANEOUS COFFEES consisting of finely pulverized
coffee which may be dissolved in boiling water are available
for campers and those who want a quick cup of coffee.
Storing Coffee
As
coffee loses its strength when it is exposed to the air, it
should be kept tightly covered, especially after it has been
ground. "When coffee has lost its flavor from exposure to the
air, it can be improved by heating the dry coffee in a frying-
pan, taking care not to let it burn. The flavor, however, will
not be so good as the original flavor.
635
636
AFTER-DINNER COFFEE
The best after-dinner coffee is made with a filter. If really
black coffee is desired, use three tablespoons of finely ground
HOT AND COLD BEVERAGES 637
ing their flavor. When all the liquid has dripped through, the
coffee is done and should be served at once.
VIENNA COFFEE
Makeafter-dinner coffee and serve in demi-tasses topped with
stiffly whipped cream. Sugar may be used if desired. This
style coffee is best suited to afternoon or evening service, al-
though it is adapted for after-dinner service as well. Serve
with small cakes.
CAFE AU LAIT
Make medium or strong coffee by the drip or percolator
method and while it is being prepared scald an equal amount
of fresh milk. Pour the coffee and hot milk together into the
cups in equal amounts, one pot in each hand.
TURKISH COFFEE
Use finely pulverized coffee. Mix one tablespoon of coffee
for each demi-tasse with an equal amount of granulated sugar.
When the water is boiling briskly, add the coffee, and when it
looks frothy remove from the fire. In a moment or two, boil
it up again and repeat a third time. It should be thick and
ICED COFFEE
Makecoffee of desired strength it should be fairly strong,
as the ice dilutes it. Cool it and serve in tall glasses with
cracked or pour the hot coffee over cracked ice, in glasses,
ice;
adding more ice if needed. Top the glass with whipped cream
or vanilla ice-cream. Cream may be poured on the ice before
the coffee is added, and the coffee may then be topped with
whipped cream.
63 8
Cereal Beverages
Grains, roasted so that they produce a brown infusion,-
similar in appearance to coffee, are obtainable in several brands.
These furnish a hot beverage for many who do not care for
or cannot drink coffee or tea. They are excellent breakfast
beverages for children and young people. Directions for pre-
paring them are given on the packages.
Tea
A
cup of tea with its delicately fascinating aroma is one of
the most delicious beverages, but probably no other is attended
with such doubtful results, chiefly because the average person
knows little about the selection of teas, and methods of brewing
it are uncertain.
Varieties of Tea
Teas divide into three groups according to the method used
in preparing them for market.
UNOXIDIZED OR UNFERMENTED These include the green
teas, an example of which would be the Japan pan-dried tea.
The leaves are greenish and the tea made from them is light
colored and delicate in flavor.
PARTLY OXIDIZED OR PARTLY FERMENTED These include
the Oolong and Ceylon varieties. The leaves are brown and
the tea made from them is darker in color than that made from
the unfermented leaves and has a characteristic aromatic flavor.
OXIDIZED OR FERMENTED These are known as black teas,
such as English Breakfast or China Congou, and India teas such
as Darjeeling and Pekoe. The leaves are black and the beverage
has a rich dark color and a fruit flavor.
During oxidation or fermentation, chemical changes take
place which improve the flavor and reduce the amount of
tannin, the substance which gives tea its astringency. As green
teas arenot oxidized, they contain a larger proportion of tannin
than the others and consequently have a more astringent flavor.
Buying Tea
Buy tea that has well-curled leaves and that is free from
stems or dust. In preparing tea for marketing, the leaves are
withered or steamed and then rolled by hand or machinery.
HOT AND COLD BEVERAGES 639
This extracts some of the juice, which dries on the leaf and
makes it easily soluble when the tea is steeped. The twist
more
of the leaf due to this rolling helps to secure this dried juice.
Tea with very large leaves, dusty tea or tea in which stems are
found in abundance isof poor quality and even though offered
at a reduced price is bad economy, as a large quantity must be
used to produce even a fair flavor.
Storing Tea
Tea will absorb moisture and odors, and the volatile oil, to
which it owes much of its flavor, will evaporate. Store tea,
therefore, in tightly covered cans and in a cool place.
ICED TEA
Make tea in the usual way. The clearest iced tea is made
by pouring the hot liquid over cracked ice rather than by cool-
ing it slowly and chilling in the refrigerator. If it is to be
poured over cracked ice, it must of course be made doubly
strong, as the ice dilutes it.
COCOA
2 to tablespoons cocoa
3 1 to 2 tablespoons sugar
/2 cup water
l salt
*/& teaspoon
1 quart milk
Scrape the chocolate fine, mix it with the water and heat
over hot water until the chocolate is melted. Bring the milk
to the scalding point (in a double boiler), add the chocolate
and the sugar, stir untikdissolved and whip with an egg-beater
until the beverage is light and frothy.
ICED CHOCOLATE
Make chocolate or cocoa as usual cool and serve in tall glasses
;
RECEPTION CHOCOLATE
l
1 quart milk /2 cup sugar
l
cup cocoa
l
/z /2 teaspoon vanilla
l
/4 cup flour Ys teaspoon salt
1 quart water
Fruit Beverages
Fruit beverages are particularly valuable in the diet. They
should be served more frequently than any of the others except
milk. The time has passed when we think of them as only
for formal or semi-formal occasions or for the warmest Summer
days. They offer most desirable minerals, are rich in vitamins,
and, because of the sugar used to sweeten them, are fairly high
in fuel value. Most of the fruit-juices have a wholesome laxa-
tive effect. In the Summer they make refreshing drinks;
through the Winter, the juices that have been bottled during
the warmer months plus the fresh juices available from the
citrus fruits are a source of vitamins and minerals, which may
be so lacking in the diet at that time; and in the Spring they
are most valuable stimulants to the jaded appetite. The tang
of their acid flavor and their attractive color make them wel-
come additions to the table.
Grape-juice, pineapple-juice, tomato-juice concentrated
grapefruit-juice and orange-juice, etc., for making fruit bever-
ages, may be bought in bottles or cans.
COMBINATIONS OF FRUITS Any combination of fruit-juices
will make a successful beverage provided some of the more tart
juices, such as those from lemons, sour oranges, apple cider or
rhubarb, are present to give the necessary acidity.
SUGAR SIRUPS Abeverage sweetened with a sugar sirup is
better than one to which unmelted sugar has been added. The
sirup gives a smoother texture and is easily mixed through the
whole drink, while sugar has a tendency to sink to the bottom.
The amounts of sugar given in the recipes can not be exact,
as the sugar must vary according to the acidity of the fruit and
individual taste.
UTENSILS It is best to use silver, glass or stainless steel in
SUGAR SIRUP
4 cups sugar 4 cups water
Boil sugar and water together for ten minutes. Pour into
clean hot jars and seal. This sirup may be kept on hand and
used as needed.
No. 1. LEMONADE
6 lemons 3 cups water 1 to 1
l
/z cups sugar sirup
Squeeze the juice from the fruit. Mix well with the sirup
and water. Serve very cold.
No. 2.
2
6 lemons 4 cups water l
/2 to /$ cup sugar
Squeeze the juice from the lemons and mix with the water
and sugar. See that the sugar is well dissolved.
VARIATIONS OF LEMONADE
APPLE LEMONADE Wash apples and dice, using everything,
including skin and core. Cook with enough water to cover,
strain through a cloth and add one cup sugar for each cup of
juice thus obtained. Dissolve sugar in the juice and cool. Fill
glasses half full of this apple sirup, add to each glass the juice
of half a lemon and fill up with ice and water.
BERRY LEMONADE To each glass of lemonade add two
tablespoons of crushed fresh or canned berries strawberries,
raspberries, blackberries, loganberries or blueberries. Seedy
fruits should be strained. Garnish with whole berries and
serve with crushed ice.
CURRANT LEMONADE
1 cup sugar 1 cup water
4 cups currants Lemons
Cook the sugar with the currants until the fruit is soft. Add
the water, strain and cool. Allow one-half lemon and one-half
glass of currant sirup for each serving. Fill glasses with ice
and water.
EGG LEMONADE, No. 1 For each glass use one beaten egg;
644
./^xv^,
No. 2 Into a tall glass half full of crushed ice put a spocn-
ful of chopped fruit, pineapple, peaches or crushed berries.
Beat in an egg, add juice of one lemon and sugar to taste. Fill
glass with plain or effervescent water and shake or stir until
very cold.
LEMON FROST Fill a tall glass one-fourth full of cracked
ice, add lemonade fill the glass three-fourths full and frost the
top with a spoonful of stiffly beaten egg-white sweetened
slightly and flavored with lemon- juice.
LEMON GINGER glass allow two tablespoons ginger
For each
sirup, the juice of one-half lemon and two tablespoons pine-
apple-juice. Fill with cracked ice and water.
LEMON MINT For each glass squeeze the juice of one lemon
over six or seven crushed mint leaves. Sweeten to taste and add
chopped ice, and water to fill the glass.
PINEAPPLE LEMONADE
1 pineapple 1 cup sugar
1 quart boiling water 1 cup tea infusion
1 lemon
Wash, slice and pare the pineapple, and take out all the eyes.
Prepare the tender part to serve. Put the core, the rind and
the grated rind of the lemon in a kettle and pour on the boil-
ing water. Cover and simmer for half an hour. Strain through
cheese-cloth. Add sugar, tea and lemon- juice. Serve cold. As
some pineapples are much more sour than others, more sugar
may be necessary.
LIMEADE
Limeade is made
in the same way as lemonade, using limes
instead of lemons and a little more sweetening. This is even
more refreshing than lemonade in summer.
ORANGEADE
4 oranges 1 to l
l
/z cups sirup
1 lemon 3 cups water
PINEAPPLE ORANGEADE
4 oranges 1 quart boiling water
Juice of 12 lemons
Mix fruit and sugar or sirup. Add ginger ale and charged
water and serve with chopped ice. This will serve twenty-five
people.
No. 2.
1
1 /2 cups water Juice of 6 lemons
l
l /z cups sugar Juice of 6 oranges
1 quart grape- juice 1 pint tea
2 quarts chilled water 1 pint grated pineapple
Boil water and sugar ten minutes. Cool and add other in-
gredients and let stand one hour. Add chilled water and serve
with chipped ice. This will serve twenty-five people.
No. 3.
Boil water and sugar ten minutes. Cool and add crushed
fruit and fruit-juice. Chill. Add charged water just before
serving. This will serve twenty-five people.
646
GINGER PUNCH
1 quart water % CUP ginger sirup
1 cup sugar 1 cup orange-juice
%. cup chopped Canton % cup lemon- juice
ginger 1 quart charged water
Boil water, sugar, ginger and ginger sirup for twenty minutes.
Cool. Add fruit-juices and charged water gradually.
LEMON PUNCH
cup mashed strawberries
l
Juice of 6 lemons /z
cup crushed pineapple
l
Juice of 3 oranges /z
1 quart water
Mix fruit-juice, sweeten to taste with sirup, add water and
crushed fruit. Garnish with very thin slices of orange.
RASPBERRY PUNCH
1 lemon 1 pint boiling water
1 cup raspberries 1 cup sugar
1 cup currants 1 cup tea infusion
Crush fruit and strain through a cloth. Without taking the
pulp from the cloth, put it into another dish and pour the
HOT AND COLD BEVERAGES 647
boiling water over it. Drain off, but do not squeeze or it will
be muddy. Add the sugar and stir until it is dissolved. Cool
thoroughly before adding the fruit-juice and tea.
VERANDA PUNCH
Juice of 3 lemons 1 cup tea infusion
Juice of 2 oranges 1 pint ginger ale
pint charged water
l
/2 cup sugar sirup 1
Mix fruit-juice and sugar sirup. Add the hot tea. Cool,
and,when ready to serve, add ginger ale and charged f
water.
Thin slices of lemon and orange may be used for a garnish.
LOGANBERRY COCKTAIL
2 cups loganberry-juice 1 cup water
1 cup orange- juice % cup sirup
Juice of 1 lemon
Proceed as in lemon punch.
GRAPE-JUICE RICKY
For each glass mix the juice of one-half lime with one-half
glassof grape- juice and two tablespoons of sugar. Shake in a
mixer with crushed ice. Fill glass with plain or charged water.
ORANGE LILY
l
/2 cup white grape-juice 2 tablespoons orange-juice
1 teaspoon sugar
Fill glass half full of shaved ice. Add grape-juice, orange-
juice and sugar and fill with chilled water. Serve with two
straws thrust through a thin slice of orange.
QUAKER DRINK
3 sprigs of mint Juice of3 oranges
Bruise mint. Pour the tea over the fruit-juice. Mix ginger
with two tablespoons hot water and the cold water. Mix all
ingredients. Chill and serve.
EGGNOG
1 egg 1 tablespoon powdered sugar
Pinch of salt 2 tablespoons fruit-juice
Milk
Add salt to the egg-white and beat to a stiff froth. Add the
sugar, the well-beaten yolk of the egg and the fruit-juice. Fill
the glass with ice-cold milk. Sprinkle with nuts.
top chopped
The egg-yolk and white may be beaten together rather than
separately, if desired.
MILK SHAKE
two-thirds full of ice-cold milk. Sweeten to taste
Fill a glass
and flavor withtwo tablespoons of fruit- juice, strained pre-
serves, melted jelly or chocolate sirup. Fill the glass with finely
chopped ice. Shake well. In the absence of a regulation
"mixer" pour from one glass into another. When frothy,
sprinkle with cinnamon or nutmeg.
HOT AND COLD BEVERAGES 649
MILK PUNCH
2 tablespoons sugar 1 cup milk
Y4 cup charged water /2
l
teaspoon vanilla
Mix sugar, vanilla and milk. Stir well and add the water.
Pour this mixture from one bowl to another to froth it. Hold
the bowl high as you pour the liquid. When it is frothy, pour
it into a tumbler and serve.
Y
coffee, 4 cup chocolate sauce (page 580) and 7 cups milk. Top
each glass with 1 tablespoon whipped cream, if desired.
ICED COFFEE SHAKE Use 3 cups cold strong coffee, 3 drops
almond extract, 2 cups chilled milk, 2 cups Apollinaris water
and powdered sugar to taste. Top each glass with sweetened
whipped cream and dust with cinnamon.
For additional beverage recipes including wines see pages 737
to 757.
FOODS AND BEVERAGES
FOR INVALIDS
A DOCTOR'S advice necessary in planning the diet for
is
** an invalid, as each casemust be considered individually.
The following general suggestions are intended to help the
housewife who, in addition to her other work, has the duty of
ministering to the needs of the sick and convalescent.
THE PROPER SELECTION AND PREPARATION of food for an
invalid is important, but the best cooked and most palatable
food may be spoiled in the serving. When possible, remove
all bottles and suggestions of medicine from the room. Use a
light tray, and serve everything as nicely as possible the hot
things really hot; the cold dishes cold, not lukewarm. In ill-
ness, even more than in health, care in serving is imperative, for
appetite may be poor.
MEALS SHOULD BE SERVED AT REGULAR INTERVALS, and al-
though the patient should not be consulted about the food to
be brought ito him, his likes and dislikes should be considered
as far as possible.
BEFORE SERVING THE MEAL, be sure that the patient is ready
for with hands and face washed and that provision has been
it, ;
made for placing the tray where it will be convenient for him
or his attendant to reach it. Special raised trays or bedside
tables may be bought; or a rest may be improvised by placing a
block of wood or a bundle of magazines on each side of the
patient so that he will not have to bear the weight of the tray
on his knees.
THE TRAY SHOULD BE COVERED with a clean napkin or" tray
cover, and the dishes and serving should be very dainty. A
flower or sprig of green will often take an invalid's mind from
the food, and the attractiveness of the whole will tempt him to
eat what would otherwise remain untouched. Serving the meal
in courses will add to the interest. Place the courses on the
tray in the order in which they are to be eaten and within easy
reach of the patient. Do not serve too much of any one food.
Invalids will often take liquid diet through a straw and enjoy
it after the
glass has become tiresome.
650
FOODS AND BEVERAGES FOR INVALIDS 651
ALBUMENIZED
1 egg-white % cup cold milk
2 tablespoons cracked ice Pinch of salt
ARTIFICIAL BUTTERMILK.
1 quart skimmed milk % cup water
1 buttermilk tablet
KUMISS.
1
l
quart milk l /2
l
tablespoons sugar
/4 yeast-cake
Heat the milk to 75 F., add the sugar and the yeast-cake
lukewarm water. Fill sterilized bottles to within
dissolved in
one and one-half inches of top, cork tightly and shake. It
may be necessary to tie the corks on the bottles, as the yeast
causes the milk to ferment and if
gas is produced in considerable
amounts the corks are forced out. Invert the bottles and
place
where they can remain at a temperature of about 70 F. for
ten hours. Place in the
refrigerator inverted and let stand for
twenty-four hours, shaking now and then to prevent the cream
from forming in the mouth of the bottle. If left
standing too
long, it becomes less palatable. It should look like thick foamy
cream when ready to serve. In
opening the bottle care must
be taken not to let the milk foam over.
WHEY
"Whey is the water solution of milk sugar, salts and minerals
which forms the basis of fresh whole milk and which is sepa-
rated from the curd and fat as follows:
y2 rennet tablet 1
cup fresh whole milk
1
tablespoon cold water
Dissolve rennet tablet in water. Warm milk slowly, stirring
until lukewarm not hot (120 F.). A
few drops of milk on
the inside of the wrist should feel comfortably warm. Remove
milk from stove. Add dissolved rfcnnet tablet and stir quickly
for a few seconds, then let stand unmoved until firm. While
warm, cut curd gently into coarse pieces to separate from the
whey and strain carefully through fine bleached muslin (72 to
76 mesh). Sweeten and flavor if desired. Serve as the doctor
orders,
WITH LEMON-JUICE
1 cup hot milk 2 teaspoons sugar
2 tablespoons lemon-juice
Add lemon-juice to hot milk and let stand over hot water
until the milk separates. Strain through a double thickness of
cheese-cloth and add the sugar to the whey.
WITH ORANGE-JUICE Substitute orange-juice for lemon-
juice and use one-half the sugar in the recipe for lemon whey.
EGGS
STEAMED Put a piece of butter in an oatmeal dish, remove
the tea-kettle lid and set the dish over the boiling water. When
the butter is melted, break an egg into the dish, and cover with
FOODS AND BEVERAGES FOR INVALIDS 653
the tea-kettle cover. The egg will cook in a few minutes, will
keep hot, and may be served in the same dish. This is also an
easy way of scrambling eggs without changing the dish.
FOR OTHER WAYS OF SERVING EGGS TO INVALIDS look in the
index for the following recipes: Coddled Eggs, Poached or
Dropped Eggs, Battered or Scrambled Eggs, Shirred Eggs, Baked
Eggs, Toast, Scalloped Eggs, Creamed Eggs,
Egg Timbales, Egg
Eggs Goldenrod, Plain Puffy Omelet, Plain French Omelet,
a la
Cream Omelet, Oyster Omelet, and others, depending on the
condition of the patient to be served.
EGG DRINKS
ALBUMEN WATER No. 1.
1 egg-white Sugar
1 cup ice-water 1 tablespoon lemon-juice
Stir the white of an egg with a sliver fork, and add the water.
Serve plain or sweeten and flavor with lemon -juice. Mix well.
No. 2.
2 teaspoons sugar 1 egg-white
Cereal Dishes
In preparing any of the grain foods for an invalid, take
special care to see that they are well cooked. In some cases the
cereal may be put through a sieve or puree strainer. Whole-
grain foods are important laxative articles of diet.
BANANA GRUEL
Stir banana meal into hot milk, and add sugar to taste.
654
OATMEAL PREPARATIONS
For oatmeal gruel and oatmeal water when the prepared oat
flouris used, follow the directions for barley gruel and water.
OATMEAL WATER
/2 tablespoons rolled oats or 2 tablespoons coarse oatmeal
1
1
2 cups water
OATMEAL JELLY
4 tablespoons rolled oats or 5 1/2 tablespoons coarse oatmeal
1 /2
1
cups water
BARLEY PREPARATIONS
BARLEY GRUEL, No. 1.
Mix the flour with the cold water. Add the boiling water
gradually, stirring constantly, and boil hard for thirty minutes.
Salt to taste. Strain through a very fine sieve.
No. 2.
BARLEY JELLY
2 tablespoons barley flour 2 cups boiling water
4 tablespoons cold water
INDIAN-MEAL GRUEL
2 tablespoons corn-meal 1 quart boiling water
1 tablespoon flour
/2
l
teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons cold water
Mix the meal and flour with the cold water, rub smooth, and
stirthe paste into the boiling water. Stir well, and when the
gruel boils, lower the heat so it will simmer gently for two
hours. Add the salt, cook for one-half hour longer, and serve
with cream or milk.
PANADA
Boiling water 2 soda or graham crackers
RICE JELLY
2 tablespoons rice flour Salt and sugar
1 cup boiling water Cinnamon or lemon-juice, if
Cold water desired
Mix the rice flour with enough cold water to make a thin
paste, and then add the boiling water. Sweeten and salt to
taste, and boil until the rice flour is transparent. Add a little
cinnamon or lemon-juice as flavoring, if desired.
Wet a mold with cold water, pour in the jelly, and when
cold serve with milk or cream and sugar.
656
FLAXSEED LEMONADE
4 tablespoons whole flaxseed 4 tablespoons sugar
1 quart boiling water Juice of 2 lemons
CHICKEN BROTH
1 fowl (3 pounds) 2 tablespoons sago or tapioca
2 quarts cold water or rice
1 teaspoon salt
Wash the chicken and remove all the skin and fat. Cut it
into small pieces, crack the bones well, and place it in a kettle
with two quarts of cold water and let stand one-half hour. Set
the kettle on the fire in a slow heat, add the rice, and gradually
bring the water to the boiling-point. Keep it simmering for
three hours, with the kettle tightly covered. Season with salt,
skim off fat, strain off the broth, and serve. If made the day
before using, the soup may be allowed to cool, when fat may
be more easily removed.
BEEF JUICE
Broil one-half pound round of beef, cut about four inches
square and an inch thick, until both sides are browned and the
meat is well warmed through to start the juices. Two minutes
should be sufficient. Sprinkle with salt, cut in pieces, place in a
presser, lemon-squeezer or potato-ricer and squeeze out all the
juice. One-half pound of beef yields two ounces or four table-
spoons of juice.
Sufficient juice for two servings is generally prepared at one
time. Warm the second serving over boiling water, stirring the
juice constantly until it is a little more than lukewarm and
serve at once.
BEEF TEA Place 1 pound lean, ground beef in a fruit jar.
Add pint cold water, and let stand 1 hour. Place jar in a
1
METHODS OF CANNING
The open-kettle or cooked-in-the-kettle and the cold-pack or
cooked-in-the-can are the two methods of canning now com-
monly used.
and both the jar and its contents are heated simultaneously by
boiling water or steam. This method is recommended for most
658
CANNING, PRESERVING AND JELLY MAKING 659
cayed parts.
4. If there is much variation in size, sort the fruit so that the con-
tents of each jar will be as nearly uniform as possible.
5. Blanch the fruit if necessary in boiling water, a small quantity
at a time, until the skin slips off.
6. Chill the outside of the blanched fruit by immersing it for a
brief period in a large receptacle of cold water. Do not attempt to
cool the fruit thoroughly by this cold dip.
7. Pack the fruit firmly in clean, tested jars to within one-half inch
of the top.
8. Fill the jars with boiling sirup or hot water.
9. Place a new rubber on each jar, adjust the cover of the jar, and
partly seal it by. adjusting only the upper clamp or by slightly screw-
ing the lid.
10. Cook for the required length of time in the hot-water bath, or,
in the case of hard pears, or pineapple, in the pressure cooker. (See
tables pages 664-665.) Be sure to have the jars completely immersed
in water.
Asparagus 40 Pumpkin 60
Beans, string 40 Sauerkraut 40
Beans, shell or Lima .... 50 Spinach and other greens 40
Beets 40 Squash 40
Carrots 40 Succotash 50
Cauliflower 40 Tomatoes and corn, equal
Corn, whole grain 50 parts 50
Corn, cream style 60 Meat 105
Parsnips 40 Fish 90
Peas 40
If the Hot- Water Bath, ^without Acid, Is Used for Canning the
Following Foods, It Is Safer to Boil the Food After Opening
the Can:
currants, sour cherries, and other very sour fruits. Such a sirup may
be made by boiling the thick sirup until it begins to spin a thread.
Vegetables Fruits
1 /
1
2 Ibs.spinach ... = 1 pt. 1 bu. peaches =25 qts.
1 Ib. chard = 1 pt. 1 bu. pears = 3 qts.
12-15 baby beets . .
= 1 pt. 1 bu. plums =28 qts.
20 carrots = 1 pt. 1 bu. red raspberries. = 24 qts.
Y
4 lb. string beans . . = 1 pt. 1 bu. cherries =20 qts.
2 qts. peas = 1 pt. 1 bu. tomatoes .... =18 qts.
4 small ears corn ... = 1
pt.
jars.
CANNING, PRESERVING AND JELLY MAKING 667
Preserves
Preserves are fruits in which the tissues of the fruit have
absorbed a heavy sugar sirup until they are filled with sirup
instead of with water. A
good preserved fruit is plump and
tender in texture and filled with sweetness. It is bright in
BERRY PRESERVES
Follow recipe for strawberry preserves or sun -cooked pre-
serves (pp. 671-672) for all berries except blackberries. Black-
berries do not make satisfactory preserves, on account of the
large hard seeds.
CHERRY PRESERVES
2 pounds sour cherries, l l
/z pounds sugar
weighed after stoning
Add the sugar to the stoned cherries and bring them quickly
to the boiling-point. Cook rapidly until the fruit is clear,
skimming as necessary. Pour at once into clean hot jars and
seal.
FIG PRESERVES
4 pounds fresh figs 1 cup water
2 pounds sugar 1 lemon
Wash and peel the figs. Slice the lemon. Boil the sugar and
water together for ten minutes, then add the figs and lemon.
Cook rapidly until the fruit is clear. Seal in clean hot jars.
PRESERVED GINGER
/2 cups water
1
1 pound fresh ginger roots 1 1 pound sugar
Scrub roots of fresh green ginger thoroughly, using a brush.
Pare with a very sharp knife, and place the roots at once in
cold water. Rinse well and place in fresh cold water. Let stand
over night. Drain, weigh the ginger, place it in a preserving-
kettle,and cover it with cold water. When the water is boil-
ing, skim out the ginger and place it again in cold water. When
CANNING, PRESERVING AND JELLY MAKING 669
quite cool, return to the kettle, add more cold water, and when
the water is boiling, skim out the ginger and lay in cold water,
as before. Do this three times, or until the ginger is tender.
Boil the sugar and water together for ten minutes. Drain
the ginger and add it to the sirup. Bring quickly to the boil-
ing-point; remove from the heat and let it stand over night.
Drain off the sirup, let it come to a boil and repeat the first
process.
Drain off the sirup again, heat to boiling, add the ginger and
simmer until clear. Pour into clean hot jars and seal. It will
be ready to use in two weeks.
GOOSEBERRY PRESERVES
1 pound green gooseberries 1% pounds sugar
Stem the berries, remove the blossom end, and wash the fruit
in cold water. Half cover the gooseberries with water and scald
the fruit until the skins are soft. Add the sugar to the hot
mixture. Bring quickly to the boiling-point and cook until
clear. Seal at once in clean hot jars.
GRAPE PRESERVES
4 pounds Concord grages /2
l
pound of sugar for each
l
/2 cup water to each pound pound of prepared fruit
fruit
Wash the grapes and press the pulp from the skins. (They
are extra nice if seeded.) Boil the sugar and water ten min-
utes. Add the fruit and cook until the grapes are clear and the
sirup is thick. Pour into hot clean jars and seal.
GREEN-GAGE PRESERVES
% pound sugar to each pound of fruit
until the plums are clear and tender. Skim out the fruit, place
on a large platter, and boil the sirup until it coats a spoon,
draining into the kettle all that drains from the fruit on the
platter. When thick enough, return the fruit to the sirup and
bring to a boil. Pour into clean hot jars and seal.
PEACH PRESERVES
% pound sugar and % cup of water to each pound of prepared
fruit
PLUM PRESERVES
6 pounds fruit 4 1/2 pounds sugar 1 cup water
Select small purpleplums and be sure they are sound and not
overripe. Removethe stems, wash the fruit, and pierce each
plum with a fork. Place the plums in an earthen bowl or jar,
cover them with the sugar and add the water. Cover the bowl
and set in a cool place over night. Drain the plums, and boil
the juice for five minutes. Add the plums and cook until clear.
This will take only a few minutes, and care should be taken
not to overcook, as the sirup thickens or jellies after standing.
Pour into hot, clean jars and seal.
CANNING, PRESERVING AND JELLY MAKING 671
QUINCE PRESERVES
3 quarts sugar 3 cups water 4 quarts prepared fruit
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES
4 pounds berries 3 pounds sugar
Pick over, wash, and hull the berries. Add the sugar to the
strawberries, and heat gently until the sugar dissolves and the
juice drawn from the berries. Cook
is
rapidly until the fruit
is plump and transparent and the sirup thick. Pack carefully
in clean, hot jars and seal. All berries except blackberries may
be made into preserves by this method. (See also Sun Cooked
Preserves below.)
SUN-COOKED PRESERVES
Small fruits like strawberries, raspberries, and currants can
be preserved by this process. Wash the fruit, drain thoroughly,
pick over and stem, then weigh it. For each pound of fruit,
allow one pound of sugar and one cup of water. Add the water
to the sugar and cook until the sirup spins a thread. Remove
the sirup from the fire. Add the fruit and let it remain in the
sirup over night. With a skimmer remove the fruit from
the
sirup, and lay it on platters or flat dishes. Cook the sirup again
until it threads. Pour the hot sirup over the berries, cover the
platter with cheese-cloth or glass and place in the direct
sun-
light. A glass cover hastens the process. Allow the fruit to
stand three or four days in the sunshine, or until the sirup is
thick and jelly-like in consistency. Pack in clean jars and seal.
TOMATO PRESERVES
1 pound small, yellow 1 lemon
tomatoes % pound sugar
Select the small yellow tomatoes that are about the size of
small plums. Pour boiling water over them and cover tightly
for two minutes, then quickly drain and cover with cold water.
This will loosen the skins. Peel the tomatoes, being careful not
to break them. If any are found with the skins still un-
loosened, treat them again with boiling water. Place the sugar
and tomatoes in a crock or enamel bowl and let stand over
night. Drain off the juice and boil rapidly until it threads.
Add the tomatoes and the thinly sliced lemon. Cook until clear
and thick. Seal in clean hot jars.
Wash the tomatoes, remove any dark parts about the stems,
and weigh them. Cover them with boiling water, let them
stand five minutes, drain and slice them into a preserving-kettle,
placing a layer of the tomatoes, then a layer of sliced lemon,
then the sugar with the ginger sprinkled over it. Let the mix-
ture stand over night. Drain and boil the sirup for ten minutes.
CANNING, PRESERVING AND JELLY MAKING 673
Skim, add the tomatoes and cook rapidly until they are clear.
Pour into clean, hot jars and seal.
Jams
Jam is small fruits which are either mashed
made from whole
or cooked to a pulp with sugar. Good jam is soft, tender and
jelly-like in texture, bright and sparkling in color and of the
same consistency throughout the mixture.
SOME UNDERRIPE FRUIT DESIRABLE Portions of fruit left
from canning, or broken fruit, may be used for jam, but at
least a portion of the fruit should be underripe. Overripe fruit
lacks pectin and some pectin, a jellying substance, is necessary
for good jam.
COOK THE FRUIT BEFORE ADDING SUGAR In order to de-
velop the pectin substance, the fruit should be cooked for a few
minutes before the sugar is added. If the fruit does not have
sufficient juice, add just enough water to keep it from burning
and cook it in a covered kettle.
NOT TOO MUCH SUGAR The best jam is made by using not
more than three-fourths pound of sugar to each pound of fruit.
COOK QUICKLY AND NOT TOO LONG After the sugar is
added to the fruit, continue the cooking quickly until the jam
gives a jelly-like appearance. It should hang in sheets from the
spoon or set quickly if a portion is dropped on a cool plate. It
should be tender and jelly-like, not thick and tough. Jam
thickens on cooling, and an allowance must be made for this
or the jam will be overcooked. Overcooking also darkens the
product. It is better to make a small amount of jam at a time.
Use enamel or porcelain cooking utensils, if possible.
STIR TO PREVENT BURNING Jam is a highly concentrated
mass and will burn quickly unless it is stirred from the bottom.
Use a wooden spoon and lift the mass from the bottom. It is
better to cook jam briskly and watch it carefully for twenty
or thirty minutes than to let it simmer for hours.
SEAL IN HOT, CLEAN JARS Jams, like preserves, are safer
from molds if they are sealed in hot, clean jars.
BLACKBERRY JAM
Mash the berries, cook them in their own juice until they are
thoroughly heated, then press them through a sieve to remove
674
fNXVSV
FIG JAM
1/4 cups sugar to 1 pint of stewed figs
Select soft, ripe, white figs, remove the stems and peel.
Mash, add just enough water to prevent scorching and cook
until they are soft. Add sugar and cook rapidly until the mix-
ture is thick and amber colored with a shiny surface.
STRAWBERRY JAM
%. pound sugar to 1 pound hulled berries
Pick over the berries and remove the hulls. Put the fruit on
the fire alone, mashing it as it heats; a wooden potato-masher
is best for the
purpose. Bring the fruit to a boil, stirring al-
most constantly and crushing any berries that may remain
whole. Add the sugar to the fruit and boil together until thick
(not over twenty minutes), stirring well to prevent burning.
Pack in clean hot jars and seal.
GOOSEBERRY JAM
Follow directions for strawberry jam, but boil the fruit alone
until the skins are soft, then add the sugar and boil until the
mixture is thick. Avoid too long cooking, as the juice will
thicken on standing.
GRAPE JAM
Stem the grapes, wash, and press the pulp from the skins.
Place the pulp in a kettle, cook until soft, then rub through a
sieve to remove the seeds. Cook the skins until soft in just
CANNING, PRESERVING AND JELLY MAKING 675
enough water to cover. Combine the two mixtures and boil for
five minutes. Measure and allow one cup of sugar to every pint
of fruit. Cook until thick, which will take but a few minutes.
Pack in clean hot jars and seal.
PEACH JAM
5 pounds peaches 1 cup water 3 pounds sugar
Choose good peaches that are not firm enough for canning.
Remove the stones and cut in slices. Put the water in the pre-
serving-kettle and add the peaches. Cover and cook until soft,
stirring to prevent sticking. Add the sugar and cook until
thick and jelly-like. Pack in clean, hot jars and seal.
Marmalades
Marmalades are usually made from fruits which have some
jelly-making properties, that is, in which both pectin and acid
are present. Thin slices of fruit are used and the product shows
a clear jelly or jelly-like sirup in which the sliced or cut fruit
is suspended. If a fruit is used which lacks these jellying prop-
erties, they are often supplied by adding sliced orange or lemon
or by using some tart apple- juice.
Marmalades are prepared in the same way as jams, except that
the fruit remains in thin slices or cut portions and is not mashed.
They should be clear and sparkling in color.
ORANGE MARMALADE
12 thin-skinned oranges 3 lemons
Dice the carrots and cook them until they are tender, in as
littlewater as possible. Slice the oranges in thin pieces and
add the juice and grated rind of the lemon. Measure the carrot
and fruit, and add two-thirds as much sugar. Simmer the mix-
ture until it is clear. Turn it into jelly glasses, and when it is
cold, cover it with hot paraffin.
AMBER MARMALADE
/z quarts water
l
1 grapefruit 3
1 orange 5 pounds sugar
1 lemon
GRAPEFRUIT MARMALADE
1 pound peeled grapefruit % pound sugar
1 quart water /4
l
pound grapefruit peel
STARTING POINT
THE FINISHED PROD-
UCT WILL BE GOLDEN
r
ORANGE MARMALADE
1 W
FRUITS AND BER-
RIES ARE ALWAYS
IN SEASON IF YOU
PRESERVE THEM
CANNING, PRESERVING AND JELLY MAKING 677
RHUBARB MARMALADE
Rhubarb for marmalade should be young and fresh. Cut it
into inch lengths without peeling. Weigh it. Allow three-
fourths pound of sugar to every pound of rhubarb. Place the
sugar and rhubarb in a preserving-kettle, heat it very slowly
and boil until thick and clear. Pack in clean hot jars and seal.
Conserves
Conserves, like marmalades, may be made of large or small
fruits. They differ from marmalade
in that several fruits may
be combined and nuts may be added. In this way, it is possible
to develop pleasing combinations of flavors and to combine
fruits which have good acid or pectin content with fruits that
lack these qualities. Conserves are made in the same way as
marmalades. When nuts are used, they are added after all the
cooking is done, as heat toughens the nut-meats.
CHERRY CONSERVE
3 pints pitted sour cherries 2% cups sugar
1 pint black raspberries
Combine all the ingredients, and cook until thick and clear.
No. 2.
Combine the grated rind and juice of the oranges and lemons
with the other ingredients and cook until the mixture is thick
and clear. Pour into hot, clean glasses and seal. This is an
excellent relish with game.
CURRANT CONSERVE
5 pints currants 2 oranges
6 2/2> cups sugar 1 cup walnut-meats
Combine the grated rind and juice of the oranges with the
currants and sugar and cook until the mixture is thick and clear.
Add the nuts, pour into clean, hot glasses and seal.
GRAPE CONSERVE
2 pints grapes 2% cups sugar
2 oranges 1 cup walnut-meats
1 cup seeded raisins
"Wash, stem, and seed the grapes. Slice the oranges very thin,
and add to the grapes. Add the raisins and sugar and cook
until the mixture is transparent and thick. Add the chopped
walnut-meats. Pack while hot in hot, clean jars and seal.
PINEAPPLE CONSERVE
1 quart pineapple pulp and 1 lemon
juice 3 cups sugar
2 oranges
PLUM CONSERVE
l
2 quarts plums 5 /2 cups sugar 1 lemon
Wash and pit the plums. Add a small amount of water and
cook in a covered kettle until the skins are soft. Add the
sugar, and grated rind and juice of the lemon, and cook until
the mixture is thick and clear. Pack into hot, clean glasses and
seal.
Fruit Butters
Fruit butters are among the most wholesome of fruit sweets,
as they contain a large^^mount of fruit to a small amount of
GRAPE BUTTER
4 pounds grapes 1 pound sugar
Wash and stem the grapes. Cook in a small amount of
water until the skins are soft. Press the pulp through a strainer,
to remove seeds and skins. Add the sugar and cook until thick
and clear. Pour into hot, clean glasses and seal,
PEACH BUTTER
2 quarts peach pulp 4 cups sugar 1 cup water
and measure the fruit. Place it in the pre-
Pare, stone, slice
serving-kettle with the water and heat it very slowly. When
68o
^wv
it is soft,pass the peaches through a fine sieve, return the pulp
to the fire, add the sugar, and cook until thick and clear. Pack
in hot, clean jars and seal.
APPLE BUTTER
Wash the apples, and cut them in eighths. Cook them in a
small amount of water until they are tender. Put them through
a sieve. To each cup of pulp add four tablespoons of sugar
and cook the mixture until it is thick. If the apples lack flavor,
a small amount of lemon- juice and grated rind may be added.
Pour into hot, clean glasses and seal.
6. Two parts pears, one part orange, and one part pineapple.
7. Two
pounds quinces, two oranges.
Equal parts grapes and crabapples, with nuts.
8.
orange.
12. One part peaches, one part pineapple, one part white
FRUIT JELLIES
Fruit-jelly is made by combiningfruit-juices and sugar in the
right proportions and under the right conditions. To be good
for jelly, a fruit- juice must contain acid and a substance called
pectin. Pectin is the essential jelly-making substance. Some
fruits contain acid and pectin in proper proportions for mak-
ing perfect jelly. With other fruit- juices either acid or pectin
has to be supplied by some other fruit in order to make good
jelly. Asour juice makes a more tender jelly than one that
contains little acid. Without sufficient pectin the mass will not
jelly.
Quantity of Sugar
Probably many of the failures in jelly-making are caused by
the addition of too much sugar. Currants, underripe grapes,
green gooseberries, barberries, and wild apples are practically
the only fruit- juices that require an equal measure of sugar.
Two- thirds as much
sugar as juice is a good proportion for
most on next page gives the proportions of
fruits; the table
juices and sugar for different kinds of jelly.
FESTIVE FLAVORS
Apple and crab apple jelly take on a note of gaiety if flavored
with a spray of the leaves of rose geranium, lemon verbena or
fresh mint. the sprigs into the boiling jelly just before
Drop
it is finished jelly while pouring. The
and allow to cool with the
jelly glass can also be decorated by enclosing a flower. Use a
wild rose or other simple flower. "Wash, and with the petals
damp press it to the bottom of the glass. Add a spoonful of the
jelly, partly cool and allow it to solidify before filling the re-
mainder of the glass.
CANNING, PRESERVING AND JELLY MAKING 683
Cherry )
comk m ed in the following proportions . .
y t 1 ..... %
Rhubarb S
com ^ ne<^ in tne following proportions
y ^
I ..... %
Apple )
i/3 l
Blueberry > combined in the following proportions 54 / 1 ..... 2/s
Rhubarb ) i/3 )
y J
(
comb me<i in the following proportions 1.. .
.%
Pineapple T| J
Peach )
c 0111 ^ 116 ^ i n tne following proportions . .
y c 1 ..... %
Apple ) combined in the following proper- l
/z \ 2
,
l
..... ^3
Strawberry > tions /2 )
Apple 73
3
Quince combined in the following proportions /4
Cranberry
Blueberry (
combined in the following proportions y J
n ^^~
8
JELLY JEWELS IN CUSTARD
CUPS WRAPPED IN CELLO-
PHANE, FOR CHRISTMAS OR
"*>N VOYAGE GIFTS
684
v^v.
Measure the juice and boil it rapidly for five minutes, skim-
ming it ifnecessary. Add
the sugar and stir the juice until the
sugar is Heating the sugar seems to save no time,
dissolved.
nor does it seem to improve the quality of the jelly. Cook the
juice very rapidly, to obtain a bright, clear product; long, slow
cooking gives a dull, dark jelly of inferior texture.
JELLY TEST To test the jelly, take up a small amount of
the juice in a spoon and allow it to drop from the side of the
spoon. When the drops flow together and sheet from the
spoon, the jelly is done and should be removed from the heat
at once.
METHOD II
The ready-to-use pectins are very helpful in making jelly.
It does not matter if the fruit is low in natural pectin, the pectin
extract will jelly any fruit with which it is used. Hence, many
fruits such as cherry, raspberry, peach, etc., which do not make
a jelly alone, can be used with concentrated pectin.
good This
assurance of success recommands it to the woman who has never
been a highly successful jelly-maker. Others prefer to use it
because it is always ready; and also because the pectin extract
has been subjected to much heat in preparation and is very
concentrated, so that it is neither necessary nor wise to heat
the fruit more than the few moments the directions advise.
Unfortunately sometimes more heat is used than directed and
consequently the pectin breaks down and the jelly is unsuc-
cessful. Much the same thing happens when jelly made by the
usual method is overcooked.
Since jellies or jams made with ready-to-use pectins require
little cooking, there is little loss from evaporation and so larger
quantities are obtained than when the natural pectin of the
fruit is depended upon.
CANNING, PRESERVING AND JELLY MAKING 685
BARBERRY JELLY
Gather the berries just before the first frost. Remove the
stems, wash and measure the berries, and to every two quarts
allow one pint of water. Cook until the berries are soft, take
from the fire, drain, and measure the juice. To each cup o
juice allow one cup of sugar, for barberries require more sugar
than most fruits. Boil the juice for five minutes, add the
sugar and cook until it meets the jelly test; then turn into hot,
clean glasses. When cool cover with paraffin.
686
LOQUAT JELLY
Wash the loquats carefully, remove the blossom end, and
cut the fruit in half. Put the fruit in a preserving-kettle and
add water to cover. Cook gently till the loquats are tender.
Strain and measure the juice. Bring to the boiling-point, boil
five minutes, and add three-fourths of a cup of sugar for each
cup of juice. Boil until the jelly point is reached, strain, and
pour into hot clean glasses. When cool, cover with hot
paraffin.
MINT JELLY
"Wash the mint and chop it fine. To each cup of chopped
mint add one-fourth cup sugar and one-fourth cup water and
let itstand over night or for several hours. Place it over the
heat and bring it to the boiling-point.
Make apple jelly, using two-thirds cup sugar to each cup of
apple-juice. When the jelly test is observed, add green vegetable
coloring and one or two tablespoons of the prepared mint for
each quart of apple-juice.
QUINCE JELLY
Quinces require long cooking to become tender. They may
be cooked in the fireless cooker or under steam pressure in both ;
cases they acquire a rich, dark red color. Quinces have too little
acid and too much pectin to make a desirable jelly when the
juice used alone. An equal amount or twice as much tart
is
ROSELLE JELLY
2 cups roselle-juice \
l
/z cups sugar 2 teaspons lemon-juice
Wash roselles, cover them with water and cook until they
are tender. Strain, measure the juice, boil it for five minutes,
and add sugar and lemon-juice in the proportion given above.
Cook until it sheets from the spoon. Skim, and
pour into hot,
clean glasses. When cool, cover with paraffin.
PICKLES AND RELISHES
Varieties of Pickles
SWEET PICKLES Fruits, ripe cucumbers and melon-rinds are
pickled in a sweet, spiced vinegar solution.
MIXED PICKLES Various combinations of vegetables may be
pickled together as mixed pickles.
687
688
V^N..
PICKLED BEETS
Cook
small beets until they are tender. Plunge them into
cold water and slip off the skins. Cover them with spiced
vinegar (recipe above), and simmer them for fifteen minutes.
PICKLES AND RELISHES 689
Seal them in clean, hot jars. Golden wax beans, the stems of
Swiss chard, or very small carrots may be pickled in the same
way.
CUCUMBER PICKLES
100 cucumbers 2 teaspoons salt
Vinegar . 1 cup sugar
1 ounce mustard seed 2 red peppers
1 ounce cloves
Use the smallest cucumbers you can procure, making two and
one-half inches the limit of length. Put the spices in thin
muslin bags, using at least two bags. Place the cucumbers in a
kettle with enough good vinegar of medium strength to cover
them. Place the bags of spices in the vinegar, together with
the salt and sugar, and the peppers cut in rings. Heat the vine-
gar as slowly as possible when it is scalding hot but not boiling,
;
the pickles are ready to set away. If this recipe is carefully fol-
lowed, satisfactory results will be obtained. If the vinegar
boils, the pickles will soften.
Pare the cucumbers, quarter and take out the seeds, then
cut the quarters into medium-sized pieces. Scald in salted water
(two tablespoons salt to one quart water) , then drain and sim-
mer in clear water until they are tender but firm. Drain well.
Tie the spices in a bag and boil them with the vinegar and the
sugar for five minutes. Pour this mixture over the cucumbers,
cover the jar and set away. The next day pour off the sirup,
boil for ten minutes and pour over the cucumbers again. Flavor
is improved by repeating this process several times. Place the
pickles in clean, hot jarsand seal.
morning remove the cucumbers, scald the brine and skim it,
turn it them stand for two days.
over the pickles again and let
Repeat this process on the third morning and let the pickles
stand two days longer. Then scald the brine each morning
until the eighth day, removing the pickles and pouring the hot
brine over them each time. On the eighth day, remove the
pickles from the brine, cover them with spiced vinegar, heat
thoroughly, and place them in clean, hot jars.
No. 2.
7 pounds cucumbers 1tablespoon allspice
1 ounce cinnamon 1quart vinegar
2 ounces cloves 3 pounds sugar
fully and remove each piece when it is clear. Pack in clean, hot
jars and seal.
MUSTARD PICKLES
1 pint cucumbers, about 2 3 green peppers, chopped
inches long 1cup small carrots, or sliced
1 pint large cucumbers, sliced carrots halved or quartered
1 pint pickling onions 1% cups white sugar
1 cup string beans, cut di- 4 tablespoons flour
agonally in 1-inch pieces
l
/2 tablespoon turmeric
1 pint small green tomatoes 1 teaspoon celery salt
1 pint cauliflower, cut in Vinegar
small pieces 4 tablespoons powdered
3 red peppers, chopped mustard
DILL PICKLES
Choose cucumbers over five inches in length. Wash them
well and pack them in earthenware jars or wooden casks. On
each layer of cucumbers place a thin layer of dill, stalks, leaves
and seed balls included. When all are packed in, cover them
with a brine solution carrying forty per cent, salt (approxi-
mately two pounds salt to three quarts water). Place a layer
of grape or horseradish leaves on top and weigh the whole down
with a clean plate and stone. Two or three weeks will be re-
quired for curing.
SPANISH TOMATOES
24 green tomatoes, sliced 1tablespoon peppercorns
1 large onion 1tablespoon mustard seed
2 green peppers 1 cup brown sugar
l
/4 cup salt 2 quarts vinegar
PICKLED ONIONS
Peel small onions until the white is reached. Scald in strong
salted water (four tablespoons salt to one quart water), then
drain. Pack in jars and sprinkle white mustard and pepper
over the onions. Cover them with a boiling hot solution of
vinegar. When cold, put in clean, cold jars and seal. One
tablespoon of salad oil may be added to the top of the mixture.
around and around the pepper. Scald well and then drop into
ice-water to crisp them. Drain well. Make a sirup, using a
proportion of one cup of sugar to two cups of vinegar. Put the
peppers into clean, hot jars, fill to overflowing with hot sirup,
and seal.
PEPPER MANGOES
Green peppers 2 tablespoons white mustard
Brine seed
1 quart chopped cabbage 1 tablespoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon salt 1 cup sugar
1 tablespoon cloves Vinegar
Remove the stem ends of green peppers, carefully extract the
seeds and midribs and lay the peppers in strongly salted water
(one-half cup salt to two quarts water) for twenty-four hours.
Chop the cabbage fine and add the salt, mustard seed, cloves,
cinnamon and sugar, mixing them well. Drain the peppers,
stuff them with the prepared cabbage, replace the pepper caps
and tie them in position. Pack the peppers in a stone jar and
cover them with strong cold vinegar. They will be ready to
use in two or three weeks.
GINGER PEARS
pounds hard pears
l
5 /$ cup preserved ginger
3 cups water 3 lemons, juice and grated
5 pounds sugar rind
Remove the skin and cores from the pears and cut the fruit
in slices lengthwise. Add the water and cook until the pears
are tender. Add the sugar, juice and grated rind of the
lemons, the ginger cut in small pieces, and simmer the mixture
until it is thick. Pour into clean, hot jars and seal.
PICKLES AND RELISHES 693
PICKLED CITRON
2 pounds citron 1 lemon
2 pounds sugar 1 tablespoon cinnamon
1 pint vinegar 1 teaspoon cloves
1 pint water 1 teaspoon allspice
Pare the citrons, and cut in medium thin slices. Soak over
night in salt water (two tablespoons salt to one quart water).
Drain off the brine and cook the citron in clear water until it is
tender. Add the citron to the hot pickling solution made from
the vinegar, sugar and spices, and boil it rapidly until it be-
comes clear. Seal it in hot, clean jars.
SPICED CURRANTS
4 quarts currants 1teaspoon allspice
2 pounds white sugar 1teaspoon cloves
1 pint vinegar 2 teaspoons cinnamon
Stem the fruit, and wash it. Make a sirup of the sugar, vine-
gar and spices and boil for five minutes. Add the fruit and
cook until the mixture is thick and clear. Seal in clean, hot
jars.
SPICED PLUMS
4 quarts plums 1 pint vinegar
3 pounds sugar 1 tablespoon cloves
1 tablespoon ground cinna- 1 tablespoon allspice
mon
Make from the vinegar, sugar and spices. Boil for
a sirup
five minutes. Prick each plum with a fork and pour the boiling
sirup over the fruit. Let the whole stand three days, then skim
out the plums, boil down the sirup until quite thick, add the
plums and heat to boiling. Seal in clean, hot jars.
Dip the peaches quickly in hot water and remove the skins.
Remove skins from the pears by paring. Boil the sugar, the
694
*VXN^N^
No. 2.
/2
l
peck peaches or pears 1 pint vinegar
2 pounds brown sugar 1 ounce stick cinnamon
Cloves
Split the peppers and remove the seeds. Chop the peppers
coarsely, pour boiling water over them and let stand for five
minutes. Drain, pour more boiling water over them, and let
PICKLES AND RELISHES 695
stand ten minutes. Drain and add the chopped onions. Boil
the vinegar, sugar, and salt for five minutes, and add all the
other ingredients. Cook the mixture ten minutes after it has
come to a boil. Pack in clean, hot glass jars.
Soak green and red peppers in brine for twenty- four hours,
using one cup salt to one gallon water. Take from the brine
and freshen in clear, cold water, from one to two hours. Drain
well, cut open, remove seeds and white sections, and chop the
peppers. Put cabbage and onions through the food-chopper
separately and measure before mixing. Add chopped cabbage
and onions to chopped peppers. Add salt, spices, whole peppers,
sugar and vinegar. Let the mixture stand over night in a
covered crock or enameled vessel. Drain, and heat the liquid.
When hot add the other ingredients and cook for ten minutes.
Seal in clean, hot jars.
CORN RELISH
18 ears sweet corn 1 quart vinegar
1 small cabbage 2 cups brown sugar
l
1 cup chopped celery /2 cup salt
4 onions 3 tablespoons mustard
3 large green peppers
Blanch the corn for two minutes and cut the kernels from
the ear. Chop the cabbage, celery, onions and peppers. Com-
696
^XN^V^
bineall the ingredients and cook until the vegetables are tender
BEET RELISH
1 quart chopped cabbage 2 cups vinegar
1 quart chopped cooked beets 1 cup sugar
1 cup grated horseradish Salt
No. 1. PICCALILLI
1 peck green tomatoes 1 cup sugar
6 green peppers 1 tablespoon cloves
6 onions 1 tablespoon cinnamon
1 cup salt 4 tablespoons allspice
1 cup horseradish Vinegar
Chop the tomatoes, peppers and onions very fine. Stir all
together with the salt, and let the mixture stand over night. In
the morning pour off the water, add the remaining ingredients
and cover with vinegar. Cook slowly until tender, tasting at
the last, and adding more salt if needed. Seal in clean, hot
jars.
No. 2.
Chop the vegetables, cover with salt, and let stand over night.
In the morning, drain and press in a cloth to remove all the
liquid possible. Add the vinegar, sugar, and spices and sim-
mer until clear. Seal in clean, hot jars.
PICKLES AND RELISHES 697
No. 1. CHOW-CHOW
4 quarts green tomatoes 1 quart vinegar
/4 cup salt cup brown or white sugar
l
1
pint cucumbers /2
l
1 teaspoon ground allspice
1 green pepper 1 tablespoon ground mustard
1 bunch celery
Chop the tomatoes, add the salt and mix. Let stand over
night. Next morning
drain the tomatoes and add the onions,
cucumbers, pepper, and celery, chopped fine, the vinegar, sugar
and spices. Put the mixture in an enamel kettle, and cook
until clear. Stir well with a wooden spoon, pack in hot, clean
jars and seal.
Ground spices make a dark pickle. Whole spices may be
used; they should be tied in a cloth bag and removed before the
pickles are sealed.
No. 2.
18 green tomatoes /2
l
cup salt
8 cucumbers 2 quarts vinegar
5 dozen small green onions 1 cup brown sugar
Dice the tomatoes, celery, and cucumbers, skin the onions and
remove the tops, cut the beans in small pieces and separate the
cauliflower into flowerets. Put all the vegetables, including the
chopped red peppers, into an earthenware crock or bowl and
sprinkle with the salt. Let stand twenty-four hours, then drain
off the liquid. Heat the vinegar with the sugar and spices
to the boiling-point, add the vegetables and cook until they
are tender. Pack the pickles in clean, hot jars and seal.
CHILI SAUCE
12 large ripe tomatoes 2 tablespoons sugar
2 large onions 1 tablespoon cinnamon
Peel the tomatoes and onions and chop them fine. Chop
the peppers very fine. Stir all together, and add salt, sugar,
698
^v^vy
cinnamon and vinegar. Boil for one hour, stirring well, and
seal in clean, hot jars. This sauce gives a delicious zest to any
sort of cold meat.
No . i. TOMATO CHUTNEY
4 pounds ripe tomatoes 2 cups brown sugar
1 pound pared, chopped 1 cup seeded raisins
apples 1 teaspoon cinnamon
3 onions, chopped fine 1 teaspoon mustard
'
l
1 pint strong vinegar /2 teaspoon cayenne
2 tablespoons salt
Chop the vegetables and then the apples. Combine the in-
gredients and cook until the chutney is thick and clear. Seal
it in hot, clean jars.
CRANBERRY CATCHUP
2J/2pounds cranberries 1 tablespoon cinnamon
Vinegar 1 teaspoon ground cloves
2% cups sugar
"Wash and pick over the cranberries. Cover them with vine-
gar and cook until they burst. Force through a sieve. Add
the other ingredients, return the mixture to the heat and sim-
mer until thick. Seal in clean, hot jars. Serve as a relish with
poultry or meat.
GRAPE CATCHUP
4 pounds grapes 2 teaspoons cloves
2 pounds sugar 2 teaspoons allspice
1 pint vinegar 2 tablespoons cinnamon
MUSHROOM CATCHUP
10 pounds mushrooms 1 teaspoon ground allspice
/2
l
cup salt 1 teaspoon ground cloves
1 cup vinegar 1 teaspoon horseradish
Few grains cayenne 1 small onion, chopped
Wash the tomatoes and force them through a wire sieve, then
strain through a jelly-bag. The liquid is not used in the
catchup.
Thin the pulp with the vinegar. Season with salt, pepper,
garlic, allspice, and cloves. Bottle in sterilized containers and
seal. This catchup retains the taste of the fresh tomatoes and is
an excellent flavoring for soups and sauces.
Chop the tomatoes and onions, sprinkle with salt, and let
stand three hours. Drain well and put the pulp in a preserv-
ing-kettle with the other ingredients. Cover with vinegar, and
boil slowly for one hour. Seal in clean, hot jars. Less mustard
may be used if a less hot catchup is desired.
700
PICKLED HORSERADISH
l
1 cup grated horseradish /2 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons white sugar 3 cups cold vinegar
TOMATO PUREE
1 gallon tomatoes 1 bay-leaf
Cook the mixture until the tomatoes are tender and put it
through a strainer. Boil the pulp until it is reduced to one-
half the original volume. Seal it in hot, clean jars.
The culls left from canning tomatoes may be made into soup
or puree.
TOMATO PASTE
Spread thick tomato puree on dry plates or flat granite pans
which have been brushed with unsalted fat. As soon as a film
forms over the top, loosen the paste with a spatula^ and turn
it on to a screen covered with cheese-cloth.
Dry it in the sun
or a very slow oven. When it is so dry that it can be handled
without sticking, roll it in paraffin paper, fold under the ends
of the paper, and store it in a tin box or a glass jar.
The paste may be used for soup, sauces, scalloped dishes, etc.
Soak it in cold water until it is soft, before adding it to any
hot mixture. One teaspoon of the paste makes one cup of soup.
BRANDIED PEACHES
1 peck peaches, skinned Sugar to half their weight
1
quart brandy
Varieties of Casseroles
Casseroles of different sizes, shapes and materials, are con-
venient additions to the cooking equipment, and should be
chosen with consideration for the needs of the family. They
come in many from the individual ramekin up to one
sizes
that will hold two They may be had in various
chickens.
shapes oval and round, shallow and deep. They are made in
a variety of materials glass, vitrified china, earthenware, iron
and aluminum and in a color-range that allows one to choose
according to personal preference brown, yellow, green, blue
and mixtures.
Care of Casseroles
Casseroles will last indefinitely if properly treated. It is wise
to avoid a sudden and great change in temperature, such as
occurs when is taken from a hot oven and placed in
a casserole
a wet sink. not advisable to set a glass or earthenware
It is
CHICKEN EN CASSEROLE
1 chicken 12 potato balls
Butter, salad oil, or other fat 1 carrot, sliced
1 pint rich brown stock 6 small onions
12 button mushrooms Salt, pepper, paprika
Wash the chicken and cut it up. Saute the pieces in a little
fat until well browned on all sides. Place in a greased casserole,
add brown stock, cover and cook in a slow to moderate oven
(350 F.) for an hour.
When the chicken has been cooking for an hour, saute the
carrot slices, the potato balls, the onions and the mushrooms
in a little fat, stirring them lightly around until they are well
browned. Put these with the chicken in the casserole, season
with salt, pepper and paprika, add more salt if needed, cover
CASSEROLE AND OVEN COOKERY 703
PIGEONS EN CASSEROLE
Pigeons or squabs 1 Spanish onion
Bacon Veal broth or white stock
3 tablespoons butter or other Vegetables, as desired
fat Flour
Clean and wash young pigeons and tie a strip of bacon around
each one, or lard the breasts if preferred. Place the butter or
other fat in a casserole, slice a mild Spanish onion over the fat,
arrange the pigeons on the onion in the casserole, cover the
casserole and set over a low heat with an asbestos mat under
the casserole to protect it from direct lieat and to insure slow
cooking. Cook on top of the stove for fifteen minutes. Add
enough veal broth or white stock to half cover the pigeons and
set in the oven (350 P.) to cook until tender (2-2 /2 hrs.).
l
STEAK EN CASSEROLE
3 tablespoons butter or Pepper
other fat Turnip balls
3 tablespoons flour Carrot balls
2 cups stock Potato balls
Salt Small onions
Parsley 2 pounds of lJ/2-inch steak
Slice theonion and cut the raw veal in cubes. Cook together
in a bacon fat, until brown. Transfer to casserole, pour
little
over it the brown stock and season with pepper and paprika.
Place in moderate oven (350 F.). Add more fat to that in
the frying-pan and brown in this the potato balls, small onions,
and slices of carrot and turnip. Add the vegetables and salt to
the casserole when the meat is partly cooked. Finish the cook-
ing, adding more stock if necessary. This dish should cook two
hours. If the broth is too thin when ready to serve, thicken
slightly with browned flour rubbed smooth in water.
LAMB EN CASSEROLE
6 slices of lamb 1 pint vegetable balls
2 tablespoons melted butter or 12 small onions
other fat Seasoning
2 cups brown stock
bake (at 350 F.) for an hour, then remove tke cover and
season with salt and pepper. Leave the cover off and cook until
the chops are tender and nicely browned on top.
Four tartapples,, pared, cored and cut in eighths > used in
place of the sweet potatoes, make an excellent casserole dish
with pork chops.
Boil the rice in the water and mash smooth with the fat.
Season with salt and pepper to taste. Line a well -greased
casserole with the mixture, pressing the paste firmly against
bottom and sides, and leaving a large hollow in the center. Set
in a cold place until firm. Meanwhile boil the liver, drain,
chop fine and season with salt. Heat the soup stock, seasoned
with caramel (See Index). Make a brown sauce with the fat,
browned flour and soup stock, and add the minced liver. Fill
the hollow in the center of the rice with the liver mixture,
sprinkle with crumbs and brown in the oven.
CASSEROLE AND OVEN COOKERY 707
RICE EN CASSEROLE
2 cups chopped cold meat 2 tablespoons butter or other
3 eggs fat
/$ cup milk
l
2 tablespoons tomato catchup
2 cups boiled rice Salt
Celery-salt
SPANISH RICE
% cup rice
l
/2 cup chopped green pepper
2 tablespoons fat or pimientos
5 cups water Salt
2 onions Pepper
2 cups tomatoes Paprika
Fry the rice in the fat until brown, then add water and boil
until soft. Drain. Saute the onions in a little fat; mix with
tomatoes and chopped peppers or pimientos, and add to the
rice. Add seasoning, and place in a greased casserole. Bake
(350 F.) for thirty minutes.
RICE A LA CREOLE
1 cup chopped boiled ham 2 cups fine soft crumbs
1 onion 2 tablespoons butter or other
fat
1 cup boiled rice
1 can tomatoes Celery-salt
Pepper and salt
minutes longer. Remove the fat from the ham and try it out.
Dice onion and green pepper, and fry slowly in this fat until
tender. Chop the ham and add it with the onion, green pepper
and seasoning to the spaghetti and tomatoes. Put in casserole
and bake fifteen minutes in a moderate oven (3 50 -400 F.).
SUMMER CASSEROLE
6 hard-cooked eggs 2 teaspoons salt
cups milk
l
3 ripe tomatoes l /2
l
3 tablespoons butter or other /2 cup grated cheese
fat Buttered crumbs
3 tablespoons flour
BANANAS EN CASSEROLE
6 small bananas 1 cup boiling water
1 glass currant or grape jelly 1 lemon
oven (400-450 F.) until the bananas are tender. The cover
may be removed at the last moment and the bananas sprinkled
with granulated sugar and allowed to brown
slightly. Serve
as an entree with game, mutton, or beef.
EGGS YORKSHIRE
y2 cup fat 1
cup pastry flour
2 eggs, beaten 1
teaspoon baking powder
1 cup milk 1/2 teaspoon salt
4 hard or soft cooked eggs
SALMON CASSEROLE
1 -pound can salmon
1 2 cups prepared biscuit
FOR SOUPS, allow from one-half cup to one cup for each
person, the amount depending upon the kind of soup you are
making and whether you are serving it in cups or plates.
FOR DESSERTS, allow from one-half cup to three-quarters cup
for each serving.
Put the skewer on the broiling rack and broil, turning oc-
casionally. For a mixed grill, any meat or vegetable that can
be put under the broiler may be used. Slices of tomato, egg-
plant and pineapple give interesting variety.
nice in a pie.
Fish
WHOLE FISH that will serve six or more persons are not a
wise purchase for the small family. Either buy small fish, such
as smelts, perch and butterfish, or a steak or fillet from one of
the large fish halibut, cod, haddock, salmon and the like.
SHELL FISH are particularly well suited to the needs of the
small family. It is possible to buy just the right amount of
clams, oysters, shrimps, hard and soft-shelled crabs, and some-
times a lobster just large enough for two is procurable. Shad
roe and frogs' legs are luxuries that are more often possible for
the small family than for the large family.
Vegetables
THE LARGE VEGETABLES will give left-overs that can be used
in many ways. A
small cabbage makes one nice salad, and, a
few days later, one cooked dish. Winter squash can be used
up in pies and custards. An egg-plant will give one-half for
stuffing and baking and several slices for frying, with some,
perhaps left to cook in Oriental style. Left-over cooked cauli-
flower may be served cold as a salad, or scalloped.
THE SMALLER VEGETABLES, fresh peas, beans, carrots, beets,
potatoes, etc., can be bought and cooked in exactly the quantity
required, though, as all of these are good for use in salads, it
is
generally wise to cook a little more than you need for one
meal.
SPAGHETTI, MACARONI AND NOODLES are often served as a
vegetable. These, of course, are easily managed if there are
cooking utensils of the right size.
Soups
AJSTY CREAMED VEGETABLE SOUP can be made in a pint
quantity.
A QUART OF MEAT STOCK can be made from the bones and
trimmings of meat purchased for other cooking, and whatever is
not needed for soup can be made into gravies and sauces for
following days. A
thickened meat stock containing small pieces
of meat and plenty of diced vegetables makes a substantial dish.
COOKING FOR TWO 715
Breads
ONE LOAF OF YEAST BREAD can be made at a time, and
quickly, if the proportion of yeast is increased.
ANY BAKING POWDER MIXTURE can be mixed in the desired
quantity, and almost any kind of loaf can be made with it
white, whole wheat, graham, oatmeal, bran, nut, raisin, etc.
Baked in a small pan, these loaves will be used up before they
are dry.
BISCUITS AND MUFFINS are the ideal home made bread for the
small family.
PANCAKES AND WAFFLES are always possible, and may be
served as breakfast or luncheon breads, as accompaniments to
meat or chicken, or as a dessert, with fruit, honey, maple sirup
or a sauce. With a table griddle or iron they can be cooked
in the dining-room and served piping hot.
Cakes
A LAYER OR LOAF CAKE which can be consumed in one or
two meals can be baked in small pans. Half of an average
recipe will make two of these small layers as well as several cup
cakes or a sheet which can be cut into squares and frosted or
not as desired.
IF ROLLED COOKIES ARE Too MUCH TROUBLE, use any
recipe for drop cookies. These can be flattened out with a
knife and made as thin as you wish.
Desserts
PUDDINGS With individual custard cups or ramekins or with
one large enough to serve two, practically any baked pudding
is possible, and with these same molds, custards or any of the
Fruits
These offer most of them come in in-
little difficulty, since
dividual portions. If
you feel impelled to buy the large fruits,
such as watermelon, honeydew and casaba melons, and pine-
apple, serve them in different ways so that they do not become
tiresome before they are eaten up. From the pineapple make
a fruit cup, a salad, an open tart, frosting for cake or a delicious
sherbet or ice-cream. After the first slices of melon have been
used, cut balls and allow them to stand in fruit juice. Serve,
chilled, as a fruit cup. Watermelon can be used for a cooling
sherbet or frappe and the other melons make interesting fruit
salads.
Nuts
These should not be" forgotten in planning meals for two.
Chestnuts, for example, make a delicious vegetable with meat
when boiled and buttered or creamed. Chestnut puree with
sweetened whipped cream is an unusual and delicious dessert.
Blanched walnuts are particularly nice in making many dishes
and can be roasted with a little oil or butter and served hot and
crisp with meat.
pared. Have the table spread with all that is needed in the way
of china, silver and glass. Arrange the sandwiches, relishes and
other cold accessories attractively and conveniently.
2. HAVE ON HAKD EVERYTHING THAT is TO BE USED in the
hot dish, and have it
prepared as far as it is possible to
prepare
it. Meat or or vegetables should be nicely diced, cheese
fish
grated, oysters drained, and eggs broken into a bowl, unless they
are to be cooked separately, as in poaching or frying. Lack of
preparation often results in tiresome delays and unappetizing
confusion, but with everything in readiness the one hot dish
is easily put together before the
guests become tired of watching
the process.
3. BE SURE THAT YOUR EQUIPMENT is SUFFICIENT to pro-
vide for the needs of your guests. If you are giving a waffle
party, do not invite more guests than your waffle iron will
easily serve, so that no one need wait hungrily while others are
eating. The same thing holds true with table grills and chafing-
dishes. There should be enough creamed chicken or Welsh
rabbit to serve everyone generously at the same time.
718
COOKING AT THE TABLE 719
BANANA SAUTE
1 taWespoon batter Flour Sugar
3 bananas 3 to 6 slices sponge cake
Melt the butter in the blazer. Peel the bananas, cut in half
lengthwise, roll lightly in flour and brown on both sides in the
hot fat. Sprinkle with sugar and serve on oblongs of sponge
cake.
CHICKEN HASH
1 Yz cups chopped chicken 1 tablespoon parsley
1 cup diced boiled potatoes Salt Pepper
cup stock or water
l
2 tablespoons fat /z
Mix the chicken and the potatoes lightly together. Melt the
fat in the blazer, add the potato and meat, parsley, seasoning and
stock, and cook directly over the flame.
If desired, one-fourth cup of chopped green peppers may be
added
CRAB RAREBIT
1 tablespoon fat Pepper Parsley
2 tablespoons flour 1 to 2 cups crab meat, fresh
2 cups cream or canned
Ys teaspoon soda 2 tablespoons Parmesan cheese
l
/2 teaspoon salt Toast
ENGLISH MONKEY
1 cup bread-crumbs 1 egg
cup milk
l
1 /2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon fat % teaspoon pepper
cup mild American cheese Toast
l
/2
Soak the bread-crumbs in the milk until they are soft. Melt
the fat in the blazer. Add the cheese cut in dice. When the
cheese has melted, add the softened crumbs, the egg beaten,
and salt and pepper. Cook three minutes longer and pour over
squares of toast.
GRILLED SARDINES
12 large sardines 1 tablespoon lemon-juice 6 pieces toast
OYSTERS A L'INDIENNE
1 pint oysters 2 tablespoons Worcestershire
Bacon sauce
Cloves 1 tablespoon minced parsley
LOBSTER A LA NEWBURG
2 tablespoons butter 1 pint milk
1 teaspoon flour 3 egg-yolks
1 boiled lobster or 1 can Salt
of lobster Cayenne
Place the butter in the blazer and stir it as it foams. Rub
the flour into the butter, add the salt and pepper, then one-
COOKING AT THE TABLE 721
half of the milk, stirring all of the time and being careful that
the flame is not too hot. Beat the yolks of the eggs until frothy,
add the remainder of the milk and stir into the roux. When
the mass is of the consistency of cream, add the lobster, cut up
coarsely, and, when thoroughly heated, serve. If using the fresh
fish, prepare as directed (see page 218). Just before adding
the lobster, rub the coral and the fat together and stir in.
strip)
= about
1 Ib. 15 thin full slices.
Butter 1 Ib. =
about 2 cups.
Celery Seed 1 02. =
4 tablespoons.
Cheese (cottage) 1 Ib. 2 cups. =
Cherries (candied) 1 Ib. =
about 120 cherries. (Maraschino)
1
qt.
=60 to 70 cherries.
Chocolate 1 Ib. = =
16 squares. 1 square grated 5 tablespoons.
Cinnamon = 4 tablespoons.
1 02.
(soda) = 70 to 90 crackers.
1 Ib.
722
FOOD EQUIVALENTS
Egg yolks 1
cup = about 12 yolks.
Eggs (whole) 1
cup = 4 to 6 eggs. = 8 to 9 1 Ib. eggs.
Figs (pressed) 1 Ib. = 25 30 to figs.
Flour (graham) 1 = about 4y cups, (white)
Ib. 2 1 Ib. .
= about
4 cups.
Lard = 2 cups.
1 Ib.
Oils = 2 cups.
1 Ib.
Olives 1 = 60 to 70
qt.
olives.
Peanut Butter = about 1% cups.
1 Ib.
tablespoons.
Prunes = 20 to 80 prunes, average 40 to 60.
1 Ib.
lumps, (powdered)
= 2% to 2% cups. 1 Ib.
Tapioca
= 2y2 cups.
1 Ib.
complicated things. The room is, of course, the ideal spot for
taffy pulls and popcorn-ball parties of the oldsters' childhood.
Entertainment takes the form of games.
COCKTAIL PARTIES
Another form of entertaining that lends itself to the maid-
less home is the cocktail party. Men and women living alone,
as well as householders, find this a simple method of bringing
their friends together in both small and large numbers. The
larger the party, the more formal it is apt to be but this need not
necessarily hold. A refectory table against the wall is the usual
728
^^/xy
setting but nothing is served that cannot be eaten with the fin-
gers. No
individual silver is necessary and only a tiny napkin is
used. Drinks are the special province of the host. He
will make
up his own shopping list and often does his own buying. He
will know the particular tastes and of the
aversions of many
guests (in a small party, of all of them) and guide himself ac-
cordingly. A
woman alone will have a relative or friend act in
this capacity. Likewise, a man entertaining alone may ask his
sister or friend to attend to the menu. Served with the drinks
are tiny and attractive open sandwiches, made of tart, smoked or
spiced ingredients. Sweets are never used, except that in every
group there are those who do not use spirituous liquors, for what-
ever reason. For them, there should be fruit juices, ginger ale,
fruitades or whatever taste dictates. Then serve sweets. In addi-
tion there should be olives, small pickles, stuffed celery, carrot
strips, potato chips in their various shapes or salted nuts. In
cold weather hot hors d'oeuvres served with a toothpick are
especially acceptable: small filled broiled mushrooms, broiled
cocktail sausages with or without a bacon wrapping, broiled
olives wrapped in bacon and many others. It is well to remember
that varnished furniture needs protection from the occasional
all
careless guest. The foot of every stemmed glass should be pro-
vided with a jacket, and tall glasses equally well protected.
Have plenty of coasters in addition.
OUTDOOR PARTIES
Interest in out-of-doors dining has long been evident in Amer-.*
ican families, somewhat colored by local facilities. When a lake
and beach are available, then campfires, beach parties, fish fries
and clambakes vie with picnics and steak fries. Many com-
munities encourage these outdoor activities by providing picnic
grounds and camp sites, often equipped with open-air fireplaces,
tables, benches and other necessary facilities. Recently, however,
many families have discovered that they may serve any meal
out of doors on their own premises with very little effort and
much pleasure. A screened-in porch, a level terrace, a planted
back yard serves admirably or, if very fortunate, a garden
planted and equipped as an outdoor living room. The handy
man about the house or the local carpenter can build collapsible
tables or hinged ones against the house wall, rush or picket
screens and canvas-covered or wooden chairs, at little expense,
THE FRIENDS WHO HONOR US 729
FORMAL PARTIES
The Formal Dinner or Luncheon served by the household
staff will be found thoroughly discussed on pages 64 to 82.
A LIST OF HERBS, SPICES,
EXTRACTS AND FLAVORS
HERBS
BAY LEAVES Flavor particularly good in practically all meat cooking;
also in vegetable and meat soups and sauces.
BORAGE Young tender leaves excellent for salad or pot herbs.
CHERVIL Flavor like parsley but milder. Young leaves may be used
in meat and vegetable soups, salads, and as a garnish. More
attractive than parsley as a garnish but not; as lasting. Used in
a powdered combination called Fines Herbes.
DILL Both leaves and seeds of dill are used. Leaves may be used as
a garnish or to cook with fish. Leaves or the whole plant may
be used to flavor dill pickles.
FENNEL Has a sweet hot flavor. Both seeds and leaves are used.
Seeds may be used as a spice in very small quantity in pies and
baked fruit. Leaves may be boiled with fish. Fresh leaves are
valued by some people.
HOREHOUND Used in candy making.
MARJORAM May be used both green and dry for flavoring soups and
ragouts; and in stuffing for all meats and fish.
MINT May be used fresh in salads, fruit beverages, jellies, conserves,
ices, iced tea, sauces for meats, and added minced to carrots and
peas. Good with apple combinations*
PARSLEY One of the most popular herbs, which may be used in
many ways. A favorite garnish. May be used in fruit and vege-
and gravies, in meat
table salads, in sandwiches, in all soups
minced and added just before serving to practically all
sauces,
vegetables, minced and added to white sauce.
PEPPER GRASS OR PEPPER CRESS Excellent flavor. May be used
in green salads and sandwiches.
SAFFRON May be used to give pale yellow color to bread, cakes,
and sauces, or to color confectionery. Has a pleasant flavor and
good color.
SAGE Used fresh and dried. be used in poultry and meat
May
stuffings; all meat combinations; in
in sausage and practically
cheese and vegetable combinations, as in vegetable loaf, or, curry.
The flowers are sometimes used in salads.
730
HERBS, SPICES, EXTRACTS 731
SEEDS
ALLSPICE Sold whole or ground. Better combined with other spices
in fruit dishes, cakes, pies, pickles, etc.
ANISE Leaves are used for garnishing and for flavor. Oil is ex-
tracted from the seed and used as anise extract.
CARAWAY Seeds have a spicy smell and aromatic taste. Used in
baked and sauerkraut.
fruit, in cakes, breads, soups, cheese
CARDAMOM Flavor especially good in honey combinations.
CLOVES Should be dark brown in color. Usually used with other
spices. The combination gives a better flavor than cloves used
alone. Too much gives an undesirable color as well as a bitter
flavor.
CORIANDER Both leaves and seeds are used. Leaves are used in
salads, soupsand curry sauces. The seeds are used for flavoring
pastries and confections in about the
same way as caraway seeds.
CURRY POWDER A number of spices combined in proper proportion
to give a distinct flavor to such dishes as vegetables of all kinds,
meat, poultry and fish.
MACE The inner envelope of nutmegs. May be used both in "blade"
and ground form in soups, sauces, pastry, pickles.
MUSTARD tender leaves are used for greens and for salad.
Young
Seeds are used as a ground spice in salad dressings, pickles,
sauces,in some vegetable cookery, and in some cheese dishes.
Made into a paste and served with meats.
NUTMEG Sold whole or ground. Gives good flavor used alone in
small amount in various soups, meat dishes, pastry and in all
dough mixtures. In combination with other spices for pickles.
PAPRIKA A
Hungarian red pepper. Bright red in color. May be
used in meat and vegetable salads. In soups, both cream and
all
stock. As a garnish for potatoes, cream cheese, salads or eggs.
PEPPERCORN The whole berry of the pepper plant.
732
sxw/vx
FLAVOR VEGETABLES
CELERY Every part of the plant can be used to advantage. Stalks
and heart may be used raw, plain or with various fillings. Outer
stalks may be stewed, scalloped, or used in combination to give
flavor to other vegetables such as potatoes. Trimmings may be
used for flavoring soups or in any cooked meat or vegetable
dishes. Dried seeds may be used in pickles, soups and salads.
all meat and fish. Tender young tops may be minced and used
as a garnish for soups and salads.
PEPPERS All varieties of green peppers and some of the red peppers
may be used to give flavor to most forms of vegetable cookery.
The green peppers of mild flavor and thick-meated type are
particularly good for stuffing and for salad.
SHALLOTS A
mild onion flavor used in the same way as onions.
HERBS, SPICES, EXTRACTS 733
VINEGAR Low
percentage natural acid, generally acetic acid.
Used
as a preservative for all pickling of vegetables and fruit. To give
zest or flavor to salad dressing; for meat, fish and vegetable
tang
sauces. Different kinds are wine vinegar, malt or beer vinegar,
white vinegar, cider vinegar, tarragon vinegar.
A LIST OF FOREIGN WORDS
AND PHRASES
Often Used in Connection with Cooking
ally speaking, sweet wines. Sauternes and Graves are two famed
classifications.
VINTAGE CHART
type and brand but with the particular years of growth. De-
pend on your wine merchant for detailed advice.
In addition to Bordeaux and Burgundy, Anjou, Alsace, and
the Rhone valley produce excellent French wines. The best
German wines are white and should be chilled. Italian wines
are heavier than either French or German, more heady. Nearly
every country in Europe grows grapes and makes wine. Though
France, Germany and Italy are the great wine exporting coun-
tries, the others ship their choicest varieties to the rest of the
wine drinking world. Our domestic wines cannot be charted
reliably as yet. We have some very fine vineyards and need only
time to ripen our pressings and to establish uniform standards.
Young wine is suitable for daily use, but fine wines must be
ripened under expert supervision for eight or more years before
they attain their full glory.
Fortified wines include sherry, madeira and port. Brandy has
been added to the natural wine. This increase in alcoholic con-
tent prolongs their keeping qualities and permits storage in up-
right positions.
Champagne needs no introduction. By complicated processes,
the wine is aerated and the corking and recorking is a momen-
tous and difficult technique.
WINE SEQUENCE (or Service Sequence) Wines reverse the
usual order of hospitality. Your most august wine should be
accorded the last place if you are serving more than one kind.
The theorists hold that your wine tasting ability is not toned up
to a proper appreciation of the unrivaled grandeur of a fine wine
at the beginning of a dinner.
Englishmen customarily serve sherry with clear soups but
Frenchmen consider that the sherry is too vivid a wine to precede
the dry white wine that accompanies the entree or fish.
Never serve a sweet wine before a dry one, nor a rich, fruity
Burgundy before a claret.
740
xvy
ing bring the claret to the dining room several hours before
service time so that it may warm gradually. Never insert the
bottle in hot water or put it near heat to hasten this process.
Red Burgundy may be served slightly cooler than the other red
wines. It loses its numbness speedily after it is poured into the
casing of ice for even ten minutes, the result may be disastrous.
You can hasten even icing by turning your bottle in the ice
bucket, which should be deep enough so that the entire bottle,
except the very top, may be surrounded by ice.
Beer should be kept in a cool place so that it may be made
icy cold quickly when needed. However, it should not be stored
permanently in the refrigerator.
UNCORKING AND DECANTING Careful uncorking is impor-
tant. One least bit of cork dropped into the bottle will ruin
742
^Vy"^"^
the stopper of the decanter meet each other. Liqueurs with high
alcoholic content keep in partially filled decanters or bottles.
Sherry, Madeira, Port and Claret are served from the bottle
or from a decanter with equal correctness.
WINE SEASONS FINE FOOD 743
shaped bowl atop a long stem conserves the aroma and permits
swirling. By holding the stem between the thumb and fore-
finger, the guest may move his glass so that the wine picks up a
slight motion and licks the si.des of the glass. This swirling ex-
hibits the fine texture of your wine and gathers its bouquet so
that, when the glass is lifted to the mouth, the nose also gains
full pleasure from the rich, fruity aroma. Dry wine spreads like
water, and sweet wine hangs and makes runnels. A
Bordeaux
that does this is called "a fat one."
The glory of Champagne, its sparkling quality, is best con-
served by serving it in a glass with a fluted top on a hollow stem.
The effervescence has a longer road to travel before it is dissi-
pated in the atmosphere.
A set of tall glasses suitable for beer, ale, juleps and lemonade
744
vss^vs
flame dies out. To cook the food with wine for a considerable
period of time is the third and usual method.
Remember, however, that wine should never cook at a high
temperature. A dozen bubbles spell disaster. This is especially
true in the case of dishes that combine cream and wine. They
should be cooked over hot water to prevent curdling. Another
trick is to heat the fish or meat with the wine and add the cream
or cream-egg mixture just before serving. If the amount of
cream is large, heat it separately so that it will not chill the hot
mixture. Do not heat eggs for sauces; merely add after the
sauce is removed from the fire, for the heat of the cooked food
will coagulate the egg.
When browning the top of a platter filled with a wine sauce
and fish combination sole or lobster, for example place it as
close to the flame as possible and leave only a second or two.
WINE SEASONS FINE FOOD 745
of the entire sauce. In olden days, a red hot poker seared the
top a nearly perfect method.
Never allow the aroma of your wine to escape and be squan-
dered on the air. This bouquet should be part of the food. So
cover your cooking utensils closely; cooking parchments may be
used. Likewise, desserts should be closely covered while they
chill inthe refrigerator.
Taste your foods as you assemble and cook them. The requi-
site amount of salt and of wine will vary because of the differ-
ences in the wines themselves. Some sorts sherry is one run
the gamut from quite sweet to very dry and from a rich, heavy,
tawny quality to a light, flavorsome one.
Remember in your tasting adventures that, in the finest cook-
ing, the wine flavor does not dominate; it merely accents and
adds subtlety to the basic food flavor.
Remember, too, that all punches, with or without wine,
should stand for thirty minutes or more after they are mixed.
This is called the ripening process. Ice is added at the time of
service.
COURT BOUILLON
l
1 /z cups boiling water 1
bay leaf
cup white wine (dry)
l
/2 6 peppercorns
l
/4 teaspoon salt /8 teaspoon thyme
l
recipe calls for a sauce, use this bouillon for its base. Any fish is
improved by the added flavor-giving qualities of a court bouil-
lon. Be sure to poach, not boil, your fish.
CHILLED TROUT
Try poaching brook trout in two tablespoons of butter and
a half cup of court bouillon or of white wine. Turn once and
746
*\s\s\s
cook a very short time. Lift out, chill and serve with tartar
sauce. may be covered with an aspic gelatin and garnished
It
with shrimps and bits of truffle.
Soften the gelatin in the cold water. Dissolve in the hot con-
somme. Add the lemon juice and wine, and salt if required.
Chill in the refrigerator. Chop lightly before putting in service
cups. Top with minced parsley, a lemon crescent or a bit of
tomato fringed with minced green pepper.
HALIBUT A LA NEWBURG
1 lb. halibut 1 cup evaporated milk (un-
1 tablespoon brandy diluted)
teaspoon lemon juice
l
/4 cup sherry wine 1
2 tablespoons butter 3 egg yolks
Dash cayenne salt to taste
Cut the halibut in small cubes. Steam over hot water or poach
in court bouillon for five minutes. Beware of long or swift cook-
ing as the halibut easily loses its shape. When poached, put the
fish, butter, wine, brandy, salt and cayenne in a double boiler
and heat smoking hot. Beat the yolks and combine with the
evaporated milk (sour cream may be substituted for the milk
and lemon juice) and cook with the hot fish for one minute.
Remove from the fire and add the lemon juice. Serve on very
hot plates. An excellent chafing dish innovation.
Saute the lobster in the melted fat. Add the seasonings and
the wine. When very hot serve on small bread croustades or
packaged appetizer shells.
WINE SEASONS FINE FOOD 747
LOBSTER A LA NEWBURG
/2
l
lb. butter 3 cups lobster meat (3 /2
r
lb.
1 cup Madeira wine live lobster)
2 cups whipping cream Salt and cayenne to taste
1 small can truffles
Cut the lobster in small pieces. Chop the truffles fine. Heat
both the above in melted butter till very hot. Add the wine.
When hot add the cream and seasoning and let them blend for
several minutes. Cook over hot water, as a high temperature
will curdle the cream-wine mixture.
SOLE THERMIDOR
1 lb. sole or filet of flounder /4
l
cup brandy
1 tablespoon flour 3 tablespoons butter
/2 cup sour cream 2 cups court bouillon
l
When cooked add the previously cooked Lima beans and the
white wine. Cook together one minute and serve around a hot
baked ham or as a sauce for left-over ham that has been re-
heated over steam.
BURGUNDIAN BEEF
Ys teaspoon thyme
Dice the salt pork- and saute in the butter. Cut the beef in
two-inch cubes or leave in one piece as preferred. Sear thor-
oughly in the hot fat. Lift out. Add the onion, garlic,
shallots
the other ingredients and the beef. Cook on a very slow fire
Lightly brown the salt pork in the melted butter, add the
shallot, onions, garlic and the carrot cut in circles. Simmer till
golden, but not browned. Lift out and brown the chicken.
.
and cook one minute. Serve garnished with croutons and minced
herbs.
A delicious entree or
specialty for chafing dish parties.
WELSH RAREBIT
1 Ib. grated American cheese l teaspoon butter
l
1 teaspoon paprika /z pint ale or beer
Salt and prepared mustard to
taste
Melt the butter and stir so that it oils the bottom of your
pan. chafing dish over hot water is ideal.) Add the cheese
(A
and gently stir into it one tablespoon of beer or ale. The cheese
will at once thicken and another tablespoon of beer or ale should
be added. Stir continuously. Add more liquid until the mix-
ture is smooth and velvety. The exact amount of ale varies
with different cheeses. Season to taste and serve on toast. Hot
plates are essential. This will serve six single portions.
ing powder. Fold in the egg white beaten stiff. Dip the bran-
died apples in this batter and fry in deep fat (360-370 F.) two
to four minutes. Serve with sauce superb or powdered sugar.
SAUCE SUPERB
2 eggs 1 cup powdered sugar
1 cup whipping cream 4 teaspoons rum
Beat the eggs till thick and lemon colored. Add the sugar
gradually and continue beating. Whip the cream very stiff, add
the rum and combine the two mixtures. The secret of success
in making this sauce is to beat it thoroughly. It will keep for
hours in the refrigerator.
CREPES SUZETTE
3 flour 6 lumps loaf sugar
/4 cup
2 teaspoons sugar 1 orange
1 teaspoon salt 6 tablespoons brandy
cup milk /4 cup Grand Marnier Liqueur
l
3/4
3 eggs y s Ib. sweet butter
This very famous but really very simple dessert is not dif-
ficult. A more awe-inspiring recipe for the crepes is common at
WINE SEASONS FINE FOOD 753
Soak the nuts and raisins in the wines and lemon juice for at
least sixhours overnight if possible. Beat the egg whites stiff,
add the sugar and beat till ropy. Fold in the wine-soaked fruits
and nuts. Pour into a buttered baking dish. Set in a pan of hot
water. Bake at 350 F. for one hour. Serve with the following
sauce.
Make a custard of 6 egg yolks, 54 CU P sugar and 1 Yz cups of
scalded milk. When smoothly thickened, flavor with sherry and
serve on the Christmas Pudding. This is a famous old Georgia
recipe.
754
Cover the chopped candied fruits with rum and cover tightly.
Stand two or three hours. Make a custard of the eggs, sugar,
salt and hot milk. Cool. Fold in the whipping cream, beaten
stiff, and the candied fruits. Pour into a tray of the mechanical
refrigerator and freeze. Beat at the end of an hour and once
or twice afterward to assure even textured cream. At the last
beating, the cream may be placed in small molds or in little in-
dividual paper containers.
SYLLABUB
2 cups whipping cream l/> cup powdered sugar
1 tablespoon rum
STRAWBERRIES CHANTILLY
Wash, stern and cut in half 1 quart ripe strawberries. Cover
with powdered sugar and 2 tablespoons rum. Chill 30 minutes.
Whisk two egg whites stiff, beat in gradually 4 tablespoons
powdered sugar. Fold in the chilled berries. Serve in sherbet
glasses and top with sweetened whipped cream.
TIPSY PUDDING
One of the choice recipes of our Grandmother's era. It ap-
peared in the place of honor on New Year's Day. The secret for
a successful outcome is to use a very stale, very porous cake.
A broken, not cut, sunshine cake at least four days old, should
be soaked in sherry. Allow about one cup sherry to a quarter of
a good sized cake. An hour later cover the cake with a soft
custard flavored with rum. Serve very cold.
BRANDIED PEACHES
4 Ibs. fruit 4 Ibs. sugar
1 pint best white brandy 1 egg white
/2 cups water
l
Cloves 3
pack in glass jars. Return any excess juice to the syrup and boil
about ten minutes more, or till well thickened. Remove from
the fire, add the brandy and pour over the fruit. Seal at once.
White cling stone peaches are particularly good. Six pounds of
fruit will yield about seven pint jars. Improves with age.
CLARET LEMONADE
12 cubes ice Sugar syrup to taste
1 bottle claret Orange slices
Juice 3 lemons
Half fill a glass pitcher with ice cubes or cracked ice. Add the
lemon juice and a few slices of orange. Fill the pitcher nearly
full with claret and add sugar syrup to taste. Stand twenty to
thirty minutes to blend and ripen.
MULLED CLARET
1
qt. hot claret /2
l
cup sugar
1 piece stick cinnamon 8 cloves
Juice 1 lemon /2
l
lemon sliced
Heat the claret and add the other ingredients. Stir till dis-
solved and serve hot. Doughnuts were served with it in the
nineties.
TUTTI FRUTTI
Into a stone jar put one cup of brandy, the best you own, one
cup sugar and one cup ripe strawberries. Stir thoroughly. As
each fruit comes to the height of its perfection, add it, with a
WINE SEASONS FINE FOOD 757
CHAMPAGNE CUP
y2 cup Maraschino 2 qts. Champagne
^/2 cup
Vermuth Cucumber rind
l/*2 cup Santa Cruz rum Juice 4 oranges
Sugar to taste Juice 3 lemons
Sweeten the fruit juices slightly. Combine all the ingredients.
Let stand ten minutes after mixing with a large piece of ice in
a punch bowl. It's well to use as large a piece of ice as possible,
for it melts more slowly and adds less water to the punch.
EGGNOG, SOUTHERN
4 eggs 4 tablespoons brandy or
1/2 cup whipping cream whisky
3 tablespoons powdered sugar
Beat the yolks thick and lemon colored. Slowly beat in the
till
brandy and sugar. Fold in the stiffly beaten whites and the
whipped cream. This must be eaten with a spoon. Excellent.
759
760
INDEX
johnny cake
materials used in
128 and meals used in .... 97
117 folding 101
methods of mixing 118 general directions for making 100 . .
sole,
fried
fried fillet of
199
199
varieties used in bread .... 97
in cake 452
see also flounder
Fluff, fruit 535
souffle 19, 202
Fluffy eggs 373
steamed 195
Foamy sauce 580
stews 176, 185
169 Folding in, defined 3
stock
198 Fondant 506
sturgeon, baked
196 cake 632
swordfish, broiled
tilefish, baked 197,198
candies made from .... 507-508
timbale 202 honey 507
time table for canning with the Fondue, cheese, baked 379
pressure cooker .... 664 on toast 378
trout 194, 745 Food equivalents 722-723
tunafish salad 445 how to buy 35
with caper sauce 203 how to use in school lunch . . 60
turbans, defined 193 materials, what they do for the
en casserole 704 body 40
warmed over 202-204 selection chart for children . . 60
weakfish, baked 197 useful facts about 1-34
white, defined 191 Food values and meal planning . 3946
whitebait, fried . . . . . . 199 body-building materials, where to
with oyster crabs 224 find 40
whitefish, baked 197 calcium 40
whitings, fried 199 chart of vitamin content of foods 41-43
INDEX 781
clam 342
fruits, frozen 574
cooking temperatures and periods 9
342 ice cream sandwich 569
corn
defined . 327 ice creams 557
618 American 563
fish
343 apricot 564
oyster
343 banana 564
parsnip
493 berry 565
peach
626 bisque 565
potato
493 caramel 565
raspberry
492-493 chocolate 565
sweet
225 cinnamon 565
Frogs' legs
Frontier sauce 325 French 564
484 fruit 566
Frosted delights
478-482 maple-fruit 566
Frostings
20 marshmallow 566
approximate amount of sugar in .
576,
576
577
whips, apricot, prune ... 528
24
Frying, deep fat
made without gelatin . . . 574 best fats for 24
currant 574 egging and crumbing foods for 26
lemon 575 general directions for ... 25
pineapple 575 testing temperature of fat for 26
raspberry 575 utensils for 25
sorbets 558 defined 2
strawberries or other fruit, frozen 574 table of temperatures for ... 9
78 4
INDEX
puff 536
Game and poultry 274-302 fruit Bavarian 530
birds, broiled 292 charlotte 530
duck, see duck, wild chartreuse 532
grouse 292, 293 fluff 535
panned 293 grapefruit a la St. Patrick .531 . .
cookery 721
use of 1
Rabbit, see hare or rabbit
149 Red snapper, boiled 194
Radish and ham sandwiches . . .
Reindeer 273
Radishes cooked with cheese . . . 627
416 Relishes, see pickles and relishes
creamed
Remoulade sauce 323
duck or chicken 622
Ragout of
Railroad yeast
. . . .
105
Rendering or trying out fat. ... 23
Rennet-custards 554, 817
Raised buckwheat cakes . . . . 112
caramel 555
doughnuts 114
chocolate 555
muffins 113
with eggs 555
Raisin and cranberry pie, see mock
595
Rhubarb and apple jelly .... 683
cherry pie and blueberry and apple jelly . 683
.
and fig and peanut butter sand- and currant jelly 681
wiches
and nut cream pie
136
599
and pineapple conserve .... 679
baked 522
and orange sauce 323 marmalade 677
and peach pie 597 596
pie
bran muffins 125
129
scallop with meringue .... 524
bread, quick sherbet 577
yeast 106 stewed 522
nut delights 500
Rice, a la Creole 417, 707
stuffing 306 and apple pudding 552
pie 597 and cheese, baked 381
rocks 489 and orange pudding 540
sauce
sticks
583
607
and liver, casserole of .... 706
and peas 405
Raisins, stewed 523 as breakfast cereal 94
Rarebit, cheese, crab 719 Bavarian 534
Mexican 378 boiled 416
poached egg tomato 378 border 330
Welsh 377 croquettes 341
Raspberry and currant ice . . 573
. .
croustades 330
and currant jam 674 crown with apricots .... 634
black, and apple jelly .... 683 curry of 416
fritters 493 en casserole 707
ice cream 568 fan-tan 341
jam 675 griddlecakes 120
jelly 681, 683 jelly 655
punch 646 muffins 125
puree 181 pudding 552
sherbet 575, 576, 577 apple 546
turnovers 611 creamy 541
Ravigote sauce 319 with raisins 541
Reception chocolate 641 soup 169
Rechauffe of meat 620 Spanish 707
Recipes, how to modify for small wild, and mushroom stuffing . . 306
family 711 stuffing 305
how to use one recipe in different Rich cookies 484
ways for small family . . . 712 Ricky, grape juice 648
INDEX 801
Ring molds . . 303, 344, 351, 427, 539 Rope in bread, cause and remedy . 103
Rissoles 332 Roquefort cheese sandwiches . . . 140
brain 270 Rose ice cream 568
French . 621 Roselle jelly .686
sweet 612 Rosettes, timbale 331
Roast, beef 242 Roux, method of making a .... 17
candle 259 for brown sauce 307
chicken 277 for white sauce 307
crown of lamb ...... 256 Royal consomme 169
mutton 256 custard 188
pork 259 Rum apricot whip 752
lamb 257 Rusks 112
leg of mutton 255 Russe, Charlotte 536
pork 258 maple 536
pot 239 Russian dressing 449
rolled 231 sandwiches 141
spareribs 259 soup 172
Roasting, defined 2 Rye bread 107
meat . . 231 prune 130
Robert sauce 316
Robin Hood eggs 373 Sago soup 169
Rocks, maple-sugar 489 St. Patrick, grapefruit a la . 531 . .
Squirrels, see
game
Soy beans, see beans, soy
Stale bread, uses for 116
Spaghetti, baked with cheese . . 400
Starch, converted into dextrin . . 15
boiled 400
cooked by dry heat 14
soup 169
in liquid 14
Spanish, Michel 707
how to combine with liquid . . 17
with baked oysters 211
useful facts about 14
Spanish cream 533
Starch-rich foods 14
eggs 369
points to observe in cooking . . 15
Michel spaghetti 707
Starter yeast 105
omelet 366
Steak, see beefsteak
potatoes 413
Steamed puddings, see puddings, hot
rice 707
Steaming, defined 1
sauce 317
Stewing, denned 1, 231
tomatoes 691
Stews, beef 236
Spareribs,
Spice cake
pork roasted . . . . 259
465
Brunswick ........ 302
clam 185
apple sauce cake 468 crab 185
pudding 540 fish 176
Spiced cranberries 320 lamb 258
currants 693 mutton 254
plums 693 onion 175
prunes 513 oyster 185
vinegar, for pickles 688 pigeon and mushroom . . . . 295
Spices, list of 730-733 see also,potpie and ragout
Spinach la Reine 627 Sticks, cheese 186, 381
and ham salad 445 Stirring of foods, defined .... 3
boiled . 418 Stock, see soups, stock for
creamed 419 Strawberries, fresh 517
in eggs 419 Chantilly 755
mold 418 frozen 574
salad . 432 Strawberry and apple jelly . . . 683
souffle 419 and grapefruit cocktail .... 163
soup, cream of 179 and pineapple cocktail .... 163
with cheese 627 jam 674
eggs, Florentine 629 mousse 571
Split-pea puree 180 preserves 671
soup 174 eight-minute 671
Sponge cake, hot water .... 469 sun-cooked 672
meringue .469 sauce 583
true 468 sherbet 576, 577
drops 498 shortcake, old-fashioned, baking
fruit, amount of needed
fruit 530 powder biscuit 547
gelatin, standard formula for . 528 sweet cake 554
lemon 529 String beans, see beans, string
orange 530 Stuffed ham . 263
INDEX 809
oyster
pineapple-nut 305
potato 304
raisin-nut
rice
sausage
for peppers
cheese
meat
shrimp 347
sweetbread 347
wild rice and mushroom . .
spun
useful facts about
varieties used in cakes . . .
Wine seasons fine food Continued Wine seasons fine food Continued
court bouillon 745 solethermidor 747
crepes Suzette 752 Southern eggnog 757
eggnog, Southern 757 strawberries Chantilly .... 755
other type . 757 superb sauce 752
eggs with sherry and orange . . 750 sweet potatoes, plantation . . . 750
frozen pudding' with rum . . . 754 syllabub 754
gelatin, hasty wine. 756 tipsy pudding 755
Georgia Christmas pudding . . . 753 trout, chilled 745
halibut a la Newburg .... 746 tutti frutti 756
ham Porte Maillot 747 veal with olives 748
hasty wine gelatin 756 Welsh rarebit 751
hot wine sauce for game . . . 751 wine gelatin, hasty 756
in cookery 744 jelly, old-fashioned .... 755
jellied consomme, with sherry . . 746 sauce, hot wine, for game 751
....
. .
er 98, 105
pudding, frozen, with rum . . . 754
Georgia Christmas .... 753 Yellow sauce, for desserts . . . . 584
tipsy 755 for fish, meat, poultry, game
rarebit, Welsh 751 and vegetables .... 310
rum whip, apricot 752 Yorkshire eggs 709
sauce for game, hot wine . . . 751 pudding 242
superb 752
sherry and orange with eggs . 750
. Zabaglione 757