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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:54:51 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:54:51 -0700
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish Dainties, by
+Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish Dainties
+ With Fifty Illustrations of Original Dishes
+
+Author: Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+Release Date: August 18, 2006 [EBook #19077]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SALADS, SANDWICHES AND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Emmy, Fox in the Stars, Suzanne Lybarger and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Salads, Sandwiches
+
+and
+
+Chafing-Dish Dainties
+
+[Illustration: Table laid for Sunday-Night Tea.
+
+"Sunday clears away the rust of the whole week."--ADDISON.]
+
+
+
+
+Salads, Sandwiches
+
+and
+
+Chafing-Dish Dainties
+
+_With Fifty Illustrations of Original Dishes_
+
+By
+
+Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+ Editor of "The Boston Cooking-School Magazine"
+ Author of "Practical Cooking and Serving"
+
+ NEW EDITION
+ WITH ADDITIONAL RECIPES
+
+ "_Things which in hungry mortals' eyes find favor._"
+ BYRON
+
+Boston
+Little, Brown, and Company
+1909
+
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1899, 1903_
+ BY JANET M. HILL.
+
+ Printers
+ S. J. PARKHILL & CO., BOSTON, U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+
+ MRS. WILLIAM B. SEWALL,
+
+President of the Boston Cooking-School Corporation,
+
+ IN GRATEFUL RECOGNITION OF THE OPPORTUNITY
+
+ PRESENTED BY HER FOR CONGENIAL WORK IN A
+
+ CHOSEN FIELD OF EFFORT, THIS LITTLE BOOK
+
+ IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
+
+ BY THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE favor with which the first edition of this little book has been
+received by those who were interested in the subjects of which it
+treats, is eminently gratifying to both author and publishers. It has
+occasioned the purpose to make a second edition of the book, even more
+complete and helpful than the first.
+
+In making the revision, wherever the text has suggested a new thought
+that thought has been inserted; under the various headings new recipes
+have been added, each in its proper place, and the number of
+illustrations has been increased from thirty-seven to fifty. A more
+complete table of contents has been presented, and also a list of the
+illustrations; the alphabetical index has been revised and made
+especially full and complete.
+
+ JANET M. HILL.
+April 10, 1903.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THERE is positive need of more widespread knowledge of the principles of
+cookery. Few women know how to cook an egg or boil a potato properly,
+and the making of the perfect loaf of bread has long been assigned a
+place among the "lost arts."
+
+By many women cooking is considered, at best, a homely art,--a necessary
+kind of drudgery; and the composition, if not the consumption, of salads
+and chafing-dish productions has been restricted, hitherto, chiefly to
+that half of the race "who cook to please themselves." But, since women
+have become anxious to compete with men in any and every walk of life,
+they, too, are desirous of becoming adepts in tossing up an appetizing
+salad or in stirring a creamy rarebit. And yet neither a pleasing salad,
+especially if it is to be composed of cooked materials, nor a tempting
+rarebit can be evolved, save by happy accident, without an accurate
+knowledge of the fundamental principles that underlie all cookery.
+
+In a book of this nature and scope, the philosophy of heat at different
+temperatures, as it is applied in cooking, and the more scientific
+aspects of culinary processes, could not be dwelt upon; but, while we
+have not overlooked the ABC of the art, our special aim has been to
+present our topics in such a simple and pleasing form that she who
+attempts the composition of the dishes described herein will not be
+satisfied until she has gained a deeper insight into the conditions
+necessary for success in the pursuit of these as well as other
+fascinating branches of the culinary art.
+
+Care has been exercised to meet the actual needs of those who wish to
+cultivate a taste for light, wholesome dishes, or to cater to the
+vagaries of the most capricious appetites.
+
+There is nothing new under the sun, so no claim is made to absolute
+originality in contents. In this and all similar works, the matter of
+necessity must consist, in the main, of old material in a new dress.
+
+Though the introduction to Part III. was originally written for this
+book, the substance of it was published in the December-January
+(1898-99) issue of the _Boston Cooking-School Magazine_. From time to
+time, also, a few of the recipes, with minor changes, have appeared in
+that journal.
+
+Illustrations by means of half-tones produced from photographs of actual
+dishes were first brought out, we think, by The Century Company; in this
+line, however, both in the number and in the variety of the dishes
+prepared, the author may justly claim to have done more than any other
+has yet essayed. The illustrations on these pages were prepared
+expressly for this work, and the dishes and the photographs of the same
+were executed under our own hand and eye. That results pleasing to the
+eye and acceptable to the taste await those who try the confections
+described in this book is the sincere wish of the author.
+
+ JANET M. HILL
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+Part I.
+
+SALADS
+
+ PAGE
+ INTRODUCTION 3
+ THE DRESSING 6
+ USE OF DRESSINGS 7
+ ARRANGEMENT OF SALADS 8
+ COMPOSITION OF MAYONNAISE 8
+ VALUE OF OIL 8
+ BOILED AND CREAM DRESSINGS 9
+ IMPORTANT POINTS IN SALAD-MAKING 9
+ WHEN TO SERVE SALADS WITH FRENCH OR MAYONNAISE
+ DRESSING 9
+ WHEN TO SERVE A FRUIT SALAD 10
+ SALADS WITH CHEESE 10
+ HOW TO MAKE AROMATIC VINEGARS, KEEP VEGETABLES,
+ AND PREPARE GARNISHES 11
+ HOW TO BOIL EGGS HARD FOR GARNISHING 11
+ TO POACH WHITES OF EGGS 11
+ ROYAL CUSTARD FOR MOULDS OF ASPIC 11
+ HOW TO USE GARLIC OR ONION IN SALADS 12
+ HOW TO SHELL AND BLANCH CHESTNUTS AND OTHER NUTS 12
+ HOW TO CHOP FRESH HERBS 13
+ HOW TO CUT RADISHES FOR A GARNISH 13
+ HOW TO CLEAN LETTUCE, ENDIVE, ETC. 13
+ HOW TO CLEAN CRESS, CABBAGE, ETC. 14
+ HOW TO RENDER UNCOOKED VEGETABLES CRISP 14
+ HOW TO BLANCH AND COOK VEGETABLES FOR SALADS 14
+ HOW TO CUT GHERKINS FOR A GARNISH 15
+ HOW TO FRINGE CELERY 15
+ HOW TO SHRED ROMAINE AND STRAIGHT LETTUCE 15
+ HOW TO KEEP CELERY, WATERCRESS, LETTUCE, ETC. 16
+ HOW TO COOK SWEETBREADS AND BRAINS 16
+ HOW TO PICKLE NASTURTIUM SEEDS 16
+ NASTURTIUM AND OTHER VINEGARS 17
+ TO DECORATE SALADS WITH PASTRY BAG AND TUBES 18
+ RECIPES FOR FRENCH DRESSING 21
+ RECIPES FOR MAYONNAISE DRESSING 22
+ BOILED, CREAM, AND OTHER DRESSINGS 26
+ VEGETABLE SALADS SERVED WITH FRENCH DRESSING 29
+ SALADS LARGELY VEGETABLE WITH MAYONNAISE, ETC. 39
+ INTRODUCTION TO FISH SALADS 53
+ RECIPES FOR FISH SALADS 55
+ RECIPES FOR VARIOUS COMPOUND SALADS 77
+ RECIPES FOR FRUIT AND NUT SALADS 89
+ HOW TO PREPARE AND USE ASPIC JELLY 97
+ CONSOMMÉ AND STOCK FOR ASPIC 98
+ CHEESE DISHES SERVED WITH SALADS 105
+
+
+Part II.
+
+SANDWICHES
+
+ BREAD FOR SANDWICHES 115
+ THE FILLING 116
+ RECIPES FOR SAVORY SANDWICHES 119
+ RECIPES FOR SWEET SANDWICHES 131
+ RECIPES FOR BREAD AND CHOU PASTE 137
+ HOW TO BOIL MEATS FOR SANDWICHES 140
+ RECIPES FOR BEVERAGES SERVED WITH SANDWICHES 143
+
+
+Part III.
+
+CHAFING-DISH DAINTIES
+
+ CHAFING-DISHES PAST AND PRESENT 151
+ CHAFING-DISH APPOINTMENTS 153
+ ARE MIDNIGHT SUPPERS HYGIENIC? 157
+ HOW TO MAKE SAUCES 158
+ MEASURING AND FLAVORING 160
+ RECIPES FOR OYSTER DISHES 163
+ RECIPES FOR LOBSTER AND OTHER SEA FISH 169
+ RECIPES FOR CHEESE CONFECTIONS 182
+ RECIPES FOR EGGS 188
+ RECIPES FOR DISHES LARGELY VEGETARIAN 195
+ RECIPES FOR RÉCHAUFFÉS AND OLLA PODRIDA 202
+
+
+
+
+Illustrations
+
+
+ Table laid for Sunday Night Tea _Frontispiece_
+ The Tender Lettuce brings on softer Sleep _Facing page_ 18
+ Cucumber Salad for Fish Course " " 28
+ Cooked Vegetable Salad " " 28
+ Potato Balls, Pecan Meats, and Cress Salad " " 32
+ Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad " " 32
+ Endive, Tomato, and Green String Bean Salad " " 36
+ Stuffed Beets " " 36
+ Cress, Cucumber, and Tomato Salad " " 41
+ Tomato Jelly with Celery and Nuts " " 41
+ Russian Vegetable Salad " " 48
+ Macedoine of Vegetable Salad " " 48
+ Miroton of Fish and Potato Salad " " 58
+ Cowslip and Cream Cheese Salad " " 58
+ Russian Salad " " 62
+ Halibut Salad " " 62
+ Shell of Fish and Mushrooms " " 68
+ Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boat " " 68
+ Shrimp Salad, Border of Eggs in Aspic " " 70
+ Lobster Salad " " 70
+ Bluefish Salad " " 72
+ Litchi Nut and Orange Salad " " 72
+ Moulded Salmon Salad " " 74
+ Salad of Shrimps and Bamboo Sprouts " " 74
+ Spinach and Egg Salad " " 84
+ Marguerite Salad " " 84
+ Easter Salad " " 86
+ Country Salad " " 86
+ Fruit Salad " " 94
+ Turquoise Salad No. 2 " " 94
+ Cheese Ramequins " " 106
+ Individual Soufflé of Cheese " " 106
+ Pineapple-Cheese and Crackers " " 110
+ Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Macedoine " " 110
+ Chicken Salad Sandwiches " " 126
+ Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic " " 126
+ Wedding Sandwich Rolls " " 128
+ Club Sandwich " " 128
+ Boston Brown Bread " " 138
+ Bread cut for Sandwiches " " 138
+ Bowl of Fruit-Punch ready for serving " " 143
+ Copper Chafing-Dish with Earthen Casserole " " 149
+ Chafing-Dish, Filler, etc. " " 153
+ Course at Formal Dinner served in Individual
+ Chafing-Dishes " " 157
+ Butter Balls with Utensils for Chafing-Dish " " 178
+ Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas " " 178
+ Yorkshire Rabbit " " 186
+ Curried Eggs " " 186
+ Mushroom Cromeskies, ready for cooking " " 198
+ Prune Toast " " 198
+
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+SALADS.
+
+ "_Though my stomach was sharp, I could scarce help regretting
+ To spoil such a delicate picture by eating._"
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ At their savory dinner set
+ Herbs and other country messes,
+ Which the neat-handed Phyllis dresses.
+ --_Milton._
+
+
+Our taste for salads--and in their simplest form who is not fond of
+salads?--is an inheritance from classic times and Eastern lands. In the
+hot climates of the Orient, cucumbers and melons were classed among
+earth's choicest productions; and a resort ever grateful in the heat of
+the day was "a lodge in a garden of cucumbers."
+
+At the Passover the Hebrews ate lettuce, camomile, dandelion and
+mint,--the "bitter herbs" of the Paschal feast,--combined with oil and
+vinegar. Of the Greeks, the rich were fond of the lettuces of Smyrna,
+which appeared on their tables at the close of the repast. In this
+respect the Romans, at first, imitated the Greeks, but later came to
+serve lettuce with eggs as a first course and to excite the appetite.
+The ancient physicians valued lettuce for its narcotic virtue, and, on
+account of this property, Galen, the celebrated Greek physician, called
+it "the philosopher's or wise man's herb."
+
+The older historians make frequent mention of salad plants and salads.
+In the biblical narrative Moses wrote: "And the children of Israel wept
+again and said, We remember the fish which we did eat in Egypt freely;
+the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks, and the onions, and the
+garlick."
+
+In his second Eclogue, Virgil represents a rustic maid, Thestylis,
+preparing for the reapers a salad called _moretum_. He wrote, also, a
+poem bearing this title, in which he describes the composition and
+preparation of the dish.
+
+A modern authority says, "Salads refresh without exciting and make
+people younger." Whether this be strictly true or not may be an open
+question, but certainly in the assertion a grain of truth is visible;
+for it is a well-known fact that "salad plants are better tonics and
+blood purifiers than druggists' compounds." There is, also, an old
+proverb: "Eat onions in May, and all the year after physicians may
+play." What is health but youth?
+
+Vegetables, fish and meats, "left over,"--all may be transformed, by
+artistic treatment, into salads delectable to the eye and taste.
+Potatoes are subject to endless combinations. First of all in this
+connection, before dressing the potatoes allow them to stand in
+bouillon, meat broth, or even in the liquor in which corned beef has
+been cooked; then drain carefully before adding the oil and other
+seasonings.
+
+Of uncooked vegetables, cabbage lettuce--called long ago by the Greek
+physician, Galen, the philosopher's or wise man's herb--stands at the
+head of salad plants. Like all uncooked vegetables, lettuce must be
+served fresh and crisp, and the more quickly it is grown the more tender
+it will be. When dressed for the table, each leaf should glisten with
+oil, yet no perceptible quantity should fall to the salad-bowl.
+Watercress, being rich in sulphuretted oil, is often served without oil.
+Cheese or eggs combine well with cress; and such a salad, with a
+sandwich of coarse bread and butter, together with a cup of sparkling
+coffee, forms an ideal luncheon for a picnic or for the home piazza.
+Indeed, all the compound salads,--that is, salads of many
+ingredients,--more particularly if they are served with a cooked or
+mayonnaise dressing, are substantial enough for the chief dish of a
+hearty meal. Their digestibility depends, in large measure, on the
+tenderness of the different ingredients, as well as upon the freshness
+of the uncooked vegetables that enter into their composition.
+
+A salad has this superiority over every other production of the culinary
+art: A salad (but not every salad) is suitable to serve upon any
+occasion, or to any class or condition of men. Among _bon vivants_,
+without a _new_ salad, no matter how _recherché_ the other courses may
+be, the luncheon, or dinner party, of to-day does not pass as an
+unqualified success.
+
+While salads may be compounded of all kinds of delicate meats, fish,
+shellfish, eggs, nuts, fruit, cheese and vegetables, cooked or uncooked,
+two things are indispensable to every kind and grade of salad, viz., the
+foundation of vegetables and the dressing.
+
+
+=The Dressing.=
+
+Salads are dressed with oil, acid and condiments; and, sometimes, a
+sweet, as honey or sugar, is used. A perfect salad is not necessarily
+acetic. The presence of vinegar in a dressing, like that of onions and
+its relatives, on most occasions should be suspected only. Wyvern and
+other true epicures consider the advice of Sydney Smith, as expressed in
+the following couplet, "most pernicious":--
+
+ "Four times the spoon with oil of Lucca crown,
+ And twice with vinegar procured from town."
+
+Aromatic vinegars, a few drops of which, used occasionally, lend
+piquancy and variety to an every-day salad, can be purchased at
+high-class provision stores; but the true salad-maker is an artist, and
+prefers to compound her own colors (_i.e._, vinegars); therefore we have
+given several recipes for the same, which may be easily modified to suit
+individual tastes.
+
+Indeed, the dressing of a salad, though in the early days of the century
+considered a special art,--an art that rendered it possible for at least
+one noted Royalist refugee to amass a considerable fortune,--is
+entirely a matter of individual taste, or, more properly speaking, of
+cultivation. On this account, particularly for a French dressing, no set
+rules can be given. By experience and judgment one must decide upon the
+proportions of the different ingredients, or, more specifically, upon
+the proportions of the oil and acid to be used. Often four spoonfuls of
+oil are used to one of vinegar. Four spoonfuls of oil to two, three or
+four of vinegar may be the proportion preferred by others, and the
+quantity may vary for different salads.
+
+Though in many of the recipes explicit quantities of oil, vinegar and
+condiments are given, it is with the understanding that these quantities
+are indicated simply as an approximate rule; sometimes less and
+sometimes more will be required, according to the tendency of the
+article dressed to absorb oil and acid, or the taste of the salad
+dresser.
+
+
+=Use of Dressings.=
+
+The dressings in most common use are the French and the mayonnaise. A
+French dressing is used for green vegetables, for fruit and nuts, and to
+marinate cooked vegetables, or the meat or fish for a meat or fish
+salad. Mayonnaise dressing is used for meat, fish, some varieties of
+fruit, as banana, apple and pineapple, and for some vegetables, as
+cauliflower, asparagus and tomatoes. Any article to be served with
+mayonnaise, after standing an hour or more in a marinade,--_i.e._,
+French dressing,--should be carefully drained, as, by the pickling
+process, liquid will drain out into the bottom of the vessel and, mixing
+with the mayonnaise, will liquefy the same.
+
+
+=Arrangement of Salads.=
+
+In the arrangement of salads there may be great display of taste and
+individuality. By a judicious selection from materials that may be kept
+constantly in store, and with one or two window boxes, in which herbs
+are growing, any one, with a modicum of inventive skill, can so change
+and modify the appearance and flavor of her salads that she may seem
+always to present a new one.
+
+
+=Composition of Mayonnaise.=
+
+Mayonnaise dressing is composed largely of olive oil. A small amount of
+yolk of egg is used as a foundation. The oil, with the addition of
+condiments, is slightly acidulated with vinegar and lemon juice, one or
+both, and the whole is made very light and thick by beating. Mayonnaise
+forms a very handsome dressing, and it is much enjoyed by those who are
+fond of oil.
+
+
+=Value of Oil.=
+
+Pure olive oil is almost entirely without flavor, and a taste for it can
+be readily acquired; and, when we consider that it contains all the
+really desirable qualities of the once-famous cod-liver oil, except the
+phosphates, and that these may be supplied in the other materials of the
+salad, it would seem wise to cultivate a taste for so wholesome an
+article. By the addition of cream, in the proportion of a cup of whipped
+cream to a pint of dressing, those to whom oil has not become agreeable
+can so modify its "tone" that they too will enjoy the mayonnaise
+dressing.
+
+
+=Boiled and Cream Dressings.=
+
+For the French and mayonnaise dressings--particularly for the latter--we
+sometimes substitute a _boiled_ and sometimes a _cream_ dressing. In the
+first, butter, or cream, is substituted for oil, and the materials are
+combined by cooking. In the latter, as the name implies, cream is the
+basis, and this may be either sweet or sour.
+
+
+=Important Points in Salad-Making.=
+
+(1) The green vegetables should be served fresh and crisp.
+
+(2) Meat and fish should be well marinated and cold.
+
+(3) The ingredients composing the salad should not be combined until the
+last moment before serving.
+
+
+=When to Serve Salads with French or Mayonnaise Dressing.=
+
+As a rule, subject, however, to exceptions, light vegetable salads,
+dressed with French dressing, are served at dinner; while heavy meat or
+fish Salads are reserved for luncheon, or supper, and are served with
+mayonnaise or cream dressing.
+
+
+=When to Serve a Fruit Salad.=
+
+A fruit salad, with sweet dressing, is served with cake at a luncheon,
+or supper, or in the evening; that is, it may take the place of fruit in
+the dessert course. A fruit salad, with French or mayonnaise dressing,
+may be served as a first course at luncheon, or with the game or roast,
+though in the latter case the French dressing is preferable.
+
+
+=Salads with Cheese.=
+
+The rightful place of salads is with the roast or game. Here the crisp,
+green salad herbs, delicately acidulated, complement and correct the
+richness of these _plats_.
+
+Occasionally when the game is omitted and an acid sauce accompanies the
+roast, a simple salad combined with cheese in some form, preferably
+cooked and hot, is selected to lengthen the menu. This same combination
+of hot cheese dish and salad should be a favorite one for home
+luncheons, when this meal is not made the children's dinner. The salad
+too in this combination, aided by the bread accompanying it, corrects by
+dilution the over concentration and richness of the cheese dish. In
+England neatly trimmed-and-cleansed celery stalks and cheese often
+precede the sweet course; but by virtue of its mission as a digester of
+everything but itself and of the common disinclination to have the taste
+of sweets linger upon the palate, the place of cheese as cheese is with
+the coffee.
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO MAKE AROMATIC VINEGARS, TO KEEP VEGETABLES AND TO PREPARE
+GARNISHES.
+
+
+=How to Boil Eggs Hard for Garnishing.=
+
+Cover the eggs with boiling water. Set them on the back of the range,
+where the water will keep hot without boiling, about forty minutes. Cool
+in cold water, and with a thin, sharp knife cut as desired.
+
+
+=To Poach Whites of Eggs.=
+
+Turn the whites of the eggs into a well-buttered mould or cup, set upon
+a trivet in a dish of hot water, and cook until firm, either upon the
+back of the range or in the oven, and without letting the water boil.
+Turn from the mould, cut into slices, and then into fanciful shapes; or
+chop fine.
+
+
+=Royal Custard for Moulds of Aspic.=
+
+Beat together one whole egg and three yolks; add one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of mace, salt and paprica, and, when well mixed, add
+half a cup of cream. Bake in a buttered mould, set in a pan of water,
+until firm. When cold cut in thin slices, then stamp out in fanciful
+shapes with French cutters. Use in decorating a mould for aspic jelly.
+
+
+=How to Use Garlic or Onion in Salads.=
+
+The salad-bowl may be rubbed with the cut surface of a clove of garlic,
+or a _chapon_ may be used. A _chapon_, according to gastronomic usage,
+is a thin piece of bread rubbed on all sides with the cut surface of a
+clove of garlic and put into the salad-bowl before the seasonings. It is
+tossed with the salad and dressings, to which it imparts its flavor. It
+may be divided and served with the salad. Oftentimes, instead of one
+piece, several small cubes of bread are thus used.
+
+After a slice of onion has been removed, the cut surface of the onion
+may be pressed with a rotary motion against a grater and the juice
+extracted; or a lemon-squeezer kept for this special purpose may be
+used.
+
+
+=How to Shell and Blanch Chestnuts.=
+
+Score the shell of each nut, and put into a frying-pan with a
+teaspoonful of butter for each pint of nuts. Shake the pan over the fire
+until the butter is melted; then set in the oven five minutes. With a
+sharp knife remove the shells and skins together.
+
+
+=How to Blanch Walnuts and Almonds.=
+
+Put the nut meats over the fire in cold water, bring quickly to the
+boiling-point, drain, and rinse with cold water, then the skins may be
+easily rubbed from the almonds; a small pointed knife will be needed for
+the walnuts.
+
+
+=How to Chop Fresh Herbs.=
+
+Pluck the leaves close, discarding the stems; gather the leaves together
+closely with the fingers of the left hand, then with a sharp knife cut
+through close to the fingers; push the leaves out a little and cut
+again, and so continue until all are cut. Now gather into a mound and
+chop to a very fine powder, holding the point of the knife close to the
+board. Put the chopped herb into a cheese-cloth and hold under a stream
+of cold water, then wring dry. Use this green powder for dusting over a
+salad when required.
+
+
+=How to Cut Radishes for a Garnish.=
+
+Cut a thin slice from the leaf end of each; cut off the root end so as
+to leave it the length of the pistil of a flower. With a small, sharp
+knife score the pink skin, at the root end, into five or six sections
+extending half-way down the radish; then loosen the skin above these
+sections. Put the radishes in cold water for a little time, when they
+will become crisp, and the points will stand out like the petals of a
+flower.
+
+
+=How to Clean Lettuce, Endive, Etc.=
+
+A short time before serving cut off the roots and freshen the vegetable
+in cold water. Then break the leaves from the stalk; dip repeatedly
+into cold water, examining carefully, until perfectly clean, taking care
+not to crush the leaves. Put into a French wire basket made for the
+purpose, or into a piece of mosquito netting or cheese-cloth, and shake
+gently until the water is removed. Then spread on a plate or in a
+colander and set in a cool place until the moment for serving.
+
+
+=How to Clean Cress.=
+
+Pick over the stalks so as to remove grass, etc. Wash and dry in the
+same manner as the lettuce, but without removing the leaves from the
+stems, except when the stems are very coarse and large.
+
+
+=How to Clean Cabbage and Cauliflower.=
+
+Let stand head downwards half an hour in cold salted water, using a
+tablespoonful of salt to a quart of water.
+
+
+=How to Render Uncooked Vegetables Crisp.=
+
+Put into cold water with a bit of ice and a slice of lemon. When ready
+to use, dry between folds of cheese-cloth and let stand exposed to the
+air a few moments.
+
+
+=How to Blanch and Cook Vegetables for Salads.=
+
+Cut the vegetables as desired, in cubes, lozenges, balls, _juliennes_,
+etc. Put over the fire in boiling water, and, after cooking three or
+four minutes, drain, rinse in cold water, and put on to cook in boiling
+salted water to cover. Drain as soon as tender.
+
+
+=How to Cut Gherkins for a Garnish.=
+
+Select small cucumber pickles of uniform size. With a sharp knife cut
+them, lengthwise, into slices thin as paper, without detaching the
+slices at one end; then spread out the slices as a fan is spread.
+
+
+=How to Fringe Celery.=
+
+Cut the stalks into pieces about two inches in length. Beginning on the
+round side at one end, with a thin, sharp knife, cut down half an inch
+as many times as possible; then turn the stalk half-way around and cut
+in the opposite direction, thus dividing the end into shreds, or a
+fringe. If desired, cut the opposite end in the same manner. Set aside
+in a pan of ice water containing a slice of lemon.
+
+
+=How to Shred Romaine and Straight Lettuce.=
+
+Wash the lettuce leaves carefully, without removing them from the stalk;
+shake in the open air, and they will dry very quickly; fold in the
+middle, crosswise, and cut through in the fold. Hold the two pieces, one
+above the other, close to the meat-board with the left hand, and with a
+sharp knife cut in narrow ribbons not more than a quarter of an inch
+wide.
+
+
+=How to Keep Celery, Watercress, Lettuce, Etc.=
+
+Many green vegetables--celery in particular--discolor or rust, if
+allowed to stand longer than a few hours after being wet. When brought
+from the market they may be put aside, in a tightly closed pail, or in a
+paper bag, in a cool, dry place. By thus excluding the air they will
+keep fresh several days. A short time before serving put them into
+ice-cold water to which a slice or two of lemon has been added.
+
+
+=How to Cook Sweetbreads and Brains.=
+
+Remove the thin outer skin or membrane and soak in cold water, changing
+the water often, an hour or more. Cover with salted boiling water,
+acidulated with lemon juice and flavored with vegetables, and cook, just
+below the boiling-point, twenty minutes. They are then ready for
+preparation in any of the ways mentioned. Tie the brains in a cloth
+before cooking.
+
+
+=How to Pickle Nasturtium Seeds.=
+
+As the seeds are gathered wash and dry them; then put them into vinegar
+to which salt (half a teaspoonful to a pint) has been added. When a
+sufficient quantity has been collected, scald fresh vinegar, add salt as
+before, and the seeds from which the first vinegar has been drained.
+Pour scalding hot into bottles, having the seeds completely covered with
+vinegar.
+
+
+=Nasturtium Vinegar.=
+
+Fill a quart jar loosely with nasturtium blossoms fully blown; add a
+shallot and one-third a clove of garlic, both finely chopped, half a red
+pepper, and cold cider vinegar to fill the jar; cover closely and set
+aside two months. Dissolve a teaspoonful of salt in the vinegar, then
+strain and filter.
+
+
+=Tarragon Vinegar.=
+
+Fill a fruit jar with fresh tarragon leaves or shoots, putting them in
+loosely; add the thin _yellow_ paring of half a lemon with two or three
+cloves, and fill the jar with white wine or cider vinegar. Screw down
+the cover tightly, and allow the jar to stand in the sun two weeks;
+strain the vinegar through a cloth, pressing out the liquid from the
+leaves; then pass through filter paper, and bottle for future use. If a
+quantity be prepared, it were better to seal the bottles.
+
+
+=Fines Herbes Vinegar.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 cups of tarragon vinegar.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of garden cress, chopped fine.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of sweet marjoram, chopped fine.
+ 2 cloves of garlic, chopped fine.
+ 4 small green capsicums, chopped fine.
+ 2 shallots, chopped fine.
+
+_Method._--Mix the ingredients in a pint fruit jar, cover closely, and
+set in the sun; after two weeks strain, pass through filter paper and
+store in tightly corked bottles.
+
+
+=Fines Herbes Vinegar, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of tarragon vinegar.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of seeds of garden cress, bruised or crushed.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of celery seeds, crushed.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of parsley seeds, crushed.
+ 4 capsicums, chopped fine.
+ 2 cloves of garlic, chopped fine.
+
+_Method._--Prepare as in preceding recipe.
+
+
+=To Decorate Salads with Mayonnaise by Use of Pastry Bag and Tubes.=
+
+Make the dressing very thick by the addition of oil, or use "jelly
+mayonnaise." Put the dressing into a pastry bag with star tube attached;
+twist the large end of the bag with the left hand, pressing the mixture
+towards the tube, and with the right guide the tube as in writing, to
+produce the pattern desired. To form stars, hold the bag in an upright
+position, point downward, press out a little of the dressing, then push
+the tube down gently, and raise it quickly to break the flow.
+
+[Illustration: "The tender lettuce brings on softer sleep."--W. KING,
+_Art of Cookery_.]
+
+
+
+
+SALAD DRESSINGS.
+
+
+
+
+SALAD DRESSINGS.
+
+ "Just, as in nature, thy proportions be,
+ As full of concord their variety."
+
+
+=French Dressing.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A few grains of cayenne or paprica.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of pepper.
+ 2 to 6 tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+
+If desired,--
+
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of prepared mustard.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of onion juice, or rub the salad-bowl with
+ slice of onion, or clove of garlic.
+
+_Method._--Mix the condiments, add the oil and mix again; then add the
+acid, a few drops at a time, and beat until an emulsion is formed; then
+pour over the vegetables, toss with the spoon and fork, and serve. In
+Chicago a method has obtained that is well worth a trial: Put a bit of
+ice into the bowl with the condiments, and, by means of a fork pressed
+against or into this, use in mixing.
+
+_Second Method._--Pour the oil over the vegetables, toss, until the oil
+is evenly distributed, and dust with salt and pepper; then add the acid
+and toss again. When the salad is prepared at the table, the vegetables
+may be dressed in a bowl, then arranged on the serving-dish; or, if but
+one vegetable is used, it is preferable to serve from the dish in which
+it is dressed.
+
+
+=To Mix a Quantity of Dressing.=
+
+Put all the ingredients into a fruit jar, fit on one or more rubbers and
+the cover; then shake the jar vigorously, until a smooth dressing is
+formed.
+
+
+=Claret Dressing.=
+
+(_For lettuce or fruit salad._)
+
+Mix half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper, white or paprica, and
+four tablespoonfuls of oil; add gradually one tablespoonful of claret
+and one tablespoonful of lemon juice or vinegar.
+
+
+=Mayonnaise Dressing.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ The yolks of 2 raw eggs.
+ 1 pint of olive oil.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A few grains of cayenne or paprica.
+
+If desired,--
+
+ 1 teaspoonful, each, of mustard and powdered sugar.
+
+_Method._--An amateur will probably find it helpful to have all the
+utensils and ingredients thoroughly chilled, but the professional
+salad-maker thinks it expedient to have the ingredients and utensils of
+the same temperature as the room in which the dressing is to be served.
+Beat the yolks with a small wooden spoon or silver fork, add the
+condiments and mix again; then add one teaspoonful of vinegar, and, when
+well mixed with the other ingredients, add the oil, at first drop by
+drop. When the mixture has become of good consistency the oil may be
+added faster. When it is too thick to beat well, add a little of the
+lemon juice, then more oil, and so on alternately, until the ingredients
+are used. If a very heavy dressing is desired, as when it is to be put
+on with forcing-bag and tubes for a garnish, an additional half a cup of
+oil may be added without increasing the quantity of acid.
+
+In preparing mayonnaise, there is absolutely no danger of curdling, if
+the eggs be fresh and the oil be added slowly, especially if the
+materials and utensils have been thoroughly chilled. If the yolks do not
+thicken when beaten with the condiments, but spread out over the bowl,
+you have sufficient indication that they will not thicken upon the
+addition of the oil, and it were better to select others and begin
+again. Take care to add the teaspoonful of acid to the yolks and
+condiments before beginning to drop in the oil, as this lessens the
+liability of the mixture to curdle.
+
+
+=How to Make Mayonnaise in Quantity.=
+
+If four quarts or more of dressing be required, make the full amount at
+one time; cut down the number of yolks to one for each pint of oil, but
+keep the usual proportions of the other ingredients. Use a Dover
+egg-beater from the start; after a little a teaspoonful of oil can be
+added instead of drops, and, very soon, a much larger quantity.
+
+
+=Curdled Mayonnaise.=
+
+Occasionally a mayonnaise will assume a curdled appearance; under such
+circumstances, often the addition of a very little of white of egg or a
+few drops of lemon juice, with thorough beating, will cause the sauce to
+resume its former smoothness. In case it does not become smooth, put the
+yolk of an egg into a cold bowl, beat well, and add to it the curdled
+mixture, a little at a time.
+
+
+=Red Mayonnaise.=
+
+Mix a level teaspoonful of Italian tomato pulp with a teaspoonful of
+mayonnaise dressing, and when well blended beat very thoroughly into a
+cup or more of the dressing, or add dressing until the desired tint is
+attained.
+
+
+=Red Mayonnaise, No. 2.=
+
+(_For fish._)
+
+Pound dried lobster coral in a mortar, sift, and add gradually to the
+dressing, to secure the shade desired. Or, after the salad is arranged
+in the bowl, or in nests, mask the top with mayonnaise of the usual
+color, and sift the coral over the centre, leaving a ring of yellow
+around the edge.
+
+
+=Sauce Tartare.=
+
+Make a mayonnaise dressing, using tarragon vinegar. To each cup of
+dressing add one shallot, chopped fine, two tablespoonfuls, each, of
+finely chopped capers, olives and cucumber pickles, one tablespoonful of
+chopped parsley, and one-fourth a teaspoonful of powdered tarragon.
+
+
+=Sardine Mayonnaise.=
+
+Skin and bone three sardines and pound them to a pulp; sift the cooked
+yolks of three eggs and add to the pulp; work until smooth, then add to
+one cup of mayonnaise dressing.
+
+
+=Jelly Mayonnaise.=
+
+(_Used for masking cold fish or salads, or as a garnish with forcing-bag
+and tube._)
+
+To a cup of mayonnaise dressing beat in gradually from two
+tablespoonfuls to one-third a cup of chilled but liquid aspic. More
+seasoning may be needed. Apply to a cold surface, or chill before using
+with forcing-bag.
+
+
+=Livournaise Sauce.=
+
+To a cup of mayonnaise dressing add a grating of nutmeg, one
+tablespoonful of chopped parsley and the pulp of eight anchovies.
+
+To prepare the anchovies, wash, dry, remove skin and bones and pound to
+a pulp in a mortar.
+
+
+=Boiled Dressing for Chicken Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/2 a cup of chicken stock, well reduced.
+ 1/2 a cup of vinegar.
+ 1/4 a cup of mixed mustard.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ Yolks of 5 eggs.
+ 1/2 a cup of oil.
+ 1/2 a cup of thick, sweet cream.
+
+_Method._--Simmer the liquor in which a fowl has been cooked, until it
+is well reduced. Put the stock, vinegar and mustard into a double
+boiler, and add the salt and pepper. Beat the yolks of the eggs and add
+carefully to the hot mixture, cooking in the same manner as a boiled
+custard. When cold and ready to serve, beat in with a whisk the oil, and
+then fold in the cream, beaten stiff with a Dover egg-beater. Melted
+butter, added before the dressing is cold, may be substituted for the
+oil.
+
+
+=Boiled Salad Dressing.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 teaspoonful of mustard.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ Yolks of 3 eggs.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of melted butter.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 1/2 a cup of thick cream.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice.
+
+_Method._--Mix together the mustard, salt and paprica, and add the yolks
+of eggs; stir well and add slowly the butter, vinegar and lemon juice,
+and cook in the double boiler until thick as soft custard. When cool and
+ready to serve, add the cream, beaten stiff with the Dover egg-beater.
+
+
+=Cream Salad Dressing.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 3/4 a cup of thick cream.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of white pepper and paprica.
+
+_Method._--Add the seasonings to the cream and beat with a Dover
+egg-beater until smooth and light. Add a scant fourth a cup of grated
+horseradish, for a change. The radish should be freshly grated, and
+added to the cream after it is beaten.
+
+
+=Dressing for Cole-Slaw.=
+
+Beat the yolks of three eggs with half a teaspoonful of made mustard, a
+dash of pepper and one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt; add one-third a cup
+of vinegar and two tablespoonfuls of butter, and cook over hot water
+until slightly thickened. Set aside to become cold before using.
+
+
+=Bacon Sauce.=
+
+Heat five tablespoonfuls of bacon fat; cook in it two tablespoonfuls of
+flour and a dash of paprica; add five tablespoonfuls of vinegar and half
+a cup of water; stir until boiling; then beat in the beaten yolks of two
+eggs, and a little salt if necessary. Do not allow the sauce to boil
+after the eggs are added. Add to salad after it has become thoroughly
+cold. Good with dandelion, endive, chicory, corn salad or lettuce.
+
+
+=Hollandaise Sauce.=
+
+Beat half a cup of butter to a cream; add the yolks of four eggs, one at
+a time, beating in each thoroughly; add one-fourth a teaspoonful of
+salt, a dash of paprica or cayenne, and half a cup of boiling water.
+Cook over hot water until thick, adding gradually the juice of half a
+lemon. Chill before using. This is good, especially for a fish salad, in
+the place of mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Bernaise Sauce.=
+
+Use tarragon instead of plain vinegar, omit the water, with the
+exception of one tablespoonful, and the hollandaise becomes bernaise
+sauce. Oil may be used in the place of butter. The sauce resembles a
+firm mayonnaise, and, as it keeps its shape well, is particularly
+adapted for garnishing with pastry bag and tube.
+
+[Illustration: Cucumber Salad for Fish Course.
+
+(See page 36)]
+
+[Illustration: Cooked Vegetable Salad
+
+(See page 37)]
+
+
+
+
+VEGETABLE SALADS SERVED WITH FRENCH DRESSING.
+
+ "Bestrewed with lettuce and cool salad herbs."
+
+
+=Lettuce Salad.=
+
+Wash and drain the lettuce leaves; toss lightly, so as to remove every
+drop of water. Sprinkle them with oil, a few drops at a time, tossing
+the leaves about with spoon and fork after each addition. When each leaf
+glistens with oil (there should be no oil in the bottom of the bowl)
+shake over them a few drops of vinegar, then dust with salt and freshly
+ground pepper. The cutting of lettuce is considered a culinary sin; but,
+when the straight-leaved lettuce, or the Romaine, is to be used, better
+effects, at least as far as appearance is concerned, will be produced,
+if the lettuce be cut into ribbons. To do this, wash the lettuce
+carefully, without removing the leaves from the stem; fold together
+across the centre, and with a sharp, thin knife cut into ribbons _less_
+than half an inch in width.
+
+
+=Endive Salad.=
+
+Prepare as lettuce salad, first rubbing over the bowl with a clove of
+garlic cut in halves. A few sprigs of chives, chopped fine, are
+exceedingly palatable, sprinkled over a lettuce, endive, string-bean, or
+other bean salad.
+
+
+=A Few Combinations.=
+
+Dress each vegetable separately with the dressing; then arrange upon the
+serving-dish. Or, have the salad arranged upon the serving-dish and pour
+the dressing over all; then toss together and serve. About three
+tablespoonfuls of oil, with other ingredients in accordance, will be
+needed for one pint of vegetable.
+
+1. Lettuce, tomatoes cut in halves, sprinkled with powdered tarragon,
+and parsley or chives.
+
+2. Lettuce, moulded spinach and fine-chopped beets.
+
+3. Lettuce, Boston baked beans and chives.
+
+4. Lettuce and peppergrass.
+
+5. Lettuce, shredded sweet peppers or pimentos, and sliced pecan nuts or
+almonds.
+
+6. Lettuce, tomatoes stuffed with peas or string beans cut small, and
+chives chopped fine.
+
+7. Lettuce, asparagus tips and sliced radishes. Arrange the lettuce at
+the edge of dish, inside a ring of radishes sliced thin, without
+removing the red skins; centre of asparagus tips, with radish cut to
+resemble a flower.
+
+8. Lettuce, shredded tomatoes and shredded green peppers.
+
+9. Shredded lettuce, English walnuts, and almonds or cooked chestnuts,
+sliced.
+
+10. Lettuce, Neufchatel cheese in slices and shredded pimentos.
+
+11. Lettuce, cauliflower, string beans and shredded pimentos.
+
+12. Lettuce or cress, artichoke slices and powdered tarragon.
+
+13. Shredded cabbage and shredded green peppers.
+
+14. Cauliflower broken into flowerets, string beans cut into small
+pieces, and beets cut in fancy shapes or chopped. Arrange each vegetable
+in a mass by itself; surround with lettuce.
+
+15. Cucumbers and new onions, sliced.
+
+16. Watercress, diced boiled beets, and olives in centre.
+
+17. Lettuce, Brussels sprouts and chopped pepper.
+
+
+=Lentil Salad.=
+
+Soak the lentils over night; wash and rinse thoroughly, then cook until
+tender, adding hot water as needed. Drain, and when cold mix with each
+pint of lentils about five tablespoonfuls of oil, two tablespoonfuls of
+tarragon vinegar and one teaspoonful, each, of capers, parsley, chives
+and cucumber pickles, all, save the capers, chopped fine. Serve in a
+mound, on a bed of lettuce leaves. Garnish with heart leaves of lettuce
+at the top and sections of tomato, or diamonds of tomato jelly, at the
+base.
+
+
+=White-Bean Salad.=
+
+Toss one pint of white beans, cooked, with one tablespoonful of vinegar
+and three tablespoonfuls of oil, a little salt and a dash of cayenne or
+paprica. Arrange in a mound on a bed of shredded lettuce, and sprinkle
+with chives, parsley and pimentos, all finely chopped. Finish the top of
+the salad with a large pim-ola.
+
+
+=Potato Salad.=
+
+(MISS COHEN.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 3 cups of cold boiled potatoes, cut in cubes.
+ 1 cup of pecan nuts, broken in pieces.
+ 5 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 1 tablespoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of onion juice.
+ A dash of cayenne.
+ 2 or 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ Watercress.
+
+_Method._--Mix the potatoes and nuts, add the oil and mix again; add the
+other seasonings, and, when well mixed, set aside in a cool place an
+hour or more. Remove the coarse stalks from two bunches of watercress
+that have been well washed and dried. Season with French dressing and
+arrange in a wreath about the edge of the salad.
+
+[Illustration: Potato Balls, Pecan Meats, and Cress Salad.]
+
+
+[Illustration: Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad.
+
+(See page 34)]
+
+
+=Potato Salad.=
+
+(CARRIE M. DEARBORN.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 12 cold boiled potatoes.
+ 4 cooked eggs.
+ 2 small Bermuda onions.
+ Chopped parsley.
+ 1 saltspoonful of white pepper.
+ 2 teaspoonfuls of salt.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls, each, of oil and vinegar.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of powdered sugar.
+
+_Method._--Cut the potatoes into dice and chop the eggs fine. Chop the
+onions, or slice them very thin. Sprinkle the potatoes, eggs and onions
+with the salt and pepper, and mix thoroughly. Pour the oil gradually
+over the mixture, stirring and tossing continually; lastly, mix with the
+other ingredients the vinegar, in which the sugar has been dissolved.
+Sprinkle chopped parsley over the top.
+
+
+=Potato Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of cubes of cold boiled potatoes.
+ 1-1/2 teaspoonfuls of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ Capers, beets, whites and yolks of eggs, and lettuce.
+
+_Method._--To the potato cubes add the salt, pepper and oil, and mix
+thoroughly; add the vinegar and mix again. Pile the cubes in a mound in
+the salad-bowl. Mark out the surface of the mound into quarters with
+capers; fill in two opposite sections with chopped beet; use chopped
+whites of eggs in a third, and sifted yolks of eggs in the fourth
+section. Finish with a border of parsley.
+
+
+=Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad.=
+
+(E. J. MCKENZIE.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of potatoes, cut in cubes.
+ 1/2 a cup of chopped gherkins.
+ 1 cup of tender nasturtium shoots, cut in bits.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of pickled nasturtium seeds.
+ Onion juice or garlic.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 5 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ Salt and pepper.
+ Chopped parsley.
+
+_Method._--Mix the potatoes, gherkins, nasturtium shoots and seeds in a
+bowl rubbed over with garlic; add the oil, vinegar and seasonings, and
+mix again. Pile in a mound on a serving-dish, dust with chopped parsley,
+and garnish with a wreath of nasturtium blossoms and leaves.
+
+
+=Stuffed Beets.=
+
+Boil new beets, of even size, until tender. Set aside for some hours, or
+over night, covered with vinegar. When ready to serve, rub off the skin,
+scoop out the centre of each to form a cup, and arrange the cups on
+lettuce leaves. For each five cups chop fine a cucumber. Make a French
+dressing of two tablespoonfuls of oil, half a tablespoonful (scant) of
+vinegar, one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of paprica and salt. Stir the
+dressing into the cucumber and fill the beets with the mixture. Of the
+beet removed to form the cups, cut slices and stamp out from these stars
+or other fanciful shapes, and use to decorate the top of each cup.
+
+Chopped radish, cress, olives or celery are all admissible for a
+filling.
+
+
+=Salad of Brussels Sprouts and Beets.=
+
+Soak the sprouts in salted water; then drain and cook in salted boiling
+water about fifteen minutes, or until tender; drain and cool. Dress with
+French dressing and pile in a mound. Finish the top with a
+fanciful-shaped figure cut from a slice of pickled beet, and place a
+wreath of cooked beet, chopped and seasoned with French dressing, about
+the whole.
+
+
+=Macedoine Salad.=
+
+Cut pieces of carrot and turnip one inch long and half an inch thick.
+Put over the fire in boiling water and bring quickly to the
+boiling-point; drain, cover with fresh water, and cook until tender;
+score the top of each piece and insert an asparagus point. Dip the
+pieces in a little melted gelatine and set alternately in a circle on
+the serving-dish. Have carrots cut in small cubes or straws, turnips and
+beet root the same, green string beans cut in small pieces, asparagus
+and peas, all cooked separately until tender. Mix with French dressing
+and dispose inside the circle. Each vegetable may be massed by itself,
+or all may be mixed together. Finish the top with half a dozen short
+stalks of asparagus.
+
+
+=Tomato-and-Onion Salad.=
+
+Peel and shred four tomatoes; slice thinly a very mild onion and
+separate into rings; dress freely with oil and tarragon vinegar, and
+season with salt and pepper. Serve on lettuce leaves, sprinkling the
+whole with fine-chopped parsley and green peppers.
+
+
+=Endive,-Tomato-and-Green-String-Bean Salad.=
+
+Dress the well-blanched stalks of a head of endive, three tomatoes,
+peeled, cut in halves and chilled, and a cup of cold cooked string
+beans, separately, with French dressing, using in the dressing tarragon
+vinegar and a few drops of onion juice; then arrange on a serving-dish.
+
+[Illustration: Endive, Tomato, and Green String Bean Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Stuffed Beets.
+
+(See page 34)]
+
+
+=Cucumber Salad.=
+
+(_German style._)
+
+Pare large cucumbers and cut them into thin slices; cut each slice round
+and round so as to form a long, narrow curling strip. Let these strips
+stand two hours in salted ice water, drain, and dry in a soft cloth.
+Serve with French dressing. Toss first in the oil, then add the
+condiments, and lastly the vinegar. Americans would prefer to omit the
+salt from the ice water, as it softens the cucumber.
+
+
+=Cucumber Salad for Fish Course.=
+
+With a handy slicer remove the outside rind from the cucumbers, cut in
+thin slices, and let stand in ice-water to chill. Wipe dry, and
+arrange the slices in the salad bowl in the form of a Greek cross. Make
+a French dressing, in the proportion of three tablespoonfuls of cider
+vinegar to six tablespoonfuls of oil, half a teaspoonful of salt, and a
+dash of paprica. Rub the inside of the salad bowl with the cut side of
+an onion before the salad is disposed in it.
+
+
+=Cooked Vegetable Salad.=
+
+Dress cooked kidney beans, peas, and balls cut from potatoes, each
+separately with French dressing, to which a few drops of onion juice
+have been added. Dispose upon a serving-dish and let stand in a cool
+place an hour or more. Garnish at serving with heart leaves of lettuce.
+
+
+=Potato Salad.=
+
+(_German Style._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of potato slices or cubes.
+ About 1/2 a cup of beef broth.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ 8 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 1 tablespoonful of grated onion.
+ 2 hard boiled eggs.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 1 teaspoonful of mustard.
+ 1 teaspoonful of sugar.
+ Fine chopped parsley.
+ (1 cup of mushrooms.)
+
+_Method._--Boil the potatoes without paring. German potatoes, which are
+waxy rather than mealy, may be procured in large cities especially for
+salads. Peel the potatoes and cut them while hot into slices or cubes;
+pour over them as much beef broth as they will readily absorb and
+sprinkle with the salt and pepper, the oil and onion; mix lightly and
+set aside for some hours. Then add the whites of the eggs chopped fine,
+the yolks passed through a sieve, and mix with the rest of the oil,
+stirred with the vinegar into the mustard and sugar. After disposing in
+the dish, sprinkle with the parsley. If mushrooms be at hand, simmer ten
+or fifteen minutes in broth, break in pieces, and add to the salad with
+the egg.
+
+
+
+
+SALADS, LARGELY VEGETABLE, SERVED WITH MAYONNAISE, CREAM OR BOILED
+DRESSING.
+
+
+=Cauliflower Salad.=
+
+Soak the cauliflower in salted water an hour; cook in boiling salted
+water until tender; drain and chill, then sprinkle with French dressing
+and set aside for half an hour. Sever the flowerets partly from the
+stalk, but so as not to change their relative positions, and place on a
+serving-dish; put heart leaves of lettuce between the flowerets and
+about the base of the vegetable; pour a cup of mayonnaise dressing over
+the whole, and sprinkle with pimentos or fine-chopped parsley. In
+serving, separate the flowerets with a sharp knife.
+
+
+=Tomatoes Stuffed with Nuts and Celery.=
+
+Peel the tomatoes; cut out a circular piece at the stem end of each and
+scoop out the flesh so as to form cups. Chill thoroughly, then fill with
+English walnut or pecan meats, broken into pieces, and celery, cut into
+small pieces and mixed with mayonnaise. Serve on lettuce leaves.
+
+
+=Stuffed-Tomato Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 smooth, small-sized tomatoes.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of chicken, veal or tongue, cut fine.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of peas.
+ 3 olives, chopped fine.
+ 3 gherkins, chopped fine.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of capers.
+ Salt and pepper.
+ Mayonnaise dressing.
+
+_Method._--Remove a round piece from the stem end of the tomatoes and
+scoop out the seeds and centre. Chill thoroughly. When ready to serve,
+mix together the solid part removed from the tomatoes, cut fine, and the
+other ingredients; season to taste with salt and pepper, adding also
+mayonnaise to hold the mixture together. With this fill the tomatoes,
+put them in nests of lettuce or cress, and force a star of mayonnaise on
+the top of each tomato.
+
+
+=Tomato Salad, Horseradish Dressing.=
+
+Plunge the tomatoes, placed in a wire basket, into a kettle of hot
+water; remove at once and rub off the skin; chill thoroughly and cut in
+halves. Serve on lettuce leaves with a star of cream dressing, seasoned
+with grated horseradish, on the top of each slice.
+
+
+=Tomato-and-Sweetbread Salad.=
+
+Cook two sweetbreads as directed on another page, or braise with
+vegetables. Cool between two plates bearing a weight. When cold cut into
+slices and stamp into rounds of suitable size to use with slices of
+tomato. Cover the slices of sweetbread with chaud-froid sauce and
+decorate with fine-chopped parsley or sifted yolk of egg; pour over a
+little melted aspic. When the aspic is set, trim neatly, and arrange
+each round of sweetbread on a slice of chilled tomato. Serve inside a
+border of lettuce around a salad made of the trimmings of the
+sweetbreads and a cucumber cut in cubes and dressed with mayonnaise.
+
+[Illustration: Cress, Cucumber, and Tomato Salad.
+
+(See page 41)]
+
+[Illustration: Tomato Jelly with Celery and Nuts.
+
+(See page 43)]
+
+
+=Cress,-Cucumber-and-Tomato Salad.=
+
+Wash the cress and shake dry; arrange as a bed on a serving-dish,
+discarding the coarse stems; above this make a smaller bed of cucumbers,
+cut in slices or dice and dressed with French dressing, using three
+tablespoonfuls of oil and one of vinegar or lemon juice to a pint of
+cucumber. Arrange peeled tomatoes, chilled and cut in pieces, upon the
+cucumbers. Serve with French, cream or mayonnaise dressing.
+
+
+=Tomatoes Stuffed with Cucumber.=
+
+Peel five tomatoes, cut off the stem ends and scoop out the pulp, thus
+forming cups; set, turned upside down, in a cool place. Chop fine the
+solid pulp from the tomatoes and one cucumber, chilled before chopping;
+stir into a cup of cream dressing and fill the tomatoes with the
+mixture. Salt and pepper will be needed in addition to that in the
+dressing. If at hand, a pimento may be chopped with the other
+ingredients, or two tablespoonfuls of grated horseradish may be used.
+Serve at once on lettuce leaves.
+
+
+=Tomatoes Stuffed with Jelly.=
+
+Chop one sweetbread and one cucumber fine. To each cup (solid and
+liquid) add one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprica, a few
+drops of onion juice and a tablespoonful of capers; add also half a
+tablespoonful of granulated gelatine, soaked in two or three
+tablespoonfuls of cold water and melted over hot water. Stir until the
+mixture begins to congeal, then fill into tomatoes prepared as above.
+Set aside on the ice for half an hour, at least; then serve on lettuce
+leaves with either mayonnaise, boiled or cream dressing. Calf's brains,
+chicken, veal, tongue or ham may be substituted for the sweetbread.
+
+
+=Tomatoes Farces à l'Aspic.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 even-sized ripe tomatoes.
+ 1 pint of aspic jelly.
+ 1/2 a cup of lobster meat, chopped fine.
+ 1 tablespoonful of capers.
+ 2 yolks of hard-boiled eggs.
+ Mayonnaise, parsley, lettuce.
+
+_Method._--Scoop out the centres of the tomatoes, after removing the
+skin, and chill thoroughly. Pass the yolks through a sieve, add to the
+lobster, with the capers, half a cup of mayonnaise and half a cup of
+chicken aspic, thick and cold, but not set; stir these in a dish
+standing in ice water until nearly set; then fill the cavities in the
+tomatoes with the mixture. Brush over the outside of the tomatoes with
+half-set aspic; when the aspic is set, repeat twice, then set aside on
+ice for some time before serving. Serve on a bed of lettuce seasoned
+with French dressing. Garnish each tomato with a sprig of parsley and
+the salad-dish with blocks of aspic. Anchovies or any cooked fish may be
+substituted for the lobster. Serve with mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Tomato Jelly.=
+
+Soak three-fourths a box of gelatine in half a cup of cold water. Cook a
+can of tomatoes, half an onion, a stalk of celery, a bay leaf, two
+cloves, a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica ten minutes. Add two
+tablespoonfuls of tarragon vinegar and the gelatine, stir till
+dissolved, strain, and mould in a ring mould. When cold turn from the
+mould and fill the centre with
+
+
+=CELERY-AND-NUT SALAD.=
+
+Cut fine tender stalks of celery and English walnuts and mix with French
+dressing. Garnish the centre of the salad and the border of the jelly
+with tender leaves of lettuce and bits of curled celery.
+
+
+=Tomato-Jelly Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Make the jelly and mould as before. Fill in the centre of the ring with
+shredded cabbage, pimentos and pecan nuts, mixed with boiled dressing.
+
+
+=Tomato Jelly with String Beans.=
+
+Cook tiny string beans until tender in boiling salted water; season
+while hot with onion juice, salt, pepper and tarragon vinegar. When cold
+add oil and toss the beans about until each bean is coated with the oil.
+Fill the centre of the jelly, fashioned in a ring mould, with the beans,
+and sprinkle over them a fine-chopped pimento. Garnish with lettuce
+leaves. Fine-chopped chives may be used in the place of the onion juice;
+they are particularly appropriate in any bean salad. If the beans are
+large, cut in halves lengthwise and the halves crosswise.
+
+Tomato jelly may be served in a ring mould with turkey, oyster, plain
+chicken, French chicken, and other salads. The oysters should be scalded
+and drained, then marinated with French dressing. Chicken and turkey
+should also be marinated before mixing with celery and the mayonnaise or
+boiled dressing.
+
+
+=Tomato-and-Artichoke Salad.=
+
+(MRS. E. M. LUCAS, IN BOSTON COOKING-SCHOOL MAGAZINE.)
+
+Choose medium-sized tomatoes, firm and smooth skinned. Peel them, cut a
+slice from the stem end and remove the seeds with a small spoon.
+Sprinkle the interior of these cups with salt and set on ice. When ready
+to serve, wipe them dry and fill with artichokes cut into dice and mixed
+with mayonnaise. Serve on lettuce leaves. Use tarragon vinegar in
+preparing the dressing. Cook the artichoke hearts until just tender,--no
+longer,--in salted boiling water, then drain and cool.
+
+
+=Artichoke Salad.=
+
+(_For game._)
+
+(MRS. E. M. LUCAS, IN BOSTON COOKING-SCHOOL MAGAZINE.)
+
+Peel three oranges, remove the pith and white skin and slice lengthwise;
+use an equal amount of tender blanched celery stalks cut into inch
+lengths. Mix together lightly with two tablespoonfuls of olive oil, one
+tablespoonful of lemon juice, half a teaspoonful of salt and a quarter a
+teaspoonful of paprica. Heap together lightly on a serving-dish and
+surround with cooked hearts of artichokes cut into quarters; wreathe
+with blanched celery leaves.
+
+
+=Artichoke Salad.=
+
+(_Used as a border for shrimp, lobster, chicken and other salads._)
+
+(MRS. E. M. LUCAS, IN BOSTON COOKING-SCHOOL MAGAZINE.)
+
+Cut boiled artichokes into quarter-inch slices and stamp out with a
+French vegetable cutter. To half a pint add one tablespoonful of olive
+oil, half a tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar and one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of salt; toss lightly together and let stand one hour;
+drain, and arrange as a border with an outer layer of tiny blanched
+lettuce leaves.
+
+2. Scoop out the centres of the artichokes and fill with mayonnaise, or
+with ravigote, tartare or tyrolienne sauce. Serve on lettuce leaves as a
+border to a meat or fish salad.
+
+3. Fill the centres with walnut meats, sliced, or tender celery stalks,
+cut fine and mixed with mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Asparagus Salad.=
+
+Cut cold cooked asparagus into pieces an inch long, mix lightly with
+cream dressing and serve, in individual portions, on curly lettuce
+leaves.
+
+
+=Asparagus-and-Salmon Salad.=
+
+Mix cold cooked salmon with mayonnaise, form in a mound and encircle
+with a wreath of cold cooked asparagus tips dressed with French
+dressing.
+
+
+=Asparagus-and-Cauliflower Salad.=
+
+Break the cooked cauliflower into its flowerets, dispose in the centre
+of the serving-dish and surround with a wreath of cooked asparagus tips.
+Pour over the whole a mayonnaise, a boiled or a cream dressing, and
+sprinkle with chopped capers or pimentos.
+
+
+=Salad of Turnips with Asparagus Tips.=
+
+Cook the turnips in boiling salted water until tender; drain, and cut
+out the centres, forming cups. Sprinkle the inside with oil and a few
+grains of salt, and, when the oil is absorbed, pour over the cups a
+little lemon juice or vinegar. Set aside to become cool. When ready to
+serve, arrange the cups on shredded lettuce and fill with cooked
+asparagus tips, cold and mixed with mayonnaise or French dressing, as
+desired. Peas, flageolets or wax beans, cut fine, may be used instead of
+the asparagus. Garnish with radishes.
+
+
+=Green-Pea Salad.=
+
+Mix the peas with a cream dressing; serve in nests of lettuce; garnish
+the top of each nest with a little chopped beet, or a fanciful figure
+cut from a pickled beet or pimento.
+
+
+=Green-Pea-and-Potato Salad.=
+
+Mix equal parts of cold cooked peas and potatoes cut in very small
+cubes; season with salt and pepper, and serve as green-pea salad.
+
+
+=Asparagus Salad.=
+
+Scrape the scales from the stalks, and cook, standing upright in boiling
+salted water, until tender; drain and chill thoroughly. Serve on lettuce
+leaves with French dressing. Garnish the lettuce with hard-boiled eggs
+cut in quarters lengthwise.
+
+
+=Macedoine of Vegetable Salad.=
+
+Dress one cup, each, of cooked carrots and turnips, cut in dice, string
+beans, cut small, green peas, and half a cup of cooked beets, cut small,
+with French dressing; add two tablespoonfuls of chopped gherkins;
+drain, and mix with sufficient jelly mayonnaise to hold the vegetables
+together. Arrange in dome shape and cover with more jelly mayonnaise.
+Set a row of sliced gherkins near the top, and fill in the space to the
+top with string beans or asparagus tips. Surround the base with
+alternate rounds of beet and potato overlapping one another. Decorate
+the space above with slices of potato and beet cut in diamonds, and
+surround the base with light-green aspic cut in diamonds. One pint of
+aspic will be sufficient; use chicken stock, and tint with color paste.
+
+
+=Russian Vegetable Salad.=
+
+Select two moulds of suitable shape and size (tin basins or earthen
+bowls will do) and chill in ice water. Have ready cooked balls, cut from
+carrots and turnips, and cooked string beans and cauliflower, all
+marinated with French dressing. Drain the vegetables, dip them into
+half-set aspic, and arrange against the chilled sides of the moulds;
+then fill the moulds with aspic jelly. When set, with a hot spoon scoop
+out the aspic from the centre of each mould and fill in the space with a
+mixture of the vegetables and jelly mayonnaise, leaving an open space at
+the top to be filled with half-set aspic. When thoroughly chilled and
+set, turn from the moulds, the smaller mould above the other. Garnish
+with flowerets of cauliflower, dipped in aspic and chilled, and lettuce.
+Serve with mayonnaise.
+
+[Illustration: Russian Vegetable Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Macedoine of Vegetable Salad.
+
+(See page 47)]
+
+
+=Stuffed-Cucumber Salad.=
+
+Pare a short cucumber and cut it lengthwise in two parts; remove the
+seeds and let chill in ice water for an hour. Chop together the solid
+part of a peeled and seeded tomato, half a slice of new onion, a stalk
+of celery and a sprig of parsley; mix with mayonnaise or a boiled
+dressing and use as a filling for the well-dried halves of cucumber.
+Serve on cress or lettuce.
+
+
+=Cowslip-and-Cream-Cheese Salad.=
+
+(See cut facing page 58.)
+
+Cook the cowslip leaves until tender in boiling salted water, reserving
+a few choice leaves with blossoms for a garnish. Chop fine, season to
+taste with salt and paprica, press into a mould, and set aside to become
+chilled. Slice chilled cream cheese (Neufchatel or cottage) in uniform
+slices, and arrange at the sides of the mound. Serve with French or
+mayonnaise dressing.
+
+
+=Cauliflower Salad, Egg Garnish.=
+
+Separate a cauliflower into flowerets and boil in salted water until
+tender, _not longer_. Drain carefully. Season with oil, vinegar, salt,
+pepper, and a sprinkling of chopped tarragon leaves (or use tarragon
+vinegar). Arrange symmetrically in an earthen bowl, having the upper
+surface level. Let stand to become thoroughly chilled, then turn on to
+a serving-dish; the shape of the mould will be retained. Cover with
+mayonnaise dressing or Sauce Tartare, and surround with lengthwise
+quarters of hard-boiled eggs.
+
+
+=Potato Salad with Mayonnaise.=
+
+Boil the potatoes and let cool without paring. Then remove the skins and
+cut into slices, balls, or cubes. Squeeze over them a little onion
+juice, sprinkle with fine-chopped parsley, and let stand in a French
+dressing several hours. Mix the dressing after the usual formula, and
+use enough to moisten well the potato. When ready to serve, make nests
+of heart leaves of lettuce, put a spoonful of the potato in each, with a
+teaspoonful of mayonnaise above, sprinkle the mayonnaise with capers,
+and press the quarter of a hard-boiled egg into the top of the
+mayonnaise. Or add the chopped white of egg to the potato before
+marinating, and sift the yolk over the mayonnaise.
+
+
+
+
+FISH SALADS.
+
+ "_Some choice sous'd fish brought couchant in a dish,
+ Among some fennel._"
+
+ "_Of what complexion?
+ Of the sea water green, sir._"
+
+
+
+
+FISH SALADS.
+
+
+Ever, and justly, fish have taken high rank in the list of salad
+ingredients. No wonder, when we consider that nothing excels in delicacy
+of flavor many a variety of fish; and, while fish are not necessarily
+expensive in any locality, in many sections of the country their cost is
+merely nominal. Then, too, salad-making appeals largely to one's
+artistic nature, and the products of sea and fresh water are constantly
+furnishing opportunities for studies in many and varied shades of color.
+The lobster's vivid red, the brilliant tints of the salmon and red
+snapper, the delicate pink of shrimps, the dull white of scallops and
+halibut, and the bluish gray of mackerel and bluefish, each, in its
+season, may be made to contrast most effectively with fresh green herbs
+and yellow dressings.
+
+Oysters, scallops and little-neck clams are frequently served in salads
+without cooking. These should be carefully washed, then drained and set
+aside in a marinade for an hour. When cooked, they should be heated to
+the boiling-point in their own liquor, then drained and cut in halves.
+The adductor muscle of the oyster--the white, button-shaped part that
+connects the animal with its shell--is often discarded. Other fish than
+shellfish, when used in salads, are boiled, broiled or baked; they
+present the best appearance, however, when boiled. Thudichum recommends
+sea water, whenever it is available, for boiling fish; lacking this, hot
+water, salted (an ounce of salt to a quart of water), and acidulated
+pleasantly with lemon juice or vinegar, is the proper medium of cooking.
+The addition of a slice or two of onion and carrot, a sprig of parsley,
+a stalk of celery, with aromatic herbs or spices, provided they be not
+used so freely as to overpower the delicate savor of the fish, is
+thought to improve the dish.
+
+The quantity of water should be adjusted to the size of the fish; in no
+case should it be larger than will suffice to produce the desired
+result. At the moment the fish is immersed in the water the temperature
+should be at the boiling-point, and thereafter the vessel should be
+permitted to simmer during the process of cooking.
+
+The fish may be cooked whole, or cut into small pieces, similar in shape
+and size. In the latter case a wire basket is of service, as, by this
+means, the fish may be easily removed from the water and drained. If the
+fish is to be served whole, remove the skin and fins, and, when
+thoroughly cold, mask with jelly mayonnaise or with a fancy butter.
+After chilling again, the mask may be decorated with capers, olives,
+eggs, etc. If the fish is to be used in flakes, the flakes will separate
+more easily while the fish is still hot. In marinating fish, let the
+proportions of oil and acid vary with the kind of fish; _i.e._,
+according to the oily nature of the flesh.
+
+
+
+
+RECIPES.
+
+
+=Brook-Trout Salad.=
+
+Dress the trout without removing the heads; boil as previously
+indicated. Remove the backbone without destroying the shape of the fish.
+Serve, thoroughly chilled, on crisp lettuce leaves dressed with claret
+or French dressing. Prepare the latter with tarragon vinegar.
+
+
+=Brook Trout Moulded in Aspic.=
+
+Pour a little chicken aspic into a pickle or other dish of suitable
+shape and size for a single fish; when nearly set, lay a trout, prepared
+as above, upon the aspic, add a few spoonfuls of aspic, let it harden so
+that the fish may become fixed in place, then add aspic to cover. Slices
+of cucumber pickles, capers, or other ornaments, may be used. When the
+aspic is thoroughly set and chilled, remove from the mould and serve on
+two lettuce leaves, with any dressing desired.
+
+
+=Halibut Salad.=
+
+Flake the fish and marinate with French dressing (three tablespoonfuls
+of oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice or vinegar, a dash of salt and
+pepper, for each pint of fish); drain, and add half as much boiled
+potato, cut in small cubes and dressed with French dressing. Serve on a
+bed of lettuce leaves. Garnish with sardine dressing. Shredded lettuce
+or peas may be used in place of the potato.
+
+
+=Halibut-and-Cucumber Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pound of cooked halibut.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ A few drops of onion juice.
+ Salt and pepper.
+ 2 pimentos.
+ Lettuce.
+ Cucumbers.
+ French dressing.
+
+_Method._--Flake one pound of cooked halibut while hot, and marinate
+with the oil, lemon juice, onion juice, salt and pepper. When cold drain
+and mix with the pimentos, shredded, after cutting from the same a few
+star-shaped or other fanciful figures. Arrange heart leaves of lettuce
+in an upright position in the centre of a serving-dish, the fish and
+pimentos around the lettuce, and, around these, one large or two small
+cucumbers, cut in small cubes and mixed with French dressing. With
+salmon use capers instead of pimentos. Use enough dressing to moisten
+the cucumbers thoroughly.
+
+
+=Halibut Salad.=
+
+Steam a thick slice of chicken halibut, until the flesh separates easily
+from the bone. Remove the skin and bones without disturbing the shape of
+the fish. Marinate, while hot, with three tablespoonfuls of oil, one
+tablespoonful of vinegar or lemon juice, and salt and pepper. When cold
+put the fish on a serving-dish, and, using endive or Boston Market
+lettuce, put the ends of the leaves beneath the fish, so that the tops
+of the leaves will fall over upon the fish. Garnish the top with stars
+of mayonnaise. Between the leaves dispose sliced pim-olas and fans cut
+from small gherkins. Serve mayonnaise with the salad.
+
+
+=Fillets of Halibut in Aspic, with Cucumber-and-Radish Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 slices of halibut, cut half an inch or less in thickness.
+ 1 lobster (a pound and a half).
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 1/4 a cup of cream.
+ 1/4 a cup of stock.
+ A dash of paprica.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1/4 a tablespoonful of salt.
+ 1 quart of aspic.
+ Olives.
+ A bunch of radishes.
+ 2 cucumbers.
+ French dressing.
+
+_Method._--Remove the skin and bone from the halibut, thus securing
+eight fillets. Season with salt, pepper, onion and lemon juice. Chop the
+lobster meat fine; melt the butter, cook in it the flour and seasonings,
+add the cream and lobster stock, and, when cooked, stir in the chopped
+lobster. When cool spread upon one side of the fillets, roll up the
+fillets and fasten with wooden toothpicks that have been dipped in
+melted butter. Bake on a fish-sheet about fifteen minutes, basting with
+butter melted in hot water.
+
+Set a plain border-mould in ice water; decorate the bottom and sides
+with pim-olas or gherkins cut in slices and dipped in half-set aspic;
+cover the decoration on the bottom with aspic, and, when set and the
+decorations on the side are "fixed" in place, arrange on the aspic the
+cold fillets of fish and fill the mould with more aspic. When cold turn
+from the mould and fill the centre with diced cucumbers and sliced
+radishes dressed with French dressing. Pass mayonnaise or French
+dressing in a separate dish. Surround the aspic with shredded lettuce if
+desired.
+
+
+=Fillets of Halibut in Aspic with Cole-Slaw.=
+
+Use a generous half-pint of oysters in the place of the lobster,
+parboiling and draining before chopping, and fill in the centre of the
+aspic with coleslaw.
+
+[Illustration: Miroton of Fish and Potato Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Cowslip and Cream Cheese Salad.
+
+(See page 49)]
+
+
+=Miroton of Fish and Potato.=
+
+Marinate one pint of cold cooked fish--salmon, cod, haddock, halibut,
+etc.--with three or four tablespoonfuls of oil, half a teaspoonful of
+salt, a dash of pepper and two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice. Marinate,
+separately, one pint of cold potatoes, cooked in their skins and cut in
+cubes, with the same quantity of dressing, adding also one teaspoonful
+of onion juice. Let stand in a cool place one hour or more. Have ready
+six hard-boiled eggs; cut a thin slice from the round end of each egg,
+that it may stand upright, then cut in quarters lengthwise. Dip into a
+little aspic jelly or melted gelatine and arrange the quarters in the
+form of a circle, with the yolks outside. Toss together the fish, potato
+and three tablespoonfuls of capers, and fill in the centre of the
+circle. Dust with fine-chopped parsley or beets; add a tuft of lettuce
+at the top and a few heart leaves of lettuce above the crown of eggs.
+
+
+=Fish Salad Moulded in Aspic.=
+
+Cover the bottom of a mould with aspic to the depth of one-fourth an
+inch. Set the mould in ice water, and, when the aspic is set, arrange
+upon it a decoration of cooked vegetables cut in shapes with French
+cutter, or fashion a conventional design or some flower. Dogwood
+blossoms provide a simple pattern, and one easily carried out. Cut the
+four petals from a thin slice of cooked turnip and the centre of the
+blossom from carrot or lemon peel. Fasten each piece in place with
+liquid jelly, and, when set, cover with more jelly. To decorate the
+sides of the mould, take the figures on the point of a skewer, dip in
+jelly, then set in position against the _chilled_ sides of the mould,
+and they will remain in place. After the jelly covering the figures on
+the bottom of the mould has "set," place a smaller mould in the centre
+of the aspic in the first, and fill this with ice and water. Pour in
+aspic to fill the space about the smaller mould, and, when this aspic is
+firm, dip out the water and ice. Fill with _warm_ water and quickly
+remove the mould. Separate a pound of cooked fish into flakes, add half
+a cup of cold cooked peas, three or four gherkins, cut very fine, and
+three tablespoonfuls of capers. Mix together and then mix with one cup
+of mayonnaise made with jelly; with this fill the vacant space in the
+mould. When ready to serve, dip the mould very quickly into warm water,
+letting the water rise to the top of the mould, and invert over a
+serving-dish; remove the mould, and garnish with lettuce, tiny gherkins
+cut to resemble fans, blocks of aspic, or aspic moulded in shells, and
+mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Fish Salad Moulded in Aspic, No. 2.=
+
+Decorate the mould as before; then put in a layer of the fish and
+dressing; when set, add a layer of aspic; alternate the layers until the
+materials are used or the mould is filled. Individual moulds may be
+prepared in the same way.
+
+
+=Salad of Mackerel or Bluefish.=
+
+Separate a cooked fish into flakes and mix with the chopped whites and
+sifted yolks of three hard-boiled eggs. Season with French dressing, mix
+lightly and turn on to a bed of lettuce or cress, also seasoned with the
+dressing. Garnish with fans cut from small gherkins, or with pickled
+beet cut in fanciful shape or chopped.
+
+
+=Salad of Salt Mackerel.=
+
+Freshen the fish carefully before cooking. Use equal parts of fish,
+flaked, and cold boiled potatoes. If potatoes are specially prepared for
+the purpose, cut them in cubes or balls, blanch, and cook in
+well-seasoned beef stock; drain, and add, when cold, to the fish. Season
+with French dressing. Arrange on a bed of cress and sift the yolk of an
+egg over the whole.
+
+
+=Salad of Shad Roe and Cucumber.=
+
+Cook two shad roes with an onion, sliced, and a bay leaf, in salted,
+acidulated water twenty minutes; drain, and marinate with about two
+tablespoonfuls of oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice and a dash of
+pepper and salt. When cold cut in small cubes. Rub the salad-bowl with a
+clove of garlic cut in halves. Cut a thoroughly chilled cucumber in
+dice; put the cucumber on a bed of lettuce leaves in the bottom of the
+bowl, and the roe, well drained, above; mask with mayonnaise,--nearly a
+cup will be required,--in the top insert a few heart leaves of lettuce,
+and place around the centre of the mound a circle of cucumber slices
+overlapping one another; or alternate these with lozenges cut from
+pickled beet.
+
+
+=Boudins-de-Saumon Salad.=
+
+Butter four small dariole moulds, or small cups; sprinkle the butter
+with chopped parsley. Select four small pieces of cooked salmon, dry on
+a soft cloth so as to remove all oily liquor, and put a piece in each
+mould. Beat two eggs (or, better, one egg and the yolks of two)
+slightly, season with one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of
+paprica and a few drops of anchovy essence or onion juice; add half a
+cup of milk, and, when well mixed, pour into the moulds around the fish.
+Set the moulds in a pan of hot water and bake until the custard is set.
+Do not let the water boil. Chill thoroughly, then turn from the moulds
+on to lettuce leaves. Serve with a star of mayonnaise dressing on the
+top of each _boudin_.
+
+
+=Russian Salad.=
+
+(BOSTON COOKING-SCHOOL.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of carrots.
+ 1 cup of potatoes.
+ 1 cup of peas.
+ 1 cup of beans (flageolets preferred).
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of pepper.
+ A head of lettuce.
+ 1 cup of mayonnaise.
+ 1 cup of shrimps.
+ 1/4 a lb. of smoked salmon.
+ 1 hard-boiled egg.
+
+_Method._--Marinate the carrots and potatoes, cut in small pieces, also
+the peas and beans, with French dressing. Arrange on a dish in four
+sections, having lettuce for the foundation of each. Cover each
+vegetable with mayonnaise. Strew the tops of two sections with small
+pieces of smoked salmon; on a third section strew the sifted yolk of the
+egg, and on the fourth, the white of the egg, cut rather coarsely.
+Outline the inner side of each section with shrimps, by lightly
+pressing the ends of the shrimps into the mayonnaise. Finish with a tuft
+of lettuce in the centre of the dish.
+
+
+=Spanish Salad.=
+
+In the centre of a flat serving-dish arrange a mound of endive. Peel
+tomatoes, divide into sections or cut in slices, and arrange these
+around the endive. Shell cold, hard-boiled eggs; cut in halves,
+crosswise, and in points; remove the yolks and pound to a paste with an
+equal amount of the flesh of lobster, shrimp, anchovies or salmon. With
+this paste, seasoned to taste with oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper,
+fill the cups fashioned from the whites of the eggs, and arrange them
+around the tomatoes. Strew chopped shallot and sweet pepper over the
+endive. Mix equal portions of oil and vinegar, add salt and pepper to
+taste, and pour over the salad. Serve at once.
+
+
+=Salmon Salad.=
+
+(_For evening company, or fish course at a dinner party._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Hard-boiled eggs.
+ 1 teaspoonful of gelatine, softened in one tablespoonful
+ of cold water.
+ 1 pint of string beans or asparagus tips.
+ 1 pint of cooked peas.
+ French dressing.
+ 2 slices of salmon, 2 inches thick.
+ Jelly mayonnaise, or fancy butter.
+ Capers.
+
+_Method._--Cut the eggs into halves lengthwise; cut a thin slice from
+the round ends, that the pieces may be set upright; dip lightly in the
+gelatine dissolved over hot water, and arrange _miroton_ fashion around
+an oval serving-dish. Set aside, that the eggs may become fixed in
+position. Marinate the vegetables, separately, with French dressing;
+cook the salmon by the directions previously given; remove the skin and
+cover the sides with jelly mayonnaise or fancy butter. When cold
+decorate with whites of eggs and capers. Use the trimmings from the
+eggs, and fix them in place by dipping in jelly mayonnaise. Set aside
+for the decorations to become fixed. Drain the vegetables and arrange
+inside the border, higher in the centre. Lay the decorated slices of
+fish upon opposite sides of the mound, and serve either with or without
+mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Halibut Salad.=
+
+(_For evening company, or fish course at a dinner party._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ A slice of chicken halibut, 3 inches thick.
+ 3 cups of cooked peas.
+ French dressing.
+ Hard-boiled eggs.
+ 3 slices of pickled beet.
+ 1 teaspoonful of gelatine.
+ Jelly mayonnaise, or green butter.
+ Heart leaves of lettuce.
+ 2 olives.
+
+_Method._--Prepare the eggs and fasten to the plate as in salmon salad.
+Dip diamond-shaped pieces of pickled beet in the dissolved gelatine
+and place upon the front and top of each half of egg. Spread the edge of
+the fish, after removing the skin, with jelly mayonnaise, or green
+butter, and, when set, decorate with figures cut from the cooked white
+of an egg. With forcing-bag and tube shape a pattern around the upper
+edge of the fish. Place the fish in the centre of the crown or _miroton_
+of eggs, with the peas seasoned with French dressing around it; cover
+the place from which the bone was taken with the centre of a head of
+lettuce, cut in halves, and two fine olives. Serve with a bowl of
+mayonnaise.
+
+[Illustration: Russian Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Halibut Salad.
+
+(See page 64)]
+
+
+=Shells of Fish and Mushrooms.=
+
+Cut cold fish--salmon, halibut, lobster, etc.--into small cubes, mix
+with one-third in measure of cooked mushrooms, also cut small, and add
+for each cup of mushrooms and fish one tablespoonful of gherkins cut
+fine. Season with French dressing and let stand one hour; then drain,
+and mix with jellied mayonnaise. Fill chilled shells with this
+preparation, rounding it on the top. Make smooth, and mask with jellied
+mayonnaise. Decorate with gherkins and the white of a hard-boiled egg
+cut in fanciful shapes, and with stars of mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Oysters in Aspic Jelly.=
+
+Parboil, drain, cool, and wipe dry one quart of oysters. Make a pint of
+mayonnaise sauce with aspic jelly and coat the well-dried oysters with
+the sauce. Prepare a quart of chicken aspic. Dip in half-set aspic the
+white of egg, poached and cut in fanciful shapes, and small gherkins cut
+in thin slices, and decorate the bottom and sides of a charlotte or
+cylindrical mould standing in ice water. Pour in jelly to the depth of
+half an inch; when set, arrange the oysters on it in a circle, one
+overlapping another; pour in more jelly, and, when set, dispose upon it
+another circle of oysters. Continue this order until the mould is
+filled. When removed from the mould, garnish with chopped aspic and fans
+cut from gherkins and lettuce. Serve with the remainder of the pint of
+mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Oyster-and-Celery Salad.=
+
+Parboil the oysters (heating them to the boiling-point in their own
+liquor), drain, and, if large, halve each; marinate with a French
+dressing (_i.e._, toss the bits of oyster in oil enough to coat them
+nicely; then toss them in a little lemon juice, dust with salt and
+pepper, and set aside to become thoroughly chilled). When ready to
+serve, drain again and add about one-third as much in bulk of
+fine-chopped celery and one or two tablespoonfuls of pickled nasturtium
+seeds or capers; then mix with mayonnaise or a boiled dressing. Serve on
+a bed of lettuce leaves. Cabbage, sliced as for slaw, may be used in the
+place of celery. Garnish with small pickles cut in thin slices and
+spread to resemble a fan.
+
+
+=Oyster-and-Sweetbread Salad.=
+
+Cut a pair of cold cooked sweetbreads into cubes. Parboil one pint of
+oysters, drain, cool, and cut in halves; marinate the sweetbreads and
+oysters with French dressing, and allow them to stand at least half an
+hour; drain, mix with mayonnaise, and serve on a bed of lettuce or
+cress. Or, surround with a circle of chopped cucumbers seasoned with
+French dressing.
+
+
+=Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boats.=
+
+Pare the cucumbers, which should be rather short, and cut them in halves
+lengthwise; remove the seeds and steam until tender; chill, and arrange
+on lettuce leaves, or on a bed of watercress. Clean and marinate the
+shrimps. If large, divide into two or three pieces. Mix with mayonnaise
+and place in the cucumbers. Decorate with stars of mayonnaise and whole
+shrimps.
+
+
+=Shrimp Salad with Aspic Border.=
+
+Set a border mould in ice water; dip hard-boiled eggs, cut in halves
+lengthwise and trimmed to fit the mould, in aspic jelly, and press
+against the sides of the mould alternately with small vegetable balls,
+or peas dipped in half-set aspic; fill gradually the empty space in the
+mould with partly cooled jelly, adding vegetables here and there if
+desired. Dip in hot water and turn from the mould. Fill in the centre
+with lettuce, torn in pieces, and one pint of shrimps, broken in pieces
+and dressed with French dressing. Smooth the mound and mask with jelly
+mayonnaise. Decorate with shrimps and small heart leaves of lettuce.
+
+
+=Shrimp Salad with Aspic Border, No. 2.=
+
+Decorate the sides of a ring mould, chilled, with hard-boiled eggs cut
+in halves, alternated with hearts of lettuce cut in halves; dip the egg
+and lettuce in half-set aspic, and they will adhere to the sides of the
+mould. Then proceed as above.
+
+
+=Shrimp Salad.=
+
+Take the shrimps from the shells, reserve the most perfect for
+garnishing, and break the others into pieces; marinate with French
+dressing. When ready to serve, drain, and mix with shredded lettuce, or
+celery cut fine, and mayonnaise. Shape in a mound on a bed of lettuce
+leaves and mask with mayonnaise. Use capers or olives, chopped very
+fine, to mark out five or six designs on the mound; a scroll effect is
+always pretty. Fill in the designs with shrimps and the rest of the
+mound with capers, sifted yolks or chopped whites of cooked eggs; or
+fill the designs with the capers or eggs and the rest of the mound with
+shrimps. Finish with a tuft of lettuce at the top.
+
+
+=Scallop Salad.=
+
+Soak the scallops in salted water (a tablespoonful of salt to a quart of
+water) one hour; rinse in cold water, cover with boiling water, and
+let simmer five or six minutes. Rinse again in cold water, drain, and
+when cold cut into slices. Cut white stalks of celery into small pieces.
+Mix the celery and scallops--half as much celery as scallops--with
+mayonnaise or boiled dressing, and shape in a mound. Mask the mound with
+a thin coating of mayonnaise. With large-sized capers outline a design
+on each of the four sides of the mound, fill these with whites of eggs,
+cooked and chopped fine. Ornament with figures cut from slices of boiled
+beets. Fill in the spaces around the designs with capers, and garnish
+with green celery leaves and white stalks of celery, fringed.
+
+[Illustration: Shell of Fish and Mushrooms.
+
+(See page 65)]
+
+[Illustration: Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boat.
+
+(See page 67)]
+
+
+=Sardine Salad.=
+
+Lay the sardines upon soft paper, that they may be freed from oil.
+Scrape off the skin and remove the bones; squeeze over them a little
+lemon juice. Arrange upon a bed of crisp lettuce leaves, or upon
+shredded lettuce, and dress with either French or mayonnaise dressing.
+Garnish with hard-boiled eggs cut in slices.
+
+
+=Sardine Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Arrange a pint of cold cooked fish, flaked, on a bed of lettuce leaves
+and cover with sardine dressing. Carefully split six selected sardines;
+remove the bones and arrange the halves on the top of the salad, with
+the heads at the centre. Garnish with slices of lemon.
+
+
+=Sardine-and-Egg Salad.=
+
+Skin and bone a dozen sardines and put them in a mortar; remove the
+shells from an equal number of hard-boiled eggs and cut them into halves
+crosswise, so as to form cups with pointed edges; put the yolks into the
+mortar with the sardines, add a tablespoonful, or less, of chopped
+parsley, a dash of pepper and salt, and work to a smooth paste; moisten
+with salad dressing and season to taste with salt and pepper. Cut a thin
+slice from the ends of the egg cups, that they may be set upright on the
+serving-dish, and fill with the mixture, making it round on the top like
+a whole yolk. Arrange these on a bed of watercress, or shredded lettuce,
+and sprinkle plentifully with French dressing.
+
+
+=Lobster Salad.=
+
+Cut lobster meat in dice and marinate with French dressing. Keep on ice
+until ready to serve, then drain carefully. Make cups of the inside
+leaves of lettuce, put a spoonful of the lobster meat in the centre of
+each cup, and press mayonnaise dressing through a pastry bag with star
+tube attached on the top of the lobster in each nest. Or, arrange the
+lobster in a mound on a bed of lettuce leaves, and mask the mound with
+mayonnaise. Finish the centre with a little bouquet of the heart leaves
+of lettuce; sift dried coral in a circle about it, and below that
+arrange circles of sifted yolk or chopped white of egg alternately
+with the coral. Garnish with the fans and feelers of the lobster. Or,
+arrange as before, then finish the centre with a bouquet of heart leaves
+of lettuce and the head of the lobster. Garnish with stars of mayonnaise
+and fans from the tail.
+
+[Illustration: Shrimp Salad, Border of Eggs in Aspic.
+
+(See page 68)]
+
+[Illustration: Lobster Salad.]
+
+
+=Lobster Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Remove the flesh carefully from the shell of a lobster, so as to keep
+the shell of body and tail intact; wash and dry the shell and arrange on
+a bed of lettuce leaves. Marinate the flesh, cut into cubes, with French
+dressing. After an hour drain, mix with an equal quantity of shredded
+lettuce, and replace in the shell. Garnish with mayonnaise and the
+lobster coral. Dry the coral thoroughly, after which it may be passed
+readily through a sieve.
+
+
+=Lobster Salad, No. 3.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 good-sized lobsters.
+ Lettuce.
+ Mayonnaise, or sauce tartare.
+ Lobster cutlets.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/3 a cup of flour.
+ Salt and paprica.
+ 1 cup of milk.
+ Lobster coral.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1 yolk of egg.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ 2 cups of lobster meat.
+ 3 cups of aspic jelly.
+
+_Method._--Make a white sauce of the butter, flour, seasonings and milk;
+add the coral and butter, after pounding until smooth in a mortar, also
+the yolk of egg, beaten and diluted with the lemon juice, and the
+lobster meat chopped rather coarsely. When cold shape into cutlets, dust
+over with sifted coral, and insert a bit of feeler or claw into the
+small end of each. Pour a little aspic into a dish, and, when it sets,
+arrange the cutlets upon it a little distance apart; pour over each a
+few spoonfuls of aspic, and when set cover with more aspic. When cold
+and very firm cut out the cutlets, giving a border of aspic to each.
+
+Marinate the flesh of the other lobster, cut into cubes, with French
+dressing; pile in a mound on a bed of lettuce leaves. Insert a tuft of
+leaves in the top, and arrange the cutlets against the mound. Garnish
+with feelers and claws. Serve mayonnaise or sauce tartare with the
+salad.
+
+
+=Lobster Salad in Ring of Aspic.=
+
+Set a ring mould in ice water. In the bottom of the mould arrange pitted
+olives or pim-olas an inch apart. Dip figures, cut from slices of royal
+custard, or from cooked carrot or turnip, into liquid aspic, and place
+them on the sides of the mould, to which they will adhere; dip
+large-sized capers (a larding-needle or skewer is of assistance in this
+work) in aspic and with them ornament the mould; then fill with aspic
+and set aside to become fixed. When ready to serve, dip the mould in hot
+water and invert on a serving-dish. Cut the meat from two two-pound
+lobsters into small cubes. Season with French dressing. Fill the open
+space in the aspic with the salad; garnish the top with the feelers and
+delicate lettuce leaves, and arrange a wreath of lettuce leaves around
+the aspic. Stamp out rounds of bread; stamp again with the same cutter
+to form crescents, spread delicately with butter, and then with caviare
+seasoned with a few drops of lemon juice, and dispose symmetrically on
+the lettuce.
+
+[Illustration: Bluefish Salad.
+
+(See page 75)]
+
+[Illustration: Litchi Nut and Orange Salad.
+
+(See page 88)]
+
+
+=Mousseline of Lobster as a Salad.=
+
+Chill timbale moulds in ice water; dip thin slices of gherkins into
+half-set aspic, and arrange them symmetrically against the sides of the
+moulds, and brush over the decoration with aspic. Cut the claw meat of a
+two-pound lobster into small cubes; chop fine, and pound the remaining
+meat in a mortar; then add to it the liver and fat, and pass through a
+sieve. There should be about one cup. Simmer the shell in water to cover
+half an hour. Beat the yolks of three eggs, slightly, with one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica; add one cup of the lobster
+liquor very gradually, and cook over hot water as a boiled custard.
+Remove from the fire and add one-fourth a package of gelatine, softened
+in one-fourth a cup of cold lobster liquor, or chicken stock; strain
+over the sifted lobster meat and stir occasionally over ice water; when
+it begins to set, add the lobster dice, and fold in carefully one cup of
+whipped cream. Turn the mixture into the decorated mould, and, when
+set, turn out on to lettuce leaves. Decorate with the head, feelers and
+claws of the lobster. Serve with French or mayonnaise dressing. French
+dressing is preferable with so rich a mixture.
+
+
+=Anchovy Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 8 salted anchovies, or 12 bottled anchovies.
+ 4 hard-boiled eggs.
+ 1 head of lettuce.
+ Juice of half a small lemon.
+ French or mayonnaise dressing, or Sauce tartare.
+
+_Method._--If salt anchovies are to be used, soak them in cold water two
+hours, then drain, dry, and remove skin and bones; divide the flesh into
+small pieces and squeeze the lemon juice over them. When ready to serve,
+arrange the lettuce leaves upon a serving-dish, stalk ends at the
+centre, cut the eggs in slices, mix with the bits of anchovies, and
+arrange upon the lettuce. Pour a French or mayonnaise dressing made with
+onion juice, or a sauce tartare, over the salad.
+
+
+=Salad of Lettuce, Bamboo Sprouts, and Shrimps.=
+
+Marinate a cup of shrimps, broken in small pieces, with three
+tablespoonfuls of oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, a dash of salt
+and pepper. Select the tender bamboo sprouts in a can, and cut them into
+small pieces of the shape desired. When ready to serve, dress these with
+salt, pepper, oil, and lemon juice. Use three measures of oil to one
+of acid. Begin with the oil. Continue mixing and adding oil, until each
+piece is glossy. Then add the acid. Mix the prepared sprouts and the
+drained shrimps, and turn them onto a bed of lettuce, cut in narrow
+shreds, and dressed with oil and acid. Decorate the salad with heart
+leaves of lettuce, whole shrimps, and hollow sections of bamboo, cut in
+thin slices.
+
+[Illustration: Moulded Salmon Salad.
+
+(See page 75)]
+
+[Illustration: Salad of Shrimps and Bamboo Sprouts.]
+
+
+=Bluefish Salad (excellent).=
+
+Separate the remnants of a baked bluefish into flakes, discarding skin
+and bones. Set aside, covered, until cold. About an hour before serving,
+sprinkle with salt and pepper and (for a generous pint of fish) the
+juice of a lemon. When ready to serve, dispose heart leaves of lettuce
+on the edge of a salad plate, and turn the fish into the centre, letting
+it come out over the stems of the lettuce leaves. Pour a boiled dressing
+over the top, and spread evenly (with a silver knife) over the fish. Put
+a tablespoonful of chopped pickled beet at the stems of each group of
+leaves, a ring of the beet near the top, and figures, cut from the beet,
+between.
+
+
+=Moulded Salmon Salad.=
+
+Use a pound of salmon, fresh-cooked or canned. Remove skin and bone, and
+pick the flesh fine with a silver fork. Mix half a teaspoonful of salt,
+a teaspoonful of sugar, a teaspoonful of flour, half a teaspoonful of
+mustard, and a dash of paprica. Over these pour very gradually
+three-fourths a cup of hot milk and stir and cook over hot water ten
+minutes, then add one-fourth a cup of hot vinegar and two tablespoonfuls
+of butter creamed and mixed with the beaten yolks of two eggs; stir
+until the egg is set, then add one level tablespoonful of granulated
+gelatine, softened in one-fourth a cup of cold water, and strain over
+the salmon; mix thoroughly, and turn into a mould. When chilled serve
+with Cream Salad Dressing (page 27), to which half a cucumber, chopped
+fine and drained, has been added. Reserve a part of the dressing,
+omitting the cucumber, and use with slices of cucumber as a garnish. To
+prepare the cucumber, pare with a handy slicer and cut from it a section
+three-fourths an inch thick; pare this round and round very thin and
+roll loosely to form a cup. Dispose this on the top of the fish and fill
+with dressing. (Use a pastry bag and tube.) Cut the rest of the cucumber
+in thin slices.
+
+
+
+
+VARIOUS COMPOUND SALADS.
+
+ Give us the luxuries of life, and we will dispense
+ with its necessaries.--_Motley._
+
+ Three several salads have I sacrificed, bedew'd
+ with precious oil and vinegar.--_Beaumont and
+ Fletcher._
+
+
+=Sweetbread-and-Cucumber Salad.=
+
+Arrange the leaves of a head of cabbage lettuce loosely upon a
+serving-dish, without destroying its shape. Have ready a pair of
+sweetbreads cooked in salted, acidulated water twenty minutes, and
+cooled and cut in small cubes and marinated; also the same quantity of
+cucumber cut in dice, chilled in ice water and dried upon a cloth. Drain
+the French dressing from the sweetbread and scatter the bits of
+sweetbread and cucumber through the lettuce. Press three-fourths a cup
+of firm jelly mayonnaise through a pastry bag with small tube, in little
+stars, here and there, throughout the lettuce, and serve at once.
+
+
+=Sweetbread-and-Cucumber Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Cook, marinate and drain the sweetbreads as before; mix with an equal
+quantity of cucumber cut in dice, and then with cream dressing. Line
+the inner side of lettuce nests with slices of radish, one overlapping
+another (do not remove the pink skin from the radish). Put in a spoonful
+of the salad and garnish each nest with a small radish cut to resemble a
+flower.
+
+
+=Chicken Salad.=
+
+Use two parts of cold cooked chicken to one part of celery. Marinate and
+drain the chicken, add the celery, and mix with mayonnaise or boiled
+dressing. Arrange the salad in nests of lettuce leaves and put a pim-ola
+in the centre of each nest.
+
+
+=Chicken Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Prepare the salad as before; dispose in a mound on a bed of lettuce
+leaves and mask with mayonnaise. By the use of stoned olives, cut in
+halves, divide the surface into quarters. Fill two opposite sections
+with whites of eggs chopped fine, a third with capers or olives chopped
+fine, and the fourth with sifted yolks of eggs. Garnish with lettuce and
+curled celery.
+
+
+=French Chicken Salad.=
+
+Cook the meats of English walnuts in well-seasoned chicken stock until
+tender; remove the brown skin and break in pieces; when cold mix with
+chicken and celery, and proceed as in preceding recipes. The walnuts
+give the salad a flavor similar to that produced in France by the use of
+truffles.
+
+
+=Chicken-and-Fresh-Mushroom Salad.=
+
+Peel mushroom caps, break in pieces, and sauté in melted butter five or
+six minutes with a slice of onion; add chicken liquor or hot water and
+let simmer until tender. Remove from the liquor, cover, and set aside to
+cool. Add the liquor and the peelings and stalks of the mushrooms to the
+liquid in which the chicken is to be cooked. Use the chicken and
+mushrooms with celery or lettuce in any recipe for chicken salad.
+
+
+=Chicken Salad, No. 3.=
+
+Arrange the salad upon the centre of the dish and mask with mayonnaise;
+then with pastry bag and tube pipe the dressing in some fanciful design.
+Surround with a border of aspic jelly, tinted a delicate green. The
+jelly may be cut in blocks or triangles, or into small cubes, and then
+massed about the salad. Cut the aspic in a cold room; first dip the
+knife in hot water and wipe dry.
+
+
+=Chicken Salad, No. 4.=
+
+Cut one cucumber and one bunch of round radishes in thin slices, and add
+two-thirds a cup of shredded celery. Season with four tablespoonfuls of
+oil, two tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice, half a teaspoonful of
+salt and a dash of paprica. Put on a bed of shredded lettuce or on heart
+leaves of lettuce; cover with three cups of chicken cut in cubes and
+marinated an hour or more with four tablespoonfuls of oil, two
+tablespoonfuls of lemon juice or vinegar, half a teaspoonful of salt and
+a dash of white pepper. Mask with mayonnaise. Arrange some bits of
+celery, an inch and a half in length and curled on one end, about the
+salad, with a bit of yolk of egg in the centre of each. Or, instead of
+the celery and yolk of egg, use sliced radishes (do not remove the red
+skin), having the slices overlap one another. Finish the top with tuft
+of lettuce or curled celery and yolk of egg.
+
+
+=Mushroom Salad with Medallions of Chicken.=
+
+Bone a chicken, fill with forcemeat, and cook until tender in stock;
+then press between two dishes until cold. Cut in slices and stamp in
+rounds. Stamp out an equal number of rounds from cooked tongue. Spread
+these with "green butter" (see Green-Butter Sandwiches) and place the
+rounds of chicken evenly on the tops. Coat these with white chaud-froid
+sauce and decorate in some design with truffles, ham or tongue. When the
+sauce has set, brush over the medallions with aspic jelly, cold but not
+set. When thoroughly cold stamp out with a round cutter. Drain and dry a
+can of white button mushrooms; toss them about in cold aspic until they
+are well coated. When the jelly has become fixed about them, pile high
+in the centre of a serving-dish; arrange the medallions about them,
+resting on delicate leaves of lettuce. Serve mayonnaise or tartare
+sauce with the salad. Sweetbreads may be substituted for the chicken,
+and fresh mushrooms for the canned.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet Salad.=
+
+Scald one cup of milk, cream or _well-reduced_ chicken stock (the last
+is preferable); beat the yolks of three eggs slightly, add one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of common salt and celery salt, and a dash of
+paprica, and cook as a boiled custard. Remove from the fire and add
+one-fourth a package of gelatine (one tablespoonful of granulated
+gelatine), softened in one-fourth a cup of chicken liquor or water.
+Strain over half a cup of cooked chicken (white meat), chopped and
+pounded in a mortar and passed through a sieve. Stir over ice water
+until the mixture is perfectly smooth and begins to set, then fold into
+it one cup of whipped cream. Turn into a ring mould, and, when chilled
+and well set, turn on to a bed of lettuce and fill in the centre with
+equal parts of celery and English walnuts, blanched, sliced and mixed
+with a French dressing.
+
+The half-cup of chicken, well pressed down, should weigh four ounces.
+The chicken broth should be strong and well flavored. Either one cup of
+whipped cream, or one cup of cream, whipped, may be used. The latter
+gives a firmer mousse, more pronounced in flavor; the former, a mousse
+of a lighter and more delicate consistency, and one more delicate in
+flavor.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet, No. 2.=
+
+Mould the mousse in small cups; turn out on to a slice of chilled tomato
+resting upon a lettuce leaf; garnish with mayonnaise dressing,
+decorating both the tomato and the mousse.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet, No. 3.=
+
+Mould the mousse in a ring mould and fill in the centre with equal parts
+of cucumber or asparagus tips and diced sweetbread; marinate the
+sweetbread with French dressing, and drain thoroughly before mixing with
+the cucumber or asparagus. Garnish with mayonnaise dressing.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet, No. 4.=
+
+Fill in the centre of the ring with diced cucumbers and sliced radishes,
+mixed with cream dressing. Garnish with cream dressing, using pastry bag
+and tube, and radishes cut to resemble roses.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet, No. 5.=
+
+Fill in the centre of the ring with mushrooms and sweetbread dressed
+with a French dressing. If the button mushrooms (canned) are used, cut
+in quarters; if fresh mushrooms are at hand, remove the stems and peel
+the caps; break into pieces and sauté in a little hot butter; then add
+hot water or stock and let simmer until tender (fifteen or twenty
+minutes). Drain and chill before using.
+
+
+=Turkey-and-Chestnut Salad.=
+
+Prepare the chestnuts as previously directed, using twice as much turkey
+meat, light or dark, cut into small cubes. Serve with lettuce and
+French, boiled or mayonnaise dressing, as desired. Marinate and drain
+the meat before adding the nuts.
+
+
+=Duck-and-Olive Salad.=
+
+Cut the meat from a duck in small pieces, and slice pim-olas very thin;
+use two tablespoonfuls of pim-olas to a cup of meat. Serve on a bed of
+cress with a French dressing.
+
+
+=Duck-and-Orange Salad.=
+
+Slice the oranges lengthwise; use twice as much flesh as fruit. Dress
+with oil, salt and paprica, and serve on lettuce leaves.
+
+
+=Ham Salad.=
+
+Soak half a tablespoonful of granulated gelatine in one tablespoonful
+and a half of cold water, and dissolve in three-fourths a cup of hot
+chicken liquor. Strain over one cup of chopped ham and stir until the
+mixture begins to thicken, then fold in one cup of _thick_ cream beaten
+stiff; add, also, a few grains of paprica and salt, if needed. Mould in
+a ring mould, and, when set and cold, turn from the mould; fill in the
+centre with lettuce arranged like a cup, and fill the cup with
+mayonnaise. Or, serve with French dressing.
+
+
+=Bacon Salad.=
+
+Cut six or eight slices of tender bacon into small squares and fry until
+they are delicately browned; then drain on soft paper. Heat six
+tablespoonfuls of the fat and two tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon
+juice; beat together the yolks of three eggs and one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of paprica and mustard, and cook with the fat and
+vinegar over hot water until the mixture thickens slightly. When the
+dressing is cold cut a head of lettuce into narrow ribbons, toss the
+lettuce and bits of bacon together, and mix with the dressing. Serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Italian Salad.=
+
+(MISS COHEN.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 herrings, soaked in milk over night.
+ 3 boiled potatoes, cut in very small dice.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of cucumber pickles, chopped fine.
+ 1 tablespoonful of capers, chopped fine.
+ 2 small boiled beets, cut fine.
+ 1/2 a pound (1 cup) of cold roast chicken, cut fine.
+ 1/2 a pound (1 cup) of boiled tongue, cut fine.
+ 2 apples, pared and finely chopped.
+ 2 carrots, cooked and finely chopped.
+ 1 celery root, cooked and chopped.
+ 1/2 a cup of pecan nuts, broken fine.
+ A little onion juice.
+
+_Method._--Mix the ingredients together thoroughly; add mayonnaise to
+moisten well. Serve on a flat dish. Mask the top with mayonnaise, then
+divide into squares like a checker-board, using fine-shredded pimento or
+pickled beet to mark the divisions; fill in alternate squares with
+sifted yolk of hard-boiled egg and the remaining squares with chopped
+white of egg. Garnish the edge with parsley, and set in the centre half
+a hard-boiled egg cut lengthwise in points and filled with capers.
+
+[Illustration: Spinach and Egg Salad.
+
+(See page 86)]
+
+[Illustration: Marguerite Salad.
+
+(See page 86)]
+
+
+=Pâté de Foie Gras, Moulded in Aspic.=
+
+Cover the bottoms of small-sized timbale moulds with a little aspic
+jelly; decorate the jelly with bits of royal custard and capers; cover
+with more aspic; then add, alternately, layers of _pâté de foie gras_
+and aspic, until the mould is filled. Turn on to shredded lettuce and
+garnish with mayonnaise, using pastry bag and tube. Arrange on
+individual dishes, so as not to disarrange the dressing in serving. Or,
+garnish with a chopped cucumber dressed with French dressing.
+
+
+=Spinach-and-Tongue Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a peck of spinach.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of paprica.
+ 1 tablespoonful of oil or butter.
+ Slices of cold tongue.
+ Sauce tartare.
+
+_Method._--Cook the spinach in salted boiling water until tender; drain,
+and chop very fine, and season with salt, pepper, oil and lemon juice.
+Press into small, well-buttered moulds or cups. Have ready thin, round
+slices of cold boiled or braised tongue, the slices a trifle larger than
+the cups of spinach. When the spinach is cold turn it from the moulds on
+to the rounds of tongue, and press a star of sauce tartare on the top of
+each mould. Garnish with parsley and slices of lemon.
+
+
+=Spinach-and-Egg Salad.=
+
+(See cut facing page 84.)
+
+Prepare and mould the spinach as in the preceding recipe. Have ready,
+also, some cold boiled eggs and mayonnaise. Turn the spinach from the
+moulds on to nests of shredded lettuce. Dispose, chain fashion, around
+the base of the spinach, the whites of the eggs cut in rings, and press
+a star of mayonnaise in the centre of each ring. Pass the yolks through
+a sieve and sprinkle over the tops of the mounds, and place above this
+the round ends of the whites.
+
+
+=Marguerite Salad.=
+
+(See cut facing page 84.)
+
+Arrange garden cress on a serving-dish; in the centre dispose whites of
+hard-boiled eggs cut in eighths lengthwise, to resemble the petals of a
+flower, and sift the yolks into the centre. When ready to serve,
+sprinkle with French dressing and toss together.
+
+
+=Easter Salad.=
+
+With the smooth sides of butter-hands roll Neufchatel cheese into small
+egg shapes. Cut long radishes into straws and season with French
+dressing. Scatter the straws in lettuce nests, arrange the eggs in the
+nests, sprinkle with dressing, and fleck with chopped parsley or
+paprica.
+
+[Illustration: Easter Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Country Salad.
+
+(See page 87)]
+
+
+=Easter Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Arrange flat nests of shredded lettuce on individual plates. Cut a
+five-cent Neufchatel cheese in three pieces; roll each piece into a ball
+and flatten to resemble the white of a poached egg, having the cheese
+about one-fourth an inch in thickness. These may be shaped upon a plate
+and then removed carefully with a spatula to the nests of lettuce. With
+pastry bag and plain tube put a mound of mayonnaise on the centre of
+each cake of cheese, to represent the yolk of an egg. Serve thoroughly
+chilled. A dash of pepper (paprica preferred) may decorate the top of
+the dressing.
+
+
+=Country Salad.=
+
+(See cut facing page 86.)
+
+Cut cold boiled corned beef or tongue into thin strips and pile in the
+centre of a serving-dish. Cook potato balls in meat broth until tender;
+blanch and cool, roll in mayonnaise or boiled dressing, and dispose
+about the meat. About these put a ring of celery cut fine, then cooked
+carrot and turnip cut in straws. Garnish with parsley and cucumber
+pickles cut in fans. Serve with additional dressing.
+
+
+=Orange-and-Litchi Nut Salad.=
+
+Peel the oranges and cut them into lengthwise slices. Crush the shells
+of the nuts, take out the meats, and remove the stones; cut the nut
+meats in halves. Mix the nuts with oil, a tablespoonful to a cup, and
+sprinkle the orange slices with oil; add also a little lemon juice if
+the oranges are sweet. Garnish with slices of orange from which the skin
+has not been taken, also, if desired, with lettuce dressed with French
+dressing. The oil and lettuce may be omitted, using sugar in place;
+little, however, will be needed, as the nuts are sweet, tasting much
+like raisins.
+
+
+=Green-and-White Salad.=
+
+Cut cooked chicken or sweetbreads in half-inch cubes; remove the skin
+and seeds from white grapes, and cut each grape in halves; cut tender
+blanched celery stalks in small pieces. Take equal portions of celery
+and meat and half as much of seeded grapes. Mix with French dressing;
+the meat should stand in the dressing an hour or more, when ready to
+serve. Serve in nests of lettuce. Dispose a little white mayonnaise or
+cream dressing on each nest. Garnish with halves of blanched pistachio
+nuts.
+
+
+
+
+=FRUIT AND NUT SALADS.=
+
+ "Fat olives and pistachio's fragrant nut,
+ And the pine's tasteful apple."
+
+
+=Fruit Salad.=
+
+(_Sweet, to serve with cake._)
+
+Peel and slice four bananas, also four oranges, lengthwise, carefully
+removing pith and seeds. Dissect half a ripe pineapple, taking the pulp
+from the core in small pieces with a silver fork. Hull and wash a part
+of a basket of strawberries. Arrange the fruit in the salad-bowl, making
+each layer smaller than the preceding. Pour over the dressing given
+below, and serve thoroughly chilled.
+
+
+=Dressing for Fruit Salad.=
+
+(_Sweet._)
+
+Boil one cup of sugar and half a cup of water five minutes, then pour on
+to the beaten yolks of three eggs; return to the fire and cook over hot
+water, stirring constantly until thickened slightly; cool, and add the
+juice of two lemons. Half a cup of wine may be used in the place of the
+lemon juice, retaining one tablespoonful of the lemon juice.
+
+
+=Fruit Salad.=
+
+(_June._)
+
+Pare lengthwise a _ripe_ pineapple and remove the eyes. With a fork
+dislodge from the hard centre the single fruits (the lines left by the
+bracts will indicate the places where the divisions should be made).
+Slice _lengthwise_ three sweet oranges, after removing the peel and
+white skin. Peel and slice two bananas, and cut in halves lengthwise one
+cup of strawberries. If the fruit be sweet, use the juice of half a
+lemon, otherwise omit it. Beat to an emulsion one-fourth a cup of olive
+oil, one tablespoonful of honey, and, if needed, the lemon juice; toss
+the fruit, together or separately, in the dressing, and serve on
+delicate leaves of lettuce. The most striking effect is produced by
+dressing each kind of fruit separately, thus massing each color by
+itself. When new figs are seasonable, they may be used in fruit salads
+to take the place of the honey. If the pineapple be of large size, more
+dressing will be required.
+
+
+=Fruit-and-Nut Salad.=
+
+Peel neatly three oranges and slice them lengthwise; also cut three
+bananas in thin slices. Skin and seed half a pound of white grapes, and
+blanch and slice the meats of one-fourth a pound of English walnuts.
+Serve very cold on lettuce leaves, dressed with four tablespoonfuls of
+oil, two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice--less, if the oranges are
+sour--and half a teaspoonful of salt.
+
+
+=Fruit-and-Nut Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Skin and seed half a pound of white grapes; blanch and slice half a
+pound of English walnuts or almonds. Toss with four tablespoonfuls of
+oil, one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of lemon
+juice. Serve in nests of lettuce. Garnish the nests with maraschino
+cherries.
+
+
+=Cherry Salad.=
+
+(MRS. PETERSON.)
+
+Marinate as many hazelnuts as cherries with plenty of oil, half as much
+lemon juice as oil, and a little salt, one or two hours. Put a nut in
+the place of the stone in the cherries. Sprinkle with oil and a very
+little lemon juice, and serve in lettuce nests.
+
+
+=Fruit Salad.=
+
+(_Winter._)
+
+Peel two oranges; with a sharp knife cut between the pulp and the skin
+and remove the section entire. Slice the meats of one-fourth a pound of
+English walnuts. Of one-fourth a pound of figs select a few for a
+garnish and cut the rest in thin slices. Slice three bananas. Toss half
+the ingredients with two or three tablespoonfuls of oil, and, if the
+oranges are sweet, toss again with one tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+Arrange in a mound on a salad-dish. Put the rest of the fruit, each kind
+separately, on the mound in sections; garnish the edge and top with
+heart leaves of lettuce, and add stars of mayonnaise and candied
+cherries here and there.
+
+
+=Orange-and-Walnut Salad.=
+
+This is a particularly good salad to serve with game. Select fine
+oranges, remove the peel and every particle of white skin, and slice
+very thin lengthwise. Slice English walnuts, blanched or plain. To each
+pint of orange slices add half a pint (scant) of the sliced nuts; dress
+with three tablespoonfuls of oil, one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt, and,
+if the oranges are particularly sweet, a tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+Serve on a bed of watercress or lettuce.
+
+
+=Celery-and-Chestnut Salad.=
+
+Shell and blanch the chestnuts; then boil about fifteen minutes, or
+until tender; drain and cool. When cool cut into quarters, add an equal
+quantity of fine-sliced celery, dress with French dressing, and serve on
+lettuce leaves. Sliced pimentos may be added.
+
+
+=Apple,-Celery-and-English-Walnut Salad.=
+
+Peel and cut the apples in small cubes; blanch the nuts and break in
+pieces, and cut the celery in thin slices; marinate the apple and nuts
+with oil and lemon juice half an hour; drain, add the celery and
+mayonnaise dressing, and serve in cups made by removing the pulp from
+red apples. Cut the edges of the apples in small vandykes; keep fresh in
+cold water until ready to serve.
+
+
+=Orange-and-Banana Salad.=
+
+(_Sweet._)
+
+Stir the juice of two oranges, half a cup of sherry wine, one
+tablespoonful of lemon juice, half a cup of sugar and the unbeaten white
+of an egg, over the fire, until the boiling-point is reached; let simmer
+slowly ten minutes, strain through a cheese-cloth, and, when thoroughly
+chilled, pour over three bananas and three oranges, sliced and mixed
+together in a salad-bowl. Sprinkle with half a cup of dessicated
+cocoanut. Serve thoroughly chilled.
+
+
+=Fig-and-Nut Salad.=
+
+Slice pulled figs, cooked and cooled, and mix with them a few slices of
+walnuts or blanched almonds. Serve with French dressing made of claret
+and lemon juice instead of vinegar, or with a cream dressing. In using
+the cream dressing, mix the ingredients with a little of the dressing
+and dispose additional dressing here and there, using the forcing-bag
+and tube. When available, fresh figs are preferable to those that have
+been cooked.
+
+
+=Grapefruit Salad.=
+
+Cut the chilled fruit in halves, crosswise, and take out the pulp with a
+spoon; dress with French dressing. The juice of the grapefruit may be
+used in the place of other acid, and mayonnaise in the place of French
+dressing. Serve on lettuce leaves, or return to the skin from which the
+pulp was removed. The edge of the grapefruit cup may be cut in
+vandykes, or otherwise ornamented.
+
+
+=Turquoise Salad.=
+
+Mix together equal parts of celery and tart apple cut in match-like
+pieces, and one or two pimentos cut in similar pieces. Dress with
+mayonnaise made light with whipped cream. Serve in nests of lettuce.
+
+
+=Turquoise Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Use pineapple in the place of the apple; serve in a mound on a bed of
+lettuce leaves. Garnish with stars cut from the pimentos with French
+cutter, curled celery, and heart leaves of celery.
+
+
+=Salad Chiffonade.=
+
+Seed two green peppers, boil two or three minutes, then cut in shreds.
+Shred the light and dark leaves of a head of lettuce, or endive,
+separately. Cut three tomatoes in shreds. Remove the peel and skin from
+one large grapefruit. Serve with French dressing, seasoning, and then
+arranging each article separately upon the serving-dish, having a circle
+of light and then dark green material about the edge.
+
+
+=Peach-and-Almond Salad.=
+
+Blanch the almonds and cut in thin slices. Chill the peaches, peel, and
+cut in slices; use one-fifth as much in bulk of sliced nuts as sliced
+peaches. Serve with French dressing, or with mayonnaise made white
+with whipped cream. Garnish the edge with delicate lettuce leaves and
+serve at once.
+
+[Illustration: Fruit Salad.
+
+(See page 90)]
+
+[Illustration: Turquoise Salad, No. 2.
+
+(See page 94)]
+
+
+=Peach Salad.=
+
+(_English style._)
+
+Cut ripe, fine-flavored peaches into quarters, after removing the skins.
+Cover with champagne, thoroughly chilled, and sprinkle with tea-rose
+petals. Serve at once.
+
+
+=Peach,-Strawberry-and-Cherry Salad.=
+
+(_London style._)
+
+Let a large handful of fresh rose petals stand an hour or two in a cool
+place in a cup of Hungarian wine. Strain out the leaves and pour the
+wine over a quart of mixed fruit,--peaches pared and cut in quarters,
+strawberries hulled and cut in halves, and cherries stoned,--all
+thoroughly chilled. Let a handful of rose petals stand an hour or two in
+a cup of thick cream; then strain the cream, sweeten slightly with
+powdered sugar, whip to a stiff froth, and use as a garnish for the
+fruit.
+
+
+=Grapefruit, Pineapple, and Pimento Salad.=
+
+Cut a large grapefruit in halves and remove the pulp with a sharp knife
+to avoid crushing it; remove half the pulp of a large pineapple from
+the core with a fork, after carefully removing the unedible outside.
+Dress with white mayonnaise and serve upon crisp lettuce hearts. Garnish
+with tiny bits of pimento. 2d.--Omit the pimento, lettuce and
+mayonnaise, and dress with sherry wine and sugar. For a Christmas salad,
+use the first formula and canned pineapple if the fresh be not at hand.
+Dispose the dressed pineapple and grapefruit upon shredded lettuce,
+having a circle of heart leaves around the edge. Dot here and there with
+small stars cut from the red pimento with a French cutter. Or chop the
+pimento fine and dispose in the shape of a large five-pointed star in
+the centre of the dish.
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO PREPARE AND USE ASPIC JELLY.
+
+
+To make aspic for moulding or decorating a fish salad, use stock
+prepared from chicken or veal, or from fish. For chicken, veal or
+sweetbread salad, use chicken or veal stock, or a light-colored
+consommé. In an emergency, aspic may be made from the prepared extracts
+of beef, or from bouillon capsules. Aspic is often tinted delicately to
+harmonize with a particular color scheme. A light-green aspic has been
+found quite effective.
+
+
+=RECIPE.=
+
+To one quart of highly seasoned stock, freed from all fat, add the juice
+of a lemon, a bay leaf, half a cup of wine and one box of gelatine
+soaked in a cup of cold water. Beat into the mixture the slightly beaten
+whites and crushed shells of two eggs. Heat to the boiling-point,
+stirring constantly, and let boil five minutes. After standing ten
+minutes skim off the froth, etc., and strain through a cheese-cloth
+folded double and held in a colander.
+
+
+=Aspic for Garnishing.=
+
+Pour the liquid jelly into a new tin to the depth of half an inch. Wring
+a napkin out of cold water and spread it smoothly over the meat-board.
+Dip the pan in warm water and turn the jelly onto the napkin; stamp in
+rounds, diamonds or other fanciful shapes. If blocks of greater
+thickness be required, fill the pan to the required depth with the
+liquid aspic. When turned from the mould, cut in squares or diamonds
+with a knife, wiped dry after having been dipped in hot water.
+
+
+=To Chop Jelly.=
+
+Cut the jelly slowly, first in one direction, then in the opposite
+direction. Each piece, whether large or small, should be clean-cut and
+distinct. Aspic melts or softens in a warm place, and should not be
+taken from the mould until the time of serving, and then it must be
+handled with care.
+
+
+=Consommé for Aspic Jelly.=
+
+Cut two pounds of beef from the under part of the round and two pounds
+of shin of veal into small pieces; crack the bones in the shin. Place
+over the fire with two and a half quarts of cold water; add one ounce of
+lean ham. Heat slowly, and cook just below the boiling-point two or
+three hours; then add to the kettle a three-pound fowl, and allow it to
+remain till tender. Put some marrow into the frying-pan, and when hot
+sauté in it a small onion cut fine, two tablespoonfuls, each, of chopped
+celery, carrot and turnip; add to the soup kettle, removing the fowl,
+together with a sprig, each, of parsley, thyme and summer savory, two
+bay leaves, a small blade of mace, four cloves, two peppercorns and one
+scant tablespoonful of salt. Let simmer about an hour and a half; then
+strain and let cool.
+
+
+=Chicken Stock for Aspic Jelly.=
+
+Put a four-pound fowl and a few bits of veal from the neck over the fire
+in three pints of cold water. Heat slowly to the boiling-point, let boil
+five minutes, then skim and let simmer until the fowl is nearly tender.
+Now add an onion and half a sliced carrot, a stalk of celery, a
+teaspoonful of sweet herbs tied in a bag with a sprig of parsley, two
+cloves, a blade of mace, eight peppercorns and a teaspoonful of salt.
+Remove the fowl when tender, and let the stock simmer until reduced to
+about one quart; strain, and set aside to become cool.
+
+
+=Second Stock for Use in Sauces, Etc.=
+
+Break the bones from roasts; add the tough or browned bits of meat and
+fat; add also the flank ends from chops and steaks, cut small (there
+should always be a few bits of fresh meat), and cover with cold water.
+Heat slowly and let simmer two or three hours, then add, for each two
+quarts of water used, one-fourth a cup, each, of chopped onion and
+carrot, two stalks of celery and a tomato cut small, two teaspoonfuls of
+sweet herbs, two sprigs of parsley browned in two tablespoonfuls of
+butter or drippings, and cook about an hour. Strain and let cool. Stock
+will keep a day or two in summer and nearly a week in winter, if the
+cake of fat that forms upon the top be left undisturbed.
+
+
+=Fish Stock.=
+
+(_For use in fish aspic, or any fish dish._)
+
+Cover the bones and trimmings from the fish that is to be used for the
+salad with cold water; add, if convenient, the body bones of a lobster
+or two. Add also one or two pounds of an inexpensive fish, and a pint of
+water for each pound of fish. All must be fresh. Bring the water slowly
+to the boiling-point and let simmer an hour, then add, for each quart of
+water, one tablespoonful, each, of chopped onion and carrot, a sprig of
+parsley and one teaspoonful of sweet herbs, sautéd delicately in two
+tablespoonfuls of butter. Season to taste with salt and cayenne.
+
+
+=Aspic Jelly from Bouillon Capsules, Etc.=
+
+Put over the fire one-fourth a cup, each, of onion and carrot, sautéd in
+two tablespoonfuls of butter, two stalks of celery, a bay leaf, half a
+dozen peppercorns and two or three cloves, with one quart of water; add
+three bouillon capsules, or three teaspoonfuls of beef extract (not
+home-made) dissolved in two cups of boiling water; let simmer about half
+an hour, then add one box of gelatine softened in one cup of cold water,
+any additional flavoring desired, and the slightly beaten white and
+crushed shell of one egg (more shells will be advantageous). Bring
+slowly to the boiling-point, stirring constantly meanwhile, and let
+simmer five minutes; let stand in a hot place ten minutes, then skim and
+strain through a cheese-cloth folded double.
+
+
+=White Chaud-froid Sauce.=
+
+(_For coating joints of fowl or game, or medallions of fowl, tongue or
+sweetbreads._)
+
+To one pint of white sauce, made of white stock, add three-fourths a cup
+of aspic jelly and one tablespoonful of lemon juice; let simmer until
+reduced to the consistency of very thick cream; remove the butter from
+the top and let cool slightly before using.
+
+
+
+
+CHEESE DISHES SERVED WITH SALADS.
+
+ _Digestive cheese and fruit there sure will be._
+ --BEN JONSON.
+
+
+
+
+CHEESE DISHES SERVED WITH SALADS.
+
+
+=Cheese Custard.=
+
+(MRS. DIMON.)
+
+Butter a baking-dish, put in a layer of bread cut in pieces one inch
+square with crust removed, sprinkle thin-sliced cheese over the bread,
+dust with salt and paprica, or a few grains of cayenne. Add other layers
+of bread and cheese, seasoning as before, using in all half a small loaf
+of bread, one cup of cheese and half a teaspoonful of salt. Beat two
+eggs slightly, add one pint of milk, and pour the mixture over the bread
+and cheese. Bake about half an hour in a moderate oven.
+
+
+=Cheese Soufflé.=
+
+Cook together four tablespoonfuls of butter and two tablespoonfuls of
+flour, into which have been sifted one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of
+soda and mustard and a few grains of cayenne. Add gradually half a cup
+of milk. When the sauce boils, remove from the fire and stir into it one
+cup of grated cheese (half a pound) and the yolks of three eggs, beaten
+until light. When well mixed, fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three
+eggs. Bake in a buttered pudding-dish, in a moderate oven, about
+twenty-five minutes, or in individual dishes, paper cases, or china
+shirring-cups, about twelve minutes. _Serve at once_ from the dish or
+dishes. The soufflé will "stand up" a little better, if three-fourths a
+cup of milk be used in place of the half-cup as given, and half a cup of
+stale grated bread be added before the cheese; but it will not be quite
+so delicate.
+
+
+=Cheese Ramequins.=
+
+Put four tablespoonfuls of butter and half a cup of water into a
+saucepan. When these boil, add half a cup of flour and a few grains,
+each, of salt and paprica; cook and stir until the mixture cleaves from
+the pan. Turn into a mixing-bowl and beat in two ounces of grated
+Parmesan cheese; then beat in, one at a time, two eggs. On a
+well-buttered baking-sheet shape the paste into flat circular pieces
+about an inch in diameter. Brush over the tops with beaten egg, diluted
+with one or two tablespoonfuls of milk or water, and put three or four
+dice of cheese on each. Bake about fifteen minutes. Serve very hot.
+
+
+=Cheese Straws.=
+
+Roll plain or puff paste into a rectangular sheet one-fourth an inch
+thick. Sprinkle one-half with grated cheese (any kind of cheese will do,
+but Parmesan is preferred); also add a few grains of cayenne and salt.
+Fold the other half over this and press the edges together closely.
+Fold again to make three layers, turn half-way round, pat and roll out
+to the thickness of one-fourth an inch. Sprinkle one half with cheese
+and proceed as before. Continue rolling and adding the cheese, until, to
+one cup and a half of flour, from half to a whole cup of cheese has been
+used. After the last rolling, cut into bands half an inch wide, or into
+rings and straws one-fourth an inch wide. The straws and bands should be
+four or five inches in length, and the rings large enough to hold three
+or four straws. Serve the bands piled in log-cabin style on a
+doylie-covered plate. If the paste be made expressly for the straws, the
+cheese and cayenne may be mixed into the flour with the butter, thus
+diminishing time in making. Bake in a moderate oven until delicately
+browned.
+
+[Illustration: Cheese Ramequins.]
+
+[Illustration: Individual Soufflé of Cheese.
+
+(See page 108)]
+
+
+=Gnochi à la Romaine.=
+
+Melt four tablespoonfuls of butter; cook in it four tablespoonfuls,
+each, of cornstarch and flour and half a teaspoonful of salt, then add
+gradually one pint of milk. When thick and smooth stir in the beaten
+yolks of two eggs, add four tablespoonfuls of grated Parmesan cheese,
+and spread on a buttered pan to cool. Just before serving, cut the paste
+in shapes, lay on a baking-sheet, and brown delicately in the oven.
+
+
+=Cheese Balls.=
+
+Mix together thoroughly one cup and a half of grated cheese, one
+tablespoonful of flour, one-fourth, a teaspoonful of salt and a few
+grains of cayenne; then add the whites of three eggs, beaten stiff.
+Shape in small balls and roll in cracker crumbs, sifted or crushed to a
+fine meal; fry in deep fat and drain on soft paper.
+
+
+=Individual Soufflés of Cheese, Iced.=
+
+(See cut facing page 106.)
+
+Mix half a cup of grated Parmesan and one-fourth a cup of grated Gruyère
+cheese and one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica with two-thirds a cup of
+chicken aspic, cold, but not set. Stir over ice water until just
+beginning to form, then fold into it one cup of whipped cream. Fasten
+strips of white paper around paper soufflé cases, letting the strips
+rise an inch and a half above the cases, fixing in place with
+sealing-wax, mucilage, or a stitch. Fill the cases and the papers
+surrounding them with the cheese mixture, and set them in a pail or
+mould that is thoroughly chilled. Press the cover down over a paper, and
+pack in equal parts of ice and salt. Let stand an hour. Before serving,
+remove the paper, sprinkle the tops with buttered crumbs, browned, and
+serve at once.
+
+
+=Cheese Croquettes.=
+
+(TOURAINE.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 2/3 a cup of milk.
+ Yolks of 2 eggs.
+ 1 cup of mild cheese, cut in small cubes.
+ 1/2 a cup of grated Gruyère cheese.
+ Salt and cayenne to taste.
+
+_Method._--Make a sauce of the butter, flour and milk; add the yolks,
+slightly beaten, and beat thoroughly; add the grated cheese, and, when
+melted, remove from the fire; add the seasonings and cubes of cheese.
+Spread in a shallow pan to cool. Cut in any shape desired, dip in
+crumbs, then in egg, and again in crumbs; fry in deep fat and drain on
+brown paper.
+
+
+=Cheese Aigrettes.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/2 a cup of water.
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ 1/2 a cup of flour.
+ 2 eggs, with yolk of a third.
+ A few grains of cayenne and salt.
+ 2 ounces (1/4 a cup) of grated Parmesan cheese.
+ Hot fat.
+
+_Method._--Boil the water and butter, sift in the flour with the salt
+and cayenne; stir and cook until the mixture cleaves from the side of
+the pan. When the mixture has slightly cooled, add the eggs, one at a
+time, beating in each egg thoroughly before another is added. Lastly,
+add the cheese. Drop, by teaspoonfuls, into hot fat and fry a golden
+brown. Drain on soft paper and serve piled on a folded napkin.
+
+
+=Cheese d'Artois.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ White of 1 egg.
+ Yolks of 2 eggs.
+ Salt and paprica.
+ 2 ounces of grated Parmesan cheese.
+ 1/4 a pound of plain or puff paste.
+
+_Method._--Cream the butter, beat in the eggs, and add the cheese with a
+few grains, each, of salt and paprica. Roll the pastry very thin and cut
+it into two rectangular pieces; lay one of these on a baking-sheet and
+spread with the cheese mixture; cover this with the second piece of
+pastry. Score with a knife in strips one inch wide and about three
+inches long, brush over with beaten egg, and bake about fifteen minutes.
+Cut out the strips while hot. Serve at once, or reheat before serving.
+
+
+=Cheese Fritters.=
+
+Slice thin half a dozen large tart apples (select apples that cook
+quickly), and prepare half as many thin slices of cheese. Beat up one or
+two eggs, and season with salt, mustard and pepper. Soak the cheese in
+the egg mixture, then put each slice between two slices of apple,
+sandwich style; dip in the beaten egg, sauté in hot butter, and serve
+hot.
+
+
+=Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Vegetable Macedoine.=
+
+Mix together a ten-cent cream cheese, a canned pimento (red) cut in tiny
+cubes, one-fourth a cup of small green string beans, cut in cubes, five
+olives, chopped fine, and enough cream to hold the mixture together.
+When thoroughly mixed, use a piece of paraffine or confectioner's paper
+to handle and give the mixture the original shape. Let stand in a cold
+place, wrapped in the paper, until ready to serve, then dispose in the
+centre of a salad dish, lined with lettuce leaves, dressed with French
+dressing. Slice the cheese with a silver knife before sending to table.
+At luncheon, mayonnaise may be served in a dish apart.
+
+[Illustration: Pineapple Cheese and Crackers.]
+
+[Illustration: Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Vegetable Macedoine.]
+
+
+
+
+PART II.
+
+SANDWICHES.
+
+ _Socrates brought Philosophy from the clouds, but
+ the Englishmen have dragged her into the kitchen._
+ --HEGEL.
+
+ _Homer never entertained either guests or hosts
+ with long speeches till the mouth of hunger be
+ stopped._
+ --SIR PHILIP SIDNEY.
+
+
+
+
+SANDWICHES.
+
+ A pale young man, with feeble whiskers and a stiff
+ white neckcloth, came walking down the lane _en
+ sandwich_--having a lady, that is, on each arm.
+ --_Thackeray_ ("_Vanity Fair_").
+
+
+The term "sandwich," now applied to many a fanciful shaped and encased
+dainty, was formerly used in speaking of "two slices of bread with meat
+between." In this sense, the word had its origin, about the end of the
+eighteenth century, from the fact that the fourth Earl of Sandwich was
+so infatuated with the pleasures and excitement of the gaming-table that
+he often could not leave it long enough to take his meals with his
+family; and, on such occasions, a butler was despatched to him bearing
+"slices of bread with meat between."
+
+The fillings of savory sandwiches may be placed between pieces of bread,
+crackers, pastry, _chou_ paste or aspic jelly. When preparing sweet
+sandwiches, these same materials may be used, as also lady-fingers
+(white or yellow), macaroons or sweet wafers.
+
+
+=Bread for Sandwiches.=
+
+As a rule, bread for sandwiches should be twenty-four hours old; but
+fresh bread, which is more pliable than stale, is better adapted to this
+use, when the sandwiches are to take the form of rolls or folds. When
+stale bread is used for rolls or folds, they must be ribbon-tied; or
+tiny Japanese toothpicks may be made to keep them in shape.
+
+The bread may be yeast or peptic bread. It may be white or brown. It is
+not even essential that the two bits of bread be of the same kind;
+Quaker, rice, whole-wheat, rye or graham bread is interchangeable with
+white or brown bread. After selecting your loaf or loaves, slice in
+even, quarter-inch slices; then cut in squares, triangles or fingers, or
+stamp with a round or fanciful-shaped cutter. Cutters can be obtained in
+heart, club, diamond and spade shape, also in racquet shape.
+
+Do not spread butter or filling upon the bread before it is cut from the
+loaf and into shape. When so treated, the butter or filling on the
+extreme edge of the bread is liable to soil the fingers or gloves that
+come in contact with it.
+
+Cream the butter, using a small wooden spoon for the purpose, and then
+it can be spread upon the most delicate bread without crumbling.
+
+
+=The Filling.=
+
+Anything appropriately eaten with the _covering_ may be used for the
+_filling_ of a sandwich. In meats, salted meat takes the lead in popular
+favor; when sliced the meat should be cut across the grain and as thin
+as possible, and several bits should be used in each sandwich, unless a
+very small, æsthetic sandwich be in order. Tongue and corned beef,
+whether they be used in slices or finely chopped, should be cooked until
+they are very tender. When corned beef or ham is chopped for a filling,
+the sandwich is much improved by a dash of mustard; Worcestershire or
+horseradish sauce improves a filling of roast beef or boiled tongue;
+while chopped capers, tomato sauce, catsup or a cold mint sauce is
+appropriate in sandwiches made of lamb; celery salt, when the filling is
+of chicken or veal, and lemon juice, when the principal ingredient is
+fish, are _en rapport_.
+
+The flavor of a few drops of onion juice is relished by many in any kind
+of fish or meat sandwich, while others would prefer a few grains of
+fine-chopped parsley.
+
+When salad sandwiches are to be prepared, chop the meat or fish very
+fine and mix it with the salad dressing. Celery, cabbage, cress,
+cucumbers, tomatoes or olives may be chopped and added to the meat with
+the dressing. When lettuce is used, the leaf is served whole, the edges
+just appearing outside the bread. Any one of these vegetables, combined
+with a salad dressing, makes a delicious sandwich without meat or fish.
+When desired, other well-prepared sauces may be used in the place of
+salad dressings. Fillings of uncooked fruit may be used; but, in the
+case of dried fruits, it is preferable to stew until tender, after the
+fruit has been finely chopped. Pineapple, lemon or orange juice may be
+added at pleasure. Sandwiches prepared from entire-wheat bread, with
+fig or date fillings, are particularly wholesome for the children's
+luncheon basket.
+
+When a particularly æsthetic sandwich is desired, wrap the butter that
+is to be used in spreading the bread in a napkin, and put it over night
+in a jar, on a bed of violets or rose petals; strew more flowers over
+the top and cover the jar tightly. If meat or fish is to be used as the
+basis of the sandwich, substitute nasturtium leaves and blossoms, or
+sprigs of mignonette, for the former flowers.
+
+Fancy butter makes an attractive filling for a sandwich; it has also the
+merit of being less often in evidence than many another filling.
+
+Sandwiches, except when vegetables and dressings are used, may be
+prepared early in the day, placed in a stone jar, covered with a
+slightly dampened cloth, and set away in a cool place until such time as
+they are wanted. Or, they may be wrapped in paraffine paper. Still, when
+convenient, it is preferable to have everything in readiness, and put
+the sandwiches together just before serving. Garnish the serving-dish
+with parsley, cress, celery plumes, slices of lemon, barberries and
+leaves, or fresh nasturtium leaves and blossoms.
+
+
+=Beverages Served with Sandwiches.=
+
+Coffee heads the list of beverages most acceptably served with
+sandwiches. Tea comes next. Cocoa and chocolate are admissible only with
+the dainty, æsthetic varieties, in which fruit or some kind of sweetmeat
+is used.
+
+
+
+
+SAVORY SANDWICHES.
+
+ "Hail, wedded nourishment!"
+
+
+=Ham-and-Tongue Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop two parts of cold tongue and one part of cold ham (one-fourth as
+much fat ham as lean) very fine; pound in a mortar, and season with
+paprica and a little mixed mustard. Spread butter on one piece of bread,
+the meat mixture on the other, and press the two pieces together.
+
+
+=Ham-and-Egg Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop the ham and pound smooth in a mortar; pass the yolks of hard-boiled
+eggs through a sieve; mix the yolks with an equal amount of mayonnaise
+dressing. Butter one piece of bread lightly and spread with the ham,
+spread the other piece with the egg and dressing, and press the two
+together.
+
+
+=Corned-Beef Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop the cold meat very fine, using one-fourth of fat meat. Work into
+the meat French mustard, or any "made" mustard, to taste, and prepare
+the sandwiches in the usual way. Boston brownbread combines well with
+this preparation.
+
+
+=Tongue-and-Veal (or Chicken) Sandwiches.=
+
+Use a little less of the chopped tongue than of the other kind of meat,
+and one-half as much chopped celery as meat. Mix with salad dressing.
+Spread one piece of bread with butter, the other with the mixture, and
+press together.
+
+
+=Celery Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop crisp celery very fine and mix with salad dressing. Spread one
+piece of bread with butter, the other with a thin layer of the mixture.
+With a sharp knife split open the round stems of celery tips and put
+them between the bread, so that the tips will just show on the edges.
+Tie with narrow ribbon, light-green in color.
+
+
+=Sardine Sandwiches.=
+
+Use, in bulk, equal parts of yolks of well-cooked eggs, rubbed to a
+smooth paste, and the flesh of sardines, freed from skin and bones and
+pounded in a mortar; season to taste with a few drops of tobasco sauce
+and lemon juice, and spread as usual. Crackers may be used in the place
+of bread, if the sandwiches be prepared just before using, otherwise the
+crackers lose their crispness. Garnish with slices of lemon and parsley.
+
+
+=Caviare Sandwich Rolls.=
+
+To each two tablespoonfuls of caviare add ten drops of onion juice and a
+few drops of lemon juice, and mix together thoroughly. Remove the crust
+from a fresh, moist loaf of bread, cut in thin slices, spread each slice
+very delicately with butter and the caviare mixture, roll up in a roll
+and tie with ribbon one-fourth an inch wide, or pin with Chinese
+toothpicks. The bread should not be more than twelve hours old. If fear
+be lest the bread will not be sufficiently moist to roll, wrap the loaf,
+when taken from the oven, in a damp cloth and then in a dry one; keep in
+this fashion until ready for use.
+
+
+=Russian Sandwiches.=
+
+Slightly butter thin slices of bread; moisten fine-chopped olives with
+mayonnaise dressing and spread upon the buttered slices; spread other
+slices with Neufchatel, or any cream cheese, and press together in
+pairs.
+
+
+=Mushroom-and-Lobster Sandwiches.=
+
+Sauté the caps of half a pound of mushrooms in a little butter about
+five minutes, adding half a sliced onion if desired. Cover with highly
+seasoned stock and let simmer until very tender; chop and press through
+a sieve, and, if very moist, reduce to the consistency of a thick purée.
+Add an equal quantity of lobster meat pounded smooth in a mortar. Season
+to taste with salt, pepper, lemon juice and, if desired, tomato catsup.
+When cool use as any filling.
+
+
+=Cheese-and-English-Walnut Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a pound of grated cheese.
+ 1/4 a pound of butter.
+ 1/4 a pound of English walnut meats, sliced.
+ Salt and paprica to taste.
+
+_Method._--Work the butter to a cream, add the seasonings and the grated
+cheese gradually; then mix in the nuts, which should be _sliced_ very
+thin. Spread the mixture upon bits of bread and press together in pairs.
+Particularly good made of brownbread and served with a simple vegetable
+salad!
+
+
+=Egg-and-Spinach Sandwiches.=
+
+Use cold boiled spinach, which when hot was chopped very fine or pressed
+through a colander, and sifted yolks of well-cooked eggs. Mix the
+spinach with sauce tartare and spread on one bit of bread, spread the
+other with butter and sifted yolk of egg; press together. Garnish the
+serving-dish with parsley and cooked eggs cut in quarters lengthwise.
+
+
+=Cress-and-Egg Sandwiches.=
+
+Pick the leaves from fresh cress, chop or break apart, season with
+French dressing, and proceed as above.
+
+
+=Imitation Pâté-de-Foie-Gras Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop half an onion and sauté in a little butter; when delicately
+browned, add five or six chicken livers and sauté them on both sides.
+Cover with well-seasoned chicken stock and let simmer until tender.
+Mash the livers fine with a wooden spoon and press them through a sieve;
+season with salt, paprica, mustard, or a dash of curry powder. Press
+into a cup, pour melted butter over the top, and set away in a cool
+place. When ready to serve, remove the butter and prepare the sandwiches
+after the usual manner.
+
+
+=Chicken Rolls.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 4 ounces from the breast of chicken (1/2 a cup).
+ 4 ounces of braised tongue.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of celery salt.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+ 1 teaspoonful of anchovy paste.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of mayonnaise or boiled dressing.
+
+_Method._--Chop the meat and pound to a paste in a mortar; add the
+seasonings and mix well. Remove the crust from a loaf of moist bread;
+cut in very thin slices, trim each slice into a rectangular shape,
+spread lightly with soft butter and then with the mixture. Roll the
+slices and tie them with ribbon. Omit the anchovy paste, if desired.
+
+
+=Epicurean Sandwiches.=
+
+Cream four tablespoonfuls of butter and one teaspoonful of mustard.
+Press the yolks of four hard-boiled eggs through a sieve and add them to
+the butter and mustard. Then add four boned anchovies, four small
+pickles, a teaspoonful of chives and a sprig of tarragon, chopped
+together until fine. Cut stale bread in fingers or other fanciful
+shapes, and spread with the mixture. Press two pieces together.
+
+
+=Halibut-and-Lettuce Sandwiches.=
+
+Put a pound and a half of halibut, a slice of onion, a stalk of celery,
+four or five peppercorns, one teaspoonful of salt and one tablespoonful
+of lemon juice in boiling water, and cook, just below the boiling-point,
+ten or fifteen minutes, according to thickness. Remove bone and skin and
+rub the fish fine with a wooden spoon; add half a cup of thick cream, a
+teaspoonful of salt, a dash of white pepper and one tablespoonful of
+lemon juice. Spread this mixture, when cold, on buttered slices of
+bread, put a lettuce leaf above the mixture, and spread a teaspoonful of
+mayonnaise or boiled salad dressing on the lettuce; finish with a slice
+of buttered bread and tie with ribbon.
+
+
+=Lobster Fingers.=
+
+Chop lobster meat very fine; season to taste with French dressing. Cut
+the bread in pieces about four inches long and an inch and a half wide.
+Finish as usual. Garnish with parsley and the slender feelers of the
+lobster.
+
+
+=Tower of Babel.=
+
+Pile a _variety_ of sandwiches in form of a pyramid (use bread of
+different colors). Arrange a garnish of parsley and radish rosebuds
+around the base, and on the top a few sprigs of parsley, or celery
+plumes.
+
+
+=Nasturtium Folds.=
+
+Flavor the butter with nasturtium leaves and blossoms, and with it
+spread a thin slice of _moist_ bread, which is longer one way than the
+other. Press fresh nasturtium leaves and blossoms upon the butter and
+fold one half over the other.
+
+
+=Harlequin Sandwiches.=
+
+Spread a bit of brownbread with butter and French mustard, and a bit of
+white bread, cut to fit the former, with butter and cheese creamed
+together. Finish as usual.
+
+
+=Harlequin Sandwiches, No. 2.=
+
+Spread the brownbread with butter and cheese creamed together, and the
+white bread with butter, then with cucumber, chopped fine and seasoned
+with French dressing, to which a few drops of onion juice have been
+added.
+
+
+=Beet-and-Cream-Cheese Sandwiches.=
+
+Spread one piece of bread with cream cheese, the other with beets that
+have been chopped very fine and seasoned with French dressing.
+
+
+=Peanut Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop freshly roasted peanuts very fine; then pound them in a mortar
+until smooth; season with salt and moisten with thick cream.
+
+
+=Peanut Sandwiches, No. 2.=
+
+Mix the prepared peanuts with mayonnaise dressing. Butter two pieces of
+bread; spread one with the peanut mixture, the other with shredded
+lettuce, and press the two together.
+
+
+=Shad-Roe-and-Yellow-Butter Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a pound of butter.
+ Sifted yolks of 4 eggs.
+ 1 set of shad roe, cooked, pounded in a mortar and sifted.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ 4 drops of tobasco sauce.
+ 2 teaspoonfuls of very fine-chopped capers.
+
+_Method._--Cream the butter and add the other ingredients gradually.
+Prepare as usual.
+
+
+=Green-Butter Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a pound of butter.
+ 1/8 a peck of spinach.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of very fine-chopped parsley.
+ 6 anchovies.
+ 2 teaspoonfuls of very fine-chopped capers.
+
+_Method._--Boil the spinach, drain thoroughly, and press through a piece
+of muslin. Beat the butter to a cream with a wooden spoon; beat into the
+butter enough of the spinach pulp to give the required tint of green.
+Wipe the oil from the anchovies, remove the backbone, and pass through a
+hair sieve; then add to the colored butter, a little at a time; add also
+the parsley and capers; chill slightly and use as a filling for
+sandwiches. These butters are used also to mask or decorate cooked fish
+for "cold service."
+
+[Illustration: Chicken Salad Sandwiches.
+
+(See page 127)]
+
+[Illustration: Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic.
+
+(See page 128)]
+
+
+=Chicken-Salad Sandwiches.=
+
+(_Chou-paste boxes._)
+
+(See cut facing page 126.)
+
+Bake _chou_ paste in long, slender shapes, like éclairs, but narrower
+and shorter; when cold split apart on the ends and one side and fill
+with chicken salad. Put the top back in place, after inserting a celery
+plume at each end. Garnish the serving-dish with celery leaves and
+pim-olas or olives. Serve other salads in the same way.
+
+
+=Mosaic Sandwiches.=
+
+Cut the bread, white, brown and graham, as thin as possible, and use
+four or five pieces in each sandwich, putting them together so that the
+colors will contrast. Either butter or other filling is admissible.
+
+
+=Chicken-and-Nut Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop fine the white meat of a cooked chicken and pound to a paste in a
+mortar. Season to taste with salt, paprica, oil and lemon juice and
+spread upon thin bits of bread. Spread other bits of bread,
+corresponding in shape to the first, with butter; press into the butter
+English walnuts, pecan nuts or almonds, blanched and _sliced_ very thin.
+Press corresponding pieces together.
+
+
+=Aspic Jelly for Sandwiches.=
+
+Soak one box (two ounces) of gelatine in one cup of cold chicken liquor
+until thoroughly softened. Add to three cups of chicken stock, seasoned
+with vegetables and sweet herbs according to directions previously
+given, also the crushed shell and white of one egg, and proceed as for
+aspic jelly. Turn the liquid jelly into rectangular pans, having it
+three-eighths of an inch or less in thickness, and set aside in a cool
+place to harden. When ready to serve, dip the pan in hot water an
+instant, and turn the jelly on to a paper. With a thin, sharp knife cut
+the jelly into squares or diamonds, or dip a cutter into hot water and
+stamp out into hearts or clubs.
+
+
+=Lobster Sandwiches with Aspic.=
+
+Chop the lobster fine, mix with mayonnaise dressing to taste, spread
+upon a bit of aspic, cover with a crisp lettuce leaf, and above this
+place another piece of aspic spread with the lobster mixture. Serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic.=
+
+After the aspic is poured into the pans, sprinkle upon it some fine-cut
+Spanish pimentos. When ready to serve, prepare as lobster sandwiches
+with aspic, using fish in the place of lobster, and, if desired, sauce
+tartare in the place of mayonnaise. Shrimps, salmon or other fish,
+chicken, veal, tongue, sweetbreads, etc., may be used either with
+lettuce or with chopped celery, cress, cucumbers, etc. Or the vegetables
+may be used without either fish, flesh or fowl.
+
+[Illustration: Wedding Sandwich Rolls.
+
+(See page 129)]
+
+[Illustration: Club Sandwich.
+
+(See page 129)]
+
+
+=Club Sandwiches.=
+
+(_Steamer Priscilla style._)
+
+Have ready four triangular pieces of toasted bread spread with
+mayonnaise dressing; cover two of these with lettuce, lay thin slices of
+cold chicken (white meat) upon the lettuce, over this arrange slices of
+broiled breakfast bacon, then lettuce, and cover with the other
+triangles of toast spread with mayonnaise. Trim neatly, arrange on a
+plate, and garnish with heart leaves of lettuce dipped in mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Wedding Sandwich Rolls.=
+
+Wrap bread as it is taken from the oven closely in a towel wrung out of
+cold water, cover with several thicknesses of dry cloth and set aside
+about four hours; then cut away the crust, and with a thin, sharp knife
+cut the loaf or loaves in slices as thin as possible and spread with
+butter, and, if desired, thin shavings of meat, potted meat or chopped
+nuts; roll the slices very closely and pile on a serving-dish.
+
+
+=The Milwaukee Sandwich.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 thin rounds of white bread.
+ 1 thin round of graham or rye bread.
+ 4 large oysters, broiled or fried.
+ Breast of cooked chicken, or turkey.
+ Two slices of crisp bacon.
+ Horseradish.
+ Lettuce.
+ 4 small sweet pickles.
+ 4 small radishes.
+ Slice of lemon.
+ 1 tomato, skin removed.
+ Tartare sauce.
+
+_Method._--Dip the bread in beaten egg, seasoned with salt and sauté to
+a rich brown in hot butter. Roll the oysters in grated bread crumbs
+(centre of the loaf) and broil them, or "egg and bread" them, and fry in
+deep fat. Lay the first slice of bread on a plate over two or three
+lettuce leaves, put the oysters on the bread, a grating of horseradish
+on each oyster; cover with the graham or rye bread; on this lay the
+chicken or turkey cut in thin slices, season with salt and pepper, put
+on the bacon, and cover with the other slice of bread. On top of the
+sandwich lay a slice of lemon cut square, and about this dispose the
+pickles and radishes, to form a star. Serve the tomato on a lettuce leaf
+at the side. Cut out the hard centre from the tomato and fill the
+opening with sauce tartare. In making this sauce, add to mayonnaise or
+boiled dressing, onion, olives, sweet pickles and celery, chopped fine
+and squeezed dry in a cloth.
+
+
+
+
+SWEET SANDWICHES.
+
+ In the name of the Prophet--figs!
+ --_Horace Smith._
+
+
+=Fig Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop one-fourth a pound of figs very fine, add one-fourth a cup of
+water, and cook to a smooth paste; add, also, one-third a cup of
+almonds, blanched, chopped very fine and pounded to a paste with a
+little rose-water, also the juice of half a lemon. When cold spread the
+mixture upon lady-fingers or cakelets, white or yellow, press another
+above the mixture, and serve upon a handsome doylie-covered plate.
+Raisins, dates or marmalade may be used in the place of the figs. The
+marmalade, of course, requires no cooking. Bread may be used in the
+place of the cake.
+
+
+=French Fruit Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop the fruit very fine; use a mixture of cherries, plums, pineapple
+and angelica root; moisten with wine, orange or lemon juice. Use
+lady-fingers or bread for the covering. If bread is used, spread lightly
+with butter; if cake be your choice, spread very lightly with marmalade.
+Use just enough butter or marmalade to keep the coverings together.
+
+
+=Date-and-Ginger Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop the dates and preserved ginger; moisten with syrup from the ginger
+jar and a little lemon juice; cook as above, and use with bread or
+lady-fingers. Preserved ginger may be used alone and without cooking.
+
+
+=Rose-Leaf Sandwiches.=
+
+Flavor the butter with rose petals according to the directions
+previously given. Spread both bits of bread lightly with it and put upon
+them three or four candied rose petals. If lady-fingers are used, brush
+them over with white of egg and sugar mixed together. Use but little
+sugar--just enough to hold the fingers together. The Turkish rose petals
+that come in little jars are particularly dainty, and adapted to this
+purpose. Garnish the dish on which they are served with rosebuds and
+leaves.
+
+
+=Violet Sandwiches.=
+
+Prepare in the same manner as in the last number, substituting candied
+violets for the rose petals, and violets with green leaves for a
+garnish.
+
+
+=Honey Sandwiches.=
+
+Spread one bit of white bread with honey pressed from the comb with a
+wooden spoon, the other bit with butter. Garnish with white clover
+blossoms and leaves.
+
+
+=Puff-Paste Sandwiches.=
+
+Roll puff paste very thin (about one-eighth of an inch), cut in fanciful
+shapes and bake to a delicate brown; add chopped almonds to rich
+strawberry preserves, or peach marmalade, and spread the mixture between
+each two bits of pastry.
+
+
+=Pineapple Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of pineapple juice and pulp.
+ 3/4 a cup of sugar.
+ Juice of half a lemon.
+ Lady-fingers.
+
+_Method._--Cook the pineapple, sugar and lemon juice until thick; let
+cool, and spread upon lady-fingers or sponge drops. Press together in
+pairs and serve.
+
+
+=Whipped-Cream Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of heavy cream.
+ 1/4 a cup of powdered sugar.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of vanilla extract.
+ Lady-fingers.
+
+_Method._--Add the sugar and extract to the cream and beat until solid;
+let chill, then spread quite thick upon lady-fingers or sponge drops.
+
+
+=Whipped-Cream Sandwiches with French Fruit.=
+
+Soak half a cup of fine-cut candied fruit in wine an hour or more.
+Prepare the cream as above, and sprinkle the same with the fruit before
+putting the sandwiches together.
+
+
+=Fruit Jelly for Sweet Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 box of gelatine (2 ounces).
+ 1 cup of cold water.
+ 1 cup of boiling water.
+ 1 cup of sugar.
+ 1-1/2 cups of orange juice.
+ 1/4 a cup of lemon juice.
+
+_Method._--Soak the gelatine in the cold water and dissolve in the
+boiling water; add the sugar and strain; when cold add the orange and
+lemon juice. Mould in sheets three-eighths of an inch thick.
+
+
+=Claret Jelly for Sweet Sandwiches.=
+
+Substitute claret for the orange juice and prepare as above. Do not omit
+the lemon juice.
+
+
+=Fruit or Claret Jelly Sandwiches with Nuts.=
+
+Slice blanched English walnuts and pecan nuts or almonds very thin, and
+stir into whipped cream. Stamp out shapes from the jelly. Spread one
+piece with the cream and nuts and cover with a second piece of jelly.
+
+
+=With French Fruit.=
+
+Substitute candied fruit for the nuts and proceed as above, or use nuts
+and fruit together.
+
+
+=Cupid's Butter Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ The yolks of 4 hard-boiled eggs.
+ 1 cup of butter.
+ 1/3 a cup of powdered sugar.
+ 1 teaspoonful of orange juice.
+ A grating of orange rind.
+ Angel cakelets or slices of angel cake.
+
+_Method._--Cream the butter, gradually add the yolks of eggs, passed
+through a potato ricer or sieve, the sugar and orange juice. Spread upon
+thin slices of angel cake, prepared for sandwiches, or upon angel
+cakelets or fingers; press two slices together and serve at once. If
+allowed to stand any length of time, keep covered and in a cool place.
+
+
+=Cheese-and-Bar-le-Duc Currant Sandwiches.=
+
+Spread wheat bread, prepared for sandwiches, with cream cheese; put two
+or three currants and a little syrup on each piece of bread, and press
+two pieces together. These may be varied by using sliced maraschino
+cherries. Either the currants or sliced cherries with a little of the
+syrup may be mixed with the cheese and then spread upon the bread.
+Bar-le-Duc currants are imported from France in tiny glasses. The seeds
+have been removed from the currants, which are cooked in honey.
+
+
+=Hunter's Sandwich (Switzerland).=
+
+Spread fresh bread, cut in thin slices, with fresh butter; over this
+spread a layer of Brie or other cream cheese, and over the cheese spread
+a layer of honey. Press two similarly shaped pieces together and serve
+at once.
+
+
+=Hunter's Sandwich (Ellwanger).=
+
+Prepare as above, substituting maple syrup (or sugar) for the honey.
+
+
+
+
+BREAD AND CHOU PASTE.
+
+ She needeth least, who kneadeth best,
+ These rules which we shall tell;
+ Who kneadeth ill shall need them more
+ Than she who kneadeth well.
+ --_F.F._
+
+
+=Two Loaves of Wheat Bread.=
+
+To two cups of scalded milk or boiled water, in a mixing-bowl, add two
+tablespoonfuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, and, when the liquid
+becomes lukewarm, one yeastcake dissolved in half a cup of water, boiled
+and cooled. With a broad-bladed knife cut and mix in enough well-dried
+flour, sifted, to make a stiff dough (about seven cups). Knead until the
+dough is elastic; cover, and set to rise in a temperature of about 70°
+Fahr. When the dough has doubled in bulk, "cut down" and knead slightly
+without removing from the mixing-bowl. When again double in bulk, shape
+into two double loaves and set to rise in buttered pans; when it has
+risen a third time, bake one hour.
+
+
+=Entire-Wheat Bread.=
+
+Use the preceding recipe without change other than in kind of flour and
+two additional tablespoonfuls of sugar.
+
+
+=Rice Bread.=
+
+Add three-fourths a cup of rice, cooked until tender and still hot, and,
+also, two tablespoonfuls of butter, to the milk or water in the first
+recipe. Other cereals, as oatmeal or cerealine, may be used instead of
+rice.
+
+
+=Salad Rolls.=
+
+Make a sponge with one cup of milk, one yeastcake dissolved in
+one-fourth a cup of milk, and about one cup and a half of flour; beat
+thoroughly, cover, and set to rise in a temperature of about 70° Fahr.
+When light add half a teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth a cup of melted
+butter, and flour enough to knead. Knead until elastic. Set to rise in a
+temperature of 70° Fahr. When doubled in bulk, cut down and shape into
+small balls. Set to rise again, covered with a cloth and a dripping-pan.
+When light press the handle of a small wooden spoon deeply across the
+centre of each ball, brush with butter and press the edges together. Set
+the rolls close together in a baking-pan, after brushing over with
+butter the points of contact.
+
+
+=Boston Brownbread.=
+
+Sift together one cup, each, of yellow corn meal, rye meal and
+entire-wheat flour, one teaspoonful of salt and three teaspoonfuls of
+soda. Add three-fourths a cup of molasses and one pint of thick, sour
+milk. Beat thoroughly, and steam in a covered mould three hours and a
+half. The quantity here given may be steamed in four baking-powder
+boxes in two hours.
+
+[Illustration: Boston Brown Bread.]
+
+[Illustration: Bread cut for Sandwiches.]
+
+
+=Baking-Powder Biscuit.=
+
+Pass through the sieve two or three times four cups of flour, one
+teaspoonful of salt, and, for each cup of flour, two level teaspoonfuls
+of baking-powder. With the tips of the fingers work into the flour
+one-third a cup of butter. When the mixture looks like meal, mix in
+gradually nearly one pint of milk, cutting the dough with a knife until
+well mixed. When it is of a consistency to handle, turn out on to a
+well-floured board, toss with the knife in the flour, then pat out into
+a sheet half an inch thick, and cut into rounds. Let the heat of the
+oven be moderate at first, and increase after the dough has risen. Bake
+about fifteen minutes.
+
+
+=Sandwich Biscuit.=
+
+Prepare the dough as above, roll to about three-eighths an inch in
+thickness, and cut into rounds. Spread one half of these with softened
+butter, and press the others, unbuttered, upon them; bake fifteen or
+eighteen minutes.
+
+
+=Pulled Bread.=
+
+(_To serve with simple salads and cheese._)
+
+Remove the crust from a fresh loaf of French bread. Gash the loaf at the
+ends and pull apart into halves; then cut the halves and pull apart
+into quarters. Repeat until the pieces are about the thickness of
+breadsticks. Put on a rack in a dripping-pan, and dry out the moisture
+in a slow oven; then brown delicately. Keep in a dry place (a tin box is
+suitable) and reheat in the oven before serving.
+
+
+=How to Give Rolls and Bread a Glossy, Brown Crust.=
+
+A short time before removing from the oven, brush over the top of each
+loaf or roll with beaten yolk of egg, diluted with a little milk, or
+with a little sugar dissolved in milk, or with thin starch.
+
+
+=Chou Paste.=
+
+Put a saucepan with half a cup of butter and one cup of boiling water
+over the fire. When the mixture boils, beat into it one cup of flour.
+When the dough cleaves from the sides of the saucepan, turn into a bowl
+and beat in, one at a time, three large or four small eggs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=To Boil Salted Meats: Ham, Tongue, Etc.=
+
+Cover the meat with cold water and bring the water slowly to the
+boiling-point; let boil five minutes, then _slightly_ bubble until the
+meat is tender.
+
+
+=To Boil Chicken, Lamb and Other Fresh Meat.=
+
+Cover the meat with boiling water, let boil rapidly five minutes, then
+keep the water just below the boiling-point, or just "quivering" at one
+side of the saucepan, until the meat is tender. When the meat is about
+half cooked, add a teaspoonful of salt for each quart of water.
+
+
+=Potted Meat and Fish for Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pound of tender cooked meat or fish (2 cups).
+ 2 ounces of fat cooked meat (1/4 a cup).
+ 2 ounces of butter (1/4 a cup).
+ Mace and anchovy essence, if desired.
+ Pepper and salt.
+
+_Method._--Chop the meat or fish very fine, then pass through a purée
+sieve; cream the butter and with a wooden spoon work it into the meat or
+fish; add seasonings to taste, press the mixture solidly into small jars
+or cups, and pour melted butter to the depth of one-fourth an inch over
+the top of the meat. Set aside in a cool place.
+
+
+=Kinds of Meat and Fish for Potting.=
+
+Ham, fat and lean; either chicken, veal or tongue, with bacon; chicken
+and ham, mixed, fat ham; chicken and tongue, mixed, with bacon; veal and
+ham, mixed, with fat ham; roast beef and corned beef, mixed, with fat of
+either, or bacon; finnan-haddie and bacon; salmon, cod, haddock,
+bluefish, etc., with bacon, or with double the amount of butter.
+
+[Illustration: Bowl of Fruit-Punch Ready for Serving.]
+
+
+
+
+BEVERAGES SERVED WITH SANDWICHES.
+
+ Towards eve there was tea
+ (A luxury due to Matilda) and ice,
+ Fruit and coffee.
+ --_Meredith's "Lucile."_
+
+ Come, touch to your lips this melting sweetness,
+ Sip of this nectar,--this Java fine,--
+ Whose tawny drops hold more completeness
+ Than lurks in the depths of ruby wine.
+ --_J. M. L._
+
+
+=Filtered Coffee.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/2 a cup of coffee, ground very fine.
+ 3 cups of boiling water.
+ About 6 blocks of sugar.
+ About 3 tablespoonfuls of cream.
+ About 6 tablespoonfuls of hot milk.
+
+_Method._--Put the coffee into the filter of a well-scalded coffee-pot.
+Pour the boiling water over the coffee. Serve as soon as the infusion
+has dripped through the filter. For black coffee use double the quantity
+of coffee.
+
+
+=Boiled Coffee.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of ground coffee.
+ White and shell of 1 egg.
+ 1 cup of cold water.
+ 6 cups of boiling water.
+ 1 tablespoonful of ground coffee.
+
+_Method._--Beat the white and crushed shell of the egg and half the cup
+of cold water together; mix with the coffee, pour over the boiling
+water, stir thoroughly, and boil from three to five minutes with the
+nozzle tightly closed; pour half a cup of cold water down the spout;
+stir in one tablespoonful of coffee and let stand on the range, without
+boiling, ten minutes.
+
+
+=Five-o'clock Tea.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Tea.
+ Candied ox-heart cherries.
+ Slices of lemon.
+ Boiling water.
+
+_Method._--Fill the tea-ball half full with tea, put the ball into the
+cup, with a cherry or a slice of lemon, and pour boiling water over
+them; remove the ball when the tea is of the desired strength.
+
+
+=Rich Chocolate.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 4 ounces of chocolate.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of granulated sugar.
+ 1/4 a cup of hot water.
+ 1 quart of scalded milk.
+ 1 teaspoonful of vanilla extract.
+ Whites of 3 eggs.
+ 1 pint of thick cream.
+ 1/3 a cup of powdered sugar.
+
+_Method._--Grate the chocolate, add the granulated sugar and hot water,
+and cook until smooth and glossy; with a whisk beat in the hot milk very
+gradually, and return to a double boiler to keep hot. Beat the cream
+until solid. Beat the whites of the eggs until dry, then beat in the
+powdered sugar and fold the cream into the egg and sugar. Add half of
+the cream mixture to the chocolate with the vanilla, and mix while the
+cream is heating. Serve the rest of the cream in spoonfuls upon the
+chocolate in the cups.
+
+
+=Plain Chocolate.=
+
+Prepare as in preceding recipe, omitting the cream mixture and such
+portion of the chocolate as is desired.
+
+
+=Plain Cocoa.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 4 teaspoonfuls of cocoa.
+ 4 teaspoonfuls of sugar.
+ 1 cup of boiling water,
+ 1 cup of hot milk.
+ Whipped cream, if desired.
+
+_Method._--Mix the cocoa and sugar, pour over the boiling water, and
+when boiling again add the hot milk; beat the whipped cream into the hot
+cocoa, or serve a spoonful upon the top of each cup.
+
+
+=Ceylon Cocoa.=
+
+Scald a two-inch piece of paper-bark cinnamon with the milk to be used
+in making the cocoa.
+
+
+=Sultana Cocoa.=
+
+Stem and wash half a pound of sultana raisins; let them stand, covered
+with one quart of boiling water, upon the back of the range an hour or
+more; filter the water through folds of cheese-cloth and use in making
+cocoa or chocolate.
+
+
+=Egg Lemonade.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 egg.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar.
+ Juice of 2 lemons.
+ 2 cups of water.
+
+_Method._--Beat the egg until white and yolk are well mixed; then beat
+in the sugar, the lemon juice and the water.
+
+
+=Fruit Punch.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pineapple.
+ 4 cups of sugar.
+ 3 cups of boiling water.
+ 1 cup of tea, freshly made.
+ 5 lemons.
+ 6 oranges.
+ 1 pint of strawberry or grape juice.
+ 1/2 a pint of maraschino cherries.
+ 1 bottle of Apollinaris water.
+ 6 quarts of water.
+
+_Method._--Grate the pineapple, add the boiling water and the sugar, and
+boil fifteen minutes; add the tea and strain into the punch-bowl. When
+cold add the fruit juice, the cherries and the cold water. A short time
+before serving, add a piece of ice, and, on serving, the Apollinaris
+water. Strawberries, mint leaves, or slices of banana may be used in the
+place of the cherries.
+
+
+=Punch à la Nantes.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 pounds of rhubarb.
+ 1 pint of water.
+ 1 bay leaf.
+ 1 cup of sugar.
+ 1 cup of orange juice.
+ 1/4 a cup of lemon juice.
+ 1/4 a cup of ginger syrup.
+
+_Method._--Cut the rhubarb into pieces without peeling; add the bay leaf
+and water, and let simmer until the rhubarb is tender; strain through a
+cheese-cloth. Boil the juice with the sugar five minutes. When cold add
+the orange and lemon juice, with one-fourth a cup of syrup from a jar of
+preserved ginger, and a piece of ice. Add water as needed.
+
+
+=Home-made Soda Water.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2-1/4 pounds of granulated sugar.
+ 1-3/4 ounces of tartaric acid.
+ 1 pint of water.
+ Whites of 3 eggs.
+ 1/2 an ounce of ginger extract.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda for each glass.
+
+_Method._--Boil the sugar, water and tartaric acid five minutes. When
+nearly cold beat into the syrup the whites of the eggs, beaten until
+foamy, and the flavoring extract. Store in a fruit jar, closely covered.
+To use, put three tablespoonfuls into a glass half full of cold water,
+stir in one-fourth a teaspoonful of soda, and drink while effervescing.
+A pint of any kind of fruit juice may displace the water, when a
+teaspoonful of lemon juice should be added to the contents of each glass
+before stirring in the soda.
+
+
+=Spanish Chocolate.=
+
+(_To serve 60._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 quarts of milk.
+ 3 blades of mace.
+ 1 five-inch stick of cinnamon.
+ 12 cloves.
+ 20 pounded almonds.
+ 1 pound of chocolate.
+ 3 cups of sugar.
+ 2 quarts of boiling water.
+ Yolks of three eggs.
+
+_Method._--Scald the milk with the spices and nuts. Break up the
+chocolate and melt over hot water; add the sugar, mix thoroughly, then
+gradually stir in the boiling water; let cook two or three minutes after
+all the water has been added, then turn into the hot milk; let stand
+over hot water until ready to serve, then add the beaten yolks of eggs,
+diluted with half a cup of water, milk or cream, and strain through a
+cheese-cloth. Keep hot over hot water.
+
+
+=Claret Cup.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 quarts of claret.
+ 1 cup of sugar.
+ 1 cup of water.
+ 5 lemons cut in slices.
+ 1 dozen whole cloves.
+ 2 qts. of charged Apollinaris or soda water.
+ 1/4 a cup of brandy, sherry or maraschino.
+ Ice.
+
+Boil the sugar and water about six minutes; let cool, then add the lemon
+slices, with seeds removed, and the cloves; let stand some hours in a
+cold place. When ready to serve, add the claret, water and liqueur, all
+chilled on ice. Put a piece of ice in the pitcher and pour over it the
+mixture. The beverage should not be sweet.
+
+[Illustration: Copper Chafing-Dish with Earthen Casserole.]
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+CHAFING-DISH DAINTIES.
+
+ _Gentlemen, prepare not to be gone;
+ We have a trifling foolish banquet._
+ --ROMEO AND JULIET.
+
+ _Small cheer and great welcome makes a merry feast._
+ --COMEDY OF ERRORS, iii. I.
+
+
+ _A little quail, or some such light thing, when I
+ come home at night._
+
+ --CHARLES DICKENS.
+
+ _Now and then your men of wit
+ Will condescend to take a bit._
+ --SWIFT.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+=Chafing-dishes Past and Present.=
+
+ Well, he was an ingenious man that first found out
+ eating and drinking.--_Swift._
+
+
+How fire was discovered, when it was first applied to the needs of human
+beings, the origin and early use of cooking and heating utensils,--all
+are concealed from us in the mists that surround the life of prehistoric
+man. But at the dawn of history, even before the beginning of our era,
+crude appliances for cooking were in use; and, without doubt, one of the
+earliest of these was an utensil corresponding in some particulars, at
+least, to the chafing-dish of to-day.
+
+The chafing-dish is a portable utensil used upon the table, either for
+cooking food or for keeping food hot after it has been cooked by other
+means. In ancient times, the fuel of the chafing-dish was either live
+coals or olive oil; to-day we use either electricity, gas, alcohol or
+colonial spirits.
+
+The first chafing-dishes of which historic mention is made consisted of
+a pan heated over a pot of burning oil, the pan resting upon a frame
+which held the pot of oil. It was with such an utensil, perhaps, that
+the Israelitish women cooked the locusts of Egypt and Palestine, for
+these were eaten as a common food by the people of the biblical lands
+and age.
+
+Mommsen, in his history of Rome, while speaking of the extravagance of
+the times, as shown in the table furnishings, probably refers to the
+chafing-dish when he says: "A well-wrought bronze cooking-machine came
+to cost more than an estate." The idea that this might be the utensil
+referred to is strengthened by the fact that many chafing-dishes have
+been found in the ruins of Pompeii. These were made of bronze, and
+highly ornamented. Evidently, olive oil was the fuel used in these
+dishes.
+
+Coming down to more modern times, Madame de Staël had a dish of very
+unique pattern, and, when driven by the command of Napoleon from her
+beloved Paris, she carried her chafing-dish with her into exile as one
+of her most cherished household gods. At the present day among the
+favored few, who have full purses, are found sets of little silver
+chafing-dishes about four inches square. These tiny dishes rest upon a
+doylie-covered plate, and a bird or rarebit may be served in them as a
+course at dinner, one to each guest. The cooking is not done in these
+dishes, and they are not furnished with lamps; in them the food, while
+it is being eaten, is simply kept hot by means of a tiny pan filled with
+hot water.
+
+[Illustration: Chafing-Dish, Filler, Etc.
+
+"With all Appliances and Means to boot."]
+
+In reality, the modern chafing-dish is a species of _bain marie_, or
+double boiler, with a lamp so arranged that cooking can be done
+without other appliances. It consists of four parts. The _first_ is the
+blazer, or the pan in which the cooking is done; this is provided with a
+long handle. The _second_ is the hot-water pan, which corresponds to the
+lower part of the double boiler; this should be provided with handles,
+and is a very inconvenient dish without them. The _third_ is the frame
+upon which the hot-water pan rests, and in which the spirit-lamp is set.
+The _last_, but by no means least, part is the lamp; this is provided
+with a cotton or an asbestos wick. When the lamp has a cotton wick, the
+flame is regulated by turning the wick up or down, as in an ordinary
+lamp. At present this style of lamp is found only in the more expensive
+grades of dishes,--silver-plated, and costing from $15 upwards. When
+asbestos is used as the wick, the lamp is filled with this porous stone,
+which is to be saturated with alcohol immediately before using, and the
+top is covered with a wire netting. The flame is regulated by means of
+metal slides, which open and shut over the netting, thus cutting off or
+letting on the flame, as it is desired.
+
+
+=Chafing-dish Appointments.=
+
+ With all appliances and means to boot.
+ --HENRY IV., iii. I.
+
+The chafing-dish should always rest upon a tray, as a very slight
+draught of air, or the expansion of the alcohol when heated, will
+sometimes cause the flame to flare out and downward, and thus an
+unprotected tablecloth might be set on fire.
+
+Often a cutlet dish is considered a necessary part of a chafing-dish
+outfit; but as one of the chief merits of the chafing-dish consists in
+the possibility of serving a repast the instant it is cooked, there
+would seem to be a want of propriety in removing the cooked article to a
+platter and garnishing the dish before serving.
+
+A polished wooden spoon, with long handle and small bowl, is a most
+convenient utensil to use while cooking the dainty; but the regulation
+chafing-dish spoon is needed when serving the same. Such a spoon has a
+broad bowl of silver or aluminum, with rounded end, and a long ebony
+handle.
+
+The filler is a most convenient article for use, when the lamp needs
+replenishing with alcohol, but in its absence the alcohol may be turned
+into a small pitcher and from that into the lamp. A lamp of the average
+size holds about five tablespoonfuls of alcohol, and this quantity will
+supply heat for at least half an hour.
+
+Glass, granite or tin measuring-cups, upon which thirds or quarters are
+indicated, also tea- and tablespoons, are essential for accurate
+measurements.
+
+Several items are essential to the successful serving of a meal from the
+chafing-dish. To be a pronounced success, the work must be done
+noiselessly and gracefully. The preparation of all articles is the same
+for the chafing-dish as for the common stove; but where the mixing is
+done at the table, as for a rarebit, the recipe takes on an additional
+flavor, according to the deftness with which it is done.
+
+Let, then, everything be ready and at hand, before the guests or family
+assemble at the table. Have the lamp filled and covered, so that it may
+remain filled. Have all seasonings measured out in a cup. In case the
+yolks of eggs are to be used, they will not injure, having been beaten
+beforehand, if they be kept covered. When oysters are to be served, have
+them washed, freed from bits of shell, drained, and left in a pitcher
+from which they can be readily poured. The quantity of butter used in
+the recipes is indicated by tablespoonfuls, and may be measured out
+beforehand and rolled into dainty balls with butter-hands, a spoonful in
+each ball.
+
+Bear in mind that the hot-water pan is to be used in all cases where the
+double boiler would be used, if the cooking were to be done upon the
+range. For instance, where the recipe calls for milk or cream, except in
+the making of a sauce, use the bath from the beginning. Also, be careful
+always to place the blazer in the bath before eggs are added to any
+mixture. Indeed, the hot-water pan is the one feature of the
+chafing-dish which it is most important to notice; for on the proper use
+of the hot-water pan the value of the chafing-dish as an exponent of
+scientific cookery entirely depends. She who well understands the
+principles upon which the use of this rests has gained no small insight
+into the secret of all cookery, be it scientific, economic or hygienic;
+for a knowledge of the effect of heat at different temperatures, applied
+to food, is the very foundation-stone upon which all cookery rests.
+
+Although the chafing-dish is especially adapted to the needs of the
+bachelor, man or maid, its use should not be relegated entirely to the
+homeless or the Bohemian. In the sick-room, at the luncheon-table, on
+Sunday night, it is most serviceable and wellnigh indispensable; it
+always suggests hearty welcome and good cheer.
+
+While it is out of place, at any ceremonial meal, as a means of cooking,
+even on such occasions a lobster Newburgh or other dish that needs be
+served piping hot to be eaten at its best may be brought on in
+individual chafing-dishes. These are supplied with hot-water pans and
+lamps. At a chafing-dish supper each guest can prepare his own rarebit.
+
+Any operation in cooking that can be performed on the kitchen range may
+be successfully carried out on the chafing-dish, provided one be skilled
+in its use. But as the dining-room is usually chosen as the site in
+which to test its possibilities, here it were well to confine one's
+efforts to such dishes as will not give rise to too much disorder.
+Sautéing and frying it were better to reserve for the range and a
+well-ventilated kitchen.
+
+[Illustration: Course at Formal Dinner served in Individual
+Chafing-Dishes.
+
+(See page 157)]
+
+Alcohol is most commonly used in the lamp of the chafing-dish; and, on
+account of its cheapness, one is often advised to buy _wood_ alcohol.
+But in large markets, where many fowl are singed daily over an alcohol
+flame, the marketmen will tell you that the very best article is none
+too good for their purpose. It does not smoke, wastes less rapidly, and
+in the end will prove quite as economical.
+
+
+=Are Midnight Suppers Hygienic?=
+
+ "Being no further enemy to you
+ Than the constraint of hospitable zeal."
+
+In regard to the chafing-dish and its most prominent use, some one may
+fittingly ask: Is it hygienic to eat at midnight? Can one keep one's
+health and eat late suppers? As in all things pertaining to food, no set
+rules can be given to meet every case; much depends upon constitutional
+traits, individual habits and idiosyncrasies. One may practise what
+another cannot attempt. As a rule, however, people who eat a hearty
+dinner, after the work of the day is done, do not need to eat again
+until the following breakfast hour.
+
+Those who are engaged, either mentally or physically, throughout the
+evening, cannot with impunity, eat a very hearty meal previous to that
+effort; but after their work is done they need nourishing food, and food
+that is both easily digested and assimilated. But even these should not
+eat and then immediately retire; for during sleep all the bodily organs,
+including the stomach, become dormant. Food partaken at this hour is not
+properly taken care of, and in too many cases must be digested when the
+individual has awakened, out of sorts, the next morning.
+
+It is well to remember, also, that, at any time after food is eaten,
+there should be a period of rest from all active effort; for then the
+blood flows from the other organs of the body to the stomach, and the
+work of digestion is begun. Oftentimes we hear men say they must smoke
+after meals, for unless they do so they cannot digest their food. They
+fail to see that it is not the tobacco that promotes digestion, but the
+enforced repose.
+
+But, if we must eat at midnight, the question may well be asked, What
+shall we eat? That which can be digested and assimilated with the least
+effort on the part of the digestive organs. And among such things we may
+note oysters, eggs and game, when these have been properly--that is,
+delicately--cooked.
+
+
+=How to Make Sauces.=
+
+ Let hunger move thy appetyte, and not savory
+ sauces.--_Babees Book._
+
+ "Change is the sauce that sharpens appetite."
+
+As so many dishes are prepared in the chafing-dish that require the use
+of a simple sauce, we give in this place the methods usually followed in
+the preparation of common sauces. For one cup of sauce, put two
+tablespoonfuls of butter into the blazer; let the butter simply melt,
+without coloring, if for a white sauce, but cook until brown for a brown
+sauce. Mix together two tablespoonfuls of flour, one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of salt and a dash of black or white pepper, or a few grains
+of cayenne or paprica, and beat it into the bubbling butter; let the
+mixture cook two or three minutes, then stir into it, rather gradually
+at first, and beating constantly, one cup of cold milk, water or stock.
+Now, when the sauce boils up once after all the liquid is in, it is
+ready for use. In making a white sauce some cooks add, from time to time
+while the sauce is being stirred, a few drops of lemon juice, which they
+claim makes the sauce much whiter.
+
+Sometimes we make the sauce after another fashion, using the same
+proportions of the various ingredients. If water or stock be used, put
+it in the blazer directly over the fire. If the liquid be milk, put it
+into the blazer, and the blazer over hot water; cream together the
+butter, flour and seasonings, dilute with a little of the hot liquid,
+pour into the remainder of the hot liquid, and stir constantly until the
+sauce thickens, and then occasionally for ten or fifteen minutes, until
+the flour is thoroughly cooked.
+
+In making a brown sauce, first brown the butter, then brown the flour in
+the butter, and, whenever it is convenient, use brown stock as the
+liquid.
+
+
+INGREDIENTS FOR ONE CUP OF SAUCE.
+
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A few grains of pepper.
+ 1 cup of liquid.
+
+
+INGREDIENTS FOR ONE PINT OF SAUCE.
+
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of pepper.
+ 1 pint of liquid.
+
+
+=Measuring.=
+
+In all recipes where flour is used, unless otherwise stated, the flour
+is measured after sifting once. When flour is measured by cups, the cup
+is filled with a spoon, and a level cupful is meant. A tablespoonful or
+teaspoonful of any designated material is a level spoonful of such
+material.
+
+
+=Flavoring.=
+
+When rich soup stock, flavored with vegetables and sweet herbs, is at
+hand for use in sauces, additional seasonings are not necessary; but
+when a sauce is made of milk, water, or water and meat extract, some
+flavor more or less pronounced is demanded. A few bits of onion and
+carrot browned in hot butter, or anchovy sauce or curry may be added;
+but, all things considered, the most convenient way to secure an
+appetizing flavor is by the use of "Kitchen Bouquet." This alone or in
+conjunction with a dash of some one of the many really good proprietary
+sauces on the market is well-nigh indispensable in chafing-dish
+cookery.
+
+
+
+
+RECIPES.
+
+ "_No variety here,
+ But you, most noble guests, whose gracious looks
+ Must make a dish or two become a feast._"
+
+
+
+
+OYSTER DISHES.
+
+ He was a bold man that first ate an
+ oyster.--_Swift._
+
+
+=Oysters.=
+
+Put into the blazer twenty-five to fifty choice oysters. As soon as they
+are hot and look plump, add salt, pepper and butter. Serve on buttered
+toast or crackers. Add two tablespoonfuls of cream or half a
+tablespoonful of lemon juice before serving, if desired.
+
+
+=Oysters, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of solid oysters.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1 scant teaspoonful of salt.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+ Beaten yolks of 2 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Put the oysters into the blazer. When they look plump and the
+edges curl, put the blazer into the hot-water pan and add the
+seasonings. Add a few spoonfuls of the liquor from the pan to the yolks
+of the eggs, and, after mixing well, pour into the chafing-dish. Stir
+constantly until the liquor thickens, then serve on thin slices of
+buttered toast or on thin crackers.
+
+
+=Oysters à la D'Uxelles.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of parboiled and drained oysters.
+ 1 pint of oyster liquor or chicken stock.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of chopped mushrooms.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ A few drops of onion juice.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ Yolks of 2 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Let the oysters be parboiled and drained beforehand. (To
+parboil, heat quickly to the boiling-point in their own liquor.) Melt
+the butter in the blazer, add the flour, salt and pepper, and cook till
+frothy; add the oyster liquor or chicken stock and cook until the
+boiling-point is reached. Now add the oysters, and, as soon as they are
+heated thoroughly, put the blazer into the bath and add the beaten
+yolks, the onion and lemon juice and the mushrooms. As soon as the eggs
+thicken the sauce a little, serve on toast or crackers. If uncooked
+mushrooms are used, cook them in the butter two or three minutes before
+the flour and seasonings are added.
+
+
+=Curried Oysters.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of oysters (parboiled and drained).
+ 1/2 a cup of cream.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1 tablespoonful of flour.
+ 1/2 a cup of oyster liquor.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of curry powder.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of chopped onion.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1 saltspoonful of pepper.
+
+_Method._--Cook the onion and butter in the blazer a few moments. Mix
+the flour and curry powder and stir into the butter. When frothy add the
+oyster liquor. As soon as the sauce boils up once, add the salt, pepper
+and cream, and, in a moment, the oysters. When the oysters are
+thoroughly heated, serve on buttered toast or crackers.
+
+
+=Curried Oysters, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of oysters.
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ One small mild onion.
+ 1 tablespoonful of curry powder.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 1 cup of oyster liquor.
+ 1 cup of white stock.
+ 1/2 a cup of thick tomato pulp.
+ Salt and pepper to taste.
+
+_Method._--Bring the oysters to the boiling-point in their own liquor,
+skim, drain, and set aside. Heat the butter in the blazer, sauté in it
+the onion cut in slices, stir in the flour and curry powder mixed with
+the salt and pepper, and, when frothy, add the oyster liquor, stock and
+tomato pulp (a pint of pulp reduced by slow cooking to half a cup). When
+the sauce boils, add the oysters; and when hot serve on buttered toast
+or fried bread.
+
+
+=Fricassee of Oysters.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of oysters.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ Yolks of 2 eggs.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1 tablespoonful of flour.
+ Pepper, salt, cayenne.
+
+_Method._--Brown the butter and add to it the parsley, seasonings and
+flour; let heat, then add the well-drained oysters, and, when the edges
+begin to curl, add the well-beaten yolks. Serve on warmed plates, with
+fried bread and parsley.
+
+
+=Creamed Dishes.=
+
+(_Oysters, shrimps, lobsters, sweetbreads, chicken, veal, fish,
+mushrooms, asparagus tips, peas, etc._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ 2 saltspoonfuls of salt.
+ 2 cups of cream, or 2 cups of milk and 4 tablespoonfuls
+ of butter.
+ 1 saltspoonful of pepper.
+ 1 pint of fish, meat, etc.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of mushrooms, chopped or diced.
+ 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1 teaspoonful of onion juice.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+
+_Method._--Prepare the sauce in the usual manner. If oysters are used,
+they should have been parboiled previously and drained, and, if large,
+cut in pieces. Fish should be flaked when hot, and meats cut into dice
+when cold.
+
+
+=Devilled Dishes.=
+
+Season any of the creamed dishes highly with cayenne, onion juice,
+mustard, and Worcestershire or other sauce.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Oysters.=
+
+Cream together two tablespoonfuls of butter and one tablespoonful of
+anchovy paste. Melt in the blazer, then add half a dozen eggs, beaten
+slightly with one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica.
+Stir and cook, and, when beginning to thicken, add half a pint of
+oysters, parboiled, "bearded," and cut fine. When scrambled, serve on
+sippets of toast, lightly spread with anchovy paste.
+
+
+=Panned Oysters.=
+
+With a fork pressed into a butter ball, rub over the bottom of the hot
+blazer. Then cover the surface with small rounds of toast, and put one
+or two uncooked oysters on each round; cover, and cook until plump, dust
+with salt and pepper, and put a bit of butter on each oyster. Serve,
+when the butter has melted, with slices of lemon.
+
+
+=Panned Oysters with Maître d'Hôtel Butter.=
+
+Cook as before. Have ready two tablespoonfuls of butter beaten to a
+cream; add a few grains of salt and paprica, one tablespoonful of
+chopped parsley, and, by degrees, the juice of half a lemon. Spread upon
+the oysters before serving.
+
+
+=Oyster Cromeskies.=
+
+Scald the oysters in their own liquor over a quick fire. When plump wrap
+each oyster in a slice of bacon, and fasten with a small skewer (wooden
+toothpick). Sauté in the blazer, heated very hot. Serve on thin rounds
+of toast. These cromeskies are most easily cooked in a double broiler,
+resting on a dripping-pan, in a hot oven.
+
+
+=Oysters Sauté.=
+
+Wash and drain the oysters, season with salt and pepper, roll in fine
+crumbs, dip in beaten egg, then roll in crumbs again. Put a little olive
+oil or clarified butter in the blazer; when it is heated, put in the
+oysters, brown them on one side, turn, and brown on the other side.
+
+
+=Oyster Canapés.=
+
+Scald a cup of cream, add two tablespoonfuls of fine-grated bread
+crumbs, a tablespoonful of butter, a dash of paprica and a grating of
+nutmeg; then add two dozen oysters, washed, drained and chopped. Stir
+until the oysters are thoroughly heated, but without boiling the
+mixture. Spread rounds of toast with butter, and then with the oyster
+mixture. Serve at once accompanied by olives, pim-olas or gherkins.
+
+
+=Escalloped Oysters.=
+
+Stir one cup of cracker crumbs into half a cup of melted butter. Heat
+half a cup of cream or strained oyster liquor in the blazer, put in a
+layer of oysters (about a cup), washed and drained, and sprinkle with a
+part of the prepared crumbs, salt and pepper; add another layer of
+oysters, the rest of the crumbs, and salt and pepper. Cover, and cook
+nearly ten minutes. Do not stir the oysters.
+
+
+
+
+LOBSTER AND OTHER SEA FISH.
+
+ And ate a lobster, and sang and mighty merry.
+ --_Pepys' Diary._
+
+ Take every creature in of every kind.
+ --_Pope._
+
+
+=Buttered Lobster.=
+
+Pick the meat from a boiled lobster and cut it into small pieces; sift
+over it the coral; mix with it also the liver, two tablespoonfuls of
+vinegar or three of lemon juice, one-third a cup of butter and
+one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of cayenne and made mustard; heat in the
+blazer until thoroughly hot. Serve on cup-shaped leaves of lettuce with
+a quarter of a hard-boiled _egg_ on the top of each portion.
+
+
+=Lobster à la Newburgh.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Meat of 2 medium-sized lobsters.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of pepper.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls, each, of sherry wine and brandy.
+ Grating of nutmeg.
+ Yolks of 4 eggs.
+ 1 cup of cream.
+
+_Method._--Remove the meat from the shells and cut it into delicate
+slices. Put the butter in the blazer, and, when it melts, put the
+lobster into it and cook four or five minutes. Add the salt, pepper,
+nutmeg, wine and brandy. Stir the cream into the beaten yolks, and then
+stir both into the lobster mixture. Serve as soon as the eggs thicken
+the sauce.
+
+
+=Plain Lobster.=
+
+Pour three tablespoonfuls of lemon juice over the meat of one lobster
+and season with salt and pepper. Put three tablespoonfuls of butter in
+the blazer, and, when it is melted, add the prepared lobster; stir until
+hot and serve at once.
+
+
+=Clams à la Newburgh.=
+
+Use one quart of clams. Separate the hard from the soft parts of the
+clams. Chop the hard parts fine. Substitute the soft and the chopped
+parts of the clams for the lobster and proceed as for lobster à la
+Newburgh.
+
+Oyster, chicken, turkey or sweetbread à la Newburgh may be prepared by
+substituting one of the above ingredients for the lobster.
+
+
+=Lobster à la Bordelaise.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 cloves of garlic, chopped.
+ 1 sliced carrot.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 glasses of white wine (half a cup).
+ Meat of 2 lobsters.
+ 1 glass of brandy.
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ Chopped parsley, white and cayenne pepper, salt.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter in the blazer and in it cook the onion and
+carrot about five minutes. Remove the carrot; add the wine, lobster and
+seasonings. When thoroughly heated, add the butter, parsley and brandy
+and serve at once.
+
+
+=Hawaiian Lobster Curry.=
+
+(ADA D. WAGG.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1-1/2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/2 an onion, chopped
+ 1 clove of garlic, very fine.
+ A small piece of grated ginger root.
+ 1-1/2 tablespoonfuls of cornstarch.
+ 1-1/2 tablespoonfuls of curry powder.
+ 1 pint of milk.
+ 1 grated cocoanut.
+ Meat of a lobster weighing 2 pounds.
+ Salt and pepper to taste.
+
+_Method._--Grate the cocoanut and set it aside to soak an hour in one
+pint of milk. Sauté the onion and garlic in the butter, add the
+cornstarch and seasonings, and cook until frothy; add the milk strained
+from the cocoanut, gradually, and, when the sauce boils up once, add the
+lobster; salt and pepper to taste.
+
+
+=Lobster à la Bechamel.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Meat of 2 lobsters.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ Salt and pepper.
+ Grating of nutmeg.
+ 1 cup of cream.
+ 4 yolks of eggs.
+ 1 cup of white stock, seasoned with mace, bay leaf, etc.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ Dried and sifted coral.
+
+_Method._--Cut the lobster in delicate slices or in dice, as preferred.
+Make a bechamel sauce, after the usual manner, of the butter, flour,
+seasonings, cream and stock. Add the lobster, and, when heated
+thoroughly, add the beaten yolks mixed with a few spoonfuls of the sauce
+from the blazer. Add the lemon juice, and sprinkle the dried and sifted
+coral or some chopped parsley over the top of the mixture as it is
+served.
+
+Oysters, clams, sweetbread, chicken or turkey may be served à la
+Bordelaise or Bechamel.
+
+
+=Lobster à la Poulette.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/3 a cup of butter.
+ 1/3 a cup of flour.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ Dash of paprica.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of white pepper.
+ 1 cup of cream.
+ 1 cup of well-seasoned chicken stock.
+ Juice of half a lemon.
+ 2 hard-boiled eggs.
+ 1 pint of diced lobster meat.
+
+_Method._--Prepare a white sauce, using the ingredients mentioned, and
+adding the lemon juice by degrees. Add the lobster to the sauce. Cut the
+whites of the hard-boiled eggs in rings and pass the yolks through a
+sieve. Serve the lobster on bits of toast, or on thin crackers, with a
+sprinkling of the yolks over the lobster, and circles of the whites
+around it.
+
+
+=Oyster Crabs à la Hollandaise.=
+
+Remove the meat from one pint of oyster crabs; put this, with a little
+of the liquor, into the blazer, add two tablespoonfuls of butter, a
+dash of paprica and a scant half-teaspoonful of salt, and let cook three
+or four minutes without boiling. Set the blazer over hot water and add
+three-fourths a cup of hollandaise sauce (either hot or cold). Stir
+until the mixture is heated, then add one tablespoonful of lemon juice
+and one teaspoonful of chopped parsley. Serve on toast, in Swedish
+timbale cases or in patty cases.
+
+
+=Hollandaise Sauce.=
+
+Put one-fourth a cup of vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of butter, a grating
+of nutmeg and a dash of paprica over hot water to heat. Beat the yolks
+of four eggs, add the hot vinegar to them, return to the fire, and stir
+constantly while the mixture thickens; then add two more tablespoonfuls
+of butter in bits.
+
+Shrimps, oysters, lobsters and delicate fish are all good when served
+after this recipe.
+
+
+=Devilled Crabs.=
+
+Melt one tablespoonful of butter, add one tablespoonful of flour, and,
+when blended, one cup of milk. Add the yolks of two hard-boiled eggs
+rubbed through a sieve, and season to taste with salt, paprica, a
+teaspoonful of lemon juice and wine; cayenne, mustard and tobasco sauce
+are approved by some. Add one cup of crab meat and one-fourth a cup of
+canned mushrooms cut in quarters. Serve on toast.
+
+
+=Oyster Crabs.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of oyster crabs.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1/2 an onion, sliced.
+ 1 tablespoonful of flour.
+ 1 cup of white stock.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1 yolk of egg.
+ Salt and pepper.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter in the blazer, add the onion, and let cook
+until a light-brown color; add the flour and mix until smooth; add the
+stock and stir until it thickens. Add the crab meat, lemon juice,
+parsley, salt and pepper. Beat the yolk of the egg and add two or three
+spoonfuls of the sauce to it; mix well, add to the ingredients in the
+blazer, stir constantly, and serve as soon as heated.
+
+
+=Crabs à la Creole.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 green pepper, chopped fine.
+ 1 clove of garlic, chopped fine.
+ 1 small onion, chopped fine.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1 cup of tomatoes.
+ 1 cup of crab meat.
+ Pepper and salt.
+
+_Method._--Put the butter in the blazer; when melted, add the garlic,
+onion, salt, pepper and tomatoes, and let cook ten minutes; add the crab
+meat (fresh or canned). Serve when hot on sippets of toast.
+
+
+=Shrimps à la Poulette.=
+
+Make a sauce of one-fourth a cup, each, of butter and flour, half a
+teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper and one cup and a half of white
+stock; add one tablespoonful of anchovy essence and a quart of shelled
+shrimps. When hot add the beaten yolks of two eggs, with half a cup of
+cream. Lastly, add a tablespoonful of lemon juice and serve, _without_
+boiling, on sippets of toast.
+
+
+=Shrimps with Peas.=
+
+A pint of shrimps and a cup of peas, heated in a cup and a half of cream
+sauce, are particularly good.
+
+
+=Anchovy Toast.=
+
+Put about two tablespoonfuls of clarified butter into the blazer. When
+hot add bread cut as for sandwiches. Brown the bread on one side, turn,
+and brown the other side. Spread with anchovy paste and serve at once.
+
+
+=Anchovy Toast with Eggs.=
+
+Prepare the anchovy toast in one chafing-dish, and, at the same time,
+the eggs in another. Beat five eggs slightly, add half a teaspoonful of
+salt, a dash of pepper and half a cup of cream or milk. Put a large
+tablespoonful of butter in the blazer; when melted, add the egg mixture.
+Stir until the egg is creamy, and serve on the anchovy toast.
+
+
+=Anchovy Toast with Spinach.=
+
+Press cooked spinach, chopped fine, through a purée sieve; reheat with a
+little butter, salt and two or three drops of tobasco sauce. Sauté
+rounds of bread to a golden brown in a little hot butter, spread with
+anchovy paste, and over this spread the purée of spinach. Press into the
+spinach on each round of bread a quarter of a hard-boiled egg cut
+lengthwise, having the yolk uppermost.
+
+
+=Anchovies with Olives.=
+
+All the preparations for this dish, with the exception of sautéing the
+bread, may be made some hours before serving.
+
+Thoroughly wash the anchovies, cut off the fillets, and chop very fine
+with a sprig of parsley and a few chives, or a slice or two of Bermuda
+onion; put the whole into a mortar and pound well, adding, meanwhile, a
+little paprica. Cut some large selected olives in halves, take out the
+stones, and fill them with the anchovy mixture. Cut small rounds of
+bread an inch and a half in diameter and an inch in thickness; remove a
+crumb, similar in shape to the olive, from the centre of each. Put a
+little butter into the blazer, and, when hot, sauté the rounds of bread
+on both sides; drain on soft paper, put an olive in the centre of each
+and a little mayonnaise over the whole. Five anchovies will suffice to
+stuff a dozen olives.
+
+
+=Sardine Canapés.=
+
+Have ready yolks of eggs, cooked until firm, and an equal bulk of
+sardines, each rubbed to a paste. Mix thoroughly, and season with salt,
+pepper and lemon juice. Prepare some bread in the blazer as for anchovy
+toast; then spread with the sardine mixture and serve at once.
+
+
+=Curried Sardines.=
+
+Mix together one teaspoonful, each, of sugar and curry powder and a
+saltspoonful of salt. Put these into the blazer with one cup of cream
+and half a teaspoonful of lemon juice. Stir until the mixture is hot,
+then put into it ten or twelve sardines. In the mean time, heat some
+butter or oil in a second blazer, and in it sauté some bits of bread a
+little larger than the sardines, and round slices of tart apple. Serve
+each sardine on a bit of bread; pour a little of the sauce over the top
+and garnish with a round of apple. The slices of apple will keep their
+shape, if the apples be cored and then cut into rounds without paring.
+
+
+=Sardines.=
+
+(_French fashion._)
+
+Remove the skins and tails from about a dozen sardines and heat them in
+the oven. Heat some butter or oil in the blazer of one chafing-dish, and
+in it sauté some bits of bread of suitable shape to serve under the
+sardines. Put in the blazer of another chafing-dish, over hot water,
+the well-beaten yolks of four eggs, one teaspoonful, each, of tarragon
+vinegar, cider vinegar and made mustard, one-fourth a teaspoonful of
+salt and one tablespoonful of butter. Stir the sauce until it is quite
+thick, then serve the sardines on the bread with the sauce poured over
+them. Olives are agreeable with this dish.
+
+[Illustration: Butter Balls, with Utensils for Chafing-Dish.]
+
+[Illustration: Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas.]
+
+
+=Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas.=
+
+Two chafing-dishes will be requisite for preparing this delicious
+luncheon dish.
+
+Have ready one pound of raw halibut chopped very fine; beat the yolk of
+an egg, add to it one teaspoonful and a fourth of salt, one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of white pepper and a few grains of cayenne or paprica.
+Blend a teaspoonful of cornstarch with a little milk; then add milk to
+make two-thirds a cup, stir gradually into the egg and seasonings, and
+then very slowly into the fish. Lastly, fold into the mixture one-third
+a cup of thick cream, beaten until stiff. Butter dariole moulds
+thoroughly, arrange a circle of cooked peas around the bottom of each
+mould, and fill with the fish preparation two-thirds full. Set into the
+blazer, surrounded with boiling water; after the water is again boiling,
+turn down the flame so that the water will barely quiver, and let cook
+about twenty minutes. Prepare, in the mean time, in the second blazer,
+creamed peas. Turn the fish from the moulds and surround with the
+
+
+=Creamed Peas.=
+
+Have ready one can of peas, drained, rinsed, covered with boiling water
+and drained again. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter; add one
+tablespoonful of flour with one teaspoonful of sugar and half a
+teaspoonful of salt; add the peas and one-third a cup of milk, stir, and
+let cook until the liquid begins to bubble.
+
+
+=Purée of Fish.=
+
+Scald one quart of milk, with half an onion and a stalk of celery;
+strain into a pitcher and keep hot if convenient. Add to the remnants of
+cold boiled white fish enough canned salmon to make two cups; chop fine
+and rub through a purée sieve. Cook together in the blazer two
+tablespoonfuls of butter, three of flour, one teaspoonful of salt and a
+dash of pepper. Add the milk gradually, and, when all is added and the
+contents of the blazer are boiling, put a few spoonfuls of the sauce
+into the fish and beat until smooth; add more sauce, and, when well
+diluted and smooth, turn the whole into the blazer. Stir, and let cook
+until very hot; then serve with crackers, split, buttered, and browned
+in the oven. These proportions give three pints of soup. Vegetable
+purées may be prepared in the same way.
+
+
+=Salt Codfish with Tomato Sauce.=
+
+Sauté one clove of garlic and half an onion, grated or chopped fine, in
+three tablespoonfuls of butter; add two tablespoonfuls of flour,
+one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica and one pimento, chopped fine; also,
+add one cup of tomato pulp, and, when the sauce boils, half a pound of
+"hatcheled" codfish, or any salt codfish picked into small pieces and
+freshened in one quart of cold water. Serve, while hot, with brownbread
+sandwiches, and pickles or pim-olas.
+
+
+=Salt Codfish in Cream Sauce.=
+
+Pick enough salt codfish into bits to make one cup. Let stand in cold
+water about half an hour. Make one cup of cream sauce, using one
+tablespoonful and a half of flour, two tablespoonfuls of butter and one
+cup of cream; remove all the water from the fish by wringing in a
+cheese-cloth, add the fish to the sauce, and, when heated, stir in a
+lightly beaten egg. Serve upon rounds of toast, with olives, or plain
+lettuce, or tomato salad.
+
+
+=Réchauffé of Fish.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of cooked fish, flaked.
+ 1 cup of macaroni, cooked, and still hot.
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ 1 cup of tomato purée.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ Dash of pepper.
+ 8 drops of tobasco sauce.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter in the blazer and toss about in it the
+macaroni and fish; add the seasonings and the tomato purée, which should
+be well reduced. Serve when thoroughly heated.
+
+
+=Réchauffé of Fish, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of cooked fish, flaked and seasoned.
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 1 cup of fish stock.
+ 1 cup of cream and milk combined.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt, if needed.
+ 1 teaspoonful of anchovy paste.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice.
+ 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley.
+
+_Method._--Marinate the fish while hot with salt, pepper, oil and lemon
+juice, adding, also, a few drops of onion juice, if desired. At
+serving-time make a sauce of the butter, flour, salt, paprica, stock and
+cream; add the paste and the fish, and, when the fish is thoroughly
+heated, turn down the flame of the lamp or set the blazer into hot
+water. Sprinkle with the parsley and serve.
+
+
+=Sardines on Toast.=
+
+Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer; add two tablespoonfuls
+of flour and a dash of paprica, and stir until smooth and browned a
+little; then add half a cup of stock and half a cup of sherry; stir
+until thickened, then let simmer a few minutes, and add nearly a cup of
+sardines, from which the bones and skin have been removed and the flesh
+separated into small pieces. Let stand until very hot.
+
+
+
+
+CHEESE CONFECTIONS.
+
+ You must eat no cheese . . . it breeds melancholy.
+ --_B. Jonson._
+
+ Art thou come? Why my cheese, my digestion!
+ --_Troilus and Cressida._
+
+
+Cheese is probably the most popular article served from the
+chafing-dish. What possessor of a chafing-dish has not concocted a
+rarebit--and the best one ever made? Were you ever present when the
+process of evolving a rarebit was in progress and half the guests were
+not disappointed in the seasoning? For perfection in this toothsome
+dish, mustard is demanded by some; by others the use of this biting
+condiment is considered a lapse in culinary taste. The consensus of
+opinion, however, is in favor of paprica; and, theoretically, Mattieu
+Williams considers bicarbonate of soda to be demanded, not for the sake
+of seasoning, but as an aid to digestion.
+
+As regards the digestibility of cheese, and, consequently, its
+adaptability to midnight suppers, opinions differ widely. Dr. Hoy, an
+excellent authority on diet, calls cheese a concentrated meat, a tissue
+builder,--but not itself a tissue, and so without waste elements,--a
+condensed, compact food product, and indigestible on account of its
+very compactness. Still, when the caseine, or curd, is softened and
+broken up by the addition of liquid and gentle heat, it is rendered more
+digestible; and cheese so prepared may be for some, if taken with no
+other nitrogenous food, an acceptable and easily digested article of
+diet.
+
+
+=Welsh Rarebit.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1/2 a pound of cheese, cut fine or grated.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of paprica.
+ 1/2 a cup of cream.
+ The beaten yolks of 2 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter, add the cheese and seasonings, and stir
+until melted; then add the eggs, diluted with the cream, and stir until
+smooth and slightly thickened. _Do not allow the mixture to boil_ at any
+time in the cooking; if necessary, cook over hot water. Serve on thin
+crackers, hot shredded-wheat or granose biscuit, or on bread toasted on
+but one side, placing the rarebit on the untoasted side.
+
+
+=Welsh Rarebit, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of cornstarch.
+ 1/2 a cup of thin cream.
+ 1/2 a pound of mild cheese.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a saltspoonful of mustard.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter; add to it the cream in which the cornstarch
+has been stirred. Let cook two minutes, and add the cheese broken into
+bits. Stir until the cheese is melted and the mixture perfectly smooth.
+Add the salt, mustard and paprica, and serve at once as above.
+
+
+=Welsh Rarebit with Ale.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ Generous 1/2 a pound of soft American cheese, broken into bits.
+ 1/3 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1 teaspoonful of mustard.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+ 1/2 a cup of ale.
+ 1 egg.
+
+_Method._--Put the butter into the chafing-dish (using the bath); when
+melted, add the cheese and ale. Mix the salt, mustard and cayenne, add
+the egg, and beat thoroughly. When the cheese is melted, add the egg
+mixture and let cook until it thickens. Serve as before.
+
+
+=Halibut Rarebit.=
+
+Marinate a cup of cooked halibut, flaked, with one tablespoonful of
+olive oil, a few drops of onion juice, one tablespoonful of lemon juice,
+one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica. Make a sauce of
+two tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour, one-fourth a teaspoonful
+of salt and half a cup, each, of chicken stock and cream. Add two-thirds
+a cup of grated cheese and the halibut. Serve, as soon as the fish is
+hot and the cheese melted, on the untoasted side of bread toasted on one
+side.
+
+
+=Oyster Rarebit.=
+
+Clean and remove the hard muscles from half a pint of oysters; parboil
+the oysters in the chafing-dish in their own liquor until their edges
+curl, then remove to a hot bowl. Put one tablespoonful of butter, half a
+pound of cheese broken in small bits, one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of
+salt and mustard and a few grains of cayenne into the chafing-dish.
+While the cheese is melting, beat two eggs slightly, and add to them the
+oyster liquor; mix this gradually with the melted cheese, add the
+oysters, and turn at once over hot toast.
+
+
+=Sardine Rarebit.=
+
+Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add half a pound of fresh cheese,
+grated or broken into bits, and stir constantly while it melts; then add
+gradually the beaten yolk of an egg, diluted with two-thirds a cup of
+cream. Stir until smooth and slightly thickened; season with a scant
+half a teaspoonful of paprica, one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and a
+few drops of tabasco sauce. Have ready a box of sardines, drained,
+broiled carefully and laid on the untoasted side of bread toasted on one
+side; pour the rarebit over the sardines and serve at once.
+
+
+=Golden Buck.=
+
+Prepare a rarebit in one chafing-dish; break some eggs into the blazer
+of another containing salted water just "off the boil." When the eggs
+are poached and the rarebit ready, place an egg above the rarebit on
+each slice of toast.
+
+
+=Yorkshire Rarebit.=
+
+Add two slices of broiled or fried bacon to each service of golden buck.
+
+
+=Mock-Crab Toast.=
+
+Melt a tablespoonful of butter in the blazer, turning it about so as to
+butter the surface thoroughly. Put in half a pound of mild cheese,
+grated, and stir until the cheese is melted; then add the yolks of three
+eggs, beaten and diluted with a tablespoonful of anchovy sauce, a
+teaspoonful of made mustard, two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice or
+vinegar and one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica. Stir until smooth.
+Serve upon the untoasted side of sippets of bread toasted on one side.
+
+
+=Cheese Fondue.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a pound of cheese broken into bits.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1 tablespoonful of flour.
+ 1 saltspoonful, each, of soda and mustard.
+ 3/4 a cup of milk.
+ A few grains of cayenne or paprica.
+ 1/2 a cup of stale bread crumbs.
+ 3 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Sift the soda, mustard and cayenne into the flour and cook in
+the butter until frothy, then add the milk gradually; when the sauce
+boils, after all the milk has been added, put the blazer into the
+bath, add the crumbs and cheese, and cook and stir until the cheese is
+melted and the mixture becomes smooth; add the eggs, beaten until light,
+and serve at once.
+
+[Illustration: Yorkshire Rarebit.]
+
+[Illustration: Curried Eggs.
+
+(See page 191)]
+
+
+=English Monkey.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of milk.
+ 1 egg.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1 cup of fine bread crumbs from the centre of a stale loaf.
+ 3/4 to 1 whole cup of cheese.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter, add the cheese, and stir while melting; then
+add the bread crumbs, which have been soaked in the milk and the egg
+lightly beaten.
+
+
+
+
+EGGS.
+
+ New-laid eggs, with Baucis' busy care
+ Turned by a gentle fire, and roasted rare.
+ --_Dryden._
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Cheese.=
+
+Beat six eggs until whites and yolks are well mixed; add half a
+teaspoonful of salt, a dash of paprica and six tablespoonfuls of milk or
+cream. Melt two tablespoonsful of butter in the blazer, pour in the egg
+mixture, and stir and scrape from the blazer as it thickens. Just before
+it comes to the proper consistency, sprinkle in half a cup of grated
+Parmesan cheese, still stirring as before, and turn down the flame or
+set the blazer into the bath. American dairy cheese may be used instead
+of the Parmesan.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Smoked Salmon.=
+
+Cook half a cup of smoked salmon, cut into thin strips, in a
+tablespoonful of butter three or four minutes; then add to the eggs just
+before the cooking is finished.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs à la Union Club.=
+
+Heat one can of pimentos (sweet red peppers) in boiling salted water;
+drain, and serve on rounds of buttered toast the pimentos filled with
+eggs scrambled with mushrooms or truffles. Pour around the pimentos a
+pint of well-seasoned brown sauce, to which one-third a cup of madeira
+has been added.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Dried Beef.=
+
+Cut half a pound of dried beef, sliced thin, into short match-like
+strips, cover with boiling water, drain at once, and add six eggs,
+beaten slightly, and one-fourth a cup of milk. Put two tablespoonfuls of
+butter into the blazer; when hot add the eggs and other ingredients, and
+stir and cook until the eggs are set.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Tomatoes.=
+
+Have ready a pint of tomato pulp, from which the seeds have been
+removed, seasoned with onion, celery or parsley, and sweet herbs. Put a
+generous tablespoonful of butter into the blazer; add the tomato, and,
+when hot, six eggs, slightly beaten, half a teaspoonful of salt and half
+a saltspoonful of pepper. Stir until the contents are of a creamy
+consistency. Serve with brownbread toast.
+
+
+=Eggs and Mushrooms à la Dauphine.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of thick tomato sauce, highly seasoned.
+ 1 pint of mushrooms.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a saltspoonful of pepper.
+ 6 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Cook the mushrooms in the tomato sauce until tender; add the
+seasoning and the eggs, which have been broken into a bowl. Lift the
+whites carefully with a silver or wooden fork while cooking, until they
+are set; then prick the yolks and let them mix with the tomato, whites
+of the eggs and mushrooms. Serve quite soft on toast.
+
+
+=Scotch Woodcock.=
+
+Make a cup of white sauce; add one tablespoonful of essence of anchovies
+and five hard-boiled eggs cut into quarters lengthwise.
+
+
+=Eggs à la Italienne.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 5 eggs.
+ 1 cup of milk.
+ 1/2 a cup of boiled spaghetti, chopped.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1/2 a cup of fresh mushrooms, sliced.
+ 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1 scant teaspoonful of salt.
+ White pepper.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter in the blazer and sauté in it the sliced
+mushrooms; add the milk and spaghetti, and, when heated thoroughly, put
+the blazer in the bath and add the beaten eggs. Stir and cook until the
+eggs have thickened; then add the parsley and seasoning, and serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Eggs à la Parisienne.=
+
+Butter thickly the inner sides of as many dariole moulds as there are
+individuals to serve. Then sprinkle them thickly with fine-chopped
+parsley, ham or tongue. Break an egg into each mould, taking care not
+to break the yolk; sprinkle over the tops a little salt and pepper, and
+set in the blazer surrounded by hot water to two-thirds the height of
+the moulds. If, after a time, the water boils, even with the lamp turned
+low, put the blazer into the bath and continue cooking, until the eggs
+are set. The eggs should be covered while cooking. When cooked, turn
+from the moulds and serve with a purée of tomatoes. Half a cup of sliced
+mushrooms added to the purée improves this dish.
+
+
+=Curried Eggs.=
+
+(See cut facing page 186.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 eggs, cooked, in water just below the boiling-point,
+ 20 minutes.
+ 1/2 a cup of stock (fish, veal or chicken).
+ 1/2 a cup of milk.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of flour, or 1 teaspoonful of cornstarch.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of curry-powder.
+ 1 slice of onion.
+ Teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ Salt and pepper to taste.
+
+_Method._--Cook the onion in the butter a few minutes, then remove it
+and add the flour and curry powder; when frothy add the milk and stock.
+As soon as the boiling-point is reached, set the blazer into the
+hot-water pan and add the eggs cut in quarters. Season with salt and
+serve on sippets of toast.
+
+Light meats, fish, oysters and lobsters may be prepared in the same way,
+omitting the half-cup of milk in the case of oysters. Chickens' livers
+may also be prepared by the same recipe, in which case the livers should
+have been cooked previously. Or they may be sautéd in a little hot
+butter in one dish, while the sauce is made in another.
+
+
+=Shirred Eggs.=
+
+Butter four or five shirring-dishes. To half a cup of grated bread
+crumbs and half a cup of chopped chicken or ham add enough cream to mix
+to a smooth, moist consistency, like butter. Season to taste with salt
+and pepper. Put a tablespoonful of the mixture into each dish, break in
+an egg, season with a dash of salt and pepper, cover with more of the
+mixture, and cook in the same manner as eggs à la Parisienne. Serve in
+the cups.
+
+
+=Eggs.=
+
+(_Creole style._)
+
+Have prepared on a hot serving-dish a can of tomatoes, stewed until they
+are reduced to a scant pint, and upon the tomatoes rounds of buttered
+toast for each egg to be served. Break some eggs, one by one, into a
+cup, and turn them into the blazer two-thirds filled with hot water;
+turn the flame low and put on the chafing-dish cover; if the water
+boils, turn down the flame. When the eggs are nicely poached, remove
+with a skimmer to the toast. Pour out the water and melt in the blazer,
+browning if desired, two tablespoonfuls of butter; add one tablespoonful
+of lemon juice; heat to the boiling-point, dust the eggs with salt and
+pepper, pour over the sauce, and serve.
+
+
+=Egg Canapés.=
+
+Have ready, cooked beforehand, four hard-boiled eggs; cut them carefully
+into halves lengthwise, remove the yolks, and press them through a small
+sieve. Soak two anchovies, then dry and remove the bones and chop them
+with two or three cold cooked mushrooms and half a teaspoonful of
+capers; mix in the sifted yolks, add a seasoning of salt, pepper and
+paprica, and one teaspoonful of tarragon vinegar. This work may be done
+some hours before the time of serving. Have a little oil or clarified
+butter in the blazer, and sauté in it some rounds of bread--one for each
+half of an egg. When the bread is of good color on one side, turn it and
+place half an egg--the space from which the yolk was taken being filled
+with the anchovy mixture--on the bread; cover the blazer, and, when the
+second side of the bread is browned nicely and the egg hot, serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Eggs with Asparagus.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of asparagus peas.
+ 1 cup of asparagus liquor.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ Paprica.
+ 3 or 4 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Cut the asparagus in pieces of the size of a pea and cook
+until tender. In cooking, reserve the tips until the other pieces are
+partially cooked, or, being more tender, they will become broken while
+the others are still uncooked. Make a sauce of the butter, flour, salt,
+paprica, and water in which the asparagus was cooked, or use half a cup
+of cream in the place of part of the asparagus liquor. When the sauce
+boils, add the asparagus and mix lightly with the sauce; break the eggs,
+one after another, into a cup and slide them carefully on to the top of
+the asparagus. Season with a sprinkling of salt and pepper, and, if
+desired, a grating of nutmeg. Set the blazer into the bath and put on
+the cover. When the eggs are nicely poached, remove the eggs, with the
+asparagus below, on to rounds of toasted and buttered bread.
+
+
+=Eggs with Spinach.=
+
+Prepare in the same manner, using for one cup of chopped spinach
+one-third the quantity of sauce given above. If convenient, the eggs may
+be poached in a second dish, and in milk, water or stock.
+
+
+=Eggs.=
+
+(_Italian Style._)
+
+Cut six cold, hard-boiled eggs into eighths lengthwise; add these, with
+a cup of cooked macaroni and half a cup of grated Parmesan cheese, to
+two cups of white sauce, at the boiling-point, in the blazer. Set over
+hot water, add a teaspoonful of onion juice, a teaspoonful of chopped
+parsley, salt and anchovy essence to taste, and serve very hot.
+
+
+
+
+DISHES LARGELY VEGETARIAN.
+
+ Although the cheer be poor,
+ 'Twill fill your stomachs.
+ --_Titus Andronicus._
+
+
+=Macaroni à la Italienne.=
+
+Have ready one-fourth a pound of macaroni, cooked until tender, but not
+broken, in boiling salted water, and then drained, and rinsed in cold
+water.
+
+Make a sauce of two tablespoonfuls of butter, one tablespoonful of
+flour, one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprica, half a cup
+of well-seasoned stock and half a cup of well-reduced tomato pulp. Add
+the drained macaroni and stir occasionally, while it becomes thoroughly
+heated, then add one-fourth a cup of grated Parmesan cheese. Lift the
+macaroni with a fork and spoon so as to mix thoroughly with the cheese,
+and serve at once.
+
+Strain the tomatoes through a sieve sufficiently fine to keep back the
+seeds, and cook the pulp, very slowly, until reduced to at least half
+its bulk. A more hearty dish may be served by adding, just before the
+cheese, three-fourths a cup of cold tongue cut in thin slices and then
+stamped into small fanciful shapes with a French cutter; or the tongue
+may be cut simply in small cubes.
+
+
+=Asparagus Peas.=
+
+Scrape the scales from the stalks of asparagus and cut the tender
+portions into pieces one-fourth an inch long. Cook in boiling salted
+water until tender; drain, and keep the peas hot. For three cups of peas
+make one cup of drawn-butter sauce, using as liquid the water in which
+the asparagus was cooked, or white stock. Add the peas to the sauce;
+beat the yolks of two eggs, add half a cup of cream, and stir into the
+sauce and peas; add, also, one tablespoonful of butter. Serve on
+croutons of fried bread, or in cases made of shredded-wheat biscuit.
+
+
+=Fresh Mushrooms and Sweetbreads.=
+
+Soak one pair of sweetbreads in cold water; cover with boiling salted
+water and let boil three minutes, then simmer twenty minutes; cool, and
+cut in small cubes. Sauté in two tablespoonfuls of hot butter sufficient
+mushroom caps, peeled and broken into pieces, to make with the
+sweetbreads two cups and a half. Make a sauce in the blazer, using
+one-fourth a cup, each, of butter and flour, one cup of chicken stock
+and half a cup of cream; add the sweetbreads and mushrooms, one
+tablespoonful of lemon juice, and, if desired, the yolks of two eggs,
+beaten and diluted with one-fourth a cup of cream or sherry. Serve on
+toast, in patty cases, or in cases of shredded-wheat biscuit.
+
+
+=Mushroom Cromeskies.=
+
+(See cut facing page 198.)
+
+Peel the caps of fresh mushrooms; wrap each mushroom in a slice of
+bacon, pinning the bacon around the mushroom with a wooden toothpick.
+Sauté in a hot blazer and serve on toast. These are particularly good,
+cooked in a hot oven in a double broiler resting over a baking-pan.
+
+
+=Creamed Mushrooms.=
+
+Wipe carefully half a pound of mushrooms; peel the caps and break them
+in pieces. Reserve the stems for another dish. Melt three tablespoonfuls
+of butter in the blazer and in it sauté the mushrooms; dust with salt
+and pepper, add two tablespoonfuls of flour, and, when cooked in the
+butter, one cup of cream, gradually; stir until the sauce boils, let
+simmer a few minutes, then serve with toast or crackers.
+
+
+=Artichokes à la Bordelaise.=
+
+(MRS. E. M. LUCAS.)
+
+Put one-fourth a cup of butter and half a cup of sifted bread crumbs
+into the blazer and light the lamp; when the crumbs are well moistened
+with the butter, add a teaspoonful of fine-minced parsley, one pint of
+cooked artichokes cut into small cubes, half a teaspoonful of salt, a
+dash of cayenne and half a pint of rich, sweet cream. Let boil up once
+and put out the flame; add a teaspoonful of lemon juice and half a
+teaspoonful of the grated rind of a lemon (or omit the grated rind);
+stir well and serve at once.
+
+
+=Puff-balls Sautéd.=
+
+Heat three tablespoonfuls of butter or oil in the blazer. Cut the
+puff-balls in slices half an inch in thickness, season with salt and
+pepper, dip in egg and bread crumbs, and sauté in the blazer to a golden
+brown.
+
+
+=Mushrooms and Macaroni.=
+
+(_Italian style._)
+
+Put one tablespoonful of butter and one teaspoonful of lemon juice into
+the blazer; add a dozen peeled mushrooms, broken into pieces and
+blanched, and cook slowly, covered, five or six minutes. Then add one
+cup and one-fourth of milk, and, when scalded, stir in two
+tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour, creamed together. When the
+sauce boils, add one-fourth a pound of macaroni, cooked and blanched in
+the usual manner; heat over hot water, and, just before serving, add
+one-fourth a cup of grated cheese.
+
+
+=Canned Peas with Egg.=
+
+Rinse, drain, and rinse again in boiling water one can of peas. Add two
+tablespoonfuls of butter, one teaspoonful of sugar, half a teaspoonful
+of salt and a dash of pepper. Beat the yolk of an egg, dilute with
+four tablespoonfuls of cream, and stir into the peas. Serve as soon as
+the egg thickens slightly.
+
+[Illustration: Mushroom Cromeskies.
+
+(_Ready for cooking._)
+
+(See page 197)]
+
+[Illustration: Prune Toast.
+
+(See page 217)]
+
+
+=Curried Vegetables.=
+
+Make a sauce of one-fourth a cup, each, of butter and flour, one
+tablespoonful of curry powder, half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of
+pepper and a pint of milk; add half a teaspoonful of onion juice, one
+cup of cooked peas, half a cup, each, of potato balls, turnips cut into
+cubes or fanciful shapes, and carrots cut into straws.
+
+
+=Potatoes à la Maître d'Hôtel.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of potato balls, cut with French cutter, and
+ cooked tender, may be used either hot or cold.
+ 1 cup of milk.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 yolks of eggs.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1 tablespoonful of parsley, finely chopped.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of pepper.
+
+_Method._--Heat the milk and potatoes in the blazer over hot water.
+Cream the butter and add the yolks of the eggs, beating them in well;
+add the parsley and seasonings, mix thoroughly, and, when the potatoes
+are hot and have absorbed part of the milk, stir the egg and butter into
+them; add the lemon juice and serve at once.
+
+
+=White Hashed Potatoes.=
+
+Butter the blazer and put into it about three cups of cold chopped
+potato, salted during the chopping. Pour over the potato a little hot
+stock, or water, and scatter some bits of butter over the top. Cover,
+and cook slowly, without stirring or browning, until thoroughly heated.
+
+
+=String Beans à la Lyonnaise.=
+
+Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer; add a fine-sliced
+onion and sauté to a delicate brown; add a quart of string beans,
+cooked, a dash of pepper, a grating of nutmeg and a little salt; heat
+thoroughly, tossing the beans occasionally; add a teaspoonful of chopped
+parsley, a tablespoonful of lemon juice and another tablespoonful of
+butter, in bits, and serve at once.
+
+
+=Tomato Sandwich.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 shredded-wheat biscuit.
+ 4 medium-sized tomatoes.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 8 teaspoonfuls of sugar, or
+ 8 teaspoonfuls of mayonnaise dressing.
+
+_Method._--Peel the tomatoes, cut in small pieces, add the salt, and
+sugar, if used, and set aside in a cool place. Split the biscuits, dip
+the inside lightly into cold water without wetting the outside, put the
+halves together, and arrange in a buttered blazer; cover, and heat over
+hot water; then separate the halves, and, using a knife dipped in hot
+water, spread with butter. Put a layer of tomatoes on the bottom half,
+if sugar has not been used, add the salad dressing, and cover with the
+top of the biscuit, pressing it down lightly.
+
+
+=Kornlet Oysters.=
+
+To one cup of kornlet add two well-beaten eggs, two tablespoonfuls of
+flour, a scant half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica. Drop, by
+spoonfuls, into a hot, well-oiled blazer and cook to a golden brown,
+turn, and brown the other side.
+
+
+=Kornlet Oysters, No. 2.=
+
+To one can of kornlet add a teaspoonful of soda, two well-beaten eggs,
+salt and pepper, and enough fine cracker crumbs to hold the mixture
+together. Drop from a spoon and cook as above.
+
+
+
+
+RÉCHAUFFÉS AND OLLA-PODRIDA
+
+ "Take heed of enemies reconciled and meats twice
+ cooked."
+
+
+=Suggestions Concerning Réchauffés.=
+
+Many of the dishes prepared in the chafing-dish are réchauffés of cold
+cooked meats, including game and fish. The composition of such dishes is
+called "the flower of cookery": but it is well to remember that we are
+dealing with a class of foods that are more digestible when cooked rare;
+also, that in these cases digestibility decreases in proportion to the
+length of time, as well as the number of times, the article has been
+cooked. The meat or fish composing such dishes should not come into
+direct contact with the source of heat; after being freed from skin,
+bone and fat, they should simply be heated in a hot sauce over hot
+water.
+
+
+=Corned-Beef Hash.=
+
+(_Spanish style._)
+
+Chop together very fine the corned beef and potatoes and a half or a
+whole green pepper, after having removed the seeds and veins; put two
+tablespoonfuls of butter into the blazer (over hot water), add the
+chopped ingredients, and season to suit the taste, adding a little stock
+or milk to moisten; mix thoroughly, then cover, and stir occasionally
+until heated through. Put a few bits of butter here and there over the
+top, and serve when melted. Use an equal quantity of meat and potato, or
+twice as much potato as meat. Serve with olives, pickles or a light
+vegetable salad.
+
+
+=Mock Terrapin.=
+
+Have ready cooked half a calf's liver (it may be boiled or braised with
+vegetables). Cut it into small cubes. Put one-fourth a cup of butter
+into the blazer; when colored a little add the cubes of liver dredged
+with two tablespoonfuls of flour, one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica
+and half a teaspoonful of salt. Stir and cook until the flour is blended
+with the butter; then add one cup of water or stock and one teaspoonful
+of chopped parsley. As soon as the sauce boils, add one-fourth a cup of
+cream, two hard-boiled eggs chopped fine, and one teaspoonful of lemon
+juice. Serve on toast, with quarters of lemon cut lengthwise.
+
+_Note._--Cream may be used in the place of stock, and the yolks of two
+uncooked eggs instead of the cooked eggs.
+
+
+=Spaghetti.=
+
+(_Queen style._)
+
+Cut cold cooked chicken or turkey and cooked tongue (enough to make one
+cup of meat) in dice; cut into inch-length pieces cooked spaghetti
+enough to make one cup. Put one cup and a half of thin cream into the
+blazer over hot water, and, when hot, add the meat and spaghetti. Beat
+the yolks of two eggs, add two tablespoonfuls of cream, and stir into
+the hot mixture; add, also, half a teaspoonful (scant) of salt and a
+dash of paprica. Stir constantly until the mixture thickens slightly,
+then serve at once with toast or crackers.
+
+
+=Scrambled Ham and Eggs.=
+
+Put a tablespoonful of butter in the blazer. Break six eggs into a bowl,
+add six tablespoonfuls of water, and beat until you can take up a
+spoonful. Add about a cup of fine-chopped ham and mix well. Pour into
+the blazer, and cook until creamy, stirring constantly.
+
+
+=Chicken Klopps with Bechamel Sauce.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 cups of cold chicken, chopped.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of celery pepper.
+ 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ The unbeaten whites of 4 eggs.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+
+_Method._--When ready to cook, mix the ingredients together thoroughly
+and form into round balls. Place the balls carefully in water _just off
+the boil_, and, in about five minutes, or as soon as the egg seems
+poached, remove the klopps with a skimmer. Serve with
+
+
+=BECHAMEL SAUCE.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/3 a cup of butter.
+ 1/3 a cup of flour.
+ 1 cup of cream.
+ 1 cup of chicken stock.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of paprica.
+ The beaten yolks of 1 or 2 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Make the sauce in the usual manner, but _do not let it boil
+after the yolks of the eggs are added_.
+
+
+=Minced Ham à la Poulette.=
+
+To each cup of fine-chopped ham add one tablespoonful of fine bread
+crumbs, softened with cream or milk. Season with salt and pepper. Heat
+thoroughly and spread on rounds of moist buttered toast. Place a poached
+_egg_ on each slice. Use two dishes.
+
+
+=Epicurean Canapés.=
+
+Heat a little butter in the blazer; sauté in it some narrow strips of
+bread and spread them thickly with the mixture used for epicurean
+sandwiches. Press a pitted olive in the centre of each and serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Aberdeen Sandwiches.=
+
+Heat one-fourth a cup of chopped cold tongue or ham, and half a cup of
+chopped veal or chicken, with half a cup of good sauce and two
+tablespoonfuls of curry paste (curry powder mixed with just enough
+water to form a paste). Let the mixture simmer five minutes, stirring
+constantly; then set aside to become cool. Have some bits of bread
+prepared as for sandwiches. Heat some clarified butter in the blazer,
+and in it sauté the bread a delicate brown, and drain on soft paper.
+Spread with the cold mixture, press two pieces together, and heat over
+hot water five or ten minutes. Serve hot.
+
+
+=Calf's Head en Tortue.=
+
+Peel a dozen mushrooms; break the caps in pieces and chop the stems very
+fine. Sauté in three tablespoonfuls of butter, adding, if desired, half
+an onion cut fine. Sprinkle in one-fourth a cup of flour, half a
+teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprica, and, when the ingredients are
+well blended, add gradually one cup and a half of stock and one-fourth a
+cup of tomato juice. Let simmer a few moments, after the sauce boils;
+then add one pint of meat from a calf's head, cooked and cut in cubes.
+
+
+=Woodcock Toast.=
+
+Pound to a paste the freshly boiled livers of two fowls (ducks
+preferred), one teaspoonful of anchovy paste (or one anchovy may be
+pounded with the livers), half a teaspoonful of sugar, one tablespoonful
+of butter, one-fourth a teaspoonful of spiced pepper and the yolks of
+two raw eggs. Pass through a sieve, dilute with a little hot cream from
+a cup of cream heated over hot water, stir, and return to the rest of
+the cream. Stir until thickened, then pour over sippets or rounds of
+toast sautéd a golden brown in a little butter.
+
+
+=Scotch Woodcock.=
+
+Beat thoroughly three eggs and three teaspoonfuls of anchovy paste. Put
+this into the chafing-dish over hot water with three-fourths a cup of
+milk and stir until thick. Spread sippets of toast with butter and then
+with anchovy paste, and turn the woodcock upon them.
+
+
+=Calves' Brains and Mushrooms à la Poulette.=
+
+Sauté a clove of garlic, cut fine, in two tablespoonfuls of butter; add
+half a pound of mushrooms, peeled and broken in pieces, one-fourth a cup
+of flour, and sauté until well browned. Then add one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of mace and paprica, half a teaspoonful of salt and
+one cup and a half of stock, and cook five or six minutes. Then add the
+yolks of two eggs, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, one tablespoonful
+of chopped parsley and three calves' brains, cooked, and cut in dice.
+Serve in timbale cases, or upon croustades of bread.
+
+
+=Beef Tea in Chafing-dish.=
+
+Cut juicy round steak into pieces about two inches square. Heat the
+blazer very hot; heat also a wooden lemon-squeezer in hot water or in
+any way that is most convenient. Put the meat into the hot blazer, turn
+again and again with a fork, keeping the blazer very hot. When the bits
+of meat are heated throughout, squeeze them, one by one, with the
+lemon-squeezer, into a _hot_ bowl. Season with salt and serve at once.
+
+
+=Salmi of Duck or Game.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Pieces of game.
+ 1/3 a cup, each, of butter and flour.
+ 1 tablespoonful, each, of carrot and onion slices.
+ 2 cups of rich brown stock, highly seasoned.
+ 1/4 a cup of madeira.
+ 1 cup of peas or flageolets, cooked.
+
+_Method._--Cook the butter, onion and carrot in the blazer until well
+browned. Skim out the onion and carrot and add the flour, pepper and
+salt. Add the stock. As soon as the sauce is cooked, add the madeira,
+the pieces of game, and the peas or flageolets. Serve as soon as the
+meat is hot.
+
+
+=Salmi of Duck, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of thin slices of duck.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour.
+ 1 pint of brown stock.
+ 1 tablespoonful of catsup.
+ 10 or 15 drops of onion juice.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ 6 mushrooms, cut in pieces.
+ 1 tablespoonful of currant jelly.
+ Salt and pepper to taste.
+
+_Method._--Brown the butter and make a sauce with the flour, seasoning
+and stock. Add the duck and mushrooms, simmer twenty minutes, add the
+currant jelly, and garnish with croutons.
+
+
+=Sweetbreads Sautéd.=
+
+Split parboiled sweetbreads into two pieces. Wipe dry, sprinkle with
+salt, pepper and flour; or season with salt and pepper, and
+egg-and-bread-crumb them. Sauté in the blazer in hot olive oil, or
+butter, until nicely browned on both sides. Serve with French peas or
+tomato sauce.
+
+
+=Chicken with Mushrooms.=
+
+Melt one-fourth a cup of butter in the blazer; add six mushroom caps,
+peeled and sliced, and cook slowly, with a teaspoonful of grated onion,
+about six minutes; add two tablespoonfuls of flour, stir until smooth,
+then add one cup of cream, stock or milk, pepper and salt, and a few
+grains of mace. When the sauce boils, stir in one pint of chicken,
+finely chopped, and serve as soon as hot. Sweetbreads, lamb or veal may
+be served in the same manner.
+
+
+=Chopped Beef.=
+
+Chop half a pound of raw beef, from the tender part of the round, very
+fine. Rub the bottom of the hot blazer with butter, put in the meat with
+one teaspoonful of grated onion, stir, and cook four or five minutes;
+add two tablespoonfuls of butter, salt and pepper, and serve at once.
+This is good with bread, but better with baked potatoes. A pound of beef
+may be cooked at one time in a chafing-dish of good size, and the grated
+onion increased to suit the taste. The juice, of which there will be a
+large quantity, may be thickened with flour and butter creamed together;
+but it is better unthickened.
+
+
+=Chicken Timbales.=
+
+Pass the breast of a raw chicken through a meat-chopper five or six
+times; beat in, one at a time, the whites of two small eggs (the whites
+of the eggs are _not_ to be previously beaten), then beat in very
+gradually one cup of thick cream. Season with half a teaspoonful of salt
+and one-fourth a teaspoonful of white pepper. Turn the mixture into
+buttered moulds, set them in the blazer, and cook, surrounded with hot
+water to two-thirds their height and covered, about twenty minutes. The
+water should not boil; if, with the flame turned low, it still boils,
+set the blazer into the bath, in which the water may boil vigorously
+without harm to the timbales. Serve with
+
+
+=BECHAMEL SAUCE.=
+
+Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add two tablespoonfuls of flour,
+one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper and half a cup, each,
+of chicken stock and cream; add the beaten yolk of one egg and let stand
+over hot water five minutes. Or,
+
+
+=MUSHROOM SAUCE.=
+
+Make as above, substituting one-fourth a cup of mushroom liquor for a
+part of the chicken stock, and adding with the egg half a can of
+mushrooms, or a cup of fresh mushrooms sautéd in two tablespoonfuls of
+butter.
+
+
+=Supreme of Chicken.=
+
+Chop fine the breast of a raw chicken. Beat one egg, add the chicken,
+and continue beating until smooth; then add three eggs, one at a time,
+beating each egg in thoroughly. Add a generous teaspoonful of salt, a
+saltspoonful of white pepper, a dash of black pepper and one pint of
+cream. Butter twelve small moulds and ornament them with truffles. Fill
+with the chicken mixture, cover with buttered paper, and steam twenty
+minutes. Or, put in a pan of boiling water and cook in a moderate oven
+till the centres are firm. Serve with mushroom or bechamel sauce. These
+can be cooked and left in the moulds and then reheated. It will take
+about fifteen minutes to reheat.
+
+
+=Egg Timbales.=
+
+Beat six eggs without separating, add a scant teaspoonful of salt, a
+dash of pepper, a teaspoonful of chopped parsley, twenty drops of onion
+juice and one cup and a half of rich milk. Stir till well mixed. Butter
+small-sized timbale moulds and fill two-thirds full with the mixture.
+Place moulds in the blazer, pour boiling water about them three-fourths
+to the tops of the moulds, and let cook about twenty minutes, or till
+the centres are firm; turn out of the moulds on to a warm platter, and
+pour about them a thin bread sauce.
+
+
+=BREAD SAUCE.=
+
+To one pint of milk add half a cup of fine, stale bread crumbs, a small
+onion with six cloves stuck in it, half a teaspoonful of salt and a few
+grains of cayenne. Cook in the double boiler for about an hour; stir
+occasionally. Remove the onion, beat well, and add one tablespoonful of
+butter. Put one tablespoonful of butter over the fire in a small
+saucepan; when hot add two-thirds a cup of rather coarse bread crumbs;
+stir over a hot fire till they are brown and crisp. Sprinkle over the
+timbales and sauce. Add a sprig of parsley to the top of each timbale.
+
+
+=Pan-Broiling.=
+
+Chops, birds, venison, hamburg, sirloin and other steaks, even spring
+chickens, may be cooked successfully in the chafing-dish; but they are
+not the dishes upon which an amateur should begin his experiments. Heat
+the blazer very hot, brush over the surface with a brush dipped in olive
+oil (or use a butter-ball and a fork), lay in the article to be cooked,
+sear upon one side, turn and sear upon the other; repeat, turning and
+cooking until done to taste; five minutes will suffice for small lamb
+chops. Serve with
+
+
+=Maître d'Hôtel Butter.=
+
+Beat four tablespoonfuls of butter to a cream; add half a teaspoonful of
+salt and a few grains of pepper, also one tablespoonful of parsley,
+chopped very fine, and one tablespoonful of lemon juice, very slowly.
+
+
+=Fillets of Beef, Mushroom Sauce.=
+
+Have half a dozen slices cut crosswise from a neatly trimmed fillet of
+beef. The slices may be cut of any thickness desired, but from half to
+three-fourths an inch is preferable for chafing-dish cookery. Melt two
+tablespoonfuls of butter in a hot blazer; lay in the meat, and cook four
+or five minutes, turning every ten seconds. The heat should be well
+maintained throughout the cooking. Season with salt when half cooked. In
+another blazer make a cup of brown sauce; brown two tablespoonfuls of
+butter, add four tablespoonfuls of flour, and, when this is well
+browned, add half a cup of very rich brown stock and half a cup of
+liquid from the mushroom can. Season to taste with Kitchen Bouquet,
+salt, and a few drops of tabasco sauce, then add half a bottle of
+mushrooms, cut in halves. Serve as soon as the mushrooms are hot.
+
+
+=Fillets of Lamb, Cherry Sauce.=
+
+For the fillets use either the fillet from the loin or the top of a
+"best end of a loin" boned. Cut the meat in slices or rounds, and sauté
+in hot butter in the blazer. Season with salt and pepper and pour into
+the blazer half a cup of maraschino cherries with half a cup of the
+liquid from the bottle. Candied cherries that have stood half an hour in
+half a cup of boiling water, on the back of the range, and then mixed
+with half a cup of sherry wine, may be used in place of the maraschino
+cherries. This sauce may also be used with fillets of beef or young
+turkey.
+
+
+=Ham Timbales.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1-1/2 cups of milk or thin cream.
+ 1 cup of cold, cooked ham, chopped fine.
+ 1/4 a cup of fine bread crumbs.
+ The yolks of 2 "hard-boiled" eggs.
+ Two raw eggs.
+ A few drops of tabasco sauce.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+
+Take the bread crumbs from the centre of a stale loaf. Pass the cooked
+yolks of eggs through a sieve. Add the ham, crumbs, yolks, salt and
+tabasco to the raw eggs beaten and mixed with the milk. When thoroughly
+mixed turn into timbale moulds very carefully buttered. Fit papers into
+the bottoms of the moulds before buttering. Set these in the blazer,
+surround with hot water, letting it come half way to the top of the
+moulds. Heat the water to the boiling-point, then set the blazer into
+the hot-water pan partly filled with boiling water, cover and cook until
+the mixture is firm in the centre. Serve, turned from the moulds, with
+cream or tomato sauce, flavored with onion, or with peas heated in a
+cream sauce.
+
+
+=Fillets of Chicken.=
+
+(_Chafing-dish Style._)
+
+Remove the breast from a plump and tender chicken and separate from the
+bone and skin. Detach the small fillets, then cut each side into two or
+three lengthwise slices the size of the small fillets. Keep covered
+closely until ready to cook. Heat the blazer very hot, butter slightly,
+and in it lay the fillets and sprinkle with the juice of half a lemon,
+salt and white pepper; add, also, one-third a cup of chicken stock and a
+tablespoonful of sherry. Cover and let cook about ten minutes. In the
+meantime prepare a sauce in a second chafing-dish, using two
+tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour, a dash of salt and pepper,
+and one cup of stock, in making which a small piece of ham or bacon was
+used. Add also a tablespoonful of mushroom or tomato catsup and a
+tablespoonful of sherry wine.
+
+
+=Mutton Réchauffé.=
+
+(_Creole Style._)
+
+Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer and sauté in this a
+tablespoonful, each, of green pepper and onion, chopped fine; add three
+tablespoonfuls of flour and half a teaspoonful of salt, and stir and
+cook until frothy; then add, gradually, one cup of brown stock and half
+a cup of tomato purée (cooked tomato strained). Let boil two or three
+minutes, then set over hot water and stir in one cup of cold roast
+mutton cut in strips or cubes, and half a cup of cooked macaroni,
+blanched and drained. Two or three mushrooms or a tablespoonful of
+mushroom catsup improves this dish.
+
+
+=Baba or Wine Cake.=
+
+This cake may be made some days in advance, and when wished reheated in
+a sauce made in the chafing-dish. Baba is baked in a large mould and cut
+in slices, or in individual cylindrical or baba moulds.
+
+
+=BABA.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 lb. of flour.
+ 1 cake of compressed yeast.
+ 1/2 a cup of water.
+ 10 oz. of butter (1-1/4 cups).
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a cup of sugar.
+ 8 eggs.
+ 1/2 a cup of currants, sultanas or sliced citron.
+
+Make a sponge of the yeast, softened in the water, and flour to knead.
+Knead the little ball of dough until elastic, and put into a small
+saucepan of lukewarm water. Meanwhile add the butter, sugar, salt and
+three of the eggs to the rest of the flour, and beat with the hand until
+all are evenly blended; then add the rest of the eggs, one after
+another. When the ball of dough rises to the top of the water and is
+light, remove from the water with a skimmer and beat it into the egg
+paste; beat for some minutes, then beat in the fruit. Turn the mixture
+into the mould or moulds, leaving room for the cake to double in bulk.
+Let rise in a temperature of 68° F. When nearly doubled in bulk, bake
+from twenty to fifty minutes.
+
+
+=SAUCE FOR BABA.=
+
+Let two cups of sugar and one cup of water boil in the blazer about six
+minutes, then add one-fourth a cup, or more, of maraschino, rum or
+sherry wine. Lay the baba, sliced or in individual forms, into the hot
+syrup and let stand a few minutes, basting the cake with the syrup. When
+hot, serve with or without whipped cream. Half a cup of apricot or
+quince marmalade may be added with the wine.
+
+
+=Fig Toast.=
+
+(See cut facing page 198.)
+
+Wash carefully and cook in boiling water half a pound of pulled figs
+until tender; add one fourth a cup of sugar and the grated rind and
+juice of half a lemon. Cook until the syrup is well reduced. Cut the
+crust from a thick slice of bread and sauté to a golden brown, first on
+one side, then on the other, in two tablespoonfuls of hot butter. Drain
+the bread on soft paper; then heap the figs upon it, cover with
+two-thirds a cup of thick cream and a scant fourth a cup of sugar,
+beaten until stiff. Serve at once. Prunes, apricots, peaches, pears, or
+strawberry preserves, may be prepared in the same manner. If preserves
+be used, omit the sugar from the cream. Sponge cake may be used in the
+place of bread.
+
+
+=Pineapple Sponge.=
+
+Heat one pint of grated pineapple over hot water, sprinkle into it
+one-third a cup of fine tapioca (a quick-cooking kind), mixed with
+two-thirds a cup of sugar, and half a teaspoonful of salt; when the
+tapioca is transparent, add the juice of a lemon, and fold in the whites
+of two eggs, beaten until dry. Serve with cream and sugar.
+
+
+=Tapioca-and-Banana Sponge.=
+
+Sprinkle half a cup of tapioca and two-thirds a cup of sugar into one
+pint of boiling water; add half a teaspoonful of salt and cook over hot
+water, stirring occasionally. When the tapioca is transparent, add the
+juice of two lemons, and fold in the whites of two eggs, beaten until
+dry. Serve spread over sliced bananas, with cream and sugar, or with a
+cold boiled custard, previously made. This dish may be prepared with
+canned peaches, apricots or quinces, using the juice of the fruit
+instead of water.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+ Aberdeen Sandwiches, 205
+ Aigrettes, Cheese, 109
+ Almond-and-Peach Salad, 94
+ Almonds and Walnuts, To Blanch, 12
+ Anchovy Salad, 74
+ Anchovy Toast, 175
+ " " with Eggs, 175
+ " " " Spinach, 176
+ Anchovies with Olives, 176
+ Apple,-Celery-and-Walnut Salad, 92
+ Artichoke Salad, 45
+ " -and-Tomato Salad, 44
+ Artichokes à la Bordelaise, 197
+ Asparagus with Eggs, 193
+ " Peas, 196
+ " Salad, 46
+ " Salad, Egg Garnish, 47
+ " -and-Cauliflower Salad, 46
+ " " Salmon Salad, 46
+ " Tips in Turnips, 46
+ Aspic Jelly from Bouillon Capsules, etc., 100
+ Aspic Jelly, Chicken Stock for, 99
+ " " , Consommé for, 98
+ " " for Garnishing, 97
+ " " Oysters in, 65
+ " " Recipe for, 97
+ " " for Sandwiches, 127, 128
+
+ Baba, 216
+ Baba, Sauce for, 216
+ Bacon Salad, 84
+ Bacon Sauce, 27
+ Baking Powder Biscuit, 139
+ Balls, Cheese, 107
+ Bamboo Sprouts, Shrimp-and-Lettuce Salad, 74
+ Banana-and-Orange Salad, 93
+ Banana-and-Tapioca Sponge, 218
+ Bar-le-Duc-and-Cheese Sandwiches, 135
+ Bean, White, Salad, 32
+ Bechamel Sauce, 205, 210
+ Beef, Chopped, 209
+ " , Fillets of, 213
+ " Hash, Corned, 202
+ " Sandwiches, Corned, 119
+ Beef Tea in Chafing-Dish, 207
+ Beet-and-Cream Cheese Sandwiches, 125
+ Beets and Brussels Sprouts, Salad of, 35
+ Beets, Stuffed, 34
+ Bernaise Sauce, 28
+ Beverages with Sandwiches, 118
+ Biscuit, Baking Powder, 139
+ " , Sandwich, 139
+ Bluefish Salad, 60, 75
+ Boiled Dressing for Chicken Salad, 26
+ Boiled Salad Dressing, 26
+ Boston Brown Bread, 138
+ Boudins-de-Saumon Salad, 61
+ Bread, Boston Brown, 138
+ " , Entire Wheat, 137
+ " , Pulled, 139
+ " , Rice, 138
+ " , Wheat, Two Loaves of, 137
+ " , for Sandwiches, 116
+ " , To Give Glossy Crust, 140
+ Brook Trout Salad, 55
+ " " " in Aspic, 55
+
+ Cabbage and Cauliflower, To Clean, 14
+ Calf's Head en Tortue, 206
+ Canapés, Egg, 193
+ " , Epicurean, 205
+ " , Oyster, 168
+ Cauliflower-and-Asparagus Salad, 46
+ Cauliflower Salad, Egg Garnish, 49
+ Caviare Sandwich Rolls, 120
+ Celery, Apple-and-Nut Salad, 92
+ " -and-Chestnut Salad, 92
+ Celery-and-Nut in Border, 43
+ Celery-and-Oyster Salad, 66
+ Celery Sandwiches, 120
+ Celery, To Fringe, 15
+ " , To Keep, 16
+ Ceylon Cocoa, 145
+ Chafing-Dish Appointments, 153
+ Chafing-Dish Recipes:
+ Aberdeen Sandwiches, 205
+ Anchovy Toast, 175
+ " " with Eggs, 175
+ " " " Spinach, 176
+ Anchovies with Olives, 176
+ Artichokes à la Bordelaise, 197
+ Asparagus Peas, 196
+ Baba on Wine Cake, 216
+ Bechamel Sauce, 210
+ Beef Tea in Chafing-Dish, 207
+ Bread Sauce, 211
+ Buttered Lobster, 169
+ Calf's Head en Tortue, 206
+ Calves' Brains and Mushrooms, Poulette, 207
+ Canned Peas with Egg, 198
+ Cheese Fondue, 186
+ Chicken Klopps with Bechamel Sauce, 204
+ Chicken Timbales, 210
+ Chicken with Mushrooms, 209
+ Chopped Beef, 209
+ Chops, etc. Pan Broiled, 212
+ Clams à la Newburgh, 170
+ Corned Beef Hash, 202
+ Crabs à la Creole, 174
+ Creamed Dishes, 166
+ Creamed Mushrooms, 197
+ Creamed Peas, 179
+ Curried Eggs, 191
+ Curried Oysters, 164
+ Curried " No. 2, 165
+ Curried Sardines, 177
+ Curried Vegetables, 199
+ Deviled Dishes, 166
+ Deviled Crabs, 173
+ Egg Canapés, 193
+ Egg Timbales, 211
+ Egg à la Italienne, 190
+ Eggs à la Parisienne, 190
+ Eggs, Creole Style, 192
+ Eggs, Italian Style, 194
+ Eggs and Mushrooms à la Dauphine, 189
+ Eggs with Asparagus, 193
+ " " Spinach, 194
+ English Monkey, 187
+ Epicurean Canapés, 205
+ Escalloped Oysters, 168
+ Fig Toast, 217
+ Fillets of Beef, Mushroom Sauce, 213
+ Fillets of Lamb, Cherry Sauce, 213
+ Fresh Mushrooms and Sweetbreads, 196
+ Fricassee of Oysters, 165
+ Golden Buck, 185
+ Halibut Rarebit, 184
+ Ham Timbales, 214
+ Hawaiian Lobster Curry, 171
+ Kornlet Oysters, 201
+ " " No. 2, 201
+ Lobster à la Bechamel, 171
+ Lobster à la Bordelaise, 170
+ Lobster à la Newburgh, 169
+ Lobster à la Poulette, 172
+ Macaroni à la Italienne, 195
+ Maître d'Hôtel Butter, 212
+ Mock Terrapin, 203
+ Minced Ham à la Poulette, 205
+ Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas, 178
+ Mushroom Cromeskies, 197
+ Mushrooms and Macaroni, 198
+ Mushroom Sauce, 210
+ Mutton Réchauffé, Creole Style, 215
+ Oyster Canapés, 168
+ Oyster Crabs, 174
+ Oyster Crabs à la Hollandaise, 172
+ Oyster Cromeskies, 167
+ Oyster Rarebit, 185
+ Oysters, 163
+ Oysters, No. 2, 163
+ Oysters à la D'Uxelles, 164
+ Oysters Sauté, 168
+ Panned Oysters, 167
+ " " Maître d'Hôtel, 167
+ Pineapple Sponge, 217
+ Plain Lobster, 170
+ Potatoes à la Maître d'Hôtel, 199
+ Puff Balls, Sautéd, 198
+ Purée of Fish, 179
+ Réchauffé of Fish, 180
+ " " " No. 2, 181
+ Salmi of Duck or Game, 208
+ Salmi of Duck No. 2, 208
+ Salt Codfish in Cream Sauce, 180
+ Salt Codfish with Tomato Sauce, 179
+ Sardine Canapés, 177
+ Sardine Rarebit, 185
+ Sardines, French Fashion, 177
+ Sardines on Toast, 181
+ Scotch Woodcock, 190, 207
+ Scrambled Eggs à la Union Club, 188
+ Scrambled Eggs with Cheese, 188
+ Scrambled Eggs with Dried Beef, 189
+ Scrambled Eggs with Oysters, 166
+ Scrambled Eggs with Smoked Salmon, 188
+ Scrambled Eggs with Tomatoes, 189
+ Scrambled Ham and Eggs, 204
+ Shirred Eggs, 192
+ Shrimps à la Poulette, 175
+ Shrimps with Peas, 175
+ Spaghetti, Queen Style, 203
+ String Beans à la Lyonnaise, 200
+ Supreme of Chicken, 211
+ Sweetbreads, Sautéd, 209
+ Tapioca and Banana Sponge, 218
+ Tomato Sandwich, 200
+ Welsh Rarebit, 183
+ " " No. 2, 183
+ " " with Ale, 184
+ White Hashed Potatoes, 199
+ Woodcock Toast, 206
+ Yorkshire Rarebit, 186
+ Chafing-Dishes, Past and Present, 151
+ Chaud-froid Sauce, White, 101
+ Cheese Aigrettes, 109
+ " d'Artois, 109
+ " Balls, 107
+ " -and-Cowslip Salad, 49
+ " Croquettes, 108
+ " Custard, 105
+ " Fondue, 186
+ " Fritters, 110
+ " Ramequins, 106
+ " Sandwiches with Bar-le-Duc, 135
+ " Sandwiches with Beets, 125
+ " " " Nuts, 122
+ " with Scrambled Eggs, 188
+ " Soufflé, 105
+ " Soufflés, Iced, 108
+ " Straws, 106
+ Cheese with Vegetable Macedoine, 110
+ Cherry Salad, 91
+ Cherry Sauce, 213
+ Cherry,-Strawberry-and-Peach Salad, 95
+ Chestnuts-and-Celery Salad, 92
+ Chestnuts, To Shell and Blanch, 12
+ Chicken, Fillets of, 214
+ " Klopps, 204
+ " and Mushrooms, 209
+ " Rolls, 123
+ " Salad, 78
+ " " , Boiled Dressing for, 26
+ " " , French, 78
+ " " with Mushrooms, 79
+ " " Sandwiches, 127
+ " -and-Nut Sandwiches, 127
+ " Stock for Aspic Jelly, 99
+ " Timbales, 210
+ Chiffonade Salad, 94
+ Chocolate, Plain, 145
+ " , Rich, 144
+ " , Spanish, 148
+ Chopped Beef, 209
+ Chou Paste, 140
+ Clams à la Newburgh, 170
+ Claret Cup, 148
+ " Dressing, 22
+ " Jelly, 134
+ Club Sandwiches, 129
+ Cocoa, Ceylon, 145
+ " , Plain, 145
+ " , Sultana, 145
+ Coffee, Boiled, 143
+ " , Filtered, 143
+ Cole Slaw, Dressing for, 27
+ Consommé for Aspic Jelly, 98
+ Cooked Vegetable Salad, 37
+ Corned Beef Hash, 202
+ " " Sandwiches, 119
+ Country Salad, 87
+ Cowslip-and-Cheese Salad, 49
+ Crab Toast, Mock, 186
+ Crabs à la Creole, 174
+ " " Hollandaise, 172
+ " Deviled, 173
+ " Oyster, 174
+ Creamed Dishes, 166
+ " Peas, 179
+ " Mushrooms, 197
+ Cream Salad Dressing, 27
+ Cress,-Cucumber-and-Tomato Salad, 41
+ Cress-and-Egg Sandwiches, 122
+ Cress, To Clean, 14
+ Cromeskies, Mushroom, 197
+ " , Oyster, 167
+ Croquettes, Cheese, 108
+ Cucumber Salad, 36
+ " " for Fish, 36
+ " " with Shad Roe, 61
+ " " , Stuffed, 49
+ Cupid's Butter Sandwiches, 135
+ Currant-and-Cheese Sandwiches, 135
+ Curry, Hawaiian Lobster, 171
+ Curried Eggs, 191
+ " Oysters, 164
+ " " No. 2, 165
+ " Sardines, 177
+ " Vegetables, 199
+ Custard, Cheese, 105
+ " , Royal, for Aspic, 11
+
+ Date-and-Ginger Sandwiches, 132
+ d'Artois, Cheese, 109
+ Deviled Dishes, 166
+ Dressing, Boiled, 26
+ " Boiled, for Chicken Salad, 26
+ " , Claret, 22
+ " , for Cole Slaw, 27
+ " , Cream Salad, 27
+ " , French, 21
+ " , " in quantity, 22
+ " , for Fruit Salad, 89
+ " , Horseradish, 40
+ " , Mayonnaise, 22
+ " , Composition, 8
+ Dressings, Boiled and Cream, 9
+ Dried Beef with Eggs, 189
+ Duck-and-Olive Salad, 83
+ " " Orange " , 83
+ Duck, Salmi of, 208
+ Duck or Game, Salmi of, 208
+
+ Easter Salad, 86
+ Egg Canapés, 193
+ Egg and Canned Peas, 198
+ Egg Lemonade, 146
+ Egg-and-Cress Sandwiches, 122
+ Egg-and-Ham Sandwiches, 119
+ " " Spinach Sandwiches, 122
+ " " " Salad, 86
+ Eggs with Anchovy Toast, 175
+ Eggs with Asparagus, 193
+ " to Boil for Garnishing, 11
+ Eggs, Creole Style, 192
+ " Curried, 191
+ " Italienne, 190, 194
+ " and Mushrooms, Dauphine, 189
+ " Parisienne, 190
+ " Scrambled with Cheese, 188
+ " Scrambled with Dried Beef, 189
+ " Scrambled with Oysters, 166
+ " Scrambled with Smoked Salmon, 188
+ " Scrambled with Tomatoes, 189
+ " Scrambled à la Union Club, 188
+ " with Spinach, 194
+ Eggs, Whites of, To Poach, 11
+ Endive, To Clean, 13
+ Endive Salad, 30
+ English Monkey, 187
+ Entire Wheat Bread, 137
+ Epicurean Canapés, 205
+ " Sandwiches, 123
+ Escalloped Oysters, 168
+
+ Fig-and-Nut Salad, 93
+ Fig Sandwiches, 131
+ Fig Toast, 217
+ Fillets of Beef, Mushroom Sauce, 213
+ " " Chicken, 214
+ " " Halibut with Cole Slaw, 58
+ " " " " Salad, 57
+ " " Lamb, Cherry Sauce, 213
+ Filling for Sandwiches, 116
+ Filtered Coffee, 143
+ Fish, Purée of, 179
+ " , Réchauffé of, 180
+ Fish Réchauffé, No. 2, 181
+ Fish Salad in Aspic, 59
+ Fish-and-Mushroom Salad, 65
+ Fish, Salt Cod in Cream Sauce, 180
+ " " " " Tomato " 179
+ Five-o'clock Tea, 144
+ Flavoring, 160
+ Fondue, Cheese, 186
+ French Dressing, Recipes for, 21
+ " " in quantity, 22
+ French Fruit Sandwiches, 131
+ Fresh Mushrooms and Sweetbreads, 196
+ Fricassee of Oysters, 165
+ Fritters, Cheese, 110
+ Fruit Jelly for Sandwiches, 134
+ Fruit Punch, 146
+ " Salad, 89, 90, 91
+ " " , Dressing for, 89
+ " " , When to Serve, 10
+ Fruit-and-Nut Salad, 90
+
+ Game, Salmi of, 208
+ Gherkins, To Cut for Garnish, 15
+ Ginger and Date Sandwiches, 132
+ Gnochi à la Romaine, 107
+ Golden Buck, 185
+ Grapefruit Salad, 93
+ Grapefruit, Pineapple,-and-Pimento Salad, 95
+ Green Butter Sandwiches, 126
+ Green Pea Salad, 47
+ " " -and-Potato Salad, 47
+
+ Halibut, Fillets of, in Aspic, 57
+ " , Moulded, and Creamed Peas, 178
+ " Rarebit, 184
+ Halibut Salad, 55, 56
+ " " for Fish Course, 64
+ Halibut-and-Cucumber Salad, 56
+ Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic, 128
+ " and Lettuce Sandwiches, 124
+ Ham, Minced, Poulette Style, 205
+ Ham Salad, 83
+ Ham-and-Egg Sandwiches, 119
+ " " Eggs Scrambled, 204
+ Ham-and-Tongue Sandwiches, 119
+ Ham Timbales, 214
+ Harlequin Sandwiches, 125
+ Hash, Corned Beef, 202
+ Herbs, How to Chop, 13
+ Hollandaise Sauce, 28, 173
+ Home-Made Soda-Water, 147
+ Honey Sandwiches, 132, 136
+ How to Blanch Walnuts and Almonds, 12
+ " " " and Cook Vegetables, 14
+ " " Boil Eggs Hard, 11
+ " " Boil Fish and Meat, 140
+ " " Chop Fresh Herbs, 13
+ " " Clean Lettuce, Endive, Cress, etc., 13
+ " " Cook Sweetbreads and Brains, 16
+ " " Cut Radishes for a Garnish, 13
+ " " Cut Gherkins for a Garnish, 15
+ " " Fringe Celery, 15
+ " " Keep Celery, Cress, Lettuce, etc., 16
+ " " Make Nasturtium and Tarragon Vinegar, 17
+ " " Make Royal Custard, 11
+ " " " Sauces, 158
+ " " Pickle Nasturtium Seeds, 16
+ " " Poach Whites of Eggs, 11
+ " " Render Vegetables Crisp, 14
+ " " Shell and Blanch Chestnuts, 12
+ " " Shred Romaine, etc., 15
+ " " Use Garlic or Onion in Salads, 12
+ Hunter's Sandwich, 136
+
+ Individual Soufflés of Cheese, 108
+ Ingredients for One Cup of Sauce, 159
+ " " " Pint of Sauce, 160
+ Italian Salad, 84
+
+ Jelly, Aspic, from Bouillon Capsules, 100
+ " , " , Chicken Stock for, 99
+ " , " , to Chop, 98
+ " , " , Consommé for, 98
+ " , " for Garnishing, 97
+ " , " , Oysters in, 65
+ " , " , Recipe for, 97
+ " , " , for Sandwiches, 127
+ " , Claret, for Sandwiches, 134
+ " , Fruit, " " , 134
+ " , Mayonnaise, 25
+ " , Tomato, 43
+ " , " with Salad, 43, 44
+
+ Klopps, Chicken, 204
+ Kornlet Oysters, 201
+
+ Lamb, Fillets of, 213
+ Lemonade, Egg, 146
+ Lentil Salad, 31
+ Lettuce, How to Clean, 13
+ " " Shred, 15
+ " Salad, 29
+ Livournaise Sauce, 25
+ Lobster à la Bechamel, 171
+ " " Bordelaise, 170
+ " Buttered, 169
+ " Curry, Hawaiian, 171
+ " Fingers, 124
+ Lobster Mousseline Salad, 73
+ Lobster à la Newburgh, 169
+ " Plain, 170
+ " à la Poulette, 172
+ Lobster Salad, 71
+ " " No. 2, No. 3, 71
+ " " in Aspic, 72
+ Lobster in Aspic Sandwiches, 128
+ Lobster and Mushroom Sandwiches, 121
+
+ Macaroni à la Italienne, 195
+ Macaroni and Mushrooms, 198
+ Macedoine, Cheese and Vegetable, 110
+ Macedoine Salad, 35
+ Mackerel Salad, 60
+ " Salt, Salad, 61
+ Maître d'Hôtel Butter, 212
+ " " Potatoes, 199
+ Marguerite Salad, 86
+ Mayonnaise, Curdled, 24
+ " , Jelly, 25
+ " , Making in Quantity, 23
+ " , Recipe for, 22
+ " , Red, 24
+ " , Sardine, 25
+ Measuring, 160
+ Meat and Fish, Potted, 141
+ Meats, Fresh, How to Boil, 140
+ " , Salted, " " 140
+ Minced Ham, Poulette, 205
+ Miroton of Fish and Potato, 58
+ Mock Crab Toast, 186
+ Mock Terrapin, 203
+ Mosaic Sandwiches, 127
+ Moulded Salmon Salad, 75
+ Mousse de Poulet Salad, 81, 82
+ Mushroom Cromeskies, 197
+ Mushroom Salad with Chicken Medallions, 80
+ " and Fish Salad, 65
+ " " Lobster Sandwiches, 121
+ " Sauce, 210
+ Mushrooms and Chicken, 209
+ " Creamed, 197
+ " and Eggs Dauphine, 189
+ " " Sweetbreads, 196
+ Mutton Réchauffé, 215
+
+ Nasturtium Folds, 125
+ Nasturtium Seeds, To Pickle, 16
+ Nut,-Apple-and-Celery Salad, 92
+ Nut-and-Celery Salad, 92
+ Nut-and-Cheese Sandwiches, 122
+ Nut-and-Chicken " 122
+ Nut-and-Fig Salad, 93
+ " " Fruit " 90
+ " , Litchi,-and-Orange Salad, 88
+ " -and-Orange Salad, 92
+
+ Oil, Value of, 8
+ Onion and Garlic, How to Use, 12
+ Orange-and-Banana Salad, 93
+ " " Litchi Nut Salad, 88
+ " " Walnut Salad, 92
+ Oyster Canapés, 168
+ " Cromeskies, 167
+ " Rarebit, 185
+ " -and-Celery Salad, 66
+ " -and-Sweetbread Salad, 67
+ Oysters in Aspic, 65
+ Oysters in Chafing-Dish, 163
+ " Creamed, 166
+ " Curried, 164, 165
+ " Deviled, 166
+ " à la D'Uxelles, 164
+ " Escalloped, 168
+ " , Fricassee of, 165
+ " , Kornlet, 201
+ " , Panned, 167
+ " , " Maître d'Hôtel, 167
+ " Sauté, 168
+ " with Scrambled-Eggs, 166
+
+ Pan-Broiling, 212
+ Panned Oysters, 167
+ Paste, Chou, 140
+ Pastry Bag and Tubes, To Decorated Salads, 18
+ Pâté-de-Foie-Gras in Aspic, 85
+ " " " Sandwiches, 122
+ Peach-and-Almond Salad, 94
+ Peach Salad, 95
+ Peach,-Strawberry-and-Cherry Salad, 95
+ Peanut Sandwiches, 125, 126
+ Peas, Creamed, 179
+ " with Egg, 198
+ Pineapple-and-Pimento Salad, 95
+ Pineapple Sandwiches, 133
+ Pineapple Sponge, 217
+ Plain Chocolate, 145
+ Plain Cocoa, 145
+ Potato Salad, 32, 33
+ " " , German Style, 37
+ " " with Mayonnaise, 50
+ " -and-Nasturtium Salad, 34
+ Potatoes, Maître d'Hôtel, 199
+ " , White Hashed, 199
+ Potted Meats and Fish, 141
+ Puff Balls, Sautéd, 198
+ Puff Paste Sandwiches, 133
+ Pulled Bread, 139
+ Punch, Fruit, 146
+ " à la Nantes, 146
+
+ Radishes, To Cut for Garnish, 13
+ Ramequins, Cheese, 106
+ Rarebit, Halibut, 184
+ " , Oyster, 185
+ " , Sardine, 185
+ " , Welsh, 183
+ " , " No. 2, 183
+ " , " With Ale, 184
+ " , Yorkshire, 186
+ Réchauffé of Fish, 180, 181
+ " " Mutton, 215
+ Réchauffés, Concerning, 202
+ Rice Bread, 138
+ Rich Chocolate, 144
+ Rolls, Salad, 138
+ Rolls, Wedding Sandwich, 129
+ Romaine, To Shred, 15
+ Rose Leaf Sandwiches, 132
+ Royal Custard for Garnishing, 11
+ Russian Salad, 62
+ " Vegetable Salad, 48
+ " Sandwiches, 121
+
+ Salad Dressing, Boiled, 26
+ Salad Dressing, Cream, 27
+ " Dressings, Use of, 7
+ " , Fruit, When to Serve, 10
+ " Making, Important Points in, 9
+ " Rolls, 138
+ Salad:
+ " Anchovy, 74
+ " Apple,-Celery-and-English-Walnut, 92
+ " Artichoke, 45
+ " Asparagus, 47
+ " Asparagus and Salmon, 46
+ " Asparagus and Cauliflower, 46
+ " Bacon, 84
+ " Bluefish, 75
+ " Boudins-de-Saumon, 61
+ " Brook Trout, 55
+ " Brook Trout in Aspic, 55
+ " Brussels Sprouts and Beet, 35
+ " Cauliflower, 39
+ " Cauliflower, Egg Garnish, 49
+ " Celery-and-Chestnut, 92
+ " Celery-and-Nut, 43
+ " Cherry, 91
+ " Chicken, 78
+ " Chicken-and-Fresh Mushroom, 79
+ " Chicken, No. 3, 79
+ " Chicken, No. 4, 79
+ " Chiffonade, 94
+ " Combination, A Few, 30
+ " Cooked Vegetable Salad, 37
+ " Country, 87
+ " Cowslip-and-Cream Cheese, 49
+ " Cress,-Cucumber-and-Tomato, 41
+ " Cucumber, 36
+ " Cucumber for Fish Course, 36
+ " Duck-and-Olive, 83
+ " Duck-and-Orange, 83
+ " Easter, 86-87
+ " Endive, 30
+ " Endives-Tomato-and-Green-String-Bean, 36
+ " Fig-and-Nut, 93
+ " Fillets of Halibut in Aspic, 57
+ " Fillets of Halibut with Cole Slaw, 58
+ " Fish Moulded in Aspic, 59, 60
+ " French Chicken, 78
+ " Fruit, 89, 91
+ " Fruit-and-Nut, 90, 91
+ " Grapefruit, 93
+ " Grapefruit,-Pineapple-and-Pimento, 95
+ " Green-Pea, 47
+ " Green-Pea-and-Potato, 47
+ " Green and White, 88
+ " Halibut, 55, 56
+ " Halibut-and-Cucumber, 56
+ " Halibut (for Fish Course), 64
+ " Ham, 83
+ " Italian, 84
+ " Lentil, 31
+ " Lettuce, 29
+ " Lettuce,-Bamboo-Sprouts-and-Shrimps, 74
+ " Lobster, 71
+ " Lobster, No. 2, 71
+ " Lobster, No. 3, 71
+ " Lobster in Ring of Aspic, 72
+ " Macedoine, 35
+ " Macedoine of Vegetable, 47
+ " Mackerel or Bluefish, 60
+ " Marguerite, 86
+ " Miroton of Fish-and-Potato, 58
+ " Mousse-de-Poulet, 81, 82
+ " Moulded Salmon Salad, 75
+ " Mousseline of Lobster, 75
+ " Mushroom with Medallions of Chicken, 80
+ " Orange-and-Litchi Nut, 88
+ " Orange-and-Walnut, 92
+ " Orange-and-Banana, 93
+ " Oysters in Aspic, 65
+ " Oyster-and-Celery, 66
+ " Oyster-and-Sweetbread, 67
+ " Pâté de Foie Gras in Aspic, 85
+ " Peach, 15
+ " Peach-and-Almond, 94
+ " Peach,-Strawberry-and-Cherry, 95
+ " Potato, 32, 33
+ " Potato-and-Nasturtium, 34
+ " Potato, German Style, 37
+ " Potato with Mayonnaise, 50
+ " Russian, 62
+ " Russian Vegetable, 48
+ " Salmon, 63
+ " Salt Mackerel, 61
+ " Sardine, 69
+ " Sardine, No. 2, 69
+ " Sardine-and-Egg, 70
+ " Scallop, 68
+ " Shad-Roe-and-Cucumber, 61
+ " Shells of Fish-and-Mushrooms, 65
+ " Shrimp, 68
+ " Shrimp in Cucumber Boats, 67
+ " Shrimp with Aspic Border, 67
+ " Spanish, 63
+ " Spinach-and-Egg, 86
+ " Spinach-and-Tongue, 85
+ " Stuffed Cucumber, 49
+ " Stuffed Beet, 34
+ " Stuffed Tomato, 40
+ " Sweetbread-and-Cucumber, 77
+ " Tomato-and-Artichoke, 44
+ " Tomato-and-Onion, 36
+ " Tomato-and-Sweetbread, 40
+ " Tomato, Horseradish Dressing, 40
+ " Tomato Jelly, No. 2, 43
+ " Tomato Jelly with String Beans, 44
+ " Tomatoes Farces à l'Aspic, 42
+ " Tomatoes Stuffed with Nuts and Celery, 39
+ " Tomatoes Stuffed with Cucumber, 41
+ " Tomatoes Stuffed with Jelly, 42
+ " Turkey-and-Chestnut, 83
+ " Turnip with Asparagus Tips, 46
+ " Turquoise, 94
+ " White Bean, 32
+ Salads, Arrangement of, 8
+ Salads, Decorating with Bag and Tubes, 18
+ Salads, Dressing of, 6
+ " , Introduction to Subject, 3
+ Salads, when Served with French Dressing, etc., 9
+ " , Serving with Cheese, 10
+ Salmi of Duck or Game, 208
+ Salmon Salad, 63
+ " " , Moulded, 75
+ Salmon-and-Asparagus Salad, 46
+ Sandwiches: Aberdeen, 205
+ " Beet-and-Cream-Cheese, 125
+ " Beverages Served with, 118
+ " Bread for, 116
+ " Caviare Roll, 120
+ " Celery, 20
+ " Cheese-and-Bar-le-Duc, 135
+ " Cheese- " -English-Walnut, 122
+ " Chicken-and-Nut, 127
+ " Chicken Roll, 123
+ " Chicken Salad, 127
+ " Club, 129
+ " Corned Beef, 119
+ " Cress-and-Egg, 122
+ " Cupid's Butter, 135
+ " Date-and-Ginger, 132
+ " Egg-and-Spinach, 122
+ " Epicurean, 123
+ " Fig, 131
+ " Filling for, 116
+ " French Fruit, 131
+ " Fruit or Claret Jelly, 134
+ " Fruit with Whipped Cream, 133
+ " Green Butter, 126
+ " Halibut with Aspic Jelly, 128
+ " Halibut-and-Lettuce, 124
+ " Ham-and-Egg, 119
+ " " " Tongue, 119
+ " Harlequin, 125
+ " Honey, 132
+ " Hunters', 136
+ " Lobster with Aspic, 128
+ " Lobster Fingers, 124
+ " Milwaukee, The, 129
+ " Mosaic, 127
+ " Mushroom-and-Lobster, 121
+ " Nasturtium Fold, 125
+ " Pâté de Foie Gras (Imitation), 122
+ " Peanut, 125, 126
+ " Pineapple, 133
+ " Puff Paste, 133
+ " Rose Leaf, 132
+ " Russian, 121
+ " Sardine, 120
+ " Shad-Roe-and-Butter, 126
+ " Tomato, 200
+ " Tongue-and-Veal, 120
+ " Tower of Babel, 124
+ " Violet, 132
+ " Wedding Sandwich Roll, 129
+ " Whipped Cream, 133
+ Sardine Canapés, 177
+ Sardine-and-Egg Salad, 70
+ Sardine Mayonnaise, 25
+ " Rarebit, 185
+ " Salad, 69
+ " Sandwiches, 120
+ Sardines, Curried, 177
+ " , French Fashion, 177
+ " on Toast, 181
+ Sauce for Baba, 216
+ Sauce, Bacon, 27
+ " , Bechamel, 205, 210
+ " , Bernaise, 28
+ " , Bread, 211
+ " , Chaud-froid, 101
+ " , Cherry, 213
+ " , Hollandaise, 28, 173
+ " , Ingredients for One cup, 159
+ " , " " " pint, 160
+ " , Livournaise, 25
+ " , Mayonnaise, 22
+ " , Mushroom, 210
+ " , Tartare, 25
+ " , Tomato, 179
+ Sauces, How to Make, 158
+ " , Stock for use in, 99
+ Scallop Salad, 68
+ Scotch Woodcock, 190, 207
+ Scrambled Eggs with Cheese, 188
+ " " " Dried Beef, 189
+ " " " Ham, 204
+ " " " Oysters, 166
+ " " " Smoked Salmon, 188
+ " " " Tomatoes, 189
+ " " à la Union Club, 188
+ Shad-Roe-and-Butter Sandwiches, 126
+ Shad-Roe-and-Cucumber Salad, 61
+ Shells of Fish and Mushrooms, 65
+ Shirred Eggs, 192
+ Shrimp Salad, 68
+ " " Aspic Border, 67
+ " " , Cucumber Boat, 67
+ " , Bamboo-and-Lettuce Salad, 74
+ Shrimps with Peas, 175
+ " à la Poulette, 175
+ Smoked Salmon with Eggs, 188
+ Soda-Water, Home-Made, 147
+ Soufflé, Cheese, 105
+ Soufflés, " Iced, 108
+ Spaghetti, Queen Style, 203
+ Spanish Chocolate, 148
+ Spanish Salad, 63
+ Spinach-and-Egg Salad, 86
+ " with Eggs, 194
+ " -and-Tongue Salad, 85
+ Sponge, Pineapple, 217
+ " , Tapioca and Banana, 218
+ Stock, Chicken, for Aspic, 99
+ Stock, Fish, 100
+ " for Sauces, 99
+ Straws, Cheese, 106
+ Strawberry,-Peach-and-Cherry Salad, 95
+ String Beans, Lyonnaise, 200
+ Sultana Cocoa, 145
+ Sweetbread-and-Cucumber Salad, 77
+ Sweetbreads-and-Brains, To Cook, 16
+ " " Mushrooms, 196
+ " Sautéd, 209
+
+ Tapioca-and-Banana Sponge, 218
+ Tartare Sauce, 25
+ Tea, Beef, in Chafing-Dish, 207
+ Tea, Five o'clock, 144
+ Terrapin, Mock, 203
+ Timbales, Chicken, 210
+ " , Egg, 211
+ " , Ham, 214
+ Toast, Fig, 217
+ " , Mock Crab, 186
+ " , Woodcock, 206
+ Tomato-and-Artichoke Salad, 44
+ Tomato, Bean-and-Endive Salad, 36
+ Tomato,-Cress-and-Cucumber Salad, 41
+ Tomato Jelly, 43
+ " " Salad, 43, 44
+ Tomato-and-Onion Salad, 36
+ Tomato Salad, Horseradish Dressing, 40
+ Tomato Salad, Stuffed, 40
+ Tomato Sandwich, 200
+ " -and-Sweetbread Salad, 40
+ Tomatoes Farces à l'Aspic, 42
+ Tomatoes with Scrambled Eggs, 189
+ Tomatoes Stuffed with Celery and Nuts, 39
+ Tomatoes Stuffed with Cucumber, 41
+ " " " Jelly, 42
+ Tongue-and-Ham Sandwiches, 119
+ " -and-Spinach Salad, 85
+ " " Veal Sandwiches, 120
+ Tower of Babel, 124
+ Turkey-and-Chestnut Salad, 83
+ Turnips and Asparagus in Salad, 46
+ Turquoise Salad, 94
+ Two Loaves of Wheat Bread, 137
+
+ Veal-and-Tongue Sandwiches, 120
+ Vegetable, Cooked, Salad, 37
+ Vegetable Salad, Macedoine of, 47
+ Vegetable Salad, Russian, 48
+ Vegetables, To Blanch and Cook, 14
+ " , Curried, 199
+ " , To Render Crisp, 14
+ Vinegar, Fines Herbes, 17, 18
+ " , Nasturtium, 77
+ " , Tarragon, 17
+ Violet Sandwiches, 132
+
+ Watercress, How to Keep, 16
+ Wedding Sandwich Rolls, 129
+ Welsh Rarebit, 183
+ " " No. 2, 183
+ " " with Ale, 184
+ Whipped Cream Sandwiches, 133
+ White Hashed Potatoes, 199
+ Wine Cake (Baba), 216
+ Woodcock Scotch, 190, 207
+ Woodcock Toast, 206
+
+ Yorkshire Rarebit, 186
+
+[Illustration: BOOKS THE BEST COMPANIONS]
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+
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+PRACTICAL COOKING & SERVING
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_By Janet McKenzie Hill_
+
+Of the Boston Cooking School
+
+This practical, up-to-date, and comprehensive work contains a "liberal
+education" in the selection, cooking, and serving of food. It is for the
+novice and expert alike, and the many illustrations (including pictures
+of utensils, tables for every sort of meal, decorations for festal
+occasions, dishes ready for serving, etc.) are absolutely invaluable to
+every housekeeper.
+
+=With washable aluminum cloth binding and 200 colored and half-tone
+illustrations. Price, net, $2.00. Postage 20 cents=
+
+
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+The Pleasures of the Table
+
+By George H. Ellwanger
+
+[Illustration: LE CUISINIER
+
+After the engraving by Mariette]
+
+ * * * * *
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+Nothing has been published in America on this subject since
+Brillat-Savarin, and there has not existed anywhere a complete
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+private.
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+ * * * * *
+
+ =Illustrated. Price, net, $2.50=
+ =Postage 25 cents=
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+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired and recipe form made consistent.
+
+Page 5, "recherche" changed to "recherché".
+
+Page 21, "teaspooonful" change to "teaspoonful". (1/2 of teaspoonful of
+salt.)
+
+Page 42, "Tomates" changed to "Tomatoes". (Tomatoes Farces)
+
+Page 85, "an" changed to "a". (centre half a)
+
+Page 96, "grape fruit" changed to "grapefruit". (grapefruit upon
+shredded)
+
+Page 156, "Newburg" changed to "Newburgh" to match rest of text. (a
+lobster Newburgh or)
+
+Page 164, the recipe for Curried Oysters was missing a measurement for
+"teaspoonful of curry powder" in the original text. Research showed that
+1/2 was most usual for recipes for this involving a fraction of a
+teaspoon. The text has been changed to reflect this.
+
+Illustration for Yorkshire Rarebit originally read "Yorkshire Rabbit."
+This was changed to fit the actual recipe.
+
+Page 215, "Rechauffé" changed to "Réchauffé". (Mutton Réchauffé)
+
+Page 221, index entry for Plain Lobster was lacking the page number. It
+has been added.
+
+Page 225, "Litichi" changed to "Litchi". (Litchi Nut Salad, 88)
+
+Page 225, "Duxelles" changed to "D'Uxelles". (à la D'Uxelles, 164)
+
+Page 228, "Serve" changed to "Served". (when Served with French)
+
+Page 229, in the index both "Souffle" and "Souffles" were changed to
+"Soufflé" and "Soufflés."
+
+The four instances of "tabasco" and five instances of "tobasco" were
+both retained, as were the instances of "well-nigh" and "wellnigh".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish
+Dainties, by Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SALADS, SANDWICHES AND ***
+
+***** This file should be named 19077-8.txt or 19077-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/1/9/0/7/19077/
+
+Produced by Emmy, Fox in the Stars, Suzanne Lybarger and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish Dainties by Janet McKenzie Hill
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish Dainties, by
+Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish Dainties
+ With Fifty Illustrations of Original Dishes
+
+Author: Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+Release Date: August 18, 2006 [EBook #19077]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SALADS, SANDWICHES AND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Emmy, Fox in the Stars, Suzanne Lybarger and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>Salads, Sandwiches</h1>
+
+<h1>and</h1>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
+<h1>Chafing-Dish Dainties</h1>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a name="sunday_tea" id="sunday_tea"></a>
+<img src="images/sunday_tea.jpg" width="400" height="227" alt="Table laid for Sunday-Night Tea." title="Table laid for Sunday-Night Tea." />
+<span class="caption">Table laid for Sunday-Night Tea.<br />
+"Sunday clears away the rust of the whole week."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Addison.</span></span>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h1>Salads, Sandwiches</h1>
+
+<h1>and</h1>
+
+<h1>Chafing-Dish Dainties</h1>
+
+<h3><i>With Fifty Illustrations of Original Dishes</i></h3>
+
+<h3>By</h3>
+
+<h2>Janet McKenzie Hill</h2>
+
+<div class="center">Editor of "The Boston Cooking-School Magazine"<br />
+Author of "Practical Cooking and Serving"<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class="center">NEW EDITION<br />
+WITH ADDITIONAL RECIPES<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Byron quote">
+<tr><td align='center'>"<i>Things which in hungry mortals' eyes find favor.</i>"</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><span class="smcap">Byron</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<div class="center"><br /><br /><br />Boston<br />
+Little, Brown, and Company<br />
+1909</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="center"><i>Copyright, 1899, 1903</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">By Janet M. Hill.</span>
+<br />
+<br />Printers<br />
+<span class="smcap">S. J. Parkhill &amp; Co., Boston, U. S. A.</span></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="center"><b>TO<br />
+<span class="smcap">Mrs. William B. Sewall</span>,<br />
+President of the Boston Cooking=School Corporation,<br />
+IN GRATEFUL RECOGNITION OF THE OPPORTUNITY<br />
+PRESENTED BY HER FOR CONGENIAL WORK IN A<br />
+CHOSEN FIELD OF EFFORT, THIS LITTLE BOOK<br />
+IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED<br />
+<span class="smcap">By the Author</span>.</b></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 25%;' />
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> favor with which the first edition of this little book has been
+received by those who were interested in the subjects of which it
+treats, is eminently gratifying to both author and publishers. It has
+occasioned the purpose to make a second edition of the book, even more
+complete and helpful than the first.</p>
+
+<p>In making the revision, wherever the text has suggested a new thought
+that thought has been inserted; under the various headings new recipes
+have been added, each in its proper place, and the number of
+illustrations has been increased from thirty-seven to fifty. A more
+complete table of contents has been presented, and also a list of the
+illustrations; the alphabetical index has been revised and made
+especially full and complete.</p>
+
+<div class='right'>
+JANET M. HILL.<br /></div>
+<div><span style="margin-left: 2em;">April 10, 1903.</span><br /></div>
+<p>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 25%;' />
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is positive need of more widespread knowledge of the principles of
+cookery. Few women know how to cook an egg or boil a potato properly,
+and the making of the perfect loaf of bread has long been assigned a
+place among the "lost arts."</p>
+
+<p>By many women cooking is considered, at best, a homely art,&mdash;a necessary
+kind of drudgery; and the composition, if not the consumption, of salads
+and chafing-dish productions has been restricted, hitherto, chiefly to
+that half of the race "who cook to please themselves." But, since women
+have become anxious to compete with men in any and every walk of life,
+they, too, are desirous of becoming adepts in tossing up an appetizing
+salad or in stirring a creamy rarebit. And yet neither a pleasing salad,
+especially if it is to be composed of cooked materials, nor a tempting
+rarebit can be evolved, save by happy accident, without an accurate
+knowledge of the fundamental principles that underlie all cookery.</p>
+
+<p>In a book of this nature and scope, the philosophy of heat at different
+temperatures, as it is applied in cooking, and the more scientific
+aspects of culinary processes, could not be dwelt upon; but, while we
+have not overlooked the ABC of the art, our special aim has been to
+present our topics in such a simple and pleasing form that she who
+attempts the composition of the dishes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span> described herein will not be
+satisfied until she has gained a deeper insight into the conditions
+necessary for success in the pursuit of these as well as other
+fascinating branches of the culinary art.</p>
+
+<p>Care has been exercised to meet the actual needs of those who wish to
+cultivate a taste for light, wholesome dishes, or to cater to the
+vagaries of the most capricious appetites.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing new under the sun, so no claim is made to absolute
+originality in contents. In this and all similar works, the matter of
+necessity must consist, in the main, of old material in a new dress.</p>
+
+<p>Though the introduction to Part III. was originally written for this
+book, the substance of it was published in the December-January
+(1898-99) issue of the <i>Boston Cooking-School Magazine</i>. From time to
+time, also, a few of the recipes, with minor changes, have appeared in
+that journal.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrations by means of half-tones produced from photographs of actual
+dishes were first brought out, we think, by The Century Company; in this
+line, however, both in the number and in the variety of the dishes
+prepared, the author may justly claim to have done more than any other
+has yet essayed. The illustrations on these pages were prepared
+expressly for this work, and the dishes and the photographs of the same
+were executed under our own hand and eye. That results pleasing to the
+eye and acceptable to the taste await those who try the confections
+described in this book is the sincere wish of the author.</p>
+
+<div class='right'>
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">JANET M. HILL</span><br /></div>
+<p>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<h2>Part I.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>SALADS</h3>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents Part I">
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'><span class="smcap">page</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_3'>3</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Dressing</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_6'>6</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Use of Dressings</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_7'>7</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Arrangement of Salads</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_8'>8</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Composition of Mayonnaise</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_8'>8</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Value of Oil</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_8'>8</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Boiled and Cream Dressings</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_9'>9</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Important Points in Salad-Making</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_9'>9</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">When to serve Salads with French or Mayonnaise Dressing</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_9'>9</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">When to serve a Fruit Salad</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_10'>10</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Salads with Cheese</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_10'>10</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to make Aromatic Vinegars, keep Vegetables, and prepare Garnishes</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_11'>11</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to boil Eggs hard for Garnishing</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_11'>11</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">To poach Whites of Eggs</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_11'>11</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Royal Custard for Moulds of Aspic</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_11'>11</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to use Garlic or Onion in Salads</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_12'>12</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to shell and blanch Chestnuts and other Nuts</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_12'>12</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to chop Fresh Herbs</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_13'>13</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to cut Radishes for a Garnish</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_13'>13</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to clean Lettuce, Endive, etc.</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_13'>13</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to clean Cress, Cabbage, etc.</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to render Uncooked Vegetables crisp</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to blanch and cook Vegetables for Salads</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to cut Gherkins for a Garnish</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_15'>15</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to Fringe Celery</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_15'>15</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to shred Romaine and Straight Lettuce</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_15'>15</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to keep Celery, Watercress, Lettuce, etc.</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_16'>16</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to cook Sweetbreads and Brains</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_16'>16</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to Pickle Nasturtium Seeds</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_16'>16</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Nasturtium and other Vinegars</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_17'>17</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">To decorate salads with pastry bag and tubes</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_18'>18</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for French Dressing</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_21'>21</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Mayonnaise Dressing</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_22'>22</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Boiled, Cream, and other Dressings</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_26'>26</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Vegetable Salads served with French Dressing</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_29'>29</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Salads largely Vegetable with Mayonnaise, etc.</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_39'>39</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Introduction to Fish Salads</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_53'>53</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Fish Salads</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_55'>55</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Various Compound Salads</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_77'>77</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Fruit and Nut Salads</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_89'>89</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to prepare and use Aspic Jelly</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_97'>97</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Consomm&eacute; and Stock for Aspic</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_98'>98</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Cheese Dishes served with Salads</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_105'>105</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<h2>Part II.</h2>
+
+<h3>SANDWICHES</h3>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents Part II">
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">page</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Bread for Sandwiches</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_115'>115</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Filling</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_116'>116</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Savory Sandwiches</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_119'>119</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span><span class="smcap">Recipes for Sweet Sandwiches</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_131'>131</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Bread and Chou Paste</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_137'>137</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to boil Meats for Sandwiches</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_140'>140</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Beverages served with Sandwiches</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_143'>143</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<h2>Part III.</h2>
+
+<h3>CHAFING-DISH DAINTIES</h3>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents Part III">
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">page</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chafing-Dishes Past and Present</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_151'>151</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chafing-Dish Appointments</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_153'>153</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Are Midnight Suppers Hygienic?</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_157'>157</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How to make Sauces</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_158'>158</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Measuring and Flavoring</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_160'>160</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Oyster Dishes</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_163'>163</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Lobster and other Sea Fish</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_169'>169</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Cheese Confections</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_182'>182</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Eggs</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_188'>188</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for Dishes largely Vegetarian</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_195'>195</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Recipes for R&eacute;chauff&eacute;s and Olla Podrida</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_202'>202</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>Illustrations</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="List of Illustrations">
+<tr><td align='left'>Table laid for Sunday Night Tea</td><td align='left'></td><td align='left'></td><td align='left'><a href='#sunday_tea'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Tender Lettuce brings on softer Sleep</td><td align='right'><i>Facing</i></td><td align='left'><i>page</i></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_18'>18</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cucumber Salad for Fish Course</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_28'>28</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cooked Vegetable Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_28'>28</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Potato Balls, Pecan Meats, and Cress Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_32'>32</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_32'>32</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Endive, Tomato, and Green String Bean Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_36'>36</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Stuffed Beets</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_36'>36</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cress, Cucumber, and Tomato Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_41'>41</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Tomato Jelly with Celery and Nuts</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_41'>41</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Russian Vegetable Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_48'>48</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Macedoine of Vegetable Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_48'>48</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Miroton of Fish and Potato Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_58'>58</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cowslip and Cream Cheese Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_58'>58</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Russian Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_62'>62</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Halibut Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_62'>62</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Shell of Fish and Mushrooms</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_68'>68</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boat</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_68'>68</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Shrimp Salad, Border of Eggs in Aspic</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_70'>70</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Lobster Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_70'>70</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bluefish Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_72'>72</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Litchi Nut and Orange Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_72'>72</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[xv]</a></span>Moulded Salmon Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_74'>74</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Salad of Shrimps and Bamboo Sprouts</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_74'>74</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Spinach and Egg Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_84'>84</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Marguerite Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_84'>84</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Easter Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_86'>86</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Country Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_86'>86</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Fruit Salad</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_94'>94</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Turquoise Salad No. 2</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_94'>94</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cheese Ramequins</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_106'>106</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Individual Souffl&eacute; of Cheese</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_106'>106</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Pineapple-Cheese and Crackers</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_110'>110</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Macedoine</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_110'>110</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Chicken Salad Sandwiches</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_126'>126</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_126'>126</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Wedding Sandwich Rolls</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_128'>128</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Club Sandwich</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_128'>128</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Boston Brown Bread</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_138'>138</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bread cut for Sandwiches</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_138'>138</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bowl of Fruit-Punch ready for serving</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_143'>143</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Copper Chafing-Dish with Earthen Casserole</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Chafing-Dish, Filler, etc.</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_153'>153</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Course at Formal Dinner served in Individual Chafing-Dishes</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_157'>157</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Butter Balls with Utensils for Chafing-Dish</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_178'>178</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_178'>178</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Yorkshire Rabbit</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_186'>186</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Curried Eggs</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_186'>186</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mushroom Cromeskies, ready for cooking</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_198'>198</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Prune Toast</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='center'>"</td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_198'>198</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><span class="smcap">Part I.</span></h2>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 36px;">
+<img src="images/leaf.png" width="36" height="24" alt="Leaf" title="Leaf" />
+</div>
+<h2>SALADS.</h2>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Though my stomach">
+<tr><td align='left'>"<i>Though my stomach was sharp, I could scarce help regretting</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: .5em;"><i>To spoil such a delicate picture by eating.</i>"</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Milton">
+<tr><td align='left'>At their savory dinner set</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Herbs and other country messes,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Which the neat-handed Phyllis dresses.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>Milton.</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<p>Our taste for salads&mdash;and in their simplest form who is not fond of
+salads?&mdash;is an inheritance from classic times and Eastern lands. In the
+hot climates of the Orient, cucumbers and melons were classed among
+earth's choicest productions; and a resort ever grateful in the heat of
+the day was "a lodge in a garden of cucumbers."</p>
+
+<p>At the Passover the Hebrews ate lettuce, camomile, dandelion and
+mint,&mdash;the "bitter herbs" of the Paschal feast,&mdash;combined with oil and
+vinegar. Of the Greeks, the rich were fond of the lettuces of Smyrna,
+which appeared on their tables at the close of the repast. In this
+respect the Romans, at first, imitated the Greeks, but later came to
+serve lettuce with eggs as a first course and to excite the appetite.
+The ancient physicians valued lettuce for its narcotic virtue, and, on
+account of this property, Galen, the celebrated Greek physician, called
+it "the philosopher's or wise man's herb."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The older historians make frequent mention of salad plants and salads.
+In the biblical narrative Moses wrote: "And the children of Israel wept
+again and said, We remember the fish which we did eat in Egypt freely;
+the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks, and the onions, and the
+garlick."</p>
+
+<p>In his second Eclogue, Virgil represents a rustic maid, Thestylis,
+preparing for the reapers a salad called <i>moretum</i>. He wrote, also, a
+poem bearing this title, in which he describes the composition and
+preparation of the dish.</p>
+
+<p>A modern authority says, "Salads refresh without exciting and make
+people younger." Whether this be strictly true or not may be an open
+question, but certainly in the assertion a grain of truth is visible;
+for it is a well-known fact that "salad plants are better tonics and
+blood purifiers than druggists' compounds." There is, also, an old
+proverb: "Eat onions in May, and all the year after physicians may
+play." What is health but youth?</p>
+
+<p>Vegetables, fish and meats, "left over,"&mdash;all may be transformed, by
+artistic treatment, into salads delectable to the eye and taste.
+Potatoes are subject to endless combinations. First of all in this
+connection, before dressing the potatoes allow them to stand in
+bouillon, meat broth, or even in the liquor in which corned beef has
+been cooked; then drain carefully before adding the oil and other
+seasonings.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Of uncooked vegetables, cabbage lettuce&mdash;called long ago by the Greek
+physician, Galen, the philosopher's or wise man's herb&mdash;stands at the
+head of salad plants. Like all uncooked vegetables, lettuce must be
+served fresh and crisp, and the more quickly it is grown the more tender
+it will be. When dressed for the table, each leaf should glisten with
+oil, yet no perceptible quantity should fall to the salad-bowl.
+Watercress, being rich in sulphuretted oil, is often served without oil.
+Cheese or eggs combine well with cress; and such a salad, with a
+sandwich of coarse bread and butter, together with a cup of sparkling
+coffee, forms an ideal luncheon for a picnic or for the home piazza.
+Indeed, all the compound salads,&mdash;that is, salads of many
+ingredients,&mdash;more particularly if they are served with a cooked or
+mayonnaise dressing, are substantial enough for the chief dish of a
+hearty meal. Their digestibility depends, in large measure, on the
+tenderness of the different ingredients, as well as upon the freshness
+of the uncooked vegetables that enter into their composition.</p>
+
+<p>A salad has this superiority over every other production of the culinary
+art: A salad (but not every salad) is suitable to serve upon any
+occasion, or to any class or condition of men. Among <i>bon vivants</i>,
+without a <i>new</i> salad, no matter how <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'recherche'"><i>recherch&eacute;</i></ins> the other courses may
+be, the luncheon, or dinner party, of to-day does not pass as an
+unqualified success.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>While salads may be compounded of all kinds of delicate meats, fish,
+shellfish, eggs, nuts, fruit, cheese and vegetables, cooked or uncooked,
+two things are indispensable to every kind and grade of salad, viz., the
+foundation of vegetables and the dressing.</p>
+<h3><br /><br />The Dressing.</h3>
+
+<p>Salads are dressed with oil, acid and condiments; and, sometimes, a
+sweet, as honey or sugar, is used. A perfect salad is not necessarily
+acetic. The presence of vinegar in a dressing, like that of onions and
+its relatives, on most occasions should be suspected only. Wyvern and
+other true epicures consider the advice of Sydney Smith, as expressed in
+the following couplet, "most pernicious":&mdash;</p>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Four times">
+<tr><td align='center'>"Four times the spoon with oil of Lucca crown,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: .5em;">And twice with vinegar procured from town."</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>Aromatic vinegars, a few drops of which, used occasionally, lend
+piquancy and variety to an every-day salad, can be purchased at
+high-class provision stores; but the true salad-maker is an artist, and
+prefers to compound her own colors (<i>i.e.</i>, vinegars); therefore we have
+given several recipes for the same, which may be easily modified to suit
+individual tastes.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, the dressing of a salad, though in the early days of the century
+considered a special art,&mdash;an art that rendered it possible for at least
+one noted Royalist refugee to amass a considerable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span> fortune,&mdash;is
+entirely a matter of individual taste, or, more properly speaking, of
+cultivation. On this account, particularly for a French dressing, no set
+rules can be given. By experience and judgment one must decide upon the
+proportions of the different ingredients, or, more specifically, upon
+the proportions of the oil and acid to be used. Often four spoonfuls of
+oil are used to one of vinegar. Four spoonfuls of oil to two, three or
+four of vinegar may be the proportion preferred by others, and the
+quantity may vary for different salads.</p>
+
+<p>Though in many of the recipes explicit quantities of oil, vinegar and
+condiments are given, it is with the understanding that these quantities
+are indicated simply as an approximate rule; sometimes less and
+sometimes more will be required, according to the tendency of the
+article dressed to absorb oil and acid, or the taste of the salad
+dresser.</p>
+<h3><br /><br />Use of Dressings.</h3>
+
+<p>The dressings in most common use are the French and the mayonnaise. A
+French dressing is used for green vegetables, for fruit and nuts, and to
+marinate cooked vegetables, or the meat or fish for a meat or fish
+salad. Mayonnaise dressing is used for meat, fish, some varieties of
+fruit, as banana, apple and pineapple, and for some vegetables, as
+cauliflower, asparagus and tomatoes. Any article to be served with
+mayonnaise, after standing an hour or more in a marinade,&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>,
+French dressing,&mdash;should be carefully drained, as,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span> by the pickling
+process, liquid will drain out into the bottom of the vessel and, mixing
+with the mayonnaise, will liquefy the same.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Arrangement of Salads.</h3>
+
+<p>In the arrangement of salads there may be great display of taste and
+individuality. By a judicious selection from materials that may be kept
+constantly in store, and with one or two window boxes, in which herbs
+are growing, any one, with a modicum of inventive skill, can so change
+and modify the appearance and flavor of her salads that she may seem
+always to present a new one.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Composition of Mayonnaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Mayonnaise dressing is composed largely of olive oil. A small amount of
+yolk of egg is used as a foundation. The oil, with the addition of
+condiments, is slightly acidulated with vinegar and lemon juice, one or
+both, and the whole is made very light and thick by beating. Mayonnaise
+forms a very handsome dressing, and it is much enjoyed by those who are
+fond of oil.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Value of Oil.</h3>
+
+<p>Pure olive oil is almost entirely without flavor, and a taste for it can
+be readily acquired; and, when we consider that it contains all the
+really desirable qualities of the once-famous cod-liver oil, except the
+phosphates, and that these may be supplied in the other materials of the
+salad, it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span> would seem wise to cultivate a taste for so wholesome an
+article. By the addition of cream, in the proportion of a cup of whipped
+cream to a pint of dressing, those to whom oil has not become agreeable
+can so modify its "tone" that they too will enjoy the mayonnaise
+dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Boiled and Cream Dressings.</h3>
+
+<p>For the French and mayonnaise dressings&mdash;particularly for the latter&mdash;we
+sometimes substitute a <i>boiled</i> and sometimes a <i>cream</i> dressing. In the
+first, butter, or cream, is substituted for oil, and the materials are
+combined by cooking. In the latter, as the name implies, cream is the
+basis, and this may be either sweet or sour.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Important Points in Salad=Making.</h3>
+
+<p>(1) The green vegetables should be served fresh and crisp.</p>
+
+<p>(2) Meat and fish should be well marinated and cold.</p>
+
+<p>(3) The ingredients composing the salad should not be combined until the
+last moment before serving.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />When to Serve Salads with French or Mayonnaise Dressing.</h3>
+
+<p>As a rule, subject, however, to exceptions, light vegetable salads,
+dressed with French dressing, are served at dinner; while heavy meat or
+fish Salads are reserved for luncheon, or supper, and are served with
+mayonnaise or cream dressing.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />When to Serve a Fruit Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>A fruit salad, with sweet dressing, is served with cake at a luncheon,
+or supper, or in the evening; that is, it may take the place of fruit in
+the dessert course. A fruit salad, with French or mayonnaise dressing,
+may be served as a first course at luncheon, or with the game or roast,
+though in the latter case the French dressing is preferable.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salads with Cheese.</h3>
+
+<p>The rightful place of salads is with the roast or game. Here the crisp,
+green salad herbs, delicately acidulated, complement and correct the
+richness of these <i>plats</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally when the game is omitted and an acid sauce accompanies the
+roast, a simple salad combined with cheese in some form, preferably
+cooked and hot, is selected to lengthen the menu. This same combination
+of hot cheese dish and salad should be a favorite one for home
+luncheons, when this meal is not made the children's dinner. The salad
+too in this combination, aided by the bread accompanying it, corrects by
+dilution the over concentration and richness of the cheese dish. In
+England neatly trimmed-and-cleansed celery stalks and cheese often
+precede the sweet course; but by virtue of its mission as a digester of
+everything but itself and of the common disinclination to have the taste
+of sweets linger upon the palate, the place of cheese as cheese is with
+the coffee.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>HOW TO MAKE AROMATIC VINEGARS, TO KEEP VEGETABLES AND TO PREPARE
+GARNISHES.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Boil Eggs Hard for Garnishing.</h3>
+
+<p>Cover the eggs with boiling water. Set them on the back of the range,
+where the water will keep hot without boiling, about forty minutes. Cool
+in cold water, and with a thin, sharp knife cut as desired.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />To Poach Whites of Eggs.</h3>
+
+<p>Turn the whites of the eggs into a well-buttered mould or cup, set upon
+a trivet in a dish of hot water, and cook until firm, either upon the
+back of the range or in the oven, and without letting the water boil.
+Turn from the mould, cut into slices, and then into fanciful shapes; or
+chop fine.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Royal Custard for Moulds of Aspic.</h3>
+
+<p>Beat together one whole egg and three yolks; add one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of mace, salt and paprica, and, when well mixed, add
+half a cup of cream. Bake in a buttered mould, set in a pan of water,
+until firm. When cold cut in thin slices,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span> then stamp out in fanciful
+shapes with French cutters. Use in decorating a mould for aspic jelly.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Use Garlic or Onion in Salads.</h3>
+
+<p>The salad-bowl may be rubbed with the cut surface of a clove of garlic,
+or a <i>chapon</i> may be used. A <i>chapon</i>, according to gastronomic usage,
+is a thin piece of bread rubbed on all sides with the cut surface of a
+clove of garlic and put into the salad-bowl before the seasonings. It is
+tossed with the salad and dressings, to which it imparts its flavor. It
+may be divided and served with the salad. Oftentimes, instead of one
+piece, several small cubes of bread are thus used.</p>
+
+<p>After a slice of onion has been removed, the cut surface of the onion
+may be pressed with a rotary motion against a grater and the juice
+extracted; or a lemon-squeezer kept for this special purpose may be
+used.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Shell and Blanch Chestnuts.</h3>
+
+<p>Score the shell of each nut, and put into a frying-pan with a
+teaspoonful of butter for each pint of nuts. Shake the pan over the fire
+until the butter is melted; then set in the oven five minutes. With a
+sharp knife remove the shells and skins together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Blanch Walnuts and Almonds.</h3>
+
+<p>Put the nut meats over the fire in cold water, bring quickly to the
+boiling-point, drain, and rinse<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span> with cold water, then the skins may be
+easily rubbed from the almonds; a small pointed knife will be needed for
+the walnuts.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Chop Fresh Herbs.</h3>
+
+<p>Pluck the leaves close, discarding the stems; gather the leaves together
+closely with the fingers of the left hand, then with a sharp knife cut
+through close to the fingers; push the leaves out a little and cut
+again, and so continue until all are cut. Now gather into a mound and
+chop to a very fine powder, holding the point of the knife close to the
+board. Put the chopped herb into a cheese-cloth and hold under a stream
+of cold water, then wring dry. Use this green powder for dusting over a
+salad when required.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Cut Radishes for a Garnish.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut a thin slice from the leaf end of each; cut off the root end so as
+to leave it the length of the pistil of a flower. With a small, sharp
+knife score the pink skin, at the root end, into five or six sections
+extending half-way down the radish; then loosen the skin above these
+sections. Put the radishes in cold water for a little time, when they
+will become crisp, and the points will stand out like the petals of a
+flower.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Clean Lettuce, Endive, Etc.</h3>
+
+<p>A short time before serving cut off the roots and freshen the vegetable
+in cold water. Then break<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span> the leaves from the stalk; dip repeatedly
+into cold water, examining carefully, until perfectly clean, taking care
+not to crush the leaves. Put into a French wire basket made for the
+purpose, or into a piece of mosquito netting or cheese-cloth, and shake
+gently until the water is removed. Then spread on a plate or in a
+colander and set in a cool place until the moment for serving.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Clean Cress.</h3>
+
+<p>Pick over the stalks so as to remove grass, etc. Wash and dry in the
+same manner as the lettuce, but without removing the leaves from the
+stems, except when the stems are very coarse and large.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Clean Cabbage and Cauliflower.</h3>
+
+<p>Let stand head downwards half an hour in cold salted water, using a
+tablespoonful of salt to a quart of water.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Render Uncooked Vegetables Crisp.</h3>
+
+<p>Put into cold water with a bit of ice and a slice of lemon. When ready
+to use, dry between folds of cheese-cloth and let stand exposed to the
+air a few moments.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Blanch and Cook Vegetables for Salads.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the vegetables as desired, in cubes, lozenges, balls, <i>juliennes</i>,
+etc. Put over the fire in boiling water, and, after cooking three or
+four minutes,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span> drain, rinse in cold water, and put on to cook in boiling
+salted water to cover. Drain as soon as tender.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Cut Gherkins for a Garnish.</h3>
+
+<p>Select small cucumber pickles of uniform size. With a sharp knife cut
+them, lengthwise, into slices thin as paper, without detaching the
+slices at one end; then spread out the slices as a fan is spread.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Fringe Celery.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the stalks into pieces about two inches in length. Beginning on the
+round side at one end, with a thin, sharp knife, cut down half an inch
+as many times as possible; then turn the stalk half-way around and cut
+in the opposite direction, thus dividing the end into shreds, or a
+fringe. If desired, cut the opposite end in the same manner. Set aside
+in a pan of ice water containing a slice of lemon.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Shred Romaine and Straight Lettuce.</h3>
+
+<p>Wash the lettuce leaves carefully, without removing them from the stalk;
+shake in the open air, and they will dry very quickly; fold in the
+middle, crosswise, and cut through in the fold. Hold the two pieces, one
+above the other, close to the meat-board with the left hand, and with a
+sharp knife cut in narrow ribbons not more than a quarter of an inch
+wide.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Keep Celery, Watercress, Lettuce, Etc.</h3>
+
+<p>Many green vegetables&mdash;celery in particular&mdash;discolor or rust, if
+allowed to stand longer than a few hours after being wet. When brought
+from the market they may be put aside, in a tightly closed pail, or in a
+paper bag, in a cool, dry place. By thus excluding the air they will
+keep fresh several days. A short time before serving put them into
+ice-cold water to which a slice or two of lemon has been added.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Cook Sweetbreads and Brains.</h3>
+
+<p>Remove the thin outer skin or membrane and soak in cold water, changing
+the water often, an hour or more. Cover with salted boiling water,
+acidulated with lemon juice and flavored with vegetables, and cook, just
+below the boiling-point, twenty minutes. They are then ready for
+preparation in any of the ways mentioned. Tie the brains in a cloth
+before cooking.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Pickle Nasturtium Seeds.</h3>
+
+<p>As the seeds are gathered wash and dry them; then put them into vinegar
+to which salt (half a teaspoonful to a pint) has been added. When a
+sufficient quantity has been collected, scald fresh vinegar, add salt as
+before, and the seeds from which the first vinegar has been drained.
+Pour scalding hot into bottles, having the seeds completely covered with
+vinegar.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Nasturtium Vinegar.</h3>
+
+<p>Fill a quart jar loosely with nasturtium blossoms fully blown; add a
+shallot and one-third a clove of garlic, both finely chopped, half a red
+pepper, and cold cider vinegar to fill the jar; cover closely and set
+aside two months. Dissolve a teaspoonful of salt in the vinegar, then
+strain and filter.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tarragon Vinegar.</h3>
+
+<p>Fill a fruit jar with fresh tarragon leaves or shoots, putting them in
+loosely; add the thin <i>yellow</i> paring of half a lemon with two or three
+cloves, and fill the jar with white wine or cider vinegar. Screw down
+the cover tightly, and allow the jar to stand in the sun two weeks;
+strain the vinegar through a cloth, pressing out the liquid from the
+leaves; then pass through filter paper, and bottle for future use. If a
+quantity be prepared, it were better to seal the bottles.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fines Herbes Vinegar.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 cups of tarragon vinegar.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of garden cress, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of sweet marjoram, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 2 cloves of garlic, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 4 small green capsicums, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 2 shallots, chopped fine.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Mix the ingredients in a pint fruit jar, cover closely, and
+set in the sun; after two weeks strain, pass through filter paper and
+store in tightly corked bottles.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a name="tender_lettuce" id="tender_lettuce"></a>
+<img src="images/tender_lettuce.jpg" width="400" height="223" alt="&quot;The tender lettuce brings on softer sleep.&quot;&mdash;W. King, Art of Cookery." title="&quot;The tender lettuce brings on softer sleep.&quot;&mdash;W. King, Art of Cookery." />
+<span class="caption">&quot;The tender lettuce brings on softer sleep.&quot;&mdash;W. King, Art of Cookery.</span>
+</div>
+<h3><br /><br />Fines Herbes Vinegar, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pint of tarragon vinegar.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of seeds of garden cress, bruised or crushed.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of celery seeds, crushed.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of parsley seeds, crushed.</li>
+<li> 4 capsicums, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 2 cloves of garlic, chopped fine.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Prepare as in preceding recipe.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />To Decorate Salads with Mayonnaise by Use of Pastry Bag and Tubes.</h3>
+
+<p>Make the dressing very thick by the addition of oil, or use "jelly
+mayonnaise." Put the dressing into a pastry bag with star tube attached;
+twist the large end of the bag with the left hand, pressing the mixture
+towards the tube, and with the right guide the tube as in writing, to
+produce the pattern desired. To form stars, hold the bag in an upright
+position, point downward, press out a little of the dressing, then push
+the tube down gently, and raise it quickly to break the flow.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span><br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>SALAD DRESSINGS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Just as in nature">
+<tr><td align='left'>"Just, as in nature, thy proportions be,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: .5em;">As full of concord their variety."</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />French Dressing.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span><br /></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac12; a <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'teaspooonful'">teaspoonful</ins> of salt.</li>
+<li> A few grains of cayenne or paprica.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of pepper.</li>
+<li> 2 to 6 tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice.</li>
+<li> 6 tablespoonfuls of oil.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>If desired,&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of prepared mustard.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of onion juice, or rub the salad-bowl with slice of onion, or clove of garlic.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Mix the condiments, add the oil and mix again; then add the
+acid, a few drops at a time, and beat until an emulsion is formed; then
+pour over the vegetables, toss with the spoon and fork, and serve. In
+Chicago a method has obtained that is well worth a trial: Put a bit of
+ice into the bowl with the condiments, and, by means of a fork pressed
+against or into this, use in mixing.</p>
+
+<p><i>Second Method.</i>&mdash;Pour the oil over the vegetables, toss, until the oil
+is evenly distributed, and dust<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span> with salt and pepper; then add the acid
+and toss again. When the salad is prepared at the table, the vegetables
+may be dressed in a bowl, then arranged on the serving-dish; or, if but
+one vegetable is used, it is preferable to serve from the dish in which
+it is dressed.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />To Mix a Quantity of Dressing.</h3>
+
+<p>Put all the ingredients into a fruit jar, fit on one or more rubbers and
+the cover; then shake the jar vigorously, until a smooth dressing is
+formed.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Claret Dressing.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>For lettuce or fruit salad.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Mix half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper, white or paprica, and
+four tablespoonfuls of oil; add gradually one tablespoonful of claret
+and one tablespoonful of lemon juice or vinegar.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mayonnaise Dressing.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> The yolks of 2 raw eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of olive oil.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> A few grains of cayenne or paprica.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>If desired,&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 teaspoonful, each, of mustard and powdered sugar.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;An amateur will probably find it helpful to have all the
+utensils and ingredients thoroughly chilled, but the professional
+salad-maker thinks it expedient to have the ingredients and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span> utensils of
+the same temperature as the room in which the dressing is to be served.
+Beat the yolks with a small wooden spoon or silver fork, add the
+condiments and mix again; then add one teaspoonful of vinegar, and, when
+well mixed with the other ingredients, add the oil, at first drop by
+drop. When the mixture has become of good consistency the oil may be
+added faster. When it is too thick to beat well, add a little of the
+lemon juice, then more oil, and so on alternately, until the ingredients
+are used. If a very heavy dressing is desired, as when it is to be put
+on with forcing-bag and tubes for a garnish, an additional half a cup of
+oil may be added without increasing the quantity of acid.</p>
+
+<p>In preparing mayonnaise, there is absolutely no danger of curdling, if
+the eggs be fresh and the oil be added slowly, especially if the
+materials and utensils have been thoroughly chilled. If the yolks do not
+thicken when beaten with the condiments, but spread out over the bowl,
+you have sufficient indication that they will not thicken upon the
+addition of the oil, and it were better to select others and begin
+again. Take care to add the teaspoonful of acid to the yolks and
+condiments before beginning to drop in the oil, as this lessens the
+liability of the mixture to curdle.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Make Mayonnaise in Quantity.</h3>
+
+<p>If four quarts or more of dressing be required, make the full amount at
+one time; cut down the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span> number of yolks to one for each pint of oil, but
+keep the usual proportions of the other ingredients. Use a Dover
+egg-beater from the start; after a little a teaspoonful of oil can be
+added instead of drops, and, very soon, a much larger quantity.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Curdled Mayonnaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Occasionally a mayonnaise will assume a curdled appearance; under such
+circumstances, often the addition of a very little of white of egg or a
+few drops of lemon juice, with thorough beating, will cause the sauce to
+resume its former smoothness. In case it does not become smooth, put the
+yolk of an egg into a cold bowl, beat well, and add to it the curdled
+mixture, a little at a time.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Red Mayonnaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Mix a level teaspoonful of Italian tomato pulp with a teaspoonful of
+mayonnaise dressing, and when well blended beat very thoroughly into a
+cup or more of the dressing, or add dressing until the desired tint is
+attained.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Red Mayonnaise, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>For fish.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Pound dried lobster coral in a mortar, sift, and add gradually to the
+dressing, to secure the shade desired. Or, after the salad is arranged
+in the bowl, or in nests, mask the top with mayonnaise of the usual
+color, and sift the coral over the centre, leaving a ring of yellow
+around the edge.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sauce Tartare.</h3>
+
+<p>Make a mayonnaise dressing, using tarragon vinegar. To each cup of
+dressing add one shallot, chopped fine, two tablespoonfuls, each, of
+finely chopped capers, olives and cucumber pickles, one tablespoonful of
+chopped parsley, and one-fourth a teaspoonful of powdered tarragon.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sardine Mayonnaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Skin and bone three sardines and pound them to a pulp; sift the cooked
+yolks of three eggs and add to the pulp; work until smooth, then add to
+one cup of mayonnaise dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Jelly Mayonnaise.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Used for masking cold fish or salads, or as a garnish with forcing-bag
+and tube.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>To a cup of mayonnaise dressing beat in gradually from two
+tablespoonfuls to one-third a cup of chilled but liquid aspic. More
+seasoning may be needed. Apply to a cold surface, or chill before using
+with forcing-bag.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Livournaise Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>To a cup of mayonnaise dressing add a grating of nutmeg, one
+tablespoonful of chopped parsley and the pulp of eight anchovies.</p>
+
+<p>To prepare the anchovies, wash, dry, remove skin and bones and pound to
+a pulp in a mortar.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Boiled Dressing for Chicken Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac12; a cup of chicken stock, well reduced.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of vinegar.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of mixed mustard.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of paprica.</li>
+<li> Yolks of 5 eggs.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of oil.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of thick, sweet cream.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Simmer the liquor in which a fowl has been cooked, until it
+is well reduced. Put the stock, vinegar and mustard into a double
+boiler, and add the salt and pepper. Beat the yolks of the eggs and add
+carefully to the hot mixture, cooking in the same manner as a boiled
+custard. When cold and ready to serve, beat in with a whisk the oil, and
+then fold in the cream, beaten stiff with a Dover egg-beater. Melted
+butter, added before the dressing is cold, may be substituted for the
+oil.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Boiled Salad Dressing.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 teaspoonful of mustard.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of paprica.</li>
+<li> Yolks of 3 eggs.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of melted butter.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of thick cream.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Mix together the mustard, salt and paprica, and add the yolks
+of eggs; stir well and add slowly the butter, vinegar and lemon juice,
+and cook in the double boiler until thick as soft custard. When cool and
+ready to serve, add the cream, beaten stiff with the Dover egg-beater.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cream Salad Dressing.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac34; a cup of thick cream.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> A dash of white pepper and paprica.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Add the seasonings to the cream and beat with a Dover
+egg-beater until smooth and light. Add a scant fourth a cup of grated
+horseradish, for a change. The radish should be freshly grated, and
+added to the cream after it is beaten.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Dressing for Cole=Slaw.</h3>
+
+<p>Beat the yolks of three eggs with half a teaspoonful of made mustard, a
+dash of pepper and one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt; add one-third a cup
+of vinegar and two tablespoonfuls of butter, and cook over hot water
+until slightly thickened. Set aside to become cold before using.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Bacon Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>Heat five tablespoonfuls of bacon fat; cook in it two tablespoonfuls of
+flour and a dash of paprica; add five tablespoonfuls of vinegar and half
+a cup of water; stir until boiling; then beat in the beaten yolks of two
+eggs, and a little salt if necessary. Do not allow the sauce to boil
+after the eggs are added. Add to salad after it has become thoroughly
+cold. Good with dandelion, endive, chicory, corn salad or lettuce.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Hollandaise Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>Beat half a cup of butter to a cream; add the yolks of four eggs, one at
+a time, beating in each thoroughly; add one-fourth a teaspoonful of
+salt, a dash of paprica or cayenne, and half a cup of boiling water.
+Cook over hot water until thick, adding gradually the juice of half a
+lemon. Chill before using. This is good, especially for a fish salad, in
+the place of mayonnaise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Bernaise Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>Use tarragon instead of plain vinegar, omit the water, with the
+exception of one tablespoonful, and the hollandaise becomes bernaise
+sauce. Oil may be used in the place of butter. The sauce resembles a
+firm mayonnaise, and, as it keeps its shape well, is particularly
+adapted for garnishing with pastry bag and tube.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/cucumbersalad.jpg" width="200" height="117" alt="Cucumber Salad for Fish Course." title="Cucumber Salad for Fish Course." />
+<span class="caption">Cucumber Salad for Fish Course.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>(See <a href='#Page_36'>page 36</a>)</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/cooked_veg.jpg" width="300" height="168" alt="Cooked Vegetable Salad" title="Cooked Vegetable Salad" />
+<span class="caption">Cooked Vegetable Salad</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>(See <a href='#Page_37'>page 37</a>)</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VEGETABLE SALADS SERVED WITH FRENCH DRESSING.</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+"Bestrewed with lettuce and cool salad herbs."<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lettuce Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Wash and drain the lettuce leaves; toss lightly, so as to remove every
+drop of water. Sprinkle them with oil, a few drops at a time, tossing
+the leaves about with spoon and fork after each addition. When each leaf
+glistens with oil (there should be no oil in the bottom of the bowl)
+shake over them a few drops of vinegar, then dust with salt and freshly
+ground pepper. The cutting of lettuce is considered a culinary sin; but,
+when the straight-leaved lettuce, or the Romaine, is to be used, better
+effects, at least as far as appearance is concerned, will be produced,
+if the lettuce be cut into ribbons. To do this, wash the lettuce
+carefully, without removing the leaves from the stem; fold together
+across the centre, and with a sharp, thin knife cut into ribbons <i>less</i>
+than half an inch in width.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Endive Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare as lettuce salad, first rubbing over the bowl with a clove of
+garlic cut in halves. A few sprigs of chives, chopped fine, are
+exceedingly palatable, sprinkled over a lettuce, endive, string-bean, or
+other bean salad.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />A Few Combinations.</h3>
+
+<p>Dress each vegetable separately with the dressing; then arrange upon the
+serving-dish. Or, have the salad arranged upon the serving-dish and pour
+the dressing over all; then toss together and serve. About three
+tablespoonfuls of oil, with other ingredients in accordance, will be
+needed for one pint of vegetable.</p>
+
+<p>1. Lettuce, tomatoes cut in halves, sprinkled with powdered tarragon,
+and parsley or chives.</p>
+
+<p>2. Lettuce, moulded spinach and fine-chopped beets.</p>
+
+<p>3. Lettuce, Boston baked beans and chives.</p>
+
+<p>4. Lettuce and peppergrass.</p>
+
+<p>5. Lettuce, shredded sweet peppers or pimentos, and sliced pecan nuts or
+almonds.</p>
+
+<p>6. Lettuce, tomatoes stuffed with peas or string beans cut small, and
+chives chopped fine.</p>
+
+<p>7. Lettuce, asparagus tips and sliced radishes. Arrange the lettuce at
+the edge of dish, inside a ring of radishes sliced thin, without
+removing the red skins; centre of asparagus tips, with radish cut to
+resemble a flower.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>8. Lettuce, shredded tomatoes and shredded green peppers.</p>
+
+<p>9. Shredded lettuce, English walnuts, and almonds or cooked chestnuts,
+sliced.</p>
+
+<p>10. Lettuce, Neufchatel cheese in slices and shredded pimentos.</p>
+
+<p>11. Lettuce, cauliflower, string beans and shredded pimentos.</p>
+
+<p>12. Lettuce or cress, artichoke slices and powdered tarragon.</p>
+
+<p>13. Shredded cabbage and shredded green peppers.</p>
+
+<p>14. Cauliflower broken into flowerets, string beans cut into small
+pieces, and beets cut in fancy shapes or chopped. Arrange each vegetable
+in a mass by itself; surround with lettuce.</p>
+
+<p>15. Cucumbers and new onions, sliced.</p>
+
+<p>16. Watercress, diced boiled beets, and olives in centre.</p>
+
+<p>17. Lettuce, Brussels sprouts and chopped pepper.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lentil Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Soak the lentils over night; wash and rinse thoroughly, then cook until
+tender, adding hot water as needed. Drain, and when cold mix with each
+pint of lentils about five tablespoonfuls of oil, two tablespoonfuls of
+tarragon vinegar and one teaspoonful, each, of capers, parsley, chives
+and cucumber pickles, all, save the capers, chopped fine. Serve in a
+mound, on a bed of lettuce leaves.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span> Garnish with heart leaves of lettuce
+at the top and sections of tomato, or diamonds of tomato jelly, at the
+base.</p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/potato_balls.jpg" width="300" height="179" alt="Potato Balls, Pecan Meats, and Cress Salad." title="Potato Balls, Pecan Meats, and Cress Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Potato Balls, Pecan Meats, and Cress Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/potato_nasturgium.jpg" width="300" height="210" alt="Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad." title="Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad.</span>
+</div>
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_34'>page 34</a></div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />White=Bean Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Toss one pint of white beans, cooked, with one tablespoonful of vinegar
+and three tablespoonfuls of oil, a little salt and a dash of cayenne or
+paprica. Arrange in a mound on a bed of shredded lettuce, and sprinkle
+with chives, parsley and pimentos, all finely chopped. Finish the top of
+the salad with a large pim-ola.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Potato Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Miss Cohen.</span>)<br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 3 cups of cold boiled potatoes, cut in cubes.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of pecan nuts, broken in pieces.</li>
+<li> 5 tablespoonfuls of oil.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of onion juice.</li>
+<li> A dash of cayenne.</li>
+<li> 2 or 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.</li>
+<li> Watercress.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Mix the potatoes and nuts, add the oil and mix again; add the
+other seasonings, and, when well mixed, set aside in a cool place an
+hour or more. Remove the coarse stalks from two bunches of watercress
+that have been well washed and dried. Season with French dressing and
+arrange in a wreath about the edge of the salad.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Potato Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Carrie M. Dearborn.</span>)<br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 12 cold boiled potatoes.</li>
+<li> 4 cooked eggs.</li>
+<li> 2 small Bermuda onions.</li>
+<li> Chopped parsley.</li>
+<li> 1 saltspoonful of white pepper.</li>
+<li> 2 teaspoonfuls of salt.</li>
+<li> 6 tablespoonfuls, each, of oil and vinegar.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of powdered sugar.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cut the potatoes into dice and chop the eggs fine. Chop the
+onions, or slice them very thin. Sprinkle the potatoes, eggs and onions
+with the salt and pepper, and mix thoroughly. Pour the oil gradually
+over the mixture, stirring and tossing continually; lastly, mix with the
+other ingredients the vinegar, in which the sugar has been dissolved.
+Sprinkle chopped parsley over the top.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Potato Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 quart of cubes of cold boiled potatoes.</li>
+<li> 1&frac12; teaspoonfuls of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of paprica.</li>
+<li> 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of oil.</li>
+<li> Capers, beets, whites and yolks of eggs, and lettuce.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;To the potato cubes add the salt, pepper and oil, and mix
+thoroughly; add the vinegar and mix again. Pile the cubes in a mound in
+the salad-bowl. Mark out the surface of the mound into quarters with
+capers; fill in two opposite sections with chopped beet; use chopped
+whites of eggs in a third, and sifted yolks of eggs in the fourth
+section. Finish with a border of parsley.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Potato=and=Nasturtium Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">E. J. McKenzie.</span>)<br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 quart of potatoes, cut in cubes.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of chopped gherkins.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of tender nasturtium shoots, cut in bits.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of pickled nasturtium seeds.</li>
+<li> Onion juice or garlic.</li>
+<li> 6 tablespoonfuls of oil.</li>
+<li> 5 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.</li>
+<li> Salt and pepper.</li>
+<li> Chopped parsley.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Mix the potatoes, gherkins, nasturtium shoots and seeds in a
+bowl rubbed over with garlic; add the oil, vinegar and seasonings, and
+mix again. Pile in a mound on a serving-dish, dust with chopped parsley,
+and garnish with a wreath of nasturtium blossoms and leaves.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Stuffed Beets.</h3>
+
+<p>Boil new beets, of even size, until tender. Set aside for some hours, or
+over night, covered with vinegar. When ready to serve, rub off the skin,
+scoop out the centre of each to form a cup, and arrange the cups on
+lettuce leaves. For each five cups chop fine a cucumber. Make a French
+dressing of two tablespoonfuls of oil, half a tablespoonful (scant) of
+vinegar, one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of paprica and salt. Stir the
+dressing into the cucumber and fill the beets with the mixture. Of the
+beet removed to form the cups, cut slices and stamp out from these stars
+or other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span> fanciful shapes, and use to decorate the top of each cup.</p>
+
+<p>Chopped radish, cress, olives or celery are all admissible for a
+filling.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salad of Brussels Sprouts and Beets.</h3>
+
+<p>Soak the sprouts in salted water; then drain and cook in salted boiling
+water about fifteen minutes, or until tender; drain and cool. Dress with
+French dressing and pile in a mound. Finish the top with a
+fanciful-shaped figure cut from a slice of pickled beet, and place a
+wreath of cooked beet, chopped and seasoned with French dressing, about
+the whole.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Macedoine Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut pieces of carrot and turnip one inch long and half an inch thick.
+Put over the fire in boiling water and bring quickly to the
+boiling-point; drain, cover with fresh water, and cook until tender;
+score the top of each piece and insert an asparagus point. Dip the
+pieces in a little melted gelatine and set alternately in a circle on
+the serving-dish. Have carrots cut in small cubes or straws, turnips and
+beet root the same, green string beans cut in small pieces, asparagus
+and peas, all cooked separately until tender. Mix with French dressing
+and dispose inside the circle. Each vegetable may be massed by itself,
+or all may be mixed together. Finish the top with half a dozen short
+stalks of asparagus.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomato=and=Onion Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Peel and shred four tomatoes; slice thinly a very mild onion and
+separate into rings; dress freely with oil and tarragon vinegar, and
+season with salt and pepper. Serve on lettuce leaves, sprinkling the
+whole with fine-chopped parsley and green peppers.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Endive,=Tomato=and=Green=String=Bean Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Dress the well-blanched stalks of a head of endive, three tomatoes,
+peeled, cut in halves and chilled, and a cup of cold cooked string
+beans, separately, with French dressing, using in the dressing tarragon
+vinegar and a few drops of onion juice; then arrange on a serving-dish.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/endive_tomato.jpg" width="300" height="225" alt="Endive, Tomato, and Green String Bean Salad." title="Endive, Tomato, and Green String Bean Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Endive, Tomato, and Green String Bean Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/stuffed_beets.jpg" width="300" height="177" alt="Stuffed Beets." title="Stuffed Beets." />
+<span class="caption">Stuffed Beets.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_34'>page 34</a></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cucumber Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>German style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Pare large cucumbers and cut them into thin slices; cut each slice round
+and round so as to form a long, narrow curling strip. Let these strips
+stand two hours in salted ice water, drain, and dry in a soft cloth.
+Serve with French dressing. Toss first in the oil, then add the
+condiments, and lastly the vinegar. Americans would prefer to omit the
+salt from the ice water, as it softens the cucumber.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cucumber Salad for Fish Course.</h3>
+
+<p>With a handy slicer remove the outside rind from the cucumbers, cut in
+thin slices, and let<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span> stand in ice-water to chill. Wipe dry, and
+arrange the slices in the salad bowl in the form of a Greek cross. Make
+a French dressing, in the proportion of three tablespoonfuls of cider
+vinegar to six tablespoonfuls of oil, half a teaspoonful of salt, and a
+dash of paprica. Rub the inside of the salad bowl with the cut side of
+an onion before the salad is disposed in it.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cooked Vegetable Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Dress cooked kidney beans, peas, and balls cut from potatoes, each
+separately with French dressing, to which a few drops of onion juice
+have been added. Dispose upon a serving-dish and let stand in a cool
+place an hour or more. Garnish at serving with heart leaves of lettuce.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Potato Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>German Style.</i>)<br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 quart of potato slices or cubes.</li>
+<li> About &frac12; a cup of beef broth.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of paprica.</li>
+<li> 8 tablespoonfuls of oil.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of grated onion.</li>
+<li> 2 hard boiled eggs.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of mustard.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of sugar.</li>
+<li> Fine chopped parsley.</li>
+<li> (1 cup of mushrooms.)</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Boil the potatoes without paring. German potatoes, which are
+waxy rather than mealy, may be procured in large cities especially for
+salads. Peel the potatoes and cut them while hot into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span> slices or cubes;
+pour over them as much beef broth as they will readily absorb and
+sprinkle with the salt and pepper, the oil and onion; mix lightly and
+set aside for some hours. Then add the whites of the eggs chopped fine,
+the yolks passed through a sieve, and mix with the rest of the oil,
+stirred with the vinegar into the mustard and sugar. After disposing in
+the dish, sprinkle with the parsley. If mushrooms be at hand, simmer ten
+or fifteen minutes in broth, break in pieces, and add to the salad with
+the egg.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>SALADS, LARGELY VEGETABLE, SERVED WITH MAYONNAISE, CREAM OR BOILED DRESSING.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cauliflower Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Soak the cauliflower in salted water an hour; cook in boiling salted
+water until tender; drain and chill, then sprinkle with French dressing
+and set aside for half an hour. Sever the flowerets partly from the
+stalk, but so as not to change their relative positions, and place on a
+serving-dish; put heart leaves of lettuce between the flowerets and
+about the base of the vegetable; pour a cup of mayonnaise dressing over
+the whole, and sprinkle with pimentos or fine-chopped parsley. In
+serving, separate the flowerets with a sharp knife.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomatoes Stuffed with Nuts and Celery.</h3>
+
+<p>Peel the tomatoes; cut out a circular piece at the stem end of each and
+scoop out the flesh so as to form cups. Chill thoroughly, then fill with
+English walnut or pecan meats, broken into pieces, and celery, cut into
+small pieces and mixed with mayonnaise. Serve on lettuce leaves.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Stuffed=Tomato Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 6 smooth, small-sized tomatoes.</li>
+<li> 6 tablespoonfuls of chicken, veal or tongue, cut fine.</li>
+<li> 6 tablespoonfuls of peas.</li>
+<li> 3 olives, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 3 gherkins, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of capers.</li>
+<li> Salt and pepper.</li>
+<li> Mayonnaise dressing.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Remove a round piece from the stem end of the tomatoes and
+scoop out the seeds and centre. Chill thoroughly. When ready to serve,
+mix together the solid part removed from the tomatoes, cut fine, and the
+other ingredients; season to taste with salt and pepper, adding also
+mayonnaise to hold the mixture together. With this fill the tomatoes,
+put them in nests of lettuce or cress, and force a star of mayonnaise on
+the top of each tomato.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomato Salad, Horseradish Dressing.</h3>
+
+<p>Plunge the tomatoes, placed in a wire basket, into a kettle of hot
+water; remove at once and rub off the skin; chill thoroughly and cut in
+halves. Serve on lettuce leaves with a star of cream dressing, seasoned
+with grated horseradish, on the top of each slice.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomato=and=Sweetbread Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook two sweetbreads as directed on another page, or braise with
+vegetables. Cool between two plates bearing a weight. When cold cut into
+slices and stamp into rounds of suitable size to use with slices of
+tomato. Cover the slices of sweet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>bread with chaud-froid sauce and
+decorate with fine-chopped parsley or sifted yolk of egg; pour over a
+little melted aspic. When the aspic is set, trim neatly, and arrange
+each round of sweetbread on a slice of chilled tomato. Serve inside a
+border of lettuce around a salad made of the trimmings of the
+sweetbreads and a cucumber cut in cubes and dressed with mayonnaise.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/cress_cucumber.jpg" width="300" height="176" alt="Cress, Cucumber, and Tomato Salad." title="Cress, Cucumber, and Tomato Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Cress, Cucumber, and Tomato Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_41'>page 41</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/tomato_jelly.jpg" width="300" height="160" alt="Tomato Jelly with Celery and Nuts." title="Tomato Jelly with Celery and Nuts." />
+<span class="caption">Tomato Jelly with Celery and Nuts.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_43'>page 43</a></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cress,=Cucumber=and=Tomato Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Wash the cress and shake dry; arrange as a bed on a serving-dish,
+discarding the coarse stems; above this make a smaller bed of cucumbers,
+cut in slices or dice and dressed with French dressing, using three
+tablespoonfuls of oil and one of vinegar or lemon juice to a pint of
+cucumber. Arrange peeled tomatoes, chilled and cut in pieces, upon the
+cucumbers. Serve with French, cream or mayonnaise dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomatoes Stuffed with Cucumber.</h3>
+
+<p>Peel five tomatoes, cut off the stem ends and scoop out the pulp, thus
+forming cups; set, turned upside down, in a cool place. Chop fine the
+solid pulp from the tomatoes and one cucumber, chilled before chopping;
+stir into a cup of cream dressing and fill the tomatoes with the
+mixture. Salt and pepper will be needed in addition to that in the
+dressing. If at hand, a pimento may be chopped with the other
+ingredients, or two tablespoonfuls<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span> of grated horseradish may be used.
+Serve at once on lettuce leaves.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomatoes Stuffed with Jelly.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop one sweetbread and one cucumber fine. To each cup (solid and
+liquid) add one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprica, a few
+drops of onion juice and a tablespoonful of capers; add also half a
+tablespoonful of granulated gelatine, soaked in two or three
+tablespoonfuls of cold water and melted over hot water. Stir until the
+mixture begins to congeal, then fill into tomatoes prepared as above.
+Set aside on the ice for half an hour, at least; then serve on lettuce
+leaves with either mayonnaise, boiled or cream dressing. Calf's brains,
+chicken, veal, tongue or ham may be substituted for the sweetbread.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br /><ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Tomates'">Tomatoes</ins> Farces &agrave; l'Aspic.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 6 even-sized ripe tomatoes.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of aspic jelly.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of lobster meat, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of capers.</li>
+<li> 2 yolks of hard-boiled eggs.</li>
+<li> Mayonnaise, parsley, lettuce.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Scoop out the centres of the tomatoes, after removing the
+skin, and chill thoroughly. Pass the yolks through a sieve, add to the
+lobster, with the capers, half a cup of mayonnaise and half a cup of
+chicken aspic, thick and cold, but not set; stir these in a dish
+standing in ice water until nearly set; then fill the cavities in the
+tomatoes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span> with the mixture. Brush over the outside of the tomatoes with
+half-set aspic; when the aspic is set, repeat twice, then set aside on
+ice for some time before serving. Serve on a bed of lettuce seasoned
+with French dressing. Garnish each tomato with a sprig of parsley and
+the salad-dish with blocks of aspic. Anchovies or any cooked fish may be
+substituted for the lobster. Serve with mayonnaise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomato Jelly.</h3>
+
+<p>Soak three-fourths a box of gelatine in half a cup of cold water. Cook a
+can of tomatoes, half an onion, a stalk of celery, a bay leaf, two
+cloves, a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica ten minutes. Add two
+tablespoonfuls of tarragon vinegar and the gelatine, stir till
+dissolved, strain, and mould in a ring mould. When cold turn from the
+mould and fill the centre with</p>
+
+
+<h4><br /><br />CELERY=AND=NUT SALAD.</h4>
+
+<p>Cut fine tender stalks of celery and English walnuts and mix with French
+dressing. Garnish the centre of the salad and the border of the jelly
+with tender leaves of lettuce and bits of curled celery.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomato=Jelly Salad, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Make the jelly and mould as before. Fill in the centre of the ring with
+shredded cabbage, pimentos and pecan nuts, mixed with boiled dressing.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomato Jelly with String Beans.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook tiny string beans until tender in boiling salted water; season
+while hot with onion juice, salt, pepper and tarragon vinegar. When cold
+add oil and toss the beans about until each bean is coated with the oil.
+Fill the centre of the jelly, fashioned in a ring mould, with the beans,
+and sprinkle over them a fine-chopped pimento. Garnish with lettuce
+leaves. Fine-chopped chives may be used in the place of the onion juice;
+they are particularly appropriate in any bean salad. If the beans are
+large, cut in halves lengthwise and the halves crosswise.</p>
+
+<p>Tomato jelly may be served in a ring mould with turkey, oyster, plain
+chicken, French chicken, and other salads. The oysters should be scalded
+and drained, then marinated with French dressing. Chicken and turkey
+should also be marinated before mixing with celery and the mayonnaise or
+boiled dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomato=and=Artichoke Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Mrs. E. M. Lucas, in Boston Cooking-School Magazine.</span>)</div>
+
+<p>Choose medium-sized tomatoes, firm and smooth skinned. Peel them, cut a
+slice from the stem end and remove the seeds with a small spoon.
+Sprinkle the interior of these cups with salt and set on ice. When ready
+to serve, wipe them dry and fill with artichokes cut into dice and mixed
+with mayonnaise. Serve on lettuce leaves. Use tarragon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span> vinegar in
+preparing the dressing. Cook the artichoke hearts until just tender,&mdash;no
+longer,&mdash;in salted boiling water, then drain and cool.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Artichoke Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>For game.</i>)<br />
+<br />
+(<span class="smcap">Mrs. E. M. Lucas, in Boston Cooking-School Magazine.</span>)</div>
+
+<p>Peel three oranges, remove the pith and white skin and slice lengthwise;
+use an equal amount of tender blanched celery stalks cut into inch
+lengths. Mix together lightly with two tablespoonfuls of olive oil, one
+tablespoonful of lemon juice, half a teaspoonful of salt and a quarter a
+teaspoonful of paprica. Heap together lightly on a serving-dish and
+surround with cooked hearts of artichokes cut into quarters; wreathe
+with blanched celery leaves.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Artichoke Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Used as a border for shrimp, lobster, chicken and other salads.</i>)<br />
+<br />
+(<span class="smcap">Mrs. E. M. Lucas, in Boston Cooking-School Magazine.</span>)</div>
+
+<p>Cut boiled artichokes into quarter-inch slices and stamp out with a
+French vegetable cutter. To half a pint add one tablespoonful of olive
+oil, half a tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar and one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of salt; toss lightly together and let stand one hour;
+drain, and arrange as a border with an outer layer of tiny blanched
+lettuce leaves.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>2. Scoop out the centres of the artichokes and fill with mayonnaise, or
+with ravigote, tartare or tyrolienne sauce. Serve on lettuce leaves as a
+border to a meat or fish salad.</p>
+
+<p>3. Fill the centres with walnut meats, sliced, or tender celery stalks,
+cut fine and mixed with mayonnaise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Asparagus Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut cold cooked asparagus into pieces an inch long, mix lightly with
+cream dressing and serve, in individual portions, on curly lettuce
+leaves.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Asparagus=and=Salmon Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Mix cold cooked salmon with mayonnaise, form in a mound and encircle
+with a wreath of cold cooked asparagus tips dressed with French
+dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Asparagus=and=Cauliflower Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Break the cooked cauliflower into its flowerets, dispose in the centre
+of the serving-dish and surround with a wreath of cooked asparagus tips.
+Pour over the whole a mayonnaise, a boiled or a cream dressing, and
+sprinkle with chopped capers or pimentos.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salad of Turnips with Asparagus Tips.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook the turnips in boiling salted water until tender; drain, and cut
+out the centres, forming cups. Sprinkle the inside with oil and a few
+grains of salt, and, when the oil is absorbed, pour over<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span> the cups a
+little lemon juice or vinegar. Set aside to become cool. When ready to
+serve, arrange the cups on shredded lettuce and fill with cooked
+asparagus tips, cold and mixed with mayonnaise or French dressing, as
+desired. Peas, flageolets or wax beans, cut fine, may be used instead of
+the asparagus. Garnish with radishes.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Green=Pea Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Mix the peas with a cream dressing; serve in nests of lettuce; garnish
+the top of each nest with a little chopped beet, or a fanciful figure
+cut from a pickled beet or pimento.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Green=Pea=and=Potato Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Mix equal parts of cold cooked peas and potatoes cut in very small
+cubes; season with salt and pepper, and serve as green-pea salad.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Asparagus Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Scrape the scales from the stalks, and cook, standing upright in boiling
+salted water, until tender; drain and chill thoroughly. Serve on lettuce
+leaves with French dressing. Garnish the lettuce with hard-boiled eggs
+cut in quarters lengthwise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Macedoine of Vegetable Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Dress one cup, each, of cooked carrots and turnips, cut in dice, string
+beans, cut small, green peas, and half a cup of cooked beets, cut small,
+with French dressing; add two tablespoonfuls of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span> chopped gherkins;
+drain, and mix with sufficient jelly mayonnaise to hold the vegetables
+together. Arrange in dome shape and cover with more jelly mayonnaise.
+Set a row of sliced gherkins near the top, and fill in the space to the
+top with string beans or asparagus tips. Surround the base with
+alternate rounds of beet and potato overlapping one another. Decorate
+the space above with slices of potato and beet cut in diamonds, and
+surround the base with light-green aspic cut in diamonds. One pint of
+aspic will be sufficient; use chicken stock, and tint with color paste.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Russian Vegetable Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Select two moulds of suitable shape and size (tin basins or earthen
+bowls will do) and chill in ice water. Have ready cooked balls, cut from
+carrots and turnips, and cooked string beans and cauliflower, all
+marinated with French dressing. Drain the vegetables, dip them into
+half-set aspic, and arrange against the chilled sides of the moulds;
+then fill the moulds with aspic jelly. When set, with a hot spoon scoop
+out the aspic from the centre of each mould and fill in the space with a
+mixture of the vegetables and jelly mayonnaise, leaving an open space at
+the top to be filled with half-set aspic. When thoroughly chilled and
+set, turn from the moulds, the smaller mould above the other. Garnish
+with flowerets of cauliflower, dipped in aspic and chilled, and lettuce.
+Serve with mayonnaise.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/russian_veg.jpg" width="300" height="225" alt="Russian Vegetable Salad." title="Russian Vegetable Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Russian Vegetable Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/macedoine_veg.jpg" width="300" height="225" alt="Macedoine of Vegetable Salad." title="Macedoine of Vegetable Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Macedoine of Vegetable Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_47'>page 47</a></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Stuffed=Cucumber Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Pare a short cucumber and cut it lengthwise in two parts; remove the
+seeds and let chill in ice water for an hour. Chop together the solid
+part of a peeled and seeded tomato, half a slice of new onion, a stalk
+of celery and a sprig of parsley; mix with mayonnaise or a boiled
+dressing and use as a filling for the well-dried halves of cucumber.
+Serve on cress or lettuce.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cowslip=and=Cream=Cheese Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(See cut facing <a href='#Page_58'>page 58</a>.)</div>
+
+<p>Cook the cowslip leaves until tender in boiling salted water, reserving
+a few choice leaves with blossoms for a garnish. Chop fine, season to
+taste with salt and paprica, press into a mould, and set aside to become
+chilled. Slice chilled cream cheese (Neufchatel or cottage) in uniform
+slices, and arrange at the sides of the mound. Serve with French or
+mayonnaise dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cauliflower Salad, Egg Garnish.</h3>
+
+<p>Separate a cauliflower into flowerets and boil in salted water until
+tender, <i>not longer</i>. Drain carefully. Season with oil, vinegar, salt,
+pepper, and a sprinkling of chopped tarragon leaves (or use tarragon
+vinegar). Arrange symmetrically in an earthen bowl, having the upper
+surface level. Let stand to become thoroughly chilled, then turn on to a
+serving-dish; the shape of the mould will be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span> retained. Cover with
+mayonnaise dressing or Sauce Tartare, and surround with lengthwise
+quarters of hard-boiled eggs.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Potato Salad with Mayonnaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Boil the potatoes and let cool without paring. Then remove the skins and
+cut into slices, balls, or cubes. Squeeze over them a little onion
+juice, sprinkle with fine-chopped parsley, and let stand in a French
+dressing several hours. Mix the dressing after the usual formula, and
+use enough to moisten well the potato. When ready to serve, make nests
+of heart leaves of lettuce, put a spoonful of the potato in each, with a
+teaspoonful of mayonnaise above, sprinkle the mayonnaise with capers,
+and press the quarter of a hard-boiled egg into the top of the
+mayonnaise. Or add the chopped white of egg to the potato before
+marinating, and sift the yolk over the mayonnaise.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>FISH SALADS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Some choice sous'd fish">
+<tr><td align='left'>"<i>Some choice sous'd fish brought couchant in a dish,</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: .5em;"><i>Among some fennel.</i>"<br /><br /></span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Of what complexion">
+<tr><td align='left'>"<i>Of what complexion?</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: .5em;"><i>Of the sea water green, sir.</i>"</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>FISH SALADS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Ever, and justly, fish have taken high rank in the list of salad
+ingredients. No wonder, when we consider that nothing excels in delicacy
+of flavor many a variety of fish; and, while fish are not necessarily
+expensive in any locality, in many sections of the country their cost is
+merely nominal. Then, too, salad-making appeals largely to one's
+artistic nature, and the products of sea and fresh water are constantly
+furnishing opportunities for studies in many and varied shades of color.
+The lobster's vivid red, the brilliant tints of the salmon and red
+snapper, the delicate pink of shrimps, the dull white of scallops and
+halibut, and the bluish gray of mackerel and bluefish, each, in its
+season, may be made to contrast most effectively with fresh green herbs
+and yellow dressings.</p>
+
+<p>Oysters, scallops and little-neck clams are frequently served in salads
+without cooking. These should be carefully washed, then drained and set
+aside in a marinade for an hour. When cooked, they should be heated to
+the boiling-point in their own liquor, then drained and cut in halves.
+The adductor muscle of the oyster&mdash;the white, button-shaped part that
+connects the animal with its shell&mdash;is often discarded. Other fish than
+shellfish,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span> when used in salads, are boiled, broiled or baked; they
+present the best appearance, however, when boiled. Thudichum recommends
+sea water, whenever it is available, for boiling fish; lacking this, hot
+water, salted (an ounce of salt to a quart of water), and acidulated
+pleasantly with lemon juice or vinegar, is the proper medium of cooking.
+The addition of a slice or two of onion and carrot, a sprig of parsley,
+a stalk of celery, with aromatic herbs or spices, provided they be not
+used so freely as to overpower the delicate savor of the fish, is
+thought to improve the dish.</p>
+
+<p>The quantity of water should be adjusted to the size of the fish; in no
+case should it be larger than will suffice to produce the desired
+result. At the moment the fish is immersed in the water the temperature
+should be at the boiling-point, and thereafter the vessel should be
+permitted to simmer during the process of cooking.</p>
+
+<p>The fish may be cooked whole, or cut into small pieces, similar in shape
+and size. In the latter case a wire basket is of service, as, by this
+means, the fish may be easily removed from the water and drained. If the
+fish is to be served whole, remove the skin and fins, and, when
+thoroughly cold, mask with jelly mayonnaise or with a fancy butter.
+After chilling again, the mask may be decorated with capers, olives,
+eggs, etc. If the fish is to be used in flakes, the flakes will separate
+more easily while the fish is still hot. In marinating fish, let the
+proportions of oil and acid vary with the kind of fish; <i>i.e.</i>,
+according to the oily nature of the flesh.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>RECIPES.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Brook=Trout Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Dress the trout without removing the heads; boil as previously
+indicated. Remove the backbone without destroying the shape of the fish.
+Serve, thoroughly chilled, on crisp lettuce leaves dressed with claret
+or French dressing. Prepare the latter with tarragon vinegar.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Brook Trout Moulded in Aspic.</h3>
+
+<p>Pour a little chicken aspic into a pickle or other dish of suitable
+shape and size for a single fish; when nearly set, lay a trout, prepared
+as above, upon the aspic, add a few spoonfuls of aspic, let it harden so
+that the fish may become fixed in place, then add aspic to cover. Slices
+of cucumber pickles, capers, or other ornaments, may be used. When the
+aspic is thoroughly set and chilled, remove from the mould and serve on
+two lettuce leaves, with any dressing desired.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Halibut Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Flake the fish and marinate with French dressing (three tablespoonfuls
+of oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice or vinegar, a dash of salt and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+pepper, for each pint of fish); drain, and add half as much boiled
+potato, cut in small cubes and dressed with French dressing. Serve on a
+bed of lettuce leaves. Garnish with sardine dressing. Shredded lettuce
+or peas may be used in place of the potato.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Halibut=and=Cucumber Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pound of cooked halibut.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of oil.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> A few drops of onion juice.</li>
+<li> Salt and pepper.</li>
+<li> 2 pimentos.</li>
+<li> Lettuce.</li>
+<li> Cucumbers.</li>
+<li> French dressing.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Flake one pound of cooked halibut while hot, and marinate
+with the oil, lemon juice, onion juice, salt and pepper. When cold drain
+and mix with the pimentos, shredded, after cutting from the same a few
+star-shaped or other fanciful figures. Arrange heart leaves of lettuce
+in an upright position in the centre of a serving-dish, the fish and
+pimentos around the lettuce, and, around these, one large or two small
+cucumbers, cut in small cubes and mixed with French dressing. With
+salmon use capers instead of pimentos. Use enough dressing to moisten
+the cucumbers thoroughly.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Halibut Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Steam a thick slice of chicken halibut, until the flesh separates easily
+from the bone. Remove the skin and bones without disturbing the shape of
+the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span> fish. Marinate, while hot, with three tablespoonfuls of oil, one
+tablespoonful of vinegar or lemon juice, and salt and pepper. When cold
+put the fish on a serving-dish, and, using endive or Boston Market
+lettuce, put the ends of the leaves beneath the fish, so that the tops
+of the leaves will fall over upon the fish. Garnish the top with stars
+of mayonnaise. Between the leaves dispose sliced pim-olas and fans cut
+from small gherkins. Serve mayonnaise with the salad.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fillets of Halibut in Aspic, with Cucumber=and=Radish Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 slices of halibut, cut half an inch or less in thickness.</li>
+<li> 1 lobster (a pound and a half).</li>
+<li> 3 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of flour.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of cream.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of stock.</li>
+<li> A dash of paprica.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a tablespoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> 1 quart of aspic.</li>
+<li> Olives.</li>
+<li> A bunch of radishes.</li>
+<li> 2 cucumbers.</li>
+<li> French dressing.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Remove the skin and bone from the halibut, thus securing
+eight fillets. Season with salt, pepper, onion and lemon juice. Chop the
+lobster meat fine; melt the butter, cook in it the flour and seasonings,
+add the cream and lobster stock, and, when cooked, stir in the chopped
+lobster. When cool spread upon one side of the fillets, roll up the
+fillets and fasten with wooden<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span> toothpicks that have been dipped in
+melted butter. Bake on a fish-sheet about fifteen minutes, basting with
+butter melted in hot water.</p>
+
+<p>Set a plain border-mould in ice water; decorate the bottom and sides
+with pim-olas or gherkins cut in slices and dipped in half-set aspic;
+cover the decoration on the bottom with aspic, and, when set and the
+decorations on the side are "fixed" in place, arrange on the aspic the
+cold fillets of fish and fill the mould with more aspic. When cold turn
+from the mould and fill the centre with diced cucumbers and sliced
+radishes dressed with French dressing. Pass mayonnaise or French
+dressing in a separate dish. Surround the aspic with shredded lettuce if
+desired.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fillets of Halibut in Aspic with Cole=Slaw.</h3>
+
+<p>Use a generous half-pint of oysters in the place of the lobster,
+parboiling and draining before chopping, and fill in the centre of the
+aspic with coleslaw.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/mirotin_fish.jpg" width="300" height="186" alt="Miroton of Fish and Potato Salad." title="Miroton of Fish and Potato Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Miroton of Fish and Potato Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/cowslip.jpg" width="300" height="157" alt="Cowslip and Cream Cheese Salad." title="Cowslip and Cream Cheese Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Cowslip and Cream Cheese Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_49'>page 49</a></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Miroton of Fish and Potato.</h3>
+
+<p>Marinate one pint of cold cooked fish&mdash;salmon, cod, haddock, halibut,
+etc.&mdash;with three or four tablespoonfuls of oil, half a teaspoonful of
+salt, a dash of pepper and two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice. Marinate,
+separately, one pint of cold potatoes, cooked in their skins and cut in
+cubes, with the same quantity of dressing, adding also one teaspoonful
+of onion juice. Let stand in a cool<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span> place one hour or more. Have ready
+six hard-boiled eggs; cut a thin slice from the round end of each egg,
+that it may stand upright, then cut in quarters lengthwise. Dip into a
+little aspic jelly or melted gelatine and arrange the quarters in the
+form of a circle, with the yolks outside. Toss together the fish, potato
+and three tablespoonfuls of capers, and fill in the centre of the
+circle. Dust with fine-chopped parsley or beets; add a tuft of lettuce
+at the top and a few heart leaves of lettuce above the crown of eggs.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fish Salad Moulded in Aspic.</h3>
+
+<p>Cover the bottom of a mould with aspic to the depth of one-fourth an
+inch. Set the mould in ice water, and, when the aspic is set, arrange
+upon it a decoration of cooked vegetables cut in shapes with French
+cutter, or fashion a conventional design or some flower. Dogwood
+blossoms provide a simple pattern, and one easily carried out. Cut the
+four petals from a thin slice of cooked turnip and the centre of the
+blossom from carrot or lemon peel. Fasten each piece in place with
+liquid jelly, and, when set, cover with more jelly. To decorate the
+sides of the mould, take the figures on the point of a skewer, dip in
+jelly, then set in position against the <i>chilled</i> sides of the mould,
+and they will remain in place. After the jelly covering the figures on
+the bottom of the mould has "set," place a smaller mould in the centre
+of the aspic in the first, and fill this with ice and water. Pour in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+aspic to fill the space about the smaller mould, and, when this aspic is
+firm, dip out the water and ice. Fill with <i>warm</i> water and quickly
+remove the mould. Separate a pound of cooked fish into flakes, add half
+a cup of cold cooked peas, three or four gherkins, cut very fine, and
+three tablespoonfuls of capers. Mix together and then mix with one cup
+of mayonnaise made with jelly; with this fill the vacant space in the
+mould. When ready to serve, dip the mould very quickly into warm water,
+letting the water rise to the top of the mould, and invert over a
+serving-dish; remove the mould, and garnish with lettuce, tiny gherkins
+cut to resemble fans, blocks of aspic, or aspic moulded in shells, and
+mayonnaise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fish Salad Moulded in Aspic, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Decorate the mould as before; then put in a layer of the fish and
+dressing; when set, add a layer of aspic; alternate the layers until the
+materials are used or the mould is filled. Individual moulds may be
+prepared in the same way.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salad of Mackerel or Bluefish.</h3>
+
+<p>Separate a cooked fish into flakes and mix with the chopped whites and
+sifted yolks of three hard-boiled eggs. Season with French dressing, mix
+lightly and turn on to a bed of lettuce or cress, also seasoned with the
+dressing. Garnish with fans cut from small gherkins, or with pickled
+beet cut in fanciful shape or chopped.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salad of Salt Mackerel.</h3>
+
+<p>Freshen the fish carefully before cooking. Use equal parts of fish,
+flaked, and cold boiled potatoes. If potatoes are specially prepared for
+the purpose, cut them in cubes or balls, blanch, and cook in
+well-seasoned beef stock; drain, and add, when cold, to the fish. Season
+with French dressing. Arrange on a bed of cress and sift the yolk of an
+egg over the whole.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salad of Shad Roe and Cucumber.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook two shad roes with an onion, sliced, and a bay leaf, in salted,
+acidulated water twenty minutes; drain, and marinate with about two
+tablespoonfuls of oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice and a dash of
+pepper and salt. When cold cut in small cubes. Rub the salad-bowl with a
+clove of garlic cut in halves. Cut a thoroughly chilled cucumber in
+dice; put the cucumber on a bed of lettuce leaves in the bottom of the
+bowl, and the roe, well drained, above; mask with mayonnaise,&mdash;nearly a
+cup will be required,&mdash;in the top insert a few heart leaves of lettuce,
+and place around the centre of the mound a circle of cucumber slices
+overlapping one another; or alternate these with lozenges cut from
+pickled beet.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Boudins=de=Saumon Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Butter four small dariole moulds, or small cups; sprinkle the butter
+with chopped parsley. Select four small pieces of cooked salmon, dry on
+a soft<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span> cloth so as to remove all oily liquor, and put a piece in each
+mould. Beat two eggs (or, better, one egg and the yolks of two)
+slightly, season with one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of
+paprica and a few drops of anchovy essence or onion juice; add half a
+cup of milk, and, when well mixed, pour into the moulds around the fish.
+Set the moulds in a pan of hot water and bake until the custard is set.
+Do not let the water boil. Chill thoroughly, then turn from the moulds
+on to lettuce leaves. Serve with a star of mayonnaise dressing on the
+top of each <i>boudin</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/russian_salad.jpg" width="300" height="178" alt="Russian Salad." title="Russian Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Russian Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/halibut_salad.jpg" width="300" height="154" alt="Halibut Salad." title="Halibut Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Halibut Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Russian Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Boston Cooking-School.</span>)<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 cup of carrots.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of potatoes.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of peas.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of beans (flageolets preferred).</li>
+<li> 6 tablespoonfuls of oil.</li>
+<li> 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of pepper.</li>
+<li> A head of lettuce.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of mayonnaise.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of shrimps.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a lb. of smoked salmon.</li>
+<li> 1 hard-boiled egg.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Marinate the carrots and potatoes, cut in small pieces, also
+the peas and beans, with French dressing. Arrange on a dish in four
+sections, having lettuce for the foundation of each. Cover each
+vegetable with mayonnaise. Strew the tops of two sections with small
+pieces of smoked salmon; on a third section strew the sifted yolk of the
+egg, and on the fourth, the white of the egg, cut rather coarsely.
+Outline the inner side<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span> of each section with shrimps, by lightly
+pressing the ends of the shrimps into the mayonnaise. Finish with a tuft
+of lettuce in the centre of the dish.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Spanish Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>In the centre of a flat serving-dish arrange a mound of endive. Peel
+tomatoes, divide into sections or cut in slices, and arrange these
+around the endive. Shell cold, hard-boiled eggs; cut in halves,
+crosswise, and in points; remove the yolks and pound to a paste with an
+equal amount of the flesh of lobster, shrimp, anchovies or salmon. With
+this paste, seasoned to taste with oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper,
+fill the cups fashioned from the whites of the eggs, and arrange them
+around the tomatoes. Strew chopped shallot and sweet pepper over the
+endive. Mix equal portions of oil and vinegar, add salt and pepper to
+taste, and pour over the salad. Serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salmon Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>For evening company, or fish course at a dinner party.</i>)<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> Hard-boiled eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of gelatine, softened in one tablespoonful of cold water.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of string beans or asparagus tips.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of cooked peas.</li>
+<li> French dressing.</li>
+<li> 2 slices of salmon, 2 inches thick.</li>
+<li> Jelly mayonnaise, or fancy butter.</li>
+<li> Capers.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cut the eggs into halves lengthwise; cut a thin slice from
+the round ends, that the pieces may be set upright; dip lightly in the
+gelatine dissolved over hot water, and arrange <i>miroton</i> fashion around
+an oval serving-dish. Set aside, that the eggs may become fixed in
+position. Marinate the vegetables, separately, with French dressing;
+cook the salmon by the directions previously given; remove the skin and
+cover the sides with jelly mayonnaise or fancy butter. When cold
+decorate with whites of eggs and capers. Use the trimmings from the
+eggs, and fix them in place by dipping in jelly mayonnaise. Set aside
+for the decorations to become fixed. Drain the vegetables and arrange
+inside the border, higher in the centre. Lay the decorated slices of
+fish upon opposite sides of the mound, and serve either with or without
+mayonnaise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Halibut Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>For evening company, or fish course at a dinner party.</i>)<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> A slice of chicken halibut, 3 inches thick.</li>
+<li> 3 cups of cooked peas.</li>
+<li> French dressing.</li>
+<li> Hard-boiled eggs.</li>
+<li> 3 slices of pickled beet.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of gelatine.</li>
+<li> Jelly mayonnaise, or green butter.</li>
+<li> Heart leaves of lettuce.</li>
+<li> 2 olives.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Prepare the eggs and fasten to the plate as in salmon salad.
+Dip diamond-shaped<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span> pieces of pickled beet in the dissolved gelatine
+and place upon the front and top of each half of egg. Spread the edge of
+the fish, after removing the skin, with jelly mayonnaise, or green
+butter, and, when set, decorate with figures cut from the cooked white
+of an egg. With forcing-bag and tube shape a pattern around the upper
+edge of the fish. Place the fish in the centre of the crown or <i>miroton</i>
+of eggs, with the peas seasoned with French dressing around it; cover
+the place from which the bone was taken with the centre of a head of
+lettuce, cut in halves, and two fine olives. Serve with a bowl of
+mayonnaise.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_64'>page 64</a></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Shells of Fish and Mushrooms.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut cold fish&mdash;salmon, halibut, lobster, etc.&mdash;into small cubes, mix
+with one-third in measure of cooked mushrooms, also cut small, and add
+for each cup of mushrooms and fish one tablespoonful of gherkins cut
+fine. Season with French dressing and let stand one hour; then drain,
+and mix with jellied mayonnaise. Fill chilled shells with this
+preparation, rounding it on the top. Make smooth, and mask with jellied
+mayonnaise. Decorate with gherkins and the white of a hard-boiled egg
+cut in fanciful shapes, and with stars of mayonnaise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oysters in Aspic Jelly.</h3>
+
+<p>Parboil, drain, cool, and wipe dry one quart of oysters. Make a pint of
+mayonnaise sauce with aspic jelly and coat the well-dried oysters with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+the sauce. Prepare a quart of chicken aspic. Dip in half-set aspic the
+white of egg, poached and cut in fanciful shapes, and small gherkins cut
+in thin slices, and decorate the bottom and sides of a charlotte or
+cylindrical mould standing in ice water. Pour in jelly to the depth of
+half an inch; when set, arrange the oysters on it in a circle, one
+overlapping another; pour in more jelly, and, when set, dispose upon it
+another circle of oysters. Continue this order until the mould is
+filled. When removed from the mould, garnish with chopped aspic and fans
+cut from gherkins and lettuce. Serve with the remainder of the pint of
+mayonnaise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oyster=and=Celery Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Parboil the oysters (heating them to the boiling-point in their own
+liquor), drain, and, if large, halve each; marinate with a French
+dressing (<i>i.e.</i>, toss the bits of oyster in oil enough to coat them
+nicely; then toss them in a little lemon juice, dust with salt and
+pepper, and set aside to become thoroughly chilled). When ready to
+serve, drain again and add about one-third as much in bulk of
+fine-chopped celery and one or two tablespoonfuls of pickled nasturtium
+seeds or capers; then mix with mayonnaise or a boiled dressing. Serve on
+a bed of lettuce leaves. Cabbage, sliced as for slaw, may be used in the
+place of celery. Garnish with small pickles cut in thin slices and
+spread to resemble a fan.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oyster=and=Sweetbread Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut a pair of cold cooked sweetbreads into cubes. Parboil one pint of
+oysters, drain, cool, and cut in halves; marinate the sweetbreads and
+oysters with French dressing, and allow them to stand at least half an
+hour; drain, mix with mayonnaise, and serve on a bed of lettuce or
+cress. Or, surround with a circle of chopped cucumbers seasoned with
+French dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boats.</h3>
+
+<p>Pare the cucumbers, which should be rather short, and cut them in halves
+lengthwise; remove the seeds and steam until tender; chill, and arrange
+on lettuce leaves, or on a bed of watercress. Clean and marinate the
+shrimps. If large, divide into two or three pieces. Mix with mayonnaise
+and place in the cucumbers. Decorate with stars of mayonnaise and whole
+shrimps.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Shrimp Salad with Aspic Border.</h3>
+
+<p>Set a border mould in ice water; dip hard-boiled eggs, cut in halves
+lengthwise and trimmed to fit the mould, in aspic jelly, and press
+against the sides of the mould alternately with small vegetable balls,
+or peas dipped in half-set aspic; fill gradually the empty space in the
+mould with partly cooled jelly, adding vegetables here and there if
+desired. Dip in hot water and turn from the mould. Fill in the centre
+with lettuce, torn in pieces, and one pint of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span> shrimps, broken in pieces
+and dressed with French dressing. Smooth the mound and mask with jelly
+mayonnaise. Decorate with shrimps and small heart leaves of lettuce.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/shell_of_fish.jpg" width="300" height="180" alt="Shell of Fish and Mushrooms." title="Shell of Fish and Mushrooms." />
+<span class="caption">Shell of Fish and Mushrooms.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_65'>page 65</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/shrimp_salad_cucumber_boat.jpg" width="300" height="153" alt="Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boat." title="Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boat." />
+<span class="caption">Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boat.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_67'>page 67</a></div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Shrimp Salad with Aspic Border, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Decorate the sides of a ring mould, chilled, with hard-boiled eggs cut
+in halves, alternated with hearts of lettuce cut in halves; dip the egg
+and lettuce in half-set aspic, and they will adhere to the sides of the
+mould. Then proceed as above.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Shrimp Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the shrimps from the shells, reserve the most perfect for
+garnishing, and break the others into pieces; marinate with French
+dressing. When ready to serve, drain, and mix with shredded lettuce, or
+celery cut fine, and mayonnaise. Shape in a mound on a bed of lettuce
+leaves and mask with mayonnaise. Use capers or olives, chopped very
+fine, to mark out five or six designs on the mound; a scroll effect is
+always pretty. Fill in the designs with shrimps and the rest of the
+mound with capers, sifted yolks or chopped whites of cooked eggs; or
+fill the designs with the capers or eggs and the rest of the mound with
+shrimps. Finish with a tuft of lettuce at the top.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scallop Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Soak the scallops in salted water (a tablespoonful of salt to a quart of
+water) one hour; rinse<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span> in cold water, cover with boiling water, and
+let simmer five or six minutes. Rinse again in cold water, drain, and
+when cold cut into slices. Cut white stalks of celery into small pieces.
+Mix the celery and scallops&mdash;half as much celery as scallops&mdash;with
+mayonnaise or boiled dressing, and shape in a mound. Mask the mound with
+a thin coating of mayonnaise. With large-sized capers outline a design
+on each of the four sides of the mound, fill these with whites of eggs,
+cooked and chopped fine. Ornament with figures cut from slices of boiled
+beets. Fill in the spaces around the designs with capers, and garnish
+with green celery leaves and white stalks of celery, fringed.</p>
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sardine Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Lay the sardines upon soft paper, that they may be freed from oil.
+Scrape off the skin and remove the bones; squeeze over them a little
+lemon juice. Arrange upon a bed of crisp lettuce leaves, or upon
+shredded lettuce, and dress with either French or mayonnaise dressing.
+Garnish with hard-boiled eggs cut in slices.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sardine Salad, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Arrange a pint of cold cooked fish, flaked, on a bed of lettuce leaves
+and cover with sardine dressing. Carefully split six selected sardines;
+remove the bones and arrange the halves on the top of the salad, with
+the heads at the centre. Garnish with slices of lemon.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/shrimp_salad_border.jpg" width="300" height="222" alt="Shrimp Salad, Border of Eggs in Aspic." title="Shrimp Salad, Border of Eggs in Aspic." />
+<span class="caption">Shrimp Salad, Border of Eggs in Aspic.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_68'>page 68</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/lobster_salad.jpg" width="300" height="212" alt="Lobster Salad." title="Lobster Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Lobster Salad.</span>
+</div>
+<h3><br /><br />Sardine=and=Egg Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Skin and bone a dozen sardines and put them in a mortar; remove the
+shells from an equal number of hard-boiled eggs and cut them into halves
+crosswise, so as to form cups with pointed edges; put the yolks into the
+mortar with the sardines, add a tablespoonful, or less, of chopped
+parsley, a dash of pepper and salt, and work to a smooth paste; moisten
+with salad dressing and season to taste with salt and pepper. Cut a thin
+slice from the ends of the egg cups, that they may be set upright on the
+serving-dish, and fill with the mixture, making it round on the top like
+a whole yolk. Arrange these on a bed of watercress, or shredded lettuce,
+and sprinkle plentifully with French dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut lobster meat in dice and marinate with French dressing. Keep on ice
+until ready to serve, then drain carefully. Make cups of the inside
+leaves of lettuce, put a spoonful of the lobster meat in the centre of
+each cup, and press mayonnaise dressing through a pastry bag with star
+tube attached on the top of the lobster in each nest. Or, arrange the
+lobster in a mound on a bed of lettuce leaves, and mask the mound with
+mayonnaise. Finish the centre with a little bouquet of the heart leaves
+of lettuce; sift dried coral in a circle about it, and below that
+arrange circles<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span> of sifted yolk or chopped white of egg alternately
+with the coral. Garnish with the fans and feelers of the lobster. Or,
+arrange as before, then finish the centre with a bouquet of heart leaves
+of lettuce and the head of the lobster. Garnish with stars of mayonnaise
+and fans from the tail.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster Salad, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Remove the flesh carefully from the shell of a lobster, so as to keep
+the shell of body and tail intact; wash and dry the shell and arrange on
+a bed of lettuce leaves. Marinate the flesh, cut into cubes, with French
+dressing. After an hour drain, mix with an equal quantity of shredded
+lettuce, and replace in the shell. Garnish with mayonnaise and the
+lobster coral. Dry the coral thoroughly, after which it may be passed
+readily through a sieve.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster Salad, No. 3.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 good-sized lobsters.</li>
+<li> Lettuce.</li>
+<li> Mayonnaise, or sauce tartare.</li>
+<li> Lobster cutlets.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> <small>1/3</small> a cup of flour.</li>
+<li> Salt and paprica.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of milk.</li>
+<li> Lobster coral.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of butter.</li>
+<li> 1 yolk of egg.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> 2 cups of lobster meat.</li>
+<li> 3 cups of aspic jelly.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Make a white sauce of the butter, flour, seasonings and milk;
+add the coral and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span> butter, after pounding until smooth in a mortar, also
+the yolk of egg, beaten and diluted with the lemon juice, and the
+lobster meat chopped rather coarsely. When cold shape into cutlets, dust
+over with sifted coral, and insert a bit of feeler or claw into the
+small end of each. Pour a little aspic into a dish, and, when it sets,
+arrange the cutlets upon it a little distance apart; pour over each a
+few spoonfuls of aspic, and when set cover with more aspic. When cold
+and very firm cut out the cutlets, giving a border of aspic to each.</p>
+
+<p>Marinate the flesh of the other lobster, cut into cubes, with French
+dressing; pile in a mound on a bed of lettuce leaves. Insert a tuft of
+leaves in the top, and arrange the cutlets against the mound. Garnish
+with feelers and claws. Serve mayonnaise or sauce tartare with the
+salad.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/bluefish.jpg" width="300" height="195" alt="Bluefish Salad." title="Bluefish Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Bluefish Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_75'>page 75</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/litchi_nut_orange.jpg" width="300" height="175" alt="Litchi Nut and Orange Salad." title="Litchi Nut and Orange Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Litchi Nut and Orange Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_88'>page 88</a></div>
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster Salad in Ring of Aspic.</h3>
+
+<p>Set a ring mould in ice water. In the bottom of the mould arrange pitted
+olives or pim-olas an inch apart. Dip figures, cut from slices of royal
+custard, or from cooked carrot or turnip, into liquid aspic, and place
+them on the sides of the mould, to which they will adhere; dip
+large-sized capers (a larding-needle or skewer is of assistance in this
+work) in aspic and with them ornament the mould; then fill with aspic
+and set aside to become fixed. When ready to serve, dip the mould in hot
+water and invert on a serving-dish. Cut the meat from two<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span> two-pound
+lobsters into small cubes. Season with French dressing. Fill the open
+space in the aspic with the salad; garnish the top with the feelers and
+delicate lettuce leaves, and arrange a wreath of lettuce leaves around
+the aspic. Stamp out rounds of bread; stamp again with the same cutter
+to form crescents, spread delicately with butter, and then with caviare
+seasoned with a few drops of lemon juice, and dispose symmetrically on
+the lettuce.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mousseline of Lobster as a Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Chill timbale moulds in ice water; dip thin slices of gherkins into
+half-set aspic, and arrange them symmetrically against the sides of the
+moulds, and brush over the decoration with aspic. Cut the claw meat of a
+two-pound lobster into small cubes; chop fine, and pound the remaining
+meat in a mortar; then add to it the liver and fat, and pass through a
+sieve. There should be about one cup. Simmer the shell in water to cover
+half an hour. Beat the yolks of three eggs, slightly, with one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica; add one cup of the lobster
+liquor very gradually, and cook over hot water as a boiled custard.
+Remove from the fire and add one-fourth a package of gelatine, softened
+in one-fourth a cup of cold lobster liquor, or chicken stock; strain
+over the sifted lobster meat and stir occasionally over ice water; when
+it begins to set, add the lobster dice, and fold in carefully one cup of
+whipped cream.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span> Turn the mixture into the decorated mould, and, when
+set, turn out on to lettuce leaves. Decorate with the head, feelers and
+claws of the lobster. Serve with French or mayonnaise dressing. French
+dressing is preferable with so rich a mixture.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/moulded_salmon.jpg" width="300" height="165" alt="Moulded Salmon Salad." title="Moulded Salmon Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Moulded Salmon Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_75'>page 75</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/shrimp_bamboo.jpg" width="300" height="153" alt="Salad of Shrimps and Bamboo Sprouts." title="Salad of Shrimps and Bamboo Sprouts." />
+<span class="caption">Salad of Shrimps and Bamboo Sprouts.</span>
+</div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Anchovy Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 8 salted anchovies, or 12 bottled anchovies.</li>
+<li> 4 hard-boiled eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 head of lettuce.</li>
+<li> Juice of half a small lemon.</li>
+<li> French or mayonnaise dressing, or Sauce tartare.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;If salt anchovies are to be used, soak them in cold water two
+hours, then drain, dry, and remove skin and bones; divide the flesh into
+small pieces and squeeze the lemon juice over them. When ready to serve,
+arrange the lettuce leaves upon a serving-dish, stalk ends at the
+centre, cut the eggs in slices, mix with the bits of anchovies, and
+arrange upon the lettuce. Pour a French or mayonnaise dressing made with
+onion juice, or a sauce tartare, over the salad.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salad of Lettuce, Bamboo Sprouts, and Shrimps.</h3>
+
+<p>Marinate a cup of shrimps, broken in small pieces, with three
+tablespoonfuls of oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, a dash of salt
+and pepper. Select the tender bamboo sprouts in a can, and cut them into
+small pieces of the shape desired. When ready to serve, dress these with
+salt, pepper, oil,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span> and lemon juice. Use three measures of oil to one
+of acid. Begin with the oil. Continue mixing and adding oil, until each
+piece is glossy. Then add the acid. Mix the prepared sprouts and the
+drained shrimps, and turn them onto a bed of lettuce, cut in narrow
+shreds, and dressed with oil and acid. Decorate the salad with heart
+leaves of lettuce, whole shrimps, and hollow sections of bamboo, cut in
+thin slices.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Bluefish Salad (excellent).</h3>
+
+<p>Separate the remnants of a baked bluefish into flakes, discarding skin
+and bones. Set aside, covered, until cold. About an hour before serving,
+sprinkle with salt and pepper and (for a generous pint of fish) the
+juice of a lemon. When ready to serve, dispose heart leaves of lettuce
+on the edge of a salad plate, and turn the fish into the centre, letting
+it come out over the stems of the lettuce leaves. Pour a boiled dressing
+over the top, and spread evenly (with a silver knife) over the fish. Put
+a tablespoonful of chopped pickled beet at the stems of each group of
+leaves, a ring of the beet near the top, and figures, cut from the beet,
+between.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Moulded Salmon Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Use a pound of salmon, fresh-cooked or canned. Remove skin and bone, and
+pick the flesh fine with a silver fork. Mix half a teaspoonful of salt,
+a teaspoonful of sugar, a teaspoonful of flour, half<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span> a teaspoonful of
+mustard, and a dash of paprica. Over these pour very gradually
+three-fourths a cup of hot milk and stir and cook over hot water ten
+minutes, then add one-fourth a cup of hot vinegar and two tablespoonfuls
+of butter creamed and mixed with the beaten yolks of two eggs; stir
+until the egg is set, then add one level tablespoonful of granulated
+gelatine, softened in one-fourth a cup of cold water, and strain over
+the salmon; mix thoroughly, and turn into a mould. When chilled serve
+with Cream Salad Dressing (<a href='#Page_27'>page 27</a>), to which half a cucumber, chopped
+fine and drained, has been added. Reserve a part of the dressing,
+omitting the cucumber, and use with slices of cucumber as a garnish. To
+prepare the cucumber, pare with a handy slicer and cut from it a section
+three-fourths an inch thick; pare this round and round very thin and
+roll loosely to form a cup. Dispose this on the top of the fish and fill
+with dressing. (Use a pastry bag and tube.) Cut the rest of the cucumber
+in thin slices.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VARIOUS COMPOUND SALADS.</h2>
+
+<div class="center">Give us the luxuries of life, and we will dispense
+with its necessaries.&mdash;<i>Motley.</i><br />
+<br />
+Three several salads have I sacrificed, bedew'd
+with precious oil and vinegar.&mdash;<i>Beaumont and
+Fletcher.</i></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sweetbread=and=Cucumber Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Arrange the leaves of a head of cabbage lettuce loosely upon a
+serving-dish, without destroying its shape. Have ready a pair of
+sweetbreads cooked in salted, acidulated water twenty minutes, and
+cooled and cut in small cubes and marinated; also the same quantity of
+cucumber cut in dice, chilled in ice water and dried upon a cloth. Drain
+the French dressing from the sweetbread and scatter the bits of
+sweetbread and cucumber through the lettuce. Press three-fourths a cup
+of firm jelly mayonnaise through a pastry bag with small tube, in little
+stars, here and there, throughout the lettuce, and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sweetbread=and=Cucumber Salad, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook, marinate and drain the sweetbreads as before; mix with an equal
+quantity of cucumber cut in dice, and then with cream dressing. Line<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+the inner side of lettuce nests with slices of radish, one overlapping
+another (do not remove the pink skin from the radish). Put in a spoonful
+of the salad and garnish each nest with a small radish cut to resemble a
+flower.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Use two parts of cold cooked chicken to one part of celery. Marinate and
+drain the chicken, add the celery, and mix with mayonnaise or boiled
+dressing. Arrange the salad in nests of lettuce leaves and put a pim-ola
+in the centre of each nest.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken Salad, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare the salad as before; dispose in a mound on a bed of lettuce
+leaves and mask with mayonnaise. By the use of stoned olives, cut in
+halves, divide the surface into quarters. Fill two opposite sections
+with whites of eggs chopped fine, a third with capers or olives chopped
+fine, and the fourth with sifted yolks of eggs. Garnish with lettuce and
+curled celery.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />French Chicken Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook the meats of English walnuts in well-seasoned chicken stock until
+tender; remove the brown skin and break in pieces; when cold mix with
+chicken and celery, and proceed as in preceding recipes. The walnuts
+give the salad a flavor similar to that produced in France by the use of
+truffles.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken=and=Fresh=Mushroom Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Peel mushroom caps, break in pieces, and saut&eacute; in melted butter five or
+six minutes with a slice of onion; add chicken liquor or hot water and
+let simmer until tender. Remove from the liquor, cover, and set aside to
+cool. Add the liquor and the peelings and stalks of the mushrooms to the
+liquid in which the chicken is to be cooked. Use the chicken and
+mushrooms with celery or lettuce in any recipe for chicken salad.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken Salad, No. 3.</h3>
+
+<p>Arrange the salad upon the centre of the dish and mask with mayonnaise;
+then with pastry bag and tube pipe the dressing in some fanciful design.
+Surround with a border of aspic jelly, tinted a delicate green. The
+jelly may be cut in blocks or triangles, or into small cubes, and then
+massed about the salad. Cut the aspic in a cold room; first dip the
+knife in hot water and wipe dry.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken Salad, No. 4.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut one cucumber and one bunch of round radishes in thin slices, and add
+two-thirds a cup of shredded celery. Season with four tablespoonfuls of
+oil, two tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice, half a teaspoonful of
+salt and a dash of paprica. Put on a bed of shredded lettuce or on heart
+leaves of lettuce; cover with three cups of chicken cut in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span> cubes and
+marinated an hour or more with four tablespoonfuls of oil, two
+tablespoonfuls of lemon juice or vinegar, half a teaspoonful of salt and
+a dash of white pepper. Mask with mayonnaise. Arrange some bits of
+celery, an inch and a half in length and curled on one end, about the
+salad, with a bit of yolk of egg in the centre of each. Or, instead of
+the celery and yolk of egg, use sliced radishes (do not remove the red
+skin), having the slices overlap one another. Finish the top with tuft
+of lettuce or curled celery and yolk of egg.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mushroom Salad with Medallions of Chicken.</h3>
+
+<p>Bone a chicken, fill with forcemeat, and cook until tender in stock;
+then press between two dishes until cold. Cut in slices and stamp in
+rounds. Stamp out an equal number of rounds from cooked tongue. Spread
+these with "green butter" (see <a href='#greenbutter'>Green-Butter Sandwiches</a>) and place the
+rounds of chicken evenly on the tops. Coat these with white chaud-froid
+sauce and decorate in some design with truffles, ham or tongue. When the
+sauce has set, brush over the medallions with aspic jelly, cold but not
+set. When thoroughly cold stamp out with a round cutter. Drain and dry a
+can of white button mushrooms; toss them about in cold aspic until they
+are well coated. When the jelly has become fixed about them, pile high
+in the centre of a serving-dish; arrange the medallions about them,
+resting on delicate leaves of lettuce. Serve mayonnaise or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span> tartare
+sauce with the salad. Sweetbreads may be substituted for the chicken,
+and fresh mushrooms for the canned.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mousse=de=Poulet Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Scald one cup of milk, cream or <i>well-reduced</i> chicken stock (the last
+is preferable); beat the yolks of three eggs slightly, add one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of common salt and celery salt, and a dash of
+paprica, and cook as a boiled custard. Remove from the fire and add
+one-fourth a package of gelatine (one tablespoonful of granulated
+gelatine), softened in one-fourth a cup of chicken liquor or water.
+Strain over half a cup of cooked chicken (white meat), chopped and
+pounded in a mortar and passed through a sieve. Stir over ice water
+until the mixture is perfectly smooth and begins to set, then fold into
+it one cup of whipped cream. Turn into a ring mould, and, when chilled
+and well set, turn on to a bed of lettuce and fill in the centre with
+equal parts of celery and English walnuts, blanched, sliced and mixed
+with a French dressing.</p>
+
+<p>The half-cup of chicken, well pressed down, should weigh four ounces.
+The chicken broth should be strong and well flavored. Either one cup of
+whipped cream, or one cup of cream, whipped, may be used. The latter
+gives a firmer mousse, more pronounced in flavor; the former, a mousse
+of a lighter and more delicate consistency, and one more delicate in
+flavor.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mousse=de=Poulet, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Mould the mousse in small cups; turn out on to a slice of chilled tomato
+resting upon a lettuce leaf; garnish with mayonnaise dressing,
+decorating both the tomato and the mousse.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mousse=de=Poulet, No. 3.</h3>
+
+<p>Mould the mousse in a ring mould and fill in the centre with equal parts
+of cucumber or asparagus tips and diced sweetbread; marinate the
+sweetbread with French dressing, and drain thoroughly before mixing with
+the cucumber or asparagus. Garnish with mayonnaise dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mousse=de=Poulet, No. 4.</h3>
+
+<p>Fill in the centre of the ring with diced cucumbers and sliced radishes,
+mixed with cream dressing. Garnish with cream dressing, using pastry bag
+and tube, and radishes cut to resemble roses.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mousse=de=Poulet, No. 5.</h3>
+
+<p>Fill in the centre of the ring with mushrooms and sweetbread dressed
+with a French dressing. If the button mushrooms (canned) are used, cut
+in quarters; if fresh mushrooms are at hand, remove the stems and peel
+the caps; break into pieces and saut&eacute; in a little hot butter; then add
+hot water or stock and let simmer until tender (fifteen or twenty
+minutes). Drain and chill before using.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Turkey=and=Chestnut Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare the chestnuts as previously directed, using twice as much turkey
+meat, light or dark, cut into small cubes. Serve with lettuce and
+French, boiled or mayonnaise dressing, as desired. Marinate and drain
+the meat before adding the nuts.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Duck=and=Olive Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the meat from a duck in small pieces, and slice pim-olas very thin;
+use two tablespoonfuls of pim-olas to a cup of meat. Serve on a bed of
+cress with a French dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Duck=and=Orange Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Slice the oranges lengthwise; use twice as much flesh as fruit. Dress
+with oil, salt and paprica, and serve on lettuce leaves.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Ham Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Soak half a tablespoonful of granulated gelatine in one tablespoonful
+and a half of cold water, and dissolve in three-fourths a cup of hot
+chicken liquor. Strain over one cup of chopped ham and stir until the
+mixture begins to thicken, then fold in one cup of <i>thick</i> cream beaten
+stiff; add, also, a few grains of paprica and salt, if needed. Mould in
+a ring mould, and, when set and cold, turn from the mould; fill in the
+centre with lettuce arranged like a cup, and fill the cup with
+mayonnaise. Or, serve with French dressing.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/spinach_egg.jpg" width="300" height="185" alt="Spinach and Egg Salad." title="Spinach and Egg Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Spinach and Egg Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_86'>page 86</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/marguerite.jpg" width="300" height="165" alt="Marguerite Salad." title="Marguerite Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Marguerite Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_86'>page 86</a></div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Bacon Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut six or eight slices of tender bacon into small squares and fry until
+they are delicately browned; then drain on soft paper. Heat six
+tablespoonfuls of the fat and two tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon
+juice; beat together the yolks of three eggs and one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of paprica and mustard, and cook with the fat and
+vinegar over hot water until the mixture thickens slightly. When the
+dressing is cold cut a head of lettuce into narrow ribbons, toss the
+lettuce and bits of bacon together, and mix with the dressing. Serve at
+once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Italian Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Miss Cohen.</span>)<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 herrings, soaked in milk over night.</li>
+<li> 3 boiled potatoes, cut in very small dice.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of cucumber pickles, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of capers, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 2 small boiled beets, cut fine.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a pound (1 cup) of cold roast chicken, cut fine.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a pound (1 cup) of boiled tongue, cut fine.</li>
+<li> 2 apples, pared and finely chopped.</li>
+<li> 2 carrots, cooked and finely chopped.</li>
+<li> 1 celery root, cooked and chopped.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of pecan nuts, broken fine.</li>
+<li> A little onion juice.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Mix the ingredients together thoroughly; add mayonnaise to
+moisten well. Serve on a flat dish. Mask the top with mayonnaise,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span> then
+divide into squares like a checker-board, using fine-shredded pimento or
+pickled beet to mark the divisions; fill in alternate squares with
+sifted yolk of hard-boiled egg and the remaining squares with chopped
+white of egg. Garnish the edge with parsley, and set in the centre half
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'an'">a</ins> hard-boiled egg cut lengthwise in points and filled with capers.</p>
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />P&acirc;t&eacute; de Foie Gras, Moulded in Aspic.</h3>
+
+<p>Cover the bottoms of small-sized timbale moulds with a little aspic
+jelly; decorate the jelly with bits of royal custard and capers; cover
+with more aspic; then add, alternately, layers of <i>p&acirc;t&eacute; de foie gras</i>
+and aspic, until the mould is filled. Turn on to shredded lettuce and
+garnish with mayonnaise, using pastry bag and tube. Arrange on
+individual dishes, so as not to disarrange the dressing in serving. Or,
+garnish with a chopped cucumber dressed with French dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Spinach=and=Tongue Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac14; a peck of spinach.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> A dash of paprica.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of oil or butter.</li>
+<li> Slices of cold tongue.</li>
+<li> Sauce tartare.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cook the spinach in salted boiling water until tender; drain,
+and chop very fine, and season with salt, pepper, oil and lemon juice.
+Press into small, well-buttered moulds or cups.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span> Have ready thin, round
+slices of cold boiled or braised tongue, the slices a trifle larger than
+the cups of spinach. When the spinach is cold turn it from the moulds on
+to the rounds of tongue, and press a star of sauce tartare on the top of
+each mould. Garnish with parsley and slices of lemon.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/easter.jpg" width="300" height="176" alt="Easter Salad." title="Easter Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Easter Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/country.jpg" width="300" height="137" alt="Country Salad." title="Country Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Country Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_87'>page 87</a></div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Spinach=and=Egg Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(See cut facing <a href='#Page_84'>page 84</a>.)</div>
+
+<p>Prepare and mould the spinach as in the preceding recipe. Have ready,
+also, some cold boiled eggs and mayonnaise. Turn the spinach from the
+moulds on to nests of shredded lettuce. Dispose, chain fashion, around
+the base of the spinach, the whites of the eggs cut in rings, and press
+a star of mayonnaise in the centre of each ring. Pass the yolks through
+a sieve and sprinkle over the tops of the mounds, and place above this
+the round ends of the whites.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Marguerite Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(See cut facing <a href='#Page_84'>page 84</a>.)</div>
+
+<p>Arrange garden cress on a serving-dish; in the centre dispose whites of
+hard-boiled eggs cut in eighths lengthwise, to resemble the petals of a
+flower, and sift the yolks into the centre. When ready to serve,
+sprinkle with French dressing and toss together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Easter Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>With the smooth sides of butter-hands roll Neufchatel cheese into small
+egg shapes. Cut<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span> long radishes into straws and season with French
+dressing. Scatter the straws in lettuce nests, arrange the eggs in the
+nests, sprinkle with dressing, and fleck with chopped parsley or
+paprica.</p>
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Easter Salad, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Arrange flat nests of shredded lettuce on individual plates. Cut a
+five-cent Neufchatel cheese in three pieces; roll each piece into a ball
+and flatten to resemble the white of a poached egg, having the cheese
+about one-fourth an inch in thickness. These may be shaped upon a plate
+and then removed carefully with a spatula to the nests of lettuce. With
+pastry bag and plain tube put a mound of mayonnaise on the centre of
+each cake of cheese, to represent the yolk of an egg. Serve thoroughly
+chilled. A dash of pepper (paprica preferred) may decorate the top of
+the dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Country Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(See cut facing <a href='#Page_86'>page 86</a>.)</div>
+
+<p>Cut cold boiled corned beef or tongue into thin strips and pile in the
+centre of a serving-dish. Cook potato balls in meat broth until tender;
+blanch and cool, roll in mayonnaise or boiled dressing, and dispose
+about the meat. About these put a ring of celery cut fine, then cooked
+carrot and turnip cut in straws. Garnish with parsley and cucumber
+pickles cut in fans. Serve with additional dressing.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Orange=and=Litchi Nut Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Peel the oranges and cut them into lengthwise slices. Crush the shells
+of the nuts, take out the meats, and remove the stones; cut the nut
+meats in halves. Mix the nuts with oil, a tablespoonful to a cup, and
+sprinkle the orange slices with oil; add also a little lemon juice if
+the oranges are sweet. Garnish with slices of orange from which the skin
+has not been taken, also, if desired, with lettuce dressed with French
+dressing. The oil and lettuce may be omitted, using sugar in place;
+little, however, will be needed, as the nuts are sweet, tasting much
+like raisins.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Green=and=White Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut cooked chicken or sweetbreads in half-inch cubes; remove the skin
+and seeds from white grapes, and cut each grape in halves; cut tender
+blanched celery stalks in small pieces. Take equal portions of celery
+and meat and half as much of seeded grapes. Mix with French dressing;
+the meat should stand in the dressing an hour or more, when ready to
+serve. Serve in nests of lettuce. Dispose a little white mayonnaise or
+cream dressing on each nest. Garnish with halves of blanched pistachio
+nuts.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>FRUIT AND NUT SALADS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Fat olives">
+<tr><td align='left'>"Fat olives and pistachio's fragrant nut,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: .5em;">And the pine's tasteful apple."</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fruit Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Sweet, to serve with cake.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Peel and slice four bananas, also four oranges, lengthwise, carefully
+removing pith and seeds. Dissect half a ripe pineapple, taking the pulp
+from the core in small pieces with a silver fork. Hull and wash a part
+of a basket of strawberries. Arrange the fruit in the salad-bowl, making
+each layer smaller than the preceding. Pour over the dressing given
+below, and serve thoroughly chilled.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Dressing for Fruit Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Sweet.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Boil one cup of sugar and half a cup of water five minutes, then pour on
+to the beaten yolks of three eggs; return to the fire and cook over hot
+water, stirring constantly until thickened slightly; cool, and add the
+juice of two lemons. Half a cup of wine may be used in the place of the
+lemon juice, retaining one tablespoonful of the lemon juice.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fruit Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>June.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Pare lengthwise a <i>ripe</i> pineapple and remove the eyes. With a fork
+dislodge from the hard centre the single fruits (the lines left by the
+bracts will indicate the places where the divisions should be made).
+Slice <i>lengthwise</i> three sweet oranges, after removing the peel and
+white skin. Peel and slice two bananas, and cut in halves lengthwise one
+cup of strawberries. If the fruit be sweet, use the juice of half a
+lemon, otherwise omit it. Beat to an emulsion one-fourth a cup of olive
+oil, one tablespoonful of honey, and, if needed, the lemon juice; toss
+the fruit, together or separately, in the dressing, and serve on
+delicate leaves of lettuce. The most striking effect is produced by
+dressing each kind of fruit separately, thus massing each color by
+itself. When new figs are seasonable, they may be used in fruit salads
+to take the place of the honey. If the pineapple be of large size, more
+dressing will be required.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fruit=and=Nut Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Peel neatly three oranges and slice them lengthwise; also cut three
+bananas in thin slices. Skin and seed half a pound of white grapes, and
+blanch and slice the meats of one-fourth a pound of English walnuts.
+Serve very cold on lettuce leaves, dressed with four tablespoonfuls of
+oil, two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice&mdash;less, if the oranges are
+sour&mdash;and half a teaspoonful of salt.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fruit=and=Nut Salad, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Skin and seed half a pound of white grapes; blanch and slice half a
+pound of English walnuts or almonds. Toss with four tablespoonfuls of
+oil, one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of lemon
+juice. Serve in nests of lettuce. Garnish the nests with maraschino
+cherries.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cherry Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Mrs. Peterson.</span>)</div>
+
+<p>Marinate as many hazelnuts as cherries with plenty of oil, half as much
+lemon juice as oil, and a little salt, one or two hours. Put a nut in
+the place of the stone in the cherries. Sprinkle with oil and a very
+little lemon juice, and serve in lettuce nests.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fruit Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Winter.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Peel two oranges; with a sharp knife cut between the pulp and the skin
+and remove the section entire. Slice the meats of one-fourth a pound of
+English walnuts. Of one-fourth a pound of figs select a few for a
+garnish and cut the rest in thin slices. Slice three bananas. Toss half
+the ingredients with two or three tablespoonfuls of oil, and, if the
+oranges are sweet, toss again with one tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+Arrange in a mound on a salad-dish. Put the rest of the fruit, each kind
+separately, on the mound in sections; garnish the edge and top with
+heart leaves of lettuce,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span> and add stars of mayonnaise and candied
+cherries here and there.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Orange=and=Walnut Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>This is a particularly good salad to serve with game. Select fine
+oranges, remove the peel and every particle of white skin, and slice
+very thin lengthwise. Slice English walnuts, blanched or plain. To each
+pint of orange slices add half a pint (scant) of the sliced nuts; dress
+with three tablespoonfuls of oil, one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt, and,
+if the oranges are particularly sweet, a tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+Serve on a bed of watercress or lettuce.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Celery=and=Chestnut Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Shell and blanch the chestnuts; then boil about fifteen minutes, or
+until tender; drain and cool. When cool cut into quarters, add an equal
+quantity of fine-sliced celery, dress with French dressing, and serve on
+lettuce leaves. Sliced pimentos may be added.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Apple,=Celery=and=English=Walnut Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Peel and cut the apples in small cubes; blanch the nuts and break in
+pieces, and cut the celery in thin slices; marinate the apple and nuts
+with oil and lemon juice half an hour; drain, add the celery and
+mayonnaise dressing, and serve in cups made by removing the pulp from
+red apples. Cut the edges of the apples in small vandykes; keep fresh in
+cold water until ready to serve.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Orange=and=Banana Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Sweet.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Stir the juice of two oranges, half a cup of sherry wine, one
+tablespoonful of lemon juice, half a cup of sugar and the unbeaten white
+of an egg, over the fire, until the boiling-point is reached; let simmer
+slowly ten minutes, strain through a cheese-cloth, and, when thoroughly
+chilled, pour over three bananas and three oranges, sliced and mixed
+together in a salad-bowl. Sprinkle with half a cup of dessicated
+cocoanut. Serve thoroughly chilled.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fig=and=Nut Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Slice pulled figs, cooked and cooled, and mix with them a few slices of
+walnuts or blanched almonds. Serve with French dressing made of claret
+and lemon juice instead of vinegar, or with a cream dressing. In using
+the cream dressing, mix the ingredients with a little of the dressing
+and dispose additional dressing here and there, using the forcing-bag
+and tube. When available, fresh figs are preferable to those that have
+been cooked.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Grapefruit Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the chilled fruit in halves, crosswise, and take out the pulp with a
+spoon; dress with French dressing. The juice of the grapefruit may be
+used in the place of other acid, and mayonnaise in the place of French
+dressing. Serve on lettuce leaves, or return to the skin from which the
+pulp<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span> was removed. The edge of the grapefruit cup may be cut in
+vandykes, or otherwise ornamented.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/fruit_salad.jpg" width="300" height="233" alt="Fruit Salad." title="Fruit Salad." />
+<span class="caption">Fruit Salad.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_90'>page 90</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/turquoise.jpg" width="300" height="174" alt="Turquoise Salad, No. 2." title="Turquoise Salad, No. 2." />
+<span class="caption">Turquoise Salad, No. 2.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_94'>page 94</a></div>
+<h3><br /><br />Turquoise Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Mix together equal parts of celery and tart apple cut in match-like
+pieces, and one or two pimentos cut in similar pieces. Dress with
+mayonnaise made light with whipped cream. Serve in nests of lettuce.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Turquoise Salad, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Use pineapple in the place of the apple; serve in a mound on a bed of
+lettuce leaves. Garnish with stars cut from the pimentos with French
+cutter, curled celery, and heart leaves of celery.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salad Chiffonade.</h3>
+
+<p>Seed two green peppers, boil two or three minutes, then cut in shreds.
+Shred the light and dark leaves of a head of lettuce, or endive,
+separately. Cut three tomatoes in shreds. Remove the peel and skin from
+one large grapefruit. Serve with French dressing, seasoning, and then
+arranging each article separately upon the serving-dish, having a circle
+of light and then dark green material about the edge.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Peach=and=Almond Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Blanch the almonds and cut in thin slices. Chill the peaches, peel, and
+cut in slices; use one-fifth as much in bulk of sliced nuts as sliced
+peaches.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span> Serve with French dressing, or with mayonnaise made white
+with whipped cream. Garnish the edge with delicate lettuce leaves and
+serve at once.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Peach Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>English style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Cut ripe, fine-flavored peaches into quarters, after removing the skins.
+Cover with champagne, thoroughly chilled, and sprinkle with tea-rose
+petals. Serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Peach,=Strawberry=and=Cherry Salad.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>London style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Let a large handful of fresh rose petals stand an hour or two in a cool
+place in a cup of Hungarian wine. Strain out the leaves and pour the
+wine over a quart of mixed fruit,&mdash;peaches pared and cut in quarters,
+strawberries hulled and cut in halves, and cherries stoned,&mdash;all
+thoroughly chilled. Let a handful of rose petals stand an hour or two in
+a cup of thick cream; then strain the cream, sweeten slightly with
+powdered sugar, whip to a stiff froth, and use as a garnish for the
+fruit.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Grapefruit, Pineapple, and Pimento Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut a large grapefruit in halves and remove the pulp with a sharp knife
+to avoid crushing it; remove half the pulp of a large pineapple from
+the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span> core with a fork, after carefully removing the unedible outside.
+Dress with white mayonnaise and serve upon crisp lettuce hearts. Garnish
+with tiny bits of pimento. 2d.&mdash;Omit the pimento, lettuce and
+mayonnaise, and dress with sherry wine and sugar. For a Christmas salad,
+use the first formula and canned pineapple if the fresh be not at hand.
+Dispose the dressed pineapple and <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'grape fruit'">grapefruit</ins> upon shredded lettuce,
+having a circle of heart leaves around the edge. Dot here and there with
+small stars cut from the red pimento with a French cutter. Or chop the
+pimento fine and dispose in the shape of a large five-pointed star in
+the centre of the dish.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>HOW TO PREPARE AND USE ASPIC JELLY.</h2>
+
+
+<p>To make aspic for moulding or decorating a fish salad, use stock
+prepared from chicken or veal, or from fish. For chicken, veal or
+sweetbread salad, use chicken or veal stock, or a light-colored
+consomm&eacute;. In an emergency, aspic may be made from the prepared extracts
+of beef, or from bouillon capsules. Aspic is often tinted delicately to
+harmonize with a particular color scheme. A light-green aspic has been
+found quite effective.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />RECIPE.</h3>
+
+<p>To one quart of highly seasoned stock, freed from all fat, add the juice
+of a lemon, a bay leaf, half a cup of wine and one box of gelatine
+soaked in a cup of cold water. Beat into the mixture the slightly beaten
+whites and crushed shells of two eggs. Heat to the boiling-point,
+stirring constantly, and let boil five minutes. After standing ten
+minutes skim off the froth, etc., and strain through a cheese-cloth
+folded double and held in a colander.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Aspic for Garnishing.</h3>
+
+<p>Pour the liquid jelly into a new tin to the depth of half an inch. Wring
+a napkin out of cold water<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span> and spread it smoothly over the meat-board.
+Dip the pan in warm water and turn the jelly onto the napkin; stamp in
+rounds, diamonds or other fanciful shapes. If blocks of greater
+thickness be required, fill the pan to the required depth with the
+liquid aspic. When turned from the mould, cut in squares or diamonds
+with a knife, wiped dry after having been dipped in hot water.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />To Chop Jelly.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the jelly slowly, first in one direction, then in the opposite
+direction. Each piece, whether large or small, should be clean-cut and
+distinct. Aspic melts or softens in a warm place, and should not be
+taken from the mould until the time of serving, and then it must be
+handled with care.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Consomm&eacute; for Aspic Jelly.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut two pounds of beef from the under part of the round and two pounds
+of shin of veal into small pieces; crack the bones in the shin. Place
+over the fire with two and a half quarts of cold water; add one ounce of
+lean ham. Heat slowly, and cook just below the boiling-point two or
+three hours; then add to the kettle a three-pound fowl, and allow it to
+remain till tender. Put some marrow into the frying-pan, and when hot
+saut&eacute; in it a small onion cut fine, two tablespoonfuls, each, of chopped
+celery, carrot and turnip; add to the soup kettle, removing the fowl,
+together with a sprig, each, of parsley, thyme and summer savory,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span> two
+bay leaves, a small blade of mace, four cloves, two peppercorns and one
+scant tablespoonful of salt. Let simmer about an hour and a half; then
+strain and let cool.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken Stock for Aspic Jelly.</h3>
+
+<p>Put a four-pound fowl and a few bits of veal from the neck over the fire
+in three pints of cold water. Heat slowly to the boiling-point, let boil
+five minutes, then skim and let simmer until the fowl is nearly tender.
+Now add an onion and half a sliced carrot, a stalk of celery, a
+teaspoonful of sweet herbs tied in a bag with a sprig of parsley, two
+cloves, a blade of mace, eight peppercorns and a teaspoonful of salt.
+Remove the fowl when tender, and let the stock simmer until reduced to
+about one quart; strain, and set aside to become cool.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Second Stock for Use in Sauces, Etc.</h3>
+
+<p>Break the bones from roasts; add the tough or browned bits of meat and
+fat; add also the flank ends from chops and steaks, cut small (there
+should always be a few bits of fresh meat), and cover with cold water.
+Heat slowly and let simmer two or three hours, then add, for each two
+quarts of water used, one-fourth a cup, each, of chopped onion and
+carrot, two stalks of celery and a tomato cut small, two teaspoonfuls of
+sweet herbs, two sprigs of parsley browned in two tablespoonfuls of
+butter or drippings, and cook about an hour. Strain and let cool. Stock
+will keep a day or two in summer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span> and nearly a week in winter, if the
+cake of fat that forms upon the top be left undisturbed.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fish Stock.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>For use in fish aspic, or any fish dish.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Cover the bones and trimmings from the fish that is to be used for the
+salad with cold water; add, if convenient, the body bones of a lobster
+or two. Add also one or two pounds of an inexpensive fish, and a pint of
+water for each pound of fish. All must be fresh. Bring the water slowly
+to the boiling-point and let simmer an hour, then add, for each quart of
+water, one tablespoonful, each, of chopped onion and carrot, a sprig of
+parsley and one teaspoonful of sweet herbs, saut&eacute;d delicately in two
+tablespoonfuls of butter. Season to taste with salt and cayenne.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Aspic Jelly from Bouillon Capsules, Etc.</h3>
+
+<p>Put over the fire one-fourth a cup, each, of onion and carrot, saut&eacute;d in
+two tablespoonfuls of butter, two stalks of celery, a bay leaf, half a
+dozen peppercorns and two or three cloves, with one quart of water; add
+three bouillon capsules, or three teaspoonfuls of beef extract (not
+home-made) dissolved in two cups of boiling water; let simmer about half
+an hour, then add one box of gelatine softened in one cup of cold water,
+any additional flavoring desired, and the slightly beaten white and
+crushed shell of one egg (more shells will be advantageous). Bring
+slowly to the boiling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>-point, stirring constantly meanwhile, and let
+simmer five minutes; let stand in a hot place ten minutes, then skim and
+strain through a cheese-cloth folded double.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />White Chaud=froid Sauce.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>For coating joints of fowl or game, or medallions of fowl, tongue or
+sweetbreads.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>To one pint of white sauce, made of white stock, add three-fourths a cup
+of aspic jelly and one tablespoonful of lemon juice; let simmer until
+reduced to the consistency of very thick cream; remove the butter from
+the top and let cool slightly before using.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHEESE DISHES SERVED WITH SALADS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Digestive cheese">
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Digestive cheese and fruit there sure will be.</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ben Jonson.</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHEESE DISHES SERVED WITH SALADS.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese Custard.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Mrs. Dimon.</span>)</div>
+
+<p>Butter a baking-dish, put in a layer of bread cut in pieces one inch
+square with crust removed, sprinkle thin-sliced cheese over the bread,
+dust with salt and paprica, or a few grains of cayenne. Add other layers
+of bread and cheese, seasoning as before, using in all half a small loaf
+of bread, one cup of cheese and half a teaspoonful of salt. Beat two
+eggs slightly, add one pint of milk, and pour the mixture over the bread
+and cheese. Bake about half an hour in a moderate oven.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese Souffl&eacute;.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook together four tablespoonfuls of butter and two tablespoonfuls of
+flour, into which have been sifted one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of
+soda and mustard and a few grains of cayenne. Add gradually half a cup
+of milk. When the sauce boils, remove from the fire and stir into it one
+cup of grated cheese (half a pound) and the yolks of three eggs, beaten
+until light. When well mixed, fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three
+eggs.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span> Bake in a buttered pudding-dish, in a moderate oven, about
+twenty-five minutes, or in individual dishes, paper cases, or china
+shirring-cups, about twelve minutes. <i>Serve at once</i> from the dish or
+dishes. The souffl&eacute; will "stand up" a little better, if three-fourths a
+cup of milk be used in place of the half-cup as given, and half a cup of
+stale grated bread be added before the cheese; but it will not be quite
+so delicate.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/cheese_rami.jpg" width="300" height="165" alt="Cheese Ramequins." title="Cheese Ramequins." />
+<span class="caption">Cheese Ramequins.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/indiv_souffle.jpg" width="300" height="190" alt="Individual Souffl&eacute; of Cheese." title="Individual Souffl&eacute; of Cheese." />
+<span class="caption">Individual Souffl&eacute; of Cheese.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_108'>page 108</a></div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese Ramequins.</h3>
+
+<p>Put four tablespoonfuls of butter and half a cup of water into a
+saucepan. When these boil, add half a cup of flour and a few grains,
+each, of salt and paprica; cook and stir until the mixture cleaves from
+the pan. Turn into a mixing-bowl and beat in two ounces of grated
+Parmesan cheese; then beat in, one at a time, two eggs. On a
+well-buttered baking-sheet shape the paste into flat circular pieces
+about an inch in diameter. Brush over the tops with beaten egg, diluted
+with one or two tablespoonfuls of milk or water, and put three or four
+dice of cheese on each. Bake about fifteen minutes. Serve very hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese Straws.</h3>
+
+<p>Roll plain or puff paste into a rectangular sheet one-fourth an inch
+thick. Sprinkle one-half with grated cheese (any kind of cheese will do,
+but Parmesan is preferred); also add a few grains of cayenne and salt.
+Fold the other half over this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span> and press the edges together closely.
+Fold again to make three layers, turn half-way round, pat and roll out
+to the thickness of one-fourth an inch. Sprinkle one half with cheese
+and proceed as before. Continue rolling and adding the cheese, until, to
+one cup and a half of flour, from half to a whole cup of cheese has been
+used. After the last rolling, cut into bands half an inch wide, or into
+rings and straws one-fourth an inch wide. The straws and bands should be
+four or five inches in length, and the rings large enough to hold three
+or four straws. Serve the bands piled in log-cabin style on a
+doylie-covered plate. If the paste be made expressly for the straws, the
+cheese and cayenne may be mixed into the flour with the butter, thus
+diminishing time in making. Bake in a moderate oven until delicately
+browned.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Gnochi &agrave; la Romaine.</h3>
+
+<p>Melt four tablespoonfuls of butter; cook in it four tablespoonfuls,
+each, of cornstarch and flour and half a teaspoonful of salt, then add
+gradually one pint of milk. When thick and smooth stir in the beaten
+yolks of two eggs, add four tablespoonfuls of grated Parmesan cheese,
+and spread on a buttered pan to cool. Just before serving, cut the paste
+in shapes, lay on a baking-sheet, and brown delicately in the oven.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese Balls.</h3>
+
+<p>Mix together thoroughly one cup and a half of grated cheese, one
+tablespoonful of flour, one-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>fourth, a teaspoonful of salt and a few
+grains of cayenne; then add the whites of three eggs, beaten stiff.
+Shape in small balls and roll in cracker crumbs, sifted or crushed to a
+fine meal; fry in deep fat and drain on soft paper.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Individual Souffl&eacute;s of Cheese, Iced.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(See cut facing <a href='#Page_106'>page 106</a>.)</div>
+
+<p>Mix half a cup of grated Parmesan and one-fourth a cup of grated Gruy&egrave;re
+cheese and one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica with two-thirds a cup of
+chicken aspic, cold, but not set. Stir over ice water until just
+beginning to form, then fold into it one cup of whipped cream. Fasten
+strips of white paper around paper souffl&eacute; cases, letting the strips
+rise an inch and a half above the cases, fixing in place with
+sealing-wax, mucilage, or a stitch. Fill the cases and the papers
+surrounding them with the cheese mixture, and set them in a pail or
+mould that is thoroughly chilled. Press the cover down over a paper, and
+pack in equal parts of ice and salt. Let stand an hour. Before serving,
+remove the paper, sprinkle the tops with buttered crumbs, browned, and
+serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese Croquettes.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Touraine.</span>)<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 3 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of flour.</li>
+<li> <small>2/3</small> a cup of milk.</li>
+<li> Yolks of 2 eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of mild cheese, cut in small cubes.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of grated Gruy&egrave;re cheese.</li>
+<li> Salt and cayenne to taste.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Make a sauce of the butter, flour and milk; add the yolks,
+slightly beaten, and beat thoroughly; add the grated cheese, and, when
+melted, remove from the fire; add the seasonings and cubes of cheese.
+Spread in a shallow pan to cool. Cut in any shape desired, dip in
+crumbs, then in egg, and again in crumbs; fry in deep fat and drain on
+brown paper.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese Aigrettes.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac12; a cup of water.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of flour.</li>
+<li> 2 eggs, with yolk of a third.</li>
+<li> A few grains of cayenne and salt.</li>
+<li> 2 ounces (&frac14; a cup) of grated Parmesan cheese.</li>
+<li> Hot fat.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Boil the water and butter, sift in the flour with the salt
+and cayenne; stir and cook until the mixture cleaves from the side of
+the pan. When the mixture has slightly cooled, add the eggs, one at a
+time, beating in each egg thoroughly before another is added. Lastly,
+add the cheese. Drop, by teaspoonfuls, into hot fat and fry a golden
+brown. Drain on soft paper and serve piled on a folded napkin.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese d'Artois.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> White of 1 egg.</li>
+<li> Yolks of 2 eggs.</li>
+<li> Salt and paprica.</li>
+<li> 2 ounces of grated Parmesan cheese.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a pound of plain or puff paste.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cream the butter, beat in the eggs, and add the cheese with a
+few grains, each, of salt and paprica. Roll the pastry very thin and cut
+it into two rectangular pieces; lay one of these on a baking-sheet and
+spread with the cheese mixture; cover this with the second piece of
+pastry. Score with a knife in strips one inch wide and about three
+inches long, brush over with beaten egg, and bake about fifteen minutes.
+Cut out the strips while hot. Serve at once, or reheat before serving.</p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/pineapple_cheese.jpg" width="300" height="178" alt="Pineapple Cheese and Crackers." title="Pineapple Cheese and Crackers." />
+<span class="caption">Pineapple Cheese and Crackers.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 250px;">
+<img src="images/lettuce_cheese_veg_macedoine.jpg" width="250" height="151" alt="Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Vegetable Macedoine." title="Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Vegetable Macedoine." />
+<span class="caption">Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Vegetable Macedoine.</span>
+</div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese Fritters.</h3>
+
+<p>Slice thin half a dozen large tart apples (select apples that cook
+quickly), and prepare half as many thin slices of cheese. Beat up one or
+two eggs, and season with salt, mustard and pepper. Soak the cheese in
+the egg mixture, then put each slice between two slices of apple,
+sandwich style; dip in the beaten egg, saut&eacute; in hot butter, and serve
+hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Vegetable Macedoine.</h3>
+
+<p>Mix together a ten-cent cream cheese, a canned pimento (red) cut in tiny
+cubes, one-fourth a cup of small green string beans, cut in cubes, five
+olives, chopped fine, and enough cream to hold the mixture together.
+When thoroughly mixed, use a piece of paraffine or confectioner's paper
+to handle and give the mixture the original shape. Let<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span> stand in a cold
+place, wrapped in the paper, until ready to serve, then dispose in the
+centre of a salad dish, lined with lettuce leaves, dressed with French
+dressing. Slice the cheese with a silver knife before sending to table.
+At luncheon, mayonnaise may be served in a dish apart.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><span class="smcap">Part II.</span></h2>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 36px;">
+<img src="images/leaf.png" width="36" height="24" alt="Leaf" title="Leaf" />
+</div>
+<h2>SANDWICHES.</h2>
+
+<div class="center"><i>Socrates brought Philosophy from the clouds, but
+the Englishmen have dragged her into the kitchen.</i></div>
+
+<div class='right'>
+&mdash;<span class="smcap">Hegel.</span><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="center"><i>Homer never entertained either guests or hosts
+with long speeches till the mouth of hunger be
+stopped.</i></div>
+
+<div class='right'>
+&mdash;<span class="smcap">Sir Philip Sidney.</span><br /></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>SANDWICHES.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A pale young man, with feeble whiskers and a stiff
+white neckcloth, came walking down the lane <i>en
+sandwich</i>&mdash;having a lady, that is, on each arm.</p>
+
+<div class='right'>
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">&mdash;<i>Thackeray</i> ("<i>Vanity Fair</i>").</span><br />
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>The term "sandwich," now applied to many a fanciful shaped and encased
+dainty, was formerly used in speaking of "two slices of bread with meat
+between." In this sense, the word had its origin, about the end of the
+eighteenth century, from the fact that the fourth Earl of Sandwich was
+so infatuated with the pleasures and excitement of the gaming-table that
+he often could not leave it long enough to take his meals with his
+family; and, on such occasions, a butler was despatched to him bearing
+"slices of bread with meat between."</p>
+
+<p>The fillings of savory sandwiches may be placed between pieces of bread,
+crackers, pastry, <i>chou</i> paste or aspic jelly. When preparing sweet
+sandwiches, these same materials may be used, as also lady-fingers
+(white or yellow), macaroons or sweet wafers.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Bread for Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>As a rule, bread for sandwiches should be twenty-four hours old; but
+fresh bread, which is more pliable than stale, is better adapted to this
+use, when the sandwiches are to take the form of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span> rolls or folds. When
+stale bread is used for rolls or folds, they must be ribbon-tied; or
+tiny Japanese toothpicks may be made to keep them in shape.</p>
+
+<p>The bread may be yeast or peptic bread. It may be white or brown. It is
+not even essential that the two bits of bread be of the same kind;
+Quaker, rice, whole-wheat, rye or graham bread is interchangeable with
+white or brown bread. After selecting your loaf or loaves, slice in
+even, quarter-inch slices; then cut in squares, triangles or fingers, or
+stamp with a round or fanciful-shaped cutter. Cutters can be obtained in
+heart, club, diamond and spade shape, also in racquet shape.</p>
+
+<p>Do not spread butter or filling upon the bread before it is cut from the
+loaf and into shape. When so treated, the butter or filling on the
+extreme edge of the bread is liable to soil the fingers or gloves that
+come in contact with it.</p>
+
+<p>Cream the butter, using a small wooden spoon for the purpose, and then
+it can be spread upon the most delicate bread without crumbling.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />The Filling.</h3>
+
+<p>Anything appropriately eaten with the <i>covering</i> may be used for the
+<i>filling</i> of a sandwich. In meats, salted meat takes the lead in popular
+favor; when sliced the meat should be cut across the grain and as thin
+as possible, and several bits should be used in each sandwich, unless a
+very small, &aelig;sthetic sandwich be in order. Tongue<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span> and corned beef,
+whether they be used in slices or finely chopped, should be cooked until
+they are very tender. When corned beef or ham is chopped for a filling,
+the sandwich is much improved by a dash of mustard; Worcestershire or
+horseradish sauce improves a filling of roast beef or boiled tongue;
+while chopped capers, tomato sauce, catsup or a cold mint sauce is
+appropriate in sandwiches made of lamb; celery salt, when the filling is
+of chicken or veal, and lemon juice, when the principal ingredient is
+fish, are <i>en rapport</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The flavor of a few drops of onion juice is relished by many in any kind
+of fish or meat sandwich, while others would prefer a few grains of
+fine-chopped parsley.</p>
+
+<p>When salad sandwiches are to be prepared, chop the meat or fish very
+fine and mix it with the salad dressing. Celery, cabbage, cress,
+cucumbers, tomatoes or olives may be chopped and added to the meat with
+the dressing. When lettuce is used, the leaf is served whole, the edges
+just appearing outside the bread. Any one of these vegetables, combined
+with a salad dressing, makes a delicious sandwich without meat or fish.
+When desired, other well-prepared sauces may be used in the place of
+salad dressings. Fillings of uncooked fruit may be used; but, in the
+case of dried fruits, it is preferable to stew until tender, after the
+fruit has been finely chopped. Pineapple, lemon or orange juice may be
+added at pleasure. Sandwiches prepared from entire-wheat bread, with
+fig<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span> or date fillings, are particularly wholesome for the children's
+luncheon basket.</p>
+
+<p>When a particularly &aelig;sthetic sandwich is desired, wrap the butter that
+is to be used in spreading the bread in a napkin, and put it over night
+in a jar, on a bed of violets or rose petals; strew more flowers over
+the top and cover the jar tightly. If meat or fish is to be used as the
+basis of the sandwich, substitute nasturtium leaves and blossoms, or
+sprigs of mignonette, for the former flowers.</p>
+
+<p>Fancy butter makes an attractive filling for a sandwich; it has also the
+merit of being less often in evidence than many another filling.</p>
+
+<p>Sandwiches, except when vegetables and dressings are used, may be
+prepared early in the day, placed in a stone jar, covered with a
+slightly dampened cloth, and set away in a cool place until such time as
+they are wanted. Or, they may be wrapped in paraffine paper. Still, when
+convenient, it is preferable to have everything in readiness, and put
+the sandwiches together just before serving. Garnish the serving-dish
+with parsley, cress, celery plumes, slices of lemon, barberries and
+leaves, or fresh nasturtium leaves and blossoms.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Beverages Served with Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Coffee heads the list of beverages most acceptably served with
+sandwiches. Tea comes next. Cocoa and chocolate are admissible only with
+the dainty, &aelig;sthetic varieties, in which fruit or some kind of sweetmeat
+is used.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>SAVORY SANDWICHES.</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+"Hail, wedded nourishment!"<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Ham=and=Tongue Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop two parts of cold tongue and one part of cold ham (one-fourth as
+much fat ham as lean) very fine; pound in a mortar, and season with
+paprica and a little mixed mustard. Spread butter on one piece of bread,
+the meat mixture on the other, and press the two pieces together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Ham=and=Egg Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop the ham and pound smooth in a mortar; pass the yolks of hard-boiled
+eggs through a sieve; mix the yolks with an equal amount of mayonnaise
+dressing. Butter one piece of bread lightly and spread with the ham,
+spread the other piece with the egg and dressing, and press the two
+together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Corned=Beef Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop the cold meat very fine, using one-fourth of fat meat. Work into
+the meat French mustard, or any "made" mustard, to taste, and prepare
+the sandwiches in the usual way. Boston brownbread combines well with
+this preparation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tongue=and=Veal (or Chicken) Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Use a little less of the chopped tongue than of the other kind of meat,
+and one-half as much chopped celery as meat. Mix with salad dressing.
+Spread one piece of bread with butter, the other with the mixture, and
+press together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Celery Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop crisp celery very fine and mix with salad dressing. Spread one
+piece of bread with butter, the other with a thin layer of the mixture.
+With a sharp knife split open the round stems of celery tips and put
+them between the bread, so that the tips will just show on the edges.
+Tie with narrow ribbon, light-green in color.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sardine Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Use, in bulk, equal parts of yolks of well-cooked eggs, rubbed to a
+smooth paste, and the flesh of sardines, freed from skin and bones and
+pounded in a mortar; season to taste with a few drops of tobasco sauce
+and lemon juice, and spread as usual. Crackers may be used in the place
+of bread, if the sandwiches be prepared just before using, otherwise the
+crackers lose their crispness. Garnish with slices of lemon and parsley.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Caviare Sandwich Rolls.</h3>
+
+<p>To each two tablespoonfuls of caviare add ten drops of onion juice and a
+few drops of lemon juice,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span> and mix together thoroughly. Remove the crust
+from a fresh, moist loaf of bread, cut in thin slices, spread each slice
+very delicately with butter and the caviare mixture, roll up in a roll
+and tie with ribbon one-fourth an inch wide, or pin with Chinese
+toothpicks. The bread should not be more than twelve hours old. If fear
+be lest the bread will not be sufficiently moist to roll, wrap the loaf,
+when taken from the oven, in a damp cloth and then in a dry one; keep in
+this fashion until ready for use.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Russian Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Slightly butter thin slices of bread; moisten fine-chopped olives with
+mayonnaise dressing and spread upon the buttered slices; spread other
+slices with Neufchatel, or any cream cheese, and press together in
+pairs.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mushroom=and=Lobster Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Saut&eacute; the caps of half a pound of mushrooms in a little butter about
+five minutes, adding half a sliced onion if desired. Cover with highly
+seasoned stock and let simmer until very tender; chop and press through
+a sieve, and, if very moist, reduce to the consistency of a thick pur&eacute;e.
+Add an equal quantity of lobster meat pounded smooth in a mortar. Season
+to taste with salt, pepper, lemon juice and, if desired, tomato catsup.
+When cool use as any filling.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese=and=English=Walnut Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac14; a pound of grated cheese.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a pound of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a pound of English walnut meats, sliced.</li>
+<li> Salt and paprica to taste.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Work the butter to a cream, add the seasonings and the grated
+cheese gradually; then mix in the nuts, which should be <i>sliced</i> very
+thin. Spread the mixture upon bits of bread and press together in pairs.
+Particularly good made of brownbread and served with a simple vegetable
+salad!</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Egg=and=Spinach Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Use cold boiled spinach, which when hot was chopped very fine or pressed
+through a colander, and sifted yolks of well-cooked eggs. Mix the
+spinach with sauce tartare and spread on one bit of bread, spread the
+other with butter and sifted yolk of egg; press together. Garnish the
+serving-dish with parsley and cooked eggs cut in quarters lengthwise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cress=and=Egg Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Pick the leaves from fresh cress, chop or break apart, season with
+French dressing, and proceed as above.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Imitation P&acirc;t&eacute;=de=Foie=Gras Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop half an onion and saut&eacute; in a little butter; when delicately
+browned, add five or six chicken livers and saut&eacute; them on both sides.
+Cover with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span> well-seasoned chicken stock and let simmer until tender.
+Mash the livers fine with a wooden spoon and press them through a sieve;
+season with salt, paprica, mustard, or a dash of curry powder. Press
+into a cup, pour melted butter over the top, and set away in a cool
+place. When ready to serve, remove the butter and prepare the sandwiches
+after the usual manner.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken Rolls.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 4 ounces from the breast of chicken (&frac12; a cup).</li>
+<li> 4 ounces of braised tongue.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of celery salt.</li>
+<li> A few grains of cayenne.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of anchovy paste.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of mayonnaise or boiled dressing.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Chop the meat and pound to a paste in a mortar; add the
+seasonings and mix well. Remove the crust from a loaf of moist bread;
+cut in very thin slices, trim each slice into a rectangular shape,
+spread lightly with soft butter and then with the mixture. Roll the
+slices and tie them with ribbon. Omit the anchovy paste, if desired.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Epicurean Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Cream four tablespoonfuls of butter and one teaspoonful of mustard.
+Press the yolks of four hard-boiled eggs through a sieve and add them to
+the butter and mustard. Then add four boned anchovies, four small
+pickles, a teaspoonful of chives and a sprig of tarragon, chopped
+together until fine. Cut stale bread in fingers or other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span> fanciful
+shapes, and spread with the mixture. Press two pieces together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Halibut=and=Lettuce Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Put a pound and a half of halibut, a slice of onion, a stalk of celery,
+four or five peppercorns, one teaspoonful of salt and one tablespoonful
+of lemon juice in boiling water, and cook, just below the boiling-point,
+ten or fifteen minutes, according to thickness. Remove bone and skin and
+rub the fish fine with a wooden spoon; add half a cup of thick cream, a
+teaspoonful of salt, a dash of white pepper and one tablespoonful of
+lemon juice. Spread this mixture, when cold, on buttered slices of
+bread, put a lettuce leaf above the mixture, and spread a teaspoonful of
+mayonnaise or boiled salad dressing on the lettuce; finish with a slice
+of buttered bread and tie with ribbon.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster Fingers.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop lobster meat very fine; season to taste with French dressing. Cut
+the bread in pieces about four inches long and an inch and a half wide.
+Finish as usual. Garnish with parsley and the slender feelers of the
+lobster.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tower of Babel.</h3>
+
+<p>Pile a <i>variety</i> of sandwiches in form of a pyramid (use bread of
+different colors). Arrange a garnish of parsley and radish rosebuds
+around the base,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span> and on the top a few sprigs of parsley, or celery
+plumes.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Nasturtium Folds.</h3>
+
+<p>Flavor the butter with nasturtium leaves and blossoms, and with it
+spread a thin slice of <i>moist</i> bread, which is longer one way than the
+other. Press fresh nasturtium leaves and blossoms upon the butter and
+fold one half over the other.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Harlequin Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Spread a bit of brownbread with butter and French mustard, and a bit of
+white bread, cut to fit the former, with butter and cheese creamed
+together. Finish as usual.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Harlequin Sandwiches, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Spread the brownbread with butter and cheese creamed together, and the
+white bread with butter, then with cucumber, chopped fine and seasoned
+with French dressing, to which a few drops of onion juice have been
+added.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Beet=and=Cream=Cheese Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Spread one piece of bread with cream cheese, the other with beets that
+have been chopped very fine and seasoned with French dressing.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Peanut Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop freshly roasted peanuts very fine; then pound them in a mortar
+until smooth; season with salt and moisten with thick cream.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/chicken_salad_sand.jpg" width="300" height="172" alt="Chicken Salad Sandwiches." title="Chicken Salad Sandwiches." />
+<span class="caption">Chicken Salad Sandwiches.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_127'>page 127</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/halibut_sandwiches.jpg" width="300" height="156" alt="Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic." title="Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic." />
+<span class="caption">Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_128'>page 128</a></div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Peanut Sandwiches, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>Mix the prepared peanuts with mayonnaise dressing. Butter two pieces of
+bread; spread one with the peanut mixture, the other with shredded
+lettuce, and press the two together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Shad=Roe=and=Yellow=Butter Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac14; a pound of butter.</li>
+<li> Sifted yolks of 4 eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 set of shad roe, cooked, pounded in a mortar and sifted.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of paprica.</li>
+<li> 4 drops of tobasco sauce.</li>
+<li> 2 teaspoonfuls of very fine-chopped capers.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cream the butter and add the other ingredients gradually.
+Prepare as usual.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Green=Butter Sandwiches.<a name="greenbutter" id="greenbutter"></a></h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac14; a pound of butter.</li>
+<li> <small>1/8</small> a peck of spinach.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of very fine-chopped parsley.</li>
+<li> 6 anchovies.</li>
+<li> 2 teaspoonfuls of very fine-chopped capers.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Boil the spinach, drain thoroughly, and press through a piece
+of muslin. Beat the butter to a cream with a wooden spoon; beat into the
+butter enough of the spinach pulp to give the required tint of green.
+Wipe the oil from the anchovies, remove the backbone, and pass through a
+hair sieve; then add to the colored butter, a little at a time; add also
+the parsley and capers; chill slightly and use as a filling for
+sandwiches. These butters are used also to mask or decorate cooked fish
+for "cold service."</p>
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken=Salad Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Chou-paste boxes.</i>)<br />
+<br />
+(See cut facing <a href='#Page_126'>page 126</a>.)</div>
+
+<p>Bake <i>chou</i> paste in long, slender shapes, like &eacute;clairs, but narrower
+and shorter; when cold split apart on the ends and one side and fill
+with chicken salad. Put the top back in place, after inserting a celery
+plume at each end. Garnish the serving-dish with celery leaves and
+pim-olas or olives. Serve other salads in the same way.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mosaic Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the bread, white, brown and graham, as thin as possible, and use
+four or five pieces in each sandwich, putting them together so that the
+colors will contrast. Either butter or other filling is admissible.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken=and=Nut Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop fine the white meat of a cooked chicken and pound to a paste in a
+mortar. Season to taste with salt, paprica, oil and lemon juice and
+spread upon thin bits of bread. Spread other bits of bread,
+corresponding in shape to the first, with butter; press into the butter
+English walnuts, pecan nuts or almonds, blanched and <i>sliced</i> very thin.
+Press corresponding pieces together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Aspic Jelly for Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Soak one box (two ounces) of gelatine in one cup of cold chicken liquor
+until thoroughly softened. Add to three cups of chicken stock, seasoned
+with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span> vegetables and sweet herbs according to directions previously
+given, also the crushed shell and white of one egg, and proceed as for
+aspic jelly. Turn the liquid jelly into rectangular pans, having it
+three-eighths of an inch or less in thickness, and set aside in a cool
+place to harden. When ready to serve, dip the pan in hot water an
+instant, and turn the jelly on to a paper. With a thin, sharp knife cut
+the jelly into squares or diamonds, or dip a cutter into hot water and
+stamp out into hearts or clubs.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster Sandwiches with Aspic.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop the lobster fine, mix with mayonnaise dressing to taste, spread
+upon a bit of aspic, cover with a crisp lettuce leaf, and above this
+place another piece of aspic spread with the lobster mixture. Serve at
+once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic.</h3>
+
+<p>After the aspic is poured into the pans, sprinkle upon it some fine-cut
+Spanish pimentos. When ready to serve, prepare as lobster sandwiches
+with aspic, using fish in the place of lobster, and, if desired, sauce
+tartare in the place of mayonnaise. Shrimps, salmon or other fish,
+chicken, veal, tongue, sweetbreads, etc., may be used either with
+lettuce or with chopped celery, cress, cucumbers, etc. Or the vegetables
+may be used without either fish, flesh or fowl.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/wedding_sandwiches.jpg" width="300" height="190" alt="Wedding Sandwich Rolls." title="Wedding Sandwich Rolls." />
+<span class="caption">Wedding Sandwich Rolls.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_129'>page 129</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/club_sandwiches.jpg" width="300" height="136" alt="Club Sandwich." title="Club Sandwich." />
+<span class="caption">Club Sandwich.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_129'>page 129</a></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Club Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Steamer Priscilla style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Have ready four triangular pieces of toasted bread spread with
+mayonnaise dressing; cover two of these with lettuce, lay thin slices of
+cold chicken (white meat) upon the lettuce, over this arrange slices of
+broiled breakfast bacon, then lettuce, and cover with the other
+triangles of toast spread with mayonnaise. Trim neatly, arrange on a
+plate, and garnish with heart leaves of lettuce dipped in mayonnaise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Wedding Sandwich Rolls.</h3>
+
+<p>Wrap bread as it is taken from the oven closely in a towel wrung out of
+cold water, cover with several thicknesses of dry cloth and set aside
+about four hours; then cut away the crust, and with a thin, sharp knife
+cut the loaf or loaves in slices as thin as possible and spread with
+butter, and, if desired, thin shavings of meat, potted meat or chopped
+nuts; roll the slices very closely and pile on a serving-dish.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />The Milwaukee Sandwich.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 thin rounds of white bread.</li>
+<li> 1 thin round of graham or rye bread.</li>
+<li> 4 large oysters, broiled or fried.</li>
+<li> Breast of cooked chicken, or turkey.</li>
+<li> Two slices of crisp bacon.</li>
+<li> Horseradish.</li>
+<li> Lettuce.</li>
+<li> 4 small sweet pickles.</li>
+<li> 4 small radishes.</li>
+<li> Slice of lemon.</li>
+<li> 1 tomato, skin removed.</li>
+<li> Tartare sauce.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Dip the bread in beaten egg, seasoned with salt and saut&eacute; to
+a rich brown in hot butter. Roll the oysters in grated bread crumbs
+(centre of the loaf) and broil them, or "egg and bread" them, and fry in
+deep fat. Lay the first slice of bread on a plate over two or three
+lettuce leaves, put the oysters on the bread, a grating of horseradish
+on each oyster; cover with the graham or rye bread; on this lay the
+chicken or turkey cut in thin slices, season with salt and pepper, put
+on the bacon, and cover with the other slice of bread. On top of the
+sandwich lay a slice of lemon cut square, and about this dispose the
+pickles and radishes, to form a star. Serve the tomato on a lettuce leaf
+at the side. Cut out the hard centre from the tomato and fill the
+opening with sauce tartare. In making this sauce, add to mayonnaise or
+boiled dressing, onion, olives, sweet pickles and celery, chopped fine
+and squeezed dry in a cloth.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>SWEET SANDWICHES.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="In the name">
+<tr><td align='left'>In the name of the Prophet&mdash;figs!</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>Horace Smith.</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fig Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop one-fourth a pound of figs very fine, add one-fourth a cup of
+water, and cook to a smooth paste; add, also, one-third a cup of
+almonds, blanched, chopped very fine and pounded to a paste with a
+little rose-water, also the juice of half a lemon. When cold spread the
+mixture upon lady-fingers or cakelets, white or yellow, press another
+above the mixture, and serve upon a handsome doylie-covered plate.
+Raisins, dates or marmalade may be used in the place of the figs. The
+marmalade, of course, requires no cooking. Bread may be used in the
+place of the cake.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />French Fruit Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop the fruit very fine; use a mixture of cherries, plums, pineapple
+and angelica root; moisten with wine, orange or lemon juice. Use
+lady-fingers or bread for the covering. If bread is used, spread lightly
+with butter; if cake be your choice, spread very lightly with marmalade.
+Use just<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span> enough butter or marmalade to keep the coverings together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Date=and=Ginger Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop the dates and preserved ginger; moisten with syrup from the ginger
+jar and a little lemon juice; cook as above, and use with bread or
+lady-fingers. Preserved ginger may be used alone and without cooking.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Rose=Leaf Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Flavor the butter with rose petals according to the directions
+previously given. Spread both bits of bread lightly with it and put upon
+them three or four candied rose petals. If lady-fingers are used, brush
+them over with white of egg and sugar mixed together. Use but little
+sugar&mdash;just enough to hold the fingers together. The Turkish rose petals
+that come in little jars are particularly dainty, and adapted to this
+purpose. Garnish the dish on which they are served with rosebuds and
+leaves.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Violet Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare in the same manner as in the last number, substituting candied
+violets for the rose petals, and violets with green leaves for a
+garnish.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Honey Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Spread one bit of white bread with honey pressed from the comb with a
+wooden spoon, the other bit<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span> with butter. Garnish with white clover
+blossoms and leaves.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Puff=Paste Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Roll puff paste very thin (about one-eighth of an inch), cut in fanciful
+shapes and bake to a delicate brown; add chopped almonds to rich
+strawberry preserves, or peach marmalade, and spread the mixture between
+each two bits of pastry.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Pineapple Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 cup of pineapple juice and pulp.</li>
+<li> &frac34; a cup of sugar.</li>
+<li> Juice of half a lemon.</li>
+<li> Lady-fingers.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cook the pineapple, sugar and lemon juice until thick; let
+cool, and spread upon lady-fingers or sponge drops. Press together in
+pairs and serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Whipped=Cream Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 cup of heavy cream.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of powdered sugar.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of vanilla extract.</li>
+<li> Lady-fingers.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Add the sugar and extract to the cream and beat until solid;
+let chill, then spread quite thick upon lady-fingers or sponge drops.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Whipped=Cream Sandwiches with French Fruit.</h3>
+
+<p>Soak half a cup of fine-cut candied fruit in wine an hour or more.
+Prepare the cream as above,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span> and sprinkle the same with the fruit before
+putting the sandwiches together.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fruit Jelly for Sweet Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 box of gelatine (2 ounces).</li>
+<li> 1 cup of cold water.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of boiling water.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of sugar.</li>
+<li> 1&frac12; cups of orange juice.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of lemon juice.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Soak the gelatine in the cold water and dissolve in the
+boiling water; add the sugar and strain; when cold add the orange and
+lemon juice. Mould in sheets three-eighths of an inch thick.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Claret Jelly for Sweet Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Substitute claret for the orange juice and prepare as above. Do not omit
+the lemon juice.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fruit or Claret Jelly Sandwiches with Nuts.</h3>
+
+<p>Slice blanched English walnuts and pecan nuts or almonds very thin, and
+stir into whipped cream. Stamp out shapes from the jelly. Spread one
+piece with the cream and nuts and cover with a second piece of jelly.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />With French Fruit.</h3>
+
+<p>Substitute candied fruit for the nuts and proceed as above, or use nuts
+and fruit together.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cupid's Butter Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> The yolks of 4 hard-boiled eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of butter.</li>
+<li> <small>1/3</small> a cup of powdered sugar.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of orange juice.</li>
+<li> A grating of orange rind.</li>
+<li> Angel cakelets or slices of angel cake.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cream the butter, gradually add the yolks of eggs, passed
+through a potato ricer or sieve, the sugar and orange juice. Spread upon
+thin slices of angel cake, prepared for sandwiches, or upon angel
+cakelets or fingers; press two slices together and serve at once. If
+allowed to stand any length of time, keep covered and in a cool place.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese=and=Bar=le=Duc Currant Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Spread wheat bread, prepared for sandwiches, with cream cheese; put two
+or three currants and a little syrup on each piece of bread, and press
+two pieces together. These may be varied by using sliced maraschino
+cherries. Either the currants or sliced cherries with a little of the
+syrup may be mixed with the cheese and then spread upon the bread.
+Bar-le-Duc currants are imported from France in tiny glasses. The seeds
+have been removed from the currants, which are cooked in honey.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Hunter's Sandwich (Switzerland).</h3>
+
+<p>Spread fresh bread, cut in thin slices, with fresh butter; over this
+spread a layer of Brie or other cream cheese, and over the cheese spread
+a layer of honey. Press two similarly shaped pieces together and serve
+at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Hunter's Sandwich (Ellwanger).</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare as above, substituting maple syrup (or sugar) for the honey.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>BREAD AND CHOU PASTE.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="She needeth least">
+<tr><td align='left'>She needeth least, who kneadeth best,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: 2em;">These rules which we shall tell;</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Who kneadeth ill shall need them more</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Than she who kneadeth well.</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>F.F.</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Two Loaves of Wheat Bread.</h3>
+
+<p>To two cups of scalded milk or boiled water, in a mixing-bowl, add two
+tablespoonfuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, and, when the liquid
+becomes lukewarm, one yeastcake dissolved in half a cup of water, boiled
+and cooled. With a broad-bladed knife cut and mix in enough well-dried
+flour, sifted, to make a stiff dough (about seven cups). Knead until the
+dough is elastic; cover, and set to rise in a temperature of about 70&deg;
+Fahr. When the dough has doubled in bulk, "cut down" and knead slightly
+without removing from the mixing-bowl. When again double in bulk, shape
+into two double loaves and set to rise in buttered pans; when it has
+risen a third time, bake one hour.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Entire=Wheat Bread.</h3>
+
+<p>Use the preceding recipe without change other than in kind of flour and
+two additional tablespoonfuls of sugar.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/boston_bread.jpg" width="300" height="191" alt="Boston Brown Bread." title="Boston Brown Bread." />
+<span class="caption">Boston Brown Bread.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/bread_cut.jpg" width="300" height="73" alt="Bread cut for Sandwiches." title="Bread cut for Sandwiches." />
+<span class="caption">Bread cut for Sandwiches.</span>
+</div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Rice Bread.</h3>
+
+<p>Add three-fourths a cup of rice, cooked until tender and still hot, and,
+also, two tablespoonfuls of butter, to the milk or water in the first
+recipe. Other cereals, as oatmeal or cerealine, may be used instead of
+rice.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salad Rolls.</h3>
+
+<p>Make a sponge with one cup of milk, one yeastcake dissolved in
+one-fourth a cup of milk, and about one cup and a half of flour; beat
+thoroughly, cover, and set to rise in a temperature of about 70&deg; Fahr.
+When light add half a teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth a cup of melted
+butter, and flour enough to knead. Knead until elastic. Set to rise in a
+temperature of 70&deg; Fahr. When doubled in bulk, cut down and shape into
+small balls. Set to rise again, covered with a cloth and a dripping-pan.
+When light press the handle of a small wooden spoon deeply across the
+centre of each ball, brush with butter and press the edges together. Set
+the rolls close together in a baking-pan, after brushing over with
+butter the points of contact.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Boston Brownbread.</h3>
+
+<p>Sift together one cup, each, of yellow corn meal, rye meal and
+entire-wheat flour, one teaspoonful of salt and three teaspoonfuls of
+soda. Add three-fourths a cup of molasses and one pint of thick, sour
+milk. Beat thoroughly, and steam in a covered mould three hours and a
+half. The quantity<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span> here given may be steamed in four baking-powder
+boxes in two hours.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Baking=Powder Biscuit.</h3>
+
+<p>Pass through the sieve two or three times four cups of flour, one
+teaspoonful of salt, and, for each cup of flour, two level teaspoonfuls
+of baking-powder. With the tips of the fingers work into the flour
+one-third a cup of butter. When the mixture looks like meal, mix in
+gradually nearly one pint of milk, cutting the dough with a knife until
+well mixed. When it is of a consistency to handle, turn out on to a
+well-floured board, toss with the knife in the flour, then pat out into
+a sheet half an inch thick, and cut into rounds. Let the heat of the
+oven be moderate at first, and increase after the dough has risen. Bake
+about fifteen minutes.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sandwich Biscuit.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare the dough as above, roll to about three-eighths an inch in
+thickness, and cut into rounds. Spread one half of these with softened
+butter, and press the others, unbuttered, upon them; bake fifteen or
+eighteen minutes.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Pulled Bread.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>To serve with simple salads and cheese.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Remove the crust from a fresh loaf of French bread. Gash the loaf at the
+ends and pull apart into halves; then cut the halves and pull apart<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+into quarters. Repeat until the pieces are about the thickness of
+breadsticks. Put on a rack in a dripping-pan, and dry out the moisture
+in a slow oven; then brown delicately. Keep in a dry place (a tin box is
+suitable) and reheat in the oven before serving.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Give Rolls and Bread a Glossy, Brown Crust.</h3>
+
+<p>A short time before removing from the oven, brush over the top of each
+loaf or roll with beaten yolk of egg, diluted with a little milk, or
+with a little sugar dissolved in milk, or with thin starch.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chou Paste.</h3>
+
+<p>Put a saucepan with half a cup of butter and one cup of boiling water
+over the fire. When the mixture boils, beat into it one cup of flour.
+When the dough cleaves from the sides of the saucepan, turn into a bowl
+and beat in, one at a time, three large or four small eggs.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<h3>To Boil Salted Meats: Ham, Tongue, Etc.</h3>
+
+<p>Cover the meat with cold water and bring the water slowly to the
+boiling-point; let boil five minutes, then <i>slightly</i> bubble until the
+meat is tender.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />To Boil Chicken, Lamb and Other Fresh Meat.</h3>
+
+<p>Cover the meat with boiling water, let boil rapidly five minutes, then
+keep the water just<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span> below the boiling-point, or just "quivering" at one
+side of the saucepan, until the meat is tender. When the meat is about
+half cooked, add a teaspoonful of salt for each quart of water.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Potted Meat and Fish for Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pound of tender cooked meat or fish (2 cups).</li>
+<li> 2 ounces of fat cooked meat (&frac14; a cup).</li>
+<li> 2 ounces of butter (&frac14; a cup).</li>
+<li> Mace and anchovy essence, if desired.</li>
+<li> Pepper and salt.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Chop the meat or fish very fine, then pass through a pur&eacute;e
+sieve; cream the butter and with a wooden spoon work it into the meat or
+fish; add seasonings to taste, press the mixture solidly into small jars
+or cups, and pour melted butter to the depth of one-fourth an inch over
+the top of the meat. Set aside in a cool place.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Kinds of Meat and Fish for Potting.</h3>
+
+<p>Ham, fat and lean; either chicken, veal or tongue, with bacon; chicken
+and ham, mixed, fat ham; chicken and tongue, mixed, with bacon; veal and
+ham, mixed, with fat ham; roast beef and corned beef, mixed, with fat of
+either, or bacon; finnan-haddie and bacon; salmon, cod, haddock,
+bluefish, etc., with bacon, or with double the amount of butter.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/fruit_punch.jpg" width="400" height="237" alt="Bowl of Fruit-Punch Ready for Serving." title="Bowl of Fruit-Punch Ready for Serving." />
+<span class="caption">Bowl of Fruit-Punch Ready for Serving.</span>
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>BEVERAGES SERVED WITH SANDWICHES.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Towards eve">
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: 5em;">Towards eve there was tea</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>(A luxury due to Matilda) and ice,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Fruit and coffee.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>Meredith's "Lucile."</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Come">
+<tr><td align='left'>Come, touch to your lips this melting sweetness,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sip of this nectar,&mdash;this Java fine,&mdash;</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Whose tawny drops hold more completeness</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Than lurks in the depths of ruby wine.</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>J. M. L.</i><br /><br /></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Filtered Coffee.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac12; a cup of coffee, ground very fine.</li>
+<li> 3 cups of boiling water.</li>
+<li> About 6 blocks of sugar.</li>
+<li> About 3 tablespoonfuls of cream.</li>
+<li> About 6 tablespoonfuls of hot milk.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Put the coffee into the filter of a well-scalded coffee-pot.
+Pour the boiling water over the coffee. Serve as soon as the infusion
+has dripped through the filter. For black coffee use double the quantity
+of coffee.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Boiled Coffee.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 cup of ground coffee.</li>
+<li> White and shell of 1 egg.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of cold water.</li>
+<li> 6 cups of boiling water.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of ground coffee.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Beat the white and crushed shell of the egg and half the cup
+of cold water together; mix with the coffee, pour over the boiling
+water, stir thoroughly, and boil from three to five minutes with the
+nozzle tightly closed; pour half a cup of cold water down the spout;
+stir in one tablespoonful of coffee and let stand on the range, without
+boiling, ten minutes.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Five=o'clock Tea.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> Tea.</li>
+<li> Candied ox-heart cherries.</li>
+<li> Slices of lemon.</li>
+<li> Boiling water.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Fill the tea-ball half full with tea, put the ball into the
+cup, with a cherry or a slice of lemon, and pour boiling water over
+them; remove the ball when the tea is of the desired strength.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Rich Chocolate.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 4 ounces of chocolate.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of granulated sugar.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of hot water.</li>
+<li> 1 quart of scalded milk.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of vanilla extract.</li>
+<li> Whites of 3 eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of thick cream.</li>
+<li> <small>1/3</small> a cup of powdered sugar.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Grate the chocolate, add the granulated sugar and hot water,
+and cook until smooth and glossy; with a whisk beat in the hot milk very
+gradually, and return to a double boiler to keep hot. Beat the cream
+until solid. Beat the whites of the eggs until dry, then beat in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+powdered sugar and fold the cream into the egg and sugar. Add half of
+the cream mixture to the chocolate with the vanilla, and mix while the
+cream is heating. Serve the rest of the cream in spoonfuls upon the
+chocolate in the cups.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Plain Chocolate.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare as in preceding recipe, omitting the cream mixture and such
+portion of the chocolate as is desired.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Plain Cocoa.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 4 teaspoonfuls of cocoa.</li>
+<li> 4 teaspoonfuls of sugar.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of boiling water,</li>
+<li> 1 cup of hot milk.</li>
+<li> Whipped cream, if desired.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Mix the cocoa and sugar, pour over the boiling water, and
+when boiling again add the hot milk; beat the whipped cream into the hot
+cocoa, or serve a spoonful upon the top of each cup.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Ceylon Cocoa.</h3>
+
+<p>Scald a two-inch piece of paper-bark cinnamon with the milk to be used
+in making the cocoa.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sultana Cocoa.</h3>
+
+<p>Stem and wash half a pound of sultana raisins; let them stand, covered
+with one quart of boiling water, upon the back of the range an hour or
+more; filter the water through folds of cheese-cloth and use in making
+cocoa or chocolate.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Egg Lemonade.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 egg.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar.</li>
+<li> Juice of 2 lemons.</li>
+<li> 2 cups of water.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Beat the egg until white and yolk are well mixed; then beat
+in the sugar, the lemon juice and the water.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fruit Punch.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pineapple.</li>
+<li> 4 cups of sugar.</li>
+<li> 3 cups of boiling water.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of tea, freshly made.</li>
+<li> 5 lemons.</li>
+<li> 6 oranges.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of strawberry or grape juice.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a pint of maraschino cherries.</li>
+<li> 1 bottle of Apollinaris water.</li>
+<li> 6 quarts of water.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Grate the pineapple, add the boiling water and the sugar, and
+boil fifteen minutes; add the tea and strain into the punch-bowl. When
+cold add the fruit juice, the cherries and the cold water. A short time
+before serving, add a piece of ice, and, on serving, the Apollinaris
+water. Strawberries, mint leaves, or slices of banana may be used in the
+place of the cherries.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Punch &agrave; la Nantes.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 pounds of rhubarb.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of water.</li>
+<li> 1 bay leaf.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of sugar.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of orange juice.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of ginger syrup.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cut the rhubarb into pieces without peeling; add the bay leaf
+and water, and let simmer until the rhubarb is tender; strain through a
+cheese-cloth. Boil the juice with the sugar five minutes. When cold add
+the orange and lemon juice, with one-fourth a cup of syrup from a jar of
+preserved ginger, and a piece of ice. Add water as needed.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Home=made Soda Water.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2&frac14; pounds of granulated sugar.</li>
+<li> 1&frac34; ounces of tartaric acid.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of water.</li>
+<li> Whites of 3 eggs.</li>
+<li> &frac12; an ounce of ginger extract.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda for each glass.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Boil the sugar, water and tartaric acid five minutes. When
+nearly cold beat into the syrup the whites of the eggs, beaten until
+foamy, and the flavoring extract. Store in a fruit jar, closely covered.
+To use, put three tablespoonfuls into a glass half full of cold water,
+stir in one-fourth a teaspoonful of soda, and drink while effervescing.
+A pint of any kind of fruit juice may displace the water, when a
+teaspoonful of lemon juice should be added to the contents of each glass
+before stirring in the soda.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Spanish Chocolate.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>To serve 60.</i>)<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 6 quarts of milk.</li>
+<li> 3 blades of mace.</li>
+<li> 1 five-inch stick of cinnamon.</li>
+<li> 12 cloves.</li>
+<li> 20 pounded almonds.</li>
+<li> 1 pound of chocolate.</li>
+<li> 3 cups of sugar.</li>
+<li> 2 quarts of boiling water.</li>
+<li> Yolks of three eggs.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Scald the milk with the spices and nuts. Break up the
+chocolate and melt over hot water; add the sugar, mix thoroughly, then
+gradually stir in the boiling water; let cook two or three minutes after
+all the water has been added, then turn into the hot milk; let stand
+over hot water until ready to serve, then add the beaten yolks of eggs,
+diluted with half a cup of water, milk or cream, and strain through a
+cheese-cloth. Keep hot over hot water.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Claret Cup.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 quarts of claret.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of sugar.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of water.</li>
+<li> 5 lemons cut in slices.</li>
+<li> 1 dozen whole cloves.</li>
+<li> 2 qts. of charged Apollinaris or soda water.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of brandy, sherry or maraschino.</li>
+<li> Ice.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>Boil the sugar and water about six minutes; let cool, then add the lemon
+slices, with seeds removed, and the cloves; let stand some hours in a
+cold place. When ready to serve, add the claret, water and liqueur, all
+chilled on ice. Put a piece of ice in the pitcher and pour over it the
+mixture. The beverage should not be sweet.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/copper_chafing.jpg" width="400" height="259" alt="Copper Chafing-Dish with Earthen Casserole." title="Copper Chafing-Dish with Earthen Casserole." />
+<span class="caption">Copper Chafing-Dish with Earthen Casserole.</span>
+</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><span class="smcap">Part III.</span></h2>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 36px;">
+<img src="images/leaf.png" width="36" height="24" alt="Leaf" title="Leaf" />
+</div>
+<h2><span class="smcap">Chafing-dish Dainties.</span></h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Gentlemen, prepare note">
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Gentlemen, prepare not to be gone;</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>We have a trifling foolish banquet.</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Romeo and Juliet.</span><br /><br /></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Small cheer">
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Small cheer and great welcome makes a merry feast.</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Comedy of Errors</span>, iii. <span class="smcap">I.</span><br /><br /></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="A little quail">
+<tr><td align='left'><i>A little quail, or some such light thing, when I come home at night.</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Charles Dickens.</span><br /><br /></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Now and then">
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Now and then your men of wit</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Will condescend to take a bit.</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Swift.</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+
+<h2>Chafing=dishes Past and Present.</h2>
+
+<div class="center">Well, he was an ingenious man that first found out
+eating and drinking.&mdash;<i>Swift.</i></div>
+
+
+<p>How fire was discovered, when it was first applied to the needs of human
+beings, the origin and early use of cooking and heating utensils,&mdash;all
+are concealed from us in the mists that surround the life of prehistoric
+man. But at the dawn of history, even before the beginning of our era,
+crude appliances for cooking were in use; and, without doubt, one of the
+earliest of these was an utensil corresponding in some particulars, at
+least, to the chafing-dish of to-day.</p>
+
+<p>The chafing-dish is a portable utensil used upon the table, either for
+cooking food or for keeping food hot after it has been cooked by other
+means. In ancient times, the fuel of the chafing-dish was either live
+coals or olive oil; to-day we use either electricity, gas, alcohol or
+colonial spirits.</p>
+
+<p>The first chafing-dishes of which historic mention is made consisted of
+a pan heated over a pot of burning oil, the pan resting upon a frame
+which held the pot of oil. It was with such an utensil, perhaps, that
+the Israelitish women cooked the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span> locusts of Egypt and Palestine, for
+these were eaten as a common food by the people of the biblical lands
+and age.</p>
+
+<p>Mommsen, in his history of Rome, while speaking of the extravagance of
+the times, as shown in the table furnishings, probably refers to the
+chafing-dish when he says: "A well-wrought bronze cooking-machine came
+to cost more than an estate." The idea that this might be the utensil
+referred to is strengthened by the fact that many chafing-dishes have
+been found in the ruins of Pompeii. These were made of bronze, and
+highly ornamented. Evidently, olive oil was the fuel used in these
+dishes.</p>
+
+<p>Coming down to more modern times, Madame de Sta&euml;l had a dish of very
+unique pattern, and, when driven by the command of Napoleon from her
+beloved Paris, she carried her chafing-dish with her into exile as one
+of her most cherished household gods. At the present day among the
+favored few, who have full purses, are found sets of little silver
+chafing-dishes about four inches square. These tiny dishes rest upon a
+doylie-covered plate, and a bird or rarebit may be served in them as a
+course at dinner, one to each guest. The cooking is not done in these
+dishes, and they are not furnished with lamps; in them the food, while
+it is being eaten, is simply kept hot by means of a tiny pan filled with
+hot water.</p>
+
+
+<p>In reality, the modern chafing-dish is a species of <i>bain marie</i>, or
+double boiler, with a lamp so<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span> arranged that cooking can be done
+without other appliances. It consists of four parts. The <i>first</i> is the
+blazer, or the pan in which the cooking is done; this is provided with a
+long handle. The <i>second</i> is the hot-water pan, which corresponds to the
+lower part of the double boiler; this should be provided with handles,
+and is a very inconvenient dish without them. The <i>third</i> is the frame
+upon which the hot-water pan rests, and in which the spirit-lamp is set.
+The <i>last</i>, but by no means least, part is the lamp; this is provided
+with a cotton or an asbestos wick. When the lamp has a cotton wick, the
+flame is regulated by turning the wick up or down, as in an ordinary
+lamp. At present this style of lamp is found only in the more expensive
+grades of dishes,&mdash;silver-plated, and costing from $15 upwards. When
+asbestos is used as the wick, the lamp is filled with this porous stone,
+which is to be saturated with alcohol immediately before using, and the
+top is covered with a wire netting. The flame is regulated by means of
+metal slides, which open and shut over the netting, thus cutting off or
+letting on the flame, as it is desired.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/chafing_dish.jpg" width="400" height="227" alt="Chafing-Dish, Filler, Etc." title="Chafing-Dish, Filler, Etc." />
+<span class="caption">Chafing-Dish, Filler, Etc.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>"With all Appliances and Means to boot."</div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chafing=dish Appointments.</h3>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="With all appliances">
+<tr><td align='left'>With all appliances and means to boot.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Henry IV.</span>, iii. <span class="smcap">I.</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>The chafing-dish should always rest upon a tray, as a very slight
+draught of air, or the expansion of the alcohol when heated, will
+sometimes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span> cause the flame to flare out and downward, and thus an
+unprotected tablecloth might be set on fire.</p>
+
+<p>Often a cutlet dish is considered a necessary part of a chafing-dish
+outfit; but as one of the chief merits of the chafing-dish consists in
+the possibility of serving a repast the instant it is cooked, there
+would seem to be a want of propriety in removing the cooked article to a
+platter and garnishing the dish before serving.</p>
+
+<p>A polished wooden spoon, with long handle and small bowl, is a most
+convenient utensil to use while cooking the dainty; but the regulation
+chafing-dish spoon is needed when serving the same. Such a spoon has a
+broad bowl of silver or aluminum, with rounded end, and a long ebony
+handle.</p>
+
+<p>The filler is a most convenient article for use, when the lamp needs
+replenishing with alcohol, but in its absence the alcohol may be turned
+into a small pitcher and from that into the lamp. A lamp of the average
+size holds about five tablespoonfuls of alcohol, and this quantity will
+supply heat for at least half an hour.</p>
+
+<p>Glass, granite or tin measuring-cups, upon which thirds or quarters are
+indicated, also tea- and tablespoons, are essential for accurate
+measurements.</p>
+
+<p>Several items are essential to the successful serving of a meal from the
+chafing-dish. To be a pronounced success, the work must be done
+noiselessly and gracefully. The preparation of all articles is the same
+for the chafing-dish as for the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span> common stove; but where the mixing is
+done at the table, as for a rarebit, the recipe takes on an additional
+flavor, according to the deftness with which it is done.</p>
+
+<p>Let, then, everything be ready and at hand, before the guests or family
+assemble at the table. Have the lamp filled and covered, so that it may
+remain filled. Have all seasonings measured out in a cup. In case the
+yolks of eggs are to be used, they will not injure, having been beaten
+beforehand, if they be kept covered. When oysters are to be served, have
+them washed, freed from bits of shell, drained, and left in a pitcher
+from which they can be readily poured. The quantity of butter used in
+the recipes is indicated by tablespoonfuls, and may be measured out
+beforehand and rolled into dainty balls with butter-hands, a spoonful in
+each ball.</p>
+
+<p>Bear in mind that the hot-water pan is to be used in all cases where the
+double boiler would be used, if the cooking were to be done upon the
+range. For instance, where the recipe calls for milk or cream, except in
+the making of a sauce, use the bath from the beginning. Also, be careful
+always to place the blazer in the bath before eggs are added to any
+mixture. Indeed, the hot-water pan is the one feature of the
+chafing-dish which it is most important to notice; for on the proper use
+of the hot-water pan the value of the chafing-dish as an exponent of
+scientific cookery entirely depends. She who well understands the
+principles upon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span> which the use of this rests has gained no small insight
+into the secret of all cookery, be it scientific, economic or hygienic;
+for a knowledge of the effect of heat at different temperatures, applied
+to food, is the very foundation-stone upon which all cookery rests.</p>
+
+<p>Although the chafing-dish is especially adapted to the needs of the
+bachelor, man or maid, its use should not be relegated entirely to the
+homeless or the Bohemian. In the sick-room, at the luncheon-table, on
+Sunday night, it is most serviceable and wellnigh indispensable; it
+always suggests hearty welcome and good cheer.</p>
+
+<p>While it is out of place, at any ceremonial meal, as a means of cooking,
+even on such occasions a lobster <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Newburg'">Newburgh</ins> or other dish that needs be
+served piping hot to be eaten at its best may be brought on in
+individual chafing-dishes. These are supplied with hot-water pans and
+lamps. At a chafing-dish supper each guest can prepare his own rarebit.</p>
+
+<p>Any operation in cooking that can be performed on the kitchen range may
+be successfully carried out on the chafing-dish, provided one be skilled
+in its use. But as the dining-room is usually chosen as the site in
+which to test its possibilities, here it were well to confine one's
+efforts to such dishes as will not give rise to too much disorder.
+Saut&eacute;ing and frying it were better to reserve for the range and a
+well-ventilated kitchen.</p>
+
+
+<p>Alcohol is most commonly used in the lamp of the chafing-dish; and, on
+account of its cheapness,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span> one is often advised to buy <i>wood</i> alcohol.
+But in large markets, where many fowl are singed daily over an alcohol
+flame, the marketmen will tell you that the very best article is none
+too good for their purpose. It does not smoke, wastes less rapidly, and
+in the end will prove quite as economical.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/formal_dinner.jpg" width="300" height="222" alt="Course at Formal Dinner served in Individual Chafing-Dishes." title="Course at Formal Dinner served in Individual Chafing-Dishes" />
+<span class="caption">Course at Formal Dinner served in Individual Chafing-Dishes.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_157'>page 157</a></div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Are Midnight Suppers Hygienic?</h3>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Being no further">
+<tr><td align='left'>"Being no further enemy to you</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: .5em;">Than the constraint of hospitable zeal."</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>In regard to the chafing-dish and its most prominent use, some one may
+fittingly ask: Is it hygienic to eat at midnight? Can one keep one's
+health and eat late suppers? As in all things pertaining to food, no set
+rules can be given to meet every case; much depends upon constitutional
+traits, individual habits and idiosyncrasies. One may practise what
+another cannot attempt. As a rule, however, people who eat a hearty
+dinner, after the work of the day is done, do not need to eat again
+until the following breakfast hour.</p>
+
+<p>Those who are engaged, either mentally or physically, throughout the
+evening, cannot with impunity, eat a very hearty meal previous to that
+effort; but after their work is done they need nourishing food, and food
+that is both easily digested and assimilated. But even these should not
+eat and then immediately retire; for during sleep all the bodily organs,
+including the stomach, become dormant. Food partaken at this hour is not
+properly taken care of, and in too many cases<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span> must be digested when the
+individual has awakened, out of sorts, the next morning.</p>
+
+<p>It is well to remember, also, that, at any time after food is eaten,
+there should be a period of rest from all active effort; for then the
+blood flows from the other organs of the body to the stomach, and the
+work of digestion is begun. Oftentimes we hear men say they must smoke
+after meals, for unless they do so they cannot digest their food. They
+fail to see that it is not the tobacco that promotes digestion, but the
+enforced repose.</p>
+
+<p>But, if we must eat at midnight, the question may well be asked, What
+shall we eat? That which can be digested and assimilated with the least
+effort on the part of the digestive organs. And among such things we may
+note oysters, eggs and game, when these have been properly&mdash;that is,
+delicately&mdash;cooked.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />How to Make Sauces.</h3>
+
+<div class="center">Let hunger move thy appetyte, and not savory
+sauces.&mdash;<i>Babees Book.</i><br />
+<br />
+"Change is the sauce that sharpens appetite."<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>As so many dishes are prepared in the chafing-dish that require the use
+of a simple sauce, we give in this place the methods usually followed in
+the preparation of common sauces. For one cup of sauce, put two
+tablespoonfuls of butter into the blazer; let the butter simply melt,
+without coloring, if for a white sauce, but cook until brown for a brown
+sauce. Mix together two tablespoon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>fuls of flour, one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of salt and a dash of black or white pepper, or a few grains
+of cayenne or paprica, and beat it into the bubbling butter; let the
+mixture cook two or three minutes, then stir into it, rather gradually
+at first, and beating constantly, one cup of cold milk, water or stock.
+Now, when the sauce boils up once after all the liquid is in, it is
+ready for use. In making a white sauce some cooks add, from time to time
+while the sauce is being stirred, a few drops of lemon juice, which they
+claim makes the sauce much whiter.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes we make the sauce after another fashion, using the same
+proportions of the various ingredients. If water or stock be used, put
+it in the blazer directly over the fire. If the liquid be milk, put it
+into the blazer, and the blazer over hot water; cream together the
+butter, flour and seasonings, dilute with a little of the hot liquid,
+pour into the remainder of the hot liquid, and stir constantly until the
+sauce thickens, and then occasionally for ten or fifteen minutes, until
+the flour is thoroughly cooked.</p>
+
+<p>In making a brown sauce, first brown the butter, then brown the flour in
+the butter, and, whenever it is convenient, use brown stock as the
+liquid.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients for One Cup of Sauce.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of flour.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> A few grains of pepper.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of liquid.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients for One Pint of Sauce.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac14; a cup of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of flour.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of pepper.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of liquid.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Measuring.</h3>
+
+<p>In all recipes where flour is used, unless otherwise stated, the flour
+is measured after sifting once. When flour is measured by cups, the cup
+is filled with a spoon, and a level cupful is meant. A tablespoonful or
+teaspoonful of any designated material is a level spoonful of such
+material.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Flavoring.</h3>
+
+<p>When rich soup stock, flavored with vegetables and sweet herbs, is at
+hand for use in sauces, additional seasonings are not necessary; but
+when a sauce is made of milk, water, or water and meat extract, some
+flavor more or less pronounced is demanded. A few bits of onion and
+carrot browned in hot butter, or anchovy sauce or curry may be added;
+but, all things considered, the most convenient way to secure an
+appetizing flavor is by the use of "Kitchen Bouquet." This alone or in
+conjunction with a dash of some one of the many really good proprietary
+sauces on the market is well-nigh indispensable in chafing-dish
+cookery.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>RECIPES.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="No variety here">
+<tr><td align='left'><span style="margin-left: 21em;">"<i>No variety here,</i></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>But you, most noble guests, whose gracious looks</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Must make a dish or two become a feast.</i>"</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>OYSTER DISHES.</h2>
+
+<div class="center">He was a bold man that first ate an
+oyster.&mdash;<i>Swift.</i></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oysters.</h3>
+
+<p>Put into the blazer twenty-five to fifty choice oysters. As soon as they
+are hot and look plump, add salt, pepper and butter. Serve on buttered
+toast or crackers. Add two tablespoonfuls of cream or half a
+tablespoonful of lemon juice before serving, if desired.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oysters, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pint of solid oysters.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> 1 scant teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> A few grains of cayenne.</li>
+<li> Beaten yolks of 2 eggs.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Put the oysters into the blazer. When they look plump and the
+edges curl, put the blazer into the hot-water pan and add the
+seasonings. Add a few spoonfuls of the liquor from the pan to the yolks
+of the eggs, and, after mixing well, pour into the chafing-dish. Stir
+constantly until the liquor thickens, then serve on thin slices of
+buttered toast or on thin crackers.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oysters &agrave; la D'Uxelles.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pint of parboiled and drained oysters.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of oyster liquor or chicken stock.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of chopped mushrooms.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of flour.</li>
+<li> A few drops of onion juice.</li>
+<li> A few grains of cayenne.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> Yolks of 2 eggs.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Let the oysters be parboiled and drained beforehand. (To
+parboil, heat quickly to the boiling-point in their own liquor.) Melt
+the butter in the blazer, add the flour, salt and pepper, and cook till
+frothy; add the oyster liquor or chicken stock and cook until the
+boiling-point is reached. Now add the oysters, and, as soon as they are
+heated thoroughly, put the blazer into the bath and add the beaten
+yolks, the onion and lemon juice and the mushrooms. As soon as the eggs
+thicken the sauce a little, serve on toast or crackers. If uncooked
+mushrooms are used, cook them in the butter two or three minutes before
+the flour and seasonings are added.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Curried Oysters.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pint of oysters (parboiled and drained).</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of cream.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of flour.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of oyster liquor.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of curry powder.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of chopped onion.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> 1 saltspoonful of pepper.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cook the onion and butter in the blazer a few moments. Mix
+the flour and curry powder and stir into the butter. When frothy add the
+oyster liquor. As soon as the sauce boils up once, add the salt, pepper
+and cream, and, in a moment, the oysters. When the oysters are
+thoroughly heated, serve on buttered toast or crackers.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Curried Oysters, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 quart of oysters.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of butter.</li>
+<li> One small mild onion.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of curry powder.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of flour.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of oyster liquor.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of white stock.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of thick tomato pulp.</li>
+<li> Salt and pepper to taste.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Bring the oysters to the boiling-point in their own liquor,
+skim, drain, and set aside. Heat the butter in the blazer, saut&eacute; in it
+the onion cut in slices, stir in the flour and curry powder mixed with
+the salt and pepper, and, when frothy, add the oyster liquor, stock and
+tomato pulp (a pint of pulp reduced by slow cooking to half a cup). When
+the sauce boils, add the oysters; and when hot serve on buttered toast
+or fried bread.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fricassee of Oysters.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 quart of oysters.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> Yolks of 2 eggs.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of chopped parsley.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of flour.</li>
+<li> Pepper, salt, cayenne.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Brown the butter and add to it the parsley, seasonings and
+flour; let heat, then add the well-drained oysters, and, when the edges
+begin to curl, add the well-beaten yolks. Serve on warmed plates, with
+fried bread and parsley.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Creamed Dishes.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Oysters, shrimps, lobsters, sweetbreads, chicken, veal, fish,
+mushrooms, asparagus tips, peas, etc.</i>)<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of flour.</li>
+<li> 2 saltspoonfuls of salt.</li>
+<li> 2 cups of cream, or 2 cups of milk and 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 1 saltspoonful of pepper.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of fish, meat, etc.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of mushrooms, chopped or diced.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of onion juice.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Prepare the sauce in the usual manner. If oysters are used,
+they should have been parboiled previously and drained, and, if large,
+cut in pieces. Fish should be flaked when hot, and meats cut into dice
+when cold.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Devilled Dishes.</h3>
+
+<p>Season any of the creamed dishes highly with cayenne, onion juice,
+mustard, and Worcestershire or other sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scrambled Eggs with Oysters.</h3>
+
+<p>Cream together two tablespoonfuls of butter and one tablespoonful of
+anchovy paste. Melt in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span> blazer, then add half a dozen eggs, beaten
+slightly with one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica.
+Stir and cook, and, when beginning to thicken, add half a pint of
+oysters, parboiled, "bearded," and cut fine. When scrambled, serve on
+sippets of toast, lightly spread with anchovy paste.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Panned Oysters.</h3>
+
+<p>With a fork pressed into a butter ball, rub over the bottom of the hot
+blazer. Then cover the surface with small rounds of toast, and put one
+or two uncooked oysters on each round; cover, and cook until plump, dust
+with salt and pepper, and put a bit of butter on each oyster. Serve,
+when the butter has melted, with slices of lemon.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Panned Oysters with Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel Butter.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook as before. Have ready two tablespoonfuls of butter beaten to a
+cream; add a few grains of salt and paprica, one tablespoonful of
+chopped parsley, and, by degrees, the juice of half a lemon. Spread upon
+the oysters before serving.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oyster Cromeskies.</h3>
+
+<p>Scald the oysters in their own liquor over a quick fire. When plump wrap
+each oyster in a slice of bacon, and fasten with a small skewer (wooden
+toothpick). Saut&eacute; in the blazer, heated very hot. Serve on thin rounds
+of toast. These cromeskies are most easily cooked in a double broiler,
+resting on a dripping-pan, in a hot oven.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oysters Saut&eacute;.</h3>
+
+<p>Wash and drain the oysters, season with salt and pepper, roll in fine
+crumbs, dip in beaten egg, then roll in crumbs again. Put a little olive
+oil or clarified butter in the blazer; when it is heated, put in the
+oysters, brown them on one side, turn, and brown on the other side.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oyster Canap&eacute;s.</h3>
+
+<p>Scald a cup of cream, add two tablespoonfuls of fine-grated bread
+crumbs, a tablespoonful of butter, a dash of paprica and a grating of
+nutmeg; then add two dozen oysters, washed, drained and chopped. Stir
+until the oysters are thoroughly heated, but without boiling the
+mixture. Spread rounds of toast with butter, and then with the oyster
+mixture. Serve at once accompanied by olives, pim-olas or gherkins.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Escalloped Oysters.</h3>
+
+<p>Stir one cup of cracker crumbs into half a cup of melted butter. Heat
+half a cup of cream or strained oyster liquor in the blazer, put in a
+layer of oysters (about a cup), washed and drained, and sprinkle with a
+part of the prepared crumbs, salt and pepper; add another layer of
+oysters, the rest of the crumbs, and salt and pepper. Cover, and cook
+nearly ten minutes. Do not stir the oysters.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>LOBSTER AND OTHER SEA FISH.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="And ate a lobster">
+<tr><td align='left'>And ate a lobster, and sang and mighty merry.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>Pepys' Diary.</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><br />Take every creature in of every kind.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>Pope.</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Buttered Lobster.</h3>
+
+<p>Pick the meat from a boiled lobster and cut it into small pieces; sift
+over it the coral; mix with it also the liver, two tablespoonfuls of
+vinegar or three of lemon juice, one-third a cup of butter and
+one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of cayenne and made mustard; heat in the
+blazer until thoroughly hot. Serve on cup-shaped leaves of lettuce with
+a quarter of a hard-boiled <i>egg</i> on the top of each portion.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster &agrave; la Newburgh.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> Meat of 2 medium-sized lobsters.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of pepper.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls, each, of sherry wine and brandy.</li>
+<li> Grating of nutmeg.</li>
+<li> Yolks of 4 eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of cream.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Remove the meat from the shells and cut it into delicate
+slices. Put the butter in the blazer, and, when it melts, put the
+lobster into it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span> and cook four or five minutes. Add the salt, pepper,
+nutmeg, wine and brandy. Stir the cream into the beaten yolks, and then
+stir both into the lobster mixture. Serve as soon as the eggs thicken
+the sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Plain Lobster.</h3>
+
+<p>Pour three tablespoonfuls of lemon juice over the meat of one lobster
+and season with salt and pepper. Put three tablespoonfuls of butter in
+the blazer, and, when it is melted, add the prepared lobster; stir until
+hot and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Clams &agrave; la Newburgh.</h3>
+
+<p>Use one quart of clams. Separate the hard from the soft parts of the
+clams. Chop the hard parts fine. Substitute the soft and the chopped
+parts of the clams for the lobster and proceed as for lobster &agrave; la
+Newburgh.</p>
+
+<p>Oyster, chicken, turkey or sweetbread &agrave; la Newburgh may be prepared by
+substituting one of the above ingredients for the lobster.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster &agrave; la Bordelaise.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 cloves of garlic, chopped.</li>
+<li> 1 sliced carrot.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 2 glasses of white wine (half a cup).</li>
+<li> Meat of 2 lobsters.</li>
+<li> 1 glass of brandy.</li>
+<li> 3 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> Chopped parsley, white and cayenne pepper, salt.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Melt the butter in the blazer and in it cook the onion and
+carrot about five minutes.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span> Remove the carrot; add the wine, lobster and
+seasonings. When thoroughly heated, add the butter, parsley and brandy
+and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Hawaiian Lobster Curry.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Ada D. Wagg.</span>)<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1&frac12; tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac12; an onion, chopped</li>
+<li> 1 clove of garlic, very fine.</li>
+<li> A small piece of grated ginger root.</li>
+<li> 1&frac12; tablespoonfuls of cornstarch.</li>
+<li> 1&frac12; tablespoonfuls of curry powder.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of milk.</li>
+<li> 1 grated cocoanut.</li>
+<li> Meat of a lobster weighing 2 pounds.</li>
+<li> Salt and pepper to taste.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Grate the cocoanut and set it aside to soak an hour in one
+pint of milk. Saut&eacute; the onion and garlic in the butter, add the
+cornstarch and seasonings, and cook until frothy; add the milk strained
+from the cocoanut, gradually, and, when the sauce boils up once, add the
+lobster; salt and pepper to taste.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster &agrave; la Bechamel.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> Meat of 2 lobsters.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 4 tablespoonfuls of flour.</li>
+<li> Salt and pepper.</li>
+<li> Grating of nutmeg.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of cream.</li>
+<li> 4 yolks of eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of white stock, seasoned with mace, bay leaf, etc.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> Dried and sifted coral.</li></ul>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cut the lobster in delicate slices or in dice, as preferred.
+Make a bechamel sauce, after the usual manner, of the butter, flour,
+seasonings, cream and stock. Add the lobster, and, when heated
+thoroughly, add the beaten yolks mixed with a few spoonfuls of the sauce
+from the blazer. Add the lemon juice, and sprinkle the dried and sifted
+coral or some chopped parsley over the top of the mixture as it is
+served.</p>
+
+<p>Oysters, clams, sweetbread, chicken or turkey may be served &agrave; la
+Bordelaise or Bechamel.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Lobster &agrave; la Poulette.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> <small>1/3</small> a cup of butter.</li>
+<li> <small>1/3</small> a cup of flour.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> Dash of paprica.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of white pepper.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of cream.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of well-seasoned chicken stock.</li>
+<li> Juice of half a lemon.</li>
+<li> 2 hard-boiled eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of diced lobster meat.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Prepare a white sauce, using the ingredients mentioned, and
+adding the lemon juice by degrees. Add the lobster to the sauce. Cut the
+whites of the hard-boiled eggs in rings and pass the yolks through a
+sieve. Serve the lobster on bits of toast, or on thin crackers, with a
+sprinkling of the yolks over the lobster, and circles of the whites
+around it.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oyster Crabs &agrave; la Hollandaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Remove the meat from one pint of oyster crabs; put this, with a little
+of the liquor, into the blazer,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span> add two tablespoonfuls of butter, a
+dash of paprica and a scant half-teaspoonful of salt, and let cook three
+or four minutes without boiling. Set the blazer over hot water and add
+three-fourths a cup of hollandaise sauce (either hot or cold). Stir
+until the mixture is heated, then add one tablespoonful of lemon juice
+and one teaspoonful of chopped parsley. Serve on toast, in Swedish
+timbale cases or in patty cases.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Hollandaise Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>Put one-fourth a cup of vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of butter, a grating
+of nutmeg and a dash of paprica over hot water to heat. Beat the yolks
+of four eggs, add the hot vinegar to them, return to the fire, and stir
+constantly while the mixture thickens; then add two more tablespoonfuls
+of butter in bits.</p>
+
+<p>Shrimps, oysters, lobsters and delicate fish are all good when served
+after this recipe.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Devilled Crabs.</h3>
+
+<p>Melt one tablespoonful of butter, add one tablespoonful of flour, and,
+when blended, one cup of milk. Add the yolks of two hard-boiled eggs
+rubbed through a sieve, and season to taste with salt, paprica, a
+teaspoonful of lemon juice and wine; cayenne, mustard and tobasco sauce
+are approved by some. Add one cup of crab meat and one-fourth a cup of
+canned mushrooms cut in quarters. Serve on toast.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oyster Crabs.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pint of oyster crabs.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac12; an onion, sliced.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of flour.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of white stock.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley.</li>
+<li> 1 yolk of egg.</li>
+<li> Salt and pepper.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Melt the butter in the blazer, add the onion, and let cook
+until a light-brown color; add the flour and mix until smooth; add the
+stock and stir until it thickens. Add the crab meat, lemon juice,
+parsley, salt and pepper. Beat the yolk of the egg and add two or three
+spoonfuls of the sauce to it; mix well, add to the ingredients in the
+blazer, stir constantly, and serve as soon as heated.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Crabs &agrave; la Creole.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 green pepper, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 1 clove of garlic, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 1 small onion, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of butter.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of tomatoes.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of crab meat.</li>
+<li> Pepper and salt.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Put the butter in the blazer; when melted, add the garlic,
+onion, salt, pepper and tomatoes, and let cook ten minutes; add the crab
+meat (fresh or canned). Serve when hot on sippets of toast.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Shrimps &agrave; la Poulette.</h3>
+
+<p>Make a sauce of one-fourth a cup, each, of butter and flour, half a
+teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper and one cup and a half of white
+stock; add one tablespoonful of anchovy essence and a quart of shelled
+shrimps. When hot add the beaten yolks of two eggs, with half a cup of
+cream. Lastly, add a tablespoonful of lemon juice and serve, <i>without</i>
+boiling, on sippets of toast.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Shrimps with Peas.</h3>
+
+<p>A pint of shrimps and a cup of peas, heated in a cup and a half of cream
+sauce, are particularly good.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Anchovy Toast.</h3>
+
+<p>Put about two tablespoonfuls of clarified butter into the blazer. When
+hot add bread cut as for sandwiches. Brown the bread on one side, turn,
+and brown the other side. Spread with anchovy paste and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Anchovy Toast with Eggs.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare the anchovy toast in one chafing-dish, and, at the same time,
+the eggs in another. Beat five eggs slightly, add half a teaspoonful of
+salt, a dash of pepper and half a cup of cream or milk. Put a large
+tablespoonful of butter in the blazer; when melted, add the egg mixture.
+Stir until the egg is creamy, and serve on the anchovy toast.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Anchovy Toast with Spinach.</h3>
+
+<p>Press cooked spinach, chopped fine, through a pur&eacute;e sieve; reheat with a
+little butter, salt and two or three drops of tobasco sauce. Saut&eacute;
+rounds of bread to a golden brown in a little hot butter, spread with
+anchovy paste, and over this spread the pur&eacute;e of spinach. Press into the
+spinach on each round of bread a quarter of a hard-boiled egg cut
+lengthwise, having the yolk uppermost.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Anchovies with Olives.</h3>
+
+<p>All the preparations for this dish, with the exception of saut&eacute;ing the
+bread, may be made some hours before serving.</p>
+
+<p>Thoroughly wash the anchovies, cut off the fillets, and chop very fine
+with a sprig of parsley and a few chives, or a slice or two of Bermuda
+onion; put the whole into a mortar and pound well, adding, meanwhile, a
+little paprica. Cut some large selected olives in halves, take out the
+stones, and fill them with the anchovy mixture. Cut small rounds of
+bread an inch and a half in diameter and an inch in thickness; remove a
+crumb, similar in shape to the olive, from the centre of each. Put a
+little butter into the blazer, and, when hot, saut&eacute; the rounds of bread
+on both sides; drain on soft paper, put an olive in the centre of each
+and a little mayonnaise over the whole. Five anchovies will suffice to
+stuff a dozen olives.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sardine Canap&eacute;s.</h3>
+
+<p>Have ready yolks of eggs, cooked until firm, and an equal bulk of
+sardines, each rubbed to a paste. Mix thoroughly, and season with salt,
+pepper and lemon juice. Prepare some bread in the blazer as for anchovy
+toast; then spread with the sardine mixture and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Curried Sardines.</h3>
+
+<p>Mix together one teaspoonful, each, of sugar and curry powder and a
+saltspoonful of salt. Put these into the blazer with one cup of cream
+and half a teaspoonful of lemon juice. Stir until the mixture is hot,
+then put into it ten or twelve sardines. In the mean time, heat some
+butter or oil in a second blazer, and in it saut&eacute; some bits of bread a
+little larger than the sardines, and round slices of tart apple. Serve
+each sardine on a bit of bread; pour a little of the sauce over the top
+and garnish with a round of apple. The slices of apple will keep their
+shape, if the apples be cored and then cut into rounds without paring.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sardines.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>French fashion.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Remove the skins and tails from about a dozen sardines and heat them in
+the oven. Heat some butter or oil in the blazer of one chafing-dish, and
+in it saut&eacute; some bits of bread of suitable shape to serve under the
+sardines. Put in the blazer of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span> another chafing-dish, over hot water,
+the well-beaten yolks of four eggs, one teaspoonful, each, of tarragon
+vinegar, cider vinegar and made mustard, one-fourth a teaspoonful of
+salt and one tablespoonful of butter. Stir the sauce until it is quite
+thick, then serve the sardines on the bread with the sauce poured over
+them. Olives are agreeable with this dish.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/butter_balls.jpg" width="300" height="218" alt="Butter Balls, with Utensils for Chafing-Dish." title="Butter Balls, with Utensils for Chafing-Dish." />
+<span class="caption">Butter Balls, with Utensils for Chafing-Dish.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/moulded_halibut.jpg" width="300" height="159" alt="Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas." title="Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas." />
+<span class="caption">Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas.</h3>
+
+<p>Two chafing-dishes will be requisite for preparing this delicious
+luncheon dish.</p>
+
+<p>Have ready one pound of raw halibut chopped very fine; beat the yolk of
+an egg, add to it one teaspoonful and a fourth of salt, one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of white pepper and a few grains of cayenne or paprica.
+Blend a teaspoonful of cornstarch with a little milk; then add milk to
+make two-thirds a cup, stir gradually into the egg and seasonings, and
+then very slowly into the fish. Lastly, fold into the mixture one-third
+a cup of thick cream, beaten until stiff. Butter dariole moulds
+thoroughly, arrange a circle of cooked peas around the bottom of each
+mould, and fill with the fish preparation two-thirds full. Set into the
+blazer, surrounded with boiling water; after the water is again boiling,
+turn down the flame so that the water will barely quiver, and let cook
+about twenty minutes. Prepare, in the mean time, in the second blazer,
+creamed peas. Turn the fish from the moulds and surround with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Creamed Peas.</h3>
+
+<p>Have ready one can of peas, drained, rinsed, covered with boiling water
+and drained again. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter; add one
+tablespoonful of flour with one teaspoonful of sugar and half a
+teaspoonful of salt; add the peas and one-third a cup of milk, stir, and
+let cook until the liquid begins to bubble.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Pur&eacute;e of Fish.</h3>
+
+<p>Scald one quart of milk, with half an onion and a stalk of celery;
+strain into a pitcher and keep hot if convenient. Add to the remnants of
+cold boiled white fish enough canned salmon to make two cups; chop fine
+and rub through a pur&eacute;e sieve. Cook together in the blazer two
+tablespoonfuls of butter, three of flour, one teaspoonful of salt and a
+dash of pepper. Add the milk gradually, and, when all is added and the
+contents of the blazer are boiling, put a few spoonfuls of the sauce
+into the fish and beat until smooth; add more sauce, and, when well
+diluted and smooth, turn the whole into the blazer. Stir, and let cook
+until very hot; then serve with crackers, split, buttered, and browned
+in the oven. These proportions give three pints of soup. Vegetable
+pur&eacute;es may be prepared in the same way.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salt Codfish with Tomato Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>Saut&eacute; one clove of garlic and half an onion, grated or chopped fine, in
+three tablespoonfuls of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span> butter; add two tablespoonfuls of flour,
+one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica and one pimento, chopped fine; also,
+add one cup of tomato pulp, and, when the sauce boils, half a pound of
+"hatcheled" codfish, or any salt codfish picked into small pieces and
+freshened in one quart of cold water. Serve, while hot, with brownbread
+sandwiches, and pickles or pim-olas.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salt Codfish in Cream Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>Pick enough salt codfish into bits to make one cup. Let stand in cold
+water about half an hour. Make one cup of cream sauce, using one
+tablespoonful and a half of flour, two tablespoonfuls of butter and one
+cup of cream; remove all the water from the fish by wringing in a
+cheese-cloth, add the fish to the sauce, and, when heated, stir in a
+lightly beaten egg. Serve upon rounds of toast, with olives, or plain
+lettuce, or tomato salad.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />R&eacute;chauff&eacute; of Fish.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 cup of cooked fish, flaked.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of macaroni, cooked, and still hot.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of butter.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of tomato pur&eacute;e.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> Dash of pepper.</li>
+<li> 8 drops of tobasco sauce.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Melt the butter in the blazer and toss about in it the
+macaroni and fish; add the seasonings and the tomato pur&eacute;e, which should
+be well reduced. Serve when thoroughly heated.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />R&eacute;chauff&eacute; of Fish, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pint of cooked fish, flaked and seasoned.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of flour.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of fish stock.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of cream and milk combined.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt, if needed.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of anchovy paste.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of paprica.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of oil.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Marinate the fish while hot with salt, pepper, oil and lemon
+juice, adding, also, a few drops of onion juice, if desired. At
+serving-time make a sauce of the butter, flour, salt, paprica, stock and
+cream; add the paste and the fish, and, when the fish is thoroughly
+heated, turn down the flame of the lamp or set the blazer into hot
+water. Sprinkle with the parsley and serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sardines on Toast.</h3>
+
+<p>Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer; add two tablespoonfuls
+of flour and a dash of paprica, and stir until smooth and browned a
+little; then add half a cup of stock and half a cup of sherry; stir
+until thickened, then let simmer a few minutes, and add nearly a cup of
+sardines, from which the bones and skin have been removed and the flesh
+separated into small pieces. Let stand until very hot.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHEESE CONFECTIONS.</h2>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Cheese quotes">
+<tr><td align='left'>You must eat no cheese . . . it breeds melancholy.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>B. Jonson.</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><br /><br />Art thou come? Why my cheese, my digestion!</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>Troilus and Cressida.</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<p>Cheese is probably the most popular article served from the
+chafing-dish. What possessor of a chafing-dish has not concocted a
+rarebit&mdash;and the best one ever made? Were you ever present when the
+process of evolving a rarebit was in progress and half the guests were
+not disappointed in the seasoning? For perfection in this toothsome
+dish, mustard is demanded by some; by others the use of this biting
+condiment is considered a lapse in culinary taste. The consensus of
+opinion, however, is in favor of paprica; and, theoretically, Mattieu
+Williams considers bicarbonate of soda to be demanded, not for the sake
+of seasoning, but as an aid to digestion.</p>
+
+<p>As regards the digestibility of cheese, and, consequently, its
+adaptability to midnight suppers, opinions differ widely. Dr. Hoy, an
+excellent authority on diet, calls cheese a concentrated meat, a tissue
+builder,&mdash;but not itself a tissue, and so without waste elements,&mdash;a
+condensed, compact<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span> food product, and indigestible on account of its
+very compactness. Still, when the caseine, or curd, is softened and
+broken up by the addition of liquid and gentle heat, it is rendered more
+digestible; and cheese so prepared may be for some, if taken with no
+other nitrogenous food, an acceptable and easily digested article of
+diet.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Welsh Rarebit.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 tablespoonful of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a pound of cheese, cut fine or grated.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> A dash of paprica.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of cream.</li>
+<li> The beaten yolks of 2 eggs.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Melt the butter, add the cheese and seasonings, and stir
+until melted; then add the eggs, diluted with the cream, and stir until
+smooth and slightly thickened. <i>Do not allow the mixture to boil</i> at any
+time in the cooking; if necessary, cook over hot water. Serve on thin
+crackers, hot shredded-wheat or granose biscuit, or on bread toasted on
+but one side, placing the rarebit on the untoasted side.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Welsh Rarebit, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 tablespoonful of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of cornstarch.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of thin cream.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a pound of mild cheese.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a saltspoonful of mustard.</li>
+<li> A few grains of cayenne.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Melt the butter; add to it the cream in which the cornstarch
+has been stirred. Let cook<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span> two minutes, and add the cheese broken into
+bits. Stir until the cheese is melted and the mixture perfectly smooth.
+Add the salt, mustard and paprica, and serve at once as above.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Welsh Rarebit with Ale.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 tablespoonful of butter.</li>
+<li> Generous &frac12; a pound of soft American cheese, broken into bits.</li>
+<li> <small>1/3</small> a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of mustard.</li>
+<li> A few grains of cayenne.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of ale.</li>
+<li> 1 egg.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Put the butter into the chafing-dish (using the bath); when
+melted, add the cheese and ale. Mix the salt, mustard and cayenne, add
+the egg, and beat thoroughly. When the cheese is melted, add the egg
+mixture and let cook until it thickens. Serve as before.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Halibut Rarebit.</h3>
+
+<p>Marinate a cup of cooked halibut, flaked, with one tablespoonful of
+olive oil, a few drops of onion juice, one tablespoonful of lemon juice,
+one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica. Make a sauce of
+two tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour, one-fourth a teaspoonful
+of salt and half a cup, each, of chicken stock and cream. Add two-thirds
+a cup of grated cheese and the halibut. Serve, as soon as the fish is
+hot and the cheese melted, on the untoasted side of bread toasted on one
+side.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Oyster Rarebit.</h3>
+
+<p>Clean and remove the hard muscles from half a pint of oysters; parboil
+the oysters in the chafing-dish in their own liquor until their edges
+curl, then remove to a hot bowl. Put one tablespoonful of butter, half a
+pound of cheese broken in small bits, one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of
+salt and mustard and a few grains of cayenne into the chafing-dish.
+While the cheese is melting, beat two eggs slightly, and add to them the
+oyster liquor; mix this gradually with the melted cheese, add the
+oysters, and turn at once over hot toast.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sardine Rarebit.</h3>
+
+<p>Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add half a pound of fresh cheese,
+grated or broken into bits, and stir constantly while it melts; then add
+gradually the beaten yolk of an egg, diluted with two-thirds a cup of
+cream. Stir until smooth and slightly thickened; season with a scant
+half a teaspoonful of paprica, one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and a
+few drops of tabasco sauce. Have ready a box of sardines, drained,
+broiled carefully and laid on the untoasted side of bread toasted on one
+side; pour the rarebit over the sardines and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Golden Buck.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare a rarebit in one chafing-dish; break some eggs into the blazer
+of another containing salted water just "off the boil." When the eggs<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+are poached and the rarebit ready, place an egg above the rarebit on
+each slice of toast.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/yorkshire.jpg" width="300" height="128" alt="Yorkshire Rarebit." title="Yorkshire Rarebit." />
+<span class="caption">Yorkshire <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Rabbit'">Rarebit</ins>.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/curried_eggs.jpg" width="300" height="165" alt="Curried Eggs." title="Curried Eggs." />
+<span class="caption">Curried Eggs.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_191'>page 191</a></div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Yorkshire Rarebit.</h3>
+
+<p>Add two slices of broiled or fried bacon to each service of golden buck.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mock=Crab Toast.</h3>
+
+<p>Melt a tablespoonful of butter in the blazer, turning it about so as to
+butter the surface thoroughly. Put in half a pound of mild cheese,
+grated, and stir until the cheese is melted; then add the yolks of three
+eggs, beaten and diluted with a tablespoonful of anchovy sauce, a
+teaspoonful of made mustard, two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice or
+vinegar and one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica. Stir until smooth.
+Serve upon the untoasted side of sippets of bread toasted on one side.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Cheese Fondue.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> &frac14; a pound of cheese broken into bits.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of flour.</li>
+<li> 1 saltspoonful, each, of soda and mustard.</li>
+<li> &frac34; a cup of milk.</li>
+<li> A few grains of cayenne or paprica.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of stale bread crumbs.</li>
+<li> 3 eggs.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Sift the soda, mustard and cayenne into the flour and cook in
+the butter until frothy, then add the milk gradually; when the sauce
+boils, after all the milk has been added, put the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span> blazer into the
+bath, add the crumbs and cheese, and cook and stir until the cheese is
+melted and the mixture becomes smooth; add the eggs, beaten until light,
+and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />English Monkey.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 cup of milk.</li>
+<li> 1 egg.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of butter.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of fine bread crumbs from the centre of a stale loaf.</li>
+<li> &frac34; to 1 whole cup of cheese.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Melt the butter, add the cheese, and stir while melting; then
+add the bread crumbs, which have been soaked in the milk and the egg
+lightly beaten.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>EGGS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Eggs">
+<tr><td align='left'>New-laid eggs, with Baucis' busy care</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Turned by a gentle fire, and roasted rare.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>Dryden.</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scrambled Eggs with Cheese.</h3>
+
+<p>Beat six eggs until whites and yolks are well mixed; add half a
+teaspoonful of salt, a dash of paprica and six tablespoonfuls of milk or
+cream. Melt two tablespoonsful of butter in the blazer, pour in the egg
+mixture, and stir and scrape from the blazer as it thickens. Just before
+it comes to the proper consistency, sprinkle in half a cup of grated
+Parmesan cheese, still stirring as before, and turn down the flame or
+set the blazer into the bath. American dairy cheese may be used instead
+of the Parmesan.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scrambled Eggs with Smoked Salmon.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook half a cup of smoked salmon, cut into thin strips, in a
+tablespoonful of butter three or four minutes; then add to the eggs just
+before the cooking is finished.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scrambled Eggs &agrave; la Union Club.</h3>
+
+<p>Heat one can of pimentos (sweet red peppers) in boiling salted water;
+drain, and serve on rounds<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span> of buttered toast the pimentos filled with
+eggs scrambled with mushrooms or truffles. Pour around the pimentos a
+pint of well-seasoned brown sauce, to which one-third a cup of madeira
+has been added.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scrambled Eggs with Dried Beef.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut half a pound of dried beef, sliced thin, into short match-like
+strips, cover with boiling water, drain at once, and add six eggs,
+beaten slightly, and one-fourth a cup of milk. Put two tablespoonfuls of
+butter into the blazer; when hot add the eggs and other ingredients, and
+stir and cook until the eggs are set.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scrambled Eggs with Tomatoes.</h3>
+
+<p>Have ready a pint of tomato pulp, from which the seeds have been
+removed, seasoned with onion, celery or parsley, and sweet herbs. Put a
+generous tablespoonful of butter into the blazer; add the tomato, and,
+when hot, six eggs, slightly beaten, half a teaspoonful of salt and half
+a saltspoonful of pepper. Stir until the contents are of a creamy
+consistency. Serve with brownbread toast.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Eggs and Mushrooms &agrave; la Dauphine.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pint of thick tomato sauce, highly seasoned.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of mushrooms.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a saltspoonful of pepper.</li>
+<li> 6 eggs.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cook the mushrooms in the tomato sauce until tender; add the
+seasoning and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span> eggs, which have been broken into a bowl. Lift the
+whites carefully with a silver or wooden fork while cooking, until they
+are set; then prick the yolks and let them mix with the tomato, whites
+of the eggs and mushrooms. Serve quite soft on toast.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scotch Woodcock.</h3>
+
+<p>Make a cup of white sauce; add one tablespoonful of essence of anchovies
+and five hard-boiled eggs cut into quarters lengthwise.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Eggs &agrave; la Italienne.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 5 eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of milk.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of boiled spaghetti, chopped.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of butter.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of fresh mushrooms, sliced.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.</li>
+<li> 1 scant teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> White pepper.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Melt the butter in the blazer and saut&eacute; in it the sliced
+mushrooms; add the milk and spaghetti, and, when heated thoroughly, put
+the blazer in the bath and add the beaten eggs. Stir and cook until the
+eggs have thickened; then add the parsley and seasoning, and serve at
+once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Eggs &agrave; la Parisienne.</h3>
+
+<p>Butter thickly the inner sides of as many dariole moulds as there are
+individuals to serve. Then sprinkle them thickly with fine-chopped
+parsley, ham or tongue. Break an egg into each mould,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span> taking care not
+to break the yolk; sprinkle over the tops a little salt and pepper, and
+set in the blazer surrounded by hot water to two-thirds the height of
+the moulds. If, after a time, the water boils, even with the lamp turned
+low, put the blazer into the bath and continue cooking, until the eggs
+are set. The eggs should be covered while cooking. When cooked, turn
+from the moulds and serve with a pur&eacute;e of tomatoes. Half a cup of sliced
+mushrooms added to the pur&eacute;e improves this dish.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Curried Eggs.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(See cut facing <a href='#Page_186'>page 186</a>.)</div>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 6 eggs, cooked, in water just below the boiling-point, 20 minutes.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of stock (fish, veal or chicken).</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of milk.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of flour, or 1 teaspoonful of cornstarch.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of curry-powder.</li>
+<li> 1 slice of onion.</li>
+<li> Teaspoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> Salt and pepper to taste.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cook the onion in the butter a few minutes, then remove it
+and add the flour and curry powder; when frothy add the milk and stock.
+As soon as the boiling-point is reached, set the blazer into the
+hot-water pan and add the eggs cut in quarters. Season with salt and
+serve on sippets of toast.</p>
+
+<p>Light meats, fish, oysters and lobsters may be prepared in the same way,
+omitting the half-cup<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span> of milk in the case of oysters. Chickens' livers
+may also be prepared by the same recipe, in which case the livers should
+have been cooked previously. Or they may be saut&eacute;d in a little hot
+butter in one dish, while the sauce is made in another.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Shirred Eggs.</h3>
+
+<p>Butter four or five shirring-dishes. To half a cup of grated bread
+crumbs and half a cup of chopped chicken or ham add enough cream to mix
+to a smooth, moist consistency, like butter. Season to taste with salt
+and pepper. Put a tablespoonful of the mixture into each dish, break in
+an egg, season with a dash of salt and pepper, cover with more of the
+mixture, and cook in the same manner as eggs &agrave; la Parisienne. Serve in
+the cups.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Eggs.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Creole style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Have prepared on a hot serving-dish a can of tomatoes, stewed until they
+are reduced to a scant pint, and upon the tomatoes rounds of buttered
+toast for each egg to be served. Break some eggs, one by one, into a
+cup, and turn them into the blazer two-thirds filled with hot water;
+turn the flame low and put on the chafing-dish cover; if the water
+boils, turn down the flame. When the eggs are nicely poached, remove
+with a skimmer to the toast. Pour out the water and melt in the blazer,
+browning if desired, two tablespoonfuls of butter; add one tablespoonful
+of lemon juice; heat<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span> to the boiling-point, dust the eggs with salt and
+pepper, pour over the sauce, and serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Egg Canap&eacute;s.</h3>
+
+<p>Have ready, cooked beforehand, four hard-boiled eggs; cut them carefully
+into halves lengthwise, remove the yolks, and press them through a small
+sieve. Soak two anchovies, then dry and remove the bones and chop them
+with two or three cold cooked mushrooms and half a teaspoonful of
+capers; mix in the sifted yolks, add a seasoning of salt, pepper and
+paprica, and one teaspoonful of tarragon vinegar. This work may be done
+some hours before the time of serving. Have a little oil or clarified
+butter in the blazer, and saut&eacute; in it some rounds of bread&mdash;one for each
+half of an egg. When the bread is of good color on one side, turn it and
+place half an egg&mdash;the space from which the yolk was taken being filled
+with the anchovy mixture&mdash;on the bread; cover the blazer, and, when the
+second side of the bread is browned nicely and the egg hot, serve at
+once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Eggs with Asparagus.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 cup of asparagus peas.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of asparagus liquor.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of flour.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> Paprica.</li>
+<li> 3 or 4 eggs.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cut the asparagus in pieces of the size of a pea and cook
+until tender. In cooking,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span> reserve the tips until the other pieces are
+partially cooked, or, being more tender, they will become broken while
+the others are still uncooked. Make a sauce of the butter, flour, salt,
+paprica, and water in which the asparagus was cooked, or use half a cup
+of cream in the place of part of the asparagus liquor. When the sauce
+boils, add the asparagus and mix lightly with the sauce; break the eggs,
+one after another, into a cup and slide them carefully on to the top of
+the asparagus. Season with a sprinkling of salt and pepper, and, if
+desired, a grating of nutmeg. Set the blazer into the bath and put on
+the cover. When the eggs are nicely poached, remove the eggs, with the
+asparagus below, on to rounds of toasted and buttered bread.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Eggs with Spinach.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare in the same manner, using for one cup of chopped spinach
+one-third the quantity of sauce given above. If convenient, the eggs may
+be poached in a second dish, and in milk, water or stock.</p>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Eggs.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Italian Style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Cut six cold, hard-boiled eggs into eighths lengthwise; add these, with
+a cup of cooked macaroni and half a cup of grated Parmesan cheese, to
+two cups of white sauce, at the boiling-point, in the blazer. Set over
+hot water, add a teaspoonful of onion juice, a teaspoonful of chopped
+parsley, salt and anchovy essence to taste, and serve very hot.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>DISHES LARGELY VEGETARIAN.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Although the cheer">
+<tr><td align='left'>Although the cheer be poor,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>'Twill fill your stomachs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&mdash;<i>Titus Andronicus.</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Macaroni &agrave; la Italienne.</h3>
+
+<p>Have ready one-fourth a pound of macaroni, cooked until tender, but not
+broken, in boiling salted water, and then drained, and rinsed in cold
+water.</p>
+
+<p>Make a sauce of two tablespoonfuls of butter, one tablespoonful of
+flour, one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprica, half a cup
+of well-seasoned stock and half a cup of well-reduced tomato pulp. Add
+the drained macaroni and stir occasionally, while it becomes thoroughly
+heated, then add one-fourth a cup of grated Parmesan cheese. Lift the
+macaroni with a fork and spoon so as to mix thoroughly with the cheese,
+and serve at once.</p>
+
+<p>Strain the tomatoes through a sieve sufficiently fine to keep back the
+seeds, and cook the pulp, very slowly, until reduced to at least half
+its bulk. A more hearty dish may be served by adding, just before the
+cheese, three-fourths a cup of cold<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span> tongue cut in thin slices and then
+stamped into small fanciful shapes with a French cutter; or the tongue
+may be cut simply in small cubes.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Asparagus Peas.</h3>
+
+<p>Scrape the scales from the stalks of asparagus and cut the tender
+portions into pieces one-fourth an inch long. Cook in boiling salted
+water until tender; drain, and keep the peas hot. For three cups of peas
+make one cup of drawn-butter sauce, using as liquid the water in which
+the asparagus was cooked, or white stock. Add the peas to the sauce;
+beat the yolks of two eggs, add half a cup of cream, and stir into the
+sauce and peas; add, also, one tablespoonful of butter. Serve on
+croutons of fried bread, or in cases made of shredded-wheat biscuit.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fresh Mushrooms and Sweetbreads.</h3>
+
+<p>Soak one pair of sweetbreads in cold water; cover with boiling salted
+water and let boil three minutes, then simmer twenty minutes; cool, and
+cut in small cubes. Saut&eacute; in two tablespoonfuls of hot butter sufficient
+mushroom caps, peeled and broken into pieces, to make with the
+sweetbreads two cups and a half. Make a sauce in the blazer, using
+one-fourth a cup, each, of butter and flour, one cup of chicken stock
+and half a cup of cream; add the sweetbreads and mushrooms, one
+tablespoonful of lemon juice, and, if desired, the yolks of two eggs,
+beaten and diluted with one-fourth a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span> cup of cream or sherry. Serve on
+toast, in patty cases, or in cases of shredded-wheat biscuit.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mushroom Cromeskies.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(See cut facing <a href='#Page_198'>page 198</a>.)</div>
+
+<p>Peel the caps of fresh mushrooms; wrap each mushroom in a slice of
+bacon, pinning the bacon around the mushroom with a wooden toothpick.
+Saut&eacute; in a hot blazer and serve on toast. These are particularly good,
+cooked in a hot oven in a double broiler resting over a baking-pan.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Creamed Mushrooms.</h3>
+
+<p>Wipe carefully half a pound of mushrooms; peel the caps and break them
+in pieces. Reserve the stems for another dish. Melt three tablespoonfuls
+of butter in the blazer and in it saut&eacute; the mushrooms; dust with salt
+and pepper, add two tablespoonfuls of flour, and, when cooked in the
+butter, one cup of cream, gradually; stir until the sauce boils, let
+simmer a few minutes, then serve with toast or crackers.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Artichokes &agrave; la Bordelaise.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<span class="smcap">Mrs. E. M. Lucas.</span>)</div>
+
+<p>Put one-fourth a cup of butter and half a cup of sifted bread crumbs
+into the blazer and light the lamp; when the crumbs are well moistened
+with the butter, add a teaspoonful of fine-minced parsley, one pint of
+cooked artichokes cut into small cubes, half a teaspoonful of salt, a
+dash of cay<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>enne and half a pint of rich, sweet cream. Let boil up once
+and put out the flame; add a teaspoonful of lemon juice and half a
+teaspoonful of the grated rind of a lemon (or omit the grated rind);
+stir well and serve at once.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/mushroom_crom.jpg" width="300" height="153" alt="Mushroom Cromeskies." title="Mushroom Cromeskies." />
+<span class="caption">Mushroom Cromeskies.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Ready for cooking.</i>)</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_197'>page 197</a></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/prune_toast.jpg" width="300" height="205" alt="Prune Toast." title="Prune Toast." />
+<span class="caption">Prune Toast.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>See <a href='#Page_217'>page 217</a></div>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Puff=balls Saut&eacute;d.</h3>
+
+<p>Heat three tablespoonfuls of butter or oil in the blazer. Cut the
+puff-balls in slices half an inch in thickness, season with salt and
+pepper, dip in egg and bread crumbs, and saut&eacute; in the blazer to a golden
+brown.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mushrooms and Macaroni.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Italian style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Put one tablespoonful of butter and one teaspoonful of lemon juice into
+the blazer; add a dozen peeled mushrooms, broken into pieces and
+blanched, and cook slowly, covered, five or six minutes. Then add one
+cup and one-fourth of milk, and, when scalded, stir in two
+tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour, creamed together. When the
+sauce boils, add one-fourth a pound of macaroni, cooked and blanched in
+the usual manner; heat over hot water, and, just before serving, add
+one-fourth a cup of grated cheese.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Canned Peas with Egg.</h3>
+
+<p>Rinse, drain, and rinse again in boiling water one can of peas. Add two
+tablespoonfuls of butter, one teaspoonful of sugar, half a teaspoonful
+of salt and a dash of pepper. Beat the yolk of an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span> egg, dilute with
+four tablespoonfuls of cream, and stir into the peas. Serve as soon as
+the egg thickens slightly.</p>
+
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Curried Vegetables.</h3>
+
+<p>Make a sauce of one-fourth a cup, each, of butter and flour, one
+tablespoonful of curry powder, half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of
+pepper and a pint of milk; add half a teaspoonful of onion juice, one
+cup of cooked peas, half a cup, each, of potato balls, turnips cut into
+cubes or fanciful shapes, and carrots cut into straws.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Potatoes &agrave; la Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pint of potato balls, cut with French cutter, and cooked tender, may be used either hot or cold.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of milk.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.</li>
+<li> 2 yolks of eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of parsley, finely chopped.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> A dash of pepper.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Heat the milk and potatoes in the blazer over hot water.
+Cream the butter and add the yolks of the eggs, beating them in well;
+add the parsley and seasonings, mix thoroughly, and, when the potatoes
+are hot and have absorbed part of the milk, stir the egg and butter into
+them; add the lemon juice and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />White Hashed Potatoes.</h3>
+
+<p>Butter the blazer and put into it about three cups of cold chopped
+potato, salted during the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span> chopping. Pour over the potato a little hot
+stock, or water, and scatter some bits of butter over the top. Cover,
+and cook slowly, without stirring or browning, until thoroughly heated.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />String Beans &agrave; la Lyonnaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer; add a fine-sliced
+onion and saut&eacute; to a delicate brown; add a quart of string beans,
+cooked, a dash of pepper, a grating of nutmeg and a little salt; heat
+thoroughly, tossing the beans occasionally; add a teaspoonful of chopped
+parsley, a tablespoonful of lemon juice and another tablespoonful of
+butter, in bits, and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tomato Sandwich.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 6 shredded-wheat biscuit.</li>
+<li> 4 medium-sized tomatoes.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> 8 teaspoonfuls of sugar, or</li>
+<li> 8 teaspoonfuls of mayonnaise dressing.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Peel the tomatoes, cut in small pieces, add the salt, and
+sugar, if used, and set aside in a cool place. Split the biscuits, dip
+the inside lightly into cold water without wetting the outside, put the
+halves together, and arrange in a buttered blazer; cover, and heat over
+hot water; then separate the halves, and, using a knife dipped in hot
+water, spread with butter. Put a layer of tomatoes on the bottom half,
+if sugar has not been used, add the salad dressing, and cover with the
+top of the biscuit, pressing it down lightly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Kornlet Oysters.</h3>
+
+<p>To one cup of kornlet add two well-beaten eggs, two tablespoonfuls of
+flour, a scant half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica. Drop, by
+spoonfuls, into a hot, well-oiled blazer and cook to a golden brown,
+turn, and brown the other side.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Kornlet Oysters, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<p>To one can of kornlet add a teaspoonful of soda, two well-beaten eggs,
+salt and pepper, and enough fine cracker crumbs to hold the mixture
+together. Drop from a spoon and cook as above.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>R&Eacute;CHAUFF&Eacute;S AND OLLA=PODRIDA</h2>
+
+<div class="center">"Take heed of enemies reconciled and meats twice
+cooked."</div>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Suggestions Concerning R&eacute;chauff&eacute;s.</h3>
+
+<p>Many of the dishes prepared in the chafing-dish are r&eacute;chauff&eacute;s of cold
+cooked meats, including game and fish. The composition of such dishes is
+called "the flower of cookery": but it is well to remember that we are
+dealing with a class of foods that are more digestible when cooked rare;
+also, that in these cases digestibility decreases in proportion to the
+length of time, as well as the number of times, the article has been
+cooked. The meat or fish composing such dishes should not come into
+direct contact with the source of heat; after being freed from skin,
+bone and fat, they should simply be heated in a hot sauce over hot
+water.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Corned=Beef Hash.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Spanish style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Chop together very fine the corned beef and potatoes and a half or a
+whole green pepper, after having removed the seeds and veins; put two<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+tablespoonfuls of butter into the blazer (over hot water), add the
+chopped ingredients, and season to suit the taste, adding a little stock
+or milk to moisten; mix thoroughly, then cover, and stir occasionally
+until heated through. Put a few bits of butter here and there over the
+top, and serve when melted. Use an equal quantity of meat and potato, or
+twice as much potato as meat. Serve with olives, pickles or a light
+vegetable salad.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mock Terrapin.</h3>
+
+<p>Have ready cooked half a calf's liver (it may be boiled or braised with
+vegetables). Cut it into small cubes. Put one-fourth a cup of butter
+into the blazer; when colored a little add the cubes of liver dredged
+with two tablespoonfuls of flour, one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica
+and half a teaspoonful of salt. Stir and cook until the flour is blended
+with the butter; then add one cup of water or stock and one teaspoonful
+of chopped parsley. As soon as the sauce boils, add one-fourth a cup of
+cream, two hard-boiled eggs chopped fine, and one teaspoonful of lemon
+juice. Serve on toast, with quarters of lemon cut lengthwise.</p>
+
+<p><i>Note.</i>&mdash;Cream may be used in the place of stock, and the yolks of two
+uncooked eggs instead of the cooked eggs.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Spaghetti.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Queen style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Cut cold cooked chicken or turkey and cooked tongue (enough to make one
+cup of meat) in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span> dice; cut into inch-length pieces cooked spaghetti
+enough to make one cup. Put one cup and a half of thin cream into the
+blazer over hot water, and, when hot, add the meat and spaghetti. Beat
+the yolks of two eggs, add two tablespoonfuls of cream, and stir into
+the hot mixture; add, also, half a teaspoonful (scant) of salt and a
+dash of paprica. Stir constantly until the mixture thickens slightly,
+then serve at once with toast or crackers.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scrambled Ham and Eggs.</h3>
+
+<p>Put a tablespoonful of butter in the blazer. Break six eggs into a bowl,
+add six tablespoonfuls of water, and beat until you can take up a
+spoonful. Add about a cup of fine-chopped ham and mix well. Pour into
+the blazer, and cook until creamy, stirring constantly.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken Klopps with Bechamel Sauce.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 2 cups of cold chicken, chopped.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of celery pepper.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.</li>
+<li> The unbeaten whites of 4 eggs.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;When ready to cook, mix the ingredients together thoroughly
+and form into round balls. Place the balls carefully in water <i>just off
+the boil</i>, and, in about five minutes, or as soon as the egg seems
+poached, remove the klopps with a skimmer. Serve with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h4><br />BECHAMEL SAUCE.</h4>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> <small>1/3</small> a cup of butter.</li>
+<li> <small>1/3</small> a cup of flour.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of cream.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of chicken stock.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> A dash of paprica.</li>
+<li> The beaten yolks of 1 or 2 eggs.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Make the sauce in the usual manner, but <i>do not let it boil
+after the yolks of the eggs are added</i>.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Minced Ham &agrave; la Poulette.</h3>
+
+<p>To each cup of fine-chopped ham add one tablespoonful of fine bread
+crumbs, softened with cream or milk. Season with salt and pepper. Heat
+thoroughly and spread on rounds of moist buttered toast. Place a poached
+<i>egg</i> on each slice. Use two dishes.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Epicurean Canap&eacute;s.</h3>
+
+<p>Heat a little butter in the blazer; saut&eacute; in it some narrow strips of
+bread and spread them thickly with the mixture used for epicurean
+sandwiches. Press a pitted olive in the centre of each and serve at
+once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Aberdeen Sandwiches.</h3>
+
+<p>Heat one-fourth a cup of chopped cold tongue or ham, and half a cup of
+chopped veal or chicken, with half a cup of good sauce and two
+tablespoonfuls of curry paste (curry powder mixed with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span> just enough
+water to form a paste). Let the mixture simmer five minutes, stirring
+constantly; then set aside to become cool. Have some bits of bread
+prepared as for sandwiches. Heat some clarified butter in the blazer,
+and in it saut&eacute; the bread a delicate brown, and drain on soft paper.
+Spread with the cold mixture, press two pieces together, and heat over
+hot water five or ten minutes. Serve hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Calf's Head en Tortue.</h3>
+
+<p>Peel a dozen mushrooms; break the caps in pieces and chop the stems very
+fine. Saut&eacute; in three tablespoonfuls of butter, adding, if desired, half
+an onion cut fine. Sprinkle in one-fourth a cup of flour, half a
+teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprica, and, when the ingredients are
+well blended, add gradually one cup and a half of stock and one-fourth a
+cup of tomato juice. Let simmer a few moments, after the sauce boils;
+then add one pint of meat from a calf's head, cooked and cut in cubes.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Woodcock Toast.</h3>
+
+<p>Pound to a paste the freshly boiled livers of two fowls (ducks
+preferred), one teaspoonful of anchovy paste (or one anchovy may be
+pounded with the livers), half a teaspoonful of sugar, one tablespoonful
+of butter, one-fourth a teaspoonful of spiced pepper and the yolks of
+two raw eggs. Pass through a sieve, dilute with a little hot cream<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span> from
+a cup of cream heated over hot water, stir, and return to the rest of
+the cream. Stir until thickened, then pour over sippets or rounds of
+toast saut&eacute;d a golden brown in a little butter.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Scotch Woodcock.</h3>
+
+<p>Beat thoroughly three eggs and three teaspoonfuls of anchovy paste. Put
+this into the chafing-dish over hot water with three-fourths a cup of
+milk and stir until thick. Spread sippets of toast with butter and then
+with anchovy paste, and turn the woodcock upon them.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Calves' Brains and Mushrooms &agrave; la Poulette.</h3>
+
+<p>Saut&eacute; a clove of garlic, cut fine, in two tablespoonfuls of butter; add
+half a pound of mushrooms, peeled and broken in pieces, one-fourth a cup
+of flour, and saut&eacute; until well browned. Then add one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of mace and paprica, half a teaspoonful of salt and
+one cup and a half of stock, and cook five or six minutes. Then add the
+yolks of two eggs, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, one tablespoonful
+of chopped parsley and three calves' brains, cooked, and cut in dice.
+Serve in timbale cases, or upon croustades of bread.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Beef Tea in Chafing=dish.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut juicy round steak into pieces about two inches square. Heat the
+blazer very hot; heat also a wooden lemon-squeezer in hot water or in
+any way that is most convenient. Put the meat<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span> into the hot blazer, turn
+again and again with a fork, keeping the blazer very hot. When the bits
+of meat are heated throughout, squeeze them, one by one, with the
+lemon-squeezer, into a <i>hot</i> bowl. Season with salt and serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salmi of Duck or Game.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> Pieces of game.</li>
+<li> <small>1/3</small> a cup, each, of butter and flour.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful, each, of carrot and onion slices.</li>
+<li> 2 cups of rich brown stock, highly seasoned.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of madeira.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of peas or flageolets, cooked.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Cook the butter, onion and carrot in the blazer until well
+browned. Skim out the onion and carrot and add the flour, pepper and
+salt. Add the stock. As soon as the sauce is cooked, add the madeira,
+the pieces of game, and the peas or flageolets. Serve as soon as the
+meat is hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Salmi of Duck, No. 2.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 pint of thin slices of duck.</li>
+<li> 2 tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour.</li>
+<li> 1 pint of brown stock.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of catsup.</li>
+<li> 10 or 15 drops of onion juice.</li>
+<li> 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.</li>
+<li> 6 mushrooms, cut in pieces.</li>
+<li> 1 tablespoonful of currant jelly.</li>
+<li> Salt and pepper to taste.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Brown the butter and make a sauce with the flour, seasoning
+and stock. Add the duck and mushrooms, simmer twenty minutes, add the
+currant jelly, and garnish with croutons.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Sweetbreads Saut&eacute;d.</h3>
+
+<p>Split parboiled sweetbreads into two pieces. Wipe dry, sprinkle with
+salt, pepper and flour; or season with salt and pepper, and
+egg-and-bread-crumb them. Saut&eacute; in the blazer in hot olive oil, or
+butter, until nicely browned on both sides. Serve with French peas or
+tomato sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken with Mushrooms.</h3>
+
+<p>Melt one-fourth a cup of butter in the blazer; add six mushroom caps,
+peeled and sliced, and cook slowly, with a teaspoonful of grated onion,
+about six minutes; add two tablespoonfuls of flour, stir until smooth,
+then add one cup of cream, stock or milk, pepper and salt, and a few
+grains of mace. When the sauce boils, stir in one pint of chicken,
+finely chopped, and serve as soon as hot. Sweetbreads, lamb or veal may
+be served in the same manner.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chopped Beef.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop half a pound of raw beef, from the tender part of the round, very
+fine. Rub the bottom of the hot blazer with butter, put in the meat with
+one teaspoonful of grated onion, stir, and cook four or five minutes;
+add two tablespoonfuls of butter, salt and pepper, and serve at once.
+This is good with bread, but better with baked potatoes. A pound of beef
+may be cooked at one time in a chafing-dish of good size, and the grated
+onion increased to suit the taste. The juice, of which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span> there will be a
+large quantity, may be thickened with flour and butter creamed together;
+but it is better unthickened.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Chicken Timbales.</h3>
+
+<p>Pass the breast of a raw chicken through a meat-chopper five or six
+times; beat in, one at a time, the whites of two small eggs (the whites
+of the eggs are <i>not</i> to be previously beaten), then beat in very
+gradually one cup of thick cream. Season with half a teaspoonful of salt
+and one-fourth a teaspoonful of white pepper. Turn the mixture into
+buttered moulds, set them in the blazer, and cook, surrounded with hot
+water to two-thirds their height and covered, about twenty minutes. The
+water should not boil; if, with the flame turned low, it still boils,
+set the blazer into the bath, in which the water may boil vigorously
+without harm to the timbales. Serve with</p>
+
+
+<h4><br />BECHAMEL SAUCE.</h4>
+
+<p>Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add two tablespoonfuls of flour,
+one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper and half a cup, each,
+of chicken stock and cream; add the beaten yolk of one egg and let stand
+over hot water five minutes. Or,</p>
+
+
+<h4><br />MUSHROOM SAUCE.</h4>
+
+<p>Make as above, substituting one-fourth a cup of mushroom liquor for a
+part of the chicken stock, and adding with the egg half a can of
+mushrooms, or a cup of fresh mushrooms saut&eacute;d in two tablespoonfuls of
+butter.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Supreme of Chicken.</h3>
+
+<p>Chop fine the breast of a raw chicken. Beat one egg, add the chicken,
+and continue beating until smooth; then add three eggs, one at a time,
+beating each egg in thoroughly. Add a generous teaspoonful of salt, a
+saltspoonful of white pepper, a dash of black pepper and one pint of
+cream. Butter twelve small moulds and ornament them with truffles. Fill
+with the chicken mixture, cover with buttered paper, and steam twenty
+minutes. Or, put in a pan of boiling water and cook in a moderate oven
+till the centres are firm. Serve with mushroom or bechamel sauce. These
+can be cooked and left in the moulds and then reheated. It will take
+about fifteen minutes to reheat.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Egg Timbales.</h3>
+
+<p>Beat six eggs without separating, add a scant teaspoonful of salt, a
+dash of pepper, a teaspoonful of chopped parsley, twenty drops of onion
+juice and one cup and a half of rich milk. Stir till well mixed. Butter
+small-sized timbale moulds and fill two-thirds full with the mixture.
+Place moulds in the blazer, pour boiling water about them three-fourths
+to the tops of the moulds, and let cook about twenty minutes, or till
+the centres are firm; turn out of the moulds on to a warm platter, and
+pour about them a thin bread sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h4><br />BREAD SAUCE.</h4>
+
+<p>To one pint of milk add half a cup of fine, stale bread crumbs, a small
+onion with six cloves stuck<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span> in it, half a teaspoonful of salt and a few
+grains of cayenne. Cook in the double boiler for about an hour; stir
+occasionally. Remove the onion, beat well, and add one tablespoonful of
+butter. Put one tablespoonful of butter over the fire in a small
+saucepan; when hot add two-thirds a cup of rather coarse bread crumbs;
+stir over a hot fire till they are brown and crisp. Sprinkle over the
+timbales and sauce. Add a sprig of parsley to the top of each timbale.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Pan=Broiling.</h3>
+
+<p>Chops, birds, venison, hamburg, sirloin and other steaks, even spring
+chickens, may be cooked successfully in the chafing-dish; but they are
+not the dishes upon which an amateur should begin his experiments. Heat
+the blazer very hot, brush over the surface with a brush dipped in olive
+oil (or use a butter-ball and a fork), lay in the article to be cooked,
+sear upon one side, turn and sear upon the other; repeat, turning and
+cooking until done to taste; five minutes will suffice for small lamb
+chops. Serve with</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel Butter.</h3>
+
+<p>Beat four tablespoonfuls of butter to a cream; add half a teaspoonful of
+salt and a few grains of pepper, also one tablespoonful of parsley,
+chopped very fine, and one tablespoonful of lemon juice, very slowly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fillets of Beef, Mushroom Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>Have half a dozen slices cut crosswise from a neatly trimmed fillet of
+beef. The slices may be cut of any thickness desired, but from half to
+three-fourths an inch is preferable for chafing-dish cookery. Melt two
+tablespoonfuls of butter in a hot blazer; lay in the meat, and cook four
+or five minutes, turning every ten seconds. The heat should be well
+maintained throughout the cooking. Season with salt when half cooked. In
+another blazer make a cup of brown sauce; brown two tablespoonfuls of
+butter, add four tablespoonfuls of flour, and, when this is well
+browned, add half a cup of very rich brown stock and half a cup of
+liquid from the mushroom can. Season to taste with Kitchen Bouquet,
+salt, and a few drops of tabasco sauce, then add half a bottle of
+mushrooms, cut in halves. Serve as soon as the mushrooms are hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fillets of Lamb, Cherry Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>For the fillets use either the fillet from the loin or the top of a
+"best end of a loin" boned. Cut the meat in slices or rounds, and saut&eacute;
+in hot butter in the blazer. Season with salt and pepper and pour into
+the blazer half a cup of maraschino cherries with half a cup of the
+liquid from the bottle. Candied cherries that have stood half an hour in
+half a cup of boiling water, on the back of the range, and then mixed
+with half a cup of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span> sherry wine, may be used in place of the maraschino
+cherries. This sauce may also be used with fillets of beef or young
+turkey.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Ham Timbales.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1&frac12; cups of milk or thin cream.</li>
+<li> 1 cup of cold, cooked ham, chopped fine.</li>
+<li> &frac14; a cup of fine bread crumbs.</li>
+<li> The yolks of 2 "hard-boiled" eggs.</li>
+<li> Two raw eggs.</li>
+<li> A few drops of tabasco sauce.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Take the bread crumbs from the centre of a stale loaf. Pass
+the cooked yolks of eggs through a sieve. Add the ham, crumbs, yolks,
+salt and tabasco to the raw eggs beaten and mixed with the milk. When
+thoroughly mixed turn into timbale moulds very carefully buttered. Fit
+papers into the bottoms of the moulds before buttering. Set these in the
+blazer, surround with hot water, letting it come half way to the top of
+the moulds. Heat the water to the boiling-point, then set the blazer
+into the hot-water pan partly filled with boiling water, cover and cook
+until the mixture is firm in the centre. Serve, turned from the moulds,
+with cream or tomato sauce, flavored with onion, or with peas heated in
+a cream sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fillets of Chicken.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Chafing-dish Style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Remove the breast from a plump and tender chicken and separate from the
+bone and skin.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span> Detach the small fillets, then cut each side into two or
+three lengthwise slices the size of the small fillets. Keep covered
+closely until ready to cook. Heat the blazer very hot, butter slightly,
+and in it lay the fillets and sprinkle with the juice of half a lemon,
+salt and white pepper; add, also, one-third a cup of chicken stock and a
+tablespoonful of sherry. Cover and let cook about ten minutes. In the
+meantime prepare a sauce in a second chafing-dish, using two
+tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour, a dash of salt and pepper,
+and one cup of stock, in making which a small piece of ham or bacon was
+used. Add also a tablespoonful of mushroom or tomato catsup and a
+tablespoonful of sherry wine.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Mutton <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Rechauff&eacute;'">R&eacute;chauff&eacute;</ins>.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(<i>Creole Style.</i>)</div>
+
+<p>Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer and saut&eacute; in this a
+tablespoonful, each, of green pepper and onion, chopped fine; add three
+tablespoonfuls of flour and half a teaspoonful of salt, and stir and
+cook until frothy; then add, gradually, one cup of brown stock and half
+a cup of tomato pur&eacute;e (cooked tomato strained). Let boil two or three
+minutes, then set over hot water and stir in one cup of cold roast
+mutton cut in strips or cubes, and half a cup of cooked macaroni,
+blanched and drained. Two or three mushrooms or a tablespoonful of
+mushroom catsup improves this dish.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Baba or Wine Cake.</h3>
+
+<p>This cake may be made some days in advance, and when wished reheated in
+a sauce made in the chafing-dish. Baba is baked in a large mould and cut
+in slices, or in individual cylindrical or baba moulds.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br /><span class="smcap">Baba.</span></h3>
+
+<div class='center'><span class="smcap">Ingredients.</span></div>
+
+
+<ul><li> 1 lb. of flour.</li>
+<li> 1 cake of compressed yeast.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of water.</li>
+<li> 10 oz. of butter (1&frac14; cups).</li>
+<li> &frac14; a teaspoonful of salt.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of sugar.</li>
+<li> 8 eggs.</li>
+<li> &frac12; a cup of currants, sultanas or sliced citron.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><i>Method.</i>&mdash;Make a sponge of the yeast, softened in the water, and flour
+to knead. Knead the little ball of dough until elastic, and put into a
+small saucepan of lukewarm water. Meanwhile add the butter, sugar, salt
+and three of the eggs to the rest of the flour, and beat with the hand
+until all are evenly blended; then add the rest of the eggs, one after
+another. When the ball of dough rises to the top of the water and is
+light, remove from the water with a skimmer and beat it into the egg
+paste; beat for some minutes, then beat in the fruit. Turn the mixture
+into the mould or moulds, leaving room for the cake to double in bulk.
+Let rise in a temperature of 68&deg; F. When nearly doubled in bulk, bake
+from twenty to fifty minutes.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br /><span class="smcap">Sauce for Baba.</span></h3>
+
+<p>Let two cups of sugar and one cup of water boil in the blazer about six
+minutes, then add one-fourth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span> a cup, or more, of maraschino, rum or
+sherry wine. Lay the baba, sliced or in individual forms, into the hot
+syrup and let stand a few minutes, basting the cake with the syrup. When
+hot, serve with or without whipped cream. Half a cup of apricot or
+quince marmalade may be added with the wine.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Fig Toast.</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>(See cut facing <a href='#Page_198'>page 198</a>.)</div>
+
+<p>Wash carefully and cook in boiling water half a pound of pulled figs
+until tender; add one fourth a cup of sugar and the grated rind and
+juice of half a lemon. Cook until the syrup is well reduced. Cut the
+crust from a thick slice of bread and saut&eacute; to a golden brown, first on
+one side, then on the other, in two tablespoonfuls of hot butter. Drain
+the bread on soft paper; then heap the figs upon it, cover with
+two-thirds a cup of thick cream and a scant fourth a cup of sugar,
+beaten until stiff. Serve at once. Prunes, apricots, peaches, pears, or
+strawberry preserves, may be prepared in the same manner. If preserves
+be used, omit the sugar from the cream. Sponge cake may be used in the
+place of bread.</p>
+
+<h3><br /><br />Pineapple Sponge.</h3>
+
+<p>Heat one pint of grated pineapple over hot water, sprinkle into it
+one-third a cup of fine tapioca (a quick-cooking kind), mixed with
+two-thirds a cup of sugar, and half a teaspoonful of salt; when the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+tapioca is transparent, add the juice of a lemon, and fold in the whites
+of two eggs, beaten until dry. Serve with cream and sugar.</p>
+
+
+<h3><br /><br />Tapioca=and=Banana Sponge.</h3>
+
+<p>Sprinkle half a cup of tapioca and two-thirds a cup of sugar into one
+pint of boiling water; add half a teaspoonful of salt and cook over hot
+water, stirring occasionally. When the tapioca is transparent, add the
+juice of two lemons, and fold in the whites of two eggs, beaten until
+dry. Serve spread over sliced bananas, with cream and sugar, or with a
+cold boiled custard, previously made. This dish may be prepared with
+canned peaches, apricots or quinces, using the juice of the fruit
+instead of water.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>INDEX.</h2>
+
+
+<ul><li> Aberdeen Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+<li> Aigrettes, Cheese, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
+<li> Almond-and-Peach Salad, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
+<li> Almonds and Walnuts, To Blanch, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
+<li> Anchovy Salad, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></li>
+<li> Anchovy Toast, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>
+<ul>
+<li> with Eggs, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
+<li> with Spinach, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Anchovies with Olives, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a></li>
+<li> Apple,-Celery-and-Walnut Salad, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+<li> Artichoke Salad, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a><ul>
+<li> -and-Tomato Salad, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Artichokes &agrave; la Bordelaise, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+<li> Asparagus with Eggs, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Peas, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
+<li> Salad, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+<li> Salad, Egg Garnish, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
+<li> -and-Cauliflower Salad, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+<li> and Salmon Salad, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+<li> Tips in Turnips, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Aspic Jelly from Bouillon Capsules, etc., <a href='#Page_100'>100</a></li>
+<li> Aspic Jelly, Chicken Stock for, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Consomm&eacute; for, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+<li> for Garnishing, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+<li> Oysters in, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+<li> Recipe for, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+<li> for Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Baba, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></li>
+<li> Baba, Sauce for, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></li>
+<li> Bacon Salad, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
+<li> Bacon Sauce, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
+<li> Baking Powder Biscuit, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+<li> Balls, Cheese, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
+<li> Bamboo Sprouts, Shrimp-and-Lettuce Salad, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></li>
+<li> Banana-and-Orange Salad, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
+<li> Banana-and-Tapioca Sponge, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
+<li> Bar-le-Duc-and-Cheese Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+<li> Bean, White, Salad, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
+<li> Bechamel Sauce, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
+<li> Beef, Chopped, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Fillets of, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+<li> Hash, Corned, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
+<li> Sandwiches, Corned, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Beef Tea in Chafing-Dish, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
+<li> Beet-and-Cream Cheese Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
+<li> Beets and Brussels Sprouts, Salad of, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
+<li> Beets, Stuffed, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></li>
+<li> Bernaise Sauce, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></li>
+<li> Beverages with Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
+<li> Biscuit, Baking Powder, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Sandwich, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Bluefish Salad, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
+<li> Boiled Dressing for Chicken Salad, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
+<li> Boiled Salad Dressing, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
+<li> Boston Brown Bread, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+<li> Boudins-de-Saumon Salad, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
+<li> Bread, Boston Brown, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Entire Wheat, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+<li> Pulled, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+<li> Rice, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>Wheat, Two Loaves of, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+<li> for Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
+<li> To Give Glossy Crust, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Brook Trout Salad, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>
+<ul>
+<li> in Aspic, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Cabbage and Cauliflower, To Clean, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
+<li> Calf's Head en Tortue, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a></li>
+<li> Canap&eacute;s, Egg, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Epicurean, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+<li> Oyster, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Cauliflower-and-Asparagus Salad, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+<li> Cauliflower Salad, Egg Garnish, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
+<li> Caviare Sandwich Rolls, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+<li> Celery, Apple-and-Nut Salad, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>
+<ul>
+<li> -and-Chestnut Salad, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Celery-and-Nut in Border, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
+<li> Celery-and-Oyster Salad, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></li>
+<li> Celery Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+<li> Celery, To Fringe, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>
+<ul>
+<li> To Keep, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Ceylon Cocoa, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+<li> Chafing-Dish Appointments, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
+<li> Chafing-Dish Recipes:
+<ul>
+<li> Aberdeen Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+<li> Anchovy Toast, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>
+<ul>
+<li> with Eggs, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
+<li> with Spinach, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Anchovies with Olives, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a></li>
+<li> Artichokes &agrave; la Bordelaise, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+<li> Asparagus Peas, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
+<li> Baba on Wine Cake, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></li>
+<li> Bechamel Sauce, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
+<li> Beef Tea in Chafing-Dish, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
+<li> Bread Sauce, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
+<li> Buttered Lobster, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+<li> Calf's Head en Tortue, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a></li>
+<li> Calves' Brains and Mushrooms, Poulette, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
+<li> Canned Peas with Egg, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
+<li> Cheese Fondue, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+<li> Chicken Klopps with Bechamel Sauce, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
+<li> Chicken Timbales, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
+<li> Chicken with Mushrooms, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
+<li> Chopped Beef, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
+<li> Chops, etc. Pan Broiled, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></li>
+<li> Clams &agrave; la Newburgh, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+<li> Corned Beef Hash, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
+<li> Crabs &agrave; la Creole, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
+<li> Creamed Dishes, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+<li> Creamed Mushrooms, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+<li> Creamed Peas, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+<li> Curried Eggs, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+<li> Curried Oysters, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
+<li> Curried Oysterys, No. 2, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+<li> Curried Sardines, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
+<li> Curried Vegetables, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+<li> Deviled Dishes, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+<li> Deviled Crabs, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
+<li> Egg Canap&eacute;s, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></li>
+<li> Egg Timbales, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
+<li> Egg &agrave; la Italienne, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
+<li> Eggs &agrave; la Parisienne, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
+<li> Eggs, Creole Style, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a></li>
+<li> Eggs, Italian Style, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
+<li> Eggs and Mushrooms &agrave; la Dauphine, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> Eggs with Asparagus, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>
+<ul>
+<li> with Spinach, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> English Monkey, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a></li>
+<li> Epicurean Canap&eacute;s, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+<li> Escalloped Oysters, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
+<li> Fig Toast, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></li>
+<li> Fillets of Beef, Mushroom Sauce, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+<li> Fillets of Lamb, Cherry Sauce, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+<li> Fresh Mushrooms and Sweetbreads, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
+<li> Fricassee of Oysters, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+<li> Golden Buck, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
+<li> Halibut Rarebit, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
+<li> Ham Timbales, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+<li> Hawaiian Lobster Curry, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
+<li> Kornlet Oysters, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>
+<ul>
+<li> No. 2, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span> Lobster &agrave; la Bechamel, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
+<li> Lobster &agrave; la Bordelaise, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+<li> Lobster &agrave; la Newburgh, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+<li> Lobster &agrave; la Poulette, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
+<li> Macaroni &agrave; la Italienne, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
+<li> Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel Butter, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></li>
+<li> Mock Terrapin, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
+<li> Minced Ham &agrave; la Poulette, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+<li> Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></li>
+<li> Mushroom Cromeskies, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+<li> Mushrooms and Macaroni, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
+<li> Mushroom Sauce, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
+<li> Mutton R&eacute;chauff&eacute;, Creole Style, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
+<li> Oyster Canap&eacute;s, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
+<li> Oyster Crabs, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
+<li> Oyster Crabs &agrave; la Hollandaise, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
+<li> Oyster Cromeskies, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+<li> Oyster Rarebit, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
+<li> Oysters, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
+<li> Oysters, No. 2, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
+<li> Oysters &agrave; la <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Duxelles'">D'Uxelles</ins>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
+<li> Oysters Saut&eacute;, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
+<li> Panned Oysters, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Pineapple Sponge, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></li>
+<li> Plain Lobster, <ins title="Transcriber's Note: reference missing in original"><a href='#Page_170'>170</a></ins></li>
+<li> Potatoes &agrave; la Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+<li> Puff Balls, Saut&eacute;d, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
+<li> Pur&eacute;e of Fish, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+<li> R&eacute;chauff&eacute; of Fish, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>
+<ul>
+<li> No. 2, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Salmi of Duck or Game, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
+<li> Salmi of Duck No. 2, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
+<li> Salt Codfish in Cream Sauce, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
+<li> Salt Codfish with Tomato Sauce, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+<li> Sardine Canap&eacute;s, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
+<li> Sardine Rarebit, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
+<li> Sardines, French Fashion, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
+<li> Sardines on Toast, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
+<li> Scotch Woodcock, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled Eggs &agrave; la Union Club, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled Eggs with Cheese, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled Eggs with Dried Beef, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled Eggs with Oysters, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled Eggs with Smoked Salmon, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled Eggs with Tomatoes, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled Ham and Eggs, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
+<li> Shirred Eggs, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a></li>
+<li> Shrimps &agrave; la Poulette, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
+<li> Shrimps with Peas, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
+<li> Spaghetti, Queen Style, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
+<li> String Beans &agrave; la Lyonnaise, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+<li> Supreme of Chicken, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
+<li> Sweetbreads, Saut&eacute;d, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
+<li> Tapioca and Banana Sponge, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
+<li> Tomato Sandwich, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+<li> Welsh Rarebit, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>
+<ul>
+<li> No. 2, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
+<li> with Ale, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> White Hashed Potatoes, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+<li> Woodcock Toast, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a></li>
+<li> Yorkshire Rarebit, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Chafing-Dishes, Past and Present, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a></li>
+<li> Chaud-froid Sauce, White, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></li>
+<li> Cheese Aigrettes, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>
+<ul>
+<li> d'Artois, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
+<li> Balls, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
+<li> -and-Cowslip Salad, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
+<li> Croquettes, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
+<li> Custard, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
+<li> Fondue, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+<li> Fritters, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>Ramequins, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
+<li> Sandwiches with Bar-le-Duc, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+<li> Sandwiches with Beets, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>
+<ul>
+<li> with Nuts, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> with Scrambled Eggs, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+<li> Souffl&eacute;, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
+<li> Souffl&eacute;s, Iced, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
+<li> Straws, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Cheese with Vegetable Macedoine, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
+<li> Cherry Salad, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
+<li> Cherry Sauce, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+<li> Cherry,-Strawberry-and-Peach Salad, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
+<li> Chestnuts-and-Celery Salad, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+<li> Chestnuts, To Shell and Blanch, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
+<li> Chicken, Fillets of, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Klopps, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
+<li> and Mushrooms, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
+<li> Rolls, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
+<li> Salad, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Boiled Dressing for, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
+<li> French, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
+<li> with Mushrooms, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
+<li> Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> -and-Nut Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
+<li> Stock for Aspic Jelly, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+<li> Timbales, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Chiffonade Salad, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
+<li> Chocolate, Plain, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Rich, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
+<li> Spanish, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Chopped Beef, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
+<li> Chou Paste, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
+<li> Clams &agrave; la Newburgh, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+<li> Claret Cup, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Dressing, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
+<li> Jelly, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Club Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
+<li> Cocoa, Ceylon, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Plain, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+<li> Sultana, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Coffee, Boiled, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Filtered, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Cole Slaw, Dressing for, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
+<li> Consomm&eacute; for Aspic Jelly, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+<li> Cooked Vegetable Salad, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></li>
+<li> Corned Beef Hash, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Country Salad, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
+<li> Cowslip-and-Cheese Salad, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
+<li> Crab Toast, Mock, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+<li> Crabs &agrave; la Creole, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Hollandaise, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
+<li> Deviled, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
+<li> Oyster, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Creamed Dishes, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Peas, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+<li> Mushrooms, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Cream Salad Dressing, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
+<li> Cress,-Cucumber-and-Tomato Salad, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
+<li> Cress-and-Egg Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+<li> Cress, To Clean, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
+<li> Cromeskies, Mushroom, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Oyster, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Croquettes, Cheese, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
+<li> Cucumber Salad, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>
+<ul>
+<li> for Fish, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
+<li> with Shad Roe, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
+<li> Stuffed, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Cupid's Butter Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+<li> Currant-and-Cheese Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+<li> Curry, Hawaiian Lobster, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
+<li> Curried Eggs, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Oysters, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>
+<ul>
+<li> No. 2, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Sardines, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
+<li> Vegetables, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Custard, Cheese, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Royal, for Aspic, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Date-and-Ginger Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
+<li> d'Artois, Cheese, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
+<li> Deviled Dishes, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+<li> Dressing, Boiled, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Boiled, for Chicken Salad, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
+<li> Claret, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>for Cole Slaw, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
+<li> Cream Salad, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
+<li> French, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>
+<ul>
+<li> in quantity, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> for Fruit Salad, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></li>
+<li> Horseradish, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+<li> Mayonnaise, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
+<li> Composition, 8</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Dressings, Boiled and Cream, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></li>
+<li> Dried Beef with Eggs, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> Duck-and-Olive Salad, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Orange Salad, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Duck, Salmi of, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
+<li> Duck or Game, Salmi of, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Easter Salad, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
+<li> Egg Canap&eacute;s, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></li>
+<li> Egg and Canned Peas, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
+<li> Egg Lemonade, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a></li>
+<li> Egg-and-Cress Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+<li> Egg-and-Ham Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Spinach Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+<li> Spinach Salad, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Eggs with Anchovy Toast, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
+<li> Eggs with Asparagus, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>
+<ul>
+<li> to Boil for Garnishing, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Eggs, Creole Style, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Curried, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+<li> Italienne, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
+<li> and Mushrooms, Dauphine, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> Parisienne, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled with Cheese, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled with Dried Beef, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled with Oysters, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled with Smoked Salmon, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled with Tomatoes, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled &agrave; la Union Club, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+<li> with Spinach, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Eggs, Whites of, To Poach, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
+<li> Endive, To Clean, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+<li> Endive Salad, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
+<li> English Monkey, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a></li>
+<li> Entire Wheat Bread, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+<li> Epicurean Canap&eacute;s, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Escalloped Oysters, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Fig-and-Nut Salad, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
+<li> Fig Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
+<li> Fig Toast, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></li>
+<li> Fillets of Beef, Mushroom Sauce, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Chicken, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+<li> Halibut with Cole Slaw, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Salad, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Lamb, Cherry Sauce, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Filling for Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
+<li> Filtered Coffee, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a></li>
+<li> Fish, Pur&eacute;e of, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>
+<ul>
+<li> R&eacute;chauff&eacute; of, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Fish R&eacute;chauff&eacute;, No. 2, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
+<li> Fish Salad in Aspic, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></li>
+<li> Fish-and-Mushroom Salad, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+<li> Fish, Salt Cod in Cream Sauce, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Tomato Sauce, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Five-o'clock Tea, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
+<li> Flavoring, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
+<li> Fondue, Cheese, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+<li> French Dressing, Recipes for, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>
+<ul>
+<li> in quantity, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> French Fruit Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
+<li> Fresh Mushrooms and Sweetbreads, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
+<li> Fricassee of Oysters, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+<li> Fritters, Cheese, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
+<li> Fruit Jelly for Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+<li> Fruit Punch, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Salad, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Dressing for, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></li>
+<li> When to Serve, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Fruit-and-Nut Salad, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Game, Salmi of, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
+<li> Gherkins, To Cut for Garnish, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+<li> Ginger and Date Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
+<li> Gnochi &agrave; la Romaine, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span> Golden Buck, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
+<li> Grapefruit Salad, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
+<li> Grapefruit, Pineapple,-and-Pimento Salad, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
+<li> Green Butter Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
+<li> Green Pea Salad, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>
+<ul>
+<li> -and-Potato Salad, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Halibut, Fillets of, in Aspic, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Moulded, and Creamed Peas, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></li>
+<li> Rarebit, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Halibut Salad, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>
+<ul>
+<li> for Fish Course, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Halibut-and-Cucumber Salad, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
+<li> Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>
+<ul>
+<li> and Lettuce Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Ham, Minced, Poulette Style, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+<li> Ham Salad, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+<li> Ham-and-Egg Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a><ul>
+
+<li> Eggs Scrambled, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Ham-and-Tongue Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
+<li> Ham Timbales, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+<li> Harlequin Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
+<li> Hash, Corned Beef, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
+<li> Herbs, How to Chop, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+<li> Hollandaise Sauce, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
+<li> Home-Made Soda-Water, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></li>
+<li> Honey Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
+<li> How to Blanch Walnuts and Almonds, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Blanch and Cook Vegetables, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
+<li> Boil Eggs Hard, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
+<li> Boil Fish and Meat, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
+<li> Chop Fresh Herbs, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+<li> Clean Lettuce, Endive, Cress, etc., <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+<li> Cook Sweetbreads and Brains, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
+<li> Cut Radishes for a Garnish, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+<li> Cut Gherkins for a Garnish, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+<li> Fringe Celery, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+<li> Keep Celery, Cress, Lettuce, etc., <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
+<li> Make Nasturtium and Tarragon Vinegar, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></li>
+<li> Make Royal Custard, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Sauces, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Pickle Nasturtium Seeds, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
+<li> Poach Whites of Eggs, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
+<li> Render Vegetables Crisp, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
+<li> Shell and Blanch Chestnuts, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
+<li> Shred Romaine, etc., <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+<li> Use Garlic or Onion in Salads, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Hunter's Sandwich, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Individual Souffl&eacute;s of Cheese, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
+<li> Ingredients for One Cup of Sauce, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Pint of Sauce, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Italian Salad, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Jelly,
+<ul>
+<li>Aspic, from Bouillon Capsules, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Chicken Stock for, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+<li> to Chop, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+<li> Consomm&eacute; for, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+<li> for Garnishing, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+<li> Oysters in, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+<li> Recipe for, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+<li> for Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Claret, for Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+<li> Fruit, for Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+<li> Mayonnaise, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
+<li> Tomato, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>
+<ul>
+<li> with Salad, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Klopps, Chicken, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
+<li> Kornlet Oysters, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Lamb, Fillets of, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span> Lemonade, Egg, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a></li>
+<li> Lentil Salad, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a></li>
+<li> Lettuce, How to Clean, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>
+<ul>
+<li> How to Shred, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+<li> Salad, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Livournaise Sauce, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
+<li> Lobster &agrave; la Bechamel, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>
+<ul>
+<li> &agrave; la Bordelaise, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+<li> Buttered, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+<li> Curry, Hawaiian, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
+<li> Fingers, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
+<li> Lobster Mousseline Salad, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></li>
+<li> Lobster &agrave; la Newburgh, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+<li> Plain, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+<li> &agrave; la Poulette, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Lobster Salad, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>
+<ul>
+<li> No. 2, No. 3, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
+<li> in Aspic, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Lobster in Aspic Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
+<li> Lobster and Mushroom Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Macaroni &agrave; la Italienne, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
+<li> Macaroni and Mushrooms, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
+<li> Macedoine, Cheese and Vegetable, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
+<li> Macedoine Salad, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
+<li> Mackerel Salad, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Salt, Salad, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel Butter, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Potatoes, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Marguerite Salad, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
+<li> Mayonnaise, Curdled, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Jelly, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
+<li> Making in Quantity, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
+<li> Recipe for, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
+<li> Red, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a></li>
+<li> Sardine, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Measuring, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
+<li> Meat and Fish, Potted, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
+<li> Meats, Fresh, How to Boil, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Salted, How to Boil, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Minced Ham, Poulette, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+<li> Miroton of Fish and Potato, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
+<li> Mock Crab Toast, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+<li> Mock Terrapin, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
+<li> Mosaic Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
+<li> Moulded Salmon Salad, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
+<li> Mousse de Poulet Salad, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
+<li> Mushroom Cromeskies, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+<li> Mushroom Salad with Chicken Medallions, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>
+<ul>
+<li> and Fish Salad, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+<li> and Lobster Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a></li>
+<li> Sauce, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Mushrooms and Chicken, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Creamed, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+<li> and Eggs Dauphine, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> and Sweetbreads, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Mutton R&eacute;chauff&eacute;, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Nasturtium Folds, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
+<li> Nasturtium Seeds, To Pickle, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
+<li> Nut,-Apple-and-Celery Salad, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+<li> Nut-and-Celery Salad, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+<li> Nut-and-Cheese Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+<li> Nut-and-Chicken Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+<li> Nut-and-Fig Salad, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>
+<ul>
+<li> -and-Fruit Salad, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
+<li> Litchi,-and-Orange Salad, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+<li> -and-Orange Salad, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Oil, Value of, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a></li>
+<li> Onion and Garlic, How to Use, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
+<li> Orange-and-Banana Salad, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>
+<ul>
+<li> <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Lititchi'">Litchi</ins> Nut Salad, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+<li> Walnut Salad, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Oyster Canap&eacute;s, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Cromeskies, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+<li> Rarebit, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
+<li> -and-Celery Salad, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></li>
+<li> -and-Sweetbread Salad, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Oysters in Aspic, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+<li> Oysters in Chafing-Dish, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Creamed, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+<li> Curried, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+<li> Deviled, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+<li> &agrave; la D'Uxelles, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
+<li> Escalloped, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span> Fricassee of, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+<li> Kornlet, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
+<li> Panned, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Saut&eacute;, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
+<li> with Scrambled-Eggs, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Pan-Broiling, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></li>
+<li> Panned Oysters, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+<li> Paste, Chou, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
+<li> Pastry Bag and Tubes, To Decorated Salads, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></li>
+<li> P&acirc;t&eacute;-de-Foie-Gras in Aspic, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Peach-and-Almond Salad, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
+<li> Peach Salad, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
+<li> Peach,-Strawberry-and-Cherry Salad, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
+<li> Peanut Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
+<li> Peas, Creamed, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>
+<ul>
+<li> with Egg, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Pineapple-and-Pimento Salad, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
+<li> Pineapple Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+<li> Pineapple Sponge, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></li>
+<li> Plain Chocolate, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+<li> Plain Cocoa, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+<li> Potato Salad, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>
+<ul>
+<li> German Style, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></li>
+<li> with Mayonnaise, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></li>
+<li> Potatoes, Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>
+<ul>
+<li> White Hashed, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Potted Meats and Fish, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
+<li> Puff Balls, Saut&eacute;d, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
+<li> Puff Paste Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+<li> Pulled Bread, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+<li> Punch, Fruit, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>
+<ul>
+<li> &agrave; la Nantes, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a></li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Radishes, To Cut for Garnish, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+<li> Ramequins, Cheese, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
+<li> Rarebit, Halibut, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Oyster, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
+<li> Sardine, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
+<li> Welsh, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>
+<ul>
+<li> No. 2, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
+<li> With Ale, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Yorkshire, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> R&eacute;chauff&eacute; of Fish, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Mutton, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> R&eacute;chauff&eacute;s, Concerning, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
+<li> Rice Bread, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+<li> Rich Chocolate, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
+<li> Rolls, Salad, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+<li> Rolls, Wedding Sandwich, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
+<li> Romaine, To Shred, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+<li> Rose Leaf Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
+<li> Royal Custard for Garnishing, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
+<li> Russian Salad, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Vegetable Salad, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a></li>
+<li> Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a></li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Salad Dressing, Boiled, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
+<li> Salad Dressing, Cream, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Dressings, Use of, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></li>
+<li> Fruit, When to Serve, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></li>
+<li> Making, Important Points in, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></li>
+<li> Rolls, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Salad:
+<ul>
+<li> Anchovy, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></li>
+<li> Apple,-Celery-and-English-Walnut, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+<li> Artichoke, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
+<li> Asparagus, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
+<li> Asparagus and Salmon, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+<li> Asparagus and Cauliflower, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+<li> Bacon, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
+<li> Bluefish, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
+<li> Boudins-de-Saumon, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
+<li> Brook Trout, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
+<li> Brook Trout in Aspic, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
+<li> Brussels Sprouts and Beet, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
+<li> Cauliflower, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></li>
+<li> Cauliflower, Egg Garnish, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
+<li> Celery-and-Chestnut, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+<li> Celery-and-Nut, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
+<li> Cherry, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
+<li> Chicken, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span> Chicken-and-Fresh Mushroom, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
+<li> Chicken, No. 3, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
+<li> Chicken, No. 4, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
+<li> Chiffonade, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
+<li> Combination, A Few, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
+<li> Cooked Vegetable Salad, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></li>
+<li> Country, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
+<li> Cowslip-and-Cream Cheese, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
+<li> Cress,-Cucumber-and-Tomato, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
+<li> Cucumber, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
+<li> Cucumber for Fish Course, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
+<li> Duck-and-Olive, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+<li> Duck-and-Orange, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+<li> Easter, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>-<a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
+<li> Endive, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
+<li> Endives-Tomato-and-Green-String-Bean, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
+<li> Fig-and-Nut, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
+<li> Fillets of Halibut in Aspic, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
+<li> Fillets of Halibut with Cole Slaw, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
+<li> Fish Moulded in Aspic, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></li>
+<li> French Chicken, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
+<li> Fruit, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
+<li> Fruit-and-Nut, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
+<li> Grapefruit, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
+<li> Grapefruit,-Pineapple-and-Pimento, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
+<li> Green-Pea, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
+<li> Green-Pea-and-Potato, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
+<li> Green and White, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+<li> Halibut, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
+<li> Halibut-and-Cucumber, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
+<li> Halibut (for Fish Course), <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
+<li> Ham, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+<li> Italian, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
+<li> Lentil, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a></li>
+<li> Lettuce, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
+<li> Lettuce,-Bamboo-Sprouts-and-Shrimps, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></li>
+<li> Lobster, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
+<li> Lobster, No. 2, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
+<li> Lobster, No. 3, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
+<li> Lobster in Ring of Aspic, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
+<li> Macedoine, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
+<li> Macedoine of Vegetable, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
+<li> Mackerel or Bluefish, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></li>
+<li> Marguerite, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
+<li> Miroton of Fish-and-Potato, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
+<li> Mousse-de-Poulet, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
+<li> Moulded Salmon Salad, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
+<li> Mousseline of Lobster, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
+<li> Mushroom with Medallions of Chicken, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a></li>
+<li> Orange-and-Litchi Nut, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+<li> Orange-and-Walnut, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
+<li> Orange-and-Banana, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
+<li> Oysters in Aspic, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+<li> Oyster-and-Celery, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></li>
+<li> Oyster-and-Sweetbread, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+<li> P&acirc;t&eacute; de Foie Gras in Aspic, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+<li> Peach, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+<li> Peach-and-Almond, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
+<li> Peach,-Strawberry-and-Cherry, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
+<li> Potato, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
+<li> Potato-and-Nasturtium, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></li>
+<li> Potato, German Style, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></li>
+<li> Potato with Mayonnaise, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
+<li> Russian, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
+<li> Russian Vegetable, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a></li>
+<li> Salmon, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
+<li> Salt Mackerel, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
+<li> Sardine, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></li>
+<li> Sardine, No. 2, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></li>
+<li> Sardine-and-Egg, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
+<li> Scallop, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></li>
+<li> Shad-Roe-and-Cucumber, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
+<li> Shells of Fish-and-Mushrooms, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+<li> Shrimp, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></li>
+<li> Shrimp in Cucumber Boats, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+<li> Shrimp with Aspic Border, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+<li> Spanish, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
+<li> Spinach-and-Egg, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
+<li> Spinach-and-Tongue, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+<li> Stuffed Cucumber, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span> Stuffed Beet, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></li>
+<li> Stuffed Tomato, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+<li> Sweetbread-and-Cucumber, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a></li>
+<li> Tomato-and-Artichoke, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></li>
+<li> Tomato-and-Onion, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
+<li> Tomato-and-Sweetbread, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+<li> Tomato, Horseradish Dressing, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+<li> Tomato Jelly, No. 2, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
+<li> Tomato Jelly with String Beans, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></li>
+<li> Tomatoes Farces &agrave; l'Aspic, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></li>
+<li> Tomatoes Stuffed with Nuts and Celery, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></li>
+<li> Tomatoes Stuffed with Cucumber, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
+<li> Tomatoes Stuffed with Jelly, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></li>
+<li> Turkey-and-Chestnut, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+<li> Turnip with Asparagus Tips, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+<li> Turquoise, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
+<li> White Bean, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Salads, Arrangement of, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a></li>
+<li> Salads, Decorating with Bag and Tubes, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></li>
+<li> Salads, Dressing of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Introduction to Subject, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Salads, when <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Serve'">Served</ins> with French Dressing, etc., <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Serving with Cheese, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Salmi of Duck or Game, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
+<li> Salmon Salad, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Moulded, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Salmon-and-Asparagus Salad, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+<li> Sandwiches:
+<ul>
+<li>Aberdeen, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+<li> Beet-and-Cream-Cheese, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
+<li> Beverages Served with, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
+<li> Bread for, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
+<li> Caviare Roll, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+<li> Celery, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></li>
+<li> Cheese-and-Bar-le-Duc, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+<li> Cheese-and-English-Walnut, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+<li> Chicken-and-Nut, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
+<li> Chicken Roll, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
+<li> Chicken Salad, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
+<li> Club, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
+<li> Corned Beef, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
+<li> Cress-and-Egg, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+<li> Cupid's Butter, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+<li> Date-and-Ginger, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
+<li> Egg-and-Spinach, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+<li> Epicurean, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
+<li> Fig, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
+<li> Filling for, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
+<li> French Fruit, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
+<li> Fruit or Claret Jelly, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+<li> Fruit with Whipped Cream, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+<li> Green Butter, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
+<li> Halibut with Aspic Jelly, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
+<li> Halibut-and-Lettuce, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
+<li> Ham-and-Egg, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Tongue, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Harlequin, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
+<li> Honey, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
+<li> Hunters', <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
+<li> Lobster with Aspic, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
+<li> Lobster Fingers, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
+<li> Milwaukee, The, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
+<li> Mosaic, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
+<li> Mushroom-and-Lobster, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a></li>
+<li> Nasturtium Fold, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
+<li> P&acirc;t&eacute; de Foie Gras (Imitation), <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+<li> Peanut, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
+<li> Pineapple, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+<li> Puff Paste, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+<li> Rose Leaf, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
+<li> Russian, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a></li>
+<li> Sardine, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+<li> Shad-Roe-and-Butter, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
+<li> Tomato, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+<li> Tongue-and-Veal, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+<li> Tower of Babel, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
+<li> Violet, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
+<li> Wedding Sandwich Roll, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
+<li> Whipped Cream, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Sardine Canap&eacute;s, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
+<li> Sardine-and-Egg Salad, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
+<li> Sardine Mayonnaise, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Rarebit, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span> Salad, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></li>
+<li> Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Sardines, Curried, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>
+<ul>
+<li> French Fashion, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
+<li> on Toast, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Sauce for Baba, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></li>
+<li> Sauce, Bacon, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Bechamel, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
+<li> Bernaise, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></li>
+<li> Bread, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
+<li> Chaud-froid, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></li>
+<li> Cherry, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+<li> Hollandaise, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
+<li> Ingredients for One cup, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>
+<ul>
+<li> pint, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Livournaise, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
+<li> Mayonnaise, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
+<li> Mushroom, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
+<li> Tartare, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
+<li> Tomato, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Sauces, How to Make, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Stock for use in, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Scallop Salad, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></li>
+<li> Scotch Woodcock, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
+<li> Scrambled Eggs with Cheese, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Dried Beef, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> Ham, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
+<li> Oysters, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+<li> Smoked Salmon, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+<li> Tomatoes, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> &agrave; la Union Club, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Shad-Roe-and-Butter Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
+<li> Shad-Roe-and-Cucumber Salad, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
+<li> Shells of Fish and Mushrooms, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+<li> Shirred Eggs, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a></li>
+<li> Shrimp
+<ul>
+<li>Salad
+<ul>
+<li> Aspic Border, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+<li> Cucumber Boat, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Bamboo-and-Lettuce Salad, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Shrimps with Peas, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>
+<ul>
+<li> &agrave; la Poulette, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Smoked Salmon with Eggs, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+<li> Soda-Water, Home-Made, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></li>
+<li> <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Souffle'">Souffl&eacute;</ins>, Cheese, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
+<li> <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Souffles'">Souffl&eacute;s</ins>, Cheese, Iced, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
+<li> Spaghetti, Queen Style, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
+<li> Spanish Chocolate, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
+<li> Spanish Salad, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
+<li> Spinach-and-Egg Salad, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>
+<ul>
+<li> with Eggs, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
+<li> -and-Tongue Salad, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Sponge, Pineapple, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Tapioca and Banana, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Stock, Chicken, for Aspic, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+<li> Stock, Fish, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>
+<ul>
+<li> for Sauces, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Straws, Cheese, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
+<li> Strawberry,-Peach-and-Cherry Salad, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
+<li> String Beans, Lyonnaise, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+<li> Sultana Cocoa, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+<li> Sweetbread-and-Cucumber Salad, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a></li>
+<li> Sweetbreads-and-Brains, To Cook, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>
+<ul>
+<li> and Mushrooms, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
+<li> Saut&eacute;d, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
+</ul>
+<br /></li>
+
+<li> Tapioca-and-Banana Sponge, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
+<li> Tartare Sauce, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
+<li> Tea, Beef, in Chafing-Dish, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
+<li> Tea, Five o'clock, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
+<li> Terrapin, Mock, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
+<li> Timbales, Chicken, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Egg, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
+<li> Ham, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Toast, Fig, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Mock Crab, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+<li> Woodcock, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Tomato-and-Artichoke Salad, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></li>
+<li> Tomato, Bean-and-Endive Salad, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
+<li> Tomato,-Cress-and-Cucumber Salad, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
+<li> Tomato Jelly, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Salad, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Tomato-and-Onion Salad, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
+<li> Tomato Salad, Horseradish Dressing, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+<li> Tomato Salad, Stuffed, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+<li><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span> Tomato Sandwich, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>
+<ul>
+<li> -and-Sweetbread Salad, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Tomatoes Farces &agrave; l'Aspic, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></li>
+<li> Tomatoes with Scrambled Eggs, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+<li> Tomatoes Stuffed with Celery and Nuts, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></li>
+<li> Tomatoes Stuffed with Cucumber, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Jelly, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Tongue-and-Ham Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>
+<ul>
+<li> -and-Spinach Salad, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+<li> and Veal Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Tower of Babel, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
+<li> Turkey-and-Chestnut Salad, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+<li> Turnips and Asparagus in Salad, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+<li> Turquoise Salad, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
+<li> Two Loaves of Wheat Bread, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Veal-and-Tongue Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+<li> Vegetable, Cooked, Salad, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></li>
+<li> Vegetable Salad, Macedoine of, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
+<li> Vegetable Salad, Russian, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a></li>
+<li> Vegetables, To Blanch and Cook, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Curried, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+<li> To Render Crisp, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Vinegar, Fines Herbes, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>
+<ul>
+<li> Nasturtium, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a></li>
+<li> Tarragon, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Violet Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Watercress, How to Keep, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
+<li> Wedding Sandwich Rolls, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
+<li> Welsh Rarebit, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>
+<ul>
+<li> No. 2, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
+<li> with Ale, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+<li> Whipped Cream Sandwiches, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+<li> White Hashed Potatoes, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+<li> Wine Cake (Baba), <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></li>
+<li> Woodcock Scotch, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
+<li> Woodcock Toast, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li> Yorkshire Rarebit, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
+<img src="images/books_best.png" width="350" height="315" alt="BOOKS THE BEST COMPANIONS" title="BOOKS THE BEST COMPANIONS" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>PRACTICAL COOKING &amp; SERVING</h2>
+<hr style='width: 25%;' />
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/practical_cooking.png" width="200" height="221" alt="Decoration" title="Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'><i><big>By Janet McKenzie Hill</big></i><br />
+<br />
+Of the Boston Cooking School</div>
+
+<p>This practical, up-to-date, and comprehensive work contains a "liberal
+education" in the selection, cooking, and serving of food. It is for the
+novice and expert alike, and the many illustrations (including pictures
+of utensils, tables for every sort of meal, decorations for festal
+occasions, dishes ready for serving, etc.) are absolutely invaluable to
+every housekeeper.</p>
+
+<div class='center'><b>With washable aluminum cloth binding and 200 colored and half-tone
+illustrations. Price, net, $2.00. Postage 20 cents</b></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>The Pleasures of the Table</h2>
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Pleasures of the Table">
+<tr><td align='center'><h3>By George H. Ellwanger</h3>
+<p>Nothing has been published in America on this subject since
+Brillat-Savarin, and there has not existed anywhere a complete
+historical account of the science of eating from the earliest times. The
+author has made a book of absorbing interest and of real literary
+distinction, full of quaint oddities and suggestive facts. It is bound
+to become a permanent and necessary addition to every library, public or
+private.</p>
+<b>Illustrated. Price, net, $2.50</b><br />
+<b>Postage 25 cents</b><br />
+DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; CO., New York
+</td><td align='center'><img src="images/le_cuisine.png" width="247" height="300" alt="LE CUISINIER After the engraving by Mariette" title="LE CUISINIER After the engraving by Mariette" />
+<span class="caption">LE CUISINIER<br />After the engraving by Mariette</span>
+</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="u"><h3>"IF IT'S SLADE'S, IT IS PURE AND GOOD"</h3></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Slades">
+<tr><td align='center'><img src="images/slades_salad.png" width="101" height="300" alt="Salad Cream" title="Salad Cream" />
+</td><td align='left'><h2>SUCCESSFUL SALADS</h2>
+<br />
+<big>can be made by any one who uses SLADE'S SALAD CREAM, for this is an
+absolutely pure and wholesome salad dressing, prepared with scientific
+exactness, so as to obtain perfect results. Contains no chemical
+preservatives or artificial coloring matter. It is put up in pint,
+half-pint, and picnic bottles. Ask your grocer for it.</big><br /><br /></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Slade's Spices">
+<tr><td align='left'><h2>CHAFING-DISH DAINTIES</h2>
+<br />
+<big>are best when flavored with SLADE'S SPICES, etc., for SLADE'S are always
+absolutely pure and extra strong.</big><br />
+<div class='bbox2'><div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="spices">
+<tr><td align='left'>SLADE'S PEPPER</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>SLADE'S PAPRIKA</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>SLADE'S CAYENNE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>SLADE'S CURRY POWDER</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>SLADE'S CELERY SALT</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>SLADE'S QUICK COOKING TAPIOCA</td></tr>
+</table></div></div><br /><br /><big>SLADE'S name protects you from fraud and adulteration&mdash;that is why you
+should ask your grocer for SLADE'S&mdash;SLADE'S are all and always
+absolutely pure and extra strong.</big>
+</td><td align='left'><img src="images/slades_mustard.png" width="250" height="350" alt="Slade&#39;s Mustard" title="Slade&#39;s Mustard" />
+</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style='width: 25%;' />
+
+<div class='center'>
+SEND FOR COOK BOOK<br />
+<big>D. &amp; L. SLADE CO.,</big> <i>Boston, Mass., U.S.A.</i><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/cocoa_top.png" width="400" height="50" alt="Border" title="Border" />
+</div>
+<h3>NO OTHER FOOD PRODUCT<br />HAS A LIKE RECORD</h3>
+
+<h2>Walter Baker &amp; Co.'s</h2>
+
+<h1>Cocoa and Chocolate</h1>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="48 highest awards">
+<tr><td align='center'><img src="images/cocoa_lady.png" width="109" height="200" alt="Registered U. S. Pat. Office" title="Registered U. S. Pat. Office" />
+<span class="caption"><br />Registered<br />U. S. Pat. Office</span>
+</td><td align='left'><div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="127 years">
+<tr><td align='center'><h2>127</h2></td><td align='left'>Years of Successful<br />
+Manufacture</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="48 highest awards">
+<tr><td align='center'><h2>48</h2></td><td align='left'>Highest Awards in<br />
+Europe and America</td></tr>
+</table>
+<big><b>It</b></big> is a perfect food,<br />highly nourishing,<br />easily digested, fitted to<br />
+repair wasted strength,<br />preserve health, prolong<br />life.<br />
+<br />
+<i>A new and handsomely<br />illustrated<br />Recipe Book free.</i>
+</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2>WALTER BAKER &amp; CO</h2>
+<h3>LIMITED</h3>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Established">
+<tr><td align='center'><b>Established</b><br />
+<b>1780</b><br /></td><td align='left'><big><b>DORCHESTER, MASS.</b></big></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/cocoa_bottom.png" width="400" height="44" alt="Border" title="Border" />
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class='tbox'>
+<h2>The Crowning Features</h2>
+<div class='center'>of any banquet or family dinner are the creams and ices.</div>
+
+<h1>JUNKET TABLETS</h1>
+
+<div class='just'>make the ice cream of such a rich, palatable quality and exquisitely
+smooth, creamy texture that the dinner becomes a pleasant memory. Junket
+ice cream can be prepared in a great variety of ways, or Junket may be
+served as a cold milk jelly.</div>
+
+<div class='center'><b>We mail 10 Tablets postpaid for 10 cents</b></div>
+
+<h2>Chr. Hansen's Laboratory</h2>
+<h3>P. O. Box 2507 Little Falls, N. Y.</h3>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/crawford_title.png" width="400" height="149" alt="Crawford Cooking Ranges" title="Crawford Cooking Ranges" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 244px;">
+<img src="images/crawford_stove_1.jpg" width="244" height="300" alt="Crawford Palace" title="Crawford Palace" />
+</div>
+
+<div class='just'><big><b>T</b>HE</big> "Palace Crawford" is more compact and shapely than other stoves. It
+doesn't have that one-sided appearance of ordinary ranges, and it seems
+to fit the kitchen better. It is a real advance in stove making.</div>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 338px;">
+<img src="images/crawford_stove_2.jpg" width="338" height="400" alt="Crawford Palace" title="Crawford Palace" />
+</div>
+
+<div class='just'><big><b>I</b>N THIS</big> range the end hearth, so much in the way, is not used. The ashes
+are caught in a hod&mdash;not a square pan&mdash;far below the grate; the
+left-hand hod in the picture. This makes the grate last longer. The
+right-hand hod is for the coal. You see, we have made a place for the
+coal-hod, <i>inside</i> the stove, and we furnish both hods.</div>
+
+<p>There is extra room on the top of this range, because of the extra shelf
+at the left.</p>
+
+<p>The Patented Crawford Single Damper prevents mistakes in regulating; no
+other stove has it.</p>
+
+<p>Other improvements are the new style removable nickeled rails, which may
+be lifted off when the stove is blacked; the dock-ash grate; the heat
+indicator; the asbestos-lined oven; the cup-joint flues. We have also a
+smaller style&mdash;the "Castle Crawford."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<div class='just'><span class="smcap">Crawford Ranges</span> are made in the finest stove factory in the world, by
+Walker &amp; Pratt Mfg. Co., Boston, and are sold by leading dealers
+everywhere.</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="oil in cans">
+<tr><td align='left'><br /><h1>Pure<br /><br />Olive Oil</h1><br /><br />
+<h2>1 Gallon Cans.<br /><br />
+5 Gallon Cans.</h2></td><td align='left'><img src="images/olive_oil_can.png" width="209" height="300" alt="Olive Oil in Cans" title="Olive Oil in Cans" />
+</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VEUVE CHAFFARD</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="oil in cans">
+<tr><td align='left'><img src="images/olive_oil_bottle.png" width="142" height="300" alt="Olive Oil in Bottles" title="" />
+</td><td align='left'><br /><h1>Pure<br /><br />Olive Oil</h1><br /><br />
+<h2>IN HONEST<br />
+BOTTLES.</h2></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+SOLD BY<br />
+PARK &amp; TILFORD, New York<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">S. S. PIERCE CO., Boston</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<hr style='width: 65%;' />
+
+<div class='tnote'><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
+
+<p>Obvious punctuation errors repaired and recipe form made consistent.</p>
+
+<p><a href='#Page_164'>Page 164</a>, the recipe for Curried Oysters was missing a measurement for
+"teaspoonful of curry powder" in the original text. Research showed that
+&frac12; was most usual for recipes for this involving a fraction of a
+teaspoon. The text has been changed to reflect this.</p>
+
+<p>The four instances of "tabasco" and five instances of "tobasco" were
+both retained, as were the instances of "well-nigh" and "wellnigh."</p>
+
+<p>The remaining corrections made are indicated by dotted lines under the
+corrections. Scroll the mouse over the word and the original text will
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'apprear'">appear</ins>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish
+Dainties, by Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SALADS, SANDWICHES AND ***
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish Dainties, by
+Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish Dainties
+ With Fifty Illustrations of Original Dishes
+
+Author: Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+Release Date: August 18, 2006 [EBook #19077]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SALADS, SANDWICHES AND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Emmy, Fox in the Stars, Suzanne Lybarger and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Salads, Sandwiches
+
+and
+
+Chafing-Dish Dainties
+
+[Illustration: Table laid for Sunday-Night Tea.
+
+"Sunday clears away the rust of the whole week."--ADDISON.]
+
+
+
+
+Salads, Sandwiches
+
+and
+
+Chafing-Dish Dainties
+
+_With Fifty Illustrations of Original Dishes_
+
+By
+
+Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+ Editor of "The Boston Cooking-School Magazine"
+ Author of "Practical Cooking and Serving"
+
+ NEW EDITION
+ WITH ADDITIONAL RECIPES
+
+ "_Things which in hungry mortals' eyes find favor._"
+ BYRON
+
+Boston
+Little, Brown, and Company
+1909
+
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1899, 1903_
+ BY JANET M. HILL.
+
+ Printers
+ S. J. PARKHILL & CO., BOSTON, U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+
+ MRS. WILLIAM B. SEWALL,
+
+President of the Boston Cooking-School Corporation,
+
+ IN GRATEFUL RECOGNITION OF THE OPPORTUNITY
+
+ PRESENTED BY HER FOR CONGENIAL WORK IN A
+
+ CHOSEN FIELD OF EFFORT, THIS LITTLE BOOK
+
+ IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
+
+ BY THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE favor with which the first edition of this little book has been
+received by those who were interested in the subjects of which it
+treats, is eminently gratifying to both author and publishers. It has
+occasioned the purpose to make a second edition of the book, even more
+complete and helpful than the first.
+
+In making the revision, wherever the text has suggested a new thought
+that thought has been inserted; under the various headings new recipes
+have been added, each in its proper place, and the number of
+illustrations has been increased from thirty-seven to fifty. A more
+complete table of contents has been presented, and also a list of the
+illustrations; the alphabetical index has been revised and made
+especially full and complete.
+
+ JANET M. HILL.
+April 10, 1903.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THERE is positive need of more widespread knowledge of the principles of
+cookery. Few women know how to cook an egg or boil a potato properly,
+and the making of the perfect loaf of bread has long been assigned a
+place among the "lost arts."
+
+By many women cooking is considered, at best, a homely art,--a necessary
+kind of drudgery; and the composition, if not the consumption, of salads
+and chafing-dish productions has been restricted, hitherto, chiefly to
+that half of the race "who cook to please themselves." But, since women
+have become anxious to compete with men in any and every walk of life,
+they, too, are desirous of becoming adepts in tossing up an appetizing
+salad or in stirring a creamy rarebit. And yet neither a pleasing salad,
+especially if it is to be composed of cooked materials, nor a tempting
+rarebit can be evolved, save by happy accident, without an accurate
+knowledge of the fundamental principles that underlie all cookery.
+
+In a book of this nature and scope, the philosophy of heat at different
+temperatures, as it is applied in cooking, and the more scientific
+aspects of culinary processes, could not be dwelt upon; but, while we
+have not overlooked the ABC of the art, our special aim has been to
+present our topics in such a simple and pleasing form that she who
+attempts the composition of the dishes described herein will not be
+satisfied until she has gained a deeper insight into the conditions
+necessary for success in the pursuit of these as well as other
+fascinating branches of the culinary art.
+
+Care has been exercised to meet the actual needs of those who wish to
+cultivate a taste for light, wholesome dishes, or to cater to the
+vagaries of the most capricious appetites.
+
+There is nothing new under the sun, so no claim is made to absolute
+originality in contents. In this and all similar works, the matter of
+necessity must consist, in the main, of old material in a new dress.
+
+Though the introduction to Part III. was originally written for this
+book, the substance of it was published in the December-January
+(1898-99) issue of the _Boston Cooking-School Magazine_. From time to
+time, also, a few of the recipes, with minor changes, have appeared in
+that journal.
+
+Illustrations by means of half-tones produced from photographs of actual
+dishes were first brought out, we think, by The Century Company; in this
+line, however, both in the number and in the variety of the dishes
+prepared, the author may justly claim to have done more than any other
+has yet essayed. The illustrations on these pages were prepared
+expressly for this work, and the dishes and the photographs of the same
+were executed under our own hand and eye. That results pleasing to the
+eye and acceptable to the taste await those who try the confections
+described in this book is the sincere wish of the author.
+
+ JANET M. HILL
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+Part I.
+
+SALADS
+
+ PAGE
+ INTRODUCTION 3
+ THE DRESSING 6
+ USE OF DRESSINGS 7
+ ARRANGEMENT OF SALADS 8
+ COMPOSITION OF MAYONNAISE 8
+ VALUE OF OIL 8
+ BOILED AND CREAM DRESSINGS 9
+ IMPORTANT POINTS IN SALAD-MAKING 9
+ WHEN TO SERVE SALADS WITH FRENCH OR MAYONNAISE
+ DRESSING 9
+ WHEN TO SERVE A FRUIT SALAD 10
+ SALADS WITH CHEESE 10
+ HOW TO MAKE AROMATIC VINEGARS, KEEP VEGETABLES,
+ AND PREPARE GARNISHES 11
+ HOW TO BOIL EGGS HARD FOR GARNISHING 11
+ TO POACH WHITES OF EGGS 11
+ ROYAL CUSTARD FOR MOULDS OF ASPIC 11
+ HOW TO USE GARLIC OR ONION IN SALADS 12
+ HOW TO SHELL AND BLANCH CHESTNUTS AND OTHER NUTS 12
+ HOW TO CHOP FRESH HERBS 13
+ HOW TO CUT RADISHES FOR A GARNISH 13
+ HOW TO CLEAN LETTUCE, ENDIVE, ETC. 13
+ HOW TO CLEAN CRESS, CABBAGE, ETC. 14
+ HOW TO RENDER UNCOOKED VEGETABLES CRISP 14
+ HOW TO BLANCH AND COOK VEGETABLES FOR SALADS 14
+ HOW TO CUT GHERKINS FOR A GARNISH 15
+ HOW TO FRINGE CELERY 15
+ HOW TO SHRED ROMAINE AND STRAIGHT LETTUCE 15
+ HOW TO KEEP CELERY, WATERCRESS, LETTUCE, ETC. 16
+ HOW TO COOK SWEETBREADS AND BRAINS 16
+ HOW TO PICKLE NASTURTIUM SEEDS 16
+ NASTURTIUM AND OTHER VINEGARS 17
+ TO DECORATE SALADS WITH PASTRY BAG AND TUBES 18
+ RECIPES FOR FRENCH DRESSING 21
+ RECIPES FOR MAYONNAISE DRESSING 22
+ BOILED, CREAM, AND OTHER DRESSINGS 26
+ VEGETABLE SALADS SERVED WITH FRENCH DRESSING 29
+ SALADS LARGELY VEGETABLE WITH MAYONNAISE, ETC. 39
+ INTRODUCTION TO FISH SALADS 53
+ RECIPES FOR FISH SALADS 55
+ RECIPES FOR VARIOUS COMPOUND SALADS 77
+ RECIPES FOR FRUIT AND NUT SALADS 89
+ HOW TO PREPARE AND USE ASPIC JELLY 97
+ CONSOMME AND STOCK FOR ASPIC 98
+ CHEESE DISHES SERVED WITH SALADS 105
+
+
+Part II.
+
+SANDWICHES
+
+ BREAD FOR SANDWICHES 115
+ THE FILLING 116
+ RECIPES FOR SAVORY SANDWICHES 119
+ RECIPES FOR SWEET SANDWICHES 131
+ RECIPES FOR BREAD AND CHOU PASTE 137
+ HOW TO BOIL MEATS FOR SANDWICHES 140
+ RECIPES FOR BEVERAGES SERVED WITH SANDWICHES 143
+
+
+Part III.
+
+CHAFING-DISH DAINTIES
+
+ CHAFING-DISHES PAST AND PRESENT 151
+ CHAFING-DISH APPOINTMENTS 153
+ ARE MIDNIGHT SUPPERS HYGIENIC? 157
+ HOW TO MAKE SAUCES 158
+ MEASURING AND FLAVORING 160
+ RECIPES FOR OYSTER DISHES 163
+ RECIPES FOR LOBSTER AND OTHER SEA FISH 169
+ RECIPES FOR CHEESE CONFECTIONS 182
+ RECIPES FOR EGGS 188
+ RECIPES FOR DISHES LARGELY VEGETARIAN 195
+ RECIPES FOR RECHAUFFES AND OLLA PODRIDA 202
+
+
+
+
+Illustrations
+
+
+ Table laid for Sunday Night Tea _Frontispiece_
+ The Tender Lettuce brings on softer Sleep _Facing page_ 18
+ Cucumber Salad for Fish Course " " 28
+ Cooked Vegetable Salad " " 28
+ Potato Balls, Pecan Meats, and Cress Salad " " 32
+ Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad " " 32
+ Endive, Tomato, and Green String Bean Salad " " 36
+ Stuffed Beets " " 36
+ Cress, Cucumber, and Tomato Salad " " 41
+ Tomato Jelly with Celery and Nuts " " 41
+ Russian Vegetable Salad " " 48
+ Macedoine of Vegetable Salad " " 48
+ Miroton of Fish and Potato Salad " " 58
+ Cowslip and Cream Cheese Salad " " 58
+ Russian Salad " " 62
+ Halibut Salad " " 62
+ Shell of Fish and Mushrooms " " 68
+ Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boat " " 68
+ Shrimp Salad, Border of Eggs in Aspic " " 70
+ Lobster Salad " " 70
+ Bluefish Salad " " 72
+ Litchi Nut and Orange Salad " " 72
+ Moulded Salmon Salad " " 74
+ Salad of Shrimps and Bamboo Sprouts " " 74
+ Spinach and Egg Salad " " 84
+ Marguerite Salad " " 84
+ Easter Salad " " 86
+ Country Salad " " 86
+ Fruit Salad " " 94
+ Turquoise Salad No. 2 " " 94
+ Cheese Ramequins " " 106
+ Individual Souffle of Cheese " " 106
+ Pineapple-Cheese and Crackers " " 110
+ Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Macedoine " " 110
+ Chicken Salad Sandwiches " " 126
+ Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic " " 126
+ Wedding Sandwich Rolls " " 128
+ Club Sandwich " " 128
+ Boston Brown Bread " " 138
+ Bread cut for Sandwiches " " 138
+ Bowl of Fruit-Punch ready for serving " " 143
+ Copper Chafing-Dish with Earthen Casserole " " 149
+ Chafing-Dish, Filler, etc. " " 153
+ Course at Formal Dinner served in Individual
+ Chafing-Dishes " " 157
+ Butter Balls with Utensils for Chafing-Dish " " 178
+ Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas " " 178
+ Yorkshire Rabbit " " 186
+ Curried Eggs " " 186
+ Mushroom Cromeskies, ready for cooking " " 198
+ Prune Toast " " 198
+
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+SALADS.
+
+ "_Though my stomach was sharp, I could scarce help regretting
+ To spoil such a delicate picture by eating._"
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ At their savory dinner set
+ Herbs and other country messes,
+ Which the neat-handed Phyllis dresses.
+ --_Milton._
+
+
+Our taste for salads--and in their simplest form who is not fond of
+salads?--is an inheritance from classic times and Eastern lands. In the
+hot climates of the Orient, cucumbers and melons were classed among
+earth's choicest productions; and a resort ever grateful in the heat of
+the day was "a lodge in a garden of cucumbers."
+
+At the Passover the Hebrews ate lettuce, camomile, dandelion and
+mint,--the "bitter herbs" of the Paschal feast,--combined with oil and
+vinegar. Of the Greeks, the rich were fond of the lettuces of Smyrna,
+which appeared on their tables at the close of the repast. In this
+respect the Romans, at first, imitated the Greeks, but later came to
+serve lettuce with eggs as a first course and to excite the appetite.
+The ancient physicians valued lettuce for its narcotic virtue, and, on
+account of this property, Galen, the celebrated Greek physician, called
+it "the philosopher's or wise man's herb."
+
+The older historians make frequent mention of salad plants and salads.
+In the biblical narrative Moses wrote: "And the children of Israel wept
+again and said, We remember the fish which we did eat in Egypt freely;
+the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks, and the onions, and the
+garlick."
+
+In his second Eclogue, Virgil represents a rustic maid, Thestylis,
+preparing for the reapers a salad called _moretum_. He wrote, also, a
+poem bearing this title, in which he describes the composition and
+preparation of the dish.
+
+A modern authority says, "Salads refresh without exciting and make
+people younger." Whether this be strictly true or not may be an open
+question, but certainly in the assertion a grain of truth is visible;
+for it is a well-known fact that "salad plants are better tonics and
+blood purifiers than druggists' compounds." There is, also, an old
+proverb: "Eat onions in May, and all the year after physicians may
+play." What is health but youth?
+
+Vegetables, fish and meats, "left over,"--all may be transformed, by
+artistic treatment, into salads delectable to the eye and taste.
+Potatoes are subject to endless combinations. First of all in this
+connection, before dressing the potatoes allow them to stand in
+bouillon, meat broth, or even in the liquor in which corned beef has
+been cooked; then drain carefully before adding the oil and other
+seasonings.
+
+Of uncooked vegetables, cabbage lettuce--called long ago by the Greek
+physician, Galen, the philosopher's or wise man's herb--stands at the
+head of salad plants. Like all uncooked vegetables, lettuce must be
+served fresh and crisp, and the more quickly it is grown the more tender
+it will be. When dressed for the table, each leaf should glisten with
+oil, yet no perceptible quantity should fall to the salad-bowl.
+Watercress, being rich in sulphuretted oil, is often served without oil.
+Cheese or eggs combine well with cress; and such a salad, with a
+sandwich of coarse bread and butter, together with a cup of sparkling
+coffee, forms an ideal luncheon for a picnic or for the home piazza.
+Indeed, all the compound salads,--that is, salads of many
+ingredients,--more particularly if they are served with a cooked or
+mayonnaise dressing, are substantial enough for the chief dish of a
+hearty meal. Their digestibility depends, in large measure, on the
+tenderness of the different ingredients, as well as upon the freshness
+of the uncooked vegetables that enter into their composition.
+
+A salad has this superiority over every other production of the culinary
+art: A salad (but not every salad) is suitable to serve upon any
+occasion, or to any class or condition of men. Among _bon vivants_,
+without a _new_ salad, no matter how _recherche_ the other courses may
+be, the luncheon, or dinner party, of to-day does not pass as an
+unqualified success.
+
+While salads may be compounded of all kinds of delicate meats, fish,
+shellfish, eggs, nuts, fruit, cheese and vegetables, cooked or uncooked,
+two things are indispensable to every kind and grade of salad, viz., the
+foundation of vegetables and the dressing.
+
+
+=The Dressing.=
+
+Salads are dressed with oil, acid and condiments; and, sometimes, a
+sweet, as honey or sugar, is used. A perfect salad is not necessarily
+acetic. The presence of vinegar in a dressing, like that of onions and
+its relatives, on most occasions should be suspected only. Wyvern and
+other true epicures consider the advice of Sydney Smith, as expressed in
+the following couplet, "most pernicious":--
+
+ "Four times the spoon with oil of Lucca crown,
+ And twice with vinegar procured from town."
+
+Aromatic vinegars, a few drops of which, used occasionally, lend
+piquancy and variety to an every-day salad, can be purchased at
+high-class provision stores; but the true salad-maker is an artist, and
+prefers to compound her own colors (_i.e._, vinegars); therefore we have
+given several recipes for the same, which may be easily modified to suit
+individual tastes.
+
+Indeed, the dressing of a salad, though in the early days of the century
+considered a special art,--an art that rendered it possible for at least
+one noted Royalist refugee to amass a considerable fortune,--is
+entirely a matter of individual taste, or, more properly speaking, of
+cultivation. On this account, particularly for a French dressing, no set
+rules can be given. By experience and judgment one must decide upon the
+proportions of the different ingredients, or, more specifically, upon
+the proportions of the oil and acid to be used. Often four spoonfuls of
+oil are used to one of vinegar. Four spoonfuls of oil to two, three or
+four of vinegar may be the proportion preferred by others, and the
+quantity may vary for different salads.
+
+Though in many of the recipes explicit quantities of oil, vinegar and
+condiments are given, it is with the understanding that these quantities
+are indicated simply as an approximate rule; sometimes less and
+sometimes more will be required, according to the tendency of the
+article dressed to absorb oil and acid, or the taste of the salad
+dresser.
+
+
+=Use of Dressings.=
+
+The dressings in most common use are the French and the mayonnaise. A
+French dressing is used for green vegetables, for fruit and nuts, and to
+marinate cooked vegetables, or the meat or fish for a meat or fish
+salad. Mayonnaise dressing is used for meat, fish, some varieties of
+fruit, as banana, apple and pineapple, and for some vegetables, as
+cauliflower, asparagus and tomatoes. Any article to be served with
+mayonnaise, after standing an hour or more in a marinade,--_i.e._,
+French dressing,--should be carefully drained, as, by the pickling
+process, liquid will drain out into the bottom of the vessel and, mixing
+with the mayonnaise, will liquefy the same.
+
+
+=Arrangement of Salads.=
+
+In the arrangement of salads there may be great display of taste and
+individuality. By a judicious selection from materials that may be kept
+constantly in store, and with one or two window boxes, in which herbs
+are growing, any one, with a modicum of inventive skill, can so change
+and modify the appearance and flavor of her salads that she may seem
+always to present a new one.
+
+
+=Composition of Mayonnaise.=
+
+Mayonnaise dressing is composed largely of olive oil. A small amount of
+yolk of egg is used as a foundation. The oil, with the addition of
+condiments, is slightly acidulated with vinegar and lemon juice, one or
+both, and the whole is made very light and thick by beating. Mayonnaise
+forms a very handsome dressing, and it is much enjoyed by those who are
+fond of oil.
+
+
+=Value of Oil.=
+
+Pure olive oil is almost entirely without flavor, and a taste for it can
+be readily acquired; and, when we consider that it contains all the
+really desirable qualities of the once-famous cod-liver oil, except the
+phosphates, and that these may be supplied in the other materials of the
+salad, it would seem wise to cultivate a taste for so wholesome an
+article. By the addition of cream, in the proportion of a cup of whipped
+cream to a pint of dressing, those to whom oil has not become agreeable
+can so modify its "tone" that they too will enjoy the mayonnaise
+dressing.
+
+
+=Boiled and Cream Dressings.=
+
+For the French and mayonnaise dressings--particularly for the latter--we
+sometimes substitute a _boiled_ and sometimes a _cream_ dressing. In the
+first, butter, or cream, is substituted for oil, and the materials are
+combined by cooking. In the latter, as the name implies, cream is the
+basis, and this may be either sweet or sour.
+
+
+=Important Points in Salad-Making.=
+
+(1) The green vegetables should be served fresh and crisp.
+
+(2) Meat and fish should be well marinated and cold.
+
+(3) The ingredients composing the salad should not be combined until the
+last moment before serving.
+
+
+=When to Serve Salads with French or Mayonnaise Dressing.=
+
+As a rule, subject, however, to exceptions, light vegetable salads,
+dressed with French dressing, are served at dinner; while heavy meat or
+fish Salads are reserved for luncheon, or supper, and are served with
+mayonnaise or cream dressing.
+
+
+=When to Serve a Fruit Salad.=
+
+A fruit salad, with sweet dressing, is served with cake at a luncheon,
+or supper, or in the evening; that is, it may take the place of fruit in
+the dessert course. A fruit salad, with French or mayonnaise dressing,
+may be served as a first course at luncheon, or with the game or roast,
+though in the latter case the French dressing is preferable.
+
+
+=Salads with Cheese.=
+
+The rightful place of salads is with the roast or game. Here the crisp,
+green salad herbs, delicately acidulated, complement and correct the
+richness of these _plats_.
+
+Occasionally when the game is omitted and an acid sauce accompanies the
+roast, a simple salad combined with cheese in some form, preferably
+cooked and hot, is selected to lengthen the menu. This same combination
+of hot cheese dish and salad should be a favorite one for home
+luncheons, when this meal is not made the children's dinner. The salad
+too in this combination, aided by the bread accompanying it, corrects by
+dilution the over concentration and richness of the cheese dish. In
+England neatly trimmed-and-cleansed celery stalks and cheese often
+precede the sweet course; but by virtue of its mission as a digester of
+everything but itself and of the common disinclination to have the taste
+of sweets linger upon the palate, the place of cheese as cheese is with
+the coffee.
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO MAKE AROMATIC VINEGARS, TO KEEP VEGETABLES AND TO PREPARE
+GARNISHES.
+
+
+=How to Boil Eggs Hard for Garnishing.=
+
+Cover the eggs with boiling water. Set them on the back of the range,
+where the water will keep hot without boiling, about forty minutes. Cool
+in cold water, and with a thin, sharp knife cut as desired.
+
+
+=To Poach Whites of Eggs.=
+
+Turn the whites of the eggs into a well-buttered mould or cup, set upon
+a trivet in a dish of hot water, and cook until firm, either upon the
+back of the range or in the oven, and without letting the water boil.
+Turn from the mould, cut into slices, and then into fanciful shapes; or
+chop fine.
+
+
+=Royal Custard for Moulds of Aspic.=
+
+Beat together one whole egg and three yolks; add one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of mace, salt and paprica, and, when well mixed, add
+half a cup of cream. Bake in a buttered mould, set in a pan of water,
+until firm. When cold cut in thin slices, then stamp out in fanciful
+shapes with French cutters. Use in decorating a mould for aspic jelly.
+
+
+=How to Use Garlic or Onion in Salads.=
+
+The salad-bowl may be rubbed with the cut surface of a clove of garlic,
+or a _chapon_ may be used. A _chapon_, according to gastronomic usage,
+is a thin piece of bread rubbed on all sides with the cut surface of a
+clove of garlic and put into the salad-bowl before the seasonings. It is
+tossed with the salad and dressings, to which it imparts its flavor. It
+may be divided and served with the salad. Oftentimes, instead of one
+piece, several small cubes of bread are thus used.
+
+After a slice of onion has been removed, the cut surface of the onion
+may be pressed with a rotary motion against a grater and the juice
+extracted; or a lemon-squeezer kept for this special purpose may be
+used.
+
+
+=How to Shell and Blanch Chestnuts.=
+
+Score the shell of each nut, and put into a frying-pan with a
+teaspoonful of butter for each pint of nuts. Shake the pan over the fire
+until the butter is melted; then set in the oven five minutes. With a
+sharp knife remove the shells and skins together.
+
+
+=How to Blanch Walnuts and Almonds.=
+
+Put the nut meats over the fire in cold water, bring quickly to the
+boiling-point, drain, and rinse with cold water, then the skins may be
+easily rubbed from the almonds; a small pointed knife will be needed for
+the walnuts.
+
+
+=How to Chop Fresh Herbs.=
+
+Pluck the leaves close, discarding the stems; gather the leaves together
+closely with the fingers of the left hand, then with a sharp knife cut
+through close to the fingers; push the leaves out a little and cut
+again, and so continue until all are cut. Now gather into a mound and
+chop to a very fine powder, holding the point of the knife close to the
+board. Put the chopped herb into a cheese-cloth and hold under a stream
+of cold water, then wring dry. Use this green powder for dusting over a
+salad when required.
+
+
+=How to Cut Radishes for a Garnish.=
+
+Cut a thin slice from the leaf end of each; cut off the root end so as
+to leave it the length of the pistil of a flower. With a small, sharp
+knife score the pink skin, at the root end, into five or six sections
+extending half-way down the radish; then loosen the skin above these
+sections. Put the radishes in cold water for a little time, when they
+will become crisp, and the points will stand out like the petals of a
+flower.
+
+
+=How to Clean Lettuce, Endive, Etc.=
+
+A short time before serving cut off the roots and freshen the vegetable
+in cold water. Then break the leaves from the stalk; dip repeatedly
+into cold water, examining carefully, until perfectly clean, taking care
+not to crush the leaves. Put into a French wire basket made for the
+purpose, or into a piece of mosquito netting or cheese-cloth, and shake
+gently until the water is removed. Then spread on a plate or in a
+colander and set in a cool place until the moment for serving.
+
+
+=How to Clean Cress.=
+
+Pick over the stalks so as to remove grass, etc. Wash and dry in the
+same manner as the lettuce, but without removing the leaves from the
+stems, except when the stems are very coarse and large.
+
+
+=How to Clean Cabbage and Cauliflower.=
+
+Let stand head downwards half an hour in cold salted water, using a
+tablespoonful of salt to a quart of water.
+
+
+=How to Render Uncooked Vegetables Crisp.=
+
+Put into cold water with a bit of ice and a slice of lemon. When ready
+to use, dry between folds of cheese-cloth and let stand exposed to the
+air a few moments.
+
+
+=How to Blanch and Cook Vegetables for Salads.=
+
+Cut the vegetables as desired, in cubes, lozenges, balls, _juliennes_,
+etc. Put over the fire in boiling water, and, after cooking three or
+four minutes, drain, rinse in cold water, and put on to cook in boiling
+salted water to cover. Drain as soon as tender.
+
+
+=How to Cut Gherkins for a Garnish.=
+
+Select small cucumber pickles of uniform size. With a sharp knife cut
+them, lengthwise, into slices thin as paper, without detaching the
+slices at one end; then spread out the slices as a fan is spread.
+
+
+=How to Fringe Celery.=
+
+Cut the stalks into pieces about two inches in length. Beginning on the
+round side at one end, with a thin, sharp knife, cut down half an inch
+as many times as possible; then turn the stalk half-way around and cut
+in the opposite direction, thus dividing the end into shreds, or a
+fringe. If desired, cut the opposite end in the same manner. Set aside
+in a pan of ice water containing a slice of lemon.
+
+
+=How to Shred Romaine and Straight Lettuce.=
+
+Wash the lettuce leaves carefully, without removing them from the stalk;
+shake in the open air, and they will dry very quickly; fold in the
+middle, crosswise, and cut through in the fold. Hold the two pieces, one
+above the other, close to the meat-board with the left hand, and with a
+sharp knife cut in narrow ribbons not more than a quarter of an inch
+wide.
+
+
+=How to Keep Celery, Watercress, Lettuce, Etc.=
+
+Many green vegetables--celery in particular--discolor or rust, if
+allowed to stand longer than a few hours after being wet. When brought
+from the market they may be put aside, in a tightly closed pail, or in a
+paper bag, in a cool, dry place. By thus excluding the air they will
+keep fresh several days. A short time before serving put them into
+ice-cold water to which a slice or two of lemon has been added.
+
+
+=How to Cook Sweetbreads and Brains.=
+
+Remove the thin outer skin or membrane and soak in cold water, changing
+the water often, an hour or more. Cover with salted boiling water,
+acidulated with lemon juice and flavored with vegetables, and cook, just
+below the boiling-point, twenty minutes. They are then ready for
+preparation in any of the ways mentioned. Tie the brains in a cloth
+before cooking.
+
+
+=How to Pickle Nasturtium Seeds.=
+
+As the seeds are gathered wash and dry them; then put them into vinegar
+to which salt (half a teaspoonful to a pint) has been added. When a
+sufficient quantity has been collected, scald fresh vinegar, add salt as
+before, and the seeds from which the first vinegar has been drained.
+Pour scalding hot into bottles, having the seeds completely covered with
+vinegar.
+
+
+=Nasturtium Vinegar.=
+
+Fill a quart jar loosely with nasturtium blossoms fully blown; add a
+shallot and one-third a clove of garlic, both finely chopped, half a red
+pepper, and cold cider vinegar to fill the jar; cover closely and set
+aside two months. Dissolve a teaspoonful of salt in the vinegar, then
+strain and filter.
+
+
+=Tarragon Vinegar.=
+
+Fill a fruit jar with fresh tarragon leaves or shoots, putting them in
+loosely; add the thin _yellow_ paring of half a lemon with two or three
+cloves, and fill the jar with white wine or cider vinegar. Screw down
+the cover tightly, and allow the jar to stand in the sun two weeks;
+strain the vinegar through a cloth, pressing out the liquid from the
+leaves; then pass through filter paper, and bottle for future use. If a
+quantity be prepared, it were better to seal the bottles.
+
+
+=Fines Herbes Vinegar.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 cups of tarragon vinegar.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of garden cress, chopped fine.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of sweet marjoram, chopped fine.
+ 2 cloves of garlic, chopped fine.
+ 4 small green capsicums, chopped fine.
+ 2 shallots, chopped fine.
+
+_Method._--Mix the ingredients in a pint fruit jar, cover closely, and
+set in the sun; after two weeks strain, pass through filter paper and
+store in tightly corked bottles.
+
+
+=Fines Herbes Vinegar, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of tarragon vinegar.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of seeds of garden cress, bruised or crushed.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of celery seeds, crushed.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of parsley seeds, crushed.
+ 4 capsicums, chopped fine.
+ 2 cloves of garlic, chopped fine.
+
+_Method._--Prepare as in preceding recipe.
+
+
+=To Decorate Salads with Mayonnaise by Use of Pastry Bag and Tubes.=
+
+Make the dressing very thick by the addition of oil, or use "jelly
+mayonnaise." Put the dressing into a pastry bag with star tube attached;
+twist the large end of the bag with the left hand, pressing the mixture
+towards the tube, and with the right guide the tube as in writing, to
+produce the pattern desired. To form stars, hold the bag in an upright
+position, point downward, press out a little of the dressing, then push
+the tube down gently, and raise it quickly to break the flow.
+
+[Illustration: "The tender lettuce brings on softer sleep."--W. KING,
+_Art of Cookery_.]
+
+
+
+
+SALAD DRESSINGS.
+
+
+
+
+SALAD DRESSINGS.
+
+ "Just, as in nature, thy proportions be,
+ As full of concord their variety."
+
+
+=French Dressing.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A few grains of cayenne or paprica.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of pepper.
+ 2 to 6 tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+
+If desired,--
+
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of prepared mustard.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of onion juice, or rub the salad-bowl with
+ slice of onion, or clove of garlic.
+
+_Method._--Mix the condiments, add the oil and mix again; then add the
+acid, a few drops at a time, and beat until an emulsion is formed; then
+pour over the vegetables, toss with the spoon and fork, and serve. In
+Chicago a method has obtained that is well worth a trial: Put a bit of
+ice into the bowl with the condiments, and, by means of a fork pressed
+against or into this, use in mixing.
+
+_Second Method._--Pour the oil over the vegetables, toss, until the oil
+is evenly distributed, and dust with salt and pepper; then add the acid
+and toss again. When the salad is prepared at the table, the vegetables
+may be dressed in a bowl, then arranged on the serving-dish; or, if but
+one vegetable is used, it is preferable to serve from the dish in which
+it is dressed.
+
+
+=To Mix a Quantity of Dressing.=
+
+Put all the ingredients into a fruit jar, fit on one or more rubbers and
+the cover; then shake the jar vigorously, until a smooth dressing is
+formed.
+
+
+=Claret Dressing.=
+
+(_For lettuce or fruit salad._)
+
+Mix half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper, white or paprica, and
+four tablespoonfuls of oil; add gradually one tablespoonful of claret
+and one tablespoonful of lemon juice or vinegar.
+
+
+=Mayonnaise Dressing.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ The yolks of 2 raw eggs.
+ 1 pint of olive oil.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A few grains of cayenne or paprica.
+
+If desired,--
+
+ 1 teaspoonful, each, of mustard and powdered sugar.
+
+_Method._--An amateur will probably find it helpful to have all the
+utensils and ingredients thoroughly chilled, but the professional
+salad-maker thinks it expedient to have the ingredients and utensils of
+the same temperature as the room in which the dressing is to be served.
+Beat the yolks with a small wooden spoon or silver fork, add the
+condiments and mix again; then add one teaspoonful of vinegar, and, when
+well mixed with the other ingredients, add the oil, at first drop by
+drop. When the mixture has become of good consistency the oil may be
+added faster. When it is too thick to beat well, add a little of the
+lemon juice, then more oil, and so on alternately, until the ingredients
+are used. If a very heavy dressing is desired, as when it is to be put
+on with forcing-bag and tubes for a garnish, an additional half a cup of
+oil may be added without increasing the quantity of acid.
+
+In preparing mayonnaise, there is absolutely no danger of curdling, if
+the eggs be fresh and the oil be added slowly, especially if the
+materials and utensils have been thoroughly chilled. If the yolks do not
+thicken when beaten with the condiments, but spread out over the bowl,
+you have sufficient indication that they will not thicken upon the
+addition of the oil, and it were better to select others and begin
+again. Take care to add the teaspoonful of acid to the yolks and
+condiments before beginning to drop in the oil, as this lessens the
+liability of the mixture to curdle.
+
+
+=How to Make Mayonnaise in Quantity.=
+
+If four quarts or more of dressing be required, make the full amount at
+one time; cut down the number of yolks to one for each pint of oil, but
+keep the usual proportions of the other ingredients. Use a Dover
+egg-beater from the start; after a little a teaspoonful of oil can be
+added instead of drops, and, very soon, a much larger quantity.
+
+
+=Curdled Mayonnaise.=
+
+Occasionally a mayonnaise will assume a curdled appearance; under such
+circumstances, often the addition of a very little of white of egg or a
+few drops of lemon juice, with thorough beating, will cause the sauce to
+resume its former smoothness. In case it does not become smooth, put the
+yolk of an egg into a cold bowl, beat well, and add to it the curdled
+mixture, a little at a time.
+
+
+=Red Mayonnaise.=
+
+Mix a level teaspoonful of Italian tomato pulp with a teaspoonful of
+mayonnaise dressing, and when well blended beat very thoroughly into a
+cup or more of the dressing, or add dressing until the desired tint is
+attained.
+
+
+=Red Mayonnaise, No. 2.=
+
+(_For fish._)
+
+Pound dried lobster coral in a mortar, sift, and add gradually to the
+dressing, to secure the shade desired. Or, after the salad is arranged
+in the bowl, or in nests, mask the top with mayonnaise of the usual
+color, and sift the coral over the centre, leaving a ring of yellow
+around the edge.
+
+
+=Sauce Tartare.=
+
+Make a mayonnaise dressing, using tarragon vinegar. To each cup of
+dressing add one shallot, chopped fine, two tablespoonfuls, each, of
+finely chopped capers, olives and cucumber pickles, one tablespoonful of
+chopped parsley, and one-fourth a teaspoonful of powdered tarragon.
+
+
+=Sardine Mayonnaise.=
+
+Skin and bone three sardines and pound them to a pulp; sift the cooked
+yolks of three eggs and add to the pulp; work until smooth, then add to
+one cup of mayonnaise dressing.
+
+
+=Jelly Mayonnaise.=
+
+(_Used for masking cold fish or salads, or as a garnish with forcing-bag
+and tube._)
+
+To a cup of mayonnaise dressing beat in gradually from two
+tablespoonfuls to one-third a cup of chilled but liquid aspic. More
+seasoning may be needed. Apply to a cold surface, or chill before using
+with forcing-bag.
+
+
+=Livournaise Sauce.=
+
+To a cup of mayonnaise dressing add a grating of nutmeg, one
+tablespoonful of chopped parsley and the pulp of eight anchovies.
+
+To prepare the anchovies, wash, dry, remove skin and bones and pound to
+a pulp in a mortar.
+
+
+=Boiled Dressing for Chicken Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/2 a cup of chicken stock, well reduced.
+ 1/2 a cup of vinegar.
+ 1/4 a cup of mixed mustard.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ Yolks of 5 eggs.
+ 1/2 a cup of oil.
+ 1/2 a cup of thick, sweet cream.
+
+_Method._--Simmer the liquor in which a fowl has been cooked, until it
+is well reduced. Put the stock, vinegar and mustard into a double
+boiler, and add the salt and pepper. Beat the yolks of the eggs and add
+carefully to the hot mixture, cooking in the same manner as a boiled
+custard. When cold and ready to serve, beat in with a whisk the oil, and
+then fold in the cream, beaten stiff with a Dover egg-beater. Melted
+butter, added before the dressing is cold, may be substituted for the
+oil.
+
+
+=Boiled Salad Dressing.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 teaspoonful of mustard.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ Yolks of 3 eggs.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of melted butter.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 1/2 a cup of thick cream.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice.
+
+_Method._--Mix together the mustard, salt and paprica, and add the yolks
+of eggs; stir well and add slowly the butter, vinegar and lemon juice,
+and cook in the double boiler until thick as soft custard. When cool and
+ready to serve, add the cream, beaten stiff with the Dover egg-beater.
+
+
+=Cream Salad Dressing.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 3/4 a cup of thick cream.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of white pepper and paprica.
+
+_Method._--Add the seasonings to the cream and beat with a Dover
+egg-beater until smooth and light. Add a scant fourth a cup of grated
+horseradish, for a change. The radish should be freshly grated, and
+added to the cream after it is beaten.
+
+
+=Dressing for Cole-Slaw.=
+
+Beat the yolks of three eggs with half a teaspoonful of made mustard, a
+dash of pepper and one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt; add one-third a cup
+of vinegar and two tablespoonfuls of butter, and cook over hot water
+until slightly thickened. Set aside to become cold before using.
+
+
+=Bacon Sauce.=
+
+Heat five tablespoonfuls of bacon fat; cook in it two tablespoonfuls of
+flour and a dash of paprica; add five tablespoonfuls of vinegar and half
+a cup of water; stir until boiling; then beat in the beaten yolks of two
+eggs, and a little salt if necessary. Do not allow the sauce to boil
+after the eggs are added. Add to salad after it has become thoroughly
+cold. Good with dandelion, endive, chicory, corn salad or lettuce.
+
+
+=Hollandaise Sauce.=
+
+Beat half a cup of butter to a cream; add the yolks of four eggs, one at
+a time, beating in each thoroughly; add one-fourth a teaspoonful of
+salt, a dash of paprica or cayenne, and half a cup of boiling water.
+Cook over hot water until thick, adding gradually the juice of half a
+lemon. Chill before using. This is good, especially for a fish salad, in
+the place of mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Bernaise Sauce.=
+
+Use tarragon instead of plain vinegar, omit the water, with the
+exception of one tablespoonful, and the hollandaise becomes bernaise
+sauce. Oil may be used in the place of butter. The sauce resembles a
+firm mayonnaise, and, as it keeps its shape well, is particularly
+adapted for garnishing with pastry bag and tube.
+
+[Illustration: Cucumber Salad for Fish Course.
+
+(See page 36)]
+
+[Illustration: Cooked Vegetable Salad
+
+(See page 37)]
+
+
+
+
+VEGETABLE SALADS SERVED WITH FRENCH DRESSING.
+
+ "Bestrewed with lettuce and cool salad herbs."
+
+
+=Lettuce Salad.=
+
+Wash and drain the lettuce leaves; toss lightly, so as to remove every
+drop of water. Sprinkle them with oil, a few drops at a time, tossing
+the leaves about with spoon and fork after each addition. When each leaf
+glistens with oil (there should be no oil in the bottom of the bowl)
+shake over them a few drops of vinegar, then dust with salt and freshly
+ground pepper. The cutting of lettuce is considered a culinary sin; but,
+when the straight-leaved lettuce, or the Romaine, is to be used, better
+effects, at least as far as appearance is concerned, will be produced,
+if the lettuce be cut into ribbons. To do this, wash the lettuce
+carefully, without removing the leaves from the stem; fold together
+across the centre, and with a sharp, thin knife cut into ribbons _less_
+than half an inch in width.
+
+
+=Endive Salad.=
+
+Prepare as lettuce salad, first rubbing over the bowl with a clove of
+garlic cut in halves. A few sprigs of chives, chopped fine, are
+exceedingly palatable, sprinkled over a lettuce, endive, string-bean, or
+other bean salad.
+
+
+=A Few Combinations.=
+
+Dress each vegetable separately with the dressing; then arrange upon the
+serving-dish. Or, have the salad arranged upon the serving-dish and pour
+the dressing over all; then toss together and serve. About three
+tablespoonfuls of oil, with other ingredients in accordance, will be
+needed for one pint of vegetable.
+
+1. Lettuce, tomatoes cut in halves, sprinkled with powdered tarragon,
+and parsley or chives.
+
+2. Lettuce, moulded spinach and fine-chopped beets.
+
+3. Lettuce, Boston baked beans and chives.
+
+4. Lettuce and peppergrass.
+
+5. Lettuce, shredded sweet peppers or pimentos, and sliced pecan nuts or
+almonds.
+
+6. Lettuce, tomatoes stuffed with peas or string beans cut small, and
+chives chopped fine.
+
+7. Lettuce, asparagus tips and sliced radishes. Arrange the lettuce at
+the edge of dish, inside a ring of radishes sliced thin, without
+removing the red skins; centre of asparagus tips, with radish cut to
+resemble a flower.
+
+8. Lettuce, shredded tomatoes and shredded green peppers.
+
+9. Shredded lettuce, English walnuts, and almonds or cooked chestnuts,
+sliced.
+
+10. Lettuce, Neufchatel cheese in slices and shredded pimentos.
+
+11. Lettuce, cauliflower, string beans and shredded pimentos.
+
+12. Lettuce or cress, artichoke slices and powdered tarragon.
+
+13. Shredded cabbage and shredded green peppers.
+
+14. Cauliflower broken into flowerets, string beans cut into small
+pieces, and beets cut in fancy shapes or chopped. Arrange each vegetable
+in a mass by itself; surround with lettuce.
+
+15. Cucumbers and new onions, sliced.
+
+16. Watercress, diced boiled beets, and olives in centre.
+
+17. Lettuce, Brussels sprouts and chopped pepper.
+
+
+=Lentil Salad.=
+
+Soak the lentils over night; wash and rinse thoroughly, then cook until
+tender, adding hot water as needed. Drain, and when cold mix with each
+pint of lentils about five tablespoonfuls of oil, two tablespoonfuls of
+tarragon vinegar and one teaspoonful, each, of capers, parsley, chives
+and cucumber pickles, all, save the capers, chopped fine. Serve in a
+mound, on a bed of lettuce leaves. Garnish with heart leaves of lettuce
+at the top and sections of tomato, or diamonds of tomato jelly, at the
+base.
+
+
+=White-Bean Salad.=
+
+Toss one pint of white beans, cooked, with one tablespoonful of vinegar
+and three tablespoonfuls of oil, a little salt and a dash of cayenne or
+paprica. Arrange in a mound on a bed of shredded lettuce, and sprinkle
+with chives, parsley and pimentos, all finely chopped. Finish the top of
+the salad with a large pim-ola.
+
+
+=Potato Salad.=
+
+(MISS COHEN.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 3 cups of cold boiled potatoes, cut in cubes.
+ 1 cup of pecan nuts, broken in pieces.
+ 5 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 1 tablespoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of onion juice.
+ A dash of cayenne.
+ 2 or 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ Watercress.
+
+_Method._--Mix the potatoes and nuts, add the oil and mix again; add the
+other seasonings, and, when well mixed, set aside in a cool place an
+hour or more. Remove the coarse stalks from two bunches of watercress
+that have been well washed and dried. Season with French dressing and
+arrange in a wreath about the edge of the salad.
+
+[Illustration: Potato Balls, Pecan Meats, and Cress Salad.]
+
+
+[Illustration: Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad.
+
+(See page 34)]
+
+
+=Potato Salad.=
+
+(CARRIE M. DEARBORN.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 12 cold boiled potatoes.
+ 4 cooked eggs.
+ 2 small Bermuda onions.
+ Chopped parsley.
+ 1 saltspoonful of white pepper.
+ 2 teaspoonfuls of salt.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls, each, of oil and vinegar.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of powdered sugar.
+
+_Method._--Cut the potatoes into dice and chop the eggs fine. Chop the
+onions, or slice them very thin. Sprinkle the potatoes, eggs and onions
+with the salt and pepper, and mix thoroughly. Pour the oil gradually
+over the mixture, stirring and tossing continually; lastly, mix with the
+other ingredients the vinegar, in which the sugar has been dissolved.
+Sprinkle chopped parsley over the top.
+
+
+=Potato Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of cubes of cold boiled potatoes.
+ 1-1/2 teaspoonfuls of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ Capers, beets, whites and yolks of eggs, and lettuce.
+
+_Method._--To the potato cubes add the salt, pepper and oil, and mix
+thoroughly; add the vinegar and mix again. Pile the cubes in a mound in
+the salad-bowl. Mark out the surface of the mound into quarters with
+capers; fill in two opposite sections with chopped beet; use chopped
+whites of eggs in a third, and sifted yolks of eggs in the fourth
+section. Finish with a border of parsley.
+
+
+=Potato-and-Nasturtium Salad.=
+
+(E. J. MCKENZIE.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of potatoes, cut in cubes.
+ 1/2 a cup of chopped gherkins.
+ 1 cup of tender nasturtium shoots, cut in bits.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of pickled nasturtium seeds.
+ Onion juice or garlic.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 5 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ Salt and pepper.
+ Chopped parsley.
+
+_Method._--Mix the potatoes, gherkins, nasturtium shoots and seeds in a
+bowl rubbed over with garlic; add the oil, vinegar and seasonings, and
+mix again. Pile in a mound on a serving-dish, dust with chopped parsley,
+and garnish with a wreath of nasturtium blossoms and leaves.
+
+
+=Stuffed Beets.=
+
+Boil new beets, of even size, until tender. Set aside for some hours, or
+over night, covered with vinegar. When ready to serve, rub off the skin,
+scoop out the centre of each to form a cup, and arrange the cups on
+lettuce leaves. For each five cups chop fine a cucumber. Make a French
+dressing of two tablespoonfuls of oil, half a tablespoonful (scant) of
+vinegar, one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of paprica and salt. Stir the
+dressing into the cucumber and fill the beets with the mixture. Of the
+beet removed to form the cups, cut slices and stamp out from these stars
+or other fanciful shapes, and use to decorate the top of each cup.
+
+Chopped radish, cress, olives or celery are all admissible for a
+filling.
+
+
+=Salad of Brussels Sprouts and Beets.=
+
+Soak the sprouts in salted water; then drain and cook in salted boiling
+water about fifteen minutes, or until tender; drain and cool. Dress with
+French dressing and pile in a mound. Finish the top with a
+fanciful-shaped figure cut from a slice of pickled beet, and place a
+wreath of cooked beet, chopped and seasoned with French dressing, about
+the whole.
+
+
+=Macedoine Salad.=
+
+Cut pieces of carrot and turnip one inch long and half an inch thick.
+Put over the fire in boiling water and bring quickly to the
+boiling-point; drain, cover with fresh water, and cook until tender;
+score the top of each piece and insert an asparagus point. Dip the
+pieces in a little melted gelatine and set alternately in a circle on
+the serving-dish. Have carrots cut in small cubes or straws, turnips and
+beet root the same, green string beans cut in small pieces, asparagus
+and peas, all cooked separately until tender. Mix with French dressing
+and dispose inside the circle. Each vegetable may be massed by itself,
+or all may be mixed together. Finish the top with half a dozen short
+stalks of asparagus.
+
+
+=Tomato-and-Onion Salad.=
+
+Peel and shred four tomatoes; slice thinly a very mild onion and
+separate into rings; dress freely with oil and tarragon vinegar, and
+season with salt and pepper. Serve on lettuce leaves, sprinkling the
+whole with fine-chopped parsley and green peppers.
+
+
+=Endive,-Tomato-and-Green-String-Bean Salad.=
+
+Dress the well-blanched stalks of a head of endive, three tomatoes,
+peeled, cut in halves and chilled, and a cup of cold cooked string
+beans, separately, with French dressing, using in the dressing tarragon
+vinegar and a few drops of onion juice; then arrange on a serving-dish.
+
+[Illustration: Endive, Tomato, and Green String Bean Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Stuffed Beets.
+
+(See page 34)]
+
+
+=Cucumber Salad.=
+
+(_German style._)
+
+Pare large cucumbers and cut them into thin slices; cut each slice round
+and round so as to form a long, narrow curling strip. Let these strips
+stand two hours in salted ice water, drain, and dry in a soft cloth.
+Serve with French dressing. Toss first in the oil, then add the
+condiments, and lastly the vinegar. Americans would prefer to omit the
+salt from the ice water, as it softens the cucumber.
+
+
+=Cucumber Salad for Fish Course.=
+
+With a handy slicer remove the outside rind from the cucumbers, cut in
+thin slices, and let stand in ice-water to chill. Wipe dry, and
+arrange the slices in the salad bowl in the form of a Greek cross. Make
+a French dressing, in the proportion of three tablespoonfuls of cider
+vinegar to six tablespoonfuls of oil, half a teaspoonful of salt, and a
+dash of paprica. Rub the inside of the salad bowl with the cut side of
+an onion before the salad is disposed in it.
+
+
+=Cooked Vegetable Salad.=
+
+Dress cooked kidney beans, peas, and balls cut from potatoes, each
+separately with French dressing, to which a few drops of onion juice
+have been added. Dispose upon a serving-dish and let stand in a cool
+place an hour or more. Garnish at serving with heart leaves of lettuce.
+
+
+=Potato Salad.=
+
+(_German Style._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of potato slices or cubes.
+ About 1/2 a cup of beef broth.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ 8 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 1 tablespoonful of grated onion.
+ 2 hard boiled eggs.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 1 teaspoonful of mustard.
+ 1 teaspoonful of sugar.
+ Fine chopped parsley.
+ (1 cup of mushrooms.)
+
+_Method._--Boil the potatoes without paring. German potatoes, which are
+waxy rather than mealy, may be procured in large cities especially for
+salads. Peel the potatoes and cut them while hot into slices or cubes;
+pour over them as much beef broth as they will readily absorb and
+sprinkle with the salt and pepper, the oil and onion; mix lightly and
+set aside for some hours. Then add the whites of the eggs chopped fine,
+the yolks passed through a sieve, and mix with the rest of the oil,
+stirred with the vinegar into the mustard and sugar. After disposing in
+the dish, sprinkle with the parsley. If mushrooms be at hand, simmer ten
+or fifteen minutes in broth, break in pieces, and add to the salad with
+the egg.
+
+
+
+
+SALADS, LARGELY VEGETABLE, SERVED WITH MAYONNAISE, CREAM OR BOILED
+DRESSING.
+
+
+=Cauliflower Salad.=
+
+Soak the cauliflower in salted water an hour; cook in boiling salted
+water until tender; drain and chill, then sprinkle with French dressing
+and set aside for half an hour. Sever the flowerets partly from the
+stalk, but so as not to change their relative positions, and place on a
+serving-dish; put heart leaves of lettuce between the flowerets and
+about the base of the vegetable; pour a cup of mayonnaise dressing over
+the whole, and sprinkle with pimentos or fine-chopped parsley. In
+serving, separate the flowerets with a sharp knife.
+
+
+=Tomatoes Stuffed with Nuts and Celery.=
+
+Peel the tomatoes; cut out a circular piece at the stem end of each and
+scoop out the flesh so as to form cups. Chill thoroughly, then fill with
+English walnut or pecan meats, broken into pieces, and celery, cut into
+small pieces and mixed with mayonnaise. Serve on lettuce leaves.
+
+
+=Stuffed-Tomato Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 smooth, small-sized tomatoes.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of chicken, veal or tongue, cut fine.
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of peas.
+ 3 olives, chopped fine.
+ 3 gherkins, chopped fine.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of capers.
+ Salt and pepper.
+ Mayonnaise dressing.
+
+_Method._--Remove a round piece from the stem end of the tomatoes and
+scoop out the seeds and centre. Chill thoroughly. When ready to serve,
+mix together the solid part removed from the tomatoes, cut fine, and the
+other ingredients; season to taste with salt and pepper, adding also
+mayonnaise to hold the mixture together. With this fill the tomatoes,
+put them in nests of lettuce or cress, and force a star of mayonnaise on
+the top of each tomato.
+
+
+=Tomato Salad, Horseradish Dressing.=
+
+Plunge the tomatoes, placed in a wire basket, into a kettle of hot
+water; remove at once and rub off the skin; chill thoroughly and cut in
+halves. Serve on lettuce leaves with a star of cream dressing, seasoned
+with grated horseradish, on the top of each slice.
+
+
+=Tomato-and-Sweetbread Salad.=
+
+Cook two sweetbreads as directed on another page, or braise with
+vegetables. Cool between two plates bearing a weight. When cold cut into
+slices and stamp into rounds of suitable size to use with slices of
+tomato. Cover the slices of sweetbread with chaud-froid sauce and
+decorate with fine-chopped parsley or sifted yolk of egg; pour over a
+little melted aspic. When the aspic is set, trim neatly, and arrange
+each round of sweetbread on a slice of chilled tomato. Serve inside a
+border of lettuce around a salad made of the trimmings of the
+sweetbreads and a cucumber cut in cubes and dressed with mayonnaise.
+
+[Illustration: Cress, Cucumber, and Tomato Salad.
+
+(See page 41)]
+
+[Illustration: Tomato Jelly with Celery and Nuts.
+
+(See page 43)]
+
+
+=Cress,-Cucumber-and-Tomato Salad.=
+
+Wash the cress and shake dry; arrange as a bed on a serving-dish,
+discarding the coarse stems; above this make a smaller bed of cucumbers,
+cut in slices or dice and dressed with French dressing, using three
+tablespoonfuls of oil and one of vinegar or lemon juice to a pint of
+cucumber. Arrange peeled tomatoes, chilled and cut in pieces, upon the
+cucumbers. Serve with French, cream or mayonnaise dressing.
+
+
+=Tomatoes Stuffed with Cucumber.=
+
+Peel five tomatoes, cut off the stem ends and scoop out the pulp, thus
+forming cups; set, turned upside down, in a cool place. Chop fine the
+solid pulp from the tomatoes and one cucumber, chilled before chopping;
+stir into a cup of cream dressing and fill the tomatoes with the
+mixture. Salt and pepper will be needed in addition to that in the
+dressing. If at hand, a pimento may be chopped with the other
+ingredients, or two tablespoonfuls of grated horseradish may be used.
+Serve at once on lettuce leaves.
+
+
+=Tomatoes Stuffed with Jelly.=
+
+Chop one sweetbread and one cucumber fine. To each cup (solid and
+liquid) add one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprica, a few
+drops of onion juice and a tablespoonful of capers; add also half a
+tablespoonful of granulated gelatine, soaked in two or three
+tablespoonfuls of cold water and melted over hot water. Stir until the
+mixture begins to congeal, then fill into tomatoes prepared as above.
+Set aside on the ice for half an hour, at least; then serve on lettuce
+leaves with either mayonnaise, boiled or cream dressing. Calf's brains,
+chicken, veal, tongue or ham may be substituted for the sweetbread.
+
+
+=Tomatoes Farces a l'Aspic.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 even-sized ripe tomatoes.
+ 1 pint of aspic jelly.
+ 1/2 a cup of lobster meat, chopped fine.
+ 1 tablespoonful of capers.
+ 2 yolks of hard-boiled eggs.
+ Mayonnaise, parsley, lettuce.
+
+_Method._--Scoop out the centres of the tomatoes, after removing the
+skin, and chill thoroughly. Pass the yolks through a sieve, add to the
+lobster, with the capers, half a cup of mayonnaise and half a cup of
+chicken aspic, thick and cold, but not set; stir these in a dish
+standing in ice water until nearly set; then fill the cavities in the
+tomatoes with the mixture. Brush over the outside of the tomatoes with
+half-set aspic; when the aspic is set, repeat twice, then set aside on
+ice for some time before serving. Serve on a bed of lettuce seasoned
+with French dressing. Garnish each tomato with a sprig of parsley and
+the salad-dish with blocks of aspic. Anchovies or any cooked fish may be
+substituted for the lobster. Serve with mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Tomato Jelly.=
+
+Soak three-fourths a box of gelatine in half a cup of cold water. Cook a
+can of tomatoes, half an onion, a stalk of celery, a bay leaf, two
+cloves, a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica ten minutes. Add two
+tablespoonfuls of tarragon vinegar and the gelatine, stir till
+dissolved, strain, and mould in a ring mould. When cold turn from the
+mould and fill the centre with
+
+
+=CELERY-AND-NUT SALAD.=
+
+Cut fine tender stalks of celery and English walnuts and mix with French
+dressing. Garnish the centre of the salad and the border of the jelly
+with tender leaves of lettuce and bits of curled celery.
+
+
+=Tomato-Jelly Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Make the jelly and mould as before. Fill in the centre of the ring with
+shredded cabbage, pimentos and pecan nuts, mixed with boiled dressing.
+
+
+=Tomato Jelly with String Beans.=
+
+Cook tiny string beans until tender in boiling salted water; season
+while hot with onion juice, salt, pepper and tarragon vinegar. When cold
+add oil and toss the beans about until each bean is coated with the oil.
+Fill the centre of the jelly, fashioned in a ring mould, with the beans,
+and sprinkle over them a fine-chopped pimento. Garnish with lettuce
+leaves. Fine-chopped chives may be used in the place of the onion juice;
+they are particularly appropriate in any bean salad. If the beans are
+large, cut in halves lengthwise and the halves crosswise.
+
+Tomato jelly may be served in a ring mould with turkey, oyster, plain
+chicken, French chicken, and other salads. The oysters should be scalded
+and drained, then marinated with French dressing. Chicken and turkey
+should also be marinated before mixing with celery and the mayonnaise or
+boiled dressing.
+
+
+=Tomato-and-Artichoke Salad.=
+
+(MRS. E. M. LUCAS, IN BOSTON COOKING-SCHOOL MAGAZINE.)
+
+Choose medium-sized tomatoes, firm and smooth skinned. Peel them, cut a
+slice from the stem end and remove the seeds with a small spoon.
+Sprinkle the interior of these cups with salt and set on ice. When ready
+to serve, wipe them dry and fill with artichokes cut into dice and mixed
+with mayonnaise. Serve on lettuce leaves. Use tarragon vinegar in
+preparing the dressing. Cook the artichoke hearts until just tender,--no
+longer,--in salted boiling water, then drain and cool.
+
+
+=Artichoke Salad.=
+
+(_For game._)
+
+(MRS. E. M. LUCAS, IN BOSTON COOKING-SCHOOL MAGAZINE.)
+
+Peel three oranges, remove the pith and white skin and slice lengthwise;
+use an equal amount of tender blanched celery stalks cut into inch
+lengths. Mix together lightly with two tablespoonfuls of olive oil, one
+tablespoonful of lemon juice, half a teaspoonful of salt and a quarter a
+teaspoonful of paprica. Heap together lightly on a serving-dish and
+surround with cooked hearts of artichokes cut into quarters; wreathe
+with blanched celery leaves.
+
+
+=Artichoke Salad.=
+
+(_Used as a border for shrimp, lobster, chicken and other salads._)
+
+(MRS. E. M. LUCAS, IN BOSTON COOKING-SCHOOL MAGAZINE.)
+
+Cut boiled artichokes into quarter-inch slices and stamp out with a
+French vegetable cutter. To half a pint add one tablespoonful of olive
+oil, half a tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar and one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of salt; toss lightly together and let stand one hour;
+drain, and arrange as a border with an outer layer of tiny blanched
+lettuce leaves.
+
+2. Scoop out the centres of the artichokes and fill with mayonnaise, or
+with ravigote, tartare or tyrolienne sauce. Serve on lettuce leaves as a
+border to a meat or fish salad.
+
+3. Fill the centres with walnut meats, sliced, or tender celery stalks,
+cut fine and mixed with mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Asparagus Salad.=
+
+Cut cold cooked asparagus into pieces an inch long, mix lightly with
+cream dressing and serve, in individual portions, on curly lettuce
+leaves.
+
+
+=Asparagus-and-Salmon Salad.=
+
+Mix cold cooked salmon with mayonnaise, form in a mound and encircle
+with a wreath of cold cooked asparagus tips dressed with French
+dressing.
+
+
+=Asparagus-and-Cauliflower Salad.=
+
+Break the cooked cauliflower into its flowerets, dispose in the centre
+of the serving-dish and surround with a wreath of cooked asparagus tips.
+Pour over the whole a mayonnaise, a boiled or a cream dressing, and
+sprinkle with chopped capers or pimentos.
+
+
+=Salad of Turnips with Asparagus Tips.=
+
+Cook the turnips in boiling salted water until tender; drain, and cut
+out the centres, forming cups. Sprinkle the inside with oil and a few
+grains of salt, and, when the oil is absorbed, pour over the cups a
+little lemon juice or vinegar. Set aside to become cool. When ready to
+serve, arrange the cups on shredded lettuce and fill with cooked
+asparagus tips, cold and mixed with mayonnaise or French dressing, as
+desired. Peas, flageolets or wax beans, cut fine, may be used instead of
+the asparagus. Garnish with radishes.
+
+
+=Green-Pea Salad.=
+
+Mix the peas with a cream dressing; serve in nests of lettuce; garnish
+the top of each nest with a little chopped beet, or a fanciful figure
+cut from a pickled beet or pimento.
+
+
+=Green-Pea-and-Potato Salad.=
+
+Mix equal parts of cold cooked peas and potatoes cut in very small
+cubes; season with salt and pepper, and serve as green-pea salad.
+
+
+=Asparagus Salad.=
+
+Scrape the scales from the stalks, and cook, standing upright in boiling
+salted water, until tender; drain and chill thoroughly. Serve on lettuce
+leaves with French dressing. Garnish the lettuce with hard-boiled eggs
+cut in quarters lengthwise.
+
+
+=Macedoine of Vegetable Salad.=
+
+Dress one cup, each, of cooked carrots and turnips, cut in dice, string
+beans, cut small, green peas, and half a cup of cooked beets, cut small,
+with French dressing; add two tablespoonfuls of chopped gherkins;
+drain, and mix with sufficient jelly mayonnaise to hold the vegetables
+together. Arrange in dome shape and cover with more jelly mayonnaise.
+Set a row of sliced gherkins near the top, and fill in the space to the
+top with string beans or asparagus tips. Surround the base with
+alternate rounds of beet and potato overlapping one another. Decorate
+the space above with slices of potato and beet cut in diamonds, and
+surround the base with light-green aspic cut in diamonds. One pint of
+aspic will be sufficient; use chicken stock, and tint with color paste.
+
+
+=Russian Vegetable Salad.=
+
+Select two moulds of suitable shape and size (tin basins or earthen
+bowls will do) and chill in ice water. Have ready cooked balls, cut from
+carrots and turnips, and cooked string beans and cauliflower, all
+marinated with French dressing. Drain the vegetables, dip them into
+half-set aspic, and arrange against the chilled sides of the moulds;
+then fill the moulds with aspic jelly. When set, with a hot spoon scoop
+out the aspic from the centre of each mould and fill in the space with a
+mixture of the vegetables and jelly mayonnaise, leaving an open space at
+the top to be filled with half-set aspic. When thoroughly chilled and
+set, turn from the moulds, the smaller mould above the other. Garnish
+with flowerets of cauliflower, dipped in aspic and chilled, and lettuce.
+Serve with mayonnaise.
+
+[Illustration: Russian Vegetable Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Macedoine of Vegetable Salad.
+
+(See page 47)]
+
+
+=Stuffed-Cucumber Salad.=
+
+Pare a short cucumber and cut it lengthwise in two parts; remove the
+seeds and let chill in ice water for an hour. Chop together the solid
+part of a peeled and seeded tomato, half a slice of new onion, a stalk
+of celery and a sprig of parsley; mix with mayonnaise or a boiled
+dressing and use as a filling for the well-dried halves of cucumber.
+Serve on cress or lettuce.
+
+
+=Cowslip-and-Cream-Cheese Salad.=
+
+(See cut facing page 58.)
+
+Cook the cowslip leaves until tender in boiling salted water, reserving
+a few choice leaves with blossoms for a garnish. Chop fine, season to
+taste with salt and paprica, press into a mould, and set aside to become
+chilled. Slice chilled cream cheese (Neufchatel or cottage) in uniform
+slices, and arrange at the sides of the mound. Serve with French or
+mayonnaise dressing.
+
+
+=Cauliflower Salad, Egg Garnish.=
+
+Separate a cauliflower into flowerets and boil in salted water until
+tender, _not longer_. Drain carefully. Season with oil, vinegar, salt,
+pepper, and a sprinkling of chopped tarragon leaves (or use tarragon
+vinegar). Arrange symmetrically in an earthen bowl, having the upper
+surface level. Let stand to become thoroughly chilled, then turn on to
+a serving-dish; the shape of the mould will be retained. Cover with
+mayonnaise dressing or Sauce Tartare, and surround with lengthwise
+quarters of hard-boiled eggs.
+
+
+=Potato Salad with Mayonnaise.=
+
+Boil the potatoes and let cool without paring. Then remove the skins and
+cut into slices, balls, or cubes. Squeeze over them a little onion
+juice, sprinkle with fine-chopped parsley, and let stand in a French
+dressing several hours. Mix the dressing after the usual formula, and
+use enough to moisten well the potato. When ready to serve, make nests
+of heart leaves of lettuce, put a spoonful of the potato in each, with a
+teaspoonful of mayonnaise above, sprinkle the mayonnaise with capers,
+and press the quarter of a hard-boiled egg into the top of the
+mayonnaise. Or add the chopped white of egg to the potato before
+marinating, and sift the yolk over the mayonnaise.
+
+
+
+
+FISH SALADS.
+
+ "_Some choice sous'd fish brought couchant in a dish,
+ Among some fennel._"
+
+ "_Of what complexion?
+ Of the sea water green, sir._"
+
+
+
+
+FISH SALADS.
+
+
+Ever, and justly, fish have taken high rank in the list of salad
+ingredients. No wonder, when we consider that nothing excels in delicacy
+of flavor many a variety of fish; and, while fish are not necessarily
+expensive in any locality, in many sections of the country their cost is
+merely nominal. Then, too, salad-making appeals largely to one's
+artistic nature, and the products of sea and fresh water are constantly
+furnishing opportunities for studies in many and varied shades of color.
+The lobster's vivid red, the brilliant tints of the salmon and red
+snapper, the delicate pink of shrimps, the dull white of scallops and
+halibut, and the bluish gray of mackerel and bluefish, each, in its
+season, may be made to contrast most effectively with fresh green herbs
+and yellow dressings.
+
+Oysters, scallops and little-neck clams are frequently served in salads
+without cooking. These should be carefully washed, then drained and set
+aside in a marinade for an hour. When cooked, they should be heated to
+the boiling-point in their own liquor, then drained and cut in halves.
+The adductor muscle of the oyster--the white, button-shaped part that
+connects the animal with its shell--is often discarded. Other fish than
+shellfish, when used in salads, are boiled, broiled or baked; they
+present the best appearance, however, when boiled. Thudichum recommends
+sea water, whenever it is available, for boiling fish; lacking this, hot
+water, salted (an ounce of salt to a quart of water), and acidulated
+pleasantly with lemon juice or vinegar, is the proper medium of cooking.
+The addition of a slice or two of onion and carrot, a sprig of parsley,
+a stalk of celery, with aromatic herbs or spices, provided they be not
+used so freely as to overpower the delicate savor of the fish, is
+thought to improve the dish.
+
+The quantity of water should be adjusted to the size of the fish; in no
+case should it be larger than will suffice to produce the desired
+result. At the moment the fish is immersed in the water the temperature
+should be at the boiling-point, and thereafter the vessel should be
+permitted to simmer during the process of cooking.
+
+The fish may be cooked whole, or cut into small pieces, similar in shape
+and size. In the latter case a wire basket is of service, as, by this
+means, the fish may be easily removed from the water and drained. If the
+fish is to be served whole, remove the skin and fins, and, when
+thoroughly cold, mask with jelly mayonnaise or with a fancy butter.
+After chilling again, the mask may be decorated with capers, olives,
+eggs, etc. If the fish is to be used in flakes, the flakes will separate
+more easily while the fish is still hot. In marinating fish, let the
+proportions of oil and acid vary with the kind of fish; _i.e._,
+according to the oily nature of the flesh.
+
+
+
+
+RECIPES.
+
+
+=Brook-Trout Salad.=
+
+Dress the trout without removing the heads; boil as previously
+indicated. Remove the backbone without destroying the shape of the fish.
+Serve, thoroughly chilled, on crisp lettuce leaves dressed with claret
+or French dressing. Prepare the latter with tarragon vinegar.
+
+
+=Brook Trout Moulded in Aspic.=
+
+Pour a little chicken aspic into a pickle or other dish of suitable
+shape and size for a single fish; when nearly set, lay a trout, prepared
+as above, upon the aspic, add a few spoonfuls of aspic, let it harden so
+that the fish may become fixed in place, then add aspic to cover. Slices
+of cucumber pickles, capers, or other ornaments, may be used. When the
+aspic is thoroughly set and chilled, remove from the mould and serve on
+two lettuce leaves, with any dressing desired.
+
+
+=Halibut Salad.=
+
+Flake the fish and marinate with French dressing (three tablespoonfuls
+of oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice or vinegar, a dash of salt and
+pepper, for each pint of fish); drain, and add half as much boiled
+potato, cut in small cubes and dressed with French dressing. Serve on a
+bed of lettuce leaves. Garnish with sardine dressing. Shredded lettuce
+or peas may be used in place of the potato.
+
+
+=Halibut-and-Cucumber Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pound of cooked halibut.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ A few drops of onion juice.
+ Salt and pepper.
+ 2 pimentos.
+ Lettuce.
+ Cucumbers.
+ French dressing.
+
+_Method._--Flake one pound of cooked halibut while hot, and marinate
+with the oil, lemon juice, onion juice, salt and pepper. When cold drain
+and mix with the pimentos, shredded, after cutting from the same a few
+star-shaped or other fanciful figures. Arrange heart leaves of lettuce
+in an upright position in the centre of a serving-dish, the fish and
+pimentos around the lettuce, and, around these, one large or two small
+cucumbers, cut in small cubes and mixed with French dressing. With
+salmon use capers instead of pimentos. Use enough dressing to moisten
+the cucumbers thoroughly.
+
+
+=Halibut Salad.=
+
+Steam a thick slice of chicken halibut, until the flesh separates easily
+from the bone. Remove the skin and bones without disturbing the shape of
+the fish. Marinate, while hot, with three tablespoonfuls of oil, one
+tablespoonful of vinegar or lemon juice, and salt and pepper. When cold
+put the fish on a serving-dish, and, using endive or Boston Market
+lettuce, put the ends of the leaves beneath the fish, so that the tops
+of the leaves will fall over upon the fish. Garnish the top with stars
+of mayonnaise. Between the leaves dispose sliced pim-olas and fans cut
+from small gherkins. Serve mayonnaise with the salad.
+
+
+=Fillets of Halibut in Aspic, with Cucumber-and-Radish Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 slices of halibut, cut half an inch or less in thickness.
+ 1 lobster (a pound and a half).
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 1/4 a cup of cream.
+ 1/4 a cup of stock.
+ A dash of paprica.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1/4 a tablespoonful of salt.
+ 1 quart of aspic.
+ Olives.
+ A bunch of radishes.
+ 2 cucumbers.
+ French dressing.
+
+_Method._--Remove the skin and bone from the halibut, thus securing
+eight fillets. Season with salt, pepper, onion and lemon juice. Chop the
+lobster meat fine; melt the butter, cook in it the flour and seasonings,
+add the cream and lobster stock, and, when cooked, stir in the chopped
+lobster. When cool spread upon one side of the fillets, roll up the
+fillets and fasten with wooden toothpicks that have been dipped in
+melted butter. Bake on a fish-sheet about fifteen minutes, basting with
+butter melted in hot water.
+
+Set a plain border-mould in ice water; decorate the bottom and sides
+with pim-olas or gherkins cut in slices and dipped in half-set aspic;
+cover the decoration on the bottom with aspic, and, when set and the
+decorations on the side are "fixed" in place, arrange on the aspic the
+cold fillets of fish and fill the mould with more aspic. When cold turn
+from the mould and fill the centre with diced cucumbers and sliced
+radishes dressed with French dressing. Pass mayonnaise or French
+dressing in a separate dish. Surround the aspic with shredded lettuce if
+desired.
+
+
+=Fillets of Halibut in Aspic with Cole-Slaw.=
+
+Use a generous half-pint of oysters in the place of the lobster,
+parboiling and draining before chopping, and fill in the centre of the
+aspic with coleslaw.
+
+[Illustration: Miroton of Fish and Potato Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Cowslip and Cream Cheese Salad.
+
+(See page 49)]
+
+
+=Miroton of Fish and Potato.=
+
+Marinate one pint of cold cooked fish--salmon, cod, haddock, halibut,
+etc.--with three or four tablespoonfuls of oil, half a teaspoonful of
+salt, a dash of pepper and two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice. Marinate,
+separately, one pint of cold potatoes, cooked in their skins and cut in
+cubes, with the same quantity of dressing, adding also one teaspoonful
+of onion juice. Let stand in a cool place one hour or more. Have ready
+six hard-boiled eggs; cut a thin slice from the round end of each egg,
+that it may stand upright, then cut in quarters lengthwise. Dip into a
+little aspic jelly or melted gelatine and arrange the quarters in the
+form of a circle, with the yolks outside. Toss together the fish, potato
+and three tablespoonfuls of capers, and fill in the centre of the
+circle. Dust with fine-chopped parsley or beets; add a tuft of lettuce
+at the top and a few heart leaves of lettuce above the crown of eggs.
+
+
+=Fish Salad Moulded in Aspic.=
+
+Cover the bottom of a mould with aspic to the depth of one-fourth an
+inch. Set the mould in ice water, and, when the aspic is set, arrange
+upon it a decoration of cooked vegetables cut in shapes with French
+cutter, or fashion a conventional design or some flower. Dogwood
+blossoms provide a simple pattern, and one easily carried out. Cut the
+four petals from a thin slice of cooked turnip and the centre of the
+blossom from carrot or lemon peel. Fasten each piece in place with
+liquid jelly, and, when set, cover with more jelly. To decorate the
+sides of the mould, take the figures on the point of a skewer, dip in
+jelly, then set in position against the _chilled_ sides of the mould,
+and they will remain in place. After the jelly covering the figures on
+the bottom of the mould has "set," place a smaller mould in the centre
+of the aspic in the first, and fill this with ice and water. Pour in
+aspic to fill the space about the smaller mould, and, when this aspic is
+firm, dip out the water and ice. Fill with _warm_ water and quickly
+remove the mould. Separate a pound of cooked fish into flakes, add half
+a cup of cold cooked peas, three or four gherkins, cut very fine, and
+three tablespoonfuls of capers. Mix together and then mix with one cup
+of mayonnaise made with jelly; with this fill the vacant space in the
+mould. When ready to serve, dip the mould very quickly into warm water,
+letting the water rise to the top of the mould, and invert over a
+serving-dish; remove the mould, and garnish with lettuce, tiny gherkins
+cut to resemble fans, blocks of aspic, or aspic moulded in shells, and
+mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Fish Salad Moulded in Aspic, No. 2.=
+
+Decorate the mould as before; then put in a layer of the fish and
+dressing; when set, add a layer of aspic; alternate the layers until the
+materials are used or the mould is filled. Individual moulds may be
+prepared in the same way.
+
+
+=Salad of Mackerel or Bluefish.=
+
+Separate a cooked fish into flakes and mix with the chopped whites and
+sifted yolks of three hard-boiled eggs. Season with French dressing, mix
+lightly and turn on to a bed of lettuce or cress, also seasoned with the
+dressing. Garnish with fans cut from small gherkins, or with pickled
+beet cut in fanciful shape or chopped.
+
+
+=Salad of Salt Mackerel.=
+
+Freshen the fish carefully before cooking. Use equal parts of fish,
+flaked, and cold boiled potatoes. If potatoes are specially prepared for
+the purpose, cut them in cubes or balls, blanch, and cook in
+well-seasoned beef stock; drain, and add, when cold, to the fish. Season
+with French dressing. Arrange on a bed of cress and sift the yolk of an
+egg over the whole.
+
+
+=Salad of Shad Roe and Cucumber.=
+
+Cook two shad roes with an onion, sliced, and a bay leaf, in salted,
+acidulated water twenty minutes; drain, and marinate with about two
+tablespoonfuls of oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice and a dash of
+pepper and salt. When cold cut in small cubes. Rub the salad-bowl with a
+clove of garlic cut in halves. Cut a thoroughly chilled cucumber in
+dice; put the cucumber on a bed of lettuce leaves in the bottom of the
+bowl, and the roe, well drained, above; mask with mayonnaise,--nearly a
+cup will be required,--in the top insert a few heart leaves of lettuce,
+and place around the centre of the mound a circle of cucumber slices
+overlapping one another; or alternate these with lozenges cut from
+pickled beet.
+
+
+=Boudins-de-Saumon Salad.=
+
+Butter four small dariole moulds, or small cups; sprinkle the butter
+with chopped parsley. Select four small pieces of cooked salmon, dry on
+a soft cloth so as to remove all oily liquor, and put a piece in each
+mould. Beat two eggs (or, better, one egg and the yolks of two)
+slightly, season with one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of
+paprica and a few drops of anchovy essence or onion juice; add half a
+cup of milk, and, when well mixed, pour into the moulds around the fish.
+Set the moulds in a pan of hot water and bake until the custard is set.
+Do not let the water boil. Chill thoroughly, then turn from the moulds
+on to lettuce leaves. Serve with a star of mayonnaise dressing on the
+top of each _boudin_.
+
+
+=Russian Salad.=
+
+(BOSTON COOKING-SCHOOL.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of carrots.
+ 1 cup of potatoes.
+ 1 cup of peas.
+ 1 cup of beans (flageolets preferred).
+ 6 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of pepper.
+ A head of lettuce.
+ 1 cup of mayonnaise.
+ 1 cup of shrimps.
+ 1/4 a lb. of smoked salmon.
+ 1 hard-boiled egg.
+
+_Method._--Marinate the carrots and potatoes, cut in small pieces, also
+the peas and beans, with French dressing. Arrange on a dish in four
+sections, having lettuce for the foundation of each. Cover each
+vegetable with mayonnaise. Strew the tops of two sections with small
+pieces of smoked salmon; on a third section strew the sifted yolk of the
+egg, and on the fourth, the white of the egg, cut rather coarsely.
+Outline the inner side of each section with shrimps, by lightly
+pressing the ends of the shrimps into the mayonnaise. Finish with a tuft
+of lettuce in the centre of the dish.
+
+
+=Spanish Salad.=
+
+In the centre of a flat serving-dish arrange a mound of endive. Peel
+tomatoes, divide into sections or cut in slices, and arrange these
+around the endive. Shell cold, hard-boiled eggs; cut in halves,
+crosswise, and in points; remove the yolks and pound to a paste with an
+equal amount of the flesh of lobster, shrimp, anchovies or salmon. With
+this paste, seasoned to taste with oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper,
+fill the cups fashioned from the whites of the eggs, and arrange them
+around the tomatoes. Strew chopped shallot and sweet pepper over the
+endive. Mix equal portions of oil and vinegar, add salt and pepper to
+taste, and pour over the salad. Serve at once.
+
+
+=Salmon Salad.=
+
+(_For evening company, or fish course at a dinner party._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Hard-boiled eggs.
+ 1 teaspoonful of gelatine, softened in one tablespoonful
+ of cold water.
+ 1 pint of string beans or asparagus tips.
+ 1 pint of cooked peas.
+ French dressing.
+ 2 slices of salmon, 2 inches thick.
+ Jelly mayonnaise, or fancy butter.
+ Capers.
+
+_Method._--Cut the eggs into halves lengthwise; cut a thin slice from
+the round ends, that the pieces may be set upright; dip lightly in the
+gelatine dissolved over hot water, and arrange _miroton_ fashion around
+an oval serving-dish. Set aside, that the eggs may become fixed in
+position. Marinate the vegetables, separately, with French dressing;
+cook the salmon by the directions previously given; remove the skin and
+cover the sides with jelly mayonnaise or fancy butter. When cold
+decorate with whites of eggs and capers. Use the trimmings from the
+eggs, and fix them in place by dipping in jelly mayonnaise. Set aside
+for the decorations to become fixed. Drain the vegetables and arrange
+inside the border, higher in the centre. Lay the decorated slices of
+fish upon opposite sides of the mound, and serve either with or without
+mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Halibut Salad.=
+
+(_For evening company, or fish course at a dinner party._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ A slice of chicken halibut, 3 inches thick.
+ 3 cups of cooked peas.
+ French dressing.
+ Hard-boiled eggs.
+ 3 slices of pickled beet.
+ 1 teaspoonful of gelatine.
+ Jelly mayonnaise, or green butter.
+ Heart leaves of lettuce.
+ 2 olives.
+
+_Method._--Prepare the eggs and fasten to the plate as in salmon salad.
+Dip diamond-shaped pieces of pickled beet in the dissolved gelatine
+and place upon the front and top of each half of egg. Spread the edge of
+the fish, after removing the skin, with jelly mayonnaise, or green
+butter, and, when set, decorate with figures cut from the cooked white
+of an egg. With forcing-bag and tube shape a pattern around the upper
+edge of the fish. Place the fish in the centre of the crown or _miroton_
+of eggs, with the peas seasoned with French dressing around it; cover
+the place from which the bone was taken with the centre of a head of
+lettuce, cut in halves, and two fine olives. Serve with a bowl of
+mayonnaise.
+
+[Illustration: Russian Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Halibut Salad.
+
+(See page 64)]
+
+
+=Shells of Fish and Mushrooms.=
+
+Cut cold fish--salmon, halibut, lobster, etc.--into small cubes, mix
+with one-third in measure of cooked mushrooms, also cut small, and add
+for each cup of mushrooms and fish one tablespoonful of gherkins cut
+fine. Season with French dressing and let stand one hour; then drain,
+and mix with jellied mayonnaise. Fill chilled shells with this
+preparation, rounding it on the top. Make smooth, and mask with jellied
+mayonnaise. Decorate with gherkins and the white of a hard-boiled egg
+cut in fanciful shapes, and with stars of mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Oysters in Aspic Jelly.=
+
+Parboil, drain, cool, and wipe dry one quart of oysters. Make a pint of
+mayonnaise sauce with aspic jelly and coat the well-dried oysters with
+the sauce. Prepare a quart of chicken aspic. Dip in half-set aspic the
+white of egg, poached and cut in fanciful shapes, and small gherkins cut
+in thin slices, and decorate the bottom and sides of a charlotte or
+cylindrical mould standing in ice water. Pour in jelly to the depth of
+half an inch; when set, arrange the oysters on it in a circle, one
+overlapping another; pour in more jelly, and, when set, dispose upon it
+another circle of oysters. Continue this order until the mould is
+filled. When removed from the mould, garnish with chopped aspic and fans
+cut from gherkins and lettuce. Serve with the remainder of the pint of
+mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Oyster-and-Celery Salad.=
+
+Parboil the oysters (heating them to the boiling-point in their own
+liquor), drain, and, if large, halve each; marinate with a French
+dressing (_i.e._, toss the bits of oyster in oil enough to coat them
+nicely; then toss them in a little lemon juice, dust with salt and
+pepper, and set aside to become thoroughly chilled). When ready to
+serve, drain again and add about one-third as much in bulk of
+fine-chopped celery and one or two tablespoonfuls of pickled nasturtium
+seeds or capers; then mix with mayonnaise or a boiled dressing. Serve on
+a bed of lettuce leaves. Cabbage, sliced as for slaw, may be used in the
+place of celery. Garnish with small pickles cut in thin slices and
+spread to resemble a fan.
+
+
+=Oyster-and-Sweetbread Salad.=
+
+Cut a pair of cold cooked sweetbreads into cubes. Parboil one pint of
+oysters, drain, cool, and cut in halves; marinate the sweetbreads and
+oysters with French dressing, and allow them to stand at least half an
+hour; drain, mix with mayonnaise, and serve on a bed of lettuce or
+cress. Or, surround with a circle of chopped cucumbers seasoned with
+French dressing.
+
+
+=Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boats.=
+
+Pare the cucumbers, which should be rather short, and cut them in halves
+lengthwise; remove the seeds and steam until tender; chill, and arrange
+on lettuce leaves, or on a bed of watercress. Clean and marinate the
+shrimps. If large, divide into two or three pieces. Mix with mayonnaise
+and place in the cucumbers. Decorate with stars of mayonnaise and whole
+shrimps.
+
+
+=Shrimp Salad with Aspic Border.=
+
+Set a border mould in ice water; dip hard-boiled eggs, cut in halves
+lengthwise and trimmed to fit the mould, in aspic jelly, and press
+against the sides of the mould alternately with small vegetable balls,
+or peas dipped in half-set aspic; fill gradually the empty space in the
+mould with partly cooled jelly, adding vegetables here and there if
+desired. Dip in hot water and turn from the mould. Fill in the centre
+with lettuce, torn in pieces, and one pint of shrimps, broken in pieces
+and dressed with French dressing. Smooth the mound and mask with jelly
+mayonnaise. Decorate with shrimps and small heart leaves of lettuce.
+
+
+=Shrimp Salad with Aspic Border, No. 2.=
+
+Decorate the sides of a ring mould, chilled, with hard-boiled eggs cut
+in halves, alternated with hearts of lettuce cut in halves; dip the egg
+and lettuce in half-set aspic, and they will adhere to the sides of the
+mould. Then proceed as above.
+
+
+=Shrimp Salad.=
+
+Take the shrimps from the shells, reserve the most perfect for
+garnishing, and break the others into pieces; marinate with French
+dressing. When ready to serve, drain, and mix with shredded lettuce, or
+celery cut fine, and mayonnaise. Shape in a mound on a bed of lettuce
+leaves and mask with mayonnaise. Use capers or olives, chopped very
+fine, to mark out five or six designs on the mound; a scroll effect is
+always pretty. Fill in the designs with shrimps and the rest of the
+mound with capers, sifted yolks or chopped whites of cooked eggs; or
+fill the designs with the capers or eggs and the rest of the mound with
+shrimps. Finish with a tuft of lettuce at the top.
+
+
+=Scallop Salad.=
+
+Soak the scallops in salted water (a tablespoonful of salt to a quart of
+water) one hour; rinse in cold water, cover with boiling water, and
+let simmer five or six minutes. Rinse again in cold water, drain, and
+when cold cut into slices. Cut white stalks of celery into small pieces.
+Mix the celery and scallops--half as much celery as scallops--with
+mayonnaise or boiled dressing, and shape in a mound. Mask the mound with
+a thin coating of mayonnaise. With large-sized capers outline a design
+on each of the four sides of the mound, fill these with whites of eggs,
+cooked and chopped fine. Ornament with figures cut from slices of boiled
+beets. Fill in the spaces around the designs with capers, and garnish
+with green celery leaves and white stalks of celery, fringed.
+
+[Illustration: Shell of Fish and Mushrooms.
+
+(See page 65)]
+
+[Illustration: Shrimp Salad in Cucumber Boat.
+
+(See page 67)]
+
+
+=Sardine Salad.=
+
+Lay the sardines upon soft paper, that they may be freed from oil.
+Scrape off the skin and remove the bones; squeeze over them a little
+lemon juice. Arrange upon a bed of crisp lettuce leaves, or upon
+shredded lettuce, and dress with either French or mayonnaise dressing.
+Garnish with hard-boiled eggs cut in slices.
+
+
+=Sardine Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Arrange a pint of cold cooked fish, flaked, on a bed of lettuce leaves
+and cover with sardine dressing. Carefully split six selected sardines;
+remove the bones and arrange the halves on the top of the salad, with
+the heads at the centre. Garnish with slices of lemon.
+
+
+=Sardine-and-Egg Salad.=
+
+Skin and bone a dozen sardines and put them in a mortar; remove the
+shells from an equal number of hard-boiled eggs and cut them into halves
+crosswise, so as to form cups with pointed edges; put the yolks into the
+mortar with the sardines, add a tablespoonful, or less, of chopped
+parsley, a dash of pepper and salt, and work to a smooth paste; moisten
+with salad dressing and season to taste with salt and pepper. Cut a thin
+slice from the ends of the egg cups, that they may be set upright on the
+serving-dish, and fill with the mixture, making it round on the top like
+a whole yolk. Arrange these on a bed of watercress, or shredded lettuce,
+and sprinkle plentifully with French dressing.
+
+
+=Lobster Salad.=
+
+Cut lobster meat in dice and marinate with French dressing. Keep on ice
+until ready to serve, then drain carefully. Make cups of the inside
+leaves of lettuce, put a spoonful of the lobster meat in the centre of
+each cup, and press mayonnaise dressing through a pastry bag with star
+tube attached on the top of the lobster in each nest. Or, arrange the
+lobster in a mound on a bed of lettuce leaves, and mask the mound with
+mayonnaise. Finish the centre with a little bouquet of the heart leaves
+of lettuce; sift dried coral in a circle about it, and below that
+arrange circles of sifted yolk or chopped white of egg alternately
+with the coral. Garnish with the fans and feelers of the lobster. Or,
+arrange as before, then finish the centre with a bouquet of heart leaves
+of lettuce and the head of the lobster. Garnish with stars of mayonnaise
+and fans from the tail.
+
+[Illustration: Shrimp Salad, Border of Eggs in Aspic.
+
+(See page 68)]
+
+[Illustration: Lobster Salad.]
+
+
+=Lobster Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Remove the flesh carefully from the shell of a lobster, so as to keep
+the shell of body and tail intact; wash and dry the shell and arrange on
+a bed of lettuce leaves. Marinate the flesh, cut into cubes, with French
+dressing. After an hour drain, mix with an equal quantity of shredded
+lettuce, and replace in the shell. Garnish with mayonnaise and the
+lobster coral. Dry the coral thoroughly, after which it may be passed
+readily through a sieve.
+
+
+=Lobster Salad, No. 3.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 good-sized lobsters.
+ Lettuce.
+ Mayonnaise, or sauce tartare.
+ Lobster cutlets.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/3 a cup of flour.
+ Salt and paprica.
+ 1 cup of milk.
+ Lobster coral.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1 yolk of egg.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ 2 cups of lobster meat.
+ 3 cups of aspic jelly.
+
+_Method._--Make a white sauce of the butter, flour, seasonings and milk;
+add the coral and butter, after pounding until smooth in a mortar, also
+the yolk of egg, beaten and diluted with the lemon juice, and the
+lobster meat chopped rather coarsely. When cold shape into cutlets, dust
+over with sifted coral, and insert a bit of feeler or claw into the
+small end of each. Pour a little aspic into a dish, and, when it sets,
+arrange the cutlets upon it a little distance apart; pour over each a
+few spoonfuls of aspic, and when set cover with more aspic. When cold
+and very firm cut out the cutlets, giving a border of aspic to each.
+
+Marinate the flesh of the other lobster, cut into cubes, with French
+dressing; pile in a mound on a bed of lettuce leaves. Insert a tuft of
+leaves in the top, and arrange the cutlets against the mound. Garnish
+with feelers and claws. Serve mayonnaise or sauce tartare with the
+salad.
+
+
+=Lobster Salad in Ring of Aspic.=
+
+Set a ring mould in ice water. In the bottom of the mould arrange pitted
+olives or pim-olas an inch apart. Dip figures, cut from slices of royal
+custard, or from cooked carrot or turnip, into liquid aspic, and place
+them on the sides of the mould, to which they will adhere; dip
+large-sized capers (a larding-needle or skewer is of assistance in this
+work) in aspic and with them ornament the mould; then fill with aspic
+and set aside to become fixed. When ready to serve, dip the mould in hot
+water and invert on a serving-dish. Cut the meat from two two-pound
+lobsters into small cubes. Season with French dressing. Fill the open
+space in the aspic with the salad; garnish the top with the feelers and
+delicate lettuce leaves, and arrange a wreath of lettuce leaves around
+the aspic. Stamp out rounds of bread; stamp again with the same cutter
+to form crescents, spread delicately with butter, and then with caviare
+seasoned with a few drops of lemon juice, and dispose symmetrically on
+the lettuce.
+
+[Illustration: Bluefish Salad.
+
+(See page 75)]
+
+[Illustration: Litchi Nut and Orange Salad.
+
+(See page 88)]
+
+
+=Mousseline of Lobster as a Salad.=
+
+Chill timbale moulds in ice water; dip thin slices of gherkins into
+half-set aspic, and arrange them symmetrically against the sides of the
+moulds, and brush over the decoration with aspic. Cut the claw meat of a
+two-pound lobster into small cubes; chop fine, and pound the remaining
+meat in a mortar; then add to it the liver and fat, and pass through a
+sieve. There should be about one cup. Simmer the shell in water to cover
+half an hour. Beat the yolks of three eggs, slightly, with one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica; add one cup of the lobster
+liquor very gradually, and cook over hot water as a boiled custard.
+Remove from the fire and add one-fourth a package of gelatine, softened
+in one-fourth a cup of cold lobster liquor, or chicken stock; strain
+over the sifted lobster meat and stir occasionally over ice water; when
+it begins to set, add the lobster dice, and fold in carefully one cup of
+whipped cream. Turn the mixture into the decorated mould, and, when
+set, turn out on to lettuce leaves. Decorate with the head, feelers and
+claws of the lobster. Serve with French or mayonnaise dressing. French
+dressing is preferable with so rich a mixture.
+
+
+=Anchovy Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 8 salted anchovies, or 12 bottled anchovies.
+ 4 hard-boiled eggs.
+ 1 head of lettuce.
+ Juice of half a small lemon.
+ French or mayonnaise dressing, or Sauce tartare.
+
+_Method._--If salt anchovies are to be used, soak them in cold water two
+hours, then drain, dry, and remove skin and bones; divide the flesh into
+small pieces and squeeze the lemon juice over them. When ready to serve,
+arrange the lettuce leaves upon a serving-dish, stalk ends at the
+centre, cut the eggs in slices, mix with the bits of anchovies, and
+arrange upon the lettuce. Pour a French or mayonnaise dressing made with
+onion juice, or a sauce tartare, over the salad.
+
+
+=Salad of Lettuce, Bamboo Sprouts, and Shrimps.=
+
+Marinate a cup of shrimps, broken in small pieces, with three
+tablespoonfuls of oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, a dash of salt
+and pepper. Select the tender bamboo sprouts in a can, and cut them into
+small pieces of the shape desired. When ready to serve, dress these with
+salt, pepper, oil, and lemon juice. Use three measures of oil to one
+of acid. Begin with the oil. Continue mixing and adding oil, until each
+piece is glossy. Then add the acid. Mix the prepared sprouts and the
+drained shrimps, and turn them onto a bed of lettuce, cut in narrow
+shreds, and dressed with oil and acid. Decorate the salad with heart
+leaves of lettuce, whole shrimps, and hollow sections of bamboo, cut in
+thin slices.
+
+[Illustration: Moulded Salmon Salad.
+
+(See page 75)]
+
+[Illustration: Salad of Shrimps and Bamboo Sprouts.]
+
+
+=Bluefish Salad (excellent).=
+
+Separate the remnants of a baked bluefish into flakes, discarding skin
+and bones. Set aside, covered, until cold. About an hour before serving,
+sprinkle with salt and pepper and (for a generous pint of fish) the
+juice of a lemon. When ready to serve, dispose heart leaves of lettuce
+on the edge of a salad plate, and turn the fish into the centre, letting
+it come out over the stems of the lettuce leaves. Pour a boiled dressing
+over the top, and spread evenly (with a silver knife) over the fish. Put
+a tablespoonful of chopped pickled beet at the stems of each group of
+leaves, a ring of the beet near the top, and figures, cut from the beet,
+between.
+
+
+=Moulded Salmon Salad.=
+
+Use a pound of salmon, fresh-cooked or canned. Remove skin and bone, and
+pick the flesh fine with a silver fork. Mix half a teaspoonful of salt,
+a teaspoonful of sugar, a teaspoonful of flour, half a teaspoonful of
+mustard, and a dash of paprica. Over these pour very gradually
+three-fourths a cup of hot milk and stir and cook over hot water ten
+minutes, then add one-fourth a cup of hot vinegar and two tablespoonfuls
+of butter creamed and mixed with the beaten yolks of two eggs; stir
+until the egg is set, then add one level tablespoonful of granulated
+gelatine, softened in one-fourth a cup of cold water, and strain over
+the salmon; mix thoroughly, and turn into a mould. When chilled serve
+with Cream Salad Dressing (page 27), to which half a cucumber, chopped
+fine and drained, has been added. Reserve a part of the dressing,
+omitting the cucumber, and use with slices of cucumber as a garnish. To
+prepare the cucumber, pare with a handy slicer and cut from it a section
+three-fourths an inch thick; pare this round and round very thin and
+roll loosely to form a cup. Dispose this on the top of the fish and fill
+with dressing. (Use a pastry bag and tube.) Cut the rest of the cucumber
+in thin slices.
+
+
+
+
+VARIOUS COMPOUND SALADS.
+
+ Give us the luxuries of life, and we will dispense
+ with its necessaries.--_Motley._
+
+ Three several salads have I sacrificed, bedew'd
+ with precious oil and vinegar.--_Beaumont and
+ Fletcher._
+
+
+=Sweetbread-and-Cucumber Salad.=
+
+Arrange the leaves of a head of cabbage lettuce loosely upon a
+serving-dish, without destroying its shape. Have ready a pair of
+sweetbreads cooked in salted, acidulated water twenty minutes, and
+cooled and cut in small cubes and marinated; also the same quantity of
+cucumber cut in dice, chilled in ice water and dried upon a cloth. Drain
+the French dressing from the sweetbread and scatter the bits of
+sweetbread and cucumber through the lettuce. Press three-fourths a cup
+of firm jelly mayonnaise through a pastry bag with small tube, in little
+stars, here and there, throughout the lettuce, and serve at once.
+
+
+=Sweetbread-and-Cucumber Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Cook, marinate and drain the sweetbreads as before; mix with an equal
+quantity of cucumber cut in dice, and then with cream dressing. Line
+the inner side of lettuce nests with slices of radish, one overlapping
+another (do not remove the pink skin from the radish). Put in a spoonful
+of the salad and garnish each nest with a small radish cut to resemble a
+flower.
+
+
+=Chicken Salad.=
+
+Use two parts of cold cooked chicken to one part of celery. Marinate and
+drain the chicken, add the celery, and mix with mayonnaise or boiled
+dressing. Arrange the salad in nests of lettuce leaves and put a pim-ola
+in the centre of each nest.
+
+
+=Chicken Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Prepare the salad as before; dispose in a mound on a bed of lettuce
+leaves and mask with mayonnaise. By the use of stoned olives, cut in
+halves, divide the surface into quarters. Fill two opposite sections
+with whites of eggs chopped fine, a third with capers or olives chopped
+fine, and the fourth with sifted yolks of eggs. Garnish with lettuce and
+curled celery.
+
+
+=French Chicken Salad.=
+
+Cook the meats of English walnuts in well-seasoned chicken stock until
+tender; remove the brown skin and break in pieces; when cold mix with
+chicken and celery, and proceed as in preceding recipes. The walnuts
+give the salad a flavor similar to that produced in France by the use of
+truffles.
+
+
+=Chicken-and-Fresh-Mushroom Salad.=
+
+Peel mushroom caps, break in pieces, and saute in melted butter five or
+six minutes with a slice of onion; add chicken liquor or hot water and
+let simmer until tender. Remove from the liquor, cover, and set aside to
+cool. Add the liquor and the peelings and stalks of the mushrooms to the
+liquid in which the chicken is to be cooked. Use the chicken and
+mushrooms with celery or lettuce in any recipe for chicken salad.
+
+
+=Chicken Salad, No. 3.=
+
+Arrange the salad upon the centre of the dish and mask with mayonnaise;
+then with pastry bag and tube pipe the dressing in some fanciful design.
+Surround with a border of aspic jelly, tinted a delicate green. The
+jelly may be cut in blocks or triangles, or into small cubes, and then
+massed about the salad. Cut the aspic in a cold room; first dip the
+knife in hot water and wipe dry.
+
+
+=Chicken Salad, No. 4.=
+
+Cut one cucumber and one bunch of round radishes in thin slices, and add
+two-thirds a cup of shredded celery. Season with four tablespoonfuls of
+oil, two tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice, half a teaspoonful of
+salt and a dash of paprica. Put on a bed of shredded lettuce or on heart
+leaves of lettuce; cover with three cups of chicken cut in cubes and
+marinated an hour or more with four tablespoonfuls of oil, two
+tablespoonfuls of lemon juice or vinegar, half a teaspoonful of salt and
+a dash of white pepper. Mask with mayonnaise. Arrange some bits of
+celery, an inch and a half in length and curled on one end, about the
+salad, with a bit of yolk of egg in the centre of each. Or, instead of
+the celery and yolk of egg, use sliced radishes (do not remove the red
+skin), having the slices overlap one another. Finish the top with tuft
+of lettuce or curled celery and yolk of egg.
+
+
+=Mushroom Salad with Medallions of Chicken.=
+
+Bone a chicken, fill with forcemeat, and cook until tender in stock;
+then press between two dishes until cold. Cut in slices and stamp in
+rounds. Stamp out an equal number of rounds from cooked tongue. Spread
+these with "green butter" (see Green-Butter Sandwiches) and place the
+rounds of chicken evenly on the tops. Coat these with white chaud-froid
+sauce and decorate in some design with truffles, ham or tongue. When the
+sauce has set, brush over the medallions with aspic jelly, cold but not
+set. When thoroughly cold stamp out with a round cutter. Drain and dry a
+can of white button mushrooms; toss them about in cold aspic until they
+are well coated. When the jelly has become fixed about them, pile high
+in the centre of a serving-dish; arrange the medallions about them,
+resting on delicate leaves of lettuce. Serve mayonnaise or tartare
+sauce with the salad. Sweetbreads may be substituted for the chicken,
+and fresh mushrooms for the canned.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet Salad.=
+
+Scald one cup of milk, cream or _well-reduced_ chicken stock (the last
+is preferable); beat the yolks of three eggs slightly, add one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of common salt and celery salt, and a dash of
+paprica, and cook as a boiled custard. Remove from the fire and add
+one-fourth a package of gelatine (one tablespoonful of granulated
+gelatine), softened in one-fourth a cup of chicken liquor or water.
+Strain over half a cup of cooked chicken (white meat), chopped and
+pounded in a mortar and passed through a sieve. Stir over ice water
+until the mixture is perfectly smooth and begins to set, then fold into
+it one cup of whipped cream. Turn into a ring mould, and, when chilled
+and well set, turn on to a bed of lettuce and fill in the centre with
+equal parts of celery and English walnuts, blanched, sliced and mixed
+with a French dressing.
+
+The half-cup of chicken, well pressed down, should weigh four ounces.
+The chicken broth should be strong and well flavored. Either one cup of
+whipped cream, or one cup of cream, whipped, may be used. The latter
+gives a firmer mousse, more pronounced in flavor; the former, a mousse
+of a lighter and more delicate consistency, and one more delicate in
+flavor.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet, No. 2.=
+
+Mould the mousse in small cups; turn out on to a slice of chilled tomato
+resting upon a lettuce leaf; garnish with mayonnaise dressing,
+decorating both the tomato and the mousse.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet, No. 3.=
+
+Mould the mousse in a ring mould and fill in the centre with equal parts
+of cucumber or asparagus tips and diced sweetbread; marinate the
+sweetbread with French dressing, and drain thoroughly before mixing with
+the cucumber or asparagus. Garnish with mayonnaise dressing.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet, No. 4.=
+
+Fill in the centre of the ring with diced cucumbers and sliced radishes,
+mixed with cream dressing. Garnish with cream dressing, using pastry bag
+and tube, and radishes cut to resemble roses.
+
+
+=Mousse-de-Poulet, No. 5.=
+
+Fill in the centre of the ring with mushrooms and sweetbread dressed
+with a French dressing. If the button mushrooms (canned) are used, cut
+in quarters; if fresh mushrooms are at hand, remove the stems and peel
+the caps; break into pieces and saute in a little hot butter; then add
+hot water or stock and let simmer until tender (fifteen or twenty
+minutes). Drain and chill before using.
+
+
+=Turkey-and-Chestnut Salad.=
+
+Prepare the chestnuts as previously directed, using twice as much turkey
+meat, light or dark, cut into small cubes. Serve with lettuce and
+French, boiled or mayonnaise dressing, as desired. Marinate and drain
+the meat before adding the nuts.
+
+
+=Duck-and-Olive Salad.=
+
+Cut the meat from a duck in small pieces, and slice pim-olas very thin;
+use two tablespoonfuls of pim-olas to a cup of meat. Serve on a bed of
+cress with a French dressing.
+
+
+=Duck-and-Orange Salad.=
+
+Slice the oranges lengthwise; use twice as much flesh as fruit. Dress
+with oil, salt and paprica, and serve on lettuce leaves.
+
+
+=Ham Salad.=
+
+Soak half a tablespoonful of granulated gelatine in one tablespoonful
+and a half of cold water, and dissolve in three-fourths a cup of hot
+chicken liquor. Strain over one cup of chopped ham and stir until the
+mixture begins to thicken, then fold in one cup of _thick_ cream beaten
+stiff; add, also, a few grains of paprica and salt, if needed. Mould in
+a ring mould, and, when set and cold, turn from the mould; fill in the
+centre with lettuce arranged like a cup, and fill the cup with
+mayonnaise. Or, serve with French dressing.
+
+
+=Bacon Salad.=
+
+Cut six or eight slices of tender bacon into small squares and fry until
+they are delicately browned; then drain on soft paper. Heat six
+tablespoonfuls of the fat and two tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon
+juice; beat together the yolks of three eggs and one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of paprica and mustard, and cook with the fat and
+vinegar over hot water until the mixture thickens slightly. When the
+dressing is cold cut a head of lettuce into narrow ribbons, toss the
+lettuce and bits of bacon together, and mix with the dressing. Serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Italian Salad.=
+
+(MISS COHEN.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 herrings, soaked in milk over night.
+ 3 boiled potatoes, cut in very small dice.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of cucumber pickles, chopped fine.
+ 1 tablespoonful of capers, chopped fine.
+ 2 small boiled beets, cut fine.
+ 1/2 a pound (1 cup) of cold roast chicken, cut fine.
+ 1/2 a pound (1 cup) of boiled tongue, cut fine.
+ 2 apples, pared and finely chopped.
+ 2 carrots, cooked and finely chopped.
+ 1 celery root, cooked and chopped.
+ 1/2 a cup of pecan nuts, broken fine.
+ A little onion juice.
+
+_Method._--Mix the ingredients together thoroughly; add mayonnaise to
+moisten well. Serve on a flat dish. Mask the top with mayonnaise, then
+divide into squares like a checker-board, using fine-shredded pimento or
+pickled beet to mark the divisions; fill in alternate squares with
+sifted yolk of hard-boiled egg and the remaining squares with chopped
+white of egg. Garnish the edge with parsley, and set in the centre half
+a hard-boiled egg cut lengthwise in points and filled with capers.
+
+[Illustration: Spinach and Egg Salad.
+
+(See page 86)]
+
+[Illustration: Marguerite Salad.
+
+(See page 86)]
+
+
+=Pate de Foie Gras, Moulded in Aspic.=
+
+Cover the bottoms of small-sized timbale moulds with a little aspic
+jelly; decorate the jelly with bits of royal custard and capers; cover
+with more aspic; then add, alternately, layers of _pate de foie gras_
+and aspic, until the mould is filled. Turn on to shredded lettuce and
+garnish with mayonnaise, using pastry bag and tube. Arrange on
+individual dishes, so as not to disarrange the dressing in serving. Or,
+garnish with a chopped cucumber dressed with French dressing.
+
+
+=Spinach-and-Tongue Salad.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a peck of spinach.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of paprica.
+ 1 tablespoonful of oil or butter.
+ Slices of cold tongue.
+ Sauce tartare.
+
+_Method._--Cook the spinach in salted boiling water until tender; drain,
+and chop very fine, and season with salt, pepper, oil and lemon juice.
+Press into small, well-buttered moulds or cups. Have ready thin, round
+slices of cold boiled or braised tongue, the slices a trifle larger than
+the cups of spinach. When the spinach is cold turn it from the moulds on
+to the rounds of tongue, and press a star of sauce tartare on the top of
+each mould. Garnish with parsley and slices of lemon.
+
+
+=Spinach-and-Egg Salad.=
+
+(See cut facing page 84.)
+
+Prepare and mould the spinach as in the preceding recipe. Have ready,
+also, some cold boiled eggs and mayonnaise. Turn the spinach from the
+moulds on to nests of shredded lettuce. Dispose, chain fashion, around
+the base of the spinach, the whites of the eggs cut in rings, and press
+a star of mayonnaise in the centre of each ring. Pass the yolks through
+a sieve and sprinkle over the tops of the mounds, and place above this
+the round ends of the whites.
+
+
+=Marguerite Salad.=
+
+(See cut facing page 84.)
+
+Arrange garden cress on a serving-dish; in the centre dispose whites of
+hard-boiled eggs cut in eighths lengthwise, to resemble the petals of a
+flower, and sift the yolks into the centre. When ready to serve,
+sprinkle with French dressing and toss together.
+
+
+=Easter Salad.=
+
+With the smooth sides of butter-hands roll Neufchatel cheese into small
+egg shapes. Cut long radishes into straws and season with French
+dressing. Scatter the straws in lettuce nests, arrange the eggs in the
+nests, sprinkle with dressing, and fleck with chopped parsley or
+paprica.
+
+[Illustration: Easter Salad.]
+
+[Illustration: Country Salad.
+
+(See page 87)]
+
+
+=Easter Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Arrange flat nests of shredded lettuce on individual plates. Cut a
+five-cent Neufchatel cheese in three pieces; roll each piece into a ball
+and flatten to resemble the white of a poached egg, having the cheese
+about one-fourth an inch in thickness. These may be shaped upon a plate
+and then removed carefully with a spatula to the nests of lettuce. With
+pastry bag and plain tube put a mound of mayonnaise on the centre of
+each cake of cheese, to represent the yolk of an egg. Serve thoroughly
+chilled. A dash of pepper (paprica preferred) may decorate the top of
+the dressing.
+
+
+=Country Salad.=
+
+(See cut facing page 86.)
+
+Cut cold boiled corned beef or tongue into thin strips and pile in the
+centre of a serving-dish. Cook potato balls in meat broth until tender;
+blanch and cool, roll in mayonnaise or boiled dressing, and dispose
+about the meat. About these put a ring of celery cut fine, then cooked
+carrot and turnip cut in straws. Garnish with parsley and cucumber
+pickles cut in fans. Serve with additional dressing.
+
+
+=Orange-and-Litchi Nut Salad.=
+
+Peel the oranges and cut them into lengthwise slices. Crush the shells
+of the nuts, take out the meats, and remove the stones; cut the nut
+meats in halves. Mix the nuts with oil, a tablespoonful to a cup, and
+sprinkle the orange slices with oil; add also a little lemon juice if
+the oranges are sweet. Garnish with slices of orange from which the skin
+has not been taken, also, if desired, with lettuce dressed with French
+dressing. The oil and lettuce may be omitted, using sugar in place;
+little, however, will be needed, as the nuts are sweet, tasting much
+like raisins.
+
+
+=Green-and-White Salad.=
+
+Cut cooked chicken or sweetbreads in half-inch cubes; remove the skin
+and seeds from white grapes, and cut each grape in halves; cut tender
+blanched celery stalks in small pieces. Take equal portions of celery
+and meat and half as much of seeded grapes. Mix with French dressing;
+the meat should stand in the dressing an hour or more, when ready to
+serve. Serve in nests of lettuce. Dispose a little white mayonnaise or
+cream dressing on each nest. Garnish with halves of blanched pistachio
+nuts.
+
+
+
+
+=FRUIT AND NUT SALADS.=
+
+ "Fat olives and pistachio's fragrant nut,
+ And the pine's tasteful apple."
+
+
+=Fruit Salad.=
+
+(_Sweet, to serve with cake._)
+
+Peel and slice four bananas, also four oranges, lengthwise, carefully
+removing pith and seeds. Dissect half a ripe pineapple, taking the pulp
+from the core in small pieces with a silver fork. Hull and wash a part
+of a basket of strawberries. Arrange the fruit in the salad-bowl, making
+each layer smaller than the preceding. Pour over the dressing given
+below, and serve thoroughly chilled.
+
+
+=Dressing for Fruit Salad.=
+
+(_Sweet._)
+
+Boil one cup of sugar and half a cup of water five minutes, then pour on
+to the beaten yolks of three eggs; return to the fire and cook over hot
+water, stirring constantly until thickened slightly; cool, and add the
+juice of two lemons. Half a cup of wine may be used in the place of the
+lemon juice, retaining one tablespoonful of the lemon juice.
+
+
+=Fruit Salad.=
+
+(_June._)
+
+Pare lengthwise a _ripe_ pineapple and remove the eyes. With a fork
+dislodge from the hard centre the single fruits (the lines left by the
+bracts will indicate the places where the divisions should be made).
+Slice _lengthwise_ three sweet oranges, after removing the peel and
+white skin. Peel and slice two bananas, and cut in halves lengthwise one
+cup of strawberries. If the fruit be sweet, use the juice of half a
+lemon, otherwise omit it. Beat to an emulsion one-fourth a cup of olive
+oil, one tablespoonful of honey, and, if needed, the lemon juice; toss
+the fruit, together or separately, in the dressing, and serve on
+delicate leaves of lettuce. The most striking effect is produced by
+dressing each kind of fruit separately, thus massing each color by
+itself. When new figs are seasonable, they may be used in fruit salads
+to take the place of the honey. If the pineapple be of large size, more
+dressing will be required.
+
+
+=Fruit-and-Nut Salad.=
+
+Peel neatly three oranges and slice them lengthwise; also cut three
+bananas in thin slices. Skin and seed half a pound of white grapes, and
+blanch and slice the meats of one-fourth a pound of English walnuts.
+Serve very cold on lettuce leaves, dressed with four tablespoonfuls of
+oil, two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice--less, if the oranges are
+sour--and half a teaspoonful of salt.
+
+
+=Fruit-and-Nut Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Skin and seed half a pound of white grapes; blanch and slice half a
+pound of English walnuts or almonds. Toss with four tablespoonfuls of
+oil, one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of lemon
+juice. Serve in nests of lettuce. Garnish the nests with maraschino
+cherries.
+
+
+=Cherry Salad.=
+
+(MRS. PETERSON.)
+
+Marinate as many hazelnuts as cherries with plenty of oil, half as much
+lemon juice as oil, and a little salt, one or two hours. Put a nut in
+the place of the stone in the cherries. Sprinkle with oil and a very
+little lemon juice, and serve in lettuce nests.
+
+
+=Fruit Salad.=
+
+(_Winter._)
+
+Peel two oranges; with a sharp knife cut between the pulp and the skin
+and remove the section entire. Slice the meats of one-fourth a pound of
+English walnuts. Of one-fourth a pound of figs select a few for a
+garnish and cut the rest in thin slices. Slice three bananas. Toss half
+the ingredients with two or three tablespoonfuls of oil, and, if the
+oranges are sweet, toss again with one tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+Arrange in a mound on a salad-dish. Put the rest of the fruit, each kind
+separately, on the mound in sections; garnish the edge and top with
+heart leaves of lettuce, and add stars of mayonnaise and candied
+cherries here and there.
+
+
+=Orange-and-Walnut Salad.=
+
+This is a particularly good salad to serve with game. Select fine
+oranges, remove the peel and every particle of white skin, and slice
+very thin lengthwise. Slice English walnuts, blanched or plain. To each
+pint of orange slices add half a pint (scant) of the sliced nuts; dress
+with three tablespoonfuls of oil, one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt, and,
+if the oranges are particularly sweet, a tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+Serve on a bed of watercress or lettuce.
+
+
+=Celery-and-Chestnut Salad.=
+
+Shell and blanch the chestnuts; then boil about fifteen minutes, or
+until tender; drain and cool. When cool cut into quarters, add an equal
+quantity of fine-sliced celery, dress with French dressing, and serve on
+lettuce leaves. Sliced pimentos may be added.
+
+
+=Apple,-Celery-and-English-Walnut Salad.=
+
+Peel and cut the apples in small cubes; blanch the nuts and break in
+pieces, and cut the celery in thin slices; marinate the apple and nuts
+with oil and lemon juice half an hour; drain, add the celery and
+mayonnaise dressing, and serve in cups made by removing the pulp from
+red apples. Cut the edges of the apples in small vandykes; keep fresh in
+cold water until ready to serve.
+
+
+=Orange-and-Banana Salad.=
+
+(_Sweet._)
+
+Stir the juice of two oranges, half a cup of sherry wine, one
+tablespoonful of lemon juice, half a cup of sugar and the unbeaten white
+of an egg, over the fire, until the boiling-point is reached; let simmer
+slowly ten minutes, strain through a cheese-cloth, and, when thoroughly
+chilled, pour over three bananas and three oranges, sliced and mixed
+together in a salad-bowl. Sprinkle with half a cup of dessicated
+cocoanut. Serve thoroughly chilled.
+
+
+=Fig-and-Nut Salad.=
+
+Slice pulled figs, cooked and cooled, and mix with them a few slices of
+walnuts or blanched almonds. Serve with French dressing made of claret
+and lemon juice instead of vinegar, or with a cream dressing. In using
+the cream dressing, mix the ingredients with a little of the dressing
+and dispose additional dressing here and there, using the forcing-bag
+and tube. When available, fresh figs are preferable to those that have
+been cooked.
+
+
+=Grapefruit Salad.=
+
+Cut the chilled fruit in halves, crosswise, and take out the pulp with a
+spoon; dress with French dressing. The juice of the grapefruit may be
+used in the place of other acid, and mayonnaise in the place of French
+dressing. Serve on lettuce leaves, or return to the skin from which the
+pulp was removed. The edge of the grapefruit cup may be cut in
+vandykes, or otherwise ornamented.
+
+
+=Turquoise Salad.=
+
+Mix together equal parts of celery and tart apple cut in match-like
+pieces, and one or two pimentos cut in similar pieces. Dress with
+mayonnaise made light with whipped cream. Serve in nests of lettuce.
+
+
+=Turquoise Salad, No. 2.=
+
+Use pineapple in the place of the apple; serve in a mound on a bed of
+lettuce leaves. Garnish with stars cut from the pimentos with French
+cutter, curled celery, and heart leaves of celery.
+
+
+=Salad Chiffonade.=
+
+Seed two green peppers, boil two or three minutes, then cut in shreds.
+Shred the light and dark leaves of a head of lettuce, or endive,
+separately. Cut three tomatoes in shreds. Remove the peel and skin from
+one large grapefruit. Serve with French dressing, seasoning, and then
+arranging each article separately upon the serving-dish, having a circle
+of light and then dark green material about the edge.
+
+
+=Peach-and-Almond Salad.=
+
+Blanch the almonds and cut in thin slices. Chill the peaches, peel, and
+cut in slices; use one-fifth as much in bulk of sliced nuts as sliced
+peaches. Serve with French dressing, or with mayonnaise made white
+with whipped cream. Garnish the edge with delicate lettuce leaves and
+serve at once.
+
+[Illustration: Fruit Salad.
+
+(See page 90)]
+
+[Illustration: Turquoise Salad, No. 2.
+
+(See page 94)]
+
+
+=Peach Salad.=
+
+(_English style._)
+
+Cut ripe, fine-flavored peaches into quarters, after removing the skins.
+Cover with champagne, thoroughly chilled, and sprinkle with tea-rose
+petals. Serve at once.
+
+
+=Peach,-Strawberry-and-Cherry Salad.=
+
+(_London style._)
+
+Let a large handful of fresh rose petals stand an hour or two in a cool
+place in a cup of Hungarian wine. Strain out the leaves and pour the
+wine over a quart of mixed fruit,--peaches pared and cut in quarters,
+strawberries hulled and cut in halves, and cherries stoned,--all
+thoroughly chilled. Let a handful of rose petals stand an hour or two in
+a cup of thick cream; then strain the cream, sweeten slightly with
+powdered sugar, whip to a stiff froth, and use as a garnish for the
+fruit.
+
+
+=Grapefruit, Pineapple, and Pimento Salad.=
+
+Cut a large grapefruit in halves and remove the pulp with a sharp knife
+to avoid crushing it; remove half the pulp of a large pineapple from
+the core with a fork, after carefully removing the unedible outside.
+Dress with white mayonnaise and serve upon crisp lettuce hearts. Garnish
+with tiny bits of pimento. 2d.--Omit the pimento, lettuce and
+mayonnaise, and dress with sherry wine and sugar. For a Christmas salad,
+use the first formula and canned pineapple if the fresh be not at hand.
+Dispose the dressed pineapple and grapefruit upon shredded lettuce,
+having a circle of heart leaves around the edge. Dot here and there with
+small stars cut from the red pimento with a French cutter. Or chop the
+pimento fine and dispose in the shape of a large five-pointed star in
+the centre of the dish.
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO PREPARE AND USE ASPIC JELLY.
+
+
+To make aspic for moulding or decorating a fish salad, use stock
+prepared from chicken or veal, or from fish. For chicken, veal or
+sweetbread salad, use chicken or veal stock, or a light-colored
+consomme. In an emergency, aspic may be made from the prepared extracts
+of beef, or from bouillon capsules. Aspic is often tinted delicately to
+harmonize with a particular color scheme. A light-green aspic has been
+found quite effective.
+
+
+=RECIPE.=
+
+To one quart of highly seasoned stock, freed from all fat, add the juice
+of a lemon, a bay leaf, half a cup of wine and one box of gelatine
+soaked in a cup of cold water. Beat into the mixture the slightly beaten
+whites and crushed shells of two eggs. Heat to the boiling-point,
+stirring constantly, and let boil five minutes. After standing ten
+minutes skim off the froth, etc., and strain through a cheese-cloth
+folded double and held in a colander.
+
+
+=Aspic for Garnishing.=
+
+Pour the liquid jelly into a new tin to the depth of half an inch. Wring
+a napkin out of cold water and spread it smoothly over the meat-board.
+Dip the pan in warm water and turn the jelly onto the napkin; stamp in
+rounds, diamonds or other fanciful shapes. If blocks of greater
+thickness be required, fill the pan to the required depth with the
+liquid aspic. When turned from the mould, cut in squares or diamonds
+with a knife, wiped dry after having been dipped in hot water.
+
+
+=To Chop Jelly.=
+
+Cut the jelly slowly, first in one direction, then in the opposite
+direction. Each piece, whether large or small, should be clean-cut and
+distinct. Aspic melts or softens in a warm place, and should not be
+taken from the mould until the time of serving, and then it must be
+handled with care.
+
+
+=Consomme for Aspic Jelly.=
+
+Cut two pounds of beef from the under part of the round and two pounds
+of shin of veal into small pieces; crack the bones in the shin. Place
+over the fire with two and a half quarts of cold water; add one ounce of
+lean ham. Heat slowly, and cook just below the boiling-point two or
+three hours; then add to the kettle a three-pound fowl, and allow it to
+remain till tender. Put some marrow into the frying-pan, and when hot
+saute in it a small onion cut fine, two tablespoonfuls, each, of chopped
+celery, carrot and turnip; add to the soup kettle, removing the fowl,
+together with a sprig, each, of parsley, thyme and summer savory, two
+bay leaves, a small blade of mace, four cloves, two peppercorns and one
+scant tablespoonful of salt. Let simmer about an hour and a half; then
+strain and let cool.
+
+
+=Chicken Stock for Aspic Jelly.=
+
+Put a four-pound fowl and a few bits of veal from the neck over the fire
+in three pints of cold water. Heat slowly to the boiling-point, let boil
+five minutes, then skim and let simmer until the fowl is nearly tender.
+Now add an onion and half a sliced carrot, a stalk of celery, a
+teaspoonful of sweet herbs tied in a bag with a sprig of parsley, two
+cloves, a blade of mace, eight peppercorns and a teaspoonful of salt.
+Remove the fowl when tender, and let the stock simmer until reduced to
+about one quart; strain, and set aside to become cool.
+
+
+=Second Stock for Use in Sauces, Etc.=
+
+Break the bones from roasts; add the tough or browned bits of meat and
+fat; add also the flank ends from chops and steaks, cut small (there
+should always be a few bits of fresh meat), and cover with cold water.
+Heat slowly and let simmer two or three hours, then add, for each two
+quarts of water used, one-fourth a cup, each, of chopped onion and
+carrot, two stalks of celery and a tomato cut small, two teaspoonfuls of
+sweet herbs, two sprigs of parsley browned in two tablespoonfuls of
+butter or drippings, and cook about an hour. Strain and let cool. Stock
+will keep a day or two in summer and nearly a week in winter, if the
+cake of fat that forms upon the top be left undisturbed.
+
+
+=Fish Stock.=
+
+(_For use in fish aspic, or any fish dish._)
+
+Cover the bones and trimmings from the fish that is to be used for the
+salad with cold water; add, if convenient, the body bones of a lobster
+or two. Add also one or two pounds of an inexpensive fish, and a pint of
+water for each pound of fish. All must be fresh. Bring the water slowly
+to the boiling-point and let simmer an hour, then add, for each quart of
+water, one tablespoonful, each, of chopped onion and carrot, a sprig of
+parsley and one teaspoonful of sweet herbs, sauted delicately in two
+tablespoonfuls of butter. Season to taste with salt and cayenne.
+
+
+=Aspic Jelly from Bouillon Capsules, Etc.=
+
+Put over the fire one-fourth a cup, each, of onion and carrot, sauted in
+two tablespoonfuls of butter, two stalks of celery, a bay leaf, half a
+dozen peppercorns and two or three cloves, with one quart of water; add
+three bouillon capsules, or three teaspoonfuls of beef extract (not
+home-made) dissolved in two cups of boiling water; let simmer about half
+an hour, then add one box of gelatine softened in one cup of cold water,
+any additional flavoring desired, and the slightly beaten white and
+crushed shell of one egg (more shells will be advantageous). Bring
+slowly to the boiling-point, stirring constantly meanwhile, and let
+simmer five minutes; let stand in a hot place ten minutes, then skim and
+strain through a cheese-cloth folded double.
+
+
+=White Chaud-froid Sauce.=
+
+(_For coating joints of fowl or game, or medallions of fowl, tongue or
+sweetbreads._)
+
+To one pint of white sauce, made of white stock, add three-fourths a cup
+of aspic jelly and one tablespoonful of lemon juice; let simmer until
+reduced to the consistency of very thick cream; remove the butter from
+the top and let cool slightly before using.
+
+
+
+
+CHEESE DISHES SERVED WITH SALADS.
+
+ _Digestive cheese and fruit there sure will be._
+ --BEN JONSON.
+
+
+
+
+CHEESE DISHES SERVED WITH SALADS.
+
+
+=Cheese Custard.=
+
+(MRS. DIMON.)
+
+Butter a baking-dish, put in a layer of bread cut in pieces one inch
+square with crust removed, sprinkle thin-sliced cheese over the bread,
+dust with salt and paprica, or a few grains of cayenne. Add other layers
+of bread and cheese, seasoning as before, using in all half a small loaf
+of bread, one cup of cheese and half a teaspoonful of salt. Beat two
+eggs slightly, add one pint of milk, and pour the mixture over the bread
+and cheese. Bake about half an hour in a moderate oven.
+
+
+=Cheese Souffle.=
+
+Cook together four tablespoonfuls of butter and two tablespoonfuls of
+flour, into which have been sifted one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of
+soda and mustard and a few grains of cayenne. Add gradually half a cup
+of milk. When the sauce boils, remove from the fire and stir into it one
+cup of grated cheese (half a pound) and the yolks of three eggs, beaten
+until light. When well mixed, fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three
+eggs. Bake in a buttered pudding-dish, in a moderate oven, about
+twenty-five minutes, or in individual dishes, paper cases, or china
+shirring-cups, about twelve minutes. _Serve at once_ from the dish or
+dishes. The souffle will "stand up" a little better, if three-fourths a
+cup of milk be used in place of the half-cup as given, and half a cup of
+stale grated bread be added before the cheese; but it will not be quite
+so delicate.
+
+
+=Cheese Ramequins.=
+
+Put four tablespoonfuls of butter and half a cup of water into a
+saucepan. When these boil, add half a cup of flour and a few grains,
+each, of salt and paprica; cook and stir until the mixture cleaves from
+the pan. Turn into a mixing-bowl and beat in two ounces of grated
+Parmesan cheese; then beat in, one at a time, two eggs. On a
+well-buttered baking-sheet shape the paste into flat circular pieces
+about an inch in diameter. Brush over the tops with beaten egg, diluted
+with one or two tablespoonfuls of milk or water, and put three or four
+dice of cheese on each. Bake about fifteen minutes. Serve very hot.
+
+
+=Cheese Straws.=
+
+Roll plain or puff paste into a rectangular sheet one-fourth an inch
+thick. Sprinkle one-half with grated cheese (any kind of cheese will do,
+but Parmesan is preferred); also add a few grains of cayenne and salt.
+Fold the other half over this and press the edges together closely.
+Fold again to make three layers, turn half-way round, pat and roll out
+to the thickness of one-fourth an inch. Sprinkle one half with cheese
+and proceed as before. Continue rolling and adding the cheese, until, to
+one cup and a half of flour, from half to a whole cup of cheese has been
+used. After the last rolling, cut into bands half an inch wide, or into
+rings and straws one-fourth an inch wide. The straws and bands should be
+four or five inches in length, and the rings large enough to hold three
+or four straws. Serve the bands piled in log-cabin style on a
+doylie-covered plate. If the paste be made expressly for the straws, the
+cheese and cayenne may be mixed into the flour with the butter, thus
+diminishing time in making. Bake in a moderate oven until delicately
+browned.
+
+[Illustration: Cheese Ramequins.]
+
+[Illustration: Individual Souffle of Cheese.
+
+(See page 108)]
+
+
+=Gnochi a la Romaine.=
+
+Melt four tablespoonfuls of butter; cook in it four tablespoonfuls,
+each, of cornstarch and flour and half a teaspoonful of salt, then add
+gradually one pint of milk. When thick and smooth stir in the beaten
+yolks of two eggs, add four tablespoonfuls of grated Parmesan cheese,
+and spread on a buttered pan to cool. Just before serving, cut the paste
+in shapes, lay on a baking-sheet, and brown delicately in the oven.
+
+
+=Cheese Balls.=
+
+Mix together thoroughly one cup and a half of grated cheese, one
+tablespoonful of flour, one-fourth, a teaspoonful of salt and a few
+grains of cayenne; then add the whites of three eggs, beaten stiff.
+Shape in small balls and roll in cracker crumbs, sifted or crushed to a
+fine meal; fry in deep fat and drain on soft paper.
+
+
+=Individual Souffles of Cheese, Iced.=
+
+(See cut facing page 106.)
+
+Mix half a cup of grated Parmesan and one-fourth a cup of grated Gruyere
+cheese and one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica with two-thirds a cup of
+chicken aspic, cold, but not set. Stir over ice water until just
+beginning to form, then fold into it one cup of whipped cream. Fasten
+strips of white paper around paper souffle cases, letting the strips
+rise an inch and a half above the cases, fixing in place with
+sealing-wax, mucilage, or a stitch. Fill the cases and the papers
+surrounding them with the cheese mixture, and set them in a pail or
+mould that is thoroughly chilled. Press the cover down over a paper, and
+pack in equal parts of ice and salt. Let stand an hour. Before serving,
+remove the paper, sprinkle the tops with buttered crumbs, browned, and
+serve at once.
+
+
+=Cheese Croquettes.=
+
+(TOURAINE.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 2/3 a cup of milk.
+ Yolks of 2 eggs.
+ 1 cup of mild cheese, cut in small cubes.
+ 1/2 a cup of grated Gruyere cheese.
+ Salt and cayenne to taste.
+
+_Method._--Make a sauce of the butter, flour and milk; add the yolks,
+slightly beaten, and beat thoroughly; add the grated cheese, and, when
+melted, remove from the fire; add the seasonings and cubes of cheese.
+Spread in a shallow pan to cool. Cut in any shape desired, dip in
+crumbs, then in egg, and again in crumbs; fry in deep fat and drain on
+brown paper.
+
+
+=Cheese Aigrettes.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/2 a cup of water.
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ 1/2 a cup of flour.
+ 2 eggs, with yolk of a third.
+ A few grains of cayenne and salt.
+ 2 ounces (1/4 a cup) of grated Parmesan cheese.
+ Hot fat.
+
+_Method._--Boil the water and butter, sift in the flour with the salt
+and cayenne; stir and cook until the mixture cleaves from the side of
+the pan. When the mixture has slightly cooled, add the eggs, one at a
+time, beating in each egg thoroughly before another is added. Lastly,
+add the cheese. Drop, by teaspoonfuls, into hot fat and fry a golden
+brown. Drain on soft paper and serve piled on a folded napkin.
+
+
+=Cheese d'Artois.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ White of 1 egg.
+ Yolks of 2 eggs.
+ Salt and paprica.
+ 2 ounces of grated Parmesan cheese.
+ 1/4 a pound of plain or puff paste.
+
+_Method._--Cream the butter, beat in the eggs, and add the cheese with a
+few grains, each, of salt and paprica. Roll the pastry very thin and cut
+it into two rectangular pieces; lay one of these on a baking-sheet and
+spread with the cheese mixture; cover this with the second piece of
+pastry. Score with a knife in strips one inch wide and about three
+inches long, brush over with beaten egg, and bake about fifteen minutes.
+Cut out the strips while hot. Serve at once, or reheat before serving.
+
+
+=Cheese Fritters.=
+
+Slice thin half a dozen large tart apples (select apples that cook
+quickly), and prepare half as many thin slices of cheese. Beat up one or
+two eggs, and season with salt, mustard and pepper. Soak the cheese in
+the egg mixture, then put each slice between two slices of apple,
+sandwich style; dip in the beaten egg, saute in hot butter, and serve
+hot.
+
+
+=Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Vegetable Macedoine.=
+
+Mix together a ten-cent cream cheese, a canned pimento (red) cut in tiny
+cubes, one-fourth a cup of small green string beans, cut in cubes, five
+olives, chopped fine, and enough cream to hold the mixture together.
+When thoroughly mixed, use a piece of paraffine or confectioner's paper
+to handle and give the mixture the original shape. Let stand in a cold
+place, wrapped in the paper, until ready to serve, then dispose in the
+centre of a salad dish, lined with lettuce leaves, dressed with French
+dressing. Slice the cheese with a silver knife before sending to table.
+At luncheon, mayonnaise may be served in a dish apart.
+
+[Illustration: Pineapple Cheese and Crackers.]
+
+[Illustration: Salad of Lettuce with Cheese and Vegetable Macedoine.]
+
+
+
+
+PART II.
+
+SANDWICHES.
+
+ _Socrates brought Philosophy from the clouds, but
+ the Englishmen have dragged her into the kitchen._
+ --HEGEL.
+
+ _Homer never entertained either guests or hosts
+ with long speeches till the mouth of hunger be
+ stopped._
+ --SIR PHILIP SIDNEY.
+
+
+
+
+SANDWICHES.
+
+ A pale young man, with feeble whiskers and a stiff
+ white neckcloth, came walking down the lane _en
+ sandwich_--having a lady, that is, on each arm.
+ --_Thackeray_ ("_Vanity Fair_").
+
+
+The term "sandwich," now applied to many a fanciful shaped and encased
+dainty, was formerly used in speaking of "two slices of bread with meat
+between." In this sense, the word had its origin, about the end of the
+eighteenth century, from the fact that the fourth Earl of Sandwich was
+so infatuated with the pleasures and excitement of the gaming-table that
+he often could not leave it long enough to take his meals with his
+family; and, on such occasions, a butler was despatched to him bearing
+"slices of bread with meat between."
+
+The fillings of savory sandwiches may be placed between pieces of bread,
+crackers, pastry, _chou_ paste or aspic jelly. When preparing sweet
+sandwiches, these same materials may be used, as also lady-fingers
+(white or yellow), macaroons or sweet wafers.
+
+
+=Bread for Sandwiches.=
+
+As a rule, bread for sandwiches should be twenty-four hours old; but
+fresh bread, which is more pliable than stale, is better adapted to this
+use, when the sandwiches are to take the form of rolls or folds. When
+stale bread is used for rolls or folds, they must be ribbon-tied; or
+tiny Japanese toothpicks may be made to keep them in shape.
+
+The bread may be yeast or peptic bread. It may be white or brown. It is
+not even essential that the two bits of bread be of the same kind;
+Quaker, rice, whole-wheat, rye or graham bread is interchangeable with
+white or brown bread. After selecting your loaf or loaves, slice in
+even, quarter-inch slices; then cut in squares, triangles or fingers, or
+stamp with a round or fanciful-shaped cutter. Cutters can be obtained in
+heart, club, diamond and spade shape, also in racquet shape.
+
+Do not spread butter or filling upon the bread before it is cut from the
+loaf and into shape. When so treated, the butter or filling on the
+extreme edge of the bread is liable to soil the fingers or gloves that
+come in contact with it.
+
+Cream the butter, using a small wooden spoon for the purpose, and then
+it can be spread upon the most delicate bread without crumbling.
+
+
+=The Filling.=
+
+Anything appropriately eaten with the _covering_ may be used for the
+_filling_ of a sandwich. In meats, salted meat takes the lead in popular
+favor; when sliced the meat should be cut across the grain and as thin
+as possible, and several bits should be used in each sandwich, unless a
+very small, aesthetic sandwich be in order. Tongue and corned beef,
+whether they be used in slices or finely chopped, should be cooked until
+they are very tender. When corned beef or ham is chopped for a filling,
+the sandwich is much improved by a dash of mustard; Worcestershire or
+horseradish sauce improves a filling of roast beef or boiled tongue;
+while chopped capers, tomato sauce, catsup or a cold mint sauce is
+appropriate in sandwiches made of lamb; celery salt, when the filling is
+of chicken or veal, and lemon juice, when the principal ingredient is
+fish, are _en rapport_.
+
+The flavor of a few drops of onion juice is relished by many in any kind
+of fish or meat sandwich, while others would prefer a few grains of
+fine-chopped parsley.
+
+When salad sandwiches are to be prepared, chop the meat or fish very
+fine and mix it with the salad dressing. Celery, cabbage, cress,
+cucumbers, tomatoes or olives may be chopped and added to the meat with
+the dressing. When lettuce is used, the leaf is served whole, the edges
+just appearing outside the bread. Any one of these vegetables, combined
+with a salad dressing, makes a delicious sandwich without meat or fish.
+When desired, other well-prepared sauces may be used in the place of
+salad dressings. Fillings of uncooked fruit may be used; but, in the
+case of dried fruits, it is preferable to stew until tender, after the
+fruit has been finely chopped. Pineapple, lemon or orange juice may be
+added at pleasure. Sandwiches prepared from entire-wheat bread, with
+fig or date fillings, are particularly wholesome for the children's
+luncheon basket.
+
+When a particularly aesthetic sandwich is desired, wrap the butter that
+is to be used in spreading the bread in a napkin, and put it over night
+in a jar, on a bed of violets or rose petals; strew more flowers over
+the top and cover the jar tightly. If meat or fish is to be used as the
+basis of the sandwich, substitute nasturtium leaves and blossoms, or
+sprigs of mignonette, for the former flowers.
+
+Fancy butter makes an attractive filling for a sandwich; it has also the
+merit of being less often in evidence than many another filling.
+
+Sandwiches, except when vegetables and dressings are used, may be
+prepared early in the day, placed in a stone jar, covered with a
+slightly dampened cloth, and set away in a cool place until such time as
+they are wanted. Or, they may be wrapped in paraffine paper. Still, when
+convenient, it is preferable to have everything in readiness, and put
+the sandwiches together just before serving. Garnish the serving-dish
+with parsley, cress, celery plumes, slices of lemon, barberries and
+leaves, or fresh nasturtium leaves and blossoms.
+
+
+=Beverages Served with Sandwiches.=
+
+Coffee heads the list of beverages most acceptably served with
+sandwiches. Tea comes next. Cocoa and chocolate are admissible only with
+the dainty, aesthetic varieties, in which fruit or some kind of sweetmeat
+is used.
+
+
+
+
+SAVORY SANDWICHES.
+
+ "Hail, wedded nourishment!"
+
+
+=Ham-and-Tongue Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop two parts of cold tongue and one part of cold ham (one-fourth as
+much fat ham as lean) very fine; pound in a mortar, and season with
+paprica and a little mixed mustard. Spread butter on one piece of bread,
+the meat mixture on the other, and press the two pieces together.
+
+
+=Ham-and-Egg Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop the ham and pound smooth in a mortar; pass the yolks of hard-boiled
+eggs through a sieve; mix the yolks with an equal amount of mayonnaise
+dressing. Butter one piece of bread lightly and spread with the ham,
+spread the other piece with the egg and dressing, and press the two
+together.
+
+
+=Corned-Beef Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop the cold meat very fine, using one-fourth of fat meat. Work into
+the meat French mustard, or any "made" mustard, to taste, and prepare
+the sandwiches in the usual way. Boston brownbread combines well with
+this preparation.
+
+
+=Tongue-and-Veal (or Chicken) Sandwiches.=
+
+Use a little less of the chopped tongue than of the other kind of meat,
+and one-half as much chopped celery as meat. Mix with salad dressing.
+Spread one piece of bread with butter, the other with the mixture, and
+press together.
+
+
+=Celery Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop crisp celery very fine and mix with salad dressing. Spread one
+piece of bread with butter, the other with a thin layer of the mixture.
+With a sharp knife split open the round stems of celery tips and put
+them between the bread, so that the tips will just show on the edges.
+Tie with narrow ribbon, light-green in color.
+
+
+=Sardine Sandwiches.=
+
+Use, in bulk, equal parts of yolks of well-cooked eggs, rubbed to a
+smooth paste, and the flesh of sardines, freed from skin and bones and
+pounded in a mortar; season to taste with a few drops of tobasco sauce
+and lemon juice, and spread as usual. Crackers may be used in the place
+of bread, if the sandwiches be prepared just before using, otherwise the
+crackers lose their crispness. Garnish with slices of lemon and parsley.
+
+
+=Caviare Sandwich Rolls.=
+
+To each two tablespoonfuls of caviare add ten drops of onion juice and a
+few drops of lemon juice, and mix together thoroughly. Remove the crust
+from a fresh, moist loaf of bread, cut in thin slices, spread each slice
+very delicately with butter and the caviare mixture, roll up in a roll
+and tie with ribbon one-fourth an inch wide, or pin with Chinese
+toothpicks. The bread should not be more than twelve hours old. If fear
+be lest the bread will not be sufficiently moist to roll, wrap the loaf,
+when taken from the oven, in a damp cloth and then in a dry one; keep in
+this fashion until ready for use.
+
+
+=Russian Sandwiches.=
+
+Slightly butter thin slices of bread; moisten fine-chopped olives with
+mayonnaise dressing and spread upon the buttered slices; spread other
+slices with Neufchatel, or any cream cheese, and press together in
+pairs.
+
+
+=Mushroom-and-Lobster Sandwiches.=
+
+Saute the caps of half a pound of mushrooms in a little butter about
+five minutes, adding half a sliced onion if desired. Cover with highly
+seasoned stock and let simmer until very tender; chop and press through
+a sieve, and, if very moist, reduce to the consistency of a thick puree.
+Add an equal quantity of lobster meat pounded smooth in a mortar. Season
+to taste with salt, pepper, lemon juice and, if desired, tomato catsup.
+When cool use as any filling.
+
+
+=Cheese-and-English-Walnut Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a pound of grated cheese.
+ 1/4 a pound of butter.
+ 1/4 a pound of English walnut meats, sliced.
+ Salt and paprica to taste.
+
+_Method._--Work the butter to a cream, add the seasonings and the grated
+cheese gradually; then mix in the nuts, which should be _sliced_ very
+thin. Spread the mixture upon bits of bread and press together in pairs.
+Particularly good made of brownbread and served with a simple vegetable
+salad!
+
+
+=Egg-and-Spinach Sandwiches.=
+
+Use cold boiled spinach, which when hot was chopped very fine or pressed
+through a colander, and sifted yolks of well-cooked eggs. Mix the
+spinach with sauce tartare and spread on one bit of bread, spread the
+other with butter and sifted yolk of egg; press together. Garnish the
+serving-dish with parsley and cooked eggs cut in quarters lengthwise.
+
+
+=Cress-and-Egg Sandwiches.=
+
+Pick the leaves from fresh cress, chop or break apart, season with
+French dressing, and proceed as above.
+
+
+=Imitation Pate-de-Foie-Gras Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop half an onion and saute in a little butter; when delicately
+browned, add five or six chicken livers and saute them on both sides.
+Cover with well-seasoned chicken stock and let simmer until tender.
+Mash the livers fine with a wooden spoon and press them through a sieve;
+season with salt, paprica, mustard, or a dash of curry powder. Press
+into a cup, pour melted butter over the top, and set away in a cool
+place. When ready to serve, remove the butter and prepare the sandwiches
+after the usual manner.
+
+
+=Chicken Rolls.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 4 ounces from the breast of chicken (1/2 a cup).
+ 4 ounces of braised tongue.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of celery salt.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+ 1 teaspoonful of anchovy paste.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of mayonnaise or boiled dressing.
+
+_Method._--Chop the meat and pound to a paste in a mortar; add the
+seasonings and mix well. Remove the crust from a loaf of moist bread;
+cut in very thin slices, trim each slice into a rectangular shape,
+spread lightly with soft butter and then with the mixture. Roll the
+slices and tie them with ribbon. Omit the anchovy paste, if desired.
+
+
+=Epicurean Sandwiches.=
+
+Cream four tablespoonfuls of butter and one teaspoonful of mustard.
+Press the yolks of four hard-boiled eggs through a sieve and add them to
+the butter and mustard. Then add four boned anchovies, four small
+pickles, a teaspoonful of chives and a sprig of tarragon, chopped
+together until fine. Cut stale bread in fingers or other fanciful
+shapes, and spread with the mixture. Press two pieces together.
+
+
+=Halibut-and-Lettuce Sandwiches.=
+
+Put a pound and a half of halibut, a slice of onion, a stalk of celery,
+four or five peppercorns, one teaspoonful of salt and one tablespoonful
+of lemon juice in boiling water, and cook, just below the boiling-point,
+ten or fifteen minutes, according to thickness. Remove bone and skin and
+rub the fish fine with a wooden spoon; add half a cup of thick cream, a
+teaspoonful of salt, a dash of white pepper and one tablespoonful of
+lemon juice. Spread this mixture, when cold, on buttered slices of
+bread, put a lettuce leaf above the mixture, and spread a teaspoonful of
+mayonnaise or boiled salad dressing on the lettuce; finish with a slice
+of buttered bread and tie with ribbon.
+
+
+=Lobster Fingers.=
+
+Chop lobster meat very fine; season to taste with French dressing. Cut
+the bread in pieces about four inches long and an inch and a half wide.
+Finish as usual. Garnish with parsley and the slender feelers of the
+lobster.
+
+
+=Tower of Babel.=
+
+Pile a _variety_ of sandwiches in form of a pyramid (use bread of
+different colors). Arrange a garnish of parsley and radish rosebuds
+around the base, and on the top a few sprigs of parsley, or celery
+plumes.
+
+
+=Nasturtium Folds.=
+
+Flavor the butter with nasturtium leaves and blossoms, and with it
+spread a thin slice of _moist_ bread, which is longer one way than the
+other. Press fresh nasturtium leaves and blossoms upon the butter and
+fold one half over the other.
+
+
+=Harlequin Sandwiches.=
+
+Spread a bit of brownbread with butter and French mustard, and a bit of
+white bread, cut to fit the former, with butter and cheese creamed
+together. Finish as usual.
+
+
+=Harlequin Sandwiches, No. 2.=
+
+Spread the brownbread with butter and cheese creamed together, and the
+white bread with butter, then with cucumber, chopped fine and seasoned
+with French dressing, to which a few drops of onion juice have been
+added.
+
+
+=Beet-and-Cream-Cheese Sandwiches.=
+
+Spread one piece of bread with cream cheese, the other with beets that
+have been chopped very fine and seasoned with French dressing.
+
+
+=Peanut Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop freshly roasted peanuts very fine; then pound them in a mortar
+until smooth; season with salt and moisten with thick cream.
+
+
+=Peanut Sandwiches, No. 2.=
+
+Mix the prepared peanuts with mayonnaise dressing. Butter two pieces of
+bread; spread one with the peanut mixture, the other with shredded
+lettuce, and press the two together.
+
+
+=Shad-Roe-and-Yellow-Butter Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a pound of butter.
+ Sifted yolks of 4 eggs.
+ 1 set of shad roe, cooked, pounded in a mortar and sifted.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ 4 drops of tobasco sauce.
+ 2 teaspoonfuls of very fine-chopped capers.
+
+_Method._--Cream the butter and add the other ingredients gradually.
+Prepare as usual.
+
+
+=Green-Butter Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a pound of butter.
+ 1/8 a peck of spinach.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of very fine-chopped parsley.
+ 6 anchovies.
+ 2 teaspoonfuls of very fine-chopped capers.
+
+_Method._--Boil the spinach, drain thoroughly, and press through a piece
+of muslin. Beat the butter to a cream with a wooden spoon; beat into the
+butter enough of the spinach pulp to give the required tint of green.
+Wipe the oil from the anchovies, remove the backbone, and pass through a
+hair sieve; then add to the colored butter, a little at a time; add also
+the parsley and capers; chill slightly and use as a filling for
+sandwiches. These butters are used also to mask or decorate cooked fish
+for "cold service."
+
+[Illustration: Chicken Salad Sandwiches.
+
+(See page 127)]
+
+[Illustration: Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic.
+
+(See page 128)]
+
+
+=Chicken-Salad Sandwiches.=
+
+(_Chou-paste boxes._)
+
+(See cut facing page 126.)
+
+Bake _chou_ paste in long, slender shapes, like eclairs, but narrower
+and shorter; when cold split apart on the ends and one side and fill
+with chicken salad. Put the top back in place, after inserting a celery
+plume at each end. Garnish the serving-dish with celery leaves and
+pim-olas or olives. Serve other salads in the same way.
+
+
+=Mosaic Sandwiches.=
+
+Cut the bread, white, brown and graham, as thin as possible, and use
+four or five pieces in each sandwich, putting them together so that the
+colors will contrast. Either butter or other filling is admissible.
+
+
+=Chicken-and-Nut Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop fine the white meat of a cooked chicken and pound to a paste in a
+mortar. Season to taste with salt, paprica, oil and lemon juice and
+spread upon thin bits of bread. Spread other bits of bread,
+corresponding in shape to the first, with butter; press into the butter
+English walnuts, pecan nuts or almonds, blanched and _sliced_ very thin.
+Press corresponding pieces together.
+
+
+=Aspic Jelly for Sandwiches.=
+
+Soak one box (two ounces) of gelatine in one cup of cold chicken liquor
+until thoroughly softened. Add to three cups of chicken stock, seasoned
+with vegetables and sweet herbs according to directions previously
+given, also the crushed shell and white of one egg, and proceed as for
+aspic jelly. Turn the liquid jelly into rectangular pans, having it
+three-eighths of an inch or less in thickness, and set aside in a cool
+place to harden. When ready to serve, dip the pan in hot water an
+instant, and turn the jelly on to a paper. With a thin, sharp knife cut
+the jelly into squares or diamonds, or dip a cutter into hot water and
+stamp out into hearts or clubs.
+
+
+=Lobster Sandwiches with Aspic.=
+
+Chop the lobster fine, mix with mayonnaise dressing to taste, spread
+upon a bit of aspic, cover with a crisp lettuce leaf, and above this
+place another piece of aspic spread with the lobster mixture. Serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic.=
+
+After the aspic is poured into the pans, sprinkle upon it some fine-cut
+Spanish pimentos. When ready to serve, prepare as lobster sandwiches
+with aspic, using fish in the place of lobster, and, if desired, sauce
+tartare in the place of mayonnaise. Shrimps, salmon or other fish,
+chicken, veal, tongue, sweetbreads, etc., may be used either with
+lettuce or with chopped celery, cress, cucumbers, etc. Or the vegetables
+may be used without either fish, flesh or fowl.
+
+[Illustration: Wedding Sandwich Rolls.
+
+(See page 129)]
+
+[Illustration: Club Sandwich.
+
+(See page 129)]
+
+
+=Club Sandwiches.=
+
+(_Steamer Priscilla style._)
+
+Have ready four triangular pieces of toasted bread spread with
+mayonnaise dressing; cover two of these with lettuce, lay thin slices of
+cold chicken (white meat) upon the lettuce, over this arrange slices of
+broiled breakfast bacon, then lettuce, and cover with the other
+triangles of toast spread with mayonnaise. Trim neatly, arrange on a
+plate, and garnish with heart leaves of lettuce dipped in mayonnaise.
+
+
+=Wedding Sandwich Rolls.=
+
+Wrap bread as it is taken from the oven closely in a towel wrung out of
+cold water, cover with several thicknesses of dry cloth and set aside
+about four hours; then cut away the crust, and with a thin, sharp knife
+cut the loaf or loaves in slices as thin as possible and spread with
+butter, and, if desired, thin shavings of meat, potted meat or chopped
+nuts; roll the slices very closely and pile on a serving-dish.
+
+
+=The Milwaukee Sandwich.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 thin rounds of white bread.
+ 1 thin round of graham or rye bread.
+ 4 large oysters, broiled or fried.
+ Breast of cooked chicken, or turkey.
+ Two slices of crisp bacon.
+ Horseradish.
+ Lettuce.
+ 4 small sweet pickles.
+ 4 small radishes.
+ Slice of lemon.
+ 1 tomato, skin removed.
+ Tartare sauce.
+
+_Method._--Dip the bread in beaten egg, seasoned with salt and saute to
+a rich brown in hot butter. Roll the oysters in grated bread crumbs
+(centre of the loaf) and broil them, or "egg and bread" them, and fry in
+deep fat. Lay the first slice of bread on a plate over two or three
+lettuce leaves, put the oysters on the bread, a grating of horseradish
+on each oyster; cover with the graham or rye bread; on this lay the
+chicken or turkey cut in thin slices, season with salt and pepper, put
+on the bacon, and cover with the other slice of bread. On top of the
+sandwich lay a slice of lemon cut square, and about this dispose the
+pickles and radishes, to form a star. Serve the tomato on a lettuce leaf
+at the side. Cut out the hard centre from the tomato and fill the
+opening with sauce tartare. In making this sauce, add to mayonnaise or
+boiled dressing, onion, olives, sweet pickles and celery, chopped fine
+and squeezed dry in a cloth.
+
+
+
+
+SWEET SANDWICHES.
+
+ In the name of the Prophet--figs!
+ --_Horace Smith._
+
+
+=Fig Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop one-fourth a pound of figs very fine, add one-fourth a cup of
+water, and cook to a smooth paste; add, also, one-third a cup of
+almonds, blanched, chopped very fine and pounded to a paste with a
+little rose-water, also the juice of half a lemon. When cold spread the
+mixture upon lady-fingers or cakelets, white or yellow, press another
+above the mixture, and serve upon a handsome doylie-covered plate.
+Raisins, dates or marmalade may be used in the place of the figs. The
+marmalade, of course, requires no cooking. Bread may be used in the
+place of the cake.
+
+
+=French Fruit Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop the fruit very fine; use a mixture of cherries, plums, pineapple
+and angelica root; moisten with wine, orange or lemon juice. Use
+lady-fingers or bread for the covering. If bread is used, spread lightly
+with butter; if cake be your choice, spread very lightly with marmalade.
+Use just enough butter or marmalade to keep the coverings together.
+
+
+=Date-and-Ginger Sandwiches.=
+
+Chop the dates and preserved ginger; moisten with syrup from the ginger
+jar and a little lemon juice; cook as above, and use with bread or
+lady-fingers. Preserved ginger may be used alone and without cooking.
+
+
+=Rose-Leaf Sandwiches.=
+
+Flavor the butter with rose petals according to the directions
+previously given. Spread both bits of bread lightly with it and put upon
+them three or four candied rose petals. If lady-fingers are used, brush
+them over with white of egg and sugar mixed together. Use but little
+sugar--just enough to hold the fingers together. The Turkish rose petals
+that come in little jars are particularly dainty, and adapted to this
+purpose. Garnish the dish on which they are served with rosebuds and
+leaves.
+
+
+=Violet Sandwiches.=
+
+Prepare in the same manner as in the last number, substituting candied
+violets for the rose petals, and violets with green leaves for a
+garnish.
+
+
+=Honey Sandwiches.=
+
+Spread one bit of white bread with honey pressed from the comb with a
+wooden spoon, the other bit with butter. Garnish with white clover
+blossoms and leaves.
+
+
+=Puff-Paste Sandwiches.=
+
+Roll puff paste very thin (about one-eighth of an inch), cut in fanciful
+shapes and bake to a delicate brown; add chopped almonds to rich
+strawberry preserves, or peach marmalade, and spread the mixture between
+each two bits of pastry.
+
+
+=Pineapple Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of pineapple juice and pulp.
+ 3/4 a cup of sugar.
+ Juice of half a lemon.
+ Lady-fingers.
+
+_Method._--Cook the pineapple, sugar and lemon juice until thick; let
+cool, and spread upon lady-fingers or sponge drops. Press together in
+pairs and serve.
+
+
+=Whipped-Cream Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of heavy cream.
+ 1/4 a cup of powdered sugar.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of vanilla extract.
+ Lady-fingers.
+
+_Method._--Add the sugar and extract to the cream and beat until solid;
+let chill, then spread quite thick upon lady-fingers or sponge drops.
+
+
+=Whipped-Cream Sandwiches with French Fruit.=
+
+Soak half a cup of fine-cut candied fruit in wine an hour or more.
+Prepare the cream as above, and sprinkle the same with the fruit before
+putting the sandwiches together.
+
+
+=Fruit Jelly for Sweet Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 box of gelatine (2 ounces).
+ 1 cup of cold water.
+ 1 cup of boiling water.
+ 1 cup of sugar.
+ 1-1/2 cups of orange juice.
+ 1/4 a cup of lemon juice.
+
+_Method._--Soak the gelatine in the cold water and dissolve in the
+boiling water; add the sugar and strain; when cold add the orange and
+lemon juice. Mould in sheets three-eighths of an inch thick.
+
+
+=Claret Jelly for Sweet Sandwiches.=
+
+Substitute claret for the orange juice and prepare as above. Do not omit
+the lemon juice.
+
+
+=Fruit or Claret Jelly Sandwiches with Nuts.=
+
+Slice blanched English walnuts and pecan nuts or almonds very thin, and
+stir into whipped cream. Stamp out shapes from the jelly. Spread one
+piece with the cream and nuts and cover with a second piece of jelly.
+
+
+=With French Fruit.=
+
+Substitute candied fruit for the nuts and proceed as above, or use nuts
+and fruit together.
+
+
+=Cupid's Butter Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ The yolks of 4 hard-boiled eggs.
+ 1 cup of butter.
+ 1/3 a cup of powdered sugar.
+ 1 teaspoonful of orange juice.
+ A grating of orange rind.
+ Angel cakelets or slices of angel cake.
+
+_Method._--Cream the butter, gradually add the yolks of eggs, passed
+through a potato ricer or sieve, the sugar and orange juice. Spread upon
+thin slices of angel cake, prepared for sandwiches, or upon angel
+cakelets or fingers; press two slices together and serve at once. If
+allowed to stand any length of time, keep covered and in a cool place.
+
+
+=Cheese-and-Bar-le-Duc Currant Sandwiches.=
+
+Spread wheat bread, prepared for sandwiches, with cream cheese; put two
+or three currants and a little syrup on each piece of bread, and press
+two pieces together. These may be varied by using sliced maraschino
+cherries. Either the currants or sliced cherries with a little of the
+syrup may be mixed with the cheese and then spread upon the bread.
+Bar-le-Duc currants are imported from France in tiny glasses. The seeds
+have been removed from the currants, which are cooked in honey.
+
+
+=Hunter's Sandwich (Switzerland).=
+
+Spread fresh bread, cut in thin slices, with fresh butter; over this
+spread a layer of Brie or other cream cheese, and over the cheese spread
+a layer of honey. Press two similarly shaped pieces together and serve
+at once.
+
+
+=Hunter's Sandwich (Ellwanger).=
+
+Prepare as above, substituting maple syrup (or sugar) for the honey.
+
+
+
+
+BREAD AND CHOU PASTE.
+
+ She needeth least, who kneadeth best,
+ These rules which we shall tell;
+ Who kneadeth ill shall need them more
+ Than she who kneadeth well.
+ --_F.F._
+
+
+=Two Loaves of Wheat Bread.=
+
+To two cups of scalded milk or boiled water, in a mixing-bowl, add two
+tablespoonfuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, and, when the liquid
+becomes lukewarm, one yeastcake dissolved in half a cup of water, boiled
+and cooled. With a broad-bladed knife cut and mix in enough well-dried
+flour, sifted, to make a stiff dough (about seven cups). Knead until the
+dough is elastic; cover, and set to rise in a temperature of about 70 deg.
+Fahr. When the dough has doubled in bulk, "cut down" and knead slightly
+without removing from the mixing-bowl. When again double in bulk, shape
+into two double loaves and set to rise in buttered pans; when it has
+risen a third time, bake one hour.
+
+
+=Entire-Wheat Bread.=
+
+Use the preceding recipe without change other than in kind of flour and
+two additional tablespoonfuls of sugar.
+
+
+=Rice Bread.=
+
+Add three-fourths a cup of rice, cooked until tender and still hot, and,
+also, two tablespoonfuls of butter, to the milk or water in the first
+recipe. Other cereals, as oatmeal or cerealine, may be used instead of
+rice.
+
+
+=Salad Rolls.=
+
+Make a sponge with one cup of milk, one yeastcake dissolved in
+one-fourth a cup of milk, and about one cup and a half of flour; beat
+thoroughly, cover, and set to rise in a temperature of about 70 deg. Fahr.
+When light add half a teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth a cup of melted
+butter, and flour enough to knead. Knead until elastic. Set to rise in a
+temperature of 70 deg. Fahr. When doubled in bulk, cut down and shape into
+small balls. Set to rise again, covered with a cloth and a dripping-pan.
+When light press the handle of a small wooden spoon deeply across the
+centre of each ball, brush with butter and press the edges together. Set
+the rolls close together in a baking-pan, after brushing over with
+butter the points of contact.
+
+
+=Boston Brownbread.=
+
+Sift together one cup, each, of yellow corn meal, rye meal and
+entire-wheat flour, one teaspoonful of salt and three teaspoonfuls of
+soda. Add three-fourths a cup of molasses and one pint of thick, sour
+milk. Beat thoroughly, and steam in a covered mould three hours and a
+half. The quantity here given may be steamed in four baking-powder
+boxes in two hours.
+
+[Illustration: Boston Brown Bread.]
+
+[Illustration: Bread cut for Sandwiches.]
+
+
+=Baking-Powder Biscuit.=
+
+Pass through the sieve two or three times four cups of flour, one
+teaspoonful of salt, and, for each cup of flour, two level teaspoonfuls
+of baking-powder. With the tips of the fingers work into the flour
+one-third a cup of butter. When the mixture looks like meal, mix in
+gradually nearly one pint of milk, cutting the dough with a knife until
+well mixed. When it is of a consistency to handle, turn out on to a
+well-floured board, toss with the knife in the flour, then pat out into
+a sheet half an inch thick, and cut into rounds. Let the heat of the
+oven be moderate at first, and increase after the dough has risen. Bake
+about fifteen minutes.
+
+
+=Sandwich Biscuit.=
+
+Prepare the dough as above, roll to about three-eighths an inch in
+thickness, and cut into rounds. Spread one half of these with softened
+butter, and press the others, unbuttered, upon them; bake fifteen or
+eighteen minutes.
+
+
+=Pulled Bread.=
+
+(_To serve with simple salads and cheese._)
+
+Remove the crust from a fresh loaf of French bread. Gash the loaf at the
+ends and pull apart into halves; then cut the halves and pull apart
+into quarters. Repeat until the pieces are about the thickness of
+breadsticks. Put on a rack in a dripping-pan, and dry out the moisture
+in a slow oven; then brown delicately. Keep in a dry place (a tin box is
+suitable) and reheat in the oven before serving.
+
+
+=How to Give Rolls and Bread a Glossy, Brown Crust.=
+
+A short time before removing from the oven, brush over the top of each
+loaf or roll with beaten yolk of egg, diluted with a little milk, or
+with a little sugar dissolved in milk, or with thin starch.
+
+
+=Chou Paste.=
+
+Put a saucepan with half a cup of butter and one cup of boiling water
+over the fire. When the mixture boils, beat into it one cup of flour.
+When the dough cleaves from the sides of the saucepan, turn into a bowl
+and beat in, one at a time, three large or four small eggs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=To Boil Salted Meats: Ham, Tongue, Etc.=
+
+Cover the meat with cold water and bring the water slowly to the
+boiling-point; let boil five minutes, then _slightly_ bubble until the
+meat is tender.
+
+
+=To Boil Chicken, Lamb and Other Fresh Meat.=
+
+Cover the meat with boiling water, let boil rapidly five minutes, then
+keep the water just below the boiling-point, or just "quivering" at one
+side of the saucepan, until the meat is tender. When the meat is about
+half cooked, add a teaspoonful of salt for each quart of water.
+
+
+=Potted Meat and Fish for Sandwiches.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pound of tender cooked meat or fish (2 cups).
+ 2 ounces of fat cooked meat (1/4 a cup).
+ 2 ounces of butter (1/4 a cup).
+ Mace and anchovy essence, if desired.
+ Pepper and salt.
+
+_Method._--Chop the meat or fish very fine, then pass through a puree
+sieve; cream the butter and with a wooden spoon work it into the meat or
+fish; add seasonings to taste, press the mixture solidly into small jars
+or cups, and pour melted butter to the depth of one-fourth an inch over
+the top of the meat. Set aside in a cool place.
+
+
+=Kinds of Meat and Fish for Potting.=
+
+Ham, fat and lean; either chicken, veal or tongue, with bacon; chicken
+and ham, mixed, fat ham; chicken and tongue, mixed, with bacon; veal and
+ham, mixed, with fat ham; roast beef and corned beef, mixed, with fat of
+either, or bacon; finnan-haddie and bacon; salmon, cod, haddock,
+bluefish, etc., with bacon, or with double the amount of butter.
+
+[Illustration: Bowl of Fruit-Punch Ready for Serving.]
+
+
+
+
+BEVERAGES SERVED WITH SANDWICHES.
+
+ Towards eve there was tea
+ (A luxury due to Matilda) and ice,
+ Fruit and coffee.
+ --_Meredith's "Lucile."_
+
+ Come, touch to your lips this melting sweetness,
+ Sip of this nectar,--this Java fine,--
+ Whose tawny drops hold more completeness
+ Than lurks in the depths of ruby wine.
+ --_J. M. L._
+
+
+=Filtered Coffee.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/2 a cup of coffee, ground very fine.
+ 3 cups of boiling water.
+ About 6 blocks of sugar.
+ About 3 tablespoonfuls of cream.
+ About 6 tablespoonfuls of hot milk.
+
+_Method._--Put the coffee into the filter of a well-scalded coffee-pot.
+Pour the boiling water over the coffee. Serve as soon as the infusion
+has dripped through the filter. For black coffee use double the quantity
+of coffee.
+
+
+=Boiled Coffee.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of ground coffee.
+ White and shell of 1 egg.
+ 1 cup of cold water.
+ 6 cups of boiling water.
+ 1 tablespoonful of ground coffee.
+
+_Method._--Beat the white and crushed shell of the egg and half the cup
+of cold water together; mix with the coffee, pour over the boiling
+water, stir thoroughly, and boil from three to five minutes with the
+nozzle tightly closed; pour half a cup of cold water down the spout;
+stir in one tablespoonful of coffee and let stand on the range, without
+boiling, ten minutes.
+
+
+=Five-o'clock Tea.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Tea.
+ Candied ox-heart cherries.
+ Slices of lemon.
+ Boiling water.
+
+_Method._--Fill the tea-ball half full with tea, put the ball into the
+cup, with a cherry or a slice of lemon, and pour boiling water over
+them; remove the ball when the tea is of the desired strength.
+
+
+=Rich Chocolate.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 4 ounces of chocolate.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of granulated sugar.
+ 1/4 a cup of hot water.
+ 1 quart of scalded milk.
+ 1 teaspoonful of vanilla extract.
+ Whites of 3 eggs.
+ 1 pint of thick cream.
+ 1/3 a cup of powdered sugar.
+
+_Method._--Grate the chocolate, add the granulated sugar and hot water,
+and cook until smooth and glossy; with a whisk beat in the hot milk very
+gradually, and return to a double boiler to keep hot. Beat the cream
+until solid. Beat the whites of the eggs until dry, then beat in the
+powdered sugar and fold the cream into the egg and sugar. Add half of
+the cream mixture to the chocolate with the vanilla, and mix while the
+cream is heating. Serve the rest of the cream in spoonfuls upon the
+chocolate in the cups.
+
+
+=Plain Chocolate.=
+
+Prepare as in preceding recipe, omitting the cream mixture and such
+portion of the chocolate as is desired.
+
+
+=Plain Cocoa.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 4 teaspoonfuls of cocoa.
+ 4 teaspoonfuls of sugar.
+ 1 cup of boiling water,
+ 1 cup of hot milk.
+ Whipped cream, if desired.
+
+_Method._--Mix the cocoa and sugar, pour over the boiling water, and
+when boiling again add the hot milk; beat the whipped cream into the hot
+cocoa, or serve a spoonful upon the top of each cup.
+
+
+=Ceylon Cocoa.=
+
+Scald a two-inch piece of paper-bark cinnamon with the milk to be used
+in making the cocoa.
+
+
+=Sultana Cocoa.=
+
+Stem and wash half a pound of sultana raisins; let them stand, covered
+with one quart of boiling water, upon the back of the range an hour or
+more; filter the water through folds of cheese-cloth and use in making
+cocoa or chocolate.
+
+
+=Egg Lemonade.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 egg.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar.
+ Juice of 2 lemons.
+ 2 cups of water.
+
+_Method._--Beat the egg until white and yolk are well mixed; then beat
+in the sugar, the lemon juice and the water.
+
+
+=Fruit Punch.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pineapple.
+ 4 cups of sugar.
+ 3 cups of boiling water.
+ 1 cup of tea, freshly made.
+ 5 lemons.
+ 6 oranges.
+ 1 pint of strawberry or grape juice.
+ 1/2 a pint of maraschino cherries.
+ 1 bottle of Apollinaris water.
+ 6 quarts of water.
+
+_Method._--Grate the pineapple, add the boiling water and the sugar, and
+boil fifteen minutes; add the tea and strain into the punch-bowl. When
+cold add the fruit juice, the cherries and the cold water. A short time
+before serving, add a piece of ice, and, on serving, the Apollinaris
+water. Strawberries, mint leaves, or slices of banana may be used in the
+place of the cherries.
+
+
+=Punch a la Nantes.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 pounds of rhubarb.
+ 1 pint of water.
+ 1 bay leaf.
+ 1 cup of sugar.
+ 1 cup of orange juice.
+ 1/4 a cup of lemon juice.
+ 1/4 a cup of ginger syrup.
+
+_Method._--Cut the rhubarb into pieces without peeling; add the bay leaf
+and water, and let simmer until the rhubarb is tender; strain through a
+cheese-cloth. Boil the juice with the sugar five minutes. When cold add
+the orange and lemon juice, with one-fourth a cup of syrup from a jar of
+preserved ginger, and a piece of ice. Add water as needed.
+
+
+=Home-made Soda Water.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2-1/4 pounds of granulated sugar.
+ 1-3/4 ounces of tartaric acid.
+ 1 pint of water.
+ Whites of 3 eggs.
+ 1/2 an ounce of ginger extract.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda for each glass.
+
+_Method._--Boil the sugar, water and tartaric acid five minutes. When
+nearly cold beat into the syrup the whites of the eggs, beaten until
+foamy, and the flavoring extract. Store in a fruit jar, closely covered.
+To use, put three tablespoonfuls into a glass half full of cold water,
+stir in one-fourth a teaspoonful of soda, and drink while effervescing.
+A pint of any kind of fruit juice may displace the water, when a
+teaspoonful of lemon juice should be added to the contents of each glass
+before stirring in the soda.
+
+
+=Spanish Chocolate.=
+
+(_To serve 60._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 quarts of milk.
+ 3 blades of mace.
+ 1 five-inch stick of cinnamon.
+ 12 cloves.
+ 20 pounded almonds.
+ 1 pound of chocolate.
+ 3 cups of sugar.
+ 2 quarts of boiling water.
+ Yolks of three eggs.
+
+_Method._--Scald the milk with the spices and nuts. Break up the
+chocolate and melt over hot water; add the sugar, mix thoroughly, then
+gradually stir in the boiling water; let cook two or three minutes after
+all the water has been added, then turn into the hot milk; let stand
+over hot water until ready to serve, then add the beaten yolks of eggs,
+diluted with half a cup of water, milk or cream, and strain through a
+cheese-cloth. Keep hot over hot water.
+
+
+=Claret Cup.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 quarts of claret.
+ 1 cup of sugar.
+ 1 cup of water.
+ 5 lemons cut in slices.
+ 1 dozen whole cloves.
+ 2 qts. of charged Apollinaris or soda water.
+ 1/4 a cup of brandy, sherry or maraschino.
+ Ice.
+
+Boil the sugar and water about six minutes; let cool, then add the lemon
+slices, with seeds removed, and the cloves; let stand some hours in a
+cold place. When ready to serve, add the claret, water and liqueur, all
+chilled on ice. Put a piece of ice in the pitcher and pour over it the
+mixture. The beverage should not be sweet.
+
+[Illustration: Copper Chafing-Dish with Earthen Casserole.]
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+CHAFING-DISH DAINTIES.
+
+ _Gentlemen, prepare not to be gone;
+ We have a trifling foolish banquet._
+ --ROMEO AND JULIET.
+
+ _Small cheer and great welcome makes a merry feast._
+ --COMEDY OF ERRORS, iii. I.
+
+
+ _A little quail, or some such light thing, when I
+ come home at night._
+
+ --CHARLES DICKENS.
+
+ _Now and then your men of wit
+ Will condescend to take a bit._
+ --SWIFT.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+=Chafing-dishes Past and Present.=
+
+ Well, he was an ingenious man that first found out
+ eating and drinking.--_Swift._
+
+
+How fire was discovered, when it was first applied to the needs of human
+beings, the origin and early use of cooking and heating utensils,--all
+are concealed from us in the mists that surround the life of prehistoric
+man. But at the dawn of history, even before the beginning of our era,
+crude appliances for cooking were in use; and, without doubt, one of the
+earliest of these was an utensil corresponding in some particulars, at
+least, to the chafing-dish of to-day.
+
+The chafing-dish is a portable utensil used upon the table, either for
+cooking food or for keeping food hot after it has been cooked by other
+means. In ancient times, the fuel of the chafing-dish was either live
+coals or olive oil; to-day we use either electricity, gas, alcohol or
+colonial spirits.
+
+The first chafing-dishes of which historic mention is made consisted of
+a pan heated over a pot of burning oil, the pan resting upon a frame
+which held the pot of oil. It was with such an utensil, perhaps, that
+the Israelitish women cooked the locusts of Egypt and Palestine, for
+these were eaten as a common food by the people of the biblical lands
+and age.
+
+Mommsen, in his history of Rome, while speaking of the extravagance of
+the times, as shown in the table furnishings, probably refers to the
+chafing-dish when he says: "A well-wrought bronze cooking-machine came
+to cost more than an estate." The idea that this might be the utensil
+referred to is strengthened by the fact that many chafing-dishes have
+been found in the ruins of Pompeii. These were made of bronze, and
+highly ornamented. Evidently, olive oil was the fuel used in these
+dishes.
+
+Coming down to more modern times, Madame de Stael had a dish of very
+unique pattern, and, when driven by the command of Napoleon from her
+beloved Paris, she carried her chafing-dish with her into exile as one
+of her most cherished household gods. At the present day among the
+favored few, who have full purses, are found sets of little silver
+chafing-dishes about four inches square. These tiny dishes rest upon a
+doylie-covered plate, and a bird or rarebit may be served in them as a
+course at dinner, one to each guest. The cooking is not done in these
+dishes, and they are not furnished with lamps; in them the food, while
+it is being eaten, is simply kept hot by means of a tiny pan filled with
+hot water.
+
+[Illustration: Chafing-Dish, Filler, Etc.
+
+"With all Appliances and Means to boot."]
+
+In reality, the modern chafing-dish is a species of _bain marie_, or
+double boiler, with a lamp so arranged that cooking can be done
+without other appliances. It consists of four parts. The _first_ is the
+blazer, or the pan in which the cooking is done; this is provided with a
+long handle. The _second_ is the hot-water pan, which corresponds to the
+lower part of the double boiler; this should be provided with handles,
+and is a very inconvenient dish without them. The _third_ is the frame
+upon which the hot-water pan rests, and in which the spirit-lamp is set.
+The _last_, but by no means least, part is the lamp; this is provided
+with a cotton or an asbestos wick. When the lamp has a cotton wick, the
+flame is regulated by turning the wick up or down, as in an ordinary
+lamp. At present this style of lamp is found only in the more expensive
+grades of dishes,--silver-plated, and costing from $15 upwards. When
+asbestos is used as the wick, the lamp is filled with this porous stone,
+which is to be saturated with alcohol immediately before using, and the
+top is covered with a wire netting. The flame is regulated by means of
+metal slides, which open and shut over the netting, thus cutting off or
+letting on the flame, as it is desired.
+
+
+=Chafing-dish Appointments.=
+
+ With all appliances and means to boot.
+ --HENRY IV., iii. I.
+
+The chafing-dish should always rest upon a tray, as a very slight
+draught of air, or the expansion of the alcohol when heated, will
+sometimes cause the flame to flare out and downward, and thus an
+unprotected tablecloth might be set on fire.
+
+Often a cutlet dish is considered a necessary part of a chafing-dish
+outfit; but as one of the chief merits of the chafing-dish consists in
+the possibility of serving a repast the instant it is cooked, there
+would seem to be a want of propriety in removing the cooked article to a
+platter and garnishing the dish before serving.
+
+A polished wooden spoon, with long handle and small bowl, is a most
+convenient utensil to use while cooking the dainty; but the regulation
+chafing-dish spoon is needed when serving the same. Such a spoon has a
+broad bowl of silver or aluminum, with rounded end, and a long ebony
+handle.
+
+The filler is a most convenient article for use, when the lamp needs
+replenishing with alcohol, but in its absence the alcohol may be turned
+into a small pitcher and from that into the lamp. A lamp of the average
+size holds about five tablespoonfuls of alcohol, and this quantity will
+supply heat for at least half an hour.
+
+Glass, granite or tin measuring-cups, upon which thirds or quarters are
+indicated, also tea- and tablespoons, are essential for accurate
+measurements.
+
+Several items are essential to the successful serving of a meal from the
+chafing-dish. To be a pronounced success, the work must be done
+noiselessly and gracefully. The preparation of all articles is the same
+for the chafing-dish as for the common stove; but where the mixing is
+done at the table, as for a rarebit, the recipe takes on an additional
+flavor, according to the deftness with which it is done.
+
+Let, then, everything be ready and at hand, before the guests or family
+assemble at the table. Have the lamp filled and covered, so that it may
+remain filled. Have all seasonings measured out in a cup. In case the
+yolks of eggs are to be used, they will not injure, having been beaten
+beforehand, if they be kept covered. When oysters are to be served, have
+them washed, freed from bits of shell, drained, and left in a pitcher
+from which they can be readily poured. The quantity of butter used in
+the recipes is indicated by tablespoonfuls, and may be measured out
+beforehand and rolled into dainty balls with butter-hands, a spoonful in
+each ball.
+
+Bear in mind that the hot-water pan is to be used in all cases where the
+double boiler would be used, if the cooking were to be done upon the
+range. For instance, where the recipe calls for milk or cream, except in
+the making of a sauce, use the bath from the beginning. Also, be careful
+always to place the blazer in the bath before eggs are added to any
+mixture. Indeed, the hot-water pan is the one feature of the
+chafing-dish which it is most important to notice; for on the proper use
+of the hot-water pan the value of the chafing-dish as an exponent of
+scientific cookery entirely depends. She who well understands the
+principles upon which the use of this rests has gained no small insight
+into the secret of all cookery, be it scientific, economic or hygienic;
+for a knowledge of the effect of heat at different temperatures, applied
+to food, is the very foundation-stone upon which all cookery rests.
+
+Although the chafing-dish is especially adapted to the needs of the
+bachelor, man or maid, its use should not be relegated entirely to the
+homeless or the Bohemian. In the sick-room, at the luncheon-table, on
+Sunday night, it is most serviceable and wellnigh indispensable; it
+always suggests hearty welcome and good cheer.
+
+While it is out of place, at any ceremonial meal, as a means of cooking,
+even on such occasions a lobster Newburgh or other dish that needs be
+served piping hot to be eaten at its best may be brought on in
+individual chafing-dishes. These are supplied with hot-water pans and
+lamps. At a chafing-dish supper each guest can prepare his own rarebit.
+
+Any operation in cooking that can be performed on the kitchen range may
+be successfully carried out on the chafing-dish, provided one be skilled
+in its use. But as the dining-room is usually chosen as the site in
+which to test its possibilities, here it were well to confine one's
+efforts to such dishes as will not give rise to too much disorder.
+Sauteing and frying it were better to reserve for the range and a
+well-ventilated kitchen.
+
+[Illustration: Course at Formal Dinner served in Individual
+Chafing-Dishes.
+
+(See page 157)]
+
+Alcohol is most commonly used in the lamp of the chafing-dish; and, on
+account of its cheapness, one is often advised to buy _wood_ alcohol.
+But in large markets, where many fowl are singed daily over an alcohol
+flame, the marketmen will tell you that the very best article is none
+too good for their purpose. It does not smoke, wastes less rapidly, and
+in the end will prove quite as economical.
+
+
+=Are Midnight Suppers Hygienic?=
+
+ "Being no further enemy to you
+ Than the constraint of hospitable zeal."
+
+In regard to the chafing-dish and its most prominent use, some one may
+fittingly ask: Is it hygienic to eat at midnight? Can one keep one's
+health and eat late suppers? As in all things pertaining to food, no set
+rules can be given to meet every case; much depends upon constitutional
+traits, individual habits and idiosyncrasies. One may practise what
+another cannot attempt. As a rule, however, people who eat a hearty
+dinner, after the work of the day is done, do not need to eat again
+until the following breakfast hour.
+
+Those who are engaged, either mentally or physically, throughout the
+evening, cannot with impunity, eat a very hearty meal previous to that
+effort; but after their work is done they need nourishing food, and food
+that is both easily digested and assimilated. But even these should not
+eat and then immediately retire; for during sleep all the bodily organs,
+including the stomach, become dormant. Food partaken at this hour is not
+properly taken care of, and in too many cases must be digested when the
+individual has awakened, out of sorts, the next morning.
+
+It is well to remember, also, that, at any time after food is eaten,
+there should be a period of rest from all active effort; for then the
+blood flows from the other organs of the body to the stomach, and the
+work of digestion is begun. Oftentimes we hear men say they must smoke
+after meals, for unless they do so they cannot digest their food. They
+fail to see that it is not the tobacco that promotes digestion, but the
+enforced repose.
+
+But, if we must eat at midnight, the question may well be asked, What
+shall we eat? That which can be digested and assimilated with the least
+effort on the part of the digestive organs. And among such things we may
+note oysters, eggs and game, when these have been properly--that is,
+delicately--cooked.
+
+
+=How to Make Sauces.=
+
+ Let hunger move thy appetyte, and not savory
+ sauces.--_Babees Book._
+
+ "Change is the sauce that sharpens appetite."
+
+As so many dishes are prepared in the chafing-dish that require the use
+of a simple sauce, we give in this place the methods usually followed in
+the preparation of common sauces. For one cup of sauce, put two
+tablespoonfuls of butter into the blazer; let the butter simply melt,
+without coloring, if for a white sauce, but cook until brown for a brown
+sauce. Mix together two tablespoonfuls of flour, one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of salt and a dash of black or white pepper, or a few grains
+of cayenne or paprica, and beat it into the bubbling butter; let the
+mixture cook two or three minutes, then stir into it, rather gradually
+at first, and beating constantly, one cup of cold milk, water or stock.
+Now, when the sauce boils up once after all the liquid is in, it is
+ready for use. In making a white sauce some cooks add, from time to time
+while the sauce is being stirred, a few drops of lemon juice, which they
+claim makes the sauce much whiter.
+
+Sometimes we make the sauce after another fashion, using the same
+proportions of the various ingredients. If water or stock be used, put
+it in the blazer directly over the fire. If the liquid be milk, put it
+into the blazer, and the blazer over hot water; cream together the
+butter, flour and seasonings, dilute with a little of the hot liquid,
+pour into the remainder of the hot liquid, and stir constantly until the
+sauce thickens, and then occasionally for ten or fifteen minutes, until
+the flour is thoroughly cooked.
+
+In making a brown sauce, first brown the butter, then brown the flour in
+the butter, and, whenever it is convenient, use brown stock as the
+liquid.
+
+
+INGREDIENTS FOR ONE CUP OF SAUCE.
+
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A few grains of pepper.
+ 1 cup of liquid.
+
+
+INGREDIENTS FOR ONE PINT OF SAUCE.
+
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of pepper.
+ 1 pint of liquid.
+
+
+=Measuring.=
+
+In all recipes where flour is used, unless otherwise stated, the flour
+is measured after sifting once. When flour is measured by cups, the cup
+is filled with a spoon, and a level cupful is meant. A tablespoonful or
+teaspoonful of any designated material is a level spoonful of such
+material.
+
+
+=Flavoring.=
+
+When rich soup stock, flavored with vegetables and sweet herbs, is at
+hand for use in sauces, additional seasonings are not necessary; but
+when a sauce is made of milk, water, or water and meat extract, some
+flavor more or less pronounced is demanded. A few bits of onion and
+carrot browned in hot butter, or anchovy sauce or curry may be added;
+but, all things considered, the most convenient way to secure an
+appetizing flavor is by the use of "Kitchen Bouquet." This alone or in
+conjunction with a dash of some one of the many really good proprietary
+sauces on the market is well-nigh indispensable in chafing-dish
+cookery.
+
+
+
+
+RECIPES.
+
+ "_No variety here,
+ But you, most noble guests, whose gracious looks
+ Must make a dish or two become a feast._"
+
+
+
+
+OYSTER DISHES.
+
+ He was a bold man that first ate an
+ oyster.--_Swift._
+
+
+=Oysters.=
+
+Put into the blazer twenty-five to fifty choice oysters. As soon as they
+are hot and look plump, add salt, pepper and butter. Serve on buttered
+toast or crackers. Add two tablespoonfuls of cream or half a
+tablespoonful of lemon juice before serving, if desired.
+
+
+=Oysters, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of solid oysters.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1 scant teaspoonful of salt.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+ Beaten yolks of 2 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Put the oysters into the blazer. When they look plump and the
+edges curl, put the blazer into the hot-water pan and add the
+seasonings. Add a few spoonfuls of the liquor from the pan to the yolks
+of the eggs, and, after mixing well, pour into the chafing-dish. Stir
+constantly until the liquor thickens, then serve on thin slices of
+buttered toast or on thin crackers.
+
+
+=Oysters a la D'Uxelles.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of parboiled and drained oysters.
+ 1 pint of oyster liquor or chicken stock.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of chopped mushrooms.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ A few drops of onion juice.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ Yolks of 2 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Let the oysters be parboiled and drained beforehand. (To
+parboil, heat quickly to the boiling-point in their own liquor.) Melt
+the butter in the blazer, add the flour, salt and pepper, and cook till
+frothy; add the oyster liquor or chicken stock and cook until the
+boiling-point is reached. Now add the oysters, and, as soon as they are
+heated thoroughly, put the blazer into the bath and add the beaten
+yolks, the onion and lemon juice and the mushrooms. As soon as the eggs
+thicken the sauce a little, serve on toast or crackers. If uncooked
+mushrooms are used, cook them in the butter two or three minutes before
+the flour and seasonings are added.
+
+
+=Curried Oysters.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of oysters (parboiled and drained).
+ 1/2 a cup of cream.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1 tablespoonful of flour.
+ 1/2 a cup of oyster liquor.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of curry powder.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of chopped onion.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1 saltspoonful of pepper.
+
+_Method._--Cook the onion and butter in the blazer a few moments. Mix
+the flour and curry powder and stir into the butter. When frothy add the
+oyster liquor. As soon as the sauce boils up once, add the salt, pepper
+and cream, and, in a moment, the oysters. When the oysters are
+thoroughly heated, serve on buttered toast or crackers.
+
+
+=Curried Oysters, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of oysters.
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ One small mild onion.
+ 1 tablespoonful of curry powder.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 1 cup of oyster liquor.
+ 1 cup of white stock.
+ 1/2 a cup of thick tomato pulp.
+ Salt and pepper to taste.
+
+_Method._--Bring the oysters to the boiling-point in their own liquor,
+skim, drain, and set aside. Heat the butter in the blazer, saute in it
+the onion cut in slices, stir in the flour and curry powder mixed with
+the salt and pepper, and, when frothy, add the oyster liquor, stock and
+tomato pulp (a pint of pulp reduced by slow cooking to half a cup). When
+the sauce boils, add the oysters; and when hot serve on buttered toast
+or fried bread.
+
+
+=Fricassee of Oysters.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 quart of oysters.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ Yolks of 2 eggs.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1 tablespoonful of flour.
+ Pepper, salt, cayenne.
+
+_Method._--Brown the butter and add to it the parsley, seasonings and
+flour; let heat, then add the well-drained oysters, and, when the edges
+begin to curl, add the well-beaten yolks. Serve on warmed plates, with
+fried bread and parsley.
+
+
+=Creamed Dishes.=
+
+(_Oysters, shrimps, lobsters, sweetbreads, chicken, veal, fish,
+mushrooms, asparagus tips, peas, etc._)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ 2 saltspoonfuls of salt.
+ 2 cups of cream, or 2 cups of milk and 4 tablespoonfuls
+ of butter.
+ 1 saltspoonful of pepper.
+ 1 pint of fish, meat, etc.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of mushrooms, chopped or diced.
+ 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1 teaspoonful of onion juice.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+
+_Method._--Prepare the sauce in the usual manner. If oysters are used,
+they should have been parboiled previously and drained, and, if large,
+cut in pieces. Fish should be flaked when hot, and meats cut into dice
+when cold.
+
+
+=Devilled Dishes.=
+
+Season any of the creamed dishes highly with cayenne, onion juice,
+mustard, and Worcestershire or other sauce.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Oysters.=
+
+Cream together two tablespoonfuls of butter and one tablespoonful of
+anchovy paste. Melt in the blazer, then add half a dozen eggs, beaten
+slightly with one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica.
+Stir and cook, and, when beginning to thicken, add half a pint of
+oysters, parboiled, "bearded," and cut fine. When scrambled, serve on
+sippets of toast, lightly spread with anchovy paste.
+
+
+=Panned Oysters.=
+
+With a fork pressed into a butter ball, rub over the bottom of the hot
+blazer. Then cover the surface with small rounds of toast, and put one
+or two uncooked oysters on each round; cover, and cook until plump, dust
+with salt and pepper, and put a bit of butter on each oyster. Serve,
+when the butter has melted, with slices of lemon.
+
+
+=Panned Oysters with Maitre d'Hotel Butter.=
+
+Cook as before. Have ready two tablespoonfuls of butter beaten to a
+cream; add a few grains of salt and paprica, one tablespoonful of
+chopped parsley, and, by degrees, the juice of half a lemon. Spread upon
+the oysters before serving.
+
+
+=Oyster Cromeskies.=
+
+Scald the oysters in their own liquor over a quick fire. When plump wrap
+each oyster in a slice of bacon, and fasten with a small skewer (wooden
+toothpick). Saute in the blazer, heated very hot. Serve on thin rounds
+of toast. These cromeskies are most easily cooked in a double broiler,
+resting on a dripping-pan, in a hot oven.
+
+
+=Oysters Saute.=
+
+Wash and drain the oysters, season with salt and pepper, roll in fine
+crumbs, dip in beaten egg, then roll in crumbs again. Put a little olive
+oil or clarified butter in the blazer; when it is heated, put in the
+oysters, brown them on one side, turn, and brown on the other side.
+
+
+=Oyster Canapes.=
+
+Scald a cup of cream, add two tablespoonfuls of fine-grated bread
+crumbs, a tablespoonful of butter, a dash of paprica and a grating of
+nutmeg; then add two dozen oysters, washed, drained and chopped. Stir
+until the oysters are thoroughly heated, but without boiling the
+mixture. Spread rounds of toast with butter, and then with the oyster
+mixture. Serve at once accompanied by olives, pim-olas or gherkins.
+
+
+=Escalloped Oysters.=
+
+Stir one cup of cracker crumbs into half a cup of melted butter. Heat
+half a cup of cream or strained oyster liquor in the blazer, put in a
+layer of oysters (about a cup), washed and drained, and sprinkle with a
+part of the prepared crumbs, salt and pepper; add another layer of
+oysters, the rest of the crumbs, and salt and pepper. Cover, and cook
+nearly ten minutes. Do not stir the oysters.
+
+
+
+
+LOBSTER AND OTHER SEA FISH.
+
+ And ate a lobster, and sang and mighty merry.
+ --_Pepys' Diary._
+
+ Take every creature in of every kind.
+ --_Pope._
+
+
+=Buttered Lobster.=
+
+Pick the meat from a boiled lobster and cut it into small pieces; sift
+over it the coral; mix with it also the liver, two tablespoonfuls of
+vinegar or three of lemon juice, one-third a cup of butter and
+one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of cayenne and made mustard; heat in the
+blazer until thoroughly hot. Serve on cup-shaped leaves of lettuce with
+a quarter of a hard-boiled _egg_ on the top of each portion.
+
+
+=Lobster a la Newburgh.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Meat of 2 medium-sized lobsters.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of pepper.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls, each, of sherry wine and brandy.
+ Grating of nutmeg.
+ Yolks of 4 eggs.
+ 1 cup of cream.
+
+_Method._--Remove the meat from the shells and cut it into delicate
+slices. Put the butter in the blazer, and, when it melts, put the
+lobster into it and cook four or five minutes. Add the salt, pepper,
+nutmeg, wine and brandy. Stir the cream into the beaten yolks, and then
+stir both into the lobster mixture. Serve as soon as the eggs thicken
+the sauce.
+
+
+=Plain Lobster.=
+
+Pour three tablespoonfuls of lemon juice over the meat of one lobster
+and season with salt and pepper. Put three tablespoonfuls of butter in
+the blazer, and, when it is melted, add the prepared lobster; stir until
+hot and serve at once.
+
+
+=Clams a la Newburgh.=
+
+Use one quart of clams. Separate the hard from the soft parts of the
+clams. Chop the hard parts fine. Substitute the soft and the chopped
+parts of the clams for the lobster and proceed as for lobster a la
+Newburgh.
+
+Oyster, chicken, turkey or sweetbread a la Newburgh may be prepared by
+substituting one of the above ingredients for the lobster.
+
+
+=Lobster a la Bordelaise.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 cloves of garlic, chopped.
+ 1 sliced carrot.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 glasses of white wine (half a cup).
+ Meat of 2 lobsters.
+ 1 glass of brandy.
+ 3 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ Chopped parsley, white and cayenne pepper, salt.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter in the blazer and in it cook the onion and
+carrot about five minutes. Remove the carrot; add the wine, lobster and
+seasonings. When thoroughly heated, add the butter, parsley and brandy
+and serve at once.
+
+
+=Hawaiian Lobster Curry.=
+
+(ADA D. WAGG.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1-1/2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1/2 an onion, chopped
+ 1 clove of garlic, very fine.
+ A small piece of grated ginger root.
+ 1-1/2 tablespoonfuls of cornstarch.
+ 1-1/2 tablespoonfuls of curry powder.
+ 1 pint of milk.
+ 1 grated cocoanut.
+ Meat of a lobster weighing 2 pounds.
+ Salt and pepper to taste.
+
+_Method._--Grate the cocoanut and set it aside to soak an hour in one
+pint of milk. Saute the onion and garlic in the butter, add the
+cornstarch and seasonings, and cook until frothy; add the milk strained
+from the cocoanut, gradually, and, when the sauce boils up once, add the
+lobster; salt and pepper to taste.
+
+
+=Lobster a la Bechamel.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Meat of 2 lobsters.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 4 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ Salt and pepper.
+ Grating of nutmeg.
+ 1 cup of cream.
+ 4 yolks of eggs.
+ 1 cup of white stock, seasoned with mace, bay leaf, etc.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ Dried and sifted coral.
+
+_Method._--Cut the lobster in delicate slices or in dice, as preferred.
+Make a bechamel sauce, after the usual manner, of the butter, flour,
+seasonings, cream and stock. Add the lobster, and, when heated
+thoroughly, add the beaten yolks mixed with a few spoonfuls of the sauce
+from the blazer. Add the lemon juice, and sprinkle the dried and sifted
+coral or some chopped parsley over the top of the mixture as it is
+served.
+
+Oysters, clams, sweetbread, chicken or turkey may be served a la
+Bordelaise or Bechamel.
+
+
+=Lobster a la Poulette.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/3 a cup of butter.
+ 1/3 a cup of flour.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ Dash of paprica.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of white pepper.
+ 1 cup of cream.
+ 1 cup of well-seasoned chicken stock.
+ Juice of half a lemon.
+ 2 hard-boiled eggs.
+ 1 pint of diced lobster meat.
+
+_Method._--Prepare a white sauce, using the ingredients mentioned, and
+adding the lemon juice by degrees. Add the lobster to the sauce. Cut the
+whites of the hard-boiled eggs in rings and pass the yolks through a
+sieve. Serve the lobster on bits of toast, or on thin crackers, with a
+sprinkling of the yolks over the lobster, and circles of the whites
+around it.
+
+
+=Oyster Crabs a la Hollandaise.=
+
+Remove the meat from one pint of oyster crabs; put this, with a little
+of the liquor, into the blazer, add two tablespoonfuls of butter, a
+dash of paprica and a scant half-teaspoonful of salt, and let cook three
+or four minutes without boiling. Set the blazer over hot water and add
+three-fourths a cup of hollandaise sauce (either hot or cold). Stir
+until the mixture is heated, then add one tablespoonful of lemon juice
+and one teaspoonful of chopped parsley. Serve on toast, in Swedish
+timbale cases or in patty cases.
+
+
+=Hollandaise Sauce.=
+
+Put one-fourth a cup of vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of butter, a grating
+of nutmeg and a dash of paprica over hot water to heat. Beat the yolks
+of four eggs, add the hot vinegar to them, return to the fire, and stir
+constantly while the mixture thickens; then add two more tablespoonfuls
+of butter in bits.
+
+Shrimps, oysters, lobsters and delicate fish are all good when served
+after this recipe.
+
+
+=Devilled Crabs.=
+
+Melt one tablespoonful of butter, add one tablespoonful of flour, and,
+when blended, one cup of milk. Add the yolks of two hard-boiled eggs
+rubbed through a sieve, and season to taste with salt, paprica, a
+teaspoonful of lemon juice and wine; cayenne, mustard and tobasco sauce
+are approved by some. Add one cup of crab meat and one-fourth a cup of
+canned mushrooms cut in quarters. Serve on toast.
+
+
+=Oyster Crabs.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of oyster crabs.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1/2 an onion, sliced.
+ 1 tablespoonful of flour.
+ 1 cup of white stock.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1 yolk of egg.
+ Salt and pepper.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter in the blazer, add the onion, and let cook
+until a light-brown color; add the flour and mix until smooth; add the
+stock and stir until it thickens. Add the crab meat, lemon juice,
+parsley, salt and pepper. Beat the yolk of the egg and add two or three
+spoonfuls of the sauce to it; mix well, add to the ingredients in the
+blazer, stir constantly, and serve as soon as heated.
+
+
+=Crabs a la Creole.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 green pepper, chopped fine.
+ 1 clove of garlic, chopped fine.
+ 1 small onion, chopped fine.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1 cup of tomatoes.
+ 1 cup of crab meat.
+ Pepper and salt.
+
+_Method._--Put the butter in the blazer; when melted, add the garlic,
+onion, salt, pepper and tomatoes, and let cook ten minutes; add the crab
+meat (fresh or canned). Serve when hot on sippets of toast.
+
+
+=Shrimps a la Poulette.=
+
+Make a sauce of one-fourth a cup, each, of butter and flour, half a
+teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper and one cup and a half of white
+stock; add one tablespoonful of anchovy essence and a quart of shelled
+shrimps. When hot add the beaten yolks of two eggs, with half a cup of
+cream. Lastly, add a tablespoonful of lemon juice and serve, _without_
+boiling, on sippets of toast.
+
+
+=Shrimps with Peas.=
+
+A pint of shrimps and a cup of peas, heated in a cup and a half of cream
+sauce, are particularly good.
+
+
+=Anchovy Toast.=
+
+Put about two tablespoonfuls of clarified butter into the blazer. When
+hot add bread cut as for sandwiches. Brown the bread on one side, turn,
+and brown the other side. Spread with anchovy paste and serve at once.
+
+
+=Anchovy Toast with Eggs.=
+
+Prepare the anchovy toast in one chafing-dish, and, at the same time,
+the eggs in another. Beat five eggs slightly, add half a teaspoonful of
+salt, a dash of pepper and half a cup of cream or milk. Put a large
+tablespoonful of butter in the blazer; when melted, add the egg mixture.
+Stir until the egg is creamy, and serve on the anchovy toast.
+
+
+=Anchovy Toast with Spinach.=
+
+Press cooked spinach, chopped fine, through a puree sieve; reheat with a
+little butter, salt and two or three drops of tobasco sauce. Saute
+rounds of bread to a golden brown in a little hot butter, spread with
+anchovy paste, and over this spread the puree of spinach. Press into the
+spinach on each round of bread a quarter of a hard-boiled egg cut
+lengthwise, having the yolk uppermost.
+
+
+=Anchovies with Olives.=
+
+All the preparations for this dish, with the exception of sauteing the
+bread, may be made some hours before serving.
+
+Thoroughly wash the anchovies, cut off the fillets, and chop very fine
+with a sprig of parsley and a few chives, or a slice or two of Bermuda
+onion; put the whole into a mortar and pound well, adding, meanwhile, a
+little paprica. Cut some large selected olives in halves, take out the
+stones, and fill them with the anchovy mixture. Cut small rounds of
+bread an inch and a half in diameter and an inch in thickness; remove a
+crumb, similar in shape to the olive, from the centre of each. Put a
+little butter into the blazer, and, when hot, saute the rounds of bread
+on both sides; drain on soft paper, put an olive in the centre of each
+and a little mayonnaise over the whole. Five anchovies will suffice to
+stuff a dozen olives.
+
+
+=Sardine Canapes.=
+
+Have ready yolks of eggs, cooked until firm, and an equal bulk of
+sardines, each rubbed to a paste. Mix thoroughly, and season with salt,
+pepper and lemon juice. Prepare some bread in the blazer as for anchovy
+toast; then spread with the sardine mixture and serve at once.
+
+
+=Curried Sardines.=
+
+Mix together one teaspoonful, each, of sugar and curry powder and a
+saltspoonful of salt. Put these into the blazer with one cup of cream
+and half a teaspoonful of lemon juice. Stir until the mixture is hot,
+then put into it ten or twelve sardines. In the mean time, heat some
+butter or oil in a second blazer, and in it saute some bits of bread a
+little larger than the sardines, and round slices of tart apple. Serve
+each sardine on a bit of bread; pour a little of the sauce over the top
+and garnish with a round of apple. The slices of apple will keep their
+shape, if the apples be cored and then cut into rounds without paring.
+
+
+=Sardines.=
+
+(_French fashion._)
+
+Remove the skins and tails from about a dozen sardines and heat them in
+the oven. Heat some butter or oil in the blazer of one chafing-dish, and
+in it saute some bits of bread of suitable shape to serve under the
+sardines. Put in the blazer of another chafing-dish, over hot water,
+the well-beaten yolks of four eggs, one teaspoonful, each, of tarragon
+vinegar, cider vinegar and made mustard, one-fourth a teaspoonful of
+salt and one tablespoonful of butter. Stir the sauce until it is quite
+thick, then serve the sardines on the bread with the sauce poured over
+them. Olives are agreeable with this dish.
+
+[Illustration: Butter Balls, with Utensils for Chafing-Dish.]
+
+[Illustration: Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas.]
+
+
+=Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas.=
+
+Two chafing-dishes will be requisite for preparing this delicious
+luncheon dish.
+
+Have ready one pound of raw halibut chopped very fine; beat the yolk of
+an egg, add to it one teaspoonful and a fourth of salt, one-fourth a
+teaspoonful of white pepper and a few grains of cayenne or paprica.
+Blend a teaspoonful of cornstarch with a little milk; then add milk to
+make two-thirds a cup, stir gradually into the egg and seasonings, and
+then very slowly into the fish. Lastly, fold into the mixture one-third
+a cup of thick cream, beaten until stiff. Butter dariole moulds
+thoroughly, arrange a circle of cooked peas around the bottom of each
+mould, and fill with the fish preparation two-thirds full. Set into the
+blazer, surrounded with boiling water; after the water is again boiling,
+turn down the flame so that the water will barely quiver, and let cook
+about twenty minutes. Prepare, in the mean time, in the second blazer,
+creamed peas. Turn the fish from the moulds and surround with the
+
+
+=Creamed Peas.=
+
+Have ready one can of peas, drained, rinsed, covered with boiling water
+and drained again. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter; add one
+tablespoonful of flour with one teaspoonful of sugar and half a
+teaspoonful of salt; add the peas and one-third a cup of milk, stir, and
+let cook until the liquid begins to bubble.
+
+
+=Puree of Fish.=
+
+Scald one quart of milk, with half an onion and a stalk of celery;
+strain into a pitcher and keep hot if convenient. Add to the remnants of
+cold boiled white fish enough canned salmon to make two cups; chop fine
+and rub through a puree sieve. Cook together in the blazer two
+tablespoonfuls of butter, three of flour, one teaspoonful of salt and a
+dash of pepper. Add the milk gradually, and, when all is added and the
+contents of the blazer are boiling, put a few spoonfuls of the sauce
+into the fish and beat until smooth; add more sauce, and, when well
+diluted and smooth, turn the whole into the blazer. Stir, and let cook
+until very hot; then serve with crackers, split, buttered, and browned
+in the oven. These proportions give three pints of soup. Vegetable
+purees may be prepared in the same way.
+
+
+=Salt Codfish with Tomato Sauce.=
+
+Saute one clove of garlic and half an onion, grated or chopped fine, in
+three tablespoonfuls of butter; add two tablespoonfuls of flour,
+one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica and one pimento, chopped fine; also,
+add one cup of tomato pulp, and, when the sauce boils, half a pound of
+"hatcheled" codfish, or any salt codfish picked into small pieces and
+freshened in one quart of cold water. Serve, while hot, with brownbread
+sandwiches, and pickles or pim-olas.
+
+
+=Salt Codfish in Cream Sauce.=
+
+Pick enough salt codfish into bits to make one cup. Let stand in cold
+water about half an hour. Make one cup of cream sauce, using one
+tablespoonful and a half of flour, two tablespoonfuls of butter and one
+cup of cream; remove all the water from the fish by wringing in a
+cheese-cloth, add the fish to the sauce, and, when heated, stir in a
+lightly beaten egg. Serve upon rounds of toast, with olives, or plain
+lettuce, or tomato salad.
+
+
+=Rechauffe of Fish.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of cooked fish, flaked.
+ 1 cup of macaroni, cooked, and still hot.
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ 1 cup of tomato puree.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ Dash of pepper.
+ 8 drops of tobasco sauce.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter in the blazer and toss about in it the
+macaroni and fish; add the seasonings and the tomato puree, which should
+be well reduced. Serve when thoroughly heated.
+
+
+=Rechauffe of Fish, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of cooked fish, flaked and seasoned.
+ 1/4 a cup of butter.
+ 1/4 a cup of flour.
+ 1 cup of fish stock.
+ 1 cup of cream and milk combined.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt, if needed.
+ 1 teaspoonful of anchovy paste.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of paprica.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of oil.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice.
+ 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley.
+
+_Method._--Marinate the fish while hot with salt, pepper, oil and lemon
+juice, adding, also, a few drops of onion juice, if desired. At
+serving-time make a sauce of the butter, flour, salt, paprica, stock and
+cream; add the paste and the fish, and, when the fish is thoroughly
+heated, turn down the flame of the lamp or set the blazer into hot
+water. Sprinkle with the parsley and serve.
+
+
+=Sardines on Toast.=
+
+Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer; add two tablespoonfuls
+of flour and a dash of paprica, and stir until smooth and browned a
+little; then add half a cup of stock and half a cup of sherry; stir
+until thickened, then let simmer a few minutes, and add nearly a cup of
+sardines, from which the bones and skin have been removed and the flesh
+separated into small pieces. Let stand until very hot.
+
+
+
+
+CHEESE CONFECTIONS.
+
+ You must eat no cheese . . . it breeds melancholy.
+ --_B. Jonson._
+
+ Art thou come? Why my cheese, my digestion!
+ --_Troilus and Cressida._
+
+
+Cheese is probably the most popular article served from the
+chafing-dish. What possessor of a chafing-dish has not concocted a
+rarebit--and the best one ever made? Were you ever present when the
+process of evolving a rarebit was in progress and half the guests were
+not disappointed in the seasoning? For perfection in this toothsome
+dish, mustard is demanded by some; by others the use of this biting
+condiment is considered a lapse in culinary taste. The consensus of
+opinion, however, is in favor of paprica; and, theoretically, Mattieu
+Williams considers bicarbonate of soda to be demanded, not for the sake
+of seasoning, but as an aid to digestion.
+
+As regards the digestibility of cheese, and, consequently, its
+adaptability to midnight suppers, opinions differ widely. Dr. Hoy, an
+excellent authority on diet, calls cheese a concentrated meat, a tissue
+builder,--but not itself a tissue, and so without waste elements,--a
+condensed, compact food product, and indigestible on account of its
+very compactness. Still, when the caseine, or curd, is softened and
+broken up by the addition of liquid and gentle heat, it is rendered more
+digestible; and cheese so prepared may be for some, if taken with no
+other nitrogenous food, an acceptable and easily digested article of
+diet.
+
+
+=Welsh Rarebit.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1/2 a pound of cheese, cut fine or grated.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of paprica.
+ 1/2 a cup of cream.
+ The beaten yolks of 2 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter, add the cheese and seasonings, and stir
+until melted; then add the eggs, diluted with the cream, and stir until
+smooth and slightly thickened. _Do not allow the mixture to boil_ at any
+time in the cooking; if necessary, cook over hot water. Serve on thin
+crackers, hot shredded-wheat or granose biscuit, or on bread toasted on
+but one side, placing the rarebit on the untoasted side.
+
+
+=Welsh Rarebit, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of cornstarch.
+ 1/2 a cup of thin cream.
+ 1/2 a pound of mild cheese.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a saltspoonful of mustard.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter; add to it the cream in which the cornstarch
+has been stirred. Let cook two minutes, and add the cheese broken into
+bits. Stir until the cheese is melted and the mixture perfectly smooth.
+Add the salt, mustard and paprica, and serve at once as above.
+
+
+=Welsh Rarebit with Ale.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ Generous 1/2 a pound of soft American cheese, broken into bits.
+ 1/3 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1 teaspoonful of mustard.
+ A few grains of cayenne.
+ 1/2 a cup of ale.
+ 1 egg.
+
+_Method._--Put the butter into the chafing-dish (using the bath); when
+melted, add the cheese and ale. Mix the salt, mustard and cayenne, add
+the egg, and beat thoroughly. When the cheese is melted, add the egg
+mixture and let cook until it thickens. Serve as before.
+
+
+=Halibut Rarebit.=
+
+Marinate a cup of cooked halibut, flaked, with one tablespoonful of
+olive oil, a few drops of onion juice, one tablespoonful of lemon juice,
+one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica. Make a sauce of
+two tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour, one-fourth a teaspoonful
+of salt and half a cup, each, of chicken stock and cream. Add two-thirds
+a cup of grated cheese and the halibut. Serve, as soon as the fish is
+hot and the cheese melted, on the untoasted side of bread toasted on one
+side.
+
+
+=Oyster Rarebit.=
+
+Clean and remove the hard muscles from half a pint of oysters; parboil
+the oysters in the chafing-dish in their own liquor until their edges
+curl, then remove to a hot bowl. Put one tablespoonful of butter, half a
+pound of cheese broken in small bits, one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of
+salt and mustard and a few grains of cayenne into the chafing-dish.
+While the cheese is melting, beat two eggs slightly, and add to them the
+oyster liquor; mix this gradually with the melted cheese, add the
+oysters, and turn at once over hot toast.
+
+
+=Sardine Rarebit.=
+
+Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add half a pound of fresh cheese,
+grated or broken into bits, and stir constantly while it melts; then add
+gradually the beaten yolk of an egg, diluted with two-thirds a cup of
+cream. Stir until smooth and slightly thickened; season with a scant
+half a teaspoonful of paprica, one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt and a
+few drops of tabasco sauce. Have ready a box of sardines, drained,
+broiled carefully and laid on the untoasted side of bread toasted on one
+side; pour the rarebit over the sardines and serve at once.
+
+
+=Golden Buck.=
+
+Prepare a rarebit in one chafing-dish; break some eggs into the blazer
+of another containing salted water just "off the boil." When the eggs
+are poached and the rarebit ready, place an egg above the rarebit on
+each slice of toast.
+
+
+=Yorkshire Rarebit.=
+
+Add two slices of broiled or fried bacon to each service of golden buck.
+
+
+=Mock-Crab Toast.=
+
+Melt a tablespoonful of butter in the blazer, turning it about so as to
+butter the surface thoroughly. Put in half a pound of mild cheese,
+grated, and stir until the cheese is melted; then add the yolks of three
+eggs, beaten and diluted with a tablespoonful of anchovy sauce, a
+teaspoonful of made mustard, two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice or
+vinegar and one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica. Stir until smooth.
+Serve upon the untoasted side of sippets of bread toasted on one side.
+
+
+=Cheese Fondue.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/4 a pound of cheese broken into bits.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 1 tablespoonful of flour.
+ 1 saltspoonful, each, of soda and mustard.
+ 3/4 a cup of milk.
+ A few grains of cayenne or paprica.
+ 1/2 a cup of stale bread crumbs.
+ 3 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Sift the soda, mustard and cayenne into the flour and cook in
+the butter until frothy, then add the milk gradually; when the sauce
+boils, after all the milk has been added, put the blazer into the
+bath, add the crumbs and cheese, and cook and stir until the cheese is
+melted and the mixture becomes smooth; add the eggs, beaten until light,
+and serve at once.
+
+[Illustration: Yorkshire Rarebit.]
+
+[Illustration: Curried Eggs.
+
+(See page 191)]
+
+
+=English Monkey.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of milk.
+ 1 egg.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1 cup of fine bread crumbs from the centre of a stale loaf.
+ 3/4 to 1 whole cup of cheese.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter, add the cheese, and stir while melting; then
+add the bread crumbs, which have been soaked in the milk and the egg
+lightly beaten.
+
+
+
+
+EGGS.
+
+ New-laid eggs, with Baucis' busy care
+ Turned by a gentle fire, and roasted rare.
+ --_Dryden._
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Cheese.=
+
+Beat six eggs until whites and yolks are well mixed; add half a
+teaspoonful of salt, a dash of paprica and six tablespoonfuls of milk or
+cream. Melt two tablespoonsful of butter in the blazer, pour in the egg
+mixture, and stir and scrape from the blazer as it thickens. Just before
+it comes to the proper consistency, sprinkle in half a cup of grated
+Parmesan cheese, still stirring as before, and turn down the flame or
+set the blazer into the bath. American dairy cheese may be used instead
+of the Parmesan.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Smoked Salmon.=
+
+Cook half a cup of smoked salmon, cut into thin strips, in a
+tablespoonful of butter three or four minutes; then add to the eggs just
+before the cooking is finished.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs a la Union Club.=
+
+Heat one can of pimentos (sweet red peppers) in boiling salted water;
+drain, and serve on rounds of buttered toast the pimentos filled with
+eggs scrambled with mushrooms or truffles. Pour around the pimentos a
+pint of well-seasoned brown sauce, to which one-third a cup of madeira
+has been added.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Dried Beef.=
+
+Cut half a pound of dried beef, sliced thin, into short match-like
+strips, cover with boiling water, drain at once, and add six eggs,
+beaten slightly, and one-fourth a cup of milk. Put two tablespoonfuls of
+butter into the blazer; when hot add the eggs and other ingredients, and
+stir and cook until the eggs are set.
+
+
+=Scrambled Eggs with Tomatoes.=
+
+Have ready a pint of tomato pulp, from which the seeds have been
+removed, seasoned with onion, celery or parsley, and sweet herbs. Put a
+generous tablespoonful of butter into the blazer; add the tomato, and,
+when hot, six eggs, slightly beaten, half a teaspoonful of salt and half
+a saltspoonful of pepper. Stir until the contents are of a creamy
+consistency. Serve with brownbread toast.
+
+
+=Eggs and Mushrooms a la Dauphine.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of thick tomato sauce, highly seasoned.
+ 1 pint of mushrooms.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a saltspoonful of pepper.
+ 6 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Cook the mushrooms in the tomato sauce until tender; add the
+seasoning and the eggs, which have been broken into a bowl. Lift the
+whites carefully with a silver or wooden fork while cooking, until they
+are set; then prick the yolks and let them mix with the tomato, whites
+of the eggs and mushrooms. Serve quite soft on toast.
+
+
+=Scotch Woodcock.=
+
+Make a cup of white sauce; add one tablespoonful of essence of anchovies
+and five hard-boiled eggs cut into quarters lengthwise.
+
+
+=Eggs a la Italienne.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 5 eggs.
+ 1 cup of milk.
+ 1/2 a cup of boiled spaghetti, chopped.
+ 1 tablespoonful of butter.
+ 1/2 a cup of fresh mushrooms, sliced.
+ 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ 1 scant teaspoonful of salt.
+ White pepper.
+
+_Method._--Melt the butter in the blazer and saute in it the sliced
+mushrooms; add the milk and spaghetti, and, when heated thoroughly, put
+the blazer in the bath and add the beaten eggs. Stir and cook until the
+eggs have thickened; then add the parsley and seasoning, and serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Eggs a la Parisienne.=
+
+Butter thickly the inner sides of as many dariole moulds as there are
+individuals to serve. Then sprinkle them thickly with fine-chopped
+parsley, ham or tongue. Break an egg into each mould, taking care not
+to break the yolk; sprinkle over the tops a little salt and pepper, and
+set in the blazer surrounded by hot water to two-thirds the height of
+the moulds. If, after a time, the water boils, even with the lamp turned
+low, put the blazer into the bath and continue cooking, until the eggs
+are set. The eggs should be covered while cooking. When cooked, turn
+from the moulds and serve with a puree of tomatoes. Half a cup of sliced
+mushrooms added to the puree improves this dish.
+
+
+=Curried Eggs.=
+
+(See cut facing page 186.)
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 eggs, cooked, in water just below the boiling-point,
+ 20 minutes.
+ 1/2 a cup of stock (fish, veal or chicken).
+ 1/2 a cup of milk.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of flour, or 1 teaspoonful of cornstarch.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of curry-powder.
+ 1 slice of onion.
+ Teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ Salt and pepper to taste.
+
+_Method._--Cook the onion in the butter a few minutes, then remove it
+and add the flour and curry powder; when frothy add the milk and stock.
+As soon as the boiling-point is reached, set the blazer into the
+hot-water pan and add the eggs cut in quarters. Season with salt and
+serve on sippets of toast.
+
+Light meats, fish, oysters and lobsters may be prepared in the same way,
+omitting the half-cup of milk in the case of oysters. Chickens' livers
+may also be prepared by the same recipe, in which case the livers should
+have been cooked previously. Or they may be sauted in a little hot
+butter in one dish, while the sauce is made in another.
+
+
+=Shirred Eggs.=
+
+Butter four or five shirring-dishes. To half a cup of grated bread
+crumbs and half a cup of chopped chicken or ham add enough cream to mix
+to a smooth, moist consistency, like butter. Season to taste with salt
+and pepper. Put a tablespoonful of the mixture into each dish, break in
+an egg, season with a dash of salt and pepper, cover with more of the
+mixture, and cook in the same manner as eggs a la Parisienne. Serve in
+the cups.
+
+
+=Eggs.=
+
+(_Creole style._)
+
+Have prepared on a hot serving-dish a can of tomatoes, stewed until they
+are reduced to a scant pint, and upon the tomatoes rounds of buttered
+toast for each egg to be served. Break some eggs, one by one, into a
+cup, and turn them into the blazer two-thirds filled with hot water;
+turn the flame low and put on the chafing-dish cover; if the water
+boils, turn down the flame. When the eggs are nicely poached, remove
+with a skimmer to the toast. Pour out the water and melt in the blazer,
+browning if desired, two tablespoonfuls of butter; add one tablespoonful
+of lemon juice; heat to the boiling-point, dust the eggs with salt and
+pepper, pour over the sauce, and serve.
+
+
+=Egg Canapes.=
+
+Have ready, cooked beforehand, four hard-boiled eggs; cut them carefully
+into halves lengthwise, remove the yolks, and press them through a small
+sieve. Soak two anchovies, then dry and remove the bones and chop them
+with two or three cold cooked mushrooms and half a teaspoonful of
+capers; mix in the sifted yolks, add a seasoning of salt, pepper and
+paprica, and one teaspoonful of tarragon vinegar. This work may be done
+some hours before the time of serving. Have a little oil or clarified
+butter in the blazer, and saute in it some rounds of bread--one for each
+half of an egg. When the bread is of good color on one side, turn it and
+place half an egg--the space from which the yolk was taken being filled
+with the anchovy mixture--on the bread; cover the blazer, and, when the
+second side of the bread is browned nicely and the egg hot, serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Eggs with Asparagus.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 cup of asparagus peas.
+ 1 cup of asparagus liquor.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of flour.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ Paprica.
+ 3 or 4 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Cut the asparagus in pieces of the size of a pea and cook
+until tender. In cooking, reserve the tips until the other pieces are
+partially cooked, or, being more tender, they will become broken while
+the others are still uncooked. Make a sauce of the butter, flour, salt,
+paprica, and water in which the asparagus was cooked, or use half a cup
+of cream in the place of part of the asparagus liquor. When the sauce
+boils, add the asparagus and mix lightly with the sauce; break the eggs,
+one after another, into a cup and slide them carefully on to the top of
+the asparagus. Season with a sprinkling of salt and pepper, and, if
+desired, a grating of nutmeg. Set the blazer into the bath and put on
+the cover. When the eggs are nicely poached, remove the eggs, with the
+asparagus below, on to rounds of toasted and buttered bread.
+
+
+=Eggs with Spinach.=
+
+Prepare in the same manner, using for one cup of chopped spinach
+one-third the quantity of sauce given above. If convenient, the eggs may
+be poached in a second dish, and in milk, water or stock.
+
+
+=Eggs.=
+
+(_Italian Style._)
+
+Cut six cold, hard-boiled eggs into eighths lengthwise; add these, with
+a cup of cooked macaroni and half a cup of grated Parmesan cheese, to
+two cups of white sauce, at the boiling-point, in the blazer. Set over
+hot water, add a teaspoonful of onion juice, a teaspoonful of chopped
+parsley, salt and anchovy essence to taste, and serve very hot.
+
+
+
+
+DISHES LARGELY VEGETARIAN.
+
+ Although the cheer be poor,
+ 'Twill fill your stomachs.
+ --_Titus Andronicus._
+
+
+=Macaroni a la Italienne.=
+
+Have ready one-fourth a pound of macaroni, cooked until tender, but not
+broken, in boiling salted water, and then drained, and rinsed in cold
+water.
+
+Make a sauce of two tablespoonfuls of butter, one tablespoonful of
+flour, one-fourth a teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprica, half a cup
+of well-seasoned stock and half a cup of well-reduced tomato pulp. Add
+the drained macaroni and stir occasionally, while it becomes thoroughly
+heated, then add one-fourth a cup of grated Parmesan cheese. Lift the
+macaroni with a fork and spoon so as to mix thoroughly with the cheese,
+and serve at once.
+
+Strain the tomatoes through a sieve sufficiently fine to keep back the
+seeds, and cook the pulp, very slowly, until reduced to at least half
+its bulk. A more hearty dish may be served by adding, just before the
+cheese, three-fourths a cup of cold tongue cut in thin slices and then
+stamped into small fanciful shapes with a French cutter; or the tongue
+may be cut simply in small cubes.
+
+
+=Asparagus Peas.=
+
+Scrape the scales from the stalks of asparagus and cut the tender
+portions into pieces one-fourth an inch long. Cook in boiling salted
+water until tender; drain, and keep the peas hot. For three cups of peas
+make one cup of drawn-butter sauce, using as liquid the water in which
+the asparagus was cooked, or white stock. Add the peas to the sauce;
+beat the yolks of two eggs, add half a cup of cream, and stir into the
+sauce and peas; add, also, one tablespoonful of butter. Serve on
+croutons of fried bread, or in cases made of shredded-wheat biscuit.
+
+
+=Fresh Mushrooms and Sweetbreads.=
+
+Soak one pair of sweetbreads in cold water; cover with boiling salted
+water and let boil three minutes, then simmer twenty minutes; cool, and
+cut in small cubes. Saute in two tablespoonfuls of hot butter sufficient
+mushroom caps, peeled and broken into pieces, to make with the
+sweetbreads two cups and a half. Make a sauce in the blazer, using
+one-fourth a cup, each, of butter and flour, one cup of chicken stock
+and half a cup of cream; add the sweetbreads and mushrooms, one
+tablespoonful of lemon juice, and, if desired, the yolks of two eggs,
+beaten and diluted with one-fourth a cup of cream or sherry. Serve on
+toast, in patty cases, or in cases of shredded-wheat biscuit.
+
+
+=Mushroom Cromeskies.=
+
+(See cut facing page 198.)
+
+Peel the caps of fresh mushrooms; wrap each mushroom in a slice of
+bacon, pinning the bacon around the mushroom with a wooden toothpick.
+Saute in a hot blazer and serve on toast. These are particularly good,
+cooked in a hot oven in a double broiler resting over a baking-pan.
+
+
+=Creamed Mushrooms.=
+
+Wipe carefully half a pound of mushrooms; peel the caps and break them
+in pieces. Reserve the stems for another dish. Melt three tablespoonfuls
+of butter in the blazer and in it saute the mushrooms; dust with salt
+and pepper, add two tablespoonfuls of flour, and, when cooked in the
+butter, one cup of cream, gradually; stir until the sauce boils, let
+simmer a few minutes, then serve with toast or crackers.
+
+
+=Artichokes a la Bordelaise.=
+
+(MRS. E. M. LUCAS.)
+
+Put one-fourth a cup of butter and half a cup of sifted bread crumbs
+into the blazer and light the lamp; when the crumbs are well moistened
+with the butter, add a teaspoonful of fine-minced parsley, one pint of
+cooked artichokes cut into small cubes, half a teaspoonful of salt, a
+dash of cayenne and half a pint of rich, sweet cream. Let boil up once
+and put out the flame; add a teaspoonful of lemon juice and half a
+teaspoonful of the grated rind of a lemon (or omit the grated rind);
+stir well and serve at once.
+
+
+=Puff-balls Sauted.=
+
+Heat three tablespoonfuls of butter or oil in the blazer. Cut the
+puff-balls in slices half an inch in thickness, season with salt and
+pepper, dip in egg and bread crumbs, and saute in the blazer to a golden
+brown.
+
+
+=Mushrooms and Macaroni.=
+
+(_Italian style._)
+
+Put one tablespoonful of butter and one teaspoonful of lemon juice into
+the blazer; add a dozen peeled mushrooms, broken into pieces and
+blanched, and cook slowly, covered, five or six minutes. Then add one
+cup and one-fourth of milk, and, when scalded, stir in two
+tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour, creamed together. When the
+sauce boils, add one-fourth a pound of macaroni, cooked and blanched in
+the usual manner; heat over hot water, and, just before serving, add
+one-fourth a cup of grated cheese.
+
+
+=Canned Peas with Egg.=
+
+Rinse, drain, and rinse again in boiling water one can of peas. Add two
+tablespoonfuls of butter, one teaspoonful of sugar, half a teaspoonful
+of salt and a dash of pepper. Beat the yolk of an egg, dilute with
+four tablespoonfuls of cream, and stir into the peas. Serve as soon as
+the egg thickens slightly.
+
+[Illustration: Mushroom Cromeskies.
+
+(_Ready for cooking._)
+
+(See page 197)]
+
+[Illustration: Prune Toast.
+
+(See page 217)]
+
+
+=Curried Vegetables.=
+
+Make a sauce of one-fourth a cup, each, of butter and flour, one
+tablespoonful of curry powder, half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of
+pepper and a pint of milk; add half a teaspoonful of onion juice, one
+cup of cooked peas, half a cup, each, of potato balls, turnips cut into
+cubes or fanciful shapes, and carrots cut into straws.
+
+
+=Potatoes a la Maitre d'Hotel.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of potato balls, cut with French cutter, and
+ cooked tender, may be used either hot or cold.
+ 1 cup of milk.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls of butter.
+ 2 yolks of eggs.
+ 1 tablespoonful of lemon juice.
+ 1 tablespoonful of parsley, finely chopped.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of pepper.
+
+_Method._--Heat the milk and potatoes in the blazer over hot water.
+Cream the butter and add the yolks of the eggs, beating them in well;
+add the parsley and seasonings, mix thoroughly, and, when the potatoes
+are hot and have absorbed part of the milk, stir the egg and butter into
+them; add the lemon juice and serve at once.
+
+
+=White Hashed Potatoes.=
+
+Butter the blazer and put into it about three cups of cold chopped
+potato, salted during the chopping. Pour over the potato a little hot
+stock, or water, and scatter some bits of butter over the top. Cover,
+and cook slowly, without stirring or browning, until thoroughly heated.
+
+
+=String Beans a la Lyonnaise.=
+
+Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer; add a fine-sliced
+onion and saute to a delicate brown; add a quart of string beans,
+cooked, a dash of pepper, a grating of nutmeg and a little salt; heat
+thoroughly, tossing the beans occasionally; add a teaspoonful of chopped
+parsley, a tablespoonful of lemon juice and another tablespoonful of
+butter, in bits, and serve at once.
+
+
+=Tomato Sandwich.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 6 shredded-wheat biscuit.
+ 4 medium-sized tomatoes.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 8 teaspoonfuls of sugar, or
+ 8 teaspoonfuls of mayonnaise dressing.
+
+_Method._--Peel the tomatoes, cut in small pieces, add the salt, and
+sugar, if used, and set aside in a cool place. Split the biscuits, dip
+the inside lightly into cold water without wetting the outside, put the
+halves together, and arrange in a buttered blazer; cover, and heat over
+hot water; then separate the halves, and, using a knife dipped in hot
+water, spread with butter. Put a layer of tomatoes on the bottom half,
+if sugar has not been used, add the salad dressing, and cover with the
+top of the biscuit, pressing it down lightly.
+
+
+=Kornlet Oysters.=
+
+To one cup of kornlet add two well-beaten eggs, two tablespoonfuls of
+flour, a scant half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprica. Drop, by
+spoonfuls, into a hot, well-oiled blazer and cook to a golden brown,
+turn, and brown the other side.
+
+
+=Kornlet Oysters, No. 2.=
+
+To one can of kornlet add a teaspoonful of soda, two well-beaten eggs,
+salt and pepper, and enough fine cracker crumbs to hold the mixture
+together. Drop from a spoon and cook as above.
+
+
+
+
+RECHAUFFES AND OLLA-PODRIDA
+
+ "Take heed of enemies reconciled and meats twice
+ cooked."
+
+
+=Suggestions Concerning Rechauffes.=
+
+Many of the dishes prepared in the chafing-dish are rechauffes of cold
+cooked meats, including game and fish. The composition of such dishes is
+called "the flower of cookery": but it is well to remember that we are
+dealing with a class of foods that are more digestible when cooked rare;
+also, that in these cases digestibility decreases in proportion to the
+length of time, as well as the number of times, the article has been
+cooked. The meat or fish composing such dishes should not come into
+direct contact with the source of heat; after being freed from skin,
+bone and fat, they should simply be heated in a hot sauce over hot
+water.
+
+
+=Corned-Beef Hash.=
+
+(_Spanish style._)
+
+Chop together very fine the corned beef and potatoes and a half or a
+whole green pepper, after having removed the seeds and veins; put two
+tablespoonfuls of butter into the blazer (over hot water), add the
+chopped ingredients, and season to suit the taste, adding a little stock
+or milk to moisten; mix thoroughly, then cover, and stir occasionally
+until heated through. Put a few bits of butter here and there over the
+top, and serve when melted. Use an equal quantity of meat and potato, or
+twice as much potato as meat. Serve with olives, pickles or a light
+vegetable salad.
+
+
+=Mock Terrapin.=
+
+Have ready cooked half a calf's liver (it may be boiled or braised with
+vegetables). Cut it into small cubes. Put one-fourth a cup of butter
+into the blazer; when colored a little add the cubes of liver dredged
+with two tablespoonfuls of flour, one-fourth a teaspoonful of paprica
+and half a teaspoonful of salt. Stir and cook until the flour is blended
+with the butter; then add one cup of water or stock and one teaspoonful
+of chopped parsley. As soon as the sauce boils, add one-fourth a cup of
+cream, two hard-boiled eggs chopped fine, and one teaspoonful of lemon
+juice. Serve on toast, with quarters of lemon cut lengthwise.
+
+_Note._--Cream may be used in the place of stock, and the yolks of two
+uncooked eggs instead of the cooked eggs.
+
+
+=Spaghetti.=
+
+(_Queen style._)
+
+Cut cold cooked chicken or turkey and cooked tongue (enough to make one
+cup of meat) in dice; cut into inch-length pieces cooked spaghetti
+enough to make one cup. Put one cup and a half of thin cream into the
+blazer over hot water, and, when hot, add the meat and spaghetti. Beat
+the yolks of two eggs, add two tablespoonfuls of cream, and stir into
+the hot mixture; add, also, half a teaspoonful (scant) of salt and a
+dash of paprica. Stir constantly until the mixture thickens slightly,
+then serve at once with toast or crackers.
+
+
+=Scrambled Ham and Eggs.=
+
+Put a tablespoonful of butter in the blazer. Break six eggs into a bowl,
+add six tablespoonfuls of water, and beat until you can take up a
+spoonful. Add about a cup of fine-chopped ham and mix well. Pour into
+the blazer, and cook until creamy, stirring constantly.
+
+
+=Chicken Klopps with Bechamel Sauce.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 2 cups of cold chicken, chopped.
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of celery pepper.
+ 1 teaspoonful of chopped parsley.
+ The unbeaten whites of 4 eggs.
+ 1 teaspoonful of salt.
+
+_Method._--When ready to cook, mix the ingredients together thoroughly
+and form into round balls. Place the balls carefully in water _just off
+the boil_, and, in about five minutes, or as soon as the egg seems
+poached, remove the klopps with a skimmer. Serve with
+
+
+=BECHAMEL SAUCE.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1/3 a cup of butter.
+ 1/3 a cup of flour.
+ 1 cup of cream.
+ 1 cup of chicken stock.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ A dash of paprica.
+ The beaten yolks of 1 or 2 eggs.
+
+_Method._--Make the sauce in the usual manner, but _do not let it boil
+after the yolks of the eggs are added_.
+
+
+=Minced Ham a la Poulette.=
+
+To each cup of fine-chopped ham add one tablespoonful of fine bread
+crumbs, softened with cream or milk. Season with salt and pepper. Heat
+thoroughly and spread on rounds of moist buttered toast. Place a poached
+_egg_ on each slice. Use two dishes.
+
+
+=Epicurean Canapes.=
+
+Heat a little butter in the blazer; saute in it some narrow strips of
+bread and spread them thickly with the mixture used for epicurean
+sandwiches. Press a pitted olive in the centre of each and serve at
+once.
+
+
+=Aberdeen Sandwiches.=
+
+Heat one-fourth a cup of chopped cold tongue or ham, and half a cup of
+chopped veal or chicken, with half a cup of good sauce and two
+tablespoonfuls of curry paste (curry powder mixed with just enough
+water to form a paste). Let the mixture simmer five minutes, stirring
+constantly; then set aside to become cool. Have some bits of bread
+prepared as for sandwiches. Heat some clarified butter in the blazer,
+and in it saute the bread a delicate brown, and drain on soft paper.
+Spread with the cold mixture, press two pieces together, and heat over
+hot water five or ten minutes. Serve hot.
+
+
+=Calf's Head en Tortue.=
+
+Peel a dozen mushrooms; break the caps in pieces and chop the stems very
+fine. Saute in three tablespoonfuls of butter, adding, if desired, half
+an onion cut fine. Sprinkle in one-fourth a cup of flour, half a
+teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprica, and, when the ingredients are
+well blended, add gradually one cup and a half of stock and one-fourth a
+cup of tomato juice. Let simmer a few moments, after the sauce boils;
+then add one pint of meat from a calf's head, cooked and cut in cubes.
+
+
+=Woodcock Toast.=
+
+Pound to a paste the freshly boiled livers of two fowls (ducks
+preferred), one teaspoonful of anchovy paste (or one anchovy may be
+pounded with the livers), half a teaspoonful of sugar, one tablespoonful
+of butter, one-fourth a teaspoonful of spiced pepper and the yolks of
+two raw eggs. Pass through a sieve, dilute with a little hot cream from
+a cup of cream heated over hot water, stir, and return to the rest of
+the cream. Stir until thickened, then pour over sippets or rounds of
+toast sauted a golden brown in a little butter.
+
+
+=Scotch Woodcock.=
+
+Beat thoroughly three eggs and three teaspoonfuls of anchovy paste. Put
+this into the chafing-dish over hot water with three-fourths a cup of
+milk and stir until thick. Spread sippets of toast with butter and then
+with anchovy paste, and turn the woodcock upon them.
+
+
+=Calves' Brains and Mushrooms a la Poulette.=
+
+Saute a clove of garlic, cut fine, in two tablespoonfuls of butter; add
+half a pound of mushrooms, peeled and broken in pieces, one-fourth a cup
+of flour, and saute until well browned. Then add one-fourth a
+teaspoonful, each, of mace and paprica, half a teaspoonful of salt and
+one cup and a half of stock, and cook five or six minutes. Then add the
+yolks of two eggs, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, one tablespoonful
+of chopped parsley and three calves' brains, cooked, and cut in dice.
+Serve in timbale cases, or upon croustades of bread.
+
+
+=Beef Tea in Chafing-dish.=
+
+Cut juicy round steak into pieces about two inches square. Heat the
+blazer very hot; heat also a wooden lemon-squeezer in hot water or in
+any way that is most convenient. Put the meat into the hot blazer, turn
+again and again with a fork, keeping the blazer very hot. When the bits
+of meat are heated throughout, squeeze them, one by one, with the
+lemon-squeezer, into a _hot_ bowl. Season with salt and serve at once.
+
+
+=Salmi of Duck or Game.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ Pieces of game.
+ 1/3 a cup, each, of butter and flour.
+ 1 tablespoonful, each, of carrot and onion slices.
+ 2 cups of rich brown stock, highly seasoned.
+ 1/4 a cup of madeira.
+ 1 cup of peas or flageolets, cooked.
+
+_Method._--Cook the butter, onion and carrot in the blazer until well
+browned. Skim out the onion and carrot and add the flour, pepper and
+salt. Add the stock. As soon as the sauce is cooked, add the madeira,
+the pieces of game, and the peas or flageolets. Serve as soon as the
+meat is hot.
+
+
+=Salmi of Duck, No. 2.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 pint of thin slices of duck.
+ 2 tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour.
+ 1 pint of brown stock.
+ 1 tablespoonful of catsup.
+ 10 or 15 drops of onion juice.
+ 1 teaspoonful of lemon juice.
+ 6 mushrooms, cut in pieces.
+ 1 tablespoonful of currant jelly.
+ Salt and pepper to taste.
+
+_Method._--Brown the butter and make a sauce with the flour, seasoning
+and stock. Add the duck and mushrooms, simmer twenty minutes, add the
+currant jelly, and garnish with croutons.
+
+
+=Sweetbreads Sauted.=
+
+Split parboiled sweetbreads into two pieces. Wipe dry, sprinkle with
+salt, pepper and flour; or season with salt and pepper, and
+egg-and-bread-crumb them. Saute in the blazer in hot olive oil, or
+butter, until nicely browned on both sides. Serve with French peas or
+tomato sauce.
+
+
+=Chicken with Mushrooms.=
+
+Melt one-fourth a cup of butter in the blazer; add six mushroom caps,
+peeled and sliced, and cook slowly, with a teaspoonful of grated onion,
+about six minutes; add two tablespoonfuls of flour, stir until smooth,
+then add one cup of cream, stock or milk, pepper and salt, and a few
+grains of mace. When the sauce boils, stir in one pint of chicken,
+finely chopped, and serve as soon as hot. Sweetbreads, lamb or veal may
+be served in the same manner.
+
+
+=Chopped Beef.=
+
+Chop half a pound of raw beef, from the tender part of the round, very
+fine. Rub the bottom of the hot blazer with butter, put in the meat with
+one teaspoonful of grated onion, stir, and cook four or five minutes;
+add two tablespoonfuls of butter, salt and pepper, and serve at once.
+This is good with bread, but better with baked potatoes. A pound of beef
+may be cooked at one time in a chafing-dish of good size, and the grated
+onion increased to suit the taste. The juice, of which there will be a
+large quantity, may be thickened with flour and butter creamed together;
+but it is better unthickened.
+
+
+=Chicken Timbales.=
+
+Pass the breast of a raw chicken through a meat-chopper five or six
+times; beat in, one at a time, the whites of two small eggs (the whites
+of the eggs are _not_ to be previously beaten), then beat in very
+gradually one cup of thick cream. Season with half a teaspoonful of salt
+and one-fourth a teaspoonful of white pepper. Turn the mixture into
+buttered moulds, set them in the blazer, and cook, surrounded with hot
+water to two-thirds their height and covered, about twenty minutes. The
+water should not boil; if, with the flame turned low, it still boils,
+set the blazer into the bath, in which the water may boil vigorously
+without harm to the timbales. Serve with
+
+
+=BECHAMEL SAUCE.=
+
+Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add two tablespoonfuls of flour,
+one-fourth a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper and half a cup, each,
+of chicken stock and cream; add the beaten yolk of one egg and let stand
+over hot water five minutes. Or,
+
+
+=MUSHROOM SAUCE.=
+
+Make as above, substituting one-fourth a cup of mushroom liquor for a
+part of the chicken stock, and adding with the egg half a can of
+mushrooms, or a cup of fresh mushrooms sauted in two tablespoonfuls of
+butter.
+
+
+=Supreme of Chicken.=
+
+Chop fine the breast of a raw chicken. Beat one egg, add the chicken,
+and continue beating until smooth; then add three eggs, one at a time,
+beating each egg in thoroughly. Add a generous teaspoonful of salt, a
+saltspoonful of white pepper, a dash of black pepper and one pint of
+cream. Butter twelve small moulds and ornament them with truffles. Fill
+with the chicken mixture, cover with buttered paper, and steam twenty
+minutes. Or, put in a pan of boiling water and cook in a moderate oven
+till the centres are firm. Serve with mushroom or bechamel sauce. These
+can be cooked and left in the moulds and then reheated. It will take
+about fifteen minutes to reheat.
+
+
+=Egg Timbales.=
+
+Beat six eggs without separating, add a scant teaspoonful of salt, a
+dash of pepper, a teaspoonful of chopped parsley, twenty drops of onion
+juice and one cup and a half of rich milk. Stir till well mixed. Butter
+small-sized timbale moulds and fill two-thirds full with the mixture.
+Place moulds in the blazer, pour boiling water about them three-fourths
+to the tops of the moulds, and let cook about twenty minutes, or till
+the centres are firm; turn out of the moulds on to a warm platter, and
+pour about them a thin bread sauce.
+
+
+=BREAD SAUCE.=
+
+To one pint of milk add half a cup of fine, stale bread crumbs, a small
+onion with six cloves stuck in it, half a teaspoonful of salt and a few
+grains of cayenne. Cook in the double boiler for about an hour; stir
+occasionally. Remove the onion, beat well, and add one tablespoonful of
+butter. Put one tablespoonful of butter over the fire in a small
+saucepan; when hot add two-thirds a cup of rather coarse bread crumbs;
+stir over a hot fire till they are brown and crisp. Sprinkle over the
+timbales and sauce. Add a sprig of parsley to the top of each timbale.
+
+
+=Pan-Broiling.=
+
+Chops, birds, venison, hamburg, sirloin and other steaks, even spring
+chickens, may be cooked successfully in the chafing-dish; but they are
+not the dishes upon which an amateur should begin his experiments. Heat
+the blazer very hot, brush over the surface with a brush dipped in olive
+oil (or use a butter-ball and a fork), lay in the article to be cooked,
+sear upon one side, turn and sear upon the other; repeat, turning and
+cooking until done to taste; five minutes will suffice for small lamb
+chops. Serve with
+
+
+=Maitre d'Hotel Butter.=
+
+Beat four tablespoonfuls of butter to a cream; add half a teaspoonful of
+salt and a few grains of pepper, also one tablespoonful of parsley,
+chopped very fine, and one tablespoonful of lemon juice, very slowly.
+
+
+=Fillets of Beef, Mushroom Sauce.=
+
+Have half a dozen slices cut crosswise from a neatly trimmed fillet of
+beef. The slices may be cut of any thickness desired, but from half to
+three-fourths an inch is preferable for chafing-dish cookery. Melt two
+tablespoonfuls of butter in a hot blazer; lay in the meat, and cook four
+or five minutes, turning every ten seconds. The heat should be well
+maintained throughout the cooking. Season with salt when half cooked. In
+another blazer make a cup of brown sauce; brown two tablespoonfuls of
+butter, add four tablespoonfuls of flour, and, when this is well
+browned, add half a cup of very rich brown stock and half a cup of
+liquid from the mushroom can. Season to taste with Kitchen Bouquet,
+salt, and a few drops of tabasco sauce, then add half a bottle of
+mushrooms, cut in halves. Serve as soon as the mushrooms are hot.
+
+
+=Fillets of Lamb, Cherry Sauce.=
+
+For the fillets use either the fillet from the loin or the top of a
+"best end of a loin" boned. Cut the meat in slices or rounds, and saute
+in hot butter in the blazer. Season with salt and pepper and pour into
+the blazer half a cup of maraschino cherries with half a cup of the
+liquid from the bottle. Candied cherries that have stood half an hour in
+half a cup of boiling water, on the back of the range, and then mixed
+with half a cup of sherry wine, may be used in place of the maraschino
+cherries. This sauce may also be used with fillets of beef or young
+turkey.
+
+
+=Ham Timbales.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1-1/2 cups of milk or thin cream.
+ 1 cup of cold, cooked ham, chopped fine.
+ 1/4 a cup of fine bread crumbs.
+ The yolks of 2 "hard-boiled" eggs.
+ Two raw eggs.
+ A few drops of tabasco sauce.
+ 1/2 a teaspoonful of salt.
+
+Take the bread crumbs from the centre of a stale loaf. Pass the cooked
+yolks of eggs through a sieve. Add the ham, crumbs, yolks, salt and
+tabasco to the raw eggs beaten and mixed with the milk. When thoroughly
+mixed turn into timbale moulds very carefully buttered. Fit papers into
+the bottoms of the moulds before buttering. Set these in the blazer,
+surround with hot water, letting it come half way to the top of the
+moulds. Heat the water to the boiling-point, then set the blazer into
+the hot-water pan partly filled with boiling water, cover and cook until
+the mixture is firm in the centre. Serve, turned from the moulds, with
+cream or tomato sauce, flavored with onion, or with peas heated in a
+cream sauce.
+
+
+=Fillets of Chicken.=
+
+(_Chafing-dish Style._)
+
+Remove the breast from a plump and tender chicken and separate from the
+bone and skin. Detach the small fillets, then cut each side into two or
+three lengthwise slices the size of the small fillets. Keep covered
+closely until ready to cook. Heat the blazer very hot, butter slightly,
+and in it lay the fillets and sprinkle with the juice of half a lemon,
+salt and white pepper; add, also, one-third a cup of chicken stock and a
+tablespoonful of sherry. Cover and let cook about ten minutes. In the
+meantime prepare a sauce in a second chafing-dish, using two
+tablespoonfuls, each, of butter and flour, a dash of salt and pepper,
+and one cup of stock, in making which a small piece of ham or bacon was
+used. Add also a tablespoonful of mushroom or tomato catsup and a
+tablespoonful of sherry wine.
+
+
+=Mutton Rechauffe.=
+
+(_Creole Style._)
+
+Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer and saute in this a
+tablespoonful, each, of green pepper and onion, chopped fine; add three
+tablespoonfuls of flour and half a teaspoonful of salt, and stir and
+cook until frothy; then add, gradually, one cup of brown stock and half
+a cup of tomato puree (cooked tomato strained). Let boil two or three
+minutes, then set over hot water and stir in one cup of cold roast
+mutton cut in strips or cubes, and half a cup of cooked macaroni,
+blanched and drained. Two or three mushrooms or a tablespoonful of
+mushroom catsup improves this dish.
+
+
+=Baba or Wine Cake.=
+
+This cake may be made some days in advance, and when wished reheated in
+a sauce made in the chafing-dish. Baba is baked in a large mould and cut
+in slices, or in individual cylindrical or baba moulds.
+
+
+=BABA.=
+
+INGREDIENTS.
+
+ 1 lb. of flour.
+ 1 cake of compressed yeast.
+ 1/2 a cup of water.
+ 10 oz. of butter (1-1/4 cups).
+ 1/4 a teaspoonful of salt.
+ 1/2 a cup of sugar.
+ 8 eggs.
+ 1/2 a cup of currants, sultanas or sliced citron.
+
+Make a sponge of the yeast, softened in the water, and flour to knead.
+Knead the little ball of dough until elastic, and put into a small
+saucepan of lukewarm water. Meanwhile add the butter, sugar, salt and
+three of the eggs to the rest of the flour, and beat with the hand until
+all are evenly blended; then add the rest of the eggs, one after
+another. When the ball of dough rises to the top of the water and is
+light, remove from the water with a skimmer and beat it into the egg
+paste; beat for some minutes, then beat in the fruit. Turn the mixture
+into the mould or moulds, leaving room for the cake to double in bulk.
+Let rise in a temperature of 68 deg. F. When nearly doubled in bulk, bake
+from twenty to fifty minutes.
+
+
+=SAUCE FOR BABA.=
+
+Let two cups of sugar and one cup of water boil in the blazer about six
+minutes, then add one-fourth a cup, or more, of maraschino, rum or
+sherry wine. Lay the baba, sliced or in individual forms, into the hot
+syrup and let stand a few minutes, basting the cake with the syrup. When
+hot, serve with or without whipped cream. Half a cup of apricot or
+quince marmalade may be added with the wine.
+
+
+=Fig Toast.=
+
+(See cut facing page 198.)
+
+Wash carefully and cook in boiling water half a pound of pulled figs
+until tender; add one fourth a cup of sugar and the grated rind and
+juice of half a lemon. Cook until the syrup is well reduced. Cut the
+crust from a thick slice of bread and saute to a golden brown, first on
+one side, then on the other, in two tablespoonfuls of hot butter. Drain
+the bread on soft paper; then heap the figs upon it, cover with
+two-thirds a cup of thick cream and a scant fourth a cup of sugar,
+beaten until stiff. Serve at once. Prunes, apricots, peaches, pears, or
+strawberry preserves, may be prepared in the same manner. If preserves
+be used, omit the sugar from the cream. Sponge cake may be used in the
+place of bread.
+
+
+=Pineapple Sponge.=
+
+Heat one pint of grated pineapple over hot water, sprinkle into it
+one-third a cup of fine tapioca (a quick-cooking kind), mixed with
+two-thirds a cup of sugar, and half a teaspoonful of salt; when the
+tapioca is transparent, add the juice of a lemon, and fold in the whites
+of two eggs, beaten until dry. Serve with cream and sugar.
+
+
+=Tapioca-and-Banana Sponge.=
+
+Sprinkle half a cup of tapioca and two-thirds a cup of sugar into one
+pint of boiling water; add half a teaspoonful of salt and cook over hot
+water, stirring occasionally. When the tapioca is transparent, add the
+juice of two lemons, and fold in the whites of two eggs, beaten until
+dry. Serve spread over sliced bananas, with cream and sugar, or with a
+cold boiled custard, previously made. This dish may be prepared with
+canned peaches, apricots or quinces, using the juice of the fruit
+instead of water.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+ Aberdeen Sandwiches, 205
+ Aigrettes, Cheese, 109
+ Almond-and-Peach Salad, 94
+ Almonds and Walnuts, To Blanch, 12
+ Anchovy Salad, 74
+ Anchovy Toast, 175
+ " " with Eggs, 175
+ " " " Spinach, 176
+ Anchovies with Olives, 176
+ Apple,-Celery-and-Walnut Salad, 92
+ Artichoke Salad, 45
+ " -and-Tomato Salad, 44
+ Artichokes a la Bordelaise, 197
+ Asparagus with Eggs, 193
+ " Peas, 196
+ " Salad, 46
+ " Salad, Egg Garnish, 47
+ " -and-Cauliflower Salad, 46
+ " " Salmon Salad, 46
+ " Tips in Turnips, 46
+ Aspic Jelly from Bouillon Capsules, etc., 100
+ Aspic Jelly, Chicken Stock for, 99
+ " " , Consomme for, 98
+ " " for Garnishing, 97
+ " " Oysters in, 65
+ " " Recipe for, 97
+ " " for Sandwiches, 127, 128
+
+ Baba, 216
+ Baba, Sauce for, 216
+ Bacon Salad, 84
+ Bacon Sauce, 27
+ Baking Powder Biscuit, 139
+ Balls, Cheese, 107
+ Bamboo Sprouts, Shrimp-and-Lettuce Salad, 74
+ Banana-and-Orange Salad, 93
+ Banana-and-Tapioca Sponge, 218
+ Bar-le-Duc-and-Cheese Sandwiches, 135
+ Bean, White, Salad, 32
+ Bechamel Sauce, 205, 210
+ Beef, Chopped, 209
+ " , Fillets of, 213
+ " Hash, Corned, 202
+ " Sandwiches, Corned, 119
+ Beef Tea in Chafing-Dish, 207
+ Beet-and-Cream Cheese Sandwiches, 125
+ Beets and Brussels Sprouts, Salad of, 35
+ Beets, Stuffed, 34
+ Bernaise Sauce, 28
+ Beverages with Sandwiches, 118
+ Biscuit, Baking Powder, 139
+ " , Sandwich, 139
+ Bluefish Salad, 60, 75
+ Boiled Dressing for Chicken Salad, 26
+ Boiled Salad Dressing, 26
+ Boston Brown Bread, 138
+ Boudins-de-Saumon Salad, 61
+ Bread, Boston Brown, 138
+ " , Entire Wheat, 137
+ " , Pulled, 139
+ " , Rice, 138
+ " , Wheat, Two Loaves of, 137
+ " , for Sandwiches, 116
+ " , To Give Glossy Crust, 140
+ Brook Trout Salad, 55
+ " " " in Aspic, 55
+
+ Cabbage and Cauliflower, To Clean, 14
+ Calf's Head en Tortue, 206
+ Canapes, Egg, 193
+ " , Epicurean, 205
+ " , Oyster, 168
+ Cauliflower-and-Asparagus Salad, 46
+ Cauliflower Salad, Egg Garnish, 49
+ Caviare Sandwich Rolls, 120
+ Celery, Apple-and-Nut Salad, 92
+ " -and-Chestnut Salad, 92
+ Celery-and-Nut in Border, 43
+ Celery-and-Oyster Salad, 66
+ Celery Sandwiches, 120
+ Celery, To Fringe, 15
+ " , To Keep, 16
+ Ceylon Cocoa, 145
+ Chafing-Dish Appointments, 153
+ Chafing-Dish Recipes:
+ Aberdeen Sandwiches, 205
+ Anchovy Toast, 175
+ " " with Eggs, 175
+ " " " Spinach, 176
+ Anchovies with Olives, 176
+ Artichokes a la Bordelaise, 197
+ Asparagus Peas, 196
+ Baba on Wine Cake, 216
+ Bechamel Sauce, 210
+ Beef Tea in Chafing-Dish, 207
+ Bread Sauce, 211
+ Buttered Lobster, 169
+ Calf's Head en Tortue, 206
+ Calves' Brains and Mushrooms, Poulette, 207
+ Canned Peas with Egg, 198
+ Cheese Fondue, 186
+ Chicken Klopps with Bechamel Sauce, 204
+ Chicken Timbales, 210
+ Chicken with Mushrooms, 209
+ Chopped Beef, 209
+ Chops, etc. Pan Broiled, 212
+ Clams a la Newburgh, 170
+ Corned Beef Hash, 202
+ Crabs a la Creole, 174
+ Creamed Dishes, 166
+ Creamed Mushrooms, 197
+ Creamed Peas, 179
+ Curried Eggs, 191
+ Curried Oysters, 164
+ Curried " No. 2, 165
+ Curried Sardines, 177
+ Curried Vegetables, 199
+ Deviled Dishes, 166
+ Deviled Crabs, 173
+ Egg Canapes, 193
+ Egg Timbales, 211
+ Egg a la Italienne, 190
+ Eggs a la Parisienne, 190
+ Eggs, Creole Style, 192
+ Eggs, Italian Style, 194
+ Eggs and Mushrooms a la Dauphine, 189
+ Eggs with Asparagus, 193
+ " " Spinach, 194
+ English Monkey, 187
+ Epicurean Canapes, 205
+ Escalloped Oysters, 168
+ Fig Toast, 217
+ Fillets of Beef, Mushroom Sauce, 213
+ Fillets of Lamb, Cherry Sauce, 213
+ Fresh Mushrooms and Sweetbreads, 196
+ Fricassee of Oysters, 165
+ Golden Buck, 185
+ Halibut Rarebit, 184
+ Ham Timbales, 214
+ Hawaiian Lobster Curry, 171
+ Kornlet Oysters, 201
+ " " No. 2, 201
+ Lobster a la Bechamel, 171
+ Lobster a la Bordelaise, 170
+ Lobster a la Newburgh, 169
+ Lobster a la Poulette, 172
+ Macaroni a la Italienne, 195
+ Maitre d'Hotel Butter, 212
+ Mock Terrapin, 203
+ Minced Ham a la Poulette, 205
+ Moulded Halibut with Creamed Peas, 178
+ Mushroom Cromeskies, 197
+ Mushrooms and Macaroni, 198
+ Mushroom Sauce, 210
+ Mutton Rechauffe, Creole Style, 215
+ Oyster Canapes, 168
+ Oyster Crabs, 174
+ Oyster Crabs a la Hollandaise, 172
+ Oyster Cromeskies, 167
+ Oyster Rarebit, 185
+ Oysters, 163
+ Oysters, No. 2, 163
+ Oysters a la D'Uxelles, 164
+ Oysters Saute, 168
+ Panned Oysters, 167
+ " " Maitre d'Hotel, 167
+ Pineapple Sponge, 217
+ Plain Lobster, 170
+ Potatoes a la Maitre d'Hotel, 199
+ Puff Balls, Sauted, 198
+ Puree of Fish, 179
+ Rechauffe of Fish, 180
+ " " " No. 2, 181
+ Salmi of Duck or Game, 208
+ Salmi of Duck No. 2, 208
+ Salt Codfish in Cream Sauce, 180
+ Salt Codfish with Tomato Sauce, 179
+ Sardine Canapes, 177
+ Sardine Rarebit, 185
+ Sardines, French Fashion, 177
+ Sardines on Toast, 181
+ Scotch Woodcock, 190, 207
+ Scrambled Eggs a la Union Club, 188
+ Scrambled Eggs with Cheese, 188
+ Scrambled Eggs with Dried Beef, 189
+ Scrambled Eggs with Oysters, 166
+ Scrambled Eggs with Smoked Salmon, 188
+ Scrambled Eggs with Tomatoes, 189
+ Scrambled Ham and Eggs, 204
+ Shirred Eggs, 192
+ Shrimps a la Poulette, 175
+ Shrimps with Peas, 175
+ Spaghetti, Queen Style, 203
+ String Beans a la Lyonnaise, 200
+ Supreme of Chicken, 211
+ Sweetbreads, Sauted, 209
+ Tapioca and Banana Sponge, 218
+ Tomato Sandwich, 200
+ Welsh Rarebit, 183
+ " " No. 2, 183
+ " " with Ale, 184
+ White Hashed Potatoes, 199
+ Woodcock Toast, 206
+ Yorkshire Rarebit, 186
+ Chafing-Dishes, Past and Present, 151
+ Chaud-froid Sauce, White, 101
+ Cheese Aigrettes, 109
+ " d'Artois, 109
+ " Balls, 107
+ " -and-Cowslip Salad, 49
+ " Croquettes, 108
+ " Custard, 105
+ " Fondue, 186
+ " Fritters, 110
+ " Ramequins, 106
+ " Sandwiches with Bar-le-Duc, 135
+ " Sandwiches with Beets, 125
+ " " " Nuts, 122
+ " with Scrambled Eggs, 188
+ " Souffle, 105
+ " Souffles, Iced, 108
+ " Straws, 106
+ Cheese with Vegetable Macedoine, 110
+ Cherry Salad, 91
+ Cherry Sauce, 213
+ Cherry,-Strawberry-and-Peach Salad, 95
+ Chestnuts-and-Celery Salad, 92
+ Chestnuts, To Shell and Blanch, 12
+ Chicken, Fillets of, 214
+ " Klopps, 204
+ " and Mushrooms, 209
+ " Rolls, 123
+ " Salad, 78
+ " " , Boiled Dressing for, 26
+ " " , French, 78
+ " " with Mushrooms, 79
+ " " Sandwiches, 127
+ " -and-Nut Sandwiches, 127
+ " Stock for Aspic Jelly, 99
+ " Timbales, 210
+ Chiffonade Salad, 94
+ Chocolate, Plain, 145
+ " , Rich, 144
+ " , Spanish, 148
+ Chopped Beef, 209
+ Chou Paste, 140
+ Clams a la Newburgh, 170
+ Claret Cup, 148
+ " Dressing, 22
+ " Jelly, 134
+ Club Sandwiches, 129
+ Cocoa, Ceylon, 145
+ " , Plain, 145
+ " , Sultana, 145
+ Coffee, Boiled, 143
+ " , Filtered, 143
+ Cole Slaw, Dressing for, 27
+ Consomme for Aspic Jelly, 98
+ Cooked Vegetable Salad, 37
+ Corned Beef Hash, 202
+ " " Sandwiches, 119
+ Country Salad, 87
+ Cowslip-and-Cheese Salad, 49
+ Crab Toast, Mock, 186
+ Crabs a la Creole, 174
+ " " Hollandaise, 172
+ " Deviled, 173
+ " Oyster, 174
+ Creamed Dishes, 166
+ " Peas, 179
+ " Mushrooms, 197
+ Cream Salad Dressing, 27
+ Cress,-Cucumber-and-Tomato Salad, 41
+ Cress-and-Egg Sandwiches, 122
+ Cress, To Clean, 14
+ Cromeskies, Mushroom, 197
+ " , Oyster, 167
+ Croquettes, Cheese, 108
+ Cucumber Salad, 36
+ " " for Fish, 36
+ " " with Shad Roe, 61
+ " " , Stuffed, 49
+ Cupid's Butter Sandwiches, 135
+ Currant-and-Cheese Sandwiches, 135
+ Curry, Hawaiian Lobster, 171
+ Curried Eggs, 191
+ " Oysters, 164
+ " " No. 2, 165
+ " Sardines, 177
+ " Vegetables, 199
+ Custard, Cheese, 105
+ " , Royal, for Aspic, 11
+
+ Date-and-Ginger Sandwiches, 132
+ d'Artois, Cheese, 109
+ Deviled Dishes, 166
+ Dressing, Boiled, 26
+ " Boiled, for Chicken Salad, 26
+ " , Claret, 22
+ " , for Cole Slaw, 27
+ " , Cream Salad, 27
+ " , French, 21
+ " , " in quantity, 22
+ " , for Fruit Salad, 89
+ " , Horseradish, 40
+ " , Mayonnaise, 22
+ " , Composition, 8
+ Dressings, Boiled and Cream, 9
+ Dried Beef with Eggs, 189
+ Duck-and-Olive Salad, 83
+ " " Orange " , 83
+ Duck, Salmi of, 208
+ Duck or Game, Salmi of, 208
+
+ Easter Salad, 86
+ Egg Canapes, 193
+ Egg and Canned Peas, 198
+ Egg Lemonade, 146
+ Egg-and-Cress Sandwiches, 122
+ Egg-and-Ham Sandwiches, 119
+ " " Spinach Sandwiches, 122
+ " " " Salad, 86
+ Eggs with Anchovy Toast, 175
+ Eggs with Asparagus, 193
+ " to Boil for Garnishing, 11
+ Eggs, Creole Style, 192
+ " Curried, 191
+ " Italienne, 190, 194
+ " and Mushrooms, Dauphine, 189
+ " Parisienne, 190
+ " Scrambled with Cheese, 188
+ " Scrambled with Dried Beef, 189
+ " Scrambled with Oysters, 166
+ " Scrambled with Smoked Salmon, 188
+ " Scrambled with Tomatoes, 189
+ " Scrambled a la Union Club, 188
+ " with Spinach, 194
+ Eggs, Whites of, To Poach, 11
+ Endive, To Clean, 13
+ Endive Salad, 30
+ English Monkey, 187
+ Entire Wheat Bread, 137
+ Epicurean Canapes, 205
+ " Sandwiches, 123
+ Escalloped Oysters, 168
+
+ Fig-and-Nut Salad, 93
+ Fig Sandwiches, 131
+ Fig Toast, 217
+ Fillets of Beef, Mushroom Sauce, 213
+ " " Chicken, 214
+ " " Halibut with Cole Slaw, 58
+ " " " " Salad, 57
+ " " Lamb, Cherry Sauce, 213
+ Filling for Sandwiches, 116
+ Filtered Coffee, 143
+ Fish, Puree of, 179
+ " , Rechauffe of, 180
+ Fish Rechauffe, No. 2, 181
+ Fish Salad in Aspic, 59
+ Fish-and-Mushroom Salad, 65
+ Fish, Salt Cod in Cream Sauce, 180
+ " " " " Tomato " 179
+ Five-o'clock Tea, 144
+ Flavoring, 160
+ Fondue, Cheese, 186
+ French Dressing, Recipes for, 21
+ " " in quantity, 22
+ French Fruit Sandwiches, 131
+ Fresh Mushrooms and Sweetbreads, 196
+ Fricassee of Oysters, 165
+ Fritters, Cheese, 110
+ Fruit Jelly for Sandwiches, 134
+ Fruit Punch, 146
+ " Salad, 89, 90, 91
+ " " , Dressing for, 89
+ " " , When to Serve, 10
+ Fruit-and-Nut Salad, 90
+
+ Game, Salmi of, 208
+ Gherkins, To Cut for Garnish, 15
+ Ginger and Date Sandwiches, 132
+ Gnochi a la Romaine, 107
+ Golden Buck, 185
+ Grapefruit Salad, 93
+ Grapefruit, Pineapple,-and-Pimento Salad, 95
+ Green Butter Sandwiches, 126
+ Green Pea Salad, 47
+ " " -and-Potato Salad, 47
+
+ Halibut, Fillets of, in Aspic, 57
+ " , Moulded, and Creamed Peas, 178
+ " Rarebit, 184
+ Halibut Salad, 55, 56
+ " " for Fish Course, 64
+ Halibut-and-Cucumber Salad, 56
+ Halibut Sandwiches with Aspic, 128
+ " and Lettuce Sandwiches, 124
+ Ham, Minced, Poulette Style, 205
+ Ham Salad, 83
+ Ham-and-Egg Sandwiches, 119
+ " " Eggs Scrambled, 204
+ Ham-and-Tongue Sandwiches, 119
+ Ham Timbales, 214
+ Harlequin Sandwiches, 125
+ Hash, Corned Beef, 202
+ Herbs, How to Chop, 13
+ Hollandaise Sauce, 28, 173
+ Home-Made Soda-Water, 147
+ Honey Sandwiches, 132, 136
+ How to Blanch Walnuts and Almonds, 12
+ " " " and Cook Vegetables, 14
+ " " Boil Eggs Hard, 11
+ " " Boil Fish and Meat, 140
+ " " Chop Fresh Herbs, 13
+ " " Clean Lettuce, Endive, Cress, etc., 13
+ " " Cook Sweetbreads and Brains, 16
+ " " Cut Radishes for a Garnish, 13
+ " " Cut Gherkins for a Garnish, 15
+ " " Fringe Celery, 15
+ " " Keep Celery, Cress, Lettuce, etc., 16
+ " " Make Nasturtium and Tarragon Vinegar, 17
+ " " Make Royal Custard, 11
+ " " " Sauces, 158
+ " " Pickle Nasturtium Seeds, 16
+ " " Poach Whites of Eggs, 11
+ " " Render Vegetables Crisp, 14
+ " " Shell and Blanch Chestnuts, 12
+ " " Shred Romaine, etc., 15
+ " " Use Garlic or Onion in Salads, 12
+ Hunter's Sandwich, 136
+
+ Individual Souffles of Cheese, 108
+ Ingredients for One Cup of Sauce, 159
+ " " " Pint of Sauce, 160
+ Italian Salad, 84
+
+ Jelly, Aspic, from Bouillon Capsules, 100
+ " , " , Chicken Stock for, 99
+ " , " , to Chop, 98
+ " , " , Consomme for, 98
+ " , " for Garnishing, 97
+ " , " , Oysters in, 65
+ " , " , Recipe for, 97
+ " , " , for Sandwiches, 127
+ " , Claret, for Sandwiches, 134
+ " , Fruit, " " , 134
+ " , Mayonnaise, 25
+ " , Tomato, 43
+ " , " with Salad, 43, 44
+
+ Klopps, Chicken, 204
+ Kornlet Oysters, 201
+
+ Lamb, Fillets of, 213
+ Lemonade, Egg, 146
+ Lentil Salad, 31
+ Lettuce, How to Clean, 13
+ " " Shred, 15
+ " Salad, 29
+ Livournaise Sauce, 25
+ Lobster a la Bechamel, 171
+ " " Bordelaise, 170
+ " Buttered, 169
+ " Curry, Hawaiian, 171
+ " Fingers, 124
+ Lobster Mousseline Salad, 73
+ Lobster a la Newburgh, 169
+ " Plain, 170
+ " a la Poulette, 172
+ Lobster Salad, 71
+ " " No. 2, No. 3, 71
+ " " in Aspic, 72
+ Lobster in Aspic Sandwiches, 128
+ Lobster and Mushroom Sandwiches, 121
+
+ Macaroni a la Italienne, 195
+ Macaroni and Mushrooms, 198
+ Macedoine, Cheese and Vegetable, 110
+ Macedoine Salad, 35
+ Mackerel Salad, 60
+ " Salt, Salad, 61
+ Maitre d'Hotel Butter, 212
+ " " Potatoes, 199
+ Marguerite Salad, 86
+ Mayonnaise, Curdled, 24
+ " , Jelly, 25
+ " , Making in Quantity, 23
+ " , Recipe for, 22
+ " , Red, 24
+ " , Sardine, 25
+ Measuring, 160
+ Meat and Fish, Potted, 141
+ Meats, Fresh, How to Boil, 140
+ " , Salted, " " 140
+ Minced Ham, Poulette, 205
+ Miroton of Fish and Potato, 58
+ Mock Crab Toast, 186
+ Mock Terrapin, 203
+ Mosaic Sandwiches, 127
+ Moulded Salmon Salad, 75
+ Mousse de Poulet Salad, 81, 82
+ Mushroom Cromeskies, 197
+ Mushroom Salad with Chicken Medallions, 80
+ " and Fish Salad, 65
+ " " Lobster Sandwiches, 121
+ " Sauce, 210
+ Mushrooms and Chicken, 209
+ " Creamed, 197
+ " and Eggs Dauphine, 189
+ " " Sweetbreads, 196
+ Mutton Rechauffe, 215
+
+ Nasturtium Folds, 125
+ Nasturtium Seeds, To Pickle, 16
+ Nut,-Apple-and-Celery Salad, 92
+ Nut-and-Celery Salad, 92
+ Nut-and-Cheese Sandwiches, 122
+ Nut-and-Chicken " 122
+ Nut-and-Fig Salad, 93
+ " " Fruit " 90
+ " , Litchi,-and-Orange Salad, 88
+ " -and-Orange Salad, 92
+
+ Oil, Value of, 8
+ Onion and Garlic, How to Use, 12
+ Orange-and-Banana Salad, 93
+ " " Litchi Nut Salad, 88
+ " " Walnut Salad, 92
+ Oyster Canapes, 168
+ " Cromeskies, 167
+ " Rarebit, 185
+ " -and-Celery Salad, 66
+ " -and-Sweetbread Salad, 67
+ Oysters in Aspic, 65
+ Oysters in Chafing-Dish, 163
+ " Creamed, 166
+ " Curried, 164, 165
+ " Deviled, 166
+ " a la D'Uxelles, 164
+ " Escalloped, 168
+ " , Fricassee of, 165
+ " , Kornlet, 201
+ " , Panned, 167
+ " , " Maitre d'Hotel, 167
+ " Saute, 168
+ " with Scrambled-Eggs, 166
+
+ Pan-Broiling, 212
+ Panned Oysters, 167
+ Paste, Chou, 140
+ Pastry Bag and Tubes, To Decorated Salads, 18
+ Pate-de-Foie-Gras in Aspic, 85
+ " " " Sandwiches, 122
+ Peach-and-Almond Salad, 94
+ Peach Salad, 95
+ Peach,-Strawberry-and-Cherry Salad, 95
+ Peanut Sandwiches, 125, 126
+ Peas, Creamed, 179
+ " with Egg, 198
+ Pineapple-and-Pimento Salad, 95
+ Pineapple Sandwiches, 133
+ Pineapple Sponge, 217
+ Plain Chocolate, 145
+ Plain Cocoa, 145
+ Potato Salad, 32, 33
+ " " , German Style, 37
+ " " with Mayonnaise, 50
+ " -and-Nasturtium Salad, 34
+ Potatoes, Maitre d'Hotel, 199
+ " , White Hashed, 199
+ Potted Meats and Fish, 141
+ Puff Balls, Sauted, 198
+ Puff Paste Sandwiches, 133
+ Pulled Bread, 139
+ Punch, Fruit, 146
+ " a la Nantes, 146
+
+ Radishes, To Cut for Garnish, 13
+ Ramequins, Cheese, 106
+ Rarebit, Halibut, 184
+ " , Oyster, 185
+ " , Sardine, 185
+ " , Welsh, 183
+ " , " No. 2, 183
+ " , " With Ale, 184
+ " , Yorkshire, 186
+ Rechauffe of Fish, 180, 181
+ " " Mutton, 215
+ Rechauffes, Concerning, 202
+ Rice Bread, 138
+ Rich Chocolate, 144
+ Rolls, Salad, 138
+ Rolls, Wedding Sandwich, 129
+ Romaine, To Shred, 15
+ Rose Leaf Sandwiches, 132
+ Royal Custard for Garnishing, 11
+ Russian Salad, 62
+ " Vegetable Salad, 48
+ " Sandwiches, 121
+
+ Salad Dressing, Boiled, 26
+ Salad Dressing, Cream, 27
+ " Dressings, Use of, 7
+ " , Fruit, When to Serve, 10
+ " Making, Important Points in, 9
+ " Rolls, 138
+ Salad:
+ " Anchovy, 74
+ " Apple,-Celery-and-English-Walnut, 92
+ " Artichoke, 45
+ " Asparagus, 47
+ " Asparagus and Salmon, 46
+ " Asparagus and Cauliflower, 46
+ " Bacon, 84
+ " Bluefish, 75
+ " Boudins-de-Saumon, 61
+ " Brook Trout, 55
+ " Brook Trout in Aspic, 55
+ " Brussels Sprouts and Beet, 35
+ " Cauliflower, 39
+ " Cauliflower, Egg Garnish, 49
+ " Celery-and-Chestnut, 92
+ " Celery-and-Nut, 43
+ " Cherry, 91
+ " Chicken, 78
+ " Chicken-and-Fresh Mushroom, 79
+ " Chicken, No. 3, 79
+ " Chicken, No. 4, 79
+ " Chiffonade, 94
+ " Combination, A Few, 30
+ " Cooked Vegetable Salad, 37
+ " Country, 87
+ " Cowslip-and-Cream Cheese, 49
+ " Cress,-Cucumber-and-Tomato, 41
+ " Cucumber, 36
+ " Cucumber for Fish Course, 36
+ " Duck-and-Olive, 83
+ " Duck-and-Orange, 83
+ " Easter, 86-87
+ " Endive, 30
+ " Endives-Tomato-and-Green-String-Bean, 36
+ " Fig-and-Nut, 93
+ " Fillets of Halibut in Aspic, 57
+ " Fillets of Halibut with Cole Slaw, 58
+ " Fish Moulded in Aspic, 59, 60
+ " French Chicken, 78
+ " Fruit, 89, 91
+ " Fruit-and-Nut, 90, 91
+ " Grapefruit, 93
+ " Grapefruit,-Pineapple-and-Pimento, 95
+ " Green-Pea, 47
+ " Green-Pea-and-Potato, 47
+ " Green and White, 88
+ " Halibut, 55, 56
+ " Halibut-and-Cucumber, 56
+ " Halibut (for Fish Course), 64
+ " Ham, 83
+ " Italian, 84
+ " Lentil, 31
+ " Lettuce, 29
+ " Lettuce,-Bamboo-Sprouts-and-Shrimps, 74
+ " Lobster, 71
+ " Lobster, No. 2, 71
+ " Lobster, No. 3, 71
+ " Lobster in Ring of Aspic, 72
+ " Macedoine, 35
+ " Macedoine of Vegetable, 47
+ " Mackerel or Bluefish, 60
+ " Marguerite, 86
+ " Miroton of Fish-and-Potato, 58
+ " Mousse-de-Poulet, 81, 82
+ " Moulded Salmon Salad, 75
+ " Mousseline of Lobster, 75
+ " Mushroom with Medallions of Chicken, 80
+ " Orange-and-Litchi Nut, 88
+ " Orange-and-Walnut, 92
+ " Orange-and-Banana, 93
+ " Oysters in Aspic, 65
+ " Oyster-and-Celery, 66
+ " Oyster-and-Sweetbread, 67
+ " Pate de Foie Gras in Aspic, 85
+ " Peach, 15
+ " Peach-and-Almond, 94
+ " Peach,-Strawberry-and-Cherry, 95
+ " Potato, 32, 33
+ " Potato-and-Nasturtium, 34
+ " Potato, German Style, 37
+ " Potato with Mayonnaise, 50
+ " Russian, 62
+ " Russian Vegetable, 48
+ " Salmon, 63
+ " Salt Mackerel, 61
+ " Sardine, 69
+ " Sardine, No. 2, 69
+ " Sardine-and-Egg, 70
+ " Scallop, 68
+ " Shad-Roe-and-Cucumber, 61
+ " Shells of Fish-and-Mushrooms, 65
+ " Shrimp, 68
+ " Shrimp in Cucumber Boats, 67
+ " Shrimp with Aspic Border, 67
+ " Spanish, 63
+ " Spinach-and-Egg, 86
+ " Spinach-and-Tongue, 85
+ " Stuffed Cucumber, 49
+ " Stuffed Beet, 34
+ " Stuffed Tomato, 40
+ " Sweetbread-and-Cucumber, 77
+ " Tomato-and-Artichoke, 44
+ " Tomato-and-Onion, 36
+ " Tomato-and-Sweetbread, 40
+ " Tomato, Horseradish Dressing, 40
+ " Tomato Jelly, No. 2, 43
+ " Tomato Jelly with String Beans, 44
+ " Tomatoes Farces a l'Aspic, 42
+ " Tomatoes Stuffed with Nuts and Celery, 39
+ " Tomatoes Stuffed with Cucumber, 41
+ " Tomatoes Stuffed with Jelly, 42
+ " Turkey-and-Chestnut, 83
+ " Turnip with Asparagus Tips, 46
+ " Turquoise, 94
+ " White Bean, 32
+ Salads, Arrangement of, 8
+ Salads, Decorating with Bag and Tubes, 18
+ Salads, Dressing of, 6
+ " , Introduction to Subject, 3
+ Salads, when Served with French Dressing, etc., 9
+ " , Serving with Cheese, 10
+ Salmi of Duck or Game, 208
+ Salmon Salad, 63
+ " " , Moulded, 75
+ Salmon-and-Asparagus Salad, 46
+ Sandwiches: Aberdeen, 205
+ " Beet-and-Cream-Cheese, 125
+ " Beverages Served with, 118
+ " Bread for, 116
+ " Caviare Roll, 120
+ " Celery, 20
+ " Cheese-and-Bar-le-Duc, 135
+ " Cheese- " -English-Walnut, 122
+ " Chicken-and-Nut, 127
+ " Chicken Roll, 123
+ " Chicken Salad, 127
+ " Club, 129
+ " Corned Beef, 119
+ " Cress-and-Egg, 122
+ " Cupid's Butter, 135
+ " Date-and-Ginger, 132
+ " Egg-and-Spinach, 122
+ " Epicurean, 123
+ " Fig, 131
+ " Filling for, 116
+ " French Fruit, 131
+ " Fruit or Claret Jelly, 134
+ " Fruit with Whipped Cream, 133
+ " Green Butter, 126
+ " Halibut with Aspic Jelly, 128
+ " Halibut-and-Lettuce, 124
+ " Ham-and-Egg, 119
+ " " " Tongue, 119
+ " Harlequin, 125
+ " Honey, 132
+ " Hunters', 136
+ " Lobster with Aspic, 128
+ " Lobster Fingers, 124
+ " Milwaukee, The, 129
+ " Mosaic, 127
+ " Mushroom-and-Lobster, 121
+ " Nasturtium Fold, 125
+ " Pate de Foie Gras (Imitation), 122
+ " Peanut, 125, 126
+ " Pineapple, 133
+ " Puff Paste, 133
+ " Rose Leaf, 132
+ " Russian, 121
+ " Sardine, 120
+ " Shad-Roe-and-Butter, 126
+ " Tomato, 200
+ " Tongue-and-Veal, 120
+ " Tower of Babel, 124
+ " Violet, 132
+ " Wedding Sandwich Roll, 129
+ " Whipped Cream, 133
+ Sardine Canapes, 177
+ Sardine-and-Egg Salad, 70
+ Sardine Mayonnaise, 25
+ " Rarebit, 185
+ " Salad, 69
+ " Sandwiches, 120
+ Sardines, Curried, 177
+ " , French Fashion, 177
+ " on Toast, 181
+ Sauce for Baba, 216
+ Sauce, Bacon, 27
+ " , Bechamel, 205, 210
+ " , Bernaise, 28
+ " , Bread, 211
+ " , Chaud-froid, 101
+ " , Cherry, 213
+ " , Hollandaise, 28, 173
+ " , Ingredients for One cup, 159
+ " , " " " pint, 160
+ " , Livournaise, 25
+ " , Mayonnaise, 22
+ " , Mushroom, 210
+ " , Tartare, 25
+ " , Tomato, 179
+ Sauces, How to Make, 158
+ " , Stock for use in, 99
+ Scallop Salad, 68
+ Scotch Woodcock, 190, 207
+ Scrambled Eggs with Cheese, 188
+ " " " Dried Beef, 189
+ " " " Ham, 204
+ " " " Oysters, 166
+ " " " Smoked Salmon, 188
+ " " " Tomatoes, 189
+ " " a la Union Club, 188
+ Shad-Roe-and-Butter Sandwiches, 126
+ Shad-Roe-and-Cucumber Salad, 61
+ Shells of Fish and Mushrooms, 65
+ Shirred Eggs, 192
+ Shrimp Salad, 68
+ " " Aspic Border, 67
+ " " , Cucumber Boat, 67
+ " , Bamboo-and-Lettuce Salad, 74
+ Shrimps with Peas, 175
+ " a la Poulette, 175
+ Smoked Salmon with Eggs, 188
+ Soda-Water, Home-Made, 147
+ Souffle, Cheese, 105
+ Souffles, " Iced, 108
+ Spaghetti, Queen Style, 203
+ Spanish Chocolate, 148
+ Spanish Salad, 63
+ Spinach-and-Egg Salad, 86
+ " with Eggs, 194
+ " -and-Tongue Salad, 85
+ Sponge, Pineapple, 217
+ " , Tapioca and Banana, 218
+ Stock, Chicken, for Aspic, 99
+ Stock, Fish, 100
+ " for Sauces, 99
+ Straws, Cheese, 106
+ Strawberry,-Peach-and-Cherry Salad, 95
+ String Beans, Lyonnaise, 200
+ Sultana Cocoa, 145
+ Sweetbread-and-Cucumber Salad, 77
+ Sweetbreads-and-Brains, To Cook, 16
+ " " Mushrooms, 196
+ " Sauted, 209
+
+ Tapioca-and-Banana Sponge, 218
+ Tartare Sauce, 25
+ Tea, Beef, in Chafing-Dish, 207
+ Tea, Five o'clock, 144
+ Terrapin, Mock, 203
+ Timbales, Chicken, 210
+ " , Egg, 211
+ " , Ham, 214
+ Toast, Fig, 217
+ " , Mock Crab, 186
+ " , Woodcock, 206
+ Tomato-and-Artichoke Salad, 44
+ Tomato, Bean-and-Endive Salad, 36
+ Tomato,-Cress-and-Cucumber Salad, 41
+ Tomato Jelly, 43
+ " " Salad, 43, 44
+ Tomato-and-Onion Salad, 36
+ Tomato Salad, Horseradish Dressing, 40
+ Tomato Salad, Stuffed, 40
+ Tomato Sandwich, 200
+ " -and-Sweetbread Salad, 40
+ Tomatoes Farces a l'Aspic, 42
+ Tomatoes with Scrambled Eggs, 189
+ Tomatoes Stuffed with Celery and Nuts, 39
+ Tomatoes Stuffed with Cucumber, 41
+ " " " Jelly, 42
+ Tongue-and-Ham Sandwiches, 119
+ " -and-Spinach Salad, 85
+ " " Veal Sandwiches, 120
+ Tower of Babel, 124
+ Turkey-and-Chestnut Salad, 83
+ Turnips and Asparagus in Salad, 46
+ Turquoise Salad, 94
+ Two Loaves of Wheat Bread, 137
+
+ Veal-and-Tongue Sandwiches, 120
+ Vegetable, Cooked, Salad, 37
+ Vegetable Salad, Macedoine of, 47
+ Vegetable Salad, Russian, 48
+ Vegetables, To Blanch and Cook, 14
+ " , Curried, 199
+ " , To Render Crisp, 14
+ Vinegar, Fines Herbes, 17, 18
+ " , Nasturtium, 77
+ " , Tarragon, 17
+ Violet Sandwiches, 132
+
+ Watercress, How to Keep, 16
+ Wedding Sandwich Rolls, 129
+ Welsh Rarebit, 183
+ " " No. 2, 183
+ " " with Ale, 184
+ Whipped Cream Sandwiches, 133
+ White Hashed Potatoes, 199
+ Wine Cake (Baba), 216
+ Woodcock Scotch, 190, 207
+ Woodcock Toast, 206
+
+ Yorkshire Rarebit, 186
+
+[Illustration: BOOKS THE BEST COMPANIONS]
+
+
+
+
+PRACTICAL COOKING & SERVING
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_By Janet McKenzie Hill_
+
+Of the Boston Cooking School
+
+This practical, up-to-date, and comprehensive work contains a "liberal
+education" in the selection, cooking, and serving of food. It is for the
+novice and expert alike, and the many illustrations (including pictures
+of utensils, tables for every sort of meal, decorations for festal
+occasions, dishes ready for serving, etc.) are absolutely invaluable to
+every housekeeper.
+
+=With washable aluminum cloth binding and 200 colored and half-tone
+illustrations. Price, net, $2.00. Postage 20 cents=
+
+
+
+
+The Pleasures of the Table
+
+By George H. Ellwanger
+
+[Illustration: LE CUISINIER
+
+After the engraving by Mariette]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nothing has been published in America on this subject since
+Brillat-Savarin, and there has not existed anywhere a complete
+historical account of the science of eating from the earliest times. The
+author has made a book of absorbing interest and of real literary
+distinction, full of quaint oddities and suggestive facts. It is bound
+to become a permanent and necessary addition to every library, public or
+private.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Illustrated. Price, net, $2.50=
+ =Postage 25 cents=
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO., New York
+
+
+
+
+"IF IT'S SLADE'S, IT IS PURE AND GOOD"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUCCESSFUL SALADS
+
+can be made by any one who uses SLADE'S SALAD CREAM, for this is an
+absolutely pure and wholesome salad dressing, prepared with scientific
+exactness, so as to obtain perfect results. Contains no chemical
+preservatives or artificial coloring matter. It is put up in pint,
+half-pint, and picnic bottles. Ask your grocer for it.
+
+
+CHAFING-DISH DAINTIES
+
+are best when flavored with SLADE'S SPICES, etc., for SLADE'S are always
+absolutely pure and extra strong.
+
+ SLADE'S PEPPER
+ SLADE'S PAPRIKA
+ SLADE'S CAYENNE
+ SLADE'S CURRY POWDER
+ SLADE'S CELERY SALT
+ SLADE'S QUICK COOKING TAPIOCA
+
+SLADE'S name protects you from fraud and adulteration--that is why you
+should ask your grocer for SLADE'S--SLADE'S are all and always
+absolutely pure and extra strong.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SEND FOR COOK BOOK
+ D. & L. SLADE CO., _Boston, Mass., U.S.A._
+
+
+
+
+NO OTHER FOOD PRODUCT HAS A LIKE RECORD
+
+Walter Baker & Co.'s
+
+Cocoa and Chocolate
+
+[Illustration: Registered U. S. Pat. Office]
+
+ 127 Years of Successful
+ Manufacture
+
+ 48 Highest Awards in
+ Europe and America
+
+It is a perfect food, highly nourishing, easily digested, fitted to
+repair wasted strength, preserve health, prolong life.
+
+_A new and handsomely illustrated Recipe Book free._
+
+ =WALTER BAKER & CO=
+ =LIMITED=
+ =DORCHESTER, MASS.=
+
+ =Established=
+ =1780=
+
+
+
+
+The Crowning Features
+
+of any banquet or family dinner are the creams and ices.
+
+JUNKET TABLETS
+
+make the ice cream of such a rich, palatable quality and exquisitely
+smooth, creamy texture that the dinner becomes a pleasant memory. Junket
+ice cream can be prepared in a great variety of ways, or Junket may be
+served as a cold milk jelly.
+
+=We mail 10 Tablets postpaid for 10 cents=
+
+ =Chr. Hansen's Laboratory=
+ =P. O. Box 2507 Little Falls, N. Y.=
+
+
+
+
+Crawford Cooking-Ranges
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The "Palace Crawford" is more compact and shapely than other stoves. It
+doesn't have that one-sided appearance of ordinary ranges, and it seems
+to fit the kitchen better. It is a real advance in stove making.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+In this range the end hearth, so much in the way, is not used. The ashes
+are caught in a hod--not a square pan--far below the grate; the
+left-hand hod in the picture. This makes the grate last longer. The
+right-hand hod is for the coal. You see, we have made a place for the
+coal-hod, _inside_ the stove, and we furnish both hods.
+
+There is extra room on the top of this range, because of the extra shelf
+at the left.
+
+The Patented Crawford Single Damper prevents mistakes in regulating; no
+other stove has it.
+
+Other improvements are the new style removable nickeled rails, which may
+be lifted off when the stove is blacked; the dock-ash grate; the heat
+indicator; the asbestos-lined oven; the cup-joint flues. We have also a
+smaller style--the "Castle Crawford."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CRAWFORD RANGES are made in the finest stove factory in the world, by
+Walker & Pratt Mfg. Co., Boston, and are sold by leading dealers
+everywhere.
+
+
+
+
+Pure Olive Oil
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ 1 Gallon Cans.
+ 5 Gallon Cans.
+
+
+
+
+VEUVE CHAFFARD
+
+ Pure
+ Olive Oil
+
+IN HONEST
+
+BOTTLES
+
+ SOLD BY
+ PARK & TILFORD, New York
+ S. S. PIERCE CO., Boston
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired and recipe form made consistent.
+
+Page 5, "recherche" changed to "recherche".
+
+Page 21, "teaspooonful" change to "teaspoonful". (1/2 of teaspoonful of
+salt.)
+
+Page 42, "Tomates" changed to "Tomatoes". (Tomatoes Farces)
+
+Page 85, "an" changed to "a". (centre half a)
+
+Page 96, "grape fruit" changed to "grapefruit". (grapefruit upon
+shredded)
+
+Page 156, "Newburg" changed to "Newburgh" to match rest of text. (a
+lobster Newburgh or)
+
+Page 164, the recipe for Curried Oysters was missing a measurement for
+"teaspoonful of curry powder" in the original text. Research showed that
+1/2 was most usual for recipes for this involving a fraction of a
+teaspoon. The text has been changed to reflect this.
+
+Illustration for Yorkshire Rarebit originally read "Yorkshire Rabbit."
+This was changed to fit the actual recipe.
+
+Page 215, "Rechauffe" changed to "Rechauffe". (Mutton Rechauffe)
+
+Page 221, index entry for Plain Lobster was lacking the page number. It
+has been added.
+
+Page 225, "Litichi" changed to "Litchi". (Litchi Nut Salad, 88)
+
+Page 225, "Duxelles" changed to "D'Uxelles". (a la D'Uxelles, 164)
+
+Page 228, "Serve" changed to "Served". (when Served with French)
+
+Page 229, in the index both "Souffle" and "Souffles" were changed to
+"Souffle" and "Souffles."
+
+The four instances of "tabasco" and five instances of "tobasco" were
+both retained, as were the instances of "well-nigh" and "wellnigh".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish
+Dainties, by Janet McKenzie Hill
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SALADS, SANDWICHES AND ***
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