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-Project Gutenberg's Miss Leslie's Complete Cookery, by Eliza Leslie
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Miss Leslie's Complete Cookery
- Directions for Cookery, in Its Various Branches
-
-Author: Eliza Leslie
-
-Release Date: July 31, 2019 [EBook #60025]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MISS LESLIE'S COMPLETE COOKERY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Julia Miller, Gemma J. Wright and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-
-Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
-Corrections and alterations from the original can be found at the end
-of the book. The original indexes have been retained, and a new index
-added which combines the two and corrects the alphabetical order.
-
-Scans of the original book can be found at
-https://archive.org/details/misslesliescompcol00lesl
-
-
-
-
- Miss Leslie's Complete Cookery.
-
- DIRECTIONS FOR COOKERY,
- IN ITS
- VARIOUS BRANCHES.
-
- BY MISS LESLIE.
-
- FORTY-NINTH EDITION.
-
- THOROUGHLY REVISED, WITH ADDITIONS.
-
- PHILADELPHIA:
- HENRY CAREY BAIRD,
- (SUCCESSOR TO E. L. CAREY,)
- NO. 7 HART'S BUILDING, SIXTH ST. ABOVE CHESTNUT.
- 1853.
-
-
-
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1837, by
- E. L. CAREY & A. HART,
- in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, in
- and for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851, by
- HENRY CAREY BAIRD,
- in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, in
- and for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
-
- STEREOTYPED BY L. JOHNSON AND CO.
- PHILADELPHIA.
- PRINTED BY T. K. AND P. G. COLLINS.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-In preparing a new and carefully revised edition of this, my first
-work on general cookery, I have introduced improvements, corrected
-errors, and added new receipts, that I trust will, on trial, be
-found satisfactory. The success of the book (proved by its immense
-and increasing circulation,) affords conclusive evidence that it has
-obtained the approbation of a large number of my countrywomen; many of
-whom have informed me that it has made practical housewives of young
-ladies who have entered into married life with no other acquirements
-than a few showy accomplishments. Gentlemen, also, have told me of
-great improvements in the family-table, after presenting their wives
-with this manual of domestic cookery; and that, after a morning devoted
-to the fatigues of business, they no longer find themselves subjected
-to the annoyance of an ill-dressed dinner.
-
-No man (or woman either) ought to be incapable of distinguishing bad
-eatables from good ones. Yet, I have heard some few ladies boast of
-that incapacity, as something meritorious, and declare that they
-considered the quality, the preparation, and even the taste of food, as
-things entirely beneath the attention of a rational being; their own
-minds being always occupied with objects of far greater importance.
-
-Let no man marry such a woman.[A] If indifferent to her own food,
-he will find her still more indifferent to his. A wife who cares
-not, or knows not what a table ought to be, always has bad cooks;
-for she cannot distinguish a bad one from a good one, dislikes
-change, and wonders how her husband can attach any importance to so
-trifling a circumstance as his dinner. Yet, though, for the sake of
-"preserving the peace," he may bring himself to pass over, as "trifling
-circumstances," the defects of his daily repasts, he will find himself
-not a little mortified, when, on inviting a friend to dinner, he finds
-his table disgraced by washy soup, poultry half raw, gravy unskimmed,
-and vegetables undrained; to say nothing of sour bread, ponderous
-puddings, curdled custards tasting of nothing, and tough pastry.
-
-Let all housekeepers remember that there is no possibility of producing
-nice dishes without a liberal allowance of good ingredients. "Out of
-nothing, nothing can come," is a homely proverb, but a true one. And so
-is the ancient caution against being "penny-wise and pound-foolish."
-By judicious management, and by taking due care that nothing is wasted
-or thrown away which might be used to advantage, one family will live
-"excellently well," at no greater cost in the end than another family
-is expending on a table that never has a good thing upon it.
-
-A sufficiency of wholesome and well-prepared food is absolutely
-necessary to the preservation of health and strength, both of body and
-mind. Ill-fed children rarely grow up with vigorous constitutions; and
-dyspepsia, in adults, is as frequently produced by eating food that is
-unpalatable or disagreeable to their taste, as by indulging too much
-in things they peculiarly relish. For those who possess the means of
-living well, it is a false (and sometimes fatal) economy to live badly;
-particularly when there is a lavish expenditure in fine clothes, fine
-furniture, and other ostentations, only excusable when _not_ purchased
-at the expense of health and comfort.
-
- ELIZA LESLIE.
-
- _Philadelphia, Jan. 16, 1851._
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[A] My instructress, the late Mrs. Goodfellow, remarked, in allusion to
-the dullness or silliness of some of her pupils, "It requires a head
-even to make cakes."
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTORY HINTS.
-
-WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.
-
-
-We recommend to all families that they should keep in the house a pair
-of scales, (one of the scales deep enough to hold flour, sugar, &c.,
-conveniently,) and a set of tin measures; as accuracy in proportioning
-the ingredients is indispensable to success in cookery. It is best
-to have the scales permanently fixed to a small beam projecting (for
-instance) from one of the shelves of the store-room. This will preclude
-the frequent inconvenience of their getting twisted, unlinked, and
-otherwise out of order; a common consequence of putting them in and out
-of their box, and carrying them from place to place. The weights (of
-which there should be a set from two pounds to a quarter of an ounce)
-ought carefully to be kept in the box, that none of them may be lost or
-mislaid.
-
-A set of tin measures (with small spouts or lips) from a gallon down
-to half a jill, will be found very convenient in every kitchen; though
-common pitchers, bowls, glasses, &c. may be substituted. It is also
-well to have a set of wooden measures from a bushel to a quarter of a
-peck.
-
-Let it be remembered, that of liquid measure--
-
- Two jills are half a pint.
- Two pints--one quart.
- Four quarts--one gallon.
-
-Of dry measure--
-
- Half a gallon is a quarter of a peck.
- One gallon--half a peck.
- Two gallons--one peck.
- Four gallons--half a bushel.
- Eight gallons--one bushel.
-
-About twenty-five drops of any thin liquid will fill a common sized
-tea-spoon.
-
-Four table-spoonfuls or half a jill, will fill a common wine glass.
-
-Four wine glasses will fill a half-pint or common tumbler, or a large
-coffee-cup.
-
-A quart black bottle holds in reality about a pint and a half.
-
-Of flour, butter, sugar, and most articles used in cakes and pastry,
-a quart is generally about equal in quantity to a pound avoirdupois,
-(sixteen ounces.) Avoirdupois is the weight designated throughout this
-book.
-
-Ten eggs generally weigh one pound before they are broken.
-
-A table-spoonful of salt is generally about one ounce.
-
-
-
-
-GENERAL CONTENTS.
-
-
- Page
-
- Soups; including those of Fish 13
-
- Fish; various ways of dressing 42
-
- Shell Fish; Oysters, Lobsters, Crabs, &c. 57
-
- Beef; including pickling and smoking it 68
-
- Veal 93
-
- Mutton and Lamb 106
-
- Pork; including Bacon, Sausages, &c. 114
-
- Venison; Hares, Rabbits, &c. 133
-
- Poultry and Game 140
-
- Gravy and Sauces 162
-
- Store Fish Sauces; Catchups, &c. 171
-
- Flavoured Vinegars 179
-
- Vegetables; including Indian Corn, Tomatas, Mushrooms, &c. 183
-
- Eggs; usual ways of dressing, including Omelets 206
-
- Pickling 212
-
- Sweetmeats; including Preserves and Jellies 230
-
- Pastry and Puddings; also Pancakes, Dumplings, Custards, &c. 272
-
- Syllabubs; also Ice Creams and Blancmange 318
-
- Cakes; including various sweet Cakes and Gingerbread 334
-
- Warm Cakes for Breakfast and Tea; also, Bread, Yeast, Butter,
- Cheese, Tea, Coffee, &c. 367
-
- Domestic Liquors; including home-made Beer, Wines, Shrub,
- Cordials, &c. 391
-
- Preparations for the Sick 411
-
- Perfumery 423
-
- Miscellaneous Receipts 431
-
- Additional Receipts 438
-
- * * * * *
-
- Animals used as Butchers' Meat 513
-
- Index 517
-
-
-
-
-MISS LESLIE'S COOKERY
-
-
-
-
-SOUPS.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-Always use soft water for making soup, and be careful to proportion the
-quantity of water to that of the meat. Somewhat less than a quart of
-water to a pound of meat, is a good rule for common soups. Rich soups,
-intended for company, may have a still smaller allowance of water.
-
-Soup should always be made entirely of fresh meat that has not been
-previously cooked. An exception to this rule may sometimes be made in
-favour of the remains of a piece of roast beef that has been _very
-much_ under-done in roasting. This may be _added_ to a good piece of
-raw meat. Cold ham, also, may be occasionally put into white soups.
-
-Soup made of cold meat has always a vapid, disagreeable taste, very
-perceptible through all the seasoning, and which nothing indeed can
-disguise. Also, it will be of a bad, dingy colour. The juices of the
-meat having been exhausted by the first cooking, the undue proportion
-of watery liquid renders it, for soup, indigestible and unwholesome, as
-well as unpalatable. As there is little or no nutriment to be derived
-from soup made with cold meat, it is better to refrain from using it
-for this purpose, and to devote the leavings of the table to some
-other object. No person accustomed to really good soup, made from
-fresh meat, can ever be deceived in the taste, even when flavoured
-with wine and spices. It is not true that French cooks have the art of
-producing _excellent_ soups from cold scraps. There is much _bad_ soup
-to be found in France, at inferior houses; but _good_ French cooks are
-not, as is generally supposed, really in the practice of concocting
-any dishes out of the refuse of the table. And we repeat, that cold
-meat, even when perfectly good, and used in a large quantity, has not
-sufficient substance to flavour soup, or to render it wholesome.
-
-Soup, however, that has been originally made of raw meat entirely, is
-frequently better the second day than the first; provided that it is
-re-boiled only for a very short time, and that no additional water is
-added to it.
-
-Unless it has been allowed to boil too hard, so as to exhaust the
-water, the soup-pot will not require replenishing. When it is found
-absolutely necessary to do so, the additional water must be boiling hot
-when poured in; if lukewarm or cold, it will entirely spoil the soup.
-
-Every particle of fat should be carefully skimmed from the surface.
-Greasy soup is disgusting and unwholesome. The lean of meat is much
-better for soup than the fat.
-
-Long and slow boiling is necessary to extract the strength from the
-meat. If boiled fast over a large fire, the meat becomes hard and
-tough, and will not give out its juices.
-
-Potatoes, if boiled in the soup, are thought by some to render it
-unwholesome, from the opinion that the water in which potatoes have
-been cooked is almost a poison. As potatoes are a part of every dinner,
-it is very easy to take a few out of the pot in which they have been
-boiled by themselves, and to cut them up and add them to the soup just
-before it goes to table. Remove all shreds of meat and bone.
-
-The cook should season the soup but very slightly with salt and pepper.
-If she puts in too much, it may spoil it for the taste of most of those
-that are to eat it; but if too little, it is easy to add more to your
-own plate.
-
-The practice of thickening soup by stirring flour into it is not a good
-one, as it spoils both the appearance and the taste. If made with a
-sufficient quantity of good fresh meat, and not too much water, and if
-boiled long and slowly, it will have substance enough without flour.
-
-
-FAMILY SOUP.
-
-Take a shin or leg of beef that has been newly killed; the fore leg is
-best, as there is the most meat on it. Have it cut into three pieces,
-and wash it well. To each pound allow somewhat less than a quart of
-water; for instance, to ten pounds of leg of beef, nine quarts of
-water is a good proportion. Put it into a large pot, and add half a
-table-spoonful of salt. Hang it over a good fire, as early as six
-o'clock in the morning, if you dine at two. When it has come to a
-hard boil, and the scum has risen, (which it will do as soon as it
-has boiled,) skim it well. Do not remove the lid more frequently than
-is absolutely necessary, as uncovering the pot causes the flavour
-to evaporate. Then set it on hot coals in the corner, and keep it
-simmering steadily, adding fresh coals so as to continue a regular heat.
-
-About nine o'clock, put in four carrots, one parsnip, and a large
-onion cut into slices, and four small turnips, and eight tomatas, also
-cut up; add a head of celery cut small. Put in a very small head of
-cabbage, cut into little pieces. If you have any objection to cabbage,
-substitute a larger proportion of the other vegetables. Put in also a
-bunch of sweet marjoram, tied up in a thin muslin rag to prevent its
-floating on the top.
-
-Let the soup simmer unceasingly till two o'clock, skimming it well:
-then take it up, and put it into a tureen. If your dinner hour is
-later, you may of course begin the soup later; but it will require at
-least eight hours' cooking; remembering to put in the vegetables three
-hours after the meat.
-
-If you wish to send the meat to table, take the best part of it out of
-the soup, about two hours before dinner. Have ready another pot with
-a dozen tomatas and a few cloves. Moisten them with a little of the
-soup, just sufficient to keep them from burning. When the tomatas have
-stewed down soft, put the meat upon them, and let it brown till dinner
-time over a few coals, keeping the pot closely covered: then send it to
-table on a dish by itself. Let the remainder of the meat be left in the
-large pot till you send up the soup, as by that time it will be boiled
-to rags and have transferred all its flavour to the liquid, which
-should be served up free from shreds.
-
-This soup will be greatly improved by the addition of a few dozen
-ochras cut into very thin slices, and put in with the other vegetables.
-You may put Lima beans into it, green peas, or indeed any vegetables
-you like: or you may thicken it with ochras and tomatas only.
-
-Next day, take what is left of the soup, put it into a pot, and simmer
-it over hot coals for half an hour: a longer time will weaken the
-taste. If it has been well made and kept in a cool place, it will be
-found better the second day than the first.
-
-If your family is very small, and the leg of beef large and the season
-winter, it may furnish soup for four successive days. Cut the beef in
-half; make soup of the first half, in the manner above directed, and
-have the remainder warmed next day: then on the third day make fresh
-soup of the second half.
-
-We have been minute in these directions; for if strictly followed, the
-soup, though plain, will be found excellent.
-
-If you do not intend to serve up the meat separately, break to pieces
-all the bones with a mallet or kitchen cleaver. This, by causing them
-to give out their marrow, &c., will greatly enrich the liquid. Do this,
-of course, when you first begin the soup. It is a slovenly and vulgar
-practice to send soup to table with shreds of meat and bits of bone in
-it.
-
-
-FINE BEEF SOUP.
-
-Begin this soup the day before it is wanted. Take a good piece of fresh
-beef that has been newly killed: any substantial part will do that has
-not too much fat about it: a fore leg is very good for this purpose.
-Wash it well. Cut off all the meat, and break up the bones. Put the
-meat and the bones into a large pot, very early in the day, so as to
-allow eight or nine hours for its boiling. Proportion the water to the
-quantity of meat--about a pint and a half to each pound. Sprinkle the
-meat with a small quantity of pepper and salt. Pour on the water, hang
-it over a moderate fire, and boil it slowly: carefully skimming off all
-the fat that rises to the top, and keeping it closely covered, except
-when you raise the lid to skim it. Do not, on any account, put in
-additional water to this soup while it is boiling; and take care that
-the boiling goes steadily on, as, if it stops, the soup will be much
-injured. But if the fire is too great, and the soup boils too fast, the
-meat will become hard and tough, and will not give out its juices.
-
-After the meat is reduced to rags, and the soup sufficiently boiled,
-remove the pot from the fire, and let it stand in the corner for a
-quarter of an hour to settle. Then take it up, strain it into a large
-earthen pan, cover it, and set it away in a cool dry place till next
-day. Straining it makes it clear and bright, and frees it from the
-shreds of meat and bone. If you find that it jellies in the pan, (which
-it will if properly made,) do not disturb it till you are ready to
-put it into the pot for the second boiling, as breaking the jelly may
-prevent it from keeping well.
-
-On the following morning, boil separately, carrots, turnips, onions,
-celery, and whatever other vegetables you intend to thicken the soup
-with. Tomatas will greatly improve it. Prepare them by taking off the
-skin, cutting them into small pieces, and stewing them in their own
-juice till they are entirely dissolved. Put on the carrots before any
-of the other vegetables, as they require the longest time to boil. Or
-you may slice and put into the soup a portion of the vegetables you are
-boiling for dinner; but they must be nearly done before you put them
-in, as the second boiling of the soup should not exceed half an hour,
-or indeed, just sufficient time to heat it thoroughly.
-
-Scrape off carefully from the cake of jellied soup whatever fat or
-sediment may still be remaining on it; divide the jelly into pieces,
-and about half an hour before it is to go to table, put it into a pot,
-add the various vegetables, (having first sliced them,) in sufficient
-quantities to make the soup very thick; hang it over the fire and
-let it boil slowly, or simmer steadily till dinner time. Boiling it
-much on the second day will destroy the flavour, and render it flat
-and insipid. For this reason, in making fine, clear beef soup, the
-vegetables are to be cooked separately. They need not be put in the
-first day, as the soup is to be strained; and on the second day,
-if put in raw, the length of time required to cook them would spoil
-the soup by doing it too much. We repeat, that when soup has been
-sufficiently boiled on the first day, and all the juices and flavour of
-the meat thoroughly extracted, half an hour is the utmost it requires
-on the second.
-
-Carefully avoid seasoning it too highly. Soup, otherwise excellent, is
-frequently spoiled by too much pepper and salt. These condiments can be
-added at table, according to the taste of those that are eating it; but
-if too large a proportion of them is put in by the cook, there is then
-no remedy, and the soup may by some be found uneatable.
-
-Many persons prefer boiling all the vegetables in the soup on the
-first day, thinking that they improve its flavour. This may be done
-in common soup that is not to be strained, but is inadmissible if you
-wish it to be very bright and clear. Also, unless you have a garden and
-a profusion of vegetables of your own, it is somewhat extravagant, as
-when strained out they are of no further use, and are therefore wasted.
-
-
-MUTTON SOUP.
-
-Cut off the shoulder part of a fore quarter of mutton, and having cut
-all the meat from the bone, put it into a soup pot with two quarts of
-water. As soon as it boils, skim it well, and then slacken the fire
-and simmer the meat for an hour and a half. Then take the remainder of
-the mutton, and put it whole into the soup-pot with sufficient boiling
-water to cover it well, and salt it to your taste. Skim it the moment
-the fresh piece of meat begins to boil, and about every quarter of an
-hour afterwards. It should boil slowly five hours. Prepare half a
-dozen turnips, four carrots,[B] and three onions, (all cut up, but not
-small,) and put them in about an hour and a half before dinner. You may
-also put in some small dumplings. Add some chopped parsley.
-
-Cut the meat off the scrag into small pieces, and send it to table in
-the tureen with the soup. The other half of the mutton should be served
-on a separate dish, with whole turnips boiled and laid round it. Many
-persons are fond of mutton that has been boiled in soup.
-
-You may thicken this soup with rice or barley that has first been
-soaked in cold water; or with green peas; or with young corn, cut down
-from the cob; or with tomatas scalded, peeled, and cut into pieces.
-
-_Cabbage Soup_ may be made in the same manner, of neck of mutton. Omit
-all the other vegetables, and put in a large head of white cabbage,
-stripped of the outside leaves, and cut small.
-
-_Noodle Soup_ can be made in this manner also. Noodles are a mixture of
-flour and beaten egg, made into a stiff paste, kneaded, rolled out very
-thin, and cut into long narrow slips, not thicker than straws, and then
-dried three or four hours in the sun, on tin or pewter plates. They
-must be put in the soup shortly before dinner, as, if boiled too long
-they will go to pieces.
-
-With the mutton that is taken from the soup you may send to table some
-suet dumplings, boiled in another pot, and served on a separate dish.
-Make them in the proportion of half a pound of beef suet to a pound
-and a quarter of flour. Chop the suet as fine as possible, rub it into
-the flour, and mix it into a dough with a little cold water. Roll it
-out thick, and cut it into dumplings about as large as the top of a
-tumbler, and boil them an hour.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[B] The carrots should be put in early, as they require a long time to
-boil; if full grown, at least three hours.
-
-
-VEAL SOUP.
-
-The knuckle or leg of veal is the best for soup. Wash it and break up
-the bones. Put it into a pot with a pound of ham or bacon cut into
-pieces, and water enough to cover the meat. A set of calf's feet, cut
-in half, will greatly improve it. After it has stewed slowly, till all
-the meat drops to pieces, strain it, return it to the pot, and put in
-a head of celery cut small, three onions, a bunch of sweet marjoram, a
-carrot and a turnip cut into pieces, and two dozen black pepper-corns,
-but not any salt. Add some small dumplings made of flour and butter.
-Simmer it another hour, or till all the vegetables are sufficiently
-done, and thus send it to table.
-
-You may thicken it with noodles, that is paste made of flour and beaten
-egg, and cut into long thin slips. Or with vermicelli, rice, or barley;
-or with green peas, or asparagus tops.
-
-
-RICH VEAL SOUP.
-
-Take three pounds of the scrag of a neck of veal, cut it into pieces,
-and put it with the bones (which must be broken up) into a pot with two
-quarts of water. Stew it till the meat is done to rags, and skim it
-well. Then strain it and return it to the pot.
-
-Blanch and pound in a mortar to a smooth paste, a quarter of a pound
-of sweet almonds, and mix them with the yolks of six hard boiled eggs
-grated, and a pint of cream, which must first have been boiled or it
-will curdle in the soup. Season it with nutmeg and mace. Stir the
-mixture into the soup, and let it boil afterward about three minutes,
-stirring all the time. Lay in the bottom of the tureen some slices of
-bread without the crust. Pour the soup upon it, and send it to table.
-
-
-CLEAR GRAVY SOUP.
-
-Having well buttered the inside of a nicely tinned stew-pot, cut half
-a pound of ham into slices, and lay them at the bottom, with three
-pounds of the lean of fresh beef, and as much veal, cut from the bones,
-which you must afterward break to pieces, and lay on the meat. Cover
-the pan closely, and set it over a quick fire. When the meat begins to
-stick to the pan, turn it; and when there is a nice brown glaze at the
-bottom, cover the meat with cold water. Watch it well, and when it is
-just coming to a boil, put in a pint of water. This will cause the scum
-to rise. Skim it well, and then pour in another pint of water; skim it
-again; pour in water as before, a pint at a time, and repeat this till
-no more scum rises. In skimming, carefully avoid stirring the soup, as
-that will injure its clearness.
-
-In the mean time prepare your vegetables. Peel off the outer skin of
-three large white onions and slice them. Pare three large turnips, and
-slice them also. Wash clean and cut into small pieces three carrots,
-and three large heads of celery. If you cannot obtain fresh celery,
-substitute a large table-spoonful of celery seed, tied up in a bit of
-clear muslin. Put the vegetables into the soup, and then place the
-pot on one side of the fire, where the heat is not so great as in the
-middle. Let it boil gently for four hours. Then strain the soup through
-a fine towel or linen bag into a large stone pan, but do not squeeze
-the bag, or the soap will be cloudy, and look dull instead of clear.
-In pouring it into the straining cloth, be careful not to disturb the
-ingredients at the bottom of the soup-pot.
-
-This soup should be of a fine clear amber colour. If not perfectly
-bright after straining, you may clarify it in this manner. Put it into
-the stew-pan. Break the whites of two eggs into a basin, carefully
-avoiding the smallest particle of the yolk. Beat the white of egg to
-a stiff froth, and then mix it gradually with the soup. Set it over
-the fire, and stir it till it boils briskly. Then take it off, and set
-it beside the fire to settle for ten minutes. Strain it then through
-a clean napkin, and it will be fit for use. But it is better to have
-the soup clear by making it carefully, than to depend on clarifying it
-afterward, as the white of egg weakens the taste.
-
-In making this (which is quite a show-soup) it is customary to reverse
-the general rule, and pour in cold water.
-
-
-SOUPE A LA JULIENNE.
-
-Make a gravy soup as in the preceding receipt, and strain it before you
-put in the vegetables. Cut some turnips and carrots into ribands, and
-some onions and celery into lozenges or long diamond-shaped pieces.
-Boil them separately. When the vegetables are thoroughly boiled, put
-them with the soup into the tureen, and then lay gently on the top some
-small squares of toasted bread without crust; taking care that they do
-not crumble down and disturb the brightness of the soup, which should
-be of a clear amber colour.
-
-
-MACCARONI SOUP.
-
-This also is made of clear gravy soup. Cut up and boil the maccaroni by
-itself in a very little water, allowing a quarter of a pound to a quart
-of soup. The pieces should be about an inch long. Put a small piece of
-butter with it. It must boil till tender, but not till it breaks. Throw
-it into the soup shortly before it goes to table, and give it one boil
-up. Send to table with it a plate or glass of rasped Parmesan or other
-rich cheese, with a dessert spoon in it, that those who like it may put
-it into their soup on the plate.
-
-While the maccaroni is boiling, take care that it does not get into
-lumps.
-
-
-RICH MACCARONI SOUP.
-
-Take a quart of clear gravy soup, and boil in it a pound of the best
-maccaroni cut into pieces. When it is tender, take out half of the
-maccaroni, and add to the remainder two quarts more of the soup. Boil
-it till the maccaroni is entirely dissolved and incorporated with the
-liquid. Strain it: then return it to the soup-pan, and add to it the
-remainder of the maccaroni, (that was taken out before the pieces
-broke,) and put in a quarter of a pound of grated Parmesan cheese. Let
-it simmer awhile, but take it up before it comes to a boil.
-
-It may be made with milk instead of gravy soup.
-
-
-VERMICELLI SOUP.
-
-Cut a knuckle of veal, or a neck of mutton into small pieces, and put
-them, with the bones broken up, into a large stew-pan. Add the meat
-sliced from a hock or shank of ham, a quarter of a pound of butter, two
-large onions sliced, a bunch of sweet herbs, and a head of celery cut
-small. Cover the pan closely, and set it without any water over a slow
-fire for an hour or more, to extract the essence from the meat. Then
-skim it well, and pour in four quarts of boiling water, and let it boil
-gently till all the meat is reduced to rags. Strain it, set it again on
-the fire, and add a quarter of a pound of vermicelli, which has first
-been scalded in boiling water. Season it to your taste with a little
-cayenne pepper, and let it boil five minutes. Lay a large slice of
-bread in the bottom of your tureen, and pour the soup upon it.
-
-For the veal or mutton you may substitute a pair of large fowls cut
-into pieces; always adding the ham or a few slices of bacon, without
-which it will be insipid. Old fowls that are fit for no other purpose
-will do very well for soup.
-
-
-MILK SOUP.
-
-Boil two quarts of milk with a quarter of a pound of sweet almonds,
-and two ounces of bitter ones, blanched and broken to pieces, and a
-large stick of cinnamon broken up. Stir in sugar enough to make it very
-sweet. When it has boiled, strain it. Cut some thin slices of bread,
-and (having pared off the crust) toast them. Lay them in the bottom
-of a tureen, pour a little of the hot milk over them, and cover them
-close, that they may soak. Beat the yolks of five eggs very light.
-Set the milk on hot coals, and add the eggs to it by degrees; stirring
-it all the time till it thickens. Then take it off instantly, lest it
-curdle, and pour it into the tureen, boiling not, over the bread.
-
-This will be still better if you cover the bottom with slices of baked
-apple.
-
-
-RICH BROWN SOUP.
-
-Take six pounds of the lean of fresh beef, cut from the bone. Stick it
-over with four dozen cloves. Season it with a tea-spoonful of salt, a
-tea-spoonful of pepper, a tea-spoonful of mace, and a beaten nutmeg.
-Slice half a dozen onions; fry them in butter; chop them, and spread
-them over the meat after you have put it into the soup-pot. Pour
-in five quarts of water, and stew it slowly for five or six hours;
-skimming it well. When the meat has dissolved into shreds, strain it,
-and return the liquid to the pot. Then add a tumbler and a half, or six
-wine glasses of claret or port wine. Simmer it again slowly till dinner
-time. When the soup is reduced to three quarts, it is done enough. Put
-it into a tureen, and send it to table.
-
-
-RICH WHITE SOUP.
-
-Take a pair of large fat fowls. Cut them up. Butter the inside of the
-soup-pot, and put in the pieces of fowl with two pounds of the lean of
-veal, cut into pieces, or with four calf's feet cut in half. Season
-them with a tea-spoonful of salt, a half tea-spoonful of cayenne
-pepper, and a dozen blades of mace. Cover them with water, and stew
-it slowly for an hour, skimming it well. Then take out the breasts and
-wings of the fowls, and having cut off the flesh, chop it fine. Keep
-the pot covered, and the veal and the remainder of the fowls still
-stewing.
-
-Mix the chopped chicken with the grated crumb of about one quarter of
-a loaf of stale bread, (a six cent loaf,) having soaked the crumbs in
-a little warm milk. Have ready the yolks of four hard boiled eggs,
-a dozen sweet almonds, and half a dozen bitter ones blanched and
-broken small. Mix the egg and almonds with the chopped chicken and
-grated bread, and pound all in a mortar till it is well incorporated.
-Strain the soup from the meat and fowl, and stir this mixture into the
-liquid, after it has stewed till reduced to two quarts. Having boiled
-separately a quart of cream or rich milk, add it hot to the soup, a
-little at a time. Cover it, and let it simmer a few minutes longer.
-Then send it to table.
-
-These two soups (the brown and the white) are suited to dinner parties.
-
-
-MEG MERRILIES' SOUP.
-
-Take four pounds of venison, or if you cannot procure venison you may
-substitute the lean of fresh beef or mutton. Season it with pepper and
-salt, put it into a large pot, (break the bones and lay them on the
-meat,) pour in four quarts of water, and boil it three hours, skimming
-it well. Then strain it, and put it into another pot.
-
-Cut up a hare or a rabbit, a pair of partridges, and a pair of grouse;
-or one of each, with a pheasant, a woodcock, or any other game that
-you can most easily obtain. Season them and put them into the soup.
-Add a dozen small onions, a couple of heads of celery cut small, and
-half a dozen sliced potatoes. Let the soup simmer till the game is
-sufficiently done, and all the vegetables tender.
-
-This is the soup with which the gipsy, Meg Merrilies, regaled Dominie
-Sampson.
-
-When game is used for soup, it must be newly killed, and quite fresh.
-
-
-VENISON SOUP.
-
-Take four pounds of freshly killed venison cut off from the bones, and
-one pound of ham in small slices. Add an onion minced, and black pepper
-to your taste. Put only as much water as will cover it, and stew it
-gently for an hour, keeping the pot closely covered. Then skim it well,
-and pour in a quart of boiling water. Add a head of celery cut into
-small pieces, and half a dozen blades of mace. Boil it gently two hours
-and a half. Then put in a quarter of a pound of butter, divided into
-small pieces and rolled in flour, and half a pint of port or Madeira
-wine. Let it boil a quarter of an hour longer, and then send it to
-table with the meat in it.
-
-
-HARE OR RABBIT SOUP.
-
-Take a large newly killed hare, or two rabbits; cut them up and wash
-the pieces. Save all the blood, (which adds much to the flavour of the
-hare,) and strain it through a sieve. Put the pieces into a soup-pot
-with four whole onions stuck with a few cloves, four or five blades of
-mace, a head of celery cut small, and a bunch of parsley with a large
-bunch of sweet marjoram and one of sweet basil, all tied together.
-Salt and cayenne to your taste. Pour in three quarts of water, and
-stew it gently an hour and a half. Then put in the strained blood and
-simmer it for another hour, at least. Do not let it actually boil, as
-that will cause the blood to curdle. Then strain it, and pound half the
-meat in a mortar, and stir it into the soup to thicken it, and cut the
-remainder of the meat into small mouthfuls. Stir in, at the last, a
-jill or two glasses of red wine, and a large table-spoonful of currant
-jelly. Boil it slowly a few minutes longer, and then put it into your
-tureen. It will be much improved by the addition of two or three dozen
-small force-meat balls, about the size of a nutmeg. This soup will
-require cooking at least four hours.
-
-Partridge, pheasant, or grouse soup may be made in a similar manner.
-
-If you have any clear gravy soup, you may cut up the hare, season it
-as above, and put it into a jug or jar well covered and set in boiling
-water till the meat is tender. Then put it into the gravy soup, add the
-wine, and let it come to a boil. Send it to table with the pieces of
-the hare in the soup.
-
-When hare soup is made in this last manner, omit using the blood.
-
-
-MULLAGATAWNY SOUP,
-
-AS MADE IN INDIA.
-
-Take a quarter of an ounce of China turmeric, the third of an ounce of
-cassia, three drachms of black pepper, two drachms of cayenne pepper,
-and an ounce of coriander seeds. These must all be pounded fine in a
-mortar, and well mixed and sifted. They will make sufficient curry
-powder for the following quantity of soup:
-
-Take two large fowls, or three pounds of the lean of veal. Cut the
-flesh entirely from the bones in small pieces, and put it into a
-stew-pan with two quarts of water. Let it boil slowly for half an
-hour, skimming it well. Prepare four large onions, minced, and fried
-in two ounces of butter. Add to them the curry powder, and moisten the
-whole with broth from the stew-pan, mixed with a little rice flour.
-When thoroughly mixed, stir the seasoning into the soup, and simmer it
-till it is as smooth and thick as cream, and till the chicken or veal
-is perfectly tender. Then stir into it the juice of a lemon; and five
-minutes after take up the soup, with the meat in it, and serve it in
-the tureen.
-
-Send to table separately, boiled rice on a hot water dish to keep it
-warm. The rice is to be put into the plates of soup by those who eat it.
-
-To boil rice for this soup in the East India fashion:--Pick and wash
-half a pound in warm water. Put it into a saucepan. Pour two quarts
-of boiling water over it, and cover the pan closely. Set it in a warm
-place by the fire, to cook gradually in the hot water. In an hour pour
-off all the water, and setting the pan on hot coals, stir up and toss
-the rice with a fork, so as to separate the grains, and to dry without
-hardening it. Do not use a spoon, as that will not loosen the grains
-sufficiently. You may toss it with two forks.
-
-
-MOCK TURTLE OR CALF'S HEAD SOUP.
-
-This soup will require eight hours to prepare. Take a large calf's
-head, and having cleaned, washed, and soaked it, put it into a pot with
-a knuckle of veal, and the hock of a ham, or a few slices of bacon; but
-previously cut off and reserve enough of the veal to make two dozen
-small force-meat balls. Put the head and the other meat into as much
-water as will cover it very well, so that it may not be necessary to
-replenish it: this soup being always made very rich. Let it boil slowly
-four hours, skimming it carefully. As soon as no more scum rises,
-put in six potatoes, and three turnips, all sliced thin; with equal
-proportions of parsley, sweet marjoram, and sweet basil, chopped fine;
-and cayenne pepper to your taste. The ham will salt it sufficiently.
-
-An hour before you send the meat to table, make about two dozen small
-force-meat balls of minced veal and beef-suet in equal quantities,
-seasoned with pepper and salt; sweet herbs, grated lemon-peel, and
-powdered nutmeg and mace. Add some beaten yolk of egg to make all these
-ingredients stick together. Flour the balls very well, and fry them
-in butter. Before you put them into the soup, take out the head, and
-the other meat. Cut the meat from the head in small pieces, and return
-it to the soup. When the soup is nearly done, stir in half a pint of
-Madeira. Have ready at least a dozen egg-balls made of the yolks of
-hard boiled eggs, grated or pounded in a mortar, and mixed with a
-little flour and sufficient raw yolk of egg to bind them. Make them up
-into the form and size of boy's marbles. Throw them into the soup at
-the last, and also squeeze in the juice of a lemon. Let it get another
-slow boil, and then put it into the tureen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We omit a receipt for _real_ turtle soup, as when that very expensive,
-complicated, and difficult dish is prepared in a private family, it is
-advisable to hire a first-rate cook for the express purpose.
-
-An easy way is to get it ready made, in any quantity you please, from a
-turtle-soup house.
-
-
-OX TAIL SOUP.
-
-Three ox tails will make a large tureen full of soup. Desire the
-butcher to divide them at the joints. Rub them with salt, and put them
-to soak in warm water, while you prepare the vegetables. Put into a
-large pot or stew-pan four onions peeled and quartered, a bunch of
-parsley, two sliced carrots, two sliced turnips, and two dozen pepper
-corns. Then put in the tails, and pour on three quarts of water.
-
-Cover the pot, and set it on hot coals by the side of the fire. Keep
-it gently simmering for about three hours, supplying it well with
-fresh hot coals. Skim it carefully. When the meat is quite tender, and
-falls from the bones, strain the soup into another pot, and add to it
-a spoonful of mushroom catchup, and two spoonfuls of butter rubbed in
-flour.
-
-You may thicken it also with the pulp of a dozen onions first fried
-soft, and then rubbed through a cullender. After it is thickened, let
-it just boil up, and then send it to table, with small squares of
-toasted bread in the tureen.
-
-
-OCHRA SOUP.
-
-Take a large slice of ham (cold boiled ham is best) and two pounds
-of the lean of fresh beef; cut all the meat into small pieces. Add a
-quarter of a pound of butter slightly melted: twelve large tomatas
-pared and cut small; five dozen ochras cut into slices not thicker
-than a cent; and a little cayenne pepper to your taste. Put all these
-ingredients into a pot; cover them with boiling water, and let them
-stew slowly for an hour. Then add three quarts of _hot_ water, and
-increase the heat so as to make the soup boil. Skim it well, and stir
-it frequently with a wooden or silver spoon.
-
-Boil it till the tomatas are all to pieces, and the ochras entirely
-dissolved. Strain it, and then serve it up with toasted bread cut into
-dice, put in after it comes out of the pot.
-
-This soup will be improved by a pint of shelled Lima beans, boiled by
-themselves, and put into the tureen just before you send it to table.
-
-
-BEAN SOUP.
-
-Put two quarts of dried white beans into soak the night before you make
-the soup, which should be put on as early in the day as possible.
-
-Take five pounds of the lean of fresh beef--the coarse pieces will do.
-Cut them up, and put them into your soup-pot with the bones belonging
-to them, (which should be broken to pieces,) and a pound of bacon cut
-very small. If you have the remains of a piece of beef that has been
-roasted the day before, and so much under-done that the juices remain
-in it, you may put it into the pot, and its bones along with it. Season
-the meat with pepper only, and pour on it six quarts of water. As soon
-as it boils take off the scum, and put in the beans (having first
-drained them) and a head of celery cut small, or a table-spoonful of
-pounded celery-seed. Boil it slowly till the meat is done to shreds,
-and the beans all dissolved. Then strain it through a cullender into
-the tureen, and put into it small squares of toasted bread with the
-crust cut off.
-
-Some prefer it with the beans boiled soft, but not quite dissolved. In
-this case, do not strain it; but take out the meat and bones with a
-fork before you send it to table.
-
-
-PEAS SOUP.
-
-Soak two quarts of dried or split peas over-night. In the morning take
-three pounds of the lean of fresh beef, and a pound of bacon or pickled
-pork. Cut them into pieces, and put them into a large soup-pot with the
-peas, (which must first be well drained,) and a table-spoonful of dried
-mint rubbed to powder. Add five quarts of water, and boil the soup
-gently for three hours, skimming it well, and then put in four heads of
-celery cut small, or two table-spoonfuls of pounded celery seed.
-
-It must be boiled till the peas are entirely dissolved, so as to be
-no longer distinguishable, and the celery quite soft. Then strain it
-into a tureen, and serve it up with toasted bread cut in dice. Omit the
-crust of the bread.
-
-Stir it up immediately before it goes to table, as it is apt to settle,
-and be thick at the bottom and thin at the top.
-
-
-GREEN PEAS SOUP.
-
-Take four pounds of knuckle of veal, and a pound of bacon. Cut them to
-pieces, and put them into a soup kettle with a sprig of mint and five
-quarts of water. Boil it moderately fast, and skim it well. When the
-meat is boiled to rags, strain it out, and put to the liquor a quart of
-young green peas. Boil them till they are entirely dissolved, and till
-they have thickened the soup, and given it a green colour.[C]
-
-Have ready two quarts of green peas that have been boiled in another
-pot with a sprig of mint, and two or three lumps of loaf sugar, (which
-will greatly improve the taste.) After they have boiled in this pot
-twenty minutes, take out the mint, put the whole peas into the pot
-of soup, and boil all together about ten minutes. Then put it into a
-tureen, and send it to table.
-
-Never use hard old green peas for this soup, or for any other purpose.
-When they begin to turn yellow, it is time to leave them off for the
-season.
-
-Lima bean soup may be made in the same manner.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[C] You may greatly improve the colour by pounding a handful of spinach
-in a mortar, straining the juice, and adding it to the soup about a
-quarter of an hour before it has done boiling.
-
-
-ASPARAGUS SOUP.
-
-Asparagus soup may be made in a similar manner to that of green peas.
-You must have four or five bunches of asparagus. Cut off the green
-tops, and put half of them into the soup, after the meat has been
-boiled to pieces and strained out. The asparagus must be boiled till
-quite dissolved, and till it has given a green colour to the soup. Then
-take the remainder of the asparagus tops (which must all this time have
-been lying in cold water) and put them into the soup, and let them boil
-about twenty minutes. Serve it up with small squares of toast in the
-tureen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-You may heighten the green of this soup by adding the juice of a
-handful of spinach, pounded in a mortar and strained. Or you may
-colour it with the juice of boiled spinach squeezed through a cloth.
-The spinach juice should be put in fifteen or ten minutes before you
-take up the soup, as a short boiling in it will take off the peculiar
-taste.
-
-
-FRIAR'S CHICKEN.
-
-Cut up four pounds of knuckle of veal; season it with white pepper
-and salt: put it into a soup-pan and let it boil slowly till the meat
-drops from the bone. Then strain it off. Have ready a pair of young
-fowls skinned, and cut up as you carve them at table. Season them with
-white pepper, salt, and mace. Put them into the soup, add a handful of
-chopped parsley, and let them boil. When the pieces of chicken are all
-quite tender, have ready four or five eggs well beaten. Stir the egg
-into the soup, and take it immediately off the fire lest it curdle.
-Serve up the chicken in the soup.
-
-Rabbits may be substituted for fowls.
-
-
-CAT-FISH SOUP.
-
-Cat-fish that have been caught near the middle of the river are much
-nicer than those that are taken near the shore where they have access
-to impure food. The small white ones are the best. Having cut off their
-heads, skin the fish, and clean them, and cut them in three. To twelve
-small cat-fish allow a pound and a half of ham. Cut the ham into small
-pieces, or mouthfuls, and scald it two or three times in boiling water,
-lest it be too salt. Chop together a bunch of parsley and some sweet
-marjoram stripped from the stalks. Put these ingredients into a soup
-kettle and season them with pepper: the ham will make it salt enough.
-Add a head of celery cut small, or a large table-spoonful of celery
-seed tied up in a bit of clear muslin to prevent its dispersing. Put
-in two quarts of water, cover the kettle, and let it boil slowly till
-every thing is sufficiently done, and the fish and ham quite tender.
-Skim it frequently. Boil in another vessel a quart of rich milk, in
-which you have melted a quarter of a pound of butter divided into small
-bits and rolled in flour. Pour it hot to the soup, and stir in at the
-last the beaten yolks of four eggs. Give it another boil, just to take
-off the rawness of the eggs, and then put it into a tureen, taking out
-the bag of celery seed before you send the soup to table, and adding
-some toasted bread cut into small squares. In making toast for soup,
-cut the bread thick, and pare off all the crust.
-
-Before you send it to table, remove the back-bones of the cat-fish.
-
-Eel soup may be made in the same manner: chicken soup also.
-
-
-LOBSTER SOUP.
-
-Have ready a good broth made of a knuckle of veal boiled slowly in as
-much water as will cover it, till the meat is reduced to rags. It must
-then be well strained.
-
-Having boiled three fine middle-sized lobsters, extract all the meat
-from the body and claws. Bruise part of the coral in a mortar, and
-also an equal quantity of the meat. Mix them well together. Add mace,
-nutmeg, cayenne, and a little grated lemon-peel; and make them up into
-force-meat balls, binding the mixture with the yolk of an egg slightly
-beaten.
-
-Take three quarts of the veal broth, and put into it the meat of the
-lobsters cut into mouthfuls. Boil it together about twenty minutes.
-Then thicken it with the remaining coral, (which you must first rub
-through a sieve,) and add the force-meat balls, and a little butter
-rolled in flour. Simmer it gently for ten minutes, but do not let it
-come to a boil, as that will injure the colour. Pour it into a tureen,
-and send it to table immediately.
-
-
-OYSTER SOUP.
-
-Season two quarts of oysters with a little cayenne. Then take them out
-of the liquor. Grate and roll fine a dozen crackers. Put them into the
-liquor with a large lump of fresh butter. When the grated biscuit has
-quite dissolved, add a quart of milk with a grated nutmeg, and a dozen
-blades of mace; and, if in season, a head of celery split fine and cut
-into small pieces. Season it to your taste with pepper.
-
-Mix the whole together, and set it in a closely covered vessel over a
-slow fire. When it comes to a boil, put in the oysters; and when it
-comes to a boil again, they will be sufficiently done.
-
-Before you send it to table put into the tureen some toasted bread cut
-into small squares, omitting the crust.
-
-
-ANOTHER OYSTER SOUP.
-
-Take two quarts of large oysters. Strain their liquor into a soup pan;
-season it with a tea-spoonful of whole pepper, a tea-spoonful of grated
-nutmeg, the same quantity of whole cloves, and seven or eight blades of
-mace. If the oysters are fresh, add a large tea-spoonful of salt; if
-they are salt oysters, none is requisite. Set the pan on hot coals,
-and boil it slowly (skimming it when necessary) till you find that it
-is sufficiently flavoured with the taste of the spice. In the mean
-time (having cut out the hard part) chop the oysters fine, with some
-hard-boiled yolk of egg. Take the liquor from the fire, and strain out
-the spice from it. Then return it to the soup pan, and put the chopped
-oysters into it, with whatever liquid may have continued about them.
-Add a quarter of a pound of butter, divided into little bits and rolled
-in flour. Cover the pan, and let it boil hard about five minutes. If
-oysters are cooked too much they become tough and tasteless.
-
-
-CLAM SOUP.
-
-Having put your clams into a pot of boiling water to make them open
-easily, take them from the shells, carefully saving the liquor. To the
-liquor of fifty opened clams, allow three quarts of water. Mix the
-water with the liquor of the clams and put it into a large pot with a
-knuckle of veal, the bone of which should be chopped in four places.
-When it has simmered slowly three hours, put in a large bunch of sweet
-herbs, a beaten nutmeg, a tea-spoonful of mace, and a table-spoonful
-of whole pepper, but no salt, as the salt of the clam liquor will be
-sufficient. Stew it slowly an hour longer, and then strain it. When you
-have returned the liquor to the pot, add a quarter of a pound of butter
-divided into four and each bit rolled in flour. Then put in the clams,
-(having cut them in pieces,) and let it boil fifteen minutes. Send it
-to table with toasted bread in it cut into dice.
-
-This soup will be greatly improved by the addition of small force-meat
-balls. Make them of cold minced veal or chicken, mixed with equal
-quantities of chopped suet and sweet marjoram, and a smaller
-proportion of hard-boiled egg, grated lemon-peel, and powdered nutmeg.
-Pound all the ingredients together in a mortar, adding a little pepper
-and salt. Break in a raw egg or two (in proportion to the quantity) to
-bind the whole together and prevent it from crumbling to pieces. When
-thoroughly mixed, make the force-meat into small balls, and let them
-boil ten minutes in the soup, shortly before you send it to table. If
-you are obliged to make them of raw veal or raw chicken they must boil
-longer.
-
-It will be a great improvement first to pound the clams in a mortar.
-
-Oyster soup may be made in this manner.
-
-
-PLAIN CLAM SOUP.
-
-Take a hundred clams, well washed, and put them into a large pot of
-boiling water. This will cause the shells to open. As they open take
-them out, and extract the clams, taking care to save the liquor. Mix
-with the liquor a quart of water, (or what will be much better, a quart
-of milk,) and thicken it with butter rolled in flour. Add a small
-bunch of sweet marjoram, and a large table-spoonful of whole pepper.
-Put the liquid into a pot over a moderate fire. Make some little round
-dumplings (about the size of a hickory nut) of flour and butter, and
-put them into the soup. When it comes to a boil, put in the clams, and
-keep them boiling an hour. Take them out before you send the soup to
-table.
-
-When the soup is done, take out the sweet marjoram. Have ready some
-toasted bread cut into small squares or dice. Put it into the soup
-before you send it to table.
-
-You may make oyster soup in a similar manner.
-
-
-WATER SOUCHY.
-
-Cut up four flounders, or half a dozen perch, two onions, and a bunch
-of parsley. Put them into three quarts of water, and boil them till
-the fish go entirely to pieces, and dissolve in the water. Then strain
-the liquor through a sieve and put it into a kettle or stew-pan. Have
-ready a few more fish with the heads, tails, and fins removed, and the
-brown skin taken off. Cut little notches in them, and lay them for a
-short time in very cold water. Then put them into the stew-pan with
-the liquor or soup-stock of the first fish. Season with pepper, salt,
-and mace, and add half a pint of white wine or two table-spoonfuls of
-vinegar. Boil it gently for a quarter of an hour, and skim it well.
-
-Provide some parsley roots, cut into slices and boiled till very
-tender; and also a quantity of parsley leaves boiled nice and green.
-After the fish-pan has boiled moderately fifteen minutes, take it off
-the fire, and put in the parsley roots; also a little mushroom catchup.
-
-Take out the fish and lay them in a broad deep dish, or in a tureen,
-and then pour on the soup very gently for fear of breaking them. Strew
-the green parsley leaves over the top. Have ready plates of bread and
-butter, which it is customary to eat with water souchy.
-
-You may omit the wine or vinegar, and flavour the soup just before you
-take it from the fire with essence of anchovy, or with any other of the
-essences and compound fish-sauces that are in general use.
-
-Water souchy (commonly pronounced _sookey_) is a Dutch soup. It may be
-made of any sort of small fish; but flounders and perch are generally
-used for it. It is very good made of carp.
-
-
-
-
-FISH.
-
-
-REMARKS.
-
-In choosing fresh fish, select only those that are thick and firm, with
-bright scales and stiff fins; the gills a very lively red, and the eyes
-full and prominent. In the summer, as soon as they are brought home,
-clean them, and put them in ice till you are ready to cook them; and
-even then do not attempt to keep a fresh fish till next day. Mackerel
-cannot be cooked too soon, as they spoil more readily than any other
-fish.
-
-Oysters in the shell may be kept from a week to a fortnight, by the
-following process. Cover them with water, and wash them clean with a
-birch broom. Then lay them with the deep or concave part of the shell
-undermost, and sprinkle each of them well with salt and Indian meal.
-Fill up the tub with cold water. Repeat this every day; first pouring
-off the liquid of the day before.
-
-The tub must stand all the time in a cool cellar, and be covered well
-with an old blanket, carpeting, or something of the sort.
-
-If carefully attended to, oysters kept in this manner will not only
-live but fatten.
-
-It is customary to eat fish only at the commencement of the dinner.
-Fish and soup are generally served up alone, before any of the other
-dishes appear, and with no vegetable but potatoes; it being considered
-a solecism in good taste to accompany them with any of the other
-productions of the garden except a little horse-radish, parsley, &c. as
-garnishing.
-
-In England and at the most fashionable tables in America, bread only is
-eaten with fish. To this rule salt cod is an exception.
-
-
-TO BOIL FRESH SALMON.
-
-Scale and clean the fish, handling it as little as possible, and
-cutting it open no more than is absolutely necessary. Place it on the
-strainer of a large fish-kettle and fill it up with cold water. Throw
-in a handful of salt. Let it boil slowly. The length of time depends on
-the size and weight of the fish. You may allow a quarter of an hour to
-each pound; but experience alone can determine the exact time. It must
-however be thoroughly done, as nothing is more disgusting than fish
-that is under-cooked. You may try it with a fork. Skim it well or the
-colour will be bad.
-
-The minute it is completely boiled, lift up the strainer and rest it
-across the top of the kettle, that the fish may drain, and then, if you
-cannot send it to table immediately, cover it with a soft napkin or
-flannel several folds double, to keep it firm by absorbing the moisture.
-
-Send it to table on a hot dish. Garnish with scraped horseradish and
-curled parsley. Have ready a small tureen of lobster sauce to accompany
-the salmon.
-
-Take what is left of it after dinner, and put it into a deep dish with
-a close cover. Having saved some of the water in which the fish was
-boiled, take a quart of it, and season it with half an ounce of whole
-pepper, and half an ounce of whole cloves, half a pint of the best
-vinegar, and a tea-spoonful of salt. Boil it; and when cold, pour it
-over the fish, and cover it closely again. In a cold place, and set on
-ice, it will keep a day or two, and may be eaten at breakfast or supper.
-
-If much of the salmon has been left, you must proportion a larger
-quantity of the pickle.
-
-Boil salmon trout in a similar manner.
-
-
-TO BAKE FRESH SALMON WHOLE.
-
-Having cleaned a small or moderate sized salmon, season it with salt,
-pepper, and powdered mace rubbed on it both outside and in. Skewer it
-with the tail turned round and put to the mouth. Lay it on a stand or
-trivet in a deep dish or pan, and stick it over with bits of butter
-rolled in flour. Put it into the oven, and baste it occasionally, while
-baking, with its own drippings.
-
-Garnish it with horseradish and sprigs of curled parsley, laid
-alternately round the edge of the dish; and send to table with it a
-small tureen of lobster sauce.
-
-Salmon trout may be drest in the same manner.
-
-
-SALMON BAKED IN SLICES.
-
-Take out the bone and cut the flesh into slices. Season them with
-cayenne and salt. Melt two ounces of butter that has been rolled in
-flour, in a half pint of water, and mix with it two large glasses
-of port wine, two table-spoonfuls of catchup, and two of soy. This
-allowance is for a small quantity of salmon. For a large dish you must
-proportion the ingredients accordingly. You may add the juice of a
-large lemon. Mix all well. Then strain it and pour it over the slices
-of salmon. Tie a sheet of buttered paper over the dish, and put it into
-the oven.
-
-You may bake trout or carp in the same manner.
-
-
-SALMON STEAKS.
-
-Split the salmon and take out the bone as nicely as possible, without
-mangling the flesh. Then cut it into fillets or steaks about an inch
-thick. Dry them lightly in a cloth, and dredge them with flour. Take
-care not to squeeze or press them. Have ready some clear bright coals,
-such as are fit for beef-steaks. Let the gridiron be clean and bright,
-and rub the bars with chalk to prevent the fish from sticking. Broil
-the slices thoroughly, turning them with steak tongs. Send them to
-table hot, wrapped in the folds of a napkin that has been heated. Serve
-up with them anchovy, or prawn, or lobster sauce.
-
-Many epicures consider this the best way of cooking salmon.
-
-Another way, perhaps still nicer, is to take some pieces of white paper
-and butter them well. Wrap in each a slice of salmon, securing the
-paper around them with a string or pins. Lay them on a gridiron, and
-broil them over a clear but moderate fire, till thoroughly done. Take
-off the paper, and send the cutlets to table hot, garnished with fried
-parsley.
-
-Serve up with them prawn or lobster sauce in a boat.
-
-
-PICKLED SALMON.
-
-Take a fine fresh salmon, and having cleaned it, cut it into large
-pieces, and boil it in salted water as if for eating. Then drain it,
-wrap it in a dry cloth, and set it in a cold place till next day.
-Then make the pickle, which must be in proportion to the quantity of
-fish. To one quart of the water in which the salmon was boiled, allow
-two quarts of the best vinegar, one ounce of whole black pepper, one
-nutmeg grated, and a dozen blades of mace. Boil all these together in
-a kettle closely covered to prevent the flavour from evaporating. When
-the vinegar thus prepared is quite cold, pour it over the salmon, and
-put on the top a table-spoonful of sweet oil, which will make it keep
-the longer.
-
-Cover it closely, put it in a dry cool place, and it will be good for
-many months.
-
-This is the nicest way of preserving salmon, and is approved by all who
-have tried it. Garnish with fennel.
-
-
-SMOKED SALMON.
-
-Cut the fish up the back; clean, and scale it, and take out the roe,
-but do not wash it. Take the bone neatly out. Rub it well inside and
-out with a mixture of salt and fine Havanna sugar, in equal quantities,
-and a small portion of saltpetre. Cover the fish with a board on which
-weights are placed to press it down, and let it lie thus for two days
-and two nights. Drain it from the salt, wipe it dry, stretch it open,
-and fasten it so with pieces of stick. Then hang it up and smoke it
-over a wood fire. It will be smoked sufficiently in five or six days.
-
-When you wish to eat it, cut off slices, soak them awhile in lukewarm
-water, and broil them for breakfast.
-
-
-TO BOIL HALIBUT.
-
-Halibut is seldom cooked whole; a piece weighing from four to six
-pounds being generally thought sufficient. Score deeply the skin of the
-back, and when you put it into the kettle lay it on the strainer with
-the back undermost. Cover it with cold water, and throw in a handful
-of salt. Do not let it come to a boil too fast. Skim it carefully,
-and when it has boiled hard a few minutes, hang the kettle higher, or
-diminish the fire under it, so as to let it simmer for about thirty or
-thirty-five minutes. Then drain it, and send it to table, garnished
-with alternate heaps of grated horse-radish and curled parsley, and
-accompanied by a boat of egg-sauce.
-
-What is left of the halibut, you may prepare for the supper-table
-by mincing it when cold, and seasoning it with a dressing of salt,
-cayenne, sweet oil, hard-boiled yolk of egg, and a large proportion of
-vinegar.
-
-
-HALIBUT CUTLETS.
-
-Cut your halibut into steaks or cutlets about an inch thick. Wipe them
-with a dry cloth, and season them with salt and cayenne pepper. Have
-ready a pan of yolk of egg well beaten, and a large flat dish of grated
-bread crumbs.
-
-Put some fresh lard or clarified beef dripping into a frying pan, and
-hold it over a clear fire till it boils. Dip your cutlets into the
-beaten egg, and then into the bread crumbs. Fry them of a light brown.
-Serve them up hot, with the gravy in the bottom of the dish.
-
-Salmon or any large fish may be fried in the same manner.
-
-Halibut cutlets are very fine cut quite thin and fried in the best
-sweet oil, omitting the egg and bread crumbs.
-
-
-TO BROIL MACKEREL.
-
-Mackerel cannot be eaten in perfection except at the sea side, where
-it can be had immediately out of the water. It loses its flavour in a
-very few hours, and spoils sooner than any other fish. Broiling is the
-best way of cooking it.
-
-Clean two fine fresh mackerel, and wipe them dry with a cloth. Split
-them open and rub them with salt. Spread some very bright coals on
-the hearth, and set the gridiron over them well greased. Lay on the
-mackerel, and broil them very nicely, taking care not to let them burn.
-When one side is quite done, turn them on the other. Lay them on a hot
-dish, and butter and pepper them before they go to table. Garnish them
-with lumps or pats of minced parsley mixed with butter, pepper and salt.
-
-
-BOILED MACKEREL.
-
-Clean the mackerel well, and let them lie a short time in vinegar and
-water. Then put them into the fish-kettle with cold water and a handful
-of salt. Boil them slowly. If small, they will be sufficiently cooked
-in twenty minutes. When the eye starts and the tail splits they are
-done. Take them up immediately on finding them boiled enough. If they
-stand any time in the water they will break.
-
-Serve them up with parsley sauce, and garnish the dish with lumps of
-minced parsley.
-
-They are eaten with mustard.
-
-For boiling, choose those that have soft roes.
-
-Another way is to put them in cold salt and water, and let them warm
-gradually for an hour. Then give them one hard boil, and they will be
-done.
-
-
-TO BOIL SALT CODFISH.
-
-The day previous to that on which it is to be eaten, take the fish
-about four o'clock in the afternoon, and put it into a kettle of cold
-water. Then place it within the kitchen fire-place, so as to keep it
-blood-warm. Next morning at ten, take out the fish, scrub it clean with
-a hard brush, and put it into a kettle of fresh cold water, into which
-a jill of molasses has been stirred. The molasses will be found an
-improvement. Place the kettle again near the fire, until about twenty
-minutes before dinner. Then hang it over the fire, and boil it hard a
-quarter of an hour, or a little more.
-
-When done, drain it, and cut it into large pieces. Wrap them closely in
-a fine napkin and send them to table on a large dish, garnished round
-the edge with hard-boiled eggs, either cut in half, or in circular
-slices, yolks and whites together. Have ready in a small tureen,
-egg-sauce made with drawn butter, thickened with hard-boiled eggs
-chopped fine. Place on one side of the fish a dish of mashed potatoes,
-on the other a dish of boiled parsnips.
-
-The most usual way of preparing salt cod for eating when it comes to
-table, is (after picking out all the bones) to mince it fine on your
-plate, and mix it with mashed potato, parsnip, and egg-sauce; seasoning
-it to your taste with cayenne and mustard. What is left may be prepared
-for breakfast next morning. It should be put into a skillet or spider,
-which must be well buttered inside, and set over hot coals to warm and
-brown. Or it may be made up into small cakes and fried.
-
-You may add to the mixture onions boiled and chopped.
-
-
-TO BOIL FRESH COD.
-
-Having washed and cleaned the fish, leave out the roe and liver; rub
-some salt on the inside, and if the weather is very cold you may keep
-it till next day. Put sufficient water in the fish-kettle to cover the
-fish very well, and add to the water a large handful of salt. As soon
-as the salt is entirely melted put in the fish. A very small codfish
-will be done in about twenty minutes, (after the water has boiled;)
-a large one will take half an hour, or more. Garnish with the roe
-and liver fried, or with scraped horseradish. Send it to table with
-oyster-sauce in a boat. Or you may make a sauce by flavouring your
-melted butter with a glass of port wine, and a table-spoonful or more,
-of soy.
-
-
-ANOTHER WAY OF BOILING FRESH COD.
-
-Put the fish into cold water with a handful of salt, and let it slowly
-and gradually warm for three hours if the cod is large, and two hours
-if it is small. Then increase the fire, and boil it hard for a few
-minutes only.
-
-
-BAKED SHAD.
-
-Keep on the head and fins. Make a force-meat or stuffing of grated
-bread crumbs, cold boiled ham or bacon minced fine, sweet marjoram,
-red pepper, and a little powdered mace or cloves. Moisten it with
-beaten yolk of egg. Stuff the inside of the fish with it, reserving a
-little to rub over the outside, having first rubbed the fish all over
-with yolk of egg. Lay the fish in a deep pan, patting its tail to its
-mouth. Pour into the bottom of the pan a little water, and add a jill
-of port wine, and a piece of butter rolled in flour. Bake it well,
-and when it is done, send it to table with the gravy poured round it.
-Garnish with slices of lemon.
-
-Any fish may be baked in the same manner.
-
-A large fish of ten or twelve pounds weight, will require about two
-hours baking.
-
-
-TO BROIL A SHAD.
-
-Split and wash the shad, and afterwards dry it in a cloth. Season it
-with salt and pepper. Have ready a bed of clear bright coals. Grease
-your gridiron well, and as soon as it is hot lay the shad upon it,
-and broil it for about a quarter of an hour or more, according to the
-thickness. Butter it well, and send it to table. You may serve with it
-melted butter in a sauce-boat.
-
-Or you may cut it into three pieces and broil it without splitting. It
-will then, of course, require a longer time. If done in this manner,
-send it to table with melted butter poured over it.
-
-
-BOILED ROCK-FISH.
-
-Having cleaned the rock-fish, put it into a fish-kettle with water
-enough to cover it well, having first dissolved a handful of salt in
-the water. Set it over a moderate fire, and do not let it boil too
-fast. Skim it well.
-
-When done, drain it, and put it on a large dish. Have ready a few eggs
-boiled hard. Cut them in half, and lay them closely on the back of the
-fish in a straight line from the head to the tail. Send with it in a
-boat, celery sauce flavoured with a little cayenne.
-
-
-SEA BASS OR BLACK FISH.
-
-May be boiled and served up in the above manner.
-
-
-PICKLED ROCK-FISH.
-
-Have ready a large rock-fish. Put on your fish-kettle with a
-sufficiency of water to cover the fish amply; spring or pump water is
-best. As soon as the water boils, throw in a tea-cup full of salt, and
-put in the fish. Boil it gently for about half an hour, skimming it
-well. Then take it out, and drain it, laying it slantingly. Reserve a
-part of the water in which the fish has been boiled, and season it to
-your taste with whole cloves, pepper, and mace. Boil it up to extract
-the strength from the spice, and after it has boiled add to it an equal
-quantity of the best vinegar. You must have enough of this liquid to
-cover the fish again. When the fish is quite cold, cut off the head and
-tail, and cut the body into large pieces, extracting the back-bone. Put
-it into a stone jar, and when the spiced liquor is cold, pour it on the
-fish, cover the jar closely, and set it in a cool place. It will be fit
-for use in a day or two, and if well secured from the air, and put into
-a cold place will keep a fortnight.
-
-
-FRIED PERCH.
-
-Having cleaned the fish and dried them with a cloth, lay them, side by
-side, on a board or large dish; sprinkle them with salt, and dredge
-them with flour. After a while turn them, and salt and dredge the other
-side. Put some lard or fresh beef-dripping into a frying-pan, and hold
-it over the fire. When the lard boils, put in the fish and fry them of
-a yellowish brown. Send to table with them in a boat, melted butter
-flavoured with soy or catchup.
-
-Flounders or other small fish may be fried in the same manner. Also
-tutaug or porgies.
-
-You may know when the lard or dripping is hot enough, by dipping in the
-tail of one of the fish. If it becomes crisp immediately, the lard is
-in a proper state for frying. Or you may try it with a piece of stale
-bread, which will become brown directly, if the lard is in order.
-
-There should always be enough of lard to cover the fish entirely. After
-they have fried five minutes on one side, turn them and fry them five
-minutes on the other. Skim the lard or dripping always before you put
-in the fish.
-
-
-TO FRY TROUT.
-
-Having cleaned the fish, and cut off the fins, dredge them with flour.
-Have ready some beaten yolk of egg, and in a separate dish some grated
-bread crumbs. Dip each fish into the egg, and then strew them with
-bread crumbs. Put some butter or fresh beef-dripping into a frying-pan,
-and hold it over the fire till it is boiling hot; then, (having skimmed
-it,) put in the fish and fry them.
-
-Prepare some melted butter with a spoonful of mushroom-catchup and
-a spoonful of lemon-pickle stirred into it. Send it to table in a
-sauce-boat to eat with the fish.
-
-You may fry carp and flounders in the same manner.
-
-
-TO BOIL TROUT.
-
-Put a handful of salt into the water. When it boils put in the trout.
-Boil them fast about twenty minutes, according to their size.
-
-For sauce, send with them melted butter, and put some soy into it; or
-flavour it with catchup.
-
-
-FRIED SEA BASS.
-
-Score the fish on the back with a knife, and season them with salt and
-cayenne pepper. Cut some small onions in round slices, and chop fine a
-bunch of parsley. Put some butter into a frying-pan over the fire, and
-when it is boiling hot lay in the fish. When they are about half done
-put the onions and parsley into the pan. Keep turning the fish that the
-onions and parsley may adhere to both sides. When quite done, put them
-into the dish in which they are to go to table, and garnish the edge of
-the dish with hard boiled eggs cut in round slices.
-
-Make in the pan in which they have been fried, a gravy, by adding some
-butter rolled in flour, and a small quantity of vinegar. Pour it into
-the dish with the fish.
-
-
-STURGEON CUTLETS OR STEAKS.
-
-This is the most approved way of dressing sturgeon. Carefully take off
-the skin, as its oiliness will give the fish a strong and disagreeable
-taste when cooked. Cut from the tail-piece slices about half an inch
-thick, rub them with salt, and broil them over a clear fire of bright
-coals. Butter them, sprinkle them with cayenne pepper, and send them
-to table hot, garnished with sliced lemon, as lemon-juice is generally
-squeezed over them when eaten.
-
-Another way is to make a seasoning of bread crumbs, sweet herbs, pepper
-and salt. First dip the slices of sturgeon in beaten yolk of egg, then
-cover them with seasoning, wrap them up closely in sheets of white
-paper well buttered, broil them over a clear fire, and send them to
-table either with or without the papers.
-
-
-STEWED CARP.
-
-Having cut off the head, tail, and fins, season the carp with salt,
-pepper, and powdered mace, both inside and out. Rub the seasoning
-on very well, and let them lay in it an hour. Then put them into a
-stew-pan with a little parsley shred fine, a whole onion, a little
-sweet marjoram, a tea-cup of thick cream or very rich milk, and a lump
-of butter rolled in flour. Pour in sufficient water to cover the carp,
-and let it stew half an hour. Some port wine will improve it.
-
-Perch may be done in the same way.
-
-You may dress a piece of sturgeon in this manner, but you must first
-boil it for twenty minutes to extract the oil. Take off the skin before
-you proceed to stew the fish.
-
-
-CHOWDER.
-
-Take half a pound of salt pork, and having half boiled it, cut it into
-slips, and with some of them cover the bottom of a pot. Then strew on
-some sliced onion. Have ready a large fresh cod, or an equal quantity
-of haddock, tutaug, or any other firm fish. Cut the fish into large
-pieces, and lay part of it on the pork and onions. Season it with
-pepper. Then cover it with a layer of biscuit, or crackers that have
-been previously soaked in milk or water. You may add also a layer of
-sliced potatoes.
-
-Next proceed with a second layer of pork, onions, fish, &c. and
-continue as before till the pot is nearly full; finishing with soaked
-crackers. Pour in about a pint and a half of cold water. Cover it
-close, set it on hot coals, and let it simmer about an hour. Then skim
-it, and turn it out into a deep dish. Leave the gravy in the pot till
-you have thickened it with a bit of butter rolled in flour, and some
-chopped parsley. Then give it one boil up, and pour it hot into the
-dish.
-
-Chowder may be made of clams, first cutting off the hard part.
-
-
-TO KEEP FRESH SHAD.
-
-Having cleaned the fish, split it down the back, and lay it (with
-the skin side downward) upon a large dish. Mix together a large
-table-spoonful of brown sugar, a small tea-spoonful of salt, and a
-tea-spoonful of cayenne pepper. Cover the shad with this mixture,
-spread on evenly, and let it rest in it till next day, (unless you want
-it the same evening,) keeping it in a cold place.
-
-Immediately before cooking, wipe the seasoning _entirely off_, and dry
-the shad in a clean cloth. Then broil it in the usual manner.
-
-This way of keeping shad a day or two is much better than to salt or
-corn it. Prepared as above it will look and taste as if perfectly
-fresh. Any other fish may be kept in this manner.
-
-
-
-
-SHELL FISH.
-
-
-PICKLED OYSTERS.
-
-Take a hundred and fifty fine large oysters, and pick off carefully
-the bits of shell that may be sticking to them. Lay the oysters in
-a deep dish, and then strain the liquor over them. Put them into
-an iron skillet that is lined with porcelain, and add salt to your
-taste. Without salt they will not be firm enough. Set the skillet on
-hot coals, and allow the oysters to simmer till they are heated all
-through, but not till they boil. Then take out the oysters and put them
-into a stone jar, leaving the liquor in the skillet. Add to it a pint
-of clear cider vinegar, a large tea-spoonful of blades of mace, three
-dozen whole cloves, and three dozen whole pepper corns. Let it come to
-a boil, and when the oysters are quite cold in the jar, pour the liquor
-on them.
-
-They are fit for use immediately, but are better the next day. In cold
-weather they will keep a week.
-
-If you intend sending them a considerable distance you must allow the
-oysters to boil, and double the proportions of the pickle and spice.
-
-
-FRIED OYSTERS.
-
-Get the largest and finest oysters. After they are taken from the shell
-wipe each of them quite dry with a cloth. Then beat up in a pan yolk
-of egg and milk, (in the proportion of two yolks to half a jill or a
-wine glass of milk,) and have some stale bread grated very fine in a
-large flat dish. Cut up at least half a pound of fresh butter in the
-frying-pan, and hold it over the fire till it is boiling hot. Dip the
-oysters all over lightly in the mixture of egg and milk, and then roll
-them up and down in the grated bread, making as many crumbs stick to
-them as you can.
-
-Put them into the frying-pan of hot butter, and keep it over a hot
-fire. Fry them brown, turning them that they may be equally browned on
-both sides. If properly done they will be crisp, and not greasy.
-
-Serve them dry in a hot dish, and do not pour over them the butter that
-may be left in the pan when they are fried.
-
-Instead of grated bread you may use crackers finely powdered.
-
-
-SCOLLOPED OYSTERS.
-
-Having grated a sufficiency of stale bread, butter a deep dish, and
-line the sides and bottom thickly with bread crumbs. Then put in a
-layer of seasoned oysters, with a few very small bits of butter on
-them. Cover them thickly with crumbs, and put in another layer of
-oysters and butter, till the dish is filled up, having a thick layer
-of crumbs on the top. Put the dish into an oven, and bake them a very
-short time, or they will shrivel. Serve them up hot.
-
-You may bake them in large clam shells, or in the tin scollop shells
-made for the purpose. Butter the bottom of each shell; sprinkle it with
-bread crumbs; lay on the oysters seasoned with cayenne and nutmeg, and
-put a morsel of butter on each. Fill up the shells with a little of the
-oyster liquor thickened with bread crumbs, and set them on a gridiron
-over coals, browning them afterwards with a red-hot shovel. Oysters are
-very nice taken whole out of the shells, and broiled.
-
-
-STEWED OYSTERS.
-
-Put the oysters into a sieve, and set it on a pan to drain the liquor
-from them. Then cut off the hard part, and put the oysters into a
-stew-pan with some whole pepper, a few blades of mace, and some grated
-nutmeg. Add a small piece of butter rolled in flour. Then pour over
-them about half of the liquor, or a little more. Set the pan on hot
-coals, and simmer them gently about five minutes. Try one, and if it
-tastes raw cook them a little longer. Make some thin slices of toast,
-having cut off all the crust. Butter the toast and lay it in the bottom
-of a deep dish. Put the oysters upon it with the liquor in which they
-were stewed.
-
-The liquor of oysters should never be thickened by stirring in
-flour. It spoils the taste, and gives them a sodden and disagreeable
-appearance, and is no longer practised by good cooks. A little cream is
-a fine improvement to stewed oysters.
-
-
-OYSTER FRITTERS.
-
-Have ready some of the finest and largest oysters; drain them from the
-liquor and wipe them dry.
-
-Beat six eggs very light, and stir into them gradually six
-table-spoonfuls of fine sifted flour. Add by degrees a pint and a half
-of rich milk and some grated nutmeg, and beat it to a smooth batter.
-
-Make your frying-pan very hot, and put into it a piece of butter or
-lard. When it has melted and begins to froth, put in a small ladle-full
-of the batter, drop an oyster in the middle of it, and fry it of a
-light brown. Send them to table hot.
-
-If you find your batter too thin, so that it spreads too much in the
-frying-pan, add a little more flour beaten well into it. If it is too
-thick, thin it with some additional milk.
-
-
-OYSTER PIE.
-
-Make a puff-paste, in the proportion of a pound and a half of fresh
-butter to two pounds of sifted flour. Roll it out rather thick, into
-two sheets. Butter a deep dish, and line the bottom and sides of
-it with paste. Fill it up with crusts of bread for the purpose of
-supporting the lid while it is baking, as the oysters will be too much
-done if they are cooked in the pie. Cover it with the other sheet of
-paste, having first buttered the flat rim of the dish. Notch the edges
-of the pie handsomely, or ornament them with leaves of paste which you
-may form with tin cutters made for the purpose. Make a little slit
-in the middle of the lid, and stick firmly into it a paste tulip or
-other flower. Put the dish into a moderate oven, and while the paste
-is baking prepare the oysters, which should be large and fresh. Put
-them into a stew-pan with half their liquor thickened with yolk of
-egg boiled hard and grated, enriched with pieces of butter rolled in
-bread crumbs, and seasoned with mace and nutmeg. Stew the oysters five
-minutes. When the paste is baked, carefully take off the lid, remove
-the pieces of bread, and put in the oysters and gravy. Replace the lid,
-and send the pie to table warm.
-
-
-TO BOIL A LOBSTER.
-
-Put a handful of salt into a large kettle or pot of boiling water. When
-the water boils very hard put in the lobster, having first brushed it,
-and tied the claws together with a bit of twine. Keep it boiling from
-half an hour to an hour in proportion to its size. If boiled too long
-the meat will be hard and stringy. When it is done, take it out, lay
-it on its claws to drain, and then wipe it dry. Send it to table cold,
-with the body and tail split open, and the claws taken off. Lay the
-large claws next to the body, and the small ones outside. Garnish with
-double parsley.
-
-It is scarcely necessary to mention that the head of a lobster, and
-what are called the lady-fingers are not to be eaten.
-
-
-TO DRESS LOBSTER COLD
-
-Put a table-spoonful of cold water on a clean plate, and with the
-back of a wooden spoon mash into it the coral or scarlet meat of the
-lobster, adding a salt-spoonful of salt, and about the same quantity of
-cayenne. On another part of the plate mix well together with the back
-of the spoon two table-spoonfuls of sweet oil, and a tea-spoonful of
-made mustard. Then mix the whole till they are well incorporated and
-perfectly smooth, adding, at the last, one table-spoonful of vinegar,
-and two more of oil.
-
-This quantity of seasoning is for a small lobster. For a large one,
-more of course will be required. Many persons add a tea-spoonful of
-powdered white sugar, thinking that it gives a mellowness to the whole.
-
-The meat of the body and claws of the lobster must be carefully
-extracted from the shell and minced very small. When the dressing is
-smoothly and thoroughly amalgamated mix the meat with it, and let it be
-handed round to the company.
-
-The vinegar from a jar of Indian pickle is by some preferred for
-lobster dressing.
-
-You may dress the lobster _immediately before_ you send it to table.
-When the dressing and meat are mixed together, pile it in a deep dish,
-and smooth it with the back of a spoon. Stick a bunch of the small
-claws in the top, and garnish with curled parsley.
-
-Very large lobsters are not the best, the meat being coarse and tough.
-
-
-STEWED LOBSTER.
-
-Having boiled the lobster, extract the meat from the shell, and cut it
-into very small pieces. Season it with a powdered nutmeg, a few blades
-of mace, and cayenne and salt to your taste. Mix with it a quarter of
-a pound of fresh butter cut small, and two glasses of white wine or of
-vinegar. Put it into a stew-pan, and set it on hot coals. Stew it about
-twenty minutes, keeping the pan closely covered lest the flavour should
-evaporate. Serve it up hot.
-
-If you choose, you can send it to table in the shell, which must first
-be nicely cleaned. Strew the meat over with sifted bread-crumbs, and
-brown the top with a salamander, or a red hot shovel held over it.
-
-
-FRICASSEED LOBSTER.
-
-Put the lobster into boiling salt and water, and let it boil according
-to its size from a quarter of an hour to half an hour. The intention
-is to have it parboiled only, as it is afterwards to be fricasseed.
-Extract the meat from the shell, and cut it into small pieces. Season
-it with red pepper, salt, and nutmeg; and put it into a stew-pan with
-as much cream as will cover it. Keep the lid close; set the pan on hot
-coals, and stew it slowly for about as long a time as it was previously
-boiled. Just before you take it from the fire, stir in the beaten yolk
-of an egg. Send it to table in a small dish placed on a larger one, and
-arrange the small claws nicely round it on the large dish.
-
-
-POTTED LOBSTER.
-
-Parboil the lobster in boiling water well salted. Then pick out all
-the meat from the body and claws, and beat it in a mortar with nutmeg,
-mace, cayenne, and salt, to your taste. Beat the coral separately.
-Then put the pounded meat into a large potting can of block tin with a
-cover. Press it down hard, having arranged it in alternate layers of
-white meat and coral to give it a marbled or variegated appearance.
-Cover it with fresh butter, and put it into a slow oven for half an
-hour. When cold, take off the butter and clarify it, by putting it into
-a jar, which must be set in a pan of boiling water. Watch it well, and
-when it melts, carefully skim off the buttermilk which will rise to the
-top. When no more scum rises, take it off and let it stand for a few
-minutes to settle, and then strain it through a sieve.
-
-Put the lobster into small potting-cans, pressing it down very hard.
-Pour the clarified butter over it, and secure the covers tightly.
-
-Potted lobster is used to lay between thin slices of bread as
-sandwiches. The clarified butter that accompanies it is excellent for
-fish sauce.
-
-Prawns and crabs may be potted in a similar manner.
-
-
-LOBSTER PIE.
-
-Put two middle-sized lobsters into boiling salt and water. When they
-are half boiled, take the meat from the shell, cut it into very small
-pieces, and put it into a pie dish. Break up the shells, and stew them
-in a very little water with half a dozen blades of mace and a grated
-nutmeg. Then strain off the liquid. Beat the coral in a mortar, and
-thicken the liquid with it. Pour this into the dish of lobster to make
-the gravy. Season it with cayenne, salt, and mushroom catchup, and add
-bits of butter. Cover it with a lid of paste, made in the proportion
-of ten ounces of butter to a pound of flour, notched handsomely, and
-ornamented with paste leaves. Do not send it to table till it has
-cooled.
-
-
-TO BOIL PRAWNS.
-
-Throw a handful of salt into a pot of boiling water. When it boils very
-hard, put in the prawns. Let them boil a quarter of an hour, and when
-you take them out lay them on a sieve to drain, and then wipe them on a
-dry cloth, and put them aside till quite cold.
-
-Lay a handful of curled parsley in the middle of a dish. Put one prawn
-on the top of it, and lay the others all round, as close as you can,
-with the tails outside. Garnish with parsley.
-
-Eat them with salt, cayenne, sweet oil, mustard and vinegar, mixed
-together as for lobsters.
-
-
-CRABS.
-
-Crabs are boiled in the same manner, and in serving up may be arranged
-like prawns.
-
-
-HOT CRABS.
-
-Having boiled the crabs, extract all the meat from the shell, cut
-it fine, and season it to your taste with nutmeg, salt, and cayenne
-pepper. Add a bit of butter, some grated bread crumbs, and sufficient
-vinegar to moisten it. Fill the back-shells of the crab with the
-mixture; set it before the fire, and brown it by holding a red-hot
-shovel or a salamander a little above it.
-
-Cover a large dish with small slices of dry toast with the crust cut
-off. Lay on each slice a shell filled with the crab. The shell of one
-crab will contain the meat of two.
-
-
-COLD CRABS.
-
-Having taken all the meat out of the shells, make a dressing with sweet
-oil, salt, cayenne pepper, mustard and vinegar, as for lobster. You
-may add to it some hard-boiled yolk of egg, mashed in the oil. Put the
-mixture into the back-shells of the crabs, and serve it up. Garnish
-with the small claws laid nicely round.
-
-
-SOFT CRABS.
-
-These crabs must be cooked directly, as they will not keep till next
-day.
-
-Remove the spongy substance from each side of the crab, and also the
-little sand-bag. Put some lard into a pan, and when it is boiling hot,
-fry the crabs in it. After you take them out, throw in a handful of
-parsley, and let it crisp; but withdraw it before it loses its colour.
-Strew it over the crabs when you dish them.
-
-Make the gravy by adding cream or rich milk to the lard, with some
-chopped parsley, pepper and salt. Let them all boil together for a few
-minutes, and then serve it up in a sauce-boat.
-
-
-TERRAPINS.
-
-Have ready a pot of boiling water. When it is boiling very hard put in
-the terrapins, and let them remain in it till quite dead. Then take
-them out, pull off the outer skin and the toe-nails, wash the terrapins
-in warm water and boil them again, allowing a tea-spoonful of salt to
-two terrapins. When the flesh becomes quite tender so that you can
-pinch it off, take them out off the shell, remove the sand-bag, and
-the gall, which you must be careful not to break, as it will make the
-terrapin so bitter as to be uneatable. Cut up all the other parts of
-the inside with the meat, and season it to your taste with cayenne
-pepper, nutmeg, and mace. Put all into a stew-pan with the juice or
-liquor that it has given out in cutting up, but not any water. To every
-two terrapins allow a quarter of a pound of butter divided into pieces
-and rolled in flour, one glass of Madeira, and the yolks of two eggs.
-The eggs must be beaten, and not stirred in till a moment before it
-goes to table. Keep it closely covered. Stew it gently till every thing
-is tender, and serve it up hot in a deep dish. The entrails are no
-longer cooked with terrapins.
-
-Terrapins, after being boiled by the cook, may be brought to table
-plain, with all the condiments separate, that the company may dress
-them according to taste.
-
-For this purpose heaters or chafing-dishes must be provided for each
-plate.
-
-
-PICKLED LOBSTER.
-
-Take half a dozen fine lobsters. Put them into boiling salt and water,
-and when they are all done, take them out and extract all the meat from
-the shells, leaving that of the claws as whole as possible, and cutting
-the flesh of the body into large pieces nearly of the same size. Season
-a sufficient quantity of vinegar very highly with whole pepper-corns,
-whole cloves, and whole blades of mace. Put the pieces of lobster into
-a stew-pan, and pour on just sufficient vinegar to keep them well
-covered. Set it over a moderate fire; and when it has boiled hard about
-five minutes, take out the lobster, and let the pickle boil by itself
-for a quarter of an hour. When the pickle and lobster are both cold,
-put them together into a broad flat stone jar. Cover it closely, and
-set it away in a cool place.
-
-Eat the pickled lobster with oil, mustard, and vinegar, and have bread
-and butter with it.
-
-
-
-
-DIRECTIONS FOR COOKING MEAT.
-
-BEEF.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-When beef is good, it will have a fine smooth open grain, and it will
-feel tender when squeezed or pinched in your fingers. The lean should
-be of a bright carnation red, and the fat white rather than yellow--the
-suet should be perfectly white. If the lean looks dark or purplish, and
-the fat very yellow, do not buy the meat.
-
-See that the butcher has properly jointed the meat before it goes home.
-For good tables, the pieces generally roasted are the sirloin and the
-fore and middle ribs. In genteel houses other parts are seldom served
-up as _roast-beef_. In small families the ribs are the most convenient
-pieces. A whole sirloin is too large, except for a numerous company,
-but it is the piece most esteemed.
-
-The best beef-steaks are those cut from the ribs, or from the
-inner part of the sirloin. All other pieces are, for this purpose,
-comparatively hard and tough.
-
-The round is generally corned or salted, and boiled. It is also used
-for the dish called beef a-la-mode.
-
-The legs make excellent soup; the head and tail are also used for that
-purpose.
-
-The tongue when fresh is never cooked except for mince-pies. Corned or
-salted it is seldom liked, as in that state it has a faint sickly taste
-that few persons can relish. But when pickled and afterwards smoked
-(the only good way of preparing a tongue) it is highly and deservedly
-esteemed.
-
-The other pieces of the animal are generally salted and boiled. Or when
-fresh they may be used for soup or stews, if not too fat.
-
-If the state of the weather will allow you to keep fresh beef two or
-three days, rub it with salt, and wrap it in a cloth.
-
-In summer do not attempt to keep it more than twenty-four hours;
-and not then unless you can conveniently lay it in ice, or in a
-spring-house.
-
-In winter if the beef is brought from market frozen, do not cook it
-that day unless you dine very late, as it will be impossible to get
-it sufficiently done--meat that has been frozen requiring double the
-usual time. To thaw it, lay it in cold water, which is the only way to
-extract the frost without injuring the meat. It should remain in the
-water three hours or more.
-
-
-TO ROAST BEEF.
-
-The fire should be prepared at least half an hour before the beef is
-put down, and it should be large, steady, clear, and bright, with
-plenty of fine hot coals at the bottom.
-
-The best apparatus for the purpose is the well-known roaster frequently
-called a tin-kitchen.
-
-Wash the meat in cold water, and then wipe it dry, and rub it with
-salt. Take care not to run the spit through the best parts of it. It is
-customary with some cooks to tie blank paper over the fat, to prevent
-it from melting and wasting too fast.
-
-Put it evenly into the roaster, and do not set it too near the fire,
-lest the outside of the meat should be burned before the inside is
-heated.
-
-Put some nice beef-dripping or some lard into the pan or bottom of
-the roaster, and as soon as it melts begin to baste the beef with it;
-taking up the liquid with a long spoon, and pouring it over the meat so
-as to let it trickle down again into the pan. Repeat this frequently
-while it is roasting; after a while you can baste it with its own fat.
-Turn the spit often, so that the meat may be equally done on all sides.
-
-Once or twice draw back the roaster, and improve the fire by clearing
-away the ashes, bringing forward the hot coals, and putting on fresh
-fuel at the back. Should a coal fall into the dripping-pan take it out
-immediately.
-
-An allowance of about half an hour to each pound of meat is the time
-commonly given for roasting; but this rule, like most others, admits of
-exceptions according to circumstances. Also, some persons like their
-meat very much done; others prefer it rare, as it is called. In summer,
-meat will roast in a shorter time than in winter.
-
-When the beef is nearly done, and the steam draws towards the fire,
-remove the paper that has covered the fat part, sprinkle on a little
-salt, and having basted the meat well with the dripping, pour off
-nicely (through the spout of the roaster) all the liquid fat from the
-top of the gravy.
-
-Lastly, dredge the meat very lightly with a little flour, and baste it
-with fresh butter. This will give it a delicate froth. To the gravy
-that is now running from the meat add nothing but a tea-cup of boiling
-water. Skim it, and send it to table in a boat. Serve up with the beef
-in a small deep plate, scraped horseradish moistened with vinegar.
-
-Fat meat requires more roasting than lean, and meat that has been
-frozen will take nearly double the usual time.
-
-Basting the meat continually with flour and water is a bad practice,
-as it gives it a coddled par-boiled appearance, and diminishes the
-flavour.
-
-These directions for roasting beef will apply equally to mutton.
-
-Pickles are generally eaten with roast beef. French mustard is an
-excellent condiment for it. In carving begin by cutting a slice from
-the side.
-
-
-TO SAVE BEEF-DRIPPING.
-
-Pour off through the spout of the roaster or tin-kitchen, all the
-fat from the top of the gravy, after you have done basting the meat
-with it. Hold a little sieve under the spout, and strain the dripping
-through it into a pan. Set it away in a cool place; and next day when
-it is cold and congealed, turn the cake of fat, and scrape with a
-knife the sediment from the bottom. Put the dripping into a jar; cover
-it tightly, and set it away in the refrigerator, or in the coldest
-place you have. It will be found useful for frying, and for many other
-purposes.
-
-Mutton-dripping cannot be used for any sort of cooking, as it
-communicates to every thing the taste of tallow.
-
-
-BAKED BEEF.
-
-This is a plain family dish, and is never provided for company.
-
-Take a nice but not a fat piece of fresh beef. Wash it, rub it with
-salt, and place it on a trivet in a deep block tin or iron pan. Pour
-a little water into the bottom, and put under and round the trivet
-a sufficiency of pared potatoes, either white or sweet ones. Put it
-into a hot oven, and let it bake till thoroughly done, basting it
-frequently with its own gravy. Then transfer it to a hot dish, and
-serve up the potatoes in another. Skim the gravy, and send it to table
-in a boat.
-
-Or you may boil the potatoes, mash them with milk, and put them into
-the bottom of the pan about half an hour before the meat is done
-baking. Press down the mashed potatoes hard with the back of a spoon,
-score them in cross lines over the top, and let them brown under the
-meat, serving them up laid round it.
-
-Instead of potatoes, you may put in the bottom of the pan what is
-called a Yorkshire pudding, to be baked under the meat.
-
-To make this pudding,--stir gradually four table-spoonfuls of flour
-into a pint of milk, adding a salt-spoon of salt. Beat four eggs very
-light, and mix them gradually with the milk and flour. See that the
-batter is not lumpy. Do not put the pudding under the meat at first, as
-if baked too long it will be hard and solid. After the meat has baked
-till the pan is quite hot and well greased with the drippings, you may
-put in the batter; having continued stirring it till the last moment.
-
-If the pudding is so spread over the pan as to be but an inch thick, it
-will require about two hours baking, and need not be turned. If it is
-thicker than an inch, you must (after it is brown on the top) loosen it
-in the pan, by inserting a knife beneath it, and having cut it across
-into four pieces, turn them all nicely that the other side may be
-equally done.
-
-But this pudding is lighter and better if laid so thin as not to
-require turning.
-
-When you serve up the beef lay the pieces of pudding round it, to be
-eaten with the meat.
-
-Veal may be baked in this manner with potatoes or a pudding. Also fresh
-pork.
-
-
-TO BOIL CORNED OR SALTED BEEF.
-
-The best piece is the round. You may either boil it whole, or divide
-it into two, or even three pieces if it is large, taking care that
-each piece shall have a portion of the fat. Wash it well; and, if very
-salt, soak it in two waters. Skewer it up tightly and in a good compact
-shape, wrapping the flap piece firmly round it. Tie it round with broad
-strong tape, or with a strip of coarse linen. Put it into a large pot,
-and cover it well with water. It will be found a convenience to lay it
-on a fish drainer.
-
-Hang it over a moderate fire that it may heat gradually all through.
-Carefully take off the scum as it rises, and when no more appears,
-keep the pot closely covered, and let it boil slowly and regularly,
-with the fire at an equal temperature. Allow at least four hours to a
-piece weighing about twelve pounds, and from that to five or six hours
-in proportion to the size. Turn the meat twice in the pot while it is
-boiling. Put in some carrots and turnips about two hours after the
-meat. Many persons boil cabbage in the same pot with the beef, but it
-is a much nicer way to do the greens in a separate vessel, lest they
-become saturated with the liquid fat. Cauliflower or brocoli (which are
-frequent accompaniments to corned beef) should never be boiled with it.
-
-Wash the cabbage in cold water, removing the outside leaves, and
-cutting the stalk close. Examine all the leaves carefully, lest insects
-should be lodged among them. If the cabbage is large, divide it into
-quarters. Put it into a pot of boiling water with a handful of salt,
-and boil it till the stalk is quite tender. Half an hour will generally
-be sufficient for a small young cabbage; an hour for a large full-grown
-one Drain it well before you dish it. If boiled separately from the
-meat, have ready some melted butter to eat with it.
-
-Should you find the beef under-done, you may reboil it next day;
-putting it into boiling water and letting it simmer for half an hour or
-more, according to its size.
-
-Cold corned beef will keep very well for some days wrapped in several
-folds of a thick linen cloth, and set away in a cool dry place.
-
-In carving a round of beef, slice it horizontally and very thin. Do not
-help any one to the outside pieces, as they are generally too hard and
-salt. French mustard is very nice with corned beef.[D]
-
-This receipt will apply equally to any piece of corned beef, except
-that being less solid than the round, they will, in proportion to their
-weight, require rather less time to boil.
-
-In dishing the meat, remove the wooden skewers and substitute plated or
-silver ones.
-
-Many persons think it best (and they are most probably right) to stew
-corned beef rather than to boil it. If you intend to stew it, put
-no more water in the pot than will barely cover the meat, and keep
-it gently simmering over a slow fire for four, five, or six hours,
-according to the size of the piece.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[D] French mustard is made of the very best mustard powder, diluted
-with tarragon vinegar mixed with an equal portion of sweet oil, adding
-a few drops of garlic vinegar. Use a wooden spoon.
-
-
-TO BROIL BEEF-STEAKS.
-
-The best beef steaks are those cut from the ribs or from the inside of
-the sirloin. All other parts are for this purpose comparatively hard
-and tough.
-
-They should be cut about three quarters of an inch thick, and, unless
-the beef is remarkably fine and tender, the steaks will be much
-improved by beating them on both sides with a steak mallet, or with a
-rolling-pin. Do not season them till you take them from the fire.
-
-Have ready on your hearth a fine bed of clear bright coals, entirely
-free from smoke and ashes. Set the gridiron over the coals in a
-slanting direction, that the meat may not be smoked by the fat dropping
-into the fire directly under it. When the gridiron is quite hot, rub
-the bars with suet, sprinkle a little salt over the coals, and lay on
-the steaks. Turn them frequently with a pair of steak-tongs, or with a
-knife and fork. A quarter of an hour is generally sufficient time to
-broil a beef-steak. For those who like them underdone or rare, ten or
-twelve minutes will be enough.
-
-When the fat blazes and smokes very much as it drips into the fire,
-quickly remove the gridiron for a moment, till the blaze has subsided.
-After they are browned, cover the upper side of the steaks with an
-inverted plate or dish to prevent the flavour from evaporating. Rub a
-dish with a shalot, or small onion, and place it near the gridiron and
-close to the fire, that it may be well heated. In turning the steak
-drop the gravy that may be standing on it into this dish, to save it
-from being lost. When the steaks are done, sprinkle them with a little
-salt and pepper, and lay them in a hot dish, putting on each a piece
-of fresh butter. Then, if it is liked, season them with a very little
-raw shalot, minced as finely as possible, and moistened with a spoonful
-of water; and stir a tea-spoonful of catchup into the gravy. Send the
-steaks to table very hot, in a covered dish. You may serve up with them
-onion sauce in a small tureen.
-
-Pickles are frequently eaten with beef-steaks.
-
-Mutton chops may be broiled in the same manner.
-
-
-TO FRY BEEF-STEAKS.
-
-Beef-steaks for frying should be cut thinner than for broiling. Take
-them from the ribs or sirloin, and remove the bone. Beat them to make
-them tender. Season them with salt and pepper.
-
-Put some fresh butter, or nice beef-dripping into a frying-pan, and
-hold it over a clear bright fire till it boils and has done hissing.
-Then put in the steaks, and (if you like them) some sliced onions. Fry
-them about a quarter of an hour, turning them frequently. Steaks, when
-fried, should be thoroughly done. After they are browned, cover them
-with a large plate to keep in the juices.
-
-Have ready a hot dish, and when they are done, take out the steaks and
-onions and lay them in it with another dish on the top, to keep them
-hot while you give the gravy in the pan another boil up over the fire.
-You may add to it a spoonful of mushroom catchup. Pour the gravy over
-the steaks, and send them to table as hot as possible.
-
-Mutton chops may be fried in this manner.
-
-
-BEEF-STEAK PUDDING.
-
-For a small pudding take a pound of fresh beef suet. Clear it from the
-skin and the stringy fibres, and mince it as finely as possible. Sift
-into a large pan two pounds of fine flour, and add the suet gradually,
-rubbing it fine with your hands and mixing it thoroughly. Then pour in,
-by degrees, enough of cold water to make a stiff dough. Roll it out
-into a large even sheet. Have ready about a pound and a half of the
-best beef-steak, omitting the bone and fat which should be all cut
-off. Divide the steak into small thin pieces, and beat them well to
-make them tender. Season them with pepper and salt, and, if convenient,
-add some mushrooms. Lay the beef in the middle of the sheet of paste,
-and put on the top a bit of butter rolled in flour. Close the paste
-nicely over the meat as if you were making a large dumpling. Dredge
-with flour a thick square cloth, and tie the pudding up in it, leaving
-space for it to swell. Fasten the string very firmly, and stop up with
-flour the little gap at the tying-place so that no water can get in.
-Have ready a large pot of boiling water. Put the pudding into it, and
-let it boil fast three hours or more. Keep up a good fire under it, as
-if it stops boiling a minute the crust will be heavy. Have a kettle of
-boiling water at the fire to replenish the pot if it wastes too much.
-Do not take up the pudding till the moment before it goes to table. Mix
-some catchup with the gravy on your plate.
-
-For a large pudding you must have two pounds of suet, three pounds of
-flour, and two pounds and a half of meat. It must boil at least five
-hours.
-
-All the fat must be removed from the meat before it goes into the
-pudding, as the gravy cannot be skimmed when enclosed in the crust.
-
-You may boil in the pudding some potatoes cut into slices.
-
-A pudding of the lean of mutton chops may be made in the same manner;
-also of venison steaks.
-
-
-A BEEF-STEAK PIE.
-
-Make a good paste in the proportion of a pound of butter to two pounds
-of sifted flour. Divide it in half, and line with one sheet of it the
-bottom and sides of a deep dish, which must first be well buttered.
-Have ready two pounds of the best beef-steak, cut thin, and well
-beaten; the bone and fat being omitted. Season it with pepper and salt.
-Spread a layer of the steak at the bottom of the pie, and on it a layer
-of sliced potato, and a few small bits of butter rolled in flour.
-Then another layer of meat, potato, &c., till the dish is full. You
-may greatly improve the flavour by adding mushrooms, or chopped clams
-or oysters, leaving out the hard parts. If you use clams or oysters,
-moisten the other ingredients with a little of their liquor. If not,
-pour in, at the last, half a pint of cold water, or less if the pie is
-small. Cover the pie with the other sheet of paste as a lid, and notch
-the edges handsomely, having reserved a little of the paste to make a
-flower or tulip to stick in the slit at the top. Bake it in a quick
-oven an hour and a quarter, or longer, in proportion to its size. Send
-it to table hot.
-
-You may make a similar pie of mutton chops, or veal cutlets, or venison
-steaks, always leaving out the bone and fat.
-
-Many persons in making pies stew the meat slowly in a little water till
-about half done, and they then put it with its gravy into the paste
-and finish by baking. In this case add no water to the pie, as there
-will be already sufficient liquid. If you half-stew the meat, do the
-potatoes with it.
-
-
-A-LA-MODE BEEF.
-
-Take the bone out of a round of fresh beef, and beat the meat well all
-over to make it tender. Chop and mix together equal quantities of sweet
-marjoram and sweet basil, the leaves picked from the stalks and rubbed
-fine. Chop also some small onions or shalots, and some parsley; the
-marrow from the bone of the beef; and a quarter of a pound, or more of
-suet. Add two penny rolls of stale bread grated; and pepper, mace, and
-nutmeg to your taste. Mix all these ingredients well, and bind them
-together with the beaten yolks of four eggs. Fill with this seasoning
-the place from whence you took out the bone; and rub what is left of it
-all over the outside of the meat. You must, of course, proportion the
-quantity of stuffing to the size of the round of beef. Fasten it well
-with skewers, and tie it round firmly with a piece of tape, so as to
-keep it compact and in good shape. It is best to prepare the meat the
-day before it is to be cooked.
-
-Cover the bottom of a stew-pan with slices of ham. Lay the beef upon
-them, and cover the top of the meat with more slices of ham. Place
-round it four large onions, four carrots, and four turnips, all cut
-in thick slices. Pour in from half a pint to a pint of water, and if
-convenient, add two calves' feet cut in half. Cover the pan closely,
-set it in an oven and let it bake for at least six hours; or seven or
-eight, according to the size.
-
-When it is thoroughly done, take out the beef and lay it on a dish with
-the vegetables round it. Remove the bacon and calves' feet, and (having
-skimmed the fat from the gravy carefully) strain it into a small
-sauce-pan; set it on hot coals, and stir into it a teacup-full of port
-wine, and the same quantity of pickled mushrooms. Let it just come to a
-boil, and then send it to table in a sauce-tureen.
-
-If the beef is to be eaten cold, you may ornament it as follows:--Glaze
-it all over with beaten white of egg. Then cover it with a coat of
-boiled potato grated finely. Have ready some slices of cold boiled
-carrot, and also of beet-root. Cut them into the form of stars or
-flowers, and arrange them handsomely over the top of the meat by
-sticking them on the grated potato. In the centre place a large bunch
-of double parsley, interspersed with flowers cut out of raw turnips,
-beets, and carrots, somewhat in imitation of white and red roses, and
-marygolds. Fix the flowers on wooden skewers concealed with parsley.
-
-Cold a-la-mode beef prepared in this manner will at a little distance
-look like a large iced cake decorated with sugar flowers.
-
-You may dress a fillet of veal according to this receipt. Of course it
-will require less time to stew.
-
-
-TO STEW BEEF.
-
-Take a good piece of fresh beef. It must not be too fat. Wash it, rub
-it with salt, and put it into a pot with barely sufficient water to
-cover it. Set it over a slow fire, and after it has stewed an hour,
-put in some potatoes pared and cut in half, and some parsnips, scraped
-and split. Let them stew with the beef till quite tender. Turn the
-meat several times in the pot. When all is done, serve up the meat and
-vegetables together, and the gravy in a boat, having first skimmed it.
-
-This is a good family dish.
-
-You may add turnips (pared and sliced) to the other vegetables.
-
-Fresh pork may be stewed in this manner, or with sweet potatoes.
-
-
-TO STEW A ROUND OF BEEF.
-
-Trim off some pieces from a round of fresh beef--take out the bone and
-break it. Put the bone and the trimmings into a pan with some cold
-water, and add an onion, a carrot, and a turnip all cut in pieces, and
-a bunch of sweet herbs. Simmer them for an hour, and having skimmed it
-well, strain off the liquid. Season the meat highly with what is called
-kitchen pepper, that is, a mixture, in equal quantities, of black
-pepper, or of cayenne, cinnamon, cloves, ginger and nutmeg, all finely
-powdered. Fasten it with skewers, and tie it firmly round with tape.
-Lay skewers in the bottom of the stew-pan; place the beef upon them,
-and then pour over it the gravy you have prepared from the bone and
-trimmings. Simmer it about an hour and a half, and then turn the meat
-over, and add to it three carrots, three turnips, and two onions all
-sliced, and a dozen tomatas sliced. Keep the lid close, except when you
-are skimming off the fat. Let the meat stew till it is thoroughly done
-and tender throughout. The time will depend on the size of the round.
-It may require from five or six to eight hours.
-
-Just before you take it up, stir into the gravy a table-spoonful or
-two of mushroom catchup, a little made mustard, and a piece of butter
-rolled in flour.
-
-Send it to table hot, with the gravy poured round it.
-
-
-ANOTHER WAY TO STEW A ROUND OF BEEF.
-
-Take a round of fresh beef (or the half of one if it is very large) and
-remove the bone. The day before you cook it, lay it in a pickle made of
-equal proportions of water and vinegar with salt to your taste. Next
-morning take it out of the pickle, put it into a large pot or stew-pan,
-and just cover it with water. Put in with it two or three large onions,
-a few cloves, a little whole black pepper, and a large glass of port
-or claret. If it is a whole round of beef allow two glasses of wine.
-Stew it slowly for at least four hours or more, in proportion to its
-size. It must be thoroughly done, and tender all through. An hour
-before you send it to table take the meat out of the pot, and pour the
-gravy into a pan. Put a large lump of butter into the pot, dredge the
-beef with flour, and return it to the pot to brown, turning it often to
-prevent its burning. Or it will be better to put it into a Dutch oven.
-Cover the lid with hot coals, renewing them as they go out. Take the
-gravy that you poured from the meat, and skim off all the fat. Put it
-into a sauce-pan, and mix with it a little butter rolled in flour, and
-add some more cloves and wine. Give it a boil up. If it is not well
-browned, burn some sugar on a hot shovel, and stir it in.
-
-If you like it stuffed, have ready when you take the meat out of the
-pickle, a force-meat of grated bread crumbs, sweet herbs, butter,
-spice, pepper and salt, and minced parsley, mixed with beaten yolk of
-egg. Fill with this the opening from whence you took the bone, and bind
-a tape firmly round the meat.
-
-
-BEEF BOUILLI.
-
-Take part of a round of fresh beef (or if you prefer it a piece of the
-flank or brisket) and rub it with salt. Place skewers in the bottom of
-the stew-pot, and lay the meat upon them with barely water enough to
-cover it. To enrich the gravy you may add the necks and other trimmings
-of whatever poultry you may happen to have; also the root of tongue, if
-convenient. Cover the pot, and set it over a quick fire. When it boils
-and the scum has risen, skim it well, and then diminish the fire so
-that the meat shall only simmer; or you may set the pot on hot coals.
-Then put in four or five carrots sliced thin, a head of celery cut up,
-and four or five sliced turnips. Add a bunch of sweet herbs, and a
-small table-spoonful of black peppercorns tied in a thin muslin rag.
-Let it stew slowly for four or five hours, and then add a dozen very
-small onions roasted and peeled, and a large table-spoonful of capers
-or nasturtians. You may, if you choose, stick a clove in each onion.
-Simmer it half an hour longer, then take up the meat, and place it in a
-dish, laying the vegetables round it. Skim and strain the gravy; season
-it with catchup, and made mustard, and serve it up in a boat.
-
-Mutton may be cooked in this manner.
-
-
-HASHED BEEF.
-
-Take some roast beef that has been rather under-done, and having cut
-off the fat and skin, put the trimmings with the bones broken up into
-a stew-pan with two large onions sliced, a few sliced potatoes, and a
-bunch of sweet herbs. Add about a pint of warm water, or broth if you
-have it. This is to make the gravy. Cover it closely, and let it simmer
-for about an hour. Then skim and strain it, carefully removing every
-particle of fat.
-
-Take another stew-pot, and melt in it a piece of butter, about the size
-of a large walnut. When it has melted, shake in a spoonful of flour.
-Stir it a few minutes, and then add to it the strained gravy. Let it
-come to a boil, and then put to it a table-spoonful of catchup, and the
-beef cut either in thin small slices or in mouthfuls. Let it simmer
-from five to ten minutes, but do not allow it to boil, lest (having
-been cooked already) it should become tasteless and insipid. Serve
-it up in a deep dish with thin slices of toast cut into triangular or
-pointed pieces, the crust omitted. Dip the toast in the gravy, and lay
-the pieces in regular order round the sides of the dish.
-
-You may hash mutton or veal in the same manner, adding sliced carrots,
-turnips, potatoes, or any vegetables you please. Tomatas are an
-improvement.
-
-To hash cold meat is an economical way of using it; but there is little
-or no nutriment in it after being twice cooked, and the natural flavour
-is much impaired by the process.
-
-Hashed meat would always be much better if the slices were cut from the
-joint or large piece as soon as it leaves the table, and soaked in the
-gravy till next day.
-
-
-BEEF CAKES.
-
-Take some cold roast beef that has been under-done, and mince it very
-fine. Mix with it grated bread crumbs, and a little chopped onion and
-parsley. Season it with pepper and salt, and moisten it with some
-beef-dripping and a little walnut or onion pickle. Some scraped cold
-tongue or ham will be found an improvement. Make it into broad flat
-cakes, and spread a coat of mashed potato thinly on the top and bottom
-of each. Lay a small bit of butter on the top of every cake, and set
-them in an oven to warm and brown.
-
-Beef cakes are frequently a breakfast dish.
-
-Any other cold fresh meat may be prepared in the same manner.
-
-Cold roast beef may be cut into slices, seasoned with salt and pepper,
-broiled a few minutes over a clear fire, and served up hot with a
-little butter spread on them.
-
-
-TO ROAST A BEEF'S HEART.
-
-Cut open the heart, and (having removed the ventricles) soak it in
-cold water to free it from the blood. Parboil it about ten minutes.
-Prepare a force-meat of grated bread crumbs, butter or minced suet,
-sweet marjoram and parsley chopped fine, a little grated lemon-peel,
-nutmeg, pepper, and salt to your taste, and some yolk of egg to bind
-the ingredients. Stuff the heart with the force-meat, and secure the
-opening by tying a string around it. Put it on a spit, and roast it
-till it is tender throughout.
-
-Add to the gravy a piece of butter rolled in flour, and a glass of
-red wine. Serve up the heart very hot in a covered dish. It chills
-immediately.
-
-Eat currant jelly with it.
-
-Boiled beef's heart is frequently used in mince pies.
-
-
-TO STEW A BEEF'S HEART.
-
-Clean the heart, and cut it lengthways into large pieces. Put them into
-a pot with a little salt and pepper, and cover them with cold water.
-Parboil them for a quarter of an hour, carefully skimming off the blood
-that rises to the top. Then take them out, cut them into mouthfuls,
-and having strained the liquid, return them to it, adding a head or
-two of chopped celery, a few sliced onions, a dozen potatoes pared and
-quartered, and a piece of butter rolled in flour. Season with whole
-pepper, and a few cloves if you like. Let it stew slowly till all the
-pieces of heart and the vegetables are quite tender.
-
-You may stew a beef's kidney in the same manner.
-
-The heart and liver of a calf make a good dish cooked as above.
-
-
-TO DRESS BEEF KIDNEY.
-
-Having soaked a fresh kidney in cold water and dried it in a cloth,
-cut it into mouthfuls, and then mince it fine. Dust it with flour. Put
-some butter into a stew-pan over a moderate fire, and when it boils put
-in the minced kidney. When you have browned it in the butter, sprinkle
-on a little salt and cayenne pepper, and pour in a very little boiling
-water. Add a glass of champagne or other wine, or a large tea-spoonful
-of mushroom catchup, or of walnut pickle. Cover the pan closely, and
-let it stew till the kidney is tender. Send it to table hot in a
-covered dish. It is eaten generally at breakfast.
-
-
-TO BOIL TRIPE.
-
-Wash it well in warm water, and trim it nicely, taking off all the
-fat. Cut it into small pieces, and put it on to boil five hours before
-dinner, in water enough to cover it very well. After it has boiled four
-hours, pour off the water, season the tripe with pepper and salt, and
-put it into a pot with milk and water mixed in equal quantities. Boil
-it an hour in the milk and water.
-
-Boil in a sauce-pan ten or a dozen onions. When they are quite soft,
-drain them in a cullender, and mash them. Wipe out your sauce-pan
-and put them on again, with a bit of butter rolled in flour, and a
-wine-glass of cream or milk. Let them boil up, and add them to the
-tripe just before you send it to table. Eat it with pepper, vinegar,
-and mustard.
-
-It is best to give tripe its first and longest boiling the day before
-it is wanted.
-
-
-TRIPE AND OYSTERS.
-
-Having boiled the tripe in milk and water, for four or five hours till
-it is quite tender, cut it up into small pieces. Put it into a stew-pan
-with just milk enough to cover it, and a few blades of mace. Let it
-stew about five minutes, and then put in the oysters, adding a large
-piece of butter rolled in flour, and salt and cayenne pepper to your
-taste. Let it stew five minutes longer, and then send it to table in a
-tureen; first skimming off whatever fat may float on the surface.
-
-
-TO FRY TRIPE.
-
-Boil the tripe the day before, till it is quite tender, which it will
-not be in less than four or five hours. Then cover it and set it away.
-Next day cut it into long slips, and dip each piece into beaten yolk of
-egg, and afterwards roll them in grated bread crumbs. Have ready in a
-frying-pan over the fire, some good beef-dripping. When it is boiling
-hot put in the tripe, and fry it about ten minutes, till of a light
-brown.
-
-You may serve it up with onion sauce.
-
-Boiled tripe that has been left from the dinner of the preceding day
-may be fried in this manner.
-
-
-PEPPER POT.
-
-Take four pounds of tripe, and four ox feet. Put them into a large
-pot with as much water as will cover them, some whole pepper, and a
-little salt. Hang them over the fire early in the morning. Let them
-boil slowly, keeping thy pot closely covered. When the tripe is quite
-tender, and the ox feet boiled to pieces, take them out, and skim
-the liquid and strain it. Then cut the tripe into small pieces; put
-it back into the pot, and pour the soup or liquor over it. Have ready
-some sweet herbs chopped fine, some sliced onions, and some sliced
-potatoes. Make some small dumplings with flour and butter. Season the
-vegetables well with pepper and salt, and put them into the pot. Have
-ready a kettle of boiling water, and pour on as much as will keep the
-ingredients covered while boiling, but take care not to weaken the
-taste by putting too much water. Add a large piece of butter rolled in
-flour, and lastly put in the dumplings. Let it boil till all the things
-are thoroughly done, and then serve it up in the tureen.
-
-
-TO BOIL A SMOKED TONGUE.
-
-In buying dried tongues, choose those that are thick and plump, and
-that have the smoothest skins. They are the most likely to be young and
-tender.
-
-A smoked tongue should soak in cold water at least all night. One that
-is very hard and dry will require twenty-four hours' soaking. When you
-boil it put it into a pot full of cold water. Set it over a slow fire
-that it may heat gradually for an hour before it comes to a boil. Then
-keep it simmering from three and a half to four hours, according to its
-size and age. Probe it with a fork, and do not take it up till it is
-tender throughout. Send it to table with mashed potato laid round it,
-and garnish with parsley. Do not split it in half when you dish it,
-as is the practice with some cooks. Cutting it lengthways spoils the
-flavour, and renders it comparatively insipid.
-
-If you wish to serve up the tongue very handsomely, rub it with yolk
-of egg after you take it from the pot, and strew over it grated bread
-crumbs; baste it with butter, and set it before the fire till it
-becomes of a light brown. Cover the root (which is always an unsightly
-object) with thick sprigs of double parsley; and (instead of mashed
-potato) lay slices of currant jelly all round the tongue.
-
-
-TO BOIL A SALTED OR PICKLED TONGUE.
-
-Put it into boiling water, and let it boil three hours or more,
-according to its size. When you take it out peel and trim it, and send
-it to table surrounded with mashed potato, and garnished with sliced
-carrot.
-
-
-TO CORN BEEF.
-
-Wash the beef well, after it has lain awhile in cold water. Then drain
-and examine it, take out all the kernels, and rub it plentifully with
-salt. It will imbibe the salt more readily after being washed. In cold
-weather warm the salt by placing it before the fire. This will cause it
-to penetrate the meat more thoroughly.
-
-In summer do not attempt to corn any beef that has not been fresh
-killed, and even then it will not keep more than a day and a half or
-two days. Wash and dry it, and rub a great deal of salt well into it.
-Cover it carefully, and keep it in a cold dry cellar.
-
-Pork is corned in the same manner.
-
-
-TO PICKLE BEEF OR TONGUES.
-
-The beef must be fresh killed, and of the best kind. You must wipe
-every piece well, to dry it from the blood and moisture. To fifty
-pounds of meat allow two pounds and a quarter of coarse salt, two
-pounds and a quarter of fine salt, one ounce and a half of saltpetre,
-two pounds of good brown sugar, and two quarts of molasses. Mix all
-these ingredients well together, boil and skim it for about twenty
-minutes, and when no more scum rises, take it from the fire. Have ready
-the beef in a large tub, or in a barrel; pour the brine gradually upon
-it with a ladle, and as it cools rub it well into every part of the
-meat. A molasses hogshead sawed in two is a good receptacle for pickled
-meat. Cover it well with a thick cloth, and look at it frequently,
-skimming off whatever may float on the top, and basting the meat with
-the brine. In about a fortnight the beef will be fit for use.
-
-Tongues may be put into the same cask with the beef, one or two at a
-time, as you procure them from the butcher. None of them will be ready
-for smoking in less than six weeks; but they had best remain in pickle
-seven or eight months. They should not be sent to the smoke-house later
-than March. If you do them at home, they will require three weeks'
-smoking over a wood fire. Hang them with the root or large end upwards.
-When done, sew up each tongue tightly in coarse linen, and hang them up
-in a dark dry cellar.
-
-Pickled tongues without smoking are seldom liked.
-
-The last of October is a good time for putting meat into pickle. If the
-weather is too warm or too cold, it will not take the salt well.
-
-In the course of the winter the pickle may probably require a second
-boiling with additional ingredients.
-
-Half an ounce of pearl-ash added to the other articles will make the
-meat more tender, but many persons thinks it injures the taste.
-
-The meat must always be kept completely immersed in the brine. To
-effect this a heavy board should be laid upon it.
-
-
-DRIED OR SMOKED BEEF.
-
-The best part for this purpose is the round, which you must desire the
-butcher to cut into four pieces. Wash the meat and dry it well in a
-cloth. Grind or beat to powder an equal quantity of cloves and mace,
-and having mixed them together, rub them well into the beef with your
-hand. The spice will be found a great improvement both to the taste
-and smell of the meat. Have ready a pickle made precisely as that in
-the preceding article. Boil and skim it, and (the meat having been
-thoroughly rubbed all over with the spice) pour on the pickle as before
-directed. Keep the beef in the pickle at least six weeks, and then
-smoke it about three weeks. Corn cobs make a good fire for smoking meat.
-
-Smoked beef is brought on the tea-table either shaved into thin chips
-without cooking, or chipped and fried in a skillet with some butter and
-beaten egg.
-
-This receipt for dried or smoked beef will answer equally well for
-venison ham, which is also used as a relish at the tea-table.
-
-Mutton hams may be prepared in the same way.
-
-
-POTTED BEEF.
-
-Take a good piece of a round of beef, and cut off all the fat. Rub the
-lean well with salt, and let it lie two days. Then put it into a jar,
-and add to it a little water in the proportion of half a pint to three
-pounds of meat. Cover the jar as closely as possible, (the best cover
-will be a coarse paste or dough) and set it in a slow oven, or in a
-vessel of boiling water for about four hours. Then drain off all the
-gravy and set the meat before the fire that all the moisture may be
-drawn out. Pull or cut it to pieces and pound it for a long time in a
-mortar with black pepper, cloves, mace, nutmeg, and oiled fresh butter,
-adding these ingredients gradually, and moistening it with a little of
-the gravy. You must pound it to a fine paste, or till it becomes of the
-consistence of cream cheese.
-
-Put it into potting cans, and cover it an inch thick with fresh butter
-that has been melted, skimmed, and strained. Tie a leather over each
-pot, and keep them closely covered. Set them in a dry place.
-
-Game and poultry may be potted in this manner.
-
-
-
-
-VEAL.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-The fore-quarter of a calf comprises the neck, breast, and shoulder:
-the hind-quarter consists of the loin, fillet, and knuckle. Separate
-dishes are made of the head, heart, liver, and sweetbread. The flesh
-of good veal is firm and dry, and the joints stiff. The lean is of a
-very light delicate red, and the fat quite white. In buying the head
-see that the eyes look full, plump, and lively; if they are dull and
-sunk the calf has been killed too long. In buying calves' feet for
-jelly or soup, endeavour to get those that have been singed only, and
-not skinned; as a great deal of gelatinous substance is contained in
-the skin. Veal should always be thoroughly cooked, and never brought to
-table rare or under-done, like beef or mutton. The least redness in the
-meat or gravy is disgusting.
-
-Veal suet may be used as a substitute for that of beef; also
-veal-dripping.
-
-
-TO ROAST A LOIN OF VEAL.
-
-The loin is the best part of the calf. It is always roasted. See that
-your fire is clear and hot, and broad enough to brown both ends. Cover
-the fat of the kidney and the back with paper to prevent it from
-scorching. A large loin of veal will require _at least_ four hours
-and a half to roast it sufficiently. At first set the roaster at a
-tolerable distance from the fire that the meat may heat gradually
-in the beginning; afterwards place it nearer. Put a little salt and
-water into the dripping-pan and baste the meat with it till the gravy
-begins to drop. Then baste with the gravy. When the meat is nearly
-done, move it close to the fire, dredge it with a very little flour,
-and baste it with butter. Skim the fat from the gravy, which should be
-thickened by shaking in a very small quantity of flour. Put it into a
-small sauce-pan, and set it on hot coals. Let it just come to a boil,
-and then send it to table in a boat. If the gravy is not in sufficient
-quantity, add to it about half a jill or a large wine-glass of boiling
-water.
-
-In carving a loin of veal help every one to a piece of the kidney as
-far as it will go.
-
-
-TO ROAST A BREAST OF VEAL.
-
-A breast of veal will require about three hours and a half to roast.
-In preparing it for the spit, cover it with the caul, and skewer the
-sweetbread to the back. Take off the caul when the meat is nearly done.
-The breast, being comparatively tough and coarse, is less esteemed than
-the loin and the fillet.
-
-
-TO ROAST A FILLET OF VEAL.
-
-Take out the bone, and secure with skewers the fat flap to the outside
-of the meat. Prepare a stuffing of fresh butter or suet minced fine,
-and an equal quantity of grated bread-crumbs, a large table-spoonful of
-grated lemon-peel, a table-spoonful of sweet marjoram chopped or rubbed
-to powder, a nutmeg grated, and a little pepper and salt, with a sprig
-of chopped parsley. Mix all these ingredients with beaten yolk of egg,
-and stuff the place from whence the bone was taken. Make deep cuts or
-incisions all over the top of the veal, and fill them with some of the
-stuffing. You may stick into each hole an inch of fat ham or bacon, cut
-very thin.
-
-Having papered the fat, spit the veal and put it into the roaster,
-keeping it at first not too near the fire. Put a little salt and water
-into the dripping-pan, and for awhile baste the meat with it. Then
-baste it with its own gravy. A fillet of veal will require four hours
-roasting. As it proceeds, place it nearer to the fire. Half an hour
-before it is done, remove the paper, and baste the meat with butter,
-having first dredged it very lightly with flour. Having skimmed the
-gravy, mix some thin melted butter with it.
-
-If convenient, you may in making the stuffing, use a large proportion
-of chopped mushrooms that have been preserved in sweet oil, or of
-chopped pickled oysters. Cold ham shred fine will improve it.
-
-You may stuff a fillet of veal entirely with sausage meat.
-
-To accompany a fillet of veal, the usual dish is boiled ham or bacon.
-
-A shoulder of veal may be stuffed and roasted in a similar manner.
-
-
-TO STEW A BREAST OF VEAL.
-
-Divide the breast into pieces according to the position of the bones.
-Put them into a stew-pan with a few slices of ham, some whole pepper, a
-bunch of sweet herbs, and a sliced onion. Add sufficient water to keep
-it from burning, and let it stew slowly till the meat is quite tender.
-Then put to it a quart or more of green peas that have boiled twenty
-minutes in another pot, and a piece of butter rolled in flour. Let all
-stew together a quarter of an hour longer. Serve it up, with the veal
-in the middle, the peas round it, and the ham laid on the peas.
-
-You may stew a breast of veal with tomatas.
-
-
-TO STEW A FILLET OF VEAL.
-
-Take a fillet of veal, wipe it well, and then with a sharp knife make
-deep incisions all over the surface, the bottom as well as the top and
-sides. Make a stuffing of grated stale bread, butter, chopped sweet
-marjoram, grated lemon-peel, nutmeg, pepper and salt, mixed up with
-beaten yolk of egg to bind and give it consistency. Fill the holes or
-incisions with the stuffing, pressing it down well with your fingers.
-Reserve some of the stuffing to rub all over the outside of the meat.
-Have ready some very thin slices of cold boiled ham, the fatter the
-better. Cover the veal with them, fastening them on with skewers. Put
-it into a pot, and stew it slowly in a very little water, just enough
-to cover it. It will take at least five hours to stew; or more, in
-proportion to its size. When done, take off the ham, and lay it round
-the veal in a dish.
-
-You may stew with it a quart or three pints of young green peas, put
-in about an hour before dinner; add to them a little butter and pepper
-while they are stewing. Serve them up in the dish with the veal, laying
-the slices of ham upon them.
-
-If you omit the ham, stew the veal entirely in lard.
-
-
-TO STEW A KNUCKLE OF VEAL.
-
-Lay four wooden skewers across the bottom of your stew-pan, and place
-the meat upon them; having first carefully washed it, and rubbed it
-with salt. Add a table-spoonful of whole pepper, the leaves from a
-bunch of sweet marjoram, a sprig of parsley leaves chopped, two onions
-peeled and sliced, and a piece of butter rolled in flour. Pour in two
-quarts of water. Cover it closely, and after it has come to a boil,
-lessen the fire, and let the meat only simmer for two hours or more.
-Before you serve it up, pour the liquid over it.
-
-This dish will be greatly improved by stewing with it a few slices of
-ham, or the remains of a cold ham.
-
-Veal when simply boiled is too insipid. To stew it is much better.
-
-
-VEAL CUTLETS.
-
-The best cutlets are those taken from the leg or fillet. Cut them about
-half an inch thick, and as large as the palm of your hand. Season them
-with pepper and salt. Grate some stale bread, and rub it through a
-cullender, adding to it chopped sweet marjoram, grated lemon-peel, and
-some powdered mace or nutmeg. Spread the mixture on a large flat dish.
-Have ready in a pan some beaten egg. First dip each cutlet into the
-egg, and then into the seasoning on the dish, seeing that a sufficient
-quantity adheres to both sides of the meat. Melt in your frying-pan,
-over a quick fire, some beef-dripping, lard, or fresh butter, and when
-it boils lay your cutlets in it, and fry them thoroughly; turning them
-on both sides, and taking care that they do not burn. Place them in a
-covered dish near the fire, while you finish the gravy in the pan, by
-first skimming it, and then shaking in a little flour and stirring it
-round. Pour the gravy hot round the cutlets, and garnish with little
-bunches of curled parsley.
-
-You may mix with the bread crumbs a little saffron.
-
-
-VEAL STEAKS.
-
-Cut a neck of veal into thin steaks, and beat them to make them tender.
-For seasoning, mix together some finely chopped onion sprinkled with
-pepper and salt, and a little chopped parsley. Add some butter, and
-put it with the parsley and onion into a small sauce-pan, and set it
-on hot coals to stew till brown. In the mean time, put the steaks on a
-hot gridiron (the bars of which have been rubbed with suet) and broil
-them well, over a bed of bright clear coals. When sufficiently done on
-one side turn them on the other. After the last turning, cover each
-steak with some of the seasoning from the sauce-pan, and let all broil
-together till thoroughly done.
-
-Instead of the onions and parsley, you may season the veal steaks with
-chopped mushrooms, or with chopped oysters, browned in butter.
-
-Have ready a gravy made of the scraps and trimmings of the veal,
-seasoned with pepper and salt, and boiled in a little hot water in the
-same sauce-pan in which the parsley and onions have been previously
-stewed. Strain the gravy when it has boiled long enough, and flavour it
-with catchup.
-
-
-MINCED VEAL.
-
-Take some cold veal, cut it into slices, and mince it very finely with
-a chopping-knife. Season it to your taste with pepper, salt, sweet
-marjoram rubbed fine, grated lemon-peel and nutmeg. Put the bones and
-trimmings into a sauce-pan with a little water, and simmer them over
-hot coals to extract the gravy from them. Then put the minced veal into
-a stew-pan, strain the gravy over it, add a piece of butter rolled in
-flour, and a little milk or cream. Let it all simmer together till
-thoroughly warmed, but do not allow it to boil lest the meat having
-been once cooked already, should become tasteless. When you serve
-it up, have ready some three-cornered pieces of bread toasted and
-buttered; place them all round the inside of the dish.
-
-Or you may cover the mince with a thick layer of grated bread,
-moistened with a little butter, and browned on the top with a
-salamander, or a red hot shovel.
-
-
-VEAL PATTIES.
-
-Mince very fine a pound of the lean of cold roast veal, and half a
-pound of cold boiled ham, (fat and lean equally mixed.) Put it into
-a stew-pan with three ounces of butter divided into bits and rolled
-in flour, a jill of cream, and a jill of veal gravy. Season it to
-your taste with cayenne pepper and nutmeg, grated lemon-peel, and
-lemon-juice. Set the pan on hot coals, and let the ingredients simmer
-till well warmed, stirring them well to prevent their burning.
-
-Have, ready baked, some small shells of puff-paste. Fill them with the
-mixture, and eat the patties either warm or cold.
-
-
-VEAL PIE.
-
-Take two pounds of veal cut from the loin, fillet, or the best end of
-the neck. Remove the bone, fat, and skin, and put them into a sauce-pan
-with half a pint of water to stew for the gravy. Make a good paste,
-allowing a pound of butter to two pounds of flour. Divide it into two
-pieces, roll it out rather thick, and cover with one piece the sides
-and bottom of a deep dish. Put in a layer of veal, seasoned with black
-pepper, then a layer of cold ham sliced thin, then more veal, more ham,
-and so on till the dish is full; interspersing the meat with yolks
-of eggs boiled hard. If you can procure some small button mushrooms
-they will be found an improvement. Pour in, at the last, the gravy you
-have drawn from the trimmings, and put on the lid of the pie, notching
-the edge handsomely, and ornamenting the centre with a flower made of
-paste. Bake the pie at least two hours and a half.
-
-You may make a very plain veal pie simply of veal chops, sliced onions,
-and potatoes pared and quartered. Season with pepper and salt, and fill
-up the dish with water.
-
-
-CALF'S HEAD DREST PLAIN.
-
-Wash the head in warm water. Then lay it in clean hot water and let it
-soak awhile. This will blanch it. Take out the brains and the black
-part of the eyes. Tie the head in a cloth, and put it into a large
-fish-kettle, with plenty of cold water, and add some salt to throw up
-the scum, which must be taken off as it rises. Let the head boil gently
-about three hours.
-
-Put eight or ten sage leaves, and as much parsley, into a small
-sauce-pan with a little water, and boil them half an hour. Then chop
-them fine, and set them ready on a plate. Wash the brains well in two
-warm waters, and then soak them for an hour in a basin of cold water
-with a little salt in it. Remove the skin and strings, and then put
-the brains into a stew-pan with plenty of cold water, and let them
-boil gently for a quarter of an hour, skimming them well. Take them
-out, chop them, and mix them with the sage and parsley leaves, two
-table-spoonfuls of melted butter, and the yolks of four hard-boiled
-eggs, and pepper and salt to your taste. Then put the mixture into a
-sauce-pan and set it on coals to warm.
-
-Take up the head when it is sufficiently boiled, score it in diamonds,
-brush it all over with beaten egg, and strew it with a mixture of
-grated bread-crumbs, and chopped sage and parsley. Stick a few bits of
-butter over it, and set it in a Dutch oven to brown. Serve it up with
-the brains laid round it. Or you may send to table the brains and the
-tongue in a small separate dish, having first trimmed the tongue and
-cut off the roots. Have also parsley-sauce in a boat. You may garnish
-with very thin small slices of broiled ham, curled up.
-
-If you get a calf's head with the hair on, sprinkle it all over with
-pounded rosin, and dip it into boiling water. This will make the hairs
-scrape off easily.
-
-
-CALF'S HEAD HASHED.
-
-Take a calf's head and a set of feet, and boil them until tender,
-having first removed the brains. Then cut the flesh off the head and
-feet in slices from the bone, and put both meat and bones into a
-stew-pan with a bunch of sweet herbs, some sliced onions, and pepper
-and salt to your taste; also a large piece of butter rolled in flour,
-and a little water. After it has stewed awhile slowly till the flavour
-is well extracted from the herbs and onions, take out the meat, season
-it a little with cayenne pepper, and lay it in a dish. Strain the gravy
-in which it was stewed, and stir into it two glasses of madeira, and
-the juice and grated peel of a lemon. Having poured some of the gravy
-over the meat, lay a piece of butter on the top, set it in an oven and
-bake it brown.
-
-In the mean time, having cleaned and washed the brains (skinning them
-and removing the strings) parboil them in a sauce-pan, and then make
-them into balls with chopped sweet herbs, grated bread-crumbs, grated
-lemon-peel, nutmeg, and beaten yolk of egg. Fry them in lard and butter
-mixed; and send them to table laid round the meat (which should have
-the tongue placed on the top) and garnish with sliced lemon. Warm the
-remaining gravy in a small sauce-pan on hot coals, and stir into it the
-beaten yolk of an egg a minute before you take it from the fire. Send
-it to table in a boat.
-
-
-CHITTERLINGS OR CALF'S TRIPE.
-
-See that the chitterlings are very nice and white. Wash them, cut them
-into pieces, and put them into a stew-pan with pepper and salt to your
-taste, and about two quarts of water. Boil them two hours or more. In
-the mean time, peel eight or ten white onions, and throw them whole
-into a sauce-pan with plenty of water. Boil them slowly till quite
-soft; then drain them in a cullender, and mash them. Wipe out your
-sauce-pan, and put in the mashed onions with a piece of butter, two
-table-spoonfuls of cream or rich milk, some nutmeg, and a very little
-salt. Sprinkle in a little flour, set the pan on hot coals (keeping it
-well covered) and give it one boil up.
-
-When the chitterlings are quite tender all through, take them up and
-drain them. Place in the bottom of a dish a slice or two of buttered
-toast with all the crust cut off. Lay the chitterlings on the toast,
-and send them to table with the stewed onions in a sauce-boat. When
-you take the chitterlings on your plate season them with pepper and
-vinegar.
-
-This, if properly prepared, is a very nice dish.
-
-
-TO FRY CALF'S FEET.
-
-Having first boiled them till tender, cut them in two, and (having
-taken out the large bones) season the feet with pepper and salt, and
-dredge them well with flour. Strew some chopped parsley or sweet
-marjoram over them, and fry them of a light brown in lard or butter.
-Serve them up with parsley-sauce.
-
-
-TO FRY CALF'S LIVER.
-
-Cut the liver into thin slices. Season it with pepper, salt, chopped
-sweet herbs, and parsley. Dredge it with flour, and fry it brown in
-lard or dripping. See that it is thoroughly done before you send it to
-table. Serve it up with its own gravy.
-
-Some slices of cold boiled ham fried with it will be found an
-improvement. If you use ham, add no salt.
-
-You may dress a calf's heart in the same manner.
-
-
-LARDED CALF'S LIVER.
-
-Take a calf's liver and wash it well. Cut into long slips the fat
-of some bacon or old ham, and insert it all through the surface of
-the liver by means of a larding-pin. Put the liver into a pot with a
-table-spoonful of lard, a few sliced tomatas, or some tomata catchup;
-adding one large or two small onions minced fine, and some sweet
-marjoram leaves rubbed very fine. The sweet marjoram will crumble more
-easily if you first dry it before the fire on a plate.
-
-Having put in all these ingredients, set the pot on hot coals in the
-corner of the fire-place, and keep it stewing, regularly and slowly,
-for four hours. Send the liver to table with the gravy round it.
-
-
-TO ROAST SWEET-BREADS.
-
-Take four fine sweet-breads, and having trimmed them nicely, parboil
-them, and then lay them in a pan of cold water till they become cool.
-Afterwards dry them in a cloth. Put some butter into a sauce-pan,
-set it on hot coals, and melt and skim it. When it is quite clear,
-take it off. Have ready some beaten egg in one dish, and some grated
-bread-crumbs in another. Skewer each sweet-bread, and fasten them on
-a spit. Then glaze them all over with egg, and sprinkle them with
-bread-crumbs. Spread on some of the clarified butter, and then another
-coat of crumbs. Roast them before a clear fire, at least a quarter of
-an hour. Have ready some nice veal gravy flavoured with lemon-juice,
-and pour it round the sweet-breads before you send them to table.
-
-
-LARDED SWEET-BREADS.
-
-Parboil four or five of the largest sweet-breads you can get. This
-should be done as soon as they are brought in, as few things spoil
-more rapidly if not cooked at once. When half boiled, lay them in
-cold water. Prepare a force-meat of grated bread, lemon-peel, butter,
-cayenne, and nutmeg mixed with beaten yolk of egg. Cut open the
-sweet-breads and stuff them with it, fastening them afterwards with
-a skewer, or tying them round with packthread. Have ready some slips
-of bacon-fat, and some slips of lemon-peel cut about the thickness of
-very small straws. Lard the sweet-breads with them in alternate rows
-of bacon and lemon-peel, drawing them through with a larding-needle.
-Do it regularly and handsomely. Then put the sweet-breads into a Dutch
-oven, and bake them brown. Serve them up with veal gravy flavoured with
-a glass of Madeira, and enriched with beaten yolk of egg stirred in at
-the last.
-
-
-MARBLED VEAL.
-
-Having boiled and skinned two fine smoked tongues, cut them to pieces
-and pound them to a paste in a mortar, moistening them with plenty of
-butter as you proceed. Have ready an equal quantity of the lean of
-veal stewed and cut into very small pieces. Pound the veal also in a
-mortar, adding butter to it by degrees. The tongue and veal must be
-kept separate till both have been pounded. Then fill your potting cans
-with lumps of the veal and tongue, pressed down hard, and so placed,
-that when cut, the mixture will look variegated or marbled. Close the
-cans with veal; again press it down very hard, and finish by pouring on
-clarified butter. Cover the cans closely, and keep them in a dry place.
-It may be eaten at tea or supper. Send it to table cut in slices.
-
-You may use it for sandwiches.
-
-To clarify butter, cut it up, melt it in a sauce-pan over the fire, and
-skim it well.
-
-
-
-
-MUTTON AND LAMB.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-The fore-quarter of a sheep contains the neck, breast, and shoulder;
-and the hind-quarter the loin and leg. The two loins together are
-called the chine or saddle. The flesh of good mutton is of a bright
-red, and a close grain, and the fat firm and quite white. The meat will
-feel tender and springy when you squeeze it with your fingers. The vein
-in the neck of the fore-quarter should be of a fine blue.
-
-Lamb is always roasted; generally a whole quarter at once. In carving
-lamb, the first thing done is to separate the shoulder from the breast,
-or the leg from the loin.
-
-If the weather is cold enough to allow it, mutton is more tender after
-being kept a few days.
-
-
-TO ROAST MUTTON.
-
-Mutton should be roasted with a quick brisk fire. Every part should be
-trimmed off that cannot be eaten. Wash the meat well. The skin should
-be taken off and skewered on again before the meat is put on the spit;
-this will make it more juicy. Otherwise tie paper over the fat, having
-soaked the twine in water to prevent the string from burning. Put a
-little salt and water into the dripping-pan, to baste the meat at
-first, then use its own gravy for that purpose. A quarter of an hour
-before you think it will be done, take off the skin or paper, dredge
-the meat very lightly with flour, and baste it with butter. Skim the
-gravy and send it to table in a boat.
-
-A leg of mutton will require from two hours roasting to two hours and a
-half in proportion to its size. A chine or saddle, from two hours and
-a half, to three hours. A shoulder, from an hour and a half, to two
-hours. A loin, from an hour and three quarters, to two hours. A haunch
-(that is a leg with part of the loin) cannot be well roasted in less
-than four hours.
-
-Always have some currant jelly on the table to eat with roast mutton.
-It should also be accompanied by mashed turnips.
-
-Slices cut from a cold leg of mutton that has been under-done, are very
-nice broiled or warmed on a gridiron, and sent to the breakfast table
-covered with currant jelly.
-
-Pickles are always eaten with mutton.
-
-In preparing a leg of mutton for roasting, you may make deep incisions
-in it, and stuff them with chopped oysters, or with a force-meat made
-in the usual manner; or with chestnuts parboiled and peeled. The gravy
-will be improved by stirring into it a glass of port wine.
-
-
-TO BOIL MUTTON.
-
-To prepare a leg of mutton for boiling, wash it clean, cut a small
-piece off the shank bone, and trim the knuckle. Put it into a pot with
-water enough to cover it, and boil it gently for three hours, skimming
-it well. Then take it from the fire, and keeping the pot well covered,
-let it finish by remaining in the steam for ten or fifteen minutes.
-Serve it up with a sauce-boat of melted butter into which a tea-cup
-full of capers or nasturtians have been stirred.
-
-Have mashed turnips to eat with it.
-
-A few small onions boiled in the water with the mutton are thought
-by some to improve the flavour of the meat. It is much better when
-sufficient time is allowed to boil or simmer it slowly; for instance,
-four hours.
-
-A neck or a loin of mutton will require also about three hours slow
-boiling. These pieces should on no account be sent to table the least
-under-done. Serve up with them carrots and whole turnips. You may add
-a dish of suet dumplings to eat with the meat, made of finely chopped
-suet mixed with double its quantity of flour, and a little cold water.
-
-
-MUTTON CHOPS.
-
-Take chops or steaks from a loin of mutton, cut off the bone close to
-the meat, and trim off the skin, and part of the fat. Beat them to make
-them tender, and season them with pepper and salt. Make your gridiron
-hot over a bed of clear bright coals; rub the bars with suet, and lay
-on the chops. Turn them frequently; and if the fat that falls from
-them causes a blaze and smoke, remove the gridiron for a moment till
-it is over. When they are thoroughly done, put them into a warm dish
-and butter them. Keep them covered till a moment before they are to be
-eaten.
-
-When the chops have been turned for the last time, you may strew
-over them some finely minced onion moistened with boiling water, and
-seasoned with pepper.
-
-Some like them flavoured with mushroom catchup.
-
-Another way of dressing mutton chops is, after trimming them nicely and
-seasoning them with pepper and salt, to lay them for awhile in melted
-butter. When they have imbibed a sufficient quantity, take them out,
-and cover them all over with grated bread-crumbs. Broil them over a
-clear fire, and see that the bread does not burn.
-
-
-CUTLETS A LA MAINTENON.
-
-Cut a neck of mutton into steaks with a bone in each; trim them nicely,
-and scrape clean the end of the bone. Flatten them with a rolling pin,
-or a meat beetle, and lay them in oiled butter. Make a seasoning of
-hard-boiled yolk of egg and sweet-herbs minced small, grated bread,
-pepper, salt, and nutmeg; and, if you choose, a little minced onion.
-Take the chops out of the butter, and cover them with the seasoning.
-Butter some half sheets of white paper, and put the cutlets into them,
-so as to be entirely covered, securing the paper with pins or strings;
-and twisting them nicely round the bone. Heat your gridiron over some
-bright lively coals. Lay the cutlets on it, and broil them about twenty
-minutes. The custom of sending them to table in the papers had best be
-omitted, as (unless managed by a French cook) these envelopes, after
-being on the gridiron, make a very bad appearance.
-
-Serve them up hot, with mushroom sauce in a boat, or with a brown
-gravy, flavoured with red wine. You may make the gravy of the bones and
-trimmings, stewed in a little water, skimmed well, and strained when
-sufficiently stewed. Thicken it with flour browned in a Dutch oven, and
-add a glass of red wine.
-
-You may bake these cutlets in a Dutch oven without the papers. Moisten
-them frequently with a little oiled butter.
-
-
-STEWED MUTTON CHOPS.
-
-Cut a loin or neck of mutton into chops, and trim away the fat and
-bones. Beat and flatten them. Season them with pepper and salt, and put
-them into a stew-pan with barely sufficient water to cover them, and
-some sliced carrots, turnips, onions, potatoes, and a bunch of sweet
-herbs, or a few tomatas. Let the whole stew slowly about three hours,
-or till every thing is tender. Keep the pan closely covered, except
-when you are skimming it.
-
-Send it to table with sippets or three-cornered pieces of toasted
-bread, laid all round the dish.
-
-
-HASHED MUTTON.
-
-Cut into small pieces the lean of some cold mutton that has been
-underdone, and season it with pepper and salt. Take the bones and other
-trimmings, put them into a sauce-pan with as much water as will cover
-them, and some sliced onions, and let them stew till you have drawn
-from them a good gravy. Having skimmed it well, strain the gravy into a
-stew-pan, and put the mutton into it. Have ready-boiled some carrots,
-turnips, potatoes and onions. Slice them, and add them to the meat and
-gravy. Set the pan on hot coals, and let it simmer till the meat is
-warmed through, but do not allow it to boil, as it has been once cooked
-already. Cover the bottom of a dish with slices of buttered toast. Lay
-the meat and vegetables upon it, and pour over them the gravy.
-
-Tomatas will be found an improvement.
-
-If green peas, or Lima beans are in season, you may boil them, and put
-them to the hashed mutton; leaving out the other vegetables, or serving
-them up separately.
-
-
-A CASSEROLE OF MUTTON.
-
-Butter a deep dish or mould, and line it with potatoes mashed with milk
-or butter, and seasoned with pepper and salt. Fill it with slices of
-the lean of cold mutton, or lamb, seasoned also. Cover the whole with
-more mashed potatoes. Put it into an oven, and bake it till the meat is
-thoroughly warmed, and the potatoes brown. Then carefully turn it out
-on a large dish; or you may, if more convenient, send it to table in
-the dish it was baked in.
-
-
-MUTTON HARICO.
-
-Take a neck of mutton, cut it into chops, and fry them brown. Then
-put them into a stew-pan with a bunch of sweet herbs, two or three
-cloves, a little mace, and pepper and salt to your taste. Cover them
-with boiling water, and let them stew slowly for about an hour. Then
-cut some carrots and turnips into dice; slice some onions, and cut up
-a head of celery; put them all into the stew-pan, and keep it closely
-covered except when you are skimming off the fat. Let the whole stew
-gently for an hour longer, and then send it to table in a deep dish,
-with the gravy about it.
-
-You may make a similar harico of veal steaks, or of beef cut very thin.
-
-
-STEWED LEG OF MUTTON
-
-Take a leg of mutton and trim it nicely. Put it into a pot with three
-pints of water; or with two pints of water and one quart of gravy drawn
-from bones, trimmings, and coarse pieces of meat. Add some slices of
-carrots, and a little salt. Stew it slowly three hours. Then put in
-small onions, small turnips, tomatas or tomata catchup, and shred or
-powdered sweet marjoram to your taste, and let it stew three hours
-longer. A large leg will require from first to last from six hours and
-a half to seven hours stewing. But though it must be tender and well
-done all through, do not allow it to stew to rags. Serve it up with the
-vegetables and gravy round it. Have mashed potatoes in another dish.
-
-
-TO ROAST LAMB.
-
-The best way of cooking lamb is to roast it; when drest otherwise it is
-insipid, and not so good as mutton. A hind-quarter of eight pounds will
-be done in about two hours; a fore-quarter of ten pounds, in two hours
-and a half; a leg of five pounds will take from an hour and a quarter
-to an hour and a half; a loin about an hour and a half. Lamb, like veal
-and pork, is not eatable unless thoroughly done; no one preferring it
-rare, as is frequently the case with beef and mutton.
-
-Wash the meat, wipe it dry, spit it, and cover the fat with paper.
-Place it before a clear brisk fire. Baste it at first with a little
-salt and water, and then with its own drippings. Remove the paper when
-the meat is nearly done, and dredge the lamb with a little flour.
-Afterwards baste it with butter. Do not take it off the spit till you
-see it drop white gravy.
-
-Prepare some mint-sauce by stripping from the stalks the leaves of
-young green mint, mincing them very fine, and mixing them with vinegar
-and sugar. There must be just sufficient vinegar to moisten the mint,
-but not enough to make the sauce liquid. Send it to table in a boat,
-and the gravy in another boat. Garnish with sliced lemon.
-
-In carving a quarter of lamb, separate the shoulder from the breast, or
-the leg from the ribs, sprinkle a little salt and pepper, and squeeze
-on some lemon juice.
-
-It should be accompanied by asparagus, green peas, and lettuce.
-
-
-MUTTON HAMS.
-
-Take large fine legs of mutton freshly killed, and wipe them dry with
-a clean towel. Allow to each ham half a pound of salt, and an ounce
-of saltpetre, and half a pound of brown sugar, all mixed together,
-slightly heated over the fire, and then well rubbed into the meat. Put
-the hams into a salting-tub, and keep them there two or three days,
-turning and rubbing them frequently. Then make a mixture, (allowing
-to each ham half a pound more of brown sugar, the same of salt, and
-an ounce of saltpetre, pounded fine, with an ounce of black pepper,
-and an ounce of cloves,) and heat this mixture a few minutes. Take the
-hams out of the tub, wipe them dry, and then rub into them this second
-mixture. Clean the salting-tub, and return the hams to it. Cover them,
-and let them lie for a fortnight, turning them several times, and
-basting them with the liquid. Then smoke them a fortnight, using for
-the fire green birch, oak, hickory, or corn-cobs.
-
-Sow them up in new cloths and white-wash the outside of the covers.
-
-
-
-
-PORK, HAM, &c.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-In cutting up pork, you have the spare-rib, shoulder, griskin or chine,
-the loin, middlings and leg; the head, feet, heart and liver. On the
-spare-rib and chine there is but little meat, and the pieces called
-middlings consist almost entirely of fat. The best parts are the loin,
-and the leg or hind quarter. Hogs make the best pork when from two and
-a half to four years old. They should be kept up and fed with corn at
-least six weeks before they are killed, or their flesh will acquire a
-disagreeable taste from the trash and offal which they eat when running
-at large. The Portuguese pork, which is fed on chestnuts, is perhaps
-the finest in the world.
-
-If the meat is young, the lean will break on being pinched, and the
-skin will dent by nipping it with the fingers; the fat will be white,
-soft, and pulpy. If the skin or rind is rough, and cannot be nipped, it
-is old.
-
-Hams that have short shank-bones, are generally preferred. If you put
-a knife under the bone of a ham, and it comes out clean, the meat is
-good; but quite the contrary if the knife appears smeared and slimy. In
-good bacon the fat is white, and the lean sticks close to the bone; if
-it is streaked with yellow, the meat is rusty, and unfit to eat.
-
-Pork in every form should be thoroughly cooked. If the least
-under-done, it is distrusting and unwholesome.
-
-
-TO ROAST A PIG.
-
-Begin your preparations by making the stuffing. Take a sufficient
-quantity of grated stale bread, and mix it with sage and sweet marjoram
-rubbed fine or powdered; also some grated lemon-peel. Season it with
-pepper, salt, powdered nutmeg and mace; mix in butter enough to moisten
-it, and some beaten yolk of egg to bind it. Let the whole be very well
-incorporated.
-
-The pig should be newly killed, (that morning if possible,) nicely
-cleaned, fat, and not too large. Wash it well in cold water, and cut
-off the feet close to the joints, leaving some skin all round to fold
-over the ends. Take out the liver and heart, and reserve them, with the
-feet, to make the gravy. Truss back the legs. Fill the body with the
-stuffing (it must be quite full) and then sew it up, or tie it round
-with a buttered twine. Put the pig on the spit, and place it before a
-clear brisk fire, but not too near lest it scorch. The fire should be
-largest at the ends, that the middle of the pig may not be done before
-the extremities. If you find the heat too great in the centre, you may
-diminish it by placing a flat-iron before the fire. When you first put
-it down, wash the pig all over with salt and water; afterwards rub it
-frequently with a feather dipped in sweet oil, or with fresh butter
-tied in a rag. If you baste it with any thing else, or with its own
-dripping, the skin will not be crisp. Take care not to blister or burn
-the outside by keeping it too near the fire. A good sized pig will
-require at least three hours' roasting.
-
-Unless a pig is very small it is seldom sent to table whole. Take the
-spit from the fire, and place it across a large dish: then, having cut
-off the head with a sharp knife, and cut down the back, slip the spit
-out. Lay the two halves of the body close together in the dish, and
-place half the head on each side. Garnish with sliced lemon.
-
-For the gravy,--take that from the dripping-pan and skim it well.
-Having boiled the heart, liver, and feet, with some minced sage in a
-very little water, cut the meat from the feet, and chop it. Chop also
-the liver and heart. Put all into a small sauce-pan, adding a little of
-the water that they were boiled in, and some bits of butter rolled in
-flour. Flavour it with a glass of Madeira, and some grated nutmeg. Give
-it a boil up, and send it to table in a gravy-boat.
-
-You may serve up with the pig, apple-sauce, cranberry-sauce, or
-bread-sauce in a small tureen; or currant jelly.
-
-If you bake the pig instead of roasting it, rub it from time to time
-with fresh butter tied in a rag.
-
-
-TO ROAST A LEG OF PORK.
-
-Take a sharp knife and score the skin across in narrow stripes (you may
-cross it again so as to form diamonds) and rub in some powdered sage.
-Raise the skin at the knuckle, and put in a stuffing of minced onion
-and sage, bread-crumbs, pepper, salt, and beaten yolk of egg. Fasten
-it down with a buttered string, or with skewers. You may make deep
-incisions in the meat of the large end of the leg, and stuff them also;
-pressing in the filling very hard. Rub a little sweet oil all over
-the skin with a brush or a goose-feather, to make it crisp and of a
-handsome brown. Do not place the spit too near the fire, lest the skin
-should burn and blister. A leg of pork will require from three to four
-hours to roast. Moisten it all the time by brushing it with sweet oil,
-or with fresh butter tied in a rag. To baste it with its own dripping
-will make the skin tough and hard. Skim the fat carefully from the
-gravy, which should be thickened with a little flour.
-
-A roast leg of pork should always be accompanied by apple-sauce, and by
-mashed potato and mashed turnips.
-
-
-TO ROAST A LOIN OF PORK.
-
-Score the skin in narrow strips, and rub it all over with a mixture
-of powdered sage-leaves, pepper and salt. Have ready a force-meat
-or stuffing of sage and marjoram, mixed with a little grated bread
-and beaten yolk of egg, and seasoned with pepper and salt. Make deep
-incisions between the ribs and fill them with this stuffing. Put it on
-the spit before a clear fire and moisten it with butter or sweet oil,
-rubbed lightly over it. It will require three hours to roast.
-
-Having skimmed the gravy well, thicken it with a little flour, and
-serve it up in a boat. Have ready some apple-sauce to eat with the
-pork. Also mashed turnips and mashed potatoes.
-
-You may roast in the same manner, a shoulder, spare-rib, or chine of
-pork; seasoning it with sage and marjoram.
-
-
-TO ROAST A MIDDLING OR SPRING PIECE OF PORK.
-
-Make a force-meat of grated bread, and minced onion and sage, pepper,
-salt, and beaten yolk of egg; mix it well, and spread it all over the
-inside of the pork. Then roll up the meat, and with a sharp knife
-score it round in circles, rubbing powdered sage into the cuts. Tie
-a buttered twine round the roll of meat so as to keep it together in
-every direction. Put a hook through one end, and roast the pork before
-a clear brisk fire, moistening the skin occasionally with butter. Or
-you may bake it in a Dutch oven. It is a good side dish. Thicken the
-gravy with a little flour, and flavour it with a glass of wine. Have
-currant jelly to eat with it.
-
-It should be delicate young pork.
-
-
-TO STEW PORK.
-
-Take a nice piece of the fillet or leg of fresh pork; rub it with a
-little salt, and score the skin. Put it into a pot with sufficient
-water to cover it, and stew it gently for two hours or more, in
-proportion to its size. Then put into the same pot a dozen or more
-sweet potatoes, scraped, split, and cut in pieces. Let the whole stew
-gently together for an hour and a half, or till all is thoroughly done,
-skimming it frequently. Serve up all together in a large dish.
-
-This stew will be found very good. For sweet potatoes you may
-substitute white ones mixed with sliced turnips, or parsnips scraped
-and split.
-
-
-TO BOIL CORNED PORK.
-
-Take a nice piece of fresh pork, (the leg is the best,) rub it with
-salt, and let it lie in the salt two days. Boil it slowly in plenty of
-water, skimming it well. When the meat is about half done, you may put
-into the same pot a fine cabbage, washed clean and quartered. The pork
-and the cabbage should be thoroughly done, and tender throughout. Send
-them to table in separate dishes, having drained and squeezed all the
-water out of the cabbage. Take off the skin of the pork, and touch the
-outside at intervals with spots of cayenne pepper. Eat mustard with it.
-
-Pork is never boiled unless corned or salted.
-
-
-PICKLED PORK AND PEASE PUDDING.
-
-Soak the pork all night in cold water, and wash and scrape it clean.
-Put it on early in the day, as it will take a long time to boil, and
-must boil slowly. Skim it frequently. Boil in a separate pot greens or
-cabbage to eat with it; also parsnips and potatoes.
-
-Pease pudding is a frequent accompaniment to pickled pork, and is
-very generally liked. To make a small pudding, you must have ready a
-quart of dried split pease, which have been soaked all night in cold
-water. Tie them in a cloth, (leaving room for them to swell,) and boil
-them slowly till they are tender. Drain them, and rub them through a
-cullender or a sieve into a deep dish; season them with pepper and
-salt, and mix with them an ounce of butter, and two beaten eggs. Beat
-all well together till thoroughly mixed. Dip a clean cloth in hot
-water, sprinkle it with flour, and put the pudding into it. Tie it up
-very tightly, leaving a small space between the mixture and the tying,
-(as the pudding will still swell a little,) and boil it an hour longer.
-Send it to table and eat it with the pork.
-
-You may make a pease pudding in a plain and less delicate way, by
-simply seasoning the pease with black pepper, (having first soaked them
-well,) tying them in a cloth, and putting them to boil in the same pot
-with the pork, taking care to make the string very tight, so that the
-water may not get in. When all is done, and you turn out the pudding,
-cut it into thick slices and lay it round the pork.
-
-Pickled pork is frequently accompanied by dried beans and hominy.
-
-
-PORK AND BEANS.
-
-Allow two pounds of pickled pork to two quarts of dried beans. Soak the
-meat all night in a pan of cold water. Put the beans into a pot with
-cold water, and let them hang all night over the embers of the fire,
-or set them in the chimney corner, that they may warm as well as soak.
-Early in the morning rinse them through a cullender. Having scored the
-rind of the pork, (which should not be a very fat piece,) put it into
-a pot with cold water, and boil it till tender, carefully skimming off
-the liquid fat. _In another pot_ boil the beans till they have all
-bursted. When soft, take them up; lay the pork in a tin pan; and cover
-it with the beans, adding a very little water. Then bake them in an
-oven till brown, but not longer.
-
-This is a homely dish, but is by many persons much liked. It is
-customary to bring it to table in the pan in which it is baked. The
-chine is the proper piece for this purpose.
-
-
-PORK STEAKS.
-
-Pork steaks or chops should be taken from the neck, or the loin. Cut
-them about half an inch thick, remove the skin, trim them neatly, and
-beat them. Season them with pepper, salt, and powdered sage-leaves or
-sweet marjoram, and broil them over a clear fire till quite done all
-through, turning them once. They require much longer broiling than
-beef-steaks or mutton chops. When you think they are nearly done, take
-up one on a plate and try it. If it is the least red inside, return
-it to the gridiron. Have ready a gravy made of the trimmings, or any
-coarse pieces of pork stewed in a little water with chopped onions and
-sage, and skimmed carefully. When all the essence is extracted, take
-out the bits of meat, &c. and serve up the gravy in a boat to eat with
-the steaks.
-
-They should be accompanied with apple-sauce.
-
-
-PORK CUTLETS.
-
-Cut them from the leg, and remove the skin; trim them and beat them,
-and sprinkle on salt and pepper. Prepare some beaten egg in a pan; and
-on a flat dish a mixture of bread-crumbs, minced onion, and sage. Put
-some lard or drippings into a frying-pan over the fire; and when it
-boils, put in the cutlets; having dipped every one first in the egg,
-and then in the seasoning. Fry them twenty or thirty minutes, turning
-them often. After you have taken them out of the frying-pan, skim the
-gravy, dredge in a little flour, give it one boil, and then pour it on
-the dish round the cutlets.
-
-Have apple-sauce to eat with them.
-
-Pork cutlets prepared in this manner may be stewed instead of being
-fried. Add to them a little water, and stew them slowly till thoroughly
-done, keeping them closely covered, except when you remove the lid to
-skim them.
-
-
-PORK PIE.
-
-Take the lean of a leg or loin of fresh pork, and season it with
-pepper, salt, and nutmeg. Cover the bottom and sides of a deep dish
-with a good paste, made with a pound of butter to two pounds of flour,
-and rolled out thick. Put in a layer of pork, and then a layer of
-pippin apples, pared, cored, and cut small. Strew over the apples
-sufficient sugar to make them very sweet. Then place another layer of
-pork, and so on till the dish is full. Pour in half a pint or more of
-sweet cider. Cover the pie with a thick lid of paste, and notch and
-ornament it according to your taste.
-
-Set it in a brisk oven, and bake it well.
-
-
-HAM PIE.
-
-Cover the sides and bottom of a dish with a good paste rolled out
-thick. Have ready some slices of cold boiled ham, about half an inch
-thick, some eggs boiled hard and sliced, and a large young fowl cleaned
-and cut up. Put a layer of ham at the bottom, then the fowl, then the
-eggs, and then another layer of ham. Shake on some pepper, and pour in
-some water, or what will be much better, some veal gravy. Cover the pie
-with a crust, notch and ornament it, and bake it well.
-
-Some mushrooms will greatly improve it.
-
-Small button mushrooms will keep very well in a bottle of sweet
-oil--first peeling the skin, and cutting off the stalks.
-
-
-HAM SANDWICHES.
-
-Cut some thin slices of bread very neatly, having slightly buttered
-them; and, if you choose, spread on a very little mustard. Have ready
-some very thin slices of cold boiled ham, and lay one between two
-slices of bread. You may either roll them up, or lay them flat on the
-plates. They are used at supper, or at luncheon.
-
-You may substitute for the ham, cold smoked tongue, shred or grated.
-
-
-BROILED HAM.
-
-Cut the ham into very thin slices, (the thinner the better.) Soak them
-in hot water at least half an hour, (a whole hour is better,) to draw
-out some of the salt; changing the water several times, and always
-pouring it on scalding hot. This process will not only extract the
-superfluous salt (which would otherwise ooze out in broiling and remain
-sticking about the surface of the meat) but it makes the ham more
-tender and mellow. After soaking, dry the slices in a cloth, and then
-heat your gridiron, and broil them over a clear fire.
-
-If you have cold boiled ham, it is better for broiling than that which
-is raw; and being boiled, will require no soaking before you put it on
-the gridiron.
-
-If you wish to serve up eggs with the ham, put some lard into a very
-clean frying-pan, and make it boiling hot. Break the eggs separately
-into a saucer, that in case a bad one should be among them it may not
-mix with the rest. Slip each egg gently into the frying-pan. Do not
-turn them while they are frying, but keep pouring some of the hot lard
-over them with an iron spoon; this will do them sufficiently on the
-upper side. They will be done enough in about three minutes; the white
-must retain its transparency so that the yolk will be seen through
-it. When done, take them up with a tin slice, drain off the lard, and
-if any part of the white is discoloured or ragged, trim it off. Lay a
-fried egg upon each slice of the broiled ham, and send them to table
-hot.
-
-This is a much nicer way than the common practice of frying the ham or
-bacon with the eggs. Some persons broil or fry the ham without eggs,
-and send it to table cut into little slips or mouthfuls.
-
-To curl small pieces of ham for garnishing, slice as thin as possible
-some that has been boiled or parboiled. The pieces should be about two
-inches square. Roll it up round little wooden skewers, and put it into
-a cheese toaster, or into a tin oven, and set it before the fire for
-eight or ten minutes. When it is done, slip out the skewers.
-
-
-TO BOIL A HAM.
-
-Hams should always be soaked in water previous to boiling, to draw out
-a portion of the salt, and to make them tender. They will soften more
-easily if soaked in lukewarm water. If it is a new ham, and not very
-salt or hard, you need not put it in water till the evening before
-you intend to cook it. An older one will require twenty-four hours'
-soaking; and one that is very old and hard should be kept in soak two
-or three days, frequently changing the water, which must be soft. Soak
-it in a tub, and keep it well covered. When you take it out of the
-water to prepare it for boiling, scrape and trim it nicely, and pare
-off all the rough-looking parts.
-
-Early in the morning put it into a large pot or kettle with plenty
-of cold water. Place it over a slow fire that it may heat gradually;
-it should not come to a boil in less than an hour and a half, or two
-hours. When it boils, quicken the fire, and skim the pot carefully.
-Then simmer it gently four or five hours or more, according to its
-size. A ham weighing fifteen pounds should simmer five hours after it
-has come to a boil. Keep the pot well skimmed.
-
-When it is done, take it up, carefully strip off the skin, and reserve
-it to cover the ham when it is put away cold. Rub the ham all over with
-some beaten egg, and strew on it fine bread-raspings shaken through the
-lid of a dredging box. Then place it in an oven to brown and crisp, or
-on a hot dish set over the pot before the fire. Cut some writing paper
-into a handsome fringe, and twist it round the shank-bone before you
-send the ham to table. Garnish the edge of the dish with little piles
-or spots of rasped crust of bread.
-
-In carving a ham, begin not quite in the centre, but a little nearer
-to the hock. Cut the slices very thin. It is not only a most ungenteel
-practice to cut ham in thick slices, but it much impairs the flavour.
-
-When you put it away after dinner, skewer on again the skin. This will
-make it keep the better.
-
-Ham should always be accompanied by green vegetables, such as
-asparagus, peas, beans, spinach, cauliflower, brocoli, &c.
-
-Bacon also should be well soaked before it is cooked; and it should be
-boiled very slowly, and for a long time. The greens may be boiled with
-the meat. Take care to skim the pot carefully, and to drain and squeeze
-the greens very well before you send them to table. If there are yellow
-streaks in the lean of the bacon, it is rusty, and unfit to eat.
-
-
-TO ROAST A HAM.
-
-Take a very fine ham (a Westphalia one if you can procure it) and soak
-it in lukewarm water for a day or two, changing the water frequently.
-The day before you intend cooking it, take the ham out of the water,
-and (having removed the skin) trim it nicely, and pour over it a bottle
-of Madeira or sherry. Let it steep till next morning; frequently during
-the day washing the wine over it. Put it on the spit in time to allow
-at least six hours for slowly roasting it. Baste it continually with
-hot water. When it is done, dredge it all over with fine bread-raspings
-shaken on through the top of the dredging box; and set it before the
-fire to brown.
-
-For gravy, take the wine in which the ham was steeped, and add to it
-the essence or juice which flowed from the meat when taken from the
-spit. Squeeze in the juice of two lemons. Put it into a sauce-pan,
-and boil and skim it. Send it to table in a boat. Cover the shank of
-the ham (which should have been sawed short) with bunches of double
-parsley, and ornament it with a cluster of flowers cut out with a
-penknife from raw carrots, beets, and turnips; and made to imitate
-marygolds, and red and white roses.
-
-
-DIRECTIONS FOR CURING HAM OR BACON.
-
-Ham or bacon, however well cured, will never be good unless the pork
-of which it is made has been properly fed. The hogs should for well
-fattened on corn, and fed with it about eight weeks, allowing ten
-bushels to each hog. They are best for curing when from two to four
-years old, and should not weigh more than one hundred and fifty or one
-hundred and sixty pounds. The first four weeks they may be fed on
-mush, or on Indian meal moistened with water; the remaining four on
-corn unground; giving them always as much as they will eat. Soap-suds
-may be given to them three or four times a week; or oftener if
-convenient.
-
-When killed and cut up, begin immediately to salt them. Rub the outside
-of each ham with a tea-spoonful of powdered saltpetre, and the inside
-with a tea-spoonful of cayenne pepper. Having mixed together two pounds
-brown sugar and fine salt, in the proportion of a pound and a half of
-brown sugar to a pint of salt, rub the pork well with it. This quantity
-of sugar and salt will be sufficient for fifty pounds of meat. Have
-ready some large tubs, the bottoms sprinkled with salt, and lay the
-meat in the tubs with the skin downward. Put plenty of salt between
-each layer of meat. After it has lain eight days, take it out and wipe
-off all the salt, and wash the tubs. Make a pickle of soft water, equal
-quantities of salt and molasses, and a little saltpetre; allowing four
-ounces of saltpetre to two quarts of molasses and two quarts of salt,
-which is the proportion for fifty pounds of meat. The pickle must be
-strong enough to bear up an egg. Boil and skim it; and when it is cold,
-pour it over the meat, which must be turned every day and basted with
-the pickle. The hams should remain in the pickle at least four weeks;
-the shoulders and middlings of the bacon three weeks; and the jowls
-two weeks. They should then be taken out and smoked. Having washed off
-the pickle, before you smoke the meat, bury it, while wet, in a tub of
-bran. This will form a crust over it, and prevent evaporation of the
-juices. Let the smoke-house be ready to receive the meat immediately.
-Take it out of the tub after it has lain half an hour, and rub the bran
-evenly over it. Then hang it up to smoke with the small end downwards.
-The smoke-house should be dark and cool, and should stand alone, for
-the heat occasioned by an adjoining building may spoil the meat, or
-produce insects. Keep up a good smoke all day, but have no blaze.
-Hickory is the best wood for a smoke-house fire. In three or four weeks
-the meat will be sufficiently smoked, and fit for use. During the
-process it should be occasionally taken down, examined, and hung up
-again. The best way of keeping hams is to sew them in coarse cloths,
-which should be white-washed. If they are to go to sea, pack them in
-pounded charcoal.
-
-An old ham will require longer to soak, and longer to boil than a new
-one.
-
-Tongues may be cured in the above manner.
-
-
-LIVER PUDDINGS.
-
-Boil some pigs' livers. When cold, mince them, and season them with
-pepper, salt, and some sage and sweet marjoram rubbed fine. You may add
-some powdered cloves. Have ready some large skins nicely cleaned, and
-fill them with the mixture, tying up the ends securely. Prick them with
-a fork to prevent their bursting; put them into hot water, and boil
-them slowly for about an hour. They will require no farther cooking
-before you eat them. Keep them in stone jars closely covered. They are
-eaten cold at breakfast or supper, cut into slices an inch thick or
-more; or they may be cut into large pieces, and broiled or fried.
-
-The best liver puddings are made of boiled pigs-feet and livers, mixed
-together in equal portions.
-
-
-COMMON SAUSAGE-MEAT.
-
-Having cleared it from the skin, sinews, and gristle, take six pounds
-of the lean of young fresh pork, and three pounds of the fat, and mince
-it all as fine as possible. Take some dried sage, pick off the leaves
-and rub them to powder, allowing three tea-spoonfuls to each pound of
-meat. Having mixed the fat and lean well together, and seasoned it with
-six tea-spoonfuls of pepper, and the same quantity of salt, strew on
-the powdered sage, and mix the whole very well with your hands. Put it
-away in a stone jar, packing it down hard; and keep it closely covered.
-Set the jar in a cool dry place.
-
-When you wish to use the sausage-meat, make it into flat cakes about an
-inch thick and the size of a dollar; dredge them with flour, and fry
-them in nothing, over rather a slow fire, till they are well browned on
-both sides, and thoroughly done. Their own fat will cook them.
-
-Sausages are seldom eaten except at breakfast.
-
-
-FINE SAUSAGES.
-
-Take some fresh pork, (the leg is best,) and clear it from the skin,
-sinews, and gristle. Allow two pounds of fat to three pounds of lean.
-Mince it all very fine, and season it with two ounces and a half of
-salt, half an ounce of pepper, twelve cloves, and a dozen blades of
-mace powdered, three grated nutmegs, six table-spoonfuls of powdered
-sage, and two tea-spoonfuls of powdered rosemary. Mix all well
-together. Put it into a stone jar, and press it down very hard. Cover
-it closely, and keep it in a dry cool place.
-
-When you use this sausage-meat, mix with it some beaten yolk of egg,
-and make it into balls or cakes. Dredge them with flour, and fry them
-in butter.
-
-
-BOLOGNA SAUSAGES.
-
-Take ten pounds of beef, and four pounds of pork; two-thirds of the
-meat should be lean, and only one third fat. Chop it very fine, and
-mix it well together. Then season it with six ounces of fine salt, one
-ounce of black pepper, half an ounce of cayenne, one table-spoonful of
-powdered cloves; and one clove of garlic minced very fine.
-
-Have ready some large skins nicely cleaned and prepared, (they should
-be beef-skins,) and wash them in salt and vinegar. Fill them with the
-above mixture, and secure the ends by tying them with packthread or
-fine twine. Make a brine of salt and water strong enough to bear up
-an egg. Put the sausages into it, and let them lie for three weeks,
-turning them daily. Then take them out, wipe them dry, hang them up and
-smoke them. Before you put them away rub them all over with sweet oil.
-
-Keep them in ashes. That of vine-twigs is best for them.
-
-You may fry them or not before you eat them.
-
-
-PORK CHEESE.
-
-Take the heads, tongues, and feet of young fresh pork, or any other
-pieces that are convenient. Having removed the skin, boil them till all
-the meat is quite tender, and can be easily stripped from the bones.
-Then chop it small, and season it with salt and black pepper to your
-taste, and if you choose, some beaten cloves. Add sage-leaves and sweet
-marjoram, minced fine, or rubbed to powder. Mix the whole very well
-together, with your hands. Put it into deep pans, with straight sides,
-(the shape of a cheese,) press it down hard and closely with a plate
-that will fit the pan; putting the under side of the plate next to the
-meat, and placing a heavy weight on it. In two or three days it will be
-fit for use, and you may turn it out of the pan. Send it to table cut
-in slices, and use mustard and vinegar with it. It is generally eaten
-at supper or breakfast.
-
-
-PIG'S FEET AND EARS SOUSED.
-
-Having cleaned them properly, and removed the skin, boil them slowly
-till they are quite tender, and then split the feet and put them with
-the ears into salt and vinegar, flavoured with a little mace. Cover
-the jar closely, and set it away. When you use them, dry each piece
-well with a cloth; dip them first in beaten yolk of egg, and then in
-bread-crumbs, and fry them nicely in butter or lard. Or you may eat
-them cold, just out of the vinegar.
-
-If you intend keeping them some time, you must make a fresh pickle for
-them every other day.
-
-
-TO IMITATE WESTPHALIA HAM.
-
-The very finest pork must be used for these hams. Mix together an equal
-quantity of powdered saltpetre and brown sugar, and rub it well into
-the hams. Next day make a pickle in sufficient quantity to cover them
-very well. The proportions of the ingredients are a pound of fine
-salt, mixed with a pound of brown sugar, an ounce of black pepper and
-an ounce of cloves pounded to powder, a small bit of sal prunella, and
-a quart of stale strong beer or porter. Boil them all together, so as
-to make a pickle that will bear up an egg. Pour it boiling hot over the
-meat, and let it lie in the pickle two weeks, turning it two or three
-times every day, and basting or washing it with the liquid. Then take
-out the hams, rub them with bran and smoke them for a fortnight. When
-done, keep them in a barrel of fine charcoal.
-
-In cooking these hams simmer them slowly for seven or eight hours.
-
-To imitate the shape of the real Westphalia hams, cut some of the
-meat off the under side of the thick part, so as to give them a flat
-appearance. Do this before you begin to cure them, first loosening the
-skin and afterwards sewing it on again.
-
-The ashes in which you keep them must be changed frequently, wiping the
-hams when you take them out.
-
-
-TO GLAZE A COLD HAM.
-
-With a brush or quill feather go all over the ham with beaten yolk of
-egg. Then cover it thickly with pounded cracker, made as fine as flour,
-or with grated crumbs of stale bread. Lastly go over it with thick
-cream. Put it to brown in the oven of a stove, or brown it on the spit
-of a tin roaster, set before the fire and turned frequently.
-
-This glazing will be found delicious. It should be put on half an inch
-thick, so as to form a crust.
-
-
-
-
-VENISON, &c.
-
-
-TO ROAST A SADDLE OR HAUNCH OF VENISON.
-
-Wipe it all over with a sponge dipped in warm water. Then rub the skin
-with lard or nice dripping. Cover the fat with sheets of paper two
-double, buttered, and tied on with packthread that has been soaked
-to keep it from burning. Or, what is still better, you may cover the
-first sheets of paper with a coarse paste of flour and water rolled out
-half an inch thick, and then cover the paste with the second sheets of
-paper, securing the whole well with the string to prevent its falling
-off. Place the venison on the spit before a strong clear fire, such as
-you would have for a sirloin of beef, and let the fire be well kept
-up all the time. Put some claret and butter into the dripping-pan and
-baste the meat with it frequently. If wrapped in paste, it will not
-be done in less than five hours. Half an hour before you take it up,
-remove the coverings carefully, place the meat nearer to the fire,
-baste it with fresh butter and dredge it very lightly with flour. Send
-it to table with fringed white paper wrapped round the bone, and its
-own gravy well skimmed. Have currant jelly to eat with it. As venison
-chills immediately, the plates should be kept on heaters.
-
-You may make another gravy with a pound and a half of scraps and
-trimmings or inferior pieces of venison, put into a sauce-pan with
-three pints of water, a few cloves, a few blades of mace, half a
-nutmeg; and salt and cayenne to your taste. Boil it down slowly to
-a pint. Then skim off the fat, and strain the gravy into a clean
-sauce-pan. Add to it half a pint of currant jelly, half a pint of
-claret, and near a quarter of a pound of butter divided into bits and
-rolled in flour. Send it to table in two small tureens or sauce-boats.
-This gravy will be found very fine.
-
-Venison should never be roasted unless very fat. The shoulder is a
-roasting piece, and may be done without the paper or paste.
-
-Venison is best when quite fresh; but if it is expedient to keep it a
-week before you cook it, wash it well with milk and water, and then dry
-it perfectly with cloths till there is not the least damp remaining on
-it. Then mix together powdered ginger and pepper, and rub it well over
-every part of the meat. Do not, however, attempt to keep it unless the
-weather is quite cold.
-
-
-TO HASH COLD VENISON.
-
-Cut the meat in nice small slices, and put the trimmings and bones into
-a sauce-pan with barely water enough to cover them. Let them stew for
-an hour. Then strain the liquid into a stew-pan; add to it some bits
-of butter rolled in flour, and whatever gravy was left of the venison
-the day before. Stir in some currant jelly, and give it a boil up. Then
-put in the meat, and keep it over the fire just long enough to warm
-it through; but do not allow it to boil, as it has been once cooked
-already.
-
-
-VENISON STEAKS.
-
-Cut them from the neck or haunch. Season them with pepper and salt.
-When the gridiron has been well heated over a bed of bright coals,
-grease the bars, and lay the steaks upon it. Broil them well, turning
-them once, and taking care to save as much of the gravy as possible.
-Serve them up with some currant jelly laid on each steak. Have your
-plates set on heaters.
-
-
-VENISON PASTY.
-
-The neck, breast, and shoulder are the parts used for a venison pie or
-pasty. Cut the meat into pieces (fat and lean together) and put the
-bones and trimmings into a stew-pan with pepper and salt, and water or
-veal broth enough to cover it. Simmer it till you have drawn out a good
-gravy. Then strain it.
-
-In the mean time make a good rich paste, and roll it rather thick.
-Cover the bottom and sides of a deep dish with one sheet of it, and
-put in your meat, having seasoned it with pepper, salt, nutmeg, and
-mace. Pour in the gravy which you have prepared from the trimmings, and
-two glasses of port or claret, and lay on the top some bits of butter
-rolled in flour. Cover the pie with a thick lid of paste, and ornament
-it handsomely with leaves and flowers formed with a tin cutter. Bake it
-two hours or more, according to its size.
-
-
-VENISON HAMS.
-
-Venison for hams must be newly killed, and in every respect as good as
-possible. Mix together equal quantities of salt and brown sugar, and
-rub it well into the hams. Put them into a tub, and let them lie seven
-days; turning them and rubbing them daily with the mixture of salt and
-sugar. Next mix together equal quantities of West India molasses and
-fine salt. Rub it over your hams, and let them lie in it a week longer.
-Then wipe them, rub them with bran, and smoke them a fortnight over
-hickory wood. Pack them in wood ashes; or in charcoal, if to go to sea.
-
-Venison ham must not be cooked before it is eaten. It is used for the
-tea-table, chipped or shred like dried beef, to which it is considered
-very superior.
-
-It will not keep as long as other smoked meat.
-
-
-TO ROAST A KID.
-
-A kid should be cooked the day it is killed, or the day after at
-farthest. They are best from three to four months old, and are only
-eaten while they live on milk.
-
-Wash the kid well, wipe it dry, and truss it. Stuff the body with a
-force-meat of grated bread, butter or suet, sweet herbs, pepper, salt,
-nutmeg, grated lemon-peel, and beaten egg; and sew it up to keep the
-stuffing in its place. Put it on the spit and rub it over with lard, or
-sweet oil. Put a little salt and water into the dripping-pan, and baste
-the kid first with that, and afterwards with its own gravy. Or you may
-make it very nice by basting it with cream. It should roast about three
-hours. At the last, transfer the gravy to a small sauce-pan; thicken
-it with a little butter rolled in flour, give it a boil up, and send it
-to table in a boat. Garnish the kid with lumps of currant jelly laid
-round the edge of the dish.
-
-A fawn (which should never be kept more than one day) may be roasted in
-the same manner; also, a hare, or a couple of rabbits.
-
-You may send to table, to eat with the kid, a dish of chestnuts boiled
-or roasted, and divested of the shells.
-
-
-TO ROAST A HARE.
-
-If a hare is old do not roast it, but make soup of it. Wash and soak
-it in water for an hour, and change the water several times, having
-made a little slit in the neck to let out the blood. Take out the
-heart and liver, and scald them. Drain, dry, and truss the hare. Make
-a force-meat richer and more moist than usual, and add to it the heart
-and liver minced fine. Soak the bread-crumbs in a little claret before
-you mix them with the other ingredients. Stuff the body of the hare
-with this force-meat, and sew it up. Put it on the spit, rub it with
-butter, and roast it before a brisk fire. For the first half hour baste
-it with butter; and afterwards with cream, or with milk thickened with
-beaten yolk of egg. At the last, dredge it lightly with flour. The hare
-will require about two hours roasting.
-
-For sauce, take the drippings of the hare mixed with cream or
-with claret, and a little lemon-juice, a bit of butter, and some
-bread-crumbs. Give it a boil up, and send it to table in a boat.
-Garnish the hare with slices of currant jelly laid round it in the
-dish.
-
-
-FRICASSEED RABBITS.
-
-The best way of cooking rabbits is to fricassee them. Take a couple of
-fine ones, and cut them up, or disjoint them. Put them into a stew-pan;
-season them with cayenne pepper and salt, some chopped parsley, and
-some powdered mace. Pour in a pint of warm water (or of veal broth, if
-you have it) and stew it over a slow fire till the rabbits are quite
-tender; adding (when they are about half done) some bits of butter
-rolled in flour. Just before you take it from the fire, enrich the
-gravy with a jill or more of thick cream with some nutmeg grated into
-it. Stir the gravy well, but take care not to let it boil after the
-cream is in, lest it curdle.
-
-Put the pieces of rabbit on a hot dish, and pour the gravy over them.
-
-
-TO STEW RABBITS.
-
-Having trussed the rabbits, lay them in a pan of warm water for about
-fifteen minutes. Then put them into a pot with plenty of water and
-a little salt, and stew them slowly for about an hour, or till they
-are quite tender. In the mean time, peel and boil in a sauce-pan a
-dozen onions. When they are quite tender all through, take them out,
-and drain and slice them. Have ready some drawn butter, prepared by
-taking six ounces of butter, (cut into bits and rolled in about three
-tea-spoonfuls of flour,) and melting it in a jill of milk. After
-shaking it round over hot coals till it simmers, add to it the onions,
-and give it one boil up.
-
-When the rabbits are done stewing lay them on a large dish (having
-first cut off their heads, which should not be sent to table) and cover
-them all over with the onion-sauce, to which you may add some grated
-nutmeg.
-
-
-TO FRY RABBITS.
-
-Having washed the rabbits well, put them into a pan of cold water,
-and let them lie in it two or three hours. Then cut them into joints,
-dry them in a cloth, dredge them with flour, strew them with chopped
-parsley, and fry them in butter. After you take them out of the
-frying-pan, stir a wine-glass of cream into the gravy, or the beaten
-yolk of an egg. Do not let it boil, but pour it at once into the dish
-with the rabbits.
-
-Rabbits are very good baked in a pie. A boiled or pot-pie may be made
-of them.
-
-They may be stuffed with force-meat and roasted, basting them with
-butter. Cut off their heads before you send them to table.
-
-
-VENISON SAUSAGES.
-
-To six pounds of fresh-killed venison, allow two pounds of fresh fat
-pork. Chop the meat and mince it very fine. Add six tea-spoonfuls of
-sage leaves, dried and powdered, the same quantity of salt, and the
-same of ground black pepper. Having mixed the whole thoroughly, pack it
-down hard in stone jars, and keep it well covered in a cool dry place.
-
-When wanted for use, make it into small flat cakes, and fry them.
-
-
-
-
-POULTRY, GAME, &c.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-In buying poultry choose those that are fresh and fat. Half-grown
-poultry is comparatively insipid; it is best when full-grown but not
-old. Old poultry is tough and hard. An old goose is so tough as to
-be frequently uneatable. When poultry is young the skin is thin and
-tender, and can be easily ripped by trying it with a pin; the legs are
-smooth; the feet moist and limber; and the eyes full and bright. The
-body should be thick and the breast fat. The bill and feet of a young
-goose are yellow, and have but few hairs on them; when old they are red
-and hairy.
-
-Poultry is best when killed over night, as if cooked too soon after
-killing, it is hard and does not taste well. It is not the custom
-in America, as in some parts of Europe, to keep game, or indeed any
-sort of eatable, till it begins to taint; all food when inclining to
-decomposition being regarded by us with disgust.
-
-When poultry or game is frozen, it should be brought into the kitchen
-early in the morning of the day on which it is to be cooked. It may be
-thawed by laying it several hours in cold water. If it is not thawed it
-will require double the time to cook, and will be tough and tasteless
-when done.
-
-In drawing poultry be very careful not to break the gall, lest its
-disagreeable bitterness should be communicated to the liver.
-
-Poultry should be always scalded in hot water to make the feathers
-come out easily. Before they are cooked they should be held for a
-moment over the blaze of the fire to singe off the hairs that are about
-the skin. The head, neck, and feet should be cut off, and the ends of
-the legs skewered in the bodies. A string should be tied tightly round.
-
-
-TO BOIL A PAIR OF FOWLS.
-
-Make a force-meat in the usual manner, of grated bread-crumbs, chopped
-sweet herbs, butter, pepper, salt, and yolk of egg. Fill the bodies of
-the fowls with the stuffing, and tie a string firmly round them. Skewer
-the livers and gizzards to the sides, under the wings. Dredge them with
-flour, and put them into a pot with just enough of water to cook them;
-cover it closely, and put it over a moderate fire. As soon as the scum
-rises, take off the pot and skim it. Then cover it again, and boil it
-slowly half an hour. Afterwards diminish the fire, and let them stew
-slowly till quite tender. An hour altogether is generally sufficient to
-boil a pair of fowls, unless they are quite old. By doing them slowly
-(rather stewing than boiling) the skin will not break, and they will be
-whiter and more tender than if boiled fast.
-
-Serve them up with egg-sauce in a boat.
-
-Young chickens are better for being soaked two hours in skim milk,
-previous to boiling. You need not stuff them. Boil or stew them slowly
-in the same manner as large fowls. Three quarters of an hour will cook
-them.
-
-Serve them up with egg-sauce, and garnish with parsley.
-
-Boiled fowls should be accompanied by ham or smoked tongue.
-
-
-TO ROAST A PAIR OF FOWLS.
-
-Leave out the livers, gizzards and hearts, to be chopped and put into
-the gravy. Fill the crops and bodies of the fowls with a force-meat,
-put them before a clear fire and roast them an hour, basting them with
-butter or with clarified dripping.
-
-Having stewed the necks, gizzards, livers, and hearts in a very little
-water, strain it and mix it hot with the gravy that has dripped from
-the fowls, and which must be first skimmed. Thicken it with a little
-browned flour, add to it the livers, hearts, and gizzards chopped
-small. Send the fowls to table with the gravy in a boat, and have
-cranberry-sauce to eat with them.
-
-
-BROILED CHICKENS.
-
-Split a pair of chickens down the back, and beat them flat. Wipe the
-inside, season them with pepper and salt, and let them lie while you
-prepare some beaten yolk of egg and grated bread-crumbs. Wash the
-outside of the chickens all over with the egg, and then strew on the
-bread-crumbs. Have ready a hot gridiron over a bed of bright coals.
-Lay the chickens on it with the inside downwards, or next the fire.
-Broil them about three quarters of an hour, keeping them covered with a
-plate. Just before you take them up, lay some small pieces of butter on
-them.
-
-In preparing chickens for broiling, you may parboil them about ten
-minutes, to ensure their being sufficiently cooked; as it is difficult
-to broil the thick parts thoroughly without burning the rest. None but
-fine plump chickens are worth broiling.
-
-
-FRICASSEED CHICKENS.
-
-Having cut up your chickens, lay them in cold water till all the blood
-is drawn out. Then wipe the pieces, season them with pepper and salt,
-and dredge them with flour. Fry them in lard or butter; they should
-be of a fine brown on both sides. When they are quite done, take them
-out of the frying-pan, cover them up, and set them by the fire to keep
-warm. Skim the gravy in the frying-pan and pour into it half a pint of
-cream; season it with nutmeg, mace, and cayenne, and thicken it with a
-small bit of butter rolled in flour. Give it a boil, and then pour it
-round the chickens, which must be kept hot. Put some lard into the pan,
-and fry some parsley in it to lay on the pieces of chicken; it must be
-done green and crisp.
-
-To make a white fricassee of chickens, skin them, cut them in pieces,
-and having soaked out the blood, season them with salt, pepper, nutmeg
-and mace, and strew over them some sweet marjoram shred fine. Put them
-into a stew-pan, and pour over them half a pint of cream, or rich
-unskimmed milk. Add some butter rolled in flour, and (if you choose)
-some small force-meat balls. Set the stew-pan over hot coals. Keep it
-closely covered, and stew or simmer it gently till the chicken is quite
-tender, but do not allow it to boil.
-
-You may improve it by a few small slices of cold ham.
-
-
-CHICKEN CROQUETS AND RISSOLES.
-
-Take some cold chicken, and having cut the flesh from the bones,
-mince it small with a little suet and parsley; adding sweet marjoram
-and grated lemon-peel. Season it with pepper, salt and nutmeg, and
-having mixed the whole very well, pound it to a paste in a marble
-mortar, putting in a little at a time, and moistening it frequently
-with yolk of egg that has been previously beaten. Then divide it into
-equal portions, and having floured your hands, make it up in the shape
-of pears, sticking the head of a clove into the bottom of each to
-represent the blossom end, and the stalk of a clove into the top to
-look like the stem. Dip them into beaten yolk of egg, and then into
-bread-crumbs grated finely and sifted. Fry them in butter, and when you
-take them out of the pan, fry some parsley in it. Having drained the
-parsley, cover the bottom of a dish with it, and lay the croquets upon
-it. Send it to table as a side dish.
-
-Croquets may be made of cold sweet-breads, or of cold veal mixed with
-ham or tongue.
-
-Rissoles are made of the same ingredients, well mixed, and beaten
-smooth in a mortar. Make a fine paste, roll it out, and cut it into
-round cakes. Then lay some of the mixture on one half of the cake, and
-fold over the other upon it, in the shape of a half-moon. Close and
-crimp the edges nicely, and fry the rissoles in butter. They should be
-of a light brown on both sides. Drain them and send them to table dry.
-
-
-BAKED CHICKEN PIE.
-
-Cover the bottom and sides of a deep dish with a thick paste. Having
-cut up your chickens, and seasoned them to your taste with salt,
-pepper, mace and nutmeg, put them in, and lay on the top several pieces
-of butter rolled in flour. Fill up the dish about two-thirds with cold
-water. Then lay on the top crust, notching it handsomely. Cut a slit
-in the top, and stick into it an ornament of paste made in the form of
-a tulip. Bake it in a moderate oven.
-
-It will be much improved by the addition of a quarter of a hundred
-oysters; or by interspersing the pieces of chicken with slices of cold
-boiled ham, in which case use no other salt.
-
-You may add also some yolks of eggs boiled hard.
-
-A duck pie may be made in the same manner. A rabbit pie also.
-
-
-A POT PIE.
-
-Take a pair of large fine fowls. Cut them up, wash the pieces, and
-season them with pepper only. Make a good paste in the proportion of a
-pound and a half of minced suet to three pounds of flour. Let there be
-plenty of paste, as it is always much liked by the eaters of pot pie.
-Roll out the paste not very thin, and cut most of it into long squares.
-Butter the sides of a pot, and line them with paste nearly to the top.
-Lay slices of cold ham at the bottom of the pot, and then the pieces
-of fowl, interspersed all through with squares of paste, and potatoes
-pared and quartered. Pour in a quart of water. Cover the whole with a
-lid of paste, having a slit in the centre, through which the gravy will
-bubble up. Boil it steadily for two hours. Half an hour before you take
-it up, put in through the hole in the centre of the crust, some bits of
-butter rolled in flour, to thicken the gravy. When done, put the pie on
-a large dish, and pour the gravy over it.
-
-You may intersperse it all through with cold ham.
-
-A pot-pie may be made of ducks, rabbits, squirrels, or venison. Also of
-beef-steaks. A beef-steak, or some pork-steaks (the lean only) greatly
-improve a chicken pot-pie. If you use no ham, season with salt.
-
-
-CHICKEN CURRY.
-
-Take a pair of fine fowls, and having cut them in pieces lay them in
-salt and water till the seasoning is ready. Take two table-spoonfuls of
-powdered ginger, one table-spoonful of fresh turmeric, a tea-spoonful
-of ground black pepper; some mace, a few cloves, some cardamom seeds,
-and a little cayenne pepper with a small portion of salt. These last
-articles according to your taste. Put all into a mortar, and add
-to them eight large onions, chopped or cut small. Mix and beat all
-together, till the onions, spices, &c. form a paste.
-
-Put the chickens into a pan with sufficient butter rolled in flour, and
-fry them till they are brown, but not till quite done. While this is
-proceeding, set over the fire a sauce-pan three parts full of water,
-or sufficient to cover the chickens when they are ready. As soon as
-the water boils, throw in the curry-paste. When the paste has all
-dissolved, and is thoroughly mixed with the water, put in the pieces of
-chicken to boil, or rather to simmer. When the chicken is quite done,
-put it into a large dish, and eat it with boiled rice. The rice may
-either be laid round on the same dish, or served up separately.
-
-This is a genuine East India receipt for curry.
-
-Lamb, veal, or rabbits may be curried in the same manner.
-
-
-_To boil Rice for the Curry._
-
-Pick the rice carefully, to clear it from husks and motes. Then soak
-it in cold water for a quarter of an hour, or more. When you are ready
-to boil it, pour off the water in which it has soaked. Have ready a
-pot or sauce-pan of boiling water, into which you have put a little
-salt. Allow two quarts of water to a pound of rice. Sprinkle the rice
-gradually into the water. Boil it hard for twenty minutes, then take
-it off the fire, and pour off all the water that remains. Set the pot
-in the chimney corner with the lid off, while dinner is dishing, that
-it may have time to dry. You may toss it up lightly with two forks, to
-separate the grains while it is drying, but do not stir it with a spoon.
-
-
-A PILAU.
-
-Take a large fine fowl, and cover the breast with slices of fat bacon
-or ham, secured by skewers. Put it into a stew-pan with two sliced
-onions. Season it to your taste with white pepper and mace. Have ready
-a pint of rice that has been well picked, washed, and soaked. Cover the
-fowl with it. Put in as much water as will well cover the whole. Stew
-it about half an hour, or till the fowl and rice are thoroughly done;
-keeping the stew-pan closely covered. Dish it all together, either with
-the rice covering the fowl, or laid round it in little heaps.
-
-You may make a pilau of beef or mutton with a larger quantity of rice;
-which must not be put in at first, or it will be done too much, the
-meat requiring a longer time to stew.
-
-
-CHICKEN SALAD.
-
-The fowls for this purpose should be young and fine. You may either
-boil or roast them. They must be quite cold. Having removed all the
-skin and fat, and disjointed the fowls cut the meat from the bones
-into very small pieces, not exceeding an inch. Wash and split two large
-fine heads of celery, and cut the white part into pieces also about an
-inch long; and having mixed the chicken and celery together, put them
-into a deep china dish, cover it and set it away.
-
-It is best not to prepare the dressing till just before the salad is
-to be eaten, that it may be as fresh as possible. Have ready the yolks
-of eight hard-boiled eggs. Put them into a flat dish, and mash them
-to a paste with the back of a wooden spoon. Add to the egg a small
-tea-spoonful of fine salt, the same quantity of cayenne pepper, half
-a jill of made mustard, a jill or a wine-glass and a half of vinegar,
-and rather more than two wine-glasses of sweet oil. Mix all these
-ingredients thoroughly; stirring them a long time till they are quite
-smooth.
-
-The dressing should not be put on till a few minutes before the salad
-is sent in; as by lying in it the chicken and celery will become tough
-and hard. After you pour it on, mix the whole well together with a
-silver fork.
-
-Chicken salad should be accompanied with plates of bread and butter,
-and a plate of biscuits. It is a supper dish, and is brought in with
-terrapin, oysters, &c.
-
-Cold turkey is excellent prepared as above.
-
-An inferior salad may be made with cold fillet of veal, instead of
-chickens.
-
-Cold boiled lobster is very fine cut up and drest in this manner, only
-substituting for celery, lettuce cut up and mixed with the lobster.
-
-
-TO ROAST A PAIR OF DUCKS.
-
-After the ducks are drawn, wipe out the inside with a clean cloth,
-and prepare your stuffing. Mince very fine some green sage leaves,
-and twice their quantity of onion, (which should first be parboiled,)
-and add a little butter, and a seasoning of pepper and salt. Mix the
-whole very well, and fill the crops and bodies of the ducks with it,
-leaving a little space for the stuffing to swell. Reserve the livers,
-gizzards, and hearts to put in the gravy. Tie the bodies of the ducks
-firmly round with strings, (which should be wetted or buttered to keep
-them from burning,) and put them on the spit before a clear brisk fire.
-Baste them first with a little salt and water, and then with their
-own gravy, dredging them lightly with flour at the last. They will be
-done in about an hour. After boiling the livers, gizzards and hearts,
-chop them, and put them into the gravy; having first skimmed it, and
-thickened it with a little browned flour.
-
-Send to table with the ducks a small tureen of onion-sauce with chopped
-sage leaves in it. Accompany them also with stewed cranberries and
-green peas, if in season.
-
-Canvas-back ducks are roasted in the same manner, omitting the
-stuffing. They will generally be done enough in three quarters of
-an hour. Send currant jelly to table with them, and have heaters to
-place under the plates. Add to the gravy a little cayenne, and a large
-wine-glass of claret or port.
-
-Other wild ducks and teal may be roasted in about half an hour. Before
-roasting, parboil them with a large carrot inside their bodies. This
-will draw all the fishy or sedgy taste that may be about the ducks.
-Then throw away the carrot, and lay them in fresh water.
-
-You may serve up with wild ducks, &c. orange-sauce, which is made by
-boiling in a little water two large sweet oranges cut into slices,
-having first removed the rind. When the pulp is all dissolved, strain
-and press it through a sieve, and add to it the juice of two more
-oranges, and a little sugar. Send it to table either warm or cold.
-
-
-STEWED DUCK.
-
-Half roast a large duck. Cut it up, and put it into a stew-pan with
-a pint of beef-gravy, or dripping of roast-beef. Have ready two
-boiled onions, half a handful of sage leaves, and two leaves of mint,
-all chopped very fine and seasoned with pepper and salt. Lay these
-ingredients over the duck. Stew it slowly for a quarter of an hour.
-Then put in a quart of young green peas. Cover it closely, and simmer
-it half an hour longer, till the peas are quite soft. Then add a piece
-of butter rolled in flour; quicken the fire, and give it one boil.
-Serve up all together.
-
-A cold duck that has been under-done may be stewed in this manner.
-
-
-TO HASH A DUCK.
-
-Cut up the duck and season it with pepper and mixed spices. Have ready
-some thin slices of cold ham or bacon. Place a layer of them in a
-stew-pan; then put in the duck and cover it with ham. Add just water
-enough to moisten it, and pour over all a large glass of red wine.
-Cover the pan closely and let it stew for an hour.
-
-Have ready a quart or more of green peas, boiled tender, drained, and
-mixed with butter and pepper. Lay them round the hashed duck.
-
-If you hash a cold duck in this manner, a quarter of an hour will be
-sufficient for stewing it; it having been cooked already.
-
-
-TO ROAST A GOOSE.
-
-Having drawn and singed the goose, wipe out the inside with a cloth,
-and sprinkle in some pepper and salt. Make a stuffing of four good
-sized onions minced fine, and half their quantity of green sage leaves
-minced also, a large tea-cupful of grated bread-crumbs, a piece of
-butter the size of a walnut, and the beaten yolks of two eggs, with a
-little pepper and salt. Mix the whole together, and incorporate them
-well. Put the stuffing into the goose, and press it in hard; but do not
-entirely fill up the cavity, as the mixture will swell in cooking. Tie
-the goose securely round with a greased or wetted string; and paper
-the breast to prevent it from scorching. Fasten the goose on the spit
-at both ends. The fire must be brisk and well kept up. It will require
-from two hours to two and a half to roast. Baste it at first with a
-little salt and water, and then with its own gravy. Take off the paper
-when the goose is about half done, and dredge it with a little flour
-towards the last. Having parboiled the liver and heart, chop them and
-put them into the gravy, which must be skimmed well and thickened with
-a little browned flour.
-
-Send apple-sauce to table with the goose; also mashed potatoes.
-
-A goose may be stuffed entirely with potatoes, boiled and mashed with
-milk, butter, pepper and salt.
-
-You may make a gravy of the giblets, that is the neck, pinions, liver,
-heart and gizzard, stewed in a little water, thickened with butter
-rolled in flour, and seasoned with pepper and salt. Add a glass of
-red wine. Before you send it to table, take out all but the liver and
-heart; mince them and leave them in the gravy. This gravy is by many
-preferred to that which comes from the goose in roasting. It is well to
-have both.
-
-If a goose is old it is useless to cook it, as when hard and tough it
-cannot be eaten.
-
-
-A GOOSE PIE.
-
-Cut a fine large young goose into eight pieces, and season it with
-pepper. Reserve the giblets for gravy. Take a smoked tongue that has
-been all night in soak, parboil it, peel it, and cut it into thick
-slices, omitting the root, which you must divide into small pieces, and
-put into a sauce-pan with the giblets and sufficient water to stew them
-slowly.
-
-Make a nice paste, allowing a pound and a half of butter to three
-pounds of flour. Roll it out thick, and line with it the bottom and
-sides of a deep dish. Fill it with the pieces of goose, and the slices
-of tongue. Skim the gravy you have drawn from the giblets, thicken it
-with a little browned flour, and pour it into the pie dish. Then put on
-the lid or upper crust. Notch and ornament it handsomely with leaves
-and flowers of paste. Bake the pie about three hours in a brisk oven.
-
-In making a large goose pie you may add a fowl, or a pair of pigeons,
-or partridges,--all cut up.
-
-A duck pie may be made in the same manner.
-
-Small pies are sometimes made of goose giblets only.
-
-
-A CHRISTMAS GOOSE PIE.
-
-These pies are always made with a standing crust. Put into a sauce-pan
-one pound of butter cut up, and a pint and a half of water; stir it
-while it is melting, and let it come to a boil. Then skim off whatever
-milk or impurity may rise to the top. Have ready four pounds of flour
-sifted into a pan. Make a hole in the middle of it, and pour in the
-melted butter while hot. Mix it with a spoon to a stiff paste, (adding
-the beaten yolks of three or four eggs,) and then knead it very well
-with your hands, on the pasteboard, keeping it dredged with flour till
-it ceases to be sticky. Then set it away to cool.
-
-Split a large goose, and a fowl down the back, loosen the flesh all
-over with a sharp knife, and take out all the bones. Parboil a smoked
-tongue; peel it and cut off the root. Mix together a powdered nutmeg, a
-quarter of an ounce of powdered mace, a tea-spoonful of pepper, and a
-tea-spoonful of salt, and season with them the fowl and the goose.
-
-Roll out the paste near an inch thick, and divide it into three pieces.
-Cut out two of them of an oval form for the top and bottom; and the
-other into a long straight piece for the sides or walls of the pie.
-Brush the paste all over with beaten white of egg, and set on the
-bottom the piece that is to form the wall, pinching the edges together,
-and cementing them with white of egg. The bottom piece must be large
-enough to turn up a little round the lower edge of the wall piece,
-to which it must be firmly joined all round. When you have the crust
-properly fixed, so as to be baked standing alone without a dish, put in
-first the goose, then the fowl, and then the tongue. Fill up what space
-is left with pieces of the flesh of pigeons, or of partridges, quails,
-or any game that is convenient. There must be no bones in the pie. You
-may add also some bits of ham, or some force-meat balls. Lastly, cover
-the other ingredients with half a pound of butter, and put on the top
-crust, which, of course, must be also of an oval form to correspond
-with the bottom. The lid must be placed not quite on the top edge of
-the wall, but an inch and a half below it. Close it very well, and
-ornament the sides and top with festoons and leaves cut out of paste.
-Notch the edges handsomely, and put a paste flower in the centre. Glaze
-the whole with beaten yolk of egg, and bind the pie all round with a
-double fold of white paper. Set it in a regular oven, and bake it four
-hours.
-
-This is one way of making the celebrated goose pies that it is
-customary in England to send as presents at Christmas. They are eaten
-at luncheon, and if the weather is cold, and they are kept carefully
-covered up from the air, they will be good for two or three weeks; the
-standing crust assisting to preserve them.
-
-
-TO ROAST A TURKEY.
-
-Make a force-meat of grated bread-crumbs, minced suet, sweet marjoram,
-grated lemon-peel, nutmeg, pepper, salt, and beaten yolk of egg. You
-may add some grated cold ham. Light some writing paper, and singe the
-hairs from the skin of the turkey. Reserve the neck, liver, and gizzard
-for the gravy. Stuff the craw of the turkey with the force-meat, of
-which there should be enough made to form into balls for frying,
-laying them round the turkey when it is dished. Dredge it with flour,
-and roast it before a clear brisk fire, basting it with cold lard.
-Towards the last, set the turkey nearer to the fire, dredge it again
-very lightly with flour, and baste it with butter. It will require,
-according to its size, from two to three hours roasting.
-
-Make the gravy of the giblets cut in pieces, seasoned, and stewed for
-two hours in a very little water; thicken it with a spoonful of browned
-flour, and stir into it the gravy from the dripping-pan, having first
-skimmed off the fat.
-
-A turkey should be accompanied by ham or tongue. Serve up with it
-mushroom-sauce. Have stewed cranberries on the table to eat with it. Do
-not help any one to the legs, or drum-sticks as they are called.
-
-Turkeys are sometimes stuffed entirely with sausage-meat. Small cakes
-of this meat should then be fried, and laid round it.
-
-To bone a turkey, you must begin with a very sharp knife at the top of
-the wings, and scrape the flesh loose from the bone without dividing
-or cutting it to pieces. If done carefully and dexterously, the whole
-mass of flesh may be separated from the bone, so that you can take hold
-of the head and draw out the entire skeleton at once. A large quantity
-of force-meat having been prepared, stuff it hard into the turkey,
-restoring it by doing so to its natural form, filling out the body,
-breast, wings and legs, so as to resemble their original shape when the
-bones were in. Roast or bake it; pouring a glass of port wine into the
-gravy. A boned turkey is frequently served up cold, covered with lumps
-of currant jelly; slices of which are laid round the dish.
-
-Any sort of poultry or game may be boned and stuffed in the same manner.
-
-A cold turkey that has not been boned is sometimes sent to table larded
-all over the breast with slips of fat bacon, drawn through the flesh
-with a larding needle, and arranged in regular form.
-
-
-TO BOIL A TURKEY.
-
-Take twenty-five large fine oysters, and chop them. Mix with them half
-a pint of grated bread-crumbs, a little sweet marjoram, a quarter of
-a pound of butter, two table-spoonfuls of cream or rich milk, and the
-beaten yolks of three eggs. When it is thoroughly mixed, stuff the craw
-of the turkey with it, and sew up the skin. Then dredge it with flour,
-put it into a large pot or kettle, and cover it well with cold water.
-Place it over the fire, and let it boil slowly for half an hour, taking
-off the scum as it rises. Then remove the pot from over the fire, and
-set it on hot coals to stew slowly for two hours, or two hours and a
-half, according to its size. Just before you send it to table, place it
-again over the fire to get well heated. When you boil a turkey, skewer
-the liver and gizzard to the sides, under the wings.
-
-Send it to table with oyster-sauce in a small tureen.
-
-In making the stuffing, you may substitute for the grated
-bread, chestnuts boiled, peeled, and minced or mashed. Serve up
-chestnut-sauce, made by peeling some boiled chestnuts and putting them
-whole into melted butter.
-
-Some persons, to make them white, boil their turkeys tied up in a large
-cloth sprinkled with flour.
-
-With a turkey, there should be on the table a ham, or a smoked tongue.
-
-
-TO ROAST PIGEONS.
-
-Draw and pick four pigeons immediately after they are killed, and let
-them be cooked soon, as they do not keep well. Wash the inside very
-clean, and wipe it dry. Stuff them with a mixture of parsley parboiled
-and chopped, grated bread-crumbs, and butter; seasoned with pepper,
-salt, and nutmeg. Dredge them with flour, and roast them before a good
-fire, basting them with butter. They will be done in about twenty-five
-or thirty minutes. Serve them up with parsley-sauce. Lay the pigeons on
-the dish in a row.
-
-If asparagus is in season, it will be much better than parsley both
-for the stuffing and sauce. It must first be boiled. Chop the green
-heads for the stuffing, and cut them in two for the melted butter. Have
-cranberry-sauce on the table.
-
-Pigeons may be split and broiled, like chickens; also stewed or
-fricasseed.
-
-They are very good stewed with slices of cold ham and green peas,
-serving up all in the same dish.
-
-
-PIGEON PIE.
-
-Take four pigeons, and pick and clean them very nicely. Season them
-with pepper and salt, and put inside of every one a large piece of
-butter and the yolk of a hard-boiled egg. Have ready a good paste,
-allowing a pound of butter to two pounds of sifted flour. Roll it out
-rather thick, and line with it the bottom and sides of a large deep
-dish. Put in the pigeons, and lay on the top some bits of butter rolled
-in flour. Pour in nearly enough of water to fill the dish. Cover the
-pie with a lid of paste rolled out thick, and nicely notched, and
-ornamented with paste leaves and flowers.
-
-You may make a similar pie of pheasants, partridges, or grouse.
-
-In preparing pigeons, &c. for pies, loosen the joints with a knife, as
-in carving.
-
-
-TO ROAST PHEASANTS, PARTRIDGES, QUAILS OR GROUSE.
-
-Pick and draw the birds immediately after they are brought in. Before
-you roast them, fill the inside with pieces of a fine ripe orange,
-leaving out the rind and seeds. Or stuff them with grated cold ham,
-mixed with bread-crumbs, butter, and a little yolk of egg. Lard them
-with small slips of the fat of bacon drawn through the flesh with a
-larding needle. Roast them before a clear fire.
-
-Make a fine rich gravy of the trimmings of meat or poultry, stewed in
-a little water, and thickened with a spoonful of browned flour. Strain
-it, and set it on the fire again, having added half a pint of claret,
-and the juice of two large oranges. Simmer it for a few minutes, pour
-some of it into the dish with the game, and serve the remainder in a
-boat.
-
-If you stuff them with force-meat, you may, instead of larding, brush
-them all over with beaten yolk of egg, and then cover them with
-bread-crumbs grated finely and sifted.
-
-
-ANOTHER WAY TO ROAST PHEASANTS, PARTRIDGES, &c.
-
-Chop some fine raw oysters, omitting the hard part; mix them with
-salt, and nutmeg, and add some beaten yolk of egg to bind the other
-ingredients. Cut some very thin slices of cold ham or bacon, and cover
-the birds with them; then wrap them closely in sheets of white paper
-well buttered, put them on the spit, and roast them before a clear fire.
-
-Send them to table with oyster-sauce in a boat.
-
-Pies may be made of any of these birds in the same manner as a pigeon
-pie.
-
-
-TO ROAST SNIPES, WOODCOCKS, OR PLOVERS.
-
-Pick them immediately; wipe them, and season them slightly with pepper
-and salt. Cut as many slices of bread as you have birds. Toast them
-brown, butter them, and lay them in the dripping-pan. Dredge the birds
-with flour, and put them on a small spit before a clear brisk fire.
-Baste them with lard, or fresh butter. They will be done in twenty or
-thirty minutes. Serve them up laid on the toast, and garnished with
-sliced orange, or with orange jelly.
-
-Have brown gravy in a boat.
-
-
-TO ROAST REED-BIRDS, OR ORTOLANS.
-
-Put into every bird, an oyster, or a little butter mixed with some
-finely sifted bread-crumbs. Dredge them with flour. Run a small skewer
-through them, and tie them on the spit. Baste them with lard or with
-fresh butter. They will be done in about ten minutes.
-
-A very nice way of cooking these birds is, (having greased them all
-over with lard or with fresh butter, and wrapped them in vine leaves
-secured closely with a string,) to lay them in a heated iron pan, and
-bury them in ashes hot enough to roast or bake them. Remove the vine
-leaves before you send the birds to table.
-
-Reed birds are very fine made into little dumplings with a thin crust
-of flour and butter, and boiled about twenty minutes. Each must be tied
-in a separate cloth. Or you may cook a dozen in one paste, like an
-apple pudding.
-
-
-LARDING.
-
-To lard meat or poultry is to introduce into the surface of the
-flesh, slips of the fat only of bacon, by means of a larding-pin or
-larding-needle, it being called by both names. It is a steel instrument
-about a foot long, sharp at one end, and cleft at the other into four
-divisions, which are near two inches in length, and resemble tweezers.
-It can be obtained at the hardware stores.
-
-Cut the bacon into slips about two inches in length, half an inch in
-breadth, and half an inch in thickness. If intended for poultry, the
-slips of bacon should not be thicker than a straw. Put them, one at
-a time, into the cleft or split end of the larding-needle. Give each
-slip a slight twist, and press it down hard into the needle with your
-fingers. Then push the needle through the flesh, (avoiding the places
-where the bones are,) and when you draw it out it will have left behind
-it the slip of bacon sticking in the surface. Take care to have all
-the slips of the same size, and arranged in regular rows at equal
-distances. Every slip should stand up about an inch. If any are wrong,
-take them out and do them over again. To lard handsomely and neatly
-requires practice and dexterity.
-
-Fowls and game are generally larded on the breast only. If cold, they
-can be done with the fat of cold boiled ham. Larding may be made to
-look very tastefully on any thing that is not to be cooked afterwards.
-
-
-FORCE-MEAT BALLS.
-
-To a pound of the lean of a leg of veal, allow a pound of beef suet.
-Mince them together very fine. Then season it to your taste with
-pepper, salt, mace, nutmeg, and chopped sage or sweet marjoram. Then
-chop a half-pint of oysters, and beat six eggs very well. Mix the whole
-together, and pound it to a paste in a marble mortar. If you do not
-want it immediately, put it away in a stone pot, strew a little flour
-on the top, and cover it closely.
-
-When you wish to use the force-meat, divide into equal parts as much
-of it as you want; and having floured your hands, roll it into round
-balls, all of the same size. Either fry them in butter, or boil them.
-
-This force-meat will be found a very good stuffing for meat or poultry.
-
-
-FINE PARTRIDGE PIE.
-
-Having trussed your partridges, loosen all the joints with a knife, but
-do not cut them apart. Scald, peel, and chop some fresh mushrooms, mix
-them with grated bread crumbs, moistened with cream and beaten yolk of
-egg, and with this stuff the partridges. Cover the sides and bottom of
-a deep dish with a rich paste, adding a layer of cold boiled ham sliced
-very thin. Add some whole button mushrooms, and some hard boiled yolks
-of eggs. Season with pepper only. Put in the partridges, laying on each
-a bit of butter rolled in flour. Cover the whole with a thick lid of
-paste handsomely notched, and ornamented with paste leaves.
-
-Before you put on the cover, pour a little water into the pie.
-
-
-
-
-GRAVY AND SAUCES.
-
-
-DRAWN OR MADE GRAVY.
-
-For this purpose you may use coarse pieces of the lean of beef or veal,
-or the giblets and trimmings of poultry or game. It must be stewed for
-a long time, skimmed, strained, thickened, and flavoured with whatever
-condiments are supposed most suited to the dish it is to accompany.
-
-In preparing meat to stew for gravy, beat it with a mallet or
-meat-beetle, score it, and cut it into small pieces; this makes it
-give out the juices. Season it with pepper and salt, and put it into a
-stew-pan with butter only. Heat it gradually, till it becomes brown.
-Shake the pan frequently, and see that it does not burn or stick to
-the bottom. It will generally be browned sufficiently in half an hour.
-Then put in some boiling water, allowing one pint to each pound of
-meat. Simmer it on coals by the side of the fire for near three hours,
-skimming it well, and keeping it closely covered. When done, remove it
-from the heat, let it stand awhile to settle, and then strain it.
-
-If you wish to keep it two or three days, (which you may in winter,)
-put it into a stone vessel, cover it closely, and set it in a cool
-place.
-
-Do not thicken this gravy till you go to use it.
-
-Mutton is unfit for made gravy.
-
-
-MELTED BUTTER,
-
-SOMETIMES CALLED DRAWN BUTTER.
-
-Melted butter is the foundation of most of the common sauces. Have a
-covered sauce-pan for this purpose. One lined with porcelain will be
-best. Take a quarter of a pound of the best fresh butter, cut it up,
-and mix with it about two tea-spoonfuls of flour. When it is thoroughly
-mixed, put it into the sauce-pan, and add to it four table-spoonfuls
-of cold water. Cover the sauce-pan, and set it in a large tin pan of
-boiling water. Shake it round continually (always moving it the same
-way) till it is entirely melted and begins to simmer. Then let it rest
-till it boils up.
-
-If you set it on hot coals, or over the fire, it will be oily.
-
-If the butter and flour is not well mixed it will be lumpy.
-
-If you put too much water, it will be thin and poor. All these defects
-are to be carefully avoided.
-
-In melting butter for sweet or pudding sauce, you may use milk instead
-of water.
-
-
-TO BROWN FLOUR.--Spread some fine flour on a plate, and set it in
-the oven, turning it up and stirring it frequently that it may brown
-equally all through.
-
-Put it into a jar, cover it well, and keep it to stir into gravies to
-thicken and colour them.
-
-
-TO BROWN BUTTER.--Put a lump of butter into a frying-pan, and toss it
-round over the fire till it becomes brown. Then dredge some browned
-flour over it, and stir it round with a spoon till it boils. It must be
-made quite smooth.
-
-You may make this into a plain sauce for fish by adding cayenne and
-some flavoured vinegar.
-
-
-
-
-PLAIN SAUCES.
-
-
-LOBSTER SAUCE.--Boil a dozen blades of mace and half a dozen
-pepper-corns in about a jill and a half (or three wine-glasses) of
-water, till all the strength of the spice is extracted. Then strain it,
-and having cut three quarters of a pound of butter into little bits,
-melt it in this water, dredging in a little flour as you hold it over
-the fire to boil. Toss it round, and let it just boil up and no more.
-
-Take a cold boiled lobster,--pound the coral in a mortar, adding a
-little sweet oil. Then stir it into the melted butter.
-
-Chop the meat of the body into very small pieces, and rub it through a
-cullender into the butter. Cut up the flesh of the claws and tail into
-dice, and stir it in. Give it another boil up, and it will be ready for
-table.
-
-Serve it up with fresh salmon, or any boiled fish of the best kind.
-
-Crab sauce is made in a similar manner; also prawn and shrimp sauce.
-
-
-ANCHOVY SAUCE.--Soak eight anchovies for three or four hours, changing
-the water every hour. Then put them into a sauce-pan with a quart
-of cold water. Set them on hot coals and simmer them till they are
-entirely dissolved, and till the liquid is diminished two-thirds. Then
-strain it, stir two glasses of red wine, and add to it about half a
-pint of melted butter.
-
-Heat it over again, and send it to table with salmon or fresh cod.
-
-
-CELERY SAUCE.--Take a large bunch of young celery. Wash and pare it
-very clean. Cut it into pieces, and boil it gently in a small quantity
-of water, till it is quite tender. Then add a little powdered mace and
-nutmeg, and a very little pepper and salt. Take a tolerably large piece
-of butter, roll it well in flour, and stir it into the sauce. Boil it
-up again, and it is ready to send to table.
-
-You may make it with cream, thus:--Prepare and boil your celery as
-above, adding some mace, nutmeg, a piece of butter the size of a
-walnut, rolled in flour; and half a pint of cream. Boil all together.
-
-Celery sauce is eaten with boiled poultry.
-
-When celery is out of season, you may use celery seed, boiled in the
-water which you afterwards use for the melted butter, but strained out
-after boiling.
-
-
-NASTURTIAN SAUCE.--This is by many considered superior to caper sauce
-and is eaten with boiled mutton. It is made with the green seeds of
-nasturtians, pickled simply in cold vinegar.
-
-Cut about six ounces of butter into small bits, and put them into a
-small sauce-pan. Mix with a wine-glass of water, sufficient flour to
-make a thick batter, pour it on the butter, and hold the sauce-pan over
-hot coals, shaking it quickly round, till the butter is melted. Let
-it just boil up, and then take it from the fire. Thicken it with the
-pickled nasturtians and send it to table in a boat.
-
-Never pour melted butter over any thing, but always send it to table in
-a sauce-tureen or boat.
-
-
-WHITE ONION SAUCE.--Peel a dozen onions, and throw them into salt and
-water to keep them white. Then boil them tender. When done, squeeze the
-water from them, and chop them. Have ready some butter that has been
-melted rich and smooth with milk or cream instead of water. Put the
-onions into the melted butter, and boil them up at once. If you wish to
-have them very mild, put in a turnip with them at the first boiling.
-
-Young white onions, if very small, need not be chopped, but may be put
-whole into the butter.
-
-Use this sauce for rabbits, tripe, boiled poultry, or any boiled fresh
-meat.
-
-
-BROWN ONION SAUCE.--Slice some large mild Spanish onions. Cover them
-with butter, and set them over a slow fire to brown. Then add salt
-and cayenne pepper to your taste, and some good brown gravy of roast
-meat, poultry or game, thickened with a bit of butter rolled in flour
-that has first been browned by holding it in a hot pan or shovel over
-the fire. Give it a boil, skim it well, and just before you take it
-off, stir in a half glass of port or claret, and the same quantity of
-mushroom catchup.
-
-Use this sauce for roasted poultry, game, or meat.
-
-
-MUSHROOM SAUCE.--Wash a pint of small button mushrooms,--remove the
-stems and the outside skin. Stew them slowly in veal gravy or in milk
-or cream, seasoning them with pepper and salt, and adding a piece of
-butter rolled in a large proportion of flour. Stew them till quite
-tender, now and then shaking the pan round.
-
-The flavour will be heightened by having salted a few the night before
-in a covered dish, to extract the juice, and then stirring it into the
-sauce while stewing.
-
-This sauce may be served up with poultry, game, or beef-steaks.
-
-In gathering mushrooms take only those that are of a dull pearl colour
-on the outside, and that have the under part tinged with pale pink.
-
-Boil an onion with them. If there is a poisonous one among them the
-onion will turn black. Then throw away the whole.
-
-
-EGG SAUCE.--Boil four eggs ten minutes. Dip them into cold water to
-prevent their looking blue. Peel off the shell. Chop the yolks of all,
-and the whites of two, and stir them into melted butter. Serve this
-sauce with boiled poultry or fish.
-
-
-BREAD SAUCE.--Put some grated crumbs of stale bread into a sauce-pan,
-and pour over them some of the liquor in which poultry or fresh meat
-has been boiled. Add some plums or dried currants that have been picked
-and washed. Having simmered them till the bread is quite soft, and the
-currants well plumped, add melted butter or cream.
-
-This sauce is for a roast pig.
-
-
-MINT SAUCE.--Take a large bunch of young green mint; if old the taste
-will be unpleasant. Wash it very clean. Pick all the leaves from the
-stalks. Chop the leaves very fine, and mix them with cold vinegar, and
-a large proportion of powdered sugar. There must be merely sufficient
-vinegar to moisten the mint well, but by no means enough to make the
-sauce liquid. It should be very sweet.
-
-It is only eaten in the spring with roast lamb. Send it to table in a
-sauce-tureen.
-
-
-CAPER SAUCE.--Take two large table-spoonfuls of capers and a little
-vinegar. Stir them for some time into half a pint of thick melted
-butter.
-
-This sauce is for boiled mutton.
-
-If you happen to have no capers, pickled cucumber chopped fine, or
-the pickled pods of radish seeds, may be stirred into the butter as a
-tolerable substitute, or nasturtians.
-
-
-PARSLEY SAUCE.--Wash a bunch of parsley in cold water. Then boil it
-about six or seven minutes in salt and water. Drain it, cut the leaves
-from the stalks, and chop them fine. Have ready some melted butter, and
-stir in the parsley. Allow two small table-spoonfuls of leaves to half
-a pint of butter.
-
-Serve it up with boiled fowls, rock-fish, sea-bass, and other boiled
-fresh fish. Also with knuckle of veal, and with calf's head boiled
-plain.
-
-
-APPLE SAUCE.--Pare, core, and slice some fine apples. Put them into a
-sauce-pan with just sufficient water to keep them from burning, and
-some grated lemon-peel. Stew them till quite soft and tender. Then mash
-them to a paste, and make them very sweet with brown sugar, adding a
-small piece of butter and some nutmeg.
-
-Apple sauce is eaten with roast pork, roast goose and roast ducks.
-
-Be careful not to have it thin and watery.
-
-
-CRANBERRY SAUCE.--Wash a quart of ripe cranberries, and put them into a
-pan with about a wine-glass of water. Stew them slowly, and stir them
-frequently, particularly after they begin to burst. They require a
-great deal of stewing, and should be like a marmalade when done.
-
-After you take them from the fire, stir in a pound of brown sugar.
-
-When they are thoroughly done, put them into a deep dish, and set them
-away to get cold.
-
-You may strain the pulp through a cullender or sieve into a mould, and
-when it is in a firm shape send it to table on a glass dish. Taste it
-when it is cold, and if not sweet enough, add more sugar. Cranberries
-require more sugar than any other fruit, except plums.
-
-Cranberry sauce is eaten with roast turkey, roast fowls, and roast
-ducks.
-
-
-PEACH SAUCE.--Take a quart of dried peaches, (those are richest and
-best that are dried with the skins on,) and soak them in cold water
-till they are tender. Then drain them, and put them into a covered pan
-with a very little water. Set them on coals, and simmer them till they
-are entirely dissolved. Then mash them with brown sugar, and send them
-to table cold to eat with roast meat, game or poultry.
-
-
-WINE SAUCE.--Have ready some rich thick melted or drawn butter, and
-the moment you take it from the fire, stir in two large glasses of
-white wine, two table-spoonfuls of powdered white sugar, and a powdered
-nutmeg. Serve it up with plum pudding, or any sort of boiled pudding
-that is made of a batter.
-
-
-COLD SWEET SAUCE.--Stir together, as for a pound-cake, equal quantities
-of fresh butter and powdered white sugar. When quite light and creamy,
-add some powdered cinnamon or nutmeg, and the juice of a lemon. Send it
-to table in a small deep plate with a tea-spoon in it.
-
-Eat it with batter pudding, bread pudding, Indian pudding, &c. whether
-baked or boiled. Also with boiled apple pudding or dumplings, and with
-fritters and pancakes.
-
-
-CREAM SAUCE.--Boil a pint and a half of rich cream with four
-table-spoonfuls of powdered sugar, some powdered nutmeg, and a dozen
-bitter almonds or peach kernels slightly broken up, or a dozen fresh
-peach leaves. As soon as it has boiled up, take it off the fire and
-strain it. If it is to be eaten with boiled pudding or with dumplings
-send it to table hot, but let it get quite cold if you intend it as an
-accompaniment to fruit pies or tarts.
-
-
-OYSTER SAUCE.--Take a pint of oysters, and save out a little of their
-liquor. Put them with their remaining liquor, and some mace and nutmeg,
-into a covered saucepan, and simmer them on hot coals about ten
-minutes. Then drain them. Oysters for sauce should be large.
-
-Having prepared in another saucepan some drawn or melted butter, (mixed
-with oyster liquor instead of water,) pour it into a sauce-boat, add
-the oysters to it, and serve it up with boiled poultry, or with boiled
-fresh fish.
-
-Celery, first boiled and then chopped, is an improvement to oyster
-sauce.
-
-
-
-
-STORE FISH SAUCES.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-Store fish sauces if properly made will keep for many months. They
-may be brought to table in fish castors, but a customary mode is to
-send them round in the small black bottles in which they have been
-originally deposited. They are in great variety, and may be purchased
-of the grocers that sell oil, pickles, anchovies, &c. In making them at
-home, the few following receipts may be found useful.
-
-The usual way of eating these sauces is to pour a little on your plate,
-and mix it with the melted butter. They give flavour to fish that would
-otherwise be insipid, and are in general use at genteel tables.
-
-Two table-spoonfuls of any of these sauces may be added to the melted
-butter a minute before you take it from the fire. But if brought to
-table in bottles, the company can use it or omit it as they please.
-
-
-SCOTCH SAUCE.--Take fifteen anchovies, chop them fine, and steep them
-in vinegar for a week, keeping the vessel closely covered. Then put
-them into a pint of claret or port wine. Scrape fine a large stick of
-horseradish, and chop two onions, a handful of parsley, a tea-spoonful
-of the leaves of lemon-thyme, and two large peach leaves. Add a nutmeg,
-six or eight blades of mace, nine cloves, and a tea-spoonful of black
-pepper, all slightly pounded in a mortar. Put all these ingredients
-into a silver or block tin sauce-pan, or into an earthen pipkin,
-and add a few grains of cochineal to colour it. Pour in a large half
-pint of the best vinegar, and simmer it slowly till the bones of the
-anchovies are entirely dissolved.
-
-Strain the liquor through a sieve, and when quite cold put it away
-for use in small bottles; the corks dipped in melted rosin, and well
-secured by pieces of leather tied closely over them. Fill each bottle
-quite full, as it will keep the better for leaving no vacancy.
-
-This sauce will give a fine flavour to melted butter.
-
-
-QUIN'S SAUCE.--Pound in a mortar six large anchovies, moistening them
-with their own pickle. Then chop and pound six small onions. Mix them
-with a little black pepper and a little cayenne, half a glass of soy,
-four glasses of mushroom catchup, two glasses of claret, and two of
-black walnut pickle. Put the mixture into a small sauce-pan or earthen
-pipkin, and let it simmer slowly till all the bones of the anchovies
-are dissolved. Strain it, and when cold, bottle it for use; dipping the
-cork in melted rosin, and tying leather over it. Fill the bottles quite
-full.
-
-
-KITCHINER'S FISH SAUCE.--Mix together a pint of claret, a pint of
-mushroom catchup, and half a pint of walnut pickle, four ounces of
-pounded anchovy, an ounce of fresh lemon-peel pared thin, and the
-same quantity of shalot or small onion. Also an ounce of scraped
-horseradish, half an ounce of black pepper, and half an ounce of
-allspice mixed, and the same quantity of cayenne and celery-seed.
-Infuse these ingredients in a wide-mouthed bottle (closely stopped) for
-a fortnight, shaking the mixture every day. Then strain and bottle it
-for use. Put it up in small bottles, filling them quite full.
-
-
-HARVEY'S SAUCE.--Dissolve six anchovies in a pint of strong vinegar
-and then add to them three table-spoonfuls of India soy, and three
-table-spoonfuls of mushroom catchup, two heads of garlic bruised small,
-and a quarter of an ounce of cayenne. Add sufficient cochineal powder
-to colour the mixture red. Let all these ingredients infuse in the
-vinegar for a fortnight, shaking it every day, and then strain and
-bottle it for use. Let the bottles be small, and cover the corks with
-leather.
-
-
-GENERAL SAUCE.--Chop six shalots or small onions, a clove of garlic,
-two peach leaves, a few sprigs of lemon-thyme and of sweet basil, and
-a few bits of fresh orange-peel. Bruise in a mortar a quarter of an
-ounce of cloves, a quarter of an ounce of mace, and half an ounce of
-long pepper. Mix two ounces of salt, a jill of claret, the juice of
-two lemons, and a pint of Madeira. Put the whole of these ingredients
-together in a stone jar, very closely covered. Let it stand all night
-over embers by the side of the fire. In the morning pour off the liquid
-quickly and carefully from the lees or settlings, strain it and put it
-into small bottles, dipping the corks in melted rosin.
-
-This sauce is intended to flavour melted butter or gravy, for every
-sort of fish and meat.
-
-
-PINK SAUCE.--Mix together half a pint of port wine, half a pint of
-strong vinegar, the juice and grated peel of two large lemons, a
-quarter of an ounce of cayenne, a dozen blades of mace, and a quarter
-of an ounce of powdered cochineal. Let it infuse a fortnight, stirring
-it several times a day. Then boil it ten minutes, strain it, and bottle
-it for use.
-
-Eat it with any sort of fish or game. It will give a fine pink tinge to
-melted butter.
-
-
-
-
-CATCHUPS.
-
-
-LOBSTER CATCHUP.--This catchup, warmed in melted butter, is an
-excellent substitute for fresh lobster sauce at seasons when the fish
-cannot be procured, as, if properly made, it will keep a year.
-
-Take a fine lobster that weighs about three pounds. Put it into boiling
-water, and cook it thoroughly. When it is cold break it up, and extract
-all the flesh from the shell. Pound the red part or coral in a marble
-mortar, and when it is well bruised, add the white meat by degrees,
-and pound that also; seasoning it with a tea-spoonful of cayenne, and
-moistening it gradually with sherry wine. When it is beaten to a smooth
-paste, mix it well with the remainder of the bottle of sherry. Put it
-into wide-mouthed bottles, and on the top of each put a table-spoonful
-of sweet oil. Dip the corks in melted rosin, and secure them well by
-tying leather over them.
-
-In using this catchup, allow four table-spoonfuls to a common-sized
-sauce-boat of melted butter. Put in the catchup at the last, and hold
-it over the fire just long enough to be thoroughly heated.
-
-
-ANCHOVY CATCHUP.--Bone two dozen anchovies, and then chop them. Put
-to them ten shalots, or very small onions, cut fine, and a handful of
-scraped horseradish, with a quarter of an ounce of mace. Add a lemon,
-cut into slices, twelve cloves, and twelve pepper-corns. Then mix
-together a pint of port, a pint of madeira, and a pint of anchovy
-liquor. Put the other ingredients into the liquid, and boil it slowly
-till reduced one-half. Then strain it, and when cold put it into small
-bottles, securing the corks with leather.
-
-
-OYSTER CATCHUP.--Take large salt oysters that have just been opened.
-Wash them in their own liquor, and pound them in a mortar, omitting the
-hard parts. To every pint of the pounded oysters, add a half pint of
-white wine or vinegar, in which you must give them a boil up, removing
-the scum as it rises. Then to each quart of the boiled oysters allow a
-tea-spoonful of beaten white pepper, a tea-spoonful of pounded mace,
-and cayenne pepper to your taste. Let it boil up for a few minutes,
-and then pass it through a sieve into an earthen pan. When cold, put
-it into small bottles, filling them quite full, as it will not keep so
-well if there is a vacancy at the top. Dip the corks in melted rosin,
-and tie leather over each.
-
-
-WALNUT CATCHUP.--Take green walnuts that are young enough to be easily
-pierced through with a large needle. Having pricked them all in several
-places, throw them into an earthen pan with a large handful of salt,
-and barely sufficient water to cover them. Break up and mash them with
-a potato-beetle, or a rolling-pin. Keep them four days in the salt and
-water, stirring and mashing them every day. The rinds will now be quite
-soft. Then scald them with boiling-hot salt and water, and raising the
-pan on the edge, let the walnut liquor flow away from the shells into
-another pan. Put the shells into a mortar, and pound them with vinegar,
-which will extract from them all the remaining juice.
-
-Put all the walnut liquor together, and boil and skim it; then to
-every quart allow an ounce of bruised ginger, an ounce of black pepper,
-half an ounce of cloves, and half an ounce of nutmeg, all slightly
-beaten. Boil the spice and walnut liquor in a closely covered vessel
-for three quarters of an hour. When cold, bottle it for use, putting
-equal proportions of the spice into each bottle. Secure the corks with
-leather.
-
-
-MUSHROOM CATCHUP.--Take mushrooms that have been freshly gathered, and
-examine them carefully to ascertain that they are of the right sort.
-Pick them nicely, and wipe them clean, but do not wash them. Spread a
-layer of them at the bottom of a deep earthen pan, and then sprinkle
-them well with salt; then another layer of mushrooms, and another
-layer of salt, and so on alternately. Throw a folded cloth over the
-jar, and set it by the fire or in a very cool oven. Let it remain thus
-for twenty-four hours, and then mash them well with your hands. Next
-squeeze and strain them through a bag.
-
-To every quart of strained liquor add an ounce and a half of whole
-black pepper, and boil it slowly in a covered vessel for half an hour.
-Then add a quarter of an ounce of allspice, half an ounce of sliced
-ginger, a few cloves, and three or four blades of mace. Boil it with
-the spice fifteen minutes longer. When it is done, take it off, and let
-it stand awhile to settle. Pour it carefully off from the sediment, and
-put it into small bottles, filling them to the top. Secure them well
-with corks dipped in melted rosin, and leather caps tied over them.
-
-The longer catchup is boiled, the better it will keep.
-
-You may add cayenne and nutmeg to the spices.
-
-The bottles should be quite small, as it soon spoils after being
-opened.
-
-
-TOMATA CATCHUP.--Take a peck of large ripe tomatas. Having cut a slit
-in each, put them into a large preserving-kettle, and boil them half
-an hour. Then take them out, and press and strain the pulp through a
-hair sieve. Put it back into the kettle, and add an ounce of salt,
-an ounce of powdered mace, half an ounce of powdered cloves, a small
-tea-spoonful of ground black pepper, the same of cayenne pepper, and
-eight table-spoonfuls of ground mustard. Mix the seasoning with the
-tomata pulp; let it boil slowly during four hours. Then take it out of
-the kettle, and let it stand till next day, in an uncovered tureen.
-When cold, stir into it one pint of the best cider vinegar. Put it
-into clean bottles, and seal the corks. It will be found excellent for
-flavouring stews, hashes, fish-sauce, &c.
-
-
-LEMON CATCHUP.--Grate the peel of a dozen large fresh lemons. Prepare,
-by pounding them in a mortar, two ounces of mustard seed, half an ounce
-of black pepper, half an ounce of nutmeg, a quarter of an ounce of
-mace, and a quarter of an ounce of cloves. Slice thin two ounces of
-horseradish. Put all these ingredients together. Strew over them one
-ounce of fine salt. Add the juice of the lemons.
-
-Boil the whole twenty minutes. Then put it warm into a jar, and let it
-stand three weeks closely covered. Stir it up daily.
-
-Then strain it through a sieve, and put it up in small bottles to
-flavour fish and other sauces.
-
-This is sometimes called lemon pickle.
-
-
-SEA CATCHUP.--Take a gallon of stale strong beer, a pound of anchovies
-washed from the pickle, a pound of peeled shalots or small onions,
-half an ounce of mace, half an ounce of cloves, a quarter of an ounce
-of whole pepper, three or four large pieces of ginger, and two quarts
-of large mushroom-flaps rubbed to pieces. Put the whole into a kettle
-closely covered, and let it simmer slowly till reduced to one half.
-Then strain it through a flannel bag, and let it stand till quite cold
-before you bottle it. Have small bottles and fill them quite full of
-the catchup. Dip the corks in melted rosin.
-
-This catchup keeps well at sea, and may be carried into any part of the
-world. A spoonful of it mixed in melted butter will make a fine fish
-sauce. It may also be used to flavour gravy.
-
-
-
-
-FLAVOURED VINEGARS.
-
-
-These vinegars will be found very useful, at times when the articles
-with which they are flavoured cannot be conveniently procured. Care
-should be taken to have the bottles that contain them accurately
-labelled, very tightly corked, and kept in a dry place. The vinegar
-used for these purposes should be of the very best sort.
-
-
-TARRAGON VINEGAR.--Tarragon should be gathered on a dry day, just
-before the plant flowers. Pick the green leaves from the stalks, and
-dry them a little before the fire. Then put them into a wide-mouthed
-stone jar, and cover them with the best vinegar, filling up the jar.
-Let it steep fourteen days, and then strain it into wide-mouthed
-bottles, in each of which put a large quantity of fresh tarragon
-leaves, and let them remain in the vinegar.
-
-
-SWEET BASIL VINEGAR.--Is made precisely in the same manner; also those
-of green mint, and sweet marjoram.
-
-
-CELERY VINEGAR.--Pound two ounces of celery seed in a mortar, and steep
-it for a fortnight in a quart of vinegar. Then strain and bottle it.
-
-
-BURNET VINEGAR.--Nearly fill a wide-mouthed bottle with the fresh green
-leaves of burnet, cover them with vinegar, and let them steep two
-weeks. Then strain off the vinegar, wash the bottle, put in a fresh
-supply of burnet leaves, pour the same vinegar over them, and let it
-infuse a fortnight longer. Then strain it again and it will be fit for
-use. The flavour will exactly resemble that of cucumbers.
-
-
-HORSERADISH VINEGAR.--Make a quart of the best vinegar boiling hot, and
-pour it on four ounces of scraped horseradish. Let it stand a week,
-then strain it off, renew the horseradish, adding the same vinegar
-cold, and let it infuse a week longer, straining it again at the last.
-
-
-SHALOT VINEGAR.--Peel and chop fine four ounces of shalots, or small
-button onions. Pour on them a quart of the best vinegar, and let them
-steep a fortnight; then strain and bottle it.
-
-Make garlic vinegar in the same manner; using but one ounce of garlic
-to a quart of vinegar. Two or three drops will be sufficient to impart
-a garlic taste to a pint of gravy or sauce. More will be offensive. The
-cook should be cautioned to use it very sparingly, as to many persons
-it is extremely disagreeable.
-
-
-CHILLI VINEGAR.--Take a hundred red chillies or capsicums, fresh
-gathered; cut them into small pieces and infuse them for a fortnight in
-a quart of the best vinegar shaking the bottle every day. Then strain
-it.
-
-
-RASPBERRY VINEGAR.--Put two quarts of ripe fresh-gathered raspberries
-into a stone or china vessel, and pour on them a quart of vinegar.
-Let it stand twenty-four hours, and then strain it through a sieve.
-Pour the liquid over two quarts of fresh raspberries, and let it again
-infuse for a day and a night. Then strain it a second time. Allow a
-pound of loaf sugar to every pint of juice. Break up the sugar, and
-let it melt in the liquor. Then put the whole into a stone jar, cover
-it closely, and set it in a kettle of boiling water, which must be kept
-on a quick boil for an hour. Take off all the scum, and when cold,
-bottle the vinegar for use.
-
-Raspberry vinegar mixed with water is a pleasant and cooling beverage
-in warm weather; also in fevers.
-
-
-
-
-MUSTARD AND PEPPER.
-
-
-COMMON MUSTARD--Is best when fresh made. Take good flour of mustard;
-put it in a plate, add to it a little salt, and mix it by degrees with
-boiling water to the usual consistence, rubbing it for a long time with
-a broad-bladed knife or a wooden spoon. It should be perfectly smooth.
-The less that is made at a time the better it will be. If you wish it
-very mild, use sugar instead of salt, and boiling milk instead of water.
-
-
-KEEPING MUSTARD.--Dissolve three ounces of salt in a quart of boiling
-vinegar, and pour it hot upon two ounces of scraped horseradish. Cover
-the jar closely and let it stand twenty-four hours. Strain it and then
-mix it by degrees with the best flour of mustard. Make it of the usual
-thickness, and beat it till quite smooth. Then put it into wide-mouthed
-bottles and stop it closely.
-
-
-FRENCH MUSTARD.--Mix together four ounces of the very best mustard
-powder, four salt-spoons of salt, a large table-spoonful of minced
-tarragon leaves, and two cloves of garlic chopped fine. Dilute it to
-the proper consistence by adding alternately equal portions of vinegar
-and salad oil. It will probably require about four wine-glassfuls or
-half a pint. Mix it well, using for the purpose a wooden spoon. When
-done, put it into a wide-mouthed bottle or into little white jars. Cork
-it very closely, and keep it in a dry place. It will not be fit for use
-in less than two days.
-
-This (used as the common mustard) is a very agreeable condiment for
-beef or mutton.
-
-If you cannot procure tarragon leaves, buy at a grocer's a bottle of
-tarragon vinegar. Mix it with an equal portion of sweet oil, adding
-a few drops of garlic vinegar. Then stir in mustard powder till
-sufficiently thick.
-
-
-TO MAKE CAYENNE PEPPER.--Take ripe chillies and dry them a whole day
-before the fire, turning them frequently. When quite dry, trim off the
-stalks and pound the pods in a mortar till they become a fine powder,
-mixing in about one sixth of their weight in salt. Or you may grind
-them in a very fine mill. While pounding the chillies, wear glasses to
-save your eyes from being incommoded by them. Put the powder into small
-bottles, and secure the corks closely.
-
-
-KITCHEN PEPPER.--Mix together two ounces of the best white ginger, an
-ounce of black pepper, an ounce of white pepper, an ounce of cinnamon,
-an ounce of nutmeg, and two dozen cloves. They must all be ground or
-pounded to a fine powder, and thoroughly mixed. Keep the mixture in a
-bottle, labelled, and well corked. It will be found useful in seasoning
-many dishes; and being ready prepared will save much trouble.
-
-
-
-
-VEGETABLES.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-All vegetables should be well picked and washed. A very little salt
-should always be thrown into the water in which they are boiled. A
-steady regular fire should be kept up, and they should never for a
-moment be allowed to stop boiling or simmering till they are thoroughly
-done. Every sort of vegetable should be cooked till tender, as if the
-least hard or under-done they are both unpalatable and unwholesome. The
-practice of putting pearl-ash in the pot to improve the colour of green
-vegetables should be strictly forbidden, as it destroys the flavour,
-and either renders them flat and insipid, or communicates a very
-disagreeable taste of its own.
-
-Every sort of culinary vegetable is infinitely best when fresh from the
-garden, and gathered as short a time as possible before it is cooked.
-They should all be laid in a pan of cold water for a while previous to
-boiling.
-
-When done, they should be carefully drained before they go to table, or
-they will be washy all through, and leave puddles of discoloured water
-in the bottoms of the dishes, to the disgust of the company and the
-discredit of the cook.
-
-
-TO BOIL POTATOES.
-
-Potatoes that are boiled together, should be as nearly as possible
-of the same size. Wash, but do not pare them. Put them into a pot
-with water enough to cover them about an inch, and do not put on the
-pot-lid. When the water is very near boiling, pour it off, and replace
-it with the same quantity of cold water, into which throw a good
-portion of salt. The cold water sends the heat from the surface to the
-heart, and makes the potatoes mealy. Potatoes of a moderate size will
-require about half an hour boiling; large ones an hour. Try them with
-a fork. When done, pour off the water, cover the pot with a folded
-napkin, or flannel, and let them stand by the fire about a quarter of
-an hour to dry.
-
-Peel them and send them to table.
-
-Potatoes are often served up with the skins on. It has a coarse,
-slovenly look, and disfigures the appearance of the dinner; besides the
-trouble and inconvenience of peeling them at table. But many prefer
-them thus.
-
-When the skins crack in boiling, it is no proof that they are done, as
-too much fire under the pot will cause the skins of some potatoes to
-break while the inside is hard.
-
-After March, when potatoes are old, it is best to pare them before
-boiling and to cut out all the blemishes. It is then better to mash
-them always before they are sent to table. Mash them when quite hot,
-using a potato-beetle for the purpose; add to them a piece of fresh
-butter, and a little salt, and, if convenient, some milk, which will
-greatly improve them. You may score and brown them on the top.
-
-A very nice way of serving up potatoes is, after they are peeled, to
-pour over them some hot cream in which a very little butter has been
-melted, and sprinkle them with pepper. This is frequently done in
-country houses where cream is plenty. New potatoes (as they are called
-when quite young) require no peeling, but should be well washed and
-brushed before they are boiled.
-
-
-FRIED POTATOES.--Take cold potatoes that have been boiled, grate them,
-make them into flat cakes, and fry them in butter. They are nice at
-breakfast. You may mix some beaten yolk of egg with them.
-
-Cold potatoes may be fried in slices or quarters, or broiled on a
-gridiron.
-
-Raw potatoes, when fried, are generally hard, tough, and strong.
-
-
-POTATO SNOW.--For this purpose use potatoes that are very white, mealy,
-and smooth. Boil them very carefully, and when they are done, peel
-them, pour off the water, and set them on a trivet before the fire till
-they are quite dry and powdery. Then rub them through a coarse wire
-sieve into the dish on which they are to go to table. Do not disturb
-the heap of potatoes before it is served up, or the flakes will fall
-and it will flatten. This preparation looks well; but many think that
-it renders the potato insipid.
-
-
-ROASTED POTATOES.--Take large fine potatoes; wash and dry them, and
-either lay them on the hearth and keep them buried in hot wood ashes,
-or bake them slowly in a Dutch oven. They will not be done in less than
-two hours. It will save time to half-boil them before they are roasted.
-Send them to table with the skins on, and eat them with cold butter and
-salt. They are introduced with cold meat at supper.
-
-Potatoes keep best buried in sand or earth. They should never be wetted
-till they are washed for cooking. If you have them in the cellar, see
-that they are well covered with matting or old carpet, as the frost
-injures them greatly.
-
-
-SWEET POTATOES BOILED.
-
-If among your sweet potatoes there should be any that are very large
-and thick, split them, and cut them in four, that they may not require
-longer time to cook than the others. Boil them with the skins on in
-plenty of water, but without any salt. You may set the pot on coals
-in the corner. Try them with a fork, and see that they are done all
-through; they will take at least an hour. Then drain off the water,
-and set them for a few minutes in a tin pan before the fire, or in the
-stove, that they may be well dried. Peel them before they are sent to
-table. When very large, and all of a size, you may roast them.
-
-
-FRIED SWEET POTATOES.--Choose them of the largest size. Half boil them,
-and then having taken off the skins, cut the potatoes in slices, and
-fry them in butter, or in nice dripping.
-
-Sweet potatoes are very good stewed with fresh pork, veal, or beef.
-
-The best way to keep them through the cold weather, is to bury them in
-earth or sand; otherwise they will be scarcely eatable after October.
-
-
-CABBAGE.
-
-ALL vegetables of the cabbage kind should be carefully washed, and
-examined in case of insects lurking among the leaves. To prepare a
-cabbage for boiling, remove the outer leaves, and pare and trim the
-stalk, cutting it close and short. If the cabbage is large, quarter
-it; if small, cut it in half; and let it stand for a while in a deep
-pan of cold water with the large end downwards. Put it into a pot with
-plenty of water, (having first tied it together to keep it whole while
-boiling,) and, taking off the scum, boil it two hours, or till the
-stalk is quite tender. When done, drain and squeeze it well. Before you
-send it to table introduce a little fresh butter between the leaves; or
-have melted butter in a boat. If it has been boiled with meat add no
-butter to it.
-
-A young cabbage will boil in an hour or an hour and a half.
-
-
-CALE-CANNON.--Boil separately some potatoes and cabbage. When done,
-drain and squeeze the cabbage, and chop or mince it very small. Mash
-the potatoes, and mix them gradually but thoroughly with the chopped
-cabbage, adding butter, pepper and salt. There should be twice as much
-potato as cabbage.
-
-Cale-cannon is eaten with corned beef, boiled pork, or bacon.
-
-Cabbages may be kept good all winter by burying them in a hole dug in
-the ground.
-
-
-CAULIFLOWER.
-
-Remove the green leaves that surround the head or white part, and peel
-off the outside skin of the small piece of stalk that is left on. Cut
-the cauliflower in four, and lay it for an hour in a pan of cold water.
-Then tie it together before it goes into the pot. Put it into boiling
-water and simmer it till the stalk is thoroughly tender, keeping it
-well covered with water, and carefully removing the scum. It will take
-about two hours.
-
-Take it up as soon as it is done; remaining in the water will
-discolour it. Drain it well, and send it to table with melted butter.
-
-It will be much whiter if put on in boiling milk and water.
-
-
-BROCOLI.--Prepare brocoli for boiling in the same manner as
-cauliflower, leaving the stalks rather longer, and splitting the head
-in half only. Tie it together again, before it goes into the pot. Put
-it on in hot water, and let it simmer till the stalk is perfectly
-tender.
-
-As soon as it is done take it out of the water and drain it. Send
-melted butter to table with it.
-
-
-SPINACH.
-
-Spinach requires close examination and picking, as insects are
-frequently found among it, and it is often gritty. Wash it through
-three or four waters. Then drain it, and put it on in boiling water.
-Ten minutes is generally sufficient time to boil spinach. Be careful
-to remove the scum. When it is quite tender, take it up, and drain and
-squeeze it well. Chop it fine, and put it into a sauce-pan with a piece
-of butter and a little pepper and salt. Set it on hot coals, and let it
-stew five minutes, stirring it all the time.
-
-
-SPINACH AND EGGS.--Boil the spinach as above, and drain and press it,
-but do not chop it. Have ready some eggs poached as follows. Boil
-in a sauce-pan, and skim some clear spring water, adding to it a
-table-spoonful of vinegar. Break the eggs separately, and having taken
-the sauce-pan off the fire, slip the eggs one at a time into it with
-as much dexterity as you can. Let the sauce-pan stand by the side of
-the fire till the white is set, and then put it over the fire for two
-minutes. The yolk should be thinly covered by the white. Take them up
-with an egg slice, and having trimmed the edges of the whites, lay the
-eggs on the top of the spinach, which should first be seasoned with
-pepper and salt and a little butter, and must be sent to table hot.
-
-
-TURNIPS.
-
-Take off a thick paring from the outside, and boil the turnips gently
-for an hour and a half. Try them with a fork, and when quite tender,
-take them up, drain them on a sieve, and either send them to table
-whole with melted butter, or mash them in a cullender, (pressing and
-squeezing them well;) season with a little pepper and salt, and mix
-with them a very small quantity of butter. Setting in the sun after
-they are cooked, or on a part of the table upon which the sun may
-happen to shine, will give to turnips a singularly unpleasant taste,
-and should therefore be avoided.
-
-When turnips are very young, it is customary to serve them up with
-about two inches of the green top left on them.
-
-If stewed with meat, they should be sliced or quartered.
-
-Mutton, either boiled or roasted, should always be accompanied by
-turnips.
-
-
-CARROTS.
-
-Wash and scrape them well. If large cut them into two, three, or four
-pieces. Put them into boiling water with a little salt in it. Full
-grown carrots will require three hours' boiling; smaller ones two
-hours, and young ones an hour. Try them with a fork, and when they are
-tender throughout, take them up and dry them in a cloth. Divide them in
-pieces and split them, or cut them into slices.
-
-Eat them with melted butter. They should accompany boiled beef or
-mutton.
-
-
-PARSNIPS.
-
-Wash, scrape and split them. Put them into a pot of boiling water; add
-a little salt, and boil them till quite tender, which will be in from
-two to three hours, according to their size. Dry them in a cloth when
-done, and pour melted butter over them in the dish. Serve them up with
-any sort of boiled meat, or with salt cod.
-
-Parsnips are very good baked or stewed with meat.
-
-
-RUSSIAN OR SWEDISH TURNIPS.
-
-This turnip (the Ruta Baga) is very large and of a reddish yellow
-colour; they are generally much liked. Take off a thick paring, cut the
-turnips into large pieces, or thick slices, and lay them awhile in cold
-water. Then boil them gently about two hours, or till they are quite
-soft. When done, drain, squeeze and mash them, and season them with
-pepper and salt, and a very little butter. Take care not to set them in
-a part of the table where the sun comes, as it will spoil the taste.
-
-Russian turnips should always be mashed.
-
-
-SQUASHES OR CYMLINGS.
-
-The green or summer squash is best when the outside is beginning to
-turn yellow, as it is then less watery and insipid than when younger.
-Wash them, cut them into pieces, and take out the seeds. Boil them
-about three quarters of an hour, or till quite tender. When done,
-drain and squeeze them well till you have pressed out all the water;
-mash them with a little butter, pepper and salt. Then put the squash
-thus prepared into a stew-pan, set it on hot coals, and stir it very
-frequently till it becomes dry. Take care not to let it burn.
-
-
-WINTER SQUASH, OR CASHAW.
-
-This is much finer than the summer squash. It is fit to eat in August,
-and, in a dry warm place, can be kept well all winter. The colour is
-a very bright yellow. Pare it, take out the seeds, cut it in pieces,
-and stew it slowly till quite soft, in a very little water. Afterwards
-drain, squeeze, and press it well, and mash it with a very little
-butter, pepper and salt.
-
-
-PUMPKIN.
-
-Deep coloured pumpkins are generally the best. In a dry warm place
-they can be kept perfectly good all winter. When you prepare to stew
-a pumpkin, cut it in half and take out all the seeds. Then cut it in
-thick slices, and pare them. Put it into a pot with a very little
-water, and stew it gently for an hour, or till soft enough to mash.
-Then take it out, drain, and squeeze it till it is as dry as you can
-get it. Afterwards mash it, adding a little pepper and salt, and a
-very little butter.
-
-Pumpkin is frequently stewed with fresh beef or fresh pork.
-
-The water in which pumpkin has been boiled, is said to be very good to
-mix bread with, it having a tendency to improve it in sweetness and to
-keep it moist.
-
-
-HOMINY.
-
-Wash the hominy very clean through three or four waters. Then put it
-into a pot (allowing two quarts of water to one quart of hominy) and
-boil it slowly five hours. When done, take it up, and drain the liquid
-from it through a cullender. Put the hominy into a deep dish, and stir
-into it a small piece of fresh butter.
-
-The small grained hominy is boiled in rather less water, and generally
-eaten with butter and sugar.
-
-
-INDIAN CORN.
-
-Corn for boiling should be full grown but young and tender. When the
-grains become yellow it is too old. Strip it of the outside leaves
-and the silk, but let the inner leaves remain, as they will keep in
-the sweetness. Put it into a large pot with plenty of water, and boil
-it rather fast for half an hour. When done, drain off the water, and
-remove the leaves.
-
-You may either lay the ears on a large flat dish and send them to table
-whole, or broken in half; or you may cut all the corn off the cob, and
-serve it up in a deep dish, mixed with butter, pepper and salt.
-
-
-MOCK OYSTERS OF CORN.
-
-Take a dozen and a half ears of large young corn, and grate all the
-grains off the cob as fine as possible. Mix with the grated corn three
-large table-spoonfuls of sifted flour, the yolks of six eggs well
-beaten. Let all be well incorporated by hard beating.
-
-Have ready in a frying-pan an equal proportion of lard and fresh
-butter. Hold it over the fire till it is boiling hot, and then put in
-portions of the mixture as nearly as possible in shape and size like
-fried oysters. Fry them brown, and send them to table hot. They should
-be near an inch thick.
-
-This is an excellent relish at breakfast, and may be introduced as a
-side dish at dinner. In taste it has a singular resemblance to fried
-oysters. The corn _must_ be young.
-
-
-STEWED EGG PLANT.
-
-The purple egg plants are better than the white ones. Put them whole
-into a pot with plenty of water, and simmer them till quite tender.
-Then take them out, drain them, and (having peeled off the skins) cut
-them up, and mash them smooth in a deep dish. Mix with them some grated
-bread, some powdered sweet marjoram, and a large piece of butter,
-adding a pounded nutmeg. Grate a layer of bread over the top, and put
-the dish into the oven and brown it. You must send it to table in the
-same dish.
-
-Egg plant is sometimes eaten at dinner, but generally at breakfast.
-
-
-TO FRY EGG PLANT.--Do not pare your egg plants if they are to be fried,
-but slice them about half an inch thick and lay them an hour or two
-in salt and water to remove their strong taste, which to most persons
-is very unpleasant. Then take them out, wipe them, and season them
-with pepper only. Beat some yolk of egg; and in another dish grate a
-sufficiency of bread-crumbs. Have ready in a frying-pan some lard and
-butter mixed, and make it boil. Then dip each slice of egg plant first
-in the egg, and then in the crumbs, till both sides are well covered;
-and fry them brown, taking care to have them done all through, as the
-least rawness renders them very unpalatable.
-
-
-STUFFED EGG PLANTS.--Parboil them to take off their bitterness. Then
-slit each one down the side, and extract the seeds. Have ready a
-stuffing made of grated bread-crumbs, butter, minced sweet herbs, salt,
-pepper, nutmeg, and beaten yolk of egg. Fill with it the cavity from
-whence you took the seeds, and bake the egg plants in a Dutch oven.
-Serve them up with a made gravy poured into the dish.
-
-
-FRIED CUCUMBERS.
-
-Having pared your cucumbers, cut them lengthways into pieces about as
-thick as a dollar. Then dry them in a cloth. Season them with pepper
-and salt, and sprinkle them thick with flour. Melt some butter in a
-frying-pan, and when it boils, put in the slices of cucumber, and fry
-them of a light brown. Send them to table hot.
-
-They make a breakfast dish.
-
-
-TO DRESS CUCUMBERS RAW.--They should be as fresh from the vine as
-possible, few vegetables being more unwholesome when long gathered. As
-soon as they are brought in lay them in cold water. Just before they
-are to go to table take them out, pare them and slice them into a pan
-of fresh cold water. When they are all sliced, transfer them to a deep
-dish, season them with a little salt and black pepper, and pour over
-them some of the best vinegar, to which you may add a little salad
-oil. You may mix with them a small quantity of sliced onion; not to be
-eaten, but to communicate a slight flavour of onion to the vinegar.
-
-
-SALSIFY.
-
-Having scraped the salsify roots, and washed them in cold water,
-parboil them. Then take them out, drain them, cut them into large
-pieces and fry them in butter.
-
-Salsify is frequently stewed slowly till quite tender, and then served
-up with melted butter. Or it may be first boiled, then grated, and made
-into cakes to be fried in butter.
-
-Salsify must not be left exposed to the air, or it will turn blackish.
-
-
-ARTICHOKES.
-
-Strip off the coarse outer leaves, and cut off the stalks close to the
-bottom. Wash the artichokes well, and let them lie two or three hours
-in cold water. Put them with their heads downward into a pot of boiling
-water, keeping them down by a plate floated over them. They must boil
-steadily from two to three hours; take care to replenish the pot with
-additional boiling water as it is wanted. When they are tender all
-through, drain them, and serve them up with melted butter.
-
-
-BEETS.
-
-Wash the beets, but do not scrape or cut them while they are raw; for
-if a knife enters them before they are boiled they will lose their
-colour. Boil them from two to three hours, according to their size.
-When they are tender all through, take them up, and scrape off all
-the outside. If they are young beets they are best split down and cut
-into long pieces, seasoned with pepper, and sent to table with melted
-butter. Otherwise you may slice them thin, after they are quite cold,
-and pour vinegar over them.
-
-
-TO STEW BEETS.--Boil them first, and then scrape and slice them. Put
-them into a stew-pan with a piece of butter rolled in flour, some
-boiled onion and parsley chopped fine, and a little vinegar, salt and
-pepper. Set the pan on hot coals, and let the beets stew for a quarter
-of an hour.
-
-
-TO BOIL GREEN OR FRENCH BEANS.
-
-These beans should be young, tender, and fresh gathered. Remove the
-strings with a knife, and take off both ends of the bean. Then cut
-them in two or three pieces only; for if split or cut very small, they
-become watery and lose much of their taste; and cannot be well drained.
-As you cut them, throw them into a pan of cold water, and let them lay
-awhile. Boil them an hour and a half. They must be perfectly tender
-before you take them up. Then drain and press them well, season them
-with pepper, and mix into them a piece of butter.
-
-
-SCARLET BEANS.--It is not generally known that the pod of the scarlet
-bean, if green and young, is extremely nice when cut into three or
-four pieces and boiled. They will require near two hours, and must be
-drained well, and mixed as before mentioned with butter and pepper. If
-gathered at the proper time, when the seed is just perceptible, they
-are superior to any of the common beans.
-
-
-LIMA BEANS.
-
-These are generally considered the finest of all beans, and should be
-gathered young. Shell them, lay them in a pan of cold water, and then
-boil them about two hours, or till they are quite soft. Drain them
-well, and add to them some butter and a little pepper.
-
-They are destroyed by the first frost, but can be kept during the
-winter, by gathering them on a dry day when full grown but not the
-least hard, and putting them in their pods into a keg. Throw some salt
-into the bottom of the keg, and cover it with a layer of the bean-pods;
-then add more salt, and then another layer of beans, till the keg is
-full. Press them down with a heavy weight, cover the keg closely, and
-keep it in a cool dry place. Before you use them, soak the pods all
-night in cold water; the next day shell them, and soak the beans till
-you are ready to boil them.
-
-
-DRIED BEANS.
-
-Wash them and lay them in soak over night. Early in the morning put
-them into a pot with plenty of water, and boil them slowly till dinner
-time. They will require seven or eight hours to be sufficiently done.
-Then take them off, put them into a sieve, and strain off the liquid.
-
-Send the beans to table in a deep dish, seasoned with pepper, and
-having a piece of butter mixed with them.
-
-
-GREEN PEAS.
-
-Green peas are unfit for eating after they become hard and yellowish;
-but they are better when nearly full grown than when very small and
-young. They should be gathered as short a time as possible before they
-are cooked, and laid in cold water as soon as they are shelled. They
-will require about an hour to boil soft. When quite done, drain them,
-mix with them a piece of butter, and add a little pepper.
-
-Peas may be greatly improved by boiling with them two or three lumps of
-loaf-sugar, and a sprig of mint to be taken out before they are dished.
-This is an English way of cooking green peas, and is to most tastes a
-very good one.
-
-
-TO BOIL ONIONS.
-
-Take off the tops and tails, and the thin outer skin; but no more lest
-the onions should go to pieces. Lay them on the bottom of a pan which
-is broad enough to contain them without piling one on another; just
-cover them with water, and let them simmer slowly till they are tender
-all through, but not till they break.
-
-Serve them up with melted butter.
-
-
-TO ROAST ONIONS.--Onions are best when parboiled before roasting. Take
-large onions, place them on a hot hearth and roast them before the
-fire in their skins, turning them as they require it. Then peel them,
-send them to table whole, and eat them with butter and salt.
-
-
-TO FRY ONIONS.--Peel, slice them, and fry them brown in butter or nice
-dripping.
-
-Onions should be kept in a very dry place, as dampness injures them.
-
-
-TO BOIL ASPARAGUS.
-
-Large or full grown asparagus is the best. Before you begin to prepare
-it for cooking, set on the fire a pot with plenty of water, and
-sprinkle into it a handful of salt. Your asparagus should be all of the
-same size. Scrape the stalks till they are perfectly nice and white;
-cut them all of equal length, and short, so as to leave them but two
-or three inches below the green part. To serve up asparagus with long
-stalks is now becoming obsolete. As you scrape them, throw them into a
-pan of cold water. Then tie them up in small bundles with bass or tape,
-as twine will cut them to pieces. When the water is boiling fast, put
-in the asparagus, and boil it an hour; if old it will require an hour
-and a quarter. When it is nearly done boiling, toast a large slice of
-bread sufficient to cover the dish (first cutting off the crust) and
-dip it into the asparagus water in the pot. Lay it in a dish, and,
-having drained the asparagus, place it on the toast with all the heads
-pointed inwards towards the centre, and the stalks spreading outwards.
-Serve up melted butter with it.
-
-
-SEA KALE.--Sea kale is prepared, boiled, and served up in the same
-manner as asparagus.
-
-
-POKE.--The young stalks and leaves of the poke-berry plant when quite
-small and first beginning to sprout up from the ground in the spring,
-are by most persons considered very nice, and are frequently brought to
-market. If the least too old they acquire a strong taste, and should
-not be eaten, as they then become unwholesome. They are in a proper
-state when the part of the stalk nearest to the ground is not thicker
-than small asparagus. Scrape the stalks, (letting the leaves remain on
-them,) and throw them into cold water. Then tie up the poke in bundles,
-put it into a pot that has plenty of boiling water, and let it boil
-fast an hour at least. Serve it up with or without toast, and send
-melted butter with it in a boat.
-
-
-STEWED TOMATAS.
-
-Peel your tomatas, cut them in half and squeeze out the seeds. Then put
-them into a stew-pan without any water, and add to them cayenne and
-salt to your taste, some grated bread, a little minced onion, and some
-powdered mace. Stew them slowly till they are first dissolved and then
-dry.
-
-
-BAKED TOMATAS.--Peel some large fine tomatas, cut them up, and take
-out the seeds. Then put them into a deep dish in alternate layers with
-grated bread-crumbs, and a very little butter in small bits. There must
-be a large proportion of bread-crumbs. Season the whole with a little
-salt, and cayenne pepper. Set it in an oven, and bake it. In cooking
-tomatas, take care not to have them too liquid. They will not lose
-their raw taste in less than three hours' cooking.
-
-
-MUSHROOMS.
-
-Good mushrooms are only found in clear open fields where the air is
-pure and unconfined. Those that grow in low damp ground, or in shady
-places, are always poisonous. Mushrooms of the proper sort generally
-appear in August and September, after a heavy dew or a misty night.
-They may be known by their being of a pale pink or salmon colour on the
-gills or under side, while the top is of a dull pearl-coloured white;
-and by their growing only in open places. When they are a day old, or a
-few hours after they are gathered, the reddish colour changes to brown.
-
-The poisonous or false mushrooms are of various colours, sometimes of
-a bright yellow or scarlet all over; sometimes entirely of a chalky
-white, stalk, top, and gills.
-
-It is easy to detect a bad mushroom if all are quite fresh; but after
-being gathered a few hours the colours change, so that unpractised
-persons frequently mistake them.
-
-It is said that if you boil an onion among mushrooms the onion
-will turn of a bluish black when there is a bad one among them. Of
-course, the whole should then be thrown into the fire. If in stirring
-mushrooms, the colour of the silver spoon is changed, it is also most
-prudent to destroy them all.
-
-
-TO STEW MUSHROOMS.--For this purpose the small button mushrooms are
-best. Wash them clean, peel off the skin, and cut off the stalks. Put
-the trimmings into a small sauce-pan with just enough water to keep
-them from burning, and covering them closely, let them stew a quarter
-of an hour. Then strain the liquor, and having put the mushrooms into a
-clean sauce-pan, (a silver one, or one lined with porcelain,) add the
-liquid to them with a little nutmeg, pepper and salt, and a piece of
-butter rolled in flour. Stew them fifteen minutes, and just before you
-take them up, stir in a very little cream or rich milk and some beaten
-yolk of egg. Serve them hot. While they are cooking, keep the pan as
-closely covered as possible; shaking it round frequently.
-
-If you wish to have the full taste of the mushroom only, after washing,
-trimming, and peeling them, put them into a stew-pan with a little salt
-and no water. Set them on coals, and stew them slowly till tender,
-adding nothing to them but a little butter rolled in flour, or else a
-little cream. Be sure to keep the pan well covered.
-
-
-BROILED MUSHROOMS.--For this purpose take large mushrooms, and be
-careful to have them freshly gathered. Peel them, score the under side,
-and cut off the stems. Lay them one by one in an earthen pan, brushing
-them over with sweet oil or oiled butter, and sprinkling each with a
-little pepper and salt. Cover them closely, and let them set for about
-an hour and a half. Then place them on a gridiron over clear hot coals,
-and broil them on both sides.
-
-Make a gravy for them of their trimmings stewed in a very little milk,
-strained and thickened with a beaten egg stirred in just before it goes
-to table.
-
-
-BOILED RICE.
-
-Pick your rice clean, and wash it in two cold waters, not draining off
-the last water till you are ready to put the rice on the fire. Prepare
-a sauce-pan of water with a little salt in it, and when it boils,
-sprinkle in the rice. Boil it hard twenty minutes, keeping it covered.
-Then take it from the fire, and pour off the water. Afterwards set the
-sauce-pan in the chimney corner with the lid off, while you are dishing
-your dinner, to allow the rice to dry, and the grains to separate.
-
-Rice, if properly boiled, should be soft and white, and every grain
-ought to stand alone. If badly managed, it will, when brought to table,
-be a grayish watery mass.
-
-In most southern families, rice is boiled every day for the dinner
-table, and eaten with the meat and poultry.
-
-The above is a Carolina receipt.
-
-
-TO DRESS LETTUCE AS SALAD.
-
-Strip off the outer leaves, wash the lettuce, split it in half, and
-lay it in cold water till dinner time. Then drain it and put it into a
-salad dish. Have ready two eggs boiled hard, (which they will be in ten
-minutes,) and laid in a basin of cold water for five minutes to prevent
-the whites from turning blue. Cut them in half and lay them on the
-lettuce.
-
-Put the yolks of the eggs on a large plate, and with a wooden spoon
-mash them smooth, mixing with them a table-spoonful of water, and two
-table-spoonfuls of sweet oil. Then add, by degrees, a salt-spoonful
-of salt, a tea-spoonful of mustard, and a tea-spoonful of powdered
-loaf-sugar. When these are all smoothly united, add very gradually
-three table-spoonfuls of vinegar. The lettuce having been cut up fine
-on another plate, put it to the dressing, and mix it well.
-
-If you have the dressing for salad made before dinner, put it into the
-bottom of the salad dish; then (having cut it up) lay the salad upon
-it, and let it rest till it is to be eaten, as stirring it will injure
-it.
-
-You may decorate the top of the salad with slices of red beet, and with
-the hard white of the eggs cut into rings.
-
-
-CELERY.--Scrape and wash it well, and let it lie in cold water till
-shortly before it goes to table; then dry it in a cloth, trim it, and
-split down the stalks almost to the bottom, leaving on a few green
-leaves. Send it to table in a celery glass, and eat it with salt only;
-or chop it fine, and make a salad dressing for it.
-
-
-RADISHES.--To prepare radishes for eating, wash them and lay them in
-clean cold water as soon as they are brought in. Shortly before they go
-to table, scrape off the thin outside skin, trim the sharp end, cut off
-the leaves at the top, leaving the stalks about an inch long, and put
-them on a small dish. Eat them with salt.
-
-Radishes should not be eaten the day after they are pulled, as they are
-extremely unwholesome if not quite fresh.
-
-The thick white radishes, after being scraped and trimmed, should be
-split or cleft in four, half way down from the top.
-
-
-TO ROAST CHESTNUTS.
-
-The large Spanish chestnuts are the best for roasting. Cut a slit
-in the shell of every one to prevent their bursting when hot. Put
-them into a pan, and set them over a charcoal furnace till they are
-thoroughly roasted; stirring them up frequently and taking care not to
-let them burn. When they are done, peel off the shells, and send the
-chestnuts to table wrapped up in a napkin to keep them warm.
-
-Chestnuts should always be roasted or boiled before they are eaten.
-
-
-GROUND-NUTS.--These nuts are never eaten raw. Put them, with their
-shells on, into an iron pan, and set them in an oven; or you may do
-them in a skillet on hot coals. A large quantity may be roasted in an
-iron pot over the fire. Stir them frequently, taking one out from time
-to time, and breaking it to try if they are done.
-
-
-CORN AND BEANS WITH PORK.
-
-Take a good piece of pork, either salt or fresh. Boil it by itself till
-quite tender. Boil also the corn and beans separately. Either dried
-or green beans will do. If string-beans, they must be cut in three.
-When the corn is well boiled, cut it from the cob, and mix it with
-the boiled beans. Put it into a pot with the boiled pork, and barely
-sufficient water to cover it. Season with pepper, and stew the whole
-together till nearly dry.
-
-
-TO KEEP OCHRAS AND TOMATOS.--Take ochras when they first come in
-season; slice them thin; with a large needle run a strong thread
-through the slices, and hang them up in your store-room in festoons. In
-winter, use them for soup; boiling them till quite dissolved.
-
-Having filled a jar two-thirds with whole tomatos, fill it quite up
-with good lard; covering it closely. When wanted for use, take them out
-from under the lard, and wash them in hot water.
-
-
-
-
-EGGS, &c.
-
-
-TO KEEP EGGS.
-
-There is no infallible mode of ascertaining the freshness of an egg
-before you break it, but unless an egg is perfectly good, it is unfit
-for any purpose whatever, and will spoil whatever it is mixed with. You
-may judge with tolerable accuracy of the state of an egg by holding it
-against the sun or the candle, and if the yolk, as you see it through
-the shell, appears round, and the white thin and clear, it is most
-probably a good one; but if the yolk looks broken, and the white thick
-and cloudy, the egg is certainly bad. You may try the freshness of eggs
-by putting them into a pan of cold water. Those that sink the soonest
-are the freshest; those that are stale or addled will float on the
-surface.
-
-There are various ways of preserving eggs. To keep them merely for
-plain boiling, you may parboil them for one minute, and then bury them
-in powdered charcoal with their small ends downward. They will keep a
-few days in a jar of salt; but do not afterwards use the salt in which
-they have been immersed.
-
-They are frequently preserved for two or three months by greasing them
-all over, when quite fresh, with melted mutton suet, and then wedging
-them close together (the small end downwards) in a box of bran, layer
-above layer; the box must be closely covered. Charcoal is better than
-bran.
-
-Another way (and a very good one) is to put some lime in a large
-vessel, and slack it with boiling water, till it is of the consistence
-of thin cream; you may allow a gallon of water to a pound of lime.
-When it is cold, pour it off into a large stone jar, put in the eggs,
-and cover the jar closely. See that the eggs are always well covered
-with the lime-water, and lest they should break, avoid moving the jar.
-If you have hens of your own, keep a jar of lime-water always ready,
-and put in the eggs as they are brought in from the nests. Jars that
-hold about six quarts are the most convenient.
-
-It will be well to renew the lime-water occasionally.
-
-
-TO BOIL EGGS FOR BREAKFAST.
-
-The fresher they are the longer time they will require for boiling. If
-you wish them quite soft, put them into a saucepan of water that is
-boiling hard at the moment, and let them remain in it five minutes. The
-longer they boil the harder they will be. In ten minutes' fast boiling
-they will be hard enough for salad.
-
-If you use one of the tin egg-boilers that are placed on the table, see
-that the water is boiling hard at the time you put in the eggs. When
-they have been in about four or five minutes, take them out, pour off
-the water, and replace it by some more that is boiling hard; as, from
-the coldness of the eggs having chilled the first water, they will
-not otherwise be done enough. The boiler may then be placed on the
-table, (keeping the lid closed,) and in a few minutes more they will be
-sufficiently cooked to be wholesome.
-
-
-TO POACH EGGS.
-
-Pour some boiling water out of a tea-kettle through a clean cloth
-spread over the top of a broad stew-pan; for by observing this process
-the eggs will be nicer and more easily done than when its impurities
-remain in the water. Set the pan with the strained water on hot coals,
-and when it boils, break each egg separately into a saucer. Remove the
-pan from the fire, and slip the eggs one by one into the surface of the
-water. Let the pan stand till the white of the eggs is set; then place
-it again on the coals, and as soon as the water boils again, the eggs
-will be sufficiently done. Take them out carefully with an egg-slice,
-and trim off all the ragged edges from the white, which should thinly
-cover the yolk. Have ready some thin slices of buttered toast with the
-crust cut off. Lay them in the bottom of the dish, with a poached egg
-on each slice of toast, and send them to the breakfast table.
-
-
-FRICASSEED EGGS.
-
-Take a dozen eggs, and boil them six or seven minutes, or till they
-are just hard enough to peel and slice without breaking. Then put them
-into a pan of cold water while you prepare some grated bread-crumbs,
-(seasoned with pepper, salt and nutmeg,) and beat the yolks of two
-or three raw eggs very light. Take the boiled eggs out of the water,
-and having peeled off the shells, slice the eggs, dust a little flour
-over them, and dip them first into the beaten egg, and then into the
-bread-crumbs so as to cover them well on both sides. Have ready in a
-frying-pan some boiling lard; put the sliced eggs into it, and fry them
-on both sides. Serve them up at the breakfast table, garnished with
-small sprigs of parsley that has been fried in the same lard after the
-eggs were taken out.
-
-
-PLAIN OMELET.
-
-Take six eggs, leaving out the whites of two. Beat them very light, and
-strain them through a sieve. Add pepper and salt to your taste. Divide
-two ounces of fresh butter into little bits, and put it into the egg.
-Have ready a quarter of a pound of butter in a frying-pan, or a flat
-stew-pan. Place it on hot coals, and have the butter boiling when you
-put in the beaten egg. Fry it gently till of a light brown on the under
-side. Do not turn it while cooking as it will do better without. You
-may brown the top by holding a hot shovel over it. When done, lay it in
-the dish, double it in half, and stick sprigs of curled parsley over it.
-
-You may flavour the omelet by mixing with the beaten egg some parsley
-or sweet herbs minced fine, some chopped celery, or chopped onion,
-allowing two moderate sized onions to an omelet of six eggs. Or what
-is still better, it may be seasoned with veal kidney or sweet-bread
-minced; with cold ham shred as fine as possible; or with minced
-oysters, (the hard part omitted,) with tops of asparagus (that has been
-previously boiled) cut into small pieces.
-
-You should have one of the pans that are made purposely for omelets.
-
-
-AN OMELETTE SOUFFLE.
-
-Break eight eggs, separate the whites from the yolks, and strain them.
-Put the whites into one pan, and the yolks into another, and beat them
-separately with rods till the yolks are very thick and smooth, and the
-whites a stiff froth that will stand alone. Then add gradually to the
-yolks, three quarters of a pound of the finest powdered loaf-sugar,
-and orange-flower water or lemon-juice to your taste. Next stir the
-whites lightly into the yolks. Butter a deep pan or dish (that has
-been previously heated) and pour the mixture rapidly into it. Set it
-in a Dutch oven with coals under it, and on the top, and bake it five
-minutes. If properly beaten and mixed, and carefully baked, it will
-rise very high. Send it immediately to table, or it will fall and
-flatten.
-
-Do not begin to make an omelette souffle till the company at table have
-commenced their dinner, that it may be ready to serve up just in time,
-immediately on the removal of the meats. The whole must be accomplished
-as quickly as possible. Send it round with a spoon.
-
-If you live in a large town, the safest way of avoiding a failure in an
-omelette souffle is to hire a French cook to come to your kitchen with
-his own utensils and ingredients, and make and bake it himself, while
-the first part of the dinner is progressing in the dining-room.
-
-An omelette souffle is a very nice and delicate thing when properly
-managed; but if flat and heavy, it should not be brought to table. If
-well made, you may turn it out on a dish.
-
-
-TO DRESS MACCARONI.
-
-Have ready a pot of boiling water. Throw a little salt into it, and
-then by slow degrees put in a pound of the maccaroni, a little at a
-time. Keep stirring it gently, and continue to do so very often while
-boiling. Take care to keep it well covered with water. Have ready a
-kettle of boiling water to replenish the maccaroni pot if it should be
-in danger of getting too dry. In about twenty minutes it will be done.
-It must be quite soft, but it must not boil long enough to break.
-
-When the maccaroni has boiled sufficiently, pour in immediately a
-little cold water, and let it stand a few minutes, keeping it covered.
-
-Grate half a pound of Parmesan cheese into a deep dish and scatter over
-it a few small bits of butter. Then with a skimmer that is perforated
-with holes, commence taking up the maccaroni, (draining it well,) and
-spread a layer of it over the cheese and butter. Spread over it another
-layer of grated cheese and butter, and then a layer of maccaroni, and
-so on till your dish is full; having a layer of maccaroni on the top,
-over which spread some butter without cheese. Cover the dish, and set
-it in an oven for half an hour. It will then be ready to send to table.
-
-You may grate some nutmeg over each layer of maccaroni.
-
-Allow half a pound of butter to a pound of maccaroni and half a pound
-of cheese.
-
-
-ANOTHER WAY.
-
-First put on the maccaroni in a very little water. Let it come to a
-hard boil, and then drain off the water. Put it on again with milk
-instead of water, and a large lump of butter. Boil it till quite tender
-all through. Then, while hot, mix in a little cream, and add some sugar
-and nutmeg, or powdered cinnamon.
-
-
-
-
-PICKLING.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-Never on any consideration use brass, copper, or bell-metal kettles for
-pickling; the verdigris produced in them by the vinegar being of a most
-poisonous nature. Kettles lined with porcelain are the best, but if
-you cannot procure them, block tin may be substituted. Iron is apt to
-discolour any acid that is boiled in it.
-
-Vinegar for pickles should always be of the best cider kind. In putting
-away pickles, use stone or glass jars. The lead which is an ingredient
-in the glazing of common earthenware, is rendered very pernicious by
-the action of the vinegar. Have a large wooden spoon and a fork, for
-the express purpose of taking pickles out of the jar when you want them
-for the table. See that, while in the jar, they are always completely
-covered with vinegar. If you discern in them any symptoms of not
-keeping well, do them over again in fresh vinegar and spice.
-
-Vinegar for pickles should only boil five or six minutes.
-
-The jars should be stopped with large flat corks, fitting closely, and
-having a leather or a round piece of oil-cloth tied over the cork.
-
-It is a good rule to have two-thirds of the jar filled with pickles,
-and one-third with vinegar.
-
-Alum is very useful in extracting the salt taste from pickles, and in
-making them firm and crisp. A very small quantity is sufficient. Too
-much will spoil them.
-
-In greening pickles keep them very closely covered, so that none of
-the steam may escape; as its retention promotes their greenness and
-prevents the flavour from evaporating.
-
-Vinegar and spice for pickles should be boiled but a few minutes. Too
-much boiling takes away the strength.
-
-
-TO PICKLE CUCUMBERS.
-
-Cucumbers for pickling should be very small, and as free from spots
-as possible. Make a brine of salt and water strong enough to bear an
-egg. Pour it over your cucumbers, cover them with fresh cabbage leaves,
-and let them stand for a week, or till they are quite yellow, stirring
-them at least twice a day. When they are perfectly yellow, pour off the
-water. Take a porcelain kettle, and cover the bottom and sides with
-fresh vine leaves. Put in the cucumbers (with a small piece of alum)
-and cover them closely with vine leaves all over the top, and then with
-a dish or cloth to keep in the steam. Fill up the kettle with clear
-water, and hang it over the fire when dinner is done, but not where
-there is a blaze. The fire under the kettle must be kept very moderate.
-The water must not boil, or be too hot to bear your hand in. Keep them
-over the fire in a slow heat till next morning. If they are not then of
-a fine green, repeat the process. When they are well greened, take them
-out of the kettle, drain them on a sieve, and put them into a clean
-stone jar. Boil for five or six minutes sufficient of the best vinegar
-to cover the cucumbers well; putting into the kettle a thin muslin bag
-filled with cloves, mace, and mustard seed. Pour the vinegar scalding
-hot into the jar of pickles, which should be secured with a large flat
-cork, and an oil-cloth or leather cover tied over it.
-
-Another way to green pickles is to cover them with vine leaves or
-cabbage leaves, and to keep them on a warm hearth, pouring boiling
-water on them five or six times a day; renewing the water as soon as it
-becomes cold.
-
-In proportioning the spice to the vinegar, allow to every two quarts,
-an ounce of mace, two dozen cloves, and two ounces of mustard seed.
-You may leave the muslin bag, with the spice, for about a week in the
-pickle jar to heighten the flavour, if you think it necessary.
-
-
-GREEN PEPPERS--May be done in the same manner as cucumbers, only
-extracting the seeds before you put the pickles into the salt and
-water. Do not put peppers into the same jar with cucumbers, as the
-former will destroy the latter.
-
-
-GHERKINS.--The gherkin is a small thick oval-shaped species of cucumber
-with a hairy or prickly surface, and is cultivated solely for pickling.
-It is customary to let the stems remain on them. Wipe them dry, put
-them into a broad stone jar, and scald them five or six times in the
-course of the day with salt and water strong enough to bear an egg, and
-let them set all night. This will make them yellow. Next day, having
-drained them from the salt and water, throw it out, wipe them dry, put
-them into a clean vessel (with a little piece of alum,) and scald them
-with boiling vinegar and water, (half and half of each,) repeating it
-frequently during the day till they are green. Keep them as closely
-covered as possible. Then put them away in stone jars, mixing among
-them whole mace and sliced ginger to your taste. Fill up with cold
-vinegar, and add a little alum, allowing to every hundred gherkins a
-piece about the size of a shelled almond.
-
-The alum will make them firm and crisp.
-
-
-RADISH PODS.--Gather sprigs or bunches of radish pods while they are
-young and tender, but let the pods remain on the sprigs; it not being
-the custom to pick them off. Put them into strong salt and water, and
-let them stand two days. Then drain and wipe them and put them into a
-clean stone jar. Boil an equal quantity of vinegar and water. Pour it
-over the radish pods while hot, and cover them closely to keep in the
-steam. Repeat this frequently through the day till they are very green.
-Then pour off the vinegar and water, and boil for five minutes some
-very good vinegar, with a little bit of alum, and pour it over them.
-Put them into a stone jar, (and having added some whole mace, whole
-pepper, a little tumeric and a little sweet oil,) cork it closely, and
-tie over it a leather or oil-cloth.
-
-
-GREEN BEANS.--Take young green or French beans; string them, but do not
-cut them in pieces. Put them in salt and water for two days, stirring
-them frequently. Then put them into a kettle with vine or cabbage
-leaves under, over, and all round them, (adding a little piece of
-alum.) Cover them closely to keep in the steam, and let them hang over
-a slow fire till they are a fine green.
-
-Having drained them in a sieve, make for them a pickle of cider
-vinegar, and boil in it for five minutes, some mace, whole pepper, and
-sliced ginger tied up in a thin muslin bag. Pour it hot upon the beans,
-put them into a stone jar, and tie them up.
-
-
-PARSLEY.--Make a brine of salt and water strong enough to bear an egg,
-and throw into it a large quantity of curled parsley tied up in little
-bunches with a thread. After it has stood three days (stirring it
-frequently) take it out drain it well, and lay it for three days in
-cold spring or pump-water, changing the water daily. Then scald it in
-hard water, and hang it, well covered, over a slow fire till it becomes
-green. Afterwards take it out, and drain and press it till quite dry.
-
-Boil for five minutes a quart of cider vinegar with a small bit of
-alum, a few blades of mace, a sliced nutmeg, and a few slips of
-horseradish. Pour it on the parsley, and put it away in a stone jar.
-
-
-MANGOES.
-
-Take very young oval shaped musk-melons. Cut a round piece out of the
-top or side of each, (saving the piece to put on again,) and extract
-the seeds. Then (having tied on the pieces with packthread) put them
-into strong salt and water for two days. Afterwards drain and wipe
-them, put them into a kettle with vine leaves or cabbage leaves under
-and over them, and a little piece of alum, and hang them on a slow fire
-to green; keeping them closely covered to retain the steam, which will
-greatly accelerate the greening. When they are quite green, have ready
-the stuffing, which must be a mixture of scraped horseradish, white
-mustard seed, mace and nutmeg pounded, race ginger cut small, pepper,
-tumeric and sweet oil. Fill your mangoes with this mixture, putting
-a small clove of garlic into each, and replacing the pieces at the
-openings; tie them with a packthread crossing backwards and forwards
-round the mango. Put them into stone jars, pour boiling vinegar over
-them, and cover them well. Before you put them on the table remove the
-packthread.
-
-
-NASTURTIANS.--Have ready a stone or glass jar of the best cold vinegar.
-Take the green seeds of the nasturtian after the flower has gone off.
-They should be full-grown but not old. Pick off the stems, and put the
-seeds into the vinegar. No other preparation is necessary, and they
-will keep a year with nothing more than sufficient cold vinegar to
-cover them. With boiled mutton they are an excellent substitute for
-capers.
-
-
-MORELLA CHERRIES.--See that all your cherries are perfect. Remove the
-stems, and put the cherries into a jar or glass with sufficient vinegar
-to cover them well. They will keep perfectly in a cool dry place.
-
-They are very good, always retaining the taste of the cherry. If you
-cannot procure morellas, the large red pie-cherries may be substituted.
-
-
-PEACHES.--Take fine large peaches (either cling or free stones) that
-are not too ripe. Wipe off the down with a clean flannel, and put the
-peaches whole into a stone jar. Cover them with cold vinegar of the
-best kind, in which you have dissolved a little of salt, allowing a
-tea-spoonful to a quart of vinegar. Put a cork in the jar and tie
-leather or oil-cloth over it.
-
-Plums and grapes may be pickled thus in cold vinegar, but without salt.
-
-
-BARBERRIES.--Have ready a jar of cold vinegar, and put into it ripe
-barberries in bunches. They make a pretty garnish for the edges of
-dishes.
-
-
-TO PICKLE GREEN PEPPERS.
-
-The bell pepper is the best for pickling, and should be gathered when
-quite young. Slit one side, and carefully take out the core, so as not
-to injure the shell of the pepper. Then put them into boiling salt and
-water, changing the water every day for one week, and keeping them
-closely covered in a warm place near the fire. Stir them several times
-a day. They will first become yellow, and then green. When they are a
-fine green put them into a jar, and pour cold vinegar over them, adding
-a small piece of alum.
-
-They require no spice.
-
-You may stuff the peppers as you do mangoes.
-
-
-TO PICKLE BUTTERNUTS.
-
-These nuts are in the best state for pickling when the shell is soft,
-and when they are so young that the outer skin can be penetrated by the
-head of a pin. They should be gathered when the sun is hot upon them.
-
-If you have a large quantity, the easiest way to prepare them for
-pickling is to put them into a tub with sufficient lye to cover them,
-and to stir and rub them about with a hickory broom till they are clean
-and smooth on the outside. This is much less trouble than scraping
-them, and is not so likely to injure the nuts. Another method is to
-scald them, and then to rub off the outer skin. Put the nuts into
-strong salt and water for one week; changing the water every other
-day, and keeping them closely covered from the air. Then drain and
-wipe them, (piercing each nut through in several places with a large
-needle,) and prepare the pickle as follows:--For a hundred large nuts,
-take of black pepper and ginger root of each an ounce; and of cloves,
-mace and nutmeg of each a half ounce. Pound all the spices to powder,
-and mix them well together, adding two large spoonfuls of mustard seed.
-Put the nuts into jars, (having first stuck each of them through in
-several places with a large needle,) strewing the powdered seasoning
-between every layer of nuts. Boil for five minutes a gallon of the very
-best cider vinegar, and pour it boiling hot upon the nuts. Secure the
-jars closely with corks and leathers. You may begin to eat the nuts in
-a fortnight.
-
-Walnuts may be pickled in the same manner.
-
-
-TO PICKLE WALNUTS BLACK.
-
-The walnuts should be gathered while young and soft, (so that you can
-easily run a pin through them,) and when the sun is upon them. Rub them
-with a coarse flannel or tow cloth to get off the fur of the outside.
-Mix salt and water strong enough to bear an egg, and let them lie in
-it a week, (changing it every two days,) and stirring them frequently.
-Then take them out, drain them, spread them on large dishes, and expose
-them to the air about ten minutes, which will cause them to blacken
-the sooner. Scald them in boiling water, (but do not let them lie in
-it,) and then rub them with a coarse woollen cloth, and pierce every
-one through in several places with a large needle, (that the pickle
-may penetrate them thoroughly.) Put them into stone jars, and prepare
-the spice and vinegar. To a hundred walnuts allow a gallon of vinegar,
-an ounce of cloves, an ounce of allspice, an ounce of black pepper,
-half an ounce of mace, and half an ounce of nutmeg. Boil the spice in
-the vinegar for fifteen minutes, then strain the vinegar, and pour it
-boiling hot over the walnuts. Tie up in a thin muslin rag, a tea-cupful
-of mustard seed, and a large table-spoonful of scraped horse-radish,
-and put it into the jars with the walnuts. Cover them closely with
-corks and leathers.
-
-Another way of pickling walnuts black, is (after preparing them as
-above) to put them into jars with the spices pounded and strewed among
-them, and then to pour over them strong cold vinegar.
-
-
-WALNUTS PICKLED WHITE.--Take large young walnuts while their shells are
-quite soft so that you can stick the head of a pin into them. Pare them
-very thin till the white appears; and as you do them, throw them into
-spring or pump water in which some salt has been dissolved. Let them
-stand in that water six hours, with a thin board upon them to keep them
-down under the water. Fill a porcelain kettle with fresh spring water,
-and set it over a clear fire, or on a charcoal furnace. Put the walnuts
-into the kettle, cover it, and let them simmer (but not boil) for about
-ten minutes. Then have ready a vessel with cold spring water and salt,
-and put your nuts into it, taking them out of the kettle with a wooden
-ladle. Let them stand in the cold salt and water for a quarter of an
-hour, with the board keeping them down as before; for if they rise
-above the liquor, or are exposed to the air, they will be discoloured.
-Then take them out, and lay them on a cloth covered with another, till
-they are quite dry. Afterwards rub them carefully with a soft flannel,
-and put them into a stone jar; laying among them blades of mace, and
-sliced nutmeg, but no dark-coloured spice. Pour over them the very best
-vinegar, and put on the top a table-spoonful of sweet oil.
-
-
-WALNUTS PICKLED GREEN.--Gather them while the shells are very soft,
-and rub them all with a flannel. Then wrap them singly in vine leaves,
-lay a few vine leaves on the bottom of a large stone jar, put in the
-walnuts, (seeing that each of them is well wrapped up so as not to
-touch one another,) and cover them with a thick layer of leaves. Fill
-up the jar with strong vinegar, cover it closely, and let it stand
-three weeks. Then pour off the vinegar, take out the walnuts, renew
-all the vine leaves, fill up with fresh vinegar, and let them stand
-three weeks longer. Then again pour off the vinegar, and renew the vine
-leaves. This time take the best cider vinegar; put salt in it till
-it will bear an egg and add to it mace, sliced nutmeg, and scraped
-horse-radish, in the proportion of an ounce of each and a gallon of
-vinegar to a hundred walnuts. Boil the spice and vinegar about ten
-minutes, and then pour it, hot on the walnuts. Cover the jar closely
-with a cork and leather, and set it away, leaving the vine leaves with
-the walnuts. When you take any out for use, disturb the others as
-little as possible, and do not put back again any that may be left.
-
-You may pickle butternuts green in the same manner.
-
-
-TO PICKLE ONIONS.
-
-Take very small onions, and with a sharp knife cut off the stems as
-close as possible, and peel off the outer skin. Then put them into
-salt and water, and let them stand in the brine for six days; stirring
-them daily, and changing the salt and water every two days. See that
-they are closely covered. Then put the onions into jars, and give them
-a scald in boiling salt and water. Let them stand till they are cold:
-then drain them on a sieve, wipe them, stick a clove in the top of
-each, and put them into wide-mouthed bottles; dispersing among them
-some blades of mace and slices of ginger or nutmeg. Fill up the bottles
-with the best cider vinegar, and put at the top a large spoonful of
-salad oil. Cork the bottles well.
-
-
-ONIONS PICKLED WHITE.--Peel some very small white onions, and lay them
-for three days in salt and water, changing the water every day. Then
-wipe them, and put them into a porcelain kettle with equal quantities
-of milk and water, sufficient to cover them well. Simmer them over a
-slow fire, but when just ready to boil take them off, and drain and
-dry them, and put them into wide-mouthed glass bottles; interspersing
-them with blades of mace. Boil a sufficient quantity of the best cider
-vinegar to cover them and fill up the bottles, adding to it a little
-salt; and when it is cold, pour it into the bottles of onions. At the
-top of each bottle put a spoonful of sweet oil. Set them away closely
-corked.
-
-
-TO PICKLE MUSHROOMS WHITE.
-
-Take small fresh-gathered button mushrooms, peel them carefully with
-a penknife, and cut off the stems; throwing the mushrooms into salt
-and water as you do them. Then put them into a porcelain skillet of
-fresh water, cover it closely, and set it over a quick fire. Boil it
-as fast as possible for seven or eight minutes, not more. Take out
-the mushrooms, drain them, and spread them on a clean board, with the
-bottom or hollow side of each mushroom turned downwards. Do this as
-quickly as possible, and immediately, while they are hot, sprinkle them
-over with salt. When they are cold, put them into a glass jar with
-slight layers of mace and sliced ginger. Fill up the jar with cold
-cider vinegar. Put a spoonful of sweet oil on the top of each jar, and
-cork it closely.
-
-
-MUSHROOMS PICKLED BROWN.--Take a quart of large mushrooms and (having
-trimmed off the stalks) rub them with a flannel cloth dipped in salt.
-Then lay them in a pan of allegar or ale vinegar, for a quarter of an
-hour, and wash them about in it. Then put them into a sauce-pan with a
-quart of allegar, a quarter of an ounce of cloves, the same of allspice
-and whole pepper, and a tea-spoonful of salt. Set the pan over coals,
-and let the mushrooms stew slowly for ten minutes, keeping the pan well
-covered. Then take them off, let them get cold by degrees, and put them
-into small bottles with the allegar strained from the spice and poured
-upon them.
-
-It will be prudent to boil an onion with the mushrooms, and if it turns
-black or blueish, you may infer that there is a poisonous one among
-them; and they should therefore be thrown away. Stir them for the same
-reason, with a silver spoon.
-
-
-TO PICKLE TOMATAS.
-
-Take a peck of tomatas, (the small round ones are best for pickling,)
-and prick every one with a fork. Put them into a broad stone or earthen
-vessel, and sprinkle salt between every layer of tomatas. Cover them,
-and let them remain two days in the salt. Then put them into vinegar
-and water mixed in equal quantities, half and half, and keep them in it
-twenty-four hours to draw out the saltness. There must be sufficient of
-the liquid to cover the tomatas well.
-
-To a peck of tomatas allow a bottle of mustard, half an ounce of
-cloves, and half an ounce of pepper, with a dozen onions sliced
-thin. Pack the tomatas in a stone jar, placing the spices and onions
-alternately with the layers of tomatas. Put them in till the jar is
-two-thirds full. Then fill it up with strong cold vinegar, and stop it
-closely. The pickles will be fit to eat in a fortnight. If you do not
-like onions, substitute for them a larger quantity of spice.
-
-
-TOMATA SOY.--For this purpose you must have the best and ripest
-tomatas, and they must be gathered on a dry day. Do not peel them, but
-merely cut them into slices. Having strewed some salt over the bottom
-of a tub, put in the tomatas in layers; sprinkling between each layer
-(which should be about two inches in thickness) a handful of salt.
-Repeat this till you have put in eight quarts or one peck of tomatas.
-Cover the tub and let it set for three days. Then early in the morning,
-put the tomatas into a large porcelain kettle, and boil it slowly
-and steadily till ten at night, frequently mashing and stirring the
-tomatas. Then put it out to cool. Next morning strain and press it
-through a sieve, and when no more liquid will pass through, put it into
-a clean kettle with two ounces of cloves, one ounce of mace, two ounces
-of black pepper, and two table-spoonfuls of cayenne, all powdered.
-
-Again let it boil slowly and steadily all day, and put it to cool in
-the evening in a large pan. Cover it, and let it set all night. Next
-day put it into small bottles, securing the corks by dipping them in
-melted rosin, and tying leathers over them.
-
-If made exactly according to these directions, and slowly and
-thoroughly boiled, it will keep for years in a cool dry place, and may
-be used for many purposes when fresh tomatas are not to be had.
-
-
-TO PICKLE CAULIFLOWERS.
-
-Take the whitest and closest full-grown cauliflowers; cut off the thick
-stalk, and split the blossom or flower part into eight or ten pieces.
-Spread them on a large dish, sprinkle them with salt, and let them
-stand twenty-four hours. Then wash off the salt, drain them, put them
-into a broad flat jar or pan, scald them with salt and water, (allowing
-a quarter of a pound of salt to a quart of water,) cover them closely
-and let them stand in the brine till next day. Afterwards drain them
-in a hair sieve, and spread them on a cloth in a warm place to dry
-for a day and a night. Then put them carefully, piece by piece, into
-clean broad jars and pour over them a pickle which has been prepared
-as follows:--Mix together three ounces of coriander seed, three ounces
-of turmeric, one ounce of mustard seed, and one ounce of ginger. Pound
-the whole in a mortar to a fine powder. Put it into three quarts of
-the very best cider vinegar, set it by the side of the fire in a
-stone jar, and let it infuse three days. These are the proportions,
-but the quantity of the whole pickle must depend on the quantity of
-cauliflower, which must be kept well covered by the liquid. Pour it
-over the cauliflower, and secure the jars closely from the air.
-
-You may pickle brocoli in the same manner. Also the green tops of
-asparagus.
-
-
-TO PICKLE RED CABBAGE.
-
-Take a fine firm cabbage of a deep red or purple colour. Strip off the
-outer leaves, and cut out the stalk. Quarter the cabbage lengthways,
-and then slice it crossways. Lay it in a deep dish, sprinkle a handful
-of salt over it, cover it with another dish, and let it lie twenty-four
-hours. Then drain it in a cullender from the salt, and wipe it dry.
-Make a pickle of sufficient cider vinegar to cover the cabbage well,
-adding to it equal quantities of cloves and allspice, with some mace.
-The spices must be put in whole, with a little cochineal to give it a
-good red colour. Boil the vinegar and spices hard for five minutes,
-and having put the cabbage into a stone jar, pour the vinegar over it
-boiling hot. Cover the jar with a cloth till it gets cold; and then put
-in a large cork, and tie a leather over it.
-
-
-EXCELLENT COLD SLAW.
-
-Take a nice fresh white cabbage, wash, and drain it, and cut off the
-stalk. Shave down the head evenly and nicely into very small shreds,
-with a cabbage-cutter, or a sharp knife. Put it into a deep china dish,
-and prepare for it the following dressing. Take a large half-pint of
-the best cider vinegar, and mix with it a quarter of a pound of fresh
-butter, divided into four bits, and rolled in flour; a small salt-spoon
-of salt, and the same quantity of cayenne. Stir all this well together,
-and boil it in a small saucepan. Have ready the yolks of four eggs well
-beaten. As soon as the mixture has come to a hard boil, take it off the
-fire, and stir in the beaten egg. Then pour it boiling hot over the
-shred cabbage, and mix it well, all through, with a spoon. Set it to
-cool on ice or snow, or in the open air. It must be quite cold before
-it goes to table.
-
-
-WARM SLAW.--Take a red cabbage; wash, drain, and shred it finely.
-Put it into a deep dish. Cover it closely, and set it on the top of
-a stove, or in a bake oven, till it is warm all through. Then make a
-dressing as in the receipt for cold slaw. Pour it hot over the cabbage.
-Cover the dish, and send it to table as warm as possible.
-
-
-EAST INDIA PICKLE.
-
-This is a mixture of various things pickled together, and put into the
-same jar.
-
-Have ready a small white cabbage, sliced, and the stalk removed; a
-cauliflower cut into neat branches, leaving out the large stalk; sliced
-cucumbers; sliced carrots; sliced beets, (all nicked round the edges;)
-button-onions; string-beans; radish pods; barberries; cherries; green
-grapes; nasturtians; capsicums; bell-peppers, &c. Sprinkle all these
-things with salt, put them promiscuously into a large earthen pan, and
-pour scalding salt and water over them. Let them lie in the brine for
-four days, turning them all over every day. Then take them out, wash
-each thing separately in vinegar, and wipe them carefully in a cloth.
-Afterwards lay them on sieves before the fire, and dry them thoroughly.
-
-For the pickle liquor.--To every two quarts of the best vinegar, put
-an ounce and a half of white ginger root, scraped and sliced; the same
-of long pepper; two ounces of peeled shalots, or little button-onions,
-cut in pieces; half an ounce of peeled garlic; an ounce of turmeric;
-and two ounces of mustard seed bruised, or of mustard powder. Let
-all these ingredients, mixed with the vinegar, infuse in a close jar
-for a week, setting in a warm place, or by the fire. Then (after the
-vegetables have been properly prepared, and dried from the brine) put
-them all into one large stone jar, or into smaller jars, and strain
-the pickle over them. The liquid must be in a large quantity, so as
-to keep the vegetables well covered with it, or they will spoil. Put
-a table-spoonful of sweet oil on the top of each jar, and secure them
-well with a large cork and a leather.
-
-If you find that after awhile the vegetables have absorbed the liquor,
-so that there is danger of their not having a sufficiency, prepare some
-more seasoned vinegar and pour it over them.
-
-East India pickle is very convenient, and will keep two years. As
-different vegetables come into season, you can prepare them with the
-salt and water process, and add them to the things already in the jar.
-You may put small mangoes into this pickle; also plums, peaches and
-apricots.
-
-
-TO PICKLE OYSTERS FOR KEEPING.
-
-For this purpose take none but the finest and largest oysters. After
-they are opened, separate them from their liquor, and put them into a
-bucket or a large pan, and pour boiling water upon them to take out the
-slime. Stir them about in it, and then take them out, and rinse them
-well in cold water. Then put them into a large kettle with fresh water,
-barely enough to cover them, (mixing with it a table-spoonful of salt
-to every hundred oysters,) and give them a boil up, just sufficient to
-plump them. Take them out, spread them on large dishes or on a clean
-table, and cover them with a cloth. Take the liquor of the oysters, and
-with every pint of it mix a quart of the best vinegar, a table-spoonful
-of salt, a table-spoonful of whole cloves, the same of whole black
-pepper, and a tea-spoonful of whole mace. Put the liquid over the fire
-in a kettle, and when it boils throw in the oysters, and let them
-remain in it five minutes. Then take the whole off the fire, stir it
-up well, and let it stand to get quite cold. Afterwards (if you have a
-large quantity) put it into a keg, which must first be well scalded,
-(a new keg is best,) and fill it as full as it can hold. Do not put a
-weight on the oysters to keep them down in the liquor, as it will crush
-them to pieces if the keg should be moved or conveyed to a distance. If
-you have not enough to fill a keg, put them into stone jars when they
-are perfectly cold, and cover them securely.
-
-For pickling oysters and all other purposes use only the best cider
-vinegar. The sharp pungent vinegar made entirely of chemical substances
-will destroy the oysters, and is too unwholesome for any culinary
-purpose. No one should purchase it. It may be known by its excessive
-sharpness; being violently pungent without any pleasant flavour.
-
-
-
-
-SWEETMEATS.
-
-
-GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-The introduction of iron ware lined with porcelain has fortunately
-almost superseded the use of brass or bell-metal kettles for
-boiling sweetmeats; a practice by which the articles prepared in
-those pernicious utensils were always more or less imbued with the
-deleterious qualities of the verdigris that is produced in them by the
-action of acids.
-
-Charcoal furnaces will be found very convenient for preserving; the
-kettles being set on the top. They can be used in the open air.
-Sweetmeats should be boiled rather quickly, that the watery particles
-may exhale at once, without being subjected to so long a process as
-to spoil the colour and diminish the flavour of the fruit. But on the
-other hand, if boiled too short a time they will not keep so well.
-
-If you wish your sweetmeats to look bright and clear, use only the very
-best loaf-sugar. Fruit may be preserved for family use and for common
-purposes, in sugar of inferior quality, but it will never have a good
-appearance, and it is also more liable to spoil.
-
-If too small a proportion of sugar is allowed to the fruit, it will
-_certainly_ not keep well. When this experiment is tried it is
-generally found to be false economy; as sweetmeats, when they begin
-to spoil, can only be recovered and made eatable by boiling them over
-again with additional sugar; and even then, they are never so good as
-if done properly at first. If jellies have not sufficient sugar, they
-do not congeal, but will remain liquid.
-
-Jelly bags should be made of white flannel. It is well to have a wooden
-stand or frame like a towel horse, to which the bag can be tied while
-it is dripping. The bag should first be dipped in hot water, for if dry
-it will absorb too much of the juice. After the liquor is all in, close
-the top of the bag, that none of the flavour may evaporate.
-
-In putting away sweetmeats, it is best to place them in small jars, as
-the more frequently they are exposed to the air by opening, the more
-danger there is of their spoiling. The best vessels for this purpose
-are white queen's-ware pots, or glass jars. For jellies, jams, and for
-small fruit, common glass tumblers are very convenient, and may be
-covered simply with double tissue-paper, cut exactly to fit the inside
-of the top of the glass, laid lightly on the sweetmeat, and pressed
-down all round with the finger. This covering, if closely and nicely
-fitted, will be found to keep them perfectly well, and as it adheres
-so closely as to form a complete coat over the top, it is better for
-jellies or jams than writing-paper dipped in brandy, which is always
-somewhat shrivelled by the liquor with which it has been saturated.
-
-If you find that your sweetmeats have become dry and candied, you may
-liquefy them again by setting the jars in water and making it boil
-round them.
-
-In preserving fruit whole, it is best to put it first in a thin syrup.
-If boiled in a thick syrup at the beginning, the juice will be drawn
-out so as to shrink the fruit.
-
-It is better to boil it but a short time at once, and then to take it
-out and let it get cold, afterwards returning it to the syrup, than to
-keep it boiling too long at a time, which will cause it to break and
-lose its shape.
-
-Preserving kettles should be rather broad than deep, for the fruit
-cannot be done equally if it is too much heaped. They should all have
-covers belonging to them, to put on after the scum has done rising,
-that the flavour of the fruit may be kept in with the steam.
-
-A perforated skimmer pierced all through with holes is a very necessary
-utensil in making sweetmeats.
-
-The water used for melting the sugar should be very clear; spring or
-pump water is best. But if you are obliged to use river water, let it
-first be filtered. Any turbidness or impurity in the water will injure
-the clearness of the sweetmeats.
-
-If sweetmeats ferment in the jars, boil them over again with additional
-sugar.
-
-
-CLARIFIED SUGAR SYRUP.
-
-Take eight pounds of the best double-refined loaf-sugar and break it
-up or powder it. Then beat the whites of four eggs to a strong froth.
-Stir the white of egg gradually into two quarts of very clear spring or
-pump water. Put the sugar into a porcelain kettle, and mix with it the
-water and white of egg. While the sugar is melting, stir it frequently;
-and when it is entirely dissolved, put the kettle over a moderate fire,
-and let it boil, carefully taking off the scum as it comes to the top,
-and pouring in a little cold water when you find the syrup rising so
-as to run over the edge of the kettle. It will be well when it first
-boils hard to pour in half a pint of cold water to keep down the
-bubbles so that the scum may appear, and be easily removed. You must
-not however boil it to candy height, so that the bubbles will look like
-hard pearls, and the syrup will harden in the spoon and hang from it in
-strings; for though very thick and clear it must continue liquid. When
-it is done, let it stand till it gets quite cold; and if you do not
-want it for immediate use, put it into bottles and seal the corks.
-
-When you wish to use this syrup for preserving, you have only to put
-the fruit into it, and boil it till tender and clear, but not till it
-breaks. Large fruit that is done whole, should first be boiled tender
-in a very thin syrup that it may not shrink. Small fruit, such as
-raspberries, strawberries, grapes, currants, gooseberries, &c. may, if
-perfectly ripe, be put raw into strong cold sugar syrup; they will thus
-retain their form and colour, and their freshness and natural taste.
-They must be put into small glass jars, and kept well covered with the
-syrup. This, however, is an experiment which sometimes fails, and had
-best be tried on a small scale, or only for immediate use.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE GINGER.
-
-Take root of green ginger, and pare it neatly with a sharp knife,
-throwing it into a pan of cold water as you pare it. Then boil it till
-tender all through, changing the water three times. Each time put on
-the ginger in quite cold water to take out the excessive heat. When
-it is perfectly tender, throw it again into a pan of cold water, and
-let it lie an hour or more; this will make it crisp. In the mean time
-prepare the syrup.
-
-For every six pounds of ginger root, clarify eight pounds of the best
-double-refined loaf-sugar. Break up the sugar, put it into a preserving
-kettle, and melt it in spring or pump water, (into which you have
-stirred gradually the beaten whites of four eggs,) and half a pint
-of water to each pound of sugar. Boil and skim it well. Then let the
-syrup stand till it is cold; and having drained the ginger, pour the
-syrup over it, cover it, and do not disturb it for two days. Then,
-having poured it from the ginger, boil the syrup over again. As soon
-as it is cold, pour it again on the ginger, and let it stand at least
-three days. Afterwards boil the syrup again, and pour it _hot_ over
-the ginger. Proceed in this manner till you find that the syrup has
-thoroughly penetrated the ginger, (which you may ascertain by its taste
-and appearance when you cut a piece off,) and till the syrup becomes
-very thick and rich. Then put it all into jars, and cover it closely.
-
-If you put the syrup hot to the ginger at first, it will shrink and
-shrivel. After the first time, you have only to boil and reboil
-the syrup; as it is not probable that it will require any further
-clarifying if carefully skimmed. It will be greatly improved by adding
-some lemon-juice at the close of the last boiling.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE CITRONS.
-
-Pare off the outer skin of some fine citrons, and cut them into
-quarters. Take out the middle. You may divide each quarter into
-several pieces. Lay them for four or five hours in salt and water.
-Take them out, and then soak them in spring or pump water (changing
-it frequently) till all the saltness is extracted, and till the last
-water tastes perfectly fresh. Boil a small lump of alum, and scald them
-in the alum-water. It must be very weak, or it will communicate an
-unpleasant taste to the citrons; a lump the size of a hickory nut will
-suffice for six pounds. Afterwards simmer them two hours with layers of
-green vine leaves. Then make a syrup, with half a pint of water to each
-pound of loaf-sugar; boil and skim it well. When it is quite clear,
-put in the citrons, and boil them slowly, till they are so soft that a
-straw will pierce through them without breaking. Afterwards put them
-into a large dish, and set them in the sun to harden.
-
-Prepare some lemons, by paring off the yellow rind very thin, and
-cutting it into slips of uniform size and shape. Lay the lemon-rind in
-scalding water, to extract the bitterness. Then take the pared lemons,
-cut them into quarters, measure a half pint of water to each lemon,
-and boil them to a mash. Strain the boiled lemon through a sieve,
-and to each pint of liquid allow a pound of the best double-refined
-loaf-sugar, for the second syrup. Melt the sugar in the liquid, and
-stir into it gradually some beaten white of egg; allowing one white to
-four pounds of sugar. Then set it over the fire; put the lemon-peel
-into the syrup, and let it boil in it till quite soft.
-
-Put the citrons cold into a glass jar, and pour the hot syrup over
-them. Let the lemon remain with the citrons, as it will improve their
-flavour.
-
-If you wish the citrons to be candied, boil down the second syrup to
-candy height, (that is, till it hangs in strings from the spoon,) and
-pour it over the citrons. Keep them well covered.
-
-You may, if you choose, after you take the citrons from the alum-water,
-give them a boil in very weak ginger tea, made of the roots of green
-ginger if you can procure it; if not, of race ginger. Powdered ginger
-will not do at all. This ginger tea will completely eradicate any
-remaining taste of the salt or the alum. Afterwards cover the sides and
-bottom of the pan with vine leaves, put a layer of leaves between each
-layer of citron, and cover the top with leaves. Simmer the citrons in
-this two hours to green them.
-
-In the same manner you may preserve water-melon rind, or the rind of
-cantelopes. Cut these rinds into stars, diamonds, crescents, circles,
-or into any fanciful shape you choose. Be sure to pare off the outside
-skin before you put the rinds into the salt and water.
-
-Pumpkin cut into slips, may be preserved according to the above
-receipt.
-
-
-CANTELOPES OR MUSK-MELONS.--Take very small cantelopes before they are
-ripe. Shave a thin paring off the whole outside. Cut out a small piece
-or plug about an inch square, and through it extract all the seeds, &c.
-from the middle. Then return the plugs to the hole from whence you took
-them, and secure them with a needle and thread, or by tying a small
-string round the cantelope.
-
-Lay the cantelopes for four or five hours in salt and water. Then put
-them into spring water to extract the salt, changing the water till you
-find it salt no longer. Scald them in weak alum-water. Make a syrup in
-the proportion of a pint of water to a pound of loaf-sugar, and boil
-the cantelopes in it till a straw will go through them. Then take them
-out, and set them in the sun to harden.
-
-Prepare some fine ripe oranges, paring off the yellow rind very thin,
-and cutting it into slips, and then laying it in scalding water to
-extract the bitterness. Cut the oranges into pieces; allow a pint of
-water to each orange, and boil them to a pulp. Afterwards strain them,
-and allow to each pint of the liquid, a pound of the best loaf-sugar,
-and stir in a little beaten white of egg; one white to two pounds of
-sugar. This is for the second syrup. Boil the peel in it, skimming it
-well. When the peel is soft, take it all out; for if left among the
-cantelopes, it will communicate to it too strong a taste of the orange.
-
-Put the cantelopes into your jars, and pour over them the hot syrup.
-Cover them closely, and keep them in a dry cool place.
-
-Large cantelopes may be prepared for preserving (after you have taken
-off the outer rind) by cutting them into pieces according to the
-natural divisions with which they are fluted.
-
-This receipt for preserving cantelopes whole, will do very well for
-green lemons or limes, substituting lemon-peel and lemon-juice for that
-of oranges in the second syrup.
-
-You may use some of the first syrup to boil up the pulp of the orange
-or lemons that has been left. It will make a sort of marmalade, that is
-very good for colds.
-
-
-PRESERVED WATER-MELON RIND.--Having pared off the green skin, cut the
-rind of a water-melon into pieces of any shape you please; stars,
-diamonds, circles, crescents or leaves, using for the purpose a sharp
-penknife. Weigh the pieces, and allow to each pound a pound and a half
-of loaf sugar. Set the sugar aside, and put the pieces of melon-rind
-into a preserving kettle, the bottom and sides of which you have lined
-with green vine leaves. Put a layer of vine leaves between each layer
-of melon-rind, and cover the top with leaves. Disperse among the pieces
-some very small bits of alum, each about the bigness of a grain of
-corn, and allowing one bit to every pound of the melon-rind. Pour in
-just water enough to cover the whole, and place a thick double cloth
-(or some other covering) over the top of the kettle to keep in the
-steam, which will improve the greening. Let it simmer (but not boil)
-for two hours. Then take out the pieces of melon-rind and spread them
-on dishes to cool. Afterwards if you find that they taste of the alum,
-simmer them in very weak ginger tea for about three hours. Then proceed
-to make your syrup. Melt the sugar in clear spring or pump water,
-allowing a pint of water to a pound and a half of sugar, and mixing in
-with it some white of egg beaten to a stiff froth. The white of one egg
-will be enough for two pounds of sugar. Boil and skim it; and when the
-scum ceases to rise, put in the melon-rind, and let it simmer an hour.
-Take it out and spread it to cool on dishes, return it to the syrup,
-and simmer it another hour. After this take it out, and put it into a
-tureen. Boil up the syrup again, and pour it over the melon-rind. Cover
-it, and let it stand all night. Next morning give the syrup another
-boil; adding to it some lemon-juice, allowing the juice of one lemon to
-a quart of the syrup. When you find it so thick as to hang in a drop on
-the point of the spoon, it is sufficiently done. Then put the rind into
-glass jars, pour in the syrup, and secure the sweetmeats closely from
-the air with paper dipped in brandy, and a leather outer cover.
-
-This, if carefully done and well greened, is a very nice sweetmeat, and
-may be used to ornament the top of creams, jellies, jams. &c. laying it
-round in rings or wreaths.
-
-Citrons may be preserved green in the same manner, first paring off the
-outer skin and cutting them into quarters. Also green limes.
-
-
-PRESERVED PEPPERS.--For this purpose take the small round peppers while
-they are green. With a sharp penknife extract the seeds and cores; and
-then put the outsides into a kettle with vine leaves, and a little
-alum to give them firmness, and assist in keeping them green. Proceed
-precisely as directed for the water-melon rind, in the above receipt.
-
-
-PUMPKIN CHIPS.--It is best to defer making this sweetmeat (which will
-be found very fine) till late in the season when lemons are ripe and
-are to be had in plenty. Pumpkins (as they keep well) can generally be
-procured at any time through the winter.
-
-Take a fine pumpkin of a rich deep colour, pare off the outer rind;
-remove the seeds; and having sliced the best part, cut it into chips
-of equal size, and as thin as you can do them. They should be in long
-narrow pieces, two inches in breadth, and four in length. It is best
-to prepare the pumpkin the day before; and having weighed the chips,
-allow to each pound of them a pound of the best loaf-sugar. You must
-have several dozen of fine ripe lemons, sufficient to furnish a jill
-of lemon-juice to each pound of pumpkin. Having rolled them under
-your hand on a table, to make them yield as much juice as possible,
-pare off the yellow rind and put it away for some other purpose. Then
-having cut the lemons, squeeze out all the juice into a pitcher. Lay
-the pumpkin chips in a large pan or tureen, strewing the sugar among
-them. Then having measured the lemon-juice in a wine-glass, (two common
-wine-glasses making one jill,) pour it over the pumpkin and sugar,
-cover the vessel, and let it stand all night.
-
-Next day transfer the pumpkin, sugar, and lemon-juice to a preserving
-kettle, and boil it slowly for an hour or more, or till the pumpkin
-becomes all through tender, crisp, and transparent; but it must not be
-over the fire long enough to break and lose its form. You must skim it
-thoroughly. Some very small pieces of the lemon-paring may be boiled
-with it. When you think it is done, take up the pumpkin chips in a
-perforated skimmer that the syrup may drain through the holes back into
-the kettle. Spread the chips to cool on large dishes, and pass the
-syrup through a flannel bag that has been first dipped in hot water.
-When the chips are cold, put them into glass jars or tumblers, pour in
-the syrup, and lay on the top white paper dipped in brandy. Then tie up
-the jars with leather, or with covers of thick white paper.
-
-If you find that when cold the chips are not perfectly clear, crisp,
-and tender, give them another boil in the syrup before you put them up.
-
-This, if well made, is a handsome and excellent sweetmeat. It need not
-be eaten with cream, the syrup being so delicious as to require nothing
-to improve it. Shells of puff-paste first baked empty, and then filled
-with pumpkin chips, will be found very nice.
-
-Musk-melon chips may be done in the same manner.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE PINE-APPLES.--Take fine large pine-apples; pare them, and
-cut off a small round piece from the bottom of each; let the freshest
-and best of the top leaves remain on. Have ready on a slow fire, a
-large preserving kettle with a thin syrup barely sufficient to cover
-the fruit. In making this syrup allow a pound of fine loaf-sugar to
-every quart of water, and half the white of a beaten egg; all to be
-mixed before it goes on the fire. Then boil and skim it, and when the
-scum ceases to rise, put in the pine-apples, and simmer them slowly an
-hour. Then take them out to cool, cover them carefully and put them
-away till next day; saving the syrup in another vessel. Next day, put
-them into the same syrup, and simmer them again an hour. On the third
-day, repeat the process. The fourth day, make a strong fresh syrup,
-allowing but a pint of water to each pound of sugar, and to every two
-pounds the beaten white of one egg. When this syrup has boiled, and is
-completely skimmed, put in the pine-apples, and simmer them half an
-hour. Then take them out to cool, and set them aside till next morning.
-Boil them again half an hour in the same syrup, and repeat this for
-seven or eight days, or till you can pierce through the pine-apple with
-a straw from a corn-broom. At the last of these boilings enrich the
-syrup by allowing to each pound of sugar a quarter of a pound more;
-and, having boiled and skimmed it, put in the pine apples for half an
-hour. Then take them out, and when quite cold put each into a separate
-glass jar, and fill up with the syrup.
-
-Pine apples may be preserved in slices by a very simple process. Pare
-them, and cut them into round pieces near an inch thick, and take out
-the core from the centre of each slice. Allow a pound of loaf-sugar to
-every pound of the sliced pine-apple. Powder the sugar, and strew it in
-layers between the slices of pine-apple. Cover it and let it set all
-night. Next morning measure some clear spring or pump water, allowing
-half a pint to each pound of sugar. Beat some white of egg, (one white
-to two pounds of sugar,) and when it is a very stiff froth, stir it
-gradually into the water. Then mix with it the pine-apple and sugar,
-and put the whole into a preserving kettle. Boil and skim it well, till
-the pine-apple is tender and bright all through. Then take it out, and
-when cold, put it up in wide-mouthed glass jars, or in large tumblers.
-
-
-TO PREPARE FRESH PINE-APPLES.--Cut off the top and bottom and pare off
-the rind. Then cut the pine-apples in round slices half an inch thick,
-and put them into a deep dish, sprinkling every slice with powdered
-loaf-sugar. Cover them, and let them lie in the sugar for an hour or
-two, before they are to be eaten.
-
-
-PRESERVED LEMONS.--Take large fine ripe lemons, that have no blemishes.
-Choose those with thin, smooth rinds. With a sharp knife scoop a
-hole in the stalk end of each, large enough to admit the handle of a
-tea-spoon. This hole is to enable the syrup to penetrate the inside
-of the lemons. Put them into a preserving kettle with clear water,
-and boil them gently till you find them tender, keeping the kettle
-uncovered. Then take them out, drain, and cool them, and put them into
-a small tub. Prepare a thin syrup of a pound of loaf-sugar to a quart
-of water. When you have boiled and skimmed it, pour it over the lemons
-and cover them. Let them stand in the syrup till next day. Then pour
-the syrup from the lemons, and spread them on a large dish. Boil it a
-quarter of an hour, and pour it over them again, having first returned
-them to the tub. Cover them, and let them again stand till next day,
-when you must again boil the syrup and pour it over them. Repeat this
-process every day till you find that the lemons are quite clear, and
-that the syrup has penetrated them thoroughly. If you find the syrup
-becoming too weak, add a little more sugar to it. Finally, make a
-strong syrup in the proportion of half a pint of water to a pound of
-sugar, adding a jill of raw lemon-juice squeezed from fresh lemons,
-and allowing to every two pounds of sugar the beaten white of an egg.
-Mix all well together in the kettle. Boil and skim it, and when the
-scum ceases to rise, pour the syrup boiling hot over the lemons; and
-covering them closely, let them stand undisturbed for four days. Then
-look at them, and if you find that they have not sucked in enough of
-the syrup to make the inside very sweet, boil them gently in the syrup
-for a quarter of an hour. When they are cold, put them up in glass jars.
-
-You may green lemons by burying them in a kettle of vine leaves when
-you give them the first boiling in the clear water.
-
-Limes may be preserved by this receipt; also oranges.
-
-To prepare fresh oranges for eating, peel and cut them in round slices
-and remove the seeds. Strew powdered loaf-sugar over them. Cover them
-and let them stand an hour before they are eaten.
-
-
-ORANGE MARMALADE.--Take fine large ripe oranges, with thin
-deep-coloured skins. Weigh them, and allow to each pound of oranges a
-pound of loaf-sugar. Pare off the yellow outside of the rind from half
-the oranges, as thin as possible; and putting it into a pan with plenty
-of cold water, cover it closely (placing a double cloth beneath the tin
-cover) to keep in the steam, and boil it slowly till it is so soft that
-the head of a pin will pierce it. In the mean time grate the rind from
-the remaining oranges, and put it aside; quarter the oranges, and take
-out all the pulp and the juice; removing the seeds and core. Put the
-sugar into a preserving kettle, with a half pint of clear water to each
-pound, and mix it with some beaten white of egg, allowing one white of
-egg, to every two pounds of sugar. When the sugar is all dissolved, put
-it on the fire, and boil and skim it till it is quite clear and thick.
-Next take the boiled parings, and pound them to a paste in a mortar;
-put this paste into the sugar, and boil and stir it ten minutes. Then
-put it in the pulp and juice of the oranges, and the grated rind,
-(which will much improve the colour,) and boil all together for about
-half an hour, till it is a transparent mass. When cold, put it up in
-glass jars, laying brandy paper on the top.
-
-Lemon marmalade may be made in a similar manner, but you must allow a
-pound and a half of sugar to each pound of lemons.
-
-
-ORANGE JELLY.--Take twenty large ripe oranges, and grate the yellow
-rind from seven of them. Dissolve an ounce of isinglass in as much warm
-water as will cover it. Mix the juice with a pound of loaf-sugar broken
-up, and add the grated rind and the isinglass. Put it into a porcelain
-pan over hot coals, and stir it till it boils. Then skim it well.
-Boil it ten minutes, and strain it (but do not squeeze it) through a
-jelly-bag till it is quite clear. Put it into a mould to congeal, and
-when you want to turn it out dip the mould into luke-warm water. Or you
-may put it into glasses at once.
-
-You must have a pint of juice to a pound of sugar.
-
-A few grains of saffron boiled with the jelly will improve the colour
-without affecting the taste.
-
-
-PRESERVED PEACHES.
-
-Take large juicy ripe peaches; free-stones are the best, as they have
-a finer flavour than the cling-stones, and are much more manageable
-both to preserve, and to eat. Pare them, and cut them in half, or in
-quarters, leaving out the stones, the half of which you must save. To
-every pound of the peaches allow a pound of loaf-sugar. Powder the
-sugar, and strew it among your peaches. Cover them and let them stand
-all night. Crack half the peach-stones, break them up, put them into
-a small sauce-pan and boil them slowly in as much water as will cover
-them. Then when the water is well flavoured with the peach-kernels,
-strain them out, and set the water aside. Take care not to use too much
-of the kernel-water; a very little will suffice. Put the peaches into
-a preserving kettle, and boil them in their juice over a quick fire,
-(adding the kernel-water,) and skimming them all the time. When they
-are quite clear, which should be in half an hour, take them off, and
-put them into a tureen. Boil the syrup five minutes longer, and pour it
-hot over the peaches. When they are cool, put them into glass jars, and
-tie them up with paper dipped in brandy laid next to them.
-
-Apricots, nectarines, and large plums may be preserved in the same
-manner.
-
-
-PEACHES FOR COMMON USE.--Take ripe free-stone peaches; pare, stone, and
-quarter them. To six pounds of the cut peaches allow three pounds of
-the best brown sugar. Strew the sugar among the peaches, and set them
-away. Next morning add a handful of the kernels, put the whole into a
-preserving kettle, and boil it slowly about an hour and three quarters,
-or two hours, skimming it well. When cold, put it up in jars, and keep
-it for pies, or for any common purpose.
-
-
-BRANDY PEACHES.--Take large white or yellow free-stone peaches, the
-finest you can procure. They must not be too ripe. Rub off the down
-with a flannel, score them down the seam with a large needle, and prick
-every peach to the stone in several places. Scald them with boiling
-water, and let them remain in the water till it becomes cold, keeping
-them well covered. Repeat the scalding three times: it is to make them
-white. Then wipe them, and spread them on a soft table-cloth, covering
-them over with several folds. Let them remain in the cloth to dry.
-Afterwards put them into a tureen, or a large jar, and pour on as much
-white French brandy as will cover them well. Carefully keep the air
-from them, and let them remain in the brandy for a week. Then make a
-syrup in the usual manner, allowing to each pound of peaches a pound
-of loaf-sugar and half a pint of water mixed with a very little beaten
-white of egg; one white to every two pounds of sugar.
-
-When the syrup has boiled, and been well skimmed, put in the peaches
-and boil them slowly till they look clear: but do not keep them boiling
-more than half an hour. Then take them out, drain them, and put
-them into large glass jars. Mix the syrup, when it is cold, with the
-brandy in which you had the peaches, and pour it over them. Instead of
-scalding the peaches to whiten them, you may lay them for an hour in
-sufficient cold weak lye to cover them well. Turn them frequently while
-in the lye, and wipe them dry afterwards.
-
-Pears and apricots may be preserved in brandy, according to the above
-receipt. The skin of the pears should be taken off, but the stems left
-on.
-
-Large egg plums may be preserved in the same manner.
-
-Another way of preparing brandy peaches is, after rubbing off the
-down and pricking them, to put them into a preserving kettle with
-cold water, and simmer them slowly till they become hot all through;
-but they must not be allowed to boil. Then dry them in a cloth, and
-let them lie till they are cold, covering them closely from the air.
-Dissolve loaf-sugar in the best white brandy, (a pound of sugar to a
-quart of brandy.) and having put the peaches into large glass jars,
-pour the brandy and sugar over them (without boiling) and cover the
-jars well with leather.
-
-Pears, apricots, and egg plums may also be done in this manner.
-
-
-PEACH MARMALADE.--Take ripe yellow free-stone peaches; pare, stone,
-and quarter them. To each pound of peaches, allow three quarters of
-a pound of powdered loaf sugar, and half an ounce of bitter almonds,
-or peach-kernels blanched in scalding water, and pounded smooth in a
-mortar. Scald the peaches in a very little water, mash them to a pulp,
-mix them with the sugar and pounded almonds, and put the whole into
-a preserving kettle. Let it boil to a smooth thick jam, skimming and
-stirring it well, and keeping the pan covered as much as possible.
-Fifteen minutes will generally suffice for boiling it. When cold, put
-it up in glass jars.
-
-Plum marmalade may be made in this manner, flavouring it with pounded
-plum-kernels.
-
-
-PEACH JELLY.--Take fine juicy free-stone peaches, and pare and quarter
-them. Scald them in a very little water, drain and mash them, and
-squeeze the juice through a jelly-bag. To every pint of juice allow a
-pound of loaf-sugar, and a few of the peach-kernels. Having broken up
-the kernels and boiled them by themselves for a quarter of an hour in
-just as much water as will cover them, strain off the kernel-water,
-and add it to the juice. Mix the juice with the sugar, and when it is
-melted, boil them together fifteen minutes, till it becomes a thick
-jelly. Skim it well when it boils. Try the jelly by taking a little in
-a spoon and holding it in the open air to see if it congeals. If you
-find, that after sufficient boiling, it still continues thin, you can
-make it congeal by stirring in an ounce or more of isinglass, dissolved
-and strained. When the jelly is done, put it into tumblers, and lay on
-the top double tissue paper cut exactly to fit the inside of the glass;
-pressing it down with your fingers.
-
-You may make plum jelly in the same manner, allowing a pound and a half
-of sugar to a pint of juice.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE APRICOTS.--Take ripe apricots; scald them, peel them, cut
-them in half, and extract the stones. Then weigh the apricots, and to
-each pound allow a pound of loaf-sugar. Put them into a tureen or large
-pan, in alternate layers of apricots and sugar; cover them, and let
-them stand all night. Next morning put all together into a preserving
-kettle, and boil them moderately a quarter of an hour. Then take them
-out, spread them on dishes, and let them stand till next day. Then boil
-them again in the same syrup another quarter of an hour. Afterwards,
-spread them out to cool, put them into glass jars, and pour the syrup
-over them.
-
-Peaches may be preserved in the same manner. Also large plums or green
-gages; but to the plums you must allow additional sugar.
-
-
-TO DRY PEACHES.--The best peaches for drying are juicy free-stones.
-They must be quite ripe. Cut them in half, and take out the stones.
-It is best not to pare them; as dried peaches are much richer with
-the skin on, and it dissolves and becomes imperceptible when they are
-cooked. Spread them out in a sunny balcony or on a scaffold, and let
-them dry gradually till they become somewhat like leather; always
-bringing them in at sunset, and not putting them out if the weather is
-damp or cloudy. They may also be dried in kilns or large ovens.
-
-Apples are dried in the same manner, except that they must be pared and
-quartered.
-
-Cherries also may be dried in the sun, first taking out all the stones.
-None but the largest and best cherries should be used for drying.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE QUINCES.
-
-Take large, yellow, ripe quinces, and having washed and wiped them,
-pare them, and extract the cores. Quarter the quinces, or cut them into
-slices half an inch thick, and lay them in scalding water (closely
-covered) and boil them till tender--lest they harden in the sugar. Put
-the parings, cores, and seeds into a preserving kettle, cover them
-with the water in which you coddled the quinces, and boil them an hour,
-keeping them closely covered all the time. To every pint of this liquor
-allow a pound of loaf-sugar; and having dissolved the sugar in it, put
-it over the fire in the preserving kettle. Boil it up and skim it, and
-when the scum has ceased rising, put in the quinces, and boil them
-till they are red, tender, and clear all through, but not till they
-break. Keep the kettle closely covered while the quinces are in it, if
-you wish to have them bright coloured. You may improve the colour by
-boiling with them a little cochineal sifted through a muslin rag.
-
-When they are done, take them out, spread them on large dishes to cool,
-and then put them into glasses. Give the syrup another boil up, and it
-will be like a fine jelly. Pour it hot over the quinces, and when cold,
-cover the jars, pasting paper round the covers.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE QUINCES WHOLE.--Take those that are large, smooth, and
-yellow; pare them and extract the cores, carefully removing all the
-blemishes. Boil the quinces in a close kettle with the cores and
-parings, in sufficient water to cover them. In half an hour take them
-out, spread them to cool, and add to the cores and parings some small
-inferior quinces cut in quarters, but not pared or cored; and pour in
-some more water, just enough to boil them. Cover the pan, and let them
-simmer for an hour. Then take it off, strain the liquid, measure it,
-and to each quart allow a pound of loaf-sugar. Put the sugar to melt in
-the liquid, and let it set all night. Next day boil the quinces in it
-for a quarter of an hour, and then take them out and cool them, saving
-the syrup. On the following day repeat the same; and the fourth day
-add a quarter of a pound more sugar to each pint of the syrup, and boil
-the quinces in it twelve minutes. If by this time they are not tender,
-bright, and transparent all through, repeat the boiling.
-
-When they are quite done, put quince jelly or marmalade into the holes
-from whence you took the cores; put the quinces into glass jars and
-pour the syrup over them. If convenient, it is a very nice way to put
-up each quince in a separate tumbler.
-
-
-QUINCE JELLY.--Take fine ripe yellow quinces, wash them and remove all
-the blemishes. Cut them in pieces, but do not pare or core them. Put
-them into a preserving-pan with clear spring water. If you are obliged
-to use river water, filter it first; allowing one pint to twelve
-large quinces. Boil them gently till they are all soft and broken.
-Then put them into a jelly-bag, and do not squeeze it till after the
-clear liquid has ceased running. Of this you must make the best jelly,
-allowing to each pint a pound of loaf-sugar. Having dissolved the sugar
-in the liquid, boil them together about twenty minutes, or till you
-have a thick jelly.
-
-In the mean time squeeze out all that is left in the bag. It will not
-be clear, but you can make of it a very good jelly for common purposes.
-
-
-QUINCE MARMALADE.--Take ten pounds of ripe yellow quinces; and having
-washed them clean, pare and core them, and cut them into small pieces.
-To each pound of the cut quinces allow half a pound of powdered
-loaf-sugar. Put the parings and cores into a kettle with water enough
-to cover them, and boil them slowly till they are all to pieces,
-and quite soft. Then having put the quinces with the sugar into a
-porcelain preserving kettle, strain over them, through a cloth, the
-liquid from the parings and cores. Add a little cochineal powdered,
-and sifted through thin muslin. Boil the whole over a quick fire till
-it becomes a thick smooth mass, keeping it covered except when you are
-skimming it; and always after skimming, stir it up well from the bottom.
-
-When cold, put it up in glass jars. If you wish to use it soon, put
-it warm into moulds, and when it is cold, set the moulds in luke-warm
-water, and the marmalade will turn out easily.
-
-
-QUINCE CHEESE.--Have fine ripe quinces, and pare and core them. Cut
-them into pieces, and weigh them; and to each pound of the cut quinces,
-allow half a pound of the best brown sugar. Put the cores and parings
-into a kettle with water enough to cover them, keeping the lid of
-the kettle closed. When you find that they are all boiled to pieces
-and quite soft, strain off the water over the sugar, and when it is
-entirely dissolved, put it over the fire and boil it to a thick syrup,
-skimming it well. When no more scum rises, put in the quinces, cover
-them closely, and boil them all day over a slow fire, stirring them and
-mashing them down with a spoon till they are a thick smooth paste. Then
-take it out, and put it into buttered tin pans or deep dishes. Let it
-set to get cold. It will then turn out so firm that you may cut it into
-slices like cheese. Keep it in a dry place in broad stone pots. It is
-intended for the tea-table.
-
-
-PRESERVED APPLES.
-
-Take fine ripe pippin or bell-flower apples. Pare and core them, and
-either leave them whole, or cut them into quarters. Weigh them, and to
-each pound of apples allow a pound of loaf-sugar. Put the apples into a
-stew-pan with just water enough to cover them, and let them boil slowly
-for about half an hour. They must be only parboiled. Then strain the
-apple water over the sugar into a preserving kettle, and when the sugar
-is melted put it on the fire with the yellow rind of some lemons pared
-thin, allowing two lemons to a dozen apples. Boil the syrup till clear
-and thick, skimming it carefully; then put in the apples, and after
-they have boiled slowly a quarter of an hour, add the juice of the
-lemons. Let it boil about fifteen minutes longer, or till the apples
-are tender and clear, but not till they break. When they are cold, put
-them into jars, and covering them closely, let them set a week. At the
-end of that time give them another boil in the same syrup; apples being
-more difficult to keep than any other fruit.
-
-You may colour them red by adding, when you boil them in the syrup, a
-little cochineal.
-
-
-BAKED APPLES.--Take a dozen fine large juicy apples, and pare and core
-them, but do not cut them in pieces. Put them side by side into a
-large baking-pan, and fill up with white sugar the holes from whence
-you have extracted the cores. Pour into each a little lemon-juice, or
-a few drops of essence of lemon, and stick in every one a long piece
-of lemon-peel evenly cut. Into the bottom of the pan put a very little
-water, just enough to prevent the apples from burning. Bake them about
-an hour, or till they are tender all through, but not till they break.
-When done, set them away to get cold.
-
-If closely covered they will keep two days. They may be eaten at tea
-with cream. Or at dinner with a boiled custard poured over them. Or
-you may cover them with sweetened cream flavoured with a little essence
-of lemon, and whipped to a froth. Heap the froth over every apple so as
-to conceal them entirely.
-
-
-APPLE JELLY.--Take twenty large ripe juicy pippins. Pare, core, and
-chop them to pieces. Put them into a jar with the yellow rind of four
-lemons, pared thin and cut into little bits. Cover the jar closely, and
-set it into a pot of hot water. Keep the water boiling hard all round
-it till the apples are dissolved. Then strain them through a jelly-bag,
-and mix with the liquid the juice of the lemons. To each pint of the
-mixed juice allow a pound of loaf-sugar. Put them into a porcelain
-kettle, and when the sugar is melted, set it on the fire, and boil and
-skim it for about twenty minutes, or till it becomes a thick jelly. Put
-it into tumblers, and cover it with double tissue paper nicely fitted
-to the inside of the top.
-
-The red or Siberian crab apple makes a delicious jelly, prepared in the
-above manner.
-
-
-APPLE BUTTER.--This is a compound of apples and cider boiled together
-till of the consistence of soft butter. It is a very good article on
-the tea-table, or at luncheon. It can only be made of sweet new cider
-fresh from the press, and not yet fermented.
-
-Fill a very large kettle with cider, and boil it till reduced to one
-half the original quantity. Then have ready some fine juicy apples,
-pared, cored, and quartered; and put as many into the kettle as can be
-kept moist by the cider. Stir it frequently, and when the apples are
-stewed quite soft, take them out with a skimmer that has holes in it,
-and put them into a tub. Then add more apples to the cider, and stew
-them soft in the same manner, stirring them nearly all the time with
-a stick. Have at hand some more cider ready boiled, to thin the apple
-butter in case you should find it too thick in the kettle.
-
-If you make a large quantity, (and it is not worth while to prepare
-apple butter on a small scale,) it will take a day to stew the apples.
-At night leave them to cool in the tubs, (which must be covered with
-cloths,) and finish next day by boiling the apple and cider again till
-the consistence is that of soft marmalade, and the colour a very dark
-brown.
-
-Twenty minutes or half an hour before you finally take it from the
-fire, add powdered cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg to your taste. If the
-spice is boiled too long, it will lose its flavour.
-
-When it is cold, put it into stone jars, and cover it closely. If it
-has been well made, and sufficiently boiled, it will keep a year or
-more.
-
-It must not be boiled in a brass or bell-metal kettle, on account of
-the verdigris which the acid will collect in it, and which will render
-the apple butter extremely unwholesome, not to say poisonous.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE GREEN CRAB APPLES.--Having washed your crab apples, (which
-should be full grown,) cover the bottom and sides of your preserving
-kettle with vine leaves, and put them in; spreading a thick layer of
-vine leaves over them. Fill up the kettle with cold water, and hang it
-over a slow fire early in the morning; simmer them slowly, but do not
-allow them to boil. When they are quite yellow, take them out, peel off
-the skin with a penknife, and extract the cores very neatly. Put them
-again into the kettle with fresh vine leaves and fresh water, and hang
-them again over a slow fire to simmer, but not to boil. When they have
-remained long enough in the second vine leaves to become green, take
-them out, weigh them, and allow a pound and a half of loaf-sugar to
-each pound of crab apples. Then after the kettle has been well washed
-and wiped, put them into it with a thick layer of sugar between each
-layer of apples, and about half a pint of water, for each pound and a
-half of sugar. You may add the juice and yellow peel of some lemons.
-Boil them gently till they are quite clear and tender throughout. Skim
-them well, and keep the kettle covered when you are not skimming. When
-done, spread them on large dishes to cool, and then tie them up in
-glass jars with brandy papers.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE RED CRAB APPLES.--Take red or Siberian crab apples when
-they are quite ripe and the seeds are black. Wash and wipe them, and
-put them into a kettle with sufficient water to cover them. Simmer them
-very slowly till you find that the skin will come off easily. Then
-take them out and peel and core them; extract the cores carefully with
-a small knife, so as not to break the apples. Then weigh them, and
-to every pound of crab apples allow a pound and a half of loaf-sugar
-and a half pint of water. Put the sugar and water into a preserving
-kettle, and when they are melted together, set it over the fire and
-let it boil. After skimming it once, put in the crab apples, adding a
-little cochineal powder rubbed with a knife into a very small quantity
-of white brandy till it has dissolved. This will greatly improve the
-colour of the apples. Cover them and let them boil till clear and
-tender, skimming the syrup when necessary. Then spread them out on
-dishes, and when they are cold, put them into glass jars and pour the
-syrup over them.
-
-The flavour will be greatly improved by boiling with them in the
-syrup, a due proportion of lemon-juice and the peel of the lemons pared
-thin so as to have the yellow part only. If you use lemon-juice put a
-smaller quantity of water to the sugar. Allow one large lemon or two
-smaller ones to two pounds of crab apples.
-
-If you find that after they have been kept awhile, the syrup inclines
-to become dry or candied, give it another boil with the crab apples in
-it, adding a tea-cup full of water to about three or four pounds of the
-sweetmeat.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE GREEN GAGES.
-
-Take large fine green gages that are all perfectly ripe. Weigh them,
-and to each pound of fruit allow a pound and a half of loaf-sugar. Put
-a layer of fresh vine leaves at the bottom of a porcelain preserving
-kettle, place on it a layer of gages, then cover them with a layer of
-vine leaves, and so on alternately, finishing with a layer of leaves
-at the top. Fill up the kettle with hard water, and set it over a slow
-fire. When the gages rise to the top, take them out and peel them,
-putting them on a sieve as you do so. Then replace them in the kettle
-with fresh vine leaves and water; cover them very closely, so that no
-steam can escape, and hang them up at some distance above the fire to
-green slowly for six hours. They should be warm all the time, but must
-not boil. When they are a fine green, take them carefully out, spread
-them on a hair sieve to drain, and make a syrup of the sugar, allowing
-a half pint of water to each pound and a half of sugar. When it has
-boiled and been skimmed, put in the green gages and boil them gently
-for a quarter of an hour. Then take them out and spread them to cool.
-Next day boil them in the same syrup for another quarter of an hour.
-When cold, put them into glass jars with the syrup, and tie them up
-with brandy paper.
-
-You may green these, or any other sweetmeats, by substituting for the
-vine-leaves, layers of the fresh green husks that inclose the ears of
-young indian corn.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE PLUMS.--Take fine ripe plums: weigh them, and to each
-pound allow a pound and a half of loaf-sugar. Put them into a pan, and
-scald them in boiling water to make the skins come off easily. Peel
-them, and throw them as you do so into a large china pitcher. Let them
-set for an hour or two, and then take them out, saving all the juice
-that has exuded from them while in the pitcher. Spread the plums out
-on large dishes, and cover them with half the sugar you have allotted
-to them, (it must be previously powdered,) and let them lie in it all
-night. Next morning pour the juice out of the pitcher into a porcelain
-preserving kettle, add the last half of the sugar to it, and let it
-melt over the fire. When it has boiled skim it, and then put in the
-plums. Boil them over a moderate fire, for about half an hour. Then
-take them out one by one with a spoon, and spread them on large dishes
-to cool. If the syrup is not sufficiently thick and clear, boil and
-skim it a little longer till it is. Put the plums into glass jars and
-pour the syrup warm over them.
-
-The flavour will be much improved by boiling in the syrup with the
-fruit a handful or more of the kernels of plums, blanched in scalding
-water and broken in half. Take the kernels out of the syrup before you
-pour it into the jars.
-
-You may preserve plums whole, without peeling, by pricking them deeply
-at each end with a large needle.
-
-Green gages and damsons may be preserved according to this receipt.
-
-
-PLUMS FOR COMMON USE.--Take fine ripe plums, and cut them in half.
-Extract all the stones, and spread out the plums on large dishes. Set
-the dishes on the sunny roof of a porch or shed, and let the plums have
-the full benefit of the sun for three or four days, taking them in as
-soon as it is off, or if the sky becomes cloudy. This will half dry
-them. Then pack them closely in stone jars with a thick layer of the
-best brown sugar between every layer of plums; putting plenty of sugar
-at the bottom and top of the jars. Cover them closely, and set them
-away in a dry place.
-
-If they have been properly managed, they will keep a year; and are very
-good for pies and other purposes, in the winter and spring.
-
-Peaches may be prepared for keeping in the same manner.
-
-
-EGG PLUMS WHOLE.--Take large egg plums that are all quite ripe, and
-prick them all over with a small silver fork. Leave on the stems.
-To four pounds of plums allow four pounds and a half of loaf-sugar,
-broken small or powdered. Put the plums and sugar into a preserving
-kettle, and pour in one quart of clear hard water. Hang the kettle over
-a moderate fire, and boil and skim it. As soon as the skin begins to
-crack or shrivel, take out the plums one at a time, (leaving the syrup
-on the fire,) and spread them on large dishes to cool. Place them in
-the open air, and as soon as they are cool enough to be touched with
-your fingers, smooth the skin down where it is broken or ruffled. When
-quite cold, return them to the syrup, (which in the mean time must have
-been kept slowly simmering,) and boil the plums again till they are
-quite clear, but not till they break. Put them warm into large glass or
-queen's-ware jars, and pour the syrup over them.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE PEARS.
-
-Take large fine juicy pears that are all perfectly ripe, and pare them
-smoothly and thin; leaving on the stems, but cutting out the black top
-at the blossom end of the fruit. As you pare them, lay them in a pan
-of cold water. Make a thin syrup, allowing a quart of water to a pound
-of loaf-sugar. Simmer the pears in it for about half an hour. Then put
-them into a tureen, and let them lie in the syrup for two days. There
-must be syrup enough to cover them well. After two days, drain the
-syrup from the pears, and add to it more sugar, in the proportion of
-a pound to each pint of the thin syrup. Stir in a very little beaten
-white of egg, (not more than one white to three or four pounds of
-sugar,) add some fresh lemon-peel pared thin, and set the syrup over
-a brisk fire. Boil it for ten minutes, and skim it well. Then add
-sufficient lemon-juice to flavour it; and put in the pears. Simmer them
-in the strong syrup till they are quite transparent. Then take them
-out, spread them to cool, and stick a clove in the blossom end of each.
-Put them into glass jars; and having kept the syrup warm over the fire
-while the pears were cooling, pour it over them.
-
-If you wish to have them red, add a little powdered cochineal to the
-strong syrup when you put in your pears.
-
-
-BAKED PEARS.--The best for baking are the large late ones, commonly
-called pound pears. Pare them, cut them in half, and take out the
-cores. Lay them in a deep white dish, with a thin slip of fresh
-lemon-peel in the place from which each core was taken. Sprinkle them
-with sugar, and strew some whole cloves or some powdered cinnamon among
-them. Pour into the dish some port wine. To a dozen large pears you
-may allow one pound of sugar, and a pint of wine. Cover the dish with a
-large sheet of brown paper tied on; set it in a moderate oven, and let
-them bake till tender all through, which you may ascertain by sticking
-a broom twig through them. They will be done in about an hour, or they
-may probably require more time; but you must not let them remain long
-enough in the oven to break or fall to pieces. When cool, put them up
-in a stone jar. In cold weather they will keep a week.
-
-To bake smaller pears, pare them, but leave on the stems, and do not
-core them. Put them into a deep dish with fresh lemon or orange-peel;
-throw on them some brown sugar or molasses; pour in at the bottom a
-little water to keep them from burning; and bake them till tender
-throughout.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE GOOSEBERRIES.
-
-The best way of preserving gooseberries is with jelly. They should
-be full grown but green. Take six quarts of gooseberries, and select
-three quarts of the largest and finest to preserve whole, reserving the
-others for the jelly. Put the whole ones into a pan with sufficient
-water to cover them, and simmer them slowly till they begin to be
-tender; but do not keep them on the fire till they are likely to burst.
-Take them out carefully with a perforated skimmer to drain the warm
-water from them, and lay them directly in a pan of cold water. Put
-those that you intend for the jelly into a stew-pan, allowing to each
-quart of gooseberries half a pint of water. Boil them fast till they
-go all to pieces, and stir and mash them with a spoon. Then put them
-into a jelly-bag that has been first dipped in hot water, and squeeze
-through it all the juice. Measure the juice, and to each pint allow a
-pound and a half of loaf-sugar. Break up the sugar, and put it into a
-preserving kettle; pour the juice over it, and let it stand to melt,
-stirring it frequently. When it has all dissolved, set it over the
-fire, put the gooseberries into it, and let them boil twenty minutes,
-or till they are quite clear, and till the jelly is thick and congeals
-in the spoon when you hold it in the air. If the gooseberries seem
-likely to break, take them out carefully, and let the jelly boil by
-itself till it is finished. When all is done, put up the gooseberries
-and the jelly together in glass jars.
-
-Strawberries, raspberries, grapes, currants or any small fruit may in a
-similar manner be preserved in jelly.
-
-
-TO STEW GOOSEBERRIES.--Top and tail them. Pour some boiling water on
-the gooseberries, cover them up, and let them set about half an hour,
-or till the skin is quite tender, but not till it bursts, as that will
-make the juice run out into the water. Then pour off the water, and
-mix with the gooseberries an equal quantity of sugar. Put them into
-a porcelain stew-pan or skillet, and set it on hot coals, or on a
-charcoal furnace. In a few minutes you may begin to mash them against
-the side of the pan with a wooden spoon. Let them stew about half an
-hour, stirring them frequently. They must be quite cold before they are
-used for any thing.
-
-
-GOOSEBERRY FOOL.--Having stewed two quarts of gooseberries in the above
-manner, stir them as soon as they are cold into a quart of rich boiling
-milk. Grate in a nutmeg, and covering the pan, let the gooseberries
-simmer in the milk for five minutes. Then stir in the beaten yolks of
-two or three eggs, and immediately remove it from the fire. Keep on the
-cover a few minutes longer; then turn out the mixture into a deep dish
-or a glass bowl, and set it away to get cold, before it goes to table.
-Eat it with sponge-cake. It will probably require additional sugar,
-stirred in at the last.
-
-Gooseberries prepared in this manner make a very good pudding, with the
-addition of a little grated bread. Use both whites and yolks of the
-eggs. Stir the mixture well, and bake it in a deep dish. Eat it cold,
-with sugar grated over it.
-
-
-TO BOTTLE GOOSEBERRIES.--For this purpose the gooseberries must be
-large and full grown, but quite green. Top and tail them, and put them
-into wide-mouthed bottles as far up as the beginning of the neck. Cover
-the bottom of a large boiler or kettle with saw-dust or straw. Stand
-the bottles of gooseberries (slightly corked) upright in the boiler,
-and pour round them cold water to each, as far up as the fruit. Put a
-brisk fire under the boiler, and when the water boils up, instantly
-take out the bottles and fill them up to the mouth with boiling water,
-which you must have ready in a tea-kettle. Cork them again slightly,
-and when quite cold put in the corks very tight and seal them. Lay the
-bottles on their sides in a box of dry sand, and turn them every day
-for four or five weeks. If properly managed, the gooseberries will keep
-a year, and may be used at any time, by stewing them with sugar.
-
-You may bottle damsons in the same manner; also grapes.
-
-
-PRESERVED RASPBERRIES.
-
-Take a quantity of ripe raspberries, and set aside the half, selecting
-for that purpose the largest and firmest. Then put the remainder into
-your preserving pan, mash them, and set them over the fire. As soon
-as they have come to a boil, take them out, let them cool, and then
-squeeze them through a bag.
-
-While they are cooling, prepare your sugar, which must be fine loaf.
-Allow a pound of sugar to every quart of whole raspberries. Having
-washed the kettle clean, put the sugar into it, allowing half a pint
-of cold water to two pounds of sugar. When it has melted in the water,
-put it on the fire, and boil it till the scum ceases to rise, and it
-is a thick syrup; taking care to skim it well. Then put in the whole
-raspberries, and boil them rapidly a few minutes, but not long enough
-to cause them to burst. Take them out with a skimmer full of holes,
-and spread them on a large dish to cool. Then mix with the syrup the
-juice of those you boiled first, and let it boil about ten or fifteen
-minutes. Lastly, put in the whole fruit, and give it one more boil,
-seeing that it does not break.
-
-Put it warm into glass jars or tumblers, and when quite cold cover it
-closely with paper dipped in brandy, tying another paper tightly over
-it.
-
-Strawberries may be done in the same manner; blackberries also.
-
-
-RASPBERRY JAM.--Take fine raspberries that are perfectly ripe. Weigh
-them, and to each pound of fruit allow three quarters of a pound of
-fine loaf-sugar. Mash the raspberries, and break up the sugar. Then mix
-them together, and put them into a preserving kettle over a good fire.
-Stir them frequently and skim them. The jam will be done in half an
-hour. Put it warm into glasses, and lay on the top a white paper cut
-exactly to fit the inside, and dipped in brandy. Then tie on another
-cover of very thick white paper.
-
-Make blackberry jam in the same manner.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE CRANBERRIES.--The cranberries must be large and ripe. Wash
-them, and to six quarts of cranberries allow nine pounds of the best
-loaf sugar. Take three quarts of the cranberries, and put them into a
-stew-pan with a pint and a half of water. Cover the pan, and boil or
-stew them till they are all to pieces. Then squeeze the juice through a
-jelly-bag. Put the sugar into a preserving kettle, pour the cranberry
-juice over it and let it stand till it is all melted, stirring it
-up frequently. Then place the kettle over the fire, and put in the
-remaining three quarts of whole cranberries. Let them boil till they
-are tender, clear, and of a bright colour, skimming them frequently.
-When done, put them warm into jars with the syrup, which should be like
-a thick jelly.
-
-
-RED CURRANT JELLY.--The currants should be perfectly ripe and gathered
-on a dry day. Strip them from the stalks, and put them into a stone
-jar. Cover the jar, and set it up to the neck in a kettle of boiling
-water. Keep the water boiling round the jar till the currants are all
-broken, stirring them up occasionally. Then put them into a jelly-bag,
-and squeeze out all the juice. To each pint of juice allow a pound
-and a quarter of the best loaf-sugar. Put the sugar into a porcelain
-kettle, pour the juice over it, and stir it frequently till it is all
-melted. Then set the kettle over a moderate fire, and let it boil
-twenty minutes, or till you find that the jelly congeals in the spoon
-when you hold it in the air; skim it carefully all the time. When the
-jelly is done, pour it warm into tumblers, and cover each with two
-rounds of white tissue paper, cut to fit exactly the inside of the
-glass.
-
-Jelly of gooseberries, plums, raspberries, strawberries, barberries,
-blackberries, grapes, and other small fruit may all be made in this
-manner.
-
-
-WHITE CURRANT JELLY.--The currants should be quite ripe, and gathered
-on a dry day. Having stripped them from the stalks, put them into a
-close stone jar, and set it in a kettle of boiling water. When all the
-currants are broken, take them out and strain them through a linen
-cloth. To each pint of juice allow a pound and a quarter of the best
-double refined loaf-sugar; break it small, and put it into a porcelain
-preserving pan with barely sufficient water to melt it; not quite half
-a pint to a pound and a quarter of sugar; it must be either clear
-spring water or river water filtered. Stir up the sugar while it is
-dissolving, and when all is melted, put it over a brisk fire, and boil
-and skim it till clear and thick. When the scum ceases to rise, put in
-the white currant juice and boil it fast for ten minutes. Then put it
-warm into tumblers, and when it is cold, cover it with double white
-tissue paper.
-
-In making this jelly, use only a silver spoon, and carefully observe
-all the above precautions, that it may be transparent and delicate.
-If it is not quite clear and bright when done boiling, you may run it
-again through a jelly-bag.
-
-White raspberry jelly may be prepared in the same manner. A very nice
-sweetmeat is made of white raspberries preserved whole, by putting them
-in white currant jelly during the ten minutes that you are boiling the
-juice with the syrup. You may also preserve red raspberries whole, by
-boiling them in red currant jelly.
-
-
-BLACK CURRANT JELLY.--Take large ripe black currants; strip them from
-the stalks, and mash them with the back of a ladle. Then put them
-into a preserving kettle with a tumbler of water to each quart of
-currants; cover it closely, set it over a moderate fire, and when the
-currants have come to a boil, take them out, and squeeze them through
-a jelly-bag. To each pint of juice you may allow about a pound of
-loaf-sugar, and (having washed the preserving kettle perfectly clean)
-put in the sugar with the juice; stir them together till well mixed and
-dissolved, and then boil it not longer than ten minutes; as the juice
-of black currants being very thick will come to a jelly very soon, and
-if boiled too long will be tough and ropy.
-
-Black currant jelly is excellent for sore throats; and if eaten freely
-on the first symptoms of the disease, will frequently check it without
-any other remedy. It would be well for all families to keep it in the
-house.
-
-
-GRAPE JELLY.--Take ripe juicy grapes, pick them from the stems; put
-them into a large earthen pan, and mash them with the back of a wooden
-ladle, or with a potato beetle. Put them into a kettle, (without any
-water,) cover them closely, and let them boil for a quarter of an
-hour; stirring them up occasionally from the bottom. Then squeeze
-them through a jelly-bag, and to each pint of juice allow a pound of
-loaf-sugar. Dissolve the sugar in the grape juice; then put it over a
-quick fire in a preserving kettle, and boil and skim it twenty minutes.
-When it is a clear thick jelly, take it off, put it warm into tumblers,
-and cover them with double tissue paper cut to fit the inside.
-
-In the same manner you may make an excellent jelly for common use, of
-ripe fox grapes and the best brown sugar; mixing with the sugar before
-it goes on the fire, a little beaten white of egg; allowing two whites
-to two pounds of sugar.
-
-
-BRANDY GRAPES.--Take some large close bunches of fine grapes, (they
-must be quite ripe,) and allow to each bunch a quarter of a pound of
-bruised sugar candy. Put the grapes and the sugar candy into large
-jars, (about two-thirds full,) and fill them up with French brandy. Tie
-them up closely, and keep them in a dry place. Morella cherries may be
-done in the same manner.
-
-Foreign grapes are kept in bunches, laid lightly in earthen jars of dry
-saw-dust.
-
-
-TO KEEP WILD GRAPES.--Gather the small black wild grapes late in the
-season, after they have been ripened by a frost. Pick them from the
-stems, and put them into stone jars, (two-thirds full,) with layers of
-brown sugar, and fill them up with cold molasses. They will keep all
-winter; and they make good common pies. If they incline to ferment in
-the jars, give them a boil with additional sugar.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE STRAWBERRIES.
-
-Strawberries for preserving should be large and ripe. They will keep
-best if gathered in dry weather, when there has been no rain for at
-least two days. Having hulled, or picked off the green, select the
-largest and firmest, and spread them out separately on flat dishes;
-having first weighed them, and allowed to each pound of strawberries a
-pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Sift half the sugar over them. Then take
-the inferior strawberries that were left, and those that are over-ripe;
-mix with them an equal quantity of powdered sugar, and mash them. Put
-them into a basin covered with a plate, and set them over the fire in
-a pan of boiling water, till they become a thick juice; then strain
-it through a bag, and mix with it the other half of the sugar that
-you have allotted to the strawberries, which are to be done whole. Put
-it into a porcelain kettle, and boil and skim it till the scum ceases
-to rise; then put in the whole strawberries with the sugar in which
-they have been lying, and all the juice that may have exuded from
-them. Set them over the fire in the syrup, just long enough to heat
-them a little; and in a few minutes take them out, one by one, with
-a tea-spoon, and spread them on dishes to cool; not allowing them to
-touch each other. Then take off what scum may arise from the additional
-sugar. Repeat this several times, taking out the strawberries and
-cooling them till they become quite clear. They must not be allowed to
-boil; and if they seem likely to break, they should be instantly and
-finally taken from the fire. When quite cold, put them with the syrup
-into tumblers, or into white queen's-ware pots. If intended to keep a
-long time it will be well to put at the top a layer of apple jelly.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE CHERRIES.
-
-Take large ripe morella cherries; weigh them, and to each pound allow
-a pound of loaf-sugar. Stone the cherries, (opening them with a sharp
-quill,) and save the juice that comes from them in the process. As you
-stone them, throw them into a large pan or tureen, and strew about
-half the sugar over them, and let them lie in it an hour or two after
-they are all stoned. Then put them into a preserving kettle with the
-remainder of the sugar, and boil and skim them till the fruit is clear
-and the syrup thick.
-
-
-CITRON MELON SLICES.--Take some fine citron melons; pare, core, and
-cut them into long broad slices. Weigh them, and to every six pounds
-of melon allow six pounds of fine loaf-sugar; and the juice and yellow
-rind (pared off very thin) of four lemons; also, half a pound of race
-(root) ginger. Put the slices of melon into a preserving-kettle; cover
-them with strong alum water, and boil them half an hour, or longer,
-till they are quite clear and tender. Then drain them, lay them in a
-broad vessel of cold water, cover them and let them stand all night.
-Next morning, tie up the race ginger in a piece of thin muslin, and
-boil it in three pints of clear spring or pump water, till the water
-is highly flavoured. Having broken up the sugar, put it into a clean
-preserving-kettle, and pour the ginger water over it. When the sugar is
-all melted, set it over the fire, add the lemon parings, and boil and
-skim it, till no more scum rises. Then take out the lemon peel, stir in
-the juice, and put in the citron slices. Boil them in the syrup till
-they are transparent and soft, but not till they break. When done, put
-the citron slices and syrup into a large tureen, set it in a dry, cool,
-dark place, and leave it uncovered for two or three days. Then put the
-slices carefully into wide-mouthed glass jars, and gently pour in the
-syrup. Lay inside the top of each jar a double white tissue paper cut
-exactly to fit, and close the jars carefully with corks and cement.
-This will be found a delicious sweetmeat.
-
-
-CHERRY JELLY.--Take fine juicy red cherries, and stone them. Save half
-the stones, crack them, and extract the kernels. Put the cherries and
-the kernels into a preserving kettle over a slow fire, and let them
-boil gently in their juice for half an hour. Then transfer them to a
-jelly-bag, and squeeze out the juice. Measure it, and to each pint
-allow a pound of fine loaf-sugar. Dissolve the sugar in the juice,
-and then boil and skim it for twenty or thirty minutes. Put it up in
-tumblers covered with tissue paper.
-
-
-CHERRY JAM.--To each pound of cherries allow three quarters of a pound
-of the best white sugar. Stone them, and as you do so throw the sugar
-gradually into the pan with them. Cover them and let them set all
-night. Next day, boil them slowly till the cherries and sugar form a
-thick smooth mass. Put it up in queen's-ware jars.
-
-
-TO DRY CHERRIES.--Choose the finest and largest red cherries for this
-purpose. Stone them, and spread them on large dishes in the sun, till
-they become quite dry, taking them in as soon as the sun is off, or if
-the sky becomes cloudy. Put them up in stone jars, strewing among them
-some of the best brown sugar.
-
-The common practice of drying cherries with the stones in, (to save
-trouble,) renders them so inconvenient to eat, that they are of little
-use, when done in that manner.
-
-With the stones extracted, dried cherries will be found very good for
-common pies.
-
-
-BARBERRY JELLY.--Take ripe barberries, and having stripped them from
-the stalks, mash them, and boil them in their juice for a quarter of
-an hour. Then squeeze them through a bag; allow to each pint of juice,
-a pound of loaf-sugar; and having melted the sugar in the juice, boil
-them together twenty or twenty-five minutes, skimming carefully. Put it
-up in tumblers with tissue paper.
-
-
-FROSTED FRUIT.--Take large ripe cherries, plums, apricots, or grapes,
-and cut off half the stalk. Have ready in one dish some beaten white of
-egg, and in another some fine loaf-sugar, powdered and sifted. Dip the
-fruit first into the white of egg, and then roll it one by one in the
-powdered sugar. Lay a sheet of white paper on the bottom of a reversed
-sieve, set it on a stove or in some other warm place, and spread the
-fruit on the paper till the icing is hardened.
-
-
-PEACH LEATHER.--To six pounds of ripe peaches, (pared and quartered,)
-allow three pounds of the best brown sugar. Mix them together, and put
-them into a preserving kettle, with barely water enough to keep them
-from burning. Pound and mash them a while with a wooden beetle. Then
-boil and skim them for three hours or more, stirring them nearly all
-the time. When done, spread them thinly on large dishes, and set them
-in the sun for three or four days. Finish the drying by loosening the
-peach leather on the dishes, and setting them in the oven after the
-bread is taken out, letting them remain till the oven is cold. Roll up
-the peach leather and put it away in a box.
-
-Apple leather may be made in the same manner.
-
-
-RHUBARB JAM,--Peel the rhubarb stalks and cut them into small square
-pieces. Then weigh them, and to each pound allow three quarters of
-a pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Put the sugar and the rhubarb into
-a large, deep, white pan, in alternate layers, the top layer to be
-of sugar--cover it, and let it stand all night. In the morning, put
-it into a preserving kettle, and boil it slowly till the whole is
-dissolved into a thick mass, stirring it frequently, and skimming it
-before every stirring. Put it warm into glass jars, and tie it up with
-brandy paper.
-
-
-
-
-PASTRY, PUDDINGS, ETC.
-
-
-THE BEST PLAIN PASTE.
-
-All paste should be made in a very cool place, as heat renders it
-heavy. It is far more difficult to get it light in summer than in
-winter. A marble slab is much better to roll it on than a paste-board.
-It will be improved in lightness by washing the butter in very cold
-water, and squeezing and pressing out all the salt, as salt is
-injurious to paste. In New York and in the Eastern states, it is
-customary, in the dairies, to put more salt in what is called fresh
-butter, than in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. This butter,
-therefore, should always undergo the process of washing and squeezing
-before it is used for pastry or cakes. None but the very best butter
-should be taken for those purposes; as any unpleasant taste is always
-increased by baking. Potted butter never makes good paste. As pastry
-is by no means an article of absolute necessity, it is better not to
-have it at all, than to make it badly, and of inferior ingredients; few
-things being more unwholesome than hard, heavy dough. The flour for
-paste should always be superfine.
-
-You may bake paste in deep dishes or in soup plates. For shells that
-are to be baked empty, and afterwards filled with stewed fruit or
-sweetmeats, deep plates of block tin with broad edges are best. If you
-use patty-pans, the more flat they are the better. Paste always rises
-higher and is more perfectly light and flaky, when unconfined at the
-sides while baking. That it may be easily taken out, the dishes or tins
-should be well buttered.
-
-To make a nice plain paste,--sift three pints of superfine flour, by
-rubbing it through a sieve into a deep pan. Divide a pound of fresh
-butter into four quarters. Cut up one quarter into the flour, and rub
-it fine with your hands. Mix in, gradually, as much cold water as
-will make a tolerably stiff dough, and then knead it slightly. Use
-as little water as possible or the paste will be tough. Sprinkle a
-little flour on your paste-board, lay the lump of dough upon it, and
-knead it a very short time. Flour it, and roll it out into a very thin
-sheet, always rolling from you. Flour your rolling-pin to prevent its
-sticking. Take a second quarter of the butter, and with your thumb,
-spread it all over the sheet of paste. If your hand is warm, use a
-knife instead of your thumb; for if the butter oils, the paste will be
-heavy. When you have put on the layer of butter, sprinkle it with a
-very little flour, and with your hands roll up the paste as you would a
-sheet of paper. Then flatten it with a rolling-pin, and roll it out a
-second time into a thin sheet. Cover it with another layer of butter,
-as before, and again roll it up into a scroll. Flatten it again, put
-on the last layer of butter, flour it slightly, and again roll up the
-sheet. Then cut the scroll into as many pieces as you want sheets for
-your dishes or patty-pans. Roll out each piece almost an inch thick.
-Flour your dishes, lay the paste lightly on them, notch the edges, and
-bake it a light brown. The oven must be moderate. If it is too hot,
-the paste will bake before it has risen sufficiently. If too cold, it
-will scarcely rise at all, and will be white and clammy. When you begin
-to make paste in this manner, do not quit it till it is ready for the
-oven. It must always be baked in a close oven where no air can reach it.
-
-The best rolling-pins, are those that are straight, and as thick at
-the ends as in the middle. They should be held by the handles, and
-the longer the handles the more convenient. The common rolling-pins
-that decrease in size towards the ends, are much less effective, and
-more tedious, as they can roll so little at a time; the extremities not
-pressing on the dough at all.
-
-All pastry is best when fresh. After the first day it loses much of its
-lightness, and is therefore more unwholesome.
-
-
-COMMON PIE CRUST.--Sift two quarts of superfine flour into a pan.
-Divide one pound of fresh butter into two equal parts, and cut up one
-half in the flour, rubbing it fine. Mix it with a very little cold
-water, and make it into a round lump. Knead it a little. Then flour
-your paste-board, and roll the dough out into a large thin sheet.
-Spread it all over with the remainder of the butter. Flour it, fold
-it up, and roll it out again. Then fold it again, or roll it into a
-scroll. Cut it into as many pieces as you want sheets of paste, and
-roll each not quite an inch thick. Butter your pie-dish.
-
-This paste will do for family use, when covered pies are wanted. Also
-for apple dumplings, pot-pies, &c.; though all boiled paste is best
-when made of suet instead of butter. Short cakes may be made of this,
-cut out with the edge of a tumbler. It should always be eaten fresh.
-
-
-SUET PASTE.--Having removed the skin and stringy fibres from a pound of
-beef suet, chop it as fine as possible. Sift two quarts of flour into
-a deep pan, and rub into it one half of the suet. Make it into a round
-lump of dough, with cold water, and then knead it a little. Lay the
-dough on your paste-board, roll it out very thin, and cover it with the
-remaining half of the suet. Flour it, roll it out thin again, and then
-roll it into a scroll. Cut it into as many pieces as you want sheets of
-paste, and roll them out half an inch thick.
-
-Suet paste should always be boiled. It is good for plain puddings that
-are made of apples, gooseberries, blackberries or other fruit; and for
-dumplings. If you use it for pot-pie, roll it the last time rather
-thicker than if wanted for any other purpose. If properly made, it
-will be light and flaky, and the suet imperceptible. If the suet is
-minced very fine, and thoroughly incorporated with the flour, not the
-slightest lump will appear when the paste comes to table.
-
-The suet must not be melted before it is used; but merely minced as
-fine as possible and mixed cold with the flour.
-
-If for dumplings to eat with boiled mutton, the dough must be rolled
-out thick, and cut out of the size you want them, with a tin, or with
-the edge of a cup or tumbler.
-
-
-DRIPPING PASTE.--To a pound of fresh beef-dripping, that has been
-nicely clarified, allow two pounds and a quarter of flour. Put the
-flour into a large pan, and mix the dripping with it, rubbing it into
-the flour with your hands till it is thoroughly incorporated. Then make
-it into a stiff dough with a little cold water, and roll it out twice.
-This may be used for common meat pies.
-
-
-LARD PASTE.--Lard for paste should never be used without an equal
-quantity of butter. Take half a pound of nice lard, and half a pound
-of fresh butter; rub them together into two pounds and a quarter of
-flour, and mix it with a little cold water to a stiff dough. Roll it
-out twice. Use it for common pies. Lard should always be kept in tin.
-
-
-POTATO PASTE.--To a pint and a half of flour, allow fourteen large
-potatoes. Boil the potatoes till they are thoroughly done throughout.
-Then peel, and mash them very fine. Rub them through a cullender.
-
-Having sifted the flour into a pan, add the potatoes gradually; rubbing
-them well into the flour with your hands. Mix in sufficient cold water
-to make a stiff dough. Roll it out evenly, and you may use it for apple
-dumplings, boiled apple pudding, beef-steak pudding, &c.
-
-Potato paste must be sent to table quite hot; as soon as it cools it
-becomes tough and heavy. It is unfit for baking; and even when boiled
-is less light than suet paste.
-
-
-FINE PUFF PASTE.--To every pound of the best fresh butter allow a
-pound or a quart of superfine flour. Sift the flour into a deep pan,
-and then sift on a plate some additional flour to use for sprinkling
-and rolling. Wash the butter through two cold waters; squeezing out
-all the salt, and whatever milk may remain in it; and then make it up
-with your hands into a round lump, and put it in ice till you are ready
-to use it. Then divide the butter into four equal parts. Cut up one
-of the quarters into the pan of flour; and divide the remaining three
-quarters into six pieces,[E] cutting each quarter in half. Mix with a
-knife the flour and butter that is in the pan, adding by degrees a very
-little cold water till you have made it into a lump of stiff dough.
-Then sprinkle some flour on the paste-board, (you should have a marble
-slab,) take the dough from the pan by lifting it out with the knife,
-lay it on the board, and flouring your rolling-pin, roll out the paste
-into a large thin sheet. Then with the knife, put all over it, at
-equal distances, one of the six pieces of butter divided into small
-bits. Fold up the sheet of paste, flour it, roll it out again, and
-add in the same manner another of the portions of butter. Repeat this
-process till the butter is all in. Then fold it once more, lay it on a
-plate, and set it in a cool place till you are ready to use it. Then
-divide it into as many pieces as you want sheets of paste; roll out
-each sheet, and put them into buttered plates or patty-pans. In using
-the rolling-pin, observe always to roll from you. Bake the paste in a
-moderate oven, but rather quick than slow. No air must be admitted to
-it while baking.
-
-The edges of paste should always be notched before it goes into the
-oven. For this purpose, use a sharp penknife, dipping it frequently in
-flour as it becomes sticky. The notches should be even and regular. If
-you do them imperfectly at first, they cannot be mended by sticking on
-additional bits of paste; as, when baked, every patch will be doubly
-conspicuous. There are various ways of notching; one of the neatest is
-to fold over one corner of each notch; or you may arrange the notches
-to stand upright and lie flat, alternately, all round the edge. They
-should be made small and regular. You may form the edge into leaves
-with the little tin cutters made for the purpose.
-
-If the above directions for puff paste are carefully followed, and if
-it is not spoiled in baking, it will rise to a great thickness and
-appear in flakes or leaves according to the number of times you have
-put in the butter.
-
-It should be eaten the day it is baked.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[E] Or into nine; and roll it in that number of times.
-
-
-SWEET PASTE.--Sift a pound and a quarter of the finest flour, and three
-ounces of powdered loaf-sugar into a deep dish. Cut up in it one pound
-of the best fresh butter, and rub it fine with your hands. Make a hole
-in the middle, pour in the yolks of two beaten eggs, and mix them with
-the flour, &c. Then wet the whole to a stiff paste with half a pint of
-rich milk. Knead it well, and roll it out.
-
-This paste is intended for tarts of the finest sweetmeats. If used as
-shells, they should be baked empty, and filled when cool. If made into
-covered tarts, they may be iced all over, in the manner of cakes, with
-beaten white of egg and powdered loaf-sugar. To make puffs of it, roll
-it out and cut it into round pieces with the edge of a large tumbler,
-or with a tin cutter. Lay the sweetmeat on one half of the paste, fold
-the other over it in the form of a half-moon, and unite the edges by
-notching them together. Bake them in a brisk oven, and when cool, send
-them to table handsomely arranged, several on a dish.
-
-Sweet paste is rarely used except for very handsome entertainments. You
-may add some rose water in mixing it.
-
-
-SHELLS.--Shells of paste are made of one sheet each, rolled out in a
-circular form, and spread over the bottom, sides, and edges of buttered
-dishes or patty-pans, and baked empty; to be filled, when cool, with
-stewed fruit, (which for this purpose should be always cold,) or with
-sweetmeats. They should be made either of fine puff paste, or of the
-best plain paste, or of sweet paste. They are generally rolled out
-rather thick, and will require about half an hour to bake. The oven
-should be rather quick, and of equal heat throughout; if hotter in one
-part than in another, the paste will draw to one side, and be warped
-and disfigured. The shells should be baked of a light brown. When cool,
-they mast be taken out of the dishes on which they were baked, and
-transferred to plates, and filled with the fruit.
-
-Shells of puff paste will rise best if baked on flat patty-pans, or tin
-plates. When they are cool, pile the sweetmeats on them in a heap.
-
-The thicker and higher the paste rises, and the more it flakes in
-layers or leaves, the finer it is considered.
-
-Baking paste as empty shells, prevents it from being moist or clammy at
-the bottom.
-
-Tarts are small shells with fruit in them.
-
-
-PIES.--Pies may be made with any sort of paste. It is a fault to roll
-it out too thin; for if it has not sufficient substance, it will, when
-baked, be dry and tasteless. For a pie, divide the paste into two
-sheets; spread one of them over the bottom and sides of a deep dish
-well buttered. Next put in the fruit or other ingredients, (heaping it
-higher in the centre,) and then place the other sheet of paste on the
-top as a lid or cover; pressing the edges closely down, and afterwards
-crimping or notching them with a sharp small knife.
-
-In making pies of juicy fruit, it is well to put on the centre of the
-under crust a common tea-cup, laying the fruit round it and over it.
-The juice will collect under the cup, and not be liable to run out from
-between the edges. There should be plenty of sugar strewed among the
-fruit as you put it into the pie.
-
-Preserves should never be put into covered pies. The proper way is to
-lay them in baked shells.
-
-All pies are best the day they are baked. If kept twenty-four hours the
-paste falls and becomes comparatively hard, heavy, and unwholesome. If
-the fruit is not ripe, it should be stewed, sweetened, and allowed to
-get cold before it is put into the pie. If put in warm it will make the
-paste heavy. With fruit pies always have a sugar dish on the table in
-case they should not be found sweet enough.
-
-
-STANDING PIES.--Cut up half a pound of butter, and put it into a
-sauce-pan with three quarters of a pint of water; cover it, and set
-it on hot coals. Have ready in a pan two pounds of sifted flour; make
-a hole in the middle of it, pour in the melted butter as soon as it
-boils, and then with a spoon gradually mix in the flour. When it is
-well mixed, knead it with your hands into a stiff dough. Sprinkle your
-paste-board with flour, lay the dough upon it, and continue to knead it
-with your hands till it no longer sticks to them, and is quite light.
-Then let it stand an hour to cool. Cut off pieces for the bottom and
-top; roll them out thick, and roll out a long piece for the sides or
-walls of the pie, which you must fix on the bottom so as to stand up
-all round; cement them together with white of egg, pinching and closing
-them firmly. Then put in the ingredients of your pie, (which should be
-venison, game, or poultry,) and lay on the lid or top crust, pinching
-the edges closely together. You may ornament the sides and top with
-leaves or flowers of paste, shaped with a tin cutter, and notch or
-scollop the edges handsomely. Before you set it in the oven glaze it
-all over with white of egg. Bake it four hours. These pies are always
-eaten cold, and in winter will keep two or three weeks, if the air is
-carefully excluded from them; and they may be carried to a considerable
-distance.
-
-
-A PYRAMID OF TARTS.--Roll out a sufficient quantity of the best puff
-paste, or sugar paste; and with oval or circular cutters, cut it out
-into seven or eight pieces of different sizes; stamping the middle
-of each with the cutter you intend using for the next. Bake them all
-separately, and when they are cool, place them on a dish in a pyramid,
-(gradually diminishing in size,) the largest piece at the bottom, and
-the smallest at the top. Take various preserved fruits, and lay some
-of the largest on the lower piece of paste; on the next place fruit
-that is rather smaller; and so on till you finish at the top with the
-smallest sweetmeats you have. The upper one may be not so large as a
-half-dollar, containing only a single raspberry or strawberry.
-
-Notch all the edges handsomely. You may ornament the top or pinnacle of
-the pyramid with a sprig of orange blossom or myrtle.
-
-
-APPLE AND OTHER PIES.
-
-Take fine juicy acid apples; pare, core, and cut them into small
-pieces. Have ready a deep dish that has been lined with paste. Fill it
-with the apples; strewing among them layers of brown sugar, and adding
-the rind of a lemon pared thin, and also the juice squeezed in, or
-some essence of lemon. Put on another sheet of paste as a lid; close
-the edges well, and notch them. Bake the pie in a moderate oven, about
-three quarters of an hour. Eat it with cream and sugar, or with cold
-boiled custard.
-
-If the pie is made of early green apples, they should first be stewed
-with a very little water, and then plenty of sugar stirred in while
-they are hot.
-
-What are called sweet apples are entirely unfit for cooking, as they
-become tough and tasteless; and it is almost impossible to get them
-sufficiently done.
-
-When you put stewed apples into baked shells, grate nutmeg over the
-top. You may cover them with cream whipped to a stiff froth, and heaped
-on them.
-
-Cranberries and gooseberries should be stewed, and sweetened before
-they are put into paste; peaches cut in half or quartered, and the
-stones removed. The stones of cherries and plums should also be
-extracted.
-
-Raspberries or strawberries, mixed with cream and white sugar, may be
-put raw into baked shells.
-
-
-RHUBARB TARTS.--Take the young green stalks of the rhubarb plant, or
-spring fruit as it is called in England; and having peeled off the
-thin skin, cut the stalks into small pieces about an inch long, and
-put them into a sauce-pan with plenty of brown sugar, and its own
-juice. Cover it, and let it stew slowly till it is soft enough to mash
-to a marmalade. Then set it away to cool. Have ready some fresh baked
-shells; fill them with the stewed rhubarb, and grate white sugar over
-the top.
-
-For covered pies, cut the rhubarb very small; mix a great deal of sugar
-with it, and put it in raw. Bake the pies about three quarters of an
-hour.
-
-
-MINCE PIES.
-
-These pies are always made with covers, and should be eaten warm. If
-baked the day before, heat them on the stove or before the fire.
-
-Mince-meat made early in the winter, and packed closely in stone jars,
-will keep till spring, if it has a sufficiency of spice and liquor.
-Whenever you take out any for use, pour some additional brandy into the
-jar before you cover it again, and add some more sugar. No mince-meat,
-however, will keep well unless all the ingredients are of the best
-quality. The meat should always be boiled the day before you want to
-chop it.
-
-
-GOOD MINCE-MEAT.--Take a bullock's heart and boil it, or two pounds
-of the lean of fresh beef. When it is quite cold, chop it very fine.
-Chop three pounds of beef suet (first removing the skin and strings)
-and six pounds of large juicy apples that have been pared and cored.
-Then stone six pounds of the best raisins, (or take sultana raisins
-that are without stones,) and chop them also. Wash and dry three pounds
-of currants. Mix all together; adding to them the grated peel and the
-juice of two or three large oranges, two table-spoonfuls of powdered
-cinnamon, two powdered nutmegs, and three dozen powdered cloves, a
-tea-spoonful of beaten mace, one pound of fine brown sugar, one quart
-of Madeira wine, one pint of French brandy, and half a pound of citron
-cut into large slips. Having thoroughly mixed the whole, put it into a
-stone jar, and tie it up with brandy paper.
-
-
-THE BEST MINCE-MEAT.--Take a large fresh tongue, rub it with a mixture,
-in equal proportions, of salt, brown sugar, and powdered cloves. Cover
-it, and let it lie two days, or at least twenty-four hours. Then boil
-it two hours, and when it is cold, skin it, and mince it very fine.
-Chop also three pounds of beef suet, six pounds of sultana raisins, and
-six pounds of the best pippin apples that have been previously pared
-and cored. Add three pounds of currants, picked, washed and dried; two
-large table-spoonfuls of powdered cinnamon; the juice and grated rinds
-of four large lemons; one pound of sweet almonds, one ounce of bitter
-almonds, blanched and pounded in a mortar with half a pint of rose
-water; also four powdered nutmegs; two dozen beaten cloves; and a dozen
-blades of mace powdered. Add a pound of powdered white sugar, and a
-pound of citron cut into slips. Mix all together, and moisten it with a
-quart of Madeira, and a pint of brandy. Put it up closely in a stone
-jar with brandy paper; and when you take any out, add some more sugar
-and brandy; and chop some fresh apples.
-
-Bake this mince-meat in puff paste.
-
-You may reserve the citron to put in when you make the pies. Do not cut
-the slips too small, or the taste will be almost imperceptible.
-
-
-VERY PLAIN MINCE-MEAT.--Take a piece of fresh beef, consisting of about
-two pounds of lean, and one pound of fat. Boil it, and when it is quite
-cold, chop it fine. Or you may substitute cold roast beef. Pare and
-core some fine juicy apples, cut them in pieces, weigh three pounds,
-and chop them. Stone four pounds of raisins, and chop them also. Add
-a large table-spoonful of powdered cloves, and the same quantity of
-powdered cinnamon. Also a pound of brown sugar. Mix all thoroughly,
-moistening it with a quart of bottled or sweet cider. You may add the
-grated peel and the juice of an orange.
-
-Bake it in good common paste.
-
-This mince-meat will do very well for children or for family use, but
-is too plain to be set before a guest. Neither will it keep so long as
-that which is richer and more highly seasoned. It is best to make no
-more of it at once than you have immediate occasion for.
-
-
-MINCE-MEAT FOR LENT.--Boil a dozen eggs quite hard, and chop the
-yolks very fine. Chop also a dozen pippins, and two pounds of sultana
-raisins. Add two pounds of currants, a pound of sugar, a table-spoonful
-of powdered cinnamon, a tea-spoonful of beaten mace, three powdered
-nutmegs, the juice and grated peel of three large lemons, and half a
-pound of citron cut in large strips. Mix these ingredients thoroughly,
-and moisten the whole with a pint of white wine, half a pint of
-rose-water, and half a pint of brandy. Bake it in very nice paste.
-
-These mince pies may be eaten by persons who refrain from meat in Lent.
-
-
-ORANGE PUDDING.
-
-Grate the yellow part of the rind, and squeeze the juice of two large,
-smooth, deep-coloured oranges. Stir together to a cream, half a
-pound of butter, and half a pound of powdered white sugar, and add a
-wine-glass of mixed wine and brandy. Beat very light six eggs, and stir
-then gradually into the mixture. Put it into a buttered dish with a
-broad edge, round which lay a border of puff-paste neatly notched. Bake
-it half an hour, and when cool grate white sugar over it.
-
-Send it to table quite cold.
-
-
-LEMON PUDDING.--May be made precisely in the same manner as the above;
-substituting lemons for oranges.
-
-
-QUINCE PUDDING.--Take six large ripe quinces; pare them, and cut out
-all the blemishes. Then scrape them to a pulp, and mix the pulp with
-half a pint of cream, and half a pound of powdered sugar, stirring them
-together very hard. Beat the yolks of seven eggs, (omitting all the
-whites except two,) and stir them gradually into the mixture, adding
-two wine glasses of rose water. Stir the whole well together, and bake
-it in a buttered dish three quarters of an hour. Grate sugar over it
-when cold.
-
-If you cannot obtain cream, you may substitute a quarter of a pound of
-fresh butter stirred with the sugar and quince.
-
-A baked apple pudding may be made in the same manner.
-
-
-ALMOND PUDDING.--Take half a pound of shelled sweet almonds, and three
-ounces of shelled bitter almonds, or peach-kernels. Scald and peel
-them; throwing them, as they are peeled, into cold water. Then pound
-them one at a time in a marble mortar, adding to each a few drops of
-rose water; otherwise they will be heavy and oily. Mix the sweet and
-bitter almonds together by pounding them alternately; and as you do
-them, take them out and lay them on a plate. They must each be beaten
-to a fine smooth paste, free from the smallest lumps. It is best to
-prepare them the day before you make the pudding.
-
-Stir to a cream half a pound of fresh butter and half a pound of
-powdered white sugar; and by degrees pour into it a glass of mixed
-wine and brandy. Beat to a stiff froth, the whites only, of twelve
-eggs, (you may reserve the yolks for custards or other purposes,) and
-stir alternately into the butter and sugar the pounded almonds and
-the beaten white of egg. When the whole is well mixed, put it into a
-buttered dish and lay puff paste round the edge. Bake it about half an
-hour, and when cold grate sugar over it.
-
-
-ANOTHER ALMOND PUDDING.--Blanch three quarters of a pound of shelled
-sweet almonds, and three ounces of shelled bitter almonds, and beat
-them in a mortar to a fine paste; mixing them well, and adding by
-degrees a tea-cup full, or more, of rose water. Boil in a pint of rich
-milk, a few sticks of cinnamon broken up, and a few blades of mace.
-When the milk has come to a boil, take it off the fire, strain it
-into a pan, and soak in it two stale rusks cut into slices. They must
-soak till quite dissolved. Stir to a cream three quarters of a pound
-of fresh butter, mixed with the same quantity of powdered loaf-sugar.
-Beat ten eggs very light, yolks and whites together, and then stir
-alternately into the butter and sugar, the rusk, eggs, and almonds.
-Set it on a stove or a chafing dish, and stir the whole together till
-very smooth and thick. Put it into a buttered dish and bake it three
-quarters of an hour. It must be eaten quite cold.
-
-
-COCOA-NUT PUDDING.--Having opened a cocoa-nut, pare off the brown skin
-from the pieces, and wash them all in cold water. Then weigh three
-quarters of a pound, and grate it into a dish. Cut up half a pound of
-butter into half a pound of powdered loaf-sugar, and stir them together
-to a cream; add to them a glass of wine and rose water mixed. Beat the
-whites only, of twelve eggs, till they stand alone on the rods; and
-then stir the grated cocoa-nut and the beaten white of egg alternately
-into the butter and sugar; giving the whole a hard stirring at the
-last. Put the mixture into a buttered dish, lay puff paste round the
-flat edge, and bake it half an hour in a moderate oven. When cold,
-grate powdered sugar over it.
-
-
-ANOTHER COCOA-NUT PUDDING.--Peel and cut up the cocoa-nut, and wash and
-wipe the pieces. Weigh one pound, and grate it fine. Then mix with it
-two stale rusks or small sponge-cakes, grated also. Stir together till
-very light half a pound of butter and half a pound of powdered white
-sugar, and add a glass of white wine. Beat six whole eggs very light,
-and stir them gradually into the butter and sugar in turn with the
-grated cocoa-nut. Having stirred the whole very hard at the last, put
-it into a buttered dish and bake it half an hour. Send it to table cold.
-
-
-PUMPKIN PUDDING.--Take a pint of pumpkin that has been stewed soft,
-and pressed through a cullender. Melt in half a pint of warm milk, a
-quarter of a pound of butter, and the same quantity of sugar, stirring
-them well together. If you can conveniently procure a pint of rich
-cream it will be better than the milk and butter. Beat eight eggs very
-light, and add them gradually to the other ingredients, alternately
-with the pumpkin. Then stir in a wine glass of rose water and a glass
-of wine mixed together; a large tea-spoonful of powdered mace and
-cinnamon mixed, and a grated nutmeg. Having stirred the whole very
-hard, put it into a buttered dish and bake it three quarters of an
-hour. Eat it cold.
-
-
-A SQUASH PUDDING.--Pare, cut in pieces, and stew in a very little
-water, a yellow winter squash. When it is quite soft, drain it dry,
-and mash it in a cullender. Then put it into a pan, and mix with it a
-quarter of a pound of butter. Prepare two pounded crackers, or an equal
-quantity of grated stale bread. Stir gradually a quarter of a pound
-of powdered sugar into a quart of rich milk, and add by degrees, the
-squash, and the powdered biscuit. Beat nine eggs very light, and stir
-them gradually into the mixture. Add a glass of white wine, a glass of
-brandy, a glass of rose water, and a table-spoonful of mixed spice,
-nutmeg, mace, and cinnamon powdered. Stir the whole very hard, till all
-the ingredients are thoroughly mixed. Bake it three quarters of an hour
-in a buttered dish; and when cold, grate white sugar over it.
-
-
-YAM PUDDING.--Take one pound of roasted yam, and rub it through a
-cullender. Mix with it half a pound of white sugar, a pint of cream or
-half a pound of butter, a tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon, a grated
-nutmeg, and a wine glass of rose water, and one of wine. Set it away to
-get cold. Then beat eight eggs very light, and add them by degrees to
-the mixture, alternately with half a pound of the mashed potato. Bake
-it three-quarters of an hour in a buttered dish.
-
-
-CHESTNUT PUDDING--May be made in the above manner.
-
-
-POTATO PUDDING.--Boil a pound of fine potatoes, peel them, mash them,
-and rub them through a cullender. Stir together to a cream, three
-quarters of a pound of sugar, and the same quantity of butter. Add to
-them gradually, a wine glass of rose water, a glass of wine, and a
-glass of brandy; a tea-spoonful of powdered mace and cinnamon, a grated
-nutmeg, and the juice and grated peel of a large lemon. Then beat six
-eggs very light, and add them by degrees to the mixture, alternately
-with the potato. Bake it three quarters of an hour in a buttered dish.
-
-
-SWEET POTATO PUDDING.--Take half a pound of sweet potatoes, wash them,
-and put them into a pot with a very little water, barely enough to
-keep them from burning. Let them simmer slowly for about half an hour;
-they must be only parboiled, otherwise they will be soft, and may make
-the pudding heavy. When they are half done, take them out, peel them,
-and when cold, grate them. Stir together to a cream, half a pound of
-butter and a quarter of a pound and two ounces of powdered sugar, add a
-grated nutmeg, a large tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon, and half a
-tea-spoonful of beaten mace. Also the juice and grated peel of a lemon,
-a wine glass of rose water, a glass of wine, and a glass of brandy.
-Stir these ingredients well together. Beat eight eggs very light, and
-stir them into the mixture in turn with the sweet potato, a little at
-a time of each. Having stirred the whole very hard at the last, put it
-into a buttered dish and bake it three quarters of an hour. Eat it cold.
-
-
-CARROT PUDDING--May be made in the above manner.
-
-
-GREEN CORN PUDDING.--Take twelve ears of green corn, as it is called,
-(that is, Indian corn when full grown, but before it begins to harden
-and turn yellow,) and grate it. Have ready a quart of rich milk, and
-stir into it by degrees a quarter of a pound of fresh butter, and a
-quarter of a pound of sugar. Beat four eggs till quite light; and then
-stir them into the milk, &c. alternately with grated corn, a little of
-each at a time. Put the mixture into a large buttered dish and bake it
-four hours. It should be eaten quite warm. For sauce, beat together
-butter and white sugar in equal proportions, mixed with grated nutmeg.
-
-To make this pudding,--you may, if more convenient, boil the corn and
-cut it from the cob; but let it get quite cold before you stir it into
-the milk. If the corn has been previously boiled, the pudding will
-require but two hours to bake.
-
-
-SAGO PUDDING.--Pick, wash, and dry half a pound of currants; and
-prepare a tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon; a half tea-spoonful of
-powdered mace; and a grated nutmeg. Have ready six table-spoonfuls of
-sago, picked clean, and soaked for two hours in cold water. Boil the
-sago in a quart of milk till quite soft. Then stir alternately into
-the milk, a quarter of a pound of butter, and six ounces of powdered
-sugar, and set it away to cool. Beat eight eggs, and when they are
-quite light, stir them gradually into the milk, sago, &c. Add the
-spice, and lastly the currants; having dredged them well with flour to
-prevent their sinking. Stir the whole very hard, put it into a buttered
-dish, and bake it three quarters of an hour. Eat it cold.
-
-
-ARROW ROOT PUDDING.--Take a large tea-cup of arrow root, and melt it in
-half a pint of rich milk. Then boil another half pint of milk with some
-cinnamon, and a few bitter almonds or peach-leaves. Strain the milk
-hot over the dissolved arrow root; stir it to a thick, smooth batter,
-and set it away to cool. Next, beat three eggs very light, and stir
-them into the batter, alternately with four large table-spoonsful of
-powdered sugar. Add some nutmeg, and some fresh lemon-peel, grated. Put
-the mixture into a buttered dish, and bake it half an hour. When cold,
-ornament the top handsomely, with slices of preserved quince or peach,
-or with whole strawberries or raspberries.
-
-
-GROUND RICE PUDDING.--Mix a quarter of a pound of ground rice with a
-pint of cold milk, till it is a smooth batter and free from lumps. Boil
-one pint of milk; and when it has boiled, stir in gradually the rice
-batter, alternately with a quarter of a pound of butter. Keep it over
-the fire, stirring all the time, till the whole is well mixed, and has
-boiled hard. Then take it off, add a quarter of a pound of white sugar;
-stir it well, and set it away to cool. Beat eight eggs very light,
-and stir them into the mixture when it is quite cold. Then strain it
-through a sieve, (this will make it more light and delicate,) add a
-grated nutmeg, and a small tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon. Stir in
-the juice and the grated peel of a lemon, or a small tea-spoonful of
-essence of lemon. Put it into a deep dish or dishes, and bake it an
-hour. As soon as it comes out of the oven, lay slips of citron over the
-top; and when cold, strew powdered sugar on it.
-
-
-A RICE PLUM PUDDING.--Take three jills of whole rice; wash it, and boil
-it in a pint of milk. When it is soft, mix in a quarter of a pound of
-butter, and set it aside to cool; and when it is quite cold, stir it
-into another pint of milk. Prepare a pound and a half of raisins or
-currants; if currants, wash and dry them; if raisins, seed them and cut
-them in half. Dredge them well with flour, to prevent their sinking;
-and prepare also a powdered nutmeg; a table-spoonful of mixed mace and
-cinnamon powdered; a wine glass of rose water; and a wine glass of
-brandy or white wine. Beat six eggs very light, and stir them into the
-mixture, alternately with a quarter of a pound of sugar. Then add by
-degrees the spice and the liquor, and lastly, stir in, a few at a time,
-the raisins or currants. Put the pudding into a buttered dish and bake
-it an hour and a half. Send it to table cool.
-
-You may make this pudding of ground rice, using but half a pint instead
-of three jills.
-
-
-A PLAIN RICE PUDDING.--Pick, wash, and boil half a pint of rice. Then
-drain off the water, and let the rice dry, and get cold. Afterwards mix
-with it two ounces of butter, and four ounces of sugar, and stir it
-into a quart of rich milk. Beat four or five eggs very light, and add
-them gradually to the mixture. Stir in at the last a table-spoonful of
-grated nutmeg and cinnamon. Bake it an hour in a deep dish. Eat it cold.
-
-
-A FARMER'S RICE PUDDING.--This pudding is made without eggs. Wash a
-common-sized tea-cup of rice through cold water. Stir it raw into a
-quart of rich milk, or of cream and milk mixed; adding a quarter of a
-pound of brown sugar, and a table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon. Put
-it into a deep pan, and bake it two hours or more. When done, the rice
-will be perfectly soft, which you may ascertain by dipping a tea-spoon
-into the edge of the pudding and taking out a little to try. Eat it
-cold.
-
-
-RICE MILK.--Pick and wash half a pint of rice, and boil it in a quart
-of water till it is quite soft. Then drain it, and mix it with a quart
-of rich milk. You may add half a pound of whole raisins. Set it over
-hot coals, and stir it frequently till it boils. When it boils hard,
-stir in alternately two beaten eggs, and four large table-spoonfuls of
-brown sugar. Let it continue boiling five minutes longer; then take it
-off, and send it to table hot. If you put in raisins you must let it
-boil till they are quite soft.
-
-
-A BOILED RICE PUDDING.--Mix a quarter of a pound of ground rice with a
-pint of milk, and simmer it over hot coals; stirring it all the time
-to prevent its being lumpy, or burning at the bottom. When it is thick
-and smooth, take it off, and pour it into an earthen pan. Mix a quarter
-of a pound of sugar, and a quarter of a pound of butter with half a
-pint of cream or very rich milk, and stir it into the rice; adding a
-powdered nutmeg, and the grated rind of two lemons; also squeeze in
-their juice. Beat the yolks of six eggs with the whites of two only.
-When the eggs are quite light, mix them gradually with the other
-ingredients, and stir the whole very hard. Butter a large bowl, or a
-pudding mould. Put in the mixture; tying a cloth tightly over the top,
-(so that no water can get in,) and boil it two hours. When done, turn
-it out into a dish. Send it to table warm, and eat it with sweetened
-cream, flavoured with a glass of brandy or white wine and a grated
-nutmeg.
-
-
-A MARLBOROUGH PUDDING.--Pare, core and quarter six large ripe pippin
-apples. Stew them in about a jill of water. When they are soft but not
-broken, take them out, drain them through a sieve, and mash them to a
-paste with the back of a spoon. Mix with them six large table-spoonfuls
-of sugar and a quarter of a pound of butter, and set them away to
-get cold. Grate two milk biscuits or small sponge cakes, or an equal
-quantity of stale bread, and grate also the yellow peel, and squeeze
-the juice of a large lemon. Beat six eggs light, and when the apple
-is cold stir them gradually into it, adding the grated biscuit and
-the lemon. Stir in a wine glass of rose water and a grated nutmeg.
-Put the mixture into a buttered dish or dishes; lay round the edge a
-border of puff paste, and bake it three quarters of an hour. When cold,
-grate white sugar over the top, and ornament it with slips of citron
-handsomely arranged.
-
-
-ALMOND CHEESE CAKE.
-
-This though usually called a cheese cake, is in fact a pudding.
-
-Cut a piece of rennet about two inches square, wash off the salt
-in cold water, and wipe it dry. Put it into a tea-cup, pour on it
-sufficient luke-warm water to cover it, and let it soak all night, or
-at least several hours. Take a quart of milk, which must be made warm,
-but not boiling. Stir the rennet-water into it. Cover it, and set it in
-a warm place. When the curd has become quite firm, and the whey looks
-greenish, drain off the whey, and set the curd in a cool place. While
-the milk is turning, prepare the other ingredients. Wash and dry half a
-pound of currants, and dredge them well with flour. Blanch three ounces
-of sweet and one ounce of bitter almonds, by scalding and peeling them.
-Then cool them in cold water, wiping them dry before you put them into
-the mortar. If you cannot procure bitter almonds, peach kernels may be
-substituted. Beat them, one at a time, in the mortar to a smooth paste,
-pouring in with every one a few drops of rose water to prevent their
-being oily, dull-coloured, and heavy. If you put a sufficiency of rose
-water, the pounded almond paste will be light, creamy, and perfectly
-white. Mix, as you do them, the sweet and bitter almonds together.
-Then beat the yolks of eight eggs, and when light, mix them gradually
-with the curd. Add five table-spoonfuls of cream, and a tea-spoonful
-of mixed spice. Lastly, stir in, by degrees, the pounded almonds, and
-the currants alternately. Stir the whole mixture very hard. Bake it in
-buttered dishes, laying puff paste round the edges. If accurately made,
-it will be found delicious. It must be put in the oven immediately.
-
-
-COMMON CHEESE CAKE.--Boil a quart of rich milk. Beat eight eggs, put
-them to the milk, and let the milk and eggs boil together till they
-become a curd. Then drain it through a very clean sieve, till all
-the whey is out. Put the curd into a deep dish, and mix with it half
-a pound of butter, working them well together. When it is cold, add
-to it the beaten yolks of four eggs, and four large table-spoonfuls
-of powdered white sugar; also a grated nutmeg. Lastly, stir in, by
-degrees, half a pound of currants that have been previously picked,
-washed, dried, and dredged with flour. Lay puff paste round the rim of
-the dish, and bake the cheese cake half an hour. Send it to table cold,
-dredged with sugar.
-
-
-PRUNE PUDDING.--Scald a pound of prunes; cover them, and let them swell
-in the hot water till they are soft. Then drain them, and extract the
-stones; spread the prunes on a large dish, and dredge them with flour.
-Take one jill or eight large table-spoonfuls from a quart of rich milk,
-and stir into it, gradually, eight spoonfuls of sifted flour. Mix it to
-a smooth batter, pressing out all the lumps with the back of the spoon.
-Beat eight eggs light, and stir them, by degrees, into the remainder of
-the milk, alternately with the batter that you have just mixed. Then
-add the prunes one at a time, stirring the whole very hard. Tie the
-pudding in a cloth that has been previously dipped in boiling water
-and then dredged with flour. Leave room for it to swell, but secure
-it firmly, so that no water can get in. Put it into a pot of boiling
-water, and boil it two hours. Send it to table hot, (not taking it out
-of the pot till a moment before it is wanted,) and eat it with cream
-sauce; or with butter, sugar, and nutmeg beaten together, and served up
-in a little tureen.
-
-A similar pudding may be made with whole raisins.
-
-
-EVE'S PUDDING.--Pare, core, and quarter six large pippins, and chop
-them very fine. Grate stale bread till you have six ounces of crumbs,
-and roll fine six ounces of white sugar. Pick, wash, and dry six ounces
-of currants, and sprinkle them with flour. Mix all these ingredients
-together in a large pan, adding six ounces of butter cut small, and
-two table-spoonfuls of flour. Beat six eggs very light, and moisten
-the mixture with them. Add a grated nutmeg, and a tea-spoonful of
-powdered cinnamon. Stir the whole very well together. Have ready a pot
-of boiling water. Dip your pudding cloth into it, shake it out, and
-dredge it with flour. Then put in the mixture, and tie it very firmly;
-leaving space for the pudding to swell, and stopping up the tying place
-with a paste of wetted flour. Boil it three hours; keeping at the fire
-a kettle of boiling water, to replenish the pot, that the pudding may
-be always well covered. Send it to table hot, and eat it with sweetened
-cream flavoured with wine and nutmeg.
-
-
-CINDERELLAS OR GERMAN PUFFS.--Sift half a pound of the finest flour.
-Cut up in a quart of rich milk, half a pound of fresh butter, and set
-it on the stove, or near the fire, till it has melted. Beat eight
-eggs very light, and stir them gradually into the milk and butter,
-alternately with the flour. Add a powdered nutmeg, and a tea-spoonful
-of powdered cinnamon. Mix the whole very well to a fine smooth batter,
-in which there must be no lumps. Butter some large common tea-cups, and
-divide the mixture among them till they are half full or a little more.
-Set them immediately in a quick oven, and bake them about a quarter of
-an hour. When done, turn them out into a dish, and grate white sugar
-over them. Serve them up hot, with a sauce of sweetened cream flavoured
-with wine and nutmeg; or you may eat them with molasses and butter; or
-with sugar and wine. Send them round whole, for they will fall almost
-as soon as cut.
-
-
-A BOILED BREAD PUDDING.--Boil a quart of rich milk. While it is
-boiling, take a small loaf of baker's bread, such as is sold for
-five or six cents. It may be either fresh or stale. Pare off all the
-crust, and cut up the crumb into very small pieces. You should have
-baker's bread if you can procure it, as home-made bread may not make
-the pudding light enough. Put the bread into a pan; and when the milk
-boils, pour it scalding hot over the bread. Cover the pan closely, and
-let it steep in the hot steam for about three quarters of an hour. Then
-remove the cover, and allow the bread and milk to cool. In the mean
-time, beat four eggs till they are thick and smooth. Then beat into
-them a table-spoonful and a half of fine wheat flour. Next beat the egg
-and flour into the bread and milk, and continue to beat hard till the
-mixture is as light as possible; for on this the success of the pudding
-chiefly depends.
-
-Have ready over the fire a pot of boiling water. Dip your pudding-cloth
-into it, and shake it out. Spread out the cloth in a deep dish or pan,
-and dredge it well with flour. Pour in the mixture, and tie up the
-cloth, leaving room for it to swell. Tie the string firmly and plaster
-up the opening (if there is any) with flour moistened with water. If
-any water gets into it the pudding will be spoiled.
-
-See that the water boils when you put in the pudding, and keep it
-boiling hard. If the pot wants replenishing, do it with boiling water
-from a kettle. Should you put in cold water to supply the place of that
-which has boiled away, the pudding will chill, and become hard and
-heavy. Boil it an hour and a half.
-
-Turn it out of the bag the minute before you send it to table. Eat it
-with wine sauce, or with sugar and butter, or molasses.
-
-It will be much improved by adding to the mixture half a pound of
-whole raisins, well floured to prevent their sinking. Sultana raisins
-are best, as they have no seeds.
-
-If these directions are exactly followed, this will be found a
-remarkably good and wholesome plain pudding.
-
-For all boiled puddings, a square pudding-cloth which can be opened
-out, is much better than a bag. It should be very thick.
-
-
-A BAKED BREAD PUDDING.--Take a stale five cent loaf of bread; cut off
-all the crust, and grate or rub the crumb as fine as possible. Boil
-a quart of rich milk, and pour it hot over the bread; then stir in a
-quarter of a pound of butter, and the same quantity of sugar, a glass
-of wine and brandy mixed, or a glass of rose water. Or you may omit
-the liquor and substitute the grated peel of a large lemon. Add a
-table-spoonful of mixed cinnamon and nutmeg powdered. Stir the whole
-very well, cover it, and set it away for half an hour. Then let it
-cool. Beat seven or eight eggs very light, and stir them gradually into
-the mixture after it is cold. Then butter a deep dish, and bake the
-pudding an hour. Send it to table cool.
-
-
-A BREAD AND BUTTER PUDDING.--Cut some slices of bread and butter
-moderately thick, omitting the crust; stale bread is best. Butter a
-deep dish, and cover the bottom with slices of the buttered bread. Have
-ready a pound of currants, picked, washed and dried. Spread one third
-of them thickly over the bread and butter, and strew on some brown
-sugar. Then put another layer of bread and butter, and cover it also
-with currants and sugar. Finish with a third layer of each, and pour
-over the whole four eggs, beaten very light and mixed with a pint of
-milk, and a wine glass of rose water. Bake the pudding an hour, and
-grate nutmeg over it when done. Eat it warm, but not hot.
-
-You may substitute for the currants, raisins seeded, and cut in half.
-
-This pudding may be made also with layers of stewed gooseberries
-instead of the currants, or with pippin apples, pared, cored and minced
-fine.
-
-
-A SUET PUDDING.--Mince very finely as much beef suet as will make two
-large table-spoonfuls. Grate two handfuls of bread-crumbs; boil a
-quart of milk and pour it hot on the bread. Cover it, and set it aside
-to steep for half an hour; then put it to cool. Beat eight eggs very
-light; stir the suet, and six table-spoonfuls of flour alternately
-into the bread and milk, and add, by degrees, the eggs. Lastly, stir
-in a table-spoonful of powdered nutmeg and cinnamon mixed, and a glass
-of mixed wine and brandy. Pour it into a square cloth dipped in hot
-water, and floured; tie it firmly, put it into a pot of boiling water,
-and boil it two hours. Do not take it up till immediately before it is
-wanted, and send it to table hot.
-
-Eat it with wine sauce, or with molasses.
-
-
-A CUSTARD PUDDING.--Take five table-spoonfuls out of a quart of cream
-or rich milk, and mix them with two large spoonfuls of fine flour. Set
-the rest of the milk to boil, flavouring it with half a dozen peach
-leaves, or with bitter almonds broken up. When it has boiled hard, take
-it off, strain it, and stir it in the cold milk and flour. Set it away
-to cool, and beat well eight yolks and four whites of eggs; add them to
-the milk, and stir in, at the last, a glass of brandy or white wine,
-a powdered nutmeg, and a quarter of a pound of sugar. Butter a large
-bowl or mould; pour in the mixture; tie a cloth tightly over it; put it
-into a pot of boiling water, and boil it two hours, replenishing the
-pot with hot water from a tea-kettle. When the pudding is done, let it
-get cool before you turn it out. Eat it with butter and sugar stirred
-together to a cream, and flavoured with lemon juice or orange.
-
-
-FLOUR HASTY PUDDING.--Tie together half a dozen peach-leaves, put them
-into a quart of milk, and set it on the fire to boil. When it has come
-to a hard boil, take out the leaves, but let the pot remain boiling
-on the fire. Then with a large wooden spoon in one hand, and some
-wheat flour in the other, thicken and stir it till it is about the
-consistence of a boiled custard. Afterwards throw in, one at a time,
-a dozen small bits of butter rolled in a thick coat of flour. You may
-enrich it by stirring in a beaten egg or two, a few minutes before you
-take it from the fire. When done, pour it into a deep dish, and strew
-brown sugar thickly over the top. Eat it warm.
-
-
-INDIAN MUSH.--Have ready on the fire a pot of boiling water. Stir into
-it by degrees (a handful at a time) sufficient Indian meal to make it
-very thick, and then add a very small portion of salt. You must keep
-the pot boiling on the fire all the time you are throwing in the meal;
-and between every handful, stir very hard with the mush-stick, (a round
-stick flattened at one end,) that the mush may not be lumpy. After it
-is sufficiently thick, keep it boiling for an hour longer, stirring it
-occasionally. Then cover the pot, and hang it higher up the chimney,
-so as to simmer slowly or keep hot for another hour. The goodness
-of mush depends greatly on its being long and thoroughly boiled. If
-sufficiently cooked, it is wholesome and nutritious, but exactly the
-reverse, if made in haste. It is not too long to have it altogether
-three or four hours over the fire; on the contrary it will be much the
-better for it.
-
-Eat it warm; either with milk, or cover your plate with mush, make a
-hole in the middle, put some butter in the hole and fill it up with
-molasses.
-
-Cold mush that has been left, may be cut into slices and fried in
-butter.
-
-Burgoo is made precisely in the same manner as mush, but with oatmeal
-instead of Indian.
-
-
-A BAKED INDIAN PUDDING.--Cut up a quarter of a pound of butter in a
-pint of molasses, and warm them together till the butter is melted.
-Boil a quart of milk; and while scalding hot, pour it slowly over a
-pint of sifted Indian meal, and stir in the molasses and butter. Cover
-it, and let it steep for an hour. Then take off the cover, and set
-the mixture to cool. When it is cold, beat six eggs, and stir them
-gradually into it; add a table-spoonful of mixed cinnamon and nutmeg;
-and the grated peel of a lemon. Stir the whole very hard; put it into a
-buttered dish, and bake it two hours. Serve it up hot, and eat it with
-wine sauce, or with butter and molasses.
-
-
-A BOILED INDIAN PUDDING.--Chop very fine a quarter of a pound of beef
-suet. Mix it with a quart of sifted Indian meal. Boil a quart of milk
-with some pieces of cinnamon broken up; strain it, and while it is hot,
-stir in gradually the meal and suet; add half a pint of molasses. Cover
-the mixture and set it away for an hour; then put it to cool. Beat six
-eggs, and stir them gradually into the mixture when it is cold; add
-a grated nutmeg, and the grated peel of a lemon. Tie the pudding in a
-cloth that has been dipped in hot water and floured; and leave plenty
-of room for it to swell. Secure it well at the tying place lest the
-water should get in, which will infallibly spoil it. Put it into a pot
-of boiling water, (which must be replenished as it boils away,) and
-boil it four hours at least; but five or six will be better. To have an
-Indian pudding _very good_, it should be mixed the night before, (all
-except the eggs,) and put on to boil early in the morning. Do not take
-it out of the pot till immediately before it is wanted. Eat it with
-wine sauce, or with molasses and butter. What is left may be boiled
-again next day.
-
-
-INDIAN PUDDING WITHOUT EGGS.--Boil some cinnamon in a quart of milk,
-and then strain it. While the milk is hot, stir into it a pint of
-molasses, and then add by degrees a quart or more of Indian meal so as
-to make a thick batter. It will be much improved by the grated peel
-and juice of a large lemon or orange. Tie it very securely in a thick
-cloth, leaving room for it to swell, and pasting up the tying-place
-with a lump of flour and water. Put it into a pot of boiling water,
-(having ready a kettle to fill it up as it boils away,) hang it over a
-good fire, and keep it boiling hard for four or five hours. Eat it warm
-with molasses and butter.
-
-This is a very economical, and not an unpalatable pudding; and may be
-found convenient when it is difficult to obtain eggs. The molasses
-should be West India.
-
-
-A BAKED PLUM PUDDING.--Grate all the crumb of a stale six cent loaf;
-boil a quart of rich milk, and pour it boiling hot over the grated
-bread; cover it, and let it steep for an hour; then set it out to cool.
-In the mean time prepare half a pound of currants, picked, washed, and
-dried; half a pound of raisins, stoned and cut in half; and a quarter
-of a pound of citron cut in large slips; also, two nutmegs beaten to a
-powder; and a table-spoonful of mace and cinnamon powdered and mixed
-together. Crush with a rolling-pin half a pound of sugar, and cut up
-half a pound of butter. When the bread and milk is uncovered to cool,
-mix with it the butter, sugar, spice and citron; adding a glass of
-brandy, and a glass of white wine. Beat eight eggs very light, and when
-the milk is quite cold, stir them gradually into the mixture. Then add,
-by degrees, the raisins and currants, (which must be previously dredged
-with flour,) and stir the whole very hard. Put it into a buttered dish,
-and bake it two hours. Send it to table warm, and eat it with wine
-sauce, or with wine and sugar only.
-
-In making this pudding, you may substitute for the butter, half a
-pound of beef suet minced as fine as possible. It will be found best
-to prepare the ingredients the day before, covering them closely and
-putting them away.
-
-
-A BOILED PLUM PUDDING.--Grate the crumb of a twelve cent loaf of bread,
-and boil a quart of rich milk with a small bunch of peach leaves in
-it, then strain it and set it out to cool. Pick, wash and dry a pound
-of currants, and stone and cut in half a pound of raisins; strew
-over them three large table-spoonfuls of flour. Roll fine a pound of
-brown sugar, and mince as fine as possible three quarters of a pound
-of beef suet. Prepare two beaten nutmegs, and a large table-spoonful
-of powdered mace and cinnamon; also the grated peel and the juice
-of two large lemons or oranges. Beat ten eggs very light, and (when
-it is cold) stir them gradually into the milk, alternately with the
-suet and grated bread. Add, by degrees, the sugar, fruit, and spice,
-with a large glass of brandy, and one of white wine. Mix the whole
-very well, and stir it hard. Then put it into a thick cloth that has
-been scalded and floured; leave room for it to swell, and tie it very
-firmly, pasting the tying-place with a small lump of moistened flour.
-Put the pudding into a large pot of boiling water, and boil it steadily
-six hours, replenishing the pot occasionally from a boiling kettle.
-Turn the pudding frequently in the pot. Prepare half a pound of citron
-cut in slips, and half a pound of almonds blanched and split in half
-lengthways. Stick the almonds and the citron all over the outside of
-the pudding as soon as you take it out of the cloth. Send it to table
-hot, and eat it with wine sauce, or with cold wine and sugar.
-
-If there is much of the pudding left, tie it in a cloth and boil it
-again next day.
-
-All the ingredients of this plum pudding (except the eggs) should be
-prepared the day before, otherwise it cannot be made in time to allow
-of its being sufficiently boiled.
-
-We have known of a very rich plum pudding being mixed in England and
-sent to America in a covered bowl; it arrived perfectly good after a
-month's voyage, the season being winter.
-
-
-A BAKED APPLE PUDDING.--Take nine large pippin apples; pare and core
-them whole. Set them in the bottom of a large deep dish, and pour
-round them a very little water, just enough to keep them from burning.
-Put them into an oven, and let them bake about half an hour. In the
-mean time, mix three table-spoonfuls of flour with a quart of milk, a
-quarter of a pound of white sugar, and a tea-spoonful of mixed spice.
-Beat seven eggs very light, and stir them gradually into the milk.
-Then take out the dish of apples, (which by this time should be half
-baked,) and fill up the holes from whence you extracted the cores, with
-white sugar; pressing down into each a slice of fresh lemon. Pour the
-batter round the apples; put the dish again into the oven, and let it
-bake another half hour; but not long enough for the apples to fall to
-pieces; as they should, when done, be soft throughout, but quite whole.
-Send it to table warm.
-
-This is sometimes called a _Bird's Nest Pudding_.
-
-It will be much improved by previously boiling in the milk a small
-handful of peach-leaves. Let it get cold before you stir in the eggs.
-
-
-BOILED APPLE PUDDING.--Pare, core, and quarter as many fine juicy
-apples as will weigh two pounds when done. Strew among them a quarter
-of a pound of brown sugar, and add a grated nutmeg, and the juice and
-yellow peel of a large lemon. Prepare a paste of suet and flour, in
-the proportion of a pound of chopped suet to two pounds of flour. Roll
-it out of moderate thickness; lay the apples in the centre, and close
-the paste nicely over them in the form of a large dumpling; tie it in
-a cloth and boil it three hours. Send it to table hot, and eat with it
-cream sauce, or with butter and sugar. The water must boil before the
-pudding goes in.
-
-Any fruit pudding may be made in a similar manner.
-
-
-AN EASTERN PUDDING.--Make a paste of a pound of flour and half a pound
-of minced suet; and roll it out thin into a square or oblong sheet;
-trim off the edges so as to make it an even shape. Spread thickly over
-it some marmalade, or cold stewed fruit, (which must be made very
-sweet,) either apple, peach, plum, gooseberry or cranberry. Roll up
-the paste, with the fruit spread on it, into a scroll. Secure each end
-by putting on nicely a thin round piece rolled out from the trimmings
-that you cut off the edges of the sheet. Put the pudding into a cloth,
-and boil it at least three hours. Serve it up hot, and eat it with
-cream sauce, or with butter and sugar. The pudding must be put on in
-boiling water.
-
-
-APPLE DUMPLINGS.
-
-Take large fine juicy apples. Pare them, and extract the cores without
-dividing the apple. Fill each hole with brown sugar, and some chips
-of lemon-peel. Also squeeze in some lemon juice. Or you may fill the
-cavities with raspberry jam, or with any sort of marmalade. Have ready
-a paste, made in the proportion of a pound of suet, chopped as fine
-as possible, to two pounds and a half of sifted flour, well mixed,
-and wetted with as little water as possible. Roll out the paste to
-a moderate thickness, and cut it into circular pieces, allowing two
-pieces to each dumpling. Lay your apple on one piece, and put another
-piece on the top, closing the paste round the sides with your fingers,
-so as to cover the apple entirely. This is a better way than gathering
-up the paste at one end, as the dumpling is less liable to burst. Boil
-each dumpling in a small coarse cloth, which has first been dipped in
-hot water. There should always be a set of cloths kept for the purpose.
-Tie them tightly, leaving a small space for the dumpling to swell.
-Plaster a little flour on the inside of each tying place to prevent the
-water from getting in. Have ready a pot of boiling water. Put in the
-dumplings and boil them steadily for an hour. Send them to table hot
-in a covered dish. Do not take them up till a moment before they are
-wanted.
-
-Eat them with cream and sugar, or with butter and sugar.
-
-You may make the paste with butter instead of suet, allowing a pound of
-butter to two pounds and a quarter of flour. But when paste is to be
-boiled, suet will make it much lighter and finer than butter.
-
-Apple dumplings may be made in a very plain manner with potato paste,
-and boiled without cloths, dredging the outside of each dumpling with
-flour. They should boil about three quarters of an hour when without
-cloths.
-
-The apples for dumplings should always be whole, (except the cores;)
-for if quartered, the pieces will separate in boiling and break through
-the crust. The apples should never be sweet ones.
-
-
-RICE DUMPLINGS.--Pick and wash a pound of rice, and boil it gently in
-two quarts of water till it becomes dry; keeping the pot well covered,
-and not stirring it. Then take it off the fire, and spread it out to
-cool on the bottom of an inverted sieve: loosening the grains lightly
-with a fork, that all the moisture may evaporate. Pare a dozen pippins
-or other large juicy apples, and scoop out the core. Then fill up the
-cavity with marmalade, or with lemon and sugar. Cover every apple all
-over with a thick coating of the boiled rice. Tie up each in a separate
-cloth,[F] and put them into a pot of cold water. They will require
-about an hour and a quarter after they begin to boil; perhaps longer.
-
-Turn them out on a large dish, and be careful in doing so not to break
-the dumplings. Eat them with cream sauce, or with wine sauce, or with
-butter, sugar, and nutmeg beaten together.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[F] Your pudding and dumpling cloths should be squares of coarse thick
-linen, hemmed, and with tape strings sewed to them. After using, they
-should be washed, dried, and ironed; and kept in one of the kitchen
-drawers, that they may be always ready when wanted.
-
-
-PIGEON DUMPLINGS OR PUDDINGS.--Take six pigeons and stuff them with
-chopped oysters, seasoned with pepper, salt, mace, and nutmeg. Score
-the breasts, and loosen all the joints with a sharp knife, as if you
-were going to carve them for eating; but do not cut them quite apart.
-Make a sufficient quantity of nice suet paste, allowing a pound of suet
-to two pounds of flour; roll it out thick, and divide it into six. Lay
-one pigeon on each sheet of the paste with the back downwards, and put
-in the lower part of the breast a piece of butter rolled in flour.
-Close the paste over the pigeon in the form of a dumpling or small
-pudding; pouring in at the last a very little cold water to add to the
-gravy. Tie each dumpling in a cloth, put them into a pot of hot water,
-and boil them two hours. Send them to table with made gravy in a boat.
-
-Partridges or quails may be cooked in this manner; also chickens, which
-must be accompanied by egg sauce.
-
-These dumplings or puddings will be found very good.
-
-
-FINE SUET DUMPLINGS.--Grate the crumb of a stale six cent loaf, and
-mix it with half as much beef suet, chopped as fine as possible. Add
-a grated nutmeg, and two large table-spoonfuls of sugar. Beat four
-eggs with four table-spoonfuls of white wine or brandy. Mix all well
-together to a stiff paste. Flour your hands, and make up the mixture
-into balls or dumplings about the size of turkey eggs. Have ready a
-pot of boiling water. Put the dumplings into cloths, and let them boil
-about half an hour. Serve them hot, and eat them with wine sauce.
-
-
-PLAIN SUET DUMPLINGS.--Sift two pounds of flour into a pan, and add a
-salt-spoon of salt. Mince very fine one pound of beef suet, and rub it
-into the flour. Make it into a stiff dough with a little cold water.
-Then roll it out an inch thick or rather more. Cut it into dumplings
-with the edge of a tumbler. Put them into a pot of boiling water, and
-let them boil an hour and a half. Send them to table hot, to eat with
-boiled loin of mutton, or with molasses after the meat is removed.
-
-
-INDIAN DUMPLINGS.--Take a pint of milk, and four eggs well beaten. Stir
-them together, and add a salt-spoon of salt. Then mix in as much sifted
-Indian meal as will make a stiff dough. Flour your hands; divide the
-dough into equal portions, and make it into balls about the size of a
-goose egg. Flatten each with the rolling-pin, tie them in cloths, and
-put them into a pot of boiling water. They will boil in a short time.
-Take care not to let them go to pieces by keeping them too long in the
-pot.
-
-Serve them up hot, and eat them with corned pork, or with bacon. Or you
-may eat them with molasses and butter after the meat is removed.
-
-If to be eaten without meat, you may mix in the dough a quarter of a
-pound of finely chopped suet.
-
-
-LIVER DUMPLINGS.--Take a calf's liver, and chop it very fine. Mix
-with it half a pound of beef suet chopped fine also; half a pound of
-flour; one minced onion; a handful of bread crumbs; a table-spoonful of
-chopped parsley and sweet marjoram mixed; a few blades of mace and some
-grated nutmeg; and a little pepper and salt. Mix all well together. Wet
-the mixture with six eggs well beaten, and make it up into dumplings,
-with your hands well floured. Have ready a large pot of boiling water.
-Drop the dumplings into it with a ladle, and let them boil an hour.
-Have ready bread-crumbs browned in butter to pour over them before they
-go to table.
-
-
-HAM DUMPLINGS.--Chop some cold ham, the fat and lean in equal
-proportions. Season it with pepper and minced sage. Make a crust,
-allowing half a pound of chopped suet, or half a pound of butter to a
-pound of flour. Roll it out thick, and divide it into equal portions.
-Put some minced ham into each, and close up the crust. Have ready a
-pot of boiling water, and put in the dumplings. Boil them about three
-quarters of an hour. You may use potatoe paste.
-
-
-LIGHT DUMPLINGS.--Mix together as much grated bread, butter and
-beaten egg (seasoned with powdered cinnamon) as will make a stiff
-paste. Stir it well. Make the mixture into round dumplings, with your
-hands well floured. Tie up each in a separate cloth, and boil them a
-short time,--about fifteen minutes. Eat them with wine sauce, or with
-molasses and butter.
-
-
-PLAIN FRITTERS.
-
-Beat seven eggs very light, and stir them gradually into a quart of
-milk; add, by degrees, three quarters of a pound, or a pint and a half
-of sifted flour. Beat the whole very hard. Have ready in a frying-pan
-over the fire, a large quantity of lard. When the lard has come to a
-hard boil, begin to put in the fritters; allowing for each about a
-jill of batter, or half a large tea-cup full. They do not require
-turning, and will be done in a few minutes. Fry as many at a time as
-the pan will hold. Send them to table hot, and eat them with powdered
-cinnamon, sugar, and white wine. Let fresh hot ones be sent in as they
-are wanted; they chill and become heavy immediately.
-
-Begin to fry the fritters as soon as the batter is mixed, as it will
-fall by setting. Near a pound and a half of lard will be required for
-the above quantity of fritters.
-
-
-APPLE FRITTERS.--Pare, core, and parboil (in a very little water) some
-large juicy pippins. When half done, take them out, drain them, and
-mince them very fine. Make a batter according to the preceding receipt;
-adding some lemon juice and grated lemon-peel. Stir into the batter a
-sufficient quantity of the minced apple to make it very thick. Then fry
-the fritters in hot lard as before directed. Eat them with nutmeg and
-sugar.
-
-
-PLAIN PANCAKES.--Sift half a pound or a pint of flour. Beat seven eggs
-very light, and stir them gradually into a quart of rich milk. Then add
-by degrees the flour, so as to make a thin batter. Mix it very smooth,
-pressing out all the lumps with the back of a spoon. Set the frying-pan
-over the fire, and when it is hot, grease it with a spoonful of lard.
-Then put in a ladle full of the batter, and fry it of a light brown,
-turning it with care to prevent its breaking. Make each pancake large
-enough to cover the bottom of a dessert plate; greasing the pan every
-time. Send them to table hot, accompanied by powdered sugar and nutmeg
-mixed in a small glass bowl. Have wine with them also.
-
-
-SWEETMEAT PANCAKES.--Take a large red beet-root that has been boiled
-tender; cut it up and pound it in a mortar till you have sufficient
-juice for colouring the pancakes. Then make a batter as in the
-preceding receipt, and stir into it at the last enough of the beet
-juice to give it a fine pink colour. Or instead of the beet juice,
-you may use a little cochineal dissolved in a very small quantity of
-brandy. Fry the pancakes in a pan greased with lard or fresh butter;
-and as fast as they are done, spread thickly over them raspberry jam or
-any sort of marmalade. Then roll them up nicely, and trim off the ends.
-Lay them, side by side, on a large dish, and strew powdered sugar over
-them. Send them to table hot, and eat them with sweetened cream.
-
-
-PLAIN CUSTARDS.
-
-Tie together six or eight peach leaves, and boil them in a quart of
-milk with a large stick of cinnamon broken up. If you cannot procure
-peach leaves, substitute a handful of peach-kernels or bitter almonds,
-or a vanilla bean split in pieces. When it has boiled hard, strain the
-milk and set it away to cool. Beat very light eight eggs, and stir them
-by degrees into the milk when it is quite cold, (if warm, the eggs will
-curdle it, and cause whey at the bottom,) and add gradually a quarter
-of a pound of sugar. Fill your cups with it; set them in a Dutch oven,
-and pour round them boiling water sufficient to reach nearly to the
-tops of the cups. Put hot coals under the oven and on the lid, (which
-must be previously heated by standing it up before a hot fire,) and
-bake the custards about fifteen minutes. Send them to table cold, with
-nutmeg grated over each. Or you may bake the whole in one large dish.
-
-
-SOFT CUSTARDS--Are made in the above manner, except that to a quart of
-milk you must have twelve yolks of eggs, and no whites. You may devote
-to this purpose the yolks that are left when you have used the whites
-for cocoa-nut or almond puddings, or for lady cake or maccaroons.
-
-
-BOILED CUSTARDS.--Beat eight eggs very light, omitting the whites of
-four. Mix them gradually with a quart of cold milk and a quarter of a
-pound of sugar. Put the mixture into a saucepan with a bunch of peach
-leaves, or a handful of broken up peach-kernels or bitter almonds; the
-yellow peel of a lemon, and a handful of broken cinnamon; or you may
-boil in it a vanilla bean. Set it on hot coals, and simmer it slowly,
-stirring it all the time. As soon as it comes to a boil, take it
-immediately off the fire, or it will curdle and be lumpy. Then strain
-it: add a table-spoonful of rose-water, and put it into glass cups. You
-may lay in the bottom of each cup a maccaroon soaked in wine. Grate
-nutmeg over the top, and send it to table cold. Eat it with tarts or
-sweetmeats.
-
-
-RICE CUSTARD.--Boil some rice in milk till it is quite dry; then put it
-into small tea-cups, (pressing it down hard,) and when it is cold and
-has taken the shape of the cups, turn it out into a deep dish, and pour
-a boiled custard round it. Lay on the top of each lump of rice a piece
-of preserved quince or peach, or a piece of fruit jelly. In boiling
-the rice, you may mix with it raisins or currants; if so, omit the
-sweetmeats on the top. Ground rice is best.
-
-Another way of boiling custard is to put the mixture into a pitcher,
-set it in a vessel of boiling water, place it on hot coals or in a
-stove, and let it boil slowly, stirring it all the time.
-
-
-SNOWBALL CUSTARD.--Make a boiled custard as in the preceding receipts;
-and when it is done and quite cold, put it into a deep glass dish. Beat
-to a stiff froth the four whites of eggs that have been omitted in the
-custard, adding eight or ten drops of oil of lemon. Drop the froth
-in balls on the top of the dish of custard, heaping and forming them
-with a spoon into a regular size and shape. Do not let them touch each
-other. You may lay a fresh rose leaf on the top of every one.
-
-
-APPLE CUSTARD.--Pare, core, and quarter a dozen large juicy pippins.
-Strew among them the yellow peel of a large lemon grated very fine; and
-stew them till tender, in a very small portion of water. When done,
-mash them smooth with the back of a spoon; (you must have a pint and a
-half of the stewed apple;) mix a quarter of a pound of sugar with them,
-and set them away till cold. Beat six eggs very light, and stir them
-gradually into a quart of rich milk, alternately with the stewed apple.
-Put the mixture into cups, or into a deep dish, and bake it about
-twenty minutes. Send it to table cold, with nutmeg grated over the top.
-
-
-LEMON CUSTARD.--Take four large ripe lemons, and roll them under your
-hand on the table to increase the juice. Then squeeze them into a
-bowl, and mix with the juice a very small tea-cup full of cold water.
-Use none of the peel. Add gradually sufficient sugar to make it _very
-sweet_. Beat twelve eggs till quite light, and then stir the lemon
-juice gradually into them, beating very hard at the last. Put the
-mixture into cups, and bake it ten minutes. When done, grate nutmeg
-over the top of each, and set them among ice, or in a very cold place.
-
-These custards being made without milk, can be prepared at a short
-notice; they will be found very fine.
-
-Orange custards may be made in the same manner.
-
-
-GOOSEBERRY CUSTARD.--Top and tail two quarts of green gooseberries.
-Stew them in a very little water; stirring and mashing them frequently.
-When they have stewed till entirely to pieces, take them out, and with
-a wooden spoon press the pulp through a cullender. Stir in (while the
-pulp is hot) a table-spoonful of butter, and sufficient sugar to make
-it very sweet. Beat six eggs very light. Simmer the gooseberry pulp
-over a gentle fire, and gradually stir the beaten eggs into it. When it
-comes to a boil, take it off immediately, stir it very hard, and set it
-out to cool. Serve it up cold in glasses or custard cups, grating some
-nutmeg over each.
-
-
-ALMOND CUSTARD.--Scald and blanch half a pound of shelled sweet
-almonds, and three ounces of shelled bitter almonds; throwing them
-as you do them into a large bowl of cold water. Then pound them one
-at a time in a mortar; pouring in frequently a little rose water to
-prevent their oiling, and becoming dark-coloured and heavy. Melt a
-quarter of a pound of loaf-sugar in a quart of cream or rich milk, and
-stir in by degrees the pounded almonds. Beat ten eggs very light, and
-stir them gradually into the mixture; adding a powdered nutmeg, and a
-tea-spoonful of powdered mace and cinnamon mixed. Then put the whole
-into a pitcher, and place it in a kettle or pan of boiling water, the
-water coming up to the lower part of the neck of the pitcher. Set it
-over hot coals, and let it boil (stirring it all the time) till it is
-quite thick, but not till it curdles. Then take the pitcher out of the
-water; pour the custard into a large bowl, and stir it till it cools.
-Put it into glass cups, and send it to table cold. Sweeten some cream
-or white of egg. Beat it to stiff froth and pile it on the top of the
-custards.
-
-
-BOILED COCOA-NUT CUSTARD.--To a pound of grated cocoa-nut allow a pint
-of unskimmed milk, and six ounces of white sugar. Beat very light the
-yolks of six eggs. Stir them gradually into the milk, alternately with
-the cocoa-nut and sugar. Put the mixture into a pitcher; set it in a
-vessel of boiling water; place it on hot coals, and simmer it till it
-is very smooth and thick; stirring it all the time. As soon as it comes
-to a hard boil, take it off the fire; pour it into a large bowl, and
-set it out to cool. When cold, put it into glass cups. Beat to a stiff
-froth the white of egg that was left, and pile it on the custards.
-
-
-BAKED COCOA-NUT CUSTARD.--Grate as much cocoa-nut as will weigh a
-pound. Mix half a pound of powdered white sugar with the milk of the
-cocoa-nut, or with a pint of cream; adding two table-spoonfuls of rose
-water. Then stir in gradually a pint of rich milk. Beat to a stiff
-froth the whites of eight eggs, and stir them into the milk and sugar,
-a little at a time, alternately with the grated cocoa-nut: add a
-tea-spoonful of powdered nutmeg and cinnamon. Then put the mixture into
-cups, and bake them twenty minutes in a Dutch oven half filled with
-boiling water. When cold, grate loaf-sugar over them.
-
-
-CHOCOLATE CUSTARD.--Scrape fine a quarter of a pound of chocolate, and
-pour on it a pint of boiling water. Cover it, and let it stand by the
-fire till it has dissolved, stirring it twice. Beat eight eggs very
-light, omitting the whites of two. Stir them by degrees into a quart of
-cream or rich milk, alternately with the melted chocolate, and three
-table-spoonfuls of powdered white sugar. Put the mixture into cups,
-and bake it about ten minutes. Send them to table cold, with sweetened
-cream, or white of egg beaten to a stiff froth, and heaped on the top
-of each custard. No chocolate is so good as Baker's prepared cocoa.
-
-
-MACCAROON CUSTARDS.--These must be made in china custard cups. Put four
-maccaroons into each cup, and pour on them three spoonfuls of white
-wine. Mix together a pint of cream, and a pint of milk; and boil them
-with a large stick of cinnamon broken up, and a small bunch of peach
-leaves or a handful of broken bitter almonds. Then strain the milk;
-stir in a quarter of a pound of white sugar, and set it away to cool.
-Beat very light eight eggs, (omitting the whites of four,) and stir
-them gradually into the cream and milk when quite cold. Fill your cups
-with the mixture, (leaving the maccaroons at the bottom,) and set them
-in a Dutch oven or iron baking pan, which must be half full of boiling
-water. Heat the oven-lid first, by standing it up before a hot fire;
-then put it on, spreading coals over the top. Place sufficient coals
-under the oven, and bake the custards about ten minutes. When cold,
-heap beaten white of egg on the top of each. These custards are very
-fine.
-
-
-SYLLABUB, OR WHIPT CREAM.
-
-Pare off very thin the yellow rind of four large lemons, and lay it
-in the bottom of a deep dish. Squeeze the juice of the lemons into
-a large bowl containing a pint of white wine, and sweeten it with
-half a pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Then, by degrees, mix in a quart
-of cream. Pour the whole into the dish in which you have laid the
-lemon-peel, and let the mixture stand untouched for three hours. Then
-beat it with rods to a stiff froth, (first taking out the lemon-peel,)
-and having put into each of your glasses a table-spoonful or more of
-fruit jelly, heap the syllabub upon it so as to stand up high at the
-top. This syllabub, if it can be kept in a cold place, may be made the
-day before you want to use it.
-
-
-COUNTRY SYLLABUB.--Mix half a pound of white sugar with a pint of fine
-sweet cider, or of white wine; and grate in a nutmeg. Prepare them in a
-large bowl, just before milking time. Then let it be taken to the cow,
-and have about three pints milked into it; stirring it occasionally
-with a spoon. Let it be eaten before the froth subsides. If you use
-cider, a little brandy will improve it.
-
-
-A TRIFLE.--Place half a pound of maccaroons or Naples biscuits at the
-bottom of a large glass bowl. Pour on them as much white wine as will
-cover and dissolve them. Make a rich custard, flavoured with bitter
-almonds or peach leaves: and pour it when cold on the maccaroons; the
-custard may be either baked or boiled. Then add a layer of marmalade
-or jam. Take a quart of cream, mix with it a quarter of a pound of
-sugar, and half a pint of white wine, and whip it with rods to a stiff
-froth; laying the froth (as you proceed) on an inverted sieve, with
-a dish under it to catch the cream that drips through; which must be
-saved and whipped over again. Instead of rods you may use a little tin
-churn. Pile the frothed cream upon the marmalade in a high pyramid. To
-ornament it,--take preserved water-melon rind that has been cut into
-leaves or flowers; split them nicely to make them thinner and lighter;
-place a circle or wreath of them round the heap of frothed cream,
-interspersing them with spots of stiff red currant jelly. Stick on the
-top of the pyramid a sprig of real flowers.
-
-
-FLOATING ISLAND.--Take a quart of rich cream, and divide it in half.
-Sweeten one pint of it with loaf-sugar, and stir into it sufficient
-currant jelly to colour it of a fine pink. Put it into a glass bowl,
-and place in the centre a pile of sliced almond-sponge cake, or of
-lady cake; every slice spread thickly with raspberry jam or marmalade,
-and laid evenly one on another. Have ready the other pint of cream,
-flavoured with the juice of two lemons, and beaten with rods to a stiff
-froth. Heap it all over the pile of cake, so as entirely to cover it.
-Both creams must be made very sweet.
-
-
-A RASPBERRY CHARLOTTE.--Take a dozen of the square or oblong
-sponge-cakes that are commonly called Naples biscuits. They should
-be quite fresh. Spread over each a thick layer of raspberry jam, and
-place them in the bottom and round the sides of a glass bowl. Take the
-whites of six eggs, and mix with them six table-spoonfuls of raspberry
-or currant jelly. Beat the egg and jelly with rods till very light,
-and then fill up the bowl with it. For this purpose, cream (if you can
-conveniently procure it) is still better than white of egg.
-
-You may make a charlotte with any sort of jam, marmalade, or fruit
-jelly. It can be prepared at a short notice, and is very generally
-liked. You may use ripe strawberries, washed and sweetened.
-
-
-A PLUM CHARLOTTE.--Stone a quart of ripe plums; first stew, and then
-sweeten them. Cut slices of bread and butter, and lay them in the
-bottom and round the sides of a large bowl or deep dish. Pour in the
-plums boiling hot, cover the bowl, and set it away to cool gradually.
-When quite cold, send it to table, and eat it with cream.
-
-
-CLOTTED CREAM.--Mix together a jill of rich milk, a large wine glass of
-rose water, and four ounces of white sugar. Add to it the beaten yolks
-of two eggs. Stir the mixture into a quart of the best cream; set it
-over hot coals, and let it just come to a boil, stirring it all the
-time. Then take it off, pour it into a glass bowl, and set it away to
-get cold. Eat it with fresh strawberries, raspberries, or with any sort
-of sweetmeats.
-
-
-LEMON CREAM.--Beat well together a quart of thick cream and the
-yolks of eight eggs. Then gradually beat in half a pound of powdered
-loaf-sugar, and the grated rind of three large lemons. Put the mixture
-into a porcelain skillet, and set it on hot coals till it comes to a
-boil; then take it off, and stir it till nearly cold. Squeeze the juice
-of the lemons into a bowl; pour the cream upon it, and continue to stir
-it till quite cold. You may serve it up in a glass bowl, in glass cups,
-or in jelly glasses. Eat it with tarts or sweetmeats.
-
-
-ORANGE CREAM.--Beat very light six eggs, omitting the whites of two.
-Have ready a pint of orange juice, and stir it gradually into the
-beaten egg, alternately with a pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Put into a
-porcelain skillet the yellow rind of one orange, pared very thin; pour
-the mixture upon it, and set it over a slow fire. Simmer it steadily,
-stirring it all the time; but when nearly ready to boil, take it off,
-remove the orange-peel, and put the mixture into glasses to get cold.
-
-
-CURDS AND WHEY.--Take a piece of rennet about three inches square, and
-wash it in two or three cold waters to get off the salt; wipe it dry,
-and fasten a string to one corner of it. Have ready in a deep dish or
-pan, a quart of unskimmed milk that has been warmed but not boiled.
-Put the rennet into it, leaving the string hanging out over the side,
-that you may know where to find it. Cover the pan, and set it by the
-fire-side or in some other warm place. When the milk becomes a firm
-mass of curd, and the whey looks clear and greenish, remove the rennet
-as gently as possible, pulling it out by the string; and set the pan
-in ice, or in a very cold place. Send to table with it a small pitcher
-of white wine, sugar and nutmeg mixed together; or a bowl of sweetened
-cream, with nutmeg grated over it.
-
-You may keep rennet in white wine; cutting it in small pieces, and
-putting it into a glass jar with wine enough to cover it well. Either
-the wine or the rennet will be found good for turning milk; but do not
-put in both together, or the curd will become so hard and tough as to
-be uneatable.
-
-Rennets properly prepared and dried, are sold constantly in the
-Philadelphia markets. The cost is trifling; and it is well to have one
-always in the house, in case of being wanted to make whey for sick
-persons. They will keep a year or more.
-
-
-LEMON ICE CREAM
-
-Have ready two quarts of very rich thick cream, and take out a pint.
-Stir gradually into the pint, a pound of the best loaf-sugar powdered
-fine; and the grated rind and the juice of four ripe lemons of the
-largest size, or of five or six smaller ones. If you cannot procure
-the fruit, you may flavour the cream with essence or oil of lemon; a
-tea-spoonful or more, according to its strength. The strongest and best
-essence of lemon is the white or whitish; when tinged with green, it
-is comparatively weak, having been diluted with water; if quite green,
-a large tea-spoonful will not communicate as much flavour as five or
-six drops of the white. After you have mixed the pint of cream with the
-sugar and lemon, beat it gradually and hard into the remaining cream,
-that is, the three pints. Cover it, and let it stand to infuse from
-half an hour to an hour. Then taste it, and if you think it necessary,
-stir in a little more lemon juice or a little more sugar. Strain it
-into the freezer through a fine strainer, (a tin one with small close
-holes is best,) to get rid of the grated lemon-peel, which if left
-in would prevent the cream from being smooth. Cover the freezer, and
-stand it in the ice cream tub, which should be filled with a mixture,
-in equal quantities, of coarse salt, and ice broken up as small as
-possible, that it may lie close and compact round the freezer, and thus
-add to its coldness. Snow, when it can be procured, is still better
-than ice to mix with the salt. It should be packed closely into the
-tub, and pressed down hard. While the cream is freezing, keep it always
-in motion, whirling the freezer round by the handle, and opening the
-lid frequently to stir and beat the cream, and to scrape it down from
-the sides with a long-handled tin spoon. Take care that no salt gets
-in, or the cream will be spoiled. When it is entirely frozen, take it
-out of the freezer and put it into your mould; set it again in the
-tub, (which must be filled with fresh ice and salt,) and leave it
-undisturbed till you want it for immediate use. This second freezing,
-however, should not continue longer than an hour, or the cream will
-become inconveniently and unpleasantly hard, and have much of the
-flavour frozen out of it. Place the mould in the ice tub, with the head
-downwards, and cover the tub with pieces of old carpet while the second
-freezing is going on. When it has arrived at the proper consistence,
-and it is time to serve it up, dip a cloth in cold water, and wash it
-round the mould for a few moments, to loosen the cream and make it come
-out easily; setting the mould on a glass or china dish. If a pyramid
-or obelisk mould, lift it carefully off the top. If the mould or form
-represents doves, dolphins, lap-dogs, fruit baskets, &c. it will open
-down the middle, and must be taken off in that manner. Serve it up
-immediately lest it begin to melt. Send round sponge-cake with it, and
-wine or cordials immediately after.
-
-If you have no moulds, but intend serving it up in a large bowl or in
-glasses, it must still be frozen twice over; otherwise it can have no
-smoothness, delicacy, or consistence, but will be rough and coarse, and
-feel in the mouth like broken icicles. The second freezing (if you have
-no mould) must be done in the freezer, which should be washed out, and
-set again in the tub with fresh ice and salt. Cover it closely and let
-the cream stand in it untouched, but not less than two hours. When you
-put it into glasses, heap it high on the top.
-
-Begin to make ice cream about four or five hours before it is wanted
-for use. If you commence it too early, it may probably be injured by
-having to remain too long in the second freezing, as it must not be
-turned out till a few moments before it is served up. In damp weather
-it requires a longer time to freeze.
-
-If cream is scarce, mix with it an equal quantity of rich milk, and
-then add, for each quart, two table-spoonfuls of powdered arrow-root
-rubbed smooth in a little cold milk. Orange ice cream is made in the
-same manner as lemon.
-
-
-STRAWBERRY ICE CREAM.--Take two quarts of ripe strawberries; hull them,
-and put them into a deep dish, strewing among them half a pound of
-powdered loaf-sugar. Cover them, and let them stand an hour or two.
-Then mash them through a sieve till you have pressed out all the juice,
-and stir into it half a pound more of powdered sugar, or enough to make
-it very sweet, and like a thick syrup. Then mix it by degrees with two
-quarts of rich cream, beating it in very hard. Put it into a freezer,
-and proceed as in the foregoing receipt. In two hours, remove it to a
-mould, or take it out and return it again to the freezer with fresh
-salt and ice, that it may be frozen a second time. In one hour more, it
-should be ready to turn out.
-
-
-RASPBERRY ICE CREAM--Is made according to the preceding receipt.
-
-
-PINE-APPLE ICE CREAM.--To each quart of cream allow a large ripe
-pine-apple, and a pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Pare the pine-apple,
-slice it very thin, and mince it small. Lay it in a deep dish and strew
-the sugar among it. Cover the dish, and let the pine-apple lie in the
-sugar for two or three hours. Then strain it through a sieve, mashing
-and pressing out all the juice. Stir the juice gradually into the
-cream, beating it hard. Put it into the freezer, and let it be twice
-frozen before it is served up.
-
-
-VANILLA ICE CREAM.--Take a large vanilla bean, and boil it slowly in
-half a pint of milk till all the flavour is drawn out, which you may
-know by tasting it. Then mix into the milk half a pound of powdered
-loaf-sugar, and stir it very hard into a quart of rich cream. Put it
-into the freezer, and proceed as directed in the receipt for Lemon Ice
-Cream; freezing it twice.
-
-
-ALMOND ICE CREAM.--Take six ounces of bitter almonds, (sweet ones will
-not do,) blanch them, and pound them in a mortar, adding by degrees a
-little rose water. Then boil them gently in a pint of cream till you
-find that it is highly flavoured with them. Then pour the cream into
-a bowl, stir in a pound of powdered loaf-sugar, cover it, and set it
-away to cool gradually; when it is cold, strain it, and then stir it
-gradually and hard into three pints of cream. Put it into the freezer,
-and proceed as directed in the first ice cream receipt. Freeze it
-twice. It will be found very fine.
-
-Send round always with ice cream, sponge cake or Savoy biscuits.
-Afterwards wine, and cordials, or liqueurs as they are now generally
-called.
-
-
-ICE ORANGEADE.--Take a pint and a half of orange juice, and mix it
-with half a pint of clear or filtered water. Stir in half a pound
-of powdered loaf-sugar. Pare very thin the yellow rind of six
-deep-coloured oranges, cut in pieces, and lay it at the bottom of a
-bowl or tureen. Pour the orange juice and sugar upon it; cover it,
-and let it infuse an hour. Then strain the liquid into a freezer, and
-proceed as for ice cream. When it is frozen, put it into a mould, (it
-will look best in the form of a pine-apple,) and freeze it a second
-time. Serve it in glass cups, with any sort of very nice sweet cakes.
-
-
-ICE LEMONADE--May be made in the above manner, but with a larger
-proportion of sugar.
-
-The juice of pine-apples, strawberries, raspberries, currants and
-cherries, may be prepared and frozen according to the above receipts.
-They will freeze in a shorter time than if mixed with cream, but are
-very inferior in richness.
-
-
-BLANC-MANGE.
-
-Put into a pan an ounce of isinglass; (in warm weather you must take
-an ounce and a quarter;) pour on as much rose water as will cover the
-isinglass, and set it on hot coals to dissolve.[G] Blanch a quarter of
-a pound of shelled almonds, (half sweet and half bitter,) and beat them
-to a paste in a mortar, (one at a time,) moistening them all the while
-with a little rose water. Stir the almonds by degrees into a quart of
-cream, alternately with half a pound of powdered white sugar; add a
-large tea-spoonful of beaten mace. Put in the melted isinglass, and
-stir the whole very hard. Then put it into a porcelain skillet, and let
-it boil fast for a quarter of an hour. Then strain it into a pitcher,
-and pour it into your moulds, which must first be wetted with cold
-water. Let it stand in a cool place undisturbed, till it has entirely
-congealed, which will be in about five hours. Then wrap a cloth dipped
-in hot water round the moulds, loosen the blanc-mange round the edges
-with a knife, and turn it out into glass dishes. It is best to make it
-the day before it is wanted.
-
-Instead of using a figure-mould, you may set it to congeal in tea-cups
-or wine glasses.
-
-Blanc-mange may be coloured green by mixing with the cream a little
-juice of spinage; cochineal which has been infused in a little brandy
-for half an hour, will colour it red; and saffron will give it a bright
-yellow tinge.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[G] You may make the stock for blanc-mange without isinglass, by
-boiling four calves' feet in two quarts of water till reduced one half,
-and till the meat is entirely to rags. Strain it, and set it away till
-next day. Then clear it from the fat and sediment; cut it into pieces,
-and boil it with the cream and the other ingredients. When you take it
-from the fire, and strain it into the pitcher, keep stirring it till it
-gets cold.
-
-
-CARRAGEEN BLANC-MANGE.--This is made of a sea-weed resembling moss,
-that is found in large quantities on some parts of our coast, and is
-to be purchased in the cities at most of the druggists. Carrageen
-costs but little, and is considered extremely salutary for persons of
-delicate constitutions. Its glutinous nature when boiled, renders it
-very suitable for blanc-mange.
-
-From a quart of rich unskimmed milk take half a pint. Add to the half
-pint two ounces of bitter almonds, blanched and pounded; half a nutmeg;
-and a large stick of cinnamon, broken up; also eight or nine blades
-of mace. Set it in a closed pan over hot coals, and boil it half an
-hour. In the mean time, wash through two or three _cold_ waters half
-a handful of carrageen, (if you put in too much it will communicate
-an unpleasant taste to the blanc-mange,) and add it to the pint and a
-half of cold milk. Then when it is sufficiently flavoured, stir in the
-boiled milk, adding gradually half a pound of powdered sugar, and mix
-the whole very well. Set it over the fire, and keep it boiling hard
-five minutes from the time it has come to a boil. Then strain it into a
-pitcher; wet your moulds or cups with cold water, put the blanc-mange
-into them, and leave it undisturbed till it congeals.
-
-After washing the sea-weed, you must drain it well, and shake the water
-from the sprigs. You may flavour the mixture (_after_ it is boiled and
-strained) with rose-water or peach-water, stirred in at the last.
-
-
-ARROW ROOT BLANC-MANGE.--Take a tea-cup full of arrow root, put it
-into a large bowl, and dissolve it in a little cold water. When it is
-melted, pour off the water, and let the arrow root remain undisturbed.
-Boil in half a pint of unskimmed milk, (made very sweet with white
-sugar,) a beaten nutmeg, and eight or nine blades of mace, mixed with
-the juice and grated peel of a lemon. When it has boiled long enough to
-be highly flavoured, strain it into a pint and a half of very rich milk
-or cream, and add a quarter of a pound of sugar. Boil the whole for ten
-minutes; then strain it, boiling hot, over the arrow root. Stir it well
-and frequently till cold; then put it into moulds and let it set to
-congeal.
-
-
-JAUNE-MANGE.--Put two ounces of isinglass into a pint of water, and
-boil it till it has dissolved. Then strain it into a porcelain skillet,
-and add to it half a pint of white wine; the grated peel and juice of
-two large deep-coloured oranges; half a pound of loaf-sugar; and the
-yolks only of eight eggs that have been well beaten. Mix the whole
-thoroughly; place it on hot coals and simmer it, stirring it all the
-time till it boils hard. Then take it off directly, strain it, and put
-it into moulds to congeal.
-
-
-CALVES' FOOT JELLY.
-
-The best calves' feet for jelly are those that have had the hair
-removed by scalding, but are not skinned; the skin containing a great
-deal of glutinous matter. In Philadelphia, unskinned calves' feet are
-generally to be met with in the lower or Jersey market.
-
-Boil a set of feet in four quarts of cold water; (if the feet have been
-skinned allow but three quarts;) they should boil slowly till the
-liquid is reduced to two quarts or one half the original quantity, and
-the meat has dropped in rags from the bone. Then strain the liquid;
-measure and set it away in a large earthen pan to get cold; and let
-it rest till next morning. Then if you do not find it a firm cake of
-jelly, boil it over again with an ounce of isinglass, and again set it
-away till cold and congealed. Remove the sediment from the bottom of
-the cake of jelly, and carefully scrape off all the fat. The smallest
-bit of fat will eventually render it dull and cloudy. Press some clean
-blotting paper all over it to absorb what little grease may yet remain.
-Then cut the cake of jelly into pieces, and put it into a porcelain
-kettle to melt over the fire. To each quart allow a pound of broken
-up loaf-sugar, a pint of Madeira wine, and a large glass of brandy;
-three large sticks of the best Ceylon cinnamon broken up, (if common
-cinnamon, use four sticks,) the grated peel and juice of four large
-lemons; and lastly, the whites of four eggs strained, but not beaten.
-In breaking the eggs, take care to separate them so nicely that none
-of the yellow gets into the white; as the smallest portion of yolk of
-egg will prevent the jelly from being perfectly clear. Mix all the
-ingredients well together, and put them to the jelly in the kettle. Set
-it on the fire, and boil it hard for twenty minutes, but do not stir
-it. Then throw in a tea-cup of cold water, and boil it five minutes
-longer; then take the kettle off the fire, and set it aside, keeping it
-closely covered for half an hour; this will improve its clearness. Take
-a large white flannel jelly-bag; suspend it by the strings to a wooden
-frame made for such purposes, or to the legs of a table. Pour in the
-mixture boiling hot, and when it is all in, close up the mouth of the
-bag that none of the flavour may evaporate. Hang it over a deep white
-dish or bowl, and let it drip slowly, but on no account squeeze the
-bag, as that will certainly make the jelly dull and cloudy. If it is
-not clear the first time, empty the bag, wash it, put in the jelly that
-has dripped into the dish, and pass it through again. Repeat this till
-it is clear. You may put it into moulds to congeal, setting them in a
-cold place. When it is quite firm, wrap a cloth that has been dipped in
-hot water, round the moulds to make the jelly turn out easily. But it
-will look much better, and the taste will be more lively, if you break
-it up after it has congealed, and put it into a glass bowl, or heap it
-in jelly glasses. Unless it is broken, its sparkling clearness shows to
-little advantage.
-
-After the clear jelly has done dripping, you may return the ingredients
-to the kettle, and warm them over again for about five minutes. Then
-put them into the bag (which you may now squeeze hard) till all the
-liquid is pressed out of it into a second dish or bowl. This last jelly
-cannot, of course, be clear, but it will taste very well, and may be
-eaten in the family.
-
-A pound of the best raisins picked and washed, and boiled with the
-other ingredients, is thought by many persons greatly to improve the
-richness and flavour of calves' feet jelly. They must be put in whole,
-and can be afterwards used for a pudding.
-
-Similar jelly may be made of pigs' or sheep's feet: but it is not so
-nice and delicate as that of calves.
-
-By boiling two sets, or eight calves' feet in five quarts of water,
-you may be sure of having the jelly very firm. In damp weather it is
-sometimes very difficult to get it to congeal if you use but one set of
-feet; there is the same risk if the weather is hot. In winter it may be
-made several days before it is to be eaten. In summer it will keep in
-ice for two days; perhaps longer.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE CREAM.--Take four quarts of new cream; it must be of
-the richest quality, and have no milk mixed with it. Put it into a
-preserving kettle, and simmer it gently over the fire; carefully taking
-off whatever scum may rise to the top, till nothing more appears. Then
-stir, gradually, into it four pounds of double-refined loaf-sugar
-that has been finely powdered and sifted. Let the cream and sugar
-boil briskly together half an hour; skimming it, if necessary, and
-afterwards stirring it as long as it continues on the fire. Put it into
-small bottles; and when it is cold, cork it, and secure the corks with
-melted rosin. This cream, if properly prepared, will keep perfectly
-good during a long sea voyage.
-
-
-ITALIAN CREAM.--Put two pints of cream into two bowls. With one bowl
-mix six ounces of powdered loaf-sugar, the juice of two large lemons,
-and two glasses of white wine. Then add the other pint of cream, and
-stir the whole very hard. Boil two ounces of isinglass with four small
-tea-cups full of water, till it is reduced to one half. Then stir the
-isinglass lukewarm into the other ingredients, and put them into a
-glass dish to congeal.
-
-
-CHOCOLATE CREAM.--Melt six ounces of scraped chocolate and four ounces
-of white sugar in one pint of boiling milk. Stir in an ounce of
-dissolved isinglass. When the whole has boiled, pour it into a mould.
-
-
-COLOURING FOR CONFECTIONARY.
-
-
-RED.--Take twenty grains of cochineal, and fifteen grains of cream
-of tartar finely powdered; add to them a piece of alum the size of a
-cherry stone, and boil them with a jill of soft water, in an earthen
-vessel, slowly, for half an hour. Then strain it through muslin, and
-keep it tightly corked in a phial.
-
-
-COCHINEAL FOR PRESENT USE.--Take two cents' worth of cochineal. Lay it
-on a flat plate, and bruise it with the blade of a knife. Put it into
-half a tea-cup of alcohol. Let it stand a quarter of an hour, and then
-filter it through fine muslin.
-
-
-YELLOW COLOURING.--Take a little saffron, put it into an earthen vessel
-with a very small quantity of cold soft water, and let it steep till
-the colour of the infusion is a bright yellow. Then strain it. The
-yellow seeds of lilies will answer nearly the same purpose.
-
-
-GREEN.--Take fresh spinach or beet leaves, and pound them in a marble
-mortar. If you want it for immediate use, take off the green froth as
-it rises, and mix it with the article you intend to colour. If you
-wish to keep it a few days, take the juice when you have pressed out a
-tea-cup full, and adding to it a piece of alum the size of a pea, give
-it a boil in a saucepan.
-
-
-WHITE.--Blanch some almonds, soak them in cold water, and then pound
-them to a smooth paste in a marble mortar; adding at intervals a little
-rose water.
-
-Thick cream will communicate a white colour.
-
-These preparations may be used for jellies, ice creams, blanc-mange,
-syllabubs, icing for cakes; and for various articles of confectionary.
-
-
-
-
-CAKES, ETC.
-
-
-GENERAL OBSERVATIONS.
-
-Unless you are provided with proper and convenient utensils and
-materials, the difficulty of preparing cakes will be great, and in
-most instances a failure; involving disappointment, waste of time,
-and useless expense. Accuracy in proportioning the ingredients is
-indispensable; and therefore scales and weights, and a set of tin
-measures (at least from a quart down to a jill) are of the utmost
-importance. A large sieve for flour is also necessary; and smaller ones
-for sugar and spice. There should be a marble mortar, or one of lignum
-vitae, (the hardest of all wood;) those of iron (however well tinned)
-are apt to discolour the articles pounded in them. Spice may be ground
-in a mill kept exclusively for that purpose. Every kitchen should be
-provided with spice-boxes. You should have a large grater for lemon,
-cocoa-nut, &c., and a small one for nutmeg. Butter and sugar cannot be
-stirred together conveniently without a spaddle or spattle, which is
-a round stick flattened at one end; and a deep earthen pan with sides
-nearly straight. For beating eggs, you should have hickory rods or a
-wire whip, and broad shallow earthen pans. Neither the eggs, nor the
-butter and sugar should be beaten in tin, as the coldness of the metal
-will prevent them from becoming light.
-
-For baking large cakes, the pans (whether of block tin or earthen)
-should have straight sides; if the sides slope inward, there will be
-much difficulty in icing the cake. Pans with a hollow tube going up
-from the centre, are supposed to diffuse the heat more equally through
-the middle of the cake. Buns and some other cakes should be baked in
-square shallow pans of block tin or iron. Little tins for queen cakes,
-&c. are most convenient when of a round or oval shape. All baking pans,
-whether large or small, should be well greased with fresh butter before
-the mixture is put into them, and should be filled but little more than
-half. You should have at least two dozen little tins, that a second
-supply may be ready for the oven the moment the first is taken out. You
-will also want tin cutters for cakes that are rolled out in dough.
-
-All the utensils should be cleaned and put away as soon as they are
-done with. They should be all kept together, and, if possible, not used
-for any other purposes.[H]
-
-As it is always desirable that cake-making should be commenced at an
-early hour, it is well on the day previous to ascertain if all the
-materials are in the house; that there may be no unnecessary delay
-from sending or waiting for them in the morning. Wastefulness is to be
-avoided in every thing; but it is utterly impossible that cakes can be
-good (or indeed any thing else) without a liberal allowance of good
-materials. Cakes are frequently rendered hard, heavy, and uneatable by
-a misplaced economy in eggs and butter; or tasteless and insipid for
-want of their due seasoning of spice, lemon, &c.
-
-Use no flour but the best superfine; if the flour is of inferior
-quality, the cakes will be heavy, ill-coloured, and unfit to eat.
-Even the best flour should always be sifted. No butter that is not
-fresh and good, should ever be put into cakes; for it will give
-them a disagreeable taste which can never be disguised by the other
-ingredients. Even when of excellent quality, the butter will be
-improved by washing it in cold water, and squeezing and pressing it.
-Except for gingerbread, use only white sugar, (for the finest cakes
-the best loaf,) and have it pulverized by pounding it in a mortar, or
-crushing it on the pasteboard with the rolling-pin. It should then be
-sifted. In mixing butter and sugar, sift the sugar into a deep pan, cut
-up the butter in it, set it in a warm place to soften, and then stir
-it very hard with the spaddle, till it becomes quite light, and of the
-consistence of cream. In preparing eggs, break them one at a time, into
-a saucer, that, in case there should be a bad one among them, it may
-not spoil the others. Put them into a broad shallow pan, and beat them
-with rods or with a wire whisk, not merely till they froth, but long
-afterwards, till the froth subsides, and they become thick and smooth
-like boiled custard. White of egg by itself may be beaten with small
-rods, or with a three-pronged fork, or a broad knife. It is a very easy
-process, and should be continued till the liquid is all converted into
-a stiff froth so firm that it will not drop from the rods when held up.
-In damp weather it is sometimes difficult to get the froth stiff.
-
-The first thing to be done in making cake, is to weigh or measure all
-the ingredients. Next sift the flour, powder the sugar, pound or grind
-the spice, and prepare the fruit; afterwards mix and stir the butter
-and sugar, and lastly beat the eggs; as, if allowed to stand any time,
-they will fall and become heavy. When all the ingredients are mixed
-together, they should be stirred very hard at the last; and (unless
-there is yeast in the cake) the sooner it is put into the oven the
-better. While baking, no air should be admitted to it, except for a
-moment, now and then, when it is necessary to examine if it is baking
-properly. For baking cakes, the best guide is practice and experience;
-so much depending on the state of the fire, that it is impossible to
-lay down any infallible rules. If you bake in a Dutch oven, let the
-lid be first heated by standing it up before the fire; and cover the
-inside of the bottom with sand or ashes, to temper the heat. For the
-same purpose, when you bake in a stove, place bricks under the pans.
-Sheets of iron without sides will be found very useful for baking small
-flat cakes. For cakes of this description, the fire should be brisk;
-if baked slowly, they will spread, lose their shape, and run into each
-other. For all cakes, the heat should be regular and even; if one part
-of the oven is cooler than another, the cake will bake imperfectly, and
-have heavy streaks through it. Gingerbread (on account of the molasses)
-is more apt to scorch and burn than any other cake; therefore it should
-be baked with a moderate fire.
-
-It is safest, when practicable, to send all large cakes to a
-professional baker's; provided they can be put immediately into the
-oven, as standing will spoil them. If you bake them at home, you will
-find that they are generally done when they cease to make a simmering
-noise; and when on probing them to the bottom with a twig from a
-broom, or with the blade of the knife, it comes out quite clean. The
-fire should then be withdrawn, and the cake allowed to get cold in the
-oven. Small cakes should be laid to cool on an inverted sieve. It may
-be recommended to novices in the art of baking, to do every thing in
-little tins or in very shallow pans; there being then less risk than
-with a large thick cake. In mixing batter that is to be baked in small
-cakes, use a less proportion of flour.
-
-Small cakes should be kept closely covered in stone jars. For large
-ones, you should have broad stone pans with close lids, or else tin
-boxes. All cakes that are made with yeast, should be eaten quite fresh;
-so also should sponge cake. Some sorts may be kept a week; black cake
-much longer.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[H] Hickory rods, spaddles, etc. can be obtained by bespeaking them at
-a turner's.
-
-Apple-corers are sold by tinners.
-
-
-BLACK CAKE.
-
-Prepare two pounds of currants by picking them clean, washing and
-draining them through a cullender, and then spreading them out on a
-large dish to dry before the fire or in the sun, placing the dish in
-a slanting position. Pick and stone two pounds of the best raisins,
-and cut them in half. Dredge the currants (when they are dry) and the
-raisins thickly with flour to prevent them from sinking in the cake.
-Grind or powder as much cinnamon as will make a large gravy-spoonful
-when done; also a table-spoonful of mace and four nutmegs; sift these
-spices, and mix them all together in a cup. Mix together two large
-glasses of white wine, one of brandy and one of rose water, and cut a
-pound of citron into large slips. Sift a pound of flour into one pan,
-and a pound of powdered loaf-sugar into another. Cut up among the sugar
-a pound of the best fresh butter, and stir them to a cream. Beat twelve
-eggs till perfectly thick and smooth, and stir them gradually into the
-butter and sugar, alternately with the flour. Then add by degrees, the
-fruit, spice and liquor, and stir the whole very hard at the last.
-Then put the mixture into a well-buttered tin pan with straight or
-perpendicular sides. Put it immediately into a moderate oven, and bake
-it at least six hours. When done, take it out and set it on an inverted
-sieve to cool gradually. Ice it next morning; first dredging the
-outside all over with flour, and then wiping it with a towel. This will
-make the icing stick.
-
-
-ICING.--A quarter of a pound of finely-powdered loaf-sugar, of the
-whitest and best quality, is the usual allowance to one white of egg.
-For the cake in the preceding receipt, three quarters of a pound of
-sugar and the whites of three eggs will be about the proper quantity.
-Beat the white of egg by itself till it stands alone. Have ready the
-powdered sugar, and then beat it hard into the white of egg, till it
-becomes thick and smooth; flavouring it as you proceed with the juice
-of a lemon, or a little extract of roses. Spread it evenly over the
-cake with a broad knife or a feather; if you find it too thin, beat
-in a little more powdered sugar. Cover with it thickly the top and
-sides of the cake, taking care not to have it rough and streaky. When
-dry, put on a second coat; and when that is nearly dry, lay on the
-ornaments. You may flower it with coloured sugar-sand or nonparels;
-but a newer and more elegant mode is to decorate it with devices and
-borders in white sugar. These are put on with a syringe, moving it
-skilfully, so as to form the pattern. A little gum tragacanth should be
-mixed with this icing.
-
-You may colour icing of a pale or deep yellow, by rubbing the lumps of
-loaf-sugar (before they are powdered) upon the outside of a large lemon
-or orange. This will also flavour it finely.
-
-Almond icing, for a very fine cake, is made by mixing gradually with
-the white of egg and sugar, some almonds, half bitter and half sweet,
-that have been pounded in a mortar with rose water to a smooth paste.
-The whole must be well incorporated, and spread over the cake near half
-an inch thick. It must be set in a cool oven to dry, and then taken out
-and covered with a smooth plain icing of sugar and white of egg.
-
-Whatever icing is left, may be used to make maccaroons or kisses.
-
-
-POUND CAKE.--Prepare a table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon, a
-tea-spoonful of powdered mace, and two nutmegs grated or powdered. Mix
-together in a tumbler, a glass of white wine, a glass of brandy, and
-a glass of rose water. Sift a pound of the finest flour into a broad
-pan, and powder a pound of loaf-sugar. Put the sugar into a deep pan,
-and cut up in it a pound of fresh butter. Warm them by the fire till
-soft; and then stir them to a cream. When they are perfectly light,
-add gradually the spice and liquor, a little at a time. Beat ten
-eggs as light as possible, and stir them by degrees into the mixture
-alternately with the flour. Then add the juice of two lemons or three
-large oranges. Stir the whole very hard; put it into a deep tin pan
-with straight or upright sides, and bake it in a moderate oven from two
-to three hours. If baked in a Dutch oven, take off the lid when you
-have ascertained that the cake is quite done, and let it remain in the
-oven to cool gradually. If any part is burnt, scrape it off as soon as
-cold.
-
-It may be iced either warm or cool; first dredging the cake with flour
-and then wiping it off. It will be best to put on two coats of icing;
-the second coat not till the first is entirely dry. Flavour the icing
-with essence of lemon, or with extract of roses.
-
-This cake will be very delicate if made with a pound of rice flour
-instead of wheat.
-
-
-INDIAN POUND CAKE.--Sift a pint of fine yellow Indian meal, and half
-a pint of wheat flour, and mix them well together. Prepare a nutmeg
-beaten, and mixed with a table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon. Stir
-together till very light, half a pound of powdered white sugar; and
-half a pound of fresh butter; adding the spice, with a glass of white
-wine, and a glass of brandy. Having beaten eight eggs as light as
-possible, stir them into the butter and sugar, a little at a time, in
-turn with the meal. Give the whole a hard stirring at the last; put it
-into a well-buttered tin pan, and bake it about two hours.
-
-This cake (like every thing else in which Indian meal is an ingredient)
-should be eaten quite fresh; it is then very nice. When stale, (even a
-day old,) it becomes dry and rough as if made with saw-dust.
-
-
-QUEEN CAKE.--Sift fourteen ounces of the finest flour, being two ounces
-less than a pound. Cakes baked in little tins, should have a smaller
-proportion of flour than those that are done in large loaves. Prepare
-a table-spoonful of beaten cinnamon, a tea-spoonful of mace, and two
-beaten nutmegs; and mix them all together when powdered. Mix in a
-tumbler, half a glass of white wine, half a glass of brandy, and half a
-glass of rose water. Powder a pound of loaf-sugar, and sift it into a
-deep pan; cut up in it a pound of fresh butter; warm them by the fire,
-and stir them to a cream. Add gradually the spice and the liquor. Beat
-ten eggs very light, and stir them into the mixture in turn with the
-flour. Stir in the juice of two lemons, and beat the whole very hard.
-Butter some little tins; half fill them with the mixture; set them into
-a brisk oven, and bake them about a quarter of an hour. When done,
-they will shrink from the sides of the tins. After you turn them out,
-spread them on an inverted sieve to cool. If you have occasion to fill
-your tins a second time, scrape and wipe them well before they are used
-again.
-
-Make an icing, flavoured with lemon juice or with extract of roses; and
-spread two coats of it on the queen cakes. Set them to dry in a warm
-place, but not near enough the fire to discolour the icing and cause it
-to crack.
-
-Queen cakes are best the day they are baked.
-
-
-FRUIT QUEEN CAKES.--Make them in the above manner, with the addition
-of a pound of currants, (picked, washed, dried, and floured,) and the
-juice and grated peel of two large lemons, stirred in gradually at the
-last. Instead of currants, you may put in sultana or seedless raisins,
-cut in half and floured. You may substitute oranges for lemons.
-
-You may make a fruit pound cake in this manner.
-
-
-LADY CAKE.--Take a quarter of a pound of shelled bitter almonds, or
-peach-kernels. Put them into a bowl of boiling water, (renewing the
-water as it cools,) and let them lie in it till the skin peels off
-easily; then throw them, as they are blanched, into a bowl of cold
-water, which will much improve their whiteness. Pound them, one at a
-time, in a mortar; pouring in frequently a few drops of rose water to
-prevent them from oiling and being heavy. Cut up three quarters of a
-pound of fresh butter into a whole pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Having
-warmed it, stir it to a light cream, and then add very gradually the
-pounded almonds, beating them in very hard. Sift into a separate pan
-half a pound and two ounces of flour, and beat in another pan to a
-stiff froth, the whites only of seventeen eggs. Stir the flour and the
-white of egg alternately into the pan of butter, sugar and almonds,
-a very little at a time of each. Having beaten the whole as hard as
-possible, put it into a buttered tin pan, (a square one is best,) and
-set it immediately into a moderate oven. Bake it about an hour, more
-or less, according to its thickness. When cool, ice it, flavouring the
-icing with lemon juice. It is best the day it is baked, and should be
-eaten fresh. When you put it away wrap it in a thick cloth.
-
-If you bake it in little tins, use two ounces less of flour.
-
-
-SPANISH BUNS.--Cut up three quarters of a pound of butter into a jill
-and a half or three wine glasses of rich unskimmed milk, (cream will be
-still better,) and set the pan on a stove or near the fire, till the
-butter becomes soft enough to stir all through the milk with a knife;
-but do not let it get so hot as to oil of itself. Then set it away in
-a cold place. Sift into separate pans, a half pound and a quarter of
-a pound of the finest flour; and having beaten four eggs as light as
-possible, mix them with the milk and butter, and then pour the whole
-into the pan that contains the half pound of flour. Having previously
-prepared two grated nutmegs, and a table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon
-and mace, stir them into the mixture; adding six drops of extract of
-roses, or a large table-spoonful of rose water. Add a wine glass and
-a half of the best fresh yeast from a brewery. If you cannot procure
-yeast of the very best quality, an attempt to make these buns will most
-probably prove a failure, as the variety of other ingredients will
-prevent them from rising unless the yeast is as strong as possible.
-Before you put it in, skim off the thin liquid or beer from the top,
-and then stir up the bottom. After you have put in the yeast, add the
-sugar; stirring it well in, a very little at a time. If too much sugar
-is put in at once, the buns will be heavy. Lastly, sprinkle in the
-quarter of a pound of flour that was sifted separately; and stir the
-whole very hard. Put the mixture into a square pan well buttered, and
-(having covered it with a cloth) place it in a corner of the hearth to
-rise, which will require, perhaps, about five hours; therefore these
-buns should always be made early in the day. Do not bake it till the
-batter has risen to twice its original quantity, and is covered on the
-top with bubbles; then set the pan into a moderate oven, and bake it
-half an hour. Let it get cool in the pan; then cut it into squares,
-and either ice them, (flavouring the icing with essence of lemon or
-extract of roses,) or sift grated loaf-sugar thickly over them. These
-buns (like all other cakes made with yeast) should be eaten the day
-they are baked: as when stale, they fall and become hard.
-
-In mixing them, you may stir in at the last half a pound of raisins,
-stoned, chopped and floured; or half a pound of currants. If you use
-fruit, put in half a wine glass more of the yeast.
-
-
-BATH BUNS.--Boil a little saffron in sufficient water to cover it, till
-the liquid is of a bright yellow; then strain it, and set it to cool.
-Rub half a pound of fresh butter into a pound of sifted flour, and
-make it into a paste with four eggs that have been well beaten, and a
-large wine glass of the best and strongest yeast; adding the infusion
-of saffron to colour it yellow. Put the dough into a pan, cover it with
-a cloth, and set it before the fire to rise. When it is quite light,
-mix into it a quarter of a pound of powdered and sifted loaf-sugar; a
-grated nutmeg; and, if you choose, two or three spoonfuls of carraway
-seeds. Roll out the dough into a thick sheet, and divide it into round
-cakes with a cutter. Strew the top of each bun with carraway comfits,
-and bake them on flat tins buttered well. They should be eaten the day
-they are baked, as they are not good unless quite fresh.
-
-
-JELLY CAKE.--Sift three quarters of a pound of flour. Stir to a cream
-a pound of butter and a pound of powdered white sugar, and mix in half
-a tea-cup of rose water, and a grated nutmeg, with a tea-spoonful of
-powdered cinnamon. Beat ten eggs very light, and add them gradually
-to the mixture, alternately with the flour; stirring the whole very
-hard. Put your griddle into the oven of a stove; and when it is quite
-hot, grease it with fresh butter tied in a clean rag, and set on it a
-tin cake-ring, (about the size of a large dinner plate,) greased also.
-Dip out two large table-spoonfuls and a half of the cake batter; put
-it within the tin ring, and bake it about five minutes (or a little
-longer) without turning it. When it is done, take it carefully off;
-place it on a large dish to cool; wipe the griddle, grease it afresh,
-and put on another cake. Proceed thus till all the batter is baked.
-When the cakes are cool, spread every one thickly over with grape
-jelly, peach marmalade, or any other sweetmeat that is smooth and
-thick; currant jelly will be found too thin, and is liable to run off.
-Lay the cakes smoothly one on another, (each having a layer of jelly
-or marmalade between,) and either grate loaf-sugar over the top one,
-or ice it smoothly; marking the icing with cross lines of coloured
-sugar-sand, all the lines meeting at the centre so as to divide the
-cake, when cut, into triangular or wedge-shaped slices. If you ice it,
-add the juice of a lemon to the icing.
-
-Jelly cake should be eaten fresh. It is best the day it is baked.
-
-You may bake small jelly cakes in muffin rings.
-
-
-SPONGE CAKE.--Sift half a pound of flour,[I] and powder a pound of the
-best loaf-sugar. Grate the yellow rind and squeeze into a saucer the
-juice of three lemons. Beat twelve eggs; and when they are as light as
-possible, beat into them gradually and very hard the sugar, adding the
-lemon, and beating the whole for a long time. Then by degrees, stir
-in the flour slowly and lightly; for if the flour is stirred hard and
-fast into sponge cake, it will make it porous and tough. Have ready
-buttered, a sufficient number of little square tins, (the thinner they
-are the better,) half fill them with the mixture; grate loaf-sugar over
-the top of each; put them immediately into a quick oven, and bake them
-about ten minutes; taking out one to try when you think they are done.
-Spread them on an inverted sieve to cool. When baked in small square
-cakes, they are generally called Naples biscuits.
-
-If you are willing to take the trouble, they will bake much nicer in
-little square paper cases, which you must make of thick letter paper,
-turning up the sides all round, and pasting together or sewing up the
-corners.
-
-If you bake the mixture in one large cake, (which is not advisable
-unless you have had much practice in baking,) put it into a buttered
-tin pan or mould, and set it directly into a hot Dutch oven, as it will
-fall and become heavy if allowed to stand. Keep plenty of live coals on
-the top, and under the bottom till the cake has risen very high, and
-is of a fine colour; then diminish the fire, and keep it moderate till
-the cake is done. It will take about an hour. When cool, ice it; adding
-a little lemon juice or extract of roses to the icing. Sponge cake is
-best the day it is baked.
-
-Diet Bread is a foolish name for Sponge Cake.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[I] Sponge cake may be made with rice flour.
-
-
-ALMOND CAKE.--Blanch, and pound in a mortar four ounces of shelled
-sweet almonds and two ounces of shelled bitter ones; adding, as you
-proceed, sufficient rose-water to make them light and white. Sift half
-a pound of flour, and powder a pound of loaf-sugar. Beat thirteen eggs;
-and when they are as light as possible, stir into them alternately
-the almonds, sugar, and flour; adding a grated nutmeg. Butter a large
-square pan; put in the mixture, and bake it in a brisk oven about half
-an hour, less or more, according to its thickness. When cool, ice it.
-It is best when eaten fresh.
-
-
-COCOA-NUT CAKE.--Cut up and wash a cocoa-nut, and grate as much of it
-as will weigh a pound. Powder a pound of loaf-sugar. Beat fifteen eggs
-very light; and then beat into them, gradually, the sugar. Then add by
-degrees the cocoa-nut; and lastly, a handful of sifted flour. Stir the
-whole very hard, and bake it either in a large tin pan, or in little
-tins. The oven should be rather quick.
-
-
-WASHINGTON CAKE.--Stir together a pound of butter and a pound of
-sugar; and sift into another pan a pound of flour. Beat six eggs very
-light, and stir them into the butter and sugar, alternately with the
-flour and a pint of rich milk or cream; if the milk is sour it will be
-no disadvantage. Add a glass of wine, a glass of brandy, a powdered
-nutmeg, and a table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon. Lastly, stir in a
-small tea-spoonful of soda, or sal-aratus, that has been melted in
-tepid water; take care not to put in too much soda, lest it give the
-cake an unpleasant taste. Stir the whole very hard; put it into a
-buttered tin pan, (or into little tins,) and bake it in a brisk oven.
-Wrapped in a thick cloth, this cake will keep soft for a week.
-
-
-CIDER CAKE.--Pick, wash, and dry a pound of currants, and sprinkle them
-well with flour; and prepare two nutmegs and a large table-spoonful
-of powdered cinnamon. Sift half a pound and two ounces of flour. Stir
-together till very light, six ounces of fresh butter, and half a pound
-of powdered white sugar; and add gradually the spice, with two wine
-glasses of brandy, (or one of brandy and one of white wine.) Beat four
-eggs very light, and stir them into the mixture alternately with the
-flour. Add by degrees half a pint of brisk cider; and then stir in the
-currants, a few at a time. Lastly, a small tea-spoonful of pearl-ash or
-sal-aratus dissolved in a little cider. Having stirred the whole very
-hard, put it in a buttered tin pan, have the oven ready, and put in the
-cake immediately. Bake it in a brisk oven an hour or more, according
-to its thickness. Or you may bake it as little cakes, putting it into
-small tins; in which case use but half a pound of flour in mixing the
-batter.
-
-
-ELECTION CAKE.--Make a sponge (as it is called) in the following
-manner:--Sift into a pan two pounds and a half of flour; and
-into a deep plate another pound. Take a second pan, and stir two
-table-spoonfuls of the best West India molasses into five jills or two
-tumblers and a half of strong fresh yeast; adding a jill of water,
-warm, but not hot. Then stir gradually into the yeast, &c. the pound
-of flour that you have sifted separately. Cover it, and let it set by
-the fire three hours to rise. While it is rising, prepare the other
-ingredients, by stirring in a deep pan two pounds of fresh butter and
-two pounds of powdered sugar, till they are quite light and creamy;
-adding to them a table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon; a tea-spoonful
-of powdered mace; and two powdered nutmegs. Stir in also half a pint
-of rich milk. Beat fourteen eggs till very smooth and thick, and stir
-them gradually into the mixture, alternately with the two pounds and a
-half of flour which you sifted first. When the sponge is quite light,
-mix the whole together, and bake it in buttered tin pans in a moderate
-oven. It should be eaten fresh, as no sweet cake made with yeast is so
-good after the first day. If it is not probable that the whole will
-come into use on the day it is baked, mix but half the above quantity.
-
-
-MORAVIAN SUGAR CAKE.--Cut up a quarter of a pound of butter into a
-pint of rich milk, and warm it till the butter becomes soft; then stir
-it about in the milk so as to mix them well. Sift three quarters of a
-pound of flour (or a pint and a half) into a deep pan, and making a
-hole in the middle of it, stir in a large table-spoonful of the best
-brewer's yeast in which a salt-spoonful of salt has been dissolved;
-and then thin it with the milk and butter. Cover it, and set it near
-the fire to rise. If the yeast is sufficiently strong, it will most
-probably be light in two hours. When it is quite light, mix with the
-dough two beaten eggs and three quarters of a pound more of sifted
-flour; adding a tea-spoonful of oil of cinnamon, and stirring it
-very hard. Butter a large round baking pan, and put the mixture into
-it. Set it to rise again, as before. Mix together five ounces or a
-large coffee-cup of fine brown sugar; two ounces of butter; and two
-table-spoonfuls of powdered cinnamon. When the dough is thoroughly
-light, make deep incisions all over it, at equal distances, and fill
-them with the mixture of butter, sugar and cinnamon, pressing it hard
-down into the bottom of the holes, and closing the dough a little at
-the top to prevent the seasoning from running out. Strew some sugar
-over the top of the cake; set it immediately into the oven, and bake
-it from an hour and a half to two hours, or more, in a brisk oven in
-proportion to its thickness. When cool, cut it into squares This is a
-very good plain cake; but do not attempt it unless you have excellent
-yeast.
-
-
-HUCKLEBERRY CAKE.--Spread a quart of ripe huckleberries on a large
-dish, and dredge them thickly with flour. Mix together half a pint of
-milk; half a pint of molasses; half a pint of powdered sugar; and half
-a pound of butter. Warm them by the fire till the butter is quite soft
-then stir them all together, and set them away till cold. Prepare a
-large table-spoonful of powdered cloves and cinnamon mixed. Beat five
-eggs very light, and stir them gradually into the other ingredients;
-adding, by degrees, sufficient sifted flour to make a thick batter.
-Then stir in a small tea-spoonful of pearl-ash or dissolved sal-aratus.
-Lastly, add by degrees the huckleberries. Put the mixture into a
-buttered pan, or into little tins, and bake it in a moderate oven. It
-is best the second day.
-
-
-BREAD CAKE.--When you are making wheat bread, and the dough is quite
-light and ready to bake, take out as much of it as would make a twelve
-cent loaf, and mix with it a tea-cup full of powdered sugar, and a
-tea-cup full of butter that has been softened and stirred about in a
-tea-cup of warm milk. Add also a beaten egg. Knead it very well, put it
-into a square pan, dredged with flour, cover it, and set it near the
-fire for half an hour. Then bake it in a moderate oven, and wrap it in
-a thick cloth as soon as it is done. It is best when fresh.
-
-
-FEDERAL CAKES.
-
-Sift two pounds of flour into a deep pan, and cut up in it a pound of
-fresh butter; rub the butter into the flour with your hands, adding
-by degrees, half a pound of powdered white sugar; a tea-spoonful of
-powdered cinnamon; a beaten nutmeg; a glass of wine or brandy, and two
-glasses of rose water. Beat four eggs very light; and add them to the
-mixture with a salt-spoonful of soda melted in a little lukewarm water.
-Mix all well together; add, if necessary, sufficient cold water to make
-it into a dough just stiff enough to roll out; knead it slightly, and
-then roll it out into a sheet about half an inch thick. Cut it out into
-small cakes with a tin cutter, or with the edge of a tumbler; dipping
-the cutter frequently into flour, to prevent its sticking. Lay the
-cakes in shallow pans buttered, or on flat sheets of tin, (taking care
-not to let them touch, lest they should run into each other,) and bake
-them of a light brown in a brisk oven. They are best the second day.
-
-
-SAVOY BISCUITS.--Take four eggs, and separate the whites from the
-yolks. Beat the whites by themselves, to a stiff froth; then add
-gradually the yolks, and beat them both together for a long time. Next
-add by degrees half a pound of the finest loaf-sugar, powdered and
-sifted, beating it in very hard; and the juice of a lemon or orange.
-Lastly, stir in a quarter of a pound of sifted flour, a little at a
-time. Stir the whole very hard, and then with a spoon lay it on sheets
-of white paper, forming it into thin cakes of an oblong or oval shape.
-Take care not to place them too close to each other, lest they run.
-Grate loaf-sugar over the top of each, to assist in keeping them in
-shape. Have the oven quite ready to put them in immediately. It should
-be rather brisk. They will bake in a few minutes, and should be but
-slightly coloured. They are sometimes called lady-fingers.
-
-
-ALMOND MACCAROONS.--Take a pound of shelled sweet almonds, and a
-quarter of a pound of shelled bitter almonds. Blanch them in scalding
-water, mix them together, and pound them, one or two at a time, in
-a mortar to a very smooth paste; adding frequently a little rose
-water to prevent them from oiling and becoming heavy. Prepare a pound
-of powdered loaf-sugar. Beat the whites of seven eggs to a stiff
-froth, and then beat into it gradually the powdered sugar, adding a
-table-spoonful of mixed spice, (nutmeg, mace, and cinnamon.) Then mix
-in the pounded almonds, (which it is best to prepare the day before,)
-and stir the whole very hard. Form the mixture with a spoon into little
-round or oval cakes, upon sheets of buttered white paper, and grate
-white sugar over each. Lay the paper in square shallow pans, or on iron
-sheets, and bake the maccaroons a few minutes in a brisk oven, till of
-a pale brown. When cold, take them off the papers.
-
-It will be well to try two or three first, and if you find them likely
-to lose their shape and run into each other, you may omit the papers
-and make the mixture up into little balls with your hands well floured;
-baking them in shallow tin pans slightly buttered.
-
-You may make maccaroons with icing that is left from a cake; adding
-pounded almonds &c.
-
-
-COCOA-NUT MACCAROONS.--Beat to a stiff froth the whites of six eggs,
-and then beat into it very hard a pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Mix
-with it a pound of grated cocoa-nut, or sufficient to make a stiff
-paste. Then flour your hands, and make it up into little balls. Lay
-them on sheets of buttered white paper, and bake them in a brisk oven;
-first grating loaf-sugar over each. They will be done in a few minutes.
-
-Maccaroons may be made in a similar manner of pounded cream-nuts,
-ground-nuts, filberts, or English walnuts.
-
-
-WHITE COCOA-NUT CAKES.--Break up a cocoa-nut; peel, and wash the pieces
-in cold water, and grate them. Mix in the milk of the nut and some
-powdered loaf-sugar, and then form the grated cocoa-nut into little
-balls upon sheets of white paper. Make them all of a regular and
-handsome form, and touch the top of each with a spot of red sugar-sand.
-Do not bake them, but place them to dry for twenty-four hours, in a
-warm room where nothing is likely to disturb them.
-
-
-COCOA-NUT JUMBLES.--Grate a large cocoa-nut. Rub half a pound of butter
-into a pound of sifted flour, and wet it with three beaten eggs, and a
-little rose water. Add by degrees the cocoa-nut, so as to form a stiff
-dough. Flour your hands and your paste-board, and dividing the dough
-into equal portions, make the jumbles with your hands into long rolls,
-and then curl them round and join the ends so as to form rings. Grate
-loaf-sugar over them; lay them in buttered pans, (not so near as to
-run into each other,) and bake them in a quick oven from five to ten
-minutes.
-
-
-COMMON JUMBLES.--Sift a pound of flour into a large pan. Cut up a
-pound of butter into a pound of powdered white sugar, and stir them
-to a cream. Beat six eggs till very light, and then pour them all at
-once into the pan of flour; next add the butter and sugar, with a
-large table-spoonful of mixed mace and cinnamon, two grated nutmegs,
-and the juice of two lemons, or a wine glass of rose water. When all
-the ingredients are in, stir the mixture very hard with a broad knife.
-Having floured your hands and spread some flour on the paste-board,
-make the dough into long rolls, (all of equal size,) and form them into
-rings by joining the two ends very nicely. Lay them on buttered tins,
-and bake them in a quick oven from five to ten minutes. Grate sugar
-over them when cool.
-
-
-APEES.--Rub a pound of fresh butter into two pounds of sifted flour,
-and mix in a pound of powdered white sugar, a grated nutmeg, a
-table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon, and four large table-spoonfuls
-of carraway seeds. Add a wine glass of rose water, and mix the whole
-with sufficient cold water to make it a stiff dough. Roll it out into
-a large sheet about a third of an inch in thickness, and cut it into
-round cakes with a tin cutter or with the edge of a tumbler. Lay them
-in buttered pans, and bake them in a quick oven, (rather hotter at the
-bottom than at the top,) till they are of a very pale brown.
-
-
-WHITE CUP CAKE.--Measure one large coffee cup of cream or rich milk,
-(which, for this cake, is best when sour,) one cup of fresh butter;
-two cups of powdered white sugar; and four cups of sifted flour. Stir
-the butter and sugar together till quite light; then by degrees add
-the cream, alternately with half the flour. Beat five eggs as light
-as possible, and stir them into the mixture, alternately with the
-remainder of the flour. Add a grated nutmeg and a large tea-spoonful
-of powdered cinnamon, with rose water to your taste. Lastly, stir in a
-very small tea-spoonful of sal-aratus or pearl-ash, melted in a little
-tepid water. Having stirred the whole very hard, put it into little
-tins; set them in a moderate oven, and bake them about twenty minutes.
-
-
-KISSES.--Powder a pound of the best loaf-sugar. Beat to a strong froth
-the whites of eight eggs, and when it is stiff enough to stand alone,
-beat into it the powdered sugar, (a tea-spoonful at a time,) adding the
-juice of two lemons, or of two large oranges. Having beaten the whole
-very hard, drop it in oval or egg-shaped heaps upon sheets of white
-paper, smoothing them with a broad knife dipped in cold water. Place
-them in a moderate oven, (if it is too cool they will not rise, but
-will flatten and run into each other,) and bake them till coloured of
-a very pale brown. Then take them off the papers very carefully, place
-two bottoms (or flat sides) together so as to unite them in an oval
-ball, and lay them on their sides to cool. You may scoop out a little
-from the under-surface of each, and put in some jelly. Then stick the
-flat sides together.
-
-
-MARMALADE CAKE.--Make a batter as for queen-cake, and bake it in small
-tin rings on a griddle. Beat white of egg, and powdered loaf-sugar
-according to the preceding receipt, flavouring it with lemon. When the
-batter is baked into cakes, and they are quite cool, spread over each
-a thick layer of marmalade, and then heap on with a spoon the icing or
-white of egg and sugar. Pile it high, and set the cakes in a moderate
-oven till the icing is coloured of a very pale brown.
-
-Instead of small ones you may bake the whole in one large cake.
-
-
-SECRETS.--Take glazed paper of different colours, and cut it into
-squares of equal size, fringing two sides of each. Have ready, burnt
-almonds, chocolate nuts, and bonbons or sugar-plums of various sorts;
-and put one in each paper with a folded slip containing two lines of
-verse; or what will be much more amusing, a conundrum with the answer.
-Twist the coloured paper so as entirely to conceal their contents,
-leaving the fringe at each end. This is the most easy, but there are
-various ways of cutting and ornamenting these envelopes.
-
-
-SCOTCH CAKE.--Rub three quarters of a pound of butter into a pound
-of sifted flour; mix in a pound of powdered sugar, and a large
-table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon. Mix it into a dough with three
-well beaten eggs. Roll it out into a sheet; cut it into round cakes,
-and bake them in a quick oven; they will require but a few minutes.
-
-
-SCOTCH QUEEN CAKE--Melt a pound of butter by putting it into a skillet
-on hot coals. Then set it away to cool. Sift two quarts of oatmeal
-into a deep pan, and mix with it a pound of powdered sugar and a
-table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon and mace. Make a hole in the
-middle, put in the melted butter, and mix it with a knife till you have
-formed of the whole a lump of dough. If it is too stiff, moisten it
-with a little rose water. Knead it well, and roll it out into a large
-oval sheet, an inch thick. Cut it down the middle, and then across, so
-as to divide it into four cakes. Prick them with a fork, and crimp or
-scollop the edges neatly. Lay them in shallow pans; set them in a quick
-oven and bake them of a light brown. This cake will keep a week or two.
-
-You may mix in with the dough half a pound of currants, picked, washed,
-and dried.
-
-
-HONEY CAKES.--Take a quart of strained honey, half a pound of fresh
-butter, and a small tea-spoonful of pearl-ash dissolved in a little
-sour milk. Add by degrees as much sifted flour as will make a stiff
-paste. Work the whole well together. Roll it out about half an inch
-thick. Cut it into cakes with the edge of a tumbler or with a tin
-cake-cutter. Lay them on buttered tins and bake them with rather a
-brisk fire, but see that they do not burn.
-
-
-WAFER CAKES.
-
-Mix together half a pound of powdered sugar, and a quarter of a pound
-of butter; and add to them six beaten eggs. Then beat the whole very
-light; stirring into it as much sifted flour as will make a stiff
-batter; a powdered nutmeg, and a tea-spoonful of cinnamon; and the
-juice of a lemon, or a table-spoonful of rose water. The batter must be
-very smooth when it is done, and without a single lump. Heat your wafer
-iron on both sides by turning it in the fire; but do not allow it to
-get too hot. Grease the inside with butter tied in a rag, (this must be
-repeated previous to the baking of every cake,) and put in the batter,
-allowing to each wafer two large table-spoonfuls, taking care not to
-stir up the batter. Close the iron, and when one side is baked, turn it
-on the other; open it occasionally to see if the wafer is doing well.
-They should be coloured of a light brown. Take them out carefully with
-a knife. Strew them with powdered sugar, and roll them up while warm,
-round a smooth stick, withdrawing it when they grow cold. They are best
-the day after they are baked.
-
-If you are preparing for company, fill up the hollow of the wafers with
-whipt cream, and stop up the two ends with preserved strawberries, or
-with any other small sweetmeat.
-
-
-WONDERS, OR CRULLERS.--Rub half a pound of butter into two pounds of
-sifted flour, mixing in three quarters of a pound of powdered sugar.
-Add a tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon, and a grated nutmeg, with a
-large table-spoonful of rose water. Beat six eggs very light, and stir
-them into the mixture. Mix it with a knife into a soft paste. Then put
-it on the paste-board, and roll it out into a sheet an inch thick. If
-you find it too soft, knead in a little more flour, and roll it out
-over again. Cut it into long slips with a jagging iron, or with a sharp
-knife, and twist them into various fantastic shapes. Have ready on hot
-coals, a skillet of boiling lard; put in the crullers and fry them of
-a light brown, turning them occasionally by means of a knife and fork.
-Take them out one by one on a perforated skimmer, that the lard may
-drain off through the holes. Spread them out on a large dish, and when
-cold grate white sugar over them.
-
-They will keep a week or more.
-
-
-DOUGH NUTS.--Take two deep dishes, and sift three quarters of a pound
-of flour into each. Make a hole in the centre of one of them, and pour
-in a wine glass of the best brewer's yeast; mix the flour gradually
-into it, wetting it with lukewarm milk; cover it, and set it by the
-fire to rise for about two hours. This is setting a sponge. In the
-mean time, cut up five ounces of butter into the other dish of flour,
-and rub it fine with your hands; add half a pound of powdered sugar, a
-tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon, a grated nutmeg, a table-spoonful
-of rose water, and a half pint of milk. Beat three eggs very light,
-and stir them hard into the mixture. Then when the sponge is perfectly
-light, add it to the other ingredients, mixing them all thoroughly
-with a knife. Cover it, and set it again by the fire for another hour.
-When it is quite light, flour your paste-board, turn out the lump of
-dough, and cut it into thick diamond shaped cakes with a jagging iron.
-If you find the dough so soft as to be unmanageable, mix in a little
-more flour; but not else. Have ready a skillet of boiling lard; put the
-dough-nuts into it, and fry them brown; and when cool grate loaf-sugar
-over them. They should be eaten quite fresh, as next day they will be
-tough and heavy; therefore it is best to make no more than you want for
-immediate use. The New York Oley Koeks are dough-nuts with currants and
-raisins in them.
-
-
-WAFFLES.--Put two pints of rich milk into separate pans. Cut up
-and melt in one of them a quarter of a pound of butter, warming it
-slightly; then, when it is melted, stir it about, and set it away to
-cool. Beat eight eggs till very light, and mix them gradually into
-the other pan of milk, alternately with half a pound of flour. Then
-mix in by degrees the milk that has the butter in it. Lastly, stir in
-a large table-spoonful of strong fresh yeast. Cover the pan, and set
-it near the fire to rise. When the batter is quite light, heat your
-waffle-iron, by putting it among the coals of a clear bright fire;
-grease the inside with butter tied in a rag, and then put in some
-batter. Shut the iron closely, and when the waffle is done on one side,
-turn the iron on the other. Take the cake out by slipping a knife
-underneath; and then heat and grease the iron for another waffle. Send
-them to table quite hot, four or six on a plate; having buttered them
-and strewed over each a mixture of powdered cinnamon, and white sugar.
-Or you may send the sugar and cinnamon in a little glass bowl.
-
-In buying waffle-irons, do not choose those broad shallow ones that are
-to hold four at a time; as the waffles baked in them are too small, too
-thin, and are never of a good shape. The common sort that bake but two
-at once are much the best. They should be of a deep well-cut pattern.
-
-
-NEW YORK COOKIES.--Take a half-pint or a tumbler full of cold water,
-and mix it with half a pound of powdered white sugar. Sift three
-pounds of flour into a large pan, and cut up in it a pound of butter;
-rub the butter very fine into the flour. Add a grated nutmeg, and a
-tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon, with a wine glass of rose water.
-Work in the sugar, and make the whole into a stiff dough, adding, if
-necessary, a little cold water. Dissolve a tea-spoonful of soda in just
-enough tepid water to cover it; and mix it in at the last. Take the
-lump of dough out of the pan, and knead it on the paste-board till it
-becomes quite light. Then roll it out rather more than half an inch
-thick, and cut it into square cakes with a jagging iron or with a
-sharp knife. Stamp the surface of each with a cake print. Lay them in
-buttered pans, and bake them of a light brown in a brisk oven.
-
-They are similar to what are called New Year's cakes, and will keep two
-or three weeks.
-
-In mixing the dough, you may add three table-spoonfuls of carraway
-seeds.
-
-
-SUGAR BISCUIT.--Wet a pound of sugar with two large tea-cups full of
-milk; and rub a pound of butter into two pounds of flour; adding a
-table-spoonful of cinnamon, or a handful of carraway seeds. Mix in the
-sugar, add a tea-spoonful of soda dissolved, and make the whole into
-a stiff dough. Knead it, and then roll it out into a sheet about half
-an inch thick. Beat it on both sides with the rolling-pin, and then
-cut it out with the edge of a tumbler into round cakes. Prick them
-with a fork, lay them in buttered pans, and bake them light brown in
-a quick oven. You may colour them yellow by mixing in with the other
-ingredients a little of the infusion of saffron. These are the hard
-sugar-biscuits.
-
-
-RUSKS.--Sift three pounds of flour into a large pan, and rub into
-it half a pound of butter, and half a pound of sugar. Beat two eggs
-very light, and stir them into a pint and a half of milk, adding two
-table-spoonfuls of rose water, and three table-spoonfuls of the best
-and strongest yeast. Make a hole in the middle of the flour, pour in
-the liquid, and gradually mix the flour into it till you have a thick
-batter. Cover it, and set it by the fire to rise. When it is quite
-light, put it on your paste-board and knead it well. Then divide
-it into small round cakes and knead each separately. Lay them very
-near each other in shallow iron pans that have been sprinkled with
-flour. Prick the top of each rusk with a fork, and set them by the
-fire to rise again for half an hour or more. When they are perfectly
-light, bake them in a moderate oven. They are best when fresh. Soft
-sugar-biscuits are made the same way.
-
-You can convert them into what are called Hard Rusks, or Tops and
-Bottoms, by splitting them in half, and putting them again into the
-oven to harden and crisp.
-
-
-MILK BISCUIT.--Cut up three quarters of a pound of butter in a quart of
-milk, and set it near the fire to warm, till the butter becomes soft;
-then with a knife, mix it thoroughly with the milk, and set it away to
-cool. Afterwards stir in two wine glasses of strong fresh yeast, and
-add by degrees as much sifted flour as will make a dough just stiff
-enough to roll out. As soon as it is mixed, roll it into a thick sheet,
-and cut it out into round cakes with the edge of a tumbler or a wine
-glass. Sprinkle a large iron pan with flour; lay the biscuits in it,
-cover it and set it to rise near the fire. When the biscuits are quite
-light, knead each one separately; prick them with a fork, and set them
-again in a warm place for about half an hour. When they are light
-again, bake them in a moderate oven. They should be eaten fresh, and
-pulled open with the fingers, as splitting them with a knife will make
-them heavy.
-
-
-WHITE GINGERBREAD.
-
-Sift two pounds of flour into a deep pan, and rub into it three
-quarters of a pound of butter; then mix in a pound of common white
-sugar powdered; and three table-spoonfuls of the best white ginger.
-Having beaten four eggs very light, mix them gradually with the other
-ingredients in the pan, and add a small tea-spoonful of pearl-ash
-melted in a wine glass of sour milk. Stir the whole as hard as
-possible. Flour your paste-board; lay the lump of dough upon it, and
-roll it out into a sheet an inch thick; adding more flour if necessary.
-Butter a large shallow square pan. Lay the dough into it, and bake it
-in a moderate oven. When cold, cut it into squares. Or you may cut it
-out into separate cakes with a jagging iron, previous to baking. You
-must be careful not to lay them too close together in the pan, lest
-they run into each other.
-
-
-COMMON GINGERBREAD.--Cut up a pound of butter in a quart of West India
-molasses, which must be perfectly sweet; sugar-house molasses will
-make it hard and heavy. Warm it slightly, just enough to melt the
-butter. Crush with the rolling-pin, on the paste-board, half a pound
-of brown sugar, and add it by degrees to the molasses and butter; then
-stir in three table-spoonfuls of ginger, a large tea-spoonful of
-powdered cloves, and a tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon. Add gradually
-sufficient flour to make a dough stiff enough to roll out easily; and
-lastly, a small tea-spoonful of pearl-ash melted in a little sour milk.
-Mix and stir the dough very hard with a spaddle, or a wooden spoon;
-but do not knead it. Then divide it with a knife into equal portions;
-and, having floured your hands, roll it out on the paste-board into
-long even strips. Place them in shallow tin pans, that have been
-buttered; either laying the strips side by side in straight round
-sticks, (uniting them at both ends,) or coil them into rings one within
-another, as you see them at the cake shops. Bake them in a brisk oven,
-taking care that they do not burn; gingerbread scorching sooner than
-any other cake.
-
-To save time and trouble, you may roll out the dough into a sheet near
-an inch thick, and cut it into round flat cakes with a tin cutter, or
-with the edge of a tumbler.
-
-Ground ginger loses much of its strength by keeping. Therefore it will
-be frequently found necessary to put in more than the quantity given in
-the receipt.
-
-
-GINGERBREAD NUTS.--Rub half a pound of butter into a pound and a half
-of sifted flour; and mix in half a pound of brown sugar, crushed
-fine with the rolling-pin. Add three table-spoonfuls of ginger, a
-tea-spoonful of powdered cloves, and a tea-spoonful of powdered
-cinnamon. Stir in a pint of molasses, and the grated peel of a large
-lemon, but not the juice, as you must add at the last a very small
-tea-spoonful of pearl-ash dissolved in tepid water, and pearl-ash
-entirely destroys the taste of lemon-juice and of every other acid.
-Stir the whole mixture very hard with a spaddle or with a wooden spoon,
-and make it into a lump of dough just stiff enough to roll out into a
-sheet about half an inch thick. Cut it out into small cakes about the
-size of a quarter dollar; or make it up, with your hands well floured,
-into little round balls, flattening them on the top. Lay them in
-buttered pans, and bake them in a moderate oven. They will keep several
-weeks. Use West India molasses.
-
-
-FRANKLIN CAKE.--Mix together a pint of molasses, and half a pint of
-milk, and cut up in it half a pound of butter. Warm them just enough
-to melt the butter, and then stir in six ounces of brown sugar; adding
-three table-spoonfuls of ginger, a table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon,
-a tea-spoonful of powdered cloves, and a grated nutmeg. Beat seven eggs
-very light, and stir them gradually into the mixture, in turn with a
-pound and two ounces of flour. Add, at the last, the grated peel and
-juice of two large lemons or oranges; the peel grated very fine. This
-gingerbread requires no pearl-ash. Stir the mixture very hard; put it
-into little queen-cake tins, well buttered; and bake it in a moderate
-oven. It is best the second day, and will keep soft a week. Use West
-India molasses.
-
-
-GINGER PLUM CAKE.--Stone a pound and a half of raisins, and cut them in
-two. Wash and dry half a pound of currants. Sift into a pan two pounds
-of flour. Put into another pan a pound of brown sugar, (rolled fine,)
-and cut up in it a pound of fresh butter. Stir the butter and sugar
-to a cream, and add to it two table-spoonfuls of the best ginger, one
-table-spoonful of powdered cinnamon; and one of powdered cloves. Then
-beat six eggs very light, and add them gradually to the butter and
-sugar, in turn with the flour and a quart of molasses. Lastly, stir in
-a tea-spoonful of pearl-ash dissolved in lukewarm water and add by
-degrees the fruit, which must be well dredged with flour. Stir all very
-hard; put the mixture into a buttered pan, and bake it in a moderate
-oven. Use West India molasses.
-
-
-MOLASSES CANDY.--Mix a pound of the best brown sugar with two quarts
-of West India molasses, (which must be perfectly sweet,) and boil it
-in a preserving kettle over a moderate fire for three hours, skimming
-it well, and stirring it frequently after the scum has ceased to rise;
-taking care that it does not burn. Have ready the grated rind and the
-juice of three lemons, and stir them into the molasses after it has
-boiled about two hours and a half; or you may substitute the juice
-and rind of three large oranges. The flavour of the lemon will all be
-boiled out if it is put in too soon. The mixture should boil at least
-three hours, that it may be crisp and brittle when cold. If it is taken
-off the fire too soon, or before it has boiled sufficiently, it will
-not congeal, but will be tough and ropy, and must be boiled over again.
-It will cease boiling of itself when it is thoroughly done. Then take
-it off the fire; have ready a square tin pan; put the mixture into it,
-and set it away to cool. The pan should be buttered.
-
-You may make molasses candy with almonds blanched and slit into pieces;
-stir them in by degrees after the mixture has boiled two hours and a
-half. Or you may blanch a quart of ground-nuts and put them in instead
-of the almonds.
-
-
-NOUGAT.--Blanch a pound of shelled sweet almonds; and with an
-almond-cutter, or a sharp penknife, split each almond into two slips.
-Spread them over a large dish, and place them in a gentle oven. Powder
-two pounds of the best loaf-sugar, and put it into a preserving pan
-without a drop of water. Set it on a chafing-dish over a slow fire,
-or on a hot stove, and stir it with a wooden spoon till the heat has
-entirely dissolved it. Then take the almonds out of the oven, and mix
-with them the juice of two or three lemons. Put them into the sugar a
-few at a time, and let them simmer till it becomes a thick stiff paste,
-stirring it hard all the while. Have ready a mould, or a square tin
-pan, greased all over the inside with sweet oil; put the mixture into
-it; smooth it evenly, and set it in a cold place to harden. When almost
-hard cut it into long slips.
-
-
-LEMON DROPS.--Squeeze some lemon-juice into a pan. Pound in a mortar
-some of the best loaf-sugar, and then sift it through a very fine
-sieve. Mix it with the lemon-juice, making it so thick that you can
-scarcely stir it. Put it into a porcelain saucepan, set it on hot
-coals, and stir it with a wooden spoon five minutes or more. Then take
-off the pan, and with the point of a knife drop the liquid on writing
-paper. When cold, the drops will easily come off.
-
-Peppermint drops may be made as above, substituting for the lemon-juice
-essence of peppermint.
-
-Orange drops may be made in the same manner.
-
-
-
-
-WARM CAKES FOR BREAKFAST AND TEA.
-
-
-BUCKWHEAT CAKES.
-
-Take a quart of buckwheat meal, mix with it a tea-spoonful of salt,
-and add a handful of Indian meal. Pour two table-spoonfuls of the best
-brewer's yeast into the centre of the meal. Then mix it with lukewarm
-water till it becomes a batter. Cover it, put it in a warm place and
-set it to rise; it will take about three hours. When it is quite light,
-and covered with bubbles, it is fit to bake. Put your griddle over the
-fire, and let it get quite hot before you begin. Grease it well with
-a piece of butter tied in a rag. Then dip out a large ladle full of
-the batter and bake it on the griddle; turning it with a broad wooden
-paddle. Let the cakes be of large size, and even at the edges. Ragged
-edges to batter cakes look very badly. Butter them as you take them off
-the griddle. Put several on a plate, and cut them across in six pieces.
-
-Grease the griddle anew, between baking each cake.
-
-If your batter has been mixed over night and is found to be sour in the
-morning, melt in warm water a piece of pearl-ash the size of a grain of
-corn, or a little larger; stir it into the batter; let it set half an
-hour, and then bake it. The pearl-ash will remove the sour taste, and
-increase the lightness of the cakes.
-
-
-FLANNEL CAKES.--Put a table-spoonful of butter into a quart of milk,
-and warm them together till the butter has melted; then stir it well,
-and set it away to cool. Beat five eggs as light as possible, and stir
-them into the milk in turn with three pints of sifted flour; add a
-small tea-spoonful of salt, and a large table-spoonful and a half of
-the best fresh yeast. Set the pan of batter near the fire to rise; and
-if the yeast is good, it will be light in three hours. Then bake it on
-a griddle in the manner of buckwheat cakes. Send them to table hot, and
-cut across into four pieces. This batter may be baked in waffle-irons.
-If so, send to table with the cakes powdered white sugar and cinnamon.
-
-
-INDIAN BATTER CAKES.--Mix together a quart of sifted Indian meal, (the
-yellow meal is best for all purposes,) and a handful of wheat flour.
-Warm a quart of milk, and stir into it a small tea-spoonful of salt,
-and two large table-spoonfuls of the best fresh yeast. Beat three eggs
-very light, and stir them gradually into the milk in turn with the
-meal. Cover it, and set it to rise for three or four hours. When quite
-light, bake it on a griddle in the manner of buckwheat cakes. Butter
-them, cut them across, and send them to table hot, with molasses in a
-sauce-boat.
-
-If the batter should chance to become sour before it is baked, stir
-in about a salt-spoonful of pearl-ash dissolved in a little lukewarm
-water; and let it set half an hour longer before it is baked.
-
-
-INDIAN MUSH CAKES.--Pour into a pan three pints of cold water, and stir
-gradually into it a quart of sifted Indian meal which has been mixed
-with half a pint of wheat flour, and a small tea-spoonful of salt. Give
-it a hard stirring at the last. Have ready a hot griddle, and bake the
-batter immediately, in cakes about the size of a saucer. Send them to
-table piled evenly, but not cut. Eat them with butter or molasses.
-
-This is the most economical and expeditious way of making soft Indian
-cakes; but it cannot be recommended as the best. It will be some
-improvement to mix the meal with milk rather than water.
-
-
-JOHNNY CAKE.--Sift a quart of Indian meal into a pan; make a hole in
-the middle, and pour in a pint of warm water. Mix the meal and water
-gradually into a batter, adding a small tea-spoonful of salt. Beat
-it very hard, and for a long time, till it becomes quite light. Then
-spread it thick and even on a stout piece of smooth board. Place
-it upright on the hearth before a clear fire, with a flat iron or
-something of the sort to support the board behind, and bake it well.
-Cut it into squares, and split and butter them hot.
-
-
-INDIAN FLAPPERS.--Have ready a pint of sifted Indian meal, mixed with
-a handful of wheat flour, and a small tea-spoonful of salt. Beat four
-eggs very light, and stir them by degrees into a quart of milk, in turn
-with the meal. They can be made in a very short time, and should be
-baked as soon as mixed, on a hot griddle; allow a large ladle full of
-batter to each cake, and make them all of the same size. Send them to
-table hot, buttered and cut in half.
-
-
-INDIAN MUFFINS.--Sift and mix together a pint and a half of yellow
-Indian meal, and a handful of wheat flour. Melt a quarter of a pound of
-fresh butter in a quart of milk. Beat four eggs very light, and stir
-into them alternately (a little at a time of each) the milk when it
-is quite cold, and the meal; adding a small tea-spoonful of salt. The
-whole must be beaten long and hard. Then butter some muffin rings; set
-them on a hot griddle, and pour some of the batter into each.
-
-Send the muffins to table hot, and split them by pulling them open with
-your fingers, as a knife will make them heavy. Eat them with butter,
-molasses or honey.
-
-
-WATER MUFFINS.--Put four table-spoonfuls of fresh strong yeast into a
-pint of lukewarm water. Add a little salt; about a small tea-spoonful;
-then stir in gradually as much sifted flour as will make a thick
-batter. Cover the pan, and set it in a warm place to rise. When it is
-quite light, and your griddle is hot, grease and set your muffin rings
-on it; having first buttered them round the inside. Dip out a ladle
-full of the batter for each ring, and bake them over a quick fire. Send
-them to table hot, and split them by pulling them open with your hands.
-
-
-COMMON MUFFINS.--Having melted three table-spoonfuls of fresh butter
-in three pints of warm milk, set it away to cool. Then beat three eggs
-as light as possible, and stir them gradually into the milk when it is
-quite cold; adding a tea-spoonful of salt. Stir in by degrees enough
-of sifted flour to make a batter as thick as you can conveniently beat
-it; and lastly, add two table-spoonfuls of strong fresh yeast from the
-brewery. Cover the batter and set it in a warm place to rise. It should
-be light in about three hours. Having heated your griddle, grease it
-with some butter tied in a rag; grease your muffin rings round the
-inside, and set them on the griddle. Take some batter out of the pan
-with a ladle or a large spoon, pour it lightly into the rings, and bake
-the muffins of a light brown. When done, break or split them open with
-your fingers; butter them and send them to table hot.
-
-
-SODA BISCUITS.--Melt half a pound of butter in a pint of warm milk,
-adding a tea-spoonful of soda; and stir in by degrees half a pound of
-sugar. Then sift into a pan two pounds of flour; make a hole in the
-middle; pour in the milk, &c., and mix it with the flour into a dough.
-Put it on your paste-board, and knead it long and hard till it becomes
-very light. Roll it out into a sheet half an inch thick. Cut it into
-little round cakes with the top of a wine glass, or with a tin cutter
-of that size; prick the tops; lay them on tins sprinkled with flour, or
-in shallow iron pans; and bake them of a light brown in a quick oven;
-they will be done in a few minutes. These biscuits keep very well.
-
-
-A SALLY LUNN.--This cake is called after the inventress. Sift into a
-pan a pound and a half of flour. Make a hole in the middle, and put
-in two ounces of butter warmed in a pint of milk, a salt-spoonful of
-salt, three well-beaten eggs, and two table-spoonfuls of the best fresh
-yeast. Mix the flour well into the other ingredients, and put the whole
-into a square tin pan that has been greased with butter. Cover it, set
-it in a warm place, and when it is quite light, bake it in a moderate
-oven. Send it to table hot, and eat it with butter.
-
-Or, you may bake it on a griddle, in small muffin rings, pulling the
-cakes open and buttering them when brought to table.
-
-
-SHORT CAKES.--Rub three quarters of a pound of fresh butter into a
-pound and a half of sifted flour; and make it into a dough with a
-little cold water. Roll it out into a sheet half an inch thick, and cut
-it into round cakes with the edge of a tumbler. Prick them with a fork;
-lay them in a shallow iron pan sprinkled with flour, and bake them in
-a moderate oven till they are brown. Send them to table hot; split and
-butter them.
-
-
-TEA BISCUIT.--Melt a quarter of a pound of fresh butter in a quart of
-warm milk, and add a salt-spoonful of salt. Sift two pounds of flour
-into a pan, make a hole in the centre, and put in three table-spoonfuls
-of the best brewer's yeast. Add the milk and butter and mix it into a
-stiff paste. Cover it and set it by the fire to rise. When quite light,
-knead it well, roll it out an inch thick, and cut it into round cakes
-with the edge of a tumbler. Prick the top of each with a fork; lay them
-in buttered pans and bake them light brown. Send them to table warm,
-and split and butter them.
-
-
-RICE CAKES.--Pick and wash half a pint of rice, and boil it very soft.
-Then drain it, and let it get cold. Sift a pint and a half of flour
-over the pan of rice, and mix in a quarter of a pound of butter that
-has been warmed by the fire, and a salt-spoonful of salt. Beat five
-eggs very light, and stir them gradually into a quart of milk. Beat the
-whole very hard, and bake it in muffin rings, or in waffle-irons. Send
-them to table hot, and eat them with butter, honey, or molasses.
-
-You may make these cakes of rice flour instead of mixing together whole
-rice and wheat flour.
-
-
-CREAM CAKES.--Having beaten three eggs very light, stir them into a
-quart of cream alternately with a quart of sifted flour; and add one
-wine glass of strong yeast, and a salt-spoon of salt. Cover the batter,
-and set it near the fire to rise. When it is quite light, stir in a
-large table-spoonful of butter that has been warmed by the fire. Bake
-the cakes in muffin rings, and send them to table hot, split with your
-fingers, and buttered.
-
-
-FRENCH ROLLS.--Sift a pound of flour into a pan, and rub into it two
-ounces of butter; mix in the whites only of three eggs, beaten to a
-stiff froth, and a table-spoonful of strong yeast; add sufficient milk
-to make a stiff dough, and a salt-spoonful of salt. Cover it and set
-it before the fire to rise. It should be light in an hour. Then put it
-on a paste-board, divide it into rolls, or round cakes; lay them in a
-floured square pan, and bake them about ten minutes in a quick oven.
-
-
-COMMON ROLLS.--Sift two pounds of flour into a pan, and mix with it a
-tea-spoonful of salt. Warm together a jill of water and a jill of milk.
-Make a hole in the middle of the pan of flour; mix with the milk and
-water a jill of the best yeast, and pour it into the hole. Mix into the
-liquid enough of the surrounding flour to make a thin batter, which you
-must stir till quite smooth and free from lumps. Then strew a handful
-of flour over the top, and set it in a warm place to rise for two hours
-or more. When it is quite light, and has cracked on the top, make it
-into a dough with some more milk and water. Knead it well for ten
-minutes. Cover it, and set it again to rise for twenty minutes. Then
-make the dough into rolls or round balls. Bake them in a square pan,
-and send them to table hot, cut in three, buttered and put together
-again.
-
-
-
-
-BREAD.
-
-Take one peck or two gallons of fine wheat flour, and sift it into a
-kneading trough, or into a small clean tub, or a large broad earthen
-pan; and make a deep hole in the middle of the heap of flour, to begin
-the process by what is called setting a sponge. Have ready half a pint
-of warm water, which in summer should be only lukewarm, but even in
-winter it must not be hot or boiling, and stir it well into half a pint
-of strong fresh yeast; (if the yeast is home-made you must use from
-three quarters to a whole pint;) then pour it into the hole in the
-middle of the flour. With a spoon work in the flour round the edges
-of the liquid, so as to bring in by degrees sufficient flour to form
-a thin batter, which must be well stirred about, for a minute or two.
-Then take a handful of flour, and scatter it thinly over the top of
-this batter, so as to cover it entirely. Lay a warmed cloth over the
-whole, and set it to rise in a warm place; in winter put it nearer the
-fire than in summer. When the batter has risen so as to make cracks in
-the flour on the top, scatter over it three or four table-spoonfuls
-(not more) of fine salt, and begin to form the whole mass into a dough;
-commencing round the hole containing the batter, and pouring as much
-soft water as is necessary to make the flour mix with the batter;
-the water must never be more than lukewarm. When the whole is well
-mixed, and the original batter which is to give fermentation to the
-dough is completely incorporated with it, knead it hard, turning it
-over, pressing it, folding it, and working it thoroughly with your
-clenched hands for twenty minutes or half an hour; or till it becomes
-perfectly light and stiff. The goodness of bread depends much on the
-kneading, which to do well requires strength and practice. When it has
-been sufficiently worked, form the dough into a lump in the middle
-of the trough or pan, and scatter a little dry flour thinly over it:
-then cover it, and set it again in a warm place to undergo a farther
-fermentation; for which, if all has been done rightly, about twenty
-minutes or half an hour will be sufficient.
-
-The oven should be hot by the time the dough has remained twenty
-minutes in the lump. If it is a brick oven it should be heated by
-faggots or small light wood, allowed to remain in till burnt down into
-coals. When the bread is ready, clear out the coals, and sweep and wipe
-the floor of the oven clean. Introduce nothing wet into the oven, as
-it may crack the bricks when they are hot. Try the heat of the bottom
-by throwing in some flour; and if it scorches and burns black, do not
-venture to put in the bread till the oven has had time to become cooler.
-
-Put the dough on the paste-board, (which must be sprinkled with flour,)
-and divide it into loaves, forming them of a good shape. Place them in
-the oven, and close up the door, which you may open once or twice to
-see how the bread is going on. The loaves will bake in from two hours
-and a half to three hours, or more, according to their size. When the
-loaves are done, wrap each in a clean coarse towel, and stand them up
-on end to cool slowly. It is a good way to have the cloths previously
-made damp by sprinkling them plentifully with water, and letting them
-lie awhile rolled up tightly. This will make the crust of the bread
-less dry and hard. Bread should be kept always wrapped in a cloth, and
-covered from the air in a box or basket with a close lid. Unless you
-have other things to bake at the same time, it is not worth while to
-heat a brick oven for a small quantity of bread. Two or three loaves
-can be baked very well in a stove, (putting them into square iron
-pans,) or in a Dutch oven.[J]
-
-If the bread has been mixed over night (which should never be done in
-warm weather) and is found, on tasting it, to be sour in the morning,
-melt a tea-spoonful of pearl-ash in a little milk-warm water, and
-sprinkle it over the dough; let it set half an hour, and then knead
-it. This will remove the acidity, and rather improve the bread in
-lightness. If dough is allowed to freeze it is totally spoiled. All
-bread that is sour, heavy, or ill-baked is not only unpalatable, but
-extremely unwholesome, and should never be eaten. These accidents so
-frequently happen when bread is made at home by careless, unpractised
-or incompetent persons, that families who live in cities or towns will
-generally risk less and save more, by obtaining their bread from a
-professional baker.
-
-If you like a little Indian in your wheat bread, prepare rather a
-larger quantity of warm water for setting the sponge; stirring into the
-water, while it is warming, enough of sifted Indian meal to make it
-like thin gruel. Warm water that has had pumpkin boiled in it is very
-good for bread.
-
-Strong fresh yeast from the brewery should always be used in preference
-to any other. If the yeast is home-made, or not very strong and
-fresh, double or treble the quantity mentioned in the receipt will be
-necessary to raise the bread. On the other hand, if too much yeast is
-put in, the bread will be disagreeably bitter.[K]
-
-You may take off a portion of the dough that has been prepared for
-bread, make it up into little round cakes or rolls, and bake them for
-breakfast or tea.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[J] If you bake bread in a Dutch oven, take off the lid when the loaf
-is done, and let it remain in the oven uncovered for a quarter of an
-hour.
-
-[K] If you are obliged from its want of strength to put in a large
-quantity of yeast, mix with it two or three handfuls of bran; add the
-warm water to it, and then strain it through a sieve or cloth; or you
-may correct the bitterness by putting in a few bits of charcoal and
-then straining it.
-
-
-BRAN BREAD.--Sift into a pan three quarts of unbolted wheat meal. Stir
-a jill of strong yeast, and a jill of molasses into a quart of soft
-water, (which must be warm but not hot,) and add a small tea-spoonful
-of pearl-ash, or sal-aratus. Make a hole in the heap of flour, pour
-in the liquid, and proceed in the usual manner of making bread. This
-quantity may be made into two loaves. Bran bread is considered very
-wholesome; and is recommended to persons afflicted with dyspepsia.
-
-
-RYE AND INDIAN BREAD.--Sift two quarts of rye, and two quarts of Indian
-meal, and mix them well together. Boil three pints of milk; pour it
-boiling hot upon the meal; add two tea-spoonfuls of salt, and stir the
-whole very hard. Let it stand till it becomes of only a lukewarm heat,
-and then stir in half a pint of good fresh yeast; if from the brewery
-and quite fresh, a smaller quantity will suffice. Knead the mixture
-into a stiff dough, and set it to rise in a pan. Cover it with a thick
-cloth that has been previously warmed, and set it near the fire. When
-it is quite light, and has cracked all over the top, make it into two
-loaves, put them into a moderate oven, and bake them two hours and a
-half.
-
-
-COMMON YEAST.--Put a large handful of hops into two quarts of boiling
-water, which must then be set on the fire again, and boiled twenty
-minutes with the hops. Have ready in a pan three pints of sifted flour;
-strain the liquid, and pour half of it on the flour. Let the other half
-stand till it becomes cool, and then mix it gradually into the pan
-with the flour, &c. Then stir into it half a pint of good strong yeast,
-fresh from the brewery if possible; if not, use some that was left of
-the last making. You may increase the strength by stirring into your
-yeast before you bottle it, four or five large tea-spoonfuls of brown
-sugar, or as many table-spoonfuls of molasses.
-
-Put it into clean bottles, and cork them loosely till the fermentation
-is over. Next morning put in the corks tightly, and set the bottles
-in a cold place. When you are going to bottle the yeast it will be an
-improvement to place two or three raisins at the bottom of each bottle.
-It is best to make yeast very frequently; as, with every precaution,
-it will scarcely keep good a week, even in cold weather. If you are
-apprehensive of its becoming sour, put into each bottle a lump of
-pearl-ash the size of a hazle-nut.
-
-
-BRAN YEAST.--Mix a pint of wheat bran, and a handful of hops with a
-quart of water, and boil them together about twenty minutes. Then
-strain it through a sieve into a pan; when the liquid becomes only
-milk-warm, stir into it four table-spoonfuls of brewer's yeast, and two
-of brown sugar, or four of molasses. Put it into a wooden bowl, cover
-it, and set it near the fire for four or five hours. Then bottle it,
-and cork it tightly next day.
-
-
-PUMPKIN YEAST.--Pare a fine ripe pumpkin, and cut it into pieces. Put
-them into a kettle with a large handful of hops, and as much water as
-will cover them. Boil them till the pumpkin is soft enough to pass
-through a cullender. Having done this, put the pulp into a stone jar,
-adding half a pint of good strong yeast to set it into a fermentation.
-The yeast must be well stirred into the pumpkin. Leave the jar
-uncovered till next day; then secure it tightly with a cork. If pumpkin
-yeast is well made, and of a proper consistence, neither too thick nor
-too thin, it will keep longer than any other.
-
-
-BAKER'S YEAST.--To a gallon of soft water put two quarts of wheat bran,
-one quart of ground malt, (which may be obtained from a brewery,) and
-two handfuls of hops. Boil them together for half an hour. Then strain
-it through a sieve, and let it stand till it is cold; after which put
-to it two large tea-cups of molasses, and half a pint of strong yeast.
-Pour it into a stone jug, and let it stand uncorked till next morning.
-Then pour off the thin liquid from the top, and cork the jug tightly.
-When you are going to use the yeast, if it has been made two or three
-days, stir in a little pearl-ash dissolved in warm water, allowing a
-lump the size of a hickory-nut to a pint of yeast. This will correct
-any tendency to sourness, and make the yeast more brisk.
-
-
-TO MAKE BUTTER.
-
-Scald your milk pans every day after washing them; and let them set
-till the water gets cold. Then wipe them with a clean cloth. Fill them
-all with cold water half an hour before milking time, and do not pour
-it out till the moment before you are ready to use the pans. Unless all
-the utensils are kept perfectly sweet and nice, the cream and butter
-will never be good. Empty milk-pans should stand all day in the sun.
-
-When you have strained the milk into the pans, (which should be broad
-and shallow,) place them in the spring-house, setting them down in
-the water. After the milk has stood twenty-four hours, skim off the
-cream, and deposite it in a large deep earthen jar, commonly called a
-crock, which must be kept closely covered, and stirred up with a stick
-at least twice a day, and whenever you add fresh cream to it. This
-stirring is to prevent the butter from being injured by the skin that
-will gather over the top of the cream.
-
-You should churn at least twice a week, for if the cream is allowed to
-stand too long, the butter will inevitably have a bad taste. Add to the
-cream the strippings of the milk.
-
-Butter of only two or three days gathering is the best. With four or
-five good cows, you may easily manage to have a churning every three
-days. If your dairy is on a large scale, churn every two days.
-
-Have your churn very clean, and rinse and cool it with cold water. A
-barrel churn is best; though a small upright one, worked by a staff or
-dash, will do very well where there are but one or two cows.
-
-Strain the cream from the crock into the churn, and put on the lid.
-Move the handle slowly in warm weather, as churning too fast will make
-the butter soft. When you find that the handle moves heavily and with
-great difficulty, the butter has come; that is, it has separated from
-the thin fluid and gathered into a lump, and it then is not necessary
-to churn any longer. Take it out with a wooden ladle, and put it into
-a small tub or pail. Squeeze and press it hard with the ladle, to get
-out all that remains of the milk. Add a little salt, and then squeeze
-and work it for a long time. If any of the milk is allowed to remain
-in, it will speedily turn sour and spoil the butter. Set it away in a
-cool place for three hours, and then work it over again.[L] Wash it in
-cold water; weigh it; make it up into separate pounds, smoothing and
-shaping it; and clap each pound on your wooden butter print, dipping
-the print every time in cold water. Spread a clean linen cloth on a
-bench in the spring-house; place the butter on it, and let it set till
-it becomes perfectly hard. Then wrap each pound in a separate piece of
-linen that has been dipped in cold water.
-
-Pour the buttermilk into a clean crock, and place it in the
-spring-house, with a saucer to dip it out with. Keep the pot covered.
-The buttermilk will be excellent the first day; but afterwards it will
-become too thick and sour. Winter buttermilk is never very palatable.
-
-Before you put away the churn, wash and scald it well; and the day that
-you use it again, keep it for an hour or more filled with cold water.
-
-In cold weather, churning is a much more tedious process than in
-summer, as the butter will be longer coming. It is best then to have
-the churn in a warm room, or near the fire.
-
-If you wish to prepare the butter for keeping a long time, take it
-after it has been thoroughly well made, and pack it down tightly into a
-large jar. You need not in working it, add more salt than if the butter
-was to be eaten immediately. But preserve it by making a brine of fine
-salt, dissolved in water. The brine must be strong enough to bear up
-an egg on the surface without sinking. Strain the brine into the jar,
-so as to be about two inches above the butter. Keep the jar closely
-covered, and set it in a cool place.
-
-When you want any of the butter for use, take it off evenly from the
-top; so that the brine may continue to cover it at a regular depth.
-
-This receipt for making butter is according to the method in use
-at the best farm-houses in Pennsylvania, and if exactly followed
-will be found very good. The badness of butter is generally owing to
-carelessness or mismanagement; to keeping the cream too long without
-churning; to want of cleanliness in the utensils; to not taking the
-trouble to work it sufficiently; or to the practice of salting it so
-profusely as to render it unpleasant to the taste, and unfit for cakes
-or pastry. All these causes of bad butter are inexcusable, and can
-easily be avoided. Unless the cows have been allowed to feed where
-there are bitter weeds or garlic, the milk cannot naturally have any
-disagreeable taste, and therefore the fault of the butter must be the
-fault of the maker. Of course, the cream is much richer where the
-pasture is fine and luxuriant; and in winter, when the cows have only
-dry food, the butter must be consequently whiter and more insipid than
-in the grazing season. Still, if properly made, even winter butter
-cannot taste badly.
-
-Many economical housekeepers always buy for cooking, butter of inferior
-quality. This is a foolish practice; as when it is bad, the taste will
-predominate through all attempts to disguise it, and render every thing
-unpalatable with which it is combined. As the use of butter is designed
-to improve and not to spoil the flavour of cookery, it is better to
-omit it altogether, and to substitute something else, unless you can
-procure that which is good. Lard, suet, beef-drippings, and sweet oil,
-may be used in the preparation of various dishes; and to eat with bread
-or warm cakes, honey, molasses, or stewed fruit, &c. are far superior
-to bad butter.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[L] A marble slab or table will be found of great advantage in working
-and making up butter.
-
-
-CHEESE.
-
-In making _good_ cheese, skim milk is never used. The milk should
-either be warm from the cow or heated to that temperature over the
-fire. When the rennet is put in, the heat of the milk should be from
-90 deg. to 96 deg.. Three quarts of milk will yield, on an average, about a
-pound of cheese. In infusing the rennet, allow a quart of lukewarm
-water, and a table-spoonful of salt to a piece about half the size
-of your hand. The rennet must soak all night in the water before it
-can be fit for use. In the morning (after taking as much of it as you
-want) put the rennet water into a bottle and cork it tightly. It will
-keep the better for adding to it a wine glass of brandy If too large a
-proportion of rennet is mixed with the milk, the cheese will be tough
-and leathery.
-
-To make a very good cheese, take three buckets of milk warm from the
-cow, and strain it immediately into a large tub or kettle. Stir into
-it half a tea-cupful of infusion of rennet or rennet-water; and having
-covered it, set it in a warm place for about half an hour, or till it
-becomes a firm curd. Cut the curd into squares with a large knife, or
-rather with a wooden slitting-dish, and let it stand about fifteen
-minutes. Then break it up fine with your hands, and let it stand a
-quarter of an hour longer. Then pour off from the top as much of the
-whey as you can; tie up the curd in a linen cloth or bag, and hang it
-up to drain out the remainder of the whey; setting a pan under it to
-catch the droppings. After all the whey is drained out, put the curd
-into the cheese-tray, and cut it again into slices; chop it coarse;
-put a cloth about it; place it in the cheese-hoop or mould, and set it
-in the screw press for half an hour, pressing it hard.[M] Then take
-it out; chop the curd very fine; add salt to your taste; and put it
-again into the cheese-hoop with a cloth about it, and press it again.
-You must always wet the cloth all over to prevent its sticking to the
-cheese, and tearing the surface. Let it remain in the press till next
-morning, when you must take it out and turn it; then wrap it in a clean
-wet cloth, and replace it in the press, where it must remain all day.
-On the following morning again take out the cheese; turn it, renew the
-cloth, and put it again into the press. Three days pressing will be
-sufficient.
-
-When you finally take it out of the press, grease the cheese all over
-with lard, and put it on a clean shelf in a dry dark room, or in a wire
-safe. Wipe, grease, and turn it carefully every day. If you omit this a
-single day the cheese will spoil. Keep the shelf perfectly clean, and
-see that the cheese does not stick to it. When the cheese becomes firm,
-you may omit the greasing; but continue to rub it all over every day
-with a clean dry cloth. Continue this for five or six weeks; the cheese
-will then be fit to eat.
-
-The best time for making cheese is when the pasture is in perfection.
-
-You may enrich the colour of the cheese by a little anatto or arnotta;
-of which procure a small quantity from the druggist, powder it, tie it
-in a muslin rag, and hold it in the warm milk, (after it is strained,)
-pressing out the colouring matter with your fingers, as laundresses
-press their indigo or blue rag in the tub of water. Anatto is perfectly
-harmless.
-
-After they begin to dry, (or ripen, as it is called,) it is the custom
-in some dairy-farms, to place the cheeses in the haystack, and keep
-them there among the hay for five or six weeks. This is said greatly to
-improve their consistence and flavour. Cheeses are sometimes ripened by
-putting them every day in fresh grass.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[M] If you are making cheese on a small scale, and have not a regular
-press, put the curd (after you have wrapped it in a cloth) into a small
-circular wooden box or tub with numerous hole's bored in the bottom;
-and with a lid that fits the inside exactly. Lay heavy weights on the
-lid in such a manner as to press evenly all over.
-
-
-SAGE CHEESE.--Take some of the young top leaves of the sage plant, and
-pound them in a mortar till you have extracted the juice. Put the juice
-into a bowl, wipe out the mortar, put in some spinach leaves, and pound
-them till you have an equal quantity of spinach juice. Mix the two
-juices together, and stir them into the warm milk immediately after you
-have put in the rennet. You may use sage juice alone; but the spinach
-will greatly improve the colour; besides correcting the bitterness of
-the sage.
-
-
-STILTON CHEESE.--Having strained the morning's milk, and skimmed the
-cream from the milk of the preceding evening, mix the cream and the
-new milk together while the latter is quite warm, and stir in the
-rennet-water. When the curd has formed, you must not break it up, (as
-is done with other cheese,) but take it out all at once with a wooden
-skimming dish, and place it on a sieve to drain gradually. While it is
-draining, keep pressing it gently till it becomes firm and dry. Then
-lay a clean cloth at the bottom of a wooden cheese-hoop or mould, which
-should have a few small holes bored in the bottom. The cloth must be
-large enough for the end to turn over the top again, after the curd is
-put in. Place it in the press for two hours; turn it, (putting a clean
-cloth under it,) and press it again for six or eight hours. Then turn
-it again, rub the cheese all over with salt, and return it to the press
-for fourteen hours. Should the edges of the cheese project, they must
-be pared off.
-
-When you take it finally out of the press, bind it round tightly with a
-cloth, (which must be changed every day when you turn the cheese,) and
-set it on a shelf or board. Continue the cloths till the cheese is firm
-enough to support itself: rubbing or brushing the outside every day
-when you turn it. After the cloths are left off, continue to brush the
-cheese every day for two or three months; during which time it may be
-improved by keeping it covered all round, under and over, with grass,
-which must be renewed every day, and gathered when quite dry after the
-dew is off. Keep the cheese and the grass between two large plates.
-
-A Stilton cheese is generally made of a small size, seldom larger in
-circumference than a dinner plate, and about four or five inches thick.
-They are usually put up for keeping, in cases of sheet lead, fitting
-them exactly. There is no cheese superior to them in richness and
-mildness.
-
-Cream cheeses (as they are generally called) may be made in this
-manner. They are always eaten quite fresh, while the inside is still
-somewhat soft. They are made small, and are sent to table whole, cut
-across into triangular slices like a pie or cake. After they become fit
-to eat, they will keep good but a day or two, but they are considered
-while fresh very delicious.
-
-
-COTTAGE CHEESE.--This is that preparation of milk vulgarly called Smear
-Case. Take a pan of milk that has just began to turn sour; cover it,
-and set it by the fire till it becomes a curd. Pour off the whey from
-the top, and tie up the curd in a pointed linen bag, and hang it up
-to drain; setting something under it to catch the droppings. Do not
-squeeze it. Let it drain all night, and in the morning put the curd
-into a pan, (adding some rich cream,) and work it very fine with a
-spoon, chopping and pressing it till about the consistence of a soft
-bread pudding. To a soup plate of the fine curd put a tea-spoonful of
-salt, and a piece of butter about the size of a walnut; mixing all
-thoroughly together. Having prepared the whole in this manner, put it
-into a stone or china vessel; cover it closely, and set it in a cold
-place till tea time.
-
-You may make it of milk that is entirely sweet by forming the curd with
-rennet.
-
-
-A WELSH RABBIT.--Toast some slices of bread, (having cut off the
-crust,) butter them, and keep them hot. Grate or shave down with a
-knife some fine mellow cheese: and, if it is not very rich, mix with
-it a few small bits of butter. Put it into a cheese-toaster, or into a
-skillet, and add to it a tea-spoonful of made mustard; a little cayenne
-pepper; and if you choose, a wine glass of fresh porter or of red wine.
-Stir the mixture over hot coals, till it is completely dissolved; and
-then brown it by holding over it a salamander, or a red-hot shovel. Lay
-the toast in the bottom and round the sides of a deep dish; put the
-melted cheese upon it, and serve it up as hot as possible, with dry
-toast in a separate plate; and accompanied by porter or ale.
-
-This preparation of cheese is for a plain supper.
-
-Dry cheese is frequently grated on little plates for the tea-table.
-
-
-TO MAKE CHOCOLATE.
-
-To each square of a chocolate cake allow three jills, or a chocolate
-cup and a half of boiling water. Scrape down the chocolate with a
-knife, and mix it first to a paste with a small quantity of the hot
-water; just enough to melt it in. Then put it into a block tin pot with
-the remainder of the water, set it on hot coals; cover it, and let it
-boil (stirring it twice) till the liquid is one third reduced. Supply
-that third with cream or rich milk; stir it again, and take it off the
-fire. Serve it up as hot as possible, with dry toast, or dry rusk. It
-chills immediately. If you wish it frothed, pour it into the cup, and
-twirl round in it the little wooden instrument called a chocolate mill,
-till you have covered the top with foam.
-
-
-TO MAKE TEA.--In buying tea, it is best to get it by the box, of an
-importer, that you may be sure of having it fresh, and unmixed with
-any that is old and of inferior quality. The box should be kept in a
-very dry place. If green tea is good, it will look green in the cup
-when poured out. Black tea should be dark coloured and have a fragrant
-flowery smell. The best pots for making tea are those of china.
-Metal and Wedgwood tea-pots by frequent use will often communicate a
-disagreeable taste to the tea. This disadvantage may be remedied in
-Wedgwood ware, by occasionally boiling the tea-pots in a vessel of hot
-water.
-
-In preparing to make tea, let the pot be twice scalded from the
-tea-kettle, which must be boiling hard at the moment the water is
-poured on the tea; otherwise it will be weak and insipid, even when a
-large quantity is put in. The best way is to have a chafing dish, with
-a kettle always boiling on it, in the room where the tea is made. It
-is a good rule to allow two heaping tea-spoonfuls of tea to a large
-cup-full of water, or two tea-spoonfuls for each grown person that is
-to drink tea, and one spoonful extra. The pot being twice scalded, put
-in the tea, and pour on the water about ten minutes before you want
-to fill the cups, that it may have time to draw or infuse. Have hot
-water in another pot, to weaken the cups of those that like it so. That
-the second course of cups may be as strong as the first, put some tea
-into a cup just before you sit down to table, pour on it a very little
-boiling water, (just enough to cover it,) set a saucer over it to keep
-in the steam, and let it infuse till you have filled all the first
-cups; then add it to that already in the tea-pot, and pour in a little
-boiling water from the kettle. Except that it is less convenient for a
-large family, a kettle on a chafing dish is better than an urn, as the
-water may be kept longer boiling.
-
-In making black tea, use a larger quantity than of green, as it is of
-a much weaker nature. The best black teas in general use are pekoe and
-pouchong; the best green teas are imperial, young hyson, and gunpowder.
-
-
-TO MAKE COFFEE--The manner in which coffee is roasted is of great
-importance to its flavour. If roasted too little, it will be weak and
-insipid; if too much, the taste will be bitter and unpleasant. To have
-it very good, it should be roasted immediately before it is made, doing
-no more than the quantity you want at that time. It loses much of its
-strength by keeping, even in twenty-four hours after roasting. It
-should on no consideration be ground till directly before it is made.
-Every family should be provided with a coffee roaster, which is an iron
-cylinder to stand before the fire, and is either turned by a handle, or
-wound up like a jack to go of itself. If roasted in an open pot or pan,
-much of the flavour evaporates in the process. Before the coffee is
-put into the roaster, it should be carefully examined and picked, lest
-there should be stones or bad grains among it. It should be roasted of
-a bright brown; and will be improved by putting among it a piece of
-butter when about half done.
-
-Watch it carefully while roasting, looking at it frequently.
-
-A coffee-mill affixed to the wall is far more convenient than one that
-must be held on the lap. It is best to grind the coffee while warm.
-
-Allow half a pint of ground coffee to one quart of water. If the coffee
-is not freshly roasted, you should put in more. Put the water into the
-tin coffee-pot, and set it on hot coals; when it boils, put in the
-coffee, a spoonful at a time, (stirring it between each spoonful,) and
-add two or three chips of isinglass, or the white of an egg. Stir it
-frequently, till it has risen up to the top in boiling; then set it a
-little farther from the fire, and boil it gently for ten minutes, or a
-quarter of an hour; after which pour in a tea-cup of cold water, and
-put it in the corner to settle for ten minutes. Scald your silver or
-china pot, and transfer the coffee to it; carefully pouring it off from
-the grounds, so as not to disturb them.
-
-If coffee is allowed to boil too long, it will lose much of its
-strength, and also become sour.
-
-
-FRENCH COFFEE.--To make coffee without boiling, you must have a biggin,
-the best sort of which is what in France is called a Grecque. They are
-to be had of various sizes and prices at the tin stores. Coffee made
-in this manner is much less troublesome than when boiled, and requires
-no white of egg or isinglass to clear it. The coffee should be freshly
-roasted and ground. Allow two cupfuls of ground coffee to six cupfuls
-of boiling water. Having first scalded the biggin, (which should have
-strainers of perforated tin, and not of linen,) put in the coffee, and
-pour on the water, which should be boiling hard at the time. Shut down
-the lid, place the pot near the fire, and the coffee will be ready as
-soon as it has all drained through the coarse and fine strainers into
-the receiver below the spout. Scald your china or silver pot, and pour
-the coffee into it. But it is best to have a biggin in the form of an
-urn, in which the coffee can both be made and brought to table.
-
-For what is called milk coffee,--boil the milk or cream separately;
-bring it to table in a covered vessel, and pour it hot into the coffee,
-the flavour of which will be impaired if the milk is boiled with it.
-
-
-
-
-DOMESTIC LIQUORS ETC.
-
-
-SPRUCE BEER.
-
-Put into a large kettle, ten gallons of water, a quarter of a pound
-of hops, and a tea-cupful of ginger. Boil them together till all the
-hops sink to the bottom. Then dip out a bucket full of the liquor, and
-stir into it six quarts of molasses, and three ounces and a half of the
-essence of spruce. When all is dissolved, mix it with the liquor in the
-kettle; strain it through a hair sieve into a cask; and stir well into
-it half a pint of good strong yeast. Let it ferment a day or two; then
-bung up the cask, and you may bottle the beer the next day. It will be
-fit for use in a week.
-
-For the essence of spruce, you may substitute two pounds of the outer
-sprigs of the spruce fir, boiled ten minutes in the liquor.
-
-To make spruce beer for present use, and in a smaller quantity, boil
-a handful of hops in two gallons and a half of water, till they fall
-to the bottom. Then strain the water, and when it is lukewarm, stir
-into it a table-spoonful of ground white ginger; a pint of molasses; a
-table-spoonful of essence of spruce; and half a pint of yeast. Mix the
-whole well together in a stone jug, and let it ferment for a day and a
-half, or two days. Then put it into bottles, with three or four raisins
-in the bottom of each, to prevent any further fermentation. It will
-then be fit for immediate use.
-
-
-GINGER BEER.--Break up a pound and a half of loaf-sugar, and mix with
-it three ounces of strong white ginger, and the grated peel of two
-lemons. Put these ingredients into a large stone jar, and pour over
-them two gallons of boiling water. When it becomes milkwarm strain it,
-and add the juice of the lemons and two large table-spoonfuls of strong
-yeast. Make this beer in the evening and let it stand all night. Next
-morning bottle it in little half pint stone bottles, tying down the
-corks with twine.
-
-
-MOLASSES BEER.--To six quarts of water, add two quarts of West India
-molasses; half a pint of the best brewer's yeast; two table-spoonfuls
-of ground ginger; and one table-spoonful of cream of tartar. Stir all
-together. Let it stand twelve hours, and then bottle it, putting three
-or four raisins into each bottle.
-
-It will be much improved by substituting the juice and grated peel of a
-large lemon, for one of the spoonfuls of ginger.
-
-Molasses beer keeps good but two or three days.
-
-
-SASSAFRAS BEER.--Have ready two gallons of soft water; one quart of
-wheat bran; a large handful of dried apples; half a pint of molasses; a
-small handful of hops; half a pint of strong fresh yeast, and a piece
-of sassafras root the size of an egg.
-
-Put all the ingredients (except the molasses and yeast) at once into a
-large kettle. Boil it till the apples are quite soft. Put the molasses
-into a small clean tub or a large pan. Set a hair sieve over the
-vessel, and strain the mixture through it. Let it stand till it becomes
-only milkwarm, and then stir in the yeast. Put the liquor immediately
-into the keg or jugs, and let it stand uncorked to ferment. Fill the
-jugs quite full, that the liquor in fermenting may run over. Set them
-in a large tub. When you see that the fermentation or working has
-subsided, cork it, and it will be fit for use next day.
-
-Two large table-spoonfuls of ginger stirred into the molasses will be
-found an improvement.
-
-If the yeast is stirred in while the liquor is too warm, it will be
-likely to turn sour.
-
-If the liquor is not put immediately into the jugs, it will not ferment
-well.
-
-Keep it in a cold place. It will not in warm weather be good more than
-two days. It is only made for present use.
-
-
-GOOSEBERRY WINE.
-
-Allow three gallons of soft water (measured after it has boiled an
-hour) to six gallons of gooseberries, which must be full ripe. Top and
-tail the gooseberries; put them, a few at a time, into a wooden dish,
-and with a rolling-pin or beetle break and mash every one; transferring
-them, as they are done, into a large stone jar. Pour the boiling water
-upon the mashed gooseberries; cover the jar, and let them stand twelve
-hours. Then strain and measure the juice, and to each quart allow
-three-quarters of a pound of loaf-sugar; mix it with the liquid, and
-let it stand eight or nine hours to dissolve, stirring it several times.
-
-Then pour it into a keg of proper size for containing it, and let it
-ferment at the bung-hole; filling it up as it works out with some of
-the liquor reserved for that purpose. As soon as it ceases to hiss,
-stop it close with a cloth wrapped round the bung. A pint of white
-brandy for every gallon of the gooseberry wine may be added on bunging
-it up. At the end of four or five months it will probably be fine
-enough to bottle off. It is best to bottle it in cold frosty weather.
-You may refine it by allowing to every gallon of wine the whites of
-two eggs, beaten to a froth, with a very small tea-spoonful of salt.
-When the white of egg, &c. is a stiff froth, take out a quart of the
-wine, and mix them well together. Then pour it into the cask, and in a
-few days it will be fine and clear. You may begin to use it any time
-after it is bottled. Put two or three raisins in the bottom of each
-bottle. They will tend to keep the wine from any farther fermentation.
-
-Fine gooseberry wine has frequently passed for champagne. Keep the
-bottles in saw-dust, lying on their sides.
-
-
-CURRANT WINE.--Take four gallons of ripe currants; strip them from the
-stalks into a great stone jar that has a cover to it, and mash them
-with a long thick stick. Let them stand twenty-four hours; then put
-the currants into a large linen bag; wash out the jar, set it under
-the bag, and squeeze the juice into it. Boil together two gallons and
-a half of water, and five pounds and a half of the best loaf-sugar,
-skimming it well. When the scum ceases to rise, mix the syrup with the
-currant juice. Let it stand a fortnight or three weeks to settle; and
-then transfer it to another vessel, taking care not to disturb the lees
-or dregs. If it is not quite clear and bright, refine it by mixing with
-a quart of the wine, (taken out for the purpose,) the whites of two
-eggs beaten to a stiff froth, and half an ounce of cream of tartar.
-Pour this gradually into the vessel. Let it stand ten days, and then
-bottle it off. Place the bottles in saw-dust, laying them on their
-sides. Take care that the saw-dust is not from pine wood. The wine will
-be fit to drink in a year, but is better when three or four years old.
-
-You may add a little brandy to it when you make it; allowing a quart of
-brandy to six gallons of wine.
-
-
-RASPBERRY WINE.--Put four gallons of ripe raspberries into a stone jar,
-and mash them with a round stick. Take four gallons of soft water,
-(measured after it has boiled an hour,) and strain it warm over the
-raspberries. Stir it well and let it stand twelve hours. Then strain
-it through a bag, and to every gallon of liquor put three pounds of
-loaf-sugar. Set it over a clear fire, and boil and skim it till the
-scum ceases to rise. When it is cold bottle it. Open the bottles every
-day for a fortnight, closing them again in a few minutes. Then seal the
-corks, and lay the bottles on their sides in saw-dust, which must not
-be from pine wood.
-
-
-ELDERBERRY WINE.--Gather the elderberries when quite ripe; put them
-into a stone jar, mash them with a round stick, and set them in a
-warm oven, or in a large kettle of boiling water till the jar is hot
-through, and the berries begin to simmer. Then take them out, and press
-and strain them through a sieve. To every quart of juice allow a pound
-of Havanna or Lisbon sugar, and two quarts of cold soft water. Put the
-sugar into a large kettle, pour the juice over it, and, when it has
-dissolved, stir in the water. Set the kettle over the fire, and boil
-and skim it till the scum ceases to rise. To four gallons of the liquor
-add a pint and a half of brandy. Put it into a keg, and let it stand
-with the bung put in loosely for four or five days, by which time it
-will have ceased to ferment. Then stop it closely, plastering the bung
-with clay. At the end of six months, draw off a little of it; and if it
-is not quite clear and bright, refine it with the whites and shells of
-three or four eggs, beaten to a stiff froth and stirred into a quart of
-the wine, taken out for the purpose and then returned to the cask; or
-you may refine it with an ounce or more of dissolved isinglass. Let it
-stand a week or two, and then bottle it.
-
-This is an excellent domestic wine, very common in England, and
-deserving to be better known in America, where the elderberry tree is
-found in great abundance. Elderberry wine is generally taken mulled
-with spice, and warm.
-
-
-ELDER FLOWER WINE.--Take the flowers or blossoms of the elder tree,
-and strip them from the stalks. To every quart of flowers allow one
-gallon of water, and three pounds of white sugar. Boil and skim the
-sugar and water, and then pour it hot on the flowers. When cool, mix
-in with it some lemon juice and some yeast; allowing to six gallons of
-the liquor the juice of six lemons, and four or five table-spoonfuls of
-good yeast stirred in very hard. Let it ferment for three days in a tub
-covered with a double blanket. Then strain the wine through a sieve,
-(add six whites of eggs beaten to a stiff froth, or an ounce of melted
-isinglass,) and put it into a cask, in the bottom of which you have
-laid four or five pounds of the best raisins, stoned. Stop the cask
-closely, and in six months the wine will be fit to bottle. It will much
-resemble Frontiniac, the elder flowers imparting to it a very pleasant
-taste.
-
-
-CIDER WINE.--Take sweet cider immediately from the press. Strain it
-through a flannel bag into a tub, and stir into it as much honey as
-will make it strong enough to bear up an egg. Then boil and skim it,
-and when the scum ceases to rise, strain it again. When cool, put it
-into a cask, and set it in a cool cellar till spring. Then bottle it
-off; and when ripe, it will be found a very pleasant beverage. The
-cider must be of the very best quality, made entirely from good sound
-apples.
-
-
-MEAD.--To every gallon of water put five pounds of strained honey, (the
-water must be hot when you add the honey,) and boil it three quarters
-of an hour, skimming it well. Then put in some hops tied in a thin bag,
-(allowing an ounce or a handful to each gallon,) and let it boil half
-an hour longer. Strain it into a tub, and let it stand four days. Then
-put it into a cask, (or into a demijohn if the quantity is small,)
-adding for each gallon of mead a jill of brandy and a sliced lemon. If
-a large cask, do not bottle it till it has stood a year.
-
-
-FOX GRAPE SHRUB.--Gather the grapes when they are full grown, but
-before they begin to purple. Pick from the stems a sufficient quantity
-to nearly fill a large preserving kettle, and pour on them as much
-boiling water as the kettle will hold. Set it over a brisk fire, and
-keep it scalding hot till all the grapes have burst. Then take them
-off, press out and strain the liquor, and allow to each quart a pound
-of sugar stirred well in. Dissolve the sugar in the juice; then put
-them together into a clean kettle, and boil and skim them for ten
-minutes, or till the scum ceases to rise. When cold, bottle it; first
-putting into each bottle a jill of brandy. Seal the bottles, and keep
-them in a warm closet.
-
-You may make gooseberry shrub in this manner.
-
-
-CURRANT SHRUB.--Your currants must be quite ripe. Pick them from the
-stalks, and squeeze them through a linen bag. To each quart of juice
-allow a pound of loaf-sugar. Put the sugar and juice into a preserving
-kettle, and let it melt before it goes on the fire. Boil it ten
-minutes, skimming it well. When cold, add a jill of the best white
-brandy to each quart of the juice. Bottle it, and set it away for use;
-sealing the corks. It improves by keeping.
-
-Raspberry shrub may be made in this manner; also strawberry.
-
-
-CHERRY SHRUB.--Pick from the stalks, and stone a sufficient quantity
-of ripe morellas, or other red cherries of the best and most juicy
-description. Put them with all their juice into a stone jar, and set
-it, closely covered, into a deep kettle of boiling water. Keep it
-boiling hard for a quarter of an hour. Then pour the cherries into a
-bag, and strain and press out all the juice. Allow a pound of sugar
-to a quart of juice, boil them together ten minutes in a preserving
-kettle, skimming them well, and when cold, bottle the liquid; first
-putting a jill of brandy into each bottle.
-
-
-CHERRY BOUNCE.--Mix together six pounds of ripe morellas and six pounds
-of large black heart cherries. Put them into a wooden bowl or tub, and
-with a pestle or mallet mash them so as to crack all the stones. Mix
-with the cherries three pounds of loaf-sugar, or of sugar candy broken
-up, and put them into a demijohn, or into a large stone jar. Pour on
-two gallons of the best double rectified whiskey. Stop the vessel
-closely, and let it stand three months, shaking it every day during the
-first month. At the end of the three months you may strain the liquor
-and bottle it off. It improves by age.
-
-
-LEMON SYRUP.--Break up into large pieces six pounds of fine loaf-sugar.
-Take twelve large ripe lemons, and (without cutting them) grate the
-yellow rind upon the sugar. Then put the sugar, with the lemon gratings
-and two quarts of water, into a preserving kettle, and let it dissolve.
-When it is all melted, boil it till quite thick, skimming it till no
-more scum rises; it will then be done. Have ready the juice of all the
-lemons, stir it in, and boil it ten minutes more. Bottle it, and keep
-it in a cold place.
-
-It makes a delicious drink in summer, in the proportion of one third
-lemon syrup and two thirds ice water.
-
-
-LEMON CORDIAL.
-
-Pare off very thin the yellow rind of a dozen large lemons; throw the
-parings into a gallon of white brandy, and let them steep till next
-day, or at least twelve hours. Break up four pounds of loaf-sugar into
-another vessel, and squeeze upon it the juice of the lemons. Let this
-too stand all night. Next day mix all together, boil two quarts of
-milk, and pour it boiling hot into the other ingredients. Cover the
-vessel, and let it stand eight days, stirring it daily. Then strain it
-through a flannel bag till the liquid is perfectly clear. Let it stand
-six weeks in a demijohn or glass jar, and then bottle it.
-
-To make it still more clear, you may filter it through a piece of fine
-muslin pinned down to the bottom of a sieve, or through blotting paper,
-which must be frequently renewed. It should be white blotting paper.
-Orange cordial may be made in the same manner.
-
-
-ROSE CORDIAL.--Put a pound of fresh rose leaves into a tureen, with
-a quart of lukewarm water. Cover the vessel, and let them infuse for
-twenty-four hours. Then squeeze them through a linen bag till all
-the liquid is pressed out. Put a fresh pound of rose leaves into the
-tureen, pour the liquid back into it, and let it infuse again for two
-days. You may repeat this till you obtain a very strong infusion.
-Then to a pint of the infusion add half a pound of loaf-sugar, half a
-pint of white brandy, an ounce of broken cinnamon, and an ounce of
-coriander seeds. Put it into a glass jar, cover it well, and let it
-stand for two weeks. Then filter it through a fine muslin or a blotting
-paper (which must be white) pinned on the bottom of a sieve; and bottle
-it for use.
-
-
-STRAWBERRY CORDIAL.--Hull a sufficient quantity of ripe strawberries,
-and squeeze them through a linen bag. To each quart of the juice allow
-a pint of white brandy, and half a pound of powdered loaf-sugar.
-Put the liquid into a glass jar or a demijohn, and let it stand a
-fortnight. Then filter it through a sieve, to the bottom of which
-a piece of fine muslin or blotting paper has been fastened; and
-afterwards bottle it.
-
-
-RASPBERRY CORDIAL--May be made in the above manner.
-
-
-QUINCE CORDIAL.--Take the finest and ripest quinces you can procure,
-wipe them clean, and cut out all the defective parts. Then grate them
-into a tureen or some other large vessel, leaving out the seeds and
-cores. Let the grated pulp remain covered in the tureen for twenty-four
-hours. Then squeeze it through a jelly-bag or cloth. To six quarts of
-the juice allow a quart of cold water, three pounds of loaf-sugar,
-(broken up,) and a quart of white brandy. Mix the whole well together,
-and put it into a stone jar. Have ready three very small flannel or
-thick muslin bags, (not larger than two inches square,) fill one with
-grated nutmeg, another with powdered mace, and the third with powdered
-cloves; and put them into the jar that the spice may flavour the
-liquor without mixing with it. Leave the jar uncorked for a few days;
-reserving some of the liquor to replace that which may flow over in
-the fermentation. Whenever it has done working, bottle it off, but do
-not use it for six months. If not sufficiently bright and clear, filter
-it through fine muslin pinned round the bottom of a sieve, or through a
-white blotting paper fastened in the same manner.
-
-
-PEACH CORDIAL.--Take the ripest and most juicy free-stone peaches you
-can procure. Cut them from the stones, and quarter them without paring.
-Crack the stones, and extract the kernels, which must be blanched and
-slightly pounded. Put the peaches into a large stone jar in layers,
-alternately with layers of the kernels, and of powdered loaf-sugar.
-When the jar is three parts full of the peaches, kernels, and sugar,
-fill it up with white brandy. Set the jar in a large pan, and leave it
-uncovered for three or four days, in case of its fermenting and flowing
-over at the top. Fill up what is thus wasted with more brandy, and then
-close the jar tightly. Let it stand five or six months; then filter it,
-and bottle it for use.
-
-Cherry, apricot, and plum cordial may be made in the above manner;
-adding always the kernels.
-
-
-ANNISEED CORDIAL.--Melt a pound of loaf-sugar in two quarts of water.
-Mix it with two quarts of white brandy, and add a table-spoonful of oil
-of anniseed. Let it stand a week; then filter it through white blotting
-paper, and bottle it for use.
-
-Clove or Cinnamon Cordial may be made in the same manner, by mixing
-sugar, water and brandy, and adding oil of cinnamon or oil of cloves.
-You may colour any of these cordials red by stirring in a little
-powdered cochineal that has been dissolved in a small quantity of
-brandy.
-
-
-ROSE BRANDY.--Nearly fill a china or glass jar with freshly-gathered
-rose leaves, and pour in sufficient French white brandy to fill it
-quite up; and then cover it closely. Next day put the whole into a
-strainer, and having squeezed and pressed the rose leaves and drained
-off the liquid, throw away the leaves, put fresh ones into the jar,
-and return the brandy to it. Repeat this every day while roses are
-in season, (taking care to keep the jar well covered,) and you will
-find the liquid much better than rose water for flavouring cakes and
-puddings.
-
-
-LEMON BRANDY.--When you use lemons for punch or lemonade, do not throw
-away the peels, but cut them in small pieces, and put them into a glass
-jar or bottle of brandy. You will find this brandy useful for many
-purposes.
-
-In the same way keep for use the kernels of peach and plum stones,
-pounding them slightly before you put them into the brandy.
-
-
-NOYAU.--Blanch and break up a pound of shelled bitter almonds or peach
-kernels. Mix with them the grated rinds of three large lemons, half a
-pint of clarified honey that has been boiled and skimmed, and three
-pounds of the best double-refined loaf-sugar. Put these ingredients
-into a jar or demijohn; pour in four quarts of the best white brandy or
-proof spirit; stop the vessel, and let it stand three months, shaking
-it every day for the first month. Then filter it, dilute it with rose
-water to your taste, (you may allow a quart of rose water to each quart
-of the liquor,) and bottle it for use.
-
-This and any other cordial may be coloured red by mixing with it (after
-it is filtered) cochineal, powdered, dissolved in a little white
-brandy, and strained through fine muslin.
-
-
-RATAFIA.--Pound in a mortar, and mix together a pound of shelled bitter
-almonds, an ounce of nutmegs, a pound of fine loaf-sugar, and one grain
-(apothecaries' weight) of ambergris. Infuse these ingredients for a
-week in a gallon of white brandy or proof spirit. Then filter it, and
-bottle it for use.
-
-
-CAPILLAIRE.--Powder eight pounds of loaf-sugar, and wet it with three
-pints of water and three eggs well beaten with their shells. Stir the
-whole mass very hard, and boil it twice over, skimming it well. Then
-strain it, and stir in two wine glasses of orange flower water. Bottle
-it, and use it for a summer draught, mixed with a little lemon juice
-and water; or you may sweeten punch with it.
-
-
-ORGEAT.--To make orgeat paste, blanch, mix together, and pound in a
-mortar till perfectly smooth, three quarters of a pound of shelled
-sweet almonds, and one quarter of a pound of shelled bitter almonds;
-adding frequently a little orange-flower or rose water, to keep them
-from oiling; and mixing with them, as you proceed, a pound of fine
-loaf-sugar that has been previously powdered by itself. When the whole
-is thoroughly incorporated to a stiff paste, put it into little pots
-and close them well. It will keep five or six months, and, when you
-wish to use it for a beverage, allow a piece of orgeat about the size
-of an egg to each half pint or tumbler of water. Having well stirred
-it, strain the mixture.
-
-To make liquid orgeat for present use; blanch and pound in a mortar,
-with rose water, a quarter of a pound of sweet and an ounce and a half
-of bitter almonds. Then sweeten three pints of rich milk with half a
-pound of loaf-sugar, and stir the almonds gradually into it. Boil it
-over hot coals; and as soon as it comes to a boil, take it off and stir
-it frequently till it gets cold. Then strain it, add a glass of brandy
-and put it into decanters. When you pour it out for drinking dilute it
-with water.
-
-
-LEMONADE.--Take fine ripe lemons, and roll them under your hand on the
-table to increase the quantity of juice. Then cut and squeeze them into
-a pitcher, and mix the juice with loaf-sugar and cold water. To half
-a pint of lemon juice you may allow a pint and a half of water, and
-ten or twelve moderate sized lumps of sugar. Send it round in little
-glasses with handles.
-
-To make a tumbler of _very good_ lemonade, allow the juice of one lemon
-and four or five lumps of sugar, filling up the glass with water. In
-summer use ice water.
-
-
-ORANGEADE--Is made of oranges, in the same proportion as lemonade. It
-is very fine when frozen.
-
-
-PUNCH.
-
-Roll twelve fine lemons under your hand on the table; then pare off
-the yellow rind very thin, and boil it in a gallon of water till all
-the flavour is drawn out. Break up into a large bowl, two pounds of
-loaf-sugar, and squeeze the lemons over it. When the water has boiled
-sufficiently, strain it from the lemon-peel, and mix it with the lemon
-juice and sugar. Stir in a quart of rum or of the best whiskey.
-
-Two scruples of flowers of benjamin, steeped in a quart of rum, will
-make an infusion which much resembles the arrack of the East Indies. It
-should be kept in a bottle, and a little of it will be found to impart
-a very fine and fragrant flavour to punch made in the usual manner.
-
-
-FROZEN PUNCH--Is made as above, omitting one half of the rum or
-whiskey. Put it into an ice-cream freezer, shaking or stirring it
-all the time. When it is frozen, send it round immediately, in small
-glasses with a tea-spoon for each.
-
-
-ROMAN PUNCH.--Grate the yellow rinds of four lemons and two oranges
-upon two pounds of loaf-sugar. Squeeze on the juice of the lemons and
-oranges; cover it, and let it stand till next day. Then strain it
-through a sieve, add a bottle of champagne, and the whites of eight
-eggs beaten to a froth. You may freeze it or not.
-
-
-MILK PUNCH.--What is commonly called milk punch, is a mixture of brandy
-or rum, sugar, milk and nutmeg, with-without either lemon juice or
-water. It is taken cold with a lump of ice in each tumbler.
-
-
-FINE MILK PUNCH.--Pare off the yellow rind of four large lemons, and
-steep it for twenty-four hours in a quart of brandy or rum. Then mix
-with it the juice of the lemons, a pound and a half of loaf-sugar, two
-grated nutmegs, and a quart of water. Add a quart of rich unskimmed
-milk, made boiling hot, and strain the whole through a jelly-bag. You
-may either use it as soon as it is cold, or make a larger quantity, (in
-the above proportions,) and bottle it. It will keep several months.
-
-
-REGENT'S PUNCH.--Take four large lemons; roll them on the table to make
-them more juicy, and then pare them as thin as possible. Cut out all
-the pulp, and throw away the seeds and the white part of the rind. Put
-the yellow rind and the pulp into a pint of boiling water with one
-tea-spoonfuls of raw green tea of the best sort. Let all boil together
-about ten minutes. Then strain it through linen, and stir in a pound
-of powdered loaf-sugar and a bottle of champagne, or of any liquor
-suitable for punch. Set it again over the fire, and when just ready to
-boil, remove it, and pour it into a china bowl or pitcher, to be sent
-round in glasses.
-
-
-WINE JELLY.--Clarify a pound of loaf-sugar, by mixing it with half a
-pint of water and the beaten white of an egg, and then boiling and
-skimming it. Put an ounce of isinglass (with as much boiling water as
-will cover it) into a small sauce-pan, and set it in hot coals till
-the isinglass is thoroughly dissolved. Then when the syrup has been
-taken from the fire, mix the melted isinglass with it, add a quart of
-white wine and stir in a table-spoonful or a spoonful and a half of old
-Jamaica spirits. Stir the mixture very hard, and pour it into a mould.
-When it has congealed, wrap a cloth dipped in warm water round the
-outside of the mould; turn out the jelly, and eat it with ice-cream.
-
-
-SHERRY COBLER.--Lay in the bottom of a tumbler some pieces of the
-yellow rind of an orange or lemon, pared off very thin; and add a
-heaping table-spoonful of powdered loaf-sugar. Upon this, place some
-pounded ice. Pour on sherry wine till the tumbler is one-third, or half
-full. Hold an empty tumbler inverted or turned downwards, upon the top
-of that which contains the ingredients; placing the glasses so that
-their edges exactly meet, and leaving no opening for any portion of the
-contents to escape. Keep your hands fast on the two tumblers, one above
-and one below, and turn them up and down, back and forwards, till the
-articles inside are thoroughly mixed. Then take off the upper tumbler,
-and let the lower one stand still a few moments before you fill it up
-with ice-water.
-
-
-MULLED WINE.--Boil together, in a pint of water, a beaten nutmeg, two
-sticks of cinnamon broken up, and a table-spoonful of cloves slightly
-pounded. When reduced to one-half, strain the liquid into a quart of
-wine, set it on hot coals, take it off as soon as it comes to a boil,
-and sweeten it. Serve it up hot in a pitcher, surrounded by glass cups,
-and with it a plate of rusk.
-
-
-MULLED CIDER.--Allow six eggs to a quart of cider. Put a handful of
-whole cloves into the cider, and boil it. While it is boiling, beat
-the eggs in a large pitcher; adding to them as much sugar as will make
-the cider very sweet. By the time the cider boils, the eggs will be
-sufficiently light. Pour the boiling liquor on the beaten egg, and
-continue to pour the mixture backwards and forwards from one pitcher to
-another, till it has a fine froth on it. Then pour it warm into your
-glasses, and grate some nutmeg over each.
-
-Port wine may be mulled in the same manner.
-
-
-EGG NOGG.--Beat separately the yolks and whites of six eggs. Stir the
-yolks into a quart of rich milk, or thin cream, and add half a pound
-of sugar. Then mix in half a pint of rum or brandy. Flavour it with a
-grated nutmeg. Lastly, stir in gently the beaten whites of three eggs.
-
-It should be mixed in a china bowl.
-
-
-SANGAREE.--Mix in a pitcher or in tumblers one-third of wine, ale,
-or porter, with two-thirds of water either warm or cold. Stir in
-sufficient loaf-sugar to sweeten it, and grate some nutmeg into it.
-
-By adding to it lemon juice, you may make what is called negus.
-
-
-TURKISH SHERBET.--Put into a large pitcher a pound and a half of the
-best loaf-sugar, broken small. Pour on it a quart of clear cold water,
-and crush and stir the sugar till it is all melted. Take a dozen large
-fine ripe oranges, and roll every one under your hand on a table, to
-increase the juice. Take off the yellow rind in large thin pieces, and
-cut them neatly into round shapes, the size of a half-dollar. Squeeze
-the juice of the oranges through a strainer upon the melted sugar, and
-stir it well. Set the pitcher on ice till the sherbet is wanted. Serve
-it up in lemonade-glasses, placing in the bottom of each, one of the
-round pieces of orange-rind, and lay a lump of ice upon it. Then fill
-the glasses with the sherbet. Instead of orange-juice, you may use that
-of strawberries, raspberries, or currants, pressed through a strainer.
-
-
-BOTTLED SMALL BEER.--Take a quart bottle of the very best brisk porter,
-and mix it with four quarts of water, a pint of molasses, and a
-table-spoonful of ginger. Bottle it, and see that the corks are of the
-very best kind. It will be fit for use in three or four days.
-
-
-TO KEEP LEMON JUICE.--Powder a pound of the best loaf-sugar; put it
-into a bowl, and strain over it a pint of lemon juice; stirring it well
-with a silver spoon till the sugar has entirely melted. Boil and skim
-it. Then bottle it, sealing the corks; and keep it in a dry place.
-
-
-ESSENCE OF LEMON-PEEL.--Rub lumps of loaf-sugar on fine ripe lemons
-till the yellow rind is all grated off; scraping up the sugar in a
-tea-spoon, and putting it on a plate, as you proceed. When you have
-enough, press it down into a little glass or china jar, and cover it
-closely. This will be found very fine to flavour puddings and cakes.
-The white or inside of lemon-peel is of no use.
-
-
-CIDER VINEGAR.
-
-Take six quarts of rye meal; stir and mix it well into a barrel of
-strong hard cider of the best kind; and then add a gallon of whiskey.
-Cover the cask, (leaving the bung loosely in it,) set it in the part of
-your yard that is most exposed to the sun and air; and in the course of
-four weeks (if the weather is warm and dry) you will have good vinegar
-fit for use. When you draw off a gallon or more, replenish the cask
-with the same quantity of cider, and add about a pint of whiskey. You
-may thus have vinegar constantly at hand for common purposes.
-
-The cask should have iron hoops.
-
-A very strong vinegar may be made by mixing cider and strained honey,
-(allowing a pound of honey to a gallon of cider,) and letting it
-stand five or six months. This vinegar is so powerful that for common
-purposes it should be diluted with a little water.
-
-Vinegar may be made in the same manner of sour wine.
-
-
-WHITE VINEGAR.--Put into a cask a mixture composed of five gallons of
-water, two gallons of whiskey, and a quart of strong yeast, stirring
-in two pounds of powdered charcoal. Place it where it will ferment
-properly, leaving the bung loose till the fermentation is over, but
-covering the hole slightly to keep out the dust and insects. At the
-end of four months draw it off, and you will have a fine vinegar, as
-clear and colourless as water.
-
-
-SUGAR VINEGAR.--To every gallon of water allow a pound of the best
-white sugar, and a jill or more of strong yeast. Mix the sugar and
-water together, and boil and skim it till the scum ceases to rise. Then
-pour it into a tub; and when it cools to lukewarm heat, put into it
-the yeast spread on pieces of toast. Let it work two days; then put it
-into an iron-hooped cask, and set it in a sunny place for five months,
-leaving the bung loose, but keeping the bung-hole covered. In five
-months it will be good clear vinegar, and you may bottle it for use.
-
-A cask that has not contained vinegar before, should have a quart of
-boiling hot vinegar poured into it, shaken about frequently till cold,
-and allowed to stand some hours.
-
-
-COMMON CIDER VINEGAR.--Set a barrel of hard sour cider in the sun for a
-few weeks, or three months, and it will become good vinegar.
-
-
-PINE-APPLE-ADE.--Pare and slice some very ripe pine-apples; then cut
-the slices into small pieces. Put them with all their juice into a
-large pitcher, and sprinkle among them plenty of powdered white sugar.
-Pour on boiling water, allowing a small half pint to each pine-apple.
-Cover the pitcher, and let it stand till quite cool, occasionally
-pressing down the pine-apple with a spoon. Then set the pitcher, for
-a while, in ice. Lastly, strain the infusion into another vessel, and
-transfer it to tumblers, putting into each glass some more sugar and a
-bit of ice. This beverage will be found delicious.
-
-
-
-
-PREPARATIONS FOR THE SICK
-
-
-CHICKEN JELLY.
-
-Take a large chicken, cut it up into very small pieces, bruise the
-bones, and put the whole into a stone jar with a cover that will make
-it water tight. Set the jar in a large kettle of boiling water, and
-keep it boiling for three hours. Then strain off the liquid, and season
-it slightly with salt, pepper, and mace; or with loaf-sugar and lemon
-juice, according to the taste of the person for whom it is intended.
-
-Return the fragments of the chicken to the jar, and set it again in a
-kettle of boiling water. You will find that you can collect nearly as
-much jelly by the second boiling.
-
-This jelly may be made of an old fowl.
-
-
-BREAD JELLY.--Measure a quart of boiling water, and set it away to get
-cold. Take one-third of a six cent loaf of bread, slice it, pare off
-the crust, and toast the crumb nicely of a light brown. Then put it
-into the boiled water, set it on hot coals in a covered pan, and boil
-it gently, till you find by putting some in a spoon to cool, that the
-liquid has become a jelly. Strain it through a thin cloth, and set it
-away for use. When it is to be taken, warm a tea-cupful, sweeten it
-with sugar, and add a little grated lemon-peel.
-
-
-ARROW ROOT JELLY.--Mix three table-spoonfuls of arrow root powder in
-a tea-cup of water till quite smooth; cover it, and let it stand a
-quarter of an hour. Put the yellow peel of a lemon into a skillet with
-a pint of water, and let it boil till reduced to one half. Then take
-out the lemon-peel, and pour in the dissolved arrow root, (while the
-water is still boiling;) add sufficient white sugar to sweeten it well,
-and let it boil together for five or six minutes. It may be seasoned
-(if thought necessary) with two tea-spoonfuls of wine, and some grated
-nutmeg.
-
-It may be boiled in milk instead of water, or in wine and water,
-according to the state of the person for whom it is wanted.
-
-
-RICE JELLY.--Having picked and washed a quarter of a pound of rice, mix
-it with half a pound of loaf-sugar, and just sufficient water to cover
-it. Boil it till it becomes a glutinous mass; then strain it; season it
-with whatever may be thought proper; and let it stand to cool.
-
-
-PORT WINE JELLY.--Melt in a little warm water an ounce of isinglass;
-stir it into a pint of port wine, adding two ounces of sugar candy,
-an ounce of gum arabic, and half a nutmeg grated. Mix all well, and
-boil it ten minutes; or till every thing is thoroughly dissolved. Then
-strain it through muslin, and set it away to get cold.
-
-
-SAGO.--Wash the sago through two or three waters, and then let it soak
-for two or three hours. To a tea-cupful of sago allow a quart of water
-and some of the yellow peel of a lemon. Simmer it till all the grains
-look transparent. Then add as much wine and nutmeg as may be proper,
-and give it another boil altogether. If seasoning is not advisable, the
-sago may be boiled in milk instead of water, and eaten plain.
-
-
-TAPIOCA.--Wash the tapioca well, and let it steep for five or six
-hours, changing the water three times. Simmer it in the last water
-till quite clear, then season it with sugar and wine, or lemon juice.
-
-
-GRUEL.--Allow three large table-spoonfuls of oatmeal or Indian meal to
-a quart of water. Put the meal into a large bowl, and add the water,
-a little at a time, mixing and bruising the meal with the back of a
-spoon. As you proceed, pour off the liquid into another bowl, every
-time, before adding fresh water to the meal, till you have used it
-all up. Then boil the mixture for twenty minutes, stirring it all the
-while; add a little salt. Then strain the gruel and sweeten it. A piece
-of butter may be stirred into it; and, if thought proper, a little wine
-and nutmeg. It should be taken warm.
-
-
-OATMEAL GRUEL.--Put four table-spoonfuls of the best grits (oatmeal
-coarsely ground) into a pint of boiling water. Let it boil gently, and
-stir it often, till it becomes as thick as you wish it. Then strain it,
-and add to it while warm, butter, wine, nutmeg, or whatever is thought
-proper to flavour it.
-
-If you make the gruel of fine oatmeal, sift it, mix it first to a thick
-batter with a little cold water, and then put it into the sauce-pan of
-boiling water. Stir it all the time it is boiling, lifting the spoon
-gently up and down, and letting the gruel fall slowly back again into
-the pan.
-
-
-PANADA.--Having pared off the crust, boil some slices of bread in a
-quart of water for about five minutes. Then take out the bread, and
-beat it smooth in a deep dish, mixing in a little of the water it has
-boiled in; and mix it with a bit of fresh butter, and sugar and nutmeg
-to your taste.
-
-Another way is to grate some bread, or to grate or pound a few
-crackers. Pour on boiling water, beat it well, and add sugar and nutmeg.
-
-
-BARLEY WATER.--Wash clean some barley, (either pearl or common,) and to
-two ounces of barley allow a quart of water. Put it into a sauce-pan,
-adding, if you choose, an equal quantity of stoned raisins; or some
-lemon-peel and sugar; or some liquorice root cut up. Let it boil slowly
-till the liquid is reduced one half. Then strain it off, and sweeten it.
-
-
-GROUND RICE MILK.--Mix in a bowl two table-spoonfuls of ground rice,
-with sufficient milk to make a thin batter. Then stir it gradually into
-a pint of milk and boil it with sugar, lemon-peel or nutmeg.
-
-
-BEEF TEA.--Cut a pound of the lean of fresh juicy beef into small thin
-slices, and sprinkle them with a very little salt. Put the meat into a
-wide-mouthed glass or stone jar closely corked, and set it in a kettle
-or pan of water, which must be made to boil, and kept boiling hard
-round the jar for an hour or more. Then take out the jar and strain the
-essence of the beef into a bowl. Chicken tea may be made in the same
-manner.
-
-
-MUTTON BROTH.--Cut off all the fat from a loin of mutton, and to each
-pound of the lean allow a quart of water. Season it with a little salt
-and some shred parsley, and put in some large pieces of the crust of
-bread. Boil it slowly for two or three hours, skimming it carefully.
-
-Beef, veal, or chicken broth may be made in the same manner.
-
-Vegetables may be added if approved. Also barley or rice.
-
-
-MUTTON BROTH MADE QUICKLY.--Cut three chops from the best part of a
-neck of mutton, and remove the fat and skin. Beat the meat on both
-sides, and slice it thin. Put into a small sauce-pan with a pint of
-water, a little salt, and some crust of bread cut into pieces. You
-may add a little parsley, and a small onion sliced thin. Cover the
-sauce-pan, and set it over the fire. Boil it fast, skim it, and in half
-an hour it should be ready for use.
-
-
-WINE WHEY.--Boil a pint of milk; and when it rises to the top of the
-sauce-pan, pour in a large glass of sherry or Madeira. It will be the
-better for adding a glass of currant wine also. Let it again boil up,
-and then take the sauce-pan off the fire, and set it aside to stand for
-a few minutes, but do not stir it. Then remove the curd, (if it has
-completely formed,) and pour the clear whey into a bowl and sweeten it.
-
-When wine is considered too heating, the whey may be made by turning
-the milk with lemon juice.
-
-
-RENNET WHEY.--Wash a small bit of rennet about two inches square, in
-cold water, to get off the salt. Put it into a tea-cup and pour on it
-sufficient lukewarm water to cover it. Let it stand all night, and in
-the morning stir the rennet water into a quart pitcher of warm milk.
-Cover it, and set it near the fire till a firm curd is formed. Pour off
-the whey from it, and it will be found an excellent and cooling drink.
-The curd may be eaten (though not by a sick person) with wine, sugar,
-and nutmeg. The whey should look greenish.
-
-
-CALF'S FEET BROTH.--Boil two calf's feet in two quarts of water, till
-the liquid is reduced one half, and the meat has dropped to pieces.
-Then strain it into a deep dish or pan, and set it by to get cold.
-When it has congealed, take all the fat carefully off; put a tea-cupful
-of the jelly into a sauce-pan, and set it on hot coals. When it has
-nearly boiled, stir in by degrees the beaten yolk of an egg, and then
-take it off immediately. You may add to it a little sugar, and some
-grated lemon-peel and nutmeg.
-
-
-CHICKEN BROTH AND PANADA.--Cut up a chicken, season it with a very
-little salt, and put it into three quarts of water. Let it simmer
-slowly till the flesh drops to pieces. You may make chicken panada or
-gruel of the same fowl, by taking out the white meat as soon as it is
-tender, mincing it fine, and then pounding it in a mortar, adding as
-you pound it, sufficient of the chicken water to moisten the paste. You
-may thin it with water till it becomes liquid enough to drink. Then
-put it into a sauce-pan and boil it gently a few minutes. Taken in
-small quantities, it will be found very nutritious. You may add to it a
-little grated lemon-peel and nutmeg.
-
-
-VEGETABLE SOUP.--Take a white onion, a turnip, a pared potato, and
-a head of celery, or a large tea-spoonful of celery seed. Put the
-vegetables whole into a quart of water, (adding a little salt,) and
-boil it slowly till reduced to a pint. Make a slice of nice toast; lay
-it in the bottom of a bowl, and strain the soup over it.
-
-
-ONION SOUP.--Put half a pound of the best fresh butter into a stew-pan
-on the fire, and let it boil till it has done making a noise; then have
-ready twelve large onions peeled and cut small; throw them into the
-butter, add a little salt, and stew them a quarter of an hour. Then
-dredge in a little flour, and stir the whole very hard; and in five
-minutes pour in a quart of boiling water, and some of the upper crust
-of bread, cut small. Let the soup boil ten minutes longer, stirring it
-often; and after you take it from the fire, stir in the yolks of two
-beaten eggs, and serve it up immediately.
-
-In France this soup is considered a fine restorative after any unusual
-fatigue. Instead of butter, the onions may be boiled in veal or chicken
-broth.
-
-
-TOAST AND WATER.--Toast some slices of bread very nicely, without
-allowing them to burn or blacken. Then put them into a pitcher, and
-fill it up with boiling water. Let it stand till it is quite cold; then
-strain it, and put it into a decanter. Another way of preparing toast
-and water is to put the toasted bread into a mug and pour cold water on
-it. Cover it closely, and let it infuse for at least an hour. Drink it
-cold.
-
-
-APPLE WATER.--Pare and slice a fine juicy apple; pour boiling water
-over it, cover it, and let it stand till cold.
-
-
-TAMARIND WATER.--Put tamarinds into a pitcher or tumbler till it is
-one-third full; then fill it up with cold water, cover it, and let it
-infuse for a quarter of an hour or more.
-
-Currant jelly or cranberry juice mixed with water makes a pleasant
-drink for an invalid.
-
-
-MOLASSES POSSET.--Put into a sauce-pan a pint of the best West India
-molasses; a tea-spoonful of powdered white ginger; and a quarter of
-a pound of fresh butter. Set it on hot coals, and simmer it slowly
-for half an hour; stirring it frequently. Do not let it come to a
-boil. Then stir in the juice of two lemons, or two table-spoonfuls
-of vinegar; cover the pan and let it stand by the fire five minutes
-longer. This is good for a cold. Some of it may be taken warm at once,
-and the remainder kept at hand for occasional use.
-
-It is the preparation absurdly called by the common people a stewed
-quaker.
-
-Half a pint of strained honey mixed cold with the juice of a lemon,
-and a table-spoonful of sweet oil, is another remedy for a cold; a
-tea-spoonful or two to be taken whenever the cough is troublesome.
-
-
-FLAX-SEED LEMONADE.--To a large table-spoonful of flax-seed allow a
-tumbler and a half of cold water. Boil them together till the liquid
-becomes very sticky. Then strain it hot over a quarter of a pound of
-pulverized sugar candy, and an ounce of pulverized gum arabic. Stir it
-till quite dissolved, and squeeze into it the juice of a lemon.
-
-This mixture has frequently been found an efficacious remedy for a
-cold; taking a wine-glass of it as often as the cough is troublesome.
-
-
-COCOA.--Put into a sauce-pan two ounces of good cocoa (the chocolate
-nut before it is ground) and one quart of water. Cover it, and as soon
-as it has come to a boil, set it on coals by the side of the fire,
-to simmer for an hour or more. Take it hot with dry toast. Baker's
-prepared cocoa is excellent.
-
-
-COCOA SHELLS.--These can be procured at the principal grocers and
-confectioners, or at a chocolate manufactory. They are the thin shells
-that envelope the chocolate kernel, and are sold at a low price; a
-pound contains a very large quantity. Soak them in water for five or
-six hours or more, (it will be better to soak them all night,) and then
-boil them in the same water. They should boil two hours. Strain the
-liquid when done, and let it be taken warm.
-
-
-RAW EGG.--Break a fresh egg into a saucer, and mix a little sugar with
-it; also, if approved, a small quantity of wine. Beat the whole to a
-strong froth. It is considered a restorative.
-
-
-SODA WATER.--To forty grains of carbonate of soda, add thirty grains or
-tartaric acid in small crystals. Fill a soda bottle with spring water,
-put in the mixture, and cork it instantly with a well-fitting cork.
-
-
-SEIDLITZ POWDERS.--Fold in a white paper one drachm of Rochelle salts.
-In a blue paper a mixture of twenty grains of tartaric acid, and
-twenty-five grains of carbonate of soda. They should all be pulverized
-very fine. Put the contents of the white paper into a tumbler not
-quite half full of cold water, and stir it till dissolved. Then put
-the mixture from the blue paper into another tumbler with the same
-quantity of water, and stir that also. When the powders are dissolved
-in both tumblers, pour the first into the other, and it will effervesce
-immediately. Drink it quickly while foaming.
-
-
-BITTERS.--Take two ounces of gentian root, an ounce of Virginia snake
-root, an ounce of the yellow paring of orange peel, and half a drachm
-of cochineal. Steep these ingredients, for a week or more, in a quart
-of Madeira or sherry wine, or brandy. When they are thoroughly infused,
-strain and filter the liquor, and bottle it for use. This is considered
-a good tonic, taken in a small cordial glass about noon.
-
-
-ESSENCE OF PEPPERMINT.--Mix an ounce of oil of peppermint with a pint
-of alcohol. Then colour it by putting in some leaves of green mint.
-Let it stand till the colour is a fine green; then filter it through
-blotting paper. Drop it on sugar when you take it.
-
-Essence of pennyroyal, mint, cinnamon, cloves, &c. may all be prepared
-in the same manner by mixing a portion of the essential oil with a
-little alcohol.
-
-You may obtain liquid camphor by breaking up and dissolving a lump in
-white brandy or spirit of wine.
-
-
-LAVENDER COMPOUND.--Fill a quart bottle with lavender blossoms freshly
-gathered, and put in loosely; then pour in as much of the best brandy
-as it will contain. Let it stand a fortnight, and then strain it.
-Afterwards, mix with it of powdered cloves, mace, nutmeg and cochineal,
-a quarter of an ounce of each; and cork it up for use in small bottles.
-When taken, a little should be dropped on a lump of sugar.
-
-
-LEAD WATER.--Mix two table-spoonfuls of extract of lead with a bottle
-of rain or river water. Then add two table-spoonfuls of brandy, and
-shake it well.
-
-
-REMEDY FOR A BURN.[N]--After immediately applying sweet oil, scrape
-the inside of a raw potato, and lay some of it on the place, securing
-it with a rag. In a short time put on fresh potato, and repeat this
-application very frequently. It will give immediate ease, and draw
-out the fire. Of course, if the burn is bad, it is best to send for a
-physician.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[N] These remedies are all very simple; but the author _knows_ them to
-have been efficacious whenever tried.
-
-
-FOR CHILBLAINS.--Dip the feet every night and morning in cold water,
-withdrawing them in a minute or two, and drying them by rubbing them
-very hard with a coarse towel. To put them immediately into a pail of
-brine brought from a pickle tub is another excellent remedy when feet
-are found to be frosted.
-
-
-FOR CORNS.--Mix together a little Indian meal and cold water, till it
-is about the consistence of thick mush. Then bind it on the corn by
-wrapping a small slip of thin rag round the toe. It will not prevent
-you from wearing your shoe and stocking. In two or three hours take it
-off, and you will find the corn much softened. Cut off as much of it
-as is soft with a penknife or scissors. Then put on a fresh poultice,
-and repeat it till the corn is entirely levelled, as it will be after a
-few regular applications of the remedy; which will be found successful
-whenever the corn returns. There is no permanent cure for them.
-
-
-WARTS.--To remove the hard callous horny warts which sometimes appear
-on the hands of children, touch the wart carefully with a new pen
-dipped slightly in aqua-fortis. It will give no pain; and after
-repeating it a few times, the wart will be found so loose as to come
-off by rubbing it with the finger.
-
-
-RING-WORMS.--Rub mercurial ointment on the ring-worm previous to going
-to bed, and do not wash it off till morning. It will effect a cure if
-persevered in; sometimes in less than a week.
-
-
-MUSQUITO BITES.--Salt wetted into a sort of paste, with a little
-vinegar, and plastered on the bite, will immediately allay the pain;
-and if not rubbed, no mark will be seen next day. It is well to keep
-salt and vinegar always in a chamber that is infested with musquitoes.
-It is also good for the sting of a wasp or bee; and for the bite of any
-venomous animal, if applied immediately. It should be left on till it
-becomes dry, and then renewed.
-
-
-ANTIDOTE FOR LAUDANUM.--When so large a quantity of laudanum has been
-swallowed as to produce dangerous effects, the fatal drowsiness has
-been prevented when all other remedies have failed, by administering
-a cup of the strongest possible coffee. The patient has revived and
-recovered, and no ill effects have followed.
-
-
-GREEN OINTMENT.--Take two or three large handfuls of the fresh-gathered
-leaves of the Jamestown weed, (called Apple Peru in New England,) and
-pound it in a mortar till you have extracted the juice. Then put the
-juice into a tin sauce-pan, mixed with sufficient lard to make a thick
-salve. Stew them together half an hour, and then put the mixture into
-gallipots and cover it closely. It is excellent to rub on chilblains,
-and other inflammatory external swellings, applying it several times a
-day.
-
-
-TO STOP BLOOD.--For a prick with a pin, or a slight cut, nothing will
-more effectually stop the bleeding than old cobwebs compressed into a
-lump and applied to the wound, or bound on it with a rag. A scrap of
-cotton wadding is also good for stopping blood. Or wet the place with
-laudanum. After the blood is stopped, cover the cut with a bit of white
-or pink court-plaster. The copperas dye in _black_ court-plaster will
-sometimes produce inflammation.
-
-
-
-
-PERFUMERY, ETC.
-
-
-COLOGNE WATER.
-
-Procure at a druggists, one drachm of oil of lavender, the same
-quantity of oil of lemon, of oil of rosemary, and of oil of cinnamon;
-with two drachms of oil of bergamot, all mixed in the same phial, which
-should be a new one. Shake the oils well, and pour them into a pint of
-spirits of wine. Cork the bottle tightly, shake it hard, and it will
-be fit for immediate use; though it improves by keeping. You may add
-to the oils, if you choose, ten drops of the tincture of musk, or ten
-drops of extract of ambergris.
-
-For very fine cologne water, mix together in a new phial oil of
-lemon, two drachms; oil of bergamot, two drachms; oil of lavender,
-two drachms; oil of cedrat, one drachm; tincture of benzoin, three
-drachms; neroli, ten drops; ambergris, ten drops; attar of roses, two
-drops. Pour the mixture into a pint of spirits of wine; cork and shake
-the bottle and set it away for use. Use only what is called absolute
-alcohol.
-
-Another receipt for cologne water is to mix with a pint of alcohol,
-sixty drops or two large tea-spoonfuls of orange-flower water, and the
-same quantity of the essential oils of lemon, lavender, and bergamot.
-The alcohol should be inodorous.
-
-
-LAVENDER WATER.--Mix two ounces of essential oil of lavender, and two
-drachms of essence of ambergris, with a pint of spirits of wine; cork
-the bottle, and shake it hard every day for a fortnight. Use absolute
-alcohol.
-
-
-HUNGARY WATER.--Mix together one ounce of oil of rosemary and two
-drachms of essence of ambergris; add them to a pint of spirits of wine.
-Shake it daily for a month, and then transfer it to small bottles.
-
-
-ROSE VINEGAR.--Fill a stone or china jar with fresh rose leaves put in
-loosely. Then pour on them as much of the best white wine vinegar as
-the jar will hold. Cover it, and set it in the sun, or in some other
-warm place for three weeks. Then strain it through a flannel bag, and
-bottle it for use. This vinegar will be found very fine for salads, or
-for any nice purposes.
-
-
-THIEVES' VINEGAR.--Take a large handful of lavender blossoms, and the
-same quantity of sage, mint, rue, wormwood and rosemary. Chop and mix
-them well. Put them into a jar, with half an ounce of camphor that has
-been dissolved in a little alcohol, and pour in three quarts of strong
-clear vinegar. Keep the jar for two or three weeks in the hot sun, and
-at night plunge it into a box of heated sand. Afterwards strain and
-bottle the liquid, putting into each bottle a clove of garlic sliced.
-To have it very clear, after it has been bottled for a week, you
-should pour it off carefully from the sediment and filter it through
-blotting paper. Then wash the bottles and return the vinegar to them.
-It should be kept very tightly corked. It is used for sprinkling about
-in sick-rooms; and also in close damp oppressive weather. Inhaling the
-odour from a small bottle will frequently prevent faintness in a crowd.
-
-It is best to make it in June.
-
-This vinegar is so called from an old tradition, that during the
-prevalence of the plague in London the composition was invented by
-four thieves, who found it a preservative from contagion; and were by
-that means enabled to remain in the city and exercise their profession
-to great advantage, after most of the inhabitants had fled.
-
-
-OIL OF FLOWERS.--A French process for obtaining essential oils from
-flowers or herbs has been described as follows:--Take carded cotton,
-or split wadding, and steep it in some pure Florence oil, such as is
-quite clear and has no smell. Then place a layer of this cotton in the
-bottom of a deep china dish, or in an earthen pipkin. Cover it with a
-thick layer of fresh rose leaves, or the leaves of sweet pink, jasmine,
-wall-flower, tuberose, magnolia blossoms, or any other odoriferous
-flower or plant from which you wish to obtain the perfume. Spread over
-the flower-leaves another layer of cotton that has been steeped in oil.
-Afterwards a second layer of flowers, and repeat them alternately till
-the vessel is quite full. Cover it closely, and let it stand in the sun
-for a week. Then throw away the flower-leaves, carefully press out the
-oil from the cotton, and put it into a small bottle for use. The oil
-will be found to have imbibed the odour of the flowers.
-
-Keep the scented cotton to perfume your clothes-drawers.
-
-
-BALM OF GILEAD OIL.--Put loosely into a bottle as many balm of Gilead
-flowers as will come up to a third part of its height; then nearly fill
-up the bottle with sweet oil, which should be of the best quality.
-Let it infuse (shaking it occasionally) for several days, and it will
-then be fit for use. It is considered a good remedy for bruises of
-the skin; also for cuts, burns, and scalds that are not very bad, and
-should be applied immediately by wetting a soft rag with it; renewing
-it frequently.
-
-
-LIP SALVE.--Put into a wide-mouthed bottle four ounces of the best
-olive oil, with one ounce of the small parts of alkanet root. Stop up
-the bottle, and set it in the sun, (shaking it often,) till you find
-the liquid of a beautiful crimson. Then strain off the oil very clear
-from the alkanet root, put it into an earthen pipkin, and add to it an
-ounce of white wax, and an ounce and a half of the best mutton suet,
-which has been previously clarified, or boiled and skimmed. Set the
-mixture on the embers of coals, and melt it slowly: stirring it well.
-After it has simmered slowly for a little while, take it off; and
-while still hot, mix with it a few drops of oil of roses, or of oil of
-neroli, or tincture of musk.
-
-
-COLD CREAM.--Cut up a shilling cake of white wax; put it into a
-clean sauce-pan with an ounce of oil of sweet almonds, and two large
-table-spoonfuls of lard. Boil and stir it well. When you take it off
-the fire, beat in an ounce of orange-flower, or rose-water. Put it up
-in gallicups with covers.
-
-
-SOFT POMATUM.--Soak half a pound of fresh lard and a quarter of a pound
-of beef marrow in water for two or three days; squeezing and pressing
-it every day, and changing the water. Afterwards drain off the water,
-and put the lard and marrow into a sieve to dry. Then transfer it to a
-jar, and set the jar into a pot of boiling water. When the mixture is
-melted, put it into a basin, and beat it with two spoonfuls of brandy.
-Then drain off the brandy, perfume the pomatum by mixing with it any
-scented essence that you please, and tie it up in gallipots.
-
-
-COSMETIC PASTE.--Take a quarter of a pound of Castile soap, and cut it
-into small pieces. Then put it into a tin or porcelain sauce-pan, with
-just water enough to moisten it well, and set it on hot coals. Let it
-simmer till it is entirely dissolved; stirring it till it becomes a
-smooth paste, and thickening it with Indian meal, (which even in a raw
-state is excellent for the hands.) Then take it from the fire, and when
-cool scent it with rose-water, or with any fragrant essence you please.
-Beat and stir it hard with a silver spoon, and when it is thoroughly
-mixed put it into little pots with covers.
-
-
-ACID SALT.--This is the composition commonly, but erroneously called
-salt of lemon, and is excellent for removing ink and other stains
-from the hands, and for taking ink spots out of white clothes. Pound
-together in a marble mortar an ounce of salt of sorrel, and an ounce
-of the best cream of tartar, mixing them thoroughly. Then put it in
-little wooden boxes or covered gallipots, and rub it on your hands when
-they are stained, washing them in cold water, and using the acid salt
-instead of soap; a very small quantity will immediately remove the
-stain. In applying it to linen or muslin that is spotted with ink or
-fruit juice, hold the stained part tightly stretched over a cup or bowl
-of boiling water. Then with your finger rub on the acid salt till the
-stain disappears. It must always be done before the article is washed.
-
-This mixture costs about twenty-five cents, and the above quantity (if
-kept dry) will be sufficient, for a year or more.
-
-Ink stains may frequently be taken out of white clothes by rubbing on
-(before they go to the wash) some bits of cold tallow picked from the
-bottom of a mould candle. Leave the tallow sticking on in a lump, and
-when the article comes from the wash, it will generally be found that
-the spot has disappeared. This experiment is so easy and so generally
-successful that it is always worth trying. When it fails, it is in
-consequence of some peculiarity in the composition of the ink.
-
-
-SWEET JARS.--Take a china jar, and put into it three handfuls of fresh
-damask rose-leaves; three of sweet pinks, three of wall-flowers, and
-stock gilly-flowers, and equal proportions of any other fragrant
-flowers that you can procure. Place them in layers; strewing powdered
-orris-root thickly between each layer.
-
-You may fill another jar with equal quantities of lavender, knotted
-marjoram, rosemary, lemon-thyme, balm of Gilead, lemon-peel, and
-smaller quantities of laurel leaves and mint; and some sliced
-orris-root. You may mix with the herbs, (which must all be chopped,)
-powdered cloves, cinnamon, and nutmeg; strewing powdered orris-root
-between the layers.
-
-Flowers, herbs, and spice may all be mixed in the same jar; adding
-always some orris root. Every thing that is put in should be perfectly
-free from damp.
-
-The jar should be kept closely covered, except when the cover is
-occasionally removed for the purpose of diffusing the scent through the
-room.
-
-
-SCENTED BAGS.--Take a quarter of a pound of coriander seeds, a quarter
-of a pound of orris root, a quarter of a pound of aromatic calamus,
-a quarter of a pound of damask rose leaves, two ounces of lavender
-blossoms, half an ounce of mace, half an ounce of cinnamon, a quarter
-of an ounce of cloves, and two drachms of musk-powder. Beat them all
-separately in a mortar, and then mix them well together. Make small
-silk or satin bags; fill each with a portion of the mixture, and sew
-them closely all round. Lay them among your clothes in the drawers.
-
-
-VIOLET PERFUME.--Drop twelve drops of genuine oil of rhodium on a lump
-of loaf-sugar. Then pound the sugar in a marble mortar with two ounces
-of orris root powder. This will afford an excellent imitation of the
-scent of violets. If you add more oil of rhodium, it will produce a
-rose perfume. Sew up the powder in little silk bags, or keep it in a
-tight box.
-
-
-DURABLE INK.--Take, when empty, one of the little bottles that has
-contained indelible ink, such as is sold in cases, and wash and rinse
-it clean. Put into it two inches of lunar caustic; fill it up with soft
-water and cork it tightly. This is the marking ink.
-
-Prepare the larger bottle that has contained the liquid used for the
-first wash, by making it quite clean. Take a large tea-spoonful of salt
-of tartar, and a lump of gum arabic the size of a hickory nut. Put them
-into the wash bottle, and fill it up with clear rain water. Cork both
-bottles tightly, and set them three days in the sun. Always put them in
-the sun before using it.
-
-Linen cannot be marked well with durable ink unless the weather is
-clear and dry. Dip a camel's hair pencil in the large bottle that
-contains the gum liquid, and wash over with it a small space on a
-corner of the linen, about large enough to contain the name. Dry it in
-the sun, and let it alone till next day. Then take a very good pen,
-and with the ink from the smallest bottle, write the name you intend,
-on the place that has been prepared by the first liquid. This also must
-be dried in the sun. See that the bottles are always well corked, and
-keep them in a covered box.
-
-After the linen is dried, iron it before you write on it.
-
-
-ANOTHER DURABLE INK.--For the marking liquid--rub together in a small
-mortar five scruples of lunar caustic with one drachm of gum arabic,
-one scruple of sap-green and one ounce of rain water. Keep the bottle
-three days in the sun.
-
-For wetting the linen--mix together a quarter of an ounce of salt of
-soda, a heaped table-spoonful of powdered gum arabic, and two ounces of
-hot water.
-
-
-TO KEEP PEARL-ASH.--Take three ounces of pearl-ash, and put it into a
-clean black bottle with a pint and a half (not more) of soft water. The
-proportion is an ounce of pearl-ash to half a pint of water. Cork it
-very tightly, shake it, and it will be fit for use as soon as all the
-pearl-ash is dissolved. A table-spoonful of this liquid is equal to a
-small tea-spoonful of pearl-ash in the lump or powder. Keeping it ready
-dissolved will be found very convenient.
-
-
-ALMOND PASTE.--Blanch half a pound of shelled sweet almonds, and a
-quarter of a pound of bitter ones, and beat them in a mortar to a
-smooth paste--adding by degrees a jill of rose or orange-flower water.
-Then beat in, gradually, half a pound of clear strained honey. When the
-whole is well incorporated, put it into gallipots, pouring on the top
-of each some orange-flower or rose-water. Keep it closely covered.
-
-This is a celebrated cosmetic for the hands.
-
-
-
-
-MISCELLANEOUS RECEIPTS.
-
-
-MINCED OYSTERS.--Take fifty fine large oysters, and mince them raw.
-Chop also four or five small pickled cucumbers, and a bunch of
-parsley. Grate about two tea-cupfuls of stale bread-crumbs, and beat
-up the yolks of four eggs. Mix the whole together in a thick batter,
-seasoning it with cayenne and powdered mace; and with a little salt
-if the oysters are fresh. Have ready a pound of lard, and melt in the
-frying-pan enough of it to fry the oysters well. If the lard is in
-too small a quantity they will be flat and tough. When the lard is
-boiling hot in the pan, put in about a table-spoonful at a time of the
-oyster-mixture, and fry it in the form of small fritters; turning them
-so as to brown on both sides. Serve them up hot, and eat them with
-small bread rolls.
-
-
-STEWED BLACK FISH.--Flour a deep dish, and lay in the bottom a piece
-of butter rolled in flour. Then sprinkle it with a mixture of parsley,
-sweet marjoram, and green onion; all chopped fine. Take your black fish
-and rub it inside and outside with a mixture of cayenne, salt, and
-powdered cloves and mace. Place skewers across the dish, and lay the
-fish upon them. Then pour in a little wine, and sufficient water to
-stew the fish. Set the dish in a moderate oven, and let it cook slowly
-for an hour.
-
-Shad or rock fish may be dressed in the same manner.
-
-
-FRIED SMELTS.--These little fish are considered extremely fine. Before
-they are cooked, cut off the heads and tails. Sprinkle the smelts with
-flour, and have ready in a frying pan over the fire plenty of fresh
-lard or butter. When it boils, put in the fish and fry them.
-
-
-BROILED SWEETBREADS.--Split open and skewer the sweetbreads; season
-them with pepper and salt, and with powdered mace. Broil them on a
-gridiron till thoroughly done. While they are broiling, prepare some
-melted butter seasoned with mace and a little white wine, or mushroom
-catchup; and have ready some toast with the crust cut off. Lay the
-toast in the bottom of a dish; place the sweetbreads upon it, and pour
-over them the drawn butter.
-
-
-PICKLED EGGS.--Boil twelve eggs quite hard, and lay them in cold water;
-having peeled off the shells. Then put them whole into a stone jar,
-with a quarter of an ounce of whole mace, and the same quantity of
-cloves; a sliced nutmeg; a table-spoonful of whole pepper; a small bit
-of ginger; and a peach leaf. Fill up the jar with boiling vinegar;
-cover it closely that the eggs may cool slowly. When they are cold, tie
-up the jar; covering the cork with leather. After it has stood three
-days pour off the pickle, boil it up again, and return it boiling hot
-to the eggs and spice. They will be fit for use in a fortnight.
-
-
-GUMBO SOUP.--Take four pounds of the lean of a fresh round of beef and
-cut the meat into small pieces, avoiding carefully all the fat. Season
-the meat with a little pepper and salt, and put it on to boil with
-three quarts and a pint of water (not more.) Boil it slowly and skim
-it well. When no more scum rises, put in half a peck of ochras, peeled
-and sliced, and half a peck of tomatas cut in quarters. Boil it slowly
-till the ochras and tomatas are entirely dissolved, and the meat all
-to rags. Then strain it through a cullender, and send it to table with
-slices of dry toast. This soup cannot be made in less than seven or
-eight hours. If you dine at two you must put on the meat to boil at six
-or seven in the morning. It should be as thick as a jelly.
-
-
-SHREWSBURY CAKES.--Rub three quarters of a pound of butter into two
-pounds of sifted flour, and mix in half a pound of powdered sugar,
-and half a pound of currants, washed and dried. Wet it to a stiff
-paste with rich milk. Roll it out, and cut it into cakes. Lay them on
-buttered baking sheets, and put them into a moderate oven.
-
-
-RICE FLUMMERY.--To two quarts of milk allow half a pound of ground
-rice. Take out one pint of the milk, and mix the rice gradually with
-it into a batter; making it quite smooth and free from lumps. Put the
-three pints of milk into a skillet, (with a bunch of peach leaves or
-a few peach-kernels,) and let it come to a boil. Then while it is
-still boiling, stir in by degrees the rice batter, taking care not to
-have it lumpy; add sugar, mace, and rose brandy to your taste; or you
-may flavour it with the juice of a large lemon. When it has boiled
-sufficiently, and is quite thick, strain it, and put it into a mould to
-congeal. Make a rich boiled custard, (flavoured in the same manner,)
-and send it to table in a pitcher, to eat with the flummery. Both
-should be cold. If you mould it in tea-cups, turn it out on a deep
-dish, and pour the custard round it.
-
-
-APPLE BUTTER WITHOUT CIDER--Mix together ten gallons of water, and ten
-gallons of the best West India molasses. Put it into a large kettle
-over a good fire; let it come to a hard boil, and skim it as long as
-any scum continues to rise. Then take out half the liquid, and put
-it into a tub. Have ready eight bushels of fine sound apples, pared,
-cored and quartered. Throw them gradually into the liquid that is
-still boiling on the fire. Let it continue to boil hard, and as it
-thickens, add by degrees the other half of the molasses and water,
-(that which has been put into the tub.) Stir it frequently to prevent
-its scorching, and to make it of equal consistence throughout. Boil it
-ten or twelve hours, continuing to stir it. At night take it out of the
-kettle, and set it in tubs to cool; covering it carefully. Wash out the
-kettle and wipe it very dry.
-
-Next morning boil the apple butter six or eight hours longer; it should
-boil eighteen hours altogether. Then an hour before you take it finally
-out, stir in a pound of mixed spice cloves, mace, cinnamon, and nutmeg,
-all finely powdered. When entirely done, put up the apple butter in
-stone or earthen jars. It will keep a year or more.
-
-It can, of course, be made in a smaller quantity than that given in
-the above receipt; and also at any time in the winter; fresh cider not
-being an ingredient, as in the most usual way of making apple butter.
-
-
-AN APPLE POT PIE.--Make a paste, allowing a pound of butter, or of
-chopped suet to two pounds and a quarter of flour. Have ready a
-sufficient quantity of fine juicy acid apples, pared, cored, and
-sliced. Mix with them brown sugar enough to sweeten them, a few cloves,
-and some slips of lemon-peel. Butter the sides of an iron pot, and line
-them with paste. Then put in the apples, interspersing them with thin
-squares of paste, and add a very little water. Cover the whole with
-a thick lid of paste, cutting a slit in the centre for the water to
-bubble up, and let it boil two hours. When done, serve it up on a large
-dish, and eat it with butter and sugar.
-
-
-PUDDING CATCHUP.--Mix together half a pint of noyau; a pint of sherry
-or other white wine; the yellow peel of four lemons, pared thin; and
-half an ounce of mace. Put the whole into a large bottle, and let it
-stand for two or three weeks. Then strain it, and add half a pint of
-capillaire or strong sugar syrup; or of Curacoa. Bottle it, and it will
-keep two or three years. It may be used for various sweet dishes, but
-chiefly for pudding-sauce mixed with melted butter.
-
-
-CURACOA.--Grate as much fresh orange-peel as will make two ounces when
-done; the peel of fresh shaddock will be still better. Mix it with a
-pint of orange juice. Put it into a quart of the strongest and clearest
-rectified spirit; shake it, let it infuse for a fortnight, and strain
-it. Then make a syrup by dissolving a pound of the best loaf-sugar in
-a pint of cold water, adding to it the beaten white of an egg, and
-boiling and skimming it till the scum ceases to rise. Mix the syrup
-with the strained liquor. Let it stand till next day, and then filter
-it through white blotting paper fastened to the bottom of a sieve.
-Curacoa is a great improvement to punch; also a table-spoonful of it in
-a tumbler of water makes a very refreshing summer drink.
-
-
-PATENT YEAST.--Boil half a pound of fresh hops in four quarts of
-water, till the liquid is reduced to two quarts. Strain it, and mix
-in sufficient wheat flour to make a thin batter; adding half a pint of
-strong fresh yeast, (brewer's yeast, if it can be procured.) When it is
-done fermenting, pour it into a pan, and stir in sufficient Indian meal
-to make a moderately stiff dough. Cover it, and set it in a warm place
-to rise. When it has become very light, roll it out into a thick sheet,
-and cut it into little cakes. Spread them out on a dish, and let them
-dry gradually in a cool place where there is no sun. Turn them five or
-six times a day while drying; and when they are quite dry, put them
-into paper bags, and keep them in a jar or box closely covered, in a
-place that is not in the least damp.
-
-When you want the yeast for use, dissolve in a little warm water one or
-more of the cakes, (in proportion to the quantity of bread you intend
-making,) and when it is quite dissolved, stir it hard, thicken it with
-a little flour, cover it, and place it near the fire to rise before you
-use it. Then mix it with the flour in the usual manner of preparing
-bread.
-
-This is a very convenient way of preserving yeast through the summer,
-or of conveying it to a distance.
-
-
-TO DRY HERBS.--By drying herbs with artificial heat as quickly as
-possible, you preserve their scent and flavour much better than when
-they are dried slowly by exposing them to the sun and air; a process
-by which a large portion of their strength evaporates. All sorts of
-herbs are in the greatest perfection just before they begin to flower.
-Gather them on a dry day, and place them in an oven, which must not be
-hot enough to discolour, scorch, or burn them. When they are quite dry,
-take them out, and replace them with others. Pick the leaves from the
-stems, (which may be thrown away,) and put them into bottles or jars;
-cork them tightly, and keep them in a dry place. Those that are used
-in cookery should be kept in a kitchen closet.
-
-
-PEACH KERNELS.--When peaches are in season, have in a convenient place
-an old basket or something of the sort, in which all the peach stones
-can be saved; they are too useful to be thrown away. Then have them
-carefully cracked, so as to extract the kernels whole if possible.
-Spread them out on a dish for one day. Then put them into a box or jar,
-and keep them to use as bitter almonds; for which they are an excellent
-substitute in flavouring custards, creams and cakes. Plum stones are
-worth saving in the same manner.
-
-
-LEMON-PEEL.--Never throw away the rind of a lemon. Keep a wide-mouthed
-bottle half full of brandy, and put into it (cut in pieces) all the
-lemon-rind that you do not immediately want. As the white part of the
-rind is of no use, it will be best to pare off the yellow very thin,
-and put that alone into the brandy, which will thus imbibe a very fine
-lemon flavour, and may be used for many nice purposes.
-
-
-TO KEEP TOMATAS.--Take fine ripe tomatas, and wipe them dry, taking
-care not to break the skin. Put them into a stone jar with cold
-vinegar, adding a small thin muslin bag filled with mace, whole cloves,
-and whole peppers. Then cork the jar tightly with a cork that has been
-dipped in melted rosin, and put it away in a dry place. Tomatas pickled
-in this manner keep perfectly well and retain their colour. For this
-purpose use the small round button tomatas.
-
-Morella cherries may be pickled thus, in cold vinegar.
-
-
-
-
-ADDITIONAL RECEIPTS.
-
-
-FRENCH GREEN PEA SOUP.--This soup is made without meat. Put into a
-soup-pot four quarts of shelled green peas, two large onions sliced, a
-handful of leaves of sweet marjoram shred from the stalks, or a handful
-of sweet basil; or a mixed handful of both--also, if you like it, a
-handful of green mint. Add four quarts of water, and boil the whole
-slowly till all the peas are entirely to pieces. Then take off the pot,
-and mash the peas well against its sides to extract from them all their
-flavour. Afterward strain off the liquid into a clean pot, and add to
-it a tea-cup full of the juice of spinach, which you must prepare,
-while the soup is boiling, by pounding some spinach in a mortar. This
-will give the soup a fine green colour. Then put in a quarter of a
-pound of the best fresh butter rolled whole in flour; and add a pint
-and a half more of shelled young peas. If you wish the soup very thick,
-you may allow a quart of the additional peas. Season it with a very
-little salt and cayenne; put it again over the fire, and boil it till
-the last peas are quite soft, but not till they go to pieces.
-
-Have ready in a tureen two or three slices of toasted bread cut into
-small squares or dice, and pour the soup on it.
-
-This soup, if properly made, will be found excellent, notwithstanding
-the absence of meat. It is convenient for fast days; and in the
-country, where vegetables can be obtained from the garden, the expense
-will be very trifling.
-
-What is left may be warmed for the next day.
-
-
-GIBLET SOUP.--Take three pounds of shin of beef or of neck of mutton.
-Cut off the meat and break the bones. Then put the meat with the bones
-into a soup-pot, with a tea-spoonful of salt, and three quarts of
-water. Add a bunch of sweet marjoram, one of sweet basil, and a quarter
-of an ounce of black pepper-corns, all tied in a thin muslin rag; a
-sliced onion, and six or eight turnips and carrots, cut small. Let the
-whole boil slowly for two or three hours, skimming it well. In the mean
-time, have ready two sets of goose-giblets, or four of duck. They must
-be scalded, and well washed in warm water. Cut off the bills, and split
-the heads; and cut the necks and gizzards into mouthfuls. Having taken
-the meat and bones out of the soup, put in the giblets, with a head
-of celery chopped. Boil it slowly an hour and a half, or more, taking
-care to skim it. Make a thickening of an ounce and a half of butter,
-and a large table-spoonful of flour, mixed together with a little of
-the soup. Then stir it into the pot, adding a large table-spoonful of
-mushroom catchup, and some small force-meat balls, or little dumplings.
-Boil the soup half an hour longer. Then send it to table with the
-giblets in the tureen.
-
-
-GUMBO.--Take an equal quantity of young tender ochras and of ripe
-tomatas, (for instance, a quarter of a peck of each.) Chop the ochras
-fine, and scald and peel the tomatas. Put them into a stew-pan without
-any water. Add a lump of butter, and a very little salt and pepper;
-and, if you choose, an onion minced fine. Let it stew steadily for an
-hour. Then strain it, and send it to table as soup in a tureen. It
-should be like a jelly, and is a favourite New Orleans dish. Eat dry
-toast with it. This gumbo is for fast days.
-
-
-HAM OMELET.--Take six ounces of cold boiled ham, and mince it very
-fine, adding a little pepper. Beat separately the whites and yolks of
-six eggs, and then mix them together; add to them gradually the minced
-ham. Beat the whole very hard, and do not let it stand a moment after
-it is thoroughly mixed. Have ready some boiling lard in a frying-pan,
-and put in the omelet immediately. Fry it about ten minutes or a
-quarter of an hour. When done, put it on a hot dish, trim off the
-edges, and fold it over in a half moon. Send it to table hot, and
-covered. It is eaten at breakfast.
-
-If you wish a soft omelet, (not to fold over,) fry it a shorter time,
-and serve it in a deep dish, to be helped with a spoon.
-
-A similar omelet may be made of the lean of a cold smoked tongue.
-
-
-BATTER PUDDING.--Take a quart of milk, and stir into it gradually eight
-large table-spoonfuls of flour, carefully pressing out all the lumps
-with the back of the spoon. Beat eight eggs very light, and add them by
-degrees to the milk and flour. Then stir the whole very well together.
-
-Dip your pudding-cloth into boiling water, and then dredge it with
-flour. Pour in the pudding, and tie it tightly, leaving room for it
-to swell. Put it into a pot full of boiling water, and boil it hard
-for two hours. Keep it in the pot till it is time to send it to table.
-Serve it up with wine-sauce, butter and sugar, or molasses and cold
-butter.
-
-
-PEACH MANGOES.--Take free-stone peaches of the largest size, (when they
-are full grown, but not quite ripe,) and lay them in salt and water for
-two days, covered with a board to keep them down. Then take them out,
-wipe them dry, cut them open, and extract the stones. Mix together, to
-your taste, minced garlic, scraped horse-radish, bruised mustard seed,
-and cloves; and a little ginger-root soaked in water to soften, and
-then sliced. Fill the cavity of the peaches with this mixture. Then tie
-them round with pack-thread, and put them into a stone jar till it is
-two-thirds full. Strew among them some whole cloves, broken cinnamon,
-and a little cochineal. Season some cold vinegar, (allowing to each
-quart a jill of fresh made mustard, and a little ginger, and nutmeg,)
-and having mixed this pickle well, fill up the jar with it.
-
-
-BROILED TOMATAS.--Take large ripe tomatas; wipe them, and split them in
-half. Broil them on a gridiron till brown, turning them when half done.
-Have ready in a dish some butter seasoned with a little pepper. When
-the tomatas are well broiled, put them into the dish, and press each
-a little with the back of a spoon, so that the juice may run into the
-butter and mix with it. This is to make the gravy. Send them to table
-hot.
-
-Tomatas are very good sliced, and fried in butter.
-
-
-PRESERVED TOMATAS.--Take large fine tomatas, (not too ripe,) and scald
-them to make the skins come off easily. Weigh them, and to each pound
-allow a pound of the best white sugar, and the grated peel of half a
-lemon. Put all together into a preserving kettle, and having boiled it
-slowly for three hours, (skimming it carefully,) add the juice of the
-lemons, and boil it an hour longer. Then put the whole into jars, and
-when cool cover and tie them up closely. This is a cheap and excellent
-sweetmeat; but the lemon must on no account be omitted. It may be
-improved by boiling a little ginger with the other ingredients.
-
-
-TOMATA HONEY.--To each pound of tomatas, allow the grated peel of a
-lemon and six fresh peach-leaves. Boil them slowly till they are all
-to pieces; then squeeze and strain them through a bag. To each pint of
-liquid allow a pound of loaf-sugar, and the juice of one lemon. Boil
-them together half an hour, or till they become a thick jelly. Then put
-it into glasses, and lay double tissue paper closely over the top. It
-will be scarcely distinguishable from real honey.
-
-
-PRESERVED CUCUMBERS.--Your cucumbers should be well shaped, and all of
-the same size. Spread the bottom and sides of a preserving kettle with
-a thick layer of vine leaves. Then put in the cucumbers with a little
-alum broken small. Cover them thickly with vine leaves, and then with a
-dish. Fill up the kettle with water, and let them hang over a slow fire
-till next morning, but do not allow the water to boil. Next day, take
-them out, cool them, and repeat the process with fresh vine leaves,
-till the cucumbers are a fine green. When cold drain them, cut a small
-piece out of the flat side, and extract the seeds. Wipe the cucumbers
-in a dry cloth, and season the inside with a mixture of bruised mace
-and grated lemon-peel. Tie on with a pack-thread the bit that was cut
-out.
-
-Weigh them, and to every pound of cucumbers allow a pound of
-loaf-sugar. Put the sugar into a preserving kettle, a half pint of
-water to each pound, and the beaten white of an egg to every two
-pounds. Boil and skim the sugar till quite clear, adding sliced ginger
-and lemon parings to your taste. When cool, pour it over the cucumbers,
-and let them lie in it two days, keeping them covered with a plate, and
-a weight on it to press it down. Then boil up the syrup again, adding
-one-half as much sugar, &c. as you had at first; and at the last the
-juice and grated peel of two lemons for every six cucumbers. The lemon
-must boil in the syrup but ten minutes. Then strain the syrup all over
-the cucumbers, and put them up in glass jars.
-
-If they are not quite clear, boil them in a third syrup. Small green
-melons may be preserved in this manner.
-
-
-APPLE RICE PUDDING.--Wash half a pint of rice, and boil it till soft
-and dry. Pare, core, and cut up six large juicy apples, and stew them
-in as little water as possible. When they are quite tender, take them
-out, and mash them with six table-spoonfuls of brown sugar. When the
-apples and rice are both cold, mix them together. Have ready five eggs
-beaten very light, and add them gradually to the other ingredients,
-with five or six drops of essence of lemon, and a grated nutmeg. Or you
-may substitute for the essence, the grated peel and the juice of one
-large lemon. Beat the whole very hard after it is all mixed; tie it
-tightly in a cloth, (leaving but a very small space for it to swell,)
-and stopping up the tying place with a lump of flour moistened to paste
-with water. Put it into a pot of boiling water, and boil it fast for
-half an hour. Send it to table hot, and eat it with sweetened cream, or
-with beaten butter and sugar.
-
-
-BAKED APPLE DUMPLINGS.--Take large, fine, juicy apples, and pare and
-core them, leaving them as whole as possible. Put them into a kettle
-with sufficient water to cover them, and let them parboil a quarter of
-an hour. Then take them out, and drain them on a sieve. Prepare a paste
-in the proportion of a pound of butter to two pounds of flour, as for
-plain pies. Roll it out into a sheet, and cut it into equal portions
-according to your number of apples. Place an apple on each, and fill up
-the hole from whence the core was extracted with brown sugar moistened
-with lemon-juice, or with any sort of marmalade. Then cover the apple
-with the paste, closing it neatly. Place the dumplings side by side in
-buttered square pans, (not so as to touch,) and bake them of a light
-brown. Serve them warm or cool, and eat them with cream sauce.
-
-They will be found very good.
-
-
-INDIAN LOAF CAKE.--Mix a tea-cup full of powdered white sugar with
-a quart of rich milk, and cut up in the milk two ounces of butter,
-adding a salt-spoonful of salt. Put this mixture into a covered pan
-or skillet, and set it on coals till it is scalding hot. Then take it
-off, and scald with it as much yellow Indian meal (previously sifted)
-as will make it of the consistence of thick boiled mush. Beat the whole
-very hard for a quarter of an hour, and then set it away to cool.
-
-While it is cooling, beat three eggs very light, and stir them
-gradually into the mixture when it is about as warm as new milk. Add a
-tea-cup full of good strong yeast, and beat the whole another quarter
-of an hour--for much of the goodness of this cake depends on its being
-long and well beaten. Then have ready a turban mould or earthen pan
-with a pipe in the centre, (to diffuse the heat through the middle of
-the cake.) The pan must be very well buttered, as Indian meal is apt
-to stick. Put in the mixture, cover it, and set it in a warm place to
-rise. It should be light in about four hours. Then bake it two hours
-in a moderate oven. When done, turn it out with the broad surface
-downwards, and send it to table hot and whole. Cut it into slices, and
-eat it with butter.
-
-This will be found an excellent cake. If wanted for breakfast, mix it,
-and set it to rise the night before. If properly made, standing all
-night will not injure it. Like all Indian cakes, (of which this is
-one of the best,) it should be eaten warm. It will be much improved
-by adding to the mixture, a salt-spoon of pearl-ash, or sal-aratus,
-dissolved in a little water.
-
-
-PLAIN CIDER CAKE.--Sift into a large pan a pound and a half of flour,
-and rub into it half a pound of butter. Mix in three-quarters of
-a pound of powdered white sugar, and melt a small tea-spoonful of
-sal-aratus or pearl-ash in a pint of the best cider. Pour the cider
-into the other ingredients while it is foaming, and stir the whole very
-hard. Have ready a buttered square pan, put in the mixture, and set it
-immediately in a rather brisk oven. Bake it an hour or more, according
-to its thickness. This is a tea cake, and should be eaten fresh. Cut it
-into squares, split and butter them.
-
-
-TENNESSEE MUFFINS.--Sift three pints of yellow Indian meal, and put
-one-half into a pan and scald it. Add a good piece of butter. Beat six
-eggs, whites and yolks separately. The yolks must be beaten till they
-become very thick and smooth, and the whites till they are a stiff
-froth that stands alone. When the scalded meal is cold, mix it into
-a batter with the beaten yolk of egg, the remainder of the meal, a
-salt-spoonful of salt, and, if necessary, a little water. The batter
-must be quite thick. At the last, stir in, lightly and slowly, the
-beaten white of egg. Grease your muffin rings, and set them in an oven
-of the proper heat; put in the batter immediately, as standing will
-injure it.
-
-Send them to table hot; pull them open, and eat them with butter.
-
-
-HOE CAKE.--Beat the whites of three eggs to a stiff froth, and sift
-into a pan a quart of wheat flour, adding a salt-spoon of salt. Make a
-hole in the middle, and mix in the white of egg so as to form a thick
-batter, and then add two table-spoonfuls of the best fresh yeast. Cover
-it, and let it stand all night. In the morning, take a hoe-iron (such
-as are made purposely for cakes) and prop it before the fire till it is
-well heated. Then flour a tea-saucer, and filling it with batter, shake
-it about, and clap it to the hoe, (which must be previously greased,)
-and the batter will adhere till it is baked. Repeat this with each
-cake. Keep them hot, and eat them with butter.
-
-
-MILK TOAST.--Boil a pint of rich milk, and then take it off, and stir
-into it a quarter of a pound of fresh butter, mixed with a small
-table-spoonful of flour. Then let it again come to a boil. Have ready
-two deep plates with half a dozen slices of toast in each. Pour the
-milk over them hot, and keep them covered till they go to table. Milk
-toast is generally eaten at breakfast.
-
-
-POTATO YEAST.--Pare half a dozen middle-sized potatoes, and boil them
-in a quart of soft water, mixed with a handful of hops, till quite
-soft. Then mash the potatoes smooth, not leaving in a single lump.
-Mix with them a handful of wheat flour. Set a sieve over the pan in
-which you have the flour and mashed potatoes, and strain into them the
-hop-water in which they were boiled. Then stir the mixture very hard,
-and afterwards pass it through a cullender to clear it of lumps. Let
-it stand till it is nearly cold. Then stir in four table-spoonfuls
-of strong yeast, and let it stand to ferment. When the foam has sunk
-down in the middle, (which will not be for several hours,) it is done
-working. Then put it into a stone jug and cork it. Set it in a cool
-place.
-
-This yeast will be found extremely good for raising home-made bread.
-
-Yeast when it becomes sour may be made fit to use by stirring into it
-a little sal-eratus, or pearl-ash, allowing a small tea-spoonful to a
-pint of yeast. This will remove the acidity, and improve the bread in
-lightness. The pearl-ash must be previously melted in a little lukewarm
-water.
-
-
-CREAM CHEESE.--The cheese so called, of which numbers are brought to
-Philadelphia market, is not made entirely of cream, but of milk warm
-from the cow, (and therefore unskimmed,) mixed with cream of last
-night. To a small tub of fresh morning's milk, add the cream skimmed
-from an equal quantity of last evening's milk. Mix the cream and the
-new milk together, and warm them to about blood-heat or 100 degrees of
-the thermometer. Have ready a cup of water in which has been soaking,
-since last night, a piece of rennet, (the salt wiped off,) about the
-length and breadth of two fingers. Stir the rennet-water into the
-vessel of mixed milk and cream, and set it in a warm place till the
-curd has completely formed. Then, with a knife, cut the curd into
-squares. Next, take a large, thin, straining-cloth, and press it down
-on the curd so as to make the whey rise up through it. As the whey
-rises, dip it off with a saucer or skimming dish. When the whey is
-nearly all out, put the curd into the cloth, and squeeze and press
-it with your hands till it becomes dry. Next, crumble the curd very
-fine with your hands, and then salt it to your taste. Then wash the
-straining-cloth clean, and lay it in the cheese-hoop (a bottomless
-vessel, about the size of a dinner-plate, perforated with small
-gimlet-holes) put the crumbled curd into the cloth, and then fold the
-rest of the cloth closely over it. The cheese-hoop should be set on a
-clean wooden bench or table. Place on it its round wooden cover, so as
-to fit exactly; and lay on the top two bricks or a heavy stone. After
-it has stood six hours in the hoop or mould, turn it, and let it stand
-six hours longer.
-
-When you take out the cheese, rub it all over with a little fresh
-butter. Set it in a dark, dry place, turning it every day, and in four
-or five days it will be fit for use. When once cut, it should be eaten
-immediately, if the weather is warm. But while uncut, it may keep a
-week in a cold place, provided it is turned several times a-day.
-
-
-ALMOND BREAD.--Blanch, and pound in a mortar, half a pound of shelled
-sweet almonds till they are a smooth paste, adding rose-water as you
-pound them. They should be done the day before they are wanted. Prepare
-a pound of loaf-sugar finely powdered, a tea-spoonful of mixed spice,
-(mace, nutmeg, and cinnamon,) and three-quarters of a pound of sifted
-flour. Take fourteen eggs, and separate the whites from the yolks.
-Leave out seven of the whites, and beat the other seven to a stiff
-froth. Beat the yolks till very thick and smooth, and then beat the
-sugar gradually into them, adding the spice. Next stir in the white of
-egg, then the flour, and lastly the almonds. Add the juice of a large
-lemon.
-
-Put the mixture into a square tin pan, (well buttered,) or into a
-copper or tin turban-mould, and set it immediately in a brisk oven. Ice
-it when cool. It is best if eaten fresh.
-
-You may add a few bitter almonds to the sweet ones.
-
-
-CUSTARD CAKES.--Mix together a pound of sifted flour and a quarter of a
-pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Divide into four a pound of fresh butter;
-mix one-fourth of it with the flour, and make it into a dough. Then
-roll it out, and put in the three remaining divisions of the butter at
-three more rollings. Set the paste in a cool place till the custard is
-ready.
-
-For the custard, beat very light the yolk only of eight eggs, and then
-stir them gradually into a pint of rich cream, adding three ounces of
-powdered white sugar, a grated nutmeg, and ratafia, peach-water, or
-essence of lemon, to your taste. Put the mixture into a deep dish; set
-it in an iron baking pan or a Dutch oven half full of boiling water,
-and bake it a quarter of an hour. Then put it to cool.
-
-In the mean time roll out the paste into a thin sheet; cut it into
-little round cakes about the size of a dollar, and bake them on flat
-tins. When they are done, spread some of the cakes thickly with the
-custard, and lay others on the top of them, making them fit closely in
-the manner of lids.
-
-You may bake the paste in patty-pans like shells, and put in the
-custard after they come out of the oven. If the custard is baked in the
-paste, it will be clammy and heavy at the bottom.
-
-You may flavour the custard with vanilla.
-
-
-HONEY GINGER CAKE.--Rub together a pound of sifted flour and
-three-quarters of a pound of fresh butter. Mix in, a tea-cup of fine
-brown sugar, two large table-spoonfuls of strong ginger, and (if you
-like them) two table-spoonfuls of carraway seeds. Having beaten five
-eggs, add them to the mixture alternately with a pint of strained
-honey; stirring in towards the last a small tea-spoonful of pearl-ash,
-that has been melted in a very little vinegar.
-
-Having beaten or stirred the mixture long enough to make it perfectly
-light, transfer it to a square iron or block-tin pan, (which must be
-well buttered,) put it into a moderate oven, and bake it an hour or
-more, in proportion to its thickness.
-
-When cool, cut it into squares. It is best if eaten fresh, but it will
-keep very well a week.
-
-
-ROCK CAKE.--Blanch three-quarters of a pound of shelled sweet almonds,
-and bruise them fine in a mortar, but not to a smooth paste as for
-maccaroons. Add, as you pound them, a little rose-water. Beat to a
-stiff froth the whites of four eggs, and then beat in gradually a pound
-of powdered loaf-sugar. Add the juice of a lemon. Then mix in the
-pounded almonds. Flour your hands, and make the mixture into little
-cones or pointed cakes. Spread sheets of damp, thin, white paper on
-buttered sheets of tin, and put the rock cakes on it, rather far apart.
-Sprinkle each with powdered loaf-sugar. Bake them of a pale brown, in a
-brisk oven. They will be done in a few minutes.
-
-When cold, take them off the papers.
-
-
-FROZEN CUSTARD.--Slice a vanilla bean, and boil it slowly in half
-a pint of milk, till all the strength is extracted and the milk
-highly flavoured with the vanilla. Then strain it, and set it aside.
-Mix a quart of cream and a pint of milk, or, if you cannot procure
-cream, take three pints of rich milk, and put them into a skillet or
-sauce-pan. Set it on hot coals, and boil it. When it has come to a
-boil, mix a table-spoonful of flour in three table-spoonfuls of milk,
-and stir it into the boiling liquid. Afterwards add six eggs, (which
-have been beaten up with two table-spoonfuls of milk,) pouring them
-slowly into the mixture. Take care to stir it all the time it is
-boiling. Five minutes after, stir in gradually half a pound of powdered
-loaf-sugar, and then the decoction of vanilla. Having stirred it hard a
-few moments, take it off the fire, and set it to cool. When quite cold,
-put it into a mould and freeze it, as you would ice-cream, for which it
-frequently passes.
-
-You may flavour it with the juice of two large lemons, stirred in just
-before you take it from the fire, or with a quarter of a pound of
-shelled bitter almonds, blanched, pounded in a mortar with rose-water,
-and then boiled in half a pint of milk, till the flavour is extracted.
-Then use the milk only.
-
-
-CHERRY CORDIAL.--Take a bushel of fine ripe cherries, either red or
-black, or mixed; stone them, put them into a clean wooden vessel, and
-mash them with a mallet or beetle. Then boil them about ten minutes,
-and strain the juice. To each quart of juice allow a quart of water,
-a pound of sugar, and a quart of brandy. Boil in the water (before
-you mix it with the juice) two ounces of cloves, and four ounces of
-cinnamon; then strain out the spice. Put the mixture into a stone jug,
-or a demijohn, and cork it tightly. Bottle it in two or three months.
-
-
-COMMON ICE CREAM.--Split into pieces a vanilla bean, and boil it in a
-very little milk till the flavour is well extracted; then strain it.
-Mix two table-spoonfuls of arrow-root powder, or the same quantity
-of fine powdered starch with just sufficient cold milk to make it a
-thin paste; rubbing it till quite smooth. Mix together a pint of cream
-and a pint of rich milk; and afterwards stir in the preparation of
-arrow-root, and the milk in which the vanilla has been boiled. Beat
-it very hard, stir in half a pound of powdered loaf-sugar, beating it
-very hard again. Then strain it, and put it into a freezer placed in a
-tub that has a hole in the bottom to let out the water; and surround
-the freezer on all sides with ice broken finely, and mixed with
-coarse salt. Beat the cream hard for half an hour. Then let it rest;
-occasionally taking off the cover, and scraping down with a long spoon
-the cream that sticks to the sides. When it is well frozen, transfer
-it to a mould; surround it with fresh salt and ice, and then freeze it
-over again. If you wish to flavour it with lemon instead of vanilla,
-take a large lump of the sugar before you powder it, and rub it on the
-outside of a large lemon till the yellow is all rubbed off upon the
-sugar. Then, when the sugar is all powdered, mix with it the juice of
-two large lemons.
-
-For strawberry ice cream, mix with the powdered sugar the juice of a
-quart of ripe strawberries squeezed through a linen bag.
-
-
-PINK CHAMPAGNE JELLY.--Beat up the white of an egg to a stiff froth,
-and then stir it hard into three wine-glasses of filtered water. Put
-twelve ounces of the best double-refined loaf-sugar (powdered fine and
-sifted) into a skillet lined with porcelain. Pour on it the white of
-egg and water, and stir it till dissolved. Then add twelve grains of
-cochineal powder. Set it over a moderate fire, and boil it and skim it
-till the scum ceases to rise. Then strain it through a very fine sieve.
-Have ready an ounce and a half of isinglass that has been boiled in
-a little water till quite dissolved. Strain it, and while the boiled
-sugar is lukewarm mix it with the isinglass, adding a pint of pink
-champagne and the juice of a large lemon. Run it through a linen bag
-into a mould. When it has congealed so as to be quite firm, wrap a wet
-cloth round the outside of the mould, and turn out the jelly into a
-glass dish; or serve it broken up, in jelly glasses, or glass cups.
-
-Jelly may be made in a similar manner of Madeira, marasquin, or noyau.
-
-
-A CHARLOTTE RUSSE.--Boil in half a pint of milk a split vanilla bean,
-till all the flavour is extracted. Then strain the milk, and when it
-is cold stir into it the yolks of four beaten eggs, and a quarter of a
-pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Simmer this custard five minutes over
-hot coals, but do not let it come to a boil. Then set it away to cool.
-Having boiled an ounce of the best Russian isinglass in a pint of water
-till it is entirely dissolved and the water reduced to one-half, strain
-it into the custard, stir it hard, and set it aside to get quite cold.
-
-Whip to a stiff froth a quart of rich cream, taking it off in spoonfuls
-as you do it, and putting it to drain on an inverted sieve. When the
-custard is quite cold, (but not yet set or congealing,) stir the whipt
-cream gradually into it.
-
-Take a circular mould of the shape of a drum, the sides being straight.
-Cut to fit it two round slices from the top and bottom of an almond
-sponge-cake; glaze them with white of egg, and lay one on at the bottom
-of the mould, reserving the other for the top. You can get the mould at
-a tinner's.
-
-Having thus covered the bottom, line the sides of the mould with more
-of the sponge-cake, cut into long squares and glazed all over with
-white of egg. They must be placed so as to stand up all round--each
-wrapping a little over the other so as to leave not the smallest
-vacancy between; and they must be cut exactly the height of the mould,
-and trimmed evenly. Then fill up with the custard and cream when it is
-just beginning to congeal; and cover the top with the other round slice
-of cake.
-
-Set the mould in a tub of pounded ice mixed with coarse salt; and let
-it remain forty minutes, or near an hour. Then turn out the Charlotte
-on a china dish. Have ready an icing, made in the usual manner of
-beaten white of egg and powdered sugar, flavoured with essence of
-lemon. Spread it smoothly over the top of the Charlotte, which when
-the icing is dry will be ready to serve. They are introduced at large
-parties, and it is usual to have two or four of them.
-
-
-A CHARLOTTE POLONAISE.--Boil over a slow fire a pint and a half of
-cream. While it is boiling have ready six yolks of eggs, beaten up with
-two table-spoonfuls of powdered arrow-root, or fine flour. Stir this
-gradually into the boiling cream, taking care to have it perfectly
-smooth and free from lumps. Ten minutes will suffice for the egg and
-cream to boil together. Then divide the mixture by putting it into two
-separate sauce-pans.
-
-Then mix with it, in one of the pans, six ounces of chocolate scraped
-fine, two ounces of powdered loaf-sugar, and a quarter of a pound of
-maccaroons, broken up. When it has come to a hard boil, take it off,
-stir it well, pour it into a bowl, and set it away to cool.
-
-Have ready, for the other sauce-pan of cream and egg, a dozen bitter
-almonds, and four ounces of shelled sweet almonds or pistachio nuts,
-all blanched and pounded in a mortar with rose-water to a smooth paste,
-and mixed with an ounce of citron also pounded. Add four ounces of
-powdered sugar; and to colour it green, two large spoonfuls of spinach
-juice that has been strained through a sieve. Stir this mixture into
-the other half of the cream, and let it come to a boil. Then put it
-aside to cool.
-
-Cut a large sponge-cake into slices half an inch thick. Spread one
-slice thickly with the chocolate cream, and cover another slice with
-the almond cream. Do this alternately (piling them evenly on a china
-dish) till all the ingredients are used up. You may arrange it in the
-original form of the sponge-cake before it was cut, or in a pyramid.
-Have ready the whites of the six eggs whipped to a stiff froth, with
-which have been gradually mixed six ounces of powdered sugar, and
-twelve drops of oil of lemon. With a spoon heap this meringue (as the
-French call it) all over the pile of cake, &c., and then sift powdered
-sugar over it. Set it in a very slow oven till the outside becomes a
-light brown colour.
-
-Serve it up cold, ornamented according to your taste.
-
-If you find the chocolate cream too thin, add more maccaroons. If the
-almond cream is too thin, mix in more pounded citron. If either of the
-mixtures is too thick, dilute it with more cream.
-
-This is superior to a Charlotte Russe.
-
-
-APPLE COMPOTE.--Take large ripe pippin apples. Pare, core, and weigh
-them, and to each pound allow a pound of fine loaf-sugar and two
-lemons. Parboil the apples, and then set them out to cool. Pare off
-very nicely with a penknife the yellow rind of the lemons, taking care
-not to break it; and then with scissors trim the edges to an even width
-all along. Put the lemon-rind to boil in a little sauce-pan by itself,
-till it becomes tender, and then set it to cool. Allow half a pint of
-water to each pound of sugar; and when it is melted, set it on the
-fire in the preserving kettle, put in the apples, and boil them slowly
-till they are clear and tender all through, but not till they break;
-skimming the syrup carefully. After you have taken out the apples,
-add the lemon-juice, put in the lemon-peel, and boil it till quite
-transparent. When the whole is cold, put the apples with the syrup into
-glass dishes, and dispose the wreaths of lemon-peel fancifully about
-them.
-
-SOUR MILK.--To recover milk that has turned sour, stir in powdered
-carbonate of magnesia, of which allow a heaped tea-spoonful to each
-quart of milk.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX,
-
-CONTAINING NEW RECEIPTS.
-
-
-ORANGE CAKE.--Take four ripe oranges, and roll them under your hand on
-the table. Break up a pound of the best loaf-sugar, and on some of the
-pieces rub off the yellow rind of the oranges. Then cut the oranges,
-and squeeze their juice through a strainer. Powder the sugar, and mix
-the orange-juice with it; reserving a little of the juice to flavour
-the icing. Wash, and squeeze in a pan of cold water, a pound of the
-best _fresh_ butter, till you have extracted whatever milk and salt may
-have been in it, as they will impede the lightness of the cake. Cut
-up the butter in the pan of sugar and orange, and stir it hard till
-perfectly light, white, and creamy. Sift into a pan fourteen ounces
-(two ounces less than a pound) of fine flour. Beat ten eggs till they
-are as thick and smooth as a fine boiled custard. Then stir them, by
-degrees, into the butter and sugar, alternately with the flour, a
-little of each at a time. Continue to beat the whole very hard for
-some time after all the ingredients are in; as this cake requires a
-great deal of beating. Have ready a large square, shallow pan, well
-buttered. Put in the mixture, and set it immediately into a brisk oven.
-It must be thoroughly baked, otherwise it will be heavy, streaked,
-and unfit to eat. The time of baking must of course be in proportion
-to its thickness, but it requires a much longer time than pound-cake,
-queen-cake, or Spanish buns. When it shrinks from the sides of the pan,
-and looks as if done, try it by sticking in the middle of it, down
-to the bottom, a twig from a corn-broom, or something similar. If
-the twig comes out dry and clean, the cake is done; but if the twig
-remains moist and clammy, let the cake remain longer in the oven. When
-it is quite done, make an icing of beaten white of egg, and powdered
-loaf-sugar, mixed with a spoonful or more of orange juice. Dredge
-the cake with flour, then wipe off the flour and spread on the icing
-thick and evenly, scoring it in large squares. Before you put it into
-baskets, cut the cake into squares about the usual size of a Spanish
-bun. It should be eaten fresh, being best the day it is baked.
-
-This cake will be found very fine. It is, of course, best when oranges
-are ripe and in perfection, as the orange flavour should be very high.
-We recommend that at the first trial of this receipt, the batter shall
-be baked in small tins, such as are used for queen-cake, or Naples
-biscuit, as there will thus be less risk of its being well baked than
-if done in a larger pan. When they seem to be done, one of the little
-cakes can be taken out and broken open, and if more baking is found
-necessary, the others can thus be continued longer in the oven. After
-some experience, an orange cake may be baked, like a pound cake, in
-a large tin pan with a tube in the centre; or in a turban mould, and
-handsomely iced and ornamented when done. A fine orange cake will, when
-cut, perfume the table.
-
-Lemon cake may be made and baked in a similar manner, adding also a
-little lemon juice to the icing.
-
-
-CITRON CAKE--Cut a pound of candied citron into slips. Spread it on a
-large dish. Sprinkle it thickly with sifted flour till it is entirely
-white with it, tumbling the citron about with your hands till every
-piece is well covered with flour. Then sift into a pan fourteen ounces
-(two ounces less than a pound) of flour. Beat together in a deep pan,
-till perfectly light, a pound of fresh butter cut up in a pound of
-powdered loaf-sugar. Then add, by degrees, a glass of wine, a glass of
-brandy, and a table-spoonful of powdered mace and cinnamon mixed, and
-a powdered nutmeg. Have ready twelve eggs beaten in a shallow pan till
-very smooth and thick. Stir the beaten egg into the beaten butter and
-sugar, alternately with the flour and citron, a little at a time of
-each. Then, at the last, stir the whole very hard. Butter a large tin
-pan (one with a tube in the centre will be best), put in the mixture,
-set it directly in a moderate oven, and bake it at least four hours.
-Put it on an inverted sieve to cool.
-
-When the cake is cool, ice and ornament it.
-
-Common pound cakes are now very much out of use. They are considered
-old-fashioned.
-
-
-BOSTON CREAM CAKES--From a quart of rich milk or cream take half a
-pint, and put it into a small saucepan, with a vanilla bean, and a
-stick of the best Ceylon cinnamon, broken in pieces. Cover the saucepan
-closely, and let it boil till the milk is highly flavoured with the
-vanilla and cinnamon. Then strain it, take out the vanilla bean, wipe
-it, and put it away, as it will do for the same purpose a second time.
-Mix the flavoured milk with the other pint and a half, and let it get
-quite cold. Beat very light _the yolks only_ of twelve eggs, and stir
-them into the milk alternately with a quarter of a pound, or more, of
-powdered white sugar. Put this custard mixture into a tin pan, set it
-in a Dutch oven or something similar, pour round the pan some boiling
-water, enough to reach half-way up its sides, and bake the custard ten
-minutes. Instead of vanilla, you may flavour the custard by boiling, in
-the half pint of milk, a handful of bitter almonds or peach kernels,
-blanched and broken in half, and stirring into the custard when it has
-done baking, but is still hot, a wine glass of rose water. As rose
-water loses most of its taste by cooking, it is best, when practicable,
-to add it after the article is taken from the fire.
-
-In the mean time let another mixture be prepared as follows. Sift
-half a pound of fine flour, cut up half a pound of fresh butter in a
-pint of rich milk, and set it on a stove or near the fire till the
-butter is soft but not melted. Then stir it well and take it off. Beat
-eight whole eggs very light, and stir them gradually into the milk
-and butter, in turn with the flour. Take care to have this batter
-very smooth, and quite free from lumps. Having beaten and stirred it
-thoroughly, put it in equal portions into deep pattypans with plain
-unscolloped sides, filling them but little more than half, so as
-to allow space for the cakes to rise in baking. The pattypans must
-be previously buttered. When the mixture is in, sprinkle powdered
-loaf-sugar over the top of each. Set them immediately into a brisk
-oven, and bake them about a quarter of an hour, or twenty minutes. They
-must be well browned. When done, take them out, and open in the side of
-each (while quite hot) a slit or cut, large enough to admit a portion
-of the custard that has been made for them. Put in with a spoon as much
-of this custard as will amply fill the cavity or hollow in the middle
-of each cake. Then close the slit nicely, by pinching and smoothing it
-with your thumb and finger, and set the cakes to cool. They should be
-eaten fresh. In summer they will not keep till next day unless they are
-set on ice. If properly made, they will be found delicious.
-
-
-CONNECTICUT LOAF CAKE.--For this cake you must prepare, the day before,
-three pounds of sifted flour, two pounds of powdered white sugar, four
-nutmegs, and a quarter of an ounce of mace powdered fine; two pounds
-of stoned raisins, two pounds of currants, picked, washed, and dried
-(or you may substitute for the currants two additional pounds of
-raisins), and half a pound of citron cut large. The raisins, currants,
-and citron must be spread on a large dish, and dredged thickly over
-with flour, which must be mixed well among them with your hands, so as
-to coat them all completely. This is to prevent their sinking in a clod
-to the bottom while the cake is baking, and should always be done with
-whatever fruit is used in either cakes or puddings. Put the spice into
-half a pint of white wine, cover it, and let it infuse all night. Next
-morning, have ready two pounds of the best fresh butter, cut small; six
-eggs well beaten; a pint of warm new milk; and half a pint of fresh
-strong yeast, procured, if possible, from a brewer or baker. Rub half
-the butter into the flour, adding half the sugar; wet it with the milk,
-and add half of the eggs, and the wine, and the yeast. Stir and mix it
-thoroughly. Then cover it and set it to rise. It should be perfectly
-light by evening. Then add the remainder of the butter and the sugar,
-and the rest of the egg. Mix it well, and set it again to rise till
-early next morning. Then add gradually the fruit, setting it again to
-rise for two or three hours. When it is perfectly light for the last
-time, butter a large deep pan, and put in the mixture. The oven must
-first be made _very hot_, and then allowed to cool down so as to bake
-rather slowly. If too hot, it will scorch and crust the cake on the
-outside, so as to prevent the heat from penetrating any farther, and
-the inside will then be soddened and heavy. A common-sized loaf-cake
-may remain in the oven from three to four hours.
-
-
-CLOVE CAKES.--Rub a pound of fresh butter (cut up) into three pounds of
-sifted flour; adding, by degrees, a pound of fine brown sugar, half an
-ounce of cloves ground or powdered, and sufficient West India molasses
-to wet the whole into a stiff dough, mixing in at the last a small
-tea-spoonful of sal-aratus dissolved in tepid water. Roll the dough
-out into a sheet of paste, and cut out the cakes with a tin stamp, or
-with the edge of a tumbler. Put them in buttered pans, and bake them
-a quarter of an hour or more. They will continue good a long time, if
-kept dry, and are excellent to take to sea.
-
-
-SOFT GINGERBREAD.--Beat to a cream half a pound of fresh butter cut up
-in a deep pan, among half a pound of brown sugar, and at the beginning
-set near the fire to soften it a little, but not to melt it. Add two
-large table-spoonfuls of ginger, a tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon,
-and a tea-spoonful of powdered cloves. Then stir into it, alternately,
-a pint of West India molasses, and three pints of sifted flour, and six
-well-beaten eggs. Lastly, dissolve a small tea-spoonful of pearl-ash in
-a pint of _sour_ milk, and stir it, while foaming, into the mixture.
-Put it immediately into shallow square tin pans, well buttered, and
-place it in an oven not too hot, or it will burn the outside, and leave
-the inside raw and heavy. This cake requires long beating, and much
-baking.
-
-
-FINE COOKIES.--Sift into a pan five large tea-cupsful of flour, and
-rub into it one tea-cup of fresh butter; add two cups of powdered
-white sugar, and a handful or two of carraway seeds; wet it with an
-egg well beaten, and a little rose-water. Add, at the last, a small
-tea-spoonful of sal-aratus dissolved in a very little lukewarm water.
-Knead the whole well. Roll it out into a sheet. Cut it into cakes with
-a stamp or a tumbler edge; put them into a buttered pan, and bake them
-about fifteen minutes. Instead of carraway seeds, you may use currants,
-picked, washed, and dried.
-
-
-INDIAN CUP CAKES.--Sift a pint and a half of yellow Indian meal, and
-mix it with half a pint wheat flour. Beat two eggs very light, and
-then stir them gradually into the meal, in turn with almost a quart of
-_sour_ milk. If you have no sour milk from the preceding day, you can
-turn some sweet milk sour by setting it in the sun. Lastly, dissolve a
-tea-spoonful of sal-aratus, or a very small tea-spoonful of pearl-ash
-in a little of the sour milk reserved for the purpose. The batter
-must be as thick as that for a pound-cake. More Indian meal may be
-necessary. Stir it at the last into the mixture, which, while foaming,
-must be put into buttered cups, or little tin pans, and set immediately
-into an oven, brisk but not too hot. When well baked, turn out the
-cakes, and send them warm to the breakfast-table. Eat them with butter.
-
-
-BRAN BATTER-CAKES.--Mix a quart of bran with a handful of wheat flour,
-and a level tea-spoonful of salt. Pour in sufficient milk-warm water
-to make a thick batter. Add two table-spoonfuls of brewer's yeast, or
-three, if home-made; and stir it very hard. Cover it, and set it by
-the fire to rise. Half an hour before you begin to bake, you may add
-a salt-spoonful of soda, melted in a little warm water. Bake it like
-buckwheat cakes, on a griddle.
-
-
-APPLE BREAD PUDDING.--Pare, core, and slice thin, a dozen or more
-fine juicy pippins, or bell-flowers, strewing among them some bits
-of the yellow rind of a large lemon that has been pared very thin,
-and squeezing over them the juice of the lemon. Or substitute a
-tea-spoonful of essence of lemon. Cover the bottom of a large deep
-dish with a thick layer of the sliced apples. Strew it thickly with
-brown sugar Then scatter on a few very small bits of the best fresh
-butter. Next strew over it a thin layer of grated bread-crumbs.
-Afterwards another thick layer of apple, followed by sugar, butter,
-and bread-crumbs as before. Continue this till you get the dish full,
-finishing with a thin layer of crumbs. Put the dish into a moderate
-oven, and bake the pudding well, ascertaining that the apples are
-thoroughly done and as soft as marmalade. Send it to table either
-hot or cold, and eat it with cream-sauce, or with butter, sugar, and
-nutmeg, stirred to a cream. This pudding is in some places called by
-the homely names of Brown Betty, or Pan Dowdy. It will require far
-less baking, if the apples are previously stewed soft, and afterwards
-mixed with the sugar and lemon. Then put it into the dish, in layers,
-interspersed (as above) with bits of butter, and layers of grated
-crumbs. It will be much improved by the addition of a grated nutmeg,
-mixed with the apples.
-
-
-APPLE CUSTARDS.--Take fine juicy apples, sufficient when stewed to fill
-two soup plates. Pare, core, and slice them. Add a lump of butter,
-about the size of a walnut, and the grated peel of a lemon; and stew
-them with as little water as can possibly keep them from burning. They
-must be stewed till they are quite soft all through, but not broken.
-Then mash them well with the back of a spoon, and make them very sweet
-with fine brown sugar. Squeeze in the juice of a lemon, or add a
-wine-glass of rose-water. When the apple is quite cold, add a grated
-nutmeg, a table-spoonful of brandy, and a table-spoonful of cream,
-mixed with a table-spoonful of finely-grated bread crumbs, and the
-well-beaten yolk of an egg. Stir the whole very hard. Cover the bottom
-and sides of two soup plates with thin puff-paste, and put a thick
-paste round the edges, notching it handsomely. Then fill up with the
-mixture, and bake it about half an hour. Or you may bake it in cups,
-without any paste. If for cups, prepare double the above quantity of
-apple and other ingredients.
-
-Peach custards may be made in a similar manner, of fine ripe free-stone
-peaches, pared, stoned, quartered, and stewed without any water. Omit
-the lemon, and add two eggs.
-
-
-NEW ENGLAND PUMPKIN PIE.--Take a quart of stewed pumpkin. Put it into
-a sieve, and press and strain it as dry as possible. Then set it away
-to get cold. Beat eight eggs very light, and stir them gradually into
-the pumpkin, a little at a time, in turn with a quart of rich cream
-and a pound of sugar. Mix together a quarter of an ounce of powdered
-mace, two powdered nutmegs, and a table-spoonful of ground ginger, and
-stir them into the other ingredients. When all is mixed, stir the whole
-very hard. Cover the bottom of your pie-dishes with a thin paste, and
-fill them nearly to the top with the mixture. Cut out narrow stripes
-of paste with your jagging-iron, and lay them across the tops of your
-pies. Bake them from an hour to an hour and a quarter. Send them to
-table cool. They are best the day they are baked. Some persons prefer
-them without any paste beneath, the dishes being filled entirely with
-the mixture; and if they have broad edges, a border of thick puff-paste
-may be laid along the edge, and handsomely notched. We think this the
-best way; as paste that is baked under any mixture that has milk and
-eggs in it, is liable, in consequence of the moisture, to become clammy
-and heavy, and is therefore unwholesome.
-
-
-WEST INDIA COCOA-NUT PUDDING.--Cut up and skin a large ripe cocoa-nut,
-and grate it fine. Then put the grated cocoa-nut into a clean cloth,
-and squeeze and press it till all the moisture is taken out. Spread it
-on a broad tin pan, and stand it up to dry, either in the sun or before
-the fire, stirring it up occasionally with your hands. When quite
-dry weigh a pound of it. Beat very light sixteen eggs (omitting the
-whites of four) and then beat into them, gradually, a pound of powdered
-loaf-sugar, and a wine glass of rose-water. Then give the whole a hard
-stirring. Put the mixture into deep dishes, and lay puff-paste round
-their edges handsomely notched. Bake them about half an hour. Send them
-to table cold with white sugar grated over the top.
-
-
-YANKEE TEA CAKES.--Cut up half a pound of fresh butter in a pint of
-milk, and warm it a little, so as to soften but not melt the butter.
-Add, gradually, half a pound of powdered white sugar, in turn with
-three well-beaten eggs, and a pound of sifted flour, finishing with
-half a jill of strong fresh yeast. Set the mixture in a warm place to
-rise. It will most probably be five hours before it is light enough
-to bake, and it should therefore be made in the forenoon. When it has
-risen high, and the top is covered with bubbles, butter some cups, and
-bake it in them about twenty minutes. When done, turn the cakes out on
-large plates; send them to table hot, and split and butter them. To
-open these cakes, pull them apart with your fingers.
-
-
-GELATINE JELLY.--Gelatine is used as a substitute for calves feet in
-making jelly. It is prepared in light yellowish sheets, and can be
-purchased at the druggists'. The chief advantage in gelatine is, that
-by keeping it in the house, you can always have it ready for use, and
-the jelly made with it may be commenced and finished the same day:
-while, if you use calves' feet, they must be boiled the day before.
-Also, you may chance to live in a place where calves' feet cannot at
-all times be procured, and then a box of gelatine, always at hand,
-may be found very convenient. The cost is about the same, whether the
-jelly is made of calves' feet or of gelatine. That of calves' feet will
-generally be the firmest, and will keep two or three days in a cold
-place or when set on ice; that of gelatine, if not used on the day that
-it is made, will sometimes melt and become liquid again. Its greatest
-recommendations are convenience and expedition. The following receipt
-for gelatine jelly will be found a very good one, if exactly followed.
-
-Soak two ounces of gelatine, for twenty-five minutes, in as much cold
-water as will cover it. Then take it out, lay it in another vessel,
-pour on it two quarts of boiling water, and let it thoroughly dissolve.
-Afterwards set it to cool. Having rolled them under your hand on a
-table, pare off very thin the yellow rind of four lemons, and cut it
-into small bits. Break up, into little pieces, two large sticks of the
-best cinnamon (that of Ceylon is far preferable to any other) and a
-pound of the best double refined loaf-sugar. Mix together in a large
-bowl, the sugar, the lemon-rind, and the cinnamon; adding the juice of
-the lemons, the beaten white of an egg, and a pint of Malaga or any
-other good white wine. Add to these ingredients the dissolved gelatine,
-when it is cool but not yet cold. Mix the whole very well, put it into
-a porcelain kettle, or a very clean bell-metal one, and boil it fifteen
-minutes. Then pour it warm into a white flannel jelly-bag, and let it
-drip into a large glass bowl. On no account squeeze or press the bag,
-or the jelly will be dull and cloudy. After it has congealed in the
-bowl, set it on ice; but the sooner it goes to table the better. A warm
-damp day is unfavourable for making any sort of jelly.
-
-You may flavour it with four or five oranges instead of lemons.
-
-If you are averse to using wine in the jelly, substitute a pound of the
-best raisins, stemmed (but not seeded or stoned) and boiled whole with
-the other ingredients.
-
-
-BISCUIT ICE CREAM.--This is the _biscuit glace_ so popular in France.
-Take some pieces of broken loaf-sugar, and rub off on them the yellow
-rind of four lemons, or oranges. Then pulverize the sugar, and mix
-it with half a pound of loaf-sugar already powdered, and moistened
-with the juice of the lemons. Beat six eggs very light, and stir them
-gradually into a quart of cream, in turn with the sugar and lemon. Have
-ready some stale Naples biscuit or square sponge cakes grated very
-fine, and stir them gradually into the mixture, in sufficient quantity
-to make a thick batter, which must be beaten till perfectly smooth and
-free from lumps. Put it into a porcelain stew-pan, and give it one
-boil up, stirring it nearly all the time. Then put it into a freezer,
-and freeze it in the usual manner. Afterwards transfer it to a pyramid
-mould, and freeze it a second time for half an hour or more. When quite
-frozen, take it out of the mould upon a glass or china dish.
-
-Instead of lemon or orange, you may flavour it with a vanilla bean
-boiled slowly in half a pint of cream, and then strained out, before
-you mix it with the other cream.
-
-
-MACCAROON ICE CREAM.--From a quart of cream take half a pint, and
-boil in it slowly two ounces of bitter almonds, or peach kernels,
-previously blanched and broken up. Then, when it is highly flavoured
-with the almonds, strain the half pint and mix it with the remaining
-pint and a half of cream, to which add, by degrees, six eggs previously
-beaten till very light, and half a pound of powdered loaf-sugar.
-Crumble a sufficient quantity of the best almond maccaroons to make a
-thick batter when stirred gradually into the mixture of cream, sugar,
-and eggs, which must be beaten till perfectly smooth. Give it a boil,
-stirring it well while boiling. Then put it into a freezer, and freeze
-it as usual. Afterward transfer it to a pyramid mould and freeze it
-again. It will be found very fine if properly made.
-
-
-ORANGE WATER ICE.--To four pounds of the best double refined
-loaf-sugar, allow a quart of water, and four dozen large ripe
-deep-coloured oranges. Having rolled the oranges on the table under
-your hand to increase the quantity of juice, wash and wipe them dry.
-Take pieces of the sugar and rub them on half the oranges till you have
-taken off on the sugar their yellow rind or zest. Then put that sugar
-with the remainder into a porcelain kettle, and pour on it a quart of
-water into which has been beaten the white of one egg. When the sugar
-is quite melted, set the kettle on the fire, and boil and skim it till
-the scum ceases to rise, and the orange-zest is entirely dissolved.
-Then stir in gradually the juice of the oranges, and when all is in,
-take it directly off the fire, lest the flavour of the juice should be
-weakened by boiling. Let it cool, stirring it well. Lastly, put it into
-a freezer surrounded by pounded ice and salt, and stir it hard for the
-first ten minutes. Take off the lid and repeat the stirring every five
-minutes till the freezing is accomplished. Turn it out into a glass
-bowl; having first washed off the ice and salt from the outside of the
-freezer, lest some of it should chance to get into the inside. Serve it
-on saucers.
-
-After it has congealed in the freezer, you may transfer it to a pyramid
-or pine-apple mould, and freeze it a second time, which will require
-half an hour or more. Of course, while in the mould, it must remain
-undisturbed. Before you turn it out, hold round the outside of the
-mould a cloth dipped in cold water.
-
-
-LEMON-WATER ICE.--May be made in the above manner, only that you must
-allow an additional pound of sugar, and use the zest or yellow rind of
-_all_ the lemons.
-
-
-STRAWBERRY-WATER ICE.--To each pound of loaf-sugar allow half a pint
-of water, and three quarts of ripe strawberries. Having broken up the
-sugar, put it into a preserving-kettle, and pour on it the water in the
-above proportion. To make the syrup very clear, you may allow to each
-pint of water half the white of an egg beaten into the water. When the
-sugar has melted, and been well stirred in the water, put the kettle
-over the fire, and boil and skim it till the scum ceases to rise. Have
-ready the strawberry juice, having put the strawberries into a linen
-bag, and squeezed the liquid into a deep pan. As soon as you take the
-kettle of syrup from the fire, stir into it the strawberry juice. Then
-put it into a freezer, surrounded with ice broken small, and mixed
-with salt; twirl it round by the handles for ten minutes, and then let
-it freeze, frequently stirring it hard. When done, turn it out into
-a glass bowl, and serve it on saucers. Or you may give it a second
-freezing in a pyramid mould.
-
-
-RASPBERRY-WATER ICE.--Is made exactly as above. You may heighten the
-colour of these ices by adding to the juice a little cochineal, which
-it is very convenient to keep in the house ready prepared. To do
-this, mix together an ounce of cochineal (pounded to a fine powder),
-a quarter of an ounce of powdered alum, and a quarter of an ounce of
-cream of tartar, adding a salt-spoonful of pearl-ash, and three ounces
-of powdered loaf-sugar. Boil them all together for ten minutes or more.
-Then pat the mixture into a clean new bottle, cork it tightly, and stir
-a little of it into any liquid you wish to colour of a fine red. With
-this you may give a red colour to calves' feet jelly, or blancmange, or
-to icing for cakes.
-
-
-GRAPE-WATER ICE--Is made as above, first mashing the grapes with a
-wooden beetle, before you put them into the bag for squeezing the
-juice. Currants for water ice must also be mashed before squeezing in
-the bag.
-
-
-PINE-APPLE WATER ICE.--Having pared and sliced a sufficient number of
-very ripe pine-apples, cut the slices into small bits, put them into a
-deep dish or a tureen, sprinkle among them powdered loaf-sugar, cover
-them and let them set several hours in a cool place. Then have ready
-a syrup made of loaf-sugar, dissolved in a little water (allowing to
-every two pounds of sugar a pint of water beaten with half the white
-of an egg), and boiled and skimmed till quite clear. Get as much
-pine-apple juice as you can, by squeezing through a sieve the bits of
-pine-apple (after they have stood some hours in the tureen), measure
-it, and to each pint of the boiled syrup allow a pint of juice. Mix
-them together while the syrup is warm from the fire. Then put it into a
-freezer, and proceed in the usual manner.
-
-
-PEACH-WATER ICE.--Take soft, ripe, juicy, freestone peaches, pare them,
-stone them, and cut them in pieces. Put the pieces into a linen bag
-and squeeze the juice into a deep pan. Crack the stones, scald and
-blanch the kernels, break them in half, and, having made a syrup as
-in the above receipts, allowing half a pint of water to each pound
-of loaf-sugar, boil the kernels in the syrup, taking them out when
-the syrup is done. This infusion of the kernels will add greatly to
-the flavour. Then measure the peach-juice, allowing a pint of it to
-each pint of syrup, and mix them together while the syrup is hot. Then
-freeze it.
-
-
-A FINE CHARLOTTE RUSSE.--For this purpose you must have a circular or
-drum-shaped tin mould, or a pair or more of them. The mould should be
-without a bottom. They can be procured at a tin-store, and are useful
-for other purposes. The day before you want the Charlotte russe, make a
-stiff plain jelly by boiling a set of calves' feet (four) in a gallon
-of water till the meat drops from the bone. It should boil slowly till
-the liquid is reduced to less than two quarts. Then, having strained
-it, measure into a pan three pints of the liquid, cover it, and set it
-away to congeal. Next morning, it should be a solid cake, from which
-you must carefully scrape off all the fat and sediment. Boil a vanilla
-bean in half a pint of milk, till the milk is very highly flavoured
-with the vanilla. Then strain it, and set it away to get cold. Take
-three pints of rich cream, put it into a shallow pan, set it on ice,
-and beat it to a stiff froth with rods or a whisk; or churn it to a
-foam with a little tin churn. Next, add to the cream the vanilla milk,
-and beat both together. Melt the jelly in a pan over the fire. Beat
-very light the yolks of six eggs, and then stir gradually into the
-beaten egg half a pound of powdered loaf-sugar. Next, add, by degrees,
-the melted jelly to the egg and sugar, stirring very hard. Keep the
-vessel sitting on ice, and continue stirring till the mixture is firm
-enough to retain the mark of the spoon. Then stir in the cream as
-quickly as possible. Have ready the tin mould, lined with the long
-thin cakes called lady-fingers, or finger biscuits, brushed over with
-beaten white of egg. They must be laid closely across each other on the
-bottom of a dish, and be so arranged as to stand up in a circle round
-the sides of the mould, each wrapping a little over the other. Then
-carefully put in the mixture, and cover the top with lady-fingers laid
-closely across. After the whole is nicely arranged, set it on ice till
-wanted. When you wish to turn out the Charlotte russe, (which must be
-done with great care,) wrap round the outside of the mould a coarse
-towel dipped in cold water, and lift it off from the charlotte.
-
-Instead of lady-fingers you may use sponge-cake for the shape or form.
-Cut two circular slices from a large sponge-cake, one for the bottom,
-and one for the top of the charlotte, and for the wall or sides arrange
-tall, square slices of the cake, all of them standing up so as to wrap
-a little over each other. All the cake must be glazed with beaten white
-of egg.
-
-A still easier way is to make an almond sponge-cake, and bake it in
-a drum-shaped mould or pan, or an oval one with straight or upright
-sides. When cold, cut off the top in one thin slice, and carefully
-cut out or hollow the middle, so as to make a space to contain the
-mixture of the charlotte, leaving bottom and sides standing. They must
-be left thin. Then, when the mixture is ready and quite cold, fill up
-the cake with it. It must be set on a china or glass dish, and kept
-on ice till wanted. It will require no turning out; and there is no
-risk of its breaking. The pieces that come out of the almond-cake when
-it is hollowed to receive the charlotte mixture, can be used for some
-other purpose, for instance, to mix with other cakes in a basket, or to
-dissolve at the bottom of a trifle.
-
-
-COFFEE CUSTARD--For this purpose the coffee should be cold drawn. Take
-a large half pint of fresh ground coffee, which should be of the best
-quality, and roasted that day. Put it into a grecque or French coffee
-pot, such as are made with strainers inside, and have a second cover
-below the lid. Lay the coffee on the upper strainer, pour on it half a
-pint of _cold_ water, and press it down with the inner cover. Put on
-the outer or top-lid of the coffee-pot, and stop the mouth of the spout
-with a roll or wad of soft white paper, or with a closely-fitting cork,
-to prevent any of the aroma escaping.
-
-When the coffee liquid has all filtered down through both the upper and
-lower strainers, pour it off into a bowl, and return it to the upper
-strainer to filter down a second time. It will then be beautifully
-clear, and very strong, notwithstanding that it has been made with cold
-water.
-
-Have ready a custard-mixture made of eight well-beaten eggs, stirred
-gradually into a pint of cold rich milk or cream; and three or four
-table-spoonfuls of powdered loaf-sugar. Stir the cold liquid coffee
-gradually into it. Put it into cups. Set them in an iron oven or
-bake-pan with boiling water round them, reaching rather more than
-half-way up the sides of the cups. Bake them ten minutes or more. Then
-set them on ice, and send them to table quite cold.
-
-
-PRESERVED LIMES, OR SMALL LEMONS.--Take limes, or small lemons that
-are quite ripe, and all about the same size. With a sharp penknife
-scoop a hole at the stalk end of each, and loosen the pulp all around
-the inside, taking care not to break or cut through the rind. In doing
-this, hold the lime over a bowl, and having extracted all the pulp and
-juice, (saving them in the bowl,) boil the empty limes half an hour or
-more in alum-water, till the rinds look clear and nearly transparent.
-Then drain them, and lay them for several hours in cold water, changing
-the water nearly every hour. At night, having changed the water once
-more, let the limes remain in it till next day, by which time all taste
-of the alum should be removed; but if it is not, give them a boil in
-some weak ginger tea. If you wish them very green, line the sides and
-bottom of a preserving-kettle with fresh vine-leaves, placed very
-thickly, put in the limes, and pour on as much clear cold water as will
-cover them, (spring or pump-water is best,) and fill up with a very
-thick layer of vine-leaves. Boil them slowly an hour or more. If they
-are not sufficiently green, repeat the process with fresh vine-leaves
-and fresh water. They must boil till a twig can pierce them.
-
-After the limes have been greened, give the kettle a complete washing;
-or take another and proceed to make the syrup. Having weighed the
-limes, allow to every pound of them a pound of the best double refined
-loaf-sugar, and half a pint of very clear water. Break up the sugar
-and put it into the kettle. Then pour on to it the water, which must
-previously be mixed with some beaten white of egg, allowing the white
-of one egg to three pounds of sugar. Let the sugar dissolve in the
-water before you set it over the fire, stirring it well. Boil and
-skim the sugar, and when the scum ceases to rise, put in the limes,
-adding the juice that was saved from them, and which must first be
-strained from the pulp, seeds, &c. Boil the limes in the syrup till
-they are very tender and transparent. Then take them out carefully, and
-spread them on flat dishes. Put the syrup into a tureen, and leave it
-uncovered for two days.
-
-In the mean time prepare a jelly for filling the limes. Get several
-dozen of fine ripe lemons. Roll them under your hand on the table,
-to increase the juice; cut them in half, and squeeze them through a
-strainer into a pitcher. To each pint of the juice allow a pound and
-a quarter of the best double refined loaf-sugar. Put the sugar, mixed
-with the lemon-juice, into a preserving-kettle, and when they are
-melted set it over the fire, and boil and skim it till it becomes a
-thick, firm jelly, which it should in twenty minutes. Try if it will
-congeal by taking out a little in a spoon, and placing it in the open
-air. If it congeals immediately, it is sufficiently done. If boiled too
-long it will liquefy, and will not congeal again without the assistance
-of isinglass. When the jelly is done, put it at once into a large bowl,
-and leave it uncovered.
-
-The lemon-jelly, the syrup and the limes, being thoroughly done, and
-all grown cold, finish by filling the limes with the jelly; putting
-them, with the open part downwards, into wide-mouthed glass jars, and
-gently pouring on them the syrup. Cover the jars closely, and paste
-strong paper over the covers. Or seal the corks.
-
-Very small, thin-skinned, ripe oranges, preserved in this manner, and
-filled with orange-jelly, are delicious.
-
-If, instead of having it liquid, you wish the syrup to crystallize or
-candy round the fruit, put no water to the sugar, but boil it slowly a
-long time, with the juice only, clarified by beaten white of egg mixed
-with the sugar in the proportion of one white to three pounds.
-
-Before squeezing out the juice of the lemons intended to make the
-jelly, it will be well to pare off very thin the yellow rind; cut it
-into bits, and put it into a bottle of white wine or brandy, where it
-will keep soft and fresh, and the infusion will make a fine flavouring
-for cakes, puddings, &c. The rind of lemons should never be thrown
-away, as it is useful for so many nice purposes. Apple-sauce and
-apple-pies should always be flavoured with lemon-peel.
-
-
-PINE-APPLE MARMALADE.--Take the largest, ripest, and most perfect
-pine-apples. Pare them, and cut out whatever blemishes you may find.
-Weigh each pine-apple, balancing the other scale with an equal
-quantity of the best double refined loaf-sugar, finely powdered.
-Grate the pine-apples on a large dish, omitting the hard core in
-the centre of each. Put the grated pine-apples and the sugar into a
-preserving-kettle, mixing them thoroughly. Set it over a moderate fire,
-and boil and skim it well, at times stirring it up from the bottom.
-After the scum has ceased to appear, still stir, till the marmalade is
-done, which will generally be in half an hour after it has come to a
-boil; but if not clear, bright, and smooth in that time, continue to
-boil it longer. When done, put it into a tureen, and cover it closely,
-while it is growing cold. Afterwards, remove it into tumblers, covering
-the top of each with double white tissue-paper, cut round so as exactly
-to fit the inside. Lay this paper closely on the marmalade, and press
-it down round the edges. Then paste on covers of thick paper.
-
-This preparation of pine-apples is far superior to the usual method
-of preserving it in slices. It will be found very fine for filling
-tart-shells, and for jelly-cake.
-
-
-ORANGE DROPS.--Squeeze through a strainer the juice of a dozen or more
-ripe oranges. Have ready some of the best double refined loaf-sugar,
-powdered as fine as possible, and sifted. Mix gradually the sugar with
-the juice, till it is so thick you can scarcely stir it. Put it into a
-porcelain skillet. Set it on hot coals, or over a moderate fire, and
-stir it hard with a wooden spoon for five minutes after it begins to
-boil. Then take it off the fire, and with a silver spoon or the point
-of a broad knife, drop portions of the mixture upon a flat tin pan or
-a pewter dish, smoothing the drops, and making them of good shape and
-regular size, which should be about that of a cent. When cold they
-will easily come off the tin. They are delicious, if properly made.
-Never use extract or oil of orange for them, or for any thing else.
-It will make them taste like turpentine, and render them uneatable.
-Confectioners form these drops in moulds made for the purpose.
-
-Lemon drops may be prepared in the same manner.
-
-
-FINE LEMON SYRUP.--The best time for making lemon syrup is early in the
-spring. Lemons are then plenty, and the syrup mixed with ice-water,
-makes a pleasant beverage for summer. It is best and cheapest to buy
-lemons by the box. Before using them _for any purpose_, each lemon
-should be wiped well, and then rolled hard under your hand upon a table
-to soften them and increase the juice. Two dozen large ripe lemons
-will generally yield about a quart of juice if pressed with a wooden
-lemon-squeezer; but it is best to have a few extra ones at hand, in
-case they should be required. To a quart of juice allow six pounds of
-the best loaf-sugar, broken up; on pieces of which rub off the yellow
-rind or zest of the lemons. The white part of the skin is useless and
-injurious. Put all the sugar into a large porcelain preserving-kettle.
-Beat to a stiff froth the whites of two eggs, mix it gradually with a
-quart of clear soft water, and then add it to the sugar. Stir the sugar
-while it is melting in the water, and when all is dissolved, place the
-kettle over the fire, and boil and skim it till perfectly clear, and
-the scum ceases to rise, and the particles of lemon zest are no longer
-visible. Meanwhile, squeeze the lemons through a strainer into a large
-pitcher, till you have a quart of juice. When the sugar has boiled
-sufficiently, and is quite clear, stir in gradually the lemon-juice,
-cover the kettle and let it boil ten minutes longer. When cool put it
-into clean, clear glass bottles, either quite new ones or some that
-have already contained lemon syrup. The bottles should first be rinsed
-with brandy. Cork them tightly and seal the corks. Orange syrup may be
-made in a similar manner omitting to use the grated yellow rind of the
-oranges, (it being too pungent for this purpose,) and substituting for
-it a double quantity of the juice; for instance, allowing two quarts of
-juice to six pounds of sugar.
-
-
-CROQUANT CAKE.--Take three quarters of a pound of almonds, (of which
-two ounces, or more, should be the bitter sort,) and blanch and slice
-them. Powder three quarters of a pound of fine white sugar. Sift three
-quarters of a pound of flour, and slice half a pound of citron. Mix
-together the almond and citron, on a flat dish, and sprinkle among them
-flour from the dredging-box, till they are white all over. Beat six
-eggs as light as possible, till they are very thick and smooth. Then
-mix them gradually with the sugar, almond, and citron, stirring very
-hard. Lastly, stir in, by degrees, the sifted flour. Butter a tin pan
-or pans, and put in the mixture about an inch deep. Bake it; and when
-cool, cut it into narrow slices about an inch wide, and five inches
-long. To make them keep a long time, lay them on shallow tins, and give
-them a second baking. Put the cakes into a stone jar, and they will
-keep a year or more, after this double baking.
-
-
-SASSAFRAS MEAD.--Mix gradually with two quarts of boiling water, three
-pounds and a half of the best brown sugar, a pint and a half of good
-West India molasses, and a quarter of a pound of tartaric acid. Stir
-it well, and when cool, strain it into a large jug or pan, then mix
-in a tea-spoonful (not more) of essence of sassafras. Transfer it to
-clean bottles, (it will fill about half a dozen,) cork it tightly, and
-keep it in a cool place. It will be fit for use next day. Put into a
-box or boxes a quarter of a pound of carbonate of soda, to use with
-it. To prepare a glass of sassafras mead for drinking, put a large
-table-spoonful of the mead into a half tumbler full of ice-water, stir
-into it a half tea-spoonful of the soda, and it will immediately foam
-up to the top.
-
-Sassafras mead will be found a cheap, wholesome, and pleasant beverage
-for warm weather. The essence of sassafras, tartaric acid, and
-carbonate of soda, can of course all be obtained at the druggists'.
-
-
-FINE TOMATA CATCHUP.--Take a large quantity of tomatas, and scald and
-peel them. Press them through a fine hair-sieve, and boil the pulp in
-either a porcelain or a bell-metal preserving-kettle, as tin or iron
-will blacken it. Cover the kettle closely, and keep it at a slow boil
-during four hours. Then measure the pulp of the tomatas, and to every
-two quarts allow a tea-spoonful of salt. Boil it an hour after the salt
-is in, stirring it frequently. Have ready, in equal proportions, a
-mixture of powdered ginger, nutmeg, mace, and cloves; and to every two
-quarts of the liquid, allow a large tea-spoonful of these mixed spices,
-adding a small tea-spoonful of cayenne. Stir in this seasoning, and
-then boil the catchup half an hour longer. Strain it carefully into a
-large pitcher, avoiding the grounds or sediment of the spices, and then
-(while hot) pour it through a flannel into clean bottles. Cork them
-tightly, and seal the corks. Keep it in a dry, cool place. It will be
-of a fine scarlet colour.
-
-
-GREEN TOMATA PICKLES.--Slice a gallon of the largest green tomatas,
-and salt them over night to your taste. In the morning mix together
-a table-spoonful of ground black pepper; one of mace; one of cloves;
-four pods of red pepper, chopped fine; and half a pint of grated
-horse-radish. Mix them all thoroughly. Have ready a large, wide-mouthed
-stone jar; put into it first a layer of the seasoning, then a layer
-of tomatas, then another of seasoning, then another of tomatas, then
-another of seasoning, another of tomatas; and so on alternately till
-the jar is filled within two inches of the top, finishing with a layer
-of seasoning. Then fill up to the top with cold cider vinegar; adding
-at the last a table-spoonful of sweet oil. Cover the jar closely.
-
-This will be found a very nice pickle, and is easily made, as it
-requires no cooking. After the tomatas are all gone, the liquid
-remaining in the jar may be used as catchup.
-
-
-RED TOMATA PICKLES.--Fill three quarters of a jar with small, round,
-button tomatas when quite ripe. Put them in whole, and then pour over
-them sufficient cold vinegar (highly flavoured with mace, cloves, and
-whole black pepper) to raise them to the top. Add a table-spoonful of
-sweet oil, and cover the jar closely.
-
-
-HASHED VEAL.--Always save the gravy of roast meat. Having skimmed off
-the fat, and poured the gravy through a strainer into a jar, cover it
-closely, and set it away in a refrigerator, or some very cold place,
-till next day. When cold meat is hashed or otherwise recooked, it is
-best to do it in its own gravy, and without the addition of water.
-
-Take some cold roast veal, and cut it into small mouthfuls. Put it
-into a skillet or stew-pan, without a drop of water. Add to it the
-veal gravy that was left the preceding day, and a small lump of fresh
-butter. Cover the skillet, and let the hash stew over the fire for
-half an hour. Then put to it a large table-spoonful of tomata catchup;
-or more, according to the quantity of meat. One large table-spoonful
-of catchup will suffice for as much hash as will fill a soup-plate.
-After the catchup is in, cover the hash, and let it stew half an hour
-longer. This is the very best way of dressing cold veal for breakfast.
-Observe that there must be no water about it. Cold roast beef, mutton,
-or pork, may be hashed in this manner; but hashed veal is best. You may
-also hash cold poultry, or rabbits, by cutting them in small bits, and
-stewing them in gravy, adding mushroom catchup instead of tomata.
-
-
-FRENCH CHICKEN SALAD.--Take a large, fine, cold fowl, and having
-removed the skin and fat, cut the flesh from the bones in very small
-shreds, not more than an inch long. The dressing should not be made
-till immediately before it goes to table. Have ready half a dozen or
-more hard-boiled eggs. Cut up the yolks upon a plate, and with the back
-of a wooden spoon mash them to a paste, adding a small salt-spoonful of
-salt, rather more of cayenne pepper, and a large tea-spoonful of made
-mustard. Mix them well together; then add two large table-spoonfuls of
-salad oil, and one of the best cider vinegar. All these ingredients for
-the dressing, must be mixed to a fine, smooth, stiff, yellow paste. Lay
-the shred chicken in a nice even heap, upon the middle of a flat dish,
-smoothing it, and making it circular or oval with the back of a spoon,
-and flattening the top. Then cover it thickly and smoothly with the
-dressing, or paste of seasoned yolk of egg, &c. Have ready a large head
-of lettuce that has been picked, and washed in cold water; and, cutting
-up the best parts of it very small, mix the lettuce with a portion of
-the hard-boiled white of egg minced fine. Lay the chopped lettuce all
-round the heap of shred chicken, &c. Then ornament the surface with
-very small bits of boiled red beets, and green pickled cucumbers, cut
-into slips and dots, and arranged in a pretty pattern upon the yellow
-ground of the coating that covers the chicken. After taking on your
-plate a portion of each part of the salad, mix all together before
-eating it.
-
-Do not use for this, or any other purpose, the violently and
-disagreeable sharp vinegar that is improperly sold in many of the
-grocery stores, and is made entirely of chemical acids. Some of these
-employed for making vinegar, are so corrosive as to be absolutely
-poisonous. This vinegar can always be known by its very clear
-transparency, and its excessive pungency, overpowering entirely the
-taste of every thing with which it is mixed; and also by its entire
-destitution of the least flavour resembling wine or cider, though it
-is often sold as "the best white vinegar." You can always have good
-wholesome vinegar by setting in the sun with the cork loosened, a
-vessel of cider till it becomes vinegar. In buying a keg of vinegar, it
-is best to get it of a farmer that makes cider.
-
-
-NORMANDY SOUP.--Take four pounds of knuckle of veal. Put it into a
-soup pot with twenty common-sized onions, and about four quarts of
-water. Let it simmer slowly for two hours or more. Then put in about
-one third of a six-penny loaf grated; adding a small tea-spoonful of
-salt, and not quite that quantity of cayenne pepper. Let it boil two
-hours longer. Then take out the meat, and press and strain the soup
-through a large sieve into a broad pan. Measure it, and to every quart
-of the soup add a pint of cream, and about two ounces of fresh butter
-divided into four bits, and rolled in flour. Taste the soup, and if
-you think it requires additional seasoning, add a very little more salt
-and cayenne. Always be careful not to season soup highly; as it is very
-easy for those who like them to add more salt and pepper, after tasting
-it at table.
-
-Put the soup again over the fire, and let it just come to a boil. Then
-serve it up. These proportions of the ingredients ought to make a
-tureen-full. This soup is a very fine one for dinner company. The taste
-of the onions becomes so mild as to be just agreeably perceptible;
-particularly in autumn when the onions are young and fresh. In cool
-weather it may be made the day before; but in this case, when done, it
-must be set on ice, and the cream and butter not put in till shortly
-before it goes to table.
-
-Never keep soup (or any other article that has been cooked) in a glazed
-earthen crock or pitcher. The glazing being of lead would render it
-unwholesome. Its effects have sometimes been so deleterious as really
-to destroy life.
-
-
-TOMATA SOUP.--Take a fore-leg of beef, and cut it up into small pieces.
-Put the meat with the bones into a soup-pot, and cover it with a gallon
-of water. Season it with pepper, and a little salt. Boil and skim it
-well. Have ready half a peck of ripe tomatas cut up small; and when the
-soup is boiling thoroughly, put them in with all their juice. Add six
-onions sliced, and some crusts of bread cut small. The soup must then
-be boiled slowly for six hours or more. When done, strain it through a
-cullender. Put into the tureen some pieces of bread cut into dice or
-small squares, and pour the soup upon it.
-
-Tomata soup (like most others) is best when made the day before. In
-this case you may boil it longer and slower. Then having strained it
-into a stone jar, cover it closely, and set it away in a cold place.
-Next day, add some grated bread-crumbs mixed with a little butter, and
-give the soup a boil up.
-
-When ochras are in season, this soup will be greatly improved by the
-addition of half a peck of ochras, peeled and sliced thin.
-
-
-CALVES' FEET SOUP.--Take eight calves' feet (two sets) and season them
-with a small tea-spoonful of salt, half a tea-spoonful of cayenne, and
-half a tea-spoonful of black pepper, all mixed together and rubbed over
-the feet. Slice a quarter of a peck of ochras, and a dozen onions, and
-cut up a quarter of a peck of tomatas without skinning them. Put the
-whole into a soup-pot with four quarts of water, and boil and skim it
-during two hours. Then take out the calves' feet, and put them on a
-dish. Next, strain the soup through a cullender, into an earthen pan,
-and with the back of a short wooden ladle mash out into the pan of soup
-all the liquid from the vegetables, till they are as dry as possible.
-Cut off all the meat nicely from the bones into small bits, and return
-it to the soup, adding a quarter of a pound of fresh butter, divided
-into four, and rolled in flour. Put the soup again into the pot, and
-give it a boil up. Toast two or three large thick slices of bread; cut
-it into small square dice or mouthfuls; lay it in the bottom of the
-tureen; pour the soup over it, and put on the tureen cover immediately.
-This soup (which, however, can only be made when tomatas and ochras
-are in season) will be found excellent. It may be greatly improved by
-boiling in it the hock of a cold ham: in which case add no salt.
-
-
-FINE CALVES' HEAD SOUP.--Boil in as much water as will cover it, a
-calf's head with the skin on, till you can slip out the bones. Then
-take a fore-leg of beef, and a knuckle of veal; cut them up, and
-put them (bones and all) into the liquid the calf's head was boiled
-in; adding as much more water as will cover the meat. Skim it well;
-and after it has thoroughly come to a boil, add half a dozen sliced
-carrots; half a dozen sliced onions; a large head of celery cut small;
-a bunch of sweet herbs; and a salt-spoonful of cayenne pepper. Boil the
-whole slowly during five hours; then strain it into a large pan.
-
-Take rather more than a pint of the liquid, (after all the fat has been
-carefully skimmed off,) and put it into a saucepan with two ounces of
-fresh butter, a bunch of sweet marjoram, a few sprigs of parsley, two
-onions minced fine, and a large slice of the lean of some cold boiled
-ham, cut into little bits. Keep it closely covered, and let it simmer
-over the fire for an hour. Then press it through a sieve into the pan
-that contains the rest of the soup. Thicken it with a large tea-cupful
-(half a pint) of grated bread-crumbs; return it to the soup-pot, and
-boil it half an hour. Unless your dinner hour is late, it is best to
-make this soup the day before, putting it into a large stoneware or
-china vessel, (not an earthen one,) covering it closely and setting it
-in a cool place.
-
-Have ready some force-meat balls, made of the meat of the calves' head,
-finely minced, and mixed with grated bread-crumbs, butter, powdered
-sweet-majoram, a very little salt and pepper, and some beaten yolk of
-egg to cement these ingredients together. Each ball should be rolled
-in flour, and fried in fresh butter before it is put into the soup.
-Shortly before you send it to table, add a large lemon sliced thin
-without peeling, and a pint of good madeira or sherry, wine of inferior
-quality being totally unfit for soup, terrapin, or any such purposes.
-Add also the yolks of some hard-boiled eggs cut in half. Then, after
-the wine, lemon, and eggs are all in, give the soup one boil up, but
-not more.
-
-
-THE BEST CLAM SOUP.--Put fifty clams into a large pot of boiling water,
-to make the shells open easily. Take a knuckle of veal, cut it into
-pieces (four calves' feet split in half will be still better) and put
-it into a soup-pot with the liquor of the clams, and a quart of rich
-milk, or cream, adding a large bunch of sweet majoram, and a few leaves
-of sage, cut into pieces, and a head of celery chopped small; also,
-a dozen whole pepper-corns, but no salt, as the saltness of the clam
-liquor will be sufficient. Boil it till all the meat of the veal drops
-from the bones, then strain off the soup and return it to the pot,
-which must first be washed out. Having in the mean time cut up the
-clams, and pounded them in a mortar, (which will cause them to flavour
-the soup much better,) season them with two dozen blades of mace, and
-two powdered nutmegs; mix with them a quarter of a pound of fresh
-butter, and put them into the soup with all the liquor that remains
-about them. After the clams are in, let it boil another quarter of an
-hour. Have ready some thick slices of nicely-toasted bread, (with the
-crust removed,) cut them into small square mouthfuls; put them into a
-tureen; and pour the soup upon them. It will be found excellent. Oyster
-soup may be made in the same manner.
-
-
-BAKED CLAMS.--In taking out the clams, save several dozen of the
-largest and finest shells, which must afterwards be washed clean, and
-wiped dry. Chop the clams fine, and mix with them some powdered mace
-and nutmeg. Butter the sides and bottom of a large, deep dish, and
-cover the bottom with a layer of grated bread-crumbs. Over this scatter
-some very small bits of the best fresh butter. Then put in a thick
-layer of the chopped clams. Next, another layer of grated bread-crumbs,
-and little bits of butter. Then, a layer of chopped clams, and proceed
-in this manner till the dish is full, finishing at the top with a layer
-of crumbs. Set the dish in the oven, and bake it about a quarter of an
-hour. Have ready the clam-shells and fill them with the baked mixture,
-either leaving them open, or covering each with another clam-shell.
-Place them on large dishes, and send them to table hot.
-
-Oysters may be cooked in a similar manner; sending them to table in the
-dish in which they were baked. The meat of boiled crabs may also be
-minced, seasoned, and dressed this way, and sent to table in the back
-shells of the crabs.
-
-Clams intended for soup will communicate to it a much finer flavour, if
-they are previously chopped small, and pounded in a mortar.
-
-
-FINE STEWED OYSTERS.--Strain the liquor from two hundred large oysters,
-and putting the half of it into a saucepan, add a table-spoonful of
-whole mace, and let it come to a hard boil, skimming it carefully. Have
-ready six ounces of fresh butter divided into six balls or lumps, and
-roll each slightly in a little flour. Add them to the boiling oyster
-liquor, and when the butter is all melted, stir the whole very hard,
-and then put in the oysters. As soon as they have come to a boil, take
-them out carefully, and lay them immediately in a pan of very cold
-water, to plump them and make them firm. Then season the liquor with a
-grated nutmeg; and taking a pint and a half of very rich cream, add it
-gradually to the liquor, stirring it all the time. When it has boiled
-again, return the oysters to it, and simmer them in the creamed liquor
-about five minutes or just long enough to heat them thoroughly. Send
-them to the tea-table hot in a covered dish.
-
-If you stew six or eight hundred oysters, in this manner, for a large
-company, see that the butter, spice, cream, &c., are all increased in
-the proper proportion.
-
-Oysters cooked in this way make very fine patties. The shells for which
-must be made of puff-paste, and baked empty in very deep patty-pans,
-filling them, when done, with oysters.
-
-
-SPICED OYSTERS.--To four hundred large oysters allow a pint of cider
-vinegar, four grated nutmegs, sixteen blades of whole mace, six dozen
-of whole cloves, three dozen whole pepper corns, and a salt-spoonful of
-cayenne. Put the liquor into a porcelain kettle, and boil and skim it;
-when it has come to a hard boil, add the vinegar and put in the oysters
-with the seasoning of spices, &c. Give them one boil up, for if boiled
-longer they will shrivel and lose their flavour. Then put them into a
-stone or glass jar, cover them closely, and set them in a cool place.
-They must be quite cold when eaten.
-
-You may give them a light reddish tint by boiling in the liquor a
-little prepared cochineal.
-
-
-TO KEEP FRESH EGGS.--Have a close, dry keg, for the purpose of
-receiving the eggs as they are brought in fresh from the hen's nests.
-An old biscuit keg will be best. Keep near it a patty-pan, or something
-of the sort, to hold a piece of clean white rag with some good lard
-tied up in it. While they are fresh and warm from the nest, grease each
-egg all over with the lard, not omitting even the smallest part; and
-then put it into the keg with the rest. Eggs preserved in this manner
-(and there is no better way) will continue good for months, provided
-they were perfectly fresh when greased; and it is useless to attempt
-preserving any but new-laid eggs. No process whatever, can restore or
-prevent from spoiling, any egg that is the least stale. Therefore, if
-you live in a city, or have not hens of your own, it is best to depend
-on buying eggs as you want them.
-
-
-A MOLASSES PIE.--Make a good paste, and having rolled it out _thick_,
-line a pie-dish with a portion of it. Then fill up the dish with
-molasses, into which you have previously stirred a table-spoonful, or
-more, of ground ginger. Cover it with an upper crust of the paste;
-notch the edges neatly; and bake it brown. This pie, plain as it is,
-will be found very good. It will be improved by laying a sliced orange
-or lemon in the bottom before you put in the molasses. To the ginger
-you may add a tea-spoonful of powdered cinnamon.
-
-
-SOUP A LA LUCY.--Take a large fowl; cut it up; put it with a few small
-onions into a soup-pot, and fry it brown in plenty of lard. Afterwards
-pour in as much water as you intend for the soup, and boil it slowly
-till the whole strength of the chicken is extracted, and the flesh
-drops in rags from the bones. An hour before dinner, strain off the
-liquid, return it to the pot (which must first be cleared entirely
-out) add the liquor of a quart of fresh oysters, and boil it again.
-In half an hour put in the oysters and mix into the soup two large
-table-spoonfuls of fresh butter rolled in flour; some whole pepper;
-blades of mace; and grated nutmeg. Toast some thick slices of bread
-(without the crust) cut them into dice, and put them into the soup
-tureen. For the fowl, you may substitute a knuckle of veal cut up; or a
-pair of rabbits.
-
-
-MINT JULEP.--This can only be made when fresh green mint is in season.
-
-Lay at the bottom of a large tumbler, one or two round slices of
-pine-apple nicely pared; and cover them with a thick layer of
-loaf-sugar, powdered or well-broken. Pour on it a glass or more of the
-best brandy. Add cold water till the tumbler is two-thirds full. Finish
-with a thick layer of pounded ice till it nearly reaches the top. Then
-stick down to one side a bunch of fresh green mint, the sprigs full and
-handsome, and tall enough to rise above the edge of the tumbler. Place,
-in the other side, one of the small tubes or straws used for drawing in
-this liquid.
-
-The proportions of the above ingredients may, of course, be varied
-according to taste.
-
-
-A UNION PUDDING.--The night before you make this pudding, take a piece
-of rennet, in size rather more than two inches square, and carefully
-wash off in two cold waters all the salt from the outside. Then wipe
-it dry. Put the rennet into a tea-cup and pour on sufficient milk-warm
-water to cover it well. Next morning, as early as you can, stir the
-rennet-water into a quart of rich milk. Cover the milk, and set it in
-a warm place till it forms a firm curd, and the whey becomes thin and
-greenish. Then remove it to a cold place and set it on ice. Blanch, in
-scalding water, two ounces of shelled bitter almonds, or peach-kernels;
-and two ounces of shelled sweet almonds. Pound the almonds in a mortar,
-to a smooth paste, one at a time (sweet and bitter alternately, so as
-to mix them well); and add, while pounding, sufficient rose-water to
-make them light and white, and to prevent their oiling. Grate upon a
-lump of loaf-sugar the yellow rind or zest of two lemons, scraping
-off the lemon-zest as you proceed, and transferring it to a saucer.
-Squeeze over it the juice of the lemons, and mix the juice and the zest
-with half a pound and two ounces of finely-powdered loaf-sugar, adding
-a small nutmeg, grated. Then put the cold curd into a sieve, and drain
-it from the whey till it is left very dry, chopping the curd small,
-that it may drain the better. Beat in a shallow pan the yolks of eight
-eggs till very light, thick, and smooth. Then mix into the egg the
-curd, in turn with the pounded almonds, and the sugar and lemon. Finish
-with a glass of brandy, or of Madeira or Sherry, and stir the whole
-very hard.
-
-Butter a deep dish of strong white ware. Put in the mixture: set it
-immediately into a brisk oven and bake it well. When done, set it in
-a cold place till wanted, and before it goes to table, sift powdered
-sugar over it. It will be still better to cover the surface with a
-meringue or icing, highly flavored with rose-water or lemon-juice. You
-may decorate the centre with the word UNION in letters of gilt sugar.
-
-The pudding will be found very fine.
-
-
-COCOA-NUT CANDY.--Take three cocoa-nuts and grate their meat on a
-coarse grater. Weigh the grated cocoa-nut, and to each pound, allow
-one pound of the best double-refined loaf-sugar. Put the sugar into a
-preserving kettle, and to every two pounds allow a pint of water, and
-the beaten white of one egg mixed into the water. When the sugar is
-entirely dissolved in the water, set it over the fire, and boil and
-skim it. When the scum has ceased to rise, and the sugar is boiling
-hard, begin to throw in the grated cocoa-nut, gradually, stirring hard
-all the time. Proceed till the mixture is so thick it can be stirred
-no longer. Have ready, square or oblong tin pans, slightly buttered
-with the best fresh butter. Fill them with the mixture, put in evenly
-and smoothly, and of the same thickness all through the pan. Smooth
-the surface all over with a broad knife dipped in cold water. Set
-it to cool, and, when the candy is almost hard, score it down in
-perpendicularly straight lines with a sharp knife dipped in cold water,
-the lines being two or three inches apart. These cuts must be made deep
-down to the bottom of the pan. When it is quite cold and firm, cut the
-candy entirely apart, so as to form long sticks, and keep it in a cold
-place.
-
-If any of the grated cocoa-nut is left, you may make it into cocoa-nut
-maccaroons, or into a cocoa-nut pudding.
-
-
-PRESERVED GREEN TOMATAS.--Take a peck of button tomatas, full grown,
-but quite green. Weigh them, and to each pound allow a pound of the
-best double-refined loaf-sugar, broken up small. Scald and peel them.
-Have ready ten lemons rolled under your hand on a table, to increase
-the juice. Grate off, upon lumps of sugar, the yellow surface of the
-rind, scraping up the grating or zest with a spoon, and transferring it
-to a bowl. Squeeze over it, through a strainer, the juice of the lemon.
-Take a quarter of a pound of root ginger, scrape off the outside, grate
-the ginger and mix it with the lemon.
-
-Put the sugar into a large preserving kettle, and pour water on it;
-allowing half a pint of water to each pound of sugar. Stir it about
-with a large, clean wooden spoon, till it melts. Set it over a clear
-fire, and boil and skim it. After it has boiled, and is very clear,
-and the scum has ceased to rise, put in the tomatas and boil them till
-every one has slightly bursted. Next add the lemon and ginger, and boil
-them about a quarter of an hour longer. Then take them out and spread
-them on large dishes to cool. Boil the syrup by itself, ten minutes
-longer. Put the tomatas into jars, about half full, and fill up with
-the syrup. Cover the jars closely, and paste paper round the lids; or
-tie bladders over them.
-
-Green tomatas, done as above, make an excellent sweetmeat. Ripe or red
-tomatas may be preserved in the same manner; yellow ones also.
-
-The lemon and ginger must on no account be omitted.
-
-
-PRESERVED FIGS.--Take figs when perfectly ripe, and wipe them
-carefully, leaving the stem about half an inch long. Boil them rapidly,
-for about ten minutes, in water that has a small bag of hickory
-wood-ashes laid at the bottom of the preserving kettle. Then take them
-out carefully, so as not to break the skins. Wash out the kettle, and
-boil the figs a second time, in clean hot water, for ten minutes. Take
-them out, spread them separately on large dishes, and let them rest
-till next morning.
-
-Prepare a syrup, by allowing to every pound of the finest loaf-sugar,
-half a pint of water, and, when melted together, placing the kettle
-over the fire. When the syrup has boiled, and is thoroughly skimmed,
-put in the figs, and boil them about twenty-five minutes or half an
-hour. Then take them out, and again spread them to cool on large
-dishes. Afterwards, put them up in glass jars, pouring the syrup over
-them. Cover the jars closely, and set them in the hot sun all next
-day. Then seal the corks with the red cement made of melted rosin and
-bees-wax, thickened with fine brick-dust.
-
-Another way is to cut the stems closely, and to peel off the skin
-of the figs; and to substitute for the bag of wood-ashes, a little
-powdered alum. Then proceed as above.
-
-
-MYRTLE ORANGES PRESERVED.--The small myrtle of the South, makes a very
-fine green sweetmeat. Lay them three days in weak salt and water.
-Then three days in cold water, changed at least three times a day.
-Afterwards, put a layer of green vine-leaves at the bottom of the
-preserving kettle, and round the sides. Put in a layer of oranges,
-sprinkling among them a very little powdered alum, allowing not more
-than a heaped salt-spoonful of alum to the whole kettle of oranges and
-vine-leaves. Then fill up with water; hang them over the fire till
-they are of a fine green, and boil them till they are so tender that
-you can pierce them through with a twig from a whisk broom. When clear
-and crisp, take them out of the kettle, spread them on flat dishes,
-and throw away the vine-leaves. Then wash out the kettle, and, having
-weighed the oranges, allow to each pound one pound of double-refined
-sugar, broken small. Put the sugar into the preserving-kettle, and
-pour on half a pint of water to each pound of sugar. When it is quite
-dissolved, hang it over the fire, and boil and skim it till it is
-very clear, and no more scum appears on the surface. Then put in the
-oranges, and boil them slowly in the syrup till they slightly burst.
-
-Another way is to scoop out all the inside of oranges as soon as they
-are greened, and make a thick jelly of it, with the addition of some
-more orange-pulp from other oranges. Press it through a strainer, and,
-after adding a pound of sugar to each pint of orange juice, boil it to
-a jelly. Having boiled the empty oranges in a syrup till they are crisp
-and tender, spread them out to cool--fill them with the jelly, and put
-them up in glass jars, pouring the syrup over them.
-
-
-TO KEEP STRAWBERRIES.--Take the largest and finest ripe strawberries,
-hull them, and put them immediately into large wide-mouthed bottles,
-filling them quite up to the top. Cork them directly, and be sure to
-wire the corks. Set the bottles into a large preserving-kettle full of
-cold water. Place them over the fire, and let the water boil around
-them for a quarter of an hour after it has come to a boil. Then take
-out the bottles, drain them, and wipe the outside dry. Proceed at once
-to seal the corks hermetically, with the red cement made of one-third
-bees-wax cut up, and two-thirds rosin, melted together in a skillet
-over the fire, and, when completely liquid, taken off the fire, and
-thickened to the consistence of sealing-wax by stirring in sufficient
-finely powdered brick-dust. This cement must be spread on hot over the
-wired corks. It is excellent for all sweetmeat and pickle jars. Nothing
-is better. Keep the bottles in boxes of dry sand. When opened, the
-strawberries will be found fresh and highly flavoured, as when just
-gathered. They must, however, be used as soon as they are opened, for
-exposure to the air will spoil them.
-
-Raspberries, ripe currants stripped from the stalk, ripe gooseberries
-topped and tailed, and any small fruit, may be kept in this manner for
-many months.
-
-In France, where syrups of every sort of fruit are made by boiling the
-juice with sugar, and then bottling it, it is very customary to serve
-up, in glass dishes, fruits preserved as above, with their respective
-syrups poured round them, from the bottles. They are delicious.
-
-
-TO KEEP PEACHES.--Take fine ripe juicy free-stone peaches. Pare them,
-and remove the stones by thrusting them out with a skewer, leaving the
-peaches as nearly whole as possible. Or you may cut them in half. Put
-them immediately into flat stone jars, and cement on the covers with
-the composition of bees-wax and rosin melted together, and thickened
-with powdered brick dust. The jars (_filled up to the top_) must be so
-closely covered that no air can possibly get to the peaches. Then pack
-the jars in boxes of sand, or of powdered charcoal, and nail on the
-box-lid.
-
-Peaches done in this manner, have arrived at California in perfect
-preservation. But they must be eaten as soon as the jars are opened.
-
-
-GREEN CORN MUFFINS.--Having boiled the corn, grate it, as if for a
-pudding. Beat six eggs very light, and stir them gradually into a quart
-of milk. Then stir in, by degrees, the grated corn, till you have a
-moderately thick batter. Add a salt-spoon of salt. Butter the inside of
-your muffin-rings. Place them on a hot griddle, over a clear fire, and
-nearly fill them with the batter. Bake the muffins well, and send them
-to table hot. Eat them with butter.
-
-
-COMPOTE OF SWEET POTATOES.--Select fine large sweet potatoes, all
-nearly the same size. Boil them well and then peel off the skins. Then
-lay the potatoes in a large baking-dish; put some pieces of fresh
-butter among them, and sprinkle them very freely with powdered sugar.
-Bake them slowly, till the butter and sugar form a crust. They should
-be eaten after the meat. This is a Carolina dish, and will be found
-very good.
-
-
-BAKED HAM.--Soak a nice small sugar-cured ham in cold water, from early
-in the evening till next morning--changing the water at bed-time. (It
-may require twenty-four hours' soaking.) Trim it nicely, and cut the
-shank-bone short off. Make a coarse paste of merely flour and water,
-sufficient in quantity to enclose the whole ham. Roll it out, and cover
-the ham entirely with it. Place it in a well-heated oven, and bake it
-five hours, or more, in proportion to its size. When done, remove the
-paste, peel off the skin, and send the ham to table, with its essence
-or gravy about it. It will be found very fine.
-
-If the ham is rather salt and hard, parboil it for two hours. Then put
-it into the paste, and bake it three hours.
-
-
-MUSHROOM SWEET-BREADS.--Take four fine fresh sweet-breads; trim them
-nicely, split them open, and remove the gristle or pipe. Then lay the
-sweet-breads in warm water till all the blood is drawn out. Afterwards,
-put them into a saucepan, set them over the fire, and parboil them for
-a quarter of an hour. Then take them out, and lay them immediately in a
-pan of cold water.
-
-Have ready a quart of fresh mushrooms; peel them, and remove the
-stalks. Spread out the mushrooms on a large flat dish, with the hollow
-side uppermost, and sprinkle them slightly with a little salt and
-pepper. Having divided each sweet-bread into four quarters, put them
-into a saucepan with the mushrooms, and add a large piece of the best
-fresh butter rolled in flour. Cover the pan closely, and set it over
-a clear fire that has no blaze. You must lift the saucepan by the
-handle, and shake it round hard, otherwise, the contents may burn
-at the bottom. Keep it closely covered all the time; for if the lid
-is removed, much of the mushroom-flavour may escape. Let them stew
-steadily for a quarter of an hour or more. Then take them up, and send
-them to table in a covered dish, either at breakfast or dinner. They
-will be found delicious. If the mushrooms are large, quarter them.
-
-
-PANCAKE HAM.--Cut very thin some slices of cold ham, making them all
-nearly of the same size and shape. Beat six eggs very light, and
-smooth. Stir them, gradually, into a pint of rich milk, alternately
-with six table-spoonfuls of sifted flour, adding half a nutmeg, grated.
-If you find the batter too thick, add a little more milk. For pancakes
-or fritters, the batter should be rather thin. Take a yeast-powder;
-dissolve the contents of the blue paper (the soda) in a little warm
-water, and, when quite melted, stir it into the batter. In another
-cup, dissolve the tartaric acid from the white paper, and stir that
-in immediately after. Have ready, in a frying-pan over the fire, a
-sufficiency of lard melted and boiling, or of fresh butter. Put in a
-ladle-full of the batter, and fry it brown. Have ready a hot plate,
-and put the pancakes on it as soon as they come out of the frying-pan,
-keeping them covered, close to the fire. When they are all baked, pile
-them evenly on a hot dish, with a slice of cold ham between every
-two pancakes, beginning with a cake at the bottom of the pile, and
-finishing with a cake at the top. You may arrange them in two piles, or
-more. In helping, cut down through the whole pile of pancakes and ham
-alternately.
-
-In making yeast-powders, allow twice as much carbonate of soda as of
-tartaric acid. For instance, a level tea-spoonful of soda to a level
-salt-spoonful of the tartaric acid. Put up the two articles, separately
-folded in papers of different colours; the former in blue paper, the
-latter in white.
-
-
-AN APPLE PANDOWDY.--Make a good plain paste. Pare, core, and slice
-half a dozen or more fine large juicy apples, and strew among them
-sufficient brown sugar to make them very sweet; adding some cloves,
-cinnamon, or lemon-peel. Have ready a pint of sour milk. Butter a deep
-tin baking-pan, and put in the apples with the sugar and spice. Then,
-having dissolved, in a little lukewarm water, a small tea-spoonful
-of soda, stir it into the milk, the acid of which it will immediately
-remove. Pour the milk, foaming, upon the apples, and immediately put a
-lid or cover of paste over the top, in the manner of a pie. This crust
-should be rolled out rather thick. Notch the edge all round, having
-made it fit closely. Set it into a hot oven, and bake it an hour. Eat
-it warm, with sugar.
-
-
-HONEY PASTE (_for the HANDS_.)--Take half a pound of strained honey,
-half a pound of white wax, and half a pound of fresh lard. Cut up the
-wax very small, put it into a porcelain-lined saucepan, and set it over
-the fire till it is quite melted. Then add alternately the honey and
-the lard; stirring them all well together. Let them boil moderately,
-till they become a thick paste, about the consistence of simple cerate,
-or of lip salve. Then remove the saucepan from the fire, and stir into
-the mixture some rose-perfume, or carnation, or violet--no other.
-Transfer the paste, while warm, to gallicups with covers; and paste a
-slip of white paper round each cover.
-
-For keeping the hands white and soft, and preventing their chapping,
-there is nothing superior to this paste; rubbing on a little of it,
-after dipping your hands lightly in water.
-
-
-GLYCERINE.--This is an excellent and very convenient preparation for
-the hands. Buy a bottle of it at one of the best druggists, and keep it
-well corked. After washing your hands with palm or castile soap, empty
-the basin, and pour in a little fresh water, to which add a few drops
-of glycerine. Finish your hands with this, rubbing it in hard. It will
-render them very soft and smooth, and prevent chapping. Try it, by all
-means.
-
-
-TO KEEP OFF MUSQUITOES.--Before going to bed, put a little eau de
-cologne into a basin of clean water, and with this wash your face,
-neck, hands, and arms, letting it dry on. The musquitoes then will not
-touch you.
-
-It may be necessary to repeat this washing before morning, or about
-day-light. There is nothing better. You may also do it early in the
-evening, before the musquitoes begin.
-
-
-CORN-STARCH BLANCMANGE.--Buy at one of the best grocer's, a half-pound
-paper of corn-starch flour. Boil a quart of milk, taking out of it
-a large tea-cup-full, which you may put into a pan. While the milk
-is boiling, mix with the cold milk four heaping table-spoonfuls of
-the corn-starch. Beat three eggs very light, and stir them into the
-mixture. Flavour it with a tea-spoonful of extract of bitter almonds,
-or of vanilla, or a wine-glass of rose-water. Add a quarter of a pound
-of powdered loaf-sugar, and stir the whole well together. When the
-other milk is boiling hard, pour it gradually on the mixture in the
-pan, which mixture will thicken while the milk is pouring. Transfer it
-to blancmange moulds, (first wetting them with cold water,) and set
-them in a cold place till dinner-time. Eat it with cream. Serve up
-sweetmeats at the same time.
-
-If you use new milk, the mixture will be like a soft custard, and must
-be sent to table as such. Skim-milk makes it blancmange.
-
-If you wish it as a pudding, use five heaping spoonfuls of the
-corn-starch powder. Send it to table hot, and eat it with wine sauce.
-It is a pudding very soon prepared.
-
-Blancmange moulds are best of block tin. Those of china are more liable
-to stick.
-
-These preparations of corn-starch are much liked.
-
-
-FARINA.--Is the finest, lightest, and most delicate preparation of
-wheat flour. It is excellent for all sorts of boiled puddings, for
-flummery, and blancmange. Also, as gruel for the sick.
-
-
-CINNAMON CAKE.--Take as much of the very best and lightest bread-dough
-as will weigh a pound. The dough must have risen perfectly, so as to
-have cracked all over the surface. Put it into a pan, and mix into it
-a quarter of a pound of fresh butter, melted in half a pint of milk,
-adding a well-beaten egg, and sufficient flour to enable you to knead
-the dough over again. Then mix in a heaping tea-spoonful of powdered
-cinnamon. Next, take a yeast-powder. In one cup, melt the soda or
-contents of the blue paper, in as much lukewarm water as will cover
-it; and, when thoroughly melted, mix it into the dough. Immediately
-after, having dissolved in another cup the tartaric acid, or contents
-of the white paper, stir that in also, and knead the dough a little
-while, till the whole is well mixed. Spread the dough thick and
-evenly in a square pan greased with lard or fresh butter, and with a
-knife make deep cuts all through it. Having previously prepared in
-a bowl a mixture of brown sugar, moistened with butter, and highly
-flavoured with powdered cinnamon, in the proportion of four heaping
-table-spoonfuls of sugar to two large spoonfuls of butter and one
-heaped tea-spoonful of cinnamon. Fill the cuts with this mixture,
-pressing it down well into the dough. Bake the cake half an hour or
-more, in a rather quick oven. When done, set it to cool; and when cold,
-cut it in squares, and sift powdered white sugar over it. It is best
-the day it is baked.
-
-You may, previous to baking, form the dough into separate round cakes;
-and in placing them in the pan, do not lay them so near each other as
-to touch.
-
-By bespeaking it in time, you can get risen bread dough from your
-baker. For two pounds of dough you must double the proportions of the
-above ingredients.
-
-
-THAWING FROZEN MEAT, &c.--If meat, poultry, fish, vegetables, or any
-other article of food, when found frozen, is thawed by putting it into
-_warm water_ or placing it before the fire, it will most certainly
-spoil by that process, and be rendered unfit to eat. The only way is
-to thaw these things by immersing them in _cold_ water. This should be
-done as soon as they are brought in from market, that they may have
-time to be well thawed before they are cooked. If meat that has been
-frozen is to be boiled, put it on in cold water. If to be roasted,
-begin by setting it at a distance from the fire; for if it should not
-chance to be thoroughly thawed all through to the centre, placing at
-first too near the fire will cause it to spoil. If it is expedient
-to thaw the meat or poultry the night before cooking, lay it in cold
-water early in the evening, and change the water at bed-time. If found
-crusted with ice in the morning, remove the ice, and put the meat in
-fresh cold water; letting it lie in it till wanted for cooking.
-
-Potatoes are injured by being frozen. Other vegetables are not the
-worse for it, provided they are always thawed in cold water.
-
-
-KEEPING MEAT, &c., IN SUMMER.--In summer, meat, poultry, fish, fruit,
-&c., should always be kept in ice, from the time they are brought
-from market till it is time to cook them. Families, who have not an
-ice-house, should have _two_ refrigerators; one for meat and poultry,
-the other for milk, butter, and fruit. If the three last articles are
-kept in the same refrigerator with meat and poultry, the milk, butter
-and fruit will imbibe a bad taste.
-
-A barrel of salt fish should never be kept in the same cellar with
-other articles of food. The fish-smell will injure them greatly, and
-render them unwholesome; milk and butter particularly.
-
-It is best to buy salt fish a little at a time, as you want it. A
-fish-barrel in the cellar will sometimes vitiate the atmosphere of the
-whole lower story of the house, and, indeed, may be smelt immediately
-on entering the door. In this case, let the barrel and its contents be
-conveyed to the river and thrown in; otherwise, its odour may produce
-sickness in the family.
-
-Avoid eating anything that is _in the very least_ approaching to
-decomposition. Even sour bread and strong butter are unwholesome as
-well as unpalatable. If the bread is sour, or the butter rancid,
-it is because (as the French, in such cases, unceremoniously say)
-"putrefaction has commenced." Fortunately, the vile practice (once
-considered fashionable) of eating venison and other game when
-absolutely tainted, is now obsolete at all good tables. Persons who
-have had opportunities of feasting on fresh-killed venison, just from
-the woods, and at a season when the deer have plenty of wild berries to
-feed on and are fat and juicy, can never relish the hard, lean, black
-haunches that are brought to the cities in winter.
-
-
-BROILED SHAD.--Cut off the head and tail, and clean the fish. Wipe
-it very dry with a cloth, and sprinkle the inside with a little salt
-and pepper. You may either broil it split open, and laid flat; or you
-may cut it into three or four pieces without splitting. In the latter
-case, it will require a longer time to broil. Keep it in ice till you
-are ready to cook it. Having well greased the bars with lard, or beef
-suet, or fresh butter, set your gridiron over a bed of clear, bright,
-hot coals; place the shad upon it (the inside downwards) and broil it
-thoroughly. When one side is done, turn it on the other with a knife
-and fork. Have ready a hot dish, with a large piece of softened fresh
-butter upon it, sprinkled with cayenne. When the shad is broiled, lay
-it on this dish, and turn it in the butter with a knife and fork. Send
-it hot to table, under a dish-cover.
-
-
-APPLE PORK.--Take a fillet of fine fresh pork, and rub it slightly
-all over with a very little salt and pepper. Score the outside skin
-in diamonds. Take out the bone, and fill up the place with fine juicy
-apples, pared, cored, and cut small, and made very sweet with plenty
-of brown sugar; adding some bits of the yellow rind of a lemon or two,
-pared off very thin. Then have ready a dozen and a half or more of
-large apples, pared, cored, and quartered, sweetened well with sugar,
-and also flavoured with yellow rind of lemon. The juice of the lemons
-will be an improvement. Put the pork into a large pot, or into an iron
-bake-oven; fill up with the cut apples the space all round, adding just
-sufficient water to keep it from burning. Stew or bake it during three
-hours. When done, serve all up in one large dish.
-
-
-STEWED SALT PORK.--Take a good piece of salt pork, (not too fat,) and,
-early in the evening, lay it in water, to soak all night, changing the
-water about bed-time. In the morning, drain and wash the pork, and cut
-it in very thin slices, seasoning it with pepper. Put a layer of this
-pork in the bottom of a large dinner-pot, and then a layer of slices
-of bread. Next put in a layer of potatoes, pared and cut up; then
-another layer of pork slices, covered by another layer of sliced bread;
-and then again potatoes. Proceed till the pot is two-thirds full,
-finishing with bread. Lastly, pour on just sufficient water to stew it
-well and keep it from burning. Set it over the fire, and let it cook
-slowly for three hours. If it becomes too dry, add a little boiling
-water.
-
-This is a homely dish, but a very good one, particularly on a farm or
-on ship-board. At sea, you must substitute biscuit for bread.
-
-Cold pork, left from yesterday, may be cooked in this manner.
-
-
-TO MAKE GOOD TOAST.--Cut the bread in even slices, and moderately
-thick. When cut too thin, toast is hard and tasteless. It is much
-nicer when the crust is pared off before toasting. A long-handled
-toasting-fork (to be obtained at the hardware or tin stores) is far
-better than the usual toasting apparatus, made to stand before the fire
-with the slices of bread slipped in between, and therefore liable to
-be browned in stripes, dark and light alternately; unless the bread,
-while toasting, is carefully slipped along, so that the whole may
-receive equal benefit from the fire. With a fork, whose handle is near
-a yard in length, the cook can sit at a comfortable distance from the
-fire, and the bread will be equally browned all over; when one side is
-done, taking it off from the fork, and turning the other. Send it to
-table hot, in a heated plate, or in a toast-rack; and butter it to your
-taste. Toast should neither be burnt nor blackened in any way. You may
-lay it in even piles, and butter it before it goes to table; cutting
-each slice in half.
-
-
-
-
-CARVING.
-
-
-The seat, for the carver should be somewhat elevated above the other
-chairs: it is extremely ungraceful to carve standing, and it is rarely
-done by any person accustomed to the business. Carving depends more on
-skill than on strength. We have seen very small women carve admirably
-sitting down; and very tall men who knew not how to cut a piece of
-beef-steak without rising on their feet to do it.
-
-The carving knife should be very sharp, and not heavy; and it should
-be held firmly in the hand: also the dish should be not too far from
-the carver. It is customary to help the fish with a fish trowel, and
-not with a knife. The middle part of a fish is generally considered the
-best. In helping it, avoid breaking the flakes, as that will give it a
-mangled appearance.
-
-In carving ribs or sirloin of beef, begin by cutting thin slices off
-the side next to you. Afterwards you may cut from the tender-loin, or
-cross-part near the lower end. Do not send any one the outside piece,
-unless you know that they particularly wish it.
-
-In helping beef-steak, put none of the bone on the plate.
-
-In cutting a round of corned beef, begin at the top; but lay aside the
-first cut or outside piece, and send it to no one, as it is always dry
-and hard. In a round of _a-la-mode beef_, the outside is frequently
-preferred.
-
-In a leg of mutton, begin across the middle, cutting the slices quite
-down to the bone. The same with a leg of pork or a ham. The latter
-should be cut in _very thin_ slices, as its flavour is spoiled when cut
-thick.
-
-To taste well, a tongue should be cut crossways in round slices.
-Cutting it lengthwise (though the practice at many tables) injures the
-flavour. The middle part of the tongue is the best. Do not help any one
-to a piece of the root; that, being by no means a favoured part, is
-generally left in the dish.
-
-In carving a fore-quarter of lamb, first separate the shoulder part
-from the breast and ribs, by passing the knife under, and then divide
-the ribs. If the lamb is large, have another dish brought to put the
-shoulder in.
-
-For a loin of veal, begin near the smallest end, and separate the ribs;
-helping a part of the kidney (as far as it will go) with each piece.
-Carve a loin of pork or mutton in the same manner.
-
-In carving a fillet of veal, begin at the top. Many persons prefer the
-first cut or outside piece. Help a portion of the stuffing with each
-slice.
-
-In a breast of veal, there are two parts very different in quality,
-the ribs and the brisket. You will easily perceive the division; enter
-your knife at it, and cut through, which will separate the two parts.
-Ask the persons you are going to help, whether they prefer a rib, or a
-piece of the brisket.
-
-For a haunch of venison, first make a deep incision, by passing your
-knife all along the side, cutting quite down to the bone. This is to
-let out the gravy. Then turn the broad end of the haunch towards you,
-and cut it as deep as you can, in thin, smooth slices, allowing some of
-the fat to each person.
-
-For a saddle of venison, or of mutton, cut from the tail to the other
-end on each side of the back-bone, making very thin slices, and
-sending some fat with each. Venison and roast mutton chill very soon,
-therefore it is usual to eat it with iron heaters under the plates.
-Some heaters are made to contain hot coals, others are kept warm with
-boiling water, and some are heated by spirits of wine; the last is a
-very exceptionable mode, as the blue blaze flaming out all around the
-plate, is to many persons frightful. Currant jelly is an indispensable
-appendage to venison, and to roast mutton, and to ducks.
-
-A young pig is most generally divided before it comes to table, in
-which case, it is not customary to send in the head, as to many persons
-it is a revolting spectacle after it is cut off. When served up whole,
-first separate the head from the shoulders, then cut off the limbs, and
-then divide the ribs. Help some of the stuffing with each piece.
-
-To carve a fowl, begin by sticking your fork in the pinion, and
-drawing it towards the leg; and then passing your knife underneath,
-take off the wing at the joint. Next, slip your knife between the leg
-and the body, to cut through the joint; and with the fork, turn the
-leg back, and the joint will give way. Then take off the other wing
-and leg. If the fowl has been trussed (as it ought to be) with the
-liver and gizzard, help the liver with one wing, and the gizzard with
-the other. The liver wing is considered the best. After the limbs
-are taken off, enter your knife into the top of the breast, and cut
-under the merry-thought, so as to loosen it, lifting it with your
-fork. Afterwards cut slices from both sides of the breast. Next take
-off the collar-bones, which lie on each side of the merry-thought,
-and then separate the side-bones from the back. The breast and wings
-are considered as the most delicate parts of the fowl; the back, as
-the least desirable, is generally left in the dish. Some persons, in
-carving a fowl, find it more convenient to take it on a plate, and as
-they separate it, return each part to the dish; but this is not now the
-usual way.
-
-A turkey is carved in the same manner as a fowl; except that the legs
-and wings being larger, are separated at the lower joint. The lower
-part of the leg, (or drumstick, as it is called,) being hard, tough,
-and stringy, is never helped to any one, but allowed to remain on the
-dish. First cut off the wing, leg, and breast from one side; then turn
-the turkey over, and cut them off from the other.
-
-To carve a goose, separate the leg from the body, by putting the fork
-into the small end of the limb; pressing it close to the body, and then
-passing the knife under, and turning the leg back, as you cut through
-the joint. To take off the wing, put your fork into the small end of
-the pinion, and press it closely to the body; then slip the knife
-under, and separate the joint. Next cut under the merry-thought, and
-take it off; and then cut slices from the breast. Then turn the goose,
-and dismember the other side. Take off the two upper side-bones, that
-are next to the wings; and then the two lower side-bones. The breast
-and legs of a goose afford the finest pieces. If a goose is old, there
-is no fowl so tough; and if difficult to carve, it will be still more
-difficult to eat.
-
-Partridges, pheasants, grouse, &c., are carved in the same manner as
-fowls. Quails, woodcocks, and snipes are merely split down the back; so
-also are pigeons, giving a half to each person.
-
-In helping any one to gravy, or to melted butter, do not pour it _over_
-their meat, fowl, or fish, but put it to one side on a vacant part
-of the plate, that they may use just as much of it as they like. In
-filling a plate, never heap one thing on another.
-
-In helping vegetables, do not plunge the spoon down to the bottom of
-the dish, in case they should not have been perfectly well drained, and
-the water should have settled there.
-
-By observing carefully how it is done, you may acquire a knowledge
-of the joints, and of the process of carving, which a little daily
-practice will soon convert into dexterity. If a young lady is ignorant
-of this very useful art, it will be well for her to take lessons of
-her father, or her brother, and a married lady can easily learn from
-her husband. Domestics who wait at table may soon, from looking on
-daily, become so expert that, when necessary, they can take a dish to
-the side-table and carve it perfectly well.
-
-At a dinner party, if the hostess is quite young, she is frequently
-glad to be relieved of the trouble of carving by the gentleman who sits
-nearest to her; but if she is familiar with the business, she usually
-prefers doing it herself.
-
-
-
-
-TO DRAW POULTRY, &c.
-
-
-Though to prepare poultry for cooking is by no means an agreeable
-business, yet some knowledge of it may be very useful to the mistress
-of a house, in case she should have occasion to instruct a servant in
-the manner of doing it; or in the possible event of her being obliged
-to do it herself; for instance, if her cook has been suddenly taken
-ill, or has left her unexpectedly.
-
-As all poultry is, of course, drawn in the same manner, it will be
-sufficient to designate the mode of emptying the inside of a fowl.
-In winter, if the fowl is frozen, lay it before the fire till it has
-completely thawed. Then have ready one or more large pieces of waste
-paper, rolled up loosely into a long wisp; lay the fowl down on a clean
-part of the hearth, and, taking its legs in your hand, light the paper,
-and pass it back and forward above the surface of the skin, (turning
-the fowl on both sides,) so as to singe off all the hairs; doing it so
-carefully as not to burn or scorch the skin. There should always be a
-quantity of old newspapers, or other waste paper, kept in a closet or
-drawer of the kitchen for this and other purposes. Next, lay the fowl
-upon its back on a clean old waiter or tray, (such as should be kept
-in every kitchen,) and with a large sharp knife cut off, first the
-head, and then the legs at the first joint. The next thing is to cut
-a very long slit in the skin at the right side of the neck, and with
-your fingers strip down the skin towards the shoulders, till you come
-to the craw, which you must take out with your hand. Then with your
-knife make two long deep cuts or incisions on each side of the body,
-going downward towards the tail. Put your hand into the cut or orifice
-on the right side, and pull out the heart, liver, gizzard, and then
-the entrails. Take care not to break the gall-bag, or its liquor will
-run over the liver, and make it so bitter that it cannot be eaten, and
-should therefore be thrown away without cooking. Next, to flatten the
-body, break the breast-bone by striking on it hard with your hand. Then
-tuck the legs into the lower part of the slits that you have cut on
-each side of the body. Afterwards with your hand bend or curve inwards
-the end of the neck-bone, and tuck it away under the long loose piece
-of skin left there. After this, lay the fowl in a small tub of cold
-water, and wash it well inside and out: then dry it with a clean towel.
-
-Next, cut open the gizzard, empty it of the sand and gravel, and take
-out the thick inside skin. Split open the heart, and let out the blood
-that is in it. Then carefully cut the gall-bag from the liver, so as
-not to break it. Wash clean the heart, liver, and gizzard, (having
-trimmed them neatly,) and return the heart to the inside of the breast;
-putting back also the eggs, if you have found any. Have ready the
-stuffing, and fill up with it the vacancy from which you have taken
-the craw, &c., pressing it in hard. Next, taking between your thumb
-and finger the above-mentioned piece of skin at the top of the neck,
-draw it down tightly towards the back of the fowl, (folding it nicely
-over the bent end of the neck-bone,) and fasten it down between the
-shoulders with a skewer, which must be stuck in so as to go lengthways
-down the back. This will prevent any of the stuffing from getting out,
-and will keep all compact and nice.
-
-Then run a skewer through both the wings and the upper part of the
-body, tucking in the liver so as to appear from under the right pinion,
-and the gizzard (scoring it first) on the left. Both pinions must be
-bent upwards. Lastly, secure all by tying two strings of small twine
-tightly round the fowl; one just above the skewer that confines the
-legs; the other just below that which passes through the wings.
-
-Of course, the strings and skewers are removed before the poultry is
-sent to table.
-
-Turkeys, geese, and ducks are always trussed in this manner, the legs
-being cut off at the first joint. So are fowls for boiling. But when
-fowls are to be roasted, some cooks leave on the whole of the legs and
-feet, (scraping and washing them clean,) and drawing the feet up quite
-to the breast, where they are tied together by a string.
-
-Pigeons, pheasants, partridges, &c., are all trussed as above, with the
-legs short.
-
-To draw a little roasting pig, cut the body open by one long slit, and
-before you take out what is inside, loosen it all with a sharp knife;
-then extract it with your hands. Empty the head also. Afterwards wash
-the animal clean, (inside and out,) and fill the vacancy with stuffing.
-Having bent the knees under, skewer the legs to the body, and secure
-the stuffing by tying twine tightly several times round the body; first
-fastening the slit by pinning it with a wooden skewer. Having boiled
-the liver and heart, chop them to enrich the gravy.
-
-
-FIGURES EXPLANATORY OF THE PIECES INTO WHICH THE FIVE LARGE ANIMALS ARE
-DIVIDED BY THE BUTCHERS.
-
-[Illustration: _Beef_
-
- 1. Sirloin.
- 2. Rump.
- 3. Edge Bone.
- 4. Buttock.
- 5. Mouse Buttock.
- 6. Leg.
- 7. Thick Flank.
- 8. Veiny Piece.
- 9. Thin Flank.
- 10. Fore Rib: 7 Ribs.
- 11. Middle Rib: 4 Ribs
- 12. Chuck Rib: 2 Ribs.
- 13. Brisket.
- 14. Shoulder, or Leg of Mutton Piece.
- 15. Clod.
- 16. Neck, or Sticking Piece.
- 17. Shin.
- 18. Cheek.
-]
-
-[Illustration: _Veal._
-
- 1. Loin, Best End.
- 2. Fillet.
- 3. Loin, Chump End.
- 4. Hind Knuckle.
- 5. Neck, Best End.
- 6. Breast, Best End.
- 7. Blade Bone.
- 8. Fore Knuckle.
- 9. Breast, Brisket End.
- 10. Neck, Scrag End.
-]
-
-[Illustration: _Mutton._
-
- 1. Leg.
- 2. Shoulder.
- 3. Loin, Best End.
- 4 Loin. Chump End
- 5. Neck. Best End.
- 6. Breast.
- 7. Neck, Scrag End.
-
-_Note._ A Chine is two Loins; and a Saddle is two Loins and two Necks
-of the Best End.]
-
-[Illustration: _Pork._
-
- 1. Leg.
- 2. Hind Loin.
- 3. Fore Loin.
- 4. Spare Rib.
- 5. Hand.
- 6. Spring.
-]
-
-[Illustration: _Venison._
-
- 1. Shoulder.
- 2. Neck.
- 3. Haunch.
- 4. Breast.
- 5. Scrag.
-]
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Acid salt, 427.
-
- Almond cake, 346.
-
- Almond custard, 316.
-
- Almond ice-cream, 326.
-
- Almond maccaroons, 351.
-
- Almond pudding, 286.
-
- Another almond pudding, 286.
-
- Anchovy catchup, 174.
-
- Anchovy sauce, 164.
-
- Anniseed cordial, 401.
-
- Apees, 354.
-
- Apples, baked, 252.
-
- Apple butter, 253.
-
- Apple butter, without cider, 434.
-
- Apple custard, 315.
-
- Apple dumplings, 307.
-
- Apple fritters, 312.
-
- Apple jelly, 253.
-
- Apple and other pies, 281.
-
- Apple pot-pie, 434.
-
- Apples, preserved, 251.
-
- Apple pudding, baked, 305.
-
- Apple pudding, boiled, 306.
-
- Apple sauce, 168.
-
- Apple water, 417.
-
- Apricots, preserved, 247.
-
- Arrow-root blancmange, 329.
-
- Arrow-root jelly, 411.
-
- Arrow-root pudding, 291.
-
- Artichokes, to boil, 195.
-
- Asparagus, to boil, 199.
-
- Asparagus soup, 35.
-
-
- Balm of Gilead oil, 425.
-
- Barberry jelly, 270.
-
- Barberries, to pickle, 217.
-
- Barley water, 414.
-
- Bath buns, 344.
-
- Bean soup, 33.
-
- Beans, (dried,) to boil, 197.
-
- Beans, (green or French,) to boil, 197.
-
- Beans, (green,) to pickle, 215.
-
- Beans, (Lima,) to boil, and dry, 197.
-
- Beans, (scarlet,) to boil, 197.
-
- Beef, remarks on, 68.
-
- Beef, a la mode, 78.
-
- Beef, baked, 71.
-
- Beef bouilli, 82.
-
- Beef, (corned or salted,) to boil, 73.
-
- Beef cakes, 84.
-
- Beef, to corn, 89.
-
- Beef, to dry and smoke, 91.
-
- Beef dripping, to save, 71.
-
- Beef, hashed, 83.
-
- Beef's heart, roasted, 85.
-
- Beef's heart, stewed, 85.
-
- Beef kidney, to dress, 86.
-
- Beef, potted, 92.
-
- Beef, to roast, 69.
-
- Beef soup, fine, 17.
-
- Beef steaks, to broil, 74.
-
- Beef steaks, to fry, 76.
-
- Beef steak pie, 77.
-
- Beef steak pudding, 76.
-
- Beef, to stew, 80.
-
- Beef, (a round of,) to stew, 80.
-
- Beef, (a round of,) to stew another way, 81.
-
- Beef and tongues, to pickle, 90.
-
- Beef tea, 414.
-
- Beets, to boil, 196.
-
- Beets, to stew, 197.
-
- Beer, (molasses,) 392.
-
- Beer, (sassafras,) 392.
-
- Biscuit, (milk,) 361.
-
- Biscuit, (soda,) 371.
-
- Biscuit, (sugar,) 361.
-
- Biscuit, (tea,) 372.
-
- Bitters, 419.
-
- Black cake, 338.
-
- Black-fish, to stew, 431.
-
- Blanc-mange, 327.
-
- Blanc-mange, (arrow-root,) 329.
-
- Blanc-mange, (carrageen,) 328.
-
- Bottled small beer, 408.
-
- Bran bread, 377.
-
- Bread, 374.
-
- Bread, (rye and Indian,) 377.
-
- Bread cake, 350.
-
- Bread jelly, 411.
-
- Bread pudding, baked, 299.
-
- Bread pudding, boiled, 298.
-
- Bread and butter pudding, 299.
-
- Bread sauce, 167.
-
- Broccoli, to boil, 188.
-
- Brown soup, rich, 26.
-
- Buckwheat cakes, 367.
-
- Burnet vinegar, 179.
-
- Burns, remedy for, 420.
-
- Butter, to brown, 163.
-
- Butter, melted or drawn, 163.
-
- Butter, to make, 379.
-
- Butter, to preserve, 381.
-
- Butternuts, to pickle, 218.
-
-
- Cabbage, to boil, 186.
-
- Cabbage, (red,) to pickle, 226.
-
- Cale-cannon, 187.
-
- Calf's feet broth, 415.
-
- Calf's feet, to fry, 103.
-
- Calf's feet jelly, 329.
-
- Calf's head, dressed plain, 100.
-
- Calf's head, hashed, 101.
-
- Calf's head soup, 30.
-
- Calf's liver, fried, 103.
-
- Calf's liver, larded, 103.
-
- Cantelope, preserved, 236.
-
- Caper sauce, 168.
-
- Capillaire, 403.
-
- Carrots, to boil, 189.
-
- Carrot pudding, 290.
-
- Carp, to stew, 55.
-
- Carrageen blanc-mange, 328.
-
- Catfish soup, 36.
-
- Cauliflower, to boil, 187.
-
- Cauliflower, to pickle, 225.
-
- Cayenne pepper, 182.
-
- Celery, to prepare for table, 204.
-
- Celery sauce, 165.
-
- Celery vinegar, 179.
-
- Charlotte, (plum,) 321.
-
- Charlotte, (raspberry,) 320.
-
- Cheese, to make, 382.
-
- Cheese, (cottage,) 386.
-
- Cheese, (sage,) 385.
-
- Cheese, (Stilton,) 385.
-
- Cheesecake, (almond,) 294.
-
- Cheesecake, (common,) 295.
-
- Cherry bounce, 398.
-
- Cherry cordial, 451.
-
- Cherries, (dried,) 270.
-
- Cherry jam, 270.
-
- Cherry jelly, 269.
-
- Cherries, preserved, 268.
-
- Citron melon slices, 269.
-
- Cherry shrub, 398.
-
- Chestnuts, to roast, 204.
-
- Chestnut pudding, 289.
-
- Chicken broth and panada, 416.
-
- Chickens, broiled, 142.
-
- Chicken croquets and rissoles, 143.
-
- Chicken curry, 146.
-
- Chicken dumplings or puddings, 309.
-
- Chickens, fricasseed, 143.
-
- Chicken jelly, 411.
-
- Chicken pie, 144.
-
- Chicken salad, 147.
-
- Chilblains, remedy for, 420.
-
- Chili vinegar, 180.
-
- Chitterlings, or calf's tripe, 102.
-
- Chocolate, to make, 387.
-
- Chocolate custard, 317.
-
- Chowder, 55.
-
- Cider cake, 347.
-
- Cider, (mulled,) 407.
-
- Cider vinegar, 409.
-
- Cider wine, 396.
-
- Cinderellas, or German puffs, 297.
-
- Citrons, to preserve, 234.
-
- Clam soup, 39.
-
- Clam soup, (plain,) 40.
-
- Clotted cream, 321.
-
- Cocoa, to prepare, 418.
-
- Cocoa shells, to boil, 418.
-
- Cocoa-nut cakes, 347.
-
- Cocoa-nut cakes, (white,) 353.
-
- Cocoa-nut custard, baked, 317.
-
- Cocoa-nut custard, boiled, 317.
-
- Cocoa-nut jumbles, 353.
-
- Cocoa-nut maccaroons, 352.
-
- Cocoa-nut pudding, 287.
-
- Cocoa-nut pudding, another way, 287.
-
- Codfish, (fresh,) to boil, 50.
-
- Codfish, (fresh,) to boil another way, 50.
-
- Codfish, salt, to boil, 49.
-
- Coffee, to make, 389.
-
- Coffee, (French,) 390.
-
- Cold cream, 426.
-
- Cold slaw, 226.
-
- Cold sweet sauce, 170.
-
- Cologne water, 423.
-
- Colouring for confectionary, 333.
-
- Corn, (Indian,) to boil, 192.
-
- Corn, (green,) pudding, 290.
-
- Corns, remedy for, 421.
-
- Cosmetic paste, 427.
-
- Crab-apples, (green,) to preserve, 254.
-
- Crab-apples, (red,) to preserve, 255.
-
- Crabs, (cold,) 65.
-
- Crabs, (hot,) 65.
-
- Crabs, (soft,) 66.
-
- Cranberries, to preserve, 264.
-
- Cranberry sauce, 169.
-
- Cream cake, 372.
-
- Cream, (lemon,) 321.
-
- Cream, (orange,) 321.
-
- Cream, to preserve, 322.
-
- Cream sauce, 170.
-
- Cucumbers, to dress raw, 194.
-
- Cucumbers, to fry, 194.
-
- Cucumbers, to pickle, 213.
-
- Cup cake, 354.
-
- Curacoa, 435.
-
- Curds and whey, 322.
-
- Currant jelly, (black,) 265.
-
- Currant jelly, (red,) 264.
-
- Currant jelly, (white,) 265.
-
- Currant shrub, 397.
-
- Currant wine, 394.
-
- Custard, (boiled,) 314.
-
- Custard, (plain,) 313.
-
- Custard, (rice,) 314.
-
- Custard, (soft,) 314.
-
- Custard pudding, 300.
-
-
- Dough nuts, 358.
-
- Ducks, to hash, 150.
-
- Ducks, to stew, 150.
-
- Ducks, to roast, 149.
-
- Dumplings, (apple,) 307.
-
- Dumplings, (light,) 311.
-
- Dumplings, (plain suet,) 310.
-
- Dumplings, (fine suet,) 309.
-
- Dumplings, (Indian,) 310.
-
- Durable ink, 429.
-
- Durable ink, another way, 430.
-
-
- Eastern pudding, 306.
-
- Eggs, to boil for breakfast, 207.
-
- Eggs, to fricassee, 208.
-
- Eggs, to keep, 206.
-
- Eggs with ham, 123.
-
- Egg nogg, 407.
-
- Eggs, to pack, 268.
-
- Eggs, to pickle, 432.
-
- Egg plant, to stew, 193.
-
- Egg plant, to fry, 193.
-
- Egg plant, stuffed, 194.
-
- Eggs, raw, 419.
-
- Egg sauce, 167.
-
- Election cake, 348.
-
- Elder-berry wine, 395.
-
- Elder-flower wine, 396.
-
- Essence of lemon peel, 408.
-
- Essence of peppermint, 419.
-
- Eve's pudding, 296.
-
-
- Family soup, 15.
-
- Federal cakes, 350.
-
- Flannel cakes, 367.
-
- Flax-seed lemonade, 418.
-
- Floating island, 320.
-
- Flour, to brown, 163.
-
- Flour hasty-pudding, 301.
-
- Force-meat balls, 161.
-
- Fowls, to boil, 141.
-
- Fowls, to roast, 142.
-
- Fox-grape shrub, 397.
-
- Friar's chicken, 36.
-
- Fritters, (apple,) 312.
-
- Fritters, (plain,) 311.
-
- Frosted fruit, 271.
-
- Fruit queen-cakes, 342.
-
-
- General sauce, 173.
-
- Gherkins, to pickle, 214.
-
- Ginger, to preserve, 233.
-
- Ginger beer, 391.
-
- Ginger plum-cake, 364.
-
- Gingerbread, (common,) 362.
-
- Gingerbread nuts, 363.
-
- Gingerbread, (Franklin,) 364.
-
- Gingerbread, (white,) 362.
-
- Gooseberries, bottled, 262.
-
- Gooseberry custard, 316.
-
- Gooseberry fool, 261.
-
- Gooseberries, to preserve, 260.
-
- Gooseberries, to stew, 261.
-
- Gooseberry wine, 393.
-
- Goose pie, 152.
-
- Goose pie for Christmas, 153.
-
- Goose, to roast, 151.
-
- Grapes, in brandy, 266.
-
- Grapes, (wild,) to keep, 267.
-
- Grape jelly, 266.
-
- Gravy, (drawn or made,) 162.
-
- Gravy soup, (clear,) 22.
-
- Ground nuts, to roast, 205.
-
- Ground rice milk, 414.
-
- Grouse, to roast, 158.
-
- Gruel, to make, 413.
-
- Gruel, oatmeal, 413.
-
-
- Halibut, to boil, 46.
-
- Halibut cutlets, 47.
-
- Ham, to boil, 124.
-
- Ham, to broil, 123.
-
- Ham or bacon, directions for curing, 126.
-
- Ham, (to glaze,) 132.
-
- Ham dumplings, 311.
-
- Ham pie, 122.
-
- Ham sandwiches, 123.
-
- Ham, to roast, 126.
-
- Ham, (Westphalia,) to imitate, 131.
-
- Hare or rabbit soup, 28.
-
- Hare, to roast, 137.
-
- Harvey's sauce, 173.
-
- Herbs, to dry, 436.
-
- Hominy, to boil, 192.
-
- Honey cake, 356.
-
- Horseradish vinegar, 180.
-
- Huckleberry cake, 350.
-
- Hungary water, 424.
-
-
- Ice cream, (almond,) 326.
-
- Ice cream, (lemon,) 322.
-
- Ice cream, (pine apple,) 325.
-
- Ice cream, (raspberry,) 325.
-
- Ice cream, (strawberry,) 325.
-
- Ice cream, (vanilla,) 325.
-
- Ice lemonade, 326.
-
- Ice orangeade, 326.
-
- Icing for cakes, 338.
-
- Indian batter cakes, 368.
-
- Indian corn, to boil, 192.
-
- Indian dumplings, 310.
-
- Indian flappers, 369.
-
- Indian muffins, 369.
-
- Indian mush, 301.
-
- Indian mush cakes, 368.
-
- Indian pound cake, 340.
-
- Indian pudding, baked, 302.
-
- Indian pudding, boiled, 302.
-
- Indian pudding without eggs, 303.
-
- Italian Cream, 332.
-
-
- Jaune-mange, 329.
-
- Jelly cake, 344.
-
- Johnny cake, 369.
-
- Julienne (a la) soup, 23.
-
-
- Kid, to roast, 136.
-
- Kitchen pepper, 182.
-
- Kitchiner's fish-sauce, 172.
-
- Kisses, 354.
-
-
- Lady cake, 342.
-
- Lamb, to roast, 112.
-
- Larding, 160.
-
- Lavender, compound, 421.
-
- Lavender water, 423.
-
- Laudanum, antidote to, 422.
-
- Lead water, 420.
-
- Lemon brandy, 402.
-
- Lemon catchup, 177.
-
- Lemon cordial, 399.
-
- Lemon cream, 321.
-
- Lemon custard, 315.
-
- Lemon juice, to keep, 408.
-
- Lemon peel, to keep, 437.
-
- Lemon peel, (essence of,) 408.
-
- Lemons, preserved, 241.
-
- Lemon pudding, 285.
-
- Lemon syrup, 398.
-
- Lemonade, 404.
-
- Lettuce or salad, to dress, 203.
-
- Lip salve, 426.
-
- Liver dumplings, 310.
-
- Liver puddings, 128.
-
- Lobster, to boil, 61.
-
- Lobster catchup, 174.
-
- Lobster, to fricassee, 62.
-
- Lobster, to dress cold, 61.
-
- Lobster, pickled, 67.
-
- Lobster, potted, 63.
-
- Lobster pie, 64.
-
- Lobster sauce, 164.
-
- Lobster soup, 37.
-
- Lobster, to stew, 62.
-
-
- Maccaroni, to dress, 210.
-
- Maccaroni soup, 24.
-
- Maccaroni soup, (rich,) 24.
-
- Maccaroons, (almond,) 351.
-
- Maccaroons, (cocoa-nut,) 352.
-
- Maccaroon custard, 318.
-
- Mackerel, to boil, 48.
-
- Mackerel, to broil, 47.
-
- Mangoes, to pickle, 216.
-
- Marbled veal, 105.
-
- Marlborough pudding, 294.
-
- Marmalade cake, 355.
-
- Mead, 397.
-
- Meg Merrilies' soup, 27.
-
- Milk biscuit, 361.
-
- Milk punch, 405.
-
- Milk soup, 25.
-
- Mince pies, 282.
-
- Mince meat, 283.
-
- Mince meat for Lent, 284.
-
- Mince meat, (very plain,) 284.
-
- Minced oysters, 431.
-
- Mint sauce, 167.
-
- Molasses beer, 392.
-
- Molasses candy, 365.
-
- Molasses posset, 407.
-
- Moravian sugar-cake, 349.
-
- Morella cherries, to pickle, 217.
-
- Mock oysters of corn, 193.
-
- Mock turtle, or calf's head soup, 30.
-
- Muffins, (common,) 370.
-
- Muffins, (Indian,) 369.
-
- Muffins, (water,) 370.
-
- Mulled cider, 407.
-
- Mulled wine, 407.
-
- Mulligatawny soup, 29.
-
- Mush, (Indian,) to make, 301.
-
- Mush cakes, 368.
-
- Mushrooms, to broil, 202.
-
- Mushroom catchup, 176.
-
- Mushrooms, to pickle brown, 223.
-
- Mushrooms, to pickle white, 222.
-
- Mushroom sauce, 166.
-
- Mushrooms, to stew, 201.
-
- Musquito bites, remedy for, 421.
-
- Mustard, (common,) 181.
-
- Mustard, (French,) 181.
-
- Mustard, (keeping.) 181.
-
- Mutton, to boil, 107.
-
- Mutton broth, 414.
-
- Mutton broth made quickly, 415.
-
- Mutton, (casserole of,) 111.
-
- Mutton chops, broiled, 108.
-
- Mutton chops, stewed, 110.
-
- Mutton cutlets, a la Maintenon, 109.
-
- Mutton harico, 111.
-
- Mutton, hashed, 110.
-
- Mutton, (leg of,) stewed, 111.
-
- Mutton, to roast, 106.
-
- Mutton soup, (including cabbage and noodle soups,) 19.
-
-
- Nasturtians, to pickle, 217.
-
- Nasturtian sauce, 165.
-
- New York cookies, 360.
-
- Nougat, 365.
-
- Noyau, 402.
-
-
- Oatmeal gruel, 413.
-
- Ochra soup, 32.
-
- Oil of flowers, 425.
-
- Omelet, (plain,) 209.
-
- Omelet souffle, 209.
-
- Onions, to boil, 198.
-
- Onions, to fry, 199.
-
- Onions, to pickle, 221.
-
- Onions, pickled white, 222.
-
- Onions, to roast, 198.
-
- Onion sauce, (brown,) 166.
-
- Onion sauce, (white,) 166.
-
- Onion soup, 416.
-
- Orangeade, 404.
-
- Orange cream, 321.
-
- Orange jelly, 243.
-
- Orange marmalade, 243.
-
- Orange pudding, 285.
-
- Orgeat, 403.
-
- Ortolans, to roast, 159.
-
- Oyster catchup, 185.
-
- Oysters, fried, 57.
-
- Oyster fritters, 59.
-
- Oysters, minced, 431.
-
- Oysters, pickled, 57.
-
- Oysters, pickled for keeping, 228.
-
- Oyster pie, 60.
-
- Oysters, scolloped, 58.
-
- Oysters, stewed, 59.
-
- Oyster soup, 38.
-
- Oyster soup, (plain,) 38.
-
- Ox-tail soup, 32.
-
- Oyster Sauce, 170.
-
-
- Panada, 413.
-
- Panada, (chicken,) 416.
-
- Pancakes, (plain,) 312.
-
- Pancakes, (sweetmeat,) 313.
-
- Parsley, to pickle, 215.
-
- Parsley sauce, 168.
-
- Parsnips, to boil, 190.
-
- Partridges, to roast, 158.
-
- Partridges, to roast another way, 158.
-
- Paste, (dripping,) 275.
-
- Paste, (lard,) 275.
-
- Paste, (the best plain,) 272.
-
- Paste, (potato,) 276.
-
- Paste, (fine puff,) 276.
-
- Paste, (suet,) 274.
-
- Paste, (sweet,) 277.
-
- Peaches, (in brandy,) 245.
-
- Peach cordial, 401.
-
- Peaches, (dried,) 248.
-
- Peaches for common use, 245.
-
- Peach jelly, 247.
-
- Peach kernels, 437.
-
- Peach marmalade, 246.
-
- Peaches, to pickle, 217.
-
- Peaches, to preserve, 244.
-
- Peach sauce, 169.
-
- Peas, (green,) to boil, 198.
-
- Peas soup, 34.
-
- Peas soup, (green,) 34.
-
- Pears, to bake, 259.
-
- Pears, to preserve, 259.
-
- Peppers, (green,) to pickle, 214, 218.
-
- Peppers, (green,) to preserve, 238.
-
- Pepper pot, 87.
-
- Perch, to fry, 52.
-
- Pheasants, to roast, 158.
-
- Pheasants, to roast another way, 158.
-
- Pine-apple-ade, 410.
-
- Pies, 279.
-
- Pie crust, (common,) 274.
-
- Pies, (standing,) 280.
-
- Pies, (apple and other,) 281.
-
- Pickle, (East India,) 227.
-
- Pig, to roast, 115.
-
- Pig's feet and ears, soused, 131.
-
- Pigeon or chicken dumplings, 309.
-
- Pigeon pie, 157.
-
- Pigeons, to roast, 156.
-
- Pilau, 147.
-
- Pine-apple ice cream, 325.
-
- Pine-apples,(fresh,) to prepare for eating, 241.
-
- Pine-apples, to preserve, 240.
-
- Plovers, to roast, 159.
-
- Plum charlotte, 321.
-
- Plums for common use, 258.
-
- Plums, to preserve, 257.
-
- Plums,(egg,) to preserve whole, 258.
-
- Plums, (green gage,) to preserve, 256.
-
- Plum pudding, baked, 303.
-
- Plum pudding, boiled, 304.
-
- Poke, to boil, 200.
-
- Pomatum, (soft,) 426.
-
- Pork and beans, 120.
-
- Pork cheese, 130.
-
- Pork, (corned,) to boil, 118.
-
- Pork, (pickled,) to boil with peas pudding, 119.
-
- Pork cutlets, 121.
-
- Pork, (leg of,) to roast, 116.
-
- Pork, (loin of,) to roast, 117.
-
- Pork, (middling piece,) to roast, 117.
-
- Pork pie, 122.
-
- Pork steaks, 120.
-
- Pork, to stew, 118.
-
- Port wine jelly, 412.
-
- Pot pie, 145.
-
- Pot pie, (apple,) 434.
-
- Potatoes, to boil, 183.
-
- Potatoes, to fry, 185.
-
- Potatoes, roasted, 185.
-
- Potato pudding, 289.
-
- Potato snow, 185.
-
- Pound cake, 339.
-
- Prawns, to boil, 64.
-
- Prune pudding, 296.
-
- Pudding catchup, 435.
-
- Pumpkin, to boil, 191.
-
- Pumpkin chips, 238.
-
- Pumpkin pudding, 288.
-
- Pumpkin yeast, 378.
-
- Punch, 404.
-
- Punch, (frozen,) 405.
-
- Punch, (milk,) 405.
-
- Punch, (fine milk,) 405.
-
- Punch, (regent's,) 405.
-
- Punch, (Roman,) 405.
-
- Pyramid of tarts, 280.
-
- Pink sauce, 173.
-
-
- Quails, to roast, 158.
-
- Queen cake, 341.
-
- Quin's sauce for fish, 172.
-
- Quince cheese, 251.
-
- Quince cordial, 400.
-
- Quince jelly, 250.
-
- Quince marmalade, 250.
-
- Quinces, preserved, 248.
-
- Quinces, to preserve whole, 249.
-
- Quince pudding, 285.
-
-
- Rabbits, fricasseed, 138.
-
- Rabbits, to fry, 139.
-
- Rabbits, to stew, 138.
-
- Radishes, to prepare for table, 204.
-
- Radish pods, to pickle, 215.
-
- Raspberry charlotte, 320.
-
- Raspberry cordial, 180.
-
- Raspberry ice-cream, 325.
-
- Raspberry jam, 263.
-
- Raspberries, to preserve, 262.
-
- Raspberry vinegar, 180.
-
- Raspberry wine, 395.
-
- Ratafia, 403.
-
- Raw egg, 419.
-
- Reed birds, to roast, 159.
-
- Rennet whey, 415.
-
- Rhubarb tarts, 282.
-
- Rice, to boil, 202.
-
- Rice, to boil for curry, 146.
-
- Rice custard, 314.
-
- Rice cakes, 372.
-
- Rice dumplings, 308.
-
- Rice flummery, 433.
-
- Rice jelly, 412.
-
- Rice pudding, boiled, 293.
-
- Rice pudding, (farmer's,) 293.
-
- Rice pudding, (ground,) 291.
-
- Rice pudding, (plain,) 292.
-
- Rice pudding, (plum,) 292.
-
- Rice milk, 293.
-
- Rice milk, (ground,) 414.
-
- Ringworms, remedy for, 421.
-
- Rock-fish, to boil, 51.
-
- Rock-fish, to pickle, 52.
-
- Rolls, (common,) 373.
-
- Rolls, (French,) 373.
-
- Rose brandy, 402.
-
- Rhubarb jam, 271.
-
- Rose cordial, 399.
-
- Rose vinegar, 424.
-
- Rusk, 361.
-
- Russian or Swedish turnip, to boil, 190.
-
- Rye and Indian bread, 377.
-
-
- Soup a la Lucy, 489.
-
- Sago, 412.
-
- Sago pudding, 290.
-
- Salad, to dress, 203.
-
- Sour milk, 455.
-
- Salmon, (fresh,) to bake whole, 44.
-
- Salmon, (fresh,) to bake in slices, 44.
-
- Salmon, (fresh,) to boil, 43.
-
- Salmon, (pickled,) 45.
-
- Salmon, (smoked,) 46.
-
- Salmon steaks, 45.
-
- Sally Lunn cake, 371.
-
- Salsify, to dress, 195.
-
- Sandwiches, (ham,) 123.
-
- Sangaree, 407.
-
- Sassafras beer, 392.
-
- Sausage meat, (common,) 129.
-
- Sausages, (fine,) 129.
-
- Sausages, (Bologna,) 130.
-
- Savoy biscuits, 351.
-
- Scented bags, 428.
-
- Scotch cake, 356.
-
- Scotch queen-cake, 356.
-
- Scotch sauce for fish, 171.
-
- Sea bass or black-fish, boiled, 52.
-
- Sea bass, fried, 54.
-
- Sea catchup, 178.
-
- Sea kale, to boil, 199.
-
- Secrets, 355.
-
- Seidlitz powders, 419.
-
- Shad, baked, 50.
-
- Shad, to fry, 51.
-
- Shalot vinegar, 180.
-
- Shells, 278.
-
- Short cakes, 371.
-
- Shrub, (cherry,) 398.
-
- Shrub, (currant,) 397.
-
- Shrub, (fox-grape,) 397.
-
- Smelts, to fry, 431.
-
- Snowball custard, 315.
-
- Snipes, to roast, 157.
-
- Soda biscuit, 371.
-
- Soda water, 419.
-
- Spanish buns, 343.
-
- Spinach, to boil, 188.
-
- Spinach and eggs, 188.
-
- Sponge cake, 345.
-
- Spruce beer, 391.
-
- Squashes or cymlings, to boil, 191.
-
- Squash, (winter,) to boil, 191.
-
- Squash pudding, 288.
-
- Strawberries, preserved, 267.
-
- Strawberry ice-cream, 325.
-
- Strawberry cordial, 400.
-
- Sturgeon cutlets, 54.
-
- Sherry Cobler, 406.
-
- Suet pudding, 300.
-
- Sugar biscuit, 360.
-
- Sugar syrup, clarified, 232.
-
- Sweet basil vinegar, 179.
-
- Sweet jars, 428.
-
- Sweet sauce, (cold,) 170.
-
- Sweet potatoes, boiled, 186.
-
- Sweet potatoes, fried, 186.
-
- Sweet potato pudding, 289.
-
- Sweetbreads, to broil, 432.
-
- Sweetbreads, larded, 104.
-
- Sweetbreads, to roast, 104.
-
- Syllabub or whipt cream, 318.
-
- Syllabub, (country,) 319.
-
- Shrewsbury cake, 433.
-
-
- Tamarind water, 417.
-
- Tapioca, 412.
-
- Tarragon vinegar, 179.
-
- Tea, to make, 388.
-
- Terrapins, 66.
-
- Thieves' vinegar, 424.
-
- Toast and water, 417.
-
- Tomatas, to bake, 200.
-
- Tomata catchup, 177.
-
- Tomatas, to keep, 437.
-
- Tomatas, to pickle, 223.
-
- Tomatas, to stew, 200.
-
- Tomata soy, 224.
-
- Tongue, (salted or pickled,) to boil, 89.
-
- Tongue, (smoked,) to boil, 88.
-
- Trifle, 319.
-
- Tripe, to boil, 86.
-
- Tripe, to fry, 87.
-
- Tripe and oysters, 87.
-
- Trout, to boil, 54.
-
- Trout, to fry, 53.
-
- Turkey, to boil, 156.
-
- Turkey, to roast, 154.
-
- Turkish sherbet, 408.
-
- Turnips, to boil, 189.
-
-
- Veal, (breast of,) to stew, 95.
-
- Veal, (breast of,) to roast, 94.
-
- Veal cutlets, 97.
-
- Veal, (fillet of,) to stew, 96.
-
- Veal, (fillet of,) to roast, 94.
-
- Veal, (knuckle of,) to stew, 96.
-
- Veal, (loin of,) to roast, 93.
-
- Veal, (minced,) 98.
-
- Veal patties, 99.
-
- Veal pie, 99.
-
- Veal soup, 21.
-
- Veal soup, (rich,) 21.
-
- Veal steaks, 98.
-
- Veal or chicken tea, 414.
-
- Vegetable soup, 416.
-
- Venison hams, 136.
-
- Venison, (cold,) to hash, 134.
-
- Venison pasty, 135.
-
- Venison, to roast, 133.
-
- Venison soup, 28.
-
- Venison steaks, 135.
-
- Vermicelli soup, 25.
-
- Vinegar (cider,) 409.
-
- Vinegar, (sugar,) 410.
-
- Vinegar, (white,) 409.
-
- Violet perfume, 429.
-
-
- Wafer cakes, 357.
-
- Waffles, 359.
-
- Walnut catchup, 175.
-
- Walnuts, pickled black, 219.
-
- Walnuts, pickled green, 221.
-
- Walnuts, pickled white, 220.
-
- Warm slaw, 226.
-
- Warts, remedy for, 421.
-
- Washington cake, 347.
-
- Watermelon rind, to preserve, 237.
-
- Water souchy, 41.
-
- Welsh rabbit, 387.
-
- White soup, (rich,) 26.
-
- Wine jelly, 406.
-
- Wine sauce, 169.
-
- Wine whey, 415.
-
- Wonders or crullers, 357.
-
- Woodcocks, to roast, 159.
-
-
- Yam pudding, 289.
-
- Yeast, (bakers',) 379.
-
- Yeast, (bran,) 378.
-
- Yeast, (common,) 377.
-
- Yeast, (patent,) 435.
-
- Yeast, (pumpkin,) 378.
-
-
-
-
-NEW RECEIPTS.
-
-
- Almond bread, 448.
-
- Almond paste, 430.
-
- Apple bread pudding, 462.
-
- Apple custard, 463.
-
- Apple compote, 455.
-
- Apple dumplings, (baked,) 443.
-
- Apple pandowdy, 498.
-
- Apple pork, 504.
-
- Apple rice pudding, 443.
-
-
- Batter pudding, 440.
-
- Biscuit ice cream, 467.
-
- Blood, to stop, 422.
-
- Boston cream cakes, 458.
-
- Bran batter-cakes, 462.
-
-
- Calf's head soup, (fine,) 484.
-
- Calves' feet soup, 484.
-
- Carving, 490.
-
- Charlotte Polonaise, 454.
-
- Charlotte Russe, 452.
-
- Charlotte Russe, (fine,) 471.
-
- Cherry cordial, 451.
-
- Chicken salad, (French,) 481.
-
- Cider cake, (plain,) 445.
-
- Citron cakes, 457.
-
- Cinnamon cake, 501.
-
- Clams, (baked,) 486.
-
- Clam soup, (fine,) 486.
-
- Clove cakes, 460.
-
- Cocoa-nut candy, 491.
-
- Cocoa-nut pudding, (West India,) 464.
-
- Coffee custard, 472.
-
- Connecticut loaf cake, 459.
-
- Cookies, (fine,) 461.
-
- Corn starch blancmange, 500.
-
- Cream cheese, 447.
-
- Croquant cake, 478.
-
- Cucumbers, (preserved,) 442.
-
- Cup cake, (Indian,) 462.
-
- Custard cakes, 448.
-
-
- Farina, 502.
-
- Figs, (preserved,) 493.
-
- Fresh eggs, (to keep,) 488.
-
- Frozen custard, 450.
-
- Frozen meat, (to thaw,) 502.
-
-
- Gelatine jelly, 465.
-
- Giblet soup, 438.
-
- Gingerbread, (soft,) 461.
-
- Glycerine, 499.
-
- Grape water-ice, 470.
-
- Green corn muffins, 496.
-
- Green ointment, 422.
-
- Green pea soup, (French,) 438.
-
- Green tomatas, (preserved,) 492.
-
- Gumbo, 439.
-
- Gumbo soup, 432.
-
-
- Ham, (baked,) 496.
-
- Ham omelet, 439.
-
- Hashed veal, 480.
-
- Hoe cake, 445.
-
- Honey ginger-cake, 449.
-
- Honey paste for the hands, 449.
-
-
- Ice cream, (common,) 451.
-
- Indian loaf cake, 444.
-
-
- Keeping meat, &c., in summer, 502.
-
-
- Lemon drops, 366.
-
- Lemon syrup, (fine,) 477.
-
- Lemon water-ice, 469.
-
- Limes, or small lemons, (preserved,) 473.
-
-
- Maccaroon ice cream, 467.
-
- Milk toast, 446.
-
- Mint julep, 490.
-
- Molasses pie, 489.
-
- Mushroom sweetbreads, 497.
-
- Musquitoes, to keep off, 500.
-
- Myrtle oranges, to preserve, 493.
-
-
- Normandy soup, 482.
-
-
- Orange cake, 456.
-
- Orange drops, 476.
-
- Orange water-ice, 468.
-
- Oysters, (fine stewed,) 487.
-
- Oysters, (spiced,) 488.
-
-
- Pancake ham, 497.
-
- Peach leather, 271.
-
- Peach mangoes, 440.
-
- Peach water-ice, 470.
-
- Pearlash, to keep, 430.
-
- Peppermint drops, 366.
-
- Pine-apple marmalade, 476.
-
- Pine-apple water-ice, 470.
-
- Pink champagne jelly, 452.
-
- Potato yeast, 446.
-
- Poultry, (to draw, &c.,) 494.
-
- Pumpkin pie, (New England,) 464.
-
- Peaches, (to keep,) 495.
-
-
- Raspberry water-ice, 469.
-
- Rock cake, 449.
-
-
- Salt pork, (to stew,) 504.
-
- Sassafras mead, 478.
-
- Shad, (broiled,) 503.
-
- Strawberries, (to keep,) 494.
-
- Strawberry water-ice, 469.
-
- Sweet potatoes, (compote of,) 497.
-
-
- Tennessee muffins, 445.
-
- Toast, (to make,) 505.
-
- Tomatas, (broiled,) 441.
-
- Tomata catchup, (fine,) 479.
-
- Tomata honey, 441.
-
- Tomata pickles, (green,) 480.
-
- Tomata pickles, (red,) 480.
-
- Tomatas, (preserved,) 441.
-
- Tomata soup, 483.
-
-
- Union pudding, 490.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-
-Printer errors such as missing punctuation have been corrected
-silently. Mis-spellings have been corrected if they were deemed to be
-printer errors, but those deemed to be deliberate spelling variations
-have been retained.
-
-The following alterations have been made (the whole original line given
-for context):
-
- p.22 three large turnips, and slice them also. Wash clean and cu
- -- 't' added to final word 'cut'.
- p.38 oysters; and when it comes to a boil again, they will be
- sufciently -- 'sufciently' corrected to sufficiently.
- p.52 but into a cold place will keep a fortnight. -- 'but'
- corrected to 'put'.
- p.60 of it is too thick, thin it with some additional milk. --
- 'of' corrected to 'If'.
- p.83 ten minutes, but do not allow it to boil, lest (having beef
- -- 'beef' corrected to 'been'.
- p.87 hours till it is quite tender, cut it up into small pieces.
- Pu -- 't' added to final word 'Put'.
- p.89 great deal of salt well into it. Cover it carefully, and
- keen -- 'keen' corrected to 'keep'
- p.99 two pounds of flour. Divide it into two pieces, oll it out --
- 'oll' corrected to 'roll'.
- p.105 them to pieces and pound them to a paste in a mortar,
- moist-tening -- 'moist-tening' corrected to 'moistening'.
- p.112 tomatas or tomata catchup, and shred or powdered swee -- 't'
- added to final word 'sweet'.
- p.130 cloves; and one clove or garlic minced very fine. -- 'or'
- corrected to 'of'.
- p.148 will become tough and hard. After you pour it on, mix the
- the -- extra 'the' removed.
- p.156 of cream or rich mllk, and the beaten yolks of three --
- 'mllk' corrected to 'milk'.
- p.162 If must be stewed for a long time, skimmed, strained,
- thickened, -- 'If' corrected to 'It'.
- p.174 In using this catchup, allow four table-spoonfuls to a
- common-seized -- 'common-seized' corrected to 'common-sized'.
- p.198 before roasting. Take large onions, place them on a ho --
- 't' added to final word 'hot'.
- p.210 a iittle at a time. Keep stirring it gently, and continue
- to do -- 'iittle' corrected to 'little'.
- p.291 &c. Add the spice, and lastly the currants; having dredges
- -- 'dredges' corrected to 'dredged'.
- p.293 pound of brown sugar, and a table-spooonful of powdered
- cinnamon. -- 'table-spooonful' corrected to 'table-spoonful'.
- p.301 being long and thoroughly boiled. If sufficienlty cooked,
- it is -- 'sufficienlty' corrected to 'sufficiently'.
- p.327 Instead of using a figure-mould, you may set it to congea.
- -- 'congea.' corrected to 'congeal'.
- p.359 ones that are to hold four at a time; as the wafflles baked
- in -- 'wafflles' corrected to 'waffles'.
- p.365 almond into two slips. Spread them over a lage dish, and --
- 'lage' corrected to 'large'.
- p.367 melted; then stir it well, and set it away too cool. Beat
- five -- 'too' corrected to 'to'.
- p.393 let it ferment at the bung-hole; filling it up as as it
- works out -- extra 'as' removed.
- p.405 is a mixture of brandy or rum, sugar, milk and nutmeg,
- with-without -- 'with-without' is probably an error but has been
- left uncorrected as the intention is unclear.
- p.425 jasmine, wall-flower, tuberose, magnolia blossoms, or and --
- 'and' corrected to 'any'.
- p.445 in three-quarters of a pound of powdered white sugar, an --
- 'd' added to final word 'and' (scan unclear).
- p.445 melt a small tea-spoonful of sal-aratus or pearl-ash in a
- pi -- 'nt' added to final word 'pint' (scan unclear).
- p.463 interpersed (as above) with bits of butter, and layers of
- grated -- 'interpersed' corrected to 'interspersed'.
- p.468 After it has congealed in the freezer, yon may transfer it
- to -- 'yon' (upside-down u) corrected to 'you'.
-
-
-Added index:
-
- Acid salt, 427.
-
- Almond bread, 448.
-
- Almond cake, 346.
-
- Almond custard, 316.
-
- Almond ice-cream, 326.
-
- Almond maccaroons, 351.
-
- Almond paste, 430.
-
- Almond pudding, 286.
-
- Anchovy catchup, 174.
-
- Anchovy sauce, 164.
-
- Anniseed cordial, 401
-
- Another almond pudding, 286.
-
- Apees, 354.
-
- Apple and other pies, 281.
-
- Apple bread pudding, 462.
-
- Apple butter, 253.
-
- Apple butter, without cider, 434.
-
- Apple compote, 455.
-
- Apple custard, 315.
-
- Apple custard, 463.
-
- Apple dumplings, (baked,) 443.
-
- Apple dumplings, 307.
-
- Apple fritters, 312.
-
- Apple jelly, 253.
-
- Apple pandowdy, 498.
-
- Apple pork, 504.
-
- Apple pot-pie, 434.
-
- Apple pudding, baked, 305.
-
- Apple pudding, boiled, 306.
-
- Apple rice pudding, 443.
-
- Apple sauce, 168.
-
- Apple water, 417.
-
- Apples, baked, 252.
-
- Apples, preserved, 251.
-
- Apricots, preserved, 247.
-
- Arrow-root blancmange, 329.
-
- Arrow-root jelly, 411.
-
- Arrow-root pudding, 291.
-
- Artichokes, to boil, 195.
-
- Asparagus soup, 35.
-
- Asparagus, to boil, 199.
-
-
- Balm of Gilead oil, 425.
-
- Barberries, to pickle, 217.
-
- Barberry jelly, 270.
-
- Barley water, 414.
-
- Bath buns, 344.
-
- Batter pudding, 440.
-
- Bean soup, 33.
-
- Beans, (dried,) to boil, 197.
-
- Beans, (green or French,) to boil, 197.
-
- Beans, (green,) to pickle, 215.
-
- Beans, (Lima,) to boil, and dry, 197.
-
- Beans, (scarlet,) to boil, 197.
-
- Beef and tongues, to pickle, 90.
-
- Beef bouilli, 82.
-
- Beef cakes, 84.
-
- Beef dripping, to save, 71.
-
- Beef kidney, to dress, 86.
-
- Beef soup, fine, 17.
-
- Beef steak pie, 77.
-
- Beef steak pudding, 76.
-
- Beef steaks, to broil, 74.
-
- Beef steaks, to fry, 76.
-
- Beef tea, 414.
-
- Beef's heart, roasted, 85.
-
- Beef's heart, stewed, 85.
-
- Beef, (a round of,) to stew another way, 81.
-
- Beef, (a round of,) to stew, 80.
-
- Beef, (corned or salted,) to boil, 73.
-
- Beef, baked, 71.
-
- Beef, hashed, 83.
-
- Beef, potted, 92.
-
- Beef, remarks on, 68.
-
- Beef, to corn, 89.
-
- Beef, to dry and smoke, 91.
-
- Beef, to roast, 69.
-
- Beef, to stew, 80.
-
- Beef, a la mode, 78.
-
- Beer, (molasses,) 392.
-
- Beer, (sassafras,) 392.
-
- Beets, to boil, 196.
-
- Beets, to stew, 197.
-
- Biscuit ice cream, 467.
-
- Biscuit, (milk,) 361.
-
- Biscuit, (soda,) 371.
-
- Biscuit, (sugar,) 361.
-
- Biscuit, (tea,) 372.
-
- Bitters, 419.
-
- Black cake, 338.
-
- Black-fish, to stew, 431.
-
- Blanc-mange, (arrow-root,) 329.
-
- Blanc-mange, (carrageen,) 328.
-
- Blanc-mange, 327.
-
- Blood, to stop, 422.
-
- Boston cream cakes, 458.
-
- Bottled small beer, 408.
-
- Bran batter-cakes, 462.
-
- Bran bread, 377.
-
- Bread and butter pudding, 299.
-
- Bread cake, 350.
-
- Bread jelly, 411.
-
- Bread pudding, baked, 299.
-
- Bread pudding, boiled, 298.
-
- Bread sauce, 167.
-
- Bread, (rye and Indian,) 377.
-
- Bread, 374.
-
- Broccoli, to boil, 188.
-
- Brown soup, rich, 26.
-
- Buckwheat cakes, 367.
-
- Burnet vinegar, 179.
-
- Burns, remedy for, 420.
-
- Butter, melted or drawn, 163.
-
- Butter, to brown, 163.
-
- Butter, to make, 379.
-
- Butter, to preserve, 381.
-
- Butternuts, to pickle, 218.
-
- Cabbage, (red,) to pickle, 226.
-
- Cabbage, to boil, 186.
-
- Cale-cannon, 187.
-
- Calf's feet broth, 415.
-
- Calf's feet jelly, 329.
-
- Calf's feet, to fry, 103.
-
- Calf's head soup, (fine,) 484.
-
- Calf's head soup, 30.
-
- Calf's head, dressed plain, 100.
-
- Calf's head, hashed, 101.
-
- Calf's liver, fried, 103.
-
- Calf's liver, larded, 103.
-
- Calves' feet soup, 484.
-
- Cantelope, preserved, 236.
-
- Caper sauce, 168.
-
- Capillaire, 403.
-
- Carp, to stew, 55.
-
- Carrageen blanc-mange, 328.
-
- Carrot pudding, 290.
-
- Carrots, to boil, 189.
-
- Carving, 490.
-
- Catfish soup, 36.
-
- Cauliflower, to boil, 187.
-
- Cauliflower, to pickle, 225.
-
- Cayenne pepper, 182.
-
- Celery sauce, 165.
-
- Celery vinegar, 179.
-
- Celery, to prepare for table, 204.
-
- Charlotte Polonaise, 454.
-
- Charlotte Russe, (fine,) 471.
-
- Charlotte Russe, 452.
-
- Charlotte, (plum,) 321.
-
- Charlotte, (raspberry,) 320.
-
- Cheese, (cottage,) 386.
-
- Cheese, (sage,) 385.
-
- Cheese, (Stilton,) 385.
-
- Cheese, to make, 382.
-
- Cheesecake, (almond,) 294.
-
- Cheesecake, (common,) 295.
-
- Cherries, (dried,) 270.
-
- Cherries, preserved, 268.
-
- Cherry bounce, 398.
-
- Cherry cordial, 451.
-
- Cherry cordial, 451.
-
- Cherry jam, 270.
-
- Cherry jelly, 269.
-
- Cherry shrub, 398.
-
- Chestnut pudding, 289.
-
- Chestnuts, to roast, 204.
-
- Chicken broth and panada, 416.
-
- Chicken croquets and rissoles, 143.
-
- Chicken curry, 146.
-
- Chicken dumplings or puddings, 309.
-
- Chicken jelly, 411.
-
- Chicken pie, 144.
-
- Chicken salad, (French,) 481.
-
- Chicken salad, 147.
-
- Chickens, broiled, 142.
-
- Chickens, fricasseed, 143.
-
- Chilblains, remedy for, 420.
-
- Chili vinegar, 180.
-
- Chitterlings, or calf's tripe, 102.
-
- Chocolate custard, 317.
-
- Chocolate, to make, 387.
-
- Chowder, 55.
-
- Cider cake, (plain,) 445.
-
- Cider cake, 347.
-
- Cider vinegar, 409.
-
- Cider wine, 396.
-
- Cider, (mulled,) 407.
-
- Cinderellas, or German puffs, 297.
-
- Cinnamon cake, 501.
-
- Citron cakes, 457.
-
- Citron melon slices, 269.
-
- Citrons, to preserve, 234.
-
- Clam soup, (fine,) 486.
-
- Clam soup, (plain,) 40.
-
- Clam soup, 39.
-
- Clams, (baked,) 486.
-
- Clotted cream, 321.
-
- Clove cakes, 460.
-
- Cocoa shells, to boil, 418.
-
- Cocoa, to prepare, 418.
-
- Cocoa-nut cakes, (white,) 353.
-
- Cocoa-nut cakes, 347.
-
- Cocoa-nut candy, 491.
-
- Cocoa-nut custard, baked, 317.
-
- Cocoa-nut custard, boiled, 317.
-
- Cocoa-nut jumbles, 353.
-
- Cocoa-nut maccaroons, 352.
-
- Cocoa-nut pudding, (West India,) 464.
-
- Cocoa-nut pudding, 287.
-
- Cocoa-nut pudding, another way, 287.
-
- Codfish, (fresh,) to boil another way, 50.
-
- Codfish, (fresh,) to boil, 50.
-
- Codfish, salt, to boil, 49.
-
- Coffee custard, 472.
-
- Coffee, (French,) 390.
-
- Coffee, to make, 389.
-
- Cold cream, 426.
-
- Cold slaw, 226.
-
- Cold sweet sauce, 170.
-
- Cologne water, 423.
-
- Colouring for confectionary, 333.
-
- Connecticut loaf cake, 459.
-
- Cookies, (fine,) 461.
-
- Corn starch blancmange, 500.
-
- Corn, (green,) pudding, 290.
-
- Corn, (Indian,) to boil, 192.
-
- Corns, remedy for, 421.
-
- Cosmetic paste, 427.
-
- Crab-apples, (green,) to preserve, 254.
-
- Crab-apples, (red,) to preserve, 255.
-
- Crabs, (cold,) 65.
-
- Crabs, (hot,) 65.
-
- Crabs, (soft,) 66.
-
- Cranberries, to preserve, 264.
-
- Cranberry sauce, 169.
-
- Cream cake, 372.
-
- Cream cheese, 447.
-
- Cream sauce, 170.
-
- Cream, (lemon,) 321.
-
- Cream, (orange,) 321.
-
- Cream, to preserve, 322.
-
- Croquant cake, 478.
-
- Cucumbers, (preserved,) 442.
-
- Cucumbers, to dress raw, 194.
-
- Cucumbers, to fry, 194.
-
- Cucumbers, to pickle, 213.
-
- Cup cake, (Indian,) 462.
-
- Cup cake, 354.
-
- Curacoa, 435.
-
- Curds and whey, 322.
-
- Currant jelly, (black,) 265.
-
- Currant jelly, (red,) 264.
-
- Currant jelly, (white,) 265.
-
- Currant shrub, 397.
-
- Currant wine, 394.
-
- Custard cakes, 448.
-
- Custard pudding, 300.
-
- Custard, (boiled,) 314.
-
- Custard, (plain,) 313.
-
- Custard, (rice,) 314.
-
- Custard, (soft,) 314.
-
-
- Dough nuts, 358.
-
- Ducks, to hash, 150.
-
- Ducks, to roast, 149.
-
- Ducks, to stew, 150.
-
- Dumplings, (apple,) 307.
-
- Dumplings, (fine suet,) 309.
-
- Dumplings, (Indian,) 310.
-
- Dumplings, (light,) 311.
-
- Dumplings, (plain suet,) 310.
-
- Durable ink, 429.
-
- Durable ink, another way, 430.
-
-
- Eastern pudding, 306.
-
- Egg nogg, 407.
-
- Egg plant, stuffed, 194.
-
- Egg plant, to fry, 193.
-
- Egg plant, to stew, 193.
-
- Egg sauce, 167.
-
- Eggs with ham, 123.
-
- Eggs, raw, 419.
-
- Eggs, to boil for breakfast, 207.
-
- Eggs, to fricassee, 208.
-
- Eggs, to keep, 206.
-
- Eggs, to pack, 268.
-
- Eggs, to pickle, 432.
-
- Elder-berry wine, 395.
-
- Elder-flower wine, 396.
-
- Election cake, 348.
-
- Essence of lemon peel, 408.
-
- Essence of peppermint, 419.
-
- Eve's pudding, 296.
-
-
- Family soup, 15.
-
- Farina, 502.
-
- Federal cakes, 350.
-
- Figs, (preserved,) 493.
-
- Flannel cakes, 367.
-
- Flax-seed lemonade, 418.
-
- Floating island, 320.
-
- Flour hasty-pudding, 301.
-
- Flour, to brown, 163.
-
- Force-meat balls, 161.
-
- Fowls, to boil, 141.
-
- Fowls, to roast, 142.
-
- Fox-grape shrub, 397.
-
- Fresh eggs, (to keep,) 488.
-
- Friar's chicken, 36.
-
- Fritters, (apple,) 312.
-
- Fritters, (plain,) 311.
-
- Frosted fruit, 271.
-
- Frozen custard, 450.
-
- Frozen meat, (to thaw,) 502.
-
- Fruit queen-cakes, 342.
-
-
- Gelatine jelly, 465.
-
- General sauce, 173.
-
- Gherkins, to pickle, 214.
-
- Giblet soup, 438.
-
- Ginger beer, 391.
-
- Ginger plum-cake, 364.
-
- Ginger, to preserve, 233.
-
- Gingerbread nuts, 363.
-
- Gingerbread, (common,) 362.
-
- Gingerbread, (Franklin,) 364.
-
- Gingerbread, (soft,) 461.
-
- Gingerbread, (white,) 362.
-
- Glycerine, 499.
-
- Goose pie for Christmas, 153.
-
- Goose pie, 152.
-
- Goose, to roast, 151.
-
- Gooseberries, bottled, 262.
-
- Gooseberries, to preserve, 260.
-
- Gooseberries, to stew, 261.
-
- Gooseberry custard, 316.
-
- Gooseberry fool, 261.
-
- Gooseberry wine, 393.
-
- Grape jelly, 266.
-
- Grape water-ice, 470.
-
- Grapes, (wild,) to keep, 267.
-
- Grapes, in brandy, 266.
-
- Gravy soup, (clear,) 22.
-
- Gravy, (drawn or made,) 162.
-
- Green corn muffins, 496.
-
- Green ointment, 422.
-
- Green pea soup, (French,) 438.
-
- Green tomatas, (preserved,) 492.
-
- Ground nuts, to roast, 205.
-
- Ground rice milk, 414.
-
- Grouse, to roast, 158.
-
- Gruel, oatmeal, 413.
-
- Gruel, to make, 413.
-
- Gumbo soup, 432.
-
- Gumbo, 439.
-
-
- Halibut cutlets, 47.
-
- Halibut, to boil, 46.
-
- Ham dumplings, 311.
-
- Ham omelet, 439.
-
- Ham or bacon, directions for curing, 126.
-
- Ham pie, 122.
-
- Ham sandwiches, 123.
-
- Ham, (baked,) 496.
-
- Ham, (to glaze,) 132.
-
- Ham, (Westphalia,) to imitate, 131.
-
- Ham, to boil, 124.
-
- Ham, to broil, 123.
-
- Ham, to roast, 126.
-
- Hare or rabbit soup, 28.
-
- Hare, to roast, 137.
-
- Harvey's sauce, 173.
-
- Hashed veal, 480.
-
- Herbs, to dry, 436.
-
- Hoe cake, 445.
-
- Hominy, to boil, 192.
-
- Honey cake, 356.
-
- Honey ginger-cake, 449.
-
- Honey paste for the hands, 449.
-
- Horseradish vinegar, 180.
-
- Huckleberry cake, 350.
-
- Hungary water, 424.
-
-
- Ice cream, (almond,) 326.
-
- Ice cream, (common,) 451.
-
- Ice cream, (lemon,) 322.
-
- Ice cream, (pine apple,) 325.
-
- Ice cream, (raspberry,) 325.
-
- Ice cream, (strawberry,) 325.
-
- Ice cream, (vanilla,) 325.
-
- Ice lemonade, 326.
-
- Ice orangeade, 326.
-
- Icing for cakes, 338.
-
- Indian batter cakes, 368.
-
- Indian corn, to boil, 192.
-
- Indian dumplings, 310.
-
- Indian flappers, 369.
-
- Indian loaf cake, 444.
-
- Indian muffins, 369.
-
- Indian mush cakes, 368.
-
- Indian mush, 301.
-
- Indian pound cake, 340.
-
- Indian pudding without eggs, 303.
-
- Indian pudding, baked, 302.
-
- Indian pudding, boiled, 302.
-
- Italian Cream, 332.
-
-
- Jaune-mange, 329.
-
- Jelly cake, 344.
-
- Johnny cake, 369.
-
- Julienne (a la) soup, 23.
-
-
- Keeping meat, &c., in summer, 502.
-
- Kid, to roast, 136.
-
- Kisses, 354.
-
- Kitchen pepper, 182.
-
- Kitchiner's fish-sauce, 172.
-
-
- Lady cake, 342.
-
- Lamb, to roast, 112.
-
- Larding, 160.
-
- Laudanum, antidote to, 422.
-
- Lavender water, 423.
-
- Lavender, compound, 421.
-
- Lead water, 420.
-
- Lemon brandy, 402.
-
- Lemon catchup, 177.
-
- Lemon cordial, 399.
-
- Lemon cream, 321.
-
- Lemon custard, 315.
-
- Lemon drops, 366.
-
- Lemon juice, to keep, 408.
-
- Lemon peel, (essence of,) 408.
-
- Lemon peel, to keep, 437.
-
- Lemon pudding, 285.
-
- Lemon syrup, (fine,) 477.
-
- Lemon syrup, 398.
-
- Lemon water-ice, 469.
-
- Lemonade, 404.
-
- Lemons, preserved, 241.
-
- Lettuce or salad, to dress, 203.
-
- Limes, or small lemons, (preserved,) 473.
-
- Lip salve, 426.
-
- Liver dumplings, 310.
-
- Liver puddings, 128.
-
- Lobster catchup, 174.
-
- Lobster pie, 64.
-
- Lobster sauce, 164.
-
- Lobster soup, 37.
-
- Lobster, pickled, 67.
-
- Lobster, potted, 63.
-
- Lobster, to boil, 61.
-
- Lobster, to dress cold, 61.
-
- Lobster, to fricassee, 62.
-
- Lobster, to stew, 62.
-
-
- Maccaroni soup, (rich,) 24.
-
- Maccaroni soup, 24.
-
- Maccaroni, to dress, 210.
-
- Maccaroon custard, 318.
-
- Maccaroon ice cream, 467.
-
- Maccaroons, (almond,) 351.
-
- Maccaroons, (cocoa-nut,) 352.
-
- Mackerel, to boil, 48.
-
- Mackerel, to broil, 47.
-
- Mangoes, to pickle, 216.
-
- Marbled veal, 105.
-
- Marlborough pudding, 294.
-
- Marmalade cake, 355.
-
- Mead, 397.
-
- Meg Merrilies' soup, 27.
-
- Milk biscuit, 361.
-
- Milk punch, 405.
-
- Milk soup, 25.
-
- Milk toast, 446.
-
- Mince meat for Lent, 284.
-
- Mince meat, (very plain,) 284.
-
- Mince meat, 283.
-
- Mince pies, 282.
-
- Minced oysters, 431.
-
- Mint julep, 490.
-
- Mint sauce, 167.
-
- Mock oysters of corn, 193.
-
- Mock turtle, or calf's head soup, 30.
-
- Molasses beer, 392.
-
- Molasses candy, 365.
-
- Molasses pie, 489.
-
- Molasses posset, 407.
-
- Moravian sugar-cake, 349.
-
- Morella cherries, to pickle, 217.
-
- Muffins, (common,) 370.
-
- Muffins, (Indian,) 369.
-
- Muffins, (water,) 370.
-
- Mulled cider, 407.
-
- Mulled wine, 407.
-
- Mulligatawny soup, 29.
-
- Mush cakes, 368.
-
- Mush, (Indian,) to make, 301.
-
- Mushroom catchup, 176.
-
- Mushroom sauce, 166.
-
- Mushroom sweetbreads, 497.
-
- Mushrooms, to broil, 202.
-
- Mushrooms, to pickle brown, 223.
-
- Mushrooms, to pickle white, 222.
-
- Mushrooms, to stew, 201.
-
- Musquito bites, remedy for, 421.
-
- Musquitoes, to keep off, 500.
-
- Mustard, (common,) 181.
-
- Mustard, (French,) 181.
-
- Mustard, (keeping.) 181.
-
- Mutton broth made quickly, 415.
-
- Mutton broth, 414.
-
- Mutton chops, broiled, 108.
-
- Mutton chops, stewed, 110.
-
- Mutton cutlets, a la Maintenon, 109.
-
- Mutton harico, 111.
-
- Mutton soup, (including cabbage and noodle soups,) 19.
-
- Mutton, (casserole of,) 111.
-
- Mutton, (leg of,) stewed, 111.
-
- Mutton, hashed, 110.
-
- Mutton, to boil, 107.
-
- Mutton, to roast, 106.
-
- Myrtle oranges, to preserve, 493.
-
-
- Nasturtian sauce, 165.
-
- Nasturtians, to pickle, 217.
-
- New York cookies, 360.
-
- Normandy soup, 482.
-
- Nougat, 365.
-
- Noyau, 402.
-
-
- Oatmeal gruel, 413.
-
- Ochra soup, 32.
-
- Oil of flowers, 425.
-
- Omelet souffle, 209.
-
- Omelet, (plain,) 209.
-
- Onion sauce, (brown,) 166.
-
- Onion sauce, (white,) 166.
-
- Onion soup, 416.
-
- Onions, pickled white, 222.
-
- Onions, to boil, 198.
-
- Onions, to fry, 199.
-
- Onions, to pickle, 221.
-
- Onions, to roast, 198.
-
- Orange cake, 456.
-
- Orange cream, 321.
-
- Orange drops, 476.
-
- Orange jelly, 243.
-
- Orange marmalade, 243.
-
- Orange pudding, 285.
-
- Orange water-ice, 468.
-
- Orangeade, 404.
-
- Orgeat, 403.
-
- Ortolans, to roast, 159.
-
- Ox-tail soup, 32.
-
- Oyster catchup, 185.
-
- Oyster fritters, 59.
-
- Oyster pie, 60.
-
- Oyster Sauce, 170.
-
- Oyster soup, (plain,) 38.
-
- Oyster soup, 38.
-
- Oysters, (fine stewed,) 487.
-
- Oysters, (spiced,) 488.
-
- Oysters, fried, 57.
-
- Oysters, minced, 431.
-
- Oysters, pickled for keeping, 228.
-
- Oysters, pickled, 57.
-
- Oysters, scolloped, 58.
-
- Oysters, stewed, 59.
-
-
- Panada, (chicken,) 416.
-
- Panada, 413.
-
- Pancake ham, 497.
-
- Pancakes, (plain,) 312.
-
- Pancakes, (sweetmeat,) 313.
-
- Parsley sauce, 168.
-
- Parsley, to pickle, 215.
-
- Parsnips, to boil, 190.
-
- Partridges, to roast another way, 158.
-
- Partridges, to roast, 158.
-
- Paste, (dripping,) 275.
-
- Paste, (fine puff,) 276.
-
- Paste, (lard,) 275.
-
- Paste, (potato,) 276.
-
- Paste, (suet,) 274.
-
- Paste, (sweet,) 277.
-
- Paste, (the best plain,) 272.
-
- Peach cordial, 401.
-
- Peach jelly, 247.
-
- Peach kernels, 437.
-
- Peach leather, 271.
-
- Peach mangoes, 440.
-
- Peach marmalade, 246.
-
- Peach sauce, 169.
-
- Peach water-ice, 470.
-
- Peaches for common use, 245.
-
- Peaches, (dried,) 248.
-
- Peaches, (in brandy,) 245.
-
- Peaches, (to keep,) 495.
-
- Peaches, to pickle, 217.
-
- Peaches, to preserve, 244.
-
- Pearlash, to keep, 430.
-
- Pears, to bake, 259.
-
- Pears, to preserve, 259.
-
- Peas soup, (green,) 34.
-
- Peas soup, 34.
-
- Peas, (green,) to boil, 198.
-
- Pepper pot, 87.
-
- Peppermint drops, 366.
-
- Peppers, (green,) to pickle, 214, 218.
-
- Peppers, (green,) to preserve, 238.
-
- Perch, to fry, 52.
-
- Pheasants, to roast another way, 158.
-
- Pheasants, to roast, 158.
-
- Pickle, (East India,) 227.
-
- Pie crust, (common,) 274.
-
- Pies, (apple and other,) 281.
-
- Pies, (standing,) 280.
-
- Pies, 279.
-
- Pig's feet and ears, soused, 131.
-
- Pig, to roast, 115.
-
- Pigeon or chicken dumplings, 309.
-
- Pigeon pie, 157.
-
- Pigeons, to roast, 156.
-
- Pilau, 147.
-
- Pine-apple ice cream, 325.
-
- Pine-apple marmalade, 476.
-
- Pine-apple water-ice, 470.
-
- Pine-apple-ade, 410.
-
- Pine-apples, to preserve, 240.
-
- Pine-apples,(fresh,) to prepare for eating, 241.
-
- Pink champagne jelly, 452.
-
- Pink sauce, 173.
-
- Plovers, to roast, 159.
-
- Plum charlotte, 321.
-
- Plum pudding, baked, 303.
-
- Plum pudding, boiled, 304.
-
- Plums for common use, 258.
-
- Plums, (green gage,) to preserve, 256.
-
- Plums, to preserve, 257.
-
- Plums,(egg,) to preserve whole, 258.
-
- Poke, to boil, 200.
-
- Pomatum, (soft,) 426.
-
- Pork and beans, 120.
-
- Pork cheese, 130.
-
- Pork cutlets, 121.
-
- Pork pie, 122.
-
- Pork steaks, 120.
-
- Pork, (corned,) to boil, 118.
-
- Pork, (leg of,) to roast, 116.
-
- Pork, (loin of,) to roast, 117.
-
- Pork, (middling piece,) to roast, 117.
-
- Pork, (pickled,) to boil with peas pudding, 119.
-
- Pork, to stew, 118.
-
- Port wine jelly, 412.
-
- Pot pie, (apple,) 434.
-
- Pot pie, 145.
-
- Potato pudding, 289.
-
- Potato snow, 185.
-
- Potato yeast, 446.
-
- Potatoes, roasted, 185.
-
- Potatoes, to boil, 183.
-
- Potatoes, to fry, 185.
-
- Poultry, (to draw, &c.,) 494.
-
- Pound cake, 339.
-
- Prawns, to boil, 64.
-
- Prune pudding, 296.
-
- Pudding catchup, 435.
-
- Pumpkin chips, 238.
-
- Pumpkin pie, (New England,) 464.
-
- Pumpkin pudding, 288.
-
- Pumpkin yeast, 378.
-
- Pumpkin, to boil, 191.
-
- Punch, (fine milk,) 405.
-
- Punch, (frozen,) 405.
-
- Punch, (milk,) 405.
-
- Punch, (regent's,) 405.
-
- Punch, (Roman,) 405.
-
- Punch, 404.
-
- Pyramid of tarts, 280.
-
-
- Quails, to roast, 158.
-
- Queen cake, 341.
-
- Quin's sauce for fish, 172.
-
- Quince cheese, 251.
-
- Quince cordial, 400.
-
- Quince jelly, 250.
-
- Quince marmalade, 250.
-
- Quince pudding, 285.
-
- Quinces, preserved, 248.
-
- Quinces, to preserve whole, 249.
-
-
- Rabbits, fricasseed, 138.
-
- Rabbits, to fry, 139.
-
- Rabbits, to stew, 138.
-
- Radish pods, to pickle, 215.
-
- Radishes, to prepare for table, 204.
-
- Raspberries, to preserve, 262.
-
- Raspberry charlotte, 320.
-
- Raspberry cordial, 180.
-
- Raspberry ice-cream, 325.
-
- Raspberry jam, 263.
-
- Raspberry vinegar, 180.
-
- Raspberry water-ice, 469.
-
- Raspberry wine, 395.
-
- Ratafia, 403.
-
- Raw egg, 419.
-
- Reed birds, to roast, 159.
-
- Rennet whey, 415.
-
- Rhubarb jam, 271.
-
- Rhubarb tarts, 282.
-
- Rice cakes, 372.
-
- Rice custard, 314.
-
- Rice dumplings, 308.
-
- Rice flummery, 433.
-
- Rice jelly, 412.
-
- Rice milk, (ground,) 414.
-
- Rice milk, 293.
-
- Rice pudding, (farmer's,) 293.
-
- Rice pudding, (ground,) 291.
-
- Rice pudding, (plain,) 292.
-
- Rice pudding, (plum,) 292.
-
- Rice pudding, boiled, 293.
-
- Rice, to boil for curry, 146.
-
- Rice, to boil, 202.
-
- Ringworms, remedy for, 421.
-
- Rock cake, 449.
-
- Rock-fish, to boil, 51.
-
- Rock-fish, to pickle, 52.
-
- Rolls, (common,) 373.
-
- Rolls, (French,) 373.
-
- Rose brandy, 402.
-
- Rose cordial, 399.
-
- Rose vinegar, 424.
-
- Rusk, 361.
-
- Russian or Swedish turnip, to boil, 190.
-
- Rye and Indian bread, 377.
-
-
- Sago pudding, 290.
-
- Sago, 412.
-
- Salad, to dress, 203.
-
- Sally Lunn cake, 371.
-
- Salmon steaks, 45.
-
- Salmon, (fresh,) to bake in slices, 44.
-
- Salmon, (fresh,) to bake whole, 44.
-
- Salmon, (fresh,) to boil, 43.
-
- Salmon, (pickled,) 45.
-
- Salmon, (smoked,) 46.
-
- Salsify, to dress, 195.
-
- Salt pork, (to stew,) 504.
-
- Sandwiches, (ham,) 123.
-
- Sangaree, 407.
-
- Sassafras beer, 392.
-
- Sassafras mead, 478.
-
- Sausage meat, (common,) 129.
-
- Sausages, (Bologna,) 130.
-
- Sausages, (fine,) 129.
-
- Savoy biscuits, 351.
-
- Scented bags, 428.
-
- Scotch cake, 356.
-
- Scotch queen-cake, 356.
-
- Scotch sauce for fish, 171.
-
- Sea bass or black-fish, boiled, 52.
-
- Sea bass, fried, 54.
-
- Sea catchup, 178.
-
- Sea kale, to boil, 199.
-
- Secrets, 355.
-
- Seidlitz powders, 419.
-
- Shad, (broiled,) 503.
-
- Shad, baked, 50.
-
- Shad, to fry, 51.
-
- Shalot vinegar, 180.
-
- Shells, 278.
-
- Sherry Cobler, 406.
-
- Short cakes, 371.
-
- Shrewsbury cake, 433.
-
- Shrub, (cherry,) 398.
-
- Shrub, (currant,) 397.
-
- Shrub, (fox-grape,) 397.
-
- Smelts, to fry, 431.
-
- Snipes, to roast, 157.
-
- Snowball custard, 315.
-
- Soda biscuit, 371.
-
- Soda water, 419.
-
- Soup a la Lucy, 489.
-
- Sour milk, 455.
-
- Spanish buns, 343.
-
- Spinach and eggs, 188.
-
- Spinach, to boil, 188.
-
- Sponge cake, 345.
-
- Spruce beer, 391.
-
- Squash pudding, 288.
-
- Squash, (winter,) to boil, 191.
-
- Squashes or cymlings, to boil, 191.
-
- Strawberries, (to keep,) 494.
-
- Strawberries, preserved, 267.
-
- Strawberry cordial, 400.
-
- Strawberry ice-cream, 325.
-
- Strawberry water-ice, 469.
-
- Sturgeon cutlets, 54.
-
- Suet pudding, 300.
-
- Sugar biscuit, 360.
-
- Sugar syrup, clarified, 232.
-
- Sweet basil vinegar, 179.
-
- Sweet jars, 428.
-
- Sweet potato pudding, 289.
-
- Sweet potatoes, (compote of,) 497.
-
- Sweet potatoes, boiled, 186.
-
- Sweet potatoes, fried, 186.
-
- Sweet sauce, (cold,) 170.
-
- Sweetbreads, larded, 104.
-
- Sweetbreads, to broil, 432.
-
- Sweetbreads, to roast, 104.
-
- Syllabub or whipt cream, 318.
-
- Syllabub, (country,) 319.
-
-
- Tamarind water, 417.
-
- Tapioca, 412.
-
- Tarragon vinegar, 179.
-
- Tea, to make, 388.
-
- Tennessee muffins, 445.
-
- Terrapins, 66.
-
- Thieves' vinegar, 424.
-
- Toast and water, 417.
-
- Toast, (to make,) 505.
-
- Tomata catchup, (fine,) 479.
-
- Tomata catchup, 177.
-
- Tomata honey, 441.
-
- Tomata pickles, (green,) 480.
-
- Tomata pickles, (red,) 480.
-
- Tomata soup, 483.
-
- Tomata soy, 224.
-
- Tomatas, (broiled,) 441.
-
- Tomatas, (preserved,) 441.
-
- Tomatas, to bake, 200.
-
- Tomatas, to keep, 437.
-
- Tomatas, to pickle, 223.
-
- Tomatas, to stew, 200.
-
- Tongue, (salted or pickled,) to boil, 89.
-
- Tongue, (smoked,) to boil, 88.
-
- Trifle, 319.
-
- Tripe and oysters, 87.
-
- Tripe, to boil, 86.
-
- Tripe, to fry, 87.
-
- Trout, to boil, 54.
-
- Trout, to fry, 53.
-
- Turkey, to boil, 156.
-
- Turkey, to roast, 154.
-
- Turkish sherbet, 408.
-
- Turnips, to boil, 189.
-
-
- Union pudding, 490.
-
-
- Veal cutlets, 97.
-
- Veal or chicken tea, 414.
-
- Veal patties, 99.
-
- Veal pie, 99.
-
- Veal soup, (rich,) 21.
-
- Veal soup, 21.
-
- Veal steaks, 98.
-
- Veal, (breast of,) to roast, 94.
-
- Veal, (breast of,) to stew, 95.
-
- Veal, (fillet of,) to roast, 94.
-
- Veal, (fillet of,) to stew, 96.
-
- Veal, (knuckle of,) to stew, 96.
-
- Veal, (loin of,) to roast, 93.
-
- Veal, (minced,) 98.
-
- Vegetable soup, 416.
-
- Venison hams, 136.
-
- Venison pasty, 135.
-
- Venison soup, 28.
-
- Venison steaks, 135.
-
- Venison, (cold,) to hash, 134.
-
- Venison, to roast, 133.
-
- Vermicelli soup, 25.
-
- Vinegar (cider,) 409.
-
- Vinegar, (sugar,) 410.
-
- Vinegar, (white,) 409.
-
- Violet perfume, 429.
-
-
- Wafer cakes, 357.
-
- Waffles, 359.
-
- Walnut catchup, 175.
-
- Walnuts, pickled black, 219.
-
- Walnuts, pickled green, 221.
-
- Walnuts, pickled white, 220.
-
- Warm slaw, 226.
-
- Warts, remedy for, 421.
-
- Washington cake, 347.
-
- Water souchy, 41.
-
- Watermelon rind, to preserve, 237.
-
- Welsh rabbit, 387.
-
- White soup, (rich,) 26.
-
- Wine jelly, 406.
-
- Wine sauce, 169.
-
- Wine whey, 415.
-
- Wonders or crullers, 357.
-
- Woodcocks, to roast, 159.
-
-
- Yam pudding, 289.
-
- Yeast, (bakers',) 379.
-
- Yeast, (bran,) 378.
-
- Yeast, (common,) 377.
-
- Yeast, (patent,) 435.
-
- Yeast, (pumpkin,) 378.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Miss Leslie's Complete Cookery, by Eliza Leslie
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MISS LESLIE'S COMPLETE COOKERY ***
-
-***** This file should be named 60025.txt or 60025.zip *****
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