^^-^^^ ', 3k? v%. ^^-n^ o „ o ' .^0' 4:^ "^^ O N O ° "^-^^ '^^fe'^ \/ ^^^^^^'^ ^^ aS> ^ ^'^ x'^^ <^ * O M O .ON O '^O^ v^ ^ ^ ' .^^ 4^ '^<^ • ■\/ ^ "■' \^ .. */• " J -'•* "^o ,'S> „o««, '^^ ** r,-^ .u'., -^^ A^ flO"** * .^^\ rl^ •••'•^ 3 "6^- ' DISHES FROM THE FIELD AND GARDEN. The more a man follows nature, and is obedient to her laws, the longer he will live; the farther he deviates from these, the shorter will be his e^ii^tence.—Huf eland. y ^< -it«M t)a^fe«mu.,? ?Ji;^VflatmtttJ ^itmi_t >St»nno-' BOOKS multiply rapidly. Literature of every kind is scattered broad- cast and something is to be had for every taste. New books, new thoughts, and new expressions of old thoughts, are plentiful and one is tempted to ask: Why another volume? In reply we beg to say that even though the name of the books is legion, there is room for more good ones. Nay, there is an urgent call for books bearing on the important needs of the day, upon subjects that are practical and useful, upon subjects that assist men and women to make the daily cares of home and business lighter and more cheerful. So it is without apology that we send forth this volume, asking that it speed onward its message until all who desire "something new on an old subject," and all who desire "something simple on a new subject," shall have been reached. What is the object of food? Why do we eat? These queries interest all humanity and have been answered repeatedly by intelligent thinkers. We "eat to live"; we eat because waste is forever going on in the human body and must be replenished. But, are there not many cooks who act upon the supposition that the greater the number of ingredients crowded into any one dish, the more remarkable the achievement and the more creditable the ingenuity displayed? This is plainly an error, for all right- thinking persons must admit that the cook deserving the highest praise is the one who can prepare the most appetizing, and at the same time, the most wht)lesome and nourishing dishes from the scantiest and plainest material. The man or woman who can do this, has not only the ability to think, and to direct, but carries forward a thrift amounting to an art — the highest art known to domestic science, saying nothing about the aid to happiness and longevity. 7 8 PREFACE. These thoughts bring us to the consideration of how to effect a change in this direction. Fortunately, fashion is helping some in this direction, for we note on all sides the simplicity with which city breakfasts, and many country ones, are now being served. We wish it were so with the dinner, but, alas, we fear that the simple diet for breakfast is more than offset by the late, rich dinner. But, as usual, we look to the women. Women are the first to advance a reform, and to them must the world look for a continuation of this feeble awakening which has been begun in the breakfast, and which, with careful discrimination, will prove the great- est blessing of the age. To discard the injurious substances that now enter largely into the composition of many of our so-called "fancy dishes" and to avoid spices, that stimulate without nourishing, and fats, that clog without strengthening, is to open up a new phase in human life. Pure foods, pure water, and pure air, will give new power, and when the per- verted appetite has approached its normal condition, many of the diseases that now assail the human frame will disappear, thus making our bodies fit temples for the dwelling of the immortal soul. This volume, by a skilled home caterer, successful housewife, and ideal mother, will prove helpful to all classes. It is not radical, but sug- gestive, and is comprised in three books, bound under one cover. BOOK I. is intended for the inexperienced housekeeper, who has all things to learn, as well as for the epicure, whose tastes incline to rich and expensive dishes, but whose pocket-book demands economy. BOOK II. is devoted to various health foods — soups, without meats (more appetizing than any ever dreamed of in our grandmother's day), to the cooking of vegetables, cereals, the making of salads without meat, etc., etc. It is an up-to-date guide in brain-building, health-building and happiness. BOOK III. is devoted to household economics, nursing the sick, the toilet, the care of the kitchen, laundry, etc., etc. Thus, the book (three volumes in one) is a complete Twentieth Cen- tury Guide on all things pertaining to cookery. It teaches us, not only what to select for the table and how best to prepare it, but furnishes a concise and ready manual for all home-keepers, regardless of wealth or station. Our blessings accompany it. THE PUBLISHERS. INTRODUCTION. WHEN I began to save the various "recipes" and "suggestions on domestic economy" contained in this book, it was with no thought of having them printed, but as the collection grew and there grew a demand for just such a book, I wrote something like one thousand of my acquaintances, the following letter, which will explain itself: " My Dear Friend: "At this, the beginning of the twentieth century, the thoughts of every up-to-date person are naturally turning toward that great and important subject: What shall we eat? The people at large are asking for a new cook-book, something that will not only tell us how to make the most appetizing foods, but healthful ones, as well. "To meet this demand, I am about to prepare a cook-book on an appetizing and healthful plan. The thought suggested itself by the rare and delightful treats which I have had at the hands of a few of my friends, who, on various occasions, have sent me recipes for healthful, and yet delicious, breads, soups, salads, cakes, etc. These have been so much appreciated that I have decided to ask my friends all over the United States, to send one or more of their favorite recipes, which I will include in the book. I believe such a work will be useful, for one made up of culled recipes, with the name of each donor underneath, must be reliable, and hence, valuable to every housewife. I therefore invite 3^ou to con- tribute your favorite, with directions for making same — something not found in any cook-book to your knowledge. All these, bound in one vol- ume, will make a sotivenir book that I shall be proud to have, you will be glad to own, and every woman will be glad to possess," In answer to this letter, I received hundreds of replies. From the first letter received, I quote the following extract: "I think your idea of a recipe book, a good one, and gladly contribute my favorite, in the line of a pudding." The second wrote: "I send a recipe for a layer cake, which, we think, is excellent. Some have called it the 'Minnehaha Cake,' but while it is similar to the Minnehaha, it is even nicer. I do not know any name for it, but as I live out here on a Minnesota prairie, will call it the 'Prairie Cake.' " 9 10 INTRODUCTION. A third wrote: "As you want a recipe not found in other cook-books, I will give you an original one. My little grandson wanted I should make him a birthday cake — one not like other cakes. Grandmothers are ever equal to the occasion; I made one and it was so highly praised, that I have been led to make it several times since — always with the same result. We call it 'Leroy's Birthday Cake' — you may call it what you like." And still another wrote: "I have decided to tell you my way of making bread, as it is very simple and not nearly as much trouble as the way most people make it. My neighbors think it is excellent." Another wrote: "I send along with my favorite some tried recipes of my neighbors." Another wrote: "If you can put in only one of my recipes, put in the prescription for beautifying and making the hair grow. Every family should have it." Thus, dear friend, the helps and suggestions in the book have been gathered from many sources. Besides those which have been sent by friends from in and out of town, from States both adjoining and remote, there are those that have been used in my family for years. I have given credit, where it was possible to remember from whom they came. Those taken from other books, are used by the kind permission of the authors or publishers. I am greatly indebted to all who have contributed, or by their courtesy made it possible for me to use their favorites in this book. It is not a haphazard collection, gathered at random from doubtful sources, but has been made up, sparing neither labor nor expense, from the choicest bits of the best experience of many who have long traveled the daily round of household duties, not reluctantly, like drudges, but lovingly, with heart and hand fully enlisted in the work. May it lessen the per- plexities of all who use it as a guide and stimulate that just pride, without which great excellence is impossible. THE AUTHOR. «14^ CONTENTS. THREE THOUSAND HELPFUL SUGGESTIONS AND RECIPES. BOOK L Arranging the Table — Up-to-Date Methods 16 Bread, Biscuits, Muffins, Waffles, etc 133 Cakes and How to Make Them 215 Cakes (Layer) and Fillings for Same 233 Camping Out — How and What to Cook 403 Canned Fruits and Vegetables 368 Carving 41 Chafing Dish and Recipes for Same 187 Cheese and Cheese Dishes 167 Coffee, Tea, Cocoa and Beverages 339 Confectionery 327 Cookies, Doughnuts and Small Cakes 244 Courses for a Formal Dinner , 19 Custards, Creams, Desserts,- Etc 289 Dinner Giving 15 Dinner-Table Novelties and Decorations 17 Dried Fruits 372 Eggs and Fifty Ways to Cook Them 175 Favors and Bonbonnieres 23 Fish 65 Garnishings 39^ Home Dinner, The 24 How to Utilize Everything 38 Ice Creams, Ices and Sherbets 3^7 Jellies 361 Luncheons 25 Marmalades 3^4 Meaning of Foreign Words on Menu Cards 3^ Meats — How to Select, Cook and Serve. m Meat and Fish Sauces 3^^ Pastry, Pies and Tarts 201 Pickles, Vinegar and Brine 374 Poultry and Game 95 Preserves— Canned and Sun Dried 35 ^ Puddings and Pudding Sauces • 259 Relishes and Catsups 400 Rusisan, Scotch and Other Afternoon Teas , 26 Salads Made of Meat, Fish and Shell Fish I95 Sandwiches and Canapes 161 Shell Fish 81 Soups Made of Meat 49 11 12 CONTENTS. Special Menus and Suggestions How to Decorate the Table 28 to 33 Spiced Fruits 366 Supper Parties 2^ Table Etiquette 20 Toasts 155 Wastefulness 37 BOOK 11. Cereals and Farinaceous Dishes 43^ Fresh Fruits — How to Serve Them 4^5 Health Paramount to All Else 40S Homekeeping, Not Housekeeping 410 Ko-nut Versus Lard 434 Nourishing Properties of Various Foods 411 Nuts as an Article of Diet 444 Salads without Meats 477 Soups without Meats 423 Vegetarianism 412 Vegetables — Their Importance 453 Vegetables — How to Cook 453 BOOK III. Dairy, The 49^ Drinking Water 5^7 Dyeing and Coloring 497 Economics for the House 49^ Food for the Sick and Convalescent 507 Happiness of Children 5^1 Helpful Laundry Recipes 490 Home, The 488 Household Hints 503 Infants 5^9 In and About the House 488 Kitchen, The . 488 Laundry, The 489 Nuisances About the House 549 Nursery, The 520 Prevalent Disorders and Their Remedies 522 Sewerage 5^7 Sick and Convalescent 506 Toilet Recipes 536 Toilet Suggestions 534 Ventilation 517 Something New in Cake-Making Delights of Christmas Time Table Set for a Formal Luncheon Table Set for a Wedding Rolls Pretzels Coffee Cake Grandmother's Brown Bread All Kinds of White Bread Breast of Veal Lamb Chops Garnished with Peas Leg of Lamb Sirloin Roast Roast Chicken Tenderloin of Beef Fish and Shell Fish Florida Lemons with Dressing Mrs. Winter's Fish Sauce Mrs. Baldwin's Fish Balls Bride's Cake Birthday Cake Geranium Cake Christmas Cake Lenten Salad Chicago Cheese Bars Bread Sticks Roast Capon Wafers Long Branch Recipe Bon Bon Boxes — Other Delights for Wee Men and Women Snapping Mottoes Drum Favor Favor — Sewing Baskets Favor — Musical Instruments Bonbonniere — Everlasting Flowers Dishes from the Field and Garden Delights for the Old and Young Delightful and Appetizing for Dinner Chicken Pie, Individual Pickled Onions Grape Jelly Fish Croquettes Blueberry Cake Dressed Radishes and Celery Stuffed Olives White Mountain Cream Puffs Mother's Salted Almonds Quince Souffle Honey a la New York Ice Cream Cake Sliced Lemon Pie Delightful Recipes from North, South, East and West Rice Croquettes Canned Cherries Pickled Peaches Canned Peaches New England Mince Meat Doughnuts, Iowa Recipe Montreal Boneless Turkey ILLUSTRATIONS Quick, Simple and "Never Fail" Recipes Cream Oysters in Pate Shells Cinderella Cake for Boys and Girls Dandy Ohio Cake Raspberry Bromangelon Meats, How and What to Select Food Furnished by the Sea, Lakes and Rivers Fresh Fruits and How to Serve Them 410, Picnics and Luncheons Life Forces for the Sick and Convalescent Unfermented Grape Juice Sweetmeats for Social Gatherings Stuflfed Prunes Fig Bars Oranges in Fancy Shape Washed Figs Dates Stuflfed with Blanched Al- monds Candy Stanley's Fudges Miss Parloa's Chocolate Creams Edwin's Ribbon Candy Fancy Bon Bon Baskets Palmer's Pineapple Glace Janet's Peppermint Drops Ethel's Candied Cherries Crystallized Lemon Goodies for the Lunch Box Greenacre Hermits , Cocoanut Cookies Nut Macaroon Raisin Pies Canadian Coflfee Cake I inrr^-.-'i /•-■■•■.•• rry 'n, ^////////^, ^w \ lilb ^<^^L '^>MwrM »N» Si^^wi "^Dinner Givina %i THE hospitably inclined, the '^I pleasure afforded by enter- taining those whose society is desired is unsurpassed, and no- where does the host or hostess show ^^y<^s^^^ *' to such advantage or disadvantage, as at the dinner-table. To give a dinner gracefully, however, requires tact; indeed, it may be said to be an art, to so select one's guests and so arrange them at the table, that no lack of harmony will mar the occa- sion. The hostess must be, to a certain extent, ac- quainted with the peculiarities of each guest, and in placing them, she should carefully avoid seat- ing two persons of opposite natures side by side. She should study her guests, as it were; should allot the charming talker to the equally charming listener, and the opinionated person to the passive and yielding disposition. A dinner should be a function where no obstacles to ease and enjoyment exist. It is generally understood that all present are desirable persons and yet an acquaintanceship begun under such auspices need not extend bej^ond the occasion that gave it birth unless .^^^ so desired. 15 16 DINNER GIVING. Invitations to a dinner party are issued ten days or two weeks in advance of the event. The recipients of the invitation should reply at once, as to their ability to accept. This gives the hostess a chance to fill a possible vacancy. These invitations can be sent by post, but are better, because of more sure delivery, sent by messenger. In giving a dinner an old saying should ever be kept in mind: "Good humor garnishes, good will beautifies, and good feeling gladdens more effectively than flowers, handsome china, or expensive silverware." To-day a hostess of moderate means can invite fifty or even one hun- dred guests, for an informal party, without ever looking to the florist or the caterer for help, provided she herself is accomplished in that finest of fine arts — entertaining; she must, though, know how to bring people together, know how to group them diplomatically; how to bring out the harmonies of each nature; how to stimulate and inspire. If she can do this, then the results will be quite as satisfactory as though she had unlim- ited wealth and the command of all Christendom at her feet. It has been well said that the responsibility of the hostess is far less for the "warming, lighting and feeding" of her guests than it is for the personal happiness of every one who crosses her doorstep. ARRANGING THE TABLE. The first requisite for a well-ordered table is, snowy, fine, damask linen. The napkins and table-cloth should be of good size and the dishes should shine with brightness. Underneath the cloth, padding should be laid. A table, when properly set, is a picture of loveliness— cut glass, silver, dainty dishes, with a background of white, appeal to the eye of the artist and why not to the guest, giving zest to the viands that are spread. As to the manner of "setting" the table, there are some differences of opinion and greater differences of customs. At the strictest of houses, there are as many knives, forks and spoons placed at the different places, as there are courses to be served. The knives lie on the right of the plate, and a row of forks on the left; the oyster fork on the outside. There are usually four forks and three knives; a steel knife for meat being one of them. The soup spoon lies next to the napkin. The napkin (which, by the way, should never be starched) is placed directly in front of each guest. Individual salt and pepper bottles are at hand, and if but- ter is needed, individual butter plates are called into use. A goblet is set at every plate. A certain scheme of color is chosen, and everything on the table har- monizes with it. The flowers adorning the table are delicately scented DINNER GIVING. IV and pleasant to all. There are many who dislike the heavily-scented tuberoses and syringas, but roses, lilies, carnations and lilacs are always agreeable. The dining-room is carpeted, or if the floor is hardwood, large rugs are used to deaden the foot-steps. In lighting the table, lamps and gas are the most common method of illumination, but the preference is in favor of wax candles, as they afford good opportunity for decorative effects and make pretty shadows. The shades to the candles match in color the other decorations. In country places, the beautiful old lamps of odd designs with colored globes, are used, with fine effect. The tables used are various — round, oval, or oblong. Many have large oval tops made which fit over extension tables, when an unusual number, like twenty or thirty, are invited. The advantage of an oval top is that one can get a better view of the company present and the ensemble, as a whole. DINNER TABLE NOVELTIES AND DECORATIONS. To the artistically inclined, an infinite variety of surprises in the way of table decorations is possible. The custom generally in vogue at the present time, is flat center-pieces. If the table be oval, a pretty cut-glass bowl, filled with any low, sweet-scented flowers, is in good taste, keeping ever in mind the fact that all colors should harmonize. Underneath the bowl, an oval, beveled-edge mirror or a round, fancy cut-glass mirror can be placed with good effect. Over the table-cloth, a few carelessly strewn rose petals, yellow and red, or red alone, are pretty and novel — these being appropriate only when roses are used as a center-piece. The square table is more picturesque looking, when a square doily, either embroidered or of Battenberg lace, is placed in the center. For those who can afford the Battenberg table-cloth, nothing can be more exquisite. They are appropriate for oval, square, or extension tables. For a long table a Battenberg scarf, extending two-thirds the length of the table, is very rich and handsome. On one table, seating twenty or more persons, two or three floral pieces can be used, intertwined with smilax, with fine effect. For receptions and weddings, medium wide satin ribbons, pink, cream or blue, with or without smilax, fastened to the chandelier or attached to the ceiling and festooned to the four corners of the table, then looped and finished with bows of the same, are gay and charming in effect. The same colored satin ribbons, crossed at the center of the table and fastened at the corners, are also very effective; so, also, is one streamer of ribbon, 18 DINNER GIVING. diagonally crossing the table, with generous handsome bows at either point of attachment. Ferns of all varieties are very handsome and appropriate, for either special occasions or for ordinary use. Smilax deeply festooned round the chandelier or suspended from the ceiling, reaching well to the table, is ever appropriate for public gatherings and suggestive of freshness, dainti- ness and beauty. Asparagus in its fragility, suspended in the same way and carried to the four corners of the room, and on it loosely hung fresh roses, pinks, jasmine or lilies, is a sweet bit of luxury. The same is true of autumn leaves strung on a thread lengthwise, and hung fringe-like all around the sides of the room, not forgetting the table on which they should be securely fastened by a blind thread. These are most catchy. I can conceive how beautifyl the country dining-room may be made to appear in spring with a generous use of apple-blossoms, loosely twined and festooned, also made into garlands for the wall, reserving ever a generous supply of the latter, to crown the heads of the guests. Then again, in the fall, there are the pumpkin-vines, corn tied together by the husks, stems of luscious apples, all of which surpass anything made by art. Then there are the wax candles with the pretty colored shades and the lamps with the transparent globes that produce a sense of dreamland, to say nothing about those favored dining-rooms which permit of a good view of the brilliant sunsets of August and September. Subdued lights are always prettier than bright lights, especially so at the opening of the dinner. Going back a moment to decorations, I believe the country homes are the ones most favored for display. My mind carries me back to girlhood and the Christmas times when grandmother invited all her children and grandchildren for a home gathering and how like fairy-land she made the festal board. The sweet smelling spruce was brought into use, and everywhere were set these trees and branches, sparkling with crystals, converting the old-fashioned home into a veritable ice palace — a fit place for Santa Claus' reception. The secret she told us was this: The spruce was first dipped into a weak solution of glue, then rolled in crushed alum (not powdered). You who have never seen the effect, just try it once and see how like a million dew-drops in the sun it appears. Then there was the china that sparkled and the glass that shone like jewels. Faded flowers she restored to freshness by first cutting the stems and putting them in very hot, then in very cold water; setting them in the cold storeroom till they were called into use. You would be surprised to see them come on the table, as fresh as though they had never been faded. DINNER GIVING. 19 SERVINQ THE DINNER. In cities the usual hour for a dinner party is seven o'clock; in country places it is frequently earlier in the day. When the last guest has arrived, dinner is announced. The host leads the way with the lady whom he wishes to honor and the hostess comes last with the gentleman whom she wishes to honor. The giving of a dinner is the most important of all the duties of a host- ess. She must not betray ignorance or show nervousness, for she alone is responsible for its entire success. The serving-maid should be trained to keep cool and avoid accidents. The number invited and the outlay expended should depend upon circumstances and one's means. The favorite form of serving a formal dinner is called a la Russe. The articles of food are carved by the servants at a side table or in the kitchen and brought to the guests. This has one advantage; it allows the host and hostess more time for social enjoyment with their guests. But it calls for well-trained servants to perform this duty satisfactorily. It requires about one servant to every six guests; therefore, when dinner is served in this fashion, where the help Is inadequate, it is well to engage outside assistance. For a home-like, informal, dinner, where the host does the carving, one servant can wait upon twelve persons and do it well If properly trained. On a table or sideboard should be placed the plates for the various courses, smaller spoons, finger-bowls, coffee-cups and saucers. As the plates from each course are removed, they should be taken to the kitchen. The waiter should approach the guests from the left except in serving water, coffee, or anything of a like nature. The color and flavor of the various courses should be as different from each other as possible, offering all the foods in their respective seasons and of the finest quality. COURSES FOR A FORMAL DINNER. First course: Oysters, as a rule, should be served at the beginning of a dinner, though they are used only In those months of the year In which the letter "r" occurs. The balance of the year little neck clams are used. The second course consists of a soup, the clear soup being preferred, accompanied by crackers or bread. Celery may be served also. The third course consists of fish, boiled or fried, and should be accompanied by small boiled potatoes; if broiled or cooked In any fancy manner, serve radishes. Fourth course: An entrde is next in order If desired; it should be made 20 DINNER GIVING. in a fancy way, so as to avoid carving; bread should be the accompani- ment. Relishes, such as olives, salted almonds, etc., are served with this course. Th.G. fifth course consists of roasts. These may be composed of beef, veal, mutton, lamb, venison, turkey, duck, goose, or capon, accompanied by one or two vegetables. Sixth course: Punch or sherbet may be dispensed with or not, as fancy dictates. The seventh course consists of snipe, prairie-chicken, squabs, etc., but poultry, such as spring-chickens, or duck, may be served instead. Eighth course: Any appetizing salad with cheese wafers. Ninth course: Hot and cold sweet dishes, consisting of puddings, ice creams, cakes, etc. Tenth course: Fresh fruits and bonbons. Last course: Turkish or black coffee served demi-tasse. The above makes a pleasant menu, but it can be made simpler or more elaborate as one chooses. Before serving the dessert all the dishes should be removed, save the drinking glasses, and all crumbs should be lifted from the cloth by means of the crumb knife and tray. A dessert plate and dessert spoon and knife, provided they are needed, should then be placed in front of each guest. Coffee (made after the manner of after-dinner coffee) should be passed last, demi-tasse, and served clear. Sugar and cream should follow, in order that those who prefer either or both, may help themselves as they please. TABLE ETIQUETTE. A host or hostess should never allude to the quality of the dishes or contents — either is in poor taste. The guests will discover their excellence without assistance. If a guest does not care for a certain article do not press it upon him. Do not, in serving, overload the plates. Do not finger knife, fork, dishes or anything on the table. Do not overload the fork. Do not leave the knife and fork crossed on the plate when you have finished, but leave them parallel on the plate, the tines of fork down, the knife to the right and the sharp edge next to the fork. Do not, under any circumstances, put the knife in the mouth. Do not drink from the saucer. Do not rise from the chair to reach anything. DINNER GIVING. 21 Do not tip the soup-plate, or put the end of the soup-spoon in the mouth, except when eating oyster-soup. Soup should be eaten from the side of the spoon and taken from the further side of the plate by moving the spoon from you. Close the mouth when chewing. Never make a hissing sound when eating soup. Never cut bread, but break it, buttering each piece as it is eaten. Never reach across others. Bread should be buttered on the edge of the plate, never in mid-air. Olives should be taken with the fingers. The fork should be used for croquettes, patties and most made dishes, and must be used equally well in either hand. Never eat anything with a spoon that can be eaten with a fork. Do not hesitate to take the last piece. Do not move the chair, but seat yourself quietly. Look into, not over, the cup or glass when drinking. Never quite fill the spoon, it is bad form. A lady, if in a restaurant or hotel, rises when another stops to speak to her, even though she is seated at the table. A gentleman half unfolds his napkin and places it over the left knee. Do not mop the face with the napkin. Napkins should be unfolded below the level of the table and as unob- trusively as possible. Never tuck the napkin under the chin or in the waistcoat. Soft cheese may be put on the cracker with a knife. Hard cheese is taken in the fingers. If the host is carving, at a family table, it is not necessary to wait until all are served before beginning to eat. The spoon is used for berries and cream, stewed fruit, peaches and cream and soft desserts. Crackers or bread should not be broken into the soup, but eaten from the fingers. Strawberries served with the stem, are eaten with the fingers. The fork should be raised laterally and not in such a fashion as to bring it at right angles to the mouth. The smaller knife, of two at the plate, should be used for fish. Never use a steel knife for fish. Side dishes of vegetables should be placed at the left and eaten with a fork. Never smear the meat with mustard or sauce of any kind; place it at the side. 22 DINNER GIVING. Never transfer the fork from one hand to the other. Never drink with the spoon in the cup. Do not leave the spoon in the cup after stirring coffee or tea, but place it in the saucer. Do not rest the elbow on the table. The knife should be taken by the handle only, resting the forefinger on the upper part of the blade. The fork should be used for mashing and eating potatoes. Never touch potato with a knife, except to butter it. Ice cream may be eaten with either a spoon or ice-cream fork. Pass anything which you see is desired, even to a stranger. When through dinner the napkin should be left unfolded, unless at home. Ladies should always be served before gentlemen. Never place toothpicks on the table and never use a toothpick at the table. Never talk with the mouth full. Never take a piece of bread with a fork. Never put glasses on the table with the stems up. Never blow on soup or coffee to cool it. Never smack the lips. Ne-^'^er leave the table with food in the mouth. Never put salt on the table-cloth. Always eat slowly. Gentlemen should seat ladies first. Do not bend over the plate for each mouthful. Carry food to the mouth with an inward, not an outward, curve of the fork or spoon. Do not spread the elbows in cutting meat. Knives, forks and spoons should be placed on the table for all the courses except the dessert. Finger-bowls are filled one-third full of tepid water, and are placed on the table only when fruit is eaten, and after a meal. The finger-tips only should be dipped in the finger-bowl. The handles of the knife and fork should rest in the palms of the hands. Do not tip up the glass or cup too much when drinking, but keep it at a slight angle. Do not ask any one whether he wishes 77zore potato, etc., but sojue potato. DINNER GIVING. 23 Do not reach after a knife, fork or spoon that is dropped but ask for another. Do not oblige the carver to make a selection for you when asked what part of the fowl you prefer, but answer promptly, giving your preference. Do not eat onions or garlic unless intending to remain alone. Do not eat after passing a plate for another to the carver, until the plate has been returned. Do not twist the feet around the legs of the chair. A crumb knife or fresh napkin should be used in brushing crumbs from the table. Never shove dishes on the table; always pass them. Never shove yourself from the table. Never touch the face or head at the table or fuss with the hands. Never suck an orange. Never spit seeds of fruit on the plate, but take them out of the mouth with a spoon and lay them on the plate. Never take a larger mouthful than will allow you to speak with ease- Never hold the spoon so that the handle rests in the palm of the hand. Never loll back in your chair or lean against the table, but sit upright. Never make introductions after the guests are seated. Never lift a glass by the rim; take goblets by the stem and tumblers near the bottom. Never ask whether any one will have some meat, but whether he will have roast beef, beefsteak, or whatever kind of meat is served. When asking for anything at the table mention the party's name when you speak. Do not give any one at the table the trouble of waiting upon you if there be a servant in the room. Do not, when at a private table, leave until all have finished. Gentlemen remaining for cigars, rise when the ladies do, and remain standing until they have left the room. Gentlemen allow the ladies to pass out first en jjzasse, if all leave the dining-room. Wear evening dress at a formal dinner party. Wear gloves and do not take them off until seated at the table. FAVORS AND BONBONNIERES. The custom of giving is looked upon with so much favor by the fash- ionably inclined, that a word regarding small gifts and bonbonnieres will perhaps be appreciated in these pages. 24 DINNER GIVING. We are never too old to admire pretty things^and if there are those who desire to give favors at a luncheon, this may help suggest a few home-made ones which are always more highly appreciated than expen- sive, bought articles. Little six and eight-sided, round or square bonbon boxes, covered with satin on which are painted or embroidered leaves, vines or bits of scenery, are very handsome as gifts and suggest a bit of love stitched up in the making. The boxes should be padded, satin lined, and the recipi- ent's monogram on the outside of the cover. At Easter time, bonbon boxes in the shape of easter eggs with artistic satin bows on top, are not without appropriateness. The favors at a George Washington luncheon are pretty, made of papier-jndchi in the form of hatchets pasted over with silver paper. On top, a bunch of red cherries (wax), held in place by a bow of red, white and blue ribbon, sug- gests to the eye uniqueness and is an effective souvenir as well. Baskets of various styles are pretty as plum-holders and useful as well as decorative. Some of these baskets are afterwards used to hold needles, thread and thimble; others jewelry and still others become per- manent fruit baskets in the boudoir. These baskets can have one handle, or two, or three, the latter covered with gilt is prettiest of all. On the side can be placed rich bows of ribbon, colored butterflies, silvered beetles, four-leaf clovers, or anything fancy suggests and means permit. Silk muffs, fans, bracelets, cut-glass, jewelry, etc., are often given by a member of the graduating class to the others whom one wishes to honor with a luncheon. Imitation guitars, banjos, drums, skiffs, rowboats, etc., all have their little day as fashionable favors. Brides frequently in giving a dinner for the bridesmaids, provide favors ranging all the way from two dollars in value to two hundred. So we might go on, but suffice it to say we have suggested a sufficient number to enable one to work out a favor scheme satisfactory to themselves. THE HOME DINNER. This function naturally partakes more of a social character than the formal, ceremonious, dinner. But the same, exactness and precision should be observed, and the same rules for making the occasion one of taste and enjoyment as its more pretentious neighbor. If more than one course, lay extra forks by each plate. The soup tureen, with the soup dishes, may be brought to the table, and set before the mistress of the house, who can serve it to the family. If a servant is at hand, she should DINNER GIVING. 25 pass the soup to each one. She must hand it from the left side. After the soup, hot plates are brought in for the next course. At the home table^ the gentleman of the house does the carving. The meat is passed as was the soup, and the vegetables, save those served in vinegar, which are placed in side-dishes. The small vegetable dishes are not used save in the instances mentioned, as too many suggests board- ing-house style. The home dinner should be made as attractive and agreeable as pos- sible, for it is the season when the family all meet, with a sense of privacy and loosening of restraint. The refined character of the occasion is stamped as plainly as on the larger display, and all the details should be carried out — the silver should be as polished, the linen as white and spot- less, and the food as well prepared as though it were designed for strangers. The manners of the home circle should be carefully guarded. It is so easy to find fault, to omit a polite attention, or to grumble, when stran- gers are not present. On all and every occasion the same order and neat- ness should prevail, and though the number of dishes may be fewer, and their concoction plainer, still the appointments of the table can be so per- fect, the welcome accorded so warm, that those minor matters will be entirely ignored or overlooked. Good manners in the home should be strenuously insisted on. The child who sees his father come to the table in his shirt sleeves, or his mother in a soiled wrapper, will scarcely be ready to observe nice details of dress when applied to his own case. LUNCHEONS. A modern luncheon is a very convenient meal, permitting of an irregular number, and a great variety of displays. It can be made expen- sive or not, as occasion demands. Many luncheons, like many dinners, are apt to be over sumptuous. The ideal luncheon is quite a simple affair. Roasts and joints are never served but entries and cold dishes instead. Table-cloths are still frequently used, but the newer idea is the use of highly-polished tables. These, when decorated with doilies and flowers, give a peculiarly antique effect, far surpassing in charm even the richest damask. At the embroidery shops many centerpieces and doilies for these occasions are being shown. A pretty set, recently made by a friend, intended for "the salad" course, consists of a round mat for the bowl, with smaller ones for the plates. The patterns are mostly wreaths of brier roses and vines. A pleasant innovation in summer, and one especially adapted to 26 DINNER GIVING. spacious homes, is to serve the luncheon on the piazzas or in shaded spots around the yard. This agreeable change brings about a sociability that delights the reserved and pleases even the most fastidious. The menu can be simple or elaborate. Guests seat themselves where they please unless cards designate where each is to sit. The hostess in all cases occupies the head of the table. The following are two of the many menus that can be easily and neatly served. MENUS. I. 2. First course, First course, Halved grape fruit. Cantaloupe. Second course. Second course, Bouillon. Clams on half-shell. Third course. Third course. Chops with peas Oyster patties. Fourth course, Fourth course, Salad. Creamed chicken. Fifth course. Fifth course, Ice. Bonbons. Ice Cream. Fruit. I dropped into a friend's a few days ago just at lunch time, and found her alone — no maid and no husband. She apologized for the lack of luncheon but said she would be glad to have me take a cup of coffee with her. Then she brought out a plate of crispy, salt soda wafers and a little roll of delicate Neufchatel cheese, which she spread upon the crackers with just a dash of paprika. Could anything be nicer? TJie lunch was delicious, appetizing and nutritious. RUSSIAN, SCOTCH AND OTHER AFTERNOON TEAS. The "Five O'Clock Tea," as it was originally called, has been turned into an informal "at home," where light refreshments are served. For- merly the hostess presided, pouring the tea with her own hands, but to-day young ladies find it a charming recreation to make the tea-table attractive, on which are set sandwiches, cake, bonbons, and a silver or copper tea-kettle steaming over an alcohol lamp. It is the young ladies also who now preside at the tea-table, while their mammas take upon themselves the more important duties of receiving the callers. These receptions enable all to show the spirit of hospitality, for everyone can entertain after this fashion, even though they have not the money to make a grand "spread." It is believed that Queen Alexandra, the former Princess of Wales, set the fashion by receiving in her boudoir DINNER GIVING. 27 at her country-seat in a bewitching tea-gown. Ever since, EngHsh ladies have observed rigidly the custom, and all who call, are served to at least tea and wafers. Gradually the fashion has spread until to-day American ladies send out hundreds of cards with the words "from three to six." Ifj warm weather, ices sometimes form a substitute for sandwiches. Callers, meet in a most informal manner, chatting unrestrainedly. Occasionally cards bear the inscription "Scotch Tea." Then all the appointments are Scotch. The music furnished is the bag-pipe, and the more old-fashioned silver, the better. Pound cake becomes ike cake of the day. Sandwiches, instead of being made of bread, are tiny biscuits spread between with orange marmalade. On other occasions, cards bear the words "Russian Tea." Then the decorations are Russian. The tea is made from real Russian tea and with it is served thin slices of lemon, Russian wafers and a little preserve. The latest form of an afternoon tea is a musicale, reading, or some literary entertainment, where ladies come early in the afternoon and just before their departure, are served to tea, chocolate frappd or bouillon, as the case may be. The hostess who makes it a point to bestow hospitality in this unaffected fashion, and who does not exact formality, but offers a warm welcome to all, is sure of having an agreeable circle of friends. Tea- rooms, after the fashion of those abroad, have recently been opened in our large cities, from three to five, and are largely patronized. SUPPER PARTIES. The informal, old-fashioned supper, at which all the dishes are placed on the table together, is being revived and bids fair to surpass many of the more sumptuous affairs. People generally are preferring simplicity, and what can be simpler in way of entertainment than this? No servant need be in attendance, and as perfect freedom reigns, each guest feels free to contribute his mite to the labor of toasting the bread, cutting of cake, carving of meat, and slicing of game, and then, too, what a good time every one has ! The host pronounces the word "ready" and brings in a hot pot of coffee with delicious cream, which he, himself, serves, while the hostess loses no opportunity in seeing that every one is helped to the store of jellies, fruits, and other good things. These indul- gent hosts and hostesses make the best parents in the world, and what boy could think of going "out" of a Sunday or holiday night with socia- bility like this at home? These suppers can take place early in the even- ing, before church or after. Then comes the singing and the good-byes. God bless such a home ! ST. PATRICK'S DAY. {March if) "There's a dear little Island far over the sea, And no spot on the globe's half so precious to me; And by lake or mountain where e'er I may roam, I shall never forget thee, my own Ireland home. Other skies may be bright, other lands may be fair, But what of all that if the heart be not there ? Other music may charm me, but ah ! there is none Which can move me to sadness or mirth like thine ovsm. * As green is the prevailing color on St. Patrick's Day, I have suggested a din- ner menu where this color and white are used exclusively. Let a dish of ferns be made the centerpiece and scatter ferns about the table. Let Irish flags decorate the room. Have the china green and white, so far as possible. Green silk embroidered over a small wire, to imitate the shamrock, placed at each plate, for a boutonniere, is quite appropriate and novel. "Oh! the Shamrock, the green, immortal Shamrock! Chosen Leaf Of Bard and Chief, Old Erin's native Shamrock!" MENU. BREAKFAST Grape Fruit Rice, with cream Popovers White Omelette, garnished with parsley Irish Potatoes, in cream CoflEee DINNER Cream of Spinach Creamed Fricassee of Chicken Irish Potatoes, mashed Peas Lettuce and Celery Salad Pistachio Ice Cream Angel Cake Coflfee LUNCHEON Escalloped Potatoes Whitefish Turbot Cold Slaw Fruit Glac6 a \k St. Patrick, whipped cream Cocoa (The above recipes and many similar ones are found within the pages of this book.) 28 ^asterSunday "RESURRECTION is the silver lining to the dark clouds of death, and we know the sun is shining beyond." Easter brings joy to the festival. Let the table decorations be fresh and dainty. The dominant dish should be eggs — eggs and eggs, over again. In pagan days, the use of eggs in the spring was symbolical of nature — "the bursting forth of life." With the Christians, it symbolizes the resurrection: "From death — Life." The free use of eggs on Easter has now generally become a custom with all nations, whether that nation acknowledges its religious significance or not. White and green are the most appropriate colors for decoration. White china and pure white linen, with Easter lilies for a centerpiece, make an ideal look- ing table. Hard-boiled eggs sliced crosswise, make pretty garnishings for the different dishes. On this special day, for breakfast, let the eggs be cooked to order as best pleases each individual fancy. This privilege will be greatly appre- ciated, especially by the little folks, who like innovations. BREAKFAST Oranges Grape Nut and cream Eggs, Hashed Potatoes, 'to order" in cream MENU DINNER Consomm6,with egg-balls Roast Lamb and mint sauce Greens, with hard-boiled eggs Egg and Watercress Salad Strawberry Ice Cream Easter Cakelets Coffee SUPPER Welch Rarebit Filberts Eggs, in jelly Easter Eggs Palm Cake Russian Tea Rolls Griddle Cakes and maple syrup Coffee (The above recipes and many similar ones are found within the pages of this book.) It is a pretty custom to exchange souvenirs on Easter mornings. The candy rabbit and bonbon box of speckled eggs, fill quite a place in the boy's heart and help him remember happily the day. A pretty custom in my girlhood was the rolling of the colored eggs out of doors on the day following Easter. I am told that this custom is now quite mod- ern — that the children in our Capital city all repair to the White House grounds to roll their eggs, and that our Presidents, as well as the wee folks, enjoy the sport. Long live the Presidents! 29 •"Rah! 'Rah! for the jolly old Fourth of July!" The United States is the only country with a known birthday. All the rest began, they know not when, and grew into power, they know not how. If there had been no Independence Day, Eng- land and America combined would not be so great as each actually is. There is no "Republican," no "Democrat," on the Fourth of July — all are Americans. All feel that their country is greater than party. — James G. Blaine. Let it not be forgotten that patriotism is one of the positive lessons to be taught in every home. Everything learned should be flavored with a genuine love of country. Every glorious fact in the nation's history should be emphasized. Every person should feel that he is entitled to a share, not only in the blessings conferred by his government, but also in the rich memories and glorious achieve- ments of his country. — Richard Edwards. [Directions for the decoration of a dining-room on the Fourth of July are almost superfluous. Only flags, banners, bunting and flowers, representing the colors of the country are required to make it delightfully attractive,] BREAKFAST Red Raspberries and cream Fried Chicken Sliced Tomatoes Creamed New Potatoes Wheat Muffins Coffee DINNER Bouillon Roast Lamb, mint 'sauce' New Potatoes, boiled Green Peas Spinach, with eggs Cucumber Salad Red, White and Blue Ice Cream Chocolate Macaroons Strawberries Coffee (The above recipes and many similar ones are found within the pages of this book. ) 30 SUPPER Chicken Mold Radishes Water-cress Salad Sally Lum White Sponge Cake Blackberries Tea HALLOWEEN 1 ^ (iPARlY r KmuMM^^mum v-^*- »^' While the dictionary definition of Halloween is rather different than the modern small boy's interpretation of it would indicate, yet we say with all earnest* ness, give the boys a good time occasionally, and why not on Halloween? "Wi' merry songs, and friendly crack, I wat they did na weary ; And unco tales, an' funnie jokes. Their sports were cheap and cheary." — "■Bobbie" Burns. Boys will be far less apt to carry off the clothes-posts, unhinge the gates, and make night hideous, if you give them a party in keeping with the occasion — a party where tin horns form the first course at the dinner-table — where colored paper napkins, folded to represent the "jack-be-nimble" and "jack-be-quicks," "toads," "monkeys," and "parrots"; where paper caps adorn the head and where jack-lanterns adorn the room. Such an evening makes glad even the heart of Aunt Jemima and Uncle Ben. And so, why not the boys? REFRESHMENTS Bouillon, de Jolly Boys Celery Kindergarten Crackers Turtle Sandwiches Little Pigs in Blankets Orange Jelly Olives k la Natural History Sugar Off, with maple S3^up Nut Cartoons Lemonade f _5^" c ^^^S% < ^.^>^^ The turnpike road to people's hearts I find Lies through their mouths, or I mistake mankind —Dr. Wolcot. 1. White Mountain Cream Puflfs. 2. -.Mother's Salted Almonds. 3. Miss Stahl's Quince Souffle. 4. Honey a la New York. 5. Ice-cream Cake 6. Sliced Lemon Pie — Meringue Dressing. A BRAIN FOOD. FISH is pronounced by medical authority to be the best "brain food," of all the meats. It is. also more easily digested than the flesh of ani- mals. In cooking fish the first care of the housewife is to be certain that the fish she is about to cook is perfectly fresh and thoroughly clean. In boiling fish, it should be put into warm water and boiled gently. In removing it from the kettle, avoid breaking the skin as it gives the fish a ragged appearance. Some cooks have kettles with a strainer on the bot- tom. The usual garnishes of fish are slices of lemon and sprigs of parsley. In frying fish, the fat should be boiling and cover the fish. Best results are obtained when the fish is rolled in flour or bread-crumbs. The best color is obtained when the fish is fried in Ko-nut, a vegetable oil spoken of quite at length in Part II. BROOK TROUT. These delightful fish are usually fried. Wash and dry the fish, being certain that they are dry inside as well as outside, sprinkle a little pepper and salt over them, and roll in corn meal. Use one part butter, to two parts lard to fry a golden brown. Drain, and serve with slices of bacon and hard-boiled eggs cut in rings and laid around the platter. It takes about eight minutes to fry them. Mrs. Julia Eaton. BAKED HADDOCK. Scale and clean a three-pound fish; fill with forcemeat and sew up; sprinkle over a generous supply of salt and bread-crumbs; put three even tablespoonfuls of butter in tiny pieces on the fish; bake three-quarters of an hour, basting frequently. I. H. B. 65 eQ FISH. . FORCEMEAT. One cup of bread-crumbs, two tablespoonfuls of butter, beef suet finely chopped, slice of onion finely chopped; half-teaspoonful of salt and a dash of cayenne. Moisten with a beaten egg. Take up the fish and make sauce by putting one cup of milk and half-cup of water in pan; add pinch of salt; thicken with one tablespoonful of flour. Garnish platter with sliced lemon and parsley. Minnie C. White. BAKED PICKEREL WITH OYSTER SAUCE. Scale, clean and wipe the fish leaving on the head and tail. Lay it on a buttered pan, dredge with salt and pepper, spread with soft butter and dredge with flour. Put in a hot oven, and when the flour begins to brown, baste with butter and water. Bake forty minutes, and serve with oyster sauce. Oyster Sauce. — Parboil a half-pint of medium-sized oysters, drain off the liquor and add enough milk to make a generous pint of sauce. Cook one rounded tablespoonful each of butter and corn-starch in a saucepan and when well mixed stir in milk mixture. When smooth add one-half a cup of cream. Stir in the oysters, season, and serve hot. Mrs. Wm. Brown. BOILED STURGEON. Cut the fish into thin slices like veal cutlets, rub them over with but- ter and sprinkle with pepper. Serve very hot with lemon garnish. Cut off the skin before the fish is boiled, as the oil in the skin if burned imparts a very rank flavor. M. V. H. BOILED SALT MACKEREL. Soak the mackerel over night, so as to remove the salt. Boil in a napkin in clear water, drain and lay it on a dish with a garnish of parsley. Make a sauce of melted butter, and serve with boiled potatoes. B. J. BROILED FRESH HACKEREL. Draw and wash the mackerel, cut off the head, rub over with salt and let stand for an hour. Rub a gridiron with Ko-nut or olive oil, lay on the mackerel and broil over a clear fire. Garnish dish with parsley and serve fish hot. Mrs. Caroline Preston. BAKED WHITEFISH. Scale and clean a good-sized fish, cut off the head, take out the bones by fastening the head of the fish with a tack to the table and begin- FISH. 67 ning at the head to pull all bones downward and stuff with the following: Take stale bread, soak in warm (not hot) water, squeeze dry; cut in pieces a small onion, fry in butter; add the bread, one-half cup of butter, salt, pepper and a little sage; heat through, and when taken off the fire, add the yolks of two well-beaten eggs; stuff the fish, sew up and entwine with several pieces of white tape. Rub the fish slightly over with butter; cover the bottom of a pan with a little hot water, and place the fish in it. Bake brown and serve with drawn butter. Mrs. C. I. Cronk. FRIED BASS WITH BACON. Carefully clean the required number of bass, season well with pepper and salt, roll in flour, then drop into a pan of very hot lard or Ko-nut and fry a golden brown. Fry in a separate pan some slices of bacon; one piece for each piece of the fish and lay on the fish. Garnish with parsley. A. M. C. FRIED SriELTS. These delicate little fish cannot be opened as can larger fish. Cut off the head and pull the insides through the gills. Wash and dry in a cloth, then roll them in flour or bread-crumbs three or four times till they are well covered. Drop them into boiling fat and fry both sides to a golden brown. It takes about ten minutes to cook them. Take them from the pan with a skimmer, and lay them on a platter, garnishing with parsley. Mrs. a. R. G. BAKED COD. Take the middle part of a large codfish or a whole small one, a tea- cup of bread-crumbs, peppered and salted, two tablespoonfuls boiled salt pork, finely chopped, one tablespoonful of herbs — sweet marjoram, thyme, and a mere suspicion of minced onion- — one teaspoonful of Worcester- shire sauce, one-half a teacup of melted butter, juice of one-half a lemon, one beaten &g,g. Lay the fish in cold, salted water for half an hour, then wipe dry and stuff with a forcemeat, made of the crumbs, pork, herbs, onion, and seasoning, bound with the beaten egg. Lay in the baking- dish, and pour over it the melted butter, which should be quite thin, seasoned with the sauce. Bake in a moderate oven for an hour, or longer, if the piece is large, basting frequently, lest it should brown too fast. Add a little butter and water if the sauce thickens too much. When the fish is done, remove it to a hot dish, strain the gravy over, and serve. Mrs. Charles Ebert. G8 FISH. BOILED COD WITH CREAM SAUCE. Clean carefully a fresh codfish, place in a kettle with salted cold water and boil fast at first then slow. When done take out and remove skin. For sauce put a cup of butter into a stew-pan and stir in one tablespoonful of flour. When brown stir in a cup of cream, add a little salt and pep- per. Let just come to a boil and serve with the fish. Ina T. McMullen. BAKED PIKE. Wash, scale and clean the fish, and dry it perfectly in every part. Fill it with forcemeat, and skewer it with its tail in its mouth. If the fish is not stuffed, sprinkle a little salt and cayenne in the inside, and place an ounce of butter there. Egg and bread-crumb it twice. Season the bread-crumbs with salt and cayenne, and mix with them a third of their quantity in shredded parsley. Pour clarified butter over the fish, and bake in a moderate oven. Lay a buttered paper over the dish. Any good fish sauce may be sent to table with pike dressed in this way. Mrs. Clarinda Elliott. BAKED PIKE— No. 2. After scaling and cleaning the pike, cut it across in slices of a uni- form thickness, and mix some slices of raw onion, a piece of butter, pep- per, salt, and half a pint of sour cream. Lay it over the slices, in a baking pan, and put them in the oven. Bake twenty minutes, basting it with the cream often. Strew cracker crumbs and grated cheese over the fish, and brown. Remove the slices of pike to a hot platter, pour some stock in the baking pan with some lemon juice, salt and pepper; stir a couple of minutes over the fire and then pour it over the fish, and it is ready for the table. Mrs. J, Leroy. BROILED SALHON. Cut six slices from the salmon, sprinkle them with salt and pepper, dip in beaten eggs and bread-crumbs. Place them in a saucepan and cook both sides quickly. Drain and lay them in a dish. Garnish them with a few slices of lemon dipped in parsely chopped fine and some eggs fried in Ko-nut oil. Mrs. B. T. Hall. BOILED SALnON. Sew as many pounds as desired up in a cheese-cloth bag, and boil for a quarter of an hour to the pound in slightly salted water. When done, take out and lay upon a platter, being careful not to break the fish. Prepare a small cupful of drawn butter in which has been stirred a tea- FISH. 69 spoonful of minced parsley and the juice of one-fourth of a lemon. Pour over the salmon and serve. Garnish with parsley. The choicest portion of the salmon is that at the center and toward the tail. Parker House. SCALLOPED SALMON. Shred one can of salmon, place in a baking dish in layers; first, a layer of rolled cracker crumbs, then one of salmon, butter, salt and pep- per; repeat until dish is nearly filled. Then take a tablespoonful each of butter and flour beaten well together and stir it into a cup of boiling milk; when thoroughly cooked, stir in a beaten ^gg] pour this over dish and bake. When nicely browned it is done. Miss M. A. Stone. SCALLOPED SALHON— No. 2. Canned salmon forms the basis of many nice dishes. Turn the con- tents of a can into an earthen bowl for an hour before using. Never let a tin of meat, vegetables or fruit stand after it is opened, but turn out the contents at once into some crockery or stone dish. Pick the salmon into small fragments, mix with one-third the quantity of bread-crumbs and add a beaten Qgg, two tablespoonfuls of melted butter and a teaspoonful of lemon juice for every pint of the mixture; season to taste, put in a but- tered dish, dust with crumbs and bake brown. A nice cream sauce is made for canned salmon by adding the fish, as it comes fromthe can, to a pint of the sauce, and garnishing with bits of toast. M. E. H. SALMON-AU ENTREE. Remove from the can; break up carefully, taking away all the oil, and as many of the bones as possible. Arrange daintily on a platter with parsley and thin slices of lemon. M. A. C. SALHON TURBOT. One large can of salmon, two eggs, one pint of milk, one cup of sifted flour, one-fourth of a cup of butter. Heat the milk and half of the butter, stir into it the flour which has been mixed smooth in a little water. Salt and let cook until stiff, stirring to prevent burning. When cold, stir in the eggs well beaten. Have a baking dish ready, fill with a layer of the same and salmon alternately. Sprinkle a layer of rolled crackers on top, moisten with milk and put the balance of the butter in bits over all. Bake about twenty minutes. Serve hot. Mrs. C. F. G. 70 FISH. MOLDED SALHON. One can salmon, two eggs (beaten lightly), two tablespoonfuls melted butter, one-half cup fine bread-crumbs, one tablespoonful corn-starch; chop fish fine, beat in bowl with silver spoon, pepper and salt to taste; put in a buttered mold and steam one and one-half hours. Mrs. Harley. 3ALM0N CREAH. One can salmon; remove skin, bone, and fluid, and mince fine. For sauce, a little more than one-half pint of milk thickened with corn-starch; add salt and pepper. Put bread-crumbs in bottom of a dish, then fish and sauce and bread-crumbs on top. Bake. Mrs. E. P. Campbell. PLANKED SHAD. Remove the scales, clean, wash, and split the shad, put it on a hardwood board about an inch and one-half thick with the skin side down and fasten it with some tacks, put the board over the fire, rubbing it once in a while with butter, and roast until done. The plank should be well seasoned and heated before placing the shad upon it or the fish will partake of the flavor of the wood. When done turn on a hot dish, sprinkle over it some salt and pepper, and drop upon it small bits of but- ter. Serve with slices of lemon. The Bourse, Philadelphia. BROILED SHAD. (Washington Style.) Split a good-sized shad down the back and lay on a platter, upon which is one tablespoonful of olive oil, and a little salt and pepper; leave it here an hour, but turn occasionally. Rub the bars of a double gridiron with oil to prevent sticking, lay the fish on and broil slowly, doing the inside first. Turn frequently. It will take from ten to fifteen minutes, according to the size of fish, to cook. When the bone can be easily lifted it is a sign that the cooking is sufficient; take off the bone, spread over a generous piece of butter, salt and pepper, and set in the oven for a minute. Excellent. Arlington Hotel, Washington, D. C. BAKED SHAD. Remove the scales and entrails but do not cut off the tail or head. Wash thoroughly and wipe dry. Fill with a dressing made of one cup of stale bread-crumbs, a tablespoonful of butter, a little chopped onion, half a teaspoonful of marjoram, same of salt and a shake of pepper. Place che fish in a well-greased pan. Dredge thickly with flour, salt and pep- FISH. 71 per. Pour a cupful of hot water in the bottom of the pan; if it cooks away add more. Bake in a hot oven, allowing fifteen minutes to every pound. Serve with roe sauce. Roe Sauce. — Boil the roes of one shad, skin and mash fine; add one cupful of drawn butter and serve at once. Mrs. I. Tibbitts. BOILED FLOUNDERS. Lay the fish in a kettle, with salt and water in the proportion of six ounces of salt to each gallon, and a little vinegar. Let the water boil a minute or so, then remove it to the side to simmer till done. The fish must not boil fast, or they will break. They should simmer fifteen min- utes. „ „ Hazel. BOILED HALIBUT. Purchase a thick slice cut through the body, or the tail piece, which is considered the richest. Wrap it in a floured cloth and lay it in warm water with salt in it. A piece weighing six pounds should be cooked in half an hour after the water begins to boil. Melted butter and parsley are eaten with it. If any is left, lay it in a deep dish and sprinkle on it a little salt, throw over it a dozen cloves, pour in some vinegar, and it will, when cold, have much the flavor of lobster. Mrs. Sarah Todd. BAKED BASS. Make a filling of pounded cracker or crumbs of bread, an &gg, pep- per, clove, salt and butter. Fill it very full, an when sewed up, grate over it a small nutmeg and sprinkle it with pounded cracker. Then pour on the white of an &gg, and a little melted butter. Bake it an hour in the same dish in which it is to be served. Portland House, Me. FRIED FINNAN HADDIES. Rub Ko-nut oil on both sides of the fish, and set it in a frying-pan with plenty of butter. Shake the pan over a clear fire. Three minutes will cook it. Then rub a little butter over it and send to table. Mrs. Conant. SPANISH COD. Take one or two thick slices of cod, tail end of the cod, remove the skin, dredge flour over the fish, and fry it in hot lard until nicely browned. Take it out gently with an egg-slice, drain, and put it into a saucepan with as much good brown gravy, boiling, was will swim it. Add a little salt and cayenne, the juice of half a lemon, a lump of sugar, an onion stuck with two cloves, and a little tomato catsup. Simmer softly till the fish is cooked; take it out, place it on a hot dish, strain the gravy, thicken- ing it with a little browned butter. L W. M. 72 FISH. FRIED PERCH. After washing and scaling the fish wipe them dry, flour them lightly all over; rub off the flour, dip them into beaten ^^g, and then into finely- grated bread-crumbs, and fry them in plenty of boiling fat, until they are nicely browned. Drain a few minutes on an inverted sieve, serve on a hot dish, and garnish with parsley. Send shrimp sauce, anchovy sauce, or plain melted butter, to table in a tureen. Mrs. Eliza Pray. BROILED SARDINES. These tiny fish are very nice when broiled over hot coals a minute or so, turning them once. Large slices of toast must be ready; on each slice place tv/o of the fish, and then pour a little of the oil which was left in the can. The oil must be hot. Inez Heffel. RED HERRINGS. Red herrings or Yarmouth bloaters can be cooked by making incisions in the skin across the fish, for a very little cooking will do them. If there is any roe, pound it in a mortar, with a little anchovy, and spread it on toast. When the herrings are very dry, soak them in warm water an hour before cooking. P. A. Thrall. SALMON CUTLETS WITH CAPER SAUCE. Take a slice of salmon two inches thick, carefully remove the bones and skin, cut into slices half an inch thick, and flatten them on the chop- ping-board with a cutlet bat dipped in water. From these slices cut as many cutlets of as uniform shape as you can. Place them quite flat on a well-buttered baking tin, sprinkle pepper and salt over them, and, ten min- utes before they are wanted, put them into the oven with a sheet of but- tered white paper over them. Put all the trimmings of the salmon into a saucepan with carrots, onions, thyme, parsley, a bay-leaf, a few cloves, some whole pepper, salt to taste, and a little more than a pint of good stock. Leave this to boil gently till reduced one-half, then strain the liquor into a basin, and remove any fat there may be. Melt a piece of butter the size of a walnut, add to it half a teaspoonful of flour, and stir it on the fire till it is well colored. Add the liquor to this, and continue stir- ring until the sauce boils, then add a heaped teaspoonful of capers; pour the same over the cutlets, and serve. B. Ellis. FISH. 73 CUTLETS OF COD. The ingredients are three pounds of the fresh fish cut in slices of the thickness of three-quarters of an inch, and taken from the body of the fish; a handful of fine bread-crumbs, with which should be mixed pepper and salt, and a little minced parsley and an Qgg, beaten light. Enough dripping to fry the cutlets. Cut each slice of fish into strips, as wide as two fingers, dry them with a clean cloth, rub lightly with salt and pepper. Dip the slices in the ^gg, then the crumbs, and fry in enough fat to cover. Drain away every drop of fat, and lay the cutlets on a napkin on a hot dish. Mrs. C. Leone. FISH TURBOT. Cook a fish of about four pounds in salted water to which spices^ parsley, and celery have been added. Pour in a cup of vinegar. Then let the fish become cold and pick into small pieces, removing the bones and skin. Now make a dressing of a cup of milk, two large tablespoons of flour, one cup of sweet cream, pepper and salt. Cook ten minutes, then mix with fish, stewing a little parsley over mixture. Grease a pudding form with butter, then fill with the mixture. Cover the top with crackers rolled fine and browned in butter. Bake half an hour. Mrs. Casper. FISH TURBOT— No. 2. Take two cups of flaked fish, one cup rolled and sifted shredded wheat biscuit crumbs, four tablespoonfuls of butter, one cup of milk, pepper, and one-half of a teaspoonful of salt. Use cold boiled and baked fish that is left over. Butter a pudding dish, cover with crumbs, layer of fish, pepper, butter and sauce made from two tablespoonfuls of wheat flour, two of the level tablespoons of butter, salt and milk. Boil till it thickens. Proceed in this way until the dish is filled, finishing with crumbs, and dress with butter. Bake slowly forty minutes. E. M. B. FRIED EELS. Clean and cut the eels into pieces three inches in length, cover them in a saucepan with cold water, in which salt, pepper, thyme, onions and carrots sliced thin, and one-half of a glass of vinegar have been put. As soon as they boil take from the fire, and let them become cool. Then drain them and dry. Mix &gg and bread-crumbs, beating the egg first, and dip each piece in. Fry them brown in drippings. Place them on a dish, and have a tartar sauce ready to serve with them. Mrs. Mamie Frye. 74 FISH. BROILED EELS. Skin and clean a good-sized eel; remove the backbone and cut the eel into five or six pieces. Dip each piece into egg and then into bread- crumbs which have been salted and peppered. Put on a greased gridiron with the skin downward, over a clear fire, and broil, turning over when done on one side. Put on a hot dish, garnish with parsley and serve with tartar sauce. E. H. Dougherty. STEWED EELS. This is a favorite dish with many. Clean and skin three pounds of eels, and remove every vestige of fat from the inside. Chop an onion fine, four tablespoons of butter, season to taste, and chopped parsley. Cut the eels in pieces, about two inches in length; season, and lay in sauce- pan containing the melted butter. Strew the onion and parsley over all, cover the saucepan closely, and set in a pot of cold water. Bring this gradually to a boil, then cook very gently for an hour and a half, or until they are tender. Turn out into a deep dish. Mary Floyd. PICKED CODFISH. This is an old-fashioned dish and name, but with most persons a great favorite. Pick the fish in small particles, separating the fibers as near as possible, the finer the better. Freshen by leaving it in water one hour. Pour off the water and cover again with fresh. Bring it to a scald, pour it off and pour over the fish just enough milk to cover it. Add to a quart of the soaked fish butter the size of one-half of an G.gg, a very little flour and a dust of pepper. Beat up two eggs, and after taking off the fish thicken it by stirring in the G.gg. Some let it boil after the ^gg is added, but if this is done the egg will curdle. Another way is to boil eggs, chop and mix them in the gravy. Louise Harris. BAKED CODFISH AND POTATOES. Mix two cupfuls mashed potatoes, one cupful shredded codfish, two eggs, butter (size of a walnut), one pint of milk, pepper to taste. Bake until set (about fifteen minutes). Miss Cheesbrough. FISH CUTLETS. Season with salt and pepper one pint of any kind of cold cooked fish; make a little thick cream sauce of milk, butter and flour, and when cold form it with the fish into shapes of cutlets. Put the cutlets first into cracker crumbs, then into Q.gg and again into crumbs. Fry in hot fat until brown. Susan I. Langley. FISH. ~ 'j'5 FISH STEAKS FRIED. Cut the slices of fresh fish three-quarters of an inch thick, dredge with flour or corn-meal slightly salted or dip them in ^gg slightly salted and roll in crumbs; fry a light brown. Salmon or any other large fish can be fried this way. A. M. Dickerson. COD'S ROE. Take cod's roe that has been smoked, shave it into small pieces, put it in a saucepan with butter and a little pepper. Stir well over the fire and pour it on pieces of toast cut diamond-shaped. Mrs. G. S. CREAMED FRESH CODFISH. Take a piece of boiled fresh cod, remove the skin and bones, and pick into flakes; put these into a stew-pan with a little butter, pepper, and salt. Put on the fire, and when the contents of the pan are quite hot add a pint of cream and milk; thicken a trifle and all is ready to serve. T. R. Rich. CREAMED CODFISH. Pick (not shred) one cupful of codfish; place in a spider and fill and cover with cold water. Stir a moment over the fire and drain off the water. Stand on the stove, cover the fish with one and one-half pints of milk and a large tablespoonful of butter. Stir into a cup of cold cream two heaping tablespoonfuls of flour and when the milk on the stove is about to boil mix this with it. When the mixture has thickened stand where it will boil no longer and stir into it one Qgg. Serve at once. Mrs. a. M. Woods. CREAMED FINNAN HADDIE. Remove the skin and bones from a small salted finnan haddie pre- viously boiled, and pick into flakes with a fork. Place in a saucepan one tablespoon of butter and a tablespoon of flour, add one and one-half cups of milk, cook a few moments; season with pepper; thicken with flour anil butter creamed; serve on a hot platter garnished with toast. Amy Brown. R. A. Hillier. DELICIOUS FISH CHOWDER. Two pounds of fresh white fish, a quarter of a pound of bacon, five small potatoes, one small onion, six tomatoes, one quart of milk, butter the size of a small hen's Qgg and a teaspoon of flour. Pick the fish to pieces. Remove bone and skin; cut potatoes into dice; the bacon in 76 FiSH. small pieces; rub the butter and flour to a cream. Spread in a granite kettle half of the potatoes, then half of the fish, then sprinkle in the minced onions, then the bacon, then half the tomatoes. Then a shake of salt and pepper; add the rest of the fish, tomatoes, potatoes, and more salt and pepper, using in all one teaspoon of salt and one-fourth teaspoon of pepper. Cover with water, let simmer for half an hour. Scald the milk, put a pinch of soda into the chowder and stir; add the hot milk to the butter and flour; stir smooth; then add to the chowder. Serve very hot. Excellent. Mira A. Miller. BOSTON FISH CHOWDER. Take a large fish, as cod, haddock or halibut and cut in slices, after having scaled and cleaned it. Then cut some slices of raw salt pork (pickled) and place them in the bottom of your iron kettle. When partly tried out, put on top of the pork a layer of fish, then a layer of onions, and one of potatoes, both sliced quite thin. Add to each layer a little salt and pepper. Add very hard crackers (pilot bread is nicest) to the whole, placing them on the sides and top, then add cold water to nearly cover them. After the water has commenced boiling, three-quarters of an hour is ample time to cook it. Be careful not to let it boil too long, or break the slices of fish, but preserve them as whole as possible. Mrs. Lydia Floyd. FISH BALLS. The remnants of any cold fish, cod, whitefish, turbot, etc., can be used, by breaking the fish to pieces with a fork, removing all the bones and skin, and shredding very fine. Add an equal quantity of mashed potatoes, make into a stiff batter with a piece of butter and some milk, and a beaten &gg. Flour your hands and shape the mixture into balls. Fry in boiling lard or drippings, to a light brown. Mrs. G. T. Baldwin. FISH FRITTERS. The remains of any cold fish can be used here, and the same bulk of mashed potatoes as the fish. Pick the fish from the bones and skin, and pound it in a mortar with one onion, season with pepper and salt, then mix well with it the mashed potatoes, and bind together with a well- beaten (tgg. Flatten the mixture out upon a dish or pastry board, cut into small rounds or squares and fry in boiling lard to a light brown. Pile it in a napkin on a very hot dish, garnish with parsley and serve with any kind of fish sauce. Mrs. Charlotte Aiken. FISH. 77 FISH CAKES Save the fish left from dinner and use while warm. Remove the skin and bones, and mix with mashed potatoes. Add pepper, salt, chopped parsley, and an ounce of butter. Moisten with an ^gg into a paste, and roll into balls; then flatten and dip into ^gg. Fry in butter or lard to a nice brown. E. Protis. FISH CROQUETTES. Mix over the fire a teaspoonful of flour, a tablespoon of butter, and half a gill of cream. Add, off the fire, the yolk of an &gg, a little season- ing, and half a pound of cold dressed fish beaten to a paste. Let the mixture cool, and form it into balls, let these be egged and breaded. Fry to a nice brown in hot fat, and serve with gravy, made by boiling down the bones, fins, and tails with an onion. Add an anchovy and season to taste. LuRA Earl. FISH CROQUETTES— No. 2. Take remnants of boiled cod, salmon or turbot, and pick the flesh out carefully. Mince it moderately fine. Stir a piece of butter, a small spoon of flour and some milk over the fire till they thicken. Then add pepper, salt, and a little grated nutmeg, together with finely-chopped parsley, and then the minced fish. When very hot remove from the fire, turn on a dish to get cold, then shape, and finish the croquettes. Adelaide Munson. PANADA FOR FI5H. Put one ounce of butter, and rather less than two gills of water into a saucepan, boil them together, and add, by degrees, a quarter of a pound of flour; stir until the mixture is smooth, but do not let it burn. When off the fire, mix with it the yolks of three well-beaten eggs. When cold, ready for use. It is excellent in making forcemeat. J. E. Place. HALIBUT TIMBALE • Take a pound of the raw fish, and cut it in small pieces afterward- pounding it in a mortar and straining it through a sieve. Make a paste of a cup of bread-crumbs and half a cup of milk. Take off the fire, add* the pulped fish, one-half a teaspoon of salt, and a dash of paprica. Beat in slowly the whipped whites of five eggs. Fill molds, after buttering, with the mixture, and set them in a pan of hot water in the oven for twenty minutes. Serve with tomato sauce. Mrs. C. Whiting. 78 FISH. COD SOUNDS AND TONGUES. Soak, scrape, and boil, as many cod sounds as required. Drain them, and put them into a stew-pan with sufficient white stock to cover them; season the sauce with salt, pepper, and powdered mace, thicken it with a lump of butter rolled in flour, and, just before serving it, squeeze in the juice of a lemon. Serve with &gg sauce. Mrs. Frances Curry. FISH CAKES— No. 2. Four medium-sized potatoes, one and one-third cups of shredded codfish, one and one-half tablespoonfuls Ko-nut, one Qgg\ sprinkle pepper. Pare, quarter and boil the potatoes. Measure the fish and soak in cold water ten minutes to draw out the salt and press it in a fine strainer. When the potatoes are soft, add the fish, and stir the mixture over the fire, to dry it. Add the seasoning, butter and beaten ^gg, and mash all together. Roll into round cakes and fry in deep hot Ko-nut. Drain them on clean brown paper and serve hot. C. A. S. BAKED FISH WITH OYSTER DRESSING. Take fine fish, soak in salt water ten minutes; season with salt and pepper slightly and fill with as much of the following dressing as possible; tie with string; roast, basting often. Dressing. — Pint of oysters, one-half teacupful of coarse rolled crack- ers, one-half cup of sweet milk, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth teaspoonful black pepper, a pinch of cayenne, one-fourth teaspoonful cel- ery salt, tiny pieces of butter; mix very carefully; spread dressing on top also. Delicious. Mrs. T. Spofford. CODFISH FRITTERS. One-half pound of codfish, four medium potatoes, two eggs; boil fish and potatoes together till potatoes are cooked; mash together and beat very lightly; add the eggs well beaten and fry biown on a griddle like pancakes. Slice the potatoes and prepare the fish in small pieces before boiling. Louise Dewey. FINNAN HADDIE A LA DELHONICO. Half pound finnan haddie, one cup cream, one hard-boiled &gg, yolk of one raw &gg, one cup of grated cheese; pick-up fish with silver fork, pour boiling water over it; let stand a few minutes; drain; braize it in butter; add the cream, then the hard-boiled eggs cut in small squares, the cheese and raw &gg, also; pepper, thicken with flour and let cook seven or eight minutes. Serve on small pieces of toast. Delicious in chafing dish. Mrs. R. Hoham. FISH. 79 SALMON MOLD. Large can of salmon rubbed fine, four eggs, yolks and whites beaten separately until light, one-half cup of bread-crumbs, two tablespoonfuls melted butter; salt and pepper to taste; beat the crumbs into the eggs; rub the butter into the salmon; put together in a well-buttered bowl; steam one hour. Serve with drawn butter sauce. Mrs. R. Elliott. FISH TURBOT— No. 2. Cook whitefish tender, remove bones, mince fine, add a little chopped celery, sprinkle with salt and pepper. For the dressing heat one pint of milk, thicken with flour; when cool add two well-beaten eggs and one- fourth of a pound of butter; put in baking dish a layer of fish, then layer of sauce, until the dish is full; cover the top with cracker crumbs and bake one hour. Minerva Van Allen. DELICIOUS LENTEN DISH. Parboil a whitefish and pick apart. Make a sauce of one pint of milk, two eggs, a heaping tablespoonful of corn-starch, two tablespoonfuls of butter, a level teaspoonful of salt and a little pepper. Butter a baking- dish, put in a layer of fish, pour over some of the sauce, grate a trifle of nutmeg on this, and so proceed until fish and sauce are used up. Cover top layer with fine bread-crumbs, a little nutmeg, and bake a golden brown. Mrs. L. Tibbitts. SCALLOPED HERRING. Soak five salt herrings over night. Divide; remove all skin and bones; cut into inch squares. Have ready a dozen of good-sized cold potatoes, alternate layers of sliced potatoes and fish, adding bit of butter and good sprinkling of pepper to each layer of fish, beginning and ending with potatoes. Cover with a sauce made of three cupfuls of milk and three beaten eggs. Lastly adding one-half of a cupful of fine bread- crumbs mixed with one teaspoonful of drawn butter. Bake about forty minutes. Serve hot. J. J. M. SHAD ROE— FRIED. The roes of shad can be served with the fish or alone. Before boil- ing the shad place the roes in a spider of hot fat. Season with pepper and salt, and cook well. They should be crisp and brown on the outside. Serve on a platter. Lillie, 80 FISH. 5ALT WHITEFISH WITH CREAM SAUCE. There are many delightful ways of cooking salt fish — one of the best is to soak over night in cold water; drain and put in spider, pour over cream and milk, half and half. Add butter and speck of pepper; let come to a boil and thicken. Fine served for breakfast with baked potatoes. L. M. SALT HACKEREI BROILED. Soak over night in cold water. Drain thoroughly, wipe dry and put on gridiron in hot oven; heat through, then place over hot coals and broil. Pour over melted butter, sprinkle on a little pepper, and serve hot. Smoked finnan-haddie is fine cooked the same way. Miss R. A. T. HOW TO CURE AND SMOKE FISH. Scale, slit the fish up the back and clean. Wipe with a damp cloth but do not wash. To twenty pounds of fish allow one pint of salt, one pint of brown sugar and one ounce of salt-peter. Mix well together and rub the fish well inside and out with this mixture. Put one fish over the other with a board on top, and on this place heavy weights to press them down. Allow them to remain so for sixty hours, then drain, wipe dry, stretch open and fasten with small pieces of stick. Smoke them for five days in a smokehouse or in a barrel over a smothered wood fire. Mrs. L. B. M. FISH SAUCES, GRAVIES, ETC. See department entitled "Meat and Fish Sauces and Garnishings. " HOW TO COOK THEM THE principal shell fish used are oysters, lobsters and mussels. It is absolutely t-» "^ imperative that oysters should be fresh and «^ the best way to insure this, is to purchase them when possible in the shell and open them as you use them. Oysters are among the most edible of their species, and when fresh, are delicious articles of food, besides being held by some medical men as nutritious for delicate and consumptive persons. There is an old maxim that they are to be used only during the months which contain the letter "r." Wash each oyster when eaten raw, by dipping it into cold water. The juice should go through a fine sieve, which removes all shell and prevents being found in the dishes. Lobsters are in season from March to November. They are eaten at other seasons but their meat is light and stringy. If used at other seasons it is best to get the canned lobster. Lobsters must be boiled alive else they are unwholesome. The larger they are the older they are. Mussels are not so general- ly liked, although growing in favor. They, too, must be eaten only during the months containing the let- ter r. 82 SHELL FISH, PHILADELPHIA BROILED OYSTERS. Take large oysters and strain through a colander, put juice on fire until it comes to a boil, then skim; melt some butter and brown it, then thicken with flour and brown together, then add the juice with a little water, to make sufficient gravy to soak the toast; wipe the oysters dry and broil on a broiler; mix with gravy and spread over the toast. Mrs. L. Brown. MOTHER'S RECIPE FOR FRYING OYSTERS. Put plenty of butter in a frying-pan and let it get real hot before you begin frying. Beat up well as many eggs as you judge you will need; dip the oysters therein, one by one, then roll them very lightly in cracker crumbs, J:hen drop them in the hot butter. They will brown nicely before the oysters cook too much. Letitia Buzley. FRIED OYSTERS— No. 2. Select fine, large oysters, dry them out of their own liquor. Have ready a plate of eggs and a plate of bread-crumbs. Lay them in the ^^^ a few minutes, and then roll them in the bread-crumbs, allowing them to remain in these also, for a minute or two; this will make them adhere, and not come off as a skin, when in the pan. Fry in half butter and half lard, in order to give them a rich brown. Make it very hot before putting the oysters in. Mrs. R. Hathaway. OYSTER PATTIES. Roll out puff paste a quarter of an inch thick, cut it into squares, cover ten patty pans, and put on each a crust of bread the size of a walnut. Roll out another layer of paste the same thickness, cut as above, wet edge of the bottom paste and put on top; pare them, so the edges will be even, notch them with the back of the knife, rub them lightly with the yolk of an ^%^, and bake them in a hot oven about a quarter of an hour. When done slice very thin off the top, remove the bread and the inside paste. Filling. — Parboil two dozen oysters in their own liquor, after boiling it down to half, cut the oysters in halves, put them in a pan with an ounce of butter rolled in flour, half a gill of cream and a little salt. Stir this mix- ture over the fire five minutes, fill the patties, put the cover on, and serve hot. Mrs. George Bonham. SHELL FISH. 83 FILLING FOR OYSTER PATTIES— No. 2. Mix well together two tablespoons of butter, two tablespoons of flour, then pour half a pint of oyster liquor and one-half a pint of cream into the butter and flour. Beat and add the yolks of two eggs. Warm the oysters in their own liquor, and add them to the mixture just before they are to be used in the patties. Mrs. L. Cleveland. STEAMED OYSTERS. Wash the oyster shells thoroughly with a brush, place them side by side in a steamer, close it well and put over a large pot of boiling water. The deep shell must be undermost in order that no juice may be wasted. As soon as the shells open, the oysters are done and should be served at once with pepper, salt, butter, and a thin slice of lemon with each oyster. Mrs. a. Anderson. ROAST OYSTERS IN THE SHELL. Prepare the oysters as for steaming, then roast them over a clear fire with the large shell down. Two minutes after the shells open, the oysters are done. Take up quickly and serve in the shells on a hot platter, with pepper, salt and butter to suit the individual taste. ^ F. H. N. OYSTER CROQUETTES. Half a pint raw oysters, half a pint of cooked veal, one heaping table- spoonful of butter, three tablespoonfuls of cracker crumbs, the yolks of two eggs. Chop the oysters and veal very fine. Soak the crackers in oyster liquor, and then mix all the ingredients, and shape. Dip in egg and roll in cracker crumbs, and fry as usual. The butter should be soft- ened before mixing. F. E. P. OYSTER CHOWDER. Take one cupful of chopped fresh celery, one cup of milk, two table- spoons of butter, two tablespoons of flour, one salt-spoon of salt and the fleshy part of two and one-half dozen oysters cut in small pieces. Make a white sauce by cooking the flour and butter together and adding the milk gradually; then add the oysters, salt and cook five minutes; just before serving add the celery. Serve on thin slices of toast. W. T. M. OYSTER ROLLS. Very thin slices of bacon are required, with the rind cut off. Pour two drops of essence of anchovy on each oyster, four drops of lemon, a very little cayenne pepper, and roll each oyster in a slice of bacon. 84 SHELL FISH. When you have rolled enough, skewer them and fry them. Then, when done, take each roll separately and place it on a fired crouton. These rolls must be eaten very hot. Mrs. Carrie Oliver. SCALLOPED OYSTERS. Take a dish, put a layer of the oysters as free from their liquor as they can be made, and a layer of rolled crackers; another layer of oysters, another of crackers, until the dish is full. Add a little salt and pepper and pieces of butter between each layer, and moisten with cream. Bake about fifteen minutes. Mrs. Clarissa McB. OYSTER PANCAKES. Chop one pint of oysters — canned ones do very well — and add enough milk to the liquor to make a pint, using a little cream. Make a batter by stirring it into a scant pint of flour, adding a pinch of salt and two eggs very well beaten. If half a teaspoonful of baking powder is sifted with the flour, you are sure to have pancakes light, but some cooks prefer to depend on the eggs. When the batter is perfectly smooth beat in the oysters and bake on a griddle, like any pancakes. Try one, and if too substantial add a little more milk. If you like them richer, add a table- spoonful of melted butter. Serve with toasted crackers. A Housewife. BALTIMORE FRENCH OYSTERS. Heat a piece of butter the size of a walnut in a stew-pan till it is quite brown. Drain the oysters from their liquor, adding to the butter. Salt and pepper to taste, and cook till they curl up round the edges. Ivy. BROILED OYSTERS. Take a dozen large oysters, roll lightly in bread-crumbs, place them on a fine wire oyster broiler, baste with butter, and brown lightly over a very hot fire, season thoroughly, and serve on toast with celery sauce. Mrs. Huldah Jenks. OYSTERS CURRIED. Take two dozen oysters, one onion, one tablespoonful of curry- powder, one dessert-spoonful of flour, two ounces of butter and the juice of a lemon. Chop the onion up quite fine, mix the curry-powder, flour, and butter together, and put all into a stew-pan, simmering till a nice brown, stirring all the time; add the liquor of the oysters and the lemon- juice, and boil for five minutes. Put in oysters, boil up once, and serve with a dish of boiled rice. Harriet Winters. SHELL FLSH. 85 CREAMED OYSTERS ON TOAST. Take one dozen select oysters and wash them until perfectly free from pieces of shell, put them in a saucepan, strain the liquor, pour it over, place the pan at the side of the fire and let it simmer gently for a few minutes until the oysters plump up. Remove the oysters with a skimmer and put them on a warm dish in the oven; add to the liquor one teacupful of cream and salt and pepper to taste. Place the pan on the fire; when the liquor boils add two tablespoonfuls of butter into which has been stirred one teaspoonful of flour. When creamy put in the oysters and remove the pan from the fire. Have ready some pieces toasted bread nicely buttered; put the oysters on them, pour over the cream and serve very hot. Marion Witte. CREAMED OYSTERS— No. 2. Beard one pint fresh oysters, boil them in their own liquor until plump, drain, and pour over them this sauce: To one-half tablespoon of butter, melted, add one large tablespoon flour; cook a few minutes, then stir in slowly one cup of hot cream or milk; season with pepper, salt and one-half teaspoon celery salt. Pour over hot buttered toast. Mrs. C. I. Brown. OYSTERS. (Italian Style.) Drain the liquor from the oysters, spread a dish with butter, lay the oysters on it, strew finely-minced parsley over, season with salt and pep- per and sprinkle with grated Parmesan cheese. Put the dish into the oven, and when nicely brown serve with hot wafers. Mrs. Frank E. Phillips. OYSTER STEW. (Milk or Cream.) Drain the liquor from two quarts of oysters; mix with the liquor a small teacupful of hot water, add a little salt and pepper and set it over the fire in a saucepan. Let it boil up, then skim; wash the oysters, put them in the hot liquor, let them come to a boil, and when they "ruffle" add one tablespoonful of butter. The instant it is melted and well-stirred in, put in a pint of boiling milk and take the saucepan from the fire. Serve hot with oyster crackers. Mrs. E. C. Kellog. OYSTER STEW. (Plain.) Same as above, using only oyster liquor and more water instead of milk or cream. H. F. L. 86 SHELL FISH. OYSTER 50UP. See "Meat Soups" Part I. BOSTON OYSTER PIE. Butter the inside of a pudding dish, line it with pie crust, set into the oven and bake; when done fill with the following filling. Pick off all shell that may be found in three pints of oysters; put them into a stew- pan with barely enough of the liquor to keep them from burning; season with salt, pepper and butter; add a little sweet cream or milk, and one or two crackers rolled fine; simmer, but not boil, 2iS that will shrivel them. Have ready an upper crust the proper size and baked. Pour fill- ing in pie, place on upper crust and serve hot. A. L. C. MOCK OYSTERS. Grate one-half dozen ears of corn with a coarse grater, beat the whites and yolks of three eggs, add them to the corn, with one table- spoonful of wheat flour, one of butter, a teaspoonful of salt, and pepper to taste; stir well and drop spoonfuls of this batter into a frying pan with hot butter and lard mixed, or Ko-nut, and fry a light brown on both sides. Canned corn may be used instead, if desired. E. E. A. STEWED TERRAPIN. (Maryland Style.) Note. — Terrapin are much esteemed, and those which command the highest price come from the Chesapeake Bay region. They are also found in most of the seas of warm climates. The kind most in demand is the "diamond-back," or salt-water terrapin, and is never found far from the seacoast. Rarely does their length exceed ten inches, and their weight about eight pounds. The female is the largest, and its flesh most prized. When they are large they are called "counts." They feed on both animal and vegetable food. The ordinary way of killing them is to plunge them into boiling water, head first, and boil them fifteen minutes. We cannot wonder that vegetarians revolt against the cruelties practiced toward the animals that furnish us with food. Cut up one terrapin, put in a saucepan with a glass of Madeira, a little salt, and pepper, and one ounce of butter. Beat a teacup of cream with yolks of two eggs, hard boiled, and put it in with the terrapin moving it around in the pan, but not letting it boil. Use a soup turpeen to hold it when done. Mrs. Claude Morey. SHELL FISH. 87 TERRAPIN STEAK. Take a terrapin, cut steaks from it, and sprinkle them with salt and pepper. Put a few lumps of butter on them and broil on a gridiron. Serve the steak very hot. Mrs. W. H. Palmer. DIAMOND-BACK OR SALT-WATER TERRAPIN. The diamond-back turtle is highly prized for food. Select a thick, fat terrapin, and plunge it head first into a kettle of boiling water. Throw in some salt, put the cover on, and Let cook for fifteen minutes. Take out, remove the black skin from the shell, and the nails from the claws. Wash the terrapin thoroughly in warm water, and remove the shells. Take out the dark green gall bladder, which is about the size of a cherry, the sand bag, entrail and remove the head. Preserve the eggs, if there be any. All the pieces of meat, together with the fat and legs, should be kept in water until wanted for use. W. J. P. STEWED TERRAPIN WITH CREAM. Take some of the flesh prepared as above, cut in little pieces, and put over the fire in a stew-pan, together with a seasoning of pepper and salt, and a small piece of butter. Let stew for a short time, add one cup of hot water and an extra piece of butter; stew for ten minutes, then add two cups of rich milk and let it stew for another five minutes; then remove the pan to the side of the fire, and stir in a little thickening. Cover the pan and let stand for five minutes. Pour the terrapins, sauce and all, over hot tea-biscuits or buttered toast. E. J. C. BOILED LOBSTER. Take a live lobster, wash thoroughly and put into a kettle of boiling water, slightly salted, having first cleaned and tied the claws together. Keep the water boiling for half an hour. When done take out, lay on its claws to drain, and wipe dry. Rub the shell with a little salad-oil, which will give it a clear red color. Do not boil a lobster too long or the meat will be stringy. The Germans put a handful of caraway seeds into the salt and water. If not sufficiently boiled, the spawn will not be brightly colored. S. F. E LOBSTER. (Newport Style.) Split two cooked lobsters in half, remove all the meat, and divide the shells into eight parts. Cut the meat fine, crack the claws, taking care not to destroy their shape, pick out the meat. Melt two tablespoonfuls 88 SHELL FLSH. of butter, add one heaping tablespoonful of flour, stir and cook two min- utes; add one and one-half cupfuls of milk, stir and cook to a thick, smooth sauce; season with one teaspoonful of salt, one-quarter of a tea- spoonful of pepper; mix the yolks of two eggs with one-half a gill of cream, add them to the sauce, cook a few minutes, next add the lobster and one teaspoonful parsley chopped fine, stir two minutes over the fire. Fill this preparation in the lobster shells, sprinkle one teaspoonful grated bread-crumbs over each one and a few drops of melted butter. Place the shells in a shallow pan and bake ten minutes in a hot oven. How TO Arrange. — Cut a piece of bread oblong and toast, fasten this in the center of an oblong dish, and cover with parsley butter (butter mixed with parsley chopped fine), fasten the lobster claws with small skewers in the center on top of the bread, dress the lobster around, it garnish with small sprigs of parsley, and serve. Mrs. L. A. B. SAUCE FOR LOBSTER. Mix a salt-spoonful of r^w mustard and a small pinch of salt and pep- per smoothly with a dessert-spoonful of cold water; add gradually one- quarter of a pint of best vinegar. Stir gently over the fire until the vinegar is hot, then put in two ounces of fresh butter, and serve. D. R. L. CREAMED LOBSTER. One pint milk, one lobster, four teaspoonfuls of butter, one-half tea- spoonful salt, two tablespoonfuls of flour and a dash of cayenne pepper. Cut lobster in small dice, boil the milk, add the butter and flour and when smooth add lobster and seasoning; simmer ten minutes. Serve on toast. Fifth Avenue Hotel. LOBSTER A LA ATLANTIC CITY. One lobster, one quart of milk, six crackers, split and buttered; one teaspoonful of salt, a dash of cayenne pepper, two tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in one of flour. Scald milk, stir in seasoning, add butter and flour; cook three minutes, add lobster. Simmer five minutes. Line a tureen with crackers; serve with sliced lemon. Chef. LOBSTER STEW, Cut a lobster into small squares, cook slowly in fresh butter, adding a cup of cream sauce. Pour in some Worcestershire sauce, and a little curry-powder. Salt and pepper and serve on slices of thin, crisp, buttered toast. Mrs. P. J. Simmons. SHELL FISH. 89 LOBSTER PATTIES. One tablespoonful of lobster meat cut into dice, six mushrooms, one truffle, one tablespoonful of butter, one teaspoonful of flour, one-half cup- ful of cream, salt, cayenne. Put a tablespoonful of butter into a saucepan and when melted add one level tablespoonful of flour; cook, but not brown; add slowly the stock and stir until perfectly smooth; then add the cream; after it begins to thicken add the lobster meat, the chopped truffle and mushrooms. Season highly. Let simmer for five minutes. This must be creamy, but not too soft. Have ready rich puff pattie shells; fill and serve at once. ' A. R. A. ; LOBSTER CROQUETTES. I Cut one-half of a boiled lobster into small pieces; put one tablespoon of butter into a stew-pan and when hot sprinkle in one tablespoon of flour and cook; pour in a cup of boiling cream, let it boil, and add lobster; stir until scalding hot, then take from the fire, and when slightly cooled stir in three beaten eggs; salt and pepper to taste; return to the fire and stir; let boil long enough to set the eggs; butter a dish and spread the lobster; when cold form into pyramids; dip into bread-crumbs and fry. Serve hot. A. M. B. LOBSTER FARCIE. Remove the lobster from the shell, and cut the fish into small pieces. Stir in the meat a thick cream sauce. Season with salt, red pepper, Worcestershire sauce, and a small quantity of onion juice. Put into shells again, sprinkle thickly with bread-crumbs, and brown in the oven very slowly. A. M. D. LOBSTER SAUSAGES. Pick the flesh from a medium-sized freshly-boiled lobster. Mince fine and pound it in a mortar with two ounces of fresh butter, a little salt, cayenne, and pounded mace, and half of the coral, which has been pounded separately, and pressed through a hair sieve with the back of a spoon. Shape the mixture into rolls like sausages, sprinkle the rest of the coral over them, and place them in oven with a moderate fire until they are quite hot. Serve them on a folded napkin, and garnish with let- tuce leaves. Mrs. Clara Bristow. COLD LOBSTER. Take off the large claws and crack the shell lightly, without disfigur- ing the fish. Split open the tail with a sharp knife, and dish the fish on a folded napkin, with the head in an upright position in the center, and the 90 . SHELL FISH. tail and claws arranged neatly round it. Garnish with parsley. Salt, cayenne, mustard, salad-oil, and vinegar should be eaten with it. Mrs. H. Brown. BOILED nUSSELS. Brush the shells and wash the mussels in several waters, so they will be free from grit. Put them into a deep saucepan (without water) and sprinkle a little salt over them. Spread a napkin over them in the sauce- pan, put the lid on, and scald them over a sharp fire. Shake them about briskly, to keep them from burning. When the shells open, take the saucepan off the fire, strain the liquor into a bowl, and take out the fish. Very carefully remove the little piece of weed which is found under the black tongue and throw it away. If the mussels are left too long on the fire they will become leathery Mrs. Croly. BROILED SOFT-SHELL CRABS. Thoroughly clean the desired number of soft-shelled crabs, dip them into melted butter and season with pepper and salt. Then put them on the gridiron and broil until the shells are slightly brown. When done serve with melted butter. Garnish the plate with lemons cut into quarters. J. M. P. FRIED SOFT-SHELL CRABS. Have ready a dish of rolled cracker mixed with a little salt and pep- per, and on the stove a granite pan half full of hot fat; beat an ^%%, roll the crabs in the crumbs and dip in the ^%%, then roll again in the crumbs and drop into the smoking fat. When done take out with a skimmer, lay on brown paper to free them from grease and serve hot. Mrs. J. M. B. CRAB CROQUETTES. Take a pint of fresh crab meat, chop very fine, add one-half pint of bread-crumbs, season with salt and pepper and mix thoroughly. Roll one dozen fresh oysters in this preparation, dip them in light ^^^ batter and also in the crumbs again. Place some fresh butter in a very hot pan and fry slowly. Mrs. Hattie Bostwick. POTTED CRAB. Pick the meat from the shell and claws of a freshly-boiled crab. Pound it in a mortar with salt, cayenne, and pounded mace. Press it into small jars, cover it with butter, and bake it in a moderate oven for half an hour. When cold, pour freshly-clarified butter over it. Set it aside until the butter becomes cold. G.R.B. SHELL FISH. 91 DEVILED CRABS. Boil the crab and extract the meat therefrom, season with cayenne pepper, mustard, salt and such table sauce as you may prefer; put into a covered saucepan with hot water sufficient to keep from burning; add cracker dust moistened with a tablespoonful of cream together with a quantity of butter. Serve in the back shell, putting a sprig of parsley with each. H. J. F. CRAB FARCIE. Take all the meat from the shells, and weigh with bread-crumbs, allowing a pound of the meat to a pound and one-quarter of the crumbs. The crumbs must cover the meat. Put pieces of butter over the whole, and bake in the oven ten minutes. Serve with lemon and parsley, chopped. Mrs. Felice LaMonte. SCALLOPS. This fish much resembles an oyster, though it is larger, and tastes like a crab. Dry them after washing, and trimming away the beard and black parts, then roll in cracker dust, afterward in ^^^ and crumbs, and drop them into boiling fat for a minute, so they will take on a light brown. The crumbs must have salt and pepper mixed with them. Mrs. Callahan. LITTLE-NECK CLAMS SERVED RAW^. Wash the required number of clams in water and scrub well with a brush. Wipe and dry them. Now open and cut them from their shells. Place five or six on a plate on the half shells on top of cracked ice. Put half a lemon in the center of the plate. Serve with crackers and a small dish of finely-chopped cabbage with fresh dressing. W. O. T. STEAMED CLAMS. (New England Style.) Scrub the required number of clams; place when clean in a saucepan over the fire without any water and heat until the shells open. Take out the clams and pour the liquor into a jar to settle. Remove the clams from their shells, pulling off the thin skin round the edge, and cutting off the black end with a pair of scissors. When the water has settled pour it into a saucepan, add the clams and heat but do not boil. Take out the clams and serve on brown bread. H. T. P. FOR CLAM BAKE See Chapter "Camping Out." 92 SHELL FLSH. ROASTED CLAMS. Wash them and lay them on a gridiron over the hot coals. As soon as the shells open take off the top shell and place a little butter and pep- per on them. Oysters may be done in the same way. Mrs. Finn. CLAMS ON TOAST. Chop fine two dozen clams, melt two tablespoonfuls of butter and add two tabl'espoonfuls of flour, then add the clams with one-half a pint of their juice; season well and let simmer fifteen minutes. Just before serv- ing add a cup of cream and let come to a boil. Serve hot on toast. Mrs. C. I. Hewitt. CLAM FRITTERS. Take twelve large, or twenty-five small clams from their shells; if the clams are large divide them. Mix two gills of flour, one gill of milk, half as much of the clam liquor, and one ^^^ well beaten. Make the batter smooth, and then stir in the clams. Drop the batter by tablespoonfuls in boiling lard; let them fry gently, turning them when done on one side. F. C. R, SHRIMPS. Have half a pint of shelled shrimps. Then make a thick sauce: a heaped teaspoonful of flour, half an ounce of butter and a gill of milk. Flavor it with a little mace, pepper and salt. Stir in the shrimps. When well heated pour the whole out onto a hot dish, trim the dish round with cold boiled rice, and serve. Mrs. Annie Rust. SHRIMPS CREAMED. Heat two tablespoonfuls of butter and half a grated onion. When hot, stir in half a cup of cold boiled rice; add a cup of cream and half a pint of canned or fresh shrimps. Stir until it comes to the boiling point, then simmer about five minutes. Serve on toast. Eastman Hotel. CREAMED SHRIMPS ON TOAST. Wash and drain one can of shrimps or wash the same amount of fresh-gathered ones and remove shell. Put in a saucepan two tablespoon- fuls of butter; when it melts add the same quantity of flour and rub smooth, but do not brown. Pour on this a quart of milk and bring to a boil. Season with pepper, add the shrimps and let the mixture stand on the back of the stove until it is heated through, then pour over toasted bread. Mrs. N. K. B. SHELL FISH. 93 MACARONI AND OYSTERS. Break a pint of macaroni into inch pieces. Put in a saucepan and cover with boihng water. Keep at the boihng point for one-half an hour. Have ready one pint of oysters, salt, pepper and one-half of a cupful of cream. Drain the macaroni, put a layer in buttered baking dish, sprinkle over a little salt and pepper, little dots of butter and a little cream; then a layer of the oysters and another of the macaroni with more salt, pepper and butter. Sprinkle cracker crumbs over the top, add bits of butter and a little more cream if necessary. Put a cover over the dish and bake till nearly done; then remove cover and continue baking till a delicate brown. Mrs. Emily B. OYSTER TOAST. Boil one cupful of oyster liquor with one-half of a cupful of milk and cream mixed, one tablespoonful of butter, one-fourth of a teaspoonful of salt, a pinch of pepper; pour it over some toasted bread and set it in the oven five minutes, then lay broiled oysters on the slices and serve hot. D. B. OYSTER RAREBIT., Clean and remove the hard muscle from one-half or a pint of oysters, parboil them In their own liquor until their edges curl, then remove to a hot bowl. Put one tablespoonful of butter and one-half of a pound of grated cheese, one salt-spoonful of salt and a few grains of cayenne into a dish; while the butter is melting beat two eggs slightly and add to them the -oyster liquor, mix this gradually into the melted cheese, add the oysters and turn at once over hot toast. L. Miller. CLAM CHOWDER. One dozen and one-half of clams. Scrub shells and place in a kettle over the fire. Cover with one quart of boiling water. As soon as shells open remove from fire. Save the water. One-third of a pound of salt pork, chopped fine; four large potatoes sliced thin. Put pork in kettle. After frying till brown add strained water and the juice of the clams, the potatoes and three onions sliced thin. Simmer one and one-quarter hours; add a quart of milk, or water, if preferred, cook fifteen minutes longer; add clams and serve. Julia Thompson. BROILED FROGS* LEGS. Lay two dozen frogs on their backs. Cut from the neck along the side of the bell}^ and cut again across the middle of the belly. Take out 94 SHELL FISH. the entrails and cut away the head, leaving only the back and legs. Skin and chop off the feet, then wash thoroughly and blanch in scalding salted water. Lay on a dish and pour over a little olive oil seasoned with salt and pepper. Turn over several times in this seasoning and broil for three or four minutes on one side, then turn. Broil altogether about seven minutes, and serve with a inaitre cP hotel %2mq.&. Mrs. T. F. Kinney. FRIED FROGS' LEGS. Clean two dozen frogs' legs and dip them singly, first in a beaten egg then in cracker crumbs and plunge them singly into very hot fat and fry for five minutes. Drain, garnish with parsley and serve with mattre d hotel sauce and Saratoga chips. W. O. C. FRICASSEED FROGS' LEGS. Clean two dozen frogs as above and put them in a granite saucepan with a little butter. Place on the fire and cook until the butter begins to brown, then pour over a teacupful of hot water, cover the pan and stew for twenty-five minutes; skim off most of the butter and add salt and pepper to taste. Thicken with the yolks of two eggs and two tablespoonfuls of cream. As soon as it begins to boil remove from the fire. Serve on hot buttered toast. G. M. J. FROGS' LEGS STEWED. A chopped or sliced onion, an ounce of butter, a small piece of raw ham cut up very small, half a green pepper, a sliced tomato, a teaspoon of rice, a cup of hot water and one of cream. Put two ounces of butter in saucepan, lay the frogs' quarters in this and fry gently. Then add the other ingredients, boiling till done. Take out of the pan, strain the gravy, mix it with the yolks of two eggs, beaten to a cream. Place the frogs' legs in a proper dish, pour over the gravy and send to the table. C. E. P. P©IUI BY THE word game is meant all animals and birds which live in the woods and fields in a state of nature, which have never been domes- ticated and are proper to be eaten. There are many sorts of game — from the little quail, prairie chicken, and kindred birds, to the roe, deer and other hoof-footed species. The flesh of wild fowl has an aroma more marked than that of the tame ones. HOW TO SELECT POULTRY. Poultry may be served in many fashions, and is generally eaten with pleasure. In selecting it full-grown fowls have the best flavor, provided they are young. The age can be determined by turning the wing back- ward — if it yields, it is tender. The same is true if the skin on the leg is readily broken. Older poultry makes the best soup. In dressing poultry, chickens only should be scalded. All other fowl and game are best dry- picked. The intestines should be removed at once, but frequently in ship- ping they are left in and, hence, when removed, the fowl needs washing in several waters. The next to the last water should contain a half tea- spoonful of baking soda, which sweetens and renders all more wholesome. The giblets are the gizzard^'heart, liver and neck. The best pan in which to bake all kinds of game and fowl is a double pan or one with a hinged cover. The latter has been put upon the mar- ket within a few years and contains a small aperture in the top which per- mits the steam and gas to escape when wished, but confines the aroma, which is absorbed by the meat. 95 96 POULTRY AND GAME. SAGE DRE55ING. A good sage dressing for geese or ducks Is obtained by mixing one pint of stale bread-crumbs, two tablespoons of melted butter, one table- spoon of chopped parsley, one teaspoon of salt, two teaspoons of powdered sage, one teaspoon of powdered sweet marjoram, one-quarter of a teaspoon of black pepper. Mix all together, and moisten by adding the butter. This can be served on a separate dish, as a dressing for pork when roasted. Mrs. Jane Hart. FORCEMENT BALLS. These may be made by chopping one-quarter of a pound of beef suet, together with a little lemon peel, and some parsley. Mix with a bowl of bread-crumbs, flavored with pepper, salt and nutmeg. The yolks of two eggs will moisten it, when it must be rolled in flour, and made up into small balls and baked in a hot oven till crisp. These balls are fine to stuff fowls with. A little ham chopped or pounded makes them richer. Mrs. Margaret Anderson. STUFFING FOR GOOSE OR TAME DUCK. Mash potatoes finely, season highly with minced onion, sage, salt and pepper. Never fill a fowl more than two-thirds. Apples can be substi- tuted for the potatoes. G. W. P. ROAST TURKEY WITH OYSTER DRESSING. Dress the turkey carefully and rub thoroughly inside and out with salt and pepper. Stuff with a dressing prepared as follows: Take a loaf of stale bread, cut off crust and soften by placing in a pan, pouring on warm water, never boiling, squeezing out with the hand all the water, add one-half a pound of melted butter and a teaspoonful of salt and one- half a teaspoonful of pepper; drain off liquor from a quart of oysters, bring to a boil, skim and pour over the bread-crumbs; mix all thoroughly and if dry, moisten with a little sweet milk; lastly, add the oysters, being careful not to break them. Sew up the openings, spread the turkey over with butter, salt and pepper, place in a dripping-pan in a well-heated oven, add half a pint of hot water, and roast, basting often. Turn until nicely browned on all sides, and about one-half an hour before it is done, baste with butter and dredge with a little flour — this gives a frothy appearance. When making the gravy if there is much fat in the pan, pour off most of it and add the chopped giblets previously boiled until tender, and the liquor in which they were cooked, place one heaping tablespoon of flour POULTRY AND GAME. 97 in a pint bowl, mix smooth with a little cream; fill up bowl with rich milk, and add to the gravy in the pan; boil several minutes, stirring constantly, and pour into the sauce-bowl. Serve with cranberry sauce. Chef. CHESTNUT DRESSING. Shell a quart and one-half of chestnuts. Put them in hot water and boil until the skins are soft, then drain the water and remove the skins. Replace the chestnuts in water, and boil until soft. Take out a few at a time, and press through a colander while hot. Season the mashed chest- nuts with two tablespoonfuls of butter, two teaspoonfuls of salt, and one- quarter of a teaspoonful of pepper. W. P. B. PLAIN ROAST TURKEY. Pluck the bird carefully and singe off the down with lighted paper; break the leg bone close to the foot, hang up the bird and draw out the strings from the thigh. Never cut the breast; make a small slit down the back of the neck and take out the crop that way, then cut the neck-bone close, and after the bird is stuffed the skin can be turned over the back and the crop will look full and round. Cut around the vent, making the opening as small as possible, and draw carefully, taking care that the gall bag and the intestine joining the gizzard are not broken. Open the gizzard, remove the contents and detach the liver from the gall bladder. The liver, gizzard and heart, if used in the gravy, will need to be boiled an hour and one-half, and chopped as fine as possible. Wash the turkey and wipe thoroughly dry, inside and out; then fill the inside with stuffing, and either sew the skin of the neck over the back or fasten it with a small skewer. Sew up the opening at the vent, then run a long skewer into the pinion and thigh through the body, passing it through the opposite pinion and thigh. Put a skewer in the small part of the leg, close on the out- side and push it through. Pass a string over the points of the skewers and tie it securely at the back. Dredge well with flour, and cover the breast with nicely-buttered white paper, place on a grating in the dripping-pan and put in the oven to roast. Baste every fifteen minutes — a few times with butter and water, and then with the gravy in the dripping-pan Do not have too hot an oven. A turkey weighing ten pounds will require three hours to bake. Mrs. a. C. Brown. 98 . POULTRY AND GAME. BOILED TURKEY WITH OYSTER SAUCE. Prepare in the same manner as for roasting, fill with a dressing of oysters. Tie legs and wings close to the body, place it in boiling water that has been well salted, with the breast down. Skim it often, and boil two hours, but not long enough to have the skin break. Serve with celery or oyster sauce. Have a nice piece of salt pork, or ham, boiled, and serve a thin piece to each plate. Some save the liquor in which the turkey has been boiled and use it for soup, by adding seasonings. Mrs. Marietta Hollister. ROASTED TURKEY WITH SAUSAGES. (German Style.) Stuff the turkey with rich dressing, when done remove to platter, sur- round with small, fried sausages and chestnuts cooked in broth. Put a handful of water cress at each end of the platter, and serve with a well- thickened giblet sauce. Matie Higbie. BRAISED TURKEY. Truss and stuff as for roasting, using a forcemeat made of minced chicken, mushrooms and sweetbreads, in addition to the bread; lard the breast with fine square shreds of fat salt pork; place the turkey in a stew- pan, breast uppermost, with sliced vegetables and sufficient broth to cover. Set it on top of the stove, and as soon as it begins to simmer put into the oven and cook slowly for an hour and one-half. Baste occasionally with the gravy. Garnish the turkey with stoned olives and thicken the gravy. Mrs. Jane Hall. BONED TURKEY. This is a difficult thing to attempt, but very nice when accomplished. Clean the fowl, as usual. Have a very sharp-pointed knife, begin at end of wing, pass the knife down close to the bone, cut all the flesh from the bone, leaving the skin whole. Pass the knife down each side of the breast bone and up the legs, keeping close to the bone. Split the back half way up, and carefully draw out the bones. Fill the places whence the bones are removed, with a stuffing restoring the fowl to its natural form, and sew up all the incisions made in the skin. Lay a few strips of fat bacon on the top, basting often with salt and water, and a little butter. A glass of port wine added to the gravy is liked by some. When serving carve across the fowl in slices, and add tomato sauce. Mrs. Fanny Holmes. POULTRY AND GAME. 99 PHEASANT. Prepare as you would any game; lard, rub with salt, wrap in grape- vine leaves and roast from an hour to an hour and a half in plcnt}^ of butter to keep them juicy and tender. The pheasant is one of the greatest dainties of the table. Malendy. JELLIED GOOSE. (German Style.) One young (not too fat) goose, two well-cleaned disjointed calves' feet, two heaping teaspoons white pepper-corns, same amount of allspice, several large onions, four bay-leaves, one carrot, one parsley root, part of a celery root, rind and juice of one lemon, salt, enough white-wine vinegar to give it a sour taste, almond oil. Take the whole goose, head, neck, heart, lungs, gizzard and feet (scald and skin the feet), together with the calves' feet, put in a granite pot, cover with water and boil, carefully skimming it until it looks clear, then add the spices, vegetables, lemon and the vinegar, boil until the meat is well done, remove the fat as it rises and strain boiling hot through a flannel (white) bag to cool. (It must taste piquant and spicy.) After the meat has cooled separate the meat from the breast bone, cut it in narrow, bias strips, cut the legs in the joints, likewise the rest of the goose, add the head, neck, feet, etc., put all together in a porcelain dish, well oiled with almond oil or greased with lard. Now free the jelly of every par- ticle of fat, remove all that is clear, melt it and pour gradually over the meat. Do not turn it out until ready to serve. It must be stiff enough to keep the shape of the form, but not hard and sticky. Mrs. Etta Hover. ROAST GOOSE. Do not cook a goose that is more than eight months old, and the fat- ter it is the more juicy the meat. The dressing should be made of three pints of bread-crumbs, six ounces of butter, a teaspoonful each of sage, black pepper and salt, and an onion chopped fine. Do not stuff very full, but stitch very closely so that the fat will not get in. Place in a baking pan with a little water, and baste often with a little salt, water and vine- gar. Turn the fowl frequently, so that it may be evenly browned. Bake two and one-half hours. When done, take it from the pan, drain off the fat and add the chopped giblets which have previously been boiled ten- der, together with the water in which they were done. Thicken with flour and butter rubbed together; let boil, and serve. L.cfC. FrAULEIN HiRSCH. 100 POULTRY AND GAME. BAKED CHICKEN. Take a plump fowl, dress and lay in cold salt water for one-half hour, then put in pan, stuff and sprinkle well with salt and pepper; lay a few slices of fat pork on to keep moist. Cover and bake until tender with a steady fire. Baste often. Turn so as to have uniform heat. Mrs. a. E. Reagor. STEWED CHICKEN WITH SALT PORK. One chicken and a little salt pork. Prepare chicken, the same as for fried chicken, cut in pieces and put on the fire in a kettle with cold water enough to cover well, add the salt pork and boil until tender. When this is done have ready some baking-powder biscuits. Break open the bis- cuits, place on a platter, on these put the chicken; thicken the gravy with the flour, add seasoning and cream; pour this over the chicken and serve at once. Lola Baker. TO ROAST OLD FOWL. Neatly dress and then soak in cold water for two hours. Boil until tender, then put into roaster and stuff with a nice sage dressing. Take two tablespoonfuls of flour mixed with butter and spread over chicken. Put in oven and bake until a nice brown. Mrs. Mella Swift. CHICKEN PIE. Take a fat hen, dress and cut into pieces. Stew until tender, adding salt. Make a crust of two cups of sour cream, one-half a teaspoonful of soda, a pinch of salt, one cup of butter and one teaspoonful of baking powder. Add enough flour to make a stiff dough. Put chicken into a deep pan with plenty of broth. Sprinkle in a handful of flour and add pepper and more salt if necessary. Wet the edge of pan and cover the top with dough three-quarters of an inch thick, cutting a slit in the center for steam to escape. Bake in a moderately hot oven thirty minutes. Mrs. Chas. Horner. CHICKEN PIE— No. 2. Put a good fat young hen to cook in cold water. When partly done, salt. When done, remove bones and lay in the bottom of a baking dish. Prepare a sauce of three tablespoonfuls of butter (melted), three table- spoonfuls of flour, a little pepper and six cups of the warm chicken broth and one cup of warm milk or cream. Pour over the chicken. Crust.— Two cups of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one teaspoonful of POULTRY AND GAME. 101 salt, two tablespoonfuls of butter or lard and one cup of milk. Mix well. Lay or drop over the chicken not (roll). An egg may be added to the crust if desired. Excellent. Mrs. Lottie Alexander. POTTED CHICKEN. To every pound cold roast or boiled chicken allow one-quarter of a pound of butter, salt and cayenne to taste, one teaspoonful of pounded mace, one-half of a small nutmeg. Cut in small pieces, pound together till reduced to a small paste. Pack closely in jelly glasses, and cover with clarified butter. A few slices of ham added is an improvement. Mrs. Casson. PRESSED CHICKEN. Select two chickens about one year old, clean, cut up well, and stew in just enough water to cover. When nearly cooked, season with salt and pepper. Stew down until the water is nearly all boiled out, and the meat drops easily from the bones. Remove the bones and gristle; chop the meat rather coarsely, then put back into the stew kettle with broth (first skimming off all fat), and let it heat again. Turn it into an oblong bread pan, drop in along center four hard-boiled eggs; place a weight on the top. This will turn out like jelly and may be sliced. The success depends upon not having too much water; and see to It that the chickens are not too young. G. W. P. CHICKEN WITH MUSHROOMS. Have ready one pound of cold roast chicken cut into dice-shape, and one-half of a pint of mushrooms, cut into small bits. Cover the mush- rooms with hot water and cook for five minutes. Skim them out and lay on a hot dish. Add enough milk to the liquid to make a coffee-cupful. Thicken with a tablespoon of flour rubbed smooth with the same quantity of butter. Season with a salt-spoonful of salt and half as much white pep- per. Add the chicken and mushrooms, and cook three minutes, stirring constantly. Serve on a hot platter. Mrs. Jennie Merrill. CHICKEN. (Italian Style.) Boil a whole chicken lill tender in lightly salted water. While cook- ing dip out Into a granite kettle a pint of the broth and put with it one sliced onion, a tablespoon of butter, salt and pepper, and one-half of a cup of macaroni broken into tiny pieces. Cook till water has nearly boiled away, then add one cup of milk and cook slowly till the 102 POULTRY AND GAME. macaroni has absorbed the milk. Sprinkle grated cheese over it. Boil the chicken broth till reduced to one pint; thicken slightly. Pour the macaroni over the chicken and the thickened sauce over the whole; on top sprinkle a little grated cheese. Mrs. Del Nero. PICKLED CHICKEN. Boil four chickens till meat falls from bones. Put meat in a stone jar and pour over it three pints of good cold cider-vinegar and a pint and one-half of the water in which they were boiled. Add spices and let stand two days. This is a fine dish for luncheon, or for Sunday evening tea. Mary Bonner. ESCALLOPED CHICKEN. To a pint of boiling hot cream add one tablespoon of flour, mix until smooth; season with pepper and salt; scatter a few bread-crumbs in dish, then a layer of seasoned chicken cut as for salad, then a layer of cream dressing; put two layers each, then bread-crumbs and small pieces of butter on top. Mrs. Minnie Amphlett. CREAMED CHICKEN. See Chapter on "Chafing Dishes." CHICKEN GULASH. (Delicious.) This is a Hungarian dish. I first tasted of it in Budapest but the first mouthful convinced me it was one of the nicest ways of serving chicken I ever knew. Boil the fowl in the usual way. When tender take out, remove the bones and put bones back into the liquor; cook thirty minutes and remove bones. Cut chicken in small bits or cubes (except the liver, heart and gizzard — reserve these for other uses). Put chicken in liquor, adci one-half can of tomatoes or six whole ones, six onions, salt, pepper, speck of sugar, and butter, and stew until done. Have ready one dozen slices of buttered toast. Pour over toast in soup tureen. Serve hot. Irene S. CHICKEN FRIED. (New Englund Style.) A chicken for frying should be very young, but if there are doubts as to its age, before cutting it up parboil it for ten minutes in water that has been slightly salted. Then sprinkle a little salt and pepper over the pieces and roll them in flour. Fry them in plenty of butter till done. It takes about twenty minutes to fry them. Put the chicken on a platter, POULTRY AND GAME. 103 make a gravy by turning off some of the fat and adding a cup of milk that has been thickened with a tablespoon of flour. Pour this gravy over it. Or the gravy can be omitted and the platter can be garnished with crisp lettuce leaves. Mrs. Fanny Oakley. STEWED CHICKEN. Melt in a stew-pan two tablespoonfuls of rather salt butter, and thicken by adding one of flour. Stir it well, to make it smooth, till it assumes a light yellow color. Put in a plump young chicken, cover it close, and let it simmer half an hour, turning it once. Then add a tumbler of rich beef jelly and one of sherry, and fill up the pan with mushrooms. Again close it and let it simmer another half hour, when it is ready to serve. Salt and pepper are the only spices needed. J. A. Goldberg. CHICKEN PATTIES. Mince fine cold chicken that has been roasted or boiled. Season with pepper and salt, and minced parsley and onion. Moisten with chicken gravy or cream; fill scalloped shells with the mixture. First, line the shells with pastry. Sprinkle grated cracker over the top of each pattie. Put a bit of butter on each; bake in a hot oven till brown. Amy Wilcox. BROILED CHICKEN ON TOAST. The finest way to prepare real young chicken is to dress and split them down the back. Remove the entrails, wash and wipe. Lay on granite pan in hot oven till thoroughly heated through, then put on broiler and place over live coals. Let thoroughly cook, turning often so as not burn. When done put in pan again, season with salt, pepper and butter and put in oven three minutes. Put small slices of buttered toast on plat- ter, put chicken on toast, add one-half cup of cream to pan, thicken a trifle, pour over chicken and serve. Mrs. L. M. CHICKEN CROQUETTES. Take any kind of cold fowl, cut up fine, season with salt, pepper and butter, a little onion if desired and stir in two fresh eggs. Make in cakes, dip in beaten ^%%., then in cracker crumbs and fry in boiling lard or lard and butter mixed, or better, still, in Ko-nut. The latter is a vegetable oil perfectly healthy and fries a golden brown without easily burning. C. E. P. CHICKEN SALAD. See Chapter on "Salads Made of Meat, Fish and Shell Fish," Part I. 104 POULTRY AND GAME. MARYLAND FRIED CHICKEN WITH CORN DODGERS. Clean and wipe a chicken and drop the pieces into boiling lard. Fry until well browned and thoroughly cooked. As the pieces are cooked remove to a hot platter. When all are done, pour off the lard, leaving in the pan the gravy of the chicken. Return the pan to the fire and pour in about- one cup or more of cream. Dredge in a little flour; stir; bring it to a boil and let boil three minutes. Season with pepper and salt and pour over the chicken. Sprinkle the top with some finely-chopped parsley. Have ready firm, cold corn-meal mush. Cut it into slices, dip them lightly in egg, cover with flour, and fry in butter. Garnish the edge of the platter with these corn dodgers, and serve. " Mrs. C. I. Tibbitts. CHICKEN STEW WITH BISCUIT. Boil the chicken same as for fricassee, take out the chicken and have ready a frying-pan with butter; into this put your chicken and let brown on both sides; after taking the chicken up on platter pour into your fry- ing-pan the gravy left in the kettle. Let come to a boil, thicken. Have ready some cream biscuits, break open on the platter, butter each half and pour over your gravy. ' J. T. P. CURRIED CHICKEN. Slice an onion and brown in a little butter, adding a spoonful of curry- powder. Let remain covered a few minutes to cook. Add more butter, and put in the cold chicken previously cut up very small. Thicken with a little flour. F. V. Varley. REED BIRDS. They need to be plucked and drawn very carefully, when they can be salted and flour dredged over them. They need a quick fire and about fifteen minutes roasting. Raw oysters can be placed in each one before putting it in the oven. Roll the oysters in bread-crumbs. Rub butter over them and pepper. D. P. Mann. SNOW BIRDS. Clean a dozen thoroughly. Put a couple of oysters in each, put them in a yellow-ware dish, add two ounces of boiled salt pork and three raw potatoes cut into slices. Add a pint of oyster juice, an ounce of butter, salt and pepper. Lay a crust over the dish, and bake in a moderate oven. C. E. P. POULTRY AND GAME, 105 ROASTED GUINEA FOWL. (Delicious. ) Unless young the guinea are apt to be tough, but even an old guinea can be made eatable by the care of a good cook and they are always high- flavored and savory. Clean, stuff and roast like duck or chicken and send to the table with currant jelly. Mrs. Helen Gay. ROAST PARTRIDGES. A simple method of roasting these birds is to pick them, draw them, and wash carefully. Then truss them, binding thin slices of smoked bacon around them. Roast fifteen minutes in a pretty hot oven. About seven minutes before needed for the table, remove the bacon, salt the partridges lightly, and brown them in the oven. When placed on the table a brown gravy must accompany them. Mrs. M. Marline. ROAST PARTRIDGES— No. 2. A German way of roasting these birds is to truss them as you would a chicken. Place a vine-leaf upon the breast of each, over this lay two or three thin slices of fat bacon, and fasten them securely with strong twine. Put the birds into a stew-pan, just large enough to hold them, with as much butter as will keep them well basted, and when they are browned on one side turn them to the other, until they are evenly colored all over. When done pour a cup of thick cream over and sprinkle bread-crumbs, browned in butter, upon them. Mrs. Freda M. QUAILS ON TOAST. Take five quails, but don't remove the legs, for you would lose all the taste of the game. Wipe them well; string them tight, so as to raise the breasts. Put a little butter on each, a little lemon juice, and inside each the quarter of a lemon without the peel. Then put a very thin slice of pork, about three inches square, round each quail, with two or three cuts in each slice, and string it tight. Let cook on a good fire, and when they are nearly well done, for white meat game must be well done, cut the string; dress nicely on toast and serve hot. Pour the juice on the quails after having taken the fat off, and put some slices of lemon around the dish, one for each quail. Mrs. Hattie Bullard. lOG POULTRY AND GAME. QUAIL STEW. Cut two quails down the back, lengthwise, place them in a pan with some butter, and cook them. Have ready two large slices of toasted or fried bread, and lay the quails upon them. Add a little water to the liquor, thicken it and pour it over the birds, squeezing a little lemon juice over them. Mrs. Hattie Forbes. ROAST QUAIL. Draw the quails and truss them, fastening a piece of fat pork over the breast of each. Place them in a baking-pan with two tablespoonfuls of butter and four of boiling water. Roast them about fifteen or twenty minutes, basting them often. When done take off the bacon, and let them be placed on a platter, garnished with water cress. Pour a rich brown gravy around the birds, but not over them. Mrs. Marcia Hunting. ROAST QUAIL— No. 2. Rinse well and steam over boiling water until tender, then dredge in flour and smother in butter. Season with salt and pepper, and roast in oven. Thicken the gravy. Serve with green-grape jelly, and garnish with parsley. Miss Caroline Elliott. ROAST PIGEONS. Clean and truss two young pigeons, mince the livers, and mix with them two ounces of finely-grated bread-crumbs, two ounces of fresh but- ter, an onion finely minced, a teaspoonful of shredded parsley, and a little salt, pepper, and grated nutmeg. Fill the birds with this forcemeat, fasten a slice of fat bacon over the breast of each, and roast. Make a sauce by mixing a little water with the gravy which drops from the birds, and boiling it with a little thickening; season it with pepper, salt, and chopped parsley. Mrs. Emma Legg. MOCK DUCK. Take a round steak, make a stuffing as if for chicken, put it in the steak, roll and skewer tightly. Sprinkle with a little flour, put in a pan, put bits of butter on it, pour water over it and bake. Mrs. Charlotte Baldwin. TO ROAST ANY SMALL BIRDS. Birds, forcemeat or oysters, bacon, one pint of rich stock, or one tea- spoonful meat extract dissolved in hot water, butter, pepper, salt, biscuit crust. Stuff the birds with any forcemeat, or put one large oyster in each POULTRY AND- GAME. 107 bird, place the bacon in an earthenware dish, upon this the birds. If a forcemeat is used add the stock; if oysters, the oyster Hquor. Add butter, pepper and salt. M. V. H. ROAST HAUNCH OF VENISON. The flavor of venison is improved by being kept as long as possible and yet remaining perfectly sweet. Choose a haunch with clear, bright and thick fat. Wash it in w^arm water and dry well with a cloth; butter a sheet of white paper and put over the fat; lay the venison in a deep bak- ing dish with a very little boiling water, and cover with a coarse paste of flour and water one-half inch thick. A thickness of coarse paper should be laid over the paste. Cook in a moderately-hot oven for four hours or less, according to the size of the haunch. Twenty minutes before it is done, quicken the fire, remove the paste and paper, dredge the joint with flour, and baste well with butter until it is nicely frothed and of a fine delicate brown color. Garnish the knuckle-bone with a frill of white paper, and serve with a gravy made from its own dripping — from which the fat has been removed — placed in a tureen. Currant jelly always accom- panies venison. Mrs. Serena Hall. VENISON STEAK BROILED. Take the leg and cut slices from it having a quick, clear fire. Turn them continually. They should be served under-done. Butter both sides of the steak; sprinkle salt and pepper over the venison, garnish with parsley and accompany it by a jelly sauce. Mrs. Dorcas Cummings. ROAST VENISON. Slit the venison and lard it with pieces of pork or bacon. Place pieces of pork or bacon on the bottom of the pan; slice very fine, vegetables on the pork, then place your meat on this. Season, brown well on the top of the stove, then turn "over and brown on the other side; then set in the oven and put soup stock or water in the bottom of the pan and cover closely. Serve with gravy. 7^he vegetables may be chopped fine and served with it, or not. Be careful not to let them burn. Baste with port wine. O. B. M. GAME PIE. (Fine.) Take two dozen woodcock, quail, snipe, or other small birds. Split each one in half and put them into a saucepan containing about a gallon of cold water, although beef broth or soup stock would be preferable. When the boiling point has been reached, carefully skim and season with 108 POULTRY AND GAME. a little pepper and salt with mace, ground cloves and one bay-leaf, adding half a pound of salt pork cut into squares, two small carrots and one onion. Boil until tender, being careful that there is enough broth to cover the game. Into another saucepan put four ounces of butter and two table- spoonfuls of browned flour, mixing well and stirring into it a part of the broth or gravy so as to make a thin sauce. Strain off what broth remains in the first saucepan, removing therefrom the vegetables and spices to go with the sauce. Slice and cut into dice-shape, potatoes equal in quantity to the meat, and put in a deep baking dish; put on the top crust of dough and bake in an oven that is not too hot. Mrs. Halliday. BAKED RABBITS WITH RICE. Cut a plump young rabbit into neat joints, and pepper highly. Dis- solve four ounces of bacon fat or good dripping in a saucepan, put in the rabbit, and let it steam over a gentle fire until lightly browned and half dressed. Take it up, drain, and put aside. Wash half a pound of rice, and put it into a saucepan with a quart of nicely-flavored stock and half a blade of mace. Let it simmer until it is tender and has absorbed the liquor,^ then let it cool, and stir in with it a large slice of fresh butter and the yolks of four eggs. Butter a deep dish, lay the pieces of rabbit into it, pour over them a large spoonful of chutnee, and then spread the rice on the top. Lay the beaten yolks of two eggs upon the rice, and bake the prepa- ration in a brisk oven. Mrs. J. Gay. HOW TO DRESS BELGIAN HARE. Take the hare by the hind feet, letting the head hang downward; strike a smart blow on the back of the head; cut the throat at once, let- ting out all the blood. Hang up. Run the knife around the first joint of the hind legs, cutting the skin, and pass the blade inside the thigh to the tail. With the hand separate the skin from the flesh, drawing the skin downward toward the head. Cut the fore legs off at the first joint and pull up the skin. Use the knife carefully in skinning the head, severing it at the nose and lip and drawing it off. Slit the belly lengthwise and remove intestines, excepting the kidneys. The liver and heart are to be saved; also the head if you wish it, first removing the eyeballs. Wash the body thoroughly and dry with a cloth. J. S. G. STEWED HARE. (Spanish Style.) Slice one large onion, one chili pepper, and four medium-sized tomatoes into a stew-pan and bring to a boil. Cut the hare in pieces and POULTRY AND GAME. 109 put in as soon as boiling; add one teaspoon of salt and enough hot water to cover. When nearly done thicken with flour and butter the size of an ^^^, Anna Dolittle. ROAST BELGIAN HARE. Prepare a stuffing by chopping fine one-quarter pound of salt pork and a small piece of onion. Pour boiling water over six Bos- ton crackers, then chop with the pork. Season with sage, salt and pep- per; add boiling water to moisten and stir in one egg. Wipe the hare dry, fill it with the stuffing and lard with small strips of salt pork. Allow twenty minutes for each pound. Put a piece of butter as large as an ^^^ in a cup, fill with boiling water and use to baste. Miss Nettie Martin. FRICASSEED HARE. Lay the pieces in cold water a little while, drain well and place in saucepan with pepper and thin slices of salt pork. Cover with water and let simmer for thirty minutes. Add chopped onion. Make a smooth flour paste, stir in and let simmer until the meat is tender, then add half a cup of cream. If too thin add more flour. Boil up once and serve hot. Mrs. J. M. Van Ness. RABBIT PIE. Cut a rabbit into eight pieces, soak in salted water one-half hour and stew until half done in enough water to cover it. Lay slices of pork in the bottom of a pie-dish and upon these a layer of the rabbit. Then fol- low slices of hard-boiled egg, peppered and buttered. Proceed until the dish is full, the top layer being bacon. Pour in the water in which the rabbit was stewed, and adding a little flour, cover with puff paste, cut a slit in the middle, and bake one hour, laying paper over the top should it brown too fast. Mrs. M. Mausley. ROAST DUCK— TAME. Take a young farm-yard duck fattened at liberty, but cleansed by being shut up two or three days and fed on barley-meal and water. Two small young ducks make a better dish than a large, handsome, hard- fleshed drake, which, as a rule, is best fit for a stew. Pluck, singe and empty; scald the feet, skin and twist round on the back of the bird; head, neck, and pinions must be cut off, the latter at the first joint, and all skewered firmly to give the breast a nice plump appearance. For stuffing, take one-half pound of onions, a teaspoonful bf powdered sage, three tablespoonfuls of bread-crumbs, the liver of duck parboiled and minced no POULTRY AND GAME. with pepper, salt, and cayenne. Cut the onions very fine, throw boiHng water over them, and cover for ten minutes; drain through a gravy strainer, and add the bread-crumbs, minced liver, sage, pepper and salt to taste; mix, and put it inside the duck. This quantity is for one duck; more onion and sage maybe added, but the above is a delicate compound not likely to disagree with the stomach. Let the duck be hung a day or two, according to the weather, to make the flesh tender. Roast before a brisk clear fire, baste often, and dredge with flour to make the bird look frothy. Serve with a good brown gravy in the dish, and apple sauce in a tureen. It takes about an hour. Mrs. E. Engel. DUCK AND GREEN PEAS. Cut the rind from half a pound of lean bacon. Divide it into pieces two inches square and fry a light brown with butter. Dredge in a little flour, and stir three minutes. Add a pint of broth, an onion stuck with two cloves, a bunch of sweet herbs, salt and pepper. The duck should be previously fried or roasted for ten minutes then put into the stew-pan with the gravy and stewed slowly for an hour and a quarter or till tender. Meanwhile stew a quart of peas with butter. Place the ducks and peas on a hot dish, pour over them the gravy strained and thickened, and serve hot. Mrs. A. Ament. BRAISED DUCK. Prepare the duck as if for roasting. Line a small pan just large enough for the duck, with slices of bacon. Strew over the bottom parsley, thyme, and lemon peel. Lay in the duck, add a carrot cut into strips, an onion stuck with three cloves, season with pepper, and cover with stock broth and a glass of white wine. Baste frequently, and simmer an hour, or till done. Fry some slices of turnip in butter to a light brown, drain and add them to the stew-pan, after removing the duck, which should be kept hot. When the turnips are tender remove them and strain the gravy, thickening with a little flour. Put the duck on a dish, throw the hot gravy over, and garnish with the turnips. Fry the turnips eight or ten minutes. Mrs. C. Clements. SQUIRREL. Squirrel is cooked similar to rabbits. They may be broiled or made into a stew. There are many varieties — black, red, gray and fox. Gophers and chipmunks are also good but of smaller variety. J. M. B. CAPON. Proceed as directed for chicken. (See pages 107, 108 and 109.) HOW TO SELECT THEM. IN PURCHASING meat one should know how to select the best quality, and the most useful pieces. . Beef, which stands at the head of the list, as being most generally used and liked, should be of a bright clear red, and the fat white. It should be well clothed in fat, to insure its being tender, and juicy. The finest pieces are the sirloin and the ribs— the latter making the best roast- ing piece in the animal. In cooking steaks remember it is far better to turn over three or four times on a platter containing a little olive oil, than it is to hammer them, to make them tender. The object is not to force out the juice, but to soften the fiber. In selecting Pork, one cannot exercise too great care in examining it. Do not buy any that is clammy or has kernels in the fat. Remember, too, when the rind is hard it is old. Fm/ should be fine in grain, of a delicate pink with plenty of kidney fat. It should never be eaten under two months old. MiUton should be firm and juicy, the flesh close-grained, the fat hard and white. TIME REQUIRED TO ROAST MEATS. Ovens vary in heating qualities, some baking quicker than others, but fifteen minutes to the pound will do most roasts. The oven must be at the proper heat when the meat is placed therein, so that the surface will crisp quickly, and the juices be retained in the meat. It is not necessary to wash the meat, but wipe it with a clean, damp cloth, and set it in the oven without any water. As soon as it begins to cook add a very little water, and baste it frequently. An onion may be laid on top of the roast, to give it a flavor, but should be removed before serving. Ill 112 MEATS. HOW TO BOIL FRESH AND SALT HEAT. Fresh meat should be put at once Into boihng water, and when halt done, the salt and vegetables should be added. Salt meats must be put into cold water in order to extract the salt. They require longer boiling than fresh meats, nearly thirty minutes to the pound. TO CLARIFY DRIPPINGS. Drippings accumulated from different cooked meats (except mutton, which has a strong flavor), can be clarified by putting all into a basin and slicing into it a raw potato, allowing it to boil long enough for the potato to brown, which causes all impurities to disappear. Remove from the fire, and when cool drain into basin and set in a cool place. Mabel Stanley. FOR PRESERVING BEEF FOR WINTER USE. See department on "Pickles, Vinegar and Brine." THAWING FROZEN HEAT, ETC. If meat, poultry or fish is thawed by putting it into loarm water or placing it before the fire, it will be rendered unfit to eat. The only way to thaw these things is by immersing them in cold water. If meat that has been frozen is to be boiled put it on in cold Avater. If to be roasted set it at a distance from the fire. It is best to thaw the night before cook- ing; lay it in cold water early in the evening and change the water at bed- time. Sherman House, Chicago. TO KEEP riEAT FROM FLIES. Put in thick paper or muslin bags; if the latter, the meat should first be covered with straw. The sacking must be done early in the season before the fly appears. Muslin lets the air in and is better than paper. Perfection Market. TO TRY OUT LARD. Skin leaf lard, cut in small pieces, put it into an iron kettle, add one to two cupfuls of water to prevent sticking and burning. Let it melt slowly, being careful not to let it scorch; stir frequently from the bottom with a wooden flat ladle and let simmer until all the pieces have turned a golden brown, then throw in a little salt to settle it. Now set it back to cool and pour into jars. Nqte. — The greatest care must be exercised while trying out lard to see to it that none runs over the pot, as that would prove disastrous. MEATS. 113 Always warm the jars first, and put in a little lard at a time, to prevent their cracking. When cold and hard, tie up with clean, heavy paper, and keep in a cool, dry cellar. Mrs. J. T. Phillips. HOW TO BROIL MEATS. Broiling consists of placing the meat over clear, red coals, free from smoke. Do not have the fire too low or the gravy will drop upon the coals, nor too hot, else the meat will be blackened, and made hard. Never stick a fork into the lean part of a steak or chop in turning it, but put it in the outer fat. Have the dish hot on which the meat is to be placed, and season it after taking from the fire. E. R. M. ROAST BEEF. Have the butcher remove the bones of a rib-roast and roll the meat into a round shape; tie securely with a stout string; then, before sending it to the table, remove the string and insert one or two steel skewers. Before placing the meat to roast season with salt; then place it upon a grating in dripping-pan and put it in a very hot oven; baste frequently; if the meat is very fat you need no water in your pan; if not, pour a small cup of boiling water into the pan after it has been in the oven fifteen min- utes. Make a brown gravy. Mrs. Flora Thomas. BROILED STEAK. The only proper way to cook a beefsteak is to broil it on a light wire gridiron over a clear fire. When ready to turn, place it on a warm plate with a little butter, turning the cooked side down so that the juices may be saved in the plate, and not lost, as would be the case, were it turned upon the gridiron; return it to the gridiron as quickly as possible, and as soon as the other side is cooked place it again upon the plate, which be sure to have always warm; season with pepper and salt to taste, adding a little butter. There is a gridiron in the market (a double one), which per- mits the turning of the meat over the fire. It is so constructed that the juices are held in the pan. Mrs. E. R. Daniels. BEEFSTEAK AND ONIONS. This very popular dish necessitates the use of a frying-pan, upon which put the steak with a little suet, and add sliced onions which have previously been prepared by dropping into cold water; season with salt and pepper and cover tightly before putting upon the fire. A good way is to cook the steak and onions separate. Then smother the steak on the hot platter with the onions. W. P. B. 114 MEATS. ROAST BEEF— No. 2. Select a loin or rib piece — the latter is the best — and pound it thor- oughly before placing in the pan; pour a cupful of boiling water over it and sprinkle a little salt; have the oven well heated and baste frequently with the drippings after the juices have cooked out. Cook about ten min- utes to a pound. When done it should be brown outside and a little red within. If the meat has an excess of fat cover the fatty portion with a flour and water paste, which can be removed before fully done. Turn the gravy upon the meat after skimming off the fat; season with pepper and salt. Any attempt at basting before the juices commence running from the meat will have the effect of toughening it. Sadie V. FILET OF BEEF LARDED. This is the tenderloin, although the sirloin is sometimes used. Trim off fat, tough skin, etc., and skewer into shape (round). Dredge well with salt, pepper and flour and put without water into a very small pan. Place in a hot oven thirty minutes; in lower part ten, and then on upper grate. Serve with mushroom sauce. The shape of the fillet is such that the time required for cooking is the same whether it weighs two or six pounds. * Mrs. F. T. Griggs. CORNED BEEF. Should be cooked in plenty of cold water brought slowly to a boil; if very salt, the meat should be soaked over night; but if young and not too strongly brined this will not be necessary. It should be cooked sufficiently long to make tender, so that in a brisket or plate piece the bones may be readily removed. Preserve the liquor in the pot, and if any of the meat remains after the first meal, return it and let it stand over night in the liquor so that it may absorb it. If no meat remains to be returned to the liquor, the latter will make a good soup for next day's dinner if the beef was not too salt. M. J. M. BOILED BEEF WITH CABBAGE. (German Style.) Take one head of cabbage, and after removing all soiled and bruised leaves, cut in sections lengthwise, making about eight or nine pieces, leav- ing the piece of heart attached to each piece to hold it together. Place in the kettle on top of beef which has been boiling some time; let all boil together for one hour. Salt to taste and add a little pepper, if liked. Lift out the meat, let the cabbage boil a few moments longer in the beef broth and send it to the table in a vegetable dish. Mrs. O. T. Learned, MEATS. 115 BEEFSTEAK AND ONIONS— No. 2. Broil or fry the steak. Cut up six onions in slices and fry them brown in drippings. Place the steak on the platter, cover it with the onions, and put it in the oven till thoroughly hot, and it is then ready for the table. Mrs. p. B. Murray. ROLLED STEAK. Take a good rump steak, flatten and lay upon it a seasoning made of bread-crumbs, parsley, pepper and salt, mixed with butter beaten to a cream with a fork. Roll up the steak, bind it evenly with fine twine, and lay it in a dish with a cup of boiling water. Cover with another dish and bake forty minutes, basting frequently. Remove the cover and let it brown before sending to table. Thicken the gravy with browned flour, and serve very hot. A layer of oysters, bearded, instead of the forcemeat is a pleasant change. The twine should be cut off before sending to table. Mrs. Priscilla Long. POT R0A5T. Put a very little drippings in an iron kettle. When hot, lay the beef in. Add an onion chopped and fried till brown in butter; pour in water that has boiled, to half the height of the meat. Add salt and pepper, and cover as close as possible. Thicken the gravy. Simmer from two to three hours, according to weight. When done, take up, and pour the gravy over it, and send to the table. Mrs. Robb. BEEF LOAF. Take two pounds of beef chopped fine and add eight large soda crackers rolled. Moisten with hot water, then add one-half a cup of sweet milk, one ^g^ and a pinch of sage. Season with salt and pepper and mix thoroughly. Make into a loaf and place in a baking pan with two strips of bacon and a lump of butter; cook slowly an hour and one- half. Mrs. M. McDuffie. ROAST STEAK AND POTATOES. Butter a baking dish and sprinkle in a layer of chopped steak, season with salt and pepper. Put over this a layer of raw potatoes, peeled and sliced. Dust over a little flour, then sprinkle over another layer of steak, and so on until pan is full. Fill pan with hot water, cover and bake three hours. The flour used thickens the water and makes a delicious gravy. Mrs. C. F. G. 116 MEATS. CURRIED STEAK. Slice two onions and one apple, and fry them in butter to a light brown. Cut a pound of steak into neat squares, mix a tablespoon each of curry-powder and flour, and salt to taste, together on a plate, rub each piece of meat into it, and fry quickly. Turn all into a saucepan with half a pint of water or gravy, which should be hot, and siniuier gently for an hour; add lemon juice, and serve in a meat dish, with a border of boiled rice piled round. Mrs. Charlotte Rice. SPICED BEEF. Boil a shank of beef in as little water as will merely cover it. Cook till meat falls from the bone. Chop very fine, spice with ground cloves, pepper, salt and summer savory. Add sufficient of the liquor in which it was boiled to moisten well. Press into molds, and when cold slice. LiBBiE Thompson. CREAHED DRIED BEEF. (Fit for a Prince.) Pick in small pieces one-fourth of a pound of thinly-cut rather moist dried beef and brown in a little butter. When brown pour in it a coffee- cup of milk and cream. Let it come to a boil and slightly thicken with a little butter and flour creamed together. When it boils, pour it over a platter of golden brown toast and serve it at once. Mrs. M. BEEF PIE WITH POTATO CRU5T. When you have used the best of a cold roast of beef take the small pieces or as much as will half fill a granite baking pan; also any gravy that you have saved, a lump of butter, a bit of sliced onion, pepper and salt, and enough water to make plenty of gravy; put over a fire, thicken by dredging in a tablespoonful of flour; cover it up where it may stew gently. Now boil a sufficient quantity of potatoes to fill up your baking dish, mash smooth, and beat light with milk and butter and place in a thick layer on top of the meat. Brush it over with ^^%, place the dish in an oven, and let remain long enough to become brown. There should be a goodly quantity of gravy left with the beef, that the dish be not dry and tasteless. LiDA B. M. LIVER AND BACON. Calf's liver is the best; slice it one-quarter of an inch thick; pour hot water over and let stand a few minutes to clear it from blood; then dry in a napkin. Take one-half a pound of thin sliced bacon, or as much as you require, and fry to a nice crisp; lay on platter and keep hot; then MEATS. 117 fry the liver to a nice brown in the same pan, having first seasoned it with salt and pepper and dredged in flour. Serve with a slice of bacon on the top of each slice of liver. Ann Hewitt. FRIED BEEF LIVER. Cut in thin slices; pour over it ^^^y^";^^ water; roll in flour; season with salt and pepper. Fry till done. R. Van Ness. SMOTHERED BEEFSTEAK. Take one large thin round steak. Prepare a dressing of a cupful of bread-crumbs, half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper, a tablespoonful of butter, a little sage, a speck of chopped onion and enough milk to moisten. Spread over the meat, roll it up carefully, and tie the ends with a string. Fry a few thin slices of bacon in a saucepan and into the fat place this roll of beef. Brown on all sides, then add one-half a pint of water, and stew until tender. When cooked sufficiently, take out the meat, thicken the gravy and pour over it. Carve crosswise. Lulu Fowle. IRISH STEW— BEEF OR nUTTON. Take two pounds round steak or mutton chops, six potatoes, two tur- nips, four small onions, nearly a quart of water. Place meat in stew-pan, add vegetables, pour in one and one-half pints of cold water; cover closely, let stew gently till vegetables are ready to mash and the greater part of the gravy is absorbed; serve hot. Mary. BOILED BEEF TONGUE. Clean three fresh tongues and place in a kettle with just enough water to cover and one cup of salt; add more water as it evaporates, so as to keep the tongues covered until done — when they can be easily pierced with a fork; take out and if to be served at once remove the skin. If wanted for future use, do not peel until needed. If salt tongues are used, soak over night and omit the salt when boiling. Mrs. A. R. BEEF'S HEART STUFFED. After washing the heart thoroughly cut it into dice one-half an inch long; put into a saucepan with water enough to cover. Remove scum. When nearly done add a sliced onion, a stalk of celery chopped fine, pep- per and salt and a piece of butter. Stew until the meat is very tender. Stir up a tablespoonful of flour with a small quantity of water and thicken the whole. Boil up and serve. Miss Holland. 118 MEATS. BEEF LOAF— No. 2. Two pounds chopped round steak, one slice chopped salt pork, one teacup browned bread-crumbs, one and one-half cups milk, one egg, piece of butter size of an ^^^, salt well and season with onion, mace, spice, etc., to suit individual taste. Bake about one hour in baking pan. A nutritious and economical dish. Will serve eight person. Eat either hot or cold. Esther Haight. TENDERLOINS STUFFED WITH OYSTERS. Take two large tenderloins, split them, season with pepper and salt. Make a dressing of pint of oysters, teacup of cracker crumbs; season with salt, pepper, and celery-salt; spread one tenderloin with dressing putting the other one-half of tenderloin on top, then spread the top thick with dressing; tie together with string, bake as you would a chicken, baste often; very fine. Belle Foster. TENDERLOIN WITH flUSHROOMS. Roast the tenderloin in the usual way. When taken from the oven lay on platter, slice thin but lay all together as though it had not been sliced and pour over a mushroom cream sauce. Serve at once. Ione Lester. BEEF PATTIES. Chop fine some cold beef, beat two eggs and mix with the meat, add- ing a little milk, melted butter, salt and pepper. Make into rolls and fry. Catharine. BEEF PATTIES— No. 2. The remains of a roast of beef, minced fine and seasoned, can be baked in a rich puff paste in patty pans. Nice for a side dish. It takes about one-half an hour to bake them. Caroline Royce. MEAT CROQUETTES. Mince cold cooked beef or mutton fine, with a large onion, pepper and salt. Add gravy to moisten. Put into shells or small cups, making them three parts full and fill them with potatoes mashed with a little cream; put a small piece of butter on top of each, and brown them lightly in the oven. Mary J. Liscomb. FRIED BRAIN. One nice calf's brain, beaten ^^^, sifted cracker crumbs, butter, parsley. Soak the brain in cold water, then scald for just one second, dip it in ^^^ and crumbs, and fry a light brown on both sides in butter. Gar- nish with parsley and serve hot. Julia. MEATS. 119 HAHBURQ STEAK. The round of beef is usually taken for this purpose. Grind or chop a pound very fine, removing all the fiber or fat. Add one-half a tea- spoon of onion juice, the same of salt, a quarter of a teaspoon of pepper, a little nutmeg and one ^gg. Make into small balls, and press them flat. Fry them in butter. Make a brown gravy of the butter used in frying. Let it brown, then add a little soup stock. Pour a little on each cake. Mrs. p. Greene. BEEF LIVER— No. 2. Cut the liver in slices two-thirds of an inch thick; soak in cold water one-quarter of an hour; have ready butter in the spider and when hot, put in the liver; season with salt, pepper, and an onion chopped fine; dust a little flour over the top; cover tight to keep steam in as much as pos- sible; add a little water while cooking, to keep from getting dry (do not let it burn); when brown turn on the other side; put on a little more salt, pepper and flour; when done take the liver out on a platter; put in about a teacup of sweet milk; if not thick enough, add a little more flour, wet with milk, until it is about the thickness of beef gravy; pour over the liver and serve. This is the Swedish way of cooking it. Dennie Safford. BAKED CALF'S LIVER. Take a calf's liver, vinegar, one onion, three or four sprigs of parsley and thyme, salt and pepper to taste, strips of bacon and brown gravy. Select a fine liver, and lard it; put it into vinegar with an onion cut in slices, parsley, thyme and seasoning in the above proportion. Let it remain in this pickle twenty-four hours, then roast, basting it frequently with the vinegar, etc.; glaze it, serve under it a good brown gravy and serve it hot. Jane Emmert. KIDNEY STEW. It will take three kidneys which must be cut lengthwise into three pieces. Wash these well and dry, wiping them very carefully. Warm three tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan; put in the kidneys before this is really hot, with very little mace, and pepper and salt to taste, one teaspoonful of chopped onion, and a cupful of good brown gravy. Simmer all together, closely covered, about ten minutes. Add the juice of one- half of a lemon and a pinch of grated lemon peel; take up the kidneys and lay upon a hot dish, with fried or toasted bread underneath. Thicken the gravy with browned flour, boil up once, pour over all, and serve. Mrs. Josephine Knox. 120 • MEATS. DRIED BEEF CREAMED— No. 2. Shave the beef thin, put It in a stew-pan, adding one-half of a teacup of cold water. Let it come to a boil, and if the beef is pretty salt pour off the water and add milk sufficient for a meal, a piece of butter and some pepper. Take cream, a full tablespoonful of flour, stir to a smooth paste, and add gradually to the beef, stirring till it thickens. It is a very nice breakfast dish. Mrs. Mary Hilton. BEEFSTEAK WITH DRESSING. It grows tiresome to always broil or fry beefsteak, so a pleasant change is to take a nice juicy round steak and make a dressing of grated bread, as if for a fowl. Cover the steak with this dressing, turn over the edges, and fasten with linen thread. Place it in a dripping-pan in which is one-half of an inch of water, and bake it. Turn it when one side is done and brown the other. Another way, which improves the flavor, is to lay the steak on the griddle in the dripping-pan, put plenty of salt, pepper and butter over it — do not spare the butter — and run it into the oven, turning it once, when one side is done, and basting the other side with the gravy. Mary Heaton. BREAKFAST DISH OF COLD STEAK. Put a spider over the fire and into it put two tablespoonfuls of butter. When hot add one cupful of chopped cold steak or any other kind of boiled meat. Sprinkle over it one tablespoonful of flour. Stir well. Pour over it enough water to make a gravy. Add a little pepper and salt. Serve on toast. Sophie Severson. riEAT PIE. Take some mutton chops, either from the loin or neck, trim them neatly and put them, with chopped parsley, butter, pepper and salt in a stew-pan over a slow fire. Place the chops, with some good brown gravy, into the baking dish and add slices of raw ham. Cover with the lid, but first fill in with mashed potatoes to the brim; bake two hours in a slow oven, when the tin cover may be taken off, and the chops will be found tender and succulent. A. Plaisted. KIDNEY TORTILLA. Four' eggs, two kidneys, one dessert-spoonful of chopped parsley, one dessert-spoonful of chopped onion, one-half of a teacupful of stock, a tablespoonful of butter, one-half of a teacupful of milk, two tablespoonfuls of butter. Cut the kidneys in rather thin slices and stew them with the parsley, onion, and one tablespoonful of butter in the stock until they are tender. MEATS. 121 Break the eggs and beat them with the milk and a Httle pepper and salt; warm the extra butter in a saute pan and pour in the eggs, shaking to prevent burning; when browned on one side, place the tortilla on a dish with the kidneys and seasoning in the center. Fold over the tortilla and serve. Mrs. Martha Kellar. KIDNEYS WITH MUSHROOM CATSUP. Cut a beef kidney into very thin slices, flour them and fry a light brown. When done, remove from the pan, pour off the fat, adding a small piece of butter, one-quarter of a pint of boiling water, pepper, salt, and a tablespoonful of mushroom catsup. Boil the gravy up once, pour over the kidney and serve. Mrs. Dalliber. SPANISH STEW FOR ODD BITS OF MEAT. Cut two medium-sized onions into small pieces; fry tender (not brown), to which add a pint of cold beef or lamb, cut small, a quart of tomatoes and salt and red pepper to taste; stew until the tomatoes are thick. Dried peppers are more desirable for this than cayenne. Miss Edith M. ROAST nUTTON. Get a leg of eight pounds, which has hung at least a week, weather allowing. During hot weather this joint gets quickly tainted. Rub it lightly with salt, and put it at once before a brisk sharp fire. Place it close to the fire for five minutes, then place it in the oven and let it roast slowly until done. Baste continually with good dripping until that from the joint begins to flow. When within twenty minutes of being done, dredge it with flour, and baste with butter or dripping; and when the froth rises serve on a hot dish. Make a gravy, throw off the fat, when any gravy, if the dripping pan has been floured, will adhere to it. Add a little stock and a little boiling water, pepper and salt. Pour the gravy round the meat, not over it. Anna Windom. nUTTON PIE. A very good family pie is made with the remains of a cold leg, loin, or any other joint of mutton from which nice neat slices of rather lean meat can be cut. These should be put with a good seasoning, in alter- nate layers with thinly-sliced potatoes, into a pie-dish, commencing at the bottom with some of the meat, and finishing at the top with potatoes. 122 MEATS. Parsley, savory herbs, onion, or shallot, with a little mace, white pepper and salt may be used at discretion. A cupful of good gravy from the meat should be poured into the pie before the crust is put on. Suet is generally used for the crust. Fannie Merklin. MUTTON PATTIES. Mutton patties are made with cooked meat, which is minced, then hashed in good gravy, seasoned with pepper, salt, and a little catsup. The mince should not boil, but be made hot, and thickened. Patty pans, lined with half puff paste and filled with the meat, will require a very short time to bake. Cover with the paste, and put them into a quick oven for fifteen minutes. Mrs. Marian Bonnell. BREADED MUTTON. Sew the mutton up in a thin cloth, lay it in a saucepan, nearly cover it with cold water, and stew gently, allowing ten minutes to each pound. Take it out, unwrap and lay it in a baking-dish, brush over with warm dripping, dredge with flour, and set in the oven for one-half of an hour, basting freely with its own broth. A few minutes before taking it up strew thickly with crumbs, fine and dry, dot bits of butter over it, and brown. Serve garnished with slices of beetroot. Mrs. Alice Waters. RAGOUT OF MUTTON. Remove the bones from the mutton, so as to have three pounds of solid meat. Cut it in strips three inches long and one inch wide. Take two lamb sweetbreads, one cup of gravy, made from the bones, two eggs, one-quarter of a pound of salt pork, one onion, sliced and fried, one cup of green peas, pepper and salt, one tablespoonful of minced parsley, browned flour. After having fried the onion in plenty of drippings then fry the mutton five minutes. Parboil the sweetbreads and throw them into cold water and blanch. Wipe and dry them, then fry them in fat. Lay the salt pork, cut in slices in the bottom of the saucepan, upon this place the mutton, then the sweetbreads, the onion and peas next, then pepper, salt and parsley. Cover with the gravy, put on a close lid, stew gently for an hour. Then let it boil up once, remove the mutton and sweetbreads, thicken the gravy with brown flour, put in two beaten eggs, stir a minute over the fire, pour over the meat and serve. Theresa Munn. MEATS. - 123 LAHB STEW. Remove all the fat from a nice leg of lamb, cut off the shank, make deep incisions in various parts of the inside of the leg; fill them with stuffing made of crumbs of bread, salt pork, sweet marjoram and pepper; stuff it very full. Put hardly water enough in the pot to cover the leg. Throw in a dozen or two of cloves, one-half of an onion sliced or chopped very fine, and a little salt. One-half of a teacup of catsup or a few toma- toes improve it very much. Let it simmer steadily three hours. When you take up the leg, thicken the gravy if it is not thick enough. Put a few spoonfuls over the meat. A. P. BROILED nUTTON CHOPS. Select one dozen chops cut from the loin; trim, season with salt and pepper; dip in melted butter and broil over a clear fire nearly ten minutes, turning frequently. Lay on warm platter and garnish with a few sprigs of parsley. Ivy Smith. A GENUINE IRISH STEW. Cut two pounds of chops from the best end of a neck of mutton, and pare away nearly all the fat. A portion of the breast may be cut into squares and used, but a neck of mutton is the best joint for the purpose. Take as many potatoes as will amount after peeling to twice the weight of the meat. Slice them with eight large onions sliced. Put a layer of mixed potatoes and onions at the bottom of a stew-pan. Place the meat on this and season it plentifully with pepper, and lightly with salt. Pack closely, and cover the meat with another layer of potato and onion. Pour in as much water or stock as will moisten the topmost layer, cover the stew-pan tightly, and let its contents simmer gently for three hours. Be careful not to remove the lid, as this will let out the flavor. Mrs. N. McGrath. SWEETBREAD CROQUETTES. Wash and parboil one pair of sweetbreads, then throw into cold water; remove outside skin and all membrane; then with silver knife chop in small pieces and measure. There should be one-half of a pint of chopped meat. Put one gill of cream into a saucepan; rub together one level teaspoonful of butter, a heaping teaspoonful of flour; stir into the hot cream until you have a smooth paste; add the yolk of one egg and the sweetbreads; mix and cook one minute, take from the fire and, if desired, add one dozen mushrooms chopped fine; if fresh, they must 124 MEATS. be cooked before chopping; add one tablespoonful of salt, one salt-spoon- ful of pepper, one teaspoonful of finely-chopped parsley, ten drops of onion juice; mix well. When cool form into croquettes; roll into beaten eggs, then roll in bread-crumbs and fry in hot lard. Mrs. R. McAdams. VEAL OYSTERS. Cut veal from the leg or tenderloin into pieces the size of an oyster. Season with pepper, salt and a little mace; dip in ^^^, then into cracker crumbs and fry. They both look and taste like oysters. To be eaten with tomato sauce. L. D. T. BAKED' VEAL PIE. Use the neck or any part of the veal which you prefer. Cook it by boiling an hour, then place the meat in a very deep dish, and when you lay on the upper crust wet the edge of the under crust all around and flour it; then lay on the upper crust and press your hand upon the edge, so that the flour and water will make the crusts adhere and prevent the gravy from escaping. Prick the top several times with a large fork. If you have pieces of crust left, cut them into leaves and ornament the pie. Bake one-half hour. M. A. M. VEAL, CHICKEN OR RABBIT BONDINETTES. To every pound of finely-minced meat add one-quarter of a pound of mashed potatoes; season with salt and pepper and moisten with a gravy made from the bones of the cold meat. Press the minced meat into well- buttered cups and bake for twenty minutes. Turn out on a dish, pour a little browned gravy round and stick a sprig of parsley into each bondinette. Mrs. Ella Field. VEAL LOAF. Four pounds of veal, three-quarters of a pound of salt pork chopped fine together, one teacupful of cracker crumbs, powdered fine, one and one-half cups of stock, three eggs, one-fourth of a cup of dried bread- crumbs, one scant teaspoonful of thyme and marjoram, one-half teaspoon- ful of summer savory, three generous teaspoonfuls of salt, one teaspoonful of pepper, one-fourth of a teaspoonful of nutmeg, two tablespoonfuls of butter; add to the chopped meat the cracker crumbs, two eggs well beaten and one cup of the stock; mix well with the hands; butter a flat cake tin, form the mixture into a loaf, place in the tin; beat the third ^^'g well, MEATS. 125 spread it on the loaf, sprinkle over with fine bread-crumbs; bake in rather hot oven three hours, basting frequently with the remaining stock in which the two tablespoonfuls of butter have been melted. Edith Van Vormer. VEAL LOAF— No. 2. Have the butcher^'';7W(not chop) four pounds taken from a leg of veal, and one pound of fat salt pork. Roll one-half of a pound of soda crackers fine and mix all together. Use little salt and pepper and thyme — about one teaspoonful. Beat two eggs, and add them. Mix thoroughly with the hands and shape into a block, using a square pan to cook it in. Roast one hour and one-half, basting constantly. To be sliced and eaten cold. Mrs. Maria White. VEAL CHEESE. Three pounds of chopped veal, one slice of salt pork, sixteen small crackers, three eggs, one-half pint of water, salt, pepper and sage to taste; bake three hours. D. C. M. VEAL CUTLETS WITH VERMICELLI. (German Style.) Remove all the fat, but not the small rib of the cutlet, season and turn in ^^^ and crumbs, or dip in melted butter, then in cheese mixed with an equal quantity of crumbs (sifted); let this absorb, then dip in the o.^^ and again in the cheese mixture. Stand aside for two hours, then fry in plent}^ of butter the same as doughnuts. In the mean- time boil some vermicelli in salt water until well done, then drain and mix with tomato sauce, arrange the vermicelli in the center of a chop- platter and place the cutlets around them. Serve hot. N. H. ROAST LOIN OF VEAL. Leave in the kidney, around which put considerable salt. Make a dressing the same as for fowls; unroll the loin, put the stuffing well around the kidney, fold and secure with several coils of white cotton twine w^ound around in all directions; place in a dripping-pan with the thick side down, and put in a rather hot oven, letting it cool down to moderate; in one-half hour add a little hot water to the pan, and baste often; half an hour after turn over the roast and when done dredge lightly with flour and baste with melted butter. Before serving, care- fully remove the twine. A roast of four to five pounds will bake in two hours. For a gravy, skim off some of the fat if there is too much in 126 MEATS. the drippings; dredge in flour, stir until brown, add hot water if neces- sary; boil a few minutes, stir in sweet herbs as fancied and put in a gravy boat. Serve with green peas and lemon jelly. Is very nice sliced cold for lunch, and Worcestershire or Chili sauce forms a fine relish. S. J. ENTREE OP VEAL. Take a piece of butter the size of an &^^, three pounds of raw veal, one teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of pepper and two raw eggs. Chop fine and mix all together, adding two tablespoonfuls of water. Mold this into a loaf, then roll into it two tablespoonfuls of pounded crackers and pour over it three tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Place in a pan and bake two hours. When cold, slice and use. Mrs. M. E. Weed. VEAL WITH OYSTERS. Take two pounds of tender veal, cut into thin bits, dredge with flour, and fry in enough hot lard to prevent sticking; when nearly done add one and one-half pints of oysters, thickened with a little flour; season with salt and pepper and cook until both are done. Serve very hot in a cov- ered dish. E. W. MEAT CROQUETTES. One pound of raw minced beef, one ^^^, one onion chopped fine with a little parsley, pepper and salt to taste. Form into cakes, dredge with flour, and fry in very hot Ko-nut or drippings. H. M. TO COOK CALF'S HEAD. When the head has been cleaned, and split in halves, the eyes and snout bone taken away, lay it in cold water to soak, for two hours. Take out the brains, and wash them well in several waters, then lay them in cold water. Put the head together; cover it with cold water in the kettle and add a tablespoonful of salt; boil slowly for two or three hours. When it has boiled a little more than an hour, take some of the liquor, about a quart, and put into a stew-pan for the gravy; add to this salt, pepper, parsley chopped fine, a tablespoonful of lemon juice and put over the fire to boil. Beat up an ^^^ lightly, with two tablespoonfuls of flour, then remove carefully the skin from the brains, and beat them up with the ^^^ and flour. When well beaten, thicken the gravy with it and stew fif- teen minutes. Mrs. Lucia Capper. MEATS. 127 TO KEEP MEAT HOT. Often a piece of meat is done, and yet the head of the house is not there to partake of it. A nice way to keep it hot without drying it is to place it in a hot dish and set it over a large saucepan of hot water at the side of the fire. Put a cover over the pan, and again cover that with a cloth. A bain-marie is useful in every kitchen. It is an open vessel or pan with a loose bottom for holding hot water. It will keep meats hot, or sauces^at boiling point without reduction or burning. F. T. Boyd. ROAST LOIN OF PORK. Pork should be chosen with great care. From the gluttonous habits of the animal it is more liable to disease than any other meat. It sbould be partaken of plentifully only in cold weather. Grainfed pork is the best. Score the skin of a fresh loin of pork at equal distances about one-quarter of an inch apart. Brush it over with salad oil, place it in a hot oven with a clear fire, but watch that the crackling does not burn before the meat is well cooked. Baste often, and heat the dish on which you send it to table. Serve with brown gravy and apple-sauce. If liked, a little sage and onion dressing may be made and served on a separate dish. It requires two hours and one-quarter to cook a five-pound roast. Mrs. Jane Hathaway. FOR PRESERVING PORK FOR WINTER USE. See Department "Pickles, Vinegars and Brines." FRIED SALT PORK. Take thin slices of pickled pork, fry lightly. Then mix a batter of €:gg and flour and milk and immerse the pork in this till it has become completely covered and fry to a light brown. Mrs. Huldah Osgood. SALT PORK. (Nearly equal to fresh.) Cut as many slices as may be needed; if for breakfast, the night previous, and soak over night in a pint of milk and water, about one-half milk, either skimmed milk, sour milk or butter-milk; rinse till the water is clear, and roll in corn-meal and fry. It is quite as nice as fresh pork. Farmer's Wife. 128 MEATS. ROAST SPARE-RIB. Trim the ragged ends of a spare-rib neatly, crack the ribs across the middle, rub with salt and sprinkle with pepper. Fold it over, stuff with a turkey dressing, sew up tightly, place in dripping pan with a pint of water, baste frequently, turning it once or twice so as to bake both sides a rich brown. Clara Jones. SADDLE OF PORK, ROASTED. Have the butcher cut a saddle of pork as he would a saddle of mut- ton. Strip off the skin, trim the joint neatly, and cover the fat with but- tered paper. Have a clear fire and baste liberally. One-half of an hour before it is taken up remove the paper, dredge the meat lightly with flour, and baste until it is brightly browned. Send brown gravy and apple- sauce or tomato-sauce to the table with it. If liked, the skin can be left on, and it will then require to be scored lengthwise, the same way in which the saddle is carved. This is the handsomest joint of pork that can be served. M. A. R. HOW TO COOK PIG'S CHEEK. Let a pickled pig's cheek boil gently until tender. Tie one-half of a pint of split peas loosely in a cloth, put them in boiling water, and boil one hour; take them out, pass them through a hair sieve, and mix with the pulp a little pepper and salt, an ounce of butter, and four well-beaten eggs. Stir the mixture over the fire tintil the eggs begin to set, then spread it upon the cheek, brush over with beaten Q.yrup and the rinsings of granite pans in which has been cooked maple syrup; add a little warm water and let stand in the sun covered with a gauze until it ferments. D. Z. ECONOMICAL VINEGAR. Save the sound cores and the parings of apples used in cooking. Put into a jar, cover with cold water, stand in a warm place, add one-half pint of molasses to every two gallons. Cover the jar with gauze; add more parings and cores occasionally. This will make good vinegar. H. F. L. SPICED VINEGAR. One gallon of cider vinegar, one pound of sugar, one tablespoonful of allspice, three tablespoonfuls of mustard seed, three tablespoonfuls of celery seed, two tablespoonfuls of salt, one tablespoonful of cinnamon, and one teacupful of grated horseradish. F. E. P. RASPBERRY VINEGAR. Put one pound of ripe red or black raspberries into a granite bowl and pour upon it a quart of the best white wine vinegar; next day strain the liquor off the raspberries; the following day do the same but do not squeeze the fruit. Put all together and bottle. M. B. C. CELERY VINEGAR FOR FLAVORINGS. One quart of fresh celery, chopped fine, one quart of cider vinegar; one tablespoonful of salt and one of brown sugar. Put the celery in a jar, heat the vinegar, sugar and salt; pour boiling hot over the celery, let cool, cover it tightly and set away. In two weeks strain and bottle. One- fourth of a pound of celery seed can be substituted instead of the fresh celery if more convenient. M. A. I. PICKLES, VINEGAR AND BRINE. 387 Pickle of Brine. TO PRESERVE BEEF. First, let it get thoroughly cold and firm, then rub salt into it and let remain for twenty-four hours. This draws off the blood. Next drain, and pack it in a brine prepared as follows: For every one hundred pounds of beef use seven pounds of salt, one ounce each of saltpetre and cayenne pepper, one pint of molasses, ten gallons of soft water. Boil and skim well, when cool pour it over the beef. Keep in this until ready for use. The brine should be boiled up occasionally and scummed. A. Granger. TO CURE HAMS. To every one hundred pounds make a brine of eight pounds of coarse salt, two ounces of saltpetre, two pounds of brown sugar, one ounce of potash and four gallons of water. First, let the hams get thoroughly cold, say two days after butchering; rub them all over with fine salt; then pour over them the brine. Let remain six weeks in the brine, then take out and dry several days before smoking. N. K. Brooks. A PICKLE FOR HAM, BEEF, TONGUE, BACON, ETC. Take three or four hams weighing fourteen or sixteen pounds each. Let them hang for a day, then rub well into each one two ounces of sal prunella, two ounces of saltpetre, and one pound of salt. Put the hams into a deep pan and turn them over and rub them each day for three daj^s. Make a pickle by boiling together three gallons of water, four pounds of common salt, four pounds of bay salt, and seven pounds of moist sugar. Skim thoroughly, and when the pickle has boiled for twenty minutes, pour it hot over the meat. The hams must be rubbed and turned daily, and their relative position altered, the one at the top being put to the bottom, and so on. At the end of three weeks they must be drained and dried, and smoked if practicable. This pickle will be found excellent for beef, bacon, tongues, etc., and will keep for several months if it be boiled and skimmed each time it is used, and kept closely corked. Salt and treacle should be added also to make up for the strength evaporat- ing. E. J. C. TO SALT PORK. Let the pork get thoroughly cold and hard, put in a boiler as much water as will well cover pork to be preserved. When it boils, mix in salt. To ascertain when there is salt enough put in an egg — if it floats there is sufficient. Pour the brine in a jar and let it cool. When cold pour over the pork. C. A. S. EAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. SAUCES accompanying various meats should increase its palatableness and yet, very many fail in this matter. Some one has said that the best test of a good cook is good gravy. There are four qualities demanded in the composition of a good sauce or gravy. First, is its color: it should be attractive to the eye; second, it should be pleasing in its aroma; third, pleasing in flavor and fourth, consistency. The simplest way to make a gravy or sauce is to remove the meat from the pan, pour or skim off the fat, leaving the residue in the pan. Then, add a little hot water or milk, stirring all thoroughly. Next strain the liquid, season to taste and it is ready for use — a clear, bright substance, free from fat. When a sauce is intended to be served hot, it should be kept so, and the best method to insure this is to place the vessel in which the sauce has been made in another one containing hot water. This prevents further boiling, but keeps the right degree of heat. Sauces, gravies, etc., are better made in an enameled saucepan. Below are given recipes for the making of all the favorites. DRAWN BUTTER SAUCE. Put in a saucepan two generous tablespoonfuls of butter, add two tablespoonfuls of flour and stir; pour in a pint of boiling water, add a little salt and pepper. Simmer for twenty minutes until it thickens, then add gradually one-half tablespoonful of butter, beating until it becomes white. Stir well, strain and serve. Celia McDonald. CREAM SAUCE. . Put into a saucepan one tablespoonful of flour and two tablespoonfuls of butter, place over a slow fire and stir lightly for two minutes, adding a pinch of sugar and salt and one teacupful of cream. Stir well again for two minutes, to avoid its coming to a boil. Serve at once. Inez Hall. QIBLET SAUCE. Take the liver, heart, izard and neck of a chicken, wash and boil m water that has been salted. Let boil till tender. Take them out with 388 MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. 389 a skimmer and chop into coarse pieces. Put them back, add a httle but- ter and thicken to a cream. Pepper and salt, boil a couple of minutes and serve. Mrs. F. T. White. HERB SAUCE. A tablespoonful of finely-chopped parsley and a tablespoonful of chopped onion, two tablespoonfuls of butter, a little salt and pepper. Stir it together in a saucepan over the fire three or four minutes. Pour in a pint of white sauce and stir till it boils hard. Then serve. Mrs. Kate Fleming. BUTTER SAUCE. Put about one-half ponnd of butter into a tin dish or a bowl. Stand the dish in water that is boiling hard and take it from the fire when the butter has melted. Strain it through a very fine sieve, and do not let any of the sediment in the dis|;i mix with it. Stir in a little salt and send to the table in a dish that has been heated. Mrs. Mary Holland. CURRY SAUCE. The powder for this sauce can be procured ready at most druggists. To make the sauce take one tablespoonful of butter, one tablespoonful of flour, one teaspoonful of curry-powder, a large slice of onion, a large cup- ful of stock, salt and pepper to taste. Cut the onion fine and fry brown in the butter. Add flour and curry-powder. Stir a minute, add the stock, season with salt and pepper and simmer five minutes. Strain and serve. This sauce is designed for broiled meats or fish. Mrs. J. E. O'Connor. OYSTER SAUCE. Let a pint of oysters heat in their own liquor till they begin to ruffle. Skim out into a hot dish, add a teacupful of milk or cream to the liquor with two tablespoonfuls of cold butter, a pinch of cayenne and salt. Thicken with a tablespoonful of flour, boil up and add the oysters. This sauce is suitable for fish, boiled turkey, chickens, or any white meats boiled. Mrs. Maude Williams. CRANBERRY SAUCE. Put the berries, after picking over and washing, into a saucepan just covered with water and stew slowly over a good fire. Stir often, mashing the fruit all you can. When they are mashed, which will take about one- half hour, take them from the fire and add the sugar (nearly a pound to a quart of berries) stirring it till it has all dissolved. Press all the fruit through a coarse sieve, and put what passes through into a dish or mold. Mrs. Amy Randall. 390 MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. MINT SAUCE. Take the leaves from the mint that grows in the garden. Pick and clean and chop. Put in a deep dish with an ounce of sugar, one-half tum- blerful of vinegar and one-half tumblerful of water. Stir slightly and pour into a sauce boat. Keep it on ice before using. For spring lamb. Mrs. Coleman. SALMON SAUCE. Yolk of one ^^g, well beaten, one-half cupful of vinegar. Stir in rapidly one-half tablespoonful of sugar, salt and pepper, two tablespoon- fuls of milk, two tablespoonfuls of cream. Let come to a boil, then cool and put over salmon. Helen PYeming. TOMATO SAUCE. Cook the tomatoes a few moments, adding salt, cloves and nutmeg. Strain them and add one teaspoonful of butter and a teaspoonful of browned flour with a tablespoonful of sugar. E. j. C. WHITE BECHANEL SAUCE. One quart of good white stock can be placed in a stew-pan with an onion, a few mushrooms, a sprig of thyme, parsley, a blade of mace and a little salt; boil till it has extracted the flavor of the herbs and the stock is reduced to about one-half — then strain. Put one pint of thick or double cream into a clean stew-pan, mix the reduced stock very gradually with it, and stir all the time over a slow fire until it thickens. If the ordinary thin cream be used mix a tablespoonful of arrowroot very smoothly into it and let simmer slowly five minutes before adding it to stock. Laura Higbee. BROWN SAUCE. Brown slowly in a saucepan one-half pound of butter, then mix with it six tablespoonfuls of hot vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of parsley, chopped very fine, and pepper and salt. This sauce accompanies eggs, fish and calf's head. Mrs. Celia Oades. QERriAN SAUCE FOR FISH. Mix well together two ounces of butter and a small teaspoonful of flour. Put it into a stew-pan with two tablespoonfuls of water and two tablespoonfuls of vinegar; stir for a minute and add the beaten yolks of two eggs, keeping up the stirring until the mixture thickens. It must not boil, and when ready to serve pour into it one-half the juice of a lemon. Make this sauce in a small glazed crock set in a saucepan of boiling water. Mrs. F. McFhee. MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. 391 TARTAR SAUCE. One cupful of mayonnaise dressing, six sour pickles, one-half bottle of capers, one-half dozen hard-boiled eggs, one medium-sized raw onion, a little green parsley. Chop all together very fine and mix with the mayon- naise dressing. Ivy White. TARTAR SAUCE— No. 2. Wash and mince finely four young onions; put them into a mortar with a teaspoonful of chopped parsley, a teaspoonful of dry mustard, a teaspoonful of salt, one-half teaspoonful of pepper and the hard-boiled yolks of two eggs. Pound these ingredients until quite smooth. Put them, into a bowl and mix with them gradually three tablespoonfuls of pure salad oil. The oil should be put in first in drops, and afterwards in teaspoonfuls and the sauce should be well beaten between each addition. If this point is carefully attended to there will be no danger of the sauce curdling. When the oil is thoroughly incorporated, add three dessert- spoonfuls of best vinegar and one of chilli vinegar. Mrs. S. Lampin. CURRY-POWDER. Curry-powder is a favorite dish with those who have resided in hot climates, and is very much liked as a seasoning. It can be prepared easily. Take one ounce of ginger, one ounce of mustard seed, one ounce of pepper, three ounces of coriander seed, three ounces of tumeric, one- half ounce of cardamoms, one-fourth of an ounce of cayenne pepper, one- fourth of an ounce of cummin seed; pound fine and sift. These can be procured at any druggist's. Carrie Earle. TART BEEF SAUCE. Four shallots finely chopped, one tablespoonful of butter, and four tablespoonfuls of vinegar. Place in a stew-pan and stir over the fire with a wooden spoon till the butter becomes clear, then add one ounce of flour and stir in for three or four minutes. Now take one pint of common stock broth, a little coloring, a pinch of pepper and boil all together fif- teen minutes; then add a tablespoonful of chopped gherkins, and one tablespoonful of minced parsley. Boil up together, skim and serve in a sauce tureen. A nice sauce for roast beef. Catherine Hall. MUSHROOn SAUCE. Dissolve one-half teaspoonful of Liebig's beef extract in one-half pint of boiling water. Fry one minced onion and one chopped carrot in a little butter or dripping until lightly browned; pour the liquid over them, let all boil together for ten minutes and add a dessert-spoonful of mush- room ketchup, skim, strain, and it is ready for table. Lucy Willis. 392 MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. WHITE SAUCE. A tablespoonful of butter is placed in a saucepan. As soon as it bub- bles add a tablespoonful of flour and stir it for five minutes, when it may be set on the back of the stove, and a cupful of milk poured in, the stir- ring going on all the time. Use salt and pepper to taste. Water can be used where the milk is called for, or more butter may be added. Some like an ^^g, but it must cool a little before this is put in and then be cooked a minute or so afterward. Hannah Fay. nUSHROOM SAUCE— No. 2. Pare and chop off the roots of one dozen small mushrooms, put in a saucepan with two cupfuls of stock, salt and pepper to taste. Cook for thirty minutes; thicken and serve. Mrs. A. Curtiss. EQQ SAUCE. Take one-half pint of veal or any white broth, thicken it with two ounces of butter blended with one and one-half ounces of flour; add, when it boils, some minced parsley, three eggs boiled hard and chopped sep- arately, yolks from whites, one-half teaspoonful of pepper and a squeeze of lemon juice. Take the sauce off the fire and stir into it another ounce of butter. Serve in a tureen. If liked, the Qgg whites only may be stirred into the sauce; the hard yolks may be pressed through a wire sieve upon the meat. This is a nice sauce for calf's head. Phebe. EGG SAUCE— No. 2. This sauce is to serve with boiled fish. Take a small cupful of butter, and rub into it one-half teaspoonful of flour, then pour upon it about a gill of boiling water, stirring it fast. Let it boil up once. If it is allowed to boil long it will become oily. Pour it over two eggs boiled hard and cut fine. S. E. W. SHALLOT SAUCE. Chop three young onions very fine, add a little pepper, a small tea- spoonful of cider vinegar and the juice of three lemons. This is a fine sauce for oysters on the half-shell. E. L. S. CAPER SAUCE. Take one ounce of butter and a teaspoonful of flour, add a glassful of cold water, salt and pepper. Put the saucepan on back of stove, stir now and then, and as soon as it boils beat till smooth. Add two ounces of butter and one tablespoonful of capers. This should be served in a hot bowl. E. F. I. MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. 393 BECHAMEL SAUCE. Cut up all sorts of soup vegetables, with two cloves and a little grated nutmeg. Cook them in butter but do not let them broM^n. Boil one quart of milk with a little salt and sugar. While it is boiling add the mirepoix (the above vegetables), cover and set it aside where it will not boil any more. Make a roux with butter and flour, cook slowly and do not let it burn, for it must be white. Add gradually a sufficient quantity of veal and chicken blonde. Skim off all the fat and strain through a fine strainer. Set aside to cool but stir it frequently so it will be very smooth; keep in a cool place. Mrs. Henri Marquise. H0LLANDAI5E SAUCE. Rub one-half cupful of butter to a cream. Add four well-beaten Qgg yolks, then the juice of one-half of a lemon, one-half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of cayenne. Pour a cupful of hot water in slowly. Mix and set it in a saucepan of hot water. Stir until the sauce becomes a thick cream. Do not allow it to boil. Stir a few minutes after removing from the fire. It is a fine sauce for fish, asparagus, or cauliflower. Jennie Hills. CELERY SAUCE. Twelve heads of celery, twelve green tomatoes, six large white onions, two green peppers, one-half teaspoonful of mustard, one-half ounce of curry-powder, three cupfuls of brown sugar, one-quarter teaspoonful of cayenne, five cloves of garlic, two quarts of vinegar, one-half teaspoonful of black pepper, salt to taste; chop separately, mix and boil one and one- half hours. Bottle while hot. Mrs. Smith. GARIBALDI SAUCE. Four pounds of tomatoes, one pound of raisins, three pounds of sugar, one pound of apples, one-quarter pound red peppers, one-half pound of onions, one lemon, one small cupful of salt, three pints of vinegar. Chop all fine and cook. Mrs. Kellan. CHUTNEY SAUCE. Select twelve ripe tomatoes, twelve large apples, four onions, one pound of raisins (seedless), one pound of brown sugar, three green and two red peppers, two teaspoonfuls of ground ginger, one-third of a tea- spoonful of red pepper and a chocolate-cupful of salt. Add one quart of vinegar and boil all together for one hour. Mrs. T, Thompson. 394 MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. GOVERNOR'S SAUCE. Slice one peck of green tomatoes, sprinkle heavily with salt and let them stand over night. Drain well in the morning; cover them with vinegar; simmer them with six large onions, three red peppers, one teaspoonful each of ginger, pepper, a pinch of red pepper, a teaspoonful of mustard, a cupful of brown sugar, and a cupful of grated horseradish. Let them all simmer a little over two hours. Tillie, PICKLES OF ORANGES. Select six fine oranges. Cut them deeply, rub well with salt, and let stand in a warm place four days. Sprinkle a tablespoonful of coriander seeds over them and cover them with one and one-half pints of boiling vinegar in which two blades of mace have been simmered for two minutes. Boil the vinegar once or twice and pour it again upon the oranges, then cover the jar with bladder, and store for use. This pickle is designed for, wild fowl and should stand two months before being used. Mrs. Hannah Fuller. ONION SAUCE. Peel some nice white onions and boil them tender. Press the water from them, chop them fine, and add one-half pint of hot milk. Add a little butter, a salt-spoonful of salt and pepper to taste. Serve with boiled veal, poultry or mutton. Mrs. A. Sears. RUSSIAN SAUCE (PIQUANT). Four tablespoonfuls of grated horseradish, one spoonful weak mus- tard, one-half spoonful of sugar, a little salt, a dash of cayenne pepper, and two spoonfuls of vinegar. Mix thoroughly and serve with cold meat. When used for fish add it to melted butter — two parts of butter to one of sauce. Mrs. K. Pinkham. SAUCE FOR GAME. Take one-half tumblerful of currant jelly, one-half tumblerful of port wine, one-half tumblerful of stock, one-half teaspoonful of salt, two table- spoonfuls of lemon juice, four cloves, a little pepper. Simmer the cloves and stock together one-half hour. Strain this over the other ingredients and let all melt together. Part of the gravy from the game can be added to it. Mrs. R. Fish. HORSERADISH SAUCE. Put two teaspoonfuls of prepared mustard into a large cup and mix with it a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, a salt-spoonful of salt and five tablespoonfuls of good vinegar. Stir this preparation briskly for two or MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. 395 three minutes with a wooden or silver fork, then pour it into a tureen in which has been placed a stick of horseradish finely grated; stir the mix- ture again and serve. Mrs. C. Dixon. HORSERADISH SAUCE— No. 2. A delicious sauce is made from grated horseradish root, mixed with lemon juice, a little salt, and a suspicion of white sugar. The lemon is to mix the sauce. Served with cold meats it makes them much more invit- ing and palatable. This sauce will retain its flavor for some time if kept well covered when not being used and the root does not discolor so quickly as when made in the old way with vinegar. Eliza Higgins. HORSERADISH SAUCE— No. 3. A good-sized stick of horseradish is required, which should be grated into a bowl and a teaspoonful of mustard, a little salt, one-quarter of a pint of cream and vinegar to taste added. Stir all well together, and serve in a pickle jar with roast beef. Carrie Long. LOBSTER SAUCE. Put the coral and spawn of a boiled lobster into a mortar and pound to a smooth paste; melt butter the size of a large ^g^ with a wine-glass- ful of vinegar and a teaspoonful of prepared mustard, now stir in the coral and spawn and a pinch of salt and dash of pepper; mix until smooth. Mrs. M. p. APPLE SAUCE TO SERVE WITH HEAT. Pare, core and quarter tart juicy apples and stew until tender. Sweeten and then beat with a granite spoon until they are light and lump- less. Serve warm with roast pork, duck or goose. Emily B. ASTRAKHAN SAUCE TO SERVE WITH MEAT COURSE. Select red juicy apples, cut in halves, take out core but do not pare; place in a shallow stew-pan with sufficient water to cover and a cupful of white sugar to every half dozen apples. Each half should cook on the bottom of the pan, skin downward and be removed from the others when done so as not to injure its shape. Stew slowly until the pieces are very tender; remove to a platter and boil the syrup ten minutes longer. It will then be like jelly. Pour it over the apples. A few pieces of lemon peel boiled in the syrup adds to the flavor. Mrs. Lillie T. CIDER APPLE SAUCE. Boil two quarts of new cider until reduced to one, then put into it only what pared and quartered apples the syrup will cover; let the whole simmer three hours. Marion. 396 MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. BLONDE FISH SAUCE. Put three tablespoonfuls of stock in a stew-pan and stew the follow- ing ingredients one-half hour over a slow fire: An onion cut small, two mushrooms, a sprig of parsley, a lemon thinly sliced and a glassful of white wine. When nearly done add, by degrees, a cupful of melted butter and the yolks of three eggs well beaten; keep stirring the pan over the fire for four or five minutes, but do not allow the contents to boil. Strain through a sieve and use it for any kind of fish. Mrs. Mattie French. FISH SOUR SAUCE. Heat one-quarter of a pint of good vinegar, stir into it one-half tea- spoonful of made mustard, a little pepper and a slice of fresh butter. Serve when the butter is dissolved. Ione Higgins. TO BROWN FLOUR. Spread a small quantity of flour upon a tin pie plate, set it upon a moderately hot stove and stir continually until it is brown. Put away in jars closely covered. It is frequently called for in coloring and thickening sauces. Palmer House Chef. TO BROWN BUTTER. Put a piece of good butter into a hot granite pan and toss until it browns. Stir brown flour into it until it is smooth and quite brown, but not scorched. To be used for coloring sauces. Palmer House Chef. TO MAKE MUSTARD. Bring to a boil one-half cupful of vinegar; stir in three teaspoonfuls of mustard, creamed in cold vinegar, one-half teaspoonful of sugar and a salt-spoonful of salt. Let cook two minutes. L. P. M. HOW TO MAKE FRENCH MUSTARD. Take one-quarter of a pound of best yellow mustard, pour over it one- half pint each of water and vinegar. Add a pinch of salt and a piece of calamus root the size of a pea. Put it on the fire and while it boils add a tablespoonful of flour; let it boil twenty minutes, stirring it constantly. Just before taking it off stir in a teaspoonful of sugar. When cool, put it into bottles and cork tightly. Hannah Merriam. MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. 397 AROMATIC SEASONING. Mix one and one-half ounces of thyme, one ounce of bay-leaves, one ounce of summer savory, one ounce of basil and one and one-half ounces of marjoram. Dry thoroughly and pick the leaves from the stems. Pound in a mortar one-quarter of an ounce of cayenne pepper, one ounce of pepper corns, one ounce of cloves, one clove of garlic, the thinly-peeled rind of a lemon, one-half ounce of mace and one nutmeg grated. Mix well together, pass them through a sieve and keep in well-corked bottles. Mrs. F. Foster. COLORING FOR GRAVIES. Take one-half cupful of sugar and put on a tin plate. Set on the stove till thoroughly brown. Add one-half cupful of water and let boil for a few minutes. Strain and bottle. This will keep for months. E. F. P. HERBS FOR WINTER. To preserve herbs for winter use such as sage, mint, thyme, or any of the sweet herbs. They should be gathered fresh in their season after a good rain. Examine and throw out poor sprigs; then tie up into small bundles and hang bottom-side up until dry in a warm airy place. When dry and brittle pick off the leaves; put them in a clean can and cover. When wanted for use rub and sift. Prudent Housewife. SAUCE ACCOMPANIMENTS FOR VARIOUS MEATS. Roast beef should be accompanied with tomato sauce, horseradish sauce, mustard, cranberry sauce or pickles. Roast pork: With apple sauce, cranberry sauce, mustard. Roast veal: Tomato sauce, mushroom sauce, onion sauce and spinach. Roast mutton: Mint sauce, currant jelly, caper sauce. Boiled mutton: Onion or caper sauce. Boiled fowls: Onion sauce, cranberry sauce, jellies. Roast lamb: Mint sauce, green peas. Roast turkey: Cranberry sauce, giblet sauce, creamed onions, currant jelly. Boiled turkey: Oyster sauce. Venison or wild ducks: Cranberry sauce, apple sauce, drawn-butter and lemon sauce, currant jelly. Stewed chicken: Curry-powder, QQg sauce. Roast goose: Apple sauce, cranberry sauce, grape or currant jelly. 398 MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. Broiled steak: Mushroom sauce. Boiled fish: White cream sauce, herb sauce, lemon sauce. Boiled lobster: Lobster sauce, slices of lemon. Broiled shad: Mushroom sauce, German sauce, parsley or egg sauce. Pickles of all kinds, salted almonds, olives and most of compotes are suitable with all roast and boiled meats. Mrs. White. Garnishing;s. The simplest method of garnishing roasts, game and fowl is with fresh parsley. Put nice little sprays here and there around the outer edge of the platter and also on top of the meat. Slices of lemon are especially nice for fish while capers are appropriate for leg of mutton, and sprigs of mint for lamb. GREEN PEAS FOR GARNISH. Put one tablespoonful of butter and one teaspoonful of flour into a stew-pan, mix well over the fire, then stir in one cupful of cooked peas. Stir over the fire for two or three minutes and when thoroughly hot, serve on platter with roast lamb. Millie Van Ness. TURNIPS OR CARROTS FOR GARNISH. Peel and cook one-half dozen turnips and then cut them into any fancy shape desired, such as cubes, balls, etc. Put them into a saucepan with a little broth; season with salt, sugar and pepper; boil till soft and use as garnish. L. B. M. CARROTS FOR GARNI5H. Clean young carrots, rub off their skin and trim them with a knife in fancy shapes. Put them into a saucepan with beef or chicken broth; add salt and pepper to taste, add a pinch of sugar and boil till done. Thicken a trifle and serve with boiled beef. ' Mrs. A. B. W. OLIVES FOR GARNISH. (Spanish Style.) Select large olives, remove the stones from one-half cupful, by cutting them round and round in spiral shape so as to retain their shape. Put them in a saucepan, pour in some white stock and stew slowly until the olives are tender. A garnish for roasts. I. M. Sterns. HAM FOR GARNISH. Scald two small slices of ham, cut into squares. Put two tablespoon- fuls of butter into a frying-pan and when hot lay in the ham; add a little MEAT AND FISH SAUCES AND GARNISHINGS. -899 parsley, salt and pepper to taste and two thin slices of lemon cut in quarters. Fry until a light brown color. A nice garnish for game. J. C. GARNISH FOR SALADS. Garnish for salads is spoken of more at length under Salads — both meat and vegetable — but it is not out of place to add here that hard-boiled eggs sliced or cut lengthwise are a most appropriate as well as appetizing finish to the ornamenting of a salad. Beets boiled and cut dice shape, capers and powdered cheese, all add to the looks and therefore flavor. Mrs. Gregory. GARNISH FOR PUDDINGS. It is generally understood by all housewives that desserts and pud- dings of all kinds are more appetizing in looks, and hence more palatable, when they come on the table in an attractive manner. Steamed plum puddings when in mold and reversed on a pudding platter and scattered over with a few plums halved, a cherry pudding strewed with a few fresh or candied cherries, or a shortcake the inside of which is filled with slightly crushed berries, is greatly enhanced in looks when surrounded with a few elegant, large, juicy-looking berries. It is not always the elaborate con- coction of a dish that strikes home to the heart; but the beauty and the simplicity. Mrs. Gregory. ]^LISHES and CATSUPS TOMATO CHUTNEY. THIRTY tomatoes, six apples, chopped, six onions, red peppers, one pound of raisins, two onions, ten ounces of salt, one and one-half pounds of brown sugar, four ounces of ginger and three pints of cider vinegar. Mrs. Chas. Hudson. INDIA RELI5H. One peck of green tomatoes, one-half head of cabbage, twelve green peppers, one pound of brown sugar, one tablespoonful of cloves, one table-spoonful of cinnamon and one tablespoonful of allspice. Chop the toma- toes, put one-half cupful of salt over them and let drain for twenty-four hours, then add three onions, the cabbage and peppers, all well Put spices in a bag and add the sugar. Cover well with cider Mrs. Cole. chopped vinegar and let it simmer for four hours GREEN TOMATO SOY. Take a peck of green tomatoes, slice them thin, add one pint of salt. Let them stand twenty-four hours, strain, and put over the fire with twelve raw onions, an ounce of black pepper, one ounce of allspice, one-quarter of a pound of ground mustard, one-half pound of white mustard seed and a little cayenne pepper. Cover the whole with vinegar and boil till as thick as a jam, stirring occasionally with a wooden spoon, to prevent burning. Katie Upton. RIPE TOMATO SOY. One peck of tomatoes peeled and sliced, one cupful of salt; let stand twenty-four hours; drain off liquor and add- one head of celery, eight onions, chopped fine, one quart of vinegar, one tablespoonful each of ground mustard, ginger, cloves, allspice, cinnamon, and one-half spoonful of cayenne pepper; stew slowly two hours; when nearly done add one pound of sugar and one-quarter pound of white mustard seed. Mrs. Milburn. 400 RELISHES AND CATSUPS. 401 CHILLI SAUCE. Take a peck of ripe tomatoes, skin and cut up coarse into kettle. Take six large onions, five large green peppers, and a good-sized bunch of celery, cutting them all up. Put all on to boil, adding about a* pint of cold water. Boil slowly four to five hours. Add one small teacupful of salt, one pint of cold vinegar, tablespoonful of black pepper and one-half teaspoonful of cayenne pepper. Boil all these together one hour. Then bottle it. It must never stop boiling. If you use canned tomatoes four cans equal one peck of whole ones. Maggie Green. CHILLI SAUCE— No. 2. Three teacupfuls of vinegar, twelve tomatoes chopped, three peppers chopped fine, two large onions chopped fine and two teaspoonfuls of salt, two teaspoonfuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of cinnamon; simmer on back part of stove two hours. Very nice. Mrs. Carrie Vroman. CHOW=CHOW. For Chow-Chow and Piccalilli see Department of "Pickles." TOMATO CATSUP. One -half bushel of tomatoes, one teacupful of salt. Boil and strain through a coarse sieve. Add one-half teaspoonful of powdered cloves, one teaspoonful of powdered allspice and four dashes of cayenne. Boil down to five quarts. Bottle while hot and pour over a teaspoonful of olive oil before corking. H. F. L. TOMATO CATSUP -No. 2. One bushel of tomatoes, three onions, two large red peppers, two tablespoonfuls of cloves, two tablespoonfuls of allspice, one tablespoonful of mace, one and one-half whole black peppers and salt to taste. Cut and heat the tomatoes until they are soft enough to strain. After straining put in the ingredients and boil down one-half; then strain through a colander, cork and seal in heated bottles. Mrs. M. H. Skinner. TOMATO CATSUP— No. 3. To one gallon of strained tomatoes, put one quart of vinegar, one large cupful of sugar, four tablespoonfuls of pepper, four tablespoonfuls of mustard, four tablespoonfuls of salt, four tablespoonfuls of mixed spices, one teaspoonful of red pepper. Boil till thick and then strain it again. Bottle and set away. Mrs. M. Dawson. GRAPE CATSUP. Wash and stew ten pounds of fruit over a slow fire until soft. Then strain through a sieve and add nine cupfuls of granulated sugar, two 40;3 RELISHF.S AND CATSUPS. teaspoonfuls of cinnamon, two tablespoonfuls of allspice, one table^ spoonful of ground black pepper, one tablespoonful of salt and two quarts of cider vinegar. Boil until a little thick and bottle. Lettie T CUCUHBER CATSUP. Peel and grate one dozen green cucumbers, add two chopped onions, one-third of a teacupful of salt and drain over night. Then add one-third of a cupful of mustard seed, one-half teaspoonful of black pepper and cover with cider vinegar. Fine for corned mutton. J. Smiley. CUCUMBER CATSUP— No. 2. Grate six fairly ripe cucumbers and drain in a colander. Mince two small onions; mix with one-half teaspoonful of horseradish and same of white mustard seed. Pour over enough cider vinegar to make quite juicy. Do not cook. This will keep in a cool place for some time. LiNNiE Beattie. GOOSEBERRY CATSUP. Make same as grape catsup, being sure to gather fruit before it is too ripe. Lillie T. PLUM CATSUP. Make same as grape catsup. Lillie T. CURRANT OR GRAPE CATSUP. Boil fifteen minutes one-half pint of vinegar, three pounds of sugar, five pounds of ripe currants, one tablespoonful each of cloves, cinnamon, allspice and one teaspoonful of black pepper, one-half teaspoonful of salt; stir the currants, strain and boil fifteen minutes longer. Berries are good also. Marion C. Packard. CURRANT CATSUP. Eight pounds of currants, eight cupfuls of sugar, one quart of vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of cinnamon, pepper and allspice. Boil in a granite kettle until just thick enough to run freely from a spoon. Seal. Mrs. L. p. M. CRAB-APPLE CATSUP. Select sound apples; peel and quarter two quarts; stew them until tender in as little water as possible, then press through a sieve. To a quart of the sifted apple add two teacupfuls of sugar, two teaspoonfuls of pepper, two teaspoonfuls of cloves, two teaspoonfuls of cinnamon and three large onions chopped fine. Stir all together adding two tablespoonfuls of salt and cider vinegar enough to cover. Place over slow fire and boil one hour. Seal while hot. F. P. E. MOST persons to-day who reside in large cities and have means at command endeavor, during the heated season, to get away for a few weeks to the country, seashore, mountains or inland lakes where good, wholesome living and pure air can be enjoyed. "Roughing it" has become quite a fad and when we consider that the idea includes not only change of location, but change of dress, healthy exercise and simple liv- ing, we must all admit that it is a good thing for mankind. Scores, in flocking hither, camp out or build cottages, others accept the hospitality offered by the "Summer Hotels," an institution made necessary by the advance of time. HOW TO ARRANGE THE STOVE. In camping out the most important thing aside from the tent is the stove. The top of a common cooking stove with stove pipe to fit is just the thing, although stoves can be purchased on purpose for camping at a cost of three or four dollars. Dig out a hole in the bank the size and shape of the stove and line all with stones except the front. Regulate the draught by placing something in front for a blower. Some prefer the gasoline or oil stoves. Coffee and tea pots should not have spouts, but lips; and the lips should be riveted on, as as not to melt off. Tin plates and cups can be kept clean by occasionally scouring them with ashes or sand. PROVISIONS FOR CAMP LIFE. These will depend much upon the locality and the requirements of the campers; the following suggestions may be serviceable in making up an outfit: Plenty of wheat, rye and graham flour, also corn-meal. Bacon, smoked ham, bologna sausage, eggs, dried beef, salt fish. Crackers, canned fruit and vegetables, where fresh cannot be obtained. Potatoes, 403 404 HOJV AND WHAT TO COOK WHEN CAMPING OUT. beans, onions, molasses, salt, pepper, sugar, mustard, vinegar, lard, but- ter, coffee, tea, chocolate, rice, oat-meal, baking-soda, ginger, soap, kerosene oil and candles. NECESSARY UTENSILS. The necessary utensils are coffee pot, spiders, kettles, bakers, gridiron, basins, cups, pails, knives, forks, spoons, lanterns, ropes, bags, strings, needles, thread, matches, shovel, axe, hammer, nails, fishing tackle, gun and ammunition, towels and flannel clothing. Most of the recipes in other parts of this book are appropriate for camp life but we give under this head a few that are especially appro- priate for out-door cooking. In camp life small and large birds should be either roasted, stewed or broiled. Pick off the feathers and draw them. Wash carefully. If for roasting, tie the legs down and place in the pan. Sprinkle with flour, cover the bottom with water and roast thirty minutes. Oven must be very hot. A. M. Johnson. BIRDS ROASTED IN THEIR FEATHERS. (Hunter's Style.) Open the bird in the usual manner, and draw; then cover with wet clay and bury in hot coals. In forty-five minutes draw from the coals and peel off the clay. Feathers and skin will come at same time. Delicious cooked in this manner. A. M. J. STEWED PATRIDQES, PIGEONS OR GROUSE. Place two partridges in a small kettle and dredge with salt, pepper and flour and cover with cold water. Cover tight and let simmer two hours. Thicken with flour and stir in two spoonfuls of catsup; simmer one hour longer, and serve. A. M. J. BROILED BIRDS. Split and clean; wipe and broil over a hot fire — if small, ten minutes; if large, fifteen. Season with salt, pepper and butter. Serve on toast. A. M. J. FISH BAKED IN THEIR SCALES. Take out the insides, wash and close up again, first seasoning a little with salt. Leave on the head, fins and scales. Cover with wet clay and bury in hot coals and bake one hour. The time depending, of course, upon the size, a longer time for a larger fish. When done peal off the clay (at which time the scales will also come off), open up, lay flat on the back and lift out the bones. Then take off the head, season, and it is ready to serve. It is unequaled in flavor. William H. Brooks. HOW AND IVhAT TO COOK WHEN CAMPING OUT. 405 BROOK TROUT. (Angler Style.) If you cook brook trout as the angler does, split to the tail and clean. Wash and drain. For a dozen large trout fry six slices of salt pork brown, take out and put in the trout. Fry a nice brown and serve with the pork. Louis Hamilton. CLAH-BAKE. A party of twenty will require a bushel of clams, which should be gathered, if possible, the day before. Leave on the shell, place in a tub and cover with clean water. Into the water throw about one quart of Indian meal. This fattens them. When time to use wash thoroughly in two or more waters. Clean one fresh cod nicely, season with salt and pep- per, and wrap in a clean cloth. Clean also a live lobster. Wash plenty of potatoes, cut off the ends, peel a generous lot of onions, husk some green corn (leaving on the inner husk to keep it clean) and all is ready for the oven. Make the oven of flat stones placed together in the form of a square, about two and one-half feet each way; around the inside of this place other stones to form a bin. Fill this bin with small sticks. On these pile larger sticks, crosswise, and on top of these a layer of stones. Start the fire, allowing it to burn down until the stones which are on top settle into the coals. Clean out quickly all the cinders with a poker, then cover the stones with a green seaweed about one and one-half inches thick. Have ready the clams, spread them on top of the seaweed, then the vegetables, then the fish and a live lobster. Cover the whole with a piece of cotton cloth to keep out dirt; then cover with seaweed until no steam can escape. Bake thirty-five minutes. Remove the covering from one corner at a time only — so that the rest may keep hot — and all hands take hold and help themselves. J. Jefferson. BEAN=BAKE. (Outing Style.) Build an oven in much the same way as for a clam-bake, except have it ro&nd and of a size to accommodate a large iron kettle in which the beans are to be baked. Prepare the coals as also for clam-bake and have ready five or six quarts of beans, as the case may be, cleaned, parboiled and seasoned with salt, pepper and molasses. In the center and on top of the beans, place two pounds, more or less, of good salt pork cross cut. Now put the kettle, with cover, containing the beans on the live coals, cover up with fresh grass and let cook fifteen hours. Have ready some 40G NOW AND WHAT TO COOK WHEN CAMPING OUT. good warm steamed brown bread, delicious butter, and all fall to, for a feast is at hand. Mrs. C. I. Eastman. CORN DODGERS. Take three teacupfuls of corn-meal, one teaspoonful of salt, one table- spoonful of sugar, and pour on boiling water enough to wet it; then make into small, flat cakes about one inch thick, and fry fifteen or twenty min- utes in boiling fat. To be eaten very hot. Fine. John Smith. CORN CAKE. Three teacupfuls of corn-meal, a generous pinch of salt, one table- spoonful of sugar, one tablespoonful of butter; wet with boiling y^2X^x and then beat in one ^^^. Spread one-half inch deep on buttered tins and bake brown in a quick oven. Delicious. Mrs. John Smith. ROAST POTATOES. "Of all the potatoes I ever tasted," said Stanley, on his return trom an outing trip in Michigan, "roasted potatoes are the best." Let the coals get red hot, cover with hot ashes and lay on one dozen or more (with jackets on, but clean) as the needs of the company require, and over them put on more ashes and then red-hot coals. Let stand twenty-five minutes. Take out, wipe clean, crush open and drop in a speck of butter and sprinkle with salt. Try them, I did and they are fine. Stanley's Mother. BOOK II ''Nor love, nor ho?ior, wealth ?wr power Can give the heart a cheerful hour When health ts lost. Be timely wise, With health all taste of pleastire flies y .-"■^:d> .^ WHAT HAKES HEALTH? IT IS a matter of no small importance that we well consider the subject — how can we best supply the human family with a food that will perform the mission of strengthening and at the same time the mis- sion of enriching life? Vegetarianism has, from the first, steadily pursued its way, making no loud boasts, but drawing converts to its theories until to-day there are hundreds in every state in the Union. Vegetarians build their theory on the single fact that all nutritive matter is formed by vegetables; that although animals appropriate nutrition they never form it, and that when men eat animal food, they take on the unhealthy conditions of the very animal they feed upon. People say that man requires a certain amount of fat. Well, so he does, but here again comes the vegetarian who says that " the vegetable world furnishes it generously. Seeds and nuts have been found far supe- rior to animal fats." Flesh eaters also bring forward the argument that animal food must be more readily assimilated than vegetable, because the people who live upon it are generally fleshy. This the vegetarians claim is a false theory. To be well nourished is to replenish tissues, not to accumulate fat. The increase of flesh beyond a proper amount becomes a disease, and they ask 408 HEALTH PARAMOUNT TO ALL ELSE. 409 if " it is not a fact that thin people will endure illness far better than those whose adipose tissue is extreme ?" From a humane point as well as a health point of view, vegetarianism has made many converts. Thousands who are not quite ready to declare themselves vegetarians have diminished their use of meat very materially within the last year. By this means, a demand for fruits, cereals, vege- tables and nuts has sprung up that we hope will bring its reward in increased health and greater mental activity. It is true that the whole earth teems with fine food and it will ever yield bounteously to her children. No article of diet supplies nutriment so cheaply and with less trouble than cereals and vegetables. Take, for instance Indian corn. At the time America was discovered the inhabitants lived almost exclusively upon this cereal. Rice' furnishes more human beings nourishment than any other article in existence. In the vegetable world, there need be no adulterations. The articles can be produced in such quantities that they should continue to be pure and within the reach of all. Fruits, of which there is a bewildering variety, have a large place in the list of health preservers. Every fruit contains substances designed to inspire and humanize its votary. The juices are cool and healing and greatly assist in digestion. Nuts also are nature's choicest food products, and were doubtless intended by the creator to constitute, with fruits, man's chief diet. Man's greatest burden bearer — the horse — by nature lives solely on a vegetable diet. It hauls heavy loads with no seeming effort. DeLesseps said that the Suez Canal, a wonderful achievement, could never have been built by any meat-eating people in the world. The climate being hot, they could not have endured it. The work was accomphshed by Armenians, who live most upon barley. DeLesseps himself became a vegetarian and remained so during his life. The elephant, the strongest of all animals, lives entirely upon plant life, and so we might go on, but suffice it to say that vegetarianism is bound to grow and the quicker we spare the blessed lambs and innocent calves, the healthier and happier we will be. At first the change in diet from meats to vegetables will perhaps seem difificult but if persisted in one will be able to say with a prominent vege- tarian, "I had been considerable of a vulture, and for some time after eliminating flesh from my menus I had desire for it. But gradually that desire faded, and there came in its stead a growing horror of flesh. After a few weeks of fruits and vegetables there came over me a feeling of exultation and superiority and crispness that was truly novel." 410 HEALTH PARAMOUNT TO ALL ELSE. HOMEKEEPINQ NOT HOUSEKEEPING. "Oh, to be strong! each morn to feel, A fresh delight to wake to life. To spring with bounding pulse to meet Whate'er of work, of care, of strife Day brings to me! each night to sleep The dreamless sleep that health can give No weary ache, no wearing pain — Ah, then indeed, 'twere joy to live. What a ringing chorus of joy and ecstacy would swell up to heaven, if the many thou- sands who are suffering could toss aside their aches and pains and sing the glad song of returning health. Every woman desires to be beauti- ful, yet, where is beauty without health? Strange to say, health is within the reach of all if the simplest rules of every-day life be observed. Let us remember the adage: "We do not Hve upon what we eat, but upon what we digest." When we ignore our natural instincts, which are satisfied with the proper amount of food and continue to impose extra duties upon the stomach, the first step is taken toward destroying health. We can well learn a lesson from the animals — none of the animal king- dom ever eats except when it is hungry and as soon as it has consumed sufficient to gratify that hunger, it cannot be tempted to continue its repast. The mothers, the real homekeepers, are coming to the front in that, as in all the other grand reforms of our progressive age. They are studying the subject of the relations of food, exercise and ventilation to health, and are becoming acquainted with the methods by which nutri- ment is best introduced into the system, and are exercising a sensible supervision over the food of their children. When an author makes the assertion and proves it — that the nature and character of the man or woman has a close relation to what the child was fed upon, it is a truth that will strike home to the mother's heart. Every mother in the land should learn something of the chemistry of cooking. This knowledge would not only enable her to keep her family in health, but would teach them how to take care of themselves. How often it is true that a mother studies every other method of bringing up her children in a successful way, but neglects their food? A mother who looks well after these things may truly be called a Homekeeper. Home- keeping and housekeeping should go hand in hand — but it seems as HEALTH PARAMOUNT TO ALL ELSE. 411 Lillian Whiting says in the World Beautiful that the two "have gotten sadly taken, — one for the other. The finest and most liberal culture is none too fine to fit a woman for homekeeping; but mere industry and trained intelligence is the basis of housekeeping. The woman unlearned in art, literary or social culture, may be a most admirable housekeeper; but the highest and greatest gifts and the most exquisite cultivation are none too much for homekeeping." We have here endeavored to pay some attention to food values, sup- plying the elements required by the system. Cream, butter and nuts fur- nish the fats to those who do not eat meat. Fruit gives the acids. Cereals and vegetables the brain and muscle. NOURISHING PROPERTIES OF VARIOUS FOODS. In the hope of arousing and cultivating intelligent interest in respect to the nutritive value of the most common articles of food, I present the following table, from "Science in the Kitchen," published at Battle Creek, the world-famed sanitarium town: GRAINS. PER CENT. Wheat, Poland 86.8 Wheat, Michigan, White 85.5 Wheat, Michigan, Diehl 85.5 Wheat, Michigan, Japanese 84.7 Rye, Winter 89.8 Rye, German 92. Barley 82.2 Barley, So. Russian 86. Oats .' 80. 1 Corn, Flint 84.9 Corn, Dent 84.4 Corn, Sweet 83. 7 Rice 86.9 Millet 85.7 Buckwheat '. . . .85.6 Irish Moss 81. i FLOUR. Graham 85.1 Wheat J Rye 84.7 Barley 84.7 Qi Oat. Corn 84 Buckwheat 85 Bean 88 Pea 87 Arrowroot 82 BREAD. PER CENT. Barley , 83.3 Whole Wheat 81. 7 White 54.9 Rye 57-2 Swedish Speise Brod 87. Zwieback, White 85.2 Rye 83.7 Macaroni 86.9 Manna . .74.6 FRESH FRUITS. Apple 137 Apricot 13.5 Blackberry 6.6 Banana 26. 7 Cherry 14-8 Cranberry 4. 1 Currant 10.7 Grape 18.2 Gooseberry 10.8 Pear 12.4 Prune 13.4 Plum 10.8 Peach 139 Raspberry 6.9 Strawberry 10. 1 Whortleberry 9.3 412 HEALTH PARAMOUNT TO ALL ELSE. DRIED FRUITS. PER CENT. Prune 69 Pear 63. 7 Apple 67 Cherry 49. 4 Raisin 66. 3 7 Fig 56 Date 67 NUTS. Chestnut ^ 89. 3 Walnut 88.2 Hazelnut 89.7 Sweet Almonds 87. 3 Peanut 79.6 Cocoanut 50. 5 VEGETABLES. Sugar Beet 16.8 Parsnip 10. Sweet Potato 27.2 Cucumber 4. Asparagus 5.3 Cauliflower 8.2 Melon 8.2 Squash 8.5 Onion 13.3. Pumpkin 8. 5 Tomato 6. 8 Peas, Green, Garden 19.7 Peas, Small 83.3 Peas, African 90.2 Peas, Green 84. i Beans, Field 78. 5 Peas, French or Kidney 85.2 Peas, White 82.2 Peas, Lima 87. String Beans 10. i Lentils 83.8 Lentils, German 74.7 MILK AND BUTTER. PER CENT. Cow's Milk 14. Cream 34. Swedish Butter 86.2 French Butter 87.4 Cheese, Stilton 68. Skimmed Milk 10.4 SACCHARINE. Syrup 75.4 Honey 79. 4 Buttermilk 9.2 Milk of Cow-tree 40.2 VEGETABLES. Carrot 11.7 Winter Cabbage 18. i Red Cabbage 8. 7 White Cabbage 8.2 Spinach 10. 5 Celery 14. 5 Head Lettuce 4.9 Potato 24. 4 White Turnip 5.4 Beet II. 5 MEATS. Beef, Lean 28 Mutton 28 Veal 37 Pork 61 Poultry 26 White Fish 22 Salmon 23 Entire Egg 26 White of Egg 22 Yolk of Egg 48 VEQETARIANISn. "Let us be thankful, not only that vv^e are alive, but that everything else is alive," said Dr. Kellogg, in announcing that there v^^ould be no tur- key, no animal food of any kind, at a recent Thanksgiving dinner of the Battle Creek sanitarium. People vuho have never thought upon this subject doubtless think that such a feast w^ould not be a Thanksgiving feast, and especially so as every form of animal food was also excluded; but there are many thousands of very intelligent persons who did the same thing. Yes, there are many HEALTH PARAMOUNT TO ALL ELSE. 413 strict vegetarians in our broad land to-day. Doubtless a large number have drawn their inspiration from the above institution. In order to show what a grand dinner can be made of vegetable foods, and to furnish suggestions for those who may desire to adopt, at least in a small measure, the vegetarian diet, I give the menu of the above dinner: riENU. Vegetable Oyster Soup Tomato Bisque Toasted Wafers Nut Roast Dressing Nuttolene — Mint Sauce Protose Cutlets Cranberry Sauce Escalloped Potatoes Baked Sweet Potatoes Kornlet Boiled Onions Asparagus Hubbard Squash Graham Bread Swieback Sticks Cocoanut Crisps White Bread Granose Biscuit •Walnut Buns Potato Salad Lettuce Celery Caramel Cereal Grape Nectar Fruit Cocoa Malted Nuts Kumyss Peaches Plums Strawberries Cherries Lemon Pie Gold Cake Roasted Almonds Pecans Malaga Grapes Apples Oranges Bananas Bromose If any one will examine a half-dozen typical, well-ordered vegetarian menus, he will agree with us, after examining the same, that it is possible to prepare a good menu without the use of meats. To illustrate this fact, and to assist those who may be interested in the subject, I give place to a few every-day breakfasts and dinners which have been furnished me by the Battle Creek sanitarium: BREAKFAST-THANKSGIVINQ MORNING FRESH FRUIT Malaga Grapes Apples Strawberry TOASTS Toasted Whole-wheat Wafers Tomato Snowflake Cream CEREALS Cal. Breakfast Food UNFERMENTED BREADS Rolled Oats DEXTRINIZED GRAINS Granola Zwieback Granut Granose Flakes Crystal Wheat Toasted Granose Biscuits Granola Porridge — Peaches ENTRIES Sliced Protose or Nuttolene — Jelly Broiled Protose Cottage Cheese Poached Eggs VEGETABLES Baked Potatoes — Cream Sauce Stewed Tomatoes Protose Hash Sticks Oatmeal Crackers Graham Crackers Currant Puflfs Passover Bread White Crackers Breakfast Rolls Cocoanut Crisps FERMENTED BREADS White Bread Fine Graham Bread Coarse Graham Bread COOKED FRUITS Baked Apples Pears Plums Prunes LIQUID FOODS FOR INVALIDS Sterilized Dairy Milk Dairy Milk Caramel-Cereal Dairy Cream Fruit Coco Gluten Gruel Almond Cream 414 HEALTH PARAMOUNT TO ALL ELSE. Another table showing that the very best animal food is only equal to the vegetable in nutritive value: loo Parts. Water. Beef Veal Mutton Beef y^ Veal 75 71 Pork 76 Chicken 73 Cod .' y-y Haddock 82 Sole yg Albumen or Nutritive Fibrin. Gelatin. Matter. 20 6 26 19 6 25 22 7 29 19 5 24 20 7 27 14 7 21 13 5 18 15 6 21 HOW TO SERVE THEM. FRESH fruits may safely be said to be nature's panacea for many of the ills under which humanity labors. Every fruit that grows contains properties especially needed by our race. At one time fruit upon the table was deemed a luxury designed solely for the wealthy or people of moderate circumstances on special occasions. To-day fruit is a necessity and from no well-set table is it absent. Each variety of fruit has its own health-giving properties — all conducive to happiness and long life. In them is stored up elements that assist digestion, refresh the brain, invigor- ate the body, and why should we go without — when fresh fruit of some sort can be obtained so cheaply? Physicians now heartily recommend a fruit diet to their patients, and were it to constitute half of the daily diet, intemperance and many other evils would be much less- ened. We can personally vouch for a case of a young man who had become addicted to the use of intoxicants. A friend advised him to try the use of oranges before breakfast. He ridiculed but followed his advice, with the result that he became a convert to the fruit diet, and when a craving for alcoholic stimulants arose, he resorted to the imme- diate use of some sort of fruit, and no longer cared for what had been his bane. As he expressed it, fruit "became meat and drink" to him. There is no better tonic in the world than the juice of one-half of a. lemon squeezed into a cupful of hot or cold water, drank without sugar, on rising in the morning. Headaches, languor, biliousness all disappear. We not only have our native fruits to draw from, but every country on earth contributes its choicest fruits, and when their value is more gener- ally understood, the good effect upon the manners and morals of the world will be productive of grander lives, clearer brains and fewer ail- ments than now. 415 416 FRESH FRUITS. TO PRESERVE APPLES FOR WINTER USE. Keep the apples on open shelves in a cool dark attic that is airy. It is preferable to the cellar, which is often too damp. Use the spotted and decaying ones first to preserve the others as long as possible; if preferred they may be packed in clean, dry straw so they will not touch each other. Still another way is, wrap each apple separately in tissue paper and pack in barrels or boxes, but this is rarely done unless the fruit is scarce and very fine. D. Z. B. TO PRESERVE GRAPES FOR WINTER USE. Select perfect bunches, seal the ends of the stems with sealing wax, hang them in a dark cellar or in any room in which the air js neither so dry as to wither them nor so cold as to freeze them; fasten each bunch separately so as not to touch each other. Lida B. STRAWBERRIES AU NATURAL. Select fresh ripe juicy berries, remove neither hulls nor stems; with a tiny brush remove alb sand underneath the sepals. Arrange on a pretty glass dish or on individual dishes. Serve with a spoonful of pow- dered sugar in small paper cup at side of plate. If berries are not fresh picked place on ice two hours before serving to freshen them. LiLLIE. STRAWBERRIES AU NATURAL— No. 2. Choose the largest strawberries, leaving the stems on. On each sauce plate arrange them around the dish with the strawberries uppermost. Then place a little pyramid of powdered sugar in the center of each plate. The berries are to be eaten by dipping each one in the sugar. A little pat of ice cream maybe substituted for the sugar, but in that case the berries should be stemmed and hulled. Mrs. J. C. M. PLUMS. (French Style.) Select any kind of plums desired. If fresh picked arrange them on fancy dish with their own leaves. Serve with small knives. If not fresh picked place on ice three hours before serving. Mary Butler. CHILLED WATERMELON. Select a thoroughly ripe watermelon, place on ice till very cold; now wipe dry and cut crosswise at center. Cut out triangular sections (see colored illustration) cut down the remaining sections so as to easily sepa- rate with a knife. Serve with rind attached; serve on large round platter decorated with fresh grape or apple leaves. John Miller. FRESH FRUITS. 417 GRAPE FRUIT SERVED IN BASKET. (Made of the peel.) Select medium-sized grape fruit cut in basket shape (see colored illus- tration) and with a knife carefully scoop out fruit and all the bitter pulp. Return the fruit and sprinkle generously with sugar just before placing it on table. Tie to the handle some light blue baby ribbon and some pretty geranium leaves and set on fancy plate at each place; a nice first course for a luncheon. Leone Hull. PINEAPPLE DESSERT. Cut the top off of a pineapple and cut away the bottom so that it will stand upright on a plate (see colored illustration). Scoop out the pulp throwing away the core. Mix the pulp with strawberries and green amalaga grapes cutting the berries and grapes into halves. Sweeten and return mixture to the pineapple shell and set on ice. Decorate dish with leaves from the crown or with grape leaves. Luella. ORANGE AND STRAWBERRIES IN BASKET. (Made of Peel.) Select good-sized oranges, cut off the top, scoop out the center and fill with strawberries and some of the orange. If liked pour over a little sherry and put on top a spoonful of whipped cream. Delicious. John. GRAPES. There is no fruit that is so inviting to the eye as large clusters of grapes, arranged in a clear glass dish. They can be pulled from the stems by the fingers in eating. Nell. PEARS. Select those that are ripe, pare them and stem them. Cut them in halves, laying them on a fruit dish, and sprinkle powdered sugar thickly over them. To be eaten with knife and fork. Mary Anderson. RAISINS. Large clusters of raisins can be arranged upon a fruit dish, and a dish of almond-meal set near them. A bunch of the raisins can be placed on each plate, and a teaspoonful or two of the almond-meal added. They are to be eaten together. Lillian B. niXED FRUITS. The beauty of any fruit is increased when it is tastefully dished. A beautiful method of showing off fruit is to procure a large gilt basket, and fill with apples, pears, peaches and grapes, and fill in the crevices with ferns and geraniums or any green sprays that suggest themselves. The 418 FRESH FRUITS. dish so ornamented should never be too full, and always garnished in some way, either with leaves or flowers. When these are not at hand, embroidered or lace paper can be bought for the purpose. All fruit designed for the table should be carefully examined and wiped with a napkin before arranging it on the dish. Mrs. R. Beals. MUSKMELONS. The large melons may be cut into large pieces and served with a little ice on the plate, but small ones are cut in halves, a small piece of ice placed in each section and served. They may be made the first course at breakfast or luncheon. A. R. G. PEACHES AND CREAM. Arrange as many peaches as you wish in a handsome dish after pour- ing a mixture of sugar and cream over them. Fill the dish with the peaches, which must have been pared and quartered and keep pouring over the cream and sugar until the dish is full. Then set them on the ice. Pruella North. A CREAFl OF CHERRIES. A quart of cherries broken with a spoon but not enough to make the pits escape, can be left to stand in a cold place after pouring a cupful of sugar over them. Strain off all the juice, sweeten it, and beat one-half pint of cream and the white of an O-gg, adding the juice of the cherries very slowly, whipping it till it ceases to foam. The juice must be poured in a little at a time, or it will curdle. Frona Williams. NUTS AND RAISINS. Select the large raisins that come in good-sized bunches and lay a handsome doily on a glass dish. Now pile up the raisins on this dish and fill in the crevices with shelled nuts of any sort that have been previ- ously blanched. Blanching is simply scalding the nuts to remove their inner skin. They must be wiped dry afterward before using. This makes a pretty dish for the table. Mrs. Laura King. MOLDED ORANGES. Peel three or four large oranges, being careful not to break the thin skin which divides them. Oil a small mold thoroughly. Boil a quarter of a pound of loaf sugar in three tablespoonfuls of water till it becomes hard and brittle when dropped into cold water, dip the edges of the orange sections into this, arrange them in layers round only the sides of the mold, and fasten them together with the sugar. When they are firm, turn them on a dish, and fill the center with whipped cream. It takes twelve minutes to boil the sugar. J. E. Taber. FRESH FRUITS. 41 i) PINEAPPLES FOR THE TABLE. Unless a pineapple is perfectly ripe it should not be eaten. Pare it, removing the eyes. Do not slice it, but after paring cut away the fruit in small pieces. Lay them in a glass dish, covered with fine white sugar. The core is indigestible, and is not used. Set the pineapple on ice till wanted. Flo Brine. STRAWBERRIES WITH CREAM. Wash them through a colander. Few of the berries brought to mar- ket can be used without washing. Drain them well, and when as dry as possible, stem them. Sugar and cream should not be placed over them as it makes them dark and soft on standing. When brought to table allow each guest to use cream and sugar at his own discretion. Keep them cool until they are to be served. Mrs. T. Chamberlain. APPLE DAINTY. Peel eight apples very thin and lay in a dish, in layers, using plenty of powdered sugared over each layer and a little lemon juice. Put it on ice three hours and it will be found excellent. Mrs. R. Roscoe. ICED CURRANTS. Procure some of the finest bunches of currants. Beat well the whites of two eggs and mix them with one-quarter of a pint of water. Dip each cluster of currants separately into the Qgg and water, drain for two min- utes, roll them in finely powdered sugar. Repeat the rolling in sugar and lay them on sheets of white paper to dry, when the sugar will become crystallized. Alternating white and red currants make a pretty effect. Mrs. Lois Eaton. RASPBERRIES, ICED. Take as many freshly-gathered raspberries as wanted. Whisk the white of an ^gg,, and stir in with it two tablespoonfuls of cold water. Dip the raspberries quickly one by one in the liquid, drain them, and roll them in finely powdered and sifted sugar. Lay them on paper to dry and arrange them prettily in a fancy dish. Mrs. W. Sues. ORANGE SALAD. Peel one-half dozen oranges, free them from the white skin, and cut them into slices of about one-quarter of an inch in thickness. Arrange them neatly in a compote dish, strew three ounces of finely-powdered sugar over them and pour upon them a wine-glassful of California sweet wine. If it stands a day before using it is richer. S. E. F. 4-30 FRESH FRUITS. FIGS AS A DESSERT. Dried figs make a very agreeable dish, but they must be prepared the day before and set away on ice. Soak them first, then simmer slowly till plump. Drain and pile them in a bon bon dish. Serve whipped cream around the dish. Flavor and sweeten the cream with vanilla or sherry. P. Thomason. ORANGES IN FANCY SHAPES. There are many artistic ways of arranging oranges. Cut the peel vertically at even distances, beginning at one end, down to the center. Now peel down the loosened skin but do not break or cut off but turn points in. The whole resembles a rose. Another pretty way is to peel off the entire skin and slice the oranges crosswise; sugar well and place each slice as though it was uncut. Ione. ICED GRAPES. Wash and drain large dry bunches of ripe grapes, two or three vari- eties if possible, dip into beaten white of ^gg, put in sieve so that they will not touch each other, sift powdered sugar over and put in a warm place to dry. Cherries may be prepared in the same way. Mrs. N. K. B. FRESH RASPBERRY COMPOTE. Bruise a quart of sound raspberries thoroughly, put them into a glass dish, and sprinkle a pound of powdered sugar over them. Let them lie in a cool place for a couple of hours, then pour over them a quart of thin claret and a quart of cold water. Send sponge cake or any light cake to table with them. Mrs. Lottie Meisman. ORANGE COMPOTE. Peel the oranges, cut. up into sections, pare off all the white skin and cut them into slices; place these in a circle in a preserve dish, pour a little brandy over and let stand in a cool place in their own juice thirty min- utes. Corrine Betts. FRESH STRAWBERRY COMPOTE. Select fine ripe berries, hull them and arrange in a pyramid in a pre- serve dish; press others through a sieve and put the pulp into a vessel with plenty of powdered sugar and the juice of an orange; stir well and place both this and the strawberries in the ice-box. When ready to serve pour the sweetened pulp over the berries. M. Brubaker. FRESH FRUITS. '-^I- A DESSERT OF PEACHES. Select the largest and finest and rub the down off with a clean cloth. Lay them on a dish in the form of a diamond and pile them up, row upon row, to the height you wish. Cut paper peach leaves and build in unless you can obtain the real leaves. Put a circle of the leaves around the base of the fruit. Mrs. Sophia Morris. APPLES. This fruit, which every one loves, can be eaten in any way. Pick nice, juicy ones, wipe and polish with a soft napkin and serve in a fancy basket decorated with apple leaves. P^ruit knives of silver should accompany them. Miss Grace Johnson. ORANQES, SLICED. Peel one-half dozen oranges and cut them in slices crosswise, picking out the seeds. Then sprinkle generously with pulverized sugar and set in a cool place. The colder any raw fruit can be made the better the flavor. W. T. M. BANANAS. Strip off the outer skin and cut the fruit in slices. Pour cream over and serve. P. E. F. WATERMELON AU NATURAL. Procure the watermelon a day or so before they are to be used and place in a cold cellar or put on ice. They can be sliced across or length- wise but need no dressing of any sort. Amy. STUFFED DATES. Select large dates, remove the seeds and refill with blanched almonds or pecan nuts. Excellent for a final course to luncheon. Greta M. STUFFED PRUNES. Select very large prunes, soak a short time so they will swell and become plump, remove the pit and stuff with other prunes as full as they can be stuffed. Sift over powdered sugar and pile on bonbon dish. -Very fine. Theresa M. CRYSTALLIZED ORANQES AND LEMONS. Boil together for one-half hour one cupful of granulated sugar and one of water. Dip the point of a skewer or darning needle in the syrup after it has been boiling the given time and then in water. If the thread formed breaks off brittle the syrup is done. Pare some oranges, divide them into eighths and wipe free of moisture. Pour part of the hot syrup 452 FRESH FRUITS. into a cup, which keep in boiling water. Take the pieces of orange on the point of a large needle or skewer and dip them in the syrup. Place them on a dish that has been buttered lightly. Care must be taken not to stir the syrup as that spoils it. Mary B. Burns. FRUIT GLACE. Prepare syrup as above and take any prepared fruits desired (grapes, pineapple, cherries, etc.) on point of a darning needle; dip them in the syrup; when cold they are ready for use. Note. — Apples, it is said, are now considered to contain far more brain food than any other fruit or vegetable, and to be much more nutri- tious than potatoes, which enter so largely into the component parts of every meal. M. B. B. CHESTNUTS CRYSTALLIZED WITH WHITE SUGAR. Make syrup as above. Boil the requisite quantity of chestnuts until soft, and peel them, taking care not to break them. Take them on the point of a skewer, one at a time; dip them first into the syrup and then, quickly, into cold water. Slip them off the skewer into a wire sieve and dry them in a warm place. G. S. T STUFFED DATES— No. 2. Remove seeds. Replace with blanched almond. Roll in coarse sugar. H. F. L. CHESTNUTS CRYSTALLIZED WITH CARAMEL. Prepare as above only instead of putting the chestnuts on a sieve to dry have ready a broad flat basin, put some brown sugar or caramel in it; dip the chestnuts into it, leaving them to drain. When they are cold arrange them tastefully on a dish. S. T. O. OUPS ^ WITHOUT MEATS w ITH the increased interest in vegetarian ideas, it is well to be able to make dishes in which meat plays no part. Vegetable soups pro- vide food for the human spec-ies entirely free from adulteration and yet capa- ble of furnishing wonderful nutrition. ONION SOUP. Put into a stew-pan several peeled and chopped onions and one quart of cold water. Let come to a boil, drain and put back into the pan. Now pour over the onions two quarts of boiling water and let cook until very tender, adding a tablespoonful of salt. When done add a cupful of rich cream; let come to a boil. A few minutes before serving remove the pan from the fire, add the yolks of two eggs, a generous lump of but- ter, into whicl\,has been mixed a very little flour, a dash of pepper and a pinch of sugar. Let come to a bubble and it is ready for the table. Mrs. a. C. Little. TURNIP AND RICE SOUP. Peel and wash as many turnips as desired and put them in a granite kettle with a lump of butter and sufficient water to allow them to simmer gently until tender. Pass through a fine hair sieve, return to the kettle, add a pint of rich milk and one-half cupful of cold boiled rice; season with salt, pepper and a pinch of sugar. Let simmer for twenty minutes; then stir in a lump of butter and one cupful of cream. Serve on croutons. Sanitarium. RICE AND PEA SOUP. Wash one teacupful of rice, put it into a granite kettle and allow it to boil gently until tender. Put one pint of young green peas into another saucepan and stew until tender. When both the above vegetables are cooked, throw them together and add one pint of hot water. Let boil, remove the pan to the side of the fire and stir in quickly the yolk of an ^^% beaten with one pint of cream. Season to taste with salt and pepper and a pinch of sugar. Pour over toasted brown bread cut in small squares. Mother of Healthy Children. 423 424 SOUPS WITHOUT MEATS. CREAM OF LETTUCE SOUP. Wash well four small heads of lettuce, drain, chop, place them in a granite kettle with one-half cupful of butter and cook for four or five min- utes, stirring lightly. Now add two quarts of water, and season with salt, pepper, a bunch of parsley and one-half cupful of well-cleaned uncooked rice; cover the kettle, and cook for forty minutes, then strain. Clean the kettle, pour the soup into it again and let it come to the boiling point. Add one pint of sweet cream; stir up and serve. Mrs. J. Anderson. CREAM TOMATO SOUP. Take one can of tomatoes, one quart of fresh, ripe ones, one-half cup- ful of rice, two tablespoonfuls of butter and one tablespoonful of flour. Peel and slice the tomatoes and put over the fire in a granite kettle, with one quart of cold water. Let them heat gradually and then add an addi- tional quart of cold water. When this boils, put in the rice, pepper, and salt to taste, and continue the boiling until the rice is tender; then stir in the flour and butter, one-half teaspoonful of baking soda and one pint of milk. Boil for a few minutes and serve. Mrs. S. Anderson. RICE AND TOMATO SOUP. Put one-half pound of well-washed rice into a granite kettle with two quarts of water and boil until tender. Season with salt and a generous lump of butter. Move the kettle to the side of the fire and add one quart of tomatoes thoroughly cooked, strained and sweetened with a pinch of baking soda. Season with salt, pepper and a tablespoonful of sugar. Pour over toasted entire-wheat bread. Eliza Brubaker. HEALTH SOUP. Cut four large onions into small pieces and put into a granite kettle with one-half cupful of butter. Toss over the fire for a few minutes. Now put in with the onions two stalks of celery cut into small pieces and some finely-shredded head of lettuce; stir these ingredients over the fire for twenty minutes, then put in one cupful of cold boiled rice, one pint of boiling milk and one of boiling water. Season the soup to taste with salt and pepper to let it simmer by the side of the fire for an hour. When done add one cupful of cream and one egg well stirred. Take at once from the fire and serve. Mrs. C. Dickerson. NEW YORK SOUP. A delicate soup is made of a quart of milk with a pinch of salt and a teaspoonful of sugar. Thicken slightly with four eggs creamed in two ounces of butter. Just before taking up stir in the yolks of two eggs. SOUPS WITHOUT MEATS. 425 Toast to a good brown, six circular slices of bread, sprinkle sugar lightly over and put them in the oven for a couple of minutes. Pour the soup over the toast and serve. Mrs. Quinn. QUICK POTATO SOUP. Mash three cold boiled potatoes. Take a tablespoonful of butter and fry a teaspoonful of chopped onion in it. Then add one-half tablespoon- ful of flour. When the thickening is cooked add a pint of milk. Put this with the mashed potato and pass the mixture through a colander. Put this back on the fire and stir. Season with salt and pepper. When the soup is ready for the table sprinkle parsley over it. A Busy Mother. PEA SOUP. A fine soup can be made by rubbing a can of peas through a colander to remove the skins, then adding water to a tablespoonful of Nut Butter so as to form an emulsion. Add this to the sifted peas, and enough addi- tional water to make the soup of the proper consistency; season with salt and serve. Potato, bean, tomato, and other vegetable soups may be pre- pared in like manner and seasoned with Nut Butter. (Nut Butter can be procured at the grocers.) Mrs. Mina Covert. CORN SOUP. To one can of grated corn, one tablespoonful of salt, one-fourth tea- spoonful of pepper add two quarts of sweet milk, butter the size of an ^%^, one cupful of mashed cold boiled potatoes and boil five minutes; serve with toast cut in dice. Mrs. B. Yeomans. VEGETABLE SOUP WITHOUT riEAT. Slice three medium-sized onions and three potatoes into one and one- half pints of boiling water; add one-half can of tomatoes, one-half can of peas, a piece of butter the size of a walnut, one tablespoonful of sugar and a little pepper and salt. Let boil one hour, roll out six soda crackers and serve. ' Lida Smith. TOMATO SOUP. Strain one can of tomatoes though a fine colander, add a pinch of soda (to offset the acid), one quart of sweet milk, a generous size of butter, salt and pepper; put over fire and boil fifteen minutes. Serve with crackers. Julia Anderson. TOMATO SOUP— No. 2. Take three large, ripe, tomatoes, slice and put them over the fire in their own juice. When hot add a quart of milk and a pinch of soda. Salt and 42G SOUPS WITHOUT MEATS. pepper lightly. Add apiece of butter the size of a walnut and lastly pour cracker crumbs plentifully in, just before removing from the fire. Canned tomatoes can be used in the winter season. Mrs. Susan Stevenson. IOWA POTATO SOUP. Peel one dozen small potatoes and boil in one quart of water until done; mash and pour all through colander; then add one quart of sweet milk and one pint of beef broth; butter size of a small eg,g\ season with salt and pepper. Mrs. C. McCartney. POTATO SOUP— A I. Pare and slice one quart of potatoes, wash and put them over the fire in one gallon of water; add two small onions (sliced), one large table- spoonful of rice, a lump of butter the size of an egg, and pepper and salt to suit the taste. When nearly done break in two eggs. Cook fifteen min- utes. Very good for convalescents. Mrs. L. A. Hall. BROWN ONION SOUP. Peel and cut in thin rings six large Spanish onions, fry them in butter till tender and brown. Then lay them on a hair sieve so as to drain off the butter. Put them in a kettle with five quarts of water, boil for one hour, stirring often. Then salt and pepper to your taste. Rub the crumbs of a roll or large tea biscuit through a colander and add to the soup, stir- ring all the time so as to keep it smooth. Boil two hours longer. Ten minutes before you serve it beat the yolks of two eggs with two spoons of the vinegar and a little of the soup. Pour it in by degrees, stirring it one way. Mrs. Jennie Tore. LENTIL SOUP. Take four carrots, two sliced onions, a chopped lettuce head, two ounces of butter, two pints of lentils, the crumbs of two French rolls and two quarts of stock. Put the vegetables, with the butter, into a stew-pan, and let them simmer five minutes; add the lentils, which should be soaked in cold water for two hours previous and a pint of the stock, and stew gently for one-half hour. Now fill up with the remainder of the stock, let it boil another hour and put in the crumbs of the rolls. When these are well soaked rub all through a wire sieve or tammy cloth. Season to taste with pepper and salt, boil up once more, and serve. Water may be used in the place of the stock, if desired; but in that case a cupful of milk, thickened with corn-flour, should be added just before the final boil. P. E. F. SOUPS WITHOUT ME A TS. 427 PEA AND VERMICELLI SOUP. Prepare one quart of green peas that have been cooked and passed through a wire sieve. Put in a saucepan with one quart of milk. Boil separately two ounces of large white vermicelli for ten minutes in salted water. Drain, put with the soup, boil ten minutes longer, skim and serve. Mrs. Mary Howe. CHICAGO CORN 50UP. Turn the contents of a can of sweet corn into a graniteware pan and mash thoroughly with a potato masher until every kernel is broken. Then rub through a colander. To the pulp thus left add sufficient nut soup stock liquor to make about three pints in all. Add a little salt and serve hot. Mrs. Jennie Boyd. VEGETABLE OYSTER SOUP. Take eight bunches of vegetable oysters, seven or eight in a bunch, one cupful of sweet corn, and one-fourth of a pound of Nuttolene. This is a product compressed from nuts and can be found at all grocers. Cook the oysters until tender and press them through a colander. Rub the corn through the colander and the nuttolene through a fine sieve. Mix the corn and nuttolene together and add the oysters; add the liquor in which the oysters were cooked, with sufficient water to make it the con- sistency of soup, not porridge. Salt to taste. Heat from one-half hour to an hour. This makes five quarts of soup. W. T. M. PENNSYLVANIA PEA SOUP— No. i. Put one quart of full-grown peas in the saucepan with three pints of boiling water and a little mint. Leave the cover off the pan and boil rapidly until peas are tender. Remove the scum as it rises, press the whole through a coarse sieve and return to the fire, letting it boil up once more. To this add a lump of sugar and salt and pepper. Serve as hot as possible. Mrs. Margeret Eustis. CREAM OF CELERY SOUP. In three pints of boiling water cook three cupfuls of celery, cut fine, until sufficiently tender to be rubbed through a sieve. One pint of milk thickened with one tablespoonful of butter and one tablespoonful of flour. Add celery salt, or extract, salt and pepper. Simmer ten minutes. A cupful of scalded cream added just before serving is an addition. Minerva. 428 SOUPS WirHOUT MEATS. ONION AND POTATO SOUP. Take six potatoes, one onion, butter, three pints of water, one large tablespoonful of chopped parsley, the yolks of two eggs, pepper and salt. Fry the potatoes and onion in the butter. When slightly colored put them into the boiling water and add the parsley. Let it boil till the potatoes are quite soft, then press all through a colander. Return the puree to the fire and let it simmer for two or three minutes. When ready to serve have the well-beaten yolks ready and add a little of the soup to them, stirring all the time. When mixed add them slowly to the soup, with plenty of pepper and salt. Do not let the soup boil after adding the eggs. Mrs. Martha Mann. SPLIT PEA SOUP. Boil a pint of split peas in two quarts of water until quite tender, then add two turnips, one carrot, a stick of celery and some potatoes, all cut in pieces. When tender pulp it through a sieve. Cut a large onion in slices and fry it in butter and flour to thicken the soup. Season to taste. Serve with the soup pieces of bread fried crisp in butter. Mrs. Lucy Ford. GREEN CORN SOUP. Boil one pint of unripe green corn in water, until sufficiently tender, then pass through a sieve and mix it with a quart of nut-meal stock. Let all boil up together and serve in a tureen with toasted bread. A few young spinach leaves may be boiled with the corn to make it a brighter green. Mrs. A. Wolcott. VEGETABLE SOUP. Peel and slice six large onions, six potatoes, two carrots and two turnips; fry them in one-half pound of butter and pour on them four quarts of boiling water. Toast a crust of bread as brown and hard as possible and put it in with celery, white pepper and salt; stew gently four hours and strain it through a coarse cloth. Have ready thinly-sliced carrot, celery and a little turnip; add them to your liking and stew them tender in the soup. A spoonful of tomato catsup may be added. S. A. Stevenson. CREAM OF BEAN SOUP. One pint of soup stock, add two cupfuls of flaked beans and let boil three minutes. Melt two tablespoonfuls of Ko-nut in frying-pan, add two tablespoonfuls of flour, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one-quarter of a teaspoonful of paprica, ten drops of onion juice and one pint of milk slowly. When well mixed add the soup stock and serve. M. Robinson. SOUPS UTfHOUT MEATS. 429 BLENDED VEGETABLE SOUP. Take two quarts of boiling water, add two tablespoonfuls of Ko-nut, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of salt, one-quarter of a teaspoonful of celery salt, two teaspoonfuls of Worcestershire sauce, one-quarter of a tea- spoonful of paprica. Then add slowly one cupful each of flaked beans, peas and rice. Boil ten minutes and serve with shredded wheat croutons. Myrtle Robinson. CUCUMBER AND GUMBO SOUP. Take six cucumbers, six ounces of bread-crumbs, four ounces of gumbo, one ounce of parsley and six ounces of sweet cream. Pare and slice the cucumbers, chop the gumbo and parsley into small pieces and stew them gently three-quarters of an hour, stirring occasionally; then pour in two quarts of boiling water; add the bread-crumbs and cream and let the whole stew two hours. If the soup is then too thin, dredge in a little flour and boil ten minutes longer. A. M. K. ASPARAGUS CREAH SOUP. Cut off the ends of the asparagus for about two inches and boil the rest till tender. Rub the vegetable through a very coarse sieve and salt the pulp. Boil a pint of milk, mix one-half teaspoonful of butter with one-half teaspoonful of flour and stir into the milk. Add the asparagus and boil about ten minutes, keeping it agitated. Meanwhile boil the ends for about fifteen minutes, drain them, and place them in a soup tureen. Add two tablespoonfuls of cream to the soup and pour it Into the tureen without boiling again. Serve at once. Mrs. L. J. Farmer. CORN AND ONION SOUP. Take a large can of corn and about three pints of water and two slices of onion and let it boil until the corn can easily be passed through a colan- der. Have ready two and one-half cupfuls of boiling milk into which has been stirred one tablespoonful each of butter and flour creamed together, salt and pepper, celery salt if you like, and one teaspoonful of sugar. Mash the corn through the colander and add it to the milk. Let all cook a few minutes and then serve, R. E. ■ GRAHAM SOUP. Take three onions, three carrots, four turnips, one small cabbage, one head of celery, one pint of stewed tomatoes (canned will do), a small bunch of sweet herbs, one tablespoonful of butter, one-half cupful of milk, thickened with corn-flour, pepper and salt, three quarts of water. Chop all the vegetables, except the cabbage and tomatoes, very fine, and set 430 SOUPS WITHOUT MEATS. them over the fire with rather over three quarts of water. Simmer gently for one-half hour, at the end of which time the cabbage must be added, having previously been parboiled and chopped. In fifteen minutes put in the tomatoes and a bunch of sweet herbs and give all a good boil for twenty minutes longer. Put through a colander; return the soup to the fire; stir in a good tablespoonful of butter, pepper and salt, one-half cup- ful of milk, thickened with corn-flour; let it boil up, and it is ready for the table. H. F. L. VERMICELLI SOUP. Break six ounces of vermicelli in pieces. Boil until nearly cooked in boiling water and salt. This will take fifteen minutes. Add it when well drained to twelve gills of boiling nut-meal stock. Boil till done, about one-half hour in all. L. S. E. DRIED PEA SOUP. Take a pint of dried peas and three quarts of water, six large onions, outside sticks of two heads of celery, a small bunch* of sweet herbs, two carrots. ,Boil all these vegetables together till they are soft and tender. Strain them through a hair sieve, pressing the carrot pulp through it. Then boil the soup well for an hour with the best part of the celery, a teaspoonful of pepper, add a little dried mint and fried bread with a little spinach. Mrs. Elsie Schultz. CREAH OF CELERY— No. 2. Trim a head of celery and boil in one pint of water for thirty-five minutes; boil a small onion finely cut in one pint of milk; mix one table- spoonful of flour with two tablespoonfuls of cold milk, add to the onion and milk and cook in a double boiler for ten minutes. Mash celery in the water in which it has been cooked, mix it into the boiling milk, add one tablespoonful of butter, one cupful of rich cream and season with pepper and salt to taste. Strain and serve immediately. Cora Hampton. CORN CHOWDER. Scrape one dozen ears of sweet corn from the cob and put it in a granite kettle with enough water to cover; let boil twenty minutes, skim- ming off the corn as it floats on the top; pare one-half dozen potatoes, cut into slices, then mash and put into water to scald. Fry an onion in a piece of butter and put into a saucepan with the corn water. Now put the potatoes and corn, first seasoning with salt and pepper, on the fire and let simmer for fifteen minutes or until the vegetables are tender. Put in one tablespoonful of butter and one pint of milk and boil up again. Serve hot with salt wafers. Mrs. C. I. Addison. SOUPS WITHOUT MEATS. 4S1 CREAH OF LENTILS. Soak two cupfuls of lentils in cold water for several hours, then place in a granite kettle over a slow fire with two quarts of water, one carrot, one onion, three whole peppers, a bunch of parsley and salt to taste. Cook for one hour and rub through a sieve; put some buttered toast in the tureen, pour over the puree and serve. A Vegetarian. CREAM OF CHESTNUT SOUP. Boil in white broth a pint of steamed chestnuts; when tender mash fine, pass through a sieve, add some good cream and season. If not thick enough add a little flour and butter mixed. Serve hot. Mrs. Mira Madison. ONION AND CELERY SOUP. One cupful of celery and two onions finely chopped; cook with one quart of water until very tender; then add one quart of rich milk; season with butter, salt and pepper; serve hot. Frances I. VVillard. PLAIN ASPARAGUS SOUP. Take one quart of asparagus, cut in inch-lengths and boil in one quart of water until tender; rub through a colander and return to the water; add one pint of milk, one teaspoonful of butter rubbed with one tea- spoonful of flour and cook five minutes. Season with salt, pepper and butter. Serve hot over toasted bread cut into dice. Ina M. Webber. SAGO SOUP. Heat to boiling point two quarts of beef, sprinkle into it very gradu- ally one-half cupful of sago; boil five minutes, then set the kettle in a double boiler for one-half hour; skim; serve hot. Chef at Grand Pacific Hotel. SAGO SOUP— No. 2. One-quarter of a pound of the best pearl sago, washed till the water poured from it is clear; then stew it quite tender in water or thick broth (it will require about one quart of liquid, which should be poured on it cold and heated very slowly); then mix with it a pint of good, boiling cream and the yolks of four eggs, and mingle the whole carefully with two quarts of strong veal or beef stock, which is already boiling. Palmer House. 432 SOUPS WITHOUT MEATS. BISQUE OF TOMATO. One part stewed and strained tomatoes; two parts boiling water, a little soda; season with salt, pepper, celery salt and very little onion. Heat thoroughly. Take from stove and stir in enough sweet cream to turn soup as white as desired. Flavor with very little powdered mace and serve at once. H. B. Y. IONIA PEA SOUP. Add one quart of dried peas to five of water and boil four hours. Cut up three large onions, two heads of celery, one carrot and two turnips and add to the boiled peas and water. Season with salt and pepper. Boil two hours more, thinning with water if necessary. Strain and add one tablespoonful of butter. Serve hot with dice of toast. Mrs. Mary Covert. PUREE OF VEGETABLE SOUP. Cut one-eighth of a cabbage, one carrot, one potato, one-half turnip, one-half onion and some celery. Put them into a saucepan with two or three quarts of water. Salt to taste and boil one and one-half hours. When ready to serve add one glassful of cream or milk, one tablespoon- ful of butter and toast squares. C. B. Preston. niNNESOTA BEAN SOUP. Soak the beans over night, and, in the morning, pour off the water, replacing it with fresh water; set on the fire until the skins slip off easily; now throw them into cold water and rub well, when the skins will rise to the top and can be removed. Boil the beans until perfectly soft, allowing two quarts of water to one quart of beans; mash the beans and add flour and butter rubbed together, seasoning with salt and pepper to taste. Pass the soup through a colander, rubbing all the thick portion through with a wooden spoon, and put into it before serving toasted bread cut into small pieces. Mrs. H. Hoover. TOMATO SOUP WITH ONIONS. Slice two onions and fry them in butter until brown; remove them and fry one dozen tomatoes just sufficient to heat them through, then put them into a stew-pan with their gravy and the onions; add a head of cel- ery and a carrot sliced; stew gently for one-half hour, add three pints of gravy; stew one and one-half hours; pulp the whole of the vegetables through a sieve; season with white pepper, salt and cayenne. Serve with sippets of toasted bread cut in shapes. Mrs. C. I. Thurston. SOUPS WITHOUT MEATS. 433 MOCK BISQUE SOUP. A quart can of tomatoes, three pints of milk, a large tablespoonful of flour, one of butter; pepper, salt and soda. Put the tomatoes on to stew adding a teaspoonful of soda. Boil milk in a double boiler except enough to mix with the flour. Add the cold thickened milk to boiling milk and cook ten minutes. Add butter, pepper and salt, and then the tomatoes (strained). Serve immediately. Anna Dickerson. POTATO SOUP— No. 3. Take four large potatoes, pare and slice thin. Put them into salt water and let stand five minutes, then put them into a soup kettle to boil. When done put in a piece of butter as large as an ^gg and season with salt and pepper. Just before serving stir in one egg well beaten. Cook five minutes and serve. Mrs. A. Marsell. POTATO 50UP— No. 4. To one quart of water use one onion sliced fine and ten large potatoes sliced fine; boil until tender, say thirty minutes, then add one cupful of sweet milk, one tablespoonful of flour stirred with a lump of butter the size of a walnut and salt and pepper to taste. Serve hot. Mrs. St. Clair. CELERY AND POTATO SOUP. Chop fine enough celery to make three cupfuls. Cook until tender in a little boiling water. Have heated one quart of sweet milk, add the cooked celery, salt to taste. Thicken with a little flour rubbed smooth in a lump of butter. Add a cupful of mashed potatoes. Let it get very hot. Mrs. R. T. Brown. CREAM OF VEGETABLE SOUP. Take the vegetables left from a boiled dinner (or fresh ones boiled until tender in salted water). Mash them through a colander, add as much milk as you need for your family, salt, pepper, celery, salt, a slice of onion, and let it come to the boiling point, then add one tablespoonful of each of butter and flour creamed together. When thoroughly cooked serve at once. Mrs. R. T. Cross. WITH the revolution in various departments of household eco- nomics and an awakening as to what substances are injurious and what harm- less, has come a cry against the use of Lard in cooking. For years, physicians have tried to convince the public that lard was indigestible; but its use has gone on; not entirely because the peo- ple have wanted to use it, but because the substitutes which have been tried, have proved a failure. Indeed, some have been quite as hurtful as the article which It was intended to displace, and so unpleasant in taste as to force people to turn back again to lard. But all these experiments have led to further search and at last it looks as if a substitute had been found which meets the requirements. Besides the merit of being a pure vegeta- ble fat, it is pleasant to the taste and easy of digestion. Ko-nut is a pure, sterilized oil, made from fresh sweet cocoanut. It will seem at first, to those using it, a trifle more expensive than lard, but it is, after all, quite as eco- nomical, for not more than two-thirds as much is required to make a given recipe, as of butter or lard. For frying, shortening, and cooking, it replaces butter, is not easily scorched, neither is much absorbed in the cooking. It is now put up in pails similar to lard and has excellent keep- ing qualities as well as high shortening powers. Being comparatively new, it may not as yet be found at all grocers. Ask your grocer to get it for you. Miss Myrtle Robinson, a demonstrator in the new cooking school kindly furnishes us many recipes in the following pages, which, according to my opinion, are unsurpassed. I quote here an extract from the Chi- cago Times-Herald: "An event of uncommon interest occurred at Evanston this week in the series of cooking lessons and lectures given by Miss Myrtle E. Robin- son, of Boston, a graduate of the New Era Cooking School, of Worcester, Mass. Miss Robinson is tall, quiet and engaging in personality. She spoke with grace and easy flow of pure English, which, with the thorough mastery of her subject, gave a charm that was irresistible, while at the time she created new editions of pies, sandwiches, salads, jellies, and divers dainties with such deft, precise and faultless motions as completely to fascinate the eye and ear, holding all listeners as by a charmed spell. The knowledge given of properties and building power of different 434 KO-NUT VERSUS LARD. 435 articles of common food was of great value to the wives and mothers, because it was so practical and will be so helpful in selecting a diet that will fit the body of each member of the family for the work of brain, nerve and muscle. The directions for making each dish, with minute details of kind, quality and strength of ingredients,' the best way to pre- pare them, the exact way to measure quantities, the length of time for cooking and all the small points were carefully given, to the delight of our hearts, and all the while the creation advanced and finally appeared in its (one is tempted to say) poetic beauty, for indeed the finished product was 'a thing of beauty,' and 'the proof of the pudding' was not lacking in the eating. The attendance increased each day and those coming the last day regretted their absence previous days." ^RmX FARINACEOUS --— ^1ISHES THE NUTRITIVE value of cereals when cooked properly makes them nearly a perfect food. First in the list, from a nutritive point, comes wheat. Oats possess more nitrogenous matter than any other grain, and that gives strength to the system. Oats are also flesh-formers. Corn, rye, rice and barley are cereals widely adopted as breakfast foods. There is a large number of these foods sold in packages, with direc- tions as to the length of time they should be cooked. But in nearly every case they need longer boiling, and if the time for cooking them were extended, they would be much more digestible. GRAPE NUTS. For nervous people and brain workers no cereal is better for break- fast than Grape Nuts. It can be obtained of any grocer. Directions for use are on each package. Mrs. Gregory. CORN FRITTERS. Boil a dozen ears of corn, or more than are needed for dinner, and while warm scrape them with the corn cutter, and put the corn in the refrigerator until morning. To two coffee-cupfuls of corn add two or three well-beaten eggs, three tablespoonfuls of cream or new milk and a small teacupful of flour, with a little salt. Drop in spoonfuls into hot fat and fry a light brown. Or else cook them on the griddle iron like any other cakes. Mrs. Lucy Blanchard. CORN FRITTERS— No. 2. Six grated ears of corn or one can of corn strained through a colander and chopped. Add one cupful of milk, a generous pinch of salt and a teaspoonful of baking-powder stirred into two-thirds cupful of milk; two eggs not beaten, but stirred in well; drop by the spoonful into boiling fat and drain on paper. Serve hot. J. E. A. 436 CEREALS AND FARINACEOUS DISHES. 437 NOODLES BAKED. The paste for noodles is composed of eggs and flour. Boil a sufficient number of them, drain and cover them with cold milk in a stew-pan. Add an ounce of butter, two ounces of grated cheese, and pepper and grated nutmeg. Turn them over the fire several times, then pile them on a hot dish, cover them with grated bread-crumbs and brown them in a quick oven. Serve hot. Mrs. Lydia Fay. PATTIES OF RICE. In a saucepan put one-quarter of a pound of rice that has been washed carefully through three or four waters, cover it with white stock and boil slowly till the rice has absorbed all the liquid. Add a little milk to give the rice a white appearance. Grate Parmesan cheese and add it to taste, and when the rice begins to be jellied, turn it into a dish, making it two inches thick. Cut the patties out with a round biscuit cutter. Mrs. E. Locke. RICE MUFFINS. Mix six cupfuls of rice flakes, one and one-half cupfuls of flour, one teaspoonful of salt, four level teaspoonfuls of baking-powder, one table- spoonful of sugar, two eggs well beaten, two cupfuls of milk, two table- spoonfuls of melted Ko-nut. Bake twenty-five minutes. Myrtle Robinson. FLAKED RICE FRITTERS. Take four cupfuls of flaked rice, one cupful of flour, two level tea- spoonfuls of baking-powder, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth tea- spoonful of paprica, one ^^^, one cupful of milk. Drop by spoonfuls into hot Ko-nut and fry five minutes. Myrtle Robinson. RICE CROQUETTES. Put two cupfuls of rice into a saucepan with plenty of water and boil until soft. Take up a little at a time in a spoon, roll it into a pear-shape and dip them into &^^ and bread-crumbs, fry carefully in boiling fat or Ko-nut, drain and place them on a napkin, garnish neatly with parsley and serve. B. A. P. FRUIT BISCUITS. Mix graham flour with just enough of scalded figs — previously washed — to make an adherent dough by much kneading; roll or cut into biscuits one-half inch thick, and two or three inches square; bake in a quick oven. E. S. F. 438 CEREALS AND FARINACEOUS DISHES. SAQO PORRIDGE. Soak four tablespoonfuls of sago ten minutes in a quart of cold water. Boil it gently one hour and season with a little sugar. Pour it into the soup plates. G. N. R. FARINA GRUEL. This is very nutritive. A nice gruel which strengthens is made by the addition of two tablespoonfuls of farina to a gill of water. Pour very slowly on the mixture a quart of boiling water, stirring thoroughly and boiling ten minutes. Mrs. Kate Collins. C0RN-5TARCH BLANC MANGE. Dissolve one-half pound of corn-starch in a pint of cold milk; then put it into three pints of boiling milk; and boil very moderately five or six minutes. L. ¥. T. CORN=MEAL HUSH. Sift with one hand into two quarts of boiling water enough corn-meal to make a thick gruel. Stir it till all the lumps are smoothed out. Set it on the back of the range and let it cook a couple of hours. Use cream, or butter and sugar on it. F. E. P. TO FRY CORN MUSH. Boil the corn-meal the day before, and put it in a deep square tin with straight sides. This makes the slices look even when cut. Have the slices all of one size. Roll each one in &gg and flour and fry in Ko-nut oil. They must be turned, so as to have a crust on both sides. Mrs. p. Pfennig, TO STEAM RICE. Rice should be cooked so as to leave the grains whole, consequently it should be first washed through cold water several times, or until that floury substance is washed off. Then take a cup of rice and put it in a pan with three cupfuls of cold water. Put it in a steamer and cook one hour. If it thickens too much add boiling water. Have a fruit sauce to eat with it, warm. L. C. A. RICE CUTLETS. One-fourth of a pound of rice, one-half pound of cold meat, one onion, one-fourth pound of bread-crumbs; boil the rice and strain it, chop up the meat and onions small, and mix with rice; sprinkle one salt-spoonful of salt and one-fourth salt-spoonful of pepper over it; mix well together, CEREALS AND FARINACEOUS DISHES. 439 with just a little milk to make a paste; let the mixture set on a plate; cut into the shape of mutton cutlets; dip in egg and bread-crumbs. Fry a golden brown; serve with tomato sauce. M. E. M. ■ CORN BREAD MADE WITH KO=NUT. One quart of sifted yellow or white meal, three cupfuls of buttermilk, one teaspoonful of soda, one-half cupful of molasses, one ^^g, three tea- spoonfuls of Ko-nut, one tablespoonful of flour and a pinch of salt. Stir well and bake in a moderate hot oven one hour. E. E. A. BAKING-POWDER BISCUIT. Mix four cupfuls of pastry flour, eight level teaspoonfuls of baking- powder, one teaspoonful of salt. Mix into this with tips of fingers four tablespoonfuls of Ko-nut, then moisten with one and one-half cupfuls of milk. Roll three-fourths of an inch in thickness, cut and bake in hot oven ten minutes. Myrtle Robinson. STEAHED FIG PUDDING. Take two cupfuls of shredded wheat biscuit crumbs, one-half cupful entire-wheat flour, one-half package of fig mince, one-fourth teaspoonful each of salt, allspice and cinnamon, one-third cupful of molasses and one- half teaspoonful of soda mixed, also one cupful of cold water, two table- spoonfuls of melted Ko-nut. Steam this pudding till done. The shredded wheat can be obtained at all the leading grocery stores. Myrtle Robinson. 5HREDDED WHEAT CROUTONS. Spread shredded wheat biscuit with Ko-nut, cut into fourths cross- wise and toast until brown. Serve hot. Myrtle Robinson. KO-NUT MUFFINS. One egg beaten light, one teaspoonful of sugar, two-thirds cupful of milk, one teaspoonful of melted Ko-nut, two teaspoonfuls (level) of bak- ing-powder and flour enough to make a batter not too stiff. Mix thor- oughly the baking-powder and salt with the flour. Stir the beaten egg, sugar and milk together; add the melted Ko-nut then the flour. Turn into gem pans and bake at once in a hot oven ten minutes. H. F. L. SALLY LUNN. Three eggs, a third of a cupful of Ko-nut, a cupful of brown sugar, a cupful of milk, a cupful of yeast, a pint of flour and nutmeg. Make these up at ten in the morning to use for tea in the evening. E. S. C. UO CEREALS AND FARINACEOUS DISHES. WHEATEN GRITS. Put two cupfuls of grits in a kettle with water to cover, and a little salt. Set on the fire, stir occasionally but do not let it scorch. It requires an hour to do it to perfection. Serve in a vegetable dish with milk and sugar at hand. D. I. P. WHEAT-MEAL WAFERS. Mix unbolted flour with cold water into a thin dough. Shape this dough into small round cakes, one-sixth of an inch thick. Bake in a range oven rather slowly. A. C. F. RICE GRIDDLE CAKES. Soak over night one quart of cold boiled rice in five gills of milk; the next morning add one quart of milk and stir in nearly as much flour, and two eggs well beaten. Bake on a soap-stone griddle. Fine bread-crumbs or rusked bread mixed with the rice, improve this cake. M. H. N. RICE DODGERS. Boil soft one-half pound of rice in salted water; when cold add one Qgg, one-half cupful of sugar and one-half package self-rising flour. Soak a slice of bread in water, drain and take off the crust; mix well with the rice and cook by dropping a spoonful at a time in boiling lard or Ko-nut. The dodgers must not touch the bottom of the pot. Serve with hot coffee. Greta M. T. CRACKED WHEAT. To four small cupfuls of boiling water stir in one cupful of cracked wheat and a scant teaspoonful of salt. Boil in double boiler two hours; serve hot for breakfast or pour into a mold and serve cold, with cream and sugar for luncheon. Lillie. RICE CAKES. Two ounces of flour, four ounces of ground rice; mix the flour and rice together while in its dry state; four ounces of sugar, two ounces of butter, two eggs, one-half teaspoonful of baking-powder, a pinch of salt. Cream the sugar and butter, add one-half the flour and one egg, then the remainder of flour, egg and baking-powder; grease some gem pans, fill two-thirds full with the mixture; bake fifteen minutes. Mrs. Philander. HOT CEREAL ROLLS. Mush, or any cereal that can be warmed over, will make nice rolls. Add graham flour to form a stiff dough. Knead it very little, cut it into shape of rolls and bake quickly. If the mush was of corn-meal fine white flour may be added. H. F. L. CEREALS AND FARINACEOUS DISHES. 441 A BREAKFAST SHORTCAKE. Take a teacupful of sweet milk and two spoonfuls of rich sweet cream. Add salt and stir in a spoonful at a time of coarse flour or "shorts." When quite thick knead in fine flour till it will roll nicely. Roll out less than one-quarter of an inch thick. Place quickly in buttered pans and bake in a quick oven. It is to be eaten hot and is nice for break- fast on a cold morning. Mrs. M. Palmer. BANNOCKS. Two teacupfuls of oatmeal or barley meal sifted with two teaspoon- fuls of baking-powder; add to two beaten eggs one tablespoonful of sugar and one pint of milk with a little salt, sifting in the oatmeal. Bake on a griddle. M. V. M. CORN-MEAL MUSH. Put two quarts of water into a kettle, let it come to a boil; now add a tablespoonful of salt and sift in through the fingers of the left hand fresh yellow corn-meal, a handful at a time stirring constantly with a pudding stick, with the right; continue to stir and add meal until it is as thick as you can stir easily; stir it a while longer; let it cook at least twenty min- utes and it is ready for the table. To be eaten with milk. Martha Higbee. FRIED MUSH. Prepare as above, pour into a mold and when cold slice and fry in drip- pings to a golden brown. Serve for breakfast with maple syrup. Martha Higbee. GRAHAM MUSH. Make same as corn-meal mush; sift the flour and stir it gently into boiling water, stirring it all the time. M. H. PETTIJOHN MUSH. This is a breakfast food which can be procured at every grocery. It /is excellent and appetizing; easy to make. Rule for making on each package. Mrs. White. CRACKED WHEAT— No. 2. Soak about one quart of cracked wheat over night in cold water. Then cook thoroughly in water slightly salted, using only the amount of water that the wheat will absorb. Emma B. 443 CEREALS AND FARINACEOUS DISHES. OATMEAL. Use about one cupful of oatmeal to each quart of water. Salt and cook in a double boiler until thoroughly done, or if preferred it can be steamed. Julia Miller. RICE. Rice is said to be the most healthful food known to man. Even the sick can eat it where nothing else agrees. The simplest and easiest way to prepare it is to wash and put over the stove in plenty of cold water. Salt slightly and cook till tender; serve with cream and sugar. Julia Smith. BOILED HOMINY. Wash a quart of hominy in cold water and then soak twelve hours in tepid water; put it over a slow fire with the water in which it has been soaking, and boil gently for five hours, adding more water from time to time. Do not add salt while cooking but season when it comes from the stove. Y. C. HOniNY CROQUETTES. Take one pint of hot cooked hominy, one tablespoonful of hot milk and the yolk of an egg. Beat all together, season with salt and let stand till cool. Shape the mixture into croquettes, then roll them in bread- crumbs and fry in Ko-nut to a golden brown. Drain, lay them on a nap- kin and serve. A. T. O. FRIED HOMINY. Stir together some cold boiled hominy, one egg well beaten, one tablespoonful of melted butter and a small quantity of milk. Heat over a slow fire and turn into mold and dredge lightly with flour. When cold slice, put a lump of Ko-nut into a flat stew-pan and when hot put in the slices and fry until brown. Drain, pile on a dish and serve with maple syrup. C. A. I. BAKED MACARONI. Break up one-half of a box of macaroni into small pieces and put into a saucepan with boiling salted water. When tender drain and put it into a stew-pan. Add a little pepper and salt, add one-fourth pound of butter, three ounces of grated cheese and pour into a baking-dish. Sprinkle with a little more cheese and bake for thirty minutes. E. J. C. MACARONI WITH TOflATOES. Break one-fourth of a box of macaroni in lengths about two inches, plunge them into a saucepan of boiling salted water and boil for twenty- CEREALS AND FARINACEOUS DISHES. 443 five minutes. Take out, drain, and put them in a baking-dish; mix in one ounce of grated Parmesan cheese, one teacupful of stewed tomatoes, a lump of butter and salt and pepper to taste. Place the dish in a slow oven, allow the mixture to simmer gently for thirty minutes and serve. G. D. BOILED HACARONI. A plain way to cook macaroni is to break it into inch-lengths and lay it in a saucepan containing boiling water and salt. It cooks in twenty- five minutes. It makes a good-sized dish. To be eaten for dinner with cream. Mrs. R. Ellison. AS- AN ARTICLE OF-DIET THE CRAVINGS of the human palate are changing very essentially. Once, nuts were regarded as a luxury, a dainty only to be used between meals, or something for the children on extra occasions; but to-day they are looked upon as an assistant to the forces of nature in imparting nutriment. They produce heat and form flesh. They take the place of meat and are subject to no adulterations. They yield bounteously under cultivation and have become one of the most important articles of commerce. By some scientists they are regarded as superior to meat and the fact that they can be used in so many forms in the culinary department recom- mends them to the housewife who is always ready to extend her repertoire of choice foods. The chestnut was a prominent article of food among the ancients, and is to-day made into bread in many countries. The peasantry of the south of France make a daily dish of boiled chestnuts and milk and thrive upon it. Flour made from the peanut is found to be more nutritious than that ground from any of the cereals; butter made from it (peanut butter) is also becoming a staple article of commerce and is used by vegetarians instead of butter made from cow's milk. It is certain that a gain in flesh is observed where nuts compose the main article of diet. It is said by some that nuts are heavy and clog the system. The reason for this complaint is that they are usually eaten after a meal that is already too heavy. Another reason, some people cannot thoroughly masticate them. This brings into prominence their value when they are ground and cooked, and the fact that they afford a nearly per- fect substitute for animal foods. There are several delicious products 444 NUTS AS AN ARTICLE OF DIET 445 formed from nuts which can be procured at all the groceries. We append a few of the best ones with recipes for their preparation. NUT BUTTER. This butter is a thoroughly sterilized product of edible nut meats, a more than perfect substitute for butter, as it makes blood as well as fat. Makes a perfect emulsion with water. It is recognized as a great delicacy wherever used. Keeps perfectly. Put up in tins of different sizes. Place the desired quantity of nut butter in a bowl, add a few drops of water and beat with a fork until smooth. For nut cream, prepare the same as above, add a little more water until of the consistency desired. For nut milk add four or five parts of water to one of nut butter. W. T. M. NUT LOAF. Three cupfuls of stale bread-crumbs, one and one-half cupfuls of chopped hickory nuts, one and one-half cupfuls of seeded raisins, one-half teaspoonful of salt. Mix, adding sufficient hot water to moisten. Cover and let stand ten minutes. Add one cupful more of hot water and turn into buttered pan. Bake one and one quarter hour in moderate oven and serve cold. A. A. C. NUT LOAF— No. 2. The most delightful combinations may be made with left-over foods combined with bread-crumbs, soups, nut preparations, with or without tomato or browned flour. The seasoning may be varied with onion, mint, thyme, sage, savory, marjoram, caraway, celery seed or leaves or stalks. In using protose, take equal quantities of that and very dry but not too fine bread-crumbs (if they are moist, twice the quantity will be required), chopped onion, and a trifle of mint (not over one-eighth of a teaspoonful to a good-sized loaf), with a little strained tomato, and water and salt. The mixture should be quite dry, after standing a few minutes for the crumbs (if dry) to become moistened. It should not seem water}^ when pressed together with the hand, but should be just moist enough to hold together; if too moist, the loaf will be solid and soggy when baked; or if not baked long enough it will be too soft to slice nicely. When prepared, press the mixture into an oiled, brick-shaped tin and bake in a moderate oven about one hour, or until it feels rather firm when pressed with the fingers. Loosen the sides, turn out on a board, and slice carefully with a thin, sharp knife. Serve with brown gravy or tomato sauce. E. J. S. 446 NUTS AS AN ARTICLE OF DIET. NUT SOUP. Break into small pieces one cupful of hickory and almond nuts of equal amounts. Simmer in two pints of water seasoned with one-half teaspoonful of salt, a slice of onion and two stalks of celery. When ten- der add one cupful of rich milk or cream. This soup may be strained or not, as desired. H. O. C. NUT SOUP— No. 2. Simmer a pint of Lima beans gently in just sufficient water to cook and not burn, until they have fallen to pieces. Add more boiling water as needed. When done, rub the beans through a colander. Add nut soup stock to make of the proper consistency and salt to season. Reheat and serve. White beans may be used in place of Lima beans, but they require longer cooking. A heaping tablespoonful of sago, previously soaked in cold water, may be added to the soup when it is reheated, if liked, and the whole cooked until the sago is transparent. F. M. P. NUT CROQUETTES. Steam one-half cupful of well-washed rice in one cupful of water with one-fourth teaspoonful of salt for one hour or until tender. Add to this an equal bulk of dry simmered protose, one egg and salt to taste; shape, roll in fine bread-crumbs; bake twenty minutes in a moderate oven. If liked one tablespoonful of chopped parsley or celery may be added before shaping. Protose as it comes from the can chopped may be used if pre- ferred. H. F. L. ALHOND PUDDING. Soak three tablespoonfuls of finely-grated bread-crumbs in milk. Add one-quarter of a pound of blanched and pounded almonds, a piece of butter the size of an egg melted in a pint of new milk, sugar to taste, a teaspoonful of grated lemon-rind, a little nutmeg and three eggs well beaten. A glass of wine may be added if approved of. Place in a pudding dish lined with paste, and bake in a moderate oven. Mrs. Sarah Bullard. PEANUT BEANS. A dish closely resembling baked beans is .afforded by taking the Vir- gina shelled raw peanuts. Pour boiling water over them and boil for five minutes. When cool slip the brown skins off, with the fingers. Put in the bean pot about one and one-half teaspoonfuls of salt to each pound of nuts and a large quantity of boiling water. Let them boil fast for one hour or so, then place them in a slow oven where they will gently simmer NUTS AS AN ARTICLE OF DIET. 447 for from eight to fourteen hours. If the water evaporates, add boiHng water and let it settle through them without stirring them. They should be slightly juicy when done. Mrs. Adelaide Haigh. Salted nuts are served with dinner, and are eaten at any time during the meal. PROTOSE ROAST WITH BROWN GRAVY. Put alternate layers of sliced protose and finely sliced onion, with salt, in a small tin or dripper. Cover with water and bake slowly for two or three hours, adding water as required. When ready to serve, remove the protose from the tin, add more water to that left in the tin, if necessary, and thicken with a mixture of brown and white flour stirred up with water. This ma}^ be served with peeled baked potatoes, or the potatoes may be baked with the protose. I. T. O. WALNUTS. Put large, sound nuts into an earthen pan, and pour over them as much cold water slightly salted as will cover them. Leave them until the next day and rub them dry before using them. They make a good des- sert. E. F. I. PRESSED PROTOSE LOAF. Break up protose slightly with a fork, add salt, a very little sage, and, if necessary, a little water to make the protose hold together. Pack it into an oiled tin, put a weight on it, press firmly, and let it stand in a cool place several hours. When ready to serve, run a knife blade around from the edge of the tin, turn the contents out carefully, slice with a thin, sharp knife, and serve with onion points, cranberry sauce, jelly, or celery. A little Nuttolene may be used with the protose. Minced yolks of hard- boiled eggs are an improvement in the loaf. Seasoning with celery salt and a little lemon juice instead of the sage, salt and water makes another variety. Minced onion with or instead of the sage gives a different dish. This may be broiled before serving if desired and served with sour-apple sauce. C. A. T. SOUR SALAD DRESSING. Rub two slightly rounded tablespoonfuls of peanut or almond butter smooth with two-thirds of a cupful of water (the half-pint cupful sold in stores), according to directions for preparing the nut butter for bread Let this cream boil up for a moment over the fire. Remove from the stove, add one-half teaspoonful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of lemon-juice. Cool, and it is ready for use. If too thick, it may be thinned with a little lemon juice or water. More salt and lemon juice may be added if desired. 448 NUTS AS AN ARTICLE OF DIET By using a scant cupful of strained stewed tomato in place of the water in the above, with the almond butter, we have a palatable and very pretty dressing. A. P. V. NUT BUTTER SANDWICHES. Cut a loaf of bread in two in the center, spread the cut surface of each half with nut butter, and sprinkle with salt if desired. Cut off a thin slice from each half with a sharp knife, and lay the two spread surfaces together. Continue to spread and cut the slices until you have the required number of sandwiches. Thin slices of protose, or a lettuce leaf with salad dressing, or both, may be laid between the slices. U. P. A. SALTED ALMONDS. Blanch the almonds by putting the meats in boiling water, let stand a few moments. Remove the hulls and dry the nuts. Put about a teaspoon- ful of butter in a long fiat tin, and when it melts put in the nuts. Sprinkle a little salt over them, and let them brown, stirring often. Be careful not to let them brown too much. Take them off, put on a paper to absorb the fat and sprinkle well with salt. W. F. A. SALTED PEANUTS. The peanuts must be shelled and blanched. Put them in a pan with a little butter and fry them quickly. Remove them to a colander and sprinkle them with fine salt, shaking them constantly. They may be served in little trays at each plate. E. J. A. SALTED PISTACHIO NUTS. Pistachio nuts salted are so expensive an item, but such a picturesque addition to the table that one should learn how to prepare them at home. Take a cupful of the shelled nuts, blanch them and after removing the skins stir in some salt and a little sweet oil — perhaps a tablespoonful. Let the nuts stand for one-half hour, then put them in an oven to become crisp, but not too brown. They should be served in a tinted china dish that harmonizes with the color of the nuts, or in a bonbon basket of fili- gree silver. A few chopped pistachios scattered thickly over a charlotte russe add to the appearance and flavor of the dessert. A. C, F. PEANUT POUND CAKE. Three large or four small eggs, a scant cupful of granulated sugar, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, one tablespoonful of ice water, one cup of sifted nut meal, one-half cupful of sliced citron, if desired, one-half to MEATS — HOW AND WHAT TO SELECT. See Chapter entitled "Meats" in order to understand which pieces are most nourishing, which most strengthening, and which most desirable. NUTS AS AN ARTICLE OF DIET. 449 two-thirds of a cupful of pastry flour, sifted once before measuring; salt. Have the ingredients as nearly ice-cold as possible. Sift the sugar; sift the flour twice and leave it in the sifter. Beat the yolks of three eggs, adding sugar gradually. When stiff add part of the water and more sugar. Beat, add more water, sugar, and one-half the lemon juice until all the sugar is in. Stir into this mixture one-half the nut meal, a good pinch of salt and the citron. Beat the whites of the eggs to a moderately stiff froth, with a pinch of salt. Add the remainder of the lemon juice, and beat until dry and feathery. Slide the beaten whites on the yolk mixture, sprinkle part of the nut meal over them, sift on a little flour and chop in lightly. Add more meal and flour; chop; continue until the fl.our is all in. Take care not to mix too much. Put into a pan at once and bake slowly in an oven that bakes well from the bottom. Handle care- fully when taking from the oven. If a gasoline oven is used, the fire may be turned off and the cake allowed to cool in the oven. M. E. P. HARD SAUCE OF NUTS. Rub together equal quantities of nut butter and sugar with a little salt and add water to make it smooth. A little more water makes a cream sauce. M. B. C. NUT SAUCE FOR VEGETABLES. Cream two large spoonfuls of Brazil nuts with warm water, then stir in gradually nearly a pint of hot water. Mix in one-half cupful of tomato that has been stewed and strained. Boil it up once and thicken with a tablespoonful of flour and cook till done — about six minutes. E. G. Don. PROTOSE CHOPS. Dip thin slices of protose (which can be procured at the grocer's), with any flavor you prefer, into beaten ^gg and bread-crumbs and broil. Serve with a brown or tomato sauce. Garnish with parsley. A. C. F. HAZEL NUT CAKES. Mince very finely two ounces of hazel nuts and one-half ounce of sweet almonds. Add three ounces of pounded and sifted sugar, the white of an &gg, beaten to a firm froth, and as much flour as will bind them together. Roll the paste out till it is one-quarter of an inch thick, stamp it out in small round cakes, place these on well-buttered tins, and bake in a slow oven twenty minutes. Mrs. R. Swarts. 450 NUTS AS AN ARTICLE OF DIET. HAZEL NUT TARTS. One scant cupful of powdered sugar, yolks of six eggs, well beaten, one pound of hazel nuts. The nuts should be ground and one-third of them kept for filling. Filberts can be used if preferred. Grind bread enough to make one and one-quarter cupfuls and keep one-third of that for filling. First mix sugar and yolks of eggs, then add one tablespoonful of rum, then the nuts, bread, and whites of eggs. Bake in two layers. Filling. — One cupful of milk, one-half cupful of sugar, a piece of but ter the size of an G.gg', let them come to a boil. Set aside and add the remaining nuts, bread, and a tablespoonful of rum. Frosting. — One and one-third cupfuls of confectioner's sugar, with cream added to make it stiff. Flavor with almond or vanilla extract. Mrs. M. Sontag. NUT SANDWICHES. Butter very thin slices of Boston brown bread and lay finely chopped almonds between the slices. Salt them very lightly — a mere dash of salt should be used. G. D. PEANUT SANDWICHES. Shell and remove the skins from one cupful of freshly-roasted pea- nuts; chop very fine, mix with one tablespoonful of mayonnaise dressing. Spread with butter and cut thin slices of white bread, remove crusts and spread the peanut dressing between the slices. Anna Hill, NUT CORN PUDDING. Put thin slices of protose into a three-quart basin in layers, with six tablespoonfuls of finely sliced celery, salt, and a slight dredging of flour until one-half or two-thirds full. Cover well with water and bake from one-half hour to one hour. Then spread over it the following corn pudding, sprinkle lightly with fine crumbs and bake until a delicate brown over the top. Mrs. J. M. C. CORN PUDDING. Two cans of sweet corn rubbed through a colander, three well-beaten eggs, one cupful of milk; salt to taste. Mrs. J. M. C. NUT BREAD. Make brown or white bread the usual way and just before forming into loaves drop in a generous handful of pecan nuts in one loaf. This makes a change and is greatly enjoyed by the children. MarYc NUTS AS AN ARTICLE OF DIET. 451 BROMOSE. A combination of carefully blanched, thoroughly cooked, and sterilized nut meats with predigested cereals, put up in jars, and in tablets resem- bling caramels. Delicate as a confection and makes fat and blood with extraordinary rapidity. Ready to eat at once. E. F. C. FRUIT COCOA. A delicious food beverage. It contains no chocolate, cocoa, tea, coffee, glucose, sugar, cream, or milk, but is a pure product of tropical fruits and nuts. It can be used in any way in which cocoa or chocolate is employed. C. A. L. NUT AMBROSIA. A preparation similar to malted nuts in composition but treated in such a manner as to produce a crisp, crusty mass with a rich nutty flavor. Veritably the daintiest and most delicious food product ever discovered. It melts in the mouth, comforts the stomach, and makes fat and blood with great rapidity. One-half pound to a pound per day is a not uncommon gain in weight on using. Ambrosia dissolves in hot or cold water. P. E. F. PROTOSE. Vegetable meat. It resembles animal food in appearance and com- position, but is far more nourishing. D. B. M. NUT SOUP STOCK. This consists of the concentrated, soluble portions of choice nuts and is a perfect substitute for meat stocks. Can be used by itself or with vegetable products. It may be used just as extract of beef is. Dissolve in hot or cold water. Add the water slowly at first, one part stock to ten of water. M. A. B. SALTED ALMONDS. Warm an ounce of butter in a baking pan and when it is quite hot throw in a pound of blanched and dried almonds, sprinkle with salt and put in a hot oven; when they begin to assume a fine delicate brown and the salt adheres pour them on a sieve and leave till cold. Serve cold on small dish. Walnuts, pecan nuts, peanuts, and others can be prepared in the same way. W. T. M. CHESTNUT CROQUETTES. Shell four dozen chestnuts, put into a stew-pan with enough water to cover. Boil thirty minutes. Drain and pound the nuts until very fine; 452 NUTS AS AN ARTICLE OF DIET. add one tablespoonful of butter and pound until well mixed; add another tablespoonful of butter and pound ten minutes, then add a little salt, one-half pint of cream, a little at a time. When all is worked rub the mixture through a sieve. Beat three eggs until light and stir into that which has been strained. Place in a double boiler and cook eight min- utes, stirring constantly. It should by this time be smooth and thick, if the water in the outer boiler has been boiling rapidly. When cold, butter the hands and mold into balls. Dip into a beaten Qgg, then into bread- crumbs; fry one and one-half minutes. Serve hot. M. W. T. CHESTNUT SALAD. Shell, blanch and boil until tender as many chestnuts as needed. Drain and set aside to cool. Boil two eggs hard. Arrange lettuce in a salad bowl, pvt the chestnuts over and then a dressing made of lemon juice, olive oil, salt and a pinch of sugar. Hold a small sieve over the salad, grate over the chestnuts the yolk of the egg and over all lay the white of the Qgg cut in rings. Emma Brooks. THEIR IMPORTANCE. IT MAY seem superfluous to give directions about the cooking of vege- tables, for to many housewives it is the simplest matter in the world to wash and cook them in scores of appetizing ways. Yet, now that vege- tables are beginning to form the main diet of hundreds of thinking men and women, it is not out of place to learn that more is involved in their cooking than sometimes seems. Even the potato, with which all are familiar, when brought to the table in a sticky, soggy condition, will neither gladden the eye, tempt the appetite, nor furnish the nourishment it other- wise would. SUGGESTIONS ON THE COOKING OF VEGETABLES. The greatest care should be taken in preparing and boiling vege- tables. If taken from the garden, they ought to be gathered in the morn- ing while still wet with the dew and if from the market they should be put in cold water until crisp, before cooking. Never boil them longer than until just done. Put them on in an abundance of fresh water, slightly salted, that is just beginning to boil. Water that has boiled for some time is flat. Care should be taken that the water does not cease to boil until the vegetables are done; drain immediately after. For onions, cabbage, turnips, etc., it is best to change the water, espe- cially when used during the winter, since the flavor, then, is much stronger. Dried peas, beans and lentils should be previously soaked and put on to boil with cold water. Boil spinach and kale in an abundance of water in an uncovered pot, to retain the color. Never thicken vegetables of any kind by adding flour mixed with cold water. Always put butter in a saucepan, to this add the flour, mix well, then add to the vegetables. This improves not only the looks, but also 453 454 VEGETABLES. the taste to such an extent that the little extra work will not be taken into consideration by those who believe in doing things right. The best water to use for the cooking of vegetables is pure well water. In cities where spring water cannot be procured, lake water will answer, but should first be filtered to take out the sediment. TIME FOR COOKING VEGETABLES. Although no exact time can be given for cooking the various vege- tables, as much depends upon the age and freshness, yet the following table will help, to some extent, the inexperienced cook. My advice is to test with a fork, or taste, and thus decide: Potatoes, boiled, twenty-five minutes. Tomatoes, fresh, one-half hour. Potatoes, baked, forty-five minutes. Tomatoes, canned, one-quarter hour. Sweet Potatoes, boiled, forty-five minutes. Cabbage, three-fourths of an hour to an Sweet Potatoes, baked, sixty minutes. hour. Squash, boiled, twenty-five minutes. Cauliflower, one hour. Squash, baked, one hour. Dandelions, two hours. Green peas, boiled, twenty to forty min- Beet Greens, one hour. utes. Onions, one and one-quarter hours. Shelled beans, boiled, sixty minutes. Beets, two hours. String beans, boiled, one hour. Turnips, white, forty-five minutes. Green corn, boiled quickly, twenty min- Turnips, yellow, one and one-half hours. utes. Parsnips, one and one-half hours. Asparagus, fifteen to thirty minutes. Carrots, one hour. Spinach, one hour. Nearly all these vegetables are eaten dressed with salt, pepper and butter, but sometimes a small piece of salt pork is boiled with them, and seasons them nicely. HASHED BROWN POTATOES. C]iop two boiled potatoes fine; take a large saucepan (an omelet pan is best); put in two tablespoonfuls of butter; when hot turn in potatoes, dust with salt and pepper and with limber knife pat down into a smooth sheet; stand pan over a moderate fire and cook slowly for ten minutes; now begin at one end of pan and roll over and pat each roll down until you get to opposite side of pan and potatoes are in the shape of omelet, put your serving dish over pan and turn up-side down; then they are ready to serve. Della Yeomans. HOLLANDAISE POTATOES. The potatoes should be pared, washed and cut into one shape before cooking. This can be done with an apple corer, a potato scoop or they VEGETABLES. -455 can be cut into cubes.' Boll twenty minutes in slightly salted water, tak- ing care that they do not break, then drain and let cool a little. Now prepare a golden sauce as follows: Boil one-half cupful of milk or water with one-half dozen pepper corns and one-half teaspoonful of salt. When flavored, strain it into another saucepan and add one-half cupful of butter and the yolks of three eggs beat with a fork, over the fire, until it thickens like cream. Then squeeze in the juice of one-half of a lemon or a tablespoonful of vinegar. Pour over the potatoes and garnish with sprigs of parsley. Leone. STUFFED POTATOES. Select potatoes of even size. Cut a thin slice from one end, that they may stand firm and put in the oven to bake. When well done remove from the oven and with sharp scissors cut a lid from the upper end, and scoop out the potato into a hot bowl with a teaspoon, keeping the skin whole. Beat the potato in the bowl with a little cream, a teaspoonful of butter, a speck of salt and pepper. Then fill the skins with the mixture, heaping it high on top. Set the potatoes carefully on end and return to oven for ten minutes to heat. Serve on a platter with sprigs of parsley and a few tiny specks of butter. Lida M. TO BOIL NEW POTATOES. Do not pare them but scrape the skins off with a dull knife, washing them nicely after. Put into boiling water and boil about fifteen minutes. Drain them and add a cupful of milk. Now melt a little butter, thicken with flour, and pour over them, keeping on the fire just long enough to heat to boiling point. Serve hot. Mrs. J. Samuels. LYONNAISE POTATOES. Take six cold boiled potatoes, place them in a frying-pan with a piece of butter the size of an English walnut and an onion chopped up raw. Season with a pinch each of salt and pepper. Cook for ten minutes, stir- ring until well browned. Chop a little parsley and sprinkle over. Mrs. Katie Upton. POTATO CAKES. Grate raw potatoes and add a little salt, a piece of butter and an &g%. Beat all well together, dredge with flour. Drop them into good drippings and fry a light brown. Cold mashed potatoes can be made in the same manaer but are not as nice. Mrs. S. Stevenson. 456 VEGETABLES. POTATO CROQUETTES. Peel, boil and mash a quart of potatoes, mixing with them the yolks of four eggs, two ounces of milk; set on the fire, stir for two minutes, spread in a dish to get cold or leave over night, if designed for breakfast, in which case a little milk may be added to moisten their dryness; mix thoroughly, divide into tablespoonful parts, shape them, roll in bread- crumbs, dip into beaten eggs (the whites), roll in bread-crumbs again and fry in hot fat. Take off when done, drain, dish and serve immediately. When they are shaped flat, they are ''croquettes a la duchesser B. J. POTATO SOUFFLE. Select for baking, potatoes as near of a size as possible; cut off each end; when baked scoop out the inside with a spoon, being careful not to break the skins. Add to the potato, butter, salt, and sufficient hot milk to make quite soft; beat till very light and smooth; fill the skins with this and place on end in a buttered pan on the oven grate till browned on top. The potatoes will puff up considerably if sufficiently beaten. Nice for breakfast or tea. Mrs. J. C. Janeway. POTATO TORTILLA. Four eggs, one teaspoonful of chopped parsley, three large potatoes, two tablespoonfuls of butter or oil. Cut cold potatoes, previously cooked, into slices, and sprinkle with the parsley. Put the butter or oil into a saute pan, and when boiling, fry the potatoes a light brown. Beat four eggs; season with pepper and salt and pour into the potatoes; shake the pan constantly to prevent sticking. When one side is brown, turn the tortilla with a plate and brown the other. Serve at once. Mrs. Lucy Mead. MASHED POTATOES. Cook the potatoes in salted water until thoroughly done, then drain. Set on the back of the stove, mash and beat with a wooden spoon until the lumps are all gone; then add enough milk (a little at a time) to make them nice and creamy, butter the size of an &^^, more salt. Put in the dish they are to be served in; make a little hole in the top which you fill with butter and set in the oven until the butter melts; then serve at once. Mrs. D. Farrand. CREAMED POTATOES. Put a pint of milk (or one-half pint of cream) in a frying-pan and let heat; add a piece of butter the size of a butternut thickened with flour, VEGETABLES. 457 some salt and pepper; let it boil, stirring till it thickens; have five good- sized potatoes (boiled or baked the day before), cut them in small pieces, put all together; cook ten minutes, stirring to prevent burning. Mrs. Mary A. Winter. SARATOGA CHIPS. Peel the potatoes carefully, cut into very thin slices and keep in cold water over night; in the morning drain off the water and rub the potatoes between napkins until thoroughly dry, then throw a handful at a time into a kettle or pan of very hot lard, stirring so that they may not adhere to the kettle or to each other. As soon as they become light brown and crisp remove quickly with a skimmer and sprinkle with salt as they are taken up. Mrs. O. Atwater. POTATO BALLS. Take four cold boiled potatoes, rub through a wire sieve, put into a stew-pan with one-half ounce of butter and a dessert-spoonful of milk; beat over the fire till smooth. Add pepper and salt, the yolk of an egg and chopped parsley. When cold form into balls, brush over with the white of egg, roll in bread-crumbs and fry in hot fat. Mrs. T. C. Young. SWEET POTATO BALLS. Boil the potatoes and mash them well. Have ready a pint of milk, which has been boiled. Add a little lemon peel, two lumps of sugar and a little salt. Add the potatoes to the milk as soon as it is ready — enough to make a thick mush. When cooled, make up into balls, covering them with crumbs of bread and yolks of t.^^. Fry them a nice brown and serve up with sugar strewed over them. Alice George. ESCALLOPED POTATOES. Pare six medium-sized potatoes, slice thin in cold water. Drain and put in a pudding pan. Season with salt and pepper, pour over two-thirds of a pint of rich milk, add a piece of butter the size of an ^g%, send to the oven, and when potatoes are well done serve. Miss Mary E. Wetherholt. BAKED POTATOES. (Peeled.) Peel nice, large potatoes carefully to retain their shape, wash them in a strong brine, then take an apple-corer, with which take out a piece of potato from end to end, insert a piece of butter, season with a trifle of pepper and salt, place them together with the pieces taken out into an 458 VEGETABLES. earthen or granite dish, in which they can be sent to the table if desired. When done they must be Hght brown and crisp on the outside and be easily pierced with a fork. Serve hot. Note. — When perfectly done all baked potatoes should be pierced with a fork two or three times several minutes before taking them out of the oven to favor the escape of steam, which makes them drier and improves the taste. J. D. E. FRENCH FRIED POTATOES. Peel the potatoes, slice them lengthwise in slices one-quarter inch thick, drop them in cold water for one hour, then take them out and dry them with a cloth, and fry them in hot lard. If you wish them to puff up, remove them with a skimmer before quite done, drain, and again return to the hot lard to continue frying until done. Sprinkle with fine salt and serve hot. H. O. C. FLAKED POTATOES. Take large, perfect potatoes, boil in their skins in salt water, drain well, peel and rub them through a coarse sieve on a hot dish beore the fire, without touching them, to keep as flaky as possible, sprinkle with fine salt and melted butter, and serve hot. C. A. M. SWEET POTATO CROQUETTES. (Excellent.) Wash and boil in their jackets as many potatoes as are required. When done, drain and remove skins; wash and season with salt, pepper, a little cream and a dash of cinnamon. Make in cone-shape and fry golden brown. Serve on garnished platter. Hilda. APPLES AND POTATOES. Use equal quantities of "potatoes and apples, peel, core and quarter the apples, peel the potatoes and boil in salt water until half done, drain off some of the water and add the apples, boil untifboth are done, then drain well before adding the salt, sugar, cream and fried onion. Mash well. They must have the consistency of mashed potatoes when properly made, and these should be smooth and creamy. Note. — Beating the potatoes with a wire potato masher after the milk or cream is added is a great improvement. E. J. F. POTATO PANCAKES. Two quarts of raw, grated potatoes, four eggs, two tablespoonfuls of thick, sour cream, salt, Ko-nut or lard. Let the grated potatoes stand for VEGETABLES. 459 several minutes, dip off the water, which set aside until the starch settles, then pour off the water and add the starch to the potatoes, beat up the eggs thoroughly, mix with the cream and potatoes, add salt to taste and fry in plenty of Ko-nut or lard till crisp and brown. H. F. L. SWEET CORN. (Canned.) One can of best corn, butter the size of a bird's egg, one cupful of rich milk, salt, sugar. Boil all togther for about ten minutes. Fresh corn may be prepared in the same way, after it has been boiled and cut from the cob. P. S. E. GREEN CORN ON COB. This should be cooked on the same day it is gathered; it loses its sweetness in a few hours. Strip off the husks, pick out all the silk, and put it in boiling water; if not entirely fresh add a tablespoonful of sugar to water, but no salt; boil twenty minutes and serve on a napkin. Mrs. a. Armstrong. SUCCOTASH. Take a can of corn, add it to a pint of Lima beans, place them in a saucepan with a large lump of butter, a little salt and pepper and one-half pint of sweet milk. Heat it thoroughly for about ten minutes, add two tablespoonfuls of Worcestershire sauce and serve. The beans must have been cooked previously. Miss Minnie Ray. ESCALLOPED GREEN CORN OR CORN PUDDING. Take six full ears of sweet green corn, score the kernels and cut from the cob. Scrape off what remains on the cob with a knife. Add one quart of milk, three eggs well beaten, two tablespoonfuls of corn-starch, one-fourth teacupful of butter, a tablespoonful of sugar and salt to taste. Bake in a well-greased earthen dish, in a hot oven two hours. Place it on the table browned and smoking hot. A. T. O. SWEET POTATOES. (Southern style.) Cut cold sweet potatoes into slices one-quarter of an inch thick and place in an earthen dish. Spread each slice with a layer of butter and sprinkle with sugar. Bake till lightly browned. Mrs. M. Adams. BOILED CAULIFLOWER SERVED WITH CREAM. Tie a fine cauliflower up in coarse tarletan, in hot water, and a little salt. When done, drain and lay it in a deep dish, the flower uppermost. 4f)0 VEGETABLES. Heat a cupful of milk and thicken with two tablespoonfuls of butter, cut into bits, and roll in flour. Add pepper, salt, the beaten white of an egg, and boil up one minute, stirring well. Take from the fire, squeeze the juice of a lemon through a hair sieve into the sauce and pour one-half into a sauce-boat, the rest over the cauliflower. Mrs. Serah Paulding. CAULIFLOWER SERVED WITH MELTED BUTTER. Take off all the green leaves, cut the flower close at the bottom, from the stalk; if large, divide into four quarters. Put into cold water, let it lie an hour, then put into boiling milk and water, or water only — milk makes it whiter — skim while boiling. When the stalks are tender take it up at once or it loses its crispness. Lay it on a cloth or colander to drain and serve with melted butter. Mrs. F. Thorne. CAULIFLOWER RELISH. Take a fine white head of cauliflower and chop it fine. Put a piece of butter as large as a butternut into a shallow pan; add three or four table- spoonfuls of strong vinegar. Stew the cauliflower, covered over with a flat tin, for twenty minutes, or until it is perfectly tender. Serve on slices of toasted bread, or on a platter with bits of toast cut into triangles, and well browned, then laid in points around the dish. This is a nice luncheon or supper dish. Mrs. Lily Baker. BROCCOLI. Trim off all leaves that are not liked, and place the broccoli in a pan of salted water to kill any insects, that may have taken shelter under the stalks. Wash them well and put them into an uncovered saucepan of boiling water with a large tablespoonful of salt to every one-half gallon of water. Keep them boiling till done. Drain them directly or they will lose color and become sodden. Mrs. Sarah Winters. SEA KALE. Wash in several waters, pare the stalks and put it into salted water; drain well when done, season it lightly and pour over melted butter C. F. S. BRUSSELS SPROUTS. Nice, tender sprouts, butter, salt, meat broth, flour, sugar, pepper. Free the sprouts of the outside leaves, wash them perfectly clean and boil in salt water until perfectly tender, drain, then cover with cold water until cold, again drain well. Melt some butter in a stew-pan, add flour, mix VEGETABLES. 461 well and stir in one cupful of meat broth or cream to make a creamy dressing, season with pepper, salt and sugar, add the sprouts, then set back and keep hot until wanted. Hilda Brice. STUFFED CABBAGE HEAD. (German style.) Separate the leaves of two cabbages carefully, boil until about one- half done in salt water, drain well, then take a clean, large napkin, lay it into a colander, over this place the largest leaves, one next to the other, overlapping some and meeting at the bottom, with the bottom of the leaf down. During the time the cabbage is boiling, prepare the forcemeat, regulate the quantity of meat according to the size of the cabbage you wish to make. Chop the small leaves of the cabbage very fine, add to the chopped meat bread-crumbs, three eggs, a liberal piece of butter and cream; mix this thoroughly and season with pepper, salt, and allspice; spread a thick layer of this over the leaves in the colander, cover with another layer of boiled cabbage leaves, continue this until it is all used up. Now take the two opposite corners of the napkin, also the two others, and secure firmly with a string, allowing plenty of room for swelling, but at the same time retaining the shape as much as possible. Boil it in plenty of water to cover well for two or three hours. Serve the cabbage whole, and garnish with parsley, when served hot; when served cold, slice it. Excellent either way. F. W. CABBAGE WITH CREAM DRESSING. Remove the outside leaves of the cabbage heads and quarter them; boil in salt water until almost tender, then drain in a colander. Put over the stove, add one cupful of rich cream, let come to a boil and thicken with butter and flour stirred to a cream; add pepper, salt and nutmeg, if liked. Julia M. FRIED CABBAGE. Chop one firm head of cabbage till fine. Put it into a kettle and add one teacupful of water, salt and pepper. Let boil till tender, add butter the size of an &g^ and with the cover off let the cabbage fry a light brown,* adding a little sugar and two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, and serve. » Stella. \ FRENCH CABBAGE. ; Chop cold boiled cabbage and drain until dry. Stir in melted butter, salt and pepper to taste. Add four tablespoonfuls of cream or milk and put on the stove. When heated thoroughly add two well-beaten eggs, 463. VEGETABLES. and then put into a buttered frying-pan. Stir until very hot and light brown on the under side. Turn out up-side down so the brown part will be on top, and serve hot. Amanda Briggs. SAUERKRAUT. Sauerkraut makes a delightful change from the regular way of serv- ing cabbage. Our German forefathers thought there was nothing like it. It can be easiest made in the fall when cabbages are plentiful. It will retain its flavor all during the winter. It is usually made in a barrel. Take firm cabbages, remove the outer leaves and slice into shreds, either by hand or with a machine made for the purpose. In the bottom of the barrel, put a layer of coarse salt, then a layer of cabbage and salt again until the desired amount is packed. With each layer of cabbage, press down with a heavy pestle until the juice floats on the surface, then a fresh layer can be added. Some flavor sauerkraut with a few grains of coriander, juniper berries, etc.; others do not. When the sauerkraut is made, place in a dry cellar, cover with a cloth; on top of the sauerkraut a plank should be placed and on this a heavy weight. At the end of a few days it will begin to ferment, then draw off the liquor and replace fresh. Repeat this each day until the liquor becomes clear, then remove cloth, wash, cover again and put the weights back. Let stand a month and it will be ready for use. Sauerkraut can be boiled with spare-ribs, ham, or sausage, or it can be fried. If the sauerkraut is too sour, pour clear water over it and press it out again, then put it in a granite kettle, with enough water to partially cover it, and cook. H. O. C. HOT 5LAW. Slice a head of cabbage fine, put it in a stew-pan with a little water, and scald well; sprinkle salt and pepper over it; then take two-thirds of a teacupful of vinegar, one-third of a teacupful of water, one egg, one-half teaspoonful of flour, a piece of butter, all well mixed together; pour it over the cabbage, and let it come to a boil, when it is ready for the table. Harriet A. Haight. RED CABBAGE SLAW. Shave the cabbage, putting into jar or bowl. Sprinkle salt through it and on top (about one cupful of salt for three cabbages). Let it stand twelve hours, then drain off and let stand one hoiir. Boil three quarts of vinegar, adding one ounce of whole mace and one ounce of whole black pepper. Let boil fifteen minutes, strain out the spice, pour hot vinegar over cabbage (sufficient to cover), tie a cloth over the jar and set away for use. Mrs. B. Marchant. VEGETABLES. 463 BAKED TOMATOES. Take eight large ripe tomatoes, bread-crumbs, pepper and sugar. Peel and slice the tomatoes, mince pork very fine; put a layer of tomatoes in a buttered pie dish, season with sugar and pepper, strew with bread- crumbs, and scatter a little pork over it. Fill the dish in this order, having crumbs at the top, cover closely, and bake for one-half hour, or till the juice bubbles up at the side. Remove the cover, brown, and serve. If you do not care to use pork it can be ornitted, but a little salt must be used. Mrs. Maggie Leahy. STUFFED TOMATOES. Get tomatoes as large and firm as possible; cut a round place in top of each, scrape out all the soft parts; mix with stale bread-crumbs, onions, parsley, butter, pepper and salt; chop very fine and fill tomatoes; care- fully bake in moderately hot oven; put a little butter in pan; see that they do not burn or become dry. Mrs. James Ladd. SLICED T0MAT0E5. Scald a few at a time in boiling water, peel, slice, set in a cool place, or lay a piece of ice on them. Serve as a relish for dinner with salt. Those who desire may add vinegar and sugar or a French dressing of oil and vinegar. Leone Dickerson. DEVILED TOMATOES. Take two or three large firm tomatoes, not over ripe, cut them in slices one-half inch thick and lay on a sieve. Make a dressing of one tablespoonful of butter and one of vinegar rubbed smooth with the yolk of one hard-boiled &^%\ add a very little sugar, salt, mustard and cayenne pepper; beat until smooth and heat to a boil. Take from the fire and pour upon a well-beaten ^%'g, whipping to a smooth cream. Put the ves- sel containing this dressing into hot water while the tomatoes are being broiled over a clear fire. Put the tomatoes on a hot dish and pour the dressing over them. Cooked in this way they will be found an exquisite accompaniment to roast chicken. Mrs. M. Werton. FRIED RIPE TOMATOES. Do not pare them, but cut them in slices as you would an apple. Dip in cracker crumbs and fry them in butter. They are very nice. Hattie. FRIED GREEN TOMATOES. Cut six large green tomatoes in slices one-eighth of an inch in thick- ness. Beat the yolk of one ^^% with a tablespoonful of cold water, 464 VEGETABLES. sprinkle salt and pepper over the tomatoes. Dip first in the ^^^, then in fine bread-crumbs. Fry in butter quite brown on both sides and serve with a gravy made as follows: Rub one tablespoonful of flour with two tablespoonfuls of butter. When well creamed brown in a pan, add one- half pint of boiling milk, stir steadily till it begins to thicken, then add salt-spoonful of salt and pour over the tomatoes. Will W. SCALLOPED TOMATOES. Turn off nearly all of the juice from a can of tomatoes (which juice may be used in soup). Put a layer of bread-crumbs in the bottom of a buttered dish; then a layer of tomatoes seasoned with pepper, salt and a little butter and sugar. Continue till dish is full, finishing with crumbs. Bake covered until hot, then brown quickly. Mrs. Susan Levy. MASHED TURNIPS. Pare, wash and cut turnips in slices; put them in a pan with as much cold water as will just cover them; let them boil till tender; pour them into a sieve or colander and press out the water; mash them with fresh milk or sweet cream until entirely free from lumps; then put them into a saucepan over the fire and stir about three minutes. F. TURNIPS IN CREAM. Cut the turnips into squares, boil in salt water until tender, add one cupful of rich milk, thickened with a little flour and butter; season to taste with salt and pepper. Mrs. Irene Jenkins. STUFFED TURNIPS. Select one dozen medium-sized turnips; peel and boil whole in water slightly salted; when tender pour off the water, slice a piece from the end of each turnip, scrape out the center, mash, and season with salt, pepper, butter and yolk of an ^^^. Fill the turnips with this mixture, put back the slice, brush over with butter, put in a baking dish and put in the hot oven to brown. Mrs. Atwood. RUTABAGA. Rutabaga is one of the oldest vegetables we serve. They are much more solid than the other turnips, but may be cooked and served accord- ing to the recipes given for turnips, except to add more cream. J. M. BOILED BEETS. Wash the roots with great care. Do not scrape or cut them, else the juice will escape and their flavor will be injured. Put them into a pan of VEGETABLES. 465 boiling water and keep them boilino- for one or two hours, or until tender. Do not prick them with a fork to ascertain this but press on the thickest part with the fingers and they will yield to the pressure. When done put them into cold water and rub the skin off with the hand, cutting them into slices of same size. They can be sent to table with no seasoning, or they may be returned to the fire and a very thin sauce of flour, butter and milk may be made and poured over them. Mrs. Annie G. CREAHED BEETS. Cut off stalks and leaves and wash the beets through three or four waters. Salt the water in your kettle well, and boil them till done. Peel them when cooked and lay them in a drainer till all the water is gone, then cut them up while hot into even slices. Cover them with cream or white sauce and serve. Mrs. J. Maguire. FRIED APPLES. Pare four large juicy apples, and cut into rounds about one-fourth of an inch thick, carefully remove the core, without breaking the apples, and fry quickly in boiling half lard and half butter to a light brown. Salt them a little. Drain free from fat, and serve vcjy hot with steak. Mrs. S. Silloway. STEWED nusHROons. A nice dish for the tea is made by peeling the mushrooms, and taking out the inner part, then broiling them on a gridiron. When the outside is brown, place them in a saucepan, just covering them with water. Let them stay in this water ten minutes, and then add a tablespoonful of white wine, a tablespoonful of burned sugar, and a few drops of sharp vinegar. Thicken with flour, milk and butter. Let them boil up a little, then toast bread pretty brown, lay it on a heated dish and pour the mushrooms over. Another way to prepare them for the table is to broil them. Select the largest and have a clear fire. Get the gridiron quite hot, and rub the bars with suet, so that the mushrooms will not stick. Lay them on the gridiron, with the stalks upward. Sprinkle sparingly with salt, but lav- ishly with pepper. Serve on a hot dish with a little butter over and under them. When they begin to steam they are done. Mrs. Kate Wilson. BROILED nUSH ROOMS. In order to test mushrooms, sprinkle salt on the gills — if they turn yellow they are poisonous, if they turn black they are good. After testing, pare, and cut off stems, dip in melted butter, season with salt and pepper, broil on both sides over a clear fire and serve on toast. A. P. 466 VEGETABLES. MUSHROOn CROQUETTES. Press one cupful of cold mashed potatoes through a sieve, add two cupfuls of mushrooms, which have been cut in pieces and simmered in two tablespoonfuls of butter for twenty minutes. Sprinkle when cooking with salt. Beat in two eggs, form into balls, and fry in hot oil. Mrs. C. I. Smith. ESCALLOPED MUSHROOHS. Put the mushrooms in a buttered baking dish with alternate layers of crumbs, seasoning each layer plentifully with butter; add salt, pepper and a gill of cream or gravy. Bake twenty minutes, keeping covered while in the oven. O. B. M. BAKED MUSHROOMS. Toast for each person a large slice of bread and spread over with rich sweet cream; lay on each slice, head downward, a mushroom, or if small, more than one; season and fill each with as much cream as it will hold. Place over each a custard cup, pressing well down to the toast; set in a moderate oven and cook fifteen minutes. Do not remove the cups for five minutes after they come from the oven, as thereby the flavor of the mushroom is preserved in its entirety. E. J. EGOS AND ASPARAGUS. Boil young asparagus and cut it into pieces as nearly as possible like peas. Have ready four eggs well beaten, and flavor with pepper and salt. Put the asparagus with them and stir gently; then dissolve two ounces of butter in a stew-pan, and stir the mixture until it is thick. Serve on toast. It will take fifteen to eighteen minutes after the water boils to boil the asparagus. Stew with the eggs two or three minutes longer. Mrs. J. E. Peck. ASPARAGUS. White asparagus, butter, salt, pepper, nutmeg, sugar, flour, yolk of an t.^%y one-half cupful of cream. Select tender asparagus, tie in bunches and boil in salt water until tender. When done, arrange nicely on a hot platter, and serve with the following dressing poured over them. Dressing. — Slightly brown a liberal quantity of butter, add a little flour and about one-fourth cupful of the water the asparagus was boiled in, season with pepper, salt and sugar to taste, boil up once, then add cream. Or, if preferred, merely serve it with browned butter, pepper and salt. ' W. T. M. VEGETABLES. 467 BOILED PARSNIPS. Rub the parsnips clean, place them in a saucepan with salted water that is boiling and cook one or more hours. When they are done, take a very coarse towel and rub their skins off, put them into a hot dish, season with salt and pepper, and pour a butter sauce over them. If you like them mashed, proceed in the same way, but after removing the skins, pass them through a colander and mash them, returning them to the saucepan with a very little milk, a small piece of butter and salt and pepper. Stir them over the fire again till quite hot, turn into a dish, and serve. Mrs. S. Maxwell. CREAMED PARSNIPS. Chop cold boiled parsnips. Put on the stove with two tablespoonfuls of butter, and pepper and salt to taste. Shake until it boils. Take up the parsnips and add to the butter a little flour and three tablespoonfuls of cream or milk. Let it boil up once and pour over the parsnips. Creamed carrots are prepared in the same way. Ione. FRIED PARSNIPS. Slice lengthwise about one-quarter of an inch thick and fry in beef drippings or butter; they will fry sooner if previously boiled and should be nicely browned. C. A. BOILED ARTICHOKES. The Jerusalem artichoke should be washed well in several waters and picked over carefully to see that no insects are about them. Trim the leaves at the bottom. Cut off the stems and put the artichokes into boil- ing water with a heaped tablespoonful of salt and a piece of soda the size of a quarter. Keep the saucepan uncovered, and let them boil quickly until tender. When done you can thrust a fork through them. Take them out, let them drain, and serve with white sauce poured over them, made of flour, butter, new milk, two small onions cut up thin in it, and pepper. A tureen of melted butter should accompany them. It takes twenty-five minutes to cook them, and they should be gathered two or three days before wanted for use. Fanny Bennet. FRIED ARTICHOKES. Boil them from eight to ten minutes, lift out, drain on a sieve, and let them cool. Dip into beaten eggs, cover with fine bread-crumbs, fry a light brown, drain, pile in hot dish and serve quickly. H. B. S. 468 VEGETABLES. STRING BEANS. The wax bean is more tender and richer in flavor than the green. Cut off the ends of the pods, string them "and cut or break into one-inch pieces. Wash before cutting, and boil them about one and one-half hours. Then drain off the water, add sweet milk, a little butter, pepper and salt and let them get thoroughly hot. They are then fit for the table. Mrs. A. R. G. LIMA BEANS. Boil a pint of Lima beans in salted water and then press them through a colander. Place the pulp back in a saucepan, add a good bit of butter, and beat with a spoon. Season as usual, with the addition of a little sugar. If too thick, add milk. Serve with sippets of fried bread around the dish. Mrs. C. Peckens. BAKED BEANS. Boil one quart of beans until the skins will crack when blown, then put them in a deep pan to bake, after the following manner: A layer of beans, then a sprinkle of sugar, salt and pepper, some fresh pork, or but- ter; continue until the pan is full. Mrs. Julia Rickord. BOSTON BAKED BEANS. (Fine.) One quart of small white beans and one pound of pork. Wash the beans, put them in a kettle over the fire and cover with cold water. As soon as they come to a boil, drain. Now put them in the bean pipkin, add a small onion chopped fine, one-half teaspoonful of dry English mus- tard, a spoonful of salt, some black pepper and three teaspoonfuls of molasses. Put pork on top of beans, fill the pan with boiling water and put in the oven covered tight and let bake for several hours, occasionally adding hot water, so they do not get dry. Mrs. P. Illingworth. BOSTON BAKED BEANS— No. 2. Two pounds of beans (soaked over night); in the morning boil for one-half hour, pour off water. Slice a small onion, put in bottom of bean pot. Add beans, one-half teaspoonful each of mustard and baking soda, a heaping tablespoonful of sugar, one heaping teaspoonful of salt, three tablespoonfuls of real black molasses (New Orleans). Add one-half pound of pork, and put on top of other ingredients. Fill pot with hot water and bake in oven six hours. (Be careful not to let beans get dry, keep adding water.) Mrs. McLeod. VEGETABLES. 469 BOILED RICE. ♦ Wash well and boil a pint of rice in two quarts of slightly salted water for about fifteen minutes. Drain in a colander, cover with a thick cloth for about ten minutes so that the rice may absorb the moisture. Pick up with a fork into a deep dish and serve very hot. E. J. Wallace. FRIED EQQ PLANT. The ^%% plants should be cut into slices of equal thickness and put into water that has been strongly salted, where they should lie for an hour. Roll in cracker crumbs and ^^^ and fry in butter. Mrs. Ellen Pinkerton. EQQ PLANT CAKES. Egg plant is nice when made into cakes. Take a small one, pare it, cut into pieces, and boil in salt and water until soft. Pour off the water, mash, add pepper, and mix with a batter made of one pint of milk, three eggs beaten thoroughly, two teaspoonfuls of baking-powder, a piece of butter the size of an ^^^, a little pinch of salt, and flour enough for a thin batter. Fry it as you would batter cakes. Vegetable oysters can be pre- pared in the same way and are very nice. Mrs. S. Stevenson. STUFFED EQQ PLANT. Cut the stem end off the ^^^ plant, peel it, scrape out the center and put all together in a weak brine for forty-five minutes, drain the pieces scraped out of the center, chop fine, mix with a forcemeat as for stuffed tomatoes, adding some cream. Put into a deep earthen dish with plenty of butter and a little water, cover well and bake in the oven, basting fre- quently, until done. H. F. L. FRIED CUCUMBERS. Pare three large cucumbers, cut them in slices. Dry them with a clean towel. Sprinkle them with flour and place them in a pan of boiling Ko-nut, and turn often until they are quite brown. Remove them from the pan and drain the fat from them, by placing them on a sieve. Very good. Mrs. Reta Holmes. PLAIN BOILED ONIONS OR CREAHED ONIONS. Skin and soak them in cold water one hour, then put into a saucepan and cover with boiling water, well salted; when nearly done pour off the water, add a little milk, a little butter, and simmer till tender. Season 470 VEGETABLES. with pepper and salt. Or make a thickened dip of butter, flour and milk. Drain the onions thoroughly, cook this thickening and pour over the onions in a deep dish. Mrs. F. Farley. FRIED 0NI0N5. Peel and slice. Fry in butter with one-half cupful of water. Season with pepper and salt, and serve hot. Mrs. N K. B. CARROTS. Wash the carrots, then scrape and cut into oblong, thin strips, boil in salt water until tender, then drain off nearly all the water and prepare as above. Jennie Adams. LENTILS. Pick the lentils over carefully, wash thoroughly and soak several hours, then put them on with clear cold water and boil them gentlv until done; heat a little butter with a little flour in it, add the onion, fry it until it turns yellow, drain off some of the water the lentils were boiled in, add them to the dressing and simmer one-half hour longer before serving. G.J. GREEN PEAS. When the peas are fresh, shell them and wash them in a colander in cold water. Then put them into cold water and let simmer twenty min- utes; season with plenty of butter and salt and a cupful of cream. Canned peas should merely be turned out of the can, liquor poured off the peas, rinsed, and left on to boil. When done add milk, butter and salt. When they have come to a boil once they are ready for the table. Mrs. J. S. Ring. PEA LOAF. Soak four cupfuls of split peas over night. In the morning put them with a small onion into a farina kettle with just enough water to cover, and boil until soft. Drain and pulp through a colander. Beat in a table- spoonful of butter, pepper, salt and three eggs. Boil in a buttered mold or floured cloth one hour. Turn out and cut in slices on the table. Mrs. B. Clayton. FRIED PEAS. Peas are exceedingly nice cooked as above with but little water. When done add butter but no cream. Let fry about three minutes and serve hot. Mrs. J. R. M. STEWED PEAS AND LETTUCE. Take a pint of shelled green peas and two heads of lettuce cut small. Put in as little water as possible to use and not burn, let boil until tender, VEGETABLES. 471 add a pinch of sugar and another of salt. When done stir in the well- beaten yolk of one egg, two tablespoonfuls of cream and a dash of pepper. Do not allow to boil after the ^^^ is added. Serve hot. Mrs. N. K. Brooks. VEGETABLE OYSTERS. Cut the vegetables in thin slices, crosswise, boil in clear water until soft, add a cupful of milk, salt, butter and flour stirred to a cream; boil all together for a few minutes, then serve on toast." P. E. F. SUMMER SQUASH. The white scalloped ones are the best. Take them before the rhine or seeds become hard. Wash and cut in moderately small pieces. Boil in clear water until tender enough to mash. Then place in a colander and drain. Have ready some bread cut in small pieces (not crumbled). Now put a spoonful of good butter in a skillet. When hot put in the bread and stir until brown, then add the squash. Mash and mix well together, and season with pepper and salt. Mrs. E. A. Parcell. SQUASH (HUBBARD). Peel a squash, cut it in small pieces and boil in water that has been salted till done. Drain thoroughly. Then mash, adding two heaping tablespoonfuls of butter and a little salt and pepper. Also cream unless too moist. Mrs. Clara Green. GREENS. Young beet tops, dandelions, spinach, young turnip tops and chicory are very beneficial in the spring and they can all be cooked in the same way. Examine them very carefully, throwing out all wilted or tough ones. Wash them through several waters, so that the sand or grit may all be eliminated, and they are perfectly clean. All greens shrink in boil- ing and so judgment must be used as to the quantity to be cooked for the family. When they are ready for the pot have it one-half full of boiling water that has been salted. Cook till they are tender, drain them, and press them so that all the water will be out. Then season them with a little salt, plenty of pepper and butter. Put them in the oven in the dish for a few minutes, and serve them hot. String beans, peas and spinach should be boiled uncovered, so as to retain their green color. Mrs. Amy Kent. PLAINLY DRESSED SPINACH. Pick the leaves from the stalks, and wash the spinach in several waters to free it from sand and grit. Put it into a large saucepan with as much 472 VEGETABLES. water only as will keep it from burning; add a small spoonful of salt and turn it frequently till quite tender. Drain it and with a knife and fork cut it in small pieces and add pepper, salt and butter. Serve immediately. Mary Jameson. DANDELION AND SPINACH GREENS. Gather freshly grown dandelions when the dew is on them. Use equal amounts of dandelion and -spinach; pick over carefully, throw into cold water and wash in several waters previously salted. Plunge the dandelion into boiling water, cook one-half hour before adding the spinach; continue the cooking until tender; then drain, add one tablespoonful of butter, a little salt and pepper. Mix well, turn on warm dish and garnish with hard-boiled ^^^. The addition of spinach prevents the bitterness of the dandelion from predominating, and the union will be found very pala- table. It cannot be too well recommended for its healthfulness. Mrs. Maude Blanchard. SPINACH FRITTERS. Boil spinach thoroughly, drain and mince it well; add some grated bread, one grate of nutmeg and a small piece of sugar. Add as much cream or yolks and whites of eggs as will make the preparation of the consistence of batter; drop the batter into a frying pan of boiling lard. When the fritters rise take out, drain and send to table. E. S. CELERY. Celery makes a pretty ornament to the table and is most healthful as well. The smaller the stalks the more tender. Serve in celery boats, with just enough of the leaves to look pretty. Put in cold water one hour before serving to make it crisp. If necessary to keep ior any length of time wet it thoroughly, wrap in a cloth and place in the refrigerators or cellar. In this way it can be kept a week if perfectly fresh when packed away. E. T. CREAM CELERY. Bring one pint of milk to a boil, add the celery chopped fine, then some butter mixed with a little flour, cream and crackers; season to taste and serve. F. P. RICE. Rice has come to be one of the main vegetable dishes of the present day. Wash the rice thoroughly, then put on with just enough cold water to prevent it from burning to the pot (a double boiler is best) which must VEGETABLES, 473 have a close-fitting cover and be set on a moderate fire; add salt to taste. The rice is steamed rather than boiled, until it is nearly done, then the cover is removed and a small lump of butter added. Served plain or with cream, sugar and nutmeg. Mrs. Stanley Arnold. FRIED APPLES. Pare and core the apples, keeping them whole, cut into slices cross- wise, sprinkle with cinnamon, sugar and a little lemon juice. Stand aside for fifteen minutes, then dip each slice into a batter and slide quickly into the hot Ko-nut, fry on one side, turn, and fry on the other. G. R. POTATO CROQUETTES. One pint of mashed potatoes, a pinch of white pepper, one-half tea- spoonful of celery salt, one and one-half tablespoonfuls of Ko-nut, one-half teaspoonful of salt and the yolks of two eggs. Mix together all the ingredients, except the ^%^, and beat until light, then add the yolks of the eggs and mix well. Rub through sieve and add one teaspoonful of chopped parsley. Shape into smooth balls, then into cylinders. Dip in bread-crumbs, then in beaten eggs, then roll in crumbs again. Fry in deep hot Ko-nut. Drain on paper and serve on a hot dish. E. T. CREAMED PEAS. Melt two tablespoonfuls of Ko-nut in a saucepan, add ten drops of onion juice, three tablespoonfuls of flour, one teaspoonful of salt, one- quarter teaspoonful of paprica and one pint of hot milk. Serve in shredded wheat baskets. R. R. FLAKED BEAN CROQUETTES. Three cupfuls of flaked beans, three-fourths of a cupful of boiling water, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth teaspoonful of paprica and one ^^%, beaten. Mix all ingredients, shape roll in rice flakes, beaten ^^% and flakes again; fry in hot Ko-nut until brown. W. W. BAKED SALSIFY. Scrape the roots, wash thoroughly, cut crosswise and boil till tender. Make a cream sauce of one tablespoonful each of butter and flour rubbed together, one pint of rich milk, salt and pepper and heat to boiling point. Butter a baking pan, put in a layer of bread-crumbs, a layer of cream sauce, a layer of salsify and so on till the dish is nearly filled. Pour cream sauce over the last layer, then bread-crumbs and bits of butter and bake brown. Mrs. E. A. B. 474 VEGETABLES. CORN CAKES. One can of corn, three eggs, a small teaspoonful of salt, a tablespoon- ful of sugar, a dash of pepper, a tablespoonful of flour and a lump of but- ter the size of an ^gg. Beat the eggs thoroughly, melt the butter and mix both with the other ingredients. Drop in well-buttered gem pans and bake in a moderate oven. Miss Rurk. CAULIFLOWER AU QRATIN. Boil one whole cauliflower in salted water till tender, then drain and cut rather coarsely. Mix one-half ounce of butter and one ounce of flour together, stir it into one cupful of hot milk till it is thick and smooth, add salt and pepper; stir in one ounce of grated Parmesan cheese and pour this gently over the cauliflower, sprinkle cheese over the top and brown in very hot oven. Serve hot. Mary. POTATOES AND CORN. Chop fine cold boiled potatoes and mix witH cooked corn in propor- tion of one cupful of potato to one-half cupful of corn; put three large tablespoonfuls of good dripping into a frying pan. When thoroughly heated serve. Ione Whipple. VEGETABLES AU QRATIN. Boil separately in salted water a head of cabbage, cut into pieces; use any cold vegetables, green peas, asparagus, and the like. Lay some but- ter into a tin pan, then cabbage, then grated cheese; again butter, peas, cheese, and again until all is used, having the last layer of cheese. Bake for one hour in a moderate oven. Emily Brooks. TOMATOES WITH SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUITS. Split into halves shredded wheat biscuits and place in baking pan. Pour over sufficient milk to soak them and over each one a little melted butter. Peel and cut in slices four or five tomatoes; place on the biscuits, dust over a little salt and pepper and bits of butter. Carefully remove to hot dish and serve. This is a very nutritious dish. Bake in quick oven fifteen minutes. Alma Locke. STUFFED ONIONS. Boil white onions in slightly salted water for one hour, changing the water twice. Lift them out and scoop out a portion from the center. Fill the cavity with the dressingof two tablespoonfuls of bread-crumbs, one large teaspoonful of grated cheese, a little cream, salt, pepper and a little VEGETABLES. 475 of the onion which has been scooped out. Wrap each onion in a piece of buttered tissue paper and twist the paper securely at the ends. Bake in a buttered pan in a moderate oven nearly one hour. Remove the paper, put into a deep dish, sprinkle over a little salt and pepper and pour over melted butter. Mrs. J. H. T. PARSNIP BALLS. Mash and season boiled parsnips. Remove from the fire, and before it cools add one well-beaten ^^%. When cold make into balls about one- half the size of an ^^^. Dip into beaten egg, then into bread-crumbs. Fry a pale brown in boiling lard or Ko-nut. L. Brooks. BAKED CUCUMBERS (DELICIOUS). Peel five good-sized cucumbers, cut lengthwise and remove the seeds and soft part. Rub one cupful of soft bread-crumbs into butter the size of an egg and add one teaspoonful of finely-chopped onion; season with salt and pepper. Sprinkle salt over the cucumbers, fill with the seasoned bread-crumbs and bake until cucumbers are very soft and the filling a nice brown. Adine. STEWED CUCUMBERS. Peel six large cucumbers and cut into slices one-half inch thick; cover with hot water and boil till tender, then drain. Put two cupfuls of cream into a saucepan, season with salt and pepper and one-half tablespoonful of butter. When it comes to a boil drop in the cucumbers and heat through, shaking the pan to prevent burning. Greta M. T. CUCUMBER WITH DRESSING. Peel the cucumbers and let them stand in ice water for one hour. Then slice and place in a bowl. Pour over a mixture of one tablespoon- ful of lemon or vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of olive oil, one-half teaspoon- ful of salt and a dash of cayenne pepper. Nellie R. STEWED OKRA WITH TOMATOES. Wash twelve pods of okra and slice thin. Peel four tomatoes and cut into slices; put in a granite saucepan, add salt and set over the fire to simmer slowly for one-half hour. Add a tablespoonful of butter with a dash of cayenne and serve. Mrs. L. P. M. BAKED MACARONI AND CHEESE. Break it into one-inch pieces, put it on the stove in cold water to which a little salt has been added and boil twenty minutes, stirring lest it 476 VEGETABLES. adhere to the bottom of the pan. Then take a deep dish, butter it well, and place a layer of macaroni, then a layer of grated cheese, adding salt, pepper and butter to each layer. Continue these layers until the dish is full, then cover with sweet milk. Beat two eggs in milk, and pour over Bake three-quarters of an hour. If you shave the cheese very thin it will answer as well as to grate it. Use old strong cheese. Mrs. Annie R. Gregory. SPAQHETTI. Break a package of spaghetti into a saucepan. Cover it with boiling water and add a teaspoonful of salt. Cook ten minutes; then immerse in cold water; drain from a colander and place for a few moments in an oven with door open. Then put a layer of spaghetti into a dish and pour over it a little milk, add a dash of salt and a few bits of butter. Over this sprinkle a layer of grated cheese (Parmesan is the best); add another layer of spaghetti and then cheese, repeating the process until the dish is full, leaving the cheese on top. Place in an oven five minutes, then serve with an extra dish of grated cheese. E. T. VERMICELLI. Boil a quart of milk and drop lightly into it six ounces of vermicelli which has been blanched in boiling water to free it from all impurities. Simmer gently, and stir frequently to keep it from getting into lumps. When tender, sweeten it and send it to table. It takes from fifteen to twenty-five minutes to boil it. Mrs. G. Atwood. VEGETABLE CURRY. A mixture of vegetables may be used for curry. The most suitable are celery, onions, cauliflowers, young cabbages, cucumbers, green peas, French beans, spinach and sorrel. Mince or slice the vegetables. Dis- solve a slice of fresh" butter in a stew-pan; roll the vegetables in curry- powder and toss them in the butter till they are one-half dressed. Pour over them as much cream or gravy mixed smoothly with curry-powder or paste as will cover them, and stew till tender. Add a little salt and serve with rice boiled for curry on a separate dish. A tablespoonful of lemon juice is an improvement. If liked a small quantity of mashed potatoes or fried onions and an apple rubbed through a sieve may be added to the curry sauce. Shrimps or prawns may also be added if approved. Charlotte Barber. ALADS WITHOUT MEATS. AMONG the vegetables peculiarly fitted for the making of fine salads are celery, tomatoes, cucumbers, onions, lentils, cabbage, green beans, lettuce, cauliflower, water cress and radishes. To this may be added chervil, which is never absent from a French or English salad. It is much like parsley, but far more aromatic, and is used in much the same way. It can be procured at most of the vegetable markets, but in preparing a salad with it, the leaves alone are taken; the root being highly poisonous. In preparing vegetables designed for salads it is proper to throw them into cold water for a short time, then carefully dry and lay them away until wanted. Never mix with the dressing until ready for use. DRESSING FOR COLD SLAW. Mix together one tablespoonful of dry mustard, three-fourths of a teaspoonful of sugar, salt-spoonful of salt. Stir smooth and add one- quarter of a pint of cream. Let these come to a boil just once, stirring all the time. Take it from the stove and beat in two eggs, which have previously been whipped well. Place the sauce back on the stove, letting it stand over a dish of boiling water. Keep stirring until thick, then add one-quarter of a pint of vinegar. This is a good sauce for slaw or cold meats. Mrs. Maude Blanchard. For Mayonnaise and French Dressings see "Salads with Meats." BOILED SALAD DRESSING. Three eggs, one tablespoonful each of sugar, oil and salt, a scant tablespoonful of mustard, a cupful of milk and one cupful of vinegar; stir oil, salt, mustard and sugar in a bowl until perfectly smooth; then add eggs and beat well after; add vinegar and finally the milk; place all in a rice or custard boiler; keep constantly stirring for about twelve or fifteen minutes, until it is as thick as rich cream. This will keep in a cool place for two weeks. Mrs. W. P. Saunders. 477 478 SALADS WITHOUT MEATS. ORANGE SALAD. Delicious for game or roasted poultry. Slice six tart, juicy oranges, remove the seeds, arranging the slices on a salad dish and dressing them with salad oil, a squeeze of lemon juice, salt and a dust of cayenne. Mattie Soff. WALDORF SALAD. Pare and cut into quarter-inch dice the same amount of rich, tart apples that you do of celery cut in thin slices. Add to the apples and celery a generous handful of English walnuts or hickory nut meats and over all pour a rich mayonnaise dressing; serve on lettuce leaves with Long Branch wafers and toasted cheese. Mrs. Minnie Buchanan. AFTER-DINNER SALAD. Prepare apples as above and mix with hickory-nut meats. Lay on top of tossed-up water-cress and serve with French dressing. Mrs. a. C. Northrup. REAL SPANISH SALAD (FINE). Take the crisp leaves of young lettuce, break into small pieces and put into a bowl Now trim a dozen young onions, tops and all, and cut up with the lettuce. Pour over fresh dressing with a generous amount of oil. Let stand ten minutes and serve. Senora Carmona. inPERIAL SALAD. Cut off some green asparagus tips one inch in length; cook them in salted water; drain and lay in a bowl, seasoning with salt, pepper, oil and vinegar; cut some cooked truffles the same length as the asparagus, season the same and one-half hour later lay them on a sieve to drain well, then add them to the asparagus and mingle with mayonnaise. Delmonico's. CABBAGE SALAD. One or two eggs, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, one-half cupful of vinegar, one-half cupful of cream, one-half teaspoonful of mustard, chop the cabbage very fine and season with salt; beat the eggs and sugar together, then add the vinegar and mustard, set in a pan of boiling water (or use a rice steamer), and stir until thoroughly cooked and thick; let stand in china or glass dish until cold and just before serving add the cream and pour over the cabbage. Very delicate if well made. Mrs. B. Dennig. SALADS WITHOUT MEATS, 479 LENTEN SALAD. One cupful of apples, crisp and cold Johnston, one cupful of celery, crisp and white, one cupful of Malaga grapes, one cupful of pecan meats, one-half cupful of sliced banana; cover with mayonnaise dressing; pre- pare the last thing before serving, as the fruit discolors by standing. Miss R. Soper. POTATO SALAD WITH NUTS. Partially cold, sliced potatoes, hickory nuts, trifle of chopped onion, any good salad dressing, mayonnaise if preferred rich; garnish with chopped parsley, cold boiled beets, sliced lemons. Mix the nuts and potatoes, pour over them the dressing, seasoned with the onion and gar- nished to suit taste. W. M. MACEDOINE SALAD. Take an even quantity of cold cooked vegetables — peas, turnips, beans, beets and potatoes cut fine. Add a little minced onion, cover with salad dressing, mix lightly and serve cold. Lillie Tibbitts. CHERRY SALAD. Arrange lettuce leaves prettily on flat dish; seed the cherries and place a hazel-nut in center to keep shape; put cherries through the leaves; pour mayonnaise dressing to which has been added a tablespoon- ful of cherry juice, instead of vinegar; then put a few cherries over the top. loNE Anderson. ORANGE SALAD. For poultry or game, orange salad will be found particularly delicious. Tart, juicy oranges should be sliced and the seeds removed. Arrange in a salad dish with or without lettuce and dress with lemon juice, salad oil, a sprinkling of salt and a dash of cayenne. H. F. GRAPE SALAD. A very choice salad for a luncheon course is the following: Select the large white or light green grapes with tender skin, remove them from the stem, wash and take out seeds, taking care to preserve the shape of the grape. Fill the vacancy with any favorite nuts — pecans, hickory or the like. Let cool, arrange on plates and spread over a generous amount of mayonnaise. Serve at once. A. C. BEET SALAD. Parboil beet, remove the skin, cut it into thin slices, and stew with small onions in a little gravy thickened with flour and cream. Add a 480 SALADS WITHOUT MEATS. dessert-spoonful of vinegar, seasonings, and a little sugar. Spread the sliced beet on the dish, placing the onions between them. It is served cold with cheese and with vinegar poured over. L. S. CELERY SALAD. Pare the stalks from three bunches of celery, clean them, wipe dry with a napkin, chop and fill a salad bowl, adding a very little salt, pepper and three tablespoonfuls of good vinegar. Do not use any oil. Mrs. H. E. Heath. WATER-CRESS SALAD. Use the tender leaves of the cress. Let them stand in cold water to make them crisp and then wipe dry. Sprinkle a teaspoonful of parsley and olives chopped fine. Add a few slices of sour apples and pour over it the French dressing which is made of one tablespoonful of vinegar, three tablespoonfuls of oil, one-half teaspoonful of salt and one-quarter of a teaspoonful of pepper. The two latter ingredients should be mixed with the oil and the vinegar stirred in slowly. To garnish water-cress a hard-boiled egg chopped fine and scattered over it is an improvement. Mrs. M. J. Town. STRING BEAN SALAD. Cook a quart of string beans, after having stringed and cut the ends off, in boiling water, well salted. When tender, take them out with the skimmer and put them into cold water. Drain them from this water thoroughly so they will be nearly dry. Place them in a salad dish, chop parsley, onion, and chervil over them, pour in some French dressing and it is ready for the table. Phebe Metcalf. BEAN SALAD. Soak a quart of beans three hours and boil them till tender, changing the water before boiling. When drained and thoroughly cold, chop some raw onion, olives and parsley and put them all in a salad bowl. Use six spoons of salad oil to two of vinegar. Mix well and serve. Mrs. Jennie Safford. WALNUT SALAD. Make a nest of lettuce leaves on a salad dish, arrange on it several pieces of orange, first cut into slices and then into quarters, and a few halves of English walnuts. Place on each a thin layer of mayonnaise dressing and serve. Mrs. Mary George. FOOD FURNISHED BY THE SEA, LAKES AND RIVERS. See Chapter entitled "Fish"— "Shell Fish"— and note all the favorite ways of cooking them, as well as their valne to man as brain Imilders. SALADS WITHOUT MEATS. 481 WALNUT SALAD— No. 2. Chop lettuce and the whites of two hard-boiled eggs separately, not too fine. Toss lightly together, sprinkle the top thickly with English wal- nuts an the yolks of the eggs chopped coarsely. Pour over this any good salad dressing and serve on crisp lettuces. Yacht-Club dressing is very satisfactory. Mrs. Nellie Burwell. ORANGE SALAD. Slice four peeled oranges lengthwise, dress with three or four table- spoonfuls of olive oil and one tablespoonful of lemon juice. Arrange slices in a mound upon a layer of lettuce leaves. Dress one cupful of nut meats with one tablespoonful of oil, a dash of salt and one-half table- spoonful of lemon juice and dispose upon the center of the mound. Toss together before serving. H. C. PLANTATION SALAD (FINE). Peel and cut very fine one large cucumber, one green onion, one punch of red radishes and shred one head of lettuce; mix all together with one teaspoonful of salt and one-quarter of a teaspoonful of pepper and one well-beaten ^%%. Brown a tablespoonful of bacon, cut into dice, in a pan over the fire, and add one-quarter of a cupful of cider vinegar with one-half cupful of water. Mix all together and serve. D. C. NUT AND CELERY SALAD. Cut two cupfuls of celery in fine shreds in water. Drain and dry, add one and one-half cupfuls of hickory-nut meats, broken fine, but not chopped. Serve with French dressing and garnish with water-cress. H. L. CABBAGE AND CELERY SALAD. Remove the center from a small, firm white cabbage. Cut very fine with a sharp knife. Keep in ice water for one hour. Drain and mix with equal parts of celery, cut in small pieces. Add cream dressing and refill the cabbage. Arrange on a folded napkin and garnish with plumes of celery and parsley, the plumes to be in honor of the day. M. A. ORANGE AND LETTUCE SALAD. Select tart, juicy oranges, peel and slice, removing the seeds. Line the bowl with lettuce leaves, arrange the organges on them (using six oranges), dress with a French dressing, using lemon juice in place of vinegar. M. C. 483 SALADS WITHOUT MEATS. CAULIFLOWER SALAD. Remove the leaves from one large cauliflower and boil for one-half hour in water slightly salted. Take out, drain, and divide it into small branches. Arrange in the center of a dish, and garnish with strips of pickled beets. Pour cream dressing or a breakfast-cupful of mayonnaise dressing over and serve quickly with hot cheese wafers. C. A. SURPRISE SALAD. Peel medium-sized tomatoes and empty their contents; now take some cabbage and celery and hash up very fine; add a few broken walnut meats and mix it with mayonnaise dressing; add a pinch of salt and a pinch of red pepper. Fill the tomato with this mixture and serve cold. Use one tomato for each guest. G. P. ONION AND TOMATO SALAD. Take a few firm, ripe tomatoes of medium size, wipe and cut them into one-fourth-inch slices; peel a Spanish onion and slice it very thin Arrange the sliced onion and tomatoes in layers in a salad-bowl and pour over them a plain salad dressing. M. P, DANDELION 5ALAD. Select fresh white dandelion leaves and wash thoroughly in three waters; drain and place in a salad-bowl. Take a pinch of salt, one-half pinch of pepper and one tablespoonful of vinegar, adding one table- spoonful of oil. Mix thoroughly, pour over the salad, and serve. A. T. VEGETABLE SALAD. Take nice fresh lettuce, separate the leaves; after washing thoroughly lay in cold water to crisp; when ready to use wipe dry and spread out on a flat dish. Take some raw tomatoes, peel and slice thinly and lay over the lettuce; then a layer of cucumbers and over this another layer of tomatoes. Onion may be added if desired. Dressing. — Take the yolk of one ^^ -i-^ i % <> • ^^0^ O N O , ■^ •