Have two pounds of rump steak, cut thin, and divide it into pieces about 3 inches long; beat these with the blade of a knife and dredge with flour. Put them in a frying-pan with a tablespoon of butter and let them fry for three minutes, then lay them in a small stewpan and pour over them the gravy, add a little more butter mixed smooth with alittle flour, and a small onion chopped fine, a pickled walnut and 1 teaspoonful of capers.Simmerfor ten minutes and serve in a covered dish.
Cut lengthwise 3 bananas, roll them in flour and fry in butter until a light-brown. Serve with cold duck.
Mix 2 cups of shredded cabbage, 2 green peppers, cut in shreds or finely chopped, 1 teaspoonful of celery seed, ¼ of a teaspoonful of mustard seed, ½ a teaspoonful of salt, ¼ of a cup of brown sugar, and ¼ of a cup of vinegar.—Janet M. Hill, in "Boston Cooking School Magazine."
Boil 3 ozs. of butter in ½ a pint of water and add flour enough to make the mixture stiff enough to leave the sides of the pan, then add the yolks of three eggs and beat the mixture well. When cold, add the whites of the eggs, beaten to a stiff froth, with one dessertspoonful of sugar and aflavoring of vanilla; fry in spoonfuls in hot fat. Serve at once. Grated cheese and cayenne pepper may be substituted for the sugar and vanilla.
Chop equal quantities of celery and apples, quite fine. Serve on lettuce leaves, with French dressing.
Mince a pound of cold beef fine and mix with this three-quarters of a pound of bread crumbs, seasoned with salt and pepper and 1 teaspoonful of minced lemon peel. Make all into a thick paste with one or two eggs, form into balls and fry a golden-brown. Garnish with parsley and serve a brown sauce with them.
Pare and slice six large potatoes, put in a saucepan, cover with stock, season, cook until potatoes are tender, add tablespoon butter and the same of chopped parsley. Stir carefully and serve with cold meat.
Boil ½ a lb. of rice. Dry it well and fry it with a little butter until lightly browned. Stir into it two large toasted tomatoes and a tablespoonful of grated cheese. Season with pepper and salt. Serve very hot.
Take 1 qt. of clams and chop them fine. Fry two slices of salt pork in an iron pot. When the fat is fried out, take the brittle out, put into the fat 2 slices of onion, then a layer of sliced potatoes, then a layer of chopped clams, sprinkle well with salt and pepper, then a layer of onion, then the bits of fried pork, cut into small pieces, add a layer of broken crackers. Do this until all is used. Then add the clam liquor and enough water to cover. Cook 20 minutes. Add 2 cups of hot milk just before serving. Use for this 6 large crackers, 1 onion, 6 potatoes, 1 qt. clams.
Take fillets from a flounder weighing 2½ lbs., season with salt and pepper, and a few drops of onion juice, if desired. Spread on one half of each fillet a tablespoonful of mashed potato (about 1 cup should be prepared) mixed with the beaten yolk of an egg, and seasoned with 1 tablespoonful of butter, ¼ of a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of pepper. Fold the other half of each fillet over the potato, cover with crumbs, dip in the white of egg beaten with 2 tablespoonfuls of water, and again cover with crumbs and fry in deep fat. Drain on soft paper, then insert a short piece of macaroni in the pointed end of each fillet and cover this with a paper frill. Garnish and serve with tomato sauce.—Janet M. Hill, in "Boston Cooking School Magazine."
Cut a breast of mutton into small pieces; dredge with flour and sauté to a golden brown in drippings or the fat of salt pork; cover with boiling water and let simmer until tender, seasoning with salt and pepper during the latter part of the cooking. Take out the meat, skim off the fat and add one can of peas drained, reheated in boiling water, and drained again; add more seasoning, if needed, and pour over the mutton on the serving-dish.—Janet M. Hill, in "Boston Cooking School Magazine."
Bake 4 large potatoes; when soft scoop out the inside and rub through a fine sieve. Boil an oz. of butter and a quarter of a pint of milk; add the yolks of three eggs, one by one, beating well together with a wooden spoon. Beat the whites of the eggs and a pinch of salt in another dish, mix all together carefully, and bake in a well-greased tin, in a hot oven until it rises well, and is a pale brown in color. The tin should be only ½ full. If it is desired for a dessert add 15 drops of vanilla, and sugar to taste.
Take 3 kidneys, skin them, remove the fat and cut into thin slices, season with salt, cayenne, and minced herbs; fry on both sides in butter, then stew in ½ a pt. of gravy flavored with tomatoes. Turn in a dish and cover the top with 2 ozs. of boiled macaroni; sprinkle some Parmesan cheese over the top and brown.
Spread bread cut for sandwiches with chopped ham, season with a little made mustard and press together in pairs. Beat an egg, add ½ a cup of rich milk, and in the mixture soak the sandwiches a few moments. Heat a tablespoonful of butter, and in this brown the sandwiches, first on one side and then on the other. Drain on soft paper and serve at once.—Janet M. Hill, in "Boston Cooking School Magazine."
Cook 1/3 of a cupful of stale bread-crumbs in 1/3 of a cupful of milk to a smooth paste. Add to it 1 cup lean ham, chopped fine, 1 teaspoonful made mustard, ½ a saltspoonfulcayenne pepper, and mix smooth with 1 raw egg. Remove the shells from 6 hard-boiled eggs, and cover them with this mixture. Fry in hot fat until brown, drain, and serve hot or cold on a bed of parsley.
Cut a small boiled lobster into small pieces, pour over them four tablespoonfuls of lemon juice, add salt and pepper, and mix well. Melt 2 tablespoonfuls of butter in the chafing dish, add the lobster and serve hot.
Make a curry sauce as in curried macaroni, and heat in it a cup of asparagus tips. Serve with sippets of toast.—Janet M. Hill, in "Boston Cooking School Magazine."
Mix 2 teaspoonfuls of baking powder with 1 pt. of flour. Rub it into a half cup of butter, add 1 cup of sweet milk. Bake quickly. Have prepared nice pieces of cold chicken, heat with gravy or a little soup stock, season well. Add some chopped parsley, pour over the short-cake and serve at once.
Sift together 3 cups of sifted flour and a teaspoonful of salt. Beat the yolks of three eggs until very light, add 1 pt. of milk and stir into the dry ingredients. Then beat the whites of three eggs, beaten dry. Bake in small buttered tins in a very hot oven.—Janet M. Hill, in "Boston Cooking School Magazine."
Take thick slices of cold veal and remove all the fat. Cut into dice, chop up tomatoes in the same sized pieces. Mix well and cover with mayonnaise.
Take the meat out of a boiled lobster in large pieces. Dip each piece in egg, then in bread-crumbs. Fry in deep, hot fat. Serve with tartar sauce.
Boil 6 crabs, pick the meat out carefully, arrange a head of lettuce on a round platter. Put the crab meat in the centre, cover with mayonnaise dressing.
Mince cold boiled tongue fine; mix it well with cream and to every ½ pint of the mixture allow the well-beaten yolks of 2 eggs; place over the fire and let it simmer a few minutes. Serve on hot buttered toast.
Take two cups of mashed potato, form into balls, dip them into beaten egg, then into bread crumbs; fry in deep fat, stick a piece of the green stem of parsley into each one.
Pour 1 pt. ofboilingwater on 1 pt. of corn-meal, add 1 teaspoonful of salt and 1 heaping tablespoonful of sugar. Beat well and set away until morning in a cool place. When ready to use add 2 well-beaten eggs and 1 heaping tablespoonful of flour. Drop by spoonful into boiling fat. Cook ten minutes.
Boil 6 eggs for 20 minutes, take the shell off, and when cold cover with the following:Cook ½ a cupful of stale bread crumbs and ½ a cupful of milk together until a smooth paste. Add 1 cupful of cooked lean ham chopped very fine, salt and pepper, and 1 beaten egg. Mix well and cover the hard boiled eggs with it. Fry in a frying basket in boiling lard for a minute.
Into a saucepan put the meat from a boiled lobster (broken into small pieces) and ½ a cup of gravy and ½ a cup of cream or milk, and half a blade of mace. Mix 2 teaspoonfuls of curry powder with one teaspoonful of flour and 1 oz. of butter; add this to the lobster andsimmerfor ½ hour. After it is done add a squeeze of lemon juice and a little salt. Serve hot.
Boil together ¼ of a cup of water and 2 ozs. of butter, then shake in 2 ozs. of flour, stirring all the time; it must be well cooked. Add 2 ozs. of grated Parmesan cheese, salt and cayenne, stir well and mix in by degrees 2 well-beaten eggs. Drop this mixture by the spoonful into hot boiling fat and fry a golden brown and serve at once.
Crack ½ a pound of English walnuts very carefully, to keep them in halves, make little balls of cream cheese and put half a walnut on each side (like the cream walnut candy) lay them on lettuce leaves, pour a French dressing over and serve with hot toasted crackers.
Mix 1 tablespoonful of grated horse radish, 1 teaspoonful of made mustard, 1 teaspoonful of sugar, 4 tablespoonfuls of vinegar; pour over slices of hot roast or broiled beef.
Put one cupful of rice on to boil in 3 cupfuls of water. When it has been boiling for half an hour, add 2 tablespoonfuls of butter and a teaspoonful of salt. Let it just simmer for an hour. Mash it fine with a spoon and add 2 well-beaten eggs, and stir for 5 minutes. Butter a border mould and fill with the rice. Put in the oven for a few minutes. Turn out on a hot dish and fill the centre with creamed fish.
A lb. of flour, ¼ of a lb. of butter, 2 ozs. of sugar, 3 eggs, ½ a pint of milk, ½ a gill of yeast. Melt the butter and sugar in the milk and mix several hours before baking. Bake in muffin rings.
Spread orange marmalade on buttered bread. Put four slices on top of each other. Put under a weight and when well pressed trim off the crusts and cut down in thin slices so they will look like jelly cake.
Take cold baked or boiled fish. Pick into small pieces. Cover with mayonnaise dressing. Garnish with sliced cucumber and serve.
Take 2 tablespoonfuls of grated Parmesan cheese and 2 scant ones of cream, a little cayenne and salt. Mix into a smooth cream and spread on rounds of thin puff paste; double it over, press the edges well together, dip them in egg and chopped vermicelli; fry in boiling fat. Serve very hot.
Boil a cauliflower, drain well and put it on a round platter. Make the sauce. Melt 1 oz. of butter, add 1 oz. of flour and a cupful of milk, and boil; sprinkle in 2 ozs. of grated Parmesan cheese, cayenne and salt to taste. Press the cauliflower together, pour the sauce over, sprinkle a little more cheese on top and put into the oven to brown.
Take out the yolks from four hard boiled eggs. Pass them and 8 olives and 4 red chillies through a wire sieve; add a little salt. Put this paste back into the whites of the eggs which have been cut lengthwise. Serve on fried bread; hot or cold.
Take three large tomatoes and cut them in halves, take out the insides and mix thoroughly with two tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs, 1 tablespoonful of grated cheese, a gill of cream, ½ a teaspoonful of sugar, salt and cayenne to taste. Fill the tomatoes with this and on top of each piece put a thin sliceof bacon. Put into the oven to cook and when the bacon is done, serve each one on a thin slice of toast.
One cupful of finely-chopped rhubarb, 1 cupful of sugar, 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, 1 teaspoonful of baking powder, ¼ of a cupful of milk, 2 eggs, sufficient flour to make a thick batter; cream the butter and sugar, add the well-beaten eggs, the milk, flour, rhubarb and baking powder. Half fill well-greased cups and steam ½ an hour.
Sauce.—Cream together ½ a cup each of butter and powdered sugar, then add by degrees one beaten egg, beating until perfectly smooth. The last thing before serving stir in 3 tablespoonfuls of boiling water.—"Table Talk," Phila.
Take large ripe cherries, stone them and lay them on young lettuce leaves. Sprinkle over them finely chopped blanched nuts, almonds or English walnuts. For the dressing use 2 tablespoonfuls each of lemon and orange juice.
Boil 1 bunch of asparagus, when cooked lay one layer of the tender part in a baking dish, sprinkle over grated cheese, then another layer of asparagus, so on until the dish is full. Pour over this 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter, a little onion juice. Cover with a layer of fine dried bread crumbs. Bake a light brown.
Remove the stems and stones from someripe cherries. Roll each one in the white of an egg, beaten with a tablespoonful of water; then in chopped blanched almonds; dip them one by one in a thick fritter batter, arrange in a frying basket and plunge into very hot fat. When brown, remove, drain on blotting paper and serve on a folded napkin.—"Table Talk," Phila.
Into a saucepan put 1 white onion sliced, and 1 qt. of sliced tomatoes, ¼ of a green pepper, 1 sprig of parsley, 4 cloves and a teaspoonful of sugar, salt and pepper to taste. Cook all together until the onion is tender. Then strain through a fine sieve to remove all the seeds. Let it cool, then pour into a mould and freeze. Serve on lettuce leaves, with mayonnaise dressing.
Boil the brains of a calf, and chop them up with 2 ozs. of ham, 2 gills of cream, salt and cayenne. Serve on fried toast with fried bread crumbs on top of each.
Take equal quantities of cooked asparagus,cut into bits, and cold cooked ham cut into small cubes. For each cup of material make a sauce of 2 tablespoonfuls each of butter and flour, a cup of the liquid in which the asparagus was cooked, a teaspoonful of lemon juice with salt and nutmeg to taste. Add 2 beaten eggs, also the ham and asparagus. Turn into small buttered cups, cover the tops with buttered cracker crumbs and bake in the oven until a golden brown.—Janet M. Hill, in "Boston Cooking School Magazine."
Soak ½ box of gelatine in ½ a cupful of cold water until soft. Add ½ a cupful of boiling water. Crush 1 qt. of strawberries and strain out the juice. Add to it 1 cupful of sugar and the juice of 1 lemon. Add this syrup to the hot gelatine. Strain through a flannel bag and mould in a porcelain dish. Serve with whipped cream.—From "Good Housekeeping."
Arrange lettuce leaves on a round platter, pile neatly in the centre a dozen red radishes sliced thin with the red peel left on. Aroundthese a row of sliced hard boiled eggs, then a row of sliced cold boiled beets; pour a French dressing over all.
Shell 1 pt. of shrimps. Into a stewpan put one oz. of butter and when melted add 1 tablespoonful of ground rice, and ½ a pt. of milk. Stir until smooth, then add the shrimps. When boiling hot pour over toast and serve.
Take half a box of sardines, remove the bones and skin, mash to a paste, spread on buttered bread. Squeeze a little lemon juice on each. Put two together and serve with dressed lettuce.
Wash, pare and cook in three cups of water, 6 apples, until tender. Dip the tops of 6 shredded wheat biscuits in 1 pt. of milk, strain them and shape into 6 cups. When the apples are tender remove to a colander to drain, then put one in each of the shreddedwheat cups. Add to the water in which the apples were cooked 1 cup of sugar and ¼ box of pink gelatine which has previously been soaked in ¼ cup of cold water, and the grated rind and juice of a lemon; let cook until reduced one third. Turn this mixture over the apples until the cups are filled. When cold turn out and serve with cream.
Butter twelve slices of bread; spread six of them with guava jelly and the other six with cream cheese. Put a guava and a cream cheese together. Press them and trim the edges.
Chop fine, 3½ lbs. of veal and 1 lb. of fat pork. Mix well with 4 soda crackers rolled fine, 3 well-beaten eggs, 1 tablespoonful of salt, 1 oz. of pepper, 1 nutmeg and a small piece of butter. Make it into a loaf, and bake without water. Quick heat at first. A little grated lemon peel is an improvement.
Cook twelve figs in as little water aspossible. When tender drain dry. Chop the figs fine, spread on slices of buttered bread. Put two together. Press them and trim.
Slice green tomatoes in thin slices, roll in flour. Heat and butter the griddle, fry the slices on it and when cooked sprinkle with powdered sugar. Serve with fish.
In a skillet melt and heat ½ of a cupful of lard or bacon fat. When smoking turn in 1 pt. of sliced okra and stir occasionally until it begins to color. Add three cupfuls of sliced raw corn and when it is lightly browned pour off nearly all the fat. Dredge in 1 tablespoonful of flour, stir until it is absorbed, then add 2/3 of a cupful of milk and stir occasionally for 15 minutes, seasoning to taste.—From "Table Talk," Phila.
For those who cannot eat raw cucumbers a very nice salad is made by peeling and then boiling until tender, the cucumbers.When icy cold slice thin, lay the slices on lettuce leaves and pour a mayonnaise dressing over. Garnish with a few round, red radishes.
A quart of milk, 1 tablespoonful gelatine dissolved in a little of the milk, 4 eggs, a pinch of salt, a cup of sugar, a wine-glass of wine, a lb. of English walnuts and a lb. of figs; make a custard of the milk and eggs and the gelatine, strain into a bowl and freeze. Vanilla may be used instead of wine.
Pick the meat from a boiled lobster, break up into small pieces, mix with a French dressing, pile neatly on lettuce leaves, and cover over with mayonnaise dressing.
Mix well 1 pt. of flour, 2 level teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a little salt. Make into a soft dough with milk, about 1 cupful. Put a spoonful of the dough into well-greased cups, then a spoonful of strawberries, then another of dough. Steam for 20 minutes. Turn out onto a platter and serve with strawberry sauce.
Sauce.—Cream 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, add gradually 1 cupful of powdered sugar and a little lemon juice. Beat in as many crushed berries as the mixture will hold and serve cold or melt over hot water and serve hot.—From "Good Housekeeping."
Fry rounds of bread crisp, and cover with the following: Mince 12 large mushrooms fine, add pepper and salt, ½ a gill of cream and stew until tender. When cooked heap the mushrooms high on the rounds of toast; sprinkle Parmesan cheese over each, brown and serve very hot.
Beat up the white of an egg, with salt and pepper, a spoonful of chopped parsley, a small onion and a teaspoonful of olive oil. Beat well and add a spoonful of tarragon vinegar. Serve with cold meat.
Take ½ a cupful of finely-choppedchicken and pound it fine. Dissolve a teaspoonful of gelatine in 2 tablespoonfuls of cold water. Whip ½ a pt. of cream to a stiff froth. Add the liquid gelatine to the chicken; season with salt and a teaspoonful of grated horse radish (if liked). Stir until it begins to thicken, add the whipped cream a little at a time, and stand away until very cold. Cut bread into fancy slices and spread with the mixture.
Boil a cauliflower whole, pour a white sauce over it. Cover this with grated cheese, and place in the oven and brown.
Cut a slice off the cucumbers lengthwise, scoop them out, fill with boiled lobster meat. Arrange the lobster claws across the top. Ornament with mayonnaise dressing.
Beat together very light ¾ of a lb. of sugar and the same of butter, add 4 eggs and mix in 1¼ lbs. of flour. Mix ¼ of a lb. of sugar and flour together, and lay in onthe bread board. Take a small spoonful of the mixture and roll it with a broad-blade knife in the flour and sugar. When rolled to the right length lay on tin sheet in the form of a horseshoe and bake.
Wash and dry the young and tender leaves of a head of lettuce. Butter slices of graham bread, spread with a thick layer of mayonnaise dressing, lay lettuce leaves between two slices.
Heat 1 pt. of milk blood warm, add 3 tablespoonfuls of butter, melted, 2 well-beaten eggs, and ½ a yeast cake dissolved in 3 tablespoonfuls of cold water. Pour gradually on the flour and beat into a smooth batter; then add 1 teaspoonful of salt and 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Butter baking pans and pour half full. Let it rise for 2 hours in a warm place. Bake ½ an hour.
Take half a loaf of stale bread, crumb, andsoak in cold water. When soaked, squeeze dry in a cloth. Chop a very little onion fine, add two tablespoonfuls of butter; stir together over the fire until a good brown; add the bread; stir well; put into this the chopped meat of a large lobster; salt, cayenne and nutmeg. When very hot, add the yolks of two eggs; stir hard, and then turn out to cool. When quite cold, form into rolls with a little flour; egg and bread-crumb them and fry.
Boil 1½ lbs. of calf's liver; when cold put it through the chopping machine twice, put it in a mortar with cayenne pepper, salt, nutmeg, mace and black pepper to taste. Line a china mould with very thin slices of fat bacon, then put a layer of cooked veal or chicken, cut in very thin slices, next a layer of the pounded liver, and so on until the mould is full. Pour in a pint of good gravy or stock in which 1½ ozs. of gelatine has been melted. Bake in a moderate oven for two hours. When quite cold, turn out on a platter.
Cut corn from the cob, spread a layer in a baking dish, season, put on a layer of sliced tomatoes, season, and so on with alternate layers until the dish is nearly full; then fill the dish with rich milk in which dissolve a little soda and bake an hour.
Cook a teaspoonful of finely chopped onion in 2½ tablespoonfuls of butter in the blazer of a chafing dish 5 minutes. Add 4 tablespoonfuls of flour, and when blended with the butter, stir in ¾ of a cup of milk. When the mixture boils, add 1 cup of korulet, 1¼ teaspoonfuls of Worcestershire sauce, 1/3 of a teaspoonful of mustard, ¼ of a teaspoonful of paprika, and a few grains of cayenne. When again boiling, set over hot water and stir in 1 beaten egg. Serve on thin crackers.—Janet M. Hill, in "Boston Cooking School Magazine."
Warm 1½ cups of boiled rice in a pt. of milk; stir in a pint of cold milk, add an egg, a little salt, and flour enough to make a thin batter. Bake in waffle irons well buttered.
Cut or grate 3 ears of corn, add a large piece of butter, and the yolk of one egg, well beaten. Cut the outside of a green pepper into small pieces. Stir all well together, bake ½ an hour, or until brown.
Shell some shrimps and put them in a saucepan with a little butter, a seasoning of salt and pepper and stir over the fire until hot. Fry some thin pieces of bread in butter or lard. Drain, place them on a hot platter, pile the buttered shrimps on top and serve.
Pick fine the meat of a boiled lobster, mix well with mayonnaise dressing. Butter slices of white bread. Lay a small lettuce leaf on each and the lobster on that; put a slice of plain bread and butter on top; press together; trim off the crust.
Pare, boil and mash 6 potatoes, add 1 tablespoonful of butter, salt and pepper and2 well-beaten eggs. Butter a border mould and pack the potato in it. Let this stand for fifteen minutes, then turn out on a dish and brush over with a well-beaten egg. Brown in the oven and fill with any kind of meat cut into blocks and seasoned well; cook in either a white or brown sauce.
Cut the centre of a cabbage very fine. Put 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar on to boil, beat 2 eggs light, add to them ½ a cup of sour cream or milk, a tablespoonful of butter. Pour the boiling vinegar on to these. Stir over the fire until boiling hot, add salt and pepper and pour over the cabbage. Serve cold.
Peal and slice 3 cucumbers; leave them in ice water until wanted, then cover with French dressing.
One pint of uncooked green corn either grated or cut from the cob, 2 tablespoonfuls of flour, pint of milk, three eggs, three tablespoonfuls of melted butter, 1 teaspoonful ofsalt and ¼ of a teaspoonful of pepper. Bake in a moderate oven until firm in the centre.
Mince fine 2 ozs. of cold game or chicken with 12 pickled mushrooms and a gill of cream; season with salt and pepper. Serve on slices of fried bread.
Pare and slice 4 potatoes and 2 onions. Cut ½ a pound of bacon into small pieces. Fry the bacon and onion until a light brown. Into a saucepan put the potatoes, 1 qt. of grated corn, the bacon and seasoning. Put these in, in layers, potatoes, bacon, corn, and continue in that way until all is used. Now add ½ a pint of boiling water and let simmer for ½ an hour. Add 1 pint of hot milk. Thicken with 1 tablespoonful of butter and 2 of flour rubbed smooth. Add 6 broken water crackers. The last thing add the beaten yolk of an egg and serve at once.
Save part of a boiled cauliflower and coverwith mayonnaise, arrange on lettuce leaves and serve.
Grate 12 ears of green corn, add 1 cup sweet milk, a tablespoonful of sugar, salt and pepper to taste, and the yolks of 4 well-beaten eggs. Beat the whites and stir in the last thing, put bits of butter on top and bake a rich brown.
Wash the peas before shelling, and save the pods. Cover the pods with as little water as will cover them, let boil until tender, strain all and press through a colander. Add to this (water and pods) a pint of milk and a thickening of 2 tablespoonfuls of flour and 2 of butter, a teaspoonful of sugar, salt and pepper to taste. Stir and cook until thickened. Serve with croutons.
A boiled carrot, a boiled turnip, two boiled potatoes, a head of celery, a boiled beet, four olives, four anchovies, yolks of two eggs, a tablespoonful of vinegar, a teaspoonful oftarragon vinegar, one teaspoonful of salt, ½ of pepper. Put the eggs into a bowl, and drip salad oil slowly over them and beat to a cream; add the vinegars, pepper and salt. Cut the vegetables into small dice and pour the dressing over.
Sift a lb. of sugar, some cinnamon and a nutmeg into 3 lbs. of flour; add a little rose water, and 3 eggs beaten light and mix well with the flour; then pour into it as much melted butter as will make it a good thickness to roll out. Mould it well, roll thin and cut it into shapes. Bake on tin sheets.
Slice cold boiled potatoes. Rub a bowl with garlic; put in the potatoes; add half a pint of finely chopped small onions, a tablespoonful of finely chopped parsley, a teaspoonful each of salt and pepper. Mix a teacupful of chicken broth, four tablespoonfuls each of oil and vinegar, and toss up lightly with the potatoes, so as to break them as little as possible. Serve on lettuce leaves and garnishwith slices of beets cut in shapes or hard boiled eggs sliced.
Chop fine some cold cooked beef and a slice of onion; season with salt and pepper, a little lemon juice and parsley, add ¼ as much boiled rice or bread crumbs as there is meat; add 1 beaten egg and sufficient water to make a paste. Form into balls and fry in deep fat.
Skin and bone a small box of sardines, chop fine 6 hard boiledyolksof eggs, a little chopped parsley, salt, pepper and a tablespoonful of butter, rub all to a paste and fill in the cavities of the white of eggs. Garnish with watercress. Serve cold.
Toast saltine biscuit, butter and spread with potted ham. Put two together, serve hot.
One pt. of milk, 1 pt. of flour, 2 eggs well beaten, a tablespoonful of butter, a pinch ofsalt, a tablespoonful of sugar. Have the pansveryhot before filling.
Cut six slices of bread and toast to a golden brown. Put them on a platter. Cover each piece with a slice of lean cooked ham, spread a little mustard over it, then chopped parsley and fine bread crumbs, and a little Parmesan cheese. Place in a hot oven for ten minutes and serve.
Mince a few slices of cold veal fine and the same quantity of ham or bacon; add one tablespoonful of minced parsley and one of herbs, a very little nutmeg, cayenne and salt. Mix into a paste with a well-beaten egg. Form into balls, egg and bread crumb them and fry in hot fat.
Take the yolk of an egg and beat it well, pour into it stirring all the time a dessert spoonful of Worcestershire sauce, a teaspoonful of anchovy sauce, a piece of butter the size of a walnut, a large tablespoonful offinely minced meat (fowl is better) a dash of red pepper, salt and black pepper to taste and a dash of nutmeg. Mix all well together until it becomes a paste. Spread it on slices of toast, place it in the oven a few minutes and serve hot.
Take the ends and poorer parts of a boiled tongue, chop quite fine, add a little parsley, a little seasoning of salt and cayenne. Butter a baking dish. Put in a layer of bread crumbs, a layer of the tongue; fill the dish in this way. When nearly full pour over the whole ½ a cup of stock. Then finish with a layer of bread crumbs and bits of butter. Brown in the oven.
Butter slices of graham bread. Put 4 hard boiled eggs through a sieve, add salt and a tablespoonful of cream or milk, rub to a paste, spread on the bread, put two slices together, trim neatly and serve with lettuce salad.
Scald 4 tablespoonfuls of corn-meal in alittle water. While hot, stir in two tablespoonfuls of butter. When cool, add 2 eggs, well beaten, 2 cups of milk, 8 tablespoonfuls of wheat flour and a little salt. Bake in cups in a quick oven.
Take the good meat from a cold roast or boiled chicken and to every lb. allow ¼ of a lb. of butter, 1 teaspoonful of pounded mace, and ½ a small grated nutmeg; salt and pepper to taste. Cut the meat in small pieces, pound it well with the butter, sprinkle in the spices gradually and keep pounding until reduced to a paste. Put it into small jars and cover with clarified butter and seal tight.
Beat well the yolks of four eggs, put them into a dish with 3 ozs. of grated chocolate, ¼ of a lb. of sugar, and 1 pt. of milk; stir these well and pour them into a pitcher set in a saucepan of boiling water; stir one way carefully but do not let boil or it will curdle. Strain the cream through a sieve into a dish and add 1½ ozs. of gelatine and ½ a pt. ofwell whipped cream. Pour into a mould and set on ice until ready to use.
1¼ lbs. of flour, 1 lb. of sugar, ½ a lb. of butter, 4 eggs, a teacup of cream or milk, warmed sufficiently to melt the butter, a tablespoonful of rose water, 2 of wine, a grated nutmeg. Make into buns and bake.
Cut very fine the good parts of a cold boiled chicken; chop up celery in the proportion of 2/3 to 1/3 of chicken and mix well. Let it stand for an hour or two with a French dressing poured over it. When it is well soaked up, cover with a mayonnaise dressing and garnish with celery tops. Serve on lettuce leaves.
Cut 3 bananas into 2 inch lengths, roll lightly in fine bread crumbs and put on ice to harden. Fry carefully in a frying basket in deep hot fat. Serve with hot or cold chicken.
Cook until tender a large bunch of celery cut into one inch lengths. Drain, return to the saucepan and cover with a cupful of white sauce. Season with salt and pepper and chopped parsley. When cold butter a baking dish and cover the bottom with crumbs. When the celery is cold add to it 2 well beaten eggs. Cover with crumbs and bits of butter. Bake ½ an hour.
Dress the partridge as for roasting, make astuffing with ½ cup of bread crumbs, ½ cup of chopped celery seasoned with a little butter and celery salt. Cover with boiling water, cook until tender. Make a sauce with 1 tablespoonful of butter in which fry 2 tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs, ½ cup of chopped celery, 1 cup milk, salt and pepper. Let this boil up once.
Parboil 1 cup of rice for 10 minutes in boiling water, then drain and rinse with cold water. Return to a saucepan and cover with fresh water, add ½ teaspoonful salt, 1 tablespoonful of sugar. Pare, peel and chop fine 6 apples, add them to the rice and cook until done. Serve as a border for hot or cold slices of pork.
Take any kind of cold meat, chop it very fine. Dissolve ½ a box of gelatine in ½ a cup of cold water. Slice two hard boiled eggs, wet a mould and lay the slices of egg in the bottom and on the sides, then put in the chopped meat. Dissolve one Anker's Bouillon Capsule in 1 cup of boiling water.When dissolved add this to the gelatine, stir well and pour over the meat.
Make a paste with four hard boiled eggs, a tablespoonful of stock and a teaspoonful of curry powder. Spread on slices of buttered bread. Put two together and serve.
After the fish has been boiled and drained add the following sauce: Take equal quantities of water in which the fish was boiled and vinegar. Add a few pepper corns, a little mace, a very little allspice; boil for a few minutes and pour over the fish.
Cream one cup of butter, add gradually 1½ of sugar and 3 eggs well beaten. Add 1 teaspoonful of soda dissolved in 1½ tablespoonfuls of hot water. Sift together 3¼ cups of flour, half a teaspoonful of salt and 1 teaspoonful of cinnamon. Add ½ of this to the thin mixture, then 1 cup of chopped English walnut meat, ½ a cup of currants and ½ a cup of chopped and seeded raisins.Put in the rest of the flour and beat well. Drop by spoonfuls 1 inch apart on a buttered sheet and bake in a moderate oven.—From "Good Housekeeping."
Cut and butter slices of white bread, scrape maple sugar and spread thickly on the bread. Cut with a maple leaf cutter and serve with hot coffee.
Cut off the top and scoop out the inside; lay the shell in salt and water for ½ an hour. Boil the inside part in about ½ a cup of water and put through the colander. Then mix it with ½ a teacup of bread crumbs, 1 large tablespoonful of butter, salt and pepper to taste. Wipe dry the inside of the shell and put the mixture in. Bake 20 minutes and sprinkle top with bread crumbs and butter.
Grate the corn; allow an egg and a tablespoonful of cream for every cupful. Beat the eggs well; add the corn by degrees,beating very hard, salt to taste; put in a tablespoonful of melted butter to every pint of corn; stir in the milk, thicken with just enough flour to hold together, say 1 tablespoonful for every two eggs, cook on the griddle. Serve with lamb or pork chops.
Cut up a knuckle of veal and cover it with 2 quarts of cold water, bring it slowly to boiling point and simmer slowly for 2 hours. Add 2 sliced onions, a bay leaf, a few pepper corns, 12 whole cloves and ½ a teaspoonful of ground allspice. Let it simmer for an hour longer. Take out the meat, remove all the bones and pick the meat into small pieces. Put it into a mould, reduce the liquor to 1 qt., add salt and pepper. Turn over the meat and stand away for 12 hours or more to harden.
Mix 6 ozs. of flour and 1 pt. of milk to a smooth batter, add 6 ozs. of sugar, 6 ozs. of butter, 6 ozs. of currants and brandy to taste. When all are well mixed turn into small cups, previously well buttered, and bake ¾of an hour. Only fill the cups half full, as it rises very light. Turn out on a dish and serve with wine sauce.
Sift together 1 qt. of sifted flour, 1 teaspoonful of salt and 3 level teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Work into these ingredients 2 tablespoonfuls of butter and then mix to a dough with milk or milk and water. Cut the dough until light and spongy, then pat out into a rectangular sheet with the rolling-pin; spread with maple sugar and roll up like a jelly roll. Cut from the end in rounds. Bake in a buttered pan and serve hot with butter.
Scoop out the centres of 6 tomatoes, fill with chopped watercress and the inside of the tomato and pour a French dressing on. Serve on lettuce leaves.
Fry squares of bread, sprinkle grated Parmesan cheese on them, season highly with pepper and salt. Pile grated tongue in apyramid on each square. Serve either hot or cold.
Grate 2 ozs. of cheese, and mix well with 2 ozs. of butter, 2 ozs. of flour, 2 ozs. of bread crumbs, season with cayenne and salt to taste. Roll out very thin and cut into strips ¼ of an inch wide and 6 long. Lay on a buttered tin and bake brown.
One cup of butter, 2 cups of sugar, 4 of flour, 3 eggs, a cup of sweet milk or, better, sour milk with a teaspoonful of soda dissolved in it. Spread with a spoon thin on tin sheets either in small cakes or one large one, which can be cut after baking. When half baked, draw to the front of the oven and sift granulated sugar mixed with cinnamon over them.
Boil six young beets, and when cooked, scoop out the centres and fill with asparagus tips which have been soaked in French dressing. Make a mayonnaise dressing, spread it evenly on a round dish, sink the beets into it, and garnish with young lettuce leaves.
Make a stuffing of fine bread crumbs, parsley or thyme, butter, salt and pepper. Have the fish carefully dried and cleaned, put in the stuffing and sew it up. Bake 20 minutes to half an hour. Baste well with drippings and serve with a garnish of parsley.
Sift a qt. of white corn-meal and add a teaspoonful of salt; pour on enough cold water to make a mixture that will squeeze easily through the fingers. Work to a soft dough. Mould into oblong cakes an inch thick at the ends, and a little thicker in the centre. Slap them down on the pan and press them a little to show the marks of the fingers. Bake in a hot oven 20 minutes.
Chop fine 2 onions, fry in half a cup of rendered bacon. Do not let them burn. Take six tomatoes, pare, cut fine. Add to the onions and fry until done. Take two cups of rice, wash and put into a saucepan, pour the mixture over, and add as muchwater as will boil the rice well; then add two seeded green peppers, cut in quarters, salt to taste and boil until rice is soft. Take out the ends of the peppers. Serve with cold meat.
Take a four-pound fish; throw a little salt over it to harden it, and let it stand an hour. Score and brown it upon a buttered gridiron. Lay it upon a strainer with some fresh mushrooms, a white onion sliced, a sprig of parsley, a few pepper corns, four cloves, a little mace, a pinch of cayenne, the juice and grated rind of a lemon, a pint of claret, and one of water. Cover the kettle well, simmer slowly, and when done, lift the fish gently and strain the sauce over it, laying the mushrooms around it.
Butter a shallow tin and line it with thin slices of cheese, break over this five eggs, being careful not to break the yolks, and season with salt and pepper. Grate a little cheese and chop fine a few sprigs of parsley, mix and sprinkle over the top, put a few bitsof butter over it and bake in a quick oven ten minutes.
One pt. of cold chicken cut into small dice, ½ a cup of stock, ½ a cup of milk, 1 tablespoonful of flour, 1 of butter, yolks of 2 eggs. Rub the butter and flour smooth and put into a frying pan. Add the stock, milk and season with salt and pepper, stir until it boils; then add the chicken and stand over a moderate fire until hot. Take it from the fire and add the well-beaten yolks; do not let it boil after the eggs are added. Serve at once.
Peel 1 qt. of large chestnuts and blanch them in hot water. Drain and rub off the inner skin and cook until tender in good stock, drain and rub them through a fine sieve. Add more stock and season with mace, cayenne and salt, and stir until it boils, then add ¼ of a pint of cream. Serve at once.
Cut the eels into four-inch pieces. Let them stand in boiling water for 5 minutes,drain, season, dip in egg and bread crumbs and fry in hot fat. Serve with tartare sauce.
Butter slightly, slices of white bread. Chop fine four stalks of celery, and the same quantity of cold meat. Make a mayonnaise dressing, stir it into the meat and celery, spread on the bread; put a plain slice of bread and butter on top.
Soak stale bread in cold water for 15 minutes, then squeeze as dry as possible. To each pt. add 2 tablespoonfuls of milk, 1 well beaten egg, 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter, ½ of a teaspoonful of salt and the same of sugar and sufficient flour to make of such consistence that the mixture will not fall apart when a small spoonful is dropped into boiling water. Have the water slightly salted and boiling hard. Test a spoonful of the mixture. When of the right consistency drop a number of spoonfuls at a time into the water and cook for 5 minutes. Lift out with a skimmer and arrange in a dish, keepingthem hot over water until all are done.—"Table Talk," Phila.
Chop fine cold cooked ham. Toast and butter some slices of bread, spread the ham on the toast, put them in the oven for 3 or 4 minutes. Beat 4 eggs in a cup of milk, season with salt and pepper. Put 2 tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan, pour in the beaten eggs and stir over the fire until thick but do not let it boil. Pour the eggs over the ham and serve.
Four mashed potatoes, season highly with pepper and salt, butter and chopped parsley. Beat very well. Roll into balls, egg and bread crumb them and fry in boiling lard.
Put ½ a pt. of gravy in a saucepan with 5 pared, cored and quartered apples. Simmer gently, until tender; beat to a pulp, season with cayenne and serve with cold roast pork.
Make the following sauce and simmer the fish cutlets in it. One cupful of stock, pepper, salt, parsley, onion, a little lemon juice and a glass of sherry. Thicken with browned flour. Heat the cutlets slowly, do not let them boil.
Put a large cup of bread crumbs to soak in a qt. of sour milk over night; in the morning rub through a sieve. Add the yokes of 4 eggs, well beaten, 2 teaspoonfuls of soda dissolved in a little water, 1 tablespoonful melted butter, and enough corn-meal to make it the consistency of ordinary griddle cakes. Add the whites of the eggs just before frying.
Take a three lb. fish, cut off the head and tail, split the fish through the back and take out the bone, cut these two pieces into four or six, season with salt and pepper. Dip each piece into melted butter, then roll in crumbs and broil on both sides. Serve with tartare sauce.
Chop very fine a few stalks of celery, mix well with a mayonnaise dressing, spread on buttered bread, put two together; press and cut in any shape desired.
One oz. of well boiled macaroni, cut verysmall, 1 large tablespoonful of grated cheese, 1 of cream; mix all together. Season with pepper and salt. Roll out puff paste very thin, cut into rounds, place some of this mixture on each round, double them over, egg and vermicelli them, fry a light brown. Serve hot.
Chop cold veal very fine, season, mix well with mayonnaise dressing. Heap on lettuce leaves. Garnish with slices of hard boiled egg.
Bone and flake cold fish; season with salt and cayenne pepper. Stir in a stewpan with a good piece of fresh butter. When hot add a teacupful of ready boiled rice, and the yolks of 4 hard boiled eggs. Stir well together until hot. Dish and serve with pickles.
Melt 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, cook in it 2 slices of onion until the onion becomes of a pale straw color, then add two tablespoonfulsof flour, 1 tablespoonful of curry powder, ¼ teaspoonful of salt and a dash of pepper. When blended with the butter, add gradually 1 cup of milk and stir until smooth and boiling. Then strain over 1 cup of macaroni, cooked until tender in boiling salted water and then drained and rinsed in cold water. Reheat and serve.—Janet M. Hill in "Boston Cooking School Magazine."
Into a saucepan put 1 dozen finely chopped oysters, a teaspoonful of cracker dust, a tablespoonful of butter and ½ a cup of milk, season with salt and pepper. Stir and let the mixture simmer for a few minutes; pour the mixture over buttered toast and serve.
Soak 3 cups of dried apples over night; drain the water off and cut them up a little and put them over the fire with 2 cups of molasses; boil until thick; take off the fire and put into a bowl. Add a cup of shortening, a tablespoonful of cinnamon, dessertspoonful of cloves, the same of allspice, a cup of sweet milk; when cold a tablespoonful ofsoda, dissolved in hot water, 4 cups of flour, added by degrees, 3 eggs well beaten, added last. Grease 3 pans well and bake.
Cut fine 2 carrots, 1 turnip, 3 stalks of celery and half an onion; cook ten minutes in 4 tablespoonfuls of butter, stirring constantly. Add 1 cup of chopped potatoes, cover and cook five minutes, then add a qt. of boiling water and cook an hour. Mash the vegetables, add a tablespoonful of butter and a little chopped parsley. Season with salt and pepper.
Chop very fine slices of cold roast beef, having first removed all fat; add six finely chopped cold potatoes, the same quantity of beets, a few slices of tomatoes, a few leaves of lettuce, a small bunch of parsley. Mix thoroughly, and chop all together, until the whole is almost reduced to a cream. Cover with a rich mayonnaise. Garnish with slices of tomato and lettuce leaves.
Beat well the whites of 4 eggs, beat theyolks, then beat them together. Cream a ¼ of a lb. of butter. Add to it gradually ½ a lb. of granulated sugar and beat until light, then add the eggs and beat again. Mix 2 ozs. of corn-starch with a quarter of a lb. of wheat flour; add a teaspoonful of baking powder and sift, stir this into the cake. Add the grated rind of ½ a lemon, bake in greased gem pans in a moderate oven 15 minutes.
Cut it into inch lengths and boil until tender in slightly salted water, dip the pieces in fritter batter and fry in smoking hot fat. Garnish with parsley and serve with tomato sauce.
Take a round of beef, trim off the fat, cut fat bacon into strips and roll them in a mixture of sweet herbs, spice, salt and pepper. Lard the meat with these and rub the rest of the seasoning into the meat. Flour it, put in a deep pan, add a pt. of water and bake in a moderate oven. Baste often. Strain the gravy and if you like a little cooking winemay be added to the gravy. Serve hot or cold.
Pare and chop into dice 6 potatoes. Put into a frying pan 1 chopped onion and 2 slices of bacon cut into small pieces, fry until a light brown. Put the potatoes, bacon and onion, a little chopped parsley, salt and pepper into a saucepan. Add 1 pt. of water, cover and simmer 15 or 20 minutes. Then add 1 pt. of milk. Mix 1 tablespoonful each of butter and flour, add to the rest and stir carefully until it boils.
Bone some nice pieces of cold fish. Warm it in a cupful of olive oil, 1 clove of garlic, some Spanish red pepper and a wine-glass of tarragon vinegar. Lay tomatoes, cooked down to a thick purée, in a dish; lay the fish upon it, pour the sauce over and serve.
Cut the celery in six inch lengths, boil in salt and water, strain. Put ½ a pint of soup stock or gravy on the fire and cook the celeryin it; add pepper and salt, a little nutmeg, 4 tablespoonfuls of cream, a little thickening of butter and flour. Simmer only a few minutes.
Drain the oysters and cover with a little lemon juice. Make a light puff paste and cut into pieces about 4 inches square; brush them over with white of egg. Place upon each square 2 or 3 of the prepared oysters and put a little piece of butter on them. Bring the four corners of the paste together and fasten them with a small wooden toothpick, leaving the crust open between the points. Bake in the oven until a nice brown, take out the toothpicks and serve.
Cut up and chop a large lobster; add both black and cayenne pepper, mustard, salt, a small cup of sweet oil, two or three powdered crackers or bread crumbs; a wine-glass of wine, lemon juice; mix well. Shape into a loaf and cover with bread crumbs. Bake half an hour.
Make a rich puff paste and bake it in small patty-pans. When cool turn out on a large dish. Stew the oysters with a few cloves, a little whole mace and the yolk of an egg boiled hard and grated, a little butter and enough oyster liquor to cover. When the oysters are cooked, set away to cool. When cold put two or three oysters and a little sauce in each patty-shell, serve with lettuce and French dressing.
Make a jelly of ¼ a box of gelatine and a pint of soup stock; season highly when it begins to thicken. Wet a mould and lay slices of tongue all over the bottom and sides. When it begins to set fill the centre with chopped chicken, hard boiled eggs, or just use tongue alone. When cold and firm garnish with parsley.
Chop fine 1 cup of cold mutton and 1 small onion; add to this ½ a cup boiled rice, salt and pepper, mix well. Take some cabbage leaves and put them into boiling waterfor a minute, and then roll the chopped meat mixture up in them like a sausage; then stew them in a little soup stock. Serve hot with garnish of hard boiled egg.
Butter slices of both white and Graham bread. Spread each with Neuchatel cheese, chop fine a few English walnuts and sprinkle over. Put a white and a brown slice together.
Take ½ a pt. of white wine and ½ a pt. of vinegar, 4 teaspoonfuls of salt, six of whole black pepper, and a little mace. Strain the oyster liquor and add the above ingredients. Boil up once and pour hot over the oysters. Let them stand ten minutes or until cold and then put in a jar and cover tightly.
Three gills of soft boiled rice, 1 gill of rice flour, a pinch of salt, 6 tablespoonfuls of sugar, 2 of wheat flour, 3 eggs, a little yeast. Fry quickly.
Beat light, two cupfuls of mashed potatoes, add 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter, salt, pepper, cream, 2 eggs beaten separately; beat all hard. Pile high on a dish; put into the oven to color and become light.
Boil a fresh beef tongue, fifteen minutes, skin it. Put in a pot, 1 carrot, 1 onion, thyme, bay leaf, salt and pepper, 2 cloves, glass of cooking wine, and a little water. Stew 4 hours. Strain out the vegetables and put in a little browned flour.
Take a qt. can of salmon, pick it over carefully, as there are a great many little bones. Season with salt and pepper and a little lemon juice. Pile neatly on a platter, arrange the tops of boiled asparagus around it and cover with mayonnaise dressing.