TX 715 176 | I Imj tracy's "new cook book 1 '?-■' .' '. "■'■" " ' ' . "•■' '■ • ■ ■ ..■.;■■. ■ ' .. Class JIL X H \ 5 Book X- T XG2, GoRiightN COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. PRACTICAL COOK BOOK BY MISS SUZANNE TRACY TEACHER OF COOKERY h SAN FRANCISCO PAYOT. STRATFORD & KERR PRINT 19 8 UBrtARY of GONGrtESS! iwo uooies rttjceivod JUN 27 1^08 QLASSJA- XXc< «** 107 2S7 COlW B. Copyright 1908 Miss Susanne Tracy PREFACE In presenting- these pages to the public, I do so at the earnest solicitation of many of my pupils who would have in book form my recipes and suggestions. I therefore put into print this pamphlet of recipes where the formula is given, followed by the explicit directions of how to put together the ingredients: with such notes and hints as may be of value to the housewife. The directions are not theories, but the fruits of practical experi- ence. The arrangement of the subject-matter is designed to make the book a household reference book that may be depended upon. Soups There are two kinds of soup stock: what is known as clear stock and mixed stock. To make a clear soup we always use fresh meat and bone; the mixed stock being made from bones and pieces of meat left from roasts and cooked meats. As this latter is made from bits of meat and bone left over, no household should be without a stock-pot. Into the stock-pot should go only such meat and bone as is perfectly sweet, the smallest piece of tainted meat will destroy the soup. Stock can be cooked on the back of the stove while other cooking 1 is going on. It should be cooled quickly and not allow T ed to stand on the stove to cool slowly. Stock allowed to cool slowly becomes sour very readily. To prepare soup bone for clear stock remove the outer skin from the meat and bone, wipe carefully with a Avet cloth. (Do not put into a pan of water and wash, as the water draws out the juices, which should be kept for the soup.) Have the butcher break the bone in many pieces. In buying a soup bone buy half meat and half bone. White stock is made from chicken and veal. Allow on<' quart of water to each pound of meat and hone. CLEAR BEEF STOCK. Buy a shin or shank of beef, having half meat and half bone (about five pounds) : remove the skin. Have the butcher break the bone and cut the meat into small pieces; add five quarts of cold water and two teaspoonfuls of salt ; let come to a boil slowly ; place where it will keep just below the boiling point; simmer slowly for six or eight hours, or until the meat falls from the bone; strain and cool quickly; when cold skim off the fat. For beef broth heat the plain beef stock, season with salt, pepper and a little minced parsley, and serve. This is the simplest form of beef soup. BEEF SOUP. Strain the soup stock, after removing the fat, into a kettle; do not allow the sediment to pass. To four quarts of stock add one small onion cut fine, one bay leaf, one stalk of celery, two sprigs of parsley, a small bouqut of sweet herbs, ten pepper corns, and six cloves; boil gently for fifteen minutes; strain through strainer cloth. Serve as a simple beef soup. g PRACTICAL COOK BOOK MIXED STOCK. Cover with cold water the trimmings, tough pieces of meat and bone left from roasts and broils ; allow one teaspoonful of salt for each quart of water; cook slowly for about four hours: then add half an onion, six cloves, six pepper corns, two sprigs of thyme, one bay leaf; simmer for two hours longer: strain and cool quickly. This stock can be used in sauces or served as a simple soup, gar- nished with vegetables or some well-cooked tapioca or sago. CHICKEN STOCK. Select a hen fowl (not as strong flavored as a rooster) ; singe and scrub ; prepare as for roasting, omitting the stuffing : place in a kettle and cover with boiling water; cook slowly until the fowl is tender; remove from broth, cooling the broth quickly: when cold, remove the fat. The chicken may be used for salad, creamed chicken, hash, or served as cold boiled chicken. CHICKEN BROTH. To one quart of chicken broth add four tablespoonfuls of boiled rice and two teaspoonfuls of minced parsley: heat boiling hoi ; sea- son with salt and pepper, and serve BOUILLON. Five pounds of beef, taken from One tablespoonful of minced the round, onion. Two and one-half quarts of cold One small stalk of celery. water, One sprig of parsley, One level teaspoonful of salt. Four cloves and four pepper corns. One carrot. Cut the meat into small pieces; cover with cold water and add the salt: let come to the boiling point slowly: simmer from six to eight hours: add the seasoning and cook one-half-hour longer; strain and cool quickly: next morning remove the fat: heat scalding hot: season with salt and pepper and serve. In making bouillon all the seasoning except salt and pepper may be omitted if preferred. VEGETABLE SOUP. Two quarts of beef stock, One-fourth cupful of barley. One carrot. One onion. One-half medium-sized yellow Two potatoes, small, turnip. Salt and pepper. Two stalks of celery. Cook the barley in one quart of water for two hours ; add the stock and all the vegetables, cut fine, except the potatoes: boil gently for an hour, or until the vegetables are almost tender: then add the potatoes and cook fifteen minutes ; season with salt and pepper. SOL' PS 7 CONSOMME. One quart of chicken or veal Two tablespoonfuls of minced stock. onion. One quart of beef stock. Two cupfuls of carrots, parsnips. Four cloves, and yellow turnip, cut fine. One inch piece each of mace and One-half bay leaf. cinnamon. Four pepper corns. Two eggs. One small stalk of celery. One sprig of parsley. Eind and juice of half a lemon. Brown the vegetables in bacon fat. taking care not to let them burn ; add them and the spices to the stock and cook slowly one and one- half hours: strain and remove the fat ; break the whites and shells of the eggs into one cupful of cold water and mix thoroughly; add to the soup and let come to the boiling point ; add lemon, salt and pepper: cook slowly twenty minutes: strain through a strainer cloth which has been wet in cold water: reheat the soup: garnish each plate with a thin slice of lemon and three allspice berries; serve very hot. MOCK TURTLE SOUP. One calf's head. Four allspiee, Pour quarts cold water. Four pepper corns. One tablespoonful of salt. One blade of mace. One carrot. One chili. ( >ne turnip. One quart brown stock. Two onions. Three eggs. Celery stalk. One lemon, Onedialf inch stick of cinnamon. Two tablespoonfuls of butter. Four cloves. Two tablespoonfuls of flour. Wash, scrape and clean the head and soak an hour or more in cold water: remove the brains and tongue and let stand in cold water to be cooked separately: cut the head in many pieces, put into the kettle : add the cold water and heat slowly : skim thoroughly ; add the salt and simmer three hours, or until the meat slips from the bones: lay the meat fiat on a plate so it can be easily cut when cold: put the bones on to boil again: add the spices and vegetables and simmer until reduced To two quarts; strain and set aside to cool: when cold remove the fat : half an hour before serving put the stock on to boil. In another saucepan brown the butter: add the cornstarch or flour and brown; add one saltspoonful each of ground pepper, thyme or marjoram, and one teaspoonful of salt: add the brown stock and cook until it thickens, add to the soup: cut the face meat into half- inch cubes: add one cup of meat, diced: boil the eggs twenty minutes and cut into slices, or make the yolks into e^^ balls. Make force meat balls with the reserve meat. Put the meat balls and hard-boiled eggs into the tureen: add the soup and serve with slices of lemon, or omit the lemon and add half a cup of sherry wine. g PRACTICAL COOK BOOK VERMICELLI SOUP. Two quarts of beef stock, One cupful of vermicelli, One teaspoonful of salt, One-half saltspoonful of pepper. Dash of cayenne pepper, Cook the vermicelli in boiling water about fifteen minutes ; drain ; heat the stock boiling hot; season with salt and pepper; add the vermicelli, and serve. The vermicelli may be broken or left whole, according to fancy. MACARONI SOUP. One quart of stock, Two sticks of macaroni, One teaspoonful of salt, One-half saltspoonful of pepper. Break the macaroni into small pieces; drop into boiling salted water and cook rapidly until the macaroni is tender; drain and allow the cold water to run over it; cut into one-fourth-inch pieces; heat the stock boiling hot ; season with pepper and salt; add the macaroni, and serve. MULLIGATAWNEY. Fowl, three pounds, One-half teaspoonful of pepper, Two large onions, Veal, three pounds. Three stalks of celery, One small carrot One tablespoonful of curry pow- Four tablespoonfuls of butter, dor. Two teaspoonfuls of salt, Five tablespoonfuls of flour, Five quarts of water. Cut the veal into small pieces; dress the fowl as if for roasting: put into the soup kettle ; add the water ; cover and let come to the boiling point; simmer for four hours, or until the fowl is tender; re- move the fowl from the kettle; put butter or chicken fat into a saucepan; cut vegetables very fine; cook in the butter fifteen minutes; skim the vegetables out of the fat and add them to the soup ; to the fat add the Hour and cook until brown ; then add the curry powder; add the whole to the soup, and cook for two hours; season with salt and pepper, then strain and skim ; remove skin and bone from the chicken ; cut into small pieces ; return the soup to the soup kettle after straining; add the chicken, and simmer gently for thirty minutes; serve with boiled rice. Note. — To skim soup when you cannot allow it to stand until cold. Pour the soup into a bowl just large enough to hold it ; set the bowl on a plate or in another vessel and fill until it runs over; let stand two or three minutes, then slowly pour a little cold water in at one side, and the fat will run over into the plate. SOUPS 9 TOMATO SOUP. One quart can of tomatoes, One tablespoonful of minced pars- One tablespoonful of sugar, ley, Four cloves, One pint of water, One tablespoonful of butter, One pint of soup stock or water, One tablespoonful of minced Four pepper corns, onion, Two teaspoonfuls of salt. One tablespoonful of cornstarch, To the tomatoes add the water, sugar, cloves, and pepper corn; stew slowly until the tomatoes are tender; press through a strainer; remove only the seeds and skin. To the stewed and strained tomatoes add the soup stock or water. Melt the butter in a small pan, add the onion and parsley and cook until lightly browned, then add the corn- starch and cook together ; slowly add one cupful of the stock, stirring until it forms a smooth sauce ; add to the soup and cook fifteen min- utes ; season with salt and pepper, strain, and serve with croutons. CROUTONS. Butter and cut into one-half-inch dice a slice of stale bread one- half inch in thickness ; toast until nicely browned ; serve with soup. FORCE-MEAT BALLS OF COOKED MEAT. One cup of cooked meat, One-half saltspoonful of pepper, One teaspoonful of chopped pars- Yolk of one egg, ley, One tablespoonful of butter, One teaspoonful of lemon juice, One tablespoonful of flour, One-half teaspoonful of salt, A few drops of onion juice. Chop the meat very fine ; add the seasoning ; add the yolk of the egg, beaten, and mix until smooth. Make into balls the size of a nutmeg ; roll in flour ; put butter in omelet pan ; when brown put in the balls and cook until brown; shake the pan occasionally to pre- vent burning. EGG BALLS. Boil three eggs twenty minutes ; put them in cold water and when cool remove the shells ; cut carefully through the white and remove the yolks whole ; cut into quarters and serve in soup, or rub yolks to a smooth paste ; add one teaspoonful of melted butter ; one saltspoon- ful of salt ; a speck of pepper. Moisten with the beaten white or yolk of one raw egg, using enough to shape easily ; shape into balls about the size of a nutmeg ; roll in flour and fry in butter until brown, or drop into the hot soup and cook five minutes. Cream Soups CREAM OF ASPARAGUS. Save the water in which the asparagus has been cooked; make a cream sauce of two tablespoonfuls of butter; two tablespoonfuls of flour, two cupfuls of rich milk and one level teaspoonful of salt ; pu1 the butter into a saucepan and melt ; add the flour and cook together, being careful not to allow it to brown; add the milk cold, stirring constantly until it thickens; then add the water, about one quart; season with salt and pepper, and serve. The tender tips of asparagus may be served in the soup as a garnish. CREAM OF CELERY. Make a celery broth by stewing some tough bits of celery in water until the water is nicely flavored; cook together one tablespoonful of butter and two tablespoonfuls of flour; then add two cupfuls of celery broth, cold; stir until it thickens; add another cupful of the broth and a cupful of rich milk; heat to the boiling point; season with salt and pepper, and serve. CREAM OF SALSIFY OR OYSTER PLANT. Cook together on tablespoonful of butter and one of Hour: add two cupfuls of salsify broth, made by stewing the salsify in water until the water is well flavored; stir constantly until it makes a smooth sauce; add two more cupfuls of the broth and simmer Ave minutes; then add one cupful of milk and half a cupful of cream; heat boiling hot : season to taste, and serve. CREAM OF CHICKEN. 'Two tablespoonfuls of butter, Two tablespoonfuls of Hour. One cupful of milk. One cupful of cream. Three cupfuls of chicken broth. Salt, pepper and celery salt. Cook together the butter and flour; add chicken broth, cold, stir- ring constantly until it thickens: add milk and cream; season to taste; heat boiling hot, and serve. If the broth be added hot, add a little at a time until a smooth sauce is formed, then add more rapidly. CREAM SOUPS 11 CREAM OF TOMATO, OR MOCK BISQUE. One quart can of tomatoes, One and one-half cupfuls of rich Four cloves, milk, One tablespoonful of sugar, Four pepper corns, One tablespoonful of butter, A pinch of soda, One pint of water, One tablespoonful of flour. Stew the tomatoes, water, cloves, pepper corns, sugar and soda together until the tomatoes are tender; then strain, removing the skin and seeds ; cook the butter and flour together ; add the milk cold, stirring constantly until it forms a smooth sauce ; add one pint of the stewed and strained tomatoes; season with pepper, salt and cayenne; heat scalding hot, and serve immediately; if allowed to stand the soup will curdle ; should it curdle beat with a Dover egg-beater until smooth. PUREE OF GREEN PEA. One tablespoonful of butter, Two cupfuls of white stock — One and one half cupfuls of veal or chicken. water, Two tablespoonfuls of flour. Two cupfuls of green peas, Cook the peas in the water until tender ; drain and rub through a sieve ; cook together the butter and flour ; add the stock and stir until thickened ; add the peas and the water in which they have been cooked ; simmer five minutes ; season with salt and pepper, and serve. Note. — To make puree of any vegetable, cook the vegetable until very tender ; rub through a puree sieve, and use to thicken the soup. Alwa} r s use a small quantity of cornstarch, arrow root or flour in puree to keep the vegetable from settling and to make the soup smooth. SPLIT PEA SOUP. One cupful dried split peas, One saltspoonful of white pepper, Three pints of cold water, One tablespoonful of butter, One-half teaspoonful of sugar, One tablespoonful of flour. One teaspoonful of salt, Soak the peas over night in cold water; put on to boil in three pints of fresh cold water and simmer until dissolved; as the water boils away add more, keeping three pints in the kettle; when soft, rub through a strainer; add enough water, stock, milk, or cream to make it the consistency of thin cream ; cook the flour and butter to- gether ; add the salt, pepper and sugar ; add a little of the strained soup, stirring constantly until you have a smooth sauce ; then add to the soup and simmer ten minutes; serve with croutons. It must always be made with flour to hold the peas in solution, otherwise it will separate as it cools. This soup may be varied by cooking a ham-bone with the peas, or 12 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK adding a cup of stewed and strained tomatoes just before serving. One small onion chopped and browned in butter and cooked with the peas gives a delicious flavor. BISQUE OF LOBSTER. Two large cans of lobster. Dash of cayenne pepper, One quart of milk, One pint of water, One teaspoonful of salt. One tablespoonfu] of butter, One saltspoonful of white pepper, Two tablespoonfuls of flour. Cut the tender portions of the lobster into tiny enbes. aboul one cupful; put llic remainder into the water and cook twenty minutes, adding more water as it boils away; cook the flour and butter to- gether, add the milk, and stir until smooth; add the seasonings; strain in the lobster liquor and cook five minutes; put the diced lob- ster into the tureen and strain the boiling soup over them ; serve im- mediately. POTATO SOUP. Three potatoes, One teaspoonful of minced onion, One pint of milk. One stalk of celery. One teaspoonful of salt. One-half saltspoonful white pepper. Oik -half teaspoonful celery salt. Dash of cayenne pepper, One tablespoonful of butter, One-half tablespoonfu] of Hour. Pare the potatoes and soak hall' an hour in cold water; pul them into boiling water and cook until very soft; drain and mash; cook the onion and celery in the milk in double boiler: strain and add to the mashed potato; cook the butter and flour together, stir it into the boiling soup; let it boil five minutes, and serve very hot. The Hour thickening keeps the potato from settling and makes the soup smooth and creamy. If a richer soup is desired, use one quart of milk', and just before serving add two eggs, well beat on. CLAM CHOWDER. Two dozen clams. Six potatoes. One-fourth pound of salt pork, One onion. One tablespoonful of butter, One teaspoonful of salt. One quart of milk. Six crackers. One-half teaspoonful of pepper, Buy the clams in the shell: scrub the shell until clean: put clams into a pan with one cupful of water and cook until the top ones open ; take the clams from the shell and cut off the neck with a pair of scissors; chop the necks tine, leaving the soft part whole; save the clam broth; pare and cut the potatoes into thin slices and soak in cold water one hour; cut the pork in small pieces and fry in a pan; add the onion, chopped tine, and cook until lightly browned; put the sliced potatoes into a kettle; strain the pork fat' into it and FISH 13 add enough boiling water to cover the potatoes; cook until the potatoes are tender, or about ten minutes ; add the clam broth and the same amount of water; add salt and pepper and clams, and lastly add the hot milk and butter; put the crackers into the tureen and pour in the chowder; serve very hot. FISH CHOWDER. Remove the bones from a fresh white fish ; cut the fish into two- inch pieces; cover the bones with water and let simmer for fifteen minutes; proceed the same as for clam chowder, using the water in which the bones have been boiled instead of the clam juice. Fish Fish should be perfectly fresh and thoroughly cooked. In buy i tig, select only those which have firm flesh, clear eyes and the skin and scales bright. If the fish looks limp it is not fit to use. It should be washed quickly, and not allowed to stand in the water. A little salt in the water keeps the flesh firm. Clean the fish as soon as possible, washing it in salt and water; remove the scales by scraping with a small knife, beginning at the tail and working towards the head: split it down the middle and remove the entrails. To skin a fish, cut a thin strip down the backbone, slip the knife under the skin at the lower part and slip it up through the bony part of the gills; hold the bony part and pull the skin off towards the tail ; remove it from the other side in the same way. TO BONE A FISH. Clean the fish; then take a sharp boning knife, and. beginning at the tail, slip the knife between the bone and flesh close to the bone; scrape away the flesh carefully ; scrape the flesh away from the second set of bones and slip the knife under; treat the other side in the same way, then remove the bone, cutting away the dorsal fin. BROILED FISH. Clean and bone the fish ; grease the broiler with a piece of salt pork to keep the fish from sticking; put fish between the broiler and broil over the coals until cooked ; the thickness of the fish will determine the time. j4 PEACTICAL COOK BOOK TO BROIL IN THE OVEN. Clean and bone the fish, grease the fish sheet with salt pork (a fish sheet is a piece of sheet iron or tin) ; place the fish, skin down, upon the sheet; season it with pepper and salt and brush with melted butter; then dust lightly with flour; place on the upper grate of a very hot oven and cook from twenty to thirty minutes, according to the thickness of the fish ; remove from the sheet and put on a hot platter; spread with Maitre d' Hotel sauce, and serve. BOILED FISH. The general rule for boiled fish is to wash in cold water and wipe dry; pin the fish in a piece of strong while cotton cloth to keep it from breaking; cover with boiling water, to which one teaspoonful of salt has been added, and cook gently. Rapid boiling will break the fish. A fish weighing from four to six pounds will require thirty minutes; allow about three minutes longer for cadi additional pound. For boiled white fish a teaspoonful of lemon juice may be added to the water. When the fish is cooked remove from the kettle; drain well; serve on a hot platter garnished with sprigs of parsley. Serve boiled fish with Hollandaise sauce, drawn butter, or egg sauce. BAKED FISH. Scrape and wash the fish; for a fish weighing four to six pounds take three cupfuls of stale bread crumbs, moisten them with three tablespoonfuls of melted butter; add one teaspoonful of salt, one- fourth teaspoonful of pepper, one tablespoonful of minced parsley and one egg beaten light; rub the fish with salt and pepper; put the stuffing into the body of the fish and fasten together with skewers; butter the fish sheet and place the fish upon it, putting il into a bak- ing pan; dredge with pepper, salt and flour; cover the bottom of the pan with hot water; bake in a hot oven about one hour, basting every fifteen minutes; when cooked, remove the sheet from the pan and slip the fish off carefully into a hot platter; pour around it tomato or Hollandaise sauce; garnish with lemon points and sprigs of parsley. FRIED FISH. Fish to be fried should be cleaned, washed and dried ; rub with salt and pepper; roll in flour and cornmeal (half of each) ; then dip in beaten egg (add one tablespoonful of water to each egg), and roll in dry bread crumbs ; fry in very hot fat ; serve very hot, with Beurre Noir poured over it, or serve with sauce tartare. Any kind of fish can be fried in the same way, cutting large fish into serving pieces. Note. — For temperature of fat see article "Fat for Frying." FISH • 15 SALT CODFISH. Wash and soak in cold water over night ; change the water and cook slowly until it comes to the boiling- point; set back where it will not boil, but keep hot for about half an hour ; pick over and remove all skin and bones ; it is then ready to be made into different dishes. CREAMED CODFISH. One tablespoonful of butter. One tablespoonful of flour, One and one-half cupfuls of milk, One-fourth teaspoonful of pepper. Two cupfuls of cooked codfish, i Cook the butter and Hour together; add the milk cold, stir con- stantly until thickened; add the fish and pepper; simmer five min- utes ; serve on toast. Note. — Any cold white fish may be used instead, of cod. The addi- tion of one teaspoonful of minced parsley gives a good flavor. CODFISH BALLS. One cupful raw codfish, One teaspoonful of butter, Four medium-sized potatoes, One-fourth saltspoonful of pepper. One egg, Wash, pare and cut the potatoes into quarters ; let stand in cold water; wash the fish and pick into half-inch pieces; remove the bones ; put the potatoes and fish into a kettle, cover with boiling water and cook until potatoes are soft, about twenty-five minutes; drain off all the water; mash and beat until very light; add the butter and pepper, and when slightly cooled add the egg" and more salt if needed; shape in a tablespoon; fry in hot fat until a golden brown; use a frying basket and fry only four or five at a time ; more will cool the fat. The fat should be hot enough to brown a piece of raw potato in forty seconds. Drain on soft paper and serve immediately. FISH SOUFFLE. Prepare the fish as for fish balls ; add one-fourth of a cup of cream and two eggs beaten separately. Bake in a moderate oven about twenty-five minutes. FISH BALLS. One cupful of cold cooked fish, Two cupfuls of mashed potatoes, One egg, Two tablespoonfuls of milk. Two tablespoonfuls of melted Pepper and salt. butter, Mix the fish and potato together; moisten with butter, milk and egg; season to taste; shape into balls and cook in hot fat three minutes. Note. — If cold mashed potato is used, heat the potato and add milk enough to moisten it. 16' PRACTICAL TOOK BOOK ESCALLOPED FISH. One cupful of cold cooked fish. One tablespoonful of butter, One tablespoonful of flour, One cupful of milk. One-half cupful of stale bread Pepper and salt. crumbs, Cook butter and Hour together; add milk cold and stir until it thickens ; add one-half teaspoonful of salt and one-fourth teaspoonful of pepper. Butter baking dish; put a layer of fish in the bottom, then a layer of while sauce, another layer of fish and another layer of white sauce; cover the top with bread crumbs moistened with melted butter; bake in a moderate oven about twenty minutes, or until the crumbs are nicely browned. FRIED FISH ROES. Wash the roes and cook ten minutes in boiling water, having added one teaspoonful of salt and one tablespoonful of lemon juice or vinegar; then plunge into cold water; drain; roll in bread crumbs, then in beaten egg. then in seasoned bread crumbs, and fry in hot fat until brown. FISH CROQUETTES. One pint of cold cooked fish, One egg, One pint of hot mashed potatoes, One-fourth teaspoonful of pepper, One-half cupful of hot milk, One teaspoonful of salt. One tablespoonful of butter, One teaspoonful of minced parsley. Mix all the ingredients thoroughly and set aside to cool; when cold shape into balls; roll in fine bread crumbs; dip in beaten eu:i: to which one tablespoonful of water has been added ; roll again in bread crumbs; fry in hot fat; serve at once. All work except frying may be done the previous day. FRIED FROGS' LEGS. Skin and wash the legs in cold water; dry them well on a towel; season with salt, pepper and lemon juice; roll in fine dried bread crumbs ; dip in beaten egg, again into fine bread crumbs ; plunge in boiling fat and cook five minutes; use a wire frying basket: serve very hot with tartare sauce. SALMON ON TOAST. Drain off part of the oil from a can of salmon ; heat the fish, adding one-fourth cup of water; season with salt and pepper; make a cream sauce of one tablespoonful of butter, one tablespoonful of flour, one cup of milk; lay the salmon on the toast and pour over it the hot cream sauce ; garnish with parsley and slices of lemon. Oysters Oysters served on the half shell should be opened just before serving. Six, on a large plate, with half of a lime in the center, should be served to each person. OYSTER COCKTAIL. Two tablespoonfuls of California Three tablespoonfuls of tomato oysters, catsup, One tablespoonful of lemon or One-fourth teaspoonful Worcester lime juice, shire sauCe, Pinch of salt, One or two drous of tobasco sauce. Have all the ingredients cold; mix the catsup, lime juice, Worces- tershire sauce, salt and tobasco sauce together ; put the oysters in the glass and pour over the sauce ; serve in punch or champagne glasses. PANNED OYSTERS. One tablespoonful of butter, Two dozen Eastern oysters, One-fourth teaspoonful of salt, Half a saltspoonful of pepper. Melt the butter in an omelet pan or chafing dish ; add the salt and pepper and then the oysters; cook until the edges curl and the oysters become plump ; serve on toast. OYSTER STEW. Two dozen large oysters, or Pepper and salt, three dozen smail ones, One tablespoonful of butter. One quart of milk, Finger the oysters carefully and remove any pieces of shell ; scald the milk in double boiler ; cook the oysters in their own liquor until the edges curl; then add the milk and butter; season to taste; serve with crackers. OYSTER PATTIES. Heat patty cases and fill with creamed oysters. CREAMED OYSTERS. One can of Eastern oysters or One blade of mace, fifty California oysters, One tablespoonful of butter, One pint of cream or rich. milk, One tablespoonful of flour. Put the oysters in a saucepan and cook in their own liquor until plump ; put the cream and mace in double boiler and heat scalding Ig PRACTICAL COOK BOOK hot; cook butter and flour together; remove the mace and add the hot cream slowly to the butter and flour; season with salt and pepper ; add the cooked oysters, and serve. OYSTERS A LA POULETTE. Cook one quart of oysters in their own liquor until they boil; when they begin to boil, strain; cook together one tablespoonful of butter and one tablespoonful of flour; add one cup to the oyster liquid and stir until a smooth sauce is formed ; add one pint of cream, one level teaspoonful of salt, one-half saltspoonful of white pepper, dash of cayenne pepper and a slight grating of nutmeg; beat the yolks of four eggs: add one-half cup of cold cream; add the oysters to the cooking mixture and then the beaten yolks of the eggs; cook two or three minutes, stirring all the time; serve im- mediately with puff paste cakes or crackers. If liked, a tablespoonful of lemon juice may be added just as the oysters arc taken from the fire. ESCALLOPED OYSTERS. Moisten stale bread crumbs with melted butter, and season with salt and pepper; butter the baking dish; put a layer of bread crumbs in the bottom and then a layer of oysters, another layer of crumbs and another layer of oysters; cover the whole with the crumbs and bake in a moderate oven about twenty minutes, or until the crumbs are nicely browned. Note. — For escalloped oysters a shallow dish or platter should be used, allowing only two layers of oysters to each dish. If more are used the upper and under layers will be overcooked while the inner ones may be underdone. Meats — Boiling All fresh meats to be boiled should be plunged into boiling water and allowed to boil rapidly for ten or fifteen minutes, to coagulate the albumen and thus close the pores, keeping in the juices of the meat. After the meat has boiled for ten minutes place it where it will just simmer, until tender. Meat that boils rapidly will be stringy. HAM. Scrub a ham with a brush until perfectly clean; then place it in a large kettle with cold water and let it come to the boiling point ; simmer gently until tender — it requires about twenty minutes to STEWING 19 the pound — let it stand in the water until cold, then remove the skin ; roll in fine bread crumbs ; stick the fat parts with whole cloves and bake in a moderate oven about half an hour. TONGUE. Cook slowly in boiling water until tender — about five or six hours — then plunge into cold water and peel off the skin. For salt tongue, soak over night and cover with cold water instead of boiling water when putting on to cook. CORNED BEEF. Wash and cover with cold water ; simmer slowly five or six hours, or until tender ; let stand in the water in which it was boiled if it is to be served cold. To press corned beef, remove the bones after it is cooked and put it under a heavy weight. NEW ENGLAND DINNER. Six pounds of corned beef, One small white turnip, One pound of salt pork, One small yellow turnip, Two or three beets, Six or eight medium-sized pota- Two carrots, toes of uniform size. One head of cabbage, Wash and soak the corned beef and pork in cold water ; put it on to boil in fresh cold water; simmer until it is tender; remove from the kettle and skim the liquor ; wash and pare the turnips and carrots and cut into inch slices ; cut the cabbage into quarters and wash care- fully ; put the carrots, turnips and cabbage into the boiling liquor and cook until tender ; pare and add the potatoes half an hour before serving time ; cook the beets in a separate kettle ; remove the skin, cut in half-inch slices ; when the vegetables are cooked, drain ; put the beef and pork in the center of a large platter ; serve the carrots, potatoes and turnips around the edge, with the cabbage and beets in separate dishes; the beets can be cooked the day before and covered with vinegar, serving them as pickled beets ; always cook the beets in a separate kettle ; the corned beef may be cooked the day before and pressed, saving the liquor for cooking the vegetables. Stewing CHICKEN STEW. Singe, draw, wash and cut the chicken, at the joints, into serving pieces ; cover with boiling water ; add one teaspoonful of salt and half a saltspoonful of pepper; simmer until tender; remove all the large bones and put the chicken, on toast, on a large platter; cook •2() PRACTICAL cooK BOOK together one tablespoonful of butter and two tablespoonfuls of flour; add one and one-half cupfuls of cold milk and stir until smooth ; add the chicken broth gradually; season with pepper and salt and celery salt; pour the hot sauce over the chicken and toast, and serve Tf you wish to serve dumplings with the chicken stew, ten minutes before the chicken is cooked let the liquid boil up. then put in the dumplings. When serving dumplings omit the toast. CHICKEN FRICASSEE. Cut the chicken as for stew; brown in hot butter before stewing; make a brown gravy by browning the butter before adding the gravy; serve on toast. LAMB FRICASSEE. Two pounds breast of lamb or One onion. mutton, Cut the lamb in small pieces; dredge with salt and flour and brown in drippings; cut the onion tine and brown in fat; add to the meat; put in a stewpan and cover with boiling water; simmer until the bones slip out; remove the bones; strain the liquor and skim off the fat; when the liquor boils again add the meat, pepper and salt ; then add one quart of green peas or one pint of cooked rice, and simmer fifteen minutes. VEAL STEW. Cut the veal into small pieces; cover with boiling water; add one- half teaspoonful of salt and one small onion, browned; simmer until veal is tender; add four potatoes, cut in thick slices; cook together one tablespoonful of butter and two of Hour; add one cupful of cold milk; stir until smooth; add the veal broth gradually; remove bones Prom veal and simmer all together for five minutes, then serve. Beef and mutton stew are made in the same way. For stewing, the cheapest and toughest meat is used; by long, slow cooking it becomes tender. CURRY OF RABBIT. Cut the rabbit into serving pieces; brown in hot butter; remove from the butter and put into stew kettle: add one large onion, cut into slices; cook one tablespoonful of flour and one of curry powder in the butter in which the rabbit was browned; add one cupful of water or stock and stir until thickened; then add one cupful of strained tomatoes, one teaspoonful of sugar and pepper and salt to taste: pour this over the rabbit and stew until tender: add a cupful of milk; heat boiling hot; serve with boiled rice. Broiling Broiling is the most perfect way of cooking meat and fish. There are three ways of broiling, — what is known as broiling proper, pan broiling and oven broiling. Broiling proper is to broil directly over the coals ; the fire must be hot, clear and free from smoke. For meat it must be hotter than for fish. Pan broiling is cooking upon a smoking hot griddle. Oven broiling is cooking in a very hot oven. The most delicious results are obtained by broiling steaks, chops, young chickens, squab, etc., directly over the glowing coals. Charcoal is best for broiling, but hard wood, coal or gas may be used, provided it is free from smoke. The point to be remembered in broiling is to have the fire, griddle or oven hot enough to instantly sear the outer surface of the meat. The best cuts of steak make the most delicious broils, tenderness being one of the essential qualities. It must be remembered, how- ever, that a second-class cut of steak taken from a first-class bullock will make a much better broil than a first class cut taken from a second-class beef. When selecting beef see that it has a thick rim of fat, that the lean is well marbled with fat and is of a bright red color after being exposed to the air for a short time. STEAKS. Have steak cut thick — two inches is the proper thickness for a steak ; it should never be cut less than one inch. Trim off the suet ; put between a double broiler and place it as close to the coals as possible ; allow it to cook for about a minute, or until the under side is Avell seared, then turn and sear the other side ; remove a little dis- tance from the coals and cook from fifteen to twenty minutes, turn- ing constantly. A steak that is broiled perfectly should be puffed out in the center and should be of a delicate pink color throughout. Serve immediately on a warm platter ; garnish with sprigs of parsley or watercress. PAN BROILING. To pan broil a steak, have the griddle smoking hot ; rub with fat ; place the steak on the griddle and press close ; let it cook one minute ; then, with a knife, loosen from the griddle and turn; sear the other side; reduce the heat slightly and cook from fifteen to twenty min- utes, turning very frequently ; do not prick the steak with a fork or 22 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK the juice will escape. The steak can be easily turned with two knives by slipping- one under the steak and assisting to turn with the other. Broiled steak is served as soon as taken from the fire, sea- soned with pepper and salt. Maitre d' Hotel sauce is sometimes served with broiled steak. TIME FOR BROILING STEAKS. Steak two inches in thickness requires from fifteen to twenty minutes; one and one-half inches, from twelve to fifteen minutes; and one inch, from eight to ten minutes. LAMB AND MUTTON CHOPS. Remove the outer skin and all the suel from the chops; broil over the coals or on a hot griddle: serve with tomato sauce and season with salt and pepper; garnish with parsley. Note. — Before cooking lamb or mutton always remove the skin. It is in the skin that the disagreeable flavor exists. BROILED CHICKEN. Only very young chickens should be broiled. Singe and draw the chickens, picking out all pin-feathers; split down the hack; clean and wipe with wet towel; break the joints; sprinkle with salt and pepper; grease a double broiler; turn the inside of the chicken to the fire first ; turn frequently, being careful the lire is not too hot; broil about twenty minutes, or until the bird is tender and nicely browned; spread with softened butter and serve on a warm plate; garnish with parsley or watercress. Roasting Roasting and baking are now synonymous terms. We speak of roasting meats and baking breads, yet we use the same oven for both. Roasting formerly meant to place the meat on a spit before the open fire, turn it frequently and baste constantly to keep from burning. Roasting to-day means to bake in a hot oven. ROAST BEEF. There are seven prime ribs in a beef. Any of them will make a first-class roast. Do not have the ribs removed, but have them cut in two-inch pieces up to the thick muscle; cut these pieces of bone off, to be braised and served as short ribs of beef ; place the cut sur- face of the roast on a smoking hot griddle and press close; let cook for BOASTING 23 two or three minutes, or until it is nicely seared ; turn and sear the other side ; set the roast, resting upon the edges of the ribs, on a rack in a dripping pan ; put into an oven hot enough to bake bread, and let cook ; do not season the meat and do not put water in the pan ; when the oven is at the proper temperature you will hear a gentle sputter- ing when the oven door is opened — if smoke issues from the oven it is too hot — if you do not hear a gentle sputtering increase the tem- perature. The time required for roasting depends upon the thickness of the roast ; fifteen minutes is allowed for each inch in thickness ; a roast four inches in thickness will cook rare in one hour; measure across the thickest part of a roast. A rump roast is seared in the same way and placed upon a rack in a hot oven ; allow fifteen min- utes to the pound. YORKSHIRE PUDDING. Two-thirds of a cupful of flour, One pint of milk, Three eggs, One teaspoonful of salt. Sift the flour and measure ; add the salt ; separate the eggs and add the yolks, unbeaten, to the flour; add a little of the milk and mix to a smooth paste ; add the rest of the milk gradually ; beat whites of the eggs to a stiff froth and stir into the batter ; pour into the roast- ing pan forty-five minutes before the roast is cooked ; serve hot with the roast of beef; if the roast is very fat pour some of the fat from the pan before putting in the pudding. BRAISED BEEF OR POT ROAST. Six or eight pounds chuck roast or a piece of the rump; trim and rub with pepper and salt ; cut a large onion into dice and brown in salt pork fat; put the roast into a braising pan; pour over it one quart of boiling water; add the onion; cover closely and cook in a moderate oven about four hours, turning after two hours, and add more water as it evaporates, so as to have three cups of gravy ; when tender take up the meat ; skim off the fat from the gravy and thicken with a tablespoonful or flour wet in a little cold water and strained into the gravy ; season with pepper and salt and a little lemon juice. VEAL HEART. Remove the tough membranes and soak in cold water and salt one hour ; wipe and stuff with stale bread crumbs seasoned with salt and pepper and moistened with melted butter; rub the heart with salt, pepper and dredge with flour ; fry brown in a pan with a little fat salt pork; place in braising kettle; add one pint of water, one tea- spoonful of minced onion ; sprig of parsley, three cloves, three pepper corns, one small carrot cut fine ; cover tightly and cook two hours in a moderately hot oven ; turn three or four times while cooking. 94 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK ROAST LAMB OR MUTTON. Remove the skin from a leg of lamb or mutton ; sear the cut sur- faces on a hot griddle ; place on a rack in a roasting pan in a hot oven. A leg of lamb will roast in one hour and a quarter, while it requires one hour and three-quarters to roast a medium-sized leg of mutton. ROAST VEAL. Veal being a dry meat, requires basting to keep it moist and to enrichen it; rub the veal with sugar, salt and pepper, using one-half as much sugar as salt; place upon rack in roasting pan and let cook in a hot oven until nicely browned, then baste with a thin gravy made from one tablespoon i'ul of butter, one of flour and two cupfuls of stock or water; season with pepper and salt; baste every fifteen minutes; veal requires longer cooking than either beef or mutton; a five-pound roast will cook in two and one-half hours. PORK. Fresh pork is seasoned with pepper, salt and sugar. Roast and baste the same as veal. Poultry and Game TO DRAW POULTRY. All poultry should be dressed as soon as killed; the feathers come out more easily while the fowl is warm; strip them off toward the head; remove the pin-feathers with a knife; singe the hairs by hold- ing it over the gas jet or a piece of lighted paper; cut off the head; turn the skin back and cut off the neck close to the body; remove the windpipe and crop; to remove the feet, cut the skin just below the leg joint ; break the joint; with a skewer pull out the tendons; cut away the oil bag in the tail ; make an incision under the side bone near the tail large enough to insert two fingers; slip the fingers around the entrails; separating the membrane; when everything is loosened, get the fingers around the heart and pull out the entrails; then take out the lungs and kidneys; when everything is removed hold the fowl under the faucet and rinse well, then wipe dry. TO CLEAN GIBLETS. Remove the outside sack from the heart ; cut open and press out the clot of blood ; cut off the gall bladder from the liver, being care- ful not to break it. and cut away any discolored part of the liver; POULTRY AND GAME 25 open the thick part of the gizzard and take out the inner sack with- out breaking; wash giblets and put into cold water; simmer until tender ; cook the neck with the giblets. TO TRUSS POULTRY. Draw the thighs up close to the body and pass a skewer through the thigh and into the body and out through the other thigh; pass another skewer through the wings, fastening them close to the body ; fold the skin at the neck over and pin it to the back with a skewer; cross the legs over the tail and tie with a stout twine, leav- ing two long ends ; pass the twine around the tail, bring it up, cross- ing in front and passing around -the skewer in the thighs; cross in the back and fasten around the skewer through the wings and tie firmly. ROAST TURKEY. Singe, draw, wash and wipe; stuff the body and neck with stale bread crumbs moistened with melted butter and seasoned with pepper, salt and celery salt ; truss and rub with butter ; lay the turkey, breast down, on the rack in the roasting pan ; put into a hot oven and cook until the back of the turkey is nicely browned, then turn it over and brown breast ; pour one pint of water into the pan after the turkey is browned ; baste every fifteen minutes, or when- ever the skin becomes very dry; allow about twenty-five minutes to the pound for roasting ; if the turkey browns too rapidly cover the breast with a heavy paper well buttered. Oysters or chopped celery may be added to the stuffing if desired. ROAST CHICKEN. Prepare the same as roast turkey; allow twenty minutes to the pound for roasting. ROAST DUCK. Many people prefer young ducks served rare ; when so liked, they are not stuffed. Pick, singe, draw and wash the duck; wipe, truss and dredge with salt, pepper and flour; roast in a hot oven about thirty minutes. Full-grown domestic ducks should be roasted about one hour and basted every ten minutes. Make a giblet gravy and serve with a grape or currant jelly. Ducks and geese have a strong flavor, and are improved by stuff- ing the body with apples or onions or coarse bits of celery, which absorb the flavor and should not be eaten. 26 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK ROAST WILD DUCK. Nearly all wild ducks have a strong' or fishy flavor. To lessen this flavor put an onion cut in two into the body of the bird, and let stand some hours before cooking. (Mean the same as poultry and wipe both inside and out with a damp towel; tuck back the wings and truss the legs close to the body: rub with salt, pepper, butter and flour: place in a baking pan and add one cup of boiling water; roast twenty-five to thirty-five minutes in a hot oven, basting occasionally with butter; serve very hot. with slices of lemon or currant jelly. Frying Prying is cooking in hot fat deep enough to entirely cover the articles to be cooked. When food is properly tried the fat is hot enough to instantly sear the outer surface and thus prevent it soak- ing into the food. All food to be fried should be thoroughly dried; if water should drop into the hot fat it would cause the fat to boil over, and there is danger of it taking- fire and causing greal trouble. Food that does not contain sufficient albumen to form a coating on the outside as soon as immersed into the hot fat should be rolled in crumbs, then in egg and again in crumbs to form a grease-proof covering. A frying-basket, or a wire basket with a long handle, is very convenient for frying purposes. In many cook books we read, "heat the fat smoking hot." That depends entirely upon the kind of fat yon are using; lard will smoke at a much lower temperature than oil. When fat smokes it loses some of its browning properties; never let fat heat without putting a small piece of raw potato into it. As soon as the potato begins to brown drop in a fresh piece of potato; if it browns in one minute the fat is hot enough to fry potatoes and dough mixtures. For such food as we roll in bread crumbs and egg the fat should be hot enough to brown a bit of bread in forty seconds. The best fat for frying purposes is a mixture of beef suet and oil. as both these fats can be heated to a much higher temperature with- out smoking than lard. Olive oil is the purest fat for frying, but is too expensive for general use. For frying the same fat can be used several times if properly cared for. The most delicate croquettes can be fried in the same fat with fish and not be marred in flavor. When frying several different kinds of food at the same time, begin with potatoes, then dough mix- tures and lastly articles rolled in crumbs. FRYING 27 When finished with the fat drop three or four slices of raw potato into it ; cool slightly, and strain through a fine strainer or a strainer cloth. FRENCH FRIED POTATOES. Pare the potatoes and cnt in strips one-half inch in thickness ; let stand in cold water one honr ; heat the fat hot enough to brown a thin slice of potato in one minute; wipe the potatoes; put into the frying basket and lower into the hot fat ; do not put a large quantity of potatoes in at one time, as they will lower the temperature of the fat and the potatoes will be soggy and greasy. When the potatoes are nicely browned lift from the fat and shake free from grease ; turn onto a piece of cheese cloth to absorb the fat ; dust lightly with salt, and serve immediately. French fried potatoes should be crisp and mealy. If they stand they become soggy. SARATOGA CHIPS. Pare the potatoes and slice very thin ; let them stand in cold water two or three hours ; wipe dry ; fry in fat hot enough to brown in one minute ; when nicely browned remove the basket and shake well ; turn chips onto cheese cloth or soft paper; dust well with salt. LAMB CHOPS BREADED. Trim the chops and remove the skin ; season with salt and pepper ; roll in fine bread crumbs ; dip in beaten egg* and roll again in bread crumbs; fry in hot fat. For a chop one inch in thickness it will re- quire six minutes to cook rare and from eight to ten to cook well done. Note. — One tablespoonful of water added to beaten egg makes a more elastic coating for fried food. FRIED CHICKEN. Cut the chicken into ten pieces ; season with pepper and salt ; roll in fine bread crumbs ; dip in beaten egg ; roll in crumbs, and fry in fat hot enough to brown a piece of bread in one minute. A young chicken will cook in ten minutes. Serve with sauce tartare or cream sauce ; garnish the dish with sprigs of parsley. Note. — For fried fish, see article on Fish. CROQUETTES. In making croquettes the material must be chopped fine, well mixed, and seasoned delicately. The shaping of croquettes can readily be acquired by a little practice and care. They are formed into cone, ball and cylindrical shapes. 28 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK To Shape. — Take a tablespoonful of the mixture, roll gently be- tween the hands into a ball; have a board well sprinkled with fine dry bread crumbs and roll the croquette \erv gently on this into shape; dip into beaten egg, to which one tablespoonful of water has been added; water added to the 1 egg makes a more elastic coating than e^'u' alone; after dipping the croquette into the egg roll it again in the bread crumbs mid then fry in fat hot enough to brown a piece of bread in forty seconds; cook until nicely browned — it will re- quire about two minutes; shake free from fat and lay on cheese cloth or soft brown paper. CHICKEN CROQUETTES. One pint of conked chicken, One teaspoonful of minced parsley, chopped tine, Pepper and salt to taste, One tablespoonful of butter, One teaspoonful of lemon juice, Two tablespoonf uls of flour, One teaspoonful of minced onion. One cupful of cream, Cook together the butter and Hour: add the cream, and stir con- stantly until it thickens; season the chicken with pepper, salt, onion, lemon juice and parsley; add to the white sauce and mix thoroughly; spread on a buttered plate and set away to cool ; when cold shape into croquettes; roll in bread crumbs, dip in egg, and roll again in crumbs, and fry in hot fat; drain on cheese cloth, and serve gar- nished with lemon points and sprigs of parsley. SWEETBREAD CROQUETTES. Two sweetbreads, One cup of cream. One tablespoonful of butter, One teaspoonful of lemon juice, Two tablespoonfuls of (loin-. Pepper and salt to taste. Cover the sweetbreads with cold water and salt; let stand two or three hours; cover with boiling water; add lemon juice and cook until tender; remove the tubes and membranes, and. with a silver fork, separate into small pieces; cook together the butter and flour; add the cream or rich milk and cook until thickened; add the sweet- breads; season to taste; spread on a buttered plate and set aside to cool; shape into croquettes; roll in fine bread crumbs; dip in egg and roll in crumbs again ; fry in hot fat until nicely browned. ROYAL CROQUETTES. Royal croquettes are made by using half chicken and half sweet- breads. POTATO CROQUETTES. Six medium-sized potatoes, Whites of two eggs, One tablespoonful of butter. One tablespoonful of minced Salt and pepper to taste, parsley. Two-thirds of a cupful of milk, FRYING 2<) Pare, boil and mash potatoes; add the butter, milk and seasonings; let cool slightly, then shape; roll in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry. RICE CROQUETTES. One and one-half cupfuls of Half a teaspoonful of salt, boiled rice, Two eggs, Three-fourths of a cupful of One tablespoonful of sugar. milk, One tablespoonful of butter. Cover the rice with the milk; add the sugar, butter and salt; let boil three minutes ; add the eggs, well beaten, and cook one minute ; set aside to cool; when cold, shape, roll in crumbs, egg and crumbs; fry and serve very hot. OTHER CROQUETTES. Mutton, veal, lamb, beef or any kind of cooked meat or fish may be substituted in place of chicken, and prepared in the same way; or. take one cupful of finely chopped meat and add to it one-half cupful of stale bread crumbs; moisten with one-third cupful of cream and one egg; season with pepper, salt and a little onion juice; drop by spoonful into hot fat; fry until nicely browned. TIMBALES. One-half cupful of flour, One egg, One-half cupful of milk, One-fourth teaspoonful of salt. Put the ingredients together in a bowl and beat with Dover egg- beater until smooth; heat timbal iron in hot fat (the fat should be hot enough to brown a piece of potato in one minute) ; dip hot iron in batter; return to the fat and cook until nicely browned; drain on soft paper. FRITTER BATTER. One cupful of flour. One saltspoonful of salt, Two tablespoonfuls of sugar, One egg, One teaspoonful of baking pow- One-third of a cupful of milk, der, Mix the flour, sugar, salt and baking-powder together; add the egg. beaten light, and the milk ; beat until light and smooth ; drop by spoonful into very hot fat; sprinkle with sugar, and serve with maple syrup or lemon sauce. APPLE FRITTERS. Pare and core two large tart apples; cut into slices about one- third of an inch in thickness ; drop into the fritter batter and fry about five or six minutes in very hot deep fat ; serve hot with lemon sauce. 30 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK FRUIT FRITTERS. Bannas, oranges, pineapple, peaches, etc., arc used for fritters; cut into small pieces or slice's and add to the fritter batter; fry in deep fat heated very hot. CHICKEN FRITTERS Cut cold boiled or roast chicken into small pieces; season with salt. pepper and a tablespoonful of lemon juice for each pint of chicken; make a batter as for "Batter Fritters," omitting the sugar; stir the chicken into the batter; drop by spoonful into very hot fat; drain and serve immediately; any tender meat may be substituted for chicken. OYSTER FRITTERS. Prepare the fritter batter, omitting the sugar; for large oysters drain and dip into the batter, and try in very hot fat ; if the oysters are small drain and add one cupful of oysters to one cupful of bat- ter; drop by spoonfuls in hot fat and fry until nicely browned; drain on cheese cloth or soft paper, and serve hot. FRIED MUSH. Cut cold mush into slices three-quarters of an inch in thickness; roll in cornmeal and flour (equal parts) ; dip in beaten egg, to which one tablespoonful of cold water has been added; roll in cornmeal and flour and fry in hot fat ; drain on cheese (doth and serve hot. CHEESE BALLS. One ;iinl one-halt' eupfuls of Dash of cayenne pepper. grated cheese, Whites of three eggs. One-fourth teaspoonful of salt, Bea1 the coos until stiff: add the salt, pepper and grated cheese; shape into small balls about the size of a walnut; roll in fine bread crumbs, then in beaten coo, ;ni( i again in bread crumbs; fry in hot fat. and serve with salad. CRULLERS. One-fourth of a cupful of butter. Two eggs, One cupful of sugar, Two teaspoonfuls of baking pow- Two eupfuls of flour, der, One-half level teaspoonful of One cupful of milk, nutmeg, Three drops of almond extract. Cream the butter ; add the sugar and egg yolks and cream to- gether ; add the flour and milk alternately; sift the baking-powder and nutmeg with the flour; beat the whites of the eggs stiff and add FRYING 31 to the mixture ; then add the flavoring' ; roll very thin ; cut into shape ; fry in deep fat heated very hot; cook until nicely browned; roll in powdered sugar and cinnamon . DOUGHNUTS. One cupful of sugar, Two teaspooufuls of cream tartar, One egg, One cupful of sweet milk, One-half teaspoonful of ginger, One teaspoonful of soda, Grating of nutmeg, One tablespoonful of melted but- Enough flour to make a dough, ter. Beat the eggs ; add the sugar, and beat together ; mix the cream tartar with one cupful of flour and add to the egg and sugar; dis- solve the soda in the milk, and add gradually to the egg and sugar; add the butter, mix the ginger and nutmeg with the flour and add enough to make a soft dough; let stand over night, or several hours, before frying; roll a piece of the dough into a sheet half an inch in thickness; cut into shape and fry in deep fat; cut all the doughnuts before frying, as the frying will require your full attention; the fat should be hot enough to brown a piece of potato in one minute. Sauteing is cooking food in a small quantity of fat. Butter, when clarified, is the most satisfactory for some things, as it browns nicely and gives a delicious flavor to the food, but lard or drippings may be used. CLARIFIED BUTTER. To clarify butter, let it boil gently for about a minute — the salt will settle to the bottom ; the scum which rises to the top should be skimmed off, leaving the oil clear. MUSH. Cut cold mush into thin slices; cook on a griddle buttered with clarified butter until nicely browned. FRIED APPLES. Cut tart apples in thin slices; dust lightly with flour, and fry in clarified butter until nicely browned; serve with liver, breakfast bacon or pork chops. VEAL CUTLETS. Rub the chops with salt, sugar and pepper ; dredge with flour ; heat one tablespoonful of clarified butter or drippings in the spider; brown the chops nicely on both sides; add two tablespoonfuls of 32 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK water; cover the spider closely and let simmer ten minutes; serve on a hot platter; add one-fourth of a cupful of sweet milk to the gravy in the spider, and serve with the chops. PORK CHOPS. Season and cook the same as veal cutlets; veal and pork require long; and thorough cooking. HAMBURG STEAKS. One pound of round steak chopped very fine; one tablespoonful of minced onion; pepper and salt to taste: mix the meat and seasonings thoroughly together; shape into cakes aboul three-fourths of an inch in thickness; grease the griddle or spider well ; brown nicely on both sides: cook about five minutes, and serve. CALF'S LIVER. Cut in slices one-half inch in thickness; dust with pepper and sail and roll in flour: cook in bacon fat until nicely browned ; serve with breakfast bacon or fried apples, or cover the liver with boiling water and let stand five minutes; season with pepper and salt : roll in Hour and fry in bacon fat or clarified butter. Salads Salads, to be palatable, should always be crisp and fresh and served icy cold. It is upon its crispness and the proper mingling and selection of ingredients that its success depends ; when lettuce is to be used it must be washed carefully, taking care not to break the leaves. The large dark leaves are not nice for salad. Of celery only the white crisp parts are used, the green, tough parts being utilized for soups and stews. All fresh vegetables to be used for salads should stand in ice water until just before serving time. Vegetable salads are served after the meat course at dinner — a rich salad, such as lobster, chicken, sweetbread, etc., is out of place at a heavy meal. These latter are best served at lunches or suppers. In arranging a salad on a dish or in a bowl, handle it very gently; do not press it into form. The garnishings should be of the freshest and crispest kind. SALADS :>:; MAYONNAISE DRESSING. Yolks of two eggs, One level teaspoonful of salt, One level teaspoonful of sugar, One pint of olive oil, One-half level teaspoonful of dry Juice of one lemon, mustard, Two tablespoonfuls of vinegar. When making mayonnaise, have utensils and ingredients very cold; a Dover egg-beater or a fork may be used; beat the yolks of the eggs until very creamy ; add the seasonings and beat again ; then add the oil very slowly until the mixture thickens ; when it gets too thick to beat add one tablespoonful of lemon juice or vinegar ; then more oil until it again thickens, then more lemon or vinegar, and con- tinue until the full amount is used. A cup of whipped cream added to the dressing just before using improves the flavor; the whipped whites of the eggs added will increase the bulk. FRENCH DRESSING. One tablespoonful of sharp vine- One-fourth of a teaspoonful of sail , gar, One-half saltspoonful of pepper. Three tablespoonfuls of olive oil. Mix the vinegar, salt, pepper and oil together and beat with a fork until the oil and vinegar unite. This dressing may be made at the table, and the salad dressed just before serving. COOKED MAYONNAISE DRESSING. Four egg yolks and one whole Six tablespoonfuls of vinegar, egg, One generous teaspoonful of butter. Heat the vinegar scalding hot; beat the eggs until creamy; pour the hot vinegar over the beaten eggs; cook over boiling water, stir- ring constantly until it thickens, then add the butter; season accord- ing to the salad to be served. CREAM DRESSING. One tablespoonful of butter. One cupful of- rieh milk. Two tablespoonfuls of flour, Four tablespoonfuls of vinegar or One-half of a cupful of cream, lemon juice. Melt the butter; add flour and cook together; add milk and stir until thickened; add gradually the vinegar and when cold stir in the cream. CHICKEN SALAD. Remove the skin and bone from a cold boiled or roast chicken; cut into half-inch dice ; to one quart of diced chicken add two table- spoonfuls of lemon juice, one-half teaspoonful of salt and one-half saltspoonful of pepper ; let stand in a cold place ; cut into half -inch dice enough tender white celery to make three eupfuls ; mix the 34 PEACTICAL COOK BOOK chicken and celery together; moisten with mayonnaise dressing; add one-half cupful of whipped cream; arrange in salad bowl; garnish the dish with crisp bits of celery or white celery leaves. Equal parts of chicken and sweetbread, or chicken and veal mixed with celery make a nice salad. SWEETBREAD SALAD. Cover the sweetbread with cold water: add one teaspoont'nl of salt and stand two or three hours; drain: cover with boiling water: add one teaspoont'nl of lemon juice; cook until tender; drain; drop into cold water and let stand until cold; remove the membranes and pnll apart with a silver fork into small pieces; mix two cupfuls of sweet- breads, two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, one-half teaspoont'nl of salt and half a saltspoonful of pepper together; let stand on the ice for one hour: cut encumbers into dice enough to make two cupfuls; let stand in ice water one hour; mix with sweetbreads and moisten with mayonnaise: serve immediately. LOBSTER SALAD. Cut the lobster into dice; season with salt, pepper and lemon juice. the same as chicken; let stand an hour; separate and wash carefully the Leaves from a crisp head of lettuce; let stand in ice water for half an hour; at serving time shake (vvr from water; arrange two or three leaves together in the form of a nest, and arrange the nests on a large dish or individual dishes ; season the mayonnaise to taste wit h a mixture of one teaspoont'nl of mustard, one teaspoont'nl of salt and a fourth of a teaspoont'nl of mixed pepper; mix one-half the dressing with the lobster; put a tablespoonfnl into each shell and a teaspoon- ful of dressing on top. Another way of serving Lobster salad is to tear the lettuce into small pieces and mix with the lobster, using one-third as much lettuce as Lobster, garnishing the dish with the whole leaves. SHRIMP SALAD. Prepare and serve shrimps the same as lobster; the shrimps may be left whole or cut into small pieces. Crab salad is also prepared in the same way. FISH SALADS. All kinds of cold cooked fish can be used for salads. Dress with a French or mayonnaise dressing, season to taste, and serve on Lettuce leaves. SALADS 35 MEAT SALAD. One pint of cold meat cut in thin slices and then cut into small pieces; to the French dressing add one tablespoonful of minced pars- ley and one teaspoonful of onion juice ; put a layer of meat in the salad howl ; pour on some dressing, another layer of meat, and so on until all the meat and dressing is used; let stand on the ice two hours ; garnish the dish with sprigs of parsley, and serve. Any kind of tender meat may be used. EGG SALAD. Boil four eggs twenty minutes ; put into cold water ; when cold remove shells and cut into halves, lengthwise ; remove the yolks, taking care not to break the whites ; mash the yolks ; moisten with mayonnaise dressing ; add one tablespoonful of finely chopped olives ; put the mixture back into the whites, and serve on a bed of lettuce leaves. CUCUMBER SALAD. Cut about an inch off the blossom end of a cucumber; pare and cut in very thin slices; let stand in cold water until very crisp; serve with a French dressing. TOMATO SALAD. Drop six medium-sized tomatoes into boiling water; let stand two or three minutes ; remove the skin ; cut off about one-fourth of each tomato: with a sharp knife cut the pulp loose from the sides and scoop out the center ; fill each shell with chipped ice and stand in the refrigerator for two or three hours ; cut pulp and the upper part of the tomato into dice ; add equal parts of finely cut celery ; moisten with mayonnaise ; fill the tomato cups with the salad and set on a lettuce leaf, or garnish the plate with nasturtium leaves. Tomato salad may also be served without the cups. POTATO SALAD. Six medium-sized potatoes, One teaspoonful of dry mustard. Pour tablespoonfuls of cooked Two teaspoonfuls of salt, mayonnaise, One-fourth of a teaspoonful of * me tablespoonful of minced white pepper, parsley, Dash of cayenne. One tablespoonful of minced Sweet cream. onion, Pare and cover the potatoes with boiling water ; add oneteaspoonful of salt; boil slowly until tender; drain; remove the cover and shake over the fire until the potatoes are dry; when cool enough to handle cut into thin slices; mix the pepper, salt and mustard together; add 36 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK to the cooked mayonnaise and mix until smooth, then add onion and parsley; slowly add sweet cream enough to make it the consistency of thin cream; put a layer of potatoes in the salad bowl ; cover with the dressing, then another layer of potatoes and more dressing until the bowl is filled ; pour the remainder of the dressing- over the potatoes and set in f clarified butter into a small dripping pan: lay the potatoes on the pan and bake in a hot oven. BOILED RICE. Pick over and wash one cupful of rice; drop gradually into two quarts of rapidly boiling salted water, and boil rapidly until the rice is soft; drain in a sieve; hold the sieve under the faucet and let the cold water run through it: shake well; turn out on a shallow pan and set in a moderate oven to i\ry : stir occasionally. BOILED MACARONI. Two quarts of boiling water; two teaspoonfuls of salt ; six sticks of macaroni; break the macaroni into inch pieces; wash and drop into the salted water; boil rapidly for thirty minutes; drain: hold colan- der under faucet and let the cold water run over the macaroni; shake well and drain. MACARONI AND CREAM SAUCE. Make a white sauce; season the boiled macaroni with pepper and salt; mix with the white sauce and simmer for five minutes. MACARONI AND TOMATO SAUCE. Cook the macaroni as directed; add to one pint of tomato sauce, and simmer five minutes. MACARONI AND CHEESE. One pint of white sauce. One cupful of grated cheese, Six sticks of macaroni. One-half cupful of bread crumbs, One tablespoonful of butter. Pepper and salt. Boil the macaroni: butter the baking dish: make the white sauce and add the grated cheese to the sauce: put the macaroni in the bak- VEGETABLES 43 ing dish; pour over it the sauce; moisten the crumbs with melted butter ; spread on top of macaroni and bake in moderate oven until crumbs are brown. BOSTON BAKED BEANS. Soak one quart of pea beans in cold water over night ; put into fresh cold water and simmer until soft enough to pierce with a pin ; do not boil them long enough to break; if desired, a small onion may be boiled with the beans ; when they are soft, drain and pour cold water over them ; when well drained, put in the bean-pot. Pour boiling water over one-fourth pound of salt pork that is part fat and part lean ; scrape the rind until white ; bury the pork in the beans, leaving only the rind exposed. Mix together one teaspoonful of dry mustard, one teaspoonful of salt, and one-fourth cupful of molasses. Place these in a cup and fill with hot water; stir until well mixed and pour the liquid over the beans and pork ; add enough water to cover the beans and bake eight hours ; add water to keep them covered until the last hour, when the pork should be raised to the surface to crisp. BOILED ONIONS. Peel ; cover with boiling salted water ; cook slowly for ten minutes ; drain off the water and add more ; cook for half an hour, or until tender; drain and cover with milk and simmer gently for ten min- utes ; season with pepper, salt and butter, and serve. BAKED BEETS. Beets retain their delicate, sugary flavor if baked instead of boiled. Turn them frequently while in the oven, but do not pierce the skin or the juice will run out. When done remove the skins ; cut in cubes, and serve hot, with butter, salt and pepper. BOILED BEETS. Wash carefully, but do not break the skin; cover with boiling water and boil slowly until tender. If young, they will cook in one hour ; old beets require longer time. When cooked put in cold water and rub off the skin. ESCALLOPED TOMATOES. One quart can of tomatoes, One saltspoonful of pepper, . One teaspoonful of salt, Two tablespoonfuls of sugar, Four slices of stale bread, One cupful of bread crumbs. One tablespoonful of butter, Butter the baking dish ; cut the bread into small squares ; season the tomatoes with pepper and salt; put a layer of bread in the 44 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK bottom of baking dish; pour over it some of the tomatoes, another layer of bread and more tomatoes, until the material is used; moisten the bread crumbs with molted butter; spread over the top; bake in moderate oven twenty minutes, or until the crumbs are nicely browned. SUMMER SQUASH. Pare the squash, cutting away little but the outer rind; cut it in quarters if small, if large divide into small pieces; if the seeds are young and small do not remove them; lay the squash on a plate and put in in a steamer over a kettle of boiling water and steam until tender, about thirty or forty minutes: take it from the steamer and drain off any water; place in a stewpan and mash well; add butter, salt and pepper to taste; set stewpan on back of the range, un- covered, for about fifteen minutes, for the squash to dry; stir occasionally; reheat and serve. This squash may be boiled instead of steamed, but it is more wol when boiled. CAULIFLOWER. Pick off the outside leaves; soak in cold water for about an hour; cook in boiling salted water until tender; drain: cover with cream sauce, and serve. CABBAGE. Remove the outside leaves; cut into quarters and remove the tough portion; cook in boiling salted water; drain; chop fine; season with pepper, salt and butter. SPINACH. Pick over and wash thoroughly; put into a kettle with just enough water to keep it from burning; boil until tender; drain and chop fine; season with pepper, salt and butter; garnish with hard-boiled eggs. FRIED PARSNIPS. Scrape the parsnips and boil gently until tender, usually an hour; drain, and when cold cut them into long thin slices about one-third inch in thickness; season each slice with salt and pepper; dip in melted butter and flour and fry in hot fat until both sides are thor- oughly browned; drain well, and serve. ASPARAGUS. Wash thoroughly; scrape off the outer skin; tie into bundles; cover with boiling, slightlv salted water, and boil for fifteen BREAD 45 minutes, or until the asparagus is tender; drain; season with pepper, salt and butter, or pour a white sauce over it and serve on toast. Asparagus may be served cold with a mayonnaise dressing-. The water in which the asparagus is boiled can be used for soup. BEANS. Remove the strings; cut into inch pieces; wash and cook in boiling- salted water for two or three hours, or until the beans are tender; drain; season with butter, pepper and salt; when very young they will cook in much shorter time. GREEN PEAS. Wash the pods before shelling; shell the peas; cover the fresh green pods with boiling water ; cook ten minutes ; skim out the pods and put in the peas ; boil until tender ; the fresh pods are sweet and very highly flavored; let the water boil nearly away; season with butter, pepper and salt ; a little sugar and sweet cream may be added. GREEN CORN. Remove husk and silk; put into cold water and let come to boil- ing; boil one minute and serve. Bread VIENNA BREAD. Flour, One compressed yeast cake. One pint of wetting (half milk One teaspoonful of salt, and water), Dissolve the yeast in half a cupful of cold water ; add the salt to the wetting, which should be lukewarm, or at a temperature of about eighty degrees, then add the yeast; stir in flour enough to make a stiff batter; beat thoroughly; add enough more flour .to make a soft dough ; turn out on a well-floured bread board and knead until soft and velvety; when it will not stick to the hands or board there is sufficient flour ; put into a buttered bowl ; brush the top with melted butter or drippings ; cover with a towel and let rise for three hours, or until it is double its bulk; the dough should be kept at a tempera- ture of seventy-five degrees; when the dough is light, shape into loaves or rolls and put in the pans; butter the top and allow it to stand one hour, or until it is light ; bake in a hot oven ; the oven for baking bread should be hot enough to brown n small quantity of 46 PKACTICAL COOK BOOK flour in two minutes ;. bake until nicely browned all over ; it requires from forty-five minutes to one hour to bake a loaf of bread. FRENCH ROLLS. Take a small piece of bread dough about four inches square; shape it into a ball ; roll under the palms of the hands upon the bread board into a long roll about one inch in diameter; lay in a buttered roll pan ; butter the top lightly ; cover with a towel and let rise one hour, or until double its bulk ; bake in a hot oven twenty minutes, or until nicely browned ; cool the bread and rolls where ;i draught of fresh air will pass around them. SOUP STICKS. Take a small bit of Vienna bread dough about one inch and a half square; roll into a long stick: lay in buttered soup-stick pans, or about halt' an inch apart in a tint pan; butter the top lightly; bake immediately in a hot oven until nicely browned; serve with soup. MILK BREAD. One quart of milk. Two teaspoonfuls of salt, One compressed yeast cake Flour enough to make a soft dough. Dissolve the yeast in one-half cupful of cold water, heat the milk to about eighty degrees ; add the sail and dissolved yeast ; mix in flour enough to make a soft dough ; beal well ; turn out on bread board and knead until soft and velvety ; put into a buttered bowl ; brush the top with melted fat; cover and let rise for live hours, or until double its bulk; shape into loaves; butter the top and let rise one hour; bake. PARKER HOUSE ROLLS. Take a piece of lightened milk-bread dough; roll into a sheet about one-half inch in thickness ; let the dough shrink ; cut the rolls with a large cutter; pull into an oval shape; spread with softened butter and fold over, ha vino- the edges come together: brush the top with butter and let rise one hour, or until light; bake. TWIN ROLLS. Cut the rolls from a sheet of dough a quarter of an inch in thick- ness ; put two rolls together, spreading softened butter between ; let rise for one hour and bake. GRAHAM BREAD. One pint milk and water (equal One tablespoonful of sugar, parts), One teaspoonful of salt. One compressed yeast cake, BREAD 47 Dissolve the yeast in one-half cupful of cold water; have the wet- ting lukewarm and add to it the yeast, sugar and salt ; mix in enough graham flour, sifted, to make a soft dough ; flour the board well with white flour; turn out the dough and knead until it ceases to stick to the board ; let rise for three hours, then shape into loaves ; let rise one hour, or until it is light; then bake. WHOLE WHEAT BREAD. Make the same as graham bread, using half whole-wheat flour and half white flour. BOSTON BROWN BREAD. Two cupfuls of cornmeal, One teaspoonful of salt. Two cupfuls of graham flour, Two teaspoonfuls of soda. One cupful of molasses, Three cupfuls of buttermilk. Mix the cornmeal, graham flour, salt and soda together; add the molasses and the buttermilk gradually ; fill mould two-thirds full ; steam in single mould six hours — in small moulds, two or three hours. GERMAN COFFEE CAKE. One and one-half yeast cakes. One teaspoonful of salt. Three eggs. One pint of milk, Three tablespoonfuls of sugar, Three tablespoonfuls of butter. Cover the yeast with cold water ; beat the eggs until light ; heat the milk scalding hot; pour the hot milk over the beaten egg; add the sugar and salt and allow it to stand until cool (about 80 degrees) ; add the yeast, and flour enough to make a soft dough ; turn out on a well-floured bread board and knead until smooth ; put into a buttered bowl ; cover and let rise three hours, or until light ; soften the butter and mix it thoroughly into the dough; allow it to rise again for two hours; roll into a sheet one inch in thickness and put into a buttered pan; spread with melted butter; dredge with sugar and cinnamon and let rise one hour; bake in a moderate oven thirty-five minutes. BUNS. Take a piece of coffee-cake dough; shape into round buns; place half an inch apart on a buttered pan; brush the top with melted butter; let rise one hour and bake in a moderate oven. CINNAMON ROLLS. Roll a piece of coffee-cake dough in a sheet one-fourth inch in thickness; cut into strips; brush with melted butter; dust with sugar and cinnamon; roll into shape; place one inch apart on a buttered pan and let rise one hour; bake in a moderately hot oven. 48 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK JENNY LIND. Take a large piece of coffee-cake dough and mix with it half a cupful of currants or stoned raisins ; roll into a sheet half an inch in thickness; cut in circular shape; brush the top with melted butter; fold over, having the edges meet ; raise one hour ; bake in a moderate oven from thirty to forty-five minutes. BAKING-POWDER BISCUIT. One quart of flour. Two tablespoonfuls of butter, Two teaspoonfuls of baking Sweet milk enough to make a soft powder, dough. One teaspoonful of salt, * Sift the flour before it is measured ; add salt and baking-powder to flour and sift together ; rub the butter into the flour with the fingers ; add the milk and mix to a smooth dough; turn out upon the bread board ; dust with flour and roll into a sheet three-quarters of an inch in thickness; cut into small biscuit; butter the biscuit pan and dust lightly with flour; lay the biscuit dose together and bake in a hot oven ten minutes. QUICK SWEDISH ROLLS. Roll a piece of baking-powder biscuit dough into a sheet one-half inch in thickness; spread with softened butter; dust with cinnamon and sugar ; roll like a jelly roll ; with a sharp knife cut off bits from the end about one-half inch ; lay the flat side on a well-buttered pan ; bake in a hot oven ten minutes. These make a very good substitute for cinnamon rolls ; to be served hot. SHORTCAKE. One pint of flour. One egg. One-half teaspoonful of salt, Two tablespoonfuls of butter. One teaspoonful of baking pow- One-half cupful of milk. der, Sift the flour, salt and baking-powder together; rub the butter into the flour ; beat the egg until light ; add the milk ; beat, do not knead, the dough ; turn out on a well-floured board ; roll into sheets one-half inch in thickness; butter and flour the baking pan; lay a sheet of the cake in the pan; brush the top with melted butter; put on a second sheet; bake in a moderate oven fifteen or twenty minutes; when baked separate the sheets ; put a layer of fruit, sprinkled with powdered sugar, between, another layer of fruit on top and cover with whipped cream; strawberries, raspberries, pineapples, oranges, or any kind of fruit desired may be used. BREAD 49 MUFFINS. Two cupfuls of flour, One tablespoonf ul of melted butter. One teaspoonful of baking Two eggs, powder, One-half saltspoonful of salt. One cupful of milk, Sift the flour, baking-powder and salt together ; separate the eggs ; add the yolks and then the milk gradually to the flour; beat to a smooth batter; add the melted butter; beat the whites of the eggs stiff and add last; bake in gem pans in a hot oven twenty minutes. SALLY LUNNS. Two cupfuls of flour, One-half cupful of milk, One and one-half teaspoonfuls Two eggs, of baking powder, Two tablespoonfuls of sugar, One-half teaspoonful of salt, One-third cupful of butter. Sift the flour, salt, sugar and baking-powder together ; separate the eggs and beat separately; add the yolks and milk to the flour and beat thoroughly, then the melted butter and lastly the whites of the eggs beaten stiff; bake in gem pans in a hot oven for fifteen minutes. RAISED MUFFINS. One egg, Two tablespoonfuls of sugar, One cupful of milk, One-half yeast cake, Two cupfuls of flour, One tablespoonf ul of melted butter. One-half teaspoonful of salt, Cover the yeast cake with cold water and let it dissolve ; heat the milk scalding hot ; beat the egg, salt and sugar together ; pour the hot milk over the beaten egg ; let it stand until lukewarm, then add the yeast and flour; beat to a smooth batter; let rise for four or five hours ; fill muffin pans two-thirds full ; let rise from twenty to thirty minutes; bake in a hot oven. If muffins raise over night use half the quantity of yeast. GRAHAM GEMS. One and one-half cupfuls of One tablespoonf ul of melted butter, graham flour, sifted, One-half teaspoonful of salt, One cupful of milk, One egg, One tablespoonful of sugar, Two teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Mix the flour, salt and baking-powder together ; beat the egg ; add the sugar and beat together, then the milk; mix the flour into the egg and milk and beat to a smooth batter; add the melted butter; bake in buttered gem pans in a hot oven. POPOVERS. One cupful of flour, One-half teaspoonful of salt, Two eggs, One cujjful of milk. 50 PE ACTIO AL COOK BOOK Beat the eggs very Light; add the milk and Hour alternately until all is used ; heat buttered iron gem pans hissing hot ; half fill with the mixture; bake in a hot oven thirty-five or forty minutes. CORN BREAD. Two eggs, One-half teaspoonfu] of salt One and one-half eupfuls of milk. One-half cupful of flour. One cupful of corn meal. One and one-half tablespoonfuls Two teaspoonfuls baking powder, of melted butter. Separate the eggs and beat the yolks unlil creamy; sift the flour meal, salt and baking-powder together; add the beaten yolks and part of the milk and stir to a smooth batter; add the remainder of the milk and the melted butter; lastly add the whipped whites of the eggs; bake half an hour in a moderate oven. CORN CAKE. One cupful of meal. One and one f ourth-cupf uls of milk One-half cupful of flour. One tables] nful of melted butter One-half teaspoonful of salt, One tablespoonful of sugar. Two teaspoonfuls of baking Yolks f two eggs, powder. Whit.' of on.- egg.' Sift the Hour. meal. salt, sugar and baking-powder together; beat the yolks of the eggs; add to the mixture; add the milk, and Lastly the whipped white of the ego; bake in a brick loaf pan half an hour in a moderate oven. One cupful of flour. One half teaspoonful of salt One cupful of buttermilk. One-half teaspoonful of soda One egg. GRIDDLE CAKES. One cupful of flo One cupful of bu One egg. Mix the flour, salt and soda together; separate the coo; a( l«J the yolk to the flour and gradually add the buttermilk ; beat The white of the egg stiff; add to the batter; if sour milk is used instead of butter- milk, add one tablespoonful of melted butter; have the griddle hot • grease it with a piece of fat pork. FLANNEL CAKES. Two eupfuls of flour. Two eggs Cup and a half of milk. One-half teaspoonfu] of salt One tablespoonful of melted Two teaspoonfuls of baking powder butter, s ' Sift the flour, baking-powder and salt together; separate the eggs; add the yolks unbeaten to the flour and the milk gradually ; beat to a smooth batter; beat the whites of the eggs stiff; add 'the melted butter to the batter, and lastly the beaten whites of the eggs; cook on a hot griddle. EGGS 5j BUCKWHEAT CAKES. One-half cupful of fine corn meal, One-half teaspoonful of salt. One pint of boiling water, One cupful of buckwheat flour. Pour the boiling water on the cornmeal ; add the salt and mix well ; when lukewarm add half a cupful of white flour ; one cupful of buckwheat flour, and one-fourth cupful of yeast, or one-fourth compressed yeast cake dissolved in cold water ; let rise over night ; in the morning stir down and beat vigorously ; when risen and ready to bake add one-fourth level teaspoonful of soda sifted through a fine strainer; beat again and fry on hot griddle. WAFFLES. Two cupfuls of flour, Cup and one-fourth of milk, One teaspoonful of baking Three eggs, powder. One tablespoonful of melted butter. One teaspoonful of salt, Mix the flour, salt and baking-powder together ; separate the eggs and add the yolks to the flour ; add the milk gradually and beat to a smooth batter ; add the melted butter and lastly the whites of the eggs, beaten stiff ; heat the waffle iron hissing hot ; butter with clarified butter or drippings ; fill the waffle iron two-thirds full ; close the iron and cook one minute, then turn and cook two or three minutes on the other side ; serve with maple syrup or caramel syrup. CARAMEL SYRUP. Cook one cupful of sugar and one-fourth cupful of water over a hot fire, without stirring, until it begins to brown ; then stir until of a rich golden brown ; add one-half cupful of water and stir over the fire until smooth : serve with waffles. Eggs SOFT BOILED EGGS. Put two eggs in a pint sauce pan ; cover with boiling water ; cover and let stand eight minutes. This method will cook both white and yolk. If you are cooking a large number of eggs, cover with boiling water and let stand three minutes; pour off and add more boiling water ; let stand five minutes longer. GENERAL RULE FOR BOILING EGGS. For very soft boiled eggs, cook in boiling water three minutes ; soft boiled, three and one-half minutes ; medium soft, four minutes ; hard boiled, twenty minutes. 52 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK HARD BOILED EGGS. Cover the eggs with boiling water and boil twenty minutes. Cook- ing eggs ten minutes makes the yolks leathery and indigestible; cooking twenty minutes makes them light and mealy. SHIRRED EGGS. Butter a sauce plate; separate two eggs, taking care not to break the yolks; beat the whites stiff; pile up irregularly upon the sauce plate; make two nests in the whites; slip in the 1 yolks; bake in cool oven until the white is lightly browned ; season with pepper, salt and a bit of butter, and serve. SHIRRED EGGS NO. 2. Butter individual plates; break carefully two eggs into each; sea- son with pepper, salt and bits of butter; bake in a moderate oven until the white is set. POACHED EGGS. To one quart of water add one teaspoonful of salt and boil slowly; break the eggs carefully and slip into the water; dip the water over the eggs; loosen carefully from the bottom of the pan ; when the white is set lift on a skimmer; trim the edges and slip onto toast. SCRAMBLED EGGS. Four eggs, One-halt" teaspoonful of salt. One tablespoonful of butter, Break the eggs with a fork; add the salt; melt the butter in omelet pan; pour in the beaten eggs: stir for two minutes over a hot fire, and serve. FRENCH OMELET. Five eggs, Five tablespoonfuls <>t' water, <>tic tablespoonful of clarified Pepper and salt, butter. Break the eggs with a fork; add the water and beat together; have omelet pan perfectly smooth; put the clarified butter in the pan; when it begins to sizzle pour in the omelet and shake vigorously over the fire until the omelet thickens on the bottom ; with a fork lift the cooked egg and let the uncooked run under: season with pepper and salt ; loosen from the sides of the pan Avith a flexible knife and slip the knife under the omelet; fold and turn onto a hot dish; serve immediately. Orated cheese, chopped ham. chicken or parsley may be sprinkled on before folding the omelet. PASTRY AND PIES 53 LIGHT OMELET. Pour eggs, Half a teaspoonful of salt, Four tablespoonfuls of milk, One teaspoonful of clarified butter. Separate the eggs ; beat the yolks and milk together ; add the salt ; beat the whites stiff and add to the mixture ; melt the butter in an omelet pan; turn in the egg mixture and cook until nicely browned underneath; set in a cool oven until the egg is firm; loosen from the pan; fold and serve immediately. EGG VERMICELLI. Boil four eggs twenty minutes; let stand in cold water ten min- utes ; separate the yolks and whites ; chop the whites very fine ; cook together one tablespoonful of butter; one scant tablespoonful of flour ; one-half teaspoonful of salt ; half a saltspoonful of white pepper ; add one cupful of rich milk and stir constantly until it thickens; add the chopped whites of the eggs; toast six slices of bread ; pour the hot cream sauce over the toast ; rub the yolks through a fine strainer over the whole ; garnish with parsley. This makes an attractive luncheon dish. Pastry and Pics FLAKY PASTRY. One cupful of flour, One-third cupful of shortening, One saltspoonful of salt, One-fourth cupful of ice water. Have all the material cold; put the flour and salt into a chopping bowl; add the shortening (half butter and half lard) and chop into pieces the size of a pea ; moisten the pastry with ice water, mixing lightly with a fork ; turn out on a floured board ; draw together into oblong shape; roll back and forth into an oblong sheet; fold into thirds ; turn half way around and roll back and forth ; fold again and turn half way around and roll out for a third time ; brush off all the surplus flour; roll like a jelly roll; wrap in a napkin and set on ice ; it can be used immediately, or stand on ice until the next day. PUFF PASTE. One cupful of ice water, . One teaspoonful of salt, One pound of flour. White of one egg. One pound of butter, Have material and utensils cold ; wash the butter in cold water and knead with a spoon until it becomes waxy; shape into an oblong sheet about an inch in thickness and set it in a pan of ice water; mix 54 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK the salt and flour together; rub one-third of the butter into the flour ; moisten with the egg and ice water; mix with a knife; stir vigor- ously; dredge the board lightly with the flour; turn out the paste; sprinkle lightly with flour ; roll backward and forward ; turn the paste half way around and roll from you; when about one-fourth of an inch in thickness wipe the remainder of the butter and lay it on the paste ; sprinkle lightly with flour ; fold the paste from each side until the edges meet, then fold from the ends; pound lightly and roll back and forth two or three times; double the paste and roll down to one-half inch in thickness; fold in thirds and turn half way around; roll down again; repeat this for six times; place on ice to harden for one or two hours before using; if the paste sticks, place it on ice; when chilled it will roll more easily; use as little flour as possible. MINCE PIE. Lean beef, four pounds, Pour pounds of currants, Two pounds of suet. Half a pound of citron, Pour quarts of chopped apples, .Juice of six lemons, Five pounds of sugar, One pint of molasses, Pour pounds of raisins. Three quinces, Three quarts of sweet cider. One 1 pint of brandy, Cloves, cinnamon, mace, and Three ounces each of candied nutmeg— three tablespoon orange and lemon peel, fuls of each, One pint of white wine, Two cupfuls of meat broth. Two tablespoonf ids of salt. Cook and mince the meat tine; chop the suet tine; cook the quinces in the cider until soft; chop the citron, lemon and orange peel; mix all the ingredients and cook slowly until the apples are soft; add the brandy and wine last ; pack away in jars covered tightly; take half the flaky pastry ; roll into a sheet one-fourth inch in thickness; cover the pie-pan, putting the pastry on quite full; All with mince meat, having it about half an inch thick; roll out the other half of the pastry about one-eighth inch in thickness; fold over and cut two or three 1 slits; cover the pie and bake in a moderate oven. LEMON PIE. Grated rind of one lemon. Three-quarters of a cupful of boiling Two level tablespoonfuls of corn water, starch. Yolks of two e^'s. Three-quarters of a cupful of One teaspoonful of butter, sugar. Juice of one lemon. Mix the cornstarch and sugar together and add to the boiling- water, stirring until it thickens ; add the grated rind of the lemon and cook for ten minutes; beat the yolks of the eggs until creamy; add slowly to the cornstarch ; cooking two minutes longer ; remove from the fire and add the lemon juice and butter; line a pie-pan PASTRY AND PIES 55 with flaky pastry and a rim; cover with soft paper; fill with pieces of stale bread and bake in a moderate oven ; when baked remove the paper and bread and fill with the mixture; beat the whites of the eggs stiff; add two tablespoonfnls of sugar and beat together; cover the pie with the meringue and bake in a cool oven until lightly browned. APPLE PIE. Cover the pie-pan with pastry ; slice the apples thin, and do not fill too full ; if apples are tart and juicy, no water is needed ; sprinkle sugar on top of fruit, half a teaspoonfnl of cinnamon if liked, and scatter bits of butter over the top ; roll the top crust ; make incisions in the center to allow the steam to escape; moisten the edge of the lower crust with water ; press the edges close together ; cut a strip of pastry half an inch wide; moisten around the edge of pie; lay on the pastry and press close to the edge ; trim ; bake in a moderate oven forty minutes. PEACH PIE. Prepare the same as sliced apple pie. using as much sugar as neces- sary; chop fine three of four peach kernels and sprinkle over the fruit : put on the top crust and bake half an hour. CREAM PEACH PIE. Line pie-pan with pastry ; put on rim ; prick with a fork ; bake until golden brown ; fill with sliced fresh or canned peaches ; sprinkle with powdered sugar ; cover with sweetened whipped cream. Straw- berries or any small fruit may be used instead of peaches. JUICY FRUIT PIES. Line a pie-pan with pastry ; fill with a piece of linen or old napkin ; put on the upper crust and bake in a moderate oven ; stew the fruit ; season to taste ; when the pastry is baked, separate with a sharp knife; remove the linen; fill with fruit; place the cover on top and set aside to cool ; many of these shells can be baked at one time and filled when required, but the pastry must be reheated ; remember to put the filling into the pie Avhile both are hot. RHUBARB PIE. Line pie-pan with pastry ; sprinkle lightly with flonr ; fill with peeled rhubarb cut into inch pieces ; sprinkle with flour ; add one cupful of sugar ; put on the top crust and bake from forty minutes to one hour. 56 PEACTICAL COOK BOOK CUSTARD PIE. Line a pie-pan with pastry and a rim; dust lightly with flour; scald three cupfuls of milk ; beat three eggs until creamy ; add three tablespoonfuls of sugar and beat together; pour the scalded milk over the beaten egg; add one saltspoonful of salt and one saltspoon- ful of nutmeg ; fill the pie-pan and bake slowly ; as soon as it puffs up test with a knife; if it comes out clean it is done. PUMPKIN PIE. Two cupfuls of cooked pumpkin, One-fourth teaspoonful of nutmeg, Two cupfuls of milk, One-half teaspoonful of salt, Two eggs, One level teaspoonful of ginger, Two tablespoonfuls of molasses, One-half level teaspoonful of cin- One-half cupful of sugar, namon. Mix in the order given; line a pie-plate with paste; put on a rim; rill with the pumpkin mixture; bake in a moderate oven forty minutes. Puddings ENGLISH PLUM PUDDING. One-half pound of stale bread One-fourth pound of figs, crumbs, One-eighth pound of citron, One cupful of hot milk. One-half pound of suet, One-half cupful of sugar. One-fourth cup of brandy, Four eggs, One-half teaspoonful each of cin- One-half pound of raisins, namon, mace, cloves, nutmeg, One-half pound of currants. One teaspoonful of salt. Cover the bread crumbs with the milk; separate the eggs; beat the yolks until ereamy; add the sugar and heat together; add to the bread and milk; chop and flour the figs and suet; add all the ingredients to the bread and milk; beat the whites of the e^gs stiff and add to the mixture; butter the mould; fill three-quarters full; steam in a single mould from five to ten hours; serve with brandy sauce. STEAMED SUET PUDDING. Three cupfuls of flour, One cup of water. One level teaspoonful of soda, One cup of molasses, One cup of chopped suet, One teaspoonful each of cinnamon. One cup of raisins and currants, nutmeg and cloves. Mix the flour, soda, spices and suet together; add the molasses, fruit and water; steam three hours in a single mould, or one hour in small moulds; serve hot, with fruit sauce. PUDDINGS 57 ORANGE PUDDING. One cupful of bread crumbs, Yolks of two eggs, Juice and rind of one-half orange, Whites of four eggs. One-third cup of sugar. Cover the bread crumbs with milk; add the rind and juice of the orange and the beaten yolks of the eggs ; beat the whites until stiff ; add the sugar and beat and add to the mixture ; bake in a buttered mould; set in a pan of hot water; bake until firm; serve with golden sauce. FRENCH BREAD PUDDING. One cupful of bread crumbs, One saltspoonful of salt, Two cupfuls of milk, One tablespoonful of sug;ir. Two small eggs, One teaspoonful of butter. Scald the milk and pour it over the bread crumbs ; separate the eggs and beat the yolks with the sugar ; add to the bread crumbs ; and salt and the butter, melted ; pour into a buttered baking dish ; set in a pan of hot water ; bake in a moderate oven until firm ; when cooked spread with jelly; beat the whites of the eggs stiff; add two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and beat together; cover the pud- ding with the meringue and bake in a cool oven until nicely browned. PRUNE PUDDING. One-half pound of prunes. Juice of one-half lemon, One pint of water, Six level tablespoonfuls of corn- One cupful of sugar, starch. One quarter teaspoonful of salt, Wash the prunes and soak over night; simmer until tender; remove the pits; add enough water to the liquid to make two cup- fuls ; mix the cornstarch with the sugar ; add to the prunes and cook fifteen minutes, stirring frequently ; when cooked add the lemon juice and one-half teaspoonful of almond extract ; dip the mould in cold water and drain; fill with the pudding and set away to cool; serve cold with whipped cream. DELICATE PUDDING. Four level tablespoonfuls of corn- One and one-half cupfuls of boil starch, ing water. One-fourth cupful of cold water, One-half cupful of sugar. Whites of three eggs, One teaspoonful of vanilln. Mix the cornstarch with the cold water ; pour over it the boiling- water and cook fifteen minutes ; beat the eggs stiff ; add the sugar and beat together ; pour the hot starch over the egg and sugar and beat until smooth ; add the vanilla ; dip mould in water ; fill with pudding ; set on ice ; serve with boiled custard made from the yolks of the eggs. 58 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK BOILED CUSTARD. One pint of milk. Three tablespoonfuls of sugar. Yolk of three eggs, (3ne-half teaspoonful of vanilla. Scald the milk; beat the eggs and sugar together; pour the hot milk over the beaten egg; cook iinlil creamy; add the vanilla and set aside to cool. CREAM RICE PUDDING. One-fourth cupful of rice, One tablespoonful of sugar. Two ;iii brown; then stir until of a rich golden brown; add one-half cupful of water and stir until smooth. BRANDY SAUCE. Coot one cupful of sugar and half a cupful of water for fifteen minutes; beat the yolks of three eggs and stir them into the boiling syrup: set the bowl into a pan of hot water and beat until it begins to thicken; add one tablespoonful of butter and the whites of three eggs beaten stiff; lastly add one-third of a cupful of brandy; stir thoroughly, and serve. HARD SAUCE. Beat half a cupful of butter to a cream; gradually add one cupful of powdered sugar and beat until creamy; flavor with one teaspoon- ful of any flavoring desired. FOAMY SAUCE. Bea1 butter and sugar together as for hard sauce; add gradually one-third of ;i cupful of boiling milk, beating all the time; serve immediately. FRUIT SAUCE Cook one cupful of sugar, <>ne tablespoonful of flour and one cup- ful of water together, for live minutes; add half a cupful of any kind of fruit juice; pour over one-half cupful of butter beaten to a cream. BERRY SAUCE. One pint of berries (raspberries, One and one-half cupfuls of pow- strawberries or blackberries), dered sugar, One tablespoonful of butter. One cov. Put the berries in bowl; add one tablespoonful of granulated sugar and mash to draw out the juices; set the bowl in a warm place; beat the butter to a cream ; add the powdered sugar and the beaten white of the egg; just before serving add the mashed berries or juice. Invalid Cookery BEEF TEA. Buy the top of the round for beef tea ; it contains the most nutri- ment and is the best flavored ; remove every particle of fat ; cut the meat into very fine pieces; add one pint of water to each pound of beef; put into a glass jar and set the jar in a pan of warm water; do not heat the water above 110 degrees; let stand for two hours; strain through a strainer cloth ; season with salt and serve. BROILED BEEF TEA. Broil a thick round steak for five minutes; cut into small pieces and press out the juice ; salt and serve, or if too strong add half a cupful of hot Avater. BARLEY WATER. One tablespoonful of pearl barley, One-half of a lemon, Three cubes of sugar, One quart of boiling water. Wash the barley in cold water, then put with the sugar and lemon juice into the boiling water ; place where it will keep hot for three hours ; strain and serve ; orange juice may be used instead of lemon. OATMEAL GRUEL. Cover three tablespoonfuls of oatmeal with one quart of boiling water; add one-fourth of a teaspoonful of salt; boil one hour; put into an oatmeal boiler and cook two hours; strain, and serve with cream and sugar. FLAXSEED LEMONADE. Four tablespoonfuls of flaxseed, Juice of two lemons. One quart of boling water, Pour the boiling water over the flaxseed and steep three hours; strain; add the lemon juice and sweeten to taste. TOAST. Cut stale bread one-third of an inch in thickness ; remove the crusts ; place on the toaster on the back part of the stove, turning frequently until it is dry; push to the hottest part of the stove and brown nicely; toast should be brown and crisp, not hard or soggy in the middle. 62 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK EGGNOG. Heat the yolk of one eg-g until creamy; whip the white and beat in with the yolk; add one tablespoonful of sugar, one tablespoonful of wine or brandy and half a cupful of milk; lastly, a little nutmeg. CHICKEN JELLY OR BROTH. (lean a small chicken; cut into small pieces; cover it with cold water; heat very slowly and simmer until the meat is tender; strain, and when cold remove the fat; season with salt, pepper and lemon; add the shell and white of one egg and cook for five minutes; skim and strain through a fine towel or napkin ; put into cups and cool if intended for jelly; small cubes of the breast meat may be moulded in the jelly or served in the broth if the patient can take it; serve hot without clearing, if intended for broth. Cake NOTES ON CAKE MAKING. Have the bowl warm, the butter soft, sugar fine; use a wooden spoon for beating; never mix cake in tin; have pans perfectly clean; do not grease the pans ; paper the bottom of the pan, and, for butter cakes, butter lightly the upper side of the paper. When baked slip a knife around the edges of the cake to loosen it; let stand in the pan until you can handle the pan without a holder; let butterless cake stand in the pan until cold; when a cake is nearly baked it will shrink from the sides of the pan. ANGEL CAKE. Eleven eggs, <>n«' teaspoonful of cream tartar. One cupful of flour. One teaspoonful of almond or One and one-half cupfuls of gran- vanilla extract, ulated sugar. Sift the flour and cream tartar five times ; sift the sugar twice ; beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth ; add the sugar gradually ; fold in the flour ; add the extract ; paper the bottom of an ungreased pan, one with a tube in the center is best ; bake from forty-five minutes to one hour in eool oven ; when baked invert the pan and let stand until cold. SUNSHINE CAKE. Make the same as angel cake, adding the yolks of five eggs, beaten light. CAKE 63 SPONGE CAKE. Five eggs, One cupful of flour, One cupful of sugar, Juice and rind of half a lemon. Separate the eggs ; beat the yolks until creamy ; add half of the sugar and beat ; add the grated rind of the iemon ; whip the whites ; add the lemon juice, the remainder of the sugar, then the beaten yolks of the eggs, and lastly fold in the flour ; bake in an ungreased pan one hour; when done invert the pan and let stand until cold. DELICATE CAKE. Three-fourths cupful of butter, Two-thirds cupful of egg white, One and one-half cupfuls of Three cupfuls of flour and three sugar, slightly rounding teaspoonfuls Two-thirds cupful of cold water, of baking powder, One teaspoonful of lemon juice One teaspoonful of almond and or one-fourth teaspoonful of mace extract (one-fourth cream tartar. mace). Cream the butter ; add the sugar gradually and cream together ; add the eggs unbeaten, one-half at a time, and beat together until light ; add lemon juice ; sift the flour before measuring ; add water and flour alternately ; mix the baking-powder with the last half cupful of the flour and sift into the cake ; beat thoroughly, and add the flavoring ; beat the cake for five minutes after everything is added ; bake in a moderate oven — one loaf, fifty minutes. DEVILS FOOD CAKE. PART I. One-half cupful grated chocolate, One-half cupful of milk. One cupful of light brown sugar, Cook over the fire, stirring until dissolved ; set aside to cool. PART II. One-half cupful of butter, Two eggs, One cupful of brown sugar, Two and one-half cupfuls of flour, One-half cupful of sweet milk, Two teaspoonfuls of vanilla. One level teaspoonful of soda, Cream the butter; add the sugar gradually and cream together; if lumpy mash out lumps with potato masher; add the eggs and beat thoroughly ; dissolve the soda in the milk ; add the milk and flour alternately; add the vanilla. Add Part I to Part II; bake in three layers ; ice with boiled icing. LEMON QUEENS. One-half cupful of butter, . Four eggs, One cupful of sugar, One-fourth teaspoonful of salt, Rind of half a lemon, One-fourth teaspoonful of soda, One tablespoonful of lemon One and one-fourth cupfuls of juice, flour. 64 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK (ream the butter; add the sugar gradually and cream together; add the rind and juice of the lemon; add eggs, unbeaten, one at a time, and beat until smooth and light; mix the soda and salt with the flour and sift into the batter; bake in muffin pans thirty minutes in a moderate oven. PLAIN LOAF CAKE. Two-thirds of a cupful of butter, Three teaspoonfuls of baking One and om-third cupfuls of powder, sugar, One cupful of milk, Three and one-fourth cupfuls of One teaspoonful of orange and flour, vanilla extract (half and half). Four eggs, Cream the butter; add the sugar gradually and cream together; add the eggs, unbeaten, two at a time, and beat until perfectly smooth; add the milk and flour alternately, mixing the baking- powder with the last half cupful of the flour and sift into the cake; add the flavoring; bake in a moderate oven from forty to forty-five minutes. SPICE CAKE. Two cupfuls of brown sugar, One half cupful of sour milk. Two CUpfuls of Hour, One level teaspoonful of soda. Onedialf cupful of butter, One teaspoonful each of nutmeg, Four eggs, cinnamon and cloves. Cream the butter: add the sugar gradually and cream together; add the yolks of four and the whites of two eggs; add the milk and flour alternately, mixing the spices and baking-powder with the Las1 half cupful of the flour; bake from thirty to forty-five minutes; ice with boiled icing. COCOANUT CAKE. One-third cupful of butter, One and one-half cupfuls of flour, One cupful of sugar. One and one-half teaspoonfuls of One-half cupful of milk, baking powder. Two eggs, Cream the butter; add the sugar gradually and cream together; add the eggs, unbeaten, and beat thoroughly ; sift the flour and bak- ing-powder together ; add the milk and flour alternately ; bake in layers fifteen minutes in moderate oven. COCOANUT ICING. Beat the whites of two eggs stiff; add two cupfuls of powdered sugar and beat together; mix cocoanut with one-half the icing and spread between the layers ; spread over the top and sides of the cake and sprinkle thickly with cocoanut on top and sides. CAKE 65 QUEEN VICTORIAS WEDDING CAKE. Twelve eggs, One-half cupful of boiled milk. Two pounds of currants, One pound of flour, One and one-half pounds of white One pound of almonds, sugar. Two pounds of citron, One pound of butter, One teaspoonful of nutmeg, One cupful of brown sugar, One teaspoonful of cloves, One quart of brandy, One teaspoonful of cinnamon. Blanch and cut the almonds into strips ; slice citron ; seed and clean raisins; wash and dry currants the day before mixing; flour, sugar and almonds are dried and slightly browned in slow oven; separate the eggs and beat ; cream the butter ; add the sugar and cream together; add the flour and eggs alternately, mixing spices with the flour ; then the milk ; with wooden spatula beat in the fruit ; add one pint of the brandy and bake four hours in a moderately heated oven; raise the pan from bottom of oven; when baked and cold turn over it the remaining pint of brandy ; wrap in paraffine paper and box ; once a year remove from box and pour over another pint of brandy. POUND CAKE. One cupful of butter, One cupful of sugar, Five eggs, Two cupfuls of pastry flour, One teaspoonful of baking pow- One teaspoonful of extract — vanilla, der, lemon and a few drops of mace. Cream the butter and gradually add the sugar and cream together ; add the eggs, unbeaten, one at a time, beating at least three minutes between each egg; add the flour sifted, mixing the baking-powder with the last half cupful of the flour ; lastly add the extracts, beating the cake thoroughly ; bake in a loaf in a moderate oven fifty minutes ; if baked in a sheet it may be cut in fancy shapes and iced with con- fectioners' icing. A white fruit cake is made by adding one cupful of stoned raisins or currants, or one quarter of a pound of citron to the batter. FRUIT CAKE. One pound of butter, One pound of sugar, One dozen eggs, One pound of citron, Five pounds of raisins, Three pounds of currants, One cupful of molasses, One tablespoonfnl each of cinna- One pint of brandy, mon, cloves, mace, allspice, One-half pint of wine, and nutmeg. One pound of flour, Two level teaspoonfuls of soda. Cream the butter; add the sugar gradually and cream together; beat the eggs until creamy and add to the butter and sugar, then add the molasses ; sift the flour, soda and spices together and add gradually, beating thoroughly ; stone and chop the raisins ; chop the 66 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK citron; add the fruit, wine and brandy and mix thoroughly; line ;i large pan with two thicknesses of heavy brown paper ; butter lightly ; bake in a moderate oven three hours. ALMOND SLICES. Six eggs, Three tablespoonfuls of chocolate, Two cupfuls of sugar, One level teaspoonful each of all- One-half pound of almonds. spice, and cinnamon. Three cupfuls of flour, Oik -half teaspoonful each of cloves Three teaspoonfuls of baking and Qutmeg. powder, Blanch and chop the almonds: separate the eggs; beat the yolks until creamy; mix the chocolate and spices with the sugar; sift the Hour and baking-powder together; add the sugar to the beaten yolks of the eggs, then the Hour and chopped almonds; lastly the whipped whites of the eggs; shape in long narrow strips on a fiat pan and bake twenty minutes; while warm cut in slices; will keep a long time. HOT WATER GINGERBREAD. One cupful of molasses, One tablespoonful of ginger, One tc;is| nfnl of soda, One tablespoonful of melted butter, One-half teaspoonful of salt, Two and one-half cupfuls of flour. ■ One half cupful of boiling water. Mix the molasses, ginger, soda, salt, butter and boiling water to- gether; add the Hour, sifted; bake in a hot oven thirty minutes. CREAM PUFFS. One cupful of boiling water. One cupful of Hour, One-half cupful of butter. Pour eggs. Put the water and butter in saucepan and boil slowly until the butter is melted; then add the flour and alknv it to cook until it cleans from the sides of the pan, stirring constantly; when cool, add one egg at a time, beating it in throughly; drop, by small spoonfuls, on a buttered papered pan; bake in a moderate oven until puffed and crusty — about thirty minutes; when cold, cut on one side and till with whipped cream, sweetened with powdered sugar and flavored with vanilla or with a filling made from "Filling for Cream Puffs." FILLING FOR CREAM PUFFS. Two cupfuls of milk. One-third of a cupful of flour, Three-fourths of a cupful of sugar. Two eggs. One teaspoonful of vanilla. Scald the milk ; mix the sugar and flour together and beat into the eggs : pour hot milk over the beaten egg ; cook in a double boiler until thickened; stirring constantly; when cool flavor with vanilla. CAKE 67 FROSTING. White of one egg, One cupful of confectioners ' sugar. One tablespoonful of lemon juice, Add the sugar gradually to the unbeaten white of the egg; when all the sugar is added beat in the lemon juice and one-half teaspoon- ful of vanilla; beat until it will pile up in the bowl when dropped from the egg-beater. BOILED ICING. One cupful of granulated sugar. One-fourth of a cupful of water. Boil the water and sugar together until it will form a soft ball when dropped in ice water; beat the white of an egg until stiff; pour the boiling syrup over the beaten white of the egg and stir until it thickens; flavor with any desired flavoring. CHOCOLATE ICING. Two squares of unsweetened One and one-half tablespoonfuls chocolate, of milk, Three-fourths of a cupful of One egg. sugar, Scrape the chocolate ; add the milk and sugar ; cook until it boils ; beat the egg light and creamy; pour the chocolate mixture over the egg ; cook one minute longer. JELLY ROLL. Four eggs, One-half of a cupful of powdered Three-fourths of a cupful of pas- sugar, try flour, Separate the eggs ; beat the yolks until creamy ; add the sugar and beat together; beat the whites until very stiff and dry and add to the yolks ; sift in the flour and stir quickly ; paper a large shallow pan ; bake twenty minutes; while yet warm cut off the edges, spread with any kind of jelly and roll up ; pin a towel around it and put in a cool place ; cut with a sharp knife. WAFERS. One-half cupful of butter, Two cupfuls of flour, One-half cupful of milk. One cupful of powdered sugar. Cream the butter and gradually add the sugar and cream together ; add the milk and flour alternately and mix thoroughly ; spread on a sheet iron or turn baking pans bottom side up and wipe very clean ; cut into squares when lightly browned and roll while hot ; the wafers must be cut and rolled as soon as they come from the oven. 68 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK COOKIES. One cupful of sugar, Two eggs. Six tablespoonfuls of melted but- Two teaspoonfuls of baking pow- ter, der, Four tablespoonfuls of milk, Flour to make a soft dough. Stir the butter into the sugar; beat the eggs and add to the sugar; add the milk ; sift the baking-powder with one cupful of flour and add to the mixture, then enough more flour to make a dough; roll out on well-floured board and cut into shape; bake in quick oven. NUT WAFERS. Heat until very light two eggs and one cupful Golden C brown sugar; add three tablespoonfuls of flour and one cupful of nuts finely chopped; drop on buttered tins and bake. SMALL NUT CAKES. One pound of butter, Three eupfuls of dour. One and one-half cupfuls of sugar. One and one-half teaspoonfuls of Four eggs, baking powder, Wine glassful of brandy, English walnuts. Cream the butter; add the sugar gradually and cream together; beat the eggs until very creamy; sift baking-powder with flour; add the eggs to the creamed butter and sugar; add flour and brandy: shape into balls; put a piece of nut on top; bake in hot oven. CARAMEL ICING. One cupful of brown sugar. One-third cupful of milk, One tablespoonful of butter. One teaspoonful of vanilla. Boil slowly until it thickens: then beat until thick enough to spread. Delicate Desserts STRAWBERRY PUDDING. One-third of a box of gelatine, One and two-third cupfuls of One-third of a cupful of cold strawberry juice, water, Juice of one lemon. One-third of a cupful of boiling Whites of two small eggs, water, Six tablespoonfuls of whipped One saltspoonful of salt, cream. Cover the gelatine with cold water ; when softened add the boiling water and stir until dissolved ; add the strawberry juice, lemon juice and salt ; set away to cool until it begins to thicken ; whip the eggs DELICATE DESSERTS 69 until stiff; add two tablespoonfuls of sugar and beat together; when the gelatine is slightly thickened beat with Dover egg-beater until light; add the whites of the eggs, and lastly the whipped cream; dip the mould in cold water and drain ; fill with the mixture and set away to harden; do not use a tin mould; pineapple, grape, lemon, orange, currant, raspberries, cherry, etc., may be used instead of strawberry; cut in slices and serve with cake. FIG PUDDING. One-third box of gelatine, One cupful of sugar, One-third cupful of cold water, White of one egg, One-third cupful of boiling water, One pint of whipped cream, Juice of one orange with water One-half pound of figs, enough added to make one Juice of half a lemon. and one-third cupfuls, Cover the gelatine with cold water and let stand until soft; cook the sugar and hot water to a syrup ; pour the boiling syrup over the gelatine and stir until dissolved ; strain and cool ; whip the egg ; add cream to egg and stand the bowl in a pan of ice w r ater ; add the gelatine mixture and stir until it thickens; chop the figs and cover with the lemon juice ; let stand while making the pudding ; add figs to the pudding, and let stand on the ice until thickened. PEACHES IN JELLY. One-third box of gelatine, One and one-third cupfuls of One-third cupful of cold water, peach liquid and water, One-third cupful of boiling water, Few drops of almond extract. One-third cupful of sugar, Cut the peaches in slices; cover the gelatine with cold water and let soak until soft ; cook the sugar with the boiling water and pour the hot syrup over the softened gelatine; strain and add the peach liquor and water, then the extract; let stand until it begins to thicken; peel and slice the peaches; put into a mould; pour the slightly thickened gelatine over the peaches and set on ice until it thickens; serve with whipped cream. GINGER CREAM. One-third box of gelatine. One-fourth pound of crystal i zed One-half cupful of cold water, ginger, One-half cupful of boiling water, One pint of whipped cream, One cupful of powdered sugar, Whites of two eggs. Soak the gelatine in cold water until soft ; add the boiling water mihI stir until dissolved; let stand until cold; when it thickens beat until light; whip the whites of the eggs until stiff; add the whipped cream; place the bowl in a pan of ice water; sift in the sugar; then ;id(l the- gelatine and mix lightly; when thickening add the ginger. 70 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK chopped fine and mixed with a little powdered sugar; dip an ice cream brick in cold water and drain ; fill with the cream and let stand until thickened ; cut in slices when serving. CHARLOTTE RUSSE. Three pints of whipped cream, One-half cupful of powdered sugar. One tablespoonful of gelatine, One teaspoonful of vanilla. Measure the cream after it is whipped ; cover the gelatine with cold water and let stand until soft ; add one-third of a cupful of boiling water, stirring until dissolved ; when cold strain into the cream care- fully, stirring all the time to prevent lumping; add the vanilla and stir until it thickens ; line the cases or a glass dish with lady fingers ; fill with the cream and set on ice until serving time. BAVARIAN CREAM. One-third box of gelatine, One and one-half cupfuls of milk. One-half cupful of cold water. Eight tablespoonfuls of whipped Whites of three eggs, cream. Soak the gelatine in cold water until soft ; scald the milk; pour the hot milk over the softened gelatine ; whip the cream ; whip the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth; add the sugar and beat together; set the bowl into ice water; stir the gelatine until it begins to thicken; add the beaten white of the egg, the cream and vanilla ; stir until thick- ened; the gelatine will thicken very quickly after it begins, so the cream and egg must be added instantly; if the gelatine becomes too thick to mix smoothly, set the bowl in a pan of hot water and stir until it liquifies, then add the cream and egg ; mould ; serve with cake. SNOW PUDDING. One-fourth of a box of gelatine. One-half cupful of boiling water. One cupful of sugar, Juice of one lemon with water Whites of three eggs, enough added to make three- One-half cupful of cold water, fourths of a cupful. Cover the gelatine with the cold water and let soak until soft ; add the boiling water and stir until it dissolves; beat the whites of the eggs stiff ; add the sugar and beat together ; add the lemon juice and water to the gelatine and let stand until cold ; set the bowl into a pan of ice water; when it begins to thicken beat with Dover egg-beater until light ; add the beaten white of the egg and beat until thickened ; pour into a glass dish and set on the ice to harden ; never mould food which contains acid in tin; serve the pudding with a custard sauce made from the yolks of the eggs ; three tablespoonfuls of sugar ; one pint of milk; one teaspoonful of vanilla; one-half saltspoonful of salt ; scald the milk ; beat the eggs until creamy ; add the sugar and beat together; pour the hot milk over the beaten egg and stir over the fire until creamy; when cold add the vanilla. SHERBETS AND ICE CREAM 71 WINE JELLY. One box of gelatine, One cupful of cold water. Three cupfuls of boiling water, One pint of sherry. One pint of sugar, Juice of one lemon. Cover the gelatine with the cold water and let stand until softened ; add the boiling water and stir until dissolved; cook the sugar in one cupful of water five minutes ; strain the gelatine into the syrup ; add the wine and lemon juice ; strain through a napkin and set on ice for six or eight hours. Orange, lemon, grape, or any fruit jelly may be made in this way. COMPOTE OF FIGS. One pound of figs, Two slices of lemon, One-half pound of powdered sugar, Two sticks of cinnamon. One pint of water, Cut the figs in small pieces ; add the water and sugar and cook slowly ten or fifteen minutes, stirring constantly the last five min- utes ; remove from the fire and add lemon and cinnamon ; let stand until cold ; serve in punch glasses witli whipped cream ; sweeten the cream with powdered sugar. Shcrbcrts and Ice Cream DIRECTIONS FOR FREEZING. Pour the mixture into the tin can ; put the beater in and put on the cover ; put the can into the tub and see that the point on the bottom of the can fits into the socket in the tub ; put on the crosspiece and turn to see if everything is in place; break the ice very fine ; put a layer of about four inches in the bottom of the tub. and then a layer of salt, using about three times as much ice as salt; put on another layer of ice and one of salt, and continue until the tub is full ; turn the crank slowly until the cream begins to harden, then turn rapidly for about ten minutes. It will be hard to turn when the mixture is frozen; wipe the salt and water from the cover; turn back the cross- piece and take off the cover without displacing the can ; remove the beater and scrape the cream from it ; pack the cream down ; put on the cover and cork the hole; put on the crosspiece and pack the ice tightly, adding more ice and salt; let stand two or three hours to ripen.' To mould cream, fill the mould, pressing the cream into every corner; cover, seal by wrapping a piece of muslin, dipped in softened fat, around the mould where the cover and mould join: pack in ice and salt for an hour; cover the bucket with an old rug or piece of carpet. This will prevent the ice melting rapidly. 72 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK BRICK ICE CREAM. Freeze the eream without any flavoring; when frozen remove the dasher; set a bowl in a pan of ice water; take about a pint of the frozen cream ; mix it until it is creamy ; add the flavoring desired ; mix thoroughly and place in the bottom of the mould ; mix another portion of the frozen cream with a second flavoring and spread it on top ; continue until the mould is filled ; seal and pack in ice and salt for an hour or more. To remove it from the mould, dip into pan of boiling water ; remove instantly and turn out the cream ; or wrap the mould in a towel dipped in hot water ; cut in slices when serving. VANILLA ICE CREAM. One pint of cream, One-half cupful of water, One cupful of sugar, Two teaspoonfuls of vanilla. Pinch of salt, Cook the sugar in the water I'm- five minutes; add to the cream; add the vanilla ; let cool and freeze. CARAMEL ICE CREAM. One pint of cream, A cupful and a half of caramelized One-fourth cupful of water, sugar, Boil one cupful of sugar with the water, without stirring, until it begins to brown; then stir until a golden brown in color; add one- half cupful of water and stir until dissolved. To the cream add the salt and caramelized sugar and freeze. STRAWBERRY ICE CREAM. One quart of berries, I fa If a saltspoonful of salt. Two cupfuls of sugar, Three pints of cream. Wash the berries ; add one cupful of sugar and the salt and let stand; cook the other cupful of sugar in half a cupful of water for five minutes ; add the syrup to the cream ; freeze the cream ; when nearly frozen wipe off the cover and remove carefully ; add the crushed fruit; mixing it thoroughly with the cream; finish freezing and pack. NEAPOLITAN ICE CREAM. One quart of cream. Two cupfuls of sugar, One quart of milk, One-half saltspoonful of salt, Six eggs, Two tablespoonfuls of flavoring. Beat the eggs until creamy ; add the salt ; cook the sugar in a half cupful of water for five minutes ; scald the milk ; add the syrup and pour the hot milk oven the beaten egg ; cook over boiling water until creamy, but not curdled; when cool add the cream and flavoring; freeze. SHEEBETS AND ICE CREAM 73 The addition of one tablespoonful of gelatine, softened with a little cold water and dissolved in the hot milk, makes the cream smoother and richer. NUT ICE CREAM. Almonds, walnuts, cocoannt or pistachio nuts, blanched and chopped fine or pounded to a paste may be added to any of the recipes for ice cream. Allow one pint of nuts to each quart of cream. MOOSE. One quart of whipped cream, One and one-half cupfuls of pow- Three teaspoonfuls of vanilla, dered sugar. Whip the cream stiff ; drain ; add the vanilla and sift in the sugar. Line ice cream mould with white paper ; pour in the mixture ; cover and seal the cover by dipping a piece of muslin, about one inch in width, into softened fat or grease ; draw it tightly around the mould where the cover joins; fasten; pack the mould in a pail of ice and salt, using three times as much ice as salt ; cover the pail with an old rug or blanket ; let stand five or six hours ; when taken from the ice and salt dip quickly into a pan of boiling water or wrap in a towel dipped in hot water ; turn out the moose ; cut in slices and serve with cake. NESSELRODE PUDDING. One pint of chestnuts, One pint of sugar, One pint of boiling water, One pound of French candies, One pint of almonds, One pint of cream, Yolks of six eggs, One pint of pineapple. One tablespoonful of vanilla, Shell, blanch and boil the chestnuts twenty minutes, or until soft ; mash and rub through a sieve ; blanch the almonds ; chop fine and pound to a paste ; boil the sugar and water together fifteen minutes ; beat the yolks of the eggs until creamy ; add the syrup ; return to the fire and cook until it thickens ; beat until cold ; add the chestnuts, fruit, candies, almonds and vanilla, and freeze ; pack and let stand two or three hours to ripen. To blanch almonds or chestnuts, shell the nuts and pour boiling water over them; let stand two or three minutes; then throw them into cold water ; remove the skins. TO WHIP CREAM. Very thick or very thin cream will not whip ; the former will turn to butter and the latter will make a liquid froth. Cream that will hardly pour should be diluted with equal quantity 74 PRACTICAL COOK BOOK of milk before whipping. The cream should be icy cold. If you have not a whipping churn, the simplest way to whip cream is to pour into a deep bowl; set in ice water and beat with a Dover egg-beater. PINEAPPLE SHERBET. One tablespoonful of gelatine, <>m' pinl of water, One pint can of pineapple. Juice of one lemon. One pint of sugar, Boil the sugar in a half cupful of water five minutes; cover the gelatine with cold water and let si and until softened; pour the hot syrup over the softened gelatine and stir until dissolved; to the pineapple add the pint of water and juice of the lemon; strain the dissolved gelatine into the mixture and freeze. The whites of three eggs may be substituted in place of the gela- tine, if desired. Any fruit juice may be substituted in place of pine- apple. LEMON ICE. ()m> quart of water. Two cupfuls of sugar. Juice of six lemons, Cook the sugar in one cupful of water five minutes; add the (piart of water and lemon juice and freeze. FRAPPE. Freeze a fruit ice to a mush and serve in sherbel glasses. Beverages COFFEE. Mocha and -lava coffee are supposed to make the best mixture. The best grade, however, should be bought. It should always be ground just before using and never bought ground, as it quickly loses its flavor, even if kept in air-tight tins. Coffee should not be boiled longer than one or two minutes; when coffee is boiled for a long time we lose from our beverage the deli- cious aroma which permeates the room, leaving the coffee bitter. Allow one tablespoonful of coffee for each cupful, and one for the pot. Five tablespoonfuls of finely One egg white, or two egg shells, ground coffee, Two cupfuls of boiling water. Two cupfuls of cold wafer. BEVERAGES 75 Have the coffee ground medium (not too fine) ; mix the dry coffee with the egg white ; add the cold water and mix thoroughly ; let come to the boiling point, slowly ; boil one or two minutes ; then add the boiling water and set on the back part of the stove where it will keep hot, but will not boil, for fifteen or twenty minutes ; serve with hot milk and cream. Do not boil, simply scald the milk ; boiled milk gives an unpleasant flavor. The egg is used to clear the coffee. VIENNA COFFEE. To one-fourth of a cupful of hot milk add two tablespoonfuls of whipped cream; fill the cup with hot coffee. CHOCOLATE. Scrape fine an ounce and a half of chocolate ; put into a saucepan with one cupful of water ; cook until smooth ; add to it three cupfuls of scalding hot milk ; mix thoroughly and serve with whipped cream. If unsweetened chocolate is used add two tablespoonfuls of sugar. TEA. In making tea an earthern teapot is best ; fill the teapot with boil- ing water and let stand five minutes ; empty, and put in the tea ; allowing one teaspoonful for each cup ; cover with freshly boiled water and allow it to stand on the stove where it will keep hot, but will not boil, for five minutes ; or put in a cosy. LEMONADE. Juice of three and grated rind Half a cupful of sugar, of one large lemon, Four cupfuls of water. Cook the sugar and grated rind of the lemon in half a cupful of water for five minutes; let cool squeeze the lemons; add the syrup and the remainder of the water : strain and serve ice cold. ALPHABETICAL INDEX Apple, Salad 37 Apples, Fried 31 Asparagus, Salad 36 Asparagus 44 Bacon 32 Barley, Water 61 Bavarian Cream 70 Beans, Boston Baked 43 " String 45 Beef, Boiled 18 " Broth 5 " Corned 19 " Roast 22 11 Soup 5 " Steak 21 " Stew 20 " Tea 61 Beets, Baked 43 " Boiled 43 Beverages 74 Biscuits, Baking Powder 48 Bisque of Lobster 12 Boiled Dinner 19 Boiled Meats 18 Boning, Fish 13 Bouillon 6 Bread, Boston Brown 47 " Corn 50 " Graham 46 " Milk 46 "" Vienna 45 " Whole Wheat 47 Broiled Hamburg Steak 32 Steaks 21 Broiling 21 Broth, Chicken 6 Buckwheat Cakes 51 Buns 47 Cabbage 44 Salad 36 Cake, Angel 62 tl Cocoanut 64 " Corn 50 " Delicate 63 41 Devil's Food 63 " Fruit 65 ' ' German Coffee 47 Instructions in Mixing 62 Cake, Jelly Roll 67 " Lemon Queens 63 " Plain Loaf 64 " Pound i^~) " Spice 64 " Sponge 63 " Sunshine 62 " Wedding 65 Cakes, Almond 66 " Buckwheat 51 " Flannel 50 " Griddle 50 " Short , 48 " Small Nut 68 Calf's Liver 32 Caramel Syrup 51 " Custards 59 " Icing 68 Cauliflower 44 Celery Salad 36 Charlotte Russe 70 Cheese Balls 30 Chicken, Broiled 22 " Croquettes 28 " Fricassee 2() Fried 27 " Roast 25 " Salad 23 " Stew 19 ( ihocolate 75 Chowder, Clam 12 " Fish 13 Coffee, Making 74 " Vienna 75 Cookies 68 Corn, Green 45 Cream, Bavarian 70 " Ginger 69 " Puffs 66 " Sauce 37 " Strawberry 70 " Whipped 73 ( Jroquettes 27 lt Chicken 28 " Fish 16 " Meat 29 " Potatoes 28 " Rice 29 ALPHABETICAL INDEX— Continued Croquettes, Royal 28 11 Sweetbreads 28 Croutons 9 Crullers 30 Cucumbers 35 Custard, Boiled 58 Baked 59 " Caramel 59 Doughnuts 31 Drawn Batter 38 Duck, Tame 25 " Wild 26 Egg- Balls 9 " Salad 35 " Vermicelli 53 " Baked 52 " Boiled ... 51 (i for Invalids 51 11 Poached 52 " Scrambled 52 " Shirred 52 Eggnog 62 Fat for Frying..! 26 " to Clarify 26 Fish, Baked ' 14 " Balls 15 " Boiled 14 " To Bone 13 " Broiled 13 " Chowder 13 " To Clean 13 " Cod 15 " Creamed 15 11 Croquettes 16 " Escalloped 16 " Fried 14 " Roes, Fried 16 " Salad 34 " Salt 15 Sauces 37 " To Skin 13 " Souffle 15 Filling for Cream Puffs 66 Flannel Cakes 50 Force Meat Balls 9 Frappe 74 Freezing 71 French Dressing 33 Fricasseeing 20 Fritters, Apple 29 " Batter 29 " Chicken 30 " Fruit 30 " Oyster 30 Frogs Legs, Fried 16 Frosting 67 Frying 26 Game, To Clean and Truss 24 Gelatine Desserts 68 Gems, Graham 49 Giblets, To Clean 24 Gingerbread 66 Gravv 24 Gruel, Oatmeal 61 Ham, Boiled 18 Hamburg Steak 32 Hollandaise Sauce 38 Horseradish Sauce 37 Ice Cream 72 " Caramel 72 " To Freeze 72 To Mould 72 Nut 73 " Neapolitan 72 Vanilla 72 Strawberry 72 [ces, Lemon 74 Icings 67 Invalid Cookery 61 Jelly, Chicken ' 62 Jenny Lind 48 Lamb Chops, Broiled 22 " " Breaded 27 11 Fricassee 20 " Roast 24 Lemon Pie 54 Sauce 59 Lemonade 75 fl Flaxseed (51 Lettuce 36 Liver, Calf's 32 Lobster, Bisque L2 " Salad 34 Materials Served in Soup 9 Macaroni 42 ' with Cream Sauce 42 " with Cheese 42 " with Tomatoes 42 • Maitre d 'Hotel Sauce 40 Mayonnaise Dressing 33 " Dressing, Cooked 33 Meats, 18 " Corned 19 il Sauces 37 Meringue 55 Mint Sauce 40 Moose 73 Muffins 49 " Sally Lunns 49 " Raised 49 Mush, Fried 30 Mushroom Sauce 38 ALPHABETICAL INDEX— Continued Mutton Chops 22 a • Fricassee 20 Stew 20 New Jiingland Dinner 19 Oatmeal Gruel 61 Omelets, French •_'- " Cheese 52 Ham 52 " Light 53 Onions, Boiled 43 Orange Pudding 51 " Jelly 71 Oyster Cocktail 17 '" Plant 10 Stuffing 27 Stew 17 Oysters, Creamed 17 " Escalloped 18 " Fritters 30 " Fried 30 " Panned 17 " Patties 17 "■ a la .foulette 18 " Raw 17 Pan Broiling 21 Parker House Rolls 46 Parsnips, Fried 44 Peas, Green 45 Paste, Puff 53 Pastry, Flaky 5^ Pie, Apple 55 " Custard 56 " Juicy Fruit 55 lt Lemon 54 Mince 54 " Peach 55 " Peach Cream 55 " Pumpkin 56 " Rhubarb 55 Popovers 49 Pork and Beans 43 Pork Chops 32 ". Roast 24 Pot Roast 23 Potato Balls 41 Potato Salad 35 " Soup 12 Potatoes, Baked 41 Boiled 40 " Browned 41 " Creamed 41 11 French Fried 41 " Lyonnaise 42 Mashed 41 Rice 41 " Saratoga 41 Potatoes, Sweet - 42 Poultry, To Clean 24 " To Draw - 24 " To Dress for Roasting.... 25 " Gravy 25 " To Stuff and Truss 25 Prune Pudding 27 Pudding, Apple Roly Poly 5S " Bread, French 57 11 Bread and Apple 58 " Corn Meal 59 " Delicate 57 " Fruit, Steamed 56 " Fig 69 " Gelatine 68 " Nesselrode 73 " Orange 57 11 Plum, English 58 " Prune 57 " Prune Souffle 58 " Rice Cream 58 il Sauces - 60 " Snow <" " Strawberry 68 Suet 56 " Yorkshire 23 Rabbit Curry 20 Rhubarb Pie ^ Rice, Boiled - 42 " Croquettes 29 Roasting 22 Rolls, Cinnamon 47 " French -. 46 " Parker House 40 Swedish 4S " Twin 46 Salad 36 " Asparagus 36 Apple 37 ' ' Banana 37 " Beet 30 " Cabbage 36 " Celery 30 " Chicken ; ^ :; Cucumber 35 " ^gg i*5 " Fish 3o Fruit 37 Lettuce 36 (i Lobster 34 " Meat 35 " Potato 35 11 Shrimp 34 " Sweetbread 34 " Tomato 35 Sally Lunns 49 ALPHABETICAL INDEX— Continued Salmon on Toast 16 Salsify Soup 10 Sauces, Meat and Fish 37 " Bechamel 39 " Beurre Noir 38 " Brown 37 Butter 38 Ci Champagne 39 " Horseradish 37 " Hollandaise 38 " Maitre d 'Hotel 40 Mint 40 " Mushroom 38 Oyster 39 Tartar 39 << Tartare 39 " Tomato 38 " White 37 11 Pudding 60 " Berry 60 " Brandy 60 " Caramel 60 " Custard 58 " Foamy 60 " Fruit 60 " Golden - 59 " Hard 60 " Lemon 59 " Wine 60 Sauteing 31 Sherbet, Pineapple 74 Shortcake, apricot 48 " urarige 48 " Strawberry 48 Shrimp Salad.... 34 Souffle, r'ish 15 " Prune 58 Soup, Beef 5 " Bisque Lobster 12 ' ' Bouillon j 6 " Chicken 6 " Clear Beef 5 " Clam 12 " Consomme 7 " Cream Asparagus 10 " Cream Celery 10 " Cream Chicken 10 " Cream Salsify 10 Soup, Cream Tomato 11 " Fish 13 Macaroni 8 " Muligatawnev 8 " Mock Bisque 11 " Mock Turtle 7 " Oyster 17 " Green Pea 11 " Split Pea 11 11 Potato 12 " Tomato 9 " Vegetable 6 11 Vermicelli 8 Spinach 44 Squash, Summer 44 Stew, Beef 19 <* Chicken 19 " Veal 20 Stock, To 'lcar 5 To Make 5 Mixed 6 Stuffing, Bread 25 " Oyster 25 Sweetbreads 2 1 li Cnamed 24 '* Salad 34 Tartar Sauce 39 Tartare Sauce 39 Tea 75 " Beef 61 " Beef Broiled 61 i i mbales 29 Toast 61 Tomato Salad 35 " Escalloped 43 Turkey, Roasl 25 Veal Cutlet :n " Heart 23 " Roast 24 " Stew 20 Vegetables 40 Wafers 67 Wafers, Nut 68 Waffles 51 Water Ice "4 Wine Jelly.., ~ 1 Yorkshire Pudding 2:; A few of the many reasons why Carnation Milk I S BEST Carnation Cows browse in the sun -kissed fields and meadows in the States of Washington and Oregon — west of the mountains — where the pas- tures are green the year 'round STERILIZED! rJllfe Nature has pro- vided numerous springs and the best of mountain streams Climatic condi- tions are perfect Wholesome well - bred cows and p e r f e c t sanitation go to make up the rest SERIAL NUMBER 2205 On account of its purity, richness in butterfat, etc- Miss Tracy recommends and uses Carnation Milk in all her lectures and demonstrations Pacific Coast Condensed Milk Co. OEFICES: SEATTLE, WASH. Factories: KENT, WASH. CHEHALIS, WASH. MOUNT VERNON, WASH. MONROE, WASH. FOREST GROVE, ORE. HILLSBORO, ORE. John H. Spohn Co., Agents, San Francisco ^FOLGER'S^ gOLBHLGATF FOLGEtfs I fio!denG aie f TEAS CEYION * HIGH GRADE— HIGH PRICE J. A. FOLGER & CO. SAN FRANCISCO 'N 27 \dos