«iiii)»K>o»mM^t;:-. ^T'Yf B l MU IB i llllll 'HMIHItliH I II fll MIM II Il l W i yMIU f WIMH IMHMI'IMhlll NmAi ^^ Class ____Xlj:^i^ Book 33^6* 1 wo COPYRIGHT DEPOSre Practical Cookery" A Manual of C9okery for Use in School and ^Home By HANNAH C. DUTAUD ll Teacher of Domestic Science ;-■ :■'■ :•*■. .j;.i Published by the Author 1914 All Rights Reserved ■\,-,- TX 7/5- Cbpyright 1914 Hannah C. Dutaud St. Lbuis, Mo. C1.ANK-EPR AGU E POINTING CO. ST. LOUIS DEC 21 1914 ©CI.A3910G7 TO MY PUPILS The Principia Girls CONTENTS. Page l'ri-f;u-c 1 I ntrudiKt iiiii - riTA]''n'K I. Siip[j?estions on how to work 3 I )isli washiuf^ 4 I'aliU' sor\ ice ."> Ivules for serving; ^' ( )r(ler of service 7 Se:itin}4" of g^uests 7 ( )r(U'r of (liniiif^ room after meals S I IIArTI'lR 11. ( hemiial lomposition of loods ^^ Protein ^^ ( arhob Ntlrates 9 h'ats and oils '^ M ineral Matter 9 Water *> ( )rf^anic anil inorganic foods 10 CHArTl<:K 111. Reasons for Cooking" foods 13 riiAi'ri':k iv. Method of ciH)king- 1-^ Ahhreviations and e(|uivalents 1^ Ways of preserving foods 15 Method i>f ci>oking albuminous substances 16 Method of cooking starchy foods 16 CMArri'R \ . Heverages 1 '^ Coffee 1 '"^ Cocoa and Choctdate 1^^ Keciju's -0 CllAR'n-R \ I. Milk . , 23 Chemical ct)m])osition -3 Practical uses -3 rreservatiim of milk 2^ Cream and butter --1 Manufacturing of butter -3 Cheese --"^ Recipes -7 1 CHAPTER VII. Eggs.... 29 Composition 29 Testing and preserving 30 Method of cooking eggs 31 Recipes 32 CHAPTER VIII. Cereals, composition and kinds 35 Cooking of cereals 38 CHAPTER IX. Nuts, kinds and composition 39 Recipes 39 CHAPTER X. Condiments, spices and flavors 41 CHAPTER XI. Sugars and manufacturing of sugars 44 Recipes 45 CHAPTER XII. Fruits , , 48 Classification of fruits 48 Recipes 49 CHAPTER XIII. Canning 51 Jellies and preserves 51 CHAPTER XIV. Vegetables : Classification 57 Time table for cooking vegetables 58 Edible fungi 58 Chemical composition 59 Recipes 59 CHAPTER XV. Meat 66 Beef 6S Veal 79 Eamb 84 Pork 85 CHAPTER XVI. Poultrv and game ^^ Selection, cleaning and preparation 88 CHAPTER XVIT. Fish 93 When to obtain fish 94 Recipes 96 II Page CHAPTER XVIII. Salads 100 Recipes 101 CHAPTER XIX. Soups without meat 106 Reci])es 106 CHAPTER XX. Sauces 108 Thickening for sauces 108 Recipes ..110 CHAPTER XXI. Batters and doughs 115 Recipes 116 CHAPTER XXII. Bread 123 Ceneral directions 124 Recipes 124 CHAPTER XXIII. Pies 129 General 129 Recipes 1 30 CHAPTER XXIV. Cakes 1 36 Recipes 136 Icings 145 CHAPTER XXV. Desserts 148 Recipes 148 CHAPTER XXVI Ice Creams 158 General rules 158 Recipes 1 58 CHAPTER XXVII. Sandwiches 162 Eillings 162 CHAPTER XXVIII. I^aper bag cookery 163 CHAPTER XXIX. Culinary dictionary 165 III PREFACE. Food of every description is wholesome and digestible if prepared and cooked properly. A variety of nutritive and relishing dishes may be prepared from the most homely materials. There must be scrupulous neatness in keeping, handling and serving food. Cleanliness should be the first requisite in the care and preparation of the food we eat. The food question is a complicated one and should be studied carefully from the standpoint of cost and nutritive value of different substances. The function of food is to supply heat and energy and to keep the tissues repaired. Meals, therefore, should be so ar- ranged as to supply the proper element for each of these re- quirements. W^e should not be influenced by the dictates of the palate in the planning and preparation of meals ; because acquired appetite would often over-rule what common sense tells us is wrong. We are prone to believe that the high market value of certain foods means high nutritive value. This is not always true. A pound of beef from the round contains far more nutri- tive value than a pound of tenderloin from the same animal and costs but one-third the cost of the tenderloin. H. I). INTRODUCTION. In olden times when the housewife, carefully taught by her mother, helped produce most of the foodstuff, she could prepare it for the table. In these days of complex living the trained investigator must help the home to se- cure the best kinds of food. Dr. C. F. Langworthy, Chief of Nutrition Investigations, in the Department of Agri- culture, Washington, D. C, in the Department Year Book says : "To say that a family bill-of-fare must be appetizing and varied does not necessarily mean that it must be costly as well. The staple food materials, skillfully combined and simply but attractively prepared, are more pleasing in the long run than elaborate living." This is another way of say- ing that an efificient cook is one who can make a good meal out of simple materials. The writer of this book, who is head of the Department of Household Arts in The Principia. is a practical housekeeper and knows how to prepare ex- quisite meals in her own home at a modicum of expense. Her pupils in school often surprise their friends with the dainty results of their efforts. Hitherto her knowledge of this art has been passed along orally. Now, some of it has been set forth in this book. In the following pages Miss Dutaud has endeavored to give, not merely a book of recipes, but a brief treatise which shall be of value to the housewife in the discharge of her duties in the kitchen and dining-room. It is to be hoped that its pages will carry some of the aroma of the practice rooms where it originated, and convey to its readers a little of the ability and skill which have en- abled its author to stand in such an enviable position before her constituency. From my knowledge of Miss Dutaud's attainments and work, I cordially commend this volume to all wide-awake housekeepers. GEORGE MILLARD DAVISON The Princi])ia. St. Louis, Mo. PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER I. SUGGESTIONS ON HOW TO WORK. 1. Neatness is the first requisite. 2. The hair should be carefully brushed and confined under clean, white cooking cap. 3. Hands and finger nails should be immaculate. 4. Long apron, preferably with sleeves. 5. Avoid the constant tasting of foods. Each time food is tasted a fresh spoon should be used for that purpose. 6. Be orderly in everything you do in the kitchen and in the home 7. Be sure to keep all cooking utensils in their right places. 8. Guard against hurry and confusion. 9. Go about your work quietly and thoughtfully. 10. Collect all materials and utensils that will be needed. This will save you steps. Remember that the economy of time is as important as the economy of money. 11. Do not use more utensils than is necessary. Measure first, dry materials, then liquid and last fats. In this way one cup will be sufficient to measure these three ingredients. 12. Have all materials carefully measured and placed in order before putting them together. Pans should be greased, fioured and set aside ready for use. 13. Do not leave sugar and flour cans open, nor spice boxes. Close them and put them away as soon as used But- ter and lard should not be left out of the refrigerator longer than is necessary. 14. Learn not to scatter flour over every inch of cooking space. Try to keep your work cleaned up as you go along. 15. When peeling fruit or vegetables, have a receptacle in which to drop the peelings. It is very careless and untidy to allow peelings to drop in the sink or on kitchen table. The^• eventually have to be gathered up and disposed of. It will save you time and make conditions about the kitchen more attractive if you will abide strictly by this rule. 16. Be systematic and cultivate cheerfulness, neatnes'^ and order in your kitchen, and. above all, the desire to do and accomplish something really worth while. PRACTICAL COOKERY DISHWASHING. 1. Use plenty of water. Have two separate pans; one for washing, the other for rinsing. Use Ivory soap. It is better to have it in a soap shaker than to rub it on dishcloth. 2. Wash first the glassware, then silver, delicate china, and last the heavier dishes. 3. Scrape all food from dishes, and allow water to run over them before putting them in the dishpan. Never place any receptacle in the dishpan that contains the smallest par- ticle of food. Dishwater should always be clear. Do not al- low it to become greasy ; change it often. Remember that the dishes out of which you cook and eat should be washed with the greatest care. 4. The handles of knives and forks, if of ivory, bone or celluloid, should not be left standing in warm water, as it will be apt to cause them either to split open, to discolor or loosen. Polish steel blades with sapolio or pulverized bristol brick. 5. Wash the cooking utensils with the same care that you do the fine china. Rough handling will cause the enamel to split or chip off. Do not allow the cooking utensils to become discolored ; use sapolio or some good cleaner to remove burnt or discolored spots. For this purpose do not use your dish- cloth. Use instead a cork or a small piece of cloth that can be discarded afterwards. 6. Use soft linen towels for glass and silverware, and linen for the other dishes. Use a good quality of cheesecloth, properly hemmed, for dishcloths. 7. Keep towels and dishcloths properly washed and rinsed. Dishes will not be clear and shiny if linen is not properly kept. 8. All dishes which have contained doughy substances should be washed with a small scrubbing brush and in cold water. When all particles of dough are removed, then they mav be washed in the ordinary manner Wash baking board with brush and cold water. 9. Wash sink in hot. soapy water. Keep a large strainer in the sink in which to scrape the dishes. This will prevent particles of food from going down the drain, and will keep the sink looking neat. Once a week sinks should be flushed with boiling water, in which washing soda has been dissolved. 10. The refrigerator should be looked over daily. Allow nothing to spoil in it. Once a week take everything out and wash it carefullv with good soapy water and pour through the drains a strong solution of hot washing soda. Do not allow PRACTICAL COOKERY any food with strong odor to be placed in the refrigerator. Keep the butter, if possible, in covered glass or earthenware dishes. Keep the milk covered and close to the ice. If the ice is covered with an asbestos blanket or newspaper it will not melt so quickly. 11. The stove is an important item and should be kept clean and spotless. Most of the stoves now used in the homes are made in such a way that they may be kept clean with soap and water. The nickel plate may be kept clean and shiny with silver polish. The burners of gas stoves once a week should be boiled in a solution of washing soda. Keep the oven clean and free from dust. To light a top burner of a gas stove, turn the cork for one second, allowing the air that is in the pipe to escape, then turn it off ; turn on the second time and apply lighted match. The flame should be blue. A yel- low flame smokes the cooking utensils, wastes the gas and does not give the required amount of heat. To light the oven burner, open the door of the lower oven, turn on the pilot light cord, lighting the pilot light from the outside. Turn on the two oven burners. When both are burning blue, turn off the pilot light. The upper oven is used for keeping dishes and food warm. The middle oven for baking and roasting; the lower oven for toasting and broiling. TABLE SERVICE. There are a few definite rules which should be followed in all homes, from the simplest to the most sumptuous. Table manners are an excellent gage of the refinement of a family. The greatest ease and freedom should be manifested. Avoid discussing unpleasant topics ; let the conversation be general and to the enjoyment of all. Ill temper, indifference, lack of interest in conversation will often spoil a good meal. Eat whatever is placed before you and show that you are enjoying it. Avoid doing anything that will give offense to your hostess. Try to be cheerful ; show a spirit of thankfulness ; remem- ber that no matter how simple the meal is, thought and care were necessary in the preparation of it. The table and food should be pleasing to the eye, the decorations few and simple. An over display of silver or flowers is not good taste. 1. Have the dining-room well lighted and ventilated. PRACTICAL COOKERY 2. If there is a center light, have table placed directly under it. 3. Table should be covered with a good silence-cloth of felting or any good, heavy, soft material. 4. Have table linen spotless and well ironed, taking care that center crease in tablecloth comes directly in center of table. Then start to arrange the places, having at least twenty inches between each cover. 5. Place knives and spoons at the right. The sharp edge oi knives should be turned toward plate; the bowls of spoons turned up. i orks are placed at the left, with tines turned up. 6. Place napkin at left next to the forks. 7. BuLter plates to the left, just coming to the point of the forks. 8. Glasses are placed at the right, just coming to the point of knives. 9. Place salt, pepper, vinegar, oil. jelly, etc., inside the line of plates. 10. Carving set in front of host. 11. Soup ladle in front of hostess, handle to the right, bowl up. 12. Arrange the coffee or tea service neatly in front of hostess. 13. Finger bowls when used should be placed on dessert plates with a doily underneath the bowl, and placed at the right of each person. Have the water in the bowls cold and if convenient have a very thin slice of lemon in the water. 14. Be sure that the table is symmetrically arranged 15. Arrange chairs at sufficient distance from tht table so that they will not touch the edge of the tablecloth. RULES FOR SERVING. 1. The waitress should stand at the left of host or hostess, and when the dishes are being served at the table, she should take on a tray or hold in her hand each plate as it is ready to serve, setting it down from the right of the person with her left hand. 2. In passing dishes from which one is to help oneself, pass always to the left, and hold the dish so low, that one can serve oneself with ease. 3. It is preferable for the waitress to use a folded napkin in her hand instead of a tray, letting the dish rest on the nap- kin, holding the dish carefully, so that the thumb will not rest u] on the upper surface of the dish. PRACTICAL COOKERY 4. Remove each course as it is finished, standing- at the right and removing the soiled dishes with the left hand. 5. Do not pile one plate on top of another; remove but one plate at a time. 6. First the soiled dishes should be removed ; then the food. Before dessert is served, crumbs should be carefully removed, either with crumb tray or by using a folded napkin and plate. 7. Glasses should be filled from the right. Do not re- move them from table, nor fill them too full. 8. Walk quietly and avoid clattering the dishes. ORDER OF SERVING. There are no set rules laid down for the way in which a meal should be served. So much has to be taken into con- sideration that it would be hard for one person to decide foi another. The question of time and help, and the type of guests present, all enter into this important question. There are, however, a few general rules that one may safely sug-gest. The hostess should be mistress of the situation, should be at ease and show no sense of worry or anxiety. If mistakes should happen, it is better to ignore them than to comment upon them. Be careful not to place a guest in an embarrassing posi- tion, remembering that while guests are at your table you are to do all in your power to make them feel at ease and at home. It is a good plan to serve first the guest at right of host, next the guest at left of hostess, interlacing in this manner till all are served. It is also proper to serve first the hostess, then the ladies and last the gentlemen. If the hostess is served first it is her duty to start eating first, in so doing showing which fork or spoon is to be used. SEATING GUESTS AT TABLE. The host should be the first to leave the drav/ing-room with the lady guest of honor, seating the lady at his right ; other guests follow, each lady being seated at the right of the gentleman whom she accompanies The hostess is the last to enter the dining-room, with the gentleman guest of honor, who sits at her left. Try to select PRACTICAL COOKERY guests who will enjoy each other. ORDER OF DINING-ROOM AFTER MEALS. 1. Remove crumbs carefully from cloth. Fold cloth in original creases. 2. If napkins are to be used again, see ihat they are neatly placed in the rings. 3. Remove crumbs from the floor, arrange the chairs in their proper places. 4. Tvv to make the dining-room one of the most cheerful rooms in the house. PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER II. CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF FOODS. The chemical substances of which the body is composed are very similiar to those of the foods which nourish it. From 15 to 20 elements are found. Among the most al)undant are, oxygen, h3'drogen, nitrogen, carbon, calcium. ]^hosphorus and sulphur. The elements are so combined as to form a great variety of compounds. The five most important compounds : Protein. Carbohydrates. Fats and oils. Mineral matter. Water. PROTEIN. This term means the principal nitrogenous compounds. Protein is found in the lean of meat and gristle, white of egg, curd of milk and gluten of wheat, etc. CARBOHYDRATES. By this term is meant the compounds made up of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. The carbohydrates are found chiefly in vegetable foods, in starch, different kinds of sugars and plant fibers (cellulose). FATS AND OILS. I Fats and oils are found chiefly in animal foods, such as meat, fish, butter. They are also found in large quantities in s(ime cereals, nuts, and in vegetable products, such as olives, and also in cotton seed. MINERAL MATTER. The mineral compounds are found in both the animal and vegetable world and contain carbon, oxygen and hydrogen. Some contain nitrogen, phosphorus and sulphur. WATER. Water is one of the most abundant of the five food prin- ciples. It forms about 60 per cent of the weight of the body. 9 PRACTICAL COOKERY Water is a great solvent. It is called the "Universal Car- rier." Good drinking water is a clear, colorless, almost tasteless, odorless liquid. In boiling, water will lose its gases. They may be re- placed by beating in air. ORGANIC AND INORGANIC FOODS. i Protein. Carbohydrates. Fats and oils. INORGANIC. I yt^^^''-, ^ Mmeral matter. PRACTICAL COOKERY Figures compiled from Atwater: COMPOSITION OF FOOD MATERIALS. tf Nutrients u 4) 03 Including refuse : Beef, round 7.8 Beef, sirloin 3.2 Mutton , leg 18.1 Pork 14.6 Salmon, whole 35. 3 Mackerel, whole 44.6 Cod, dressed 29.9 Oysters in shell 82.4 60.9 40.9 50.6 43.0 40.6 40.4 58.5 15.3 Excluding refuse : Beef, round 68.2 Beef, sirloin 42.2 Mutton, leg 61.8 Cod 82.6 Oysters 87.2 Milk 87.0 Butter 10.5' Cheese 30.2 Potatoes 78.9 Beans 68.5 Rice 12.4 Corn meal 15.0 Oatmeal 7.8 Wheat flour 12.5 Wheat bread 32.3 Sugar 2.0 31.3 55.9 31.3 42.4 24.1 15.0 11.6 2.3 31.8 57.8 38.2 17.4 12.8 13.0 89.5 69.8 21.1 31.5 87.6 85.0 92.2 87.5 67.7 98.0 18.0 12.9 15.0 13.6 14.3 10.0 10.6 1.1 20.5 13.3 18.3 15.8 6.3 3.6 1.0 28.3 2.1 7.1 7.4 9.2 14.7 11.0 12.3 42.3 15.6 28.0 8.8 4.3 0.2 0.2 10.1 43.7 19.0 0.4 1.6 4.0 85 35.5 0.1 0.7 0.4 3.8 7.1 1.1 1.7 0.6 4.0 4.7 0.5 1.8 17.9 22 79.4 70.6 68.4 74.9 56.3 97.8 1.2 0.8 0.9 1.2 0.9 0.7 3.0 4.2 0.1 1.7 0.4 1.4 2.0 0.5 0.9 0.2 855 2025 935 1435 635 370 205 40 805 2090 1140 310 260 325 3615 2070 375 570 1630 1645 1845 1645 1280 1820 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER III. THE MOTTO OF THE NEW YORK CITY PUBLIC SCHOOL KITCHENS. Good cookery means the knowledge of all fruits, herbs, balms, and spices, and of all that is healing and sweet in fields and groves, and savory in meats. It means carefulness, inventiveness, watchfulness, willingness, and readiness of appliance. It means the economy of your great-grandmoth- ers and the science of modern chemists. It means much tasting and no wasting. It means English thoroughness, French art, and Arabian hospitality. It means, in tine, that you are to be perfectly and always ladies (loafgivers). — Ruskin. Food is prepared and cooked for many reasons : 1. To render mastication ea.sy. 2. To convert certain hurtful substances into nutriti\'e foods. 3. To combine the right foods in proper proportions. 4. To make it more agreeable to the palate and pleasing to the eye. Apart from the purely aesthetic value of an agreeable meal, and a well spread table, there remain many solid arguments for the last two reasons. Pleasant flavors are a necessity of diet. No person could be nourished on tasteless foods. No one could live content on a monotonous diet, though there may be nothing wanting from the point of \iew of chemical analysis. Mastication acts mechanically in subdividing foods. It acts chemically by reason of the digestive power of saliva on starch. We may percei\e how iniiwssible it would be to masticate a mouthful of flour or of raw meat. We cannot ex])ect the human teeth to do all of the sub- dividing of the food we eat ; the action of heat in the prepara- tion of foods will accomplish much of the subdividing. In all latitudes cookery has to accommodate itself in an infinite \ariety of wa}'s to the ages, conditions and fortunes of men. 12 PRACTICAL COOKERY Food must be prepared in such a manner that the great- est nutrititive and aesthetic value may be derived from its consumption. TEMPERATURES USED IN COOKING. 98 degrees — Lukewarm ; body heat. 150 degrees — Scalding; too hot to keep fingers in. 183 degrees — Simmering; small air bubbles appear. 212 degrees — Boiling; large bubbles appear all over sur- face of water and steam escapes. Next to exact measuring comes care in proper combinin.g. 1. To stir, mix by using circular motion, widening the circles until all is blended. Stirring is the motion ordinarily employed in all cookery, sometimes used in combination with beating. When stirring a sauce or other food which is being cooked on top of stove, do not stir too rapidly nor in one spot. In this instance the object is to keep the food from adhering to the bottom of the pan and also to keep the dififerent sul>- stances well blended. A rapid stirring would retard the cooking. By stirring, ingredients are mixed. 2. To beat, turn ingredients over and over continually, bringing the under part to the surface, thus allowing the utensils used for beating to be constantly brought in contact with the bottom of the dish and throughout the mixture. By beating, a large amount of air is introduced. Beating should always be done in the same direction. 3. To cut and fold is to introduce one ingredient into an- other ingredient by two motions: with a spoon, a repeated vertical downward motion, known as cutting; and a turning over and over of mixture, allowing bowl of spoon each time to come in contact with bottom of dish, called folding. These repeated motions are alternated until thorough blending is ac- complished. By cutting and folding air alread\- introduced is ])re\'ented from escaping. 13 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER IV. Principal methods of cooking: [From Theory and Practice of Cookery] 1. Broiling: cooking over a glowing fire. 2. Roasting: cooking before a glowing fire. \ 3. Baking: cooking in an oven. Direct applica- tion of heat. by Boiling: cooking in boiling water. Stewing: cooking for a long time in water below the boiling point. 6. Steaming : a. moist : cooking in steamer. b. dry : cooking in double boiler. ) Application ■- means of 3 heated air. ^ Heat applied > by means of 3 water. By contact with steam. By the heat of steam sur- rounding vessel. Frying: cooking in hot fat deep enough " to cover the article to be cooked. Sauteing: cooking in a small quantity of hot fat. Heat applied by means of heated fat. 9. 10 11. Pan-baking: Pan-broiling cooking in a frying- i pan or on a grid- \ die, with little or no fat. I Heat applied liy means of heated metal. Braising: a combination of stewing Fricasseeing: a combination of frying and stewine. Exact measuring is necessary to obtain the best results in cooking. Flour, meal, powdered sugar, soda and baking powder, should be sifted before mea.suring. All materials are to be measured level. Measure dry materials into a cup with a spoon, leveling the top with a knife. A cupful of liquid is all the cup will hold. A spoonful of liquid is all the spoon will hold. To measure butter, lard or any solid fat, pack solidly intd the cup and level off with a knife. To measure a spoon- PRACTICAL COOKERY ful or cupful of dry substance, heap material on spoon or cup, lift it and level with the flat surface of a caseknife. Half a spoonful is a spoonful divided lengthwise. Quarter of a spoonful is a spoonful divided into half crosswise and lengthwise. A speck is as much as will lie on the tip of a pointed knife. ABBREVIATIONS. tbsp. stands for tablespoon. oz. stands for ounce, tsp. stands for teaspoon. lb. stands for pound, c. stands for cup. spk. stands for speck. g. stands for gill. min. stands for minute, pt. stands for pint. h. stands for hour. qt. stands for quart. EQUIVALENTS. Measures. Weights. 3 tsp.^1 tbsp. 2 c. liquid=l lb. 4tbsp.=>4 c. 4 c. flour^l lb. 2g.=l c. 2 c. solid fat=l lb. 2 c.=l pt. 2 c. granulated sugar= lb. 2pt.=l qt. 3 c. meal^l lb. 4 qt.=l gal. 2 c. solid meat=l lb. 2 tbsp. sugar=l oz. 2 tbsp. butter=l oz. 2 tbsp. liquid=l oz. 4 tbsp. flour=l oz. WAYS OF PRESERVING FOODS. 1. By Freezing: Foods that spoil easily are frozen for trans- portation. Example: Poultry, fish. 2. By Refrigerating: Foods that are kept in cold storage. Example : Meat, milk, eggs, butter, etc. 3. By Canning: Preserving in airtight glass jars or tins. sugar being often used as a help. Example : Canned peaches, corn, peas. 4. By Sugaring: Fruit juices and small fruits being pre- served by equal amount of sugar and fruit, or fruit juices. Example : Jellies and jams. 5. By Drying: The evaporation of most of the moisture. Example: Fruits, vegetables, meats. (Salt is often used.) 6. By Salting: Flesh of animals being preserved by appli- cation of salt, dry or by corning or salting in brine. PRACTICAL COOKERY Example : Pork, beef, codfish. 7. By Smoking: Foods, having been salted or cured, are placed in a closed room for several hours, where hickory wood is allowed to smolder. Example : Ham, bacon, beef, fish. 8. By Pickling: Vinegar with the addition of salt, sugar and spices in which fruits and vegetables are allowed to remain. Example : Pickled pears, tomatoes. 9. By Placing in Oil: Olive oil is best for this purpose. Ex- ample : Sardines, Pimentoes. METHOD OF COOKING ALBUMINOUS SUBSTANCES The greatest care should be exercised in the cooking ol albumin. Alliuminous matter is of various kinds and is found in animal and vegetable substances. Some are liquid, some are solid. Coagulation is one of the properties of albumin. Heat coagulates nearly all all)uminous substances. The albumin in egg and milk should be subjected to slow, even temperature. The albumin in egg, when subjected to high temperature, will become liard and tough. For example, a custard that has overcooked by too high a temperature becomes a hard, solidi- fied mass, allowing the watery substances to separate; but if subjected to low temperature it will be soft and creamy. The albumin in meat also hardens on exposure to heat. In cooking a choice, tender cut of meat, it is essential to subject it to intense heat in order to harden the albumin on the outside. This will form a hard stirface and will help to retain the good juice in the meat. Albuminous substances, if cooked at a temperature below boiling, will always be soft. When cooked at a temperature of 212 degrees the albumin is hard and tough. The effect of heat on albuminous substances is not only to change the texture, but also to develop the flavor. The purest form of albumin is found in the white of egg. The albuminous substances are classified as protein foods. METHOD OF COOKING STARCHY FOODS. Starch is composed of carbon, oxygen and hydrogen. When heated, the two last pass off as water, leaving the car- bon. PRACTICAL COOKERY Starch is a fine, white powder, insoluble in cold water, but partially soluble in hot water. When boiling water is poured upon dry starch, lumps form immediately, because the moment the hot water touches the itarch it causes it to swell, forming a sticky outer surface, therefore preventing the rest from swelling. To prevent starch from forming lumps it should first be mixed with cold water. Then the hot liquid is added to it. A given amount of starch (flour or corn starch) may be thoroughly mixed with a given amount of sugar. Then the hot liquid may be poured over and stirred constantly. The hot liquid will cause the sugar to melt and thereby allow all of the starch granules to swell and become soluble. Whenever starch is heated to 320 degrees a new substance is formed, named dextrine. Dextrine somewhat resembles sugar, difl^ering from starch in that it is soluble in cold water and does not thicken mixtures. Dextrine is found in prepared breakfast foods like grape- nuts, in baked potatoes, crusts of bread and cakes. When preparing vegetables or fruit rich in starch, put them in cold water, because if exposed to the air they will become discolored, and will form a hard outer crust. All starchy vegetables should be cooked in boiling water, and not allowed to remain in the water when cooked. Water should be drained ofif immediately. All starchy foods should be thoroughly cooked. All cereals should be subjected to a process of long, slow cooking. This will greatly improve the flavor of the cereals. PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER V. BEVERAGES. Tea is of Chinese origin, because cultivated first in China. It is now cultivated in Japan, Korea. India, and Ceylon. Tea leaves are obtained from a hard, subtropical shrub. These shrubs are grown from seeds, and are planted in rows usually four or five feet apart, so that the pickers may easily walk in between the rows. These shrubs are cultivated and pruned. The leaves are not picked till shrubs are three years old. If the shrubs are planted in a sheltered position, they are allowed to obtain the height of five feet or more. The leaves are usually gathered three times a year. The first picking in early spring is considered the choicest and .usually demands the highest market prices. The leaves when first picked have neither flavor nor odor. WHien the leaves are picked they are allowed to dry in the sun, after which they are rolled up by hand, and are then dried by artifical heat to develop the flavor and stimulaLing properties. Two substances are found in tea: theine and tannin. Tan- nin is a bitter substance used in making ink and in tanning leather. There are three kinds of tea sold on the market : green tea, black and scented. Black tea is manufactured by a process of withering under the influence of light, heat and air, rolling and ferment- ing and firing. This is done usually over a charcoal sieve. Scented tea is usually of jjoorer quality and is usually flav- ored with aromatic leaves of other plants. Tea should not be boiled nor allowed to stand. This tends to extract the tannin. Green tea is rolled, but is neither withered nor fermented but is treated to stronger firing. COFFEE. First used in Asia and Africa. CofTee is the seed of a berry of a tree, which attains the height of 16 to 18 feet if allowed to grow wild. In its cul- ts PRACTICAL COOKERY tivated state the tree is seldom allowed to exceed eight or nine feet. The flowers grow in clusters at the bases of the leaves and are pure white and of an agreeable odor. The fruit is a small red berry, resembling a cherry, and containing two seeds, known as cofifee beans. The fruit is gathered when ripe. Then the outer pulp and parchment-like covering are removed. This is done by ma- chinery. The berries are then exposed to the sun for several days to allow them to dry, and are placed in circular troughs and subjected to the pressure of heavy rollers. These com- pletely loosen the parchment covering around the coffee bean. The outer covering is fanned off. Then the berries are sized, and toasted. The smallest berry brings the highest price. The finest coffee is grown in Ceylon and Java. Good grades of coffee are also grown in the West Indies, Brazil and Central America. Coffee, like tea, contains tannin and theine, generally called caffeine (in coffee). The difference between tea and coffee is due to the dif- ferent aromatic oils they contain. One method of determining if coffee has been adulterat- ed is to pour cold water over a little coffee. If the coffee floats and colors the water very slowly, it is pure. If the water is quicklv discolored and some of the coffee sinks to the bot- tom, this is usually a sign that some adulterant is present. Chicory is a common adulterant. COCOA AND CHOCOLATE. The Spaniards were the first to introduce the cocoa bean into Europe. It was imported from Mexico where it has been used as a drink for many years. Chocolate is peculiarly considered a Spanish drink. In Spain it is considered almost a necessitv. Chocolate is essentially a tropical cultivation, requiring a moist atmosphere, and a temperature of 70° to 90° F. The best comes from Mexico, Ceylon and Samoa. The trees are planted from 12 to 14 feet apart, and must be several years old before they bear good fruit. The fruit of the tree, in which the seeds lie buried, is a mel- on-shaped pod about a foot long. The interior of these pods is divided into cells, each containing rows of seeds about the size of an almond. These seeds, which are called cocoa beans, PRACTICAL COOKERY lie surrounded by fibrous pulp. When the pods are ripe they are cut off the tree with knives fastened to poles. The pods are then left on the ground for 24 hours. Afier this the seeds are taken out and thrown into heaps and allowed to remain for about five days until they have fermented. During this process they become dark in color and lose much of their bitter taste. To further improve the taste the beans are well roasted. In this condition they are shipped to the dififerent manufac- turers. In the factories the beans are cracked into irregular bits, known as cocoa nibs. Chocolate is the whole bean. In the crushing process it forms a paste which is run into molds and cooled and sold for plain chocolate. It is sometimes flavored and sweetened be- fore being molded. The pulverized cocoa which is sold under the name of breakfast cocoa is made by extracting from the cracked bean a large proportion of its fat and grinding to powder the dry substance. The fat extracted from the cocoa bean is used in making perfumes, cocoa butter, etc. Average chemical composition of chocolate : 50 per cent fat. 13 per cent protein. 7 per cent tannin-like principle. 4 per cent starch. 1 per cent theobromine (a substance allied to cafifeine). Cocoa is frequently adulterated with an inferior grade of starch. Cocoa is insoluble in cold water. But when dissolved in boiling liquid the starch thickens, holding all the other solids together. Chocolate when cooked with milk is an excellent food and verv nutritious. RECIPES. TEA. 1 tsp. tea. 1 c. boiling water. Put tea in a scalded teapot and pour the boiling water over it. let stand five minutes, then stir, strain and serve either hot or iced. (Very thin slices of lemon in which whole cloves have been inserted give a dainty flavor to tea.) PRACTICAL COOKERY BOILED COFFEE. 2 tbsp. coarsely ground coffee. 1 tbsp. cold water. 1 c. boiling water. 1 tbsp. cold water. Mix the coffee with one tablespoonful of cold water. Add boiling water and let boil three minutes. Remove to back of stove, add another tablespoonful of cold water and settle five minutes. A little egg or crushed eggshells may be mixed with the coffee to help clear it. (One tbsp of coffee is all that is needed to make one cup of coffee ; the extra tbsp. is usually added for the coffee pot.) CAFE AU LAIT. 5 tbsp. coffee. 1 c. cold water. 2 c. cold milk (unskimmed). 1 spk. salt. Mix coffee, cold water and salt together, place in a sauce pan and allow it to come slowly to the boiling point, then add cold milk, boil again, strain and serve. COCOA. 3 tbsp. cocoa. 2 tbsp. sugar. j4 tsp. salt. 1 qt. boiling milk (half water may be used). 1 tsp. vanilla. Mix cocoa, sugar, salt together and dissolve with a little of the hot liquid, then cook all together in double boiler for one hour or more, then add vanilla. CHOCOLATE. 1 qt. milk, or half milk and half water (boiling). 2 oz. chocolate. ^ c. sugar. Spk. salt. 1 tsp. vanilla. Melt chocolate in double boiler, then add hot liquid, sui^ai . salt. Allow it to cook about an hour, stirring it frequentl_\, then add vanilla. Serve plain or with whipped cream PRACTICAL COOKERY Marshmellows may be used in place of cream. LEMONADE. 1 c. sugar. Yi c. lemon juice. 1 pt. water. Make syrup by boiling sugar and water twelve minutes ; add fruit juice, cool, and dilute with ice-water to suit in- dividual tastes. Lemon syrup may be bottled and kept on hand to use as needed. ORANGEADE. Make syrup as for lemonade. Sweeten orange juice with syrup, and dilute by pouring over crushed ice. PINEAPPLE LEMONADE. 1 pt. water. 1 c. sugar. 1 qt. ice-water. 1 can grated pineapple. Juice 3 lemons. Make syrup by boiling water and sugar 10 minutes ; add pineapple and lemon juice, cool, strain, and add ice-water. UNFERMENTED GRAPE JUICE. 10 lb grapes. 3 lb sugar. 1 c. water. Put grapes and water in granite stew-pan. Heat until stones and pulp separate; then strain through jelley-bag, add sugar, heat to boiling point, and bottle. This will make one gallon and will keep indefinitely if kept in a dark place. FRUIT PUNCH. Mrs. F. L. Morey. Yi box oranges (Russets are the best for this purpose). 3 doz. lemons. 2 cans Hawaiian pineapple (25 cent size). 1 bottle Maraschino cherries (75-cent size). Add sugar to taste, and large cakes of ice as needed. This will serve a large number of people. PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER VI. MILK. Milk is called a "perfect food" because it contains all the elements necessary for the nourishment of the body. SOURCES. Cows, goats, asses, camels. CHEMICAL COMPOSITION (Average). Water — 87 per cent. Carbohydrate — 5 per cent. Fat — 3 to 4 per cent. Mineral matter- — 1 per cent. Protein — 3 per cent. The protein in milk is in form of casein and albumin. Carbohydrate as lactose (milk sugar). Fat, as a fine emulsion. Mineral matter — as calcium, magnesium, iron. etc. Lactic acid is found in sour milk. Milk is an economical food, because of its high food value. It lends itself to a variety of combinations, and is acceptable as food without cooking. PRACTICAL USES OF MILK. Combinations in desserts. Soups. Sauces. Cheese. Beverages. Too much emphasis cannot be laid on the care of milk in both dairy and home. The vessels for containing milk should be properly cleansed and sterilized. The vessels should have a smooth, glazed surface, free from cracks, and should be shallow to allow the cream to rise. The vessels should be covered, kept in a cool place and away from the influence of strong odors. PRESERVATION OF MILK. 1. Scalding — (bringing to boiling point). 2. Pasturization — (remaining at temperature of 140 to 160 degrees for about 20 minutes). 3. Sterilization — (remaining at temperature of 180 to 200 degrees for several hours). PRACTICAL COOKERY ADULTERANTS IN MILK. 1. Water (to increase in bulk). 2. Chalk (to use in watered milk). 3. Gelatine (to give it rich, thick appearance). ARTIFICAL PRESERVATIVES IN MILK. 1. Formaldehyde. 2. Borax. 3. Bicarbonate of Soda. MARKET PRODUCTS OF MILK. 1. Cream. 2. Butter. 3. Buttermilk. 4. Cheese. CREAM AND BUTTER. After milk has stood for several hours, cream rises. The thickness of the cream depends upon the breed of cow. Good milk should yield one-fifth of its total in cream. Gravity cream is that which is allowed to rise to toj) of pan. It takes at least four hours for the cream to rise. If the pan is kept covered the cream will be softer; if left uncov- ered, a sort of crust will form on top of cream. Separated cream is that which is put through the separator and separated at once from the milk. In double cream we find 33 per cent butter fat. In coffee cream 18 per cent butter fat is found. Fat is found in milk in the form of tiny globules, about l/1500di of an inch in diameter. These small globules, being lighter than the rest of the milk, rise to the top as cream. The fat globules in cream have a little albuminous covering. The turning back and forth of the cream causes the rupture of the covering, allowing the fat to run together, forming butter. Butter is salted to prevent it from spoiling. The salt added is about two ounces to one pound. Butter is sold on market as dairy and creamery butter. Dairy butter is the farmer's product, sometimes good, not always reliable, often bought in large bulk (in tubs) and taken to some large manufacturing center and made into renovated butter and sold as creamery butter. Creamery butter is manufactured the year round in a uni- form way. Good butter contains about 87 per cent fat. is firm, not crumbly, will foam when heated, and will yield little water when pressed. 24 PRACTICAL COOKERY MANUFACTURED BUTTER. Oleomargarin. — The process of making oleomargarin was discovered during the Franco^Prussian war, and was manu- factured to supply the French army with butter. It is made from animal fats by chemical process. When oleomargarin is churned in a liquid form with a given amount of milk, a butter is formed which mixes with it. The buttermilk imparts a flavor of fresh butter to the mass, making a perfect imitation which can hardly be dis- tinguished from real butter. Butterine is made by churning oleomargarin with milk and water, or by churning milk with butter and yolks of eggs. This combination is converted into butterine. DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING BUTTER. Beat thick cream with Dover egg beater or small churn, until it separates into buttermilk and butter. Remove butter and wash it under a stream of cold water, to remove all the buttermilk. When buttermilk is all washed out, work but- ter with a wooden spoon to press out all the water, then add salt, about two ounces to one pound of butter. Pack in a cov- ered dish and keep in cool place. MAITRE D'HOTEL BUTTER. 1 c. butter. Juice of 1 lemon. 1 tbsp. of minced parsley. Cream butter till soft and waxy; add lemon juice, drop at a time, then parsley. Serve with fish or vegetables. CHEESE. When milk becomes sour, it separates into a thick, white substance, and a light yellowish liquid. This is called the curd and the whey. Cheese is made from the curd of milk. It is a concentrat- ed food and contains a great deal of nourishment in small bulk. It has a high food value on account of the large ])er cent of fat it contains. Being deficient in starch, it should al- ways be combined with starchy foods. As it is rich in pro- tein, it may well be used as a meat substitute. Each country and state has its own law governing the manufacturing of cheese. The state of New York and Wis- consin manufacture the best American cheese. The state laws demand that the cheese shall be manufactured from unskimmed milk. Cheese manufactured from good, clean milk is smooth and has small, even holes through it. Cheese that is manufac- 25 PRACTICAL COOKERY tured from milk which was not perfectly clean is dry and has cracks all through it. Cheese that becomes very oily on the outside has been filled with some oily substance when in process of manu- facture. Cheese should be kept in oiled paper in a dry. cool place, but should not be kept altogether airtight. Cheese may be classified under three heads: 1. Cream cheese. 2. Whole milk cheese. 3. Skimmed and sour milk cheese. NEUFCHATEL. Cream thickened by heat, then pressed in small molds. Considered a great delicacy ; made in Normandy. BRIE. A soft, salted, white cream cheese, made in the district of Brie, France. CAMEMBERT. A rich, sweet cream cheese of light, yellowish color. Made in Xormandy. CREAM CHEDDAR. Extra portion of cream being added to the whole milk, making a very rich, soft, yellowish cheese. Made in Eng- land. CHEDDAR. Made from unskimmed milk. Rich, yellowish cheese. Fine quality made in New York and Wisconsin ; also Eng- land. EDAM. A hard, yellowish cheese. Made in Holland. GRUYERE. Made by pressing the curd in large, shallow, cylindrical molds, and while being molded is heavily salted for about a month. It is a pale, yellowish color, and contains large air holes. Made in both Switzerland and France. ROQUEFORT. A French cheese made from the milk of ewes. When cheese is molded and dry it is placed in deep caverns in the limestone rocks of Roquefort, at temperature of about 40 degrees. The cheese is salted and allowed to remain in the caverns about 40 days, until ripe for use. 26 PRACTICAL COOKERY PARMESON. A hard, dry, grainy and highly flavored cheese, colored with saffron. It is made in Italy. BRICK CHEESE. Semi-hard comes in form of bricks. The best quality should be moist and contain uniform small holes all through it. Small pieces of cheese may be kept and allowed to dry. Then thev may be ground in meat grinder, or rolled fine with rolling pin. They may be kept in a glass jar for an indefinite time, and can be used for flavoring sauces, for top of scallop- ed dishes, or the making of sandwiches and may also be sprinkled into soups. TOASTED CRACKERS AND CHEESE. Prepare grated cheese seasoned with salt and pepper. Split the crackers and cover each half cracker with the mix- ture and brown them in the oven. When the cheese has melted, the crackers are ready to serve. COTTAGE CHEESE. Heat sour milk slowly until the whey rises to the top. Pour it off, and put the curd into a bag. letting it drip for six hours without squeezing. Put it into a bowl and break it fine with a wooden spoon. Season with salt and mix into a paste with a little cream or butter. Mould into balls and keep in a cold place. It is best when fresh. CHEESE STRAWS. 1 c. grated cheese. 1 c. fresh bread crumbs. Yz c. flour. 1 tbsp. butter. Yx tbsp. salt. yi tbsp. white pepper. Cayenne. 2 tbsp. milk. Cream butter, add flour, crumbs and grated cheese, then add seasoning, mix thoroughly, then add milk. Roll ^-inch thick, cut ^-inch wide and six inches long. Bake until brown in a moderately hot oven. WELSH RAREBIT. 2 c. grated cheddar cheese. Yz c. cream or milk. 1 tsp. mustard. Y2 tsp. salt. 27 PRACTICAL COOKERY y2 tsp. Worcestershire sauce. Spk. cayenne pepper or paprika. 2 eggs. 1 tbsp. butter. Beat the eggs slightly, add the mustard, salt and cayenne. Put the milk and cheese in the upper part of the double boil- er, and when the cheese is melted, add the butter. Pour th»i mixture on the eggs, return to the double boiler, stir con- stantly until thick and smooth, then add Worcestershire sauce and serve on toast. CHEESE SOUFFLE. 3 tbsp. butter. 3 tbsp. flour. % c. milk. 1 c. grated cheese. 3 eggs. Yz tsp. salt. Spk. pepper. Put the butter in a saucepan. When hot add the flour and stir until smooth ; add the milk and seasoning. Cook two minutes. Remove to the back of the stove and add the well- beaten yolks and the cheese. Set away to cool. When cold add the whites of eggs, beaten until stiff. Turn into a but- tered dish and bake in a moderate oven about one-half hour. Serve the moment it comes from the oven. 28 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER VII. EGGS. Kmerson said, "There is a best way of doing everything, even if it is to boil an egg." Mrs. Hill says, "with eggs, the best way is not 'to boil' at all, but to cook at a temperature below the boiling point of water, or be exact, not above 180° F." Eggs, like milk, are called a perfect food, because they con- tain various food principles in their right proportion, for the nourishment of the body. As we have stated before, the white of egg is considered the purest form of albumin. We have also mentioned that coagulation is one of the properties of albumin. The cook- ing of eggs will give ample illustration of how albumin coagu- lates under dififerent temperatures. COMPOSITION OF EGG. Water, 87.7. Protein, 12.6. Fat. .25. Mineral matter, .59. It is easy to see by this table that eggs are deficient in carbohydrates, so should be combined with carbohydrate food"^ to make them an ideal food. Egg consists of shell, membrane, white and yolk. The membrane is a thin, transparent skin lying between the shell and white. The yolk is heM in place by thin threads of albumin. CONTENTS OF WHITE. Water. Albumin. The mineral contents of the white are in form of sulphur. CONTENTS OF YOLK. Protein. Water. Fat. Albumin. The mineral contents are phosphorus, calcium, iron. (It is the iron in egg that gives it its good yellow color.) Shell consists chieflv of carbonate of lime. The amount of water varies with the age of the egg. PRACTICAL COOKERY Egg-s are an economic food. Because rich in protein and fat they may be used as a meat substitute They are capable of a variety of combinations, and are easily prepared. They are used as a leavening and thickening agent, also as a gar- nish. TESTING OF EGGS. 1. Fresh eggs have a thick, rough shell and feel heavy. 2. Hold egg between your eye and the light. If clear it is fresh. 3. Drop egg in cold w^ater. If it sinks it is fresh. 4. If the contents of an egg rattle when shaken it is stale. PRESERVATION OF EGGS. 1. Keep eggs in a cool, dry place. The shell of eggs is somewhat porous and for that reason should be kept away from strong odors. 2. They may be preserved for an indefinite time by pack- ing them, small end down, in lime, sand, sawdust, in salt, by coating them with fat or by immersing them in lime water. The main object in the preservation is to keep the air out. HOW TO BREAK EGGS. Eggs should be washed before they are broken open Hold eggs in left hand and crack the shell by striking it sharply in center with a knife or against side of dish. Then placing thumbs together at the crack slowly break the shells apart. To separate the yolk from the white, hold the egg upright while breaking it in order that the yolk may remain in half of the shell. In this way the white will run out of part of the shell. Then slip the yolk from one part of the shell to the other till all of the white is freed from the yolk. If a little of the yolk should accidently fall into the white it may be re- moved by using a piece of the shell or by using a small damp piece of clean linen. The yolk will stick to the dam]) linen. In breaking more than one egg. break each singly into a cup. This will insure you against serious mishai) should some of the eggs not be perfectly fresh or should you acciden- tally break one of the yolks. BEATING EGGS. The beating of allnimin causes it to e.\])aiul until it be- comes light and full of fine air bubbles, also developing the flavor a little. Whites are beaten stiff when they are thick and can be cut with a knife, and are flaky and dry. There is, however. danger at times of beating the whites too much till all the life PRACTICAL COOKERY is beaten out of them. This is true in the making of cakes and souffles. A speck of salt added to the white of egg will cause it to beat up faster. The yolks of eggs should be beaten in a bowl with Dover egg beater, till they are thick and light colored. In case of cracked shells, to prevent boiling out, pierce the large end several times. EFFECTS OF HEAT ON ALBUMIN. RAW ALBUMIN. Clear, sticky, a pale straw colored liquid. HEATED TO 134° F. Fine threads of semi-solid white substance appear in liquid. HEATED TO 160° F. Tender, white jelly is formed. HEATED TO 212° F. Tough, white jelly. HEATED TO 300° F. Hard, horny substance. Eggs that are to be used as a garnish should be put into boiling water and allowed to boil steadily for half a'l hour. They should then be placed in ice water until perfectly chilled, when the shells may be removed. It will then be found that in cutting them into slices the white will not break nor the yolk crumble. SOFT-COOKED EGGS. For two eggs allow one pint of water ; for each additional Ggg, an extra cupful. Put the water in a saucepan, let it come to the boiling point, place the eggs in the water with a spoon, and cover the saucepan. Remove at once from the fire, and let stand, covered, about ten minutes, according to the size of eggs. HARD-BOILED EGGS. Cook in the same manner as soft-cooked eggs, placing saucepan on back of stove, where the water will keep hot. but not boil for 30 minutes. When eggs are hard boiled they should be placed in cold water for a few minutes, then the shells should be cracked open to allow the liberation of the sulphur. POACHED EGGS. Prepare a slice of buttered toast for each egg, and keep it hot. Have ready a shallow pan containing enough boiling, PRACTICAL COOKERY salted water to cover the eggs, allowing 1 teaspoon salt for one pint of water and ^ tsp. vinegar. Break egg into saucer, and slip it carefully into the water. Cook until the white is firm, and a film forms over the top of yolk. Pour water over the yolk with a spoon, if necessary. Remove eggs from water with skimmer, drain, trim off rough edges, and p. ace each egg on a slice of toast. Add salt, pepper and butter to taste. Aiuifin-rings or egg-poachers are often used to keep eggs ni shape. POACHED EGGS IN CREAM. For each egg, allow y^ c. cream, j^^ tsp. buiter. Melt but- ter in shallow pan, then add cream. When cream is hot slij) the egg carefully into it, cook very slowly, until yolk is firm, then salt and pepper to taste. Cover top with chopped parsley or grated cheese. Serve on toast. This makes a very rich dish ; it may be served for lunch or supper, as a meat substitute. SCRAMBLED EGGS. 5 eggs. j4 cup milk. ^ tsp. salt. ^ tsp. pepj^er. 2 tbsp. butter. Beat eggs slightly, add salt, pepper and milk. Put the butter into a hot, smooth omelet pan ; when melted, j^our in the mixture. Cook until of a creamy consistency, stirring from the bottom of the pan as it thickens. Serve on slices of hot buttered toast. OMELET. 1 tbsp. butter. 1 tbsp. flour. % c. milk. y2 tsp. salt. Vs tsp. pepper. 1 tsp. parsley. 4 eggs, or 3 large ones. Melt butter, then add flour, when smooth add milk and stir till thick Remove from fire, add salt, pepper and parsley and the yolks of eggs, slightly beaten. Allow this mixture to become perfectly cold, then beat the whites until stifle and fold in the mixture. Put 2 tbsp. of butter or bacon fat in an omelet pan ; when melted pour in the mixture ; as it cooks prick with a iork to let the uncooked part run underneath. Place in a very hot 32 PRACTICAL COOKERY oven for a few minutes to cook the top. Make an opening in top of omelet with a knife and if knife comes out without bemg coated the omelet is cooked. Fold in center and serve on a hot platter. Spanish omelet is made in same manner by adding to the sauce a little grated onion, one chopped green pepper or two chopped pimentoes. When the omelet is cooked, before it is folded, cover with a layer of thinly sliced tomatoes which have been peeled and warmed through in the oven. The omelet is then folded and served. Instead of the tomatoes a cup of chopped chicken, veal or ham may be substituted. Jelly omelet is made by the same method as plain omelet, omitting parsley ; when omelet is cooked, before folding, spre?d o- ?r with jelly or jam, then fold. One is sure of perfect success in making omelets by this formula. ' STUFFED EGGS. 6 eggs. 1 tsp. butter. I/4 isp. mustard. y% tsp. pepper. J/2 tsp. salt. A few drops of vinegar or 1 tbsp salad dressing. Cook 6 eggs 30 minutes. Remove the shell and cut length- wise. Remove ihe yolks, mash the yolks; add butter, salt, pepper and mustard. When smooth, add a few drops of vinegar. Fill the whites with the mixture. Smooth the top. Arra-ge ea::b half on a bed of fine parsley or lettuce. If liked, add half the quantity of potted or deviled ham or tongue. CUP CUSTARD. 1 qt scalded milk. 5 eggs. ^ c. .sugar. y^ tsp. salt. Spk. nutmeg Mix eggs slightly and stir in the sugar and salt, then slowly the hot milk. When sugar has dissolved, pour into cups (about six) and grate a little nutmeg over each custard. Set the cups in a i^an of hot wat-r. p'hI bake in a moderate oven till a pointed knife inserted in custard comes out clean. Do not let the water in the pan boil. Serve plain or with cara- mel sauce. PRACTICAL COOKERY EGG CUTLETS. (May be used as meat substitute.) 1 tbsp. butter. 1 tbsp. flour. Yi. c. milk. 1 spk. grated onion. ^ tsp. chopped parsley. 1 tsp. salt. y% tsp. pepper and a little paprika. 5 eggs (hard boiled). Melt butter; add flour, then milk and cook till thick, stir- ring constantly ; then add seasoning, onion and parsley ; then the eggs chopped rather fine. Mix well together and spread on a plate to cool. When cool, form in shape of cutlets, roll in fine bread crumbs, then in beaten ^^%. and lastly in bread crumbs. Fry in deep fat till golden brown, drain on l)rown paper and serve with Hollandaise sauce. OMELET. Mrs. C. H. Howard. ^ pt. warm milk. Yz c. flour (which has been moistened in a little cold milk). 6 eggs. Salt and pepper to taste. Add the warm milk to the moistened flour, pour into double boiler, add the salt and pepper. When well scalded add the beaten yolks of the eggs. Add next the whites beaten to a froth. Pour into a well-buttered baking dish and bake in moderate oven for 20 minutes. Serve immediately. 34 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER VIII. CEREALS. Cereals are grains of grasses, the seeds of which are used for food. Those that are most commonly used are wheat, oats, corn, rye, barley, rice, buckwheat. From these are prepared the different breakfast foods and flours. Wheat is perhaps the most important of these grasses. It was cultivated in Egypt and China, long before the Christian era. It is frequently mentioned in the Bible. The prehistoric Lake-dwellers of Switzerland depended upon its cultivation for their daily food. The countries which produce the largest amount of wheat are. United States, Canada, Russia, India, Australia, Egypt and Turkey. There are several varieties being cultivated in these different countries. The grain of wheat is highly nutritious, due to its large per cent of starch. COMPOSITION OF WHEAT (Average). Carbohydrates, 67 per cent. Protein, 13. (In form of Albuminoids.) Mineral matter, small amount. Water, 14 per cent. The nitrogenous part of the flour of wheat is an elastic sub- stance known as gluten. This substance is absolutely essen- tial in the making of light bread. Wheat flour, mixed with some water, yields a yellowish, elastic, sticky substance, which resembles glue. This is due to the gluten in wheat. If the mixture of water and flour, after being moistened, is heated it will expand to more than double its bulk. KINDS OF WHEAT. Winter wheat and spring wheat. Winter wheat or soft wheat is sown in the fall. On ac- count of its exposure during the winter months to the cold and dampness, much of the gluten has been destroyed. There- fore, the wheat yields a flour when milled that is soft and starchy. This grade of flour is used in the home mostly for pastry and cakes. The spring or hard wheat is sown in spring, grows quickly 35 PRACTICAL COOKERY and yields a flour when milled that is rich in gluten. This flour is excellent for bread making. It is grown mostly in northern states. Spring wheat is known by its greater capacity for absorb- ing water, its gritty feeling and by caking slightly when squeezed in the hand. Each grain of wheat is composed of four separate layers: first — the outside covering is hard and is called bran. The second layer contains the gluten. The third layer contains the fat and germ, and the center contains the starch. In the manufacture of flour the wheat is first cleaned, then rolled, then bolted and packed. The millers manufacture diflferent grades of flour. High grade patent flour is the whitest and purest and commands the highest price. It is poor economy to buy a low grade of flour, as it is liable to contain flour-dust, shorts, ' and other by-products, which are neither wholesome nor nu- tritious. In the milling of wheat every part of the grain is utilized and sold. The outer covering, known as screening and bran, is sold for cattle feed. The germ is made into breakfast food. Graham flour is made from unbolted flour, and contains some of the bran as well as the finer parts of the flour. Entire wheat, or whole wheat, is manufactured by grind- ing together all parts of the kernel except the bran and the germ Macaroni, spaghetti, vermicelli, are Italian pastes made from the glutinous flour, or spring wheat. OATS. The cultivation of oats is as old as the cultivation of wheat. Oats are grown chiefly as food for beasts, and form an important human food, especially in Scotland. Dr. Johnson, in his dictionary, defines oats as "a grain which in England is given to horses, but which in Scotland supports the people." Oatmeal is very nutritious, but on account of its lack of gluten, is unsuitable for bread making. It is manufactured into breakfast foods. Most of the American breakfast foods have been partially steam cooked in the process of manufacture. This somewhat simplifies the cooking of them in the home. However, it is well to cook them twice as long as the directions call for. A long, slow cooking will improve the flavor. PRACTICAL COOKERY CORN. Indian corn, commonly called maize, is a native of America and Central Mexico. The early explorers found the Indians using it as a staple food. The prehistoric cliff dwellers of Colorado also cultivated it. Corn is cultivated very little in Europe. The climatic conditions there are unfavorable for its grov^th. There is, however, a very line grade of corn which is grown along cer- tain portions of the Mediterranean. The Italians use the corn meal in the preparation of many of their dishes and cakes. Certain grades of corn are grown chiefly as food for beasts. The finer grades form an important human food. Corn, like oats, is also deficient in gluten, so cannot be used in making lightbread. It is, however, five times richer in fat than wheat, and for this reason it deteriorates very quickly and should only be bought in small quantities. If in the process of milling corn it has not been well cured, either in the ear or the meal, it deteriorates in flavor and loses much of its sweetness. This is the reason why corn is not exported to any great extent into Europe. RYE. In appearance the rye plant resembles both wheat and I)arley. It is grown extensively in Russia and Germany. It contains sufficient amount of gluten to make lightbread. It is used very little in this country except in the distilling of liquors. BARLEY. The origin of barley is unknown. It is mentioned by Pliny as "the first grain to have been used for the nourish- ment of man." Long before the Christian era the grain was cultivated by the Egyptians. Barley, unlike other grains, is cultivated in both warm and cold climates. Barley is rich in starch but deficient in gluten, and so is not adaptable for bread making. In this countrv we use the pearl barley, which is the whole grain decorticated and polished. In European countries it is used both as coarse and fine meal. BUCKWHEAT. Buckwheat is cultivated extensivel}'' in America and Rus- sia. The flour is deficient in gluten and does not compare with anv of the other cereals in point of nutrition. It is used particularly in the making of small cakes. In Russia the seeds are often used by simply removing the hull or outer coating, 37 PRACTICAL COOKERY then cooked whole in butter or oil. This method is used mostly by the peasant element. RICE. Rice, the origin of which is unknown, has been cultivated for years in India, China, and the Malayan Islands. Rice contains 75 per cent of starchy subi^lance. but is com- pletely deficient in albuminoids. In its appearance the rice grain resembles barley. The cultivation of rice in America dates back to the year 1700. It is claimed that by mere chance it was planted in South Carolina where now the finest quality of rice is grown. The unpolished rice used by the Chinese and Japanese is far more nutritious than the polished rice used in this coun- try. Parafftn and glucose are used in the polishing of rice. These substances are hard to remove in cooking. COOKING OF CEREALS. Most cereals should be cooked by steam, and for this pur- pose a double boiler is used ; the upper one holding the food, fits tightly halfway down into the lower one, which contains the boiling water. Rice may be cooked in a steamer, which is a covered per- forated pan. This pan is placed over boiling water, the rice being kept out of the water, but in direct contact with the steam. In cooking flaky breakfast food it is well not to stir it too often, as it will spoil its flaky appearance. TABLE FOR COOKING CEREALS. Kind. Quantity. Water. Time. Rolled Avena 1 cup 2 cups 1 hour Rice (steamed) 1 cup 2^ to 4 cups 1 hour Cornmeal 1 cup 3^ cups 2 hours Oatmeal (coarse) 1 cup 4 cups 3 hours Hominy (fine) 1 cup 4 cups 1 hour W^heatena, etc 1 cup 3)4 cups 30 min. Ralston _ 1 cup 3 i>2cups 30 min. PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER IX. NUTS. Nuts are the fruit of certain trees and shrubs, which have the seed enclosed in a bony, woody covering, not opening when ripe. They have been used as food for centuries by the Greeks, by peasa'nts of the south of France and Mediterranean Islands. They are now used extensively in vegetarian diet as a substitute for meat, owing to the nourishment they con- tam in a highly concentrated form. Nuts are rich in oils and protein, but deficient in carbo- hydrates and contain very little water. They are considered an economical food, and may be used in a number of ways without being cooked. They are capable of many combina- tions with other foods, but, being deficient in starch, should always be combined with starchy food, when prepared as a meat substitute Nuts should be regarded as a staple food, and in this present day, when meat is so high, can suitably be used at leas^ once a week for dinner in plac ' of meat. Nuts, being rich in protein, should not be eaten as a dessert after a heartv meal. They may be combined in a salad and served with a dinner that is deficient in protein. Nuts Rich in Oil — Pecan, Brazil, butternut, filbert, hick- ory, black walnut. Rich in Nitrogen — Peanut, butternut, almond, pistachio, pecan, chestnut. Rich in Starch — Chestnut, pecan. NUT CROQUETTES. 2 tbsp. butter. 2 tbsp. flour. . •}4 c. milk. 34 c. grated cheese. 1 c. chopped pecans. \y2 c. cooked rice or cooked macaroni. J4 tsp. mustard. % tsp pepper. Spk. grated onion. Melt butter, add flour, when well blended add milk ; cook till thick and add seasoning, grated cheese, nuts and rice. If macaroni is used it should be chopped very fine. When well mixed together spread on a plate to cool for several hours. PRACTICAL COOKERY Then shape in form of croquettes, roll in fine bread crumbs, then in beaten egg and last in bread crumbs ; fry in deep fat, drain on brown paper and serve with tomato sauce. NUT CUTLETS. 2 tbsp. butter. 2 tbsp. flour. 1 c. milk. 1 tsp. salt. ys tsp. pepper. 1 tsp. chopped parsley. S])k. grated onion. 1 ^gg- 1 c. chopped pecans. 2 c. bread crumbs (from center of loaf). Melt butter, add flour when smooth, add milk and cook till thick, then add seasoning; remove from fire and add egg, which has been slightly beaten, then the nuts and bread crumbs ; return to the fire and cook for few seconds, till well mixed together, then spread on a plate to cool for several hours. Shape in form of cutlets, roll in fine bread crumbs and in beaten egg, lastly in fine bread crumbs ; fry in deep fat and drain on brown paper. A piece of macaroni may be inserted in small end of cutlet ; serve on a bed of parsley with tartar sauce. NUT LOAF. 2 tbsp. butter. 2 tbsp. flour. 1 c. milk. 1 tsp. salt. % tsp. pepper. yz tsp. Worcestershire sauce. Skp. paprika. }/i tsp. poultry seasoning, 1 onion, chopped fine. j4 c. celery. 2 c. cooked rice. 1 c. soft bread crumbs. \y2 c. chopped nuts. 1 tbsp. lemon juice. Melt butter, add flour, when smooth add milk ; cook till thick, add seasoning, then the rest of the ingredients, last the lemon juice. Mix all well together, shajie in a loaf, bake slowly one hour, basting often with melted butter. Serve with tomato sauce. PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER X. CONDIMENTS, SPICES, AND FLAVORS. Condiments, spices, and flavors have no food value, but when used in small quantity they serve to improve the focd, making it more palatable by their flavor and aroma. Condiments are the substances which are usually eaten with meat, and give relish. Condiments are often combined with salt. Salt may be considered as an indispensable article of food. It is an article of great historical importance. It is mentioned several times in the Bible. The poet Homer calls it "divine." It was at one time used as a measure of value. Salt is used probably more as a condiment than as a preservative, for it is used in the preparation of nearly all foods. Salt is used extensively in the manufacturing of chemicals. It is obtained from evaporation of water of the ocean and of interior of sa- line lakes and by the evaporation of the water rising naturally in saline springs. It is also obtained by mining the solid ma- terial, or rock salt. The principal salt producing states in this country are New York. Michigan, Utah, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Texas. Spices are aromatic vegetable condiments used for season- ing foods and are added chiefly to foods which contain sugar. Cloves are the unexpanded flowers of an evergreen tree found in the East Indies and West Indies. Owing to their peculiar shape they are called nails by both French and Chinese. Good cloves are dark in color, rich in oil, and very aromatic. Cinnamon is the mner bark of a tree allied to the laurel, and is cultivated in India, China, Ceylon, and the Penang Islands. Allspice is so called because the aroma resembles that of cloves, cinnamon, and nutmeg. The alls])ice is the berrv of the cassia tree, which is extensively cultivated in Jamaica. Nutmeg is the kernel of the fruit of an evergreen tree, native of the East Indian Islands. There are several varieties on the market. The round, small nutmeg is considered the best. From inferior nutmegs is extracted an oil which is sold as "oil of mace." It is claimed that more nutmegs are consumed in America PRACTICAL COOKERY than in all Europe. Mace is the thin covering of the nutmeg. Pepper plant is a vine which grows wild in China and in the East and West Indies. Only the berries of the vine are used. Those used for white pepper are decorticated before grinding. This makes a mild pepper. The black pepper is ground with the hull left on the berry. This gives it a very pungent flavor. Dill is a small herb native to Spain. The small seeds are used whole, but oil is also extracted from them for flavoring. Celery is a vegetable grown in Europe and America. It is a great relish and very economical, since every particle of it may be used. The stalks may be combined in a variety of ways. The leaves are used as a garnish. The celery seeds are ground and made into celery salt, which is used as a flavor for soups and sauces. The seeds are also used whole. Bay leaves are the leaves of a shrub belonging to the laurel family, growing wild along the Mediterranean. The leaves are exported dry and used in flavoring meats and soups. Parsley is a small, green herb, supposed to have come originally from Egypt, but now grown both in Europe and America, and probably used more than any other vegetable in flavoring and garnishing foods Summer savory, thyme, and sage are all botanically allied. Their flavor is fragrant and aromatic. They are used for flavoring meats and dressing for fowls. Mint, sweet marjoram, and tarragon are aromatic herbs grown in Europe and xA.merica and used extensively in the making of sauces, pickles and vinegar. Onions, leeks, shallot, and garlic are essential in the flavor- ing of meats, soups, sauces, and salads. The onion demands skilful handling. When used properly it is a wholesome con- diment. Only the smallest quantity of garlic should be used, owing to its strong, decided flavor. The leek is milder than the common onion, the shallot being the daintiest of them all. Capers are unopened flowers of a shrub which is cultivated in France, but grows wild in Italy and Africa. The buds are preserved in salt and vinegar and are used for flavoring gra- vies and sauces. They are considered almost indispensable in the serving of roast mutton. Curry powder is a manufactured powder, yellow in color, highly seasoned, and very aromatic. Used mostly in the PRACTICAL COOKERY East Indies. Mustard is the pulverized seed of a plant which grows in England. Good mustard should be a bright yellow color ; very aromatic as well as pungent in flavor. Horseradish plant grows in Europe and America. The roots of this plant are grated and prepared with salt and vinegar and served as a condiment. Ginger is a native of East and West Indies. The root is either decorticated and ground for seasoning purposes, or it is served whole in sugar. Different aromatic herbs are ground and sold in pack- ages It is preferable to use the unground product, as that contains more of the aroma and good oils. Flavors are mostly used in the making of sweetmeats. Perhaps the vanilla bean is used the most. The vanilla vine is a native of Central America and cultivated in South Amer- ica, West Indies and Mexico. The vanilla of commerce is made by extracting the oil from the seed pods. The best vanilla beans come from Mexico. 43 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XI. SUGARS. Sugar is one of the principal carbohydrates. No other food is more universally used, both by young- and old. Not only is it a food pleasing to the taste, but it is one of the best heat givers. Common Sugars — Cane, maple, beetroot sugar, honey. Products of Cane Sugar — Granulated sugar, cut loaf sugar, brown sugar, powdered or confectioners' sugar, molasses. Sugar extracted from milk is called lactose. It is \ery expensive, and is used mostly in the preparation of infant foods. Honey is the purest natural form of sugar. The quality of the honey depends much on the flowers the bees feed upon. The finest quality of honey comes from Italy and Switzer- land. MANUFACTURING OF SUGARS. Cane Sugar — The juice is first extracted lrt)m the cane by crushing the stalk between a series of heavy rollers. Then it is clarified and boiled down to the required density in cop- per pans. As the syrup granulates it is removed from the fire. After cooling the fluid part is drained away from the crystals. These crystals are called raw sugar and are sent in this form to the refineries. In the refineries of the United States, raw sugar is mixed with hot water and treated with lime to neutralize any acid present, then filtered through flannel and afterwards through a bed of charcoal. The syrup is then boiled in vacuum pans. These are cov- ered vessels from which part of the air is exhausted. Under the reduced air pressure the sugar soluticin can l^e evaporated to a thick syrup without danger of burning. Granulated sugar is obtained from this syrup by putting it into machines with rapidly revolving cylinders which throw out the uncrystalizable part of the syrup and leave a mass of white crystals. The purest kind of sugar is made by running the syrup into molds, where it is allowed to harden. After it has hard- ened it is cut into cubes and sold as block sugar. Powdered sugar is made by grinding the fragments l")roken ofif in the cutting of block sugar. PRACTICAL COOKERY Brown sugars are the less refined grades. Molasses is the liquid that will not crystalize in the manu- facturing of sugar. Beet sugar, which is extracted from the crude root of the beet, is a much more complicated process than the extraction of the juices from the sugar cane, owing to the fact that the l>eet juices abound in impurities, acids, minerals and gummy matter. The juice is extracted by pressure, filtered through both lime and charcoal. The refining is the same as the refining of cane sugar. The maple sugar industry is almost exclusively confined to Canada and the United States. In early spring the maple trees are bored or tapped, and the sap collected. The sap needs no purification. It is simply boiled and reduced to a thick, golden syrup, known as maple syrup. It is also boiled to a sugar which is solidified into cakes and sold as maple sugar. It is a difficult matter to obtain pure maple sugar, most of it being adulterated with inferior grades of brown sugar. Sorghum is a sweet extracted from the stem of corn. The process of extracting the juices is similar to that used for ex- tracting the juices of the cane sugar. Generally the whole product is converted into a thick molasses. Glucose is a sugar syrup obtained by the conversion of starch into sugar. In Europe the potato starch is used. In America both corn and barley are converted into glucose. Starch yields about 50 per cent of its bulk in refined sugar. Sugar plants yield about 14 per cent in refined sugar. CANDIES. COOKED FONDANT. 2 c. granulated sugar. ^ c. cold water. % tsp. cream tartar. Anv flavoring desired. Boil all together until it makes a soft ball when tried in cold water. Turn out on large platter, and when cool work it until creamy. Divide into portions and flax'or to taste. Shape into chocolate creams, cream dates, nut creams and bonbons. PENOCHE. 2 c. light brown sugar. ^i c. milk. 2 tbsp. butter. 54 tsp. salt. 45 PRACTICAL COOKERY 54 tsp. soda. 1 c. chopped nuts. 1 tsp. vanilla. Boil sugar, milk, salt and soda to soft-boil stage. Remove from the fire, add butter and flavoring. Boil till thick, then add nuts ; when cool it may be worked into a ball and kneaded on a slab of marble ; this will make it rich and creamy. Place on oiled pai)er and cut into squares. PEANUT BRITTLE. 2 c. sugar. •j-^ c. shelled peanuts. Break peanuts in pieces, or chop them. Line a greased pan with peanuts. Put sugar in saucepan, and heat till it becomes thin, light brown syrup, stirring constantly. Pour over peanuts and mark in squares. When cool, break in pieces. TAFFY. 2 c. molasses. 1 c. sugar. 1 tbsp. butter. 1 tbsp. vinegar. 3/2 tsp. soda. Boil first four ingredients together until it is brittle when tried in cold water, then stir in the soda. Pour into buttered pans; when cool, pull until light colored. FUDGE. 2 c. sugar. 1 c. milk. 2 tbsp. butter. 34 tsp. salt. 14 tsp. soda. 2 oz. chocolate. 1 tsp. vanilla. 2 tbsp. molasses. Boil sugar, chocolate, milk, molasses, salt and soda mitil it reaches the soft-boil stage. Remove from fire, add but- ter and vanilla and beat until thick and creamy, then spread on a buttered platter and cut in squares. MAPLE PUFFS. (Miss Martha Tenny.) 2 c. light brown sugar. •14 c. cold water. 1 c. chopped nuts. 46 PRACTICAL COOKERY Yi tsp. vanilla. White of an egg. Boil sugar and water until it will form a hard ball when tried in water. Beat white of ^g% until thick, pour syrup slowly into white of ^%^, add vanilla and beat till thick ; add nuts, and drop by spoonfuls on oiled paper. MARSHMALLOWS. \ 2 rounded tbsp. gelatine. 2 c. sugar. 1 c. cold water. 1 tsp. vanilla. y^ tsp. salt. Soak gelatine in half cup water until dissolved. Boil sugar with half cup water until it will spin a thread, then pour slowly into the gelatine, stirring it constantly. Add vanilla and salt ; beat until very thick. Pour on to a platter on which has been placed a thick layer of powdered sugar. Cover with powdered sugar; let stand for a few hours, then cut into squares and roll in powdered sugar. They may be dipped in melted chocolate instead of rolling into powdered sugar. MILLIONAIRE'S FUDGE. 2 lbs. powdered sugar. y2 lb. chocolate. y2 lb. pecans. 3/2 lb. marshmallows. 1 c. cream. 1 tbsp. butter. 1 tsp. vanilla. Cut marshmallows into quarters, spread over large but- tered pan, put chopped nuts over the marshmallow^s. Boil sugar, chocolate, and cream, adding butter and vanilla ; when cooked, stir until it is thick, but not too long, as it must be hot enough to melt the marshmallows when poured over them. Be sure the marshmallows are fresh. 47 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XII. FRUIT. Fruits are edible, succulent products of plants or trees. \^'ith but few exceptions, they contain little nourishment. Ne\ ertheless, they are considered a very essential part of the diet, owing to the large amount of refreshing juices they con- tain, also the mineral matter and large amount of water. Most fresh fruits contain about S^O per cent water and a large amount of cellulose. They contain no fat, a very small amount of protein, and when ripe a very small amount of starch, most of the starch having been converted inLo sugars and gums in process of ripening. One of these gums is called pectin, a substance which is absolutely essential in the mak- ing of jelly. It has the property of gelatinizing when boiled. In the drying of fruits, most of the water has evaporated. They should for that reason be soaked several hours before being cooked in order to restore some of the moisture. CLASSIFICATION OF FRUITS. Stone Fruits — Peach, apricot, plum, cherry, olive, grape. Pome Fruits — Apple, pear quince. Berries — Strawberry, raspberry, black]:)erry, mulberry, cranberry, gooseberry, currant. Citrous Fruits — Orange, lemon, grapefruit, lime, citron. Protein in fruits is in form of extractives and flavors, and a slight amount of albumin. Carbohydrate in form of sugar and starch in some fruits, such as bananas. Cellulose found in nearly all fruits. Tartaric acids found in grapes, raisins, currants. Malic acid, found in apples, pears, peaches, quinces, a]:)ri- cots, and plums. Citric acid, found in oranges, lemons, grapefruit. Oxalic acid, found in strawberries. Dried fruits contain from 50 to 75 per cent sugar. Prunes are dried plums. Raisins are dried grapes. Currants are dried currants from Asia Minor or Greece. APPLE SAUCE. Pare tart apples, cut in quarters, remove the core, cover fruit with cold water in which a little salt has been added. Cook until soft, in a covered vessel, then sweeten to taste. 48" PRACTICAL COOKERY Usually about one cup of sugar to two of fruit is needed. If apples do not cook up well they may be put through a potato ricer. BAKED APPLES. Wash and core sound, tart apples ; fill the core with sugar, place a small piece of butter on top of each apple, and a little grated nutmeg. Place in a granite baking dish ; add enough l)oiHng water to cover bottom of dish. Bake in moderate oven until soft. When the apples are baking, dip the juice in the pan with a spoon and pour over top of apples to keep ap])les from hardening. FRIED APPLES. Mrs. Timmermier. 1 qt. apples, peeled and cut in quarters. lYz c. sugar. 2 tbsp. butter. yi c. water. Spk. salt. Boil sugar, water, butter and salt together for 15 minutes. Spread apples neatly in rows in a baking dish. Pour over the apples the prepared syrup, place in warm oven and cook until apples are a rich, gold color, basting them occasionally with the syrup. BAKED CARAMEL APPLES. Mrs. Timmermier. 8 medium size apples, peeled and cored. 2 c. sugar. y2 c. water. ^ tsp. salt. Spk. grated nutmeg. 2 tbsp. butter. Boil sugar, water, butter, salt, and nutmeg for 15 minutes. Place apples in a baking dish, pour syrup over them and place in a very hot oven for 20 minutes. Then lower the heat and bake the apples until they have absorbed the syrup and have become a deep pink. These apples should be basted often, thus preventing the top from hardening. They should be served hot with meat or may be served as a dessert with a little cream or hard sauce. STEWED PRUNES. 1 lb. prunes. 2 tbsp. sugar. I lemon, sliced. 49 PRACTICAL COOKERY Wash the prunes and soak them for several hours, or over night, in sufficient cold water to cover them. Add sugar and lemon, and cook them 30 minutes, or until soft. RHUBARB SAUCE. 1 pt. rhubarb, washed and cut in half-inch lengths. 1^ c. sugar. Spk. salt. 1 orange, sliced thin. (This may be omitted.) Mix these four ingredients together, place in baking dish and cook in a slow oven until tender and a deep red color. so PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XIII. CANNING. Every piece of food, whether fruit, vegetables or meat, no matter how fresh, is filled with tiny, invisible organisms which cause it to spoil. The air, no matter how clear it may look, is filled with these tiny organisms which spoil food. These or- ganisms are of two classes : yeast spores, which attack fruits, and bacteria, which attack vegetables and meats. Yeasts are killed by lower degrees of heat than bacteria ; 170° to 180° Fahrenheit will usually be sufficient. A short boiling is therefore enough for killing yeast in fruits. Bac- teria, however, resist destruction by heat for a long time. Two and even more hours at boiling point (212° F.) are required to render all fish, meats and most vegetables, proof against spoiling. This is the reason fruits may be cooked in an open kettle, poured into jars hot, capped and clamped at once, before the temperature falls much below the boiling point. Vegetables and meat handled this way will give bacteria a chance to light on food while being poured into the jar, and will cause it to spoil. All vegetables and meats should be cooked in closed jars and not exposed to the air. When the food in jar is hot it is very much expanded ; in cooling, it shrinks, forming a vacuum. In shrinking it draws the cap down tight, and by the atmospheric pressure of about 15 pounds to the square inch, holds it tighter, until when cold the cap is held tight and securely. Jars should be sterilized by placing in cold water and letting the water come to boiling point. Caps and rubbers should be dipped in boiling water, but not allowed to remain there. JELLIES, PRESERVES, AND CANNING OF FOODS. Preserving, in the ordinary sense, means the cooking of fruits in thick syrup made of equal weights of sugar and fruit, little or no water being used, according to the fruit. Canning is preserving sterilized foods in sterilized air-tight cans or jars. Meats, fish, vegetables and fruits are thus pre- served. PRACTICAL COOKERY GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR FILLING JARS. Remove the jars from the boiling water. Place fruit in jar, the rounded side of fruit towards the outside of jar. Fill with syrup. Use blade of silver knife to push fruit away from jar to allow air bubbles to rise to the surface and break. Fill to overflowing; place the rubber on the jar, put on the cover and screw it tight. Turn the jar upside down to see if it is airtight. CANNED PEACHES. Pare the peaches, dropping them into cold water. Make a syrup, allowing two cups of water and one pound of sugar to three pounds of peaches. Boil it 15 minutes. Cut peaches in two. stone them, and put peaches and stone into the syrup. The flavor of peaches is improved by cooking the stones with them. Cook the fruit until, when tried with a knitting needle, it is found to be soft. Pears, cherries and plums may be canned like peaches. PRESERVED GINGERED PEARS. Eight pounds pears cut into slices, 8 pounds of sugar, 4 lemons, ^4 lb. preserved ginger. Put the sugar on stove with one pint of water. When dissolved, put in pears, and simmer for two hours. Slice the lemons, cook until tender, add ginger when the pears have cooked two hours. STRAWBERRY PRESERVES. 1 qt. berries, steamed and mashed. 1 lb. sugar. y^ pt. water. Bring the sugar and water to the boiling point and skim, then l)oil ten minutes longer. Drop in the berries and boil for l.S minutes. Lift the berries out with a strainer and place on a platter. Tip the platter and drain all juice, returning it to the remainder of syrup. Boil \S minutes longer. Pour over the berries, and stand the platter in the sun from twelve to eighteen hours. APRICOT MARMALADE. Wash and soak dried apricots for several hours, then cook in the water in which they have been soaking. When fruit is soft, rub it through a sieve, and to each cup of fruit pulp add one cup sugar and one tbsj) of lemon juice. Cook fruit pulp, sugar and lemon juice together over a verv slow fire until very thick. This must be stirred constantly to keep from burning. Turn into sterilized glasses and set aside to harden. Cover with parafifin. PRACTICAL COOKERY CRANBERRY JELLY. 4 c. cranberries. 1 or 2 c. water. 3 c. sugar. Pick over and wash the cranberries ; cook them with the water until they burst from their skins, press through a strainer, add the sugar and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Stop stirring and boil eight or ten minutes, or until it jells. Pour into moulds or glasses which have been wet with cold water and set away to cool. ORANGE MARMALADE. 6 oranges. 3 lemons. 7 c. cold water. 133^ c. sugar. Slice oranges and lemons very thin, lengthwise ; add the water and cook one and one-half hours. Dissolve sugar in a little of the liquid in which fruit has been cooking. Bring sugar to a boil and skim ofif all impurities. Add this syrup to the fruit and cook for 20 minutes or longer, if it seems too thin. Turn into sterilized glasses and set aside to harden, then cover with parafifin. GRAPE JAM. Remove the grapes from the stems. Wash them and press the pulp from the skins. Boil the pulp until it will separate from the seeds. Rub through a sieve. Add the skins to the pulp and boil with an equal weight of sugar for 15 minutes. Put into jars and when cool cover with paraffin. JELLIES. Wash the fruit, and remove stems and imperfections. Cut large fruit into pieces. With watery fruits, such as grapes and currants, use no water. With apples and quinces, use enough water to cover them. Cook fruit until the juice flows. Remove from the fire and strain. Measure the juice, boil 20 minutes and add an equal quantity of heated sugar; boil five minutes, or until jelly stiffens when tried on a plate; skim, turn into sterilized glasses, and set aside to harden. Cover with melted paraffin. Keep jellies in a cool, dr}- place. CRAB APPLE JELLY. Remove the blossom and decayed portion from the fruit ; if large, cut into pieces, but do not pare or remove the seeds. Nearly cover with cold water. Cook the fruit until soft. Drain, first in a colander, then in a jelly bag. Use the juice 53 PRACTICAL COOKERY only and do not press the bag except for a second grade jelly. To 1 c. juice, use 1 c. sugar. Boil the juice slowly for 15 minutes; add the sugar and boil for five minutes, skimming as often as necessary. Pour into jelly glasses and when hard cover with parafifin. BEANS. Have beans as fresh from the vines as possible. Be sure all pods are tender and brittle, and cut in convenient lengths. Boil in open kettle 10 minutes; pour ofT water and pack solidly in jars. Fill with cold water, clamp on cap and boil for three hours. CORN. Secure fresh, young corn. Score down in the center of each row and press out the pulpy materials. Fill jars with the pulp and a little cold water, to which a little salt and sugar has been added. Seal jars and boil for four hours. BEETS. Boil small red beets for 30 minutes, remove skins, pack in jars, fill with cold water and boil one hour. TOMATOES. Select solid tomatoes of medium size. Scald and peel them, place in kettle and cook slowly about half an hour, being careful not to break the tomatoes, then pour into hot sterilized tin preserving cans. Place cover on securely and seal with sealing wax. SPICED PEARS AND PEACHES. 7 lbs. pears or peaches. 3 lbs. sugar. 1 pt. vinegar. Yz oz. ginger root. Vz lemon (rind). Whole cloves. Whole allspice. Stick cinnamon. Cut the pears in half, remove the seeds and pare. Put the vinegar and sugar on to boil Into each piece of the pear stick three or four cloves. Divide the cinnamon, allspice and gin- ger into two parts, put into small pieces of cheese cloth, tie tightlv, and then throw them into the sugar and vinegar. When the mixture begins to simmer, add pears and lemon rind, bring all to boiling point, take from the fire, and turn carefully into a stone jar. Stand in a cool place over night. Next day drain all the syrup from the pears into a porcelain lined or agate 54 PRACTICAL COOKERY kettle, cook over a moderate fire, and when boiling hot pour it back in the jar over the pears. Next day drain and heat again as before ; do this for seven consecutive days. The last day boil the syrup down until there is just enough to cover the fruit. Add the fruit to the hot syrup, bring the whole to a boil, and put in stone or glass jars or tumblers. The pears may be finished in one day, by taking out the fruit and cook- ing the syrup slowly down to the right amount, then the fruit is added to re-heat it and finish as above. The fruit is less rich if done in this way. SPICED BEANS. 4 qts. beans. 3 c. brown sugar. 1 pt. cider vinegar. 1 tbsp. salt. 2 qts. water. 1 tbsp. whole cloves. 1 tsp. allspice Yz nutmeg. 1 6-in. stick cinnamon, broken into pieces. Small piece horseradish. TOMATO CATSUP. 12 ripe tomatoes. 2 large onions. 4 green peppers. 2 tbsp. salt. 4 tbsp. brown sugar. 2 tbsp. ginger. 1 tbsp. cinnamon. 1 tbsp. mustard. 1 nutmeg (grated). 1 qt. vinegar. Peel the tomatoes and onions. Chop the onions and pep- pers fine. Boil all the ingredients together for three hours, or until soft and broken. Stir frequently. Bottle and seal while hot. CORN RELISH. (Mrs. Chapin.) 6 c. cabbage, chopped fine. 6 c. corn, cut from cob. 1^ c. sugar. 1 tbsp. salt. y^ box mustard. 1 qt. vinegar. PRACTICAL COOKERY 5 red peppers, chopped fine. 1 tbsp. flour, dissolved in vinegar. Cook all tog-ether slowly for one hour. 56 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XIV. VEGETABLES. Vegetables are herbaceous plants used wholly or in part for culinary purposes. They are an economical food when used in season. If possible, at least two vegetables should be planned for every dinner. All vegetables contain a large amount of water. Some are rich in carbohydrates and contain a great deal of mineral salts The food value of vegetables depends upon the composi- tion, which varies with the kind, also upon the method of preparation. In the cooking of vegetables they should not only be prepared in a palatable way. but should be made as nutritious as possible. Those depending entirely upon a vegetarian diet should carefully study the chemical composition of each vegetable. Otherwise they will have a one-sided diet. One should be- come familiar with the different methods of dressing and pre- paring vegetables, so that if the selection is limited, they may lend variety to the diet by being cooked in different ways. A potato well baked or properly boiled is a nourishing and appetizing dish, but would soon become monotonous if served every day. There are possibly thirty if not more different ways of serving potatoes, so that one need not repeat the same method too often. The woody part of vegetables is called cellucose, the toughness of which depends upon the age, soil and season of the year. If vegetables are old, the addition of a little cooking soda to the water in which they are being cooked will help to soften the woody framework. CLASSIFICATION. Tubers — Potatoes, artichokes, peanuts. Roots — Turnips, beets, carrots, radishes, parsnips, sweet potatoes. Bulbs — Onions, leeks, garlic. Stem — Celery, asparagus. Leaves — Lettuce, cabbage, spinach. Flowers — Cauliflower. Seeds — Peas, beans. PRACTICAL COOKERY TIME-TABLE FOR COOKING VEGETABLES IN WATER. Potatoes, 30 min. Spinach, 45 min. Carrots, 45 min. Celery, 30 min. Turnips, 45 min. Parsnips, 45 min. Beets (young), 45 min. Green peas, 45 min. Beets (old), 3 hrs. String beans, 20 min. Tomatoes, 20 min. Lima beans, 2 hours or more. Onions, 60 min. Green corn, 20 min. Cabbage, 60 min. Rice, 45 min. Cauliflower, 30 min. Macaroni, 60 min. Asparagus, 30 min. GENERAL RULES. Wash thoroughly, pare or scrape if skins must be removed. Stand in cold water until cooked, to keep them crisp and to prevent their being discolored. Cook in boiling water ; the water must be kept at the boiling point. Use 1 tbsp. salt with 2 qts. water; put the salt into the water when the vegetables are partially cooked. The water in which vegetables are cooked is called vegetable stock. Fresh green vegetables require less water than others. Cabbage, cauliflower, onions, and turnips should be cooked uncovered in a large amount of water. All vegetables must be drained as soon as tender. Season with salt and pepper and serve hot with butter or sauce. Use vegetables which are in season and select medium sized or small, rather than large vegetables. Underground vegetables should be cooked in boiling water covered. EDIBLE FUNGI. The diflference between edible fungi and vegetables is in the large amount of protein they contain. Edible fungi rank- higher than cereals and legumes in nutritive value. In flavor as well as nutritive value they closely resemble that of animal food. Edible Fungi — Mushrooms, morels, truffles. Legumes — Beans, peas, lentils. Tubers and Succulent Roots — Potato, cassava, turnip, car- rot, beet, parsnip, salisfy. Salad Plants — Lettuce, endive, radish, celery, watercress, spinach, artichoke, chives, cucumber. PRACTICAL COOKERY AVERAGE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF VEGE- TABLES AS PURCHASED (Atwater). to . 4^ 4J *-■ ■" 1)*-' *^ _J ^ §U ^O ^U U O^U U Z'z^ aid) ►. and stews 8c Chuck I'ot ro.ists \2 to ITk 68 PRACTICAL COOKERY Kibs Roasts, long cut 18 to 24c Ribs (three nearest hind quarter). ..Rolled roast 25 to 30c Ribs (two nearest the neck) Roasts 18 to 20c Plate Corning 8 to 10c Fore shank Soup 5c HIND QUARTER. Loin and choice steaks — ] 'orterhouse Steaks 25 to 30c Sirloin Steaks 25 to 30c Tenderloin Fillet of beef 5 to 10c Flank Corning and steaks 10 to 12c kump Steaks, roast, stew...l2 to 16c Round Steaks, roast, stew...l2 to 14c Hind shank Soup 5c Fig. L 1— Neck. 2 — Chuck. 3 — First cut chuck ribs. 4 — Third cut ribs. 5 — Second cut ribs. 6 — First cut ribs. 7 — Porterhouse. 8 — Sirloin. 9 — Tail end of rntnp. Side of Beef. 10 — Top of rcnnid. 11— Round. 12- Leg. 13 — Top of sirloin. 14— Flank. 15 — Plate piece. 16 — Navel. 17 — T>eg or shin. 18 — Cross rib. 69 PRACTICAL COOKERY Fig. 2 1 — First cut of ribs. 2— Porterhouse steak or sirloin roast. v3 — Flat boned sirloin steak or roast. 4a — Large sirloin. 5a — Sirloin steaks or roasts. 6 — Sirloin steaks or roasts. Hind Quarter. 7 — Aitchbone. 8 — Rumj) steaks or roasts (and 4b and 5b). 9 — Round steak (and 12c). 10 — Best part of vein. 11 — Poorer part of vein. 12— Leg of beef (d). 13— Flank (e). Fig. 3. 1 — First cut of ribs. 2 — Second cut of ribs. 3 — Third cut of ribs. 4 — Best chuck ribs. 5 — Best chuck ribs. 6 — Poorer chuck ribs. 7 — Poorer chuck ribs. 8 — Neck piece. Fore Quarter. 9 — Plate ])iece. 10— Shoulder. 11 — Shoulder. 12 — Navel end of brisket. 13 — Navel end of brisket. 14 — Brisket. 15— Shin. 70 PRACTICAL COOKERY BROILING UNDER GAS FLAME. Have broiling oven very hot. Prepare meat and place in greased double broiler or on rack in pan. Sear one side of the meat and then the other. Cook more slowly, turning oc- casionally. Season and serve. PAN BROILING. Have smooth frying pan hissing hot. Prepare meat, rub a little fat over bottom of pan and put in meat. Sear both sides, then allow to cook more slowly. When done, season and serve. Drain ofif the fat as it cooks out of the meat and use for brown gravy. GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR ROASTING. Wipe meat, trim and skewer into shape. Dredge all meat except beef with salt, pepper and flour. Place on rack in drip- ping pan in hot oven. When the meat is brown, cover bottom of pan with hot water, reduce the heat and cook more slowly. TIME-TABLE FOR BROILING. Steak, 1 inch thick, 7 to 10 minutes. Steak, 1^ inches thick, 10 to 15 minutes. Mutton chops, 7 to 10 minutes. Spring chicken, 20 minutes. Fish, 15 to 20 minutes. TIME-TABLE FOR ROASTING. (Per Pound.) Beef ribs (rare), 8 to 10 minutes. Beef ribs (well done), 12 to 15 minutes. Beef, round, 12 to 15 minutes Mutton, leg (rare), 10 minutes> Mutton, leg (well done), 15 minutes. Mutton, loin (rare), 8 minutes. Mutton, shoulder, stuffed, 15 minutes. Lamb (well done), 18 to 20 minutes. Veal (well done), 20 minutes. Pork (well done), 30 minutes. Chicken, 15 minutes. Goose, 18 minutes. Eight-pound turkey, 1^ hours. Large turkey, 3 hours. COOKING OF TOUGH MEATS. The toughness of a piece of meat depends on the amount and quality of the connective tissue, and therefore the meat from the parts of the animal where the muscles are not used PRACTICAL COOKERY very much is more tender than from the parts which are exer- cised a great deal. Exercise also draws a large quantity of blood to the muscles, consequently tough muscles contain more juice than the other muscles. In order to soften and dissolve the connective tissue, tough cuts of meat must be cooked in moist heat. There are three ways of doing this — stewing, boiling and braising. By boiling is meant to plunge the meat into boiling water. Cook at this temperature 10 to 15 minutes. And then simmer until the meat is tender. By this means much of the juice and flavor is kept in the meat. Braising is the cooking of meat with a small amount of water, in the oven, in a tightly covered pan. Cuts not tender enough for roasting, but of better quality than those used for stews, are cooked in this way. The purpose of stewing meat is to keep part of the juice in the meat, and to extract part to flavor the gravy, so some of the meat is put on in cold water and the remainder is browned in the frying pan before adding. Meat for stews should contain some bone and fat. The bone makes the stew gelatinous and the fat gives the desired richness. BEEF STEW. 2 lbs. beef from leg or flank. 1 onion, cut in slices. 1 carrot, cut in dice. 1 c. turnip, cut in dice. 2 c. potatoes, cut in dice. 1 green pepper, cut very small. 2 tbsp. salt. Yz tsp. pepper. 3 tbsp. flour. 4 c. water. Remove the fat and cut the meat into one-inch pieces ; put aside one-half cup of the best pieces of meat; put the rest of the meat and the bones in cold water and soak for one hour. Then heat until it bubbles. Season the half cup of meat and roll it in flour. Melt the fat in a frying pan, remove the scraps, brown the sliced onion and then the floured meat in the hot fat ; add both to the stew and cook for two hours at the simmering point. Add the vegetables and flour, which have been mixed with one-half cup cold water, and cook one hour or until the meat and vegetables are tender. Remove the bone. Season and serve. 72 PRACTICAL COOKERY CASSEROLE OF BEEF. \y2 lb. beef (from round or rump). ^ c. carrots, diced. y^ c. potatoes, diced. •)4 c. turnips, diced. 1 onion, cut fine. 3 c. boiling water. 1 c. tomato juice. 3 tbsp. flour. 2 tbsp. bacon fat or butter. \y2 tbsp. salt. 3/4 tsp. pepper. A few celery seeds. Slice of lemon. Spk. grated nutmeg. Cut beef in cubes, put in hot frying pan and brown on both sides, taking care not to burn them. Place in hot casserole. Put the fat in frying pan; when melted, add vegetables. Sprinkle flour and seasoning over vegetables, mix all well together, then turn into the casserole. Pour water and tomato juice in frying pan. let come to boiling point, then pour into the casserole; mix all together. Place cover on securely and bake iri a moderate oven two hours. Do not lift the cover during the process of cooking. BEEF LOAF. (Mrs. C. N. Stevens.) 1 lb. beef (any cheap cut will do). 1 lb. pork. 1 onion. 3/2 grated nutmeg. 1/2 lemon (juice). ^ c. bread crumbs. 2 tsp. salt. ^ tsp. pepper. 2 tbsp. melted butter. Chop onion very fine, beat &gg slightly, then mix all well together and pack in a baking dish. Bake two hours. It is well to bake it part of the time covered. It may be served with a gravy made from the drippings in the pan or a tomato sauce ; horseradish sauce is also good served with it. This loaf is also good served cold. CHARTREUSE OF RICE AND MEAT. Boil one cup of rice until tender. Chop fine one pint of meat, season with salt and pepper to taste ; one teaspoon of 73 PRACTICAL COOKERY onion juice, one teaspoon of minced parsley and add beaten egg, two tablespoons of crumbs and moisten with enough water or stock to mold easily. Butter a mold, line bottom and sides with rice about three-fourths inch deep, fill in the meat, cover closely with rice and steam for about 45 min- utes. Turn onto a platter, garnish with parsley, if desired, and pcAir tomato or brown sauce over it. CORN BEEF HASH. Drop the corn beef into boiling water and simmer, allow- ing 30 minutes to the pound. When cold, chop rather coarse. Chop cold cuoked potatoes coarse, also Dry bread may be used instead of part of the potatoes, and improves hash. 4 c. meat. 4 c. potatoes. 4 tbsp. butter. 2 tsp. salt. 14 tsp. pepper. 1 c. milk. Butter the bottom of a skillet ; put in it the mixture of meat and potato. Over the top put seasoning and butter. Add the milk and put the skillet in the oven. Let it remain there half an hour, stirring every ten minutes. If browned hash is desired, reserve half of the butter, and after the second stirring melt the butter in a frying pan ; put the mixture into it and cook on the top of the stove, without stirring, until brown underneath. Fold and serve. This will be greatly improved by the addition of a green pepper, chopped fine. COTTAGE PIE. Cover bottom of a small greased baking dish with hot mashed potato, add a thick layer of roast beef, chopped or cut in small pieces (seasoned with salt, pepper, and a few drops of onion juice) and moistened with some of the gravy; cover with a thin layer of mashed potato, and bake in a hot oven long enough to heat through. HASH ON TOAST. 6 slices of toast. Toast points. 1 c. cooked potato, cut in dice. 2 c. meat, cut in dice. ]/{ tsp. Worcestershire sauce. 2 tbsp. butter. 2 tbsp. flour. y2 tsp. salt. Pepper. 74 PRACTICAL COOKERY 2 c. stock or water. Make a brown sauce, heat the meat and potatoes in it, and serve on the toast. Garnish with parsley and toast points. SWISS STEAK. Select a slice of round steak, cut about two inches thick. Into the steak pound as much flour as it will hold on both sides. It takes at least a cup of flour. Then brown well in hot bacon or salt pork, fat on both sides, then cover with hot water and let stew about one and a half or two hours. Cut a number of onions fine and add these, also parsley, salt and pepper. Add more water as needed and, if necessary, thicken the g^rav}' a little when ready to serve. SPANISH STEAK. Round steak, weighing two pounds, cut two inches thick ; rub the night before with olive oil and lemon juice. Brown well in very hot frying pan, on both sides. Cover with one onion sliced thin, pour over one can of tomatoes and add three tablespoons of bacon fat or butter, season with salt and pep- per, cover securely and cook on top of stove very slowly from two to three hours. When done, the meat should have ab- sorbed most of the juices. Serve whole, using the good juices in frying pan for gravy. MOCK DUCK. 2 c. soft bread crumbs. ^ c. butter. 2 tbsp. chopped parsley. 2 tbsp. chopped celery. 34 tsp. pepper. 1 tsp. salt. Mix ingredients together thoroughly and moisten with hot water. Two pounds beef (round or flank), pound on bis- cuit board. Spread dressing on meat, roll and bake for two hours in slow oven, basting frequently. PIGS IN BLANKETS. One and one-half pounds of lean beef (any cheap cut, but preferably the round), cut in pieces three "by four inches, sprinkle with salt and pepper. Cover one side with finely minced onion, add one piece of bacon, then roll and fasten together securely with tooth picks or tie with cord Brown in a very hot frying pan, in which has been melted a little lard or bacon fat ; then pour in boiling water till it about covers the meat. Cover the frying pan and cook slowly about two hours; when meat is 'tender, thicken gravy with a little flour. PRACTICAL COOKERY HAMBURG STEAK. One ])ouiul of lean meat (any cheap cut will do) ; have it put through the meat grinder once. Season with salt, pepper, a little nutmeg, and one tablespoon of lemon juice; form into round, flat cakes, and brown quickly in hot frying pan. When brown, put them in a paper bag. Peel ten medium size onions, add four tablespoons of fat in pan in which the meat was browned, then add the onions and brown them (juickly. Season with salt and pepper, then pour in paper bag on top of meat and cook in moderate oven about half an hour. SMOTHERED BEEF, OR POT ROAST. Four to six pounds from the rump, the vein or the round. Wipe with a clean, wet cloth. Sear all over by placing in a hot frying pan and turning till all the surface is browned. Put in a kettle with one cup of water, and place it where it will keep just below the boiling point. Do not let the water boil entirely away, but add only enough to keep the meat from burning. Have the cover fitting closely to keep the steam in. Cook until very tender, but do not let it break Serve hot or cold. The best method of cooking this roast is either in an old- fashioned iron vessel or in a large casserole, in which case it can be cooked in the oven instead of on top of stove. The addition of one onion will greatlv improve the flavor. MEAT SOUFFLE. 2 tbsp. butter. 2 tbsp. flour. 2 c. milk. 2 c. ground meat (any kind, or a combination of differ- ent kinds). ^ c. fresh bread crumbs. 3 eggs. 2 tsp. salt. % tsp. pepper. 1 tsp. chopped parsley. % tsp. celery salt. Melt butter, add flour, then milk, and cook till thick, add bread crumbs. Remove from fire and add slowly the beaten yolk of eggs, then add all the seasoning and the meat. Set aside till cool, then fold in the beaten whites of eggs. Pour into a deep buttered bakino- dish and bake in a nuKlerate oven foi thirtv minutes. Serve hot. PRACTICAL COOKERY ROAST BEEF. The choicest pieces for roasting- are from the rump and the loin. The first five ribs in the fore-quarter are also roasted ; the first two ribs make a very good roast, partic- ularly when the beef is of first quality. The chuck ribs are often roasted, but unless the meat is much better than the average, it is likely to prove unsatisfactory. The tenderloin is often removed whole (or divided, when the rump is sep- arated from the loin) and cooked as a roast. Being dry and without flavor, it is usually larded and served with a rich, high-flavored sauce. Let the meat to be roasted, skewered, or tied in a com- pact form, rest on a rack in a dripping-pan, skin side down ; dredge with flour and sear over the outside in a hot oven, then add salt and pepper and drippings and cook at a low temperature until done basting: the melted fat in the pan over the n-'cat, everv ten minute?. After a time turn the roast, to brown the skin side. When properly cooked, the outside fat is cris]) and rolled. FILLET OF BEEF, ROASTED. (Mrs. Hill.) The fillet of beef is taken from underneath that part of the backbone, wdiich is included in the lower part of the sirloin and the rump. Ordinarily it is cut as a part of the steaks or roasts in these joints, and when removed whole for a fillet these steaks or roasts are less desirable by so much. The part under the rump is called the short fillet, that under the sir- loin the long fillet. When the whole fillet is needed, it should be cut out before the division into loin and rump has been made. If this is not done, the two pieces need be skewered together. The whole fillet sells for 75 cents to one dollar per pound; the sh(~»rt fillet (from the rump) at about 35 cents per pound. The rump steaks are large, and the loss of the ten- derloin is not so apparent as it is in the sm:dler sirUnii steaks, hence the difiference in price. The rump fillet weighs about two pounds and a half and is an economical cut for occasional use. Tn dressing a fillet the sinewy covering on one side and the su])erfluous fat on the other are removed. It is then trimmed into shape and the thin end folded under. This leaves nothing but fine-grained, tender meat. Being destitute of flavor, this must be added in the cooking. Larcl the whole up])er surface with salt-pork dredge witli flour and brown, the lean beneath is browned to the depth of one-fourth an inch and the whole interior is evenly red and juicw Ribs are roasted just as they are cut, as a "standing roast," or boned and PRACTICAL COOKERY bake half an hour. Baste frequently. The oven must be very- hot at first. Serve with brown mushroom sauce, or gravy made from drippings in pan. The fillet when served may be surrounded with vegetables cut in fancy shapes. MUSHROOM SAUCE. Drippings from fillet of beef. 2 tbsp. butter. 4 tbsp. flour. 1 pt. stock. 1 pt. cooked mushrooms. 1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce. Salt and pepper. Heat the butter and drippings until brown. Add the flour and then the stock gradually. Strain, add the mushrooms. Cook five minutes, add the Worcestershire sauce and salt and pepper to taste. GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING SOUP-STOCKS. Soups are very nutritious, and if made in the proper way are very economical, as they are the means of saving and uti- lizing a great many remnants of left-overs that would be unfit for any other dish: Soup stock is the basis of all meat soups. It consists of the soluble parts of the meat, vegetables and bone dissolved in water. Soups are divided into two classes, soups with stock, and soups without stock. When meat for soup comes from the market, remove from the brown paper and wipe all over with a clean, damp cloth. Cut the lean meat into small pieces. By so doing, a large amount of surface is exposed to the water, and juices are more easily drawn out. Put bone, meat and fat into a clean soup kettle, and add as many quarts of cold water as there are pounds of meat and bone. Let stand one hour, that the water mav draw the juice from the meat. Heat gradually to the boiling point, then lower the heat, and cook slowlv from six to seven hours. A scum will rise on the top, which contains coagulated albuminous juices. These give to the soup its chief nutritive \alue, and shouM not be removed. A^egetables and spices should be added the last hour of cook- ing. A knuckle of veal is often added, which gi\es the stock when cold a jelly-like consistency. Some of the fat is ab- sorbed. The remainder rises to the top and forms, when cold, an air-tight covering over the stock, and should not be removed until the stock is done. PRACTICAL COOKERY From this stock may be made macaroni, noodle, vegeta- ble or tapioca soups, by adding just before serving, the boiled vegetables indicated by the name. Have all the trimmings sent home with the meat. Either kitchen bouquet or caramel is used to darken soups. The kettle should be closely covered to keep in the steam and sa\ ory odors, Stock made without vegetables keeps best in hot weather. It is better to use the stock the day after it is made. VEAL. 1. Veal is obtained from a young calf when about six to eight months old. 2. Veal contains smaller percentage of fat than beef, and is less nutritious. 3. Veal is divided in the same manner as beef, into fore and hind quarters. 4. Fore-quarter is subdivided in breast, shoulder and neck. 5. Hind-quarter is subdivided into loin, leg and knuckle. 6. Good veal may be known by its pinkish colored flesh and white fat; it is obtained throughout the year, but the best season is during the spring. 7. Veal should always be thoroughly cooked. VEAL CUTLETS. Cut veal from leg. about one inch thick, free from skin and bones, season with salt and pepper, roll into beaten egg, then into tine bread crumbs, and saute to a golden brown in bacon fat or half lard and butter. This must be cooked with care, or the outer covering will burn before meat is thor- oughly cooked. Serve with maitre d' hotel butter or tomato or mushroom sauce. ROAST VEAL. The loin, l^reast and fillet (a thick piece from the upper pirt of the leg) are the best pieces for roasting. The bone shou'd be removed from the fillet, and the cavity filled with a highly seasoned and very moist stuffing. Tie or skewer into a round shape. Dredge with salt, pepper and flour. Put stri])s of pork over the top and bake. Allow half an hour to a pound. Cover with a buttered paper to keep the meat from burning. Add water, when the flour ha,^ browned, and baste often. Serve with horseradish or tomato sauce. VEAL STEW OR FRICASSEE. The ends of the ribs, the neck and the knuckle may be 79 PRACTICAL COOKERY utilized in a stew. Cut the meat, two pounds in small pieces, and remove all the fine bones. Cover the meat with boiling water; skim as it begins to boil; add two small onions, two teaspoonfuls of salt, and one saltspoonful of pepper. Simmer until thoroughly tender. Cut four potatoes in halves ; soak in cold water and parboil them five minutes ; add them to the stew. Add one tablespoonful of flour wet in cold water, and more seasoning, if desired; and just before serving add one cup of cream, or if milk be used, add one tablespoonful of butter. Remove the bones before serving. To make veal potpie, add dumplings. If intended for a fricassee, fry the veal in salt pork fat before stewing, and omit the potatoes. DUMPLINGS That May be Used for Veal, Lamb or Beef Stews. 1 c. flour. 1 tsp. baking powder. Yi tsp. salt. Yi. c. milk. 1 beaten ^%g. Beat ^^^, add milk, "sift dry ingredients together; add tc milk and ^^^. Stir well together. Drop from a spoon into the hot meat broth, place cover over vessel, and allow to boil for ten minutes. Serve as soon as cooked. VEAL LOAF. 2 lbs. of lean veal. 1 lb. of pickled pork. 3 hard boiled eggs. 3 cloves. y-2. of an onion. 1 bay leaf. 34 tsp. celery seeds. y^ tsp. pepper. Yi, tsp. salt (add more if needed). Cook veal and pork, and all the seasoning together until tender; chop meat in chopping bowl rather coarsely, return to the liquor in which it was cooked. There should be about one and one-half cups. Reheat, place half of the meat in a small narrow pan, then lay the eggs in whole, lengthwise in center of pan. Pour over the rest of the meat, allow to stand 24 hours before using. When this loaf is sliced there will be a slice of ^^^ in center of each piece. VEAL PIE. One pound veal from shoulder or leg. Wash and cut into small pieces. Cover with cold water, let come to boiling point, PRACTICAL COOKERY skim ofif the impurities as they rise to the top. Add one carrot, cut in small pieces, and one small onion, and simmer until tender. Then thicken stock with a little flour moistened in cold water; add salt, pepper and one tablespoonful chopped parsley. If de- sired, mushroom.-^ or diced potatoes may be added. Cover with a g-ood crust. VEAL CROQUETTES (or chicken). 3 tbsp. butter. 3 tbsp. flour. 1 c. milk. 2 tsp. salt. y^. tsp. white pepper. Yz tsp. celery salt. 1 tsp. lemon juice. 1 tsp. parsley. Yz grated onion. 2 c. chopped veal or chicken. Make cream sauce, then add all the seasoning, then the meat ; spread onto a platter to cool for several hours. Then shape in form of croquettes, roll in fine, dry crumbs; then add beaten tgg, and last, the dry crumbs ; fry in deep fa^" Serve on a bed of peas and parsley. METHOD OF COOKING IN DEEP FAT. The fat used for cooking may be olive oil, beef drippings lard, or a mixture of several fats. The food must be covered with crumbs and tgg, or a bat- ter, to keep it from absorbing fat. Place the articles to be cooked in a bath of the fat, deep enough to float them. The kettle should be of iron ; a frying basket may be used. Foods already cooked, or needing little cooking, require a higher temperature than batters. The temperature of the fat for oysters, croquettes, fish balls, etc., may be tested by browning a cube of bread while counting forty. Counting sixty while the bread browns gives the right temperature for all batters. All the articles cooked must be drained on unglazed brown paper. When one quantity of food has been taken from the fat. it must be reheated and tested before adding a second set. In the absence of a frying basket, a wire spoon may be used to remove the food from the fat. Fat which has been used for frying, should be cooled and clarified by cooking a few slices of raw potato in it for 10 minutes ; strain through muslin and, when cold, cover. Fat PRACTICAL COOKERY may be used several times for frying and then may be mad< into soap. SWEETBREAD PATTIES. 1 pr. sweetbreads. 1 tbsp. butter. 2 tbsp. flour. . ■ . ■ 54tsp. salt. White pepper. Cayenne. 1 c. cream. Five large mushrooms, or half as many canned mush- rooms as there are sweetbreads. Sweetbreads spoil very quickly. Remove from paper at once, soak in cold water 10 minutes, and parboil 15 minutes. Add salt five minutes before they are done. F'ut them in cold water for 15 minutes, then remove the tough portions. Cut the sweetbreads into small pieces and chop the mushrooms fine. Make a white sauce of the butter, flour, seasoning and cream. Add the sweetbreads and the mushrooms, and when hot, serve in patty dishes or timbales. If desired, the mush- rooms may be omitted and twice as many sweetbreads used. CALVES' LIVER AND BACON. Cover with cold water slices of liver cut one-half inch thick, let stand five minutes; drain, wipe and remove the thin outside skin and veins. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour, and fry in bacon fat. Serve with bacon. BLANQUETTE OF VEAL. 2 tbsp. butter. 1 c. stock. Yolks of 2 eggs. 1 tbsp. chopped parsley. 2 tbsp. flour. 1 c. cream or milk. 12 button mushrooms. Salt and pepper to taste. 2 c. finely-chopped cooked veal. Melt the butter without browning, add the flour and stir until smooth. Add the liquid, and when the sauce begins to thicken, add the meat and the mushrooms cut in pieces. Stir until the sauce thickens, and when ready to serve, add the yolks of the eggs beaten light, and the parsley. Stir the eggs gently into the sauce, cooking for one minute only Long standing, or too long cooking, cooks the eggs too much so they separate from the sauce. The blanquette may be gar- PRACTICAL COOKERY nished with whole mushrooms which have been heated in their own liquor. The above recipe may be used for making veal patties or the filling of bouche cases. In that case, they would be more delicious if part sweetbreads were used with the chopped veal. FRICASSEE OF VEAL. (Mrs. Hill.) Blanch in boiling salted water two and a half pounds of lean veal, then cut it into two-inch pieces or cubes and place them in a casserole. Add enough white sauce to well cover the meat. Season carefully with salt, pepper, red pepper and a grating of nutmeg; add one bay leaf, a blade of mace and three slices of lemon ; then slice ten mushrooms and add them. Cover and simmer slowly for 50 minutes, stirring occasion- ally and adding two tablespoonfuls of cream when the meat is cooked tender. One or two yolks of eggs beaten up with a little milk or cream may also be added at this stage. Re- heat thoroughly, but do not allow the fricassee to boil again after the eggs are added. Remove the bay leaf, blade of mace and slices of lemon before serving. SWEETBREADS AND MUSHROOM CUTLETS. Boil one pair of sweetbreads in salted water till tender, remove, dip in ice water and take oflf skins and gristly fibers. When cold, cut in dice. Yz can mushrooms (diced). 2 tbps. butter. 2 tbsp. flour. 1 c. milk. 1 c. soft bread crumbs. Yz grated onion. 1 tbsp. lemon juice. 2 tsp. salt. yi tsp. pepper and spk. paprika. Melt butter, add flour and milk and cook until thick ; re- move from fire, add crumbs and the ^^% slightly beaten, then the mushrooms and sweetbreads. Return to fire and cook for a few seconds. Then pour onto a platter and allow to cool for several hours. Shape in form of cutlets, roll in bread crumbs and beaten ^g^ and fry in deep fat ; drain on brown paper. Serve with peas and tartar sauce. (If the mixture seems too thin, more crumbs may be added ; it should be of the same consistency as croquette mixtures ) PRACTICAL COOKERY LAMB AND MUTTON. 1. Laml) comes from a young sheep about one year old; spring lamb, from six weeks to seven and eight months oUl. 2. Sheep, between three and five years old, is sold as mutton. .V Tlie meat of the mutton should be tine-grained, a rich red and juicy; the fat, firm and white. 4. The meat of the lamb should be pink and the fat white and delicate. .^. I. ami) and nuitton arc divided into leg, linn, shoulder, nc-ck nnd Hank. (). A very young lamb is simply divided into fore and hind ([uartcrs. LAMB STEW. Hri'ast ol land). 1 >i. lbs. Boiling water, about 1 ])int. Potatoes, 4. medium-sized, (juartcrcd and parboiled. Onion, 1, about lJ/> inches in diameter, sliced. Rice, 2 tablespoonfuls. Toiuato, strained. 1 cupful, or tomato cit^up. 1 tablrspoonful. vSalt and pepper. Brown the onions in a little of the fat in a saucepan ; put with them the meat cut roughly into cube-shaped pieces about one and t)ne-half inches thick, and sprinkled with salt and pepper. (^)ver them with boiling water; heat this to the boiling point again, then let it simmer directly over the heat for two hours; or cook it over hot water for three hours, or until the meat is tender. After one hour of simmering, add the rice; half an hour before dishing the stew add the potat(H\s; when they are done, remove the bones and pieces of f.it, stir in the tomato or catsup, add salt and pepper, if needed, and serve. BRAISED LAMB. (Mrs. M. C. Crawley.) Two pounds of lamb from shoulder, cut in three-inch pieces, trim and wipe carefully; di]) in beaten egg and bread crund)s. Season with salt and pepper. I^lace meat in an iron skillet and put in a very hot oven for about ten minutes, then cover meat with boiling water. Bake in a slow oven for three hours. The water must be renewed and all the pieces of meat turned over. \\'hen done, the meat should be a nice brown, and the gravy will be lovely and rich. If this is carefullx done, it will be as good as chicken, and cost far less. PRACTICAL COOKERY LEG OF MUTTON. STUFFED AND ROASTED. Remove the bone ; wipe inside and out with a wet cloth ; sprinkle the inside with salt ; stuff and sew. Put it on a rack in a dripping pan, with some of the kidney suet. Dredge with salt, pepper and flour, and bake in a hot oven. Baste as soon as the flour is brown, and baste often. Bake two hours. Stuffing: One cup of stale bread crumbs. Season with one saltspoonful each, of salt, pepper, thyme or marjoram, and moisten with a quarter of a cut of melted butter. Add hot water, if a moist stuffing is desired. The bone may be left in the leg, in which case the stuf- fing would be omitted. Serve with mint sauce or caper sauce. CURRY OF MUTTON. Fry one large onion, cut fine, in one heaping tablespoon- ful of butter. Mix one tablespoonful of curry powder and one teaspoonful of salt, and stir it into the butter and onion. Add gradually one pint of hot water or stock. Cut two pounds of lean nuitton into small pieces, and brown them in hot fat : add them to the sauce, and simmer until tender. Place the meat on a hot dish, and arrange a border of boiled rice around the meat. Slices of cold cooked mutton may be used instead of the fresh meat. Currv is prepared in the same manner. CROWN ROAST OF LAMB. A crown rt)ast is fashioned from one loin or the two loins sewed together. The bones must be trimmed the same as for French chops, removing the trimmings to make the meat on the chops of uniform height. When the ends of the loin are joined, a circle of crown meat is formed. The ends of the ribs should be the same length. Cover the ends of the bones with salt ])ork : this will keep them from burning, at the same time imjiroving the flavor of the meat. The center of the roast may be filled with bread stuiling or sausage meat, or mashed sweet potatoes and nuts. Another method is to place a cup in the cavity, and when roast is cooked the cup is removed and opening filled with peas. Set the roast in hot oven for 15 minutes, then reduce heat and bake for one hour. Baste frequently; a little boiling water added occasionallv will keep juices from burning. PORK. 1. Pork is the flesh of the hog; the lean should be pink and the fat firm, clear and white. 2. The very fat portions are salted. 3. Hams are the hind legs, which are salted and .smoked. 4. Bacon, the flank, salted and smoked. PRACTICAL COOKERY 5. Ribs and loin, sold for roasting or as chops. 6. The kichicy fat is rendered and purified and sold as leaf lard. ROAST PORK. The chine, or loin, and the spare ribs, are the best pieces for roasting-. Rub well with pe])per or sage, salt and flour, and bake 20 minutes for each pound. Baste often, and do not have the oven as hot as for other meat. FRIED CHOPS. Remove the meat from the l)one, then free from all par- ticles of fat, leaving the nice fdlet free from bone and fat. Fry tiie Int slowly in hot skillet. Dip the meat into beaten egg or milk, then into fine bread crumbs, and fry the meat in the .-;killcl, in which the fat was melted. Season with salt and pe])pcr and poultry seasoning. These must be well cooked, and not too rapidly. BOILED HAM. If very salt, let it soak over night. Scrub well, trim off the hard black jjart, cover with cold water, and let it simmer slowly, allowing half an hour to the pound. Take it from the fire; let it remain in the water until nearly cold, then peel off the .-^kin and sprinkle with sugar and bread crumbs ; I)rown in the oven. ( )r boil inUil nearlv tender, remove the skin and bake two hours; baste often with vinegru". HAM RELISH. 1 cupful of cf)ld boiled ham, chopped fine. y2 cupful of cream. 3 hard-boiled eggs. Salt and ])epper to taste. Scald the cream. Kub the yolks of two eggs smooth with a little of the cream ; add to the cream, in the farina boiler with the ham. Press the whites of the two eggs through a sieve, add to the mixture and, when thoroughly heated, put on a hot dish. Slice the remaining ^^^ over the ham and ser\ e. BAKED SPARE RIBS. Two sets of spare ribs; sew the two sides and one end securely, fill space in between with good bread stufifing. Sew ui) tight and bake for one hour, turning it over so that both sides will brown well. Raste often. FRIED HAM. Cut the ham in thin slices, remove the outside, gash the PRACTICAL COOKERY fat and cook in a fryinj;- ])an till the fat is crisp. If cooked too loni^, it will become hard and dry. BROILED HAM. Cut in \erv thin slices and broil three or four minutes. ( )1(1 or very salt ham should be parboiled five minutes be- fore ])cin^- ])roilcd. .Scr\e with poached c.efs's. BAKED SLICE OF HAM. One slii'c of ham, one and one-half inch thick; cover with buttered bread crund)s. IMace in small bakin^^ dish. Cut \ery thin'\ one onion, and sj)read over meat. I'our over one cu]) of ricj' cream, and bake in moderate oven 50 minutes. BAKED PORK AND BEANS. .Soak one (|uart of pea beans in cold water over ni<:^ht. In the morniiij:;' ])Ut them into fresh cold water, and simmer till soft enouj2:h to pierce with a i)in, being careful not to let them boil enough to break. If you like, boil one onion with them. When soft, turn them into a colander, and pour cold water through them. Place them with the onion in a bean pot. Pour boiling \\atcr over one quarter of a pound of salt pork, ]jart fat and part lean ; scrape the rind till white. Cut the rind in half-inch strijjs ; bury the pork in the beans, leaving only the rind exposed. Mix one teaspoonful of salt — more, if the pork is not very salt — and one teaspoonful of mustard with one quarter of a cup of molasses. Fill the cup with hot water, and when well mixed, pour it over the beans; add enough more water to cover them. Keep them covered with water and bake for eight hours. TO TRY OUT LARD. Cut the leaves into small i)ieces; renioxe all flesh and membrane; ])Ut a few pieces in a kettle on the back of the stove, and when they are heated through, put in the remain- der. Cook slowly until the scraps are crisp; strain through a tine cloth into tin ])ails or pans, and press that obtained from the scra])s into a separate pail. Never ])ut water with the leaves, as the object is to exi)el that which they already contain, and there is no danger of burning, if only a few pieces be put in at first, and the kettle be not (nor the hot fire. The kettle should not be covered until the scraps are cris]) ; the?! cover it, and if no steam condenses on the cover, the water is evaporated. .87 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XVI. POULTRY AND GAME. There is practically no difference between the flesh of fowls and that of other meat in regard to nutritious value. The flesh of fowl is rich in nitrogenous matter, but contains little fat, unless specially fattened for killing. The light meat from the breast is tender, ])ut poorer in fla\-or than the dark meat from the leg and second joint. Tlie breast meat is delicate, owing to the shortness of its muscle fibers. The toughness of the leg and second joints is due to the long fibers and the tendons running through it. SELECTION. 1. The bird should be short and plump. 2. The skin fairly smooth. 3. Legs smooth. 4. Toes pliable. 5. End of breast bone should bend readily. 6. Quantity of meat on breast bone. 7. Should be fat. If convenient, use yellow skin fowls. Tlie flavor of the meat i*^ richer. CLEANING AND PREPARING. 1. Poultry should not be sent to market in an undrawn condition. The animal, before it is killed, should go without food long enough to empty the crop. 2. Dry method of removing feathers — plucking them from the dry bird. 3. Wet method or scalding — plunging the bird into boil- ing water (there being sufficient water to cover the animal), allowing it to remain in the water for a few moments only. This last method is a quicker method, but not as good as the dry method, as the boiling water will injure the fine flavor. In buying ])o'ultry. the dry picked will sell for a few cents more a ])Ound. 4. Spring chickens, from four months to a year old. are better for roasting, frying and broiling. The older fowls, which are cheaper, should be used for fricassees, stews, salads and pies. 5. It is wise, before roasting or stewing a fowl, to re- move the tendons from the legs. There are seven in each leg. 6. Remove all pin feathers. 7. Singe by holding o\er gas flame or over burning paper. PRACTICAL COOKERY 8. Wash well in several waters. Coarse corn meal will be a great help in cleaning- the skin. 9. If the fowl is to be roasted, the wings should l)e folded under the back, so that they need not be removed in carving. Salt should be s])rinkled on the fowl. Poultry — Chickens, Turkeys, Tame Uuck;^. (ieese. Game — Quail, Partridge, Grouse. Wild Ducks and Geese. TO CUT A CHICKEN INTO PIECES. Cut off the leg and separate at the joint, into drumstick and second joint. Cut off the wing and remove the ti]) ; sep- arate wing at middle point. Remove leg and wing from other side. .Separate the wishbone, with the meat which is on it, from the breast; cut through the ribs on either side and sc])- aratc the breast from the back; cut the breast in half length- wise, and the back through the middle crosswise. The side bones may be cut apart lengthwise with a cleaver. There should l)e 12 pieces. The neck and tips of the wings may be cooked with the giblets, and used for making gravy. If the chicken is to be stewed, cover the pieces with boil- ing water, and cook at that tem])erature for 15 minutes. Then add one tablcspoonful salt, and cook at a low tem])erature until tender. Serve with a sauce. ROAST CHICKEN. Singe, clean, wash, stuff and truss a chicken. Place breast down on rack in drip])ing pan ; sprinkle with salt, and spread with two tablespoonfuls butter and two table- spoonfuls flour, rubbed together. Put in hot oven at first, then reduce heat. When fat and flour begin to brown, pour vine cup boiling water into the pan. IJa.ste everv 13 minutes, and turn the chicken, that it may brown evenly. A four-])oun(l chicken requires one and one-half hours. STUFFING. y^ c. or 2 oz. butter. 1 c. bread or cracker crumbs. 1 tsp. to tbs]). mixed herbs. '4 t"- boiling water. Salt and pepper. Melt butter, add crnnd)s, seasoning and water. GRAVY. I'"ur off li(|uid in wdiich chicken has been roasted. Re- turn to pan, four tablespoonfuls fat with foin- tal)lesi)oonfuls Hour; add two cups stock, in which giblets, neck and ti])s of wings have been cooked. Cook five minutes. Season with salt and pepper, then strain. PRACTICAL COOKERY FRICASSEED CHICKEN. A fowl may l)e used for this purpose. Remove pin feath- ers, singe, cut off oil gland. Take out crop and windpipe at neck. Cut off legs and wings, divide each into two parts. No- tice position of inner organs, removing heart, liver and giz- zard together, then take out lungs and kidneys, adhering to the back bone. Divide back, loosen shoulder blade, cut from wing joint to point of ribs and separate back from breast. Rinse quickly, cover with boiling water and cook till ten- der, then brown in hot fat and serve with hot gravy. Or brown first, then stew in the gravy until tender. The sauce may be made with water or strained tomato. Mushrooms or other vegetables may be added. ROAST TURKEY. Turkey should be cleaned and prepared for roasting in the same manner as chicken. DRESSING FOR TEN-POUND TURKEY. 6 c. dried bread crumbs. j/4 c. chopped suet. I lb. of blanched and chopped chestnuts. y2 c. celery. ji tbsp. chopped parsley. 1 onion, chopped fine. 2 tbsp. salt. 1 tsp. pepper. 2 tbsp. sweet herbs. Enough boiling water to barely moisten it, so it will hold together. Fill turkey, then sew with heavy thread. Cover drumsticks with clean muslin to prevent them from drying out in cooking. Place turkey in baking pan, breast down ; bake in a moderate oven for two hours, basti'ig verv c^ften. It is a good plan to baste fowls with a thin mixture of flour and water; this helps to form a nice, brown crust on outside, and is a help in keeping in the juices and making the meat tender. GIBLET SAUCE. Cook giblets till tender, remove the toueh skins and chop fine. Take three tablespoonfuls of the turkey drippings and blend with three tablespoonfuls of flour. Carefully remove the rest of the fat from the dripping pan, after turkey is cooked, pour two cups water in the baking pan and let come tieces. Cook the fish and ])otatoes together in boiling water until the ])otatoes are PRACTICAL COOKERY soft, drain and shake over the fire until dry ; mash with a wire potato masher, add the beaten egg, butter and pepper, add more salt if needed and beat until light. Take up the mixture by spoonfuls, mould slightly, and slip them into the fat. Fry one minute, or until brown. HALIBUT TIMBALE WITH PEAS. (Mrs. Hill.) Chop fine one pound of halibut, weighed after being freed of skin and bones. Beat the yolk of an egg ; add one tea- s])Oonful and a fourth of salt, one-fourth a teaspoonful of white pepper and half a teaspoonful of pai)rika. Mix a tea- spoonful of cornstarch with a little milk, then add milk to make three-fourths a cup in all, and gradually stir into the yolk and seasonings, then stir the whole through the fish. Lastly, fold in thoroughly one-third a cup of heavy cream, beaten firm. Turn the mixture into a border or a Charlotte- Russe mold, carefully buttered. Set on many folds of paper in a baking pan. Surround with water at the bcnling point, and let cook in the oven till firm in the center. Remove from the water. Let stand three or four minutes, that the prep- aration may shrink from the mold a little; unmold on hot dish. Fill the center or surround, as required, with peas, seasoned with salt, black pepper, butter and a teaspoonful of sugar. Serve Hollandaise or fish Bechamel sauce, in a sauce boat. FISH BECHAMEL SAUCE. (Boston C. S. Magazine.) Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter; in it cook three table- spoonfuls of flour and a scant half teaspoonful, each, of salt and paprika ; add three-fourths a cup, each, of fish broth ( made of the fish trimmings, slice of onion, carrot and branch of parsley), and thin cream and stir until boiling. HALIBUT DELIGHT. One slice of halibut, cut one inch thick, then cut into long strips about one inch wide and four inches in length. Rub with salt and pepper, and lemon juice, and dip into a fritter batter and cook in deep fat till golden brown ; drain on l)rown paper. (Do not have fat too hot. as it will cook the doughy covering and fish will be raw.) This makes a pleasant change and makes a small piece of fish go a long way. BAKED CREAM FISH. Roil two pounds of any good white fish in salted water; when done, allow to cool, then break into two small flakes. PRACTICAL COOKERY S tbsp. butter. 3 tsp. flour. 2 c. milk. 1 tsp. chopped parsley. 1 green i)ep])er, chopped line. 2 tsp. salt. M.tsp. pepper. Juice oi halt lemon. A little grated onion. Melt butter, add Hour, then milk, ctiok till thick, add seas- oning, green pepp.r, onion juice or lemon juice. Butter bak- ing dish, put in a layer of fish and layer of dressing, alternate till all is used, then sprinkle top with bu-ttered bread crumbs, liake half an hour. (.\ny cold, fresh tish on hand may ])e used for this purpose.) FRIED OYSTERS. Select large oysters, wash and wipe them, remove pieces of shell, season with salt and ])epper, roll in fine bread crumbs which have been dried, sifted and seasoned, dip in beaten egg and again in crumbs. The eggs should have one tal)lespot>n- ful of water or oyster juice added to it. Fry one minute ; drain, garnish and serve. FRICASSEED OYSTERS. 2 tbsp. butter. 's tsp. white pe])per. i tsp. salt. Cayenne. 1 pt., or 30 tnsters. I'lace all the ingredients, except the oysters, in a chafing dish or co\ered saucepan. A\'hen hot, add the oysters, cover and shake the pan occasionally. When the oysters are ])lumi), drain them and place them where they will keep hot. Add enough cream to the liquid in the pan to make one CU]). OYSTER STEW. 1 c. milk. 1 pt. or 30 oysters. Salt and pepper. 1 tbsp. butter. Scald the milk. Cook and strain the oyster juice, then add the oysters, and cook until the edges curl. .\dd the seas- tinii\g. buUer and hot milk. Serve at once. (^nc tables])oonful flour may be cooked with the butter as for white sauce. PRACTICAL COOKERY OYSTER CELERY. 1 c. finely cut celery. 1 c. finely cut green pepper. 3 tbsp. butter. 3 tbsp. flour. 3 c. milk. 1 qt. well drained oysters. Add seasoning- to taste. 2 eg-gs. Place celery, green pepper and butter in dish and cook slowly, then add flour, and the milk, stirring till thick ; ad4 tsp. salt. Cut vegetables in small pieces and mix all (except potato and oni(m) ; cook 10 minutes in three tablespoonfuls butter; PRACTICAL COOKERY add potato, cook two minutes; add onion and water, cook one hour. Mix one tablespoonful butter and the flour, add enoug-h of the liquid to make it pour easily, add to the soup, with the seasoning, and cook one hour longer. Beat with a fork to break the vegetables ; add parsley, and serve hot. CREAM OF TOMATO SOUP. 1 can tomatoes. 1 tsp. soda. 4 tbsp. butter. 4 tbsp. flour. 3 tsp. salt. Yz tsp. white pepper. 1 qt. milk. Cover and stew the tomatoes slowly one-half to one hour ; rub through a strainer, and add soda while hot ; make a white sauce and add the tomato juice. Serve immediately. GREEN PEA SOUP. 1 pt. or 1 can peas. 1 qt. water. 2 tbsp. butter. 2 tbsp. flour. Yi tsp. salt. 1-16 tsp. white pepper. Yz tsp. sugar. 1 pt. milk or cream. Wash the peas and cook them in 1 pt. of boiling water until soft; mash them with the water in which they were cooked, strain and add the remainder of the liquid ; make a white sauce, and cook until it is like thick cream. If the peas are fresh, some of the pods may be cooked with them. lo7 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XX. SAUCES. There is a French epigram which, when translated, reads, "Cooking and roasting may be taught, but it takes a genius to make a sauce." This is very true, for in no other line of cooking does the art of cooking display itself to better ad- \-antage than in the making of sauces. Each sauce must jjosses a distinct flavor and character of its owm, and add richness and piquancy or flavor without los- ing its own identity. The excellence of many entrees depends almost entirely on the sauces which enter largely into their composition. Most fish dishes would be insipid without an appropriate sauce. Some meat dishes and a large variety of puddings would be unpalatable without their customary sauces. The French, perhaps, exceed all other nations in the mak- ing of sauces. One will And, in glancing over a French c(jo1c book as many as 500 and 600 recipes for sauces History tells us that long before the reign of Louis XI the "SAU- CIERS" had formed themselves mto a corporation. The> made sauces which the people botight to flavor their ragouts. Difference between sauces and gravy — Grav}' is simply the juices of meat diluted and seasoned, but not thickened, except the slightly thickened brown gravy, which ought to really rank as a thin sauce. Sauces are liquid seasonings. The following licjuids form the bases of most of the sauces: L White Stock — Nearly all the good, white, savory sauces have for their foundation wdiite stock anl milk, used in varying proportions. 2. Brown Stock — All good brown savory sauces are made from stock, more or less rich, according to the ]Hirpose for which they are intended. ?i. Fish Stock — Fish sauces usually ha\e for their foun- dation about equal quantities of fish stock and milk. 4. Milk — Milk forms the basis of nearlv all the plain white sauces, both sweet and savory, also of bread sauce. THICKENINGS FOR SAUCES. White Roux — In making white roux, equal c]uantities of butter and flour are stirred in a stew pan over a slow fire for 10 or 15 minutes, but without allowing the roux t(^ take any color. If for immediate use. the roux mu^t cool slightly be- PRACTICAL COOKERY fore adding the liquid. Fawn Roux — For a fawn or blonde roux, take equal quan- tities of butter and flour, and cook slowly over the fire or in a cool oven until the mixture acquires a pale fawn color. Brown Roux — This third variety is usually called "stock roux." because where roux is being constantly used, a large quantity of it is made and kept in stock. The proportion of l)Utter and flour are the same as for white and fawn roux. The nut-brown color is obtained by a long, slow process of frying or roasting, during which much of the flavor, charac- teristic of well-made brown sauce, is developed. Kgg I^iaison — This thickening is composed of yolks of eggs beaten up with a small quantity of cream, milk, or white stock. The sauce to which this liaison (or thickening) is added must require no further cooking. One or two table- spoonfuls of hot sauce should be mixed with the eggs and cream, and the whole then strained into the sauce, which should be just below boiling point. To remove the raw taste of the eggs, it is necessary to cook and stir the sauce by the side of the fire for a few minutes, but it must not be allowed to boil, or the eggs may curdle. Butter and Cream Liaison — When butter and cream are employed for thickening, they are added in equal proportions to the sauce just before serving; reheating would spoil the flavor of the sauce. Kneaded Butter Liaison — This form of liaison is exceed- inglv useful when no roux is at hand, and a little additional thickening is required. Butter will absorb about its own weight in flour, and the two are kneaded together on a plate until all the flour is absorbed, or, in other words, thoroughly moistened by the l:)Utter. Tbis liaison should be added to the sauce in small portions and stirred until it is smoothly mixed with it. GRAVY. Gravy in its most simple form is made bv adding boiling water to the sediment which remains in the meat tin when the fat has been carefully poured ofif. It should be seasoned to taste, boiled up, stirring meanwhile to loosen the brown particles which adhere to the sides of the tin, well skimmed, and strained over or round the meat. Any bones that have been removed from the meat may be boiled to form the basis of the gravv. but nothing else must be introduced. Beef gravy must contain only salt and pepper; and mutton gravy the same ingredients, and a few drops of caramel when the gravy is very light in color. A'^eal gravy, also, should be made from PRACTICAL COOKERY the l)()ncs and, after l)einj^" mixed with tliat in tlie meat tin. should be slightly thickened with flour and butter, kneaded together, or flour mixed smoothly with a little water. Gravies served with game, roast rabbits, etc., may be made from beef, beef or game bones, or from stock. Clear stock must be used for clear gravies, but, with this exception, any good second stock will serve. An economical cook will ahvays contrive to provide the basis of gravies, sauces, and soups out of the bones and trimmings of ])oultry and meat, except, of course, the clear soups and gravies, which must have a good, clear stock for their foundation. WHITE SAUCE. 2 tbs]). butter. 2 tbsp. flour. 1 c. milk. 14 ts]). salt. )4 tsp. white ])ci)])er. CREAM SAUCE. Use cream instead of milk and from one ..j two table- spoonfuls of flour, according to the thickness of the cream ; otherwise, the same as white sauce. THICK WHITE SAUCE. (FOR CROQUETTES AND SIMILAR MIXTURES.) Tliree tablespooiifuls of l)Ultcr, one-third a cvi]) of flour. one cup of milk, or white stock, or cream and white stock combined. Use the same quantity of condiments and ])re- pare as white sauce. VELOUTE SAUCE. Same as white sauce, with white stock, i)referably chicken. lla\'ore(l with onion, celery aud carrot. BECHAMEL. Make a \eloute sauce, using equal cpiantities of chicken stock and cream for liquid. If the chicken stock has not been flavored with vegetables, etc., frv a generous tablespoonful of vegetables, carrot, onion, parsley, etc.. in the butter be- fore adding the flour; do not. however, allow them to color; strain I)ef(MX' serving. HORSERADISH SAUCE. To a cu]) of \elc»ute sauce add one-fourth a cuj) of hot cream and one-third a cu]> of fresh-grated horseradish; let heat without boiling. Serx'e with fish. HORSERADISH SAUCE (Hot, for Beef). 4 tbsp. grated horseradish. PRACTICAL COOKERY 4 tbsp. powdered cracker. Yi c. cream. 1 tsp. powdered sugar. 1 tsp. salt. ^ saltsp. ])ei)])er. 1 tsp. mustard. 2 tl)sp. \incgar. Mi.x. and lieat over hot water. HORSERADISH SAUCE (Cold). Cream one-fourth of a cu]> of butter till very light; adfl two tablespoonfuls of grated horseradish, one tal)les])oonful of very thick cream, and half a teas])oonful of Tarragon vin- egar. Keep it on the ice till thick and cold. OLIVE SAUCE (for Roast Duck). (Mrs. Hill.) Cover a dozen olives with boiling water and let stand half an hour on the back of the range. I 'are them round and round and remove the stone; add to a pint of 1)rown sauce, then let simmer five or six minutes. SAUCE PIQUANTE (for Boiled Beef). (Mrs. Hill.) 2 tbs]). choiJ])cd shallot or very mild onion. 2 tbsp. tine-choj)])ed ])arsley. Ya, c. butter. 1-3 c. flour. 4 tbsp. vinegar. 2 c. brown stock. Cayenne to taste. Cook the shallot with the butter and \inegar until the butter looks clear and brown, when the shallot will have ab- sorbed the vinegar. Then add the Hour and i)e])]jer, salt, if needed, and let cook until brown; add the stock graduallv and, just before serving, the parsley and gherkins. BROWN SAUCE. 1 pt. hot stock. 2 tbsp. minced onion. 2 tbsp. butter. 2 heaping tbsjj. flour. Y2 t.sp. salt. Y2 saltsp. ])epper. 1 tbsp. lemon juice. Caramel enough to color. Mince the onion and fry it in the butter five minutes. Be PRACTICAL COOKERY t-;ircful iKit til hiini it. VVlu-ii llic liullcr is brown, add the dry flour and stir well. Add the hot stock, a little at a lime, and stir rapidly as it thickens, until perfectly smooth. .Add the salt and pepper, usin^*- more if hif^di seasoning be desired. .Simmer hve minutes, and strain to reiiKJve the onion. The stock for brown sauces may be made from bones and remnants of any kind of meat, by soaking them in cold water, and boiling until the nutriment is extracted. 'J'he onion may be omitted if the flavor be not desired; but the sauce is better with it if it be not burned. TOMATO SAUCE (for Chops or Fish). y^ can toniatoes. 1 c. water. 2 cloves. -' alls|)icc berries. 1 pi'ppercorns. 1 ts]). mi.\ed herbs. 2 sj)rigs i)arsley. 1 tbs]). clioppi'd oni4 tsp. salt. Yi sallsp. ])epper. I'ut the tomato, water, spices, herbs and parslev on to boil in a granite saucepan. I^'ry the onion in the butter till yellow, add the cornstarch, and stir all into the tomato. Sim mer 10 minutes; add the salt and pepper, and a little cayi-nne pei)per, and strain the sauce over boiled meat or iish. SAUCE TARTAR (for Fish or Meat Substitute). 1 tsj). mustard. Yi saltsp. pepi)er. 1 ts}). powdered sugar. 1 saltsp. salt. h'evv dro])s onion juice. Y(dks 2 raw eggs. Yi 0. oil. .^ tbsp. \inegar. 1 tbsp. chop])e(l olives. 1 tbsp. cho])j)e(l capers. 1 tbs]). chopped cucund)er pickles. 1 tbs]). cho])]>cd parsley. Mi.x in the order given; add the yolks, and stir well; add the oil slowly, then the vinegar and chopped ingredients. This will keep for several weeks. PRACTICAL COOKERY MINT SAUCE. 1 huiicli iniiil. y^ c. boiling water. 2 tbs]). sugar. y^ t.s]). salt. The juice of one lemon or 4 tl)S]). vinegar. A few gr. cayenne. j4 tsp. .salt. Chop the leaves from tlic Knncli of mint very line; ponr ()\'er the water, a(l4 c. fat. Ice water. Mix in the order given. FLAKY PASTRY. 3 c. flour, ^ tsp. salt. ^ c. shortening. ^ to ^ c. water. Y c. washed butter. Wash the butter and set aside as for puff-paste. With a knife or the tips of the fingers work the half-cup of shorten- ing into the flour and salt. When the mixture looks like meal, add the cold water, gradually, and with a knife mix to a paste as in plain pastry ; knead slightly, cover and let stand five minutes, then pat with the rolling-pin and roll out into a rectangular sheet. Fold in the butter as in puff-paste, and give the paste two or three "turns," allowing it to stand five minutes between each turn. This pastry may be used at once. If set awa}^ for future use, cover closely to exclude the air and avoid the forming of a crust. PUFF-PASTE. 1 lb. flour. 1 lb. butter. 1 tsp. lemon-juice. About y3 pint cold water. Method. — Wash and .•■queeze the butter in cold warer. dry well in a floured cloth, shape into a square about the size of a slice of sandwich bread, and keep in a cool place while the paste is being prepared. Sieve the flour on to a marble slab or board, make a well in the center, put in the lemon-juice, and add water gradually until a smooth paste is formed. The condition of the butter determines the consistency ; when soft, the paste must be equally so. Knead the paste until 130 PRACTICAL COOKERY smooth, then roll it out into a strip a little wider than the butter, and rather more than twice its length. Place the but- ter on one half of the paste, fold the other half over, enclos- ing the butter entirely, and press the edges together with the rolling-pin. Let it remain in a cool place for about 15 min- utes, then roll out to about three times the original length, but keeping the width the same, and fold exactly in three. Turn the paste round so that the folded edges are on the right and left, roll and fold again, and put aside for 15 min- utes. Repeat this until the paste has been rolled out six times. The rolling should be done as evenly as possible, and the paste kept in a long, narrow shape which, when folded, forms a square. Each time the paste is rolled out, it may be well sprinkled with flour, but it must be evenly distributed with a paste-brush, and all the loose flour carefully brushed off before beginning to roll. When the paste has had its sixth roll, it is ready for use ; it should be baked in a hot oven, and until the paste has risen and become partially baked, the oven door should not be opened, because a current of cold air may cause the flakes to collapse on one side. SUET CRUST. 2 c. flour. 1 tsp. salt. 1 tsp. baking powder. 1 c. suet, chopped fine. Enough ice water to make it hold together, sift dry ingre- dients together, add suet, then the water. This makes a good crust for meat pies or dumplings. CRUST FOR MEAT PIE. 6 tbsp. melted butter, beat well. 1 c. sweet milk. 2 c. flour. 3 tsp. baking powder. ^ tsp. salt. Mix all well together, and spread on top of pie, or use as short cake. NEAR PUFF-PASTE. % c. lard. 2 c. flour. 1 tsp. salt. ^ c. well-washed butter. Sift flour and salt together. Rub lard in with fingers until it is in very fine crumbs. Chop in butter with a knife PRACTICAL COOKERY and just enough water so that it can be rolled. Then roll up in a tight roll. Press down from top of roll till flat. Then roll again (always away from you). End in a roll. After three times wrap in cheese cloth and put in ice chest for a few hours. APPLE PIE. Wipe and cut tart apples into eighths ; remove the cores and skins. \'ary the amount of sugar according to the acid- ity of the apples, using 2 tablespoons or more for an apple. If the apples are not juicy, add from 3-<^ to 1 tablespoon of water, according to the size of the apple. The apples may be flavored with lemon juice, cinnamon or nutmeg, and should be covered with bits of butter. Bake until the apples are soft and the crust is brown. MOCK MINCE PIE. 54 c. cracker crumbs. 54 c. sugar. 54 c. molasses. % c. lemon juice or vinegar. Yz c. raisins, seeded and chopped. 54 c. butter, or 5<2 c. suet. 1 ^%^, well beaten. Spice. Mix ingredients in order gi\en. Add si)ices to taste, and bake between crusts ; or cook, add eggs last and bake be- tween two crusts. APPLE DUMPLING. Crust. 2 c. flour. Yz tsp. salt. 1 tsp. baking powder. Yz c. lard. Enough ice water or milk to make a stiff dough. Sift drv ingredients together, cut in the lard with a knife, then add water or milk, then roll about Y^ inch thick, then cut into large rounds, large enough to almost cover apples ; then cut out small rounds to fit the top of apple, joining the edges to- gether neatly to make a smooth surface. Make two or three small cuts in the top of crust to allow escape of steam, brusVi over top with melted butter and bake till a good golden browMi. The apple should be peeled and cored. For 6 apples al- low 15^ cups sugar, 5^ teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon butter and a little grated nutmeg and Y^ cups water. The apple should be steamed in this syrup until soft, being careful not to al- 132 PRACTICAL COOKERY low them to break in pieces. Allow the apples to cool before covering with the pastry. Serve with hard sauce and syrup in which apples were cooked, or serve with cream FRUIT PIE. (Mrs. M. C. Crawley.) Make a rich pie dough and line pie tin, pinching up the dough all around the edge to make a deep pie. Wash a box of blackberries and drain, then add 2 scant tablespoons flour, yolks of 2 eggs and sugar to taste, and mix thoroughly. Put this mixture in the previously arranged crust and bake. Make a meringue of the two whites, beating them until dry and stilT, then add 2 tablespoons sugar and beat again until real stifif, and when the pie is done put on the meringue and brown. When the pie is taken finally from the oven, slip it on to a plate. If the meringue is well beaten before and after the sugar is added, it will stand up, and be an inch thick. The crust will bake with the fruit, not separately. One can use strawberries, raspberries, huckleberries, etc., as well as peaches, apricots, cherries and pineapples. CUSTARD PIE. 2 eggs. 3 tbsp. sugar. }i tsp. salt. 1^ c. milk. Few ^-ratings nutmeg. Beat eggs slightly, add sugar, salt and milk. Line plate with paste, and build up a fluted rim. Strain in the mixture and sprinkle with a few gratings of nutmeg. Bake in quick oven at first to set rim, decrease the heat afterwards and cook at low tem])erature. PUMPKIN PIE. 1 c. cooked pumpkin. 2 c. milk. 2 eggs. }i tsp. ginger. y2 c. sugar. y2 tsp. salt. ^ tsp. grated nutmeg. Beat egg slightly, add pumpkin and seasoning, then the milk. Line a pie plate with rich crust. Pour in the mixture and bake one hour in a moderate oven. PRACTICAL COOKERY MINCE MEAT. (Mrs. Plumridge.) 5 lbs. chopped beef. 1 pk. tart apples. 4 lbs. currants. 1 lb. citron. 4 lbs. raisins. 2 qts. brown sugar. 2 qts. molasses. 2 qts. cider. 2 lbs. chopped suet. 1 tbsp. salt. 1 tbsp. cinnamon. 2 nutmegs. 2 tbsp. cloves. 2 tbsp. cloves. 2 tbsp. ginger. 2 tbsp. allspice. Scald well, and it will keep for a long time. MINCE MEAT MADE WITH NUTS. 2 lbs. raisins. 1 lb. currants. 1 lb. shelled English walnuts. 3 c. sugar. Yz lb. citron. Juice of 3 oranges, juice of 3 lemons. (Grated rind of 1 orange and 1 lemon.) 4 lbs. apples, cut fine. 1 tsp. salt. 1 tsp. cinnamon. 1 nutmeg. Yi tsp. cloves. Enough cider to blend it well together. Cook one hour and seal. LEMON RAISIN PIE. 1 large lemon. 1 c. sugar. Yi. c. raisins. 2 tbsp. flour. 1 tbsp. butter. 1 c. water. Spk. salt. Cream butter, add sugar, flour and salt, then the lemon PRACTICAL COOKERY juice, water and raisins, and bake with two crusts in a mod- erate oven about three-quarters of an hour. CHESS CAKE. (Mrs. Moreno.) 2 eggs. 1 c. sugar. 1 small tbsp. butter. 3^2 c. milk. Yt. c. chopped citron. Flavor with nutmeg and bake with one crust; this makes one pie. LEMON PIE. 1 c. boiling water. Y\. c. sugar. 3 tbsp. corn starch. 1 tbsp. butter. 2 eggs. Juice and grated rind of one lemon. Mix sugar and corn starch together, pour in boiling water slowly to avoid lumping. Cook till thick. Beat yolk of eggs and pour into the yolk the hot mixture, return to the fire and cook for a few moments, then add butter and the lemon juice and grated rind. Pour into a pie shell which has been previ- ously baked. Beat whites of eggs stiff, add 3 tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and 34 tablespoonful vanilla ; beat well and spread on top of pie. Place in a moderate oven long enough to brown the top. 135 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XXIV. CAKES. Cakes might be classified under batters and doughs. But most cakes are much richer in their composition than the light breads which are usually classified under the batters and doughs. There are two classes of cakes — butter cakes and sponge cakes. Sponge cakes include angel and sunshine cakes. Ex- amples of butter cakes are cup cakes, pound cakes, etc. In making cakes use only the best material — good butter, fresh eggs and finely granulated or powdered sugar. Butter cakes are varied by changing the flavoring, by adding nuts, fruits, chocolate or spices. For chocolate cake melt the chocolate over hot water and add afterwards the yolks of the eggs. Dredge raisins and currants with flour and add to the mixture just before the egg whites. The oven must be ready for baking, the pans thoroughly greased. Sift flour before measuring; pastry flour sliould be used. The flour and baking powder must be mixed and sifted several times, and if spices are used, they should be sifted with the flour. Powdered or fine granulated sugar may be used. Cream the butter, add the sugar gradually. The yolks and whites of the eggs should be beaten separately, and the yolks added to the butter and sugar. The bowl in which they are beaten should be rinsed with the milk. The milk and flour are added alternately, then the flavoring, and the whites of the eggs. When fruit is used, save a little flour to cover it, and add just before the whites of the eggs. Bake cake from 20 to 40 minutes, or until it shrinks from the pan. \\Mien taken from the oven, allow it to remain in the pan about 3 minutes. Lard or fat may be used in gingerbread. SPONGE CAKE. 5 eggs. 1 c. sugar. 1 tsp. lemon juice. Rind of half lemon. 1^4 c. flour. J4 tsp. salt. Beat the yolks until light and lemon colored, add the sugar gradually and continue beating, then the leiiit^n juice and PRACTICAL COOKERY rind and the flour, which has been sifted two or three tmies Fold in the whites of the egg, which have been laeaten until stiff. The salt should be added to the egg whites before beating. SUNSHINE CAKE. 7 eggs (whites). 5 eggs (yolks). 1 c. fine granulated sugar. 1 c. flour measured after sifting 5 times. 14 tsp. cream tartar. 1 tsp. orange extract. . , , • , r u a Beat yolks thick and set aside. Add pmch of salt and cream of tartar to whites of eggs and beat stiff ; add sugar 'ind beat well, then add flavoring and beaten yolks and stir lightlv. Last, carefully stir in flour. Bake m tube pan m moderate oven 40 or 50 minutes. ANGEL CAKE. (Mrs. A. T. Morey.) Whites of 8 eggs. ly^ c. sugar (sifted 3 times). 1 c. flour (sifted 5 times). y3 tsp. cream tartar. 1 tsp. vanilla. Spk. of salt. J J 4.1 Add the salt to the eggs and beat to a foam; add the cream of tartar and beat until stiff. Sift in the sugar, beating all the time. Sift in the flour, slowly mixing it with a ight. folding motion. Add the vanilla. Bake in an unbuttered pan in a slow oven one hour. BUTTER CAKE. Yz c. butter. 1 c. sugar. 2 eggs. I/2 c. milk. 2 c. flour. 2^ tsp. baking powder. y tsp. vanilla. Cream the butter, add the sugar graduallv, then the egg^, well beaten, beating the mixture all the while to keep the consistency the same. Add the vanilla, then at the same time one-third of the milk and one-third of the flour, beating well. Sift in the last third of the flour containing the baking pow- der, and mix well before adding the last portion of milk. Bake in shallow cake pans, and put together with different frostings or fillings, from which the cake takes it name. 137 PRACTICAL COOKERY BLACK CHOCOLATE CAKE. (Helen Andrews.) 2 squares chocolate, grated. Yz c. milk. Yolk of 1 ^%g. Boil this together until stiff, and add when cool — y^ c. butter. 3^ c. sour milk. 2 small c. sugar. 2 eggs, or yolks of 6. 2 c. flour. 1 tsp. soda. Flavor with vanilla. Bake in moderate oven. CANADIAN FRUIT CAKE. (Mrs. E. V. Roy.) Y\ c. butter. 2 c. sugar. 3 eggs. •}4 tsp. cloves. ]/\ tsp. mace. 1 tsp. allspice. ■>4 tsp. soda. 1 c. milk. 3 c. flour. 1 tsp. cream of tartar. 1 c. sliced citron peel. 1 lb. raisins. Yz lb. shelled walnuts. Cream butter, add sugar and beaten eggs. Sift dry ingre- dients together. Alternate flour and milk, little at a time. Dust fruit with flour. Bake three hours in slow oven. ORANGE CAKE. (C. S. Monitor.) y^ c. butter. 1 c. sugar. 2 eggs, well beaten. 1/2 c. milk. 1^ c. flour. 2^ tsp. baking powder. Make in the ordinary way and bake in two layers. ORANGE FILLING. Yi. c. sugar. 2Y2 tbsp. flour. PRACTICAL COOKERY Grated rind of Yi. orange. Yz c. orange juice. Yz tbsp. lemon juice. 1 ^^^, slightly beaten. 1 tbsp. butter. Cook ten minutes in double boiler, stirring constantly. Put between the layers, cover top with orange frosting. ORANGE FROSTING. Grated rind of 1 orange, add Y^ teaspoon lemon juice and 2 tablespoons orange juice. Let stand 15 minutes. Then add to the yolk of an t^^, slightly beaten ; then stir in enough con- fectioners' sugar until right consistency to spread. SEED CAKE. (Mrs. Arthur Masse.) 4 eggs. 1 c. butter. 2 c. sugar. 1 c. milk. 1 tsp. baking powder. 3 c. flour. Caraway seed to taste. Preserved citron or mixed peel may be used for half the mixture, if desired. The above recipe makes two small cakes or one large loaf cake. BLACK FRUIT CAKE. (Mrs. Plumridge.) 2 lbs. raisins. 2 lbs. currants. 2 lbs. French prunes, sliced. 1 lb. citron. 1 lb. chopped almonds. % lb. butter. 1 lb. brown sugar. 1 lb. browned flour. Y2 lb. figs. 12 eggs. 3 lemons. 1 c. molasses. Ya orange peel. 1 c. rose water. 1 tbsp. cloves, cinnamon, allspice. 2 tbsp. soda. 2 grated nutmegs. 139 PRACTICAL COOKERY Soak spices 24 hours in pint cider; boil lemon till straw will pierce them. Flour fruit. Alix flour, sugar, molasses, butter and eggs, but do not beat ; add dissolved soda in 3"2 cup of milk, then spice and cider, then lemons, chopped Hne ; last, the floured fruit. Bake in slow oven four hours. MOCK ANGEL FOOD CAKE. 1 c. flour. 1 c. sugar. 3 tsp. baking powder. (Sift flour and l)aking powder four times.) 1 c. boiling milk. Beat until smooth, flavor and fold in lightly the beaten whites of two eggs. APPLE SAUCE CAKE. 1 c. sugar. Yi c. butter (creamed). 1 c. hot apple sauce (unsweetened). 1 tsp. cinnamon. ^ tsp. ground cloves. Nutmeg and salt. 1 tsp. soda. 3/2 tsp. baking powder. l-)4 c. flour. 1 c. raisins. 1 c. nuts. Bake 45 minutes in slow oven. MARBLE ; CAKE. White Part. Whites of 2 eggs. Va c. • sugar. Va c. butter. Va c. sweet milk. 1 c '.. flour. 1 tsp. baking powder. Dark Part. Yo ilks of 2 eggs. V2 c. sugar. Ya c. molasses. Ya c. butter. Ya c. sweet milk. Y tsp. each of cl oves, cinnamon ana nnrmeg. ^Ya [ c. flour. 1 1 arge tsp. baking powder. PRACTICAL COOKERY Bake in round angel food pan. Drop one spoonful of white, then the dark, till all is used. ROLLED OAT CAKES. (Mrs. Masse.) 1 tbsp. butter. 1 c. sugar. 2 eggs. Little salt. 2 c. rolled oats. Cream the butter and sugar together, then add eggs and flavor. Shape with the hands into tiny cakes, and bake in quick oven. BROWN SUGAR COOKIES. ^ c. butter. % c. brown sugar. 1 cup rolled oats. }i English walnuts. 1 c. flour. 1 tsp. baking powder. Cream butter, add sugar, beaten egg, rolled oats, nuts and flour and baking powder. Roll ^ inch thick and cut. Bake about 15 minutes. NUT SQUARES. 1 ^gg- 1 c. brown sugar. % tsp. soda. Pinch of salt. 1 c. nuts. 6 tbsp. flour. Beat Qgg light, add sugar; sift dry ingredients and add to the sugar and nuts. Spread in baking pan about an inch thick. Bake for 25 minutes. Cut in squares. PEANUT COOKIES. 2 tbsp. butter. 54 c. sugar. 1 ^gg- 1 tsp. baking powder. % tsp. salt. ]/2 c. flour. 2 tbsp. milk. J/2 c. finely clvjpped peanuts J/2 tsp. lemon juice. PRACTICAL COOKERY Cream the butter, add sugar, and egg well beaten. Mix and sift dry ingredients ; add to first mixture ; then add milk, peanuts and lemon juice. Drop from a teaspoon on an unbut- tered sheet one inch apart, and place one-half peanut on top of each. Bake 12 to 15 minutes in a slow oven. NUT COOKIES. (Miss Grace Holmes.) lJ/'2 c. sugar. 1 c. butter. 3 well-beaten eggs. 3 c. flour, or 1 cup ground Quaker oats and 2 c. flour. J/2 lb. chopped pecan meats. 1 c. raisins. y2 tsp. salt. 1 tsp. soda, dissolved in 3 tbsp. boiling water. 1 tsp. cinnamon. 1 tsp. vanilla. Drop in buttered tins, and place in medium oven. DEVIL'S FOOD. Yz c. butter. 1 c. sugar. 4 eggs. 1 c. sugar. 2^ c. flour. 4 tbsp. baking powder. 1 c. milk. 1 tsp. vanilla. 2 squares chocolate. Beat half a cup of butter to a cream, gradually beat in 1 cup of sugar ; beat the yolks of 4 eggs until light, and add in 1 cup of sugar ; then add to the butter and sugar ; add alter- nately 1 cup of milk and 23/5 cups of flour, sifted with 4 level teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Add 2 squares of melted chocolate, a teaspoon of vanilla and, lastly, the beaten whites of 4 eggs. Bake in lavers or loaf. NUT CAKE. Yz c. butter. 1 c. sugar. 2 eggs. Yz c. milk. 2 c. flour. IH tsp. baking powder. 1 c. raisins. 1 c. walnuts. Bake in moderate oven for a little over one hour. PRACTICAL COOKERY GINGER BREAD. (Mrs. C. N. Stevens.) ^ c. butter. Yz c. sugar. 1/2 c. molasses. Yz c. sour milk. 2 c. flour. 2 eggs. 1 tsp. soda. J4 tsp. salt. y2 tsp. ginger. 1 tsp. cinnamon. Mix in usual manner; bake in square cake pan. Take great care not to have oven too hot, as a cake containing molasses will burn very quickly. ROCKS. (Mrs. M. C. Crawley.) \y2 c. brown sugar. 1 c. butter (part lard if desired). 3 eggs, beaten. Scant c. raisins. Scant c. chopped nuts. 2^ c. flour. 1 small tsp. soda. 1 small tsp. cinnamon. 1 small tsp. cloves. Drop in buttered tins. No liquid is added ; the butter and sugar, with the eggs, make enough wetting, as they must be stiff enough not to run on the tins. One-quarter of a tea- spoon of dough will make a good-sized rock. BOSTON COOKIES. Yy c. butter. 1 c. sugar. 3 eggs. 1 tsp. soda. 1^ tbsp. boiling water. ZYa c. flour. Y\ tsp. salt. 1 tsp. cinnamon. 1 c. chopped walnuts. 1 c. currants. Yj c. raisins. Cream butter, add sugar and beaten ^^%. Soda dissolved in boiling water; then add half of the flour sifted with dry ingredients. Dust fruit with small portion of flour, and add, 143 PRACTICAL COOKERY with nuts, to the mixture. Then add remainder of flour. Drop by spoonfuls and bake 15 minutes. MARSHMA1.LOW DAINTIES. Take small soda crackers and spread with butter. Place marshmallow on top of crackers. Sprinkle with little cinna- mon. Place tiny piece of butter on top of marshmallow. Put in a very hot oven until marshmallows are melted. PLAIN COOKIES. Yz c. butter. Yz c. lard. I c. sugar. . 4 eggs. 1 tsp. soda. Y2 tsp. salt. Y2 tsp. nutmeg. Cream butter and lard, add sugar and beaten eggs ; then 1 cup flour sifted with dry ingredients ; then more flour to make a stiflf dough ; roll about 54-iiich thick and cut with bis- cuit cutter, and bake in quick oven. They will keep crisp for several weeks. DOUGHNUTS. - eggs. 1 c. sugar. 4 tbsp. melted lard. •)4 c. sour milk. 2 c. flour. Y2 tsp. salt. Y2 tsp. soda. 1 tsp. baking powder. Grated nutmeg. Beat eggs till light, then add sugar and melted lard (which must be barely melted and not hot) ; beat well together, and add milk and the dry ingredients sifted together. Beat well for a few minutes till quite light ; add enough flour so that the dough may be rolled out about -XJ-inch thick. Cut with doughnut cutter. Do not work in too much flour in rerolling the dough. The secret of good doughnuts is to keep the dough soft. Roll and cut them all before trying to frv them. This will allow a sort of crust to form on the outside and prevent fat from soaking through. Fill a skillet about three- fourths full of lard ; Avhen boiling hot, drop in doughnuts, cjuickly low^er the heat, turn doughnuts over just once, drain on brown paper. Every time the doughnuts are added to the lard the heat must be raised for a few minutes, then lowered. PRACTICAL COOKERY These will keep fresh about a week, if kept in a closed stone jar. Roll in powdered sugar before serving. ICINGS. Cakes should be iced when cold. Otherwise the grease on the cake will come through the icing. It is an excellent plant in icing an elaborate cake, to put on first a layer of fondant. Do not add flavoring to icing. It will prevent it from get- ting stiff. The oil in the extract is an enemy to icing. Fondant icing is better for small cakes, as it will cut better. Cut hot cakes, bread and puff paste with a hot knife. Hot bread and cakes may also be cut with a heavy thread. Icing is not only used for decorative purposes, but also as a help towards keeping cakes fresh. A cake that is to be kept several months is best covered with a thick layer of almond paste. The process of forcing frosting or icing through a bag with tube attached, so as to trace a design upon the cake, is called piping. A frosted cake is decorated with piping alone ; or coarse- colored sugars, citron, glace fruits, nuts, small candies and fruit jellies are combined with the piping. MATERIALS FOR UNCOOKED ICING. With the exception of the syrup for chocolate icing, which is made of granulated sugar, and which might be classed among the cooked icings, all uncooked icings are made of confectioner's sugar. ALMOND PASTE (for Cakes, etc.). 4 ozs. ground almonds. 6 ozs. loaf sugar. 1 white of egg. Lemon juice. Put the sugar with 1 tablespoon of water and a teaspoon of lemon juice into a stew pan ; bring to the boil- ing point, skim well, and boil to the "ball point.*' Pour the syrup on to the ground almonds, add about one-half the white of egg, mix well together, and use as required. ICE CREAM ICING. The whites of 2 eggs. ^2 c. confectioner's sugar. yi tsp. vanilla extract. Beat the whites of the eggs until foamv ; then beat in. gradually, the sugar; add the flavoring, and l)eat the mixture 145 PRACTICAL COOKERY until it is very smooth and glossy. This makes a very soft icing. It is used principally on white layer cakes, as tilling and icing. It spreads easily upon the sides of the cake. BUTTER CREAM. J4 c. best butter. 1^ c. confectioner's sugar. Flavoring. White of 1 egg. Beat butter till creamy ; add sugar gradually, and beat well; then add beaten white of egg, and keep on beating; then flavor. Use any flavoring desired. One-fourth cup of grated chocolate added to this will make a delicious chocolate icing. BOILED FROSTING. 1 c. granulated sugar. ^ c. cold water. White of 1 egg. yi tsp. cream tartar. Boil the sugar and water, without stirring, until the syrup will "thread" or "rope." When it is nearly at that point, beat the egg "stiff"; add the cream of tartar, and pour the boiling syrup in a fine stream, beating well. When it thickens and is perfectly smooth, pour it over the cake. It hardens quickly, and should be put on the cake before it stiffens enough to drop. MARSHMALLOW FILLING. Make boiled icing as above, using whites of 4 eggs instead of 1. As soon as syrup has been poured over eggs, add ^4 1^- marshmallows. cut in quarters, and beat until stiff. Be cer- tain that the marshmallows are very fresh. CHOCOLATE CREAM FILLING. Boil 1}4 cups sugar and jA cup cream together until it makes a soft ball in water. Do not stir. Just before remov- ing from the fire add a pinch of cream of tartar. Let stand until nearly cool, add vanilla and beat, spread on cake. Melt plain chocolate, and spread on top, after cream filling has hardened. CHOCOLATE FUDGE FROSTING. 1 square chocolate. 1 c. sugar. 6 tsp. cold water. 1 tbsp. butter. 1 spk. salt and cinnamon. 146 PRACTICAL COOKERY Boil for 15 minutes, remove from fire and slightly cool; add 1 teaspoon vanilla and beat till thick enough to spread. MAPLE SUGAR FROSTING. 1 heaping c. maple sugar. 1 c. boiling water. ■ 1 white of egg. Pinch of cream of tartar. Put maple sugar and water into a sauce-pan ; when boil- ing, add the cream of tartar, and boil until it forms a soft ball when tried in cold water. Pour onto the beaten white of egg, and continue beating until of a consistency to spread be- tween cakes. ORANGE FILLING. Yolks of 3 eggs. 1 c. sugar. 2 tbsp. flour. Juice and rind of 1 orange and jA lemon. Lump of butter, size of walnut. Boil together until thick. When cold spread on cake. 147 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XXV. DESSERTS. The subject of desserts is an important one, and, like the salad, the dessert should be one of the daintiest parts of the meal. If a rich fruit pudding or a mince pie or a very heavy cream dessert is planned for a certain meal, the other courses preceding it should be very light in their composition — per- haps a very light broth with chops or steak and vegetables, that contain little starch. The human stomach is capable of just so much. It is un- wise to overtax it with a rich dessert on top of a heavy meal. One will never go far wrong if one uses fruits of different kinds, with perhaps a little cream and a light cake for the dessert, and, if so desired, afterwards crackers and cheese may be served. (lelatine forms the basis of a number of attractive and wholesome desserts, (ielatine, as we have found in the chap- ter on meats, is the substance which is extracted from the bone, skin and connective tissues of the animal. These sub- stances are changed into gelatine by cooking for several hours in boiling water. The connective tissues of the young ani- mals are especially rich in gelatine-yielding material. Calves' feet yield a pure form of gelatine. But the purest form is isin- glass, a kind of gelatine obtained from the bladder of the sturgeon. When first softened by soaking in cold water, gelatine will dissolve readily in boiling liquids, hardening or stiffening to a jelly when cold. Do not cook the gelatine. Boiling will change it so that it will not stififen. FRUIT GELATINE. 1 ])kg. gelatine dissolved in }'j c. cold water. 2 c. cold water. 1 c. sugar. Juice of one lemon. Yz c. pineapple cut in dice. 1 banana neatly cut. }) oranges cut in sections. Yz c. preserved cherries. Vi c. pecans cut in halves. Boil sugar, water and lemon juice ; then add dissolved gelatine ; when partly cool add fruit, turn into a wet mold ; allow to stand till jellied ; more fruit may be added. The juice of the fruit may be added to the gelatine, which will improve the flavor. Serve with cream. 148 PRACTICAL COOKERY ORANGE CUSTARD. 6 oranges. Yi c. sugar. 2 c. milk. Yi c. sugar. 3 tbsp. corn starch. y2 tsp. salt. Yz tsp. vanilla. 2 eggs. Cut oranges in uniform slices, put in a glass dish. Pour ov'er the oranges Yz cuj) sugar; let stand in a cool place. Beat yolks of eggs light and add milk to eggs. Mix sugar and corn starch together and pour o.^^ mixture into it slowly. being careful not to have any lumps. Pour in double boiler and cook till thick, stirring constantly. When custard is cool pour over oranges. Beat white stiff, add 2 tablespoons of pulverized sugar, and spread over custard ; decorate top with slices of oranges. CHOCOLATE PUDDIN^ 2 tbsp. butter. Yz c. sugar. 2 eggs. Yi. c. milk. Y2 c. flour. 3 tsp. baking powder. XYz squares chocolate. % tsp. salt. Cream the butter ; add the sugar and eggs beaten light. Beat all well together; then add milk slowly; then add the flour, sifted with the dry ingredients. Add the melted choco- late the last thing and steam one hour. Serve with vanilla sauce. VANILLA S/*^^*"^ Y2 c. sugar. 1 c. boiling water. 1 tbsp. corn starch. 2 tbsp. butter. 1 tsp. vanilla. Ya tsp. salt. A little grated nutmeg. Mix sugar and corn starch, add water slowly, add salt and nutmeg; cook for 10 minutes; remove from fire and add but- ter and vanilla. SNOW PUDDING. Y2 pk. gelatine, dissolved in ^ c. cold water. 149 PRACTICAL COOKERY 2 c. cold water. 1 c. sugar. Juice of 2 lemons. Whites of 3 eggs. Boil water, sugar and lemon juice together; then add gela- tine. When partly stiff beat with an egg beater till light; then add beaten whites and beat altogether till stiff and white like snow. Pour in wet mold. Serve with custard sauce. CUSTARD SAUCE FOR SNOW PU MNG. Yolks of 3 eggs. 2 c. milk. 34 tsp. salt. Yz c. sugar. Lemon flavoring. Heat milk in double boiler ; add milk slowly to the beaten yolks of eggs; then add sugar and salt and cook for just a few seconds. Then add flavoring; remove at once from the vessel in which it was cooked, or else it will cause the custard to have a curdle appearance. This sauce may be served with a number of desserts. ORANGE CHARLOTTE RUSSE. Yz c. orange juice. ^ c. sugar. Yz c. water. 2 eggs. 1^ tbsp. gelatine, dissolved in Ya c. cold water. 1 pt. double cream (whipped). Boil orange juice, sugar and water together. Beat yolks of eggs very light, stir into the eggs the hot mixture; then return to fire and cook until the mixture will coat the spoon. Remove from fire, add dissolved gelatine, strain and set in ice water till partly thick ; then add beaten whites of egg and the cream. Pour in molds. Decorate with slices of oranges or ladv fingers. MAPLE CHARLOTTE RUSSE. 1 tbs]i. gelatine, dissolved in '4 c. cold water. 4 eggs. 1 c. maple syrup. 1 pt. dc^uble cream. Beat yolks of eggs slightly, add maple svrup and cook o\er slow fire, stirring constantly till it thickens ; remove from fire, add gelatine, allow to cool, stirring occasionally to keep from forming hard lumps. Whip the cream and add to the cream the beaten whites of eggs ; then add slowlv PRACTICAL COOKERY the gelatine mixture ; mix well together. Line a charlotte mold with lady fingers or stale light cake, and pour in the mixture ; let stand for 24 hours before serving. FRIED CREAM. (Mrs. C. N. Stevens.) 2 c. milk. ^ c. sugar. 1 tbsp. butter. Yolks 3 eggs. 1 tbsp. corn starch. 1 tbsp. flour. 1 tsp. vanilla. ^ tsp. salt. Stock cinnamon 1 inch long. Cook the cinnamon in the milk. Mix sugar, flour and corn starch together ; mix with the hot milk and cook till thick; remove from fire and add the beaten yolks of e^gg and salt ; return to the fire for a few moments then add vanilla and butter ; mix well and pour into buttered platters about }4- inch thick. When perfectly cold and stifif, cut in squares about IjA inches. Roll in fine cracker crumbs, then into beaten sweetened egg, and again into cracker crumbs, and fry in deep fat till a golden brown. Drain on brown paper; place in warm oven for a few moments. Roll in pulverized sugar and serve with maple syrup. It is a good plan to make the cus- tard the day before it is to be used. PRUNE SOUFFLE. 1 c. prune pulp. Whites of 5 eggs. ^ c. powdered sugar. }i tsp. salt. 1 tsp. vanilla. Beat the whites of the egg very stif¥ ; add sugar, salt and vanilla ; then fold in the prune pulp. Pour into a buttered bread pan and place into a large pan containing boiling water. Place in a very hot oven, and bake for exactly 10 minutes. Remove the pan which contains the pudding from the one containing the boiling water, and allow it to become very cold. Serve with whipped cream. ENGLISH BREAD PUDDING. 2J4 c. dried bread crumbs. 1 c. milk. ^ c. molasses. 34 c. butter or .)4 c. chopped suet. PRACTICAL COOKERY 1 c. raisins. 1 tsp. soda. 1 tsp. salt. 1 tsp. cinnamon. 34 tsp. cloves. Mix spices with bread crumbs and salt and raisins ; dis- solve soda in small quantity of boiling water; add to mo- lasses ; then add molasses and milk to bread crumbs. Mix well together, and steam 2 hours. Serve with hard or lemon sauce. BALDWIN PUDDING. 1/^ c. bread crumbs. y^ c. melted butter. 2 c. tart apples, sliced very thin. y2 c. sugar. 3 tbsp. lemon juice. Ys c. chopped almonds. y^ tsp. salt. Yj^ grated nutmeg. Mix bread crumbs with melted butter ; cover buttered bak- ing dish with one-third of the crumbs, then a layer of apples and one-half of the other ingredients, then crumbs. There should be two layers of apples and three of crumbs. Bake for 40 minutes in moderate oven. Serve with hard sauce or cream. COTTAGE PUDDING. 1 c. milk. 1 c. sugar. 1 c. chopped suet. 2 c. flour. 3 tsp. baking powder. Y2 tsp. ^'anilla or a little nutmeg. Beat tgg, add sugar, then the milk, then the dry ingre- dients and suet. Mix well and beat for a few seconds. Bake in a moderate oven. Serve hot with whipped cream or foamy sauce. ENGLISH PLUM PUDDING. (Mrs. Plumridge.) 1 c. brown sugar. 1 c. molasses. 1 tsp. mace, salt, nutmeg. 1 lb. currants. 1 lb. raisins. PRACTICAL COOKERY 3/2 lb. citron. 1 lb. beef suet, mixed with salt. Yz lb. almonds, blanched and chopped. 8 eggs, beaten separately. 1 c. of milk. Beat eggs and sugar to cream ; add suet, milk and fruit ; 33/2 cups of bread crumbs. CHOCOLATE FUDGE PUDDING. (Boston C. S. Magazine.) 13^ square melted chocolate. 2 tbsp. sugar. 34 c. water. 3 yolks eggs. 1 white of ^^^■ Yz c. sugar. 1 c. milk. Melt chocolate and add the 2 tablespoons of sugar and the 34 cup water, and stir until smooth and boiling. Beat yolks of eggs and add Yz cup sugar, beat again, then fold in the beaten white ; then add the chocolate mixture and 1 cup milk, and mix thoroughly. Butter some custard cups, then dredge them with granulated sugar, pour in the mixture, set on folds of cloth in a baking dish surrounded with boiling water, and bake in moderate oven till firm. The water in dish should not boil. CHOCOLATE FUDGE SAUCE. 2 squares chocolate. Ya c. sugar. 34 c. boiling water. 1 tbsp. corn starch. ^ c. sugar. Y2 c. boiling water. Cook first three ingredients together. Mix corn starch with Yx cup "sugar and add Y^ cup boiling water to the choco- late mixture ; add sugar and corn starch, and cook all to- gether for five minutes. FRUIT PUDDING. Y2 c. sugar. 1 c. Quaker oats. 1 c. chopped suet. Y2 c. molasses. Y2 c. sweet milk. Y2 c. chopped raisins. Yi. c. currants. PRACTICAL COOKERY Yz c. nuts. 1 c. flour. Yi tsp. soda. Yt. tsp. cinnamon. 1 tsp. salt. Mix sugar and suet together, add molasses, then milk and dry ingredients, and last the fruit. Sift dry ingredients to- gether. Sprinkle fruit with flour. Steam four hours. Serve with caramel or hard sauce. CARAMEL SAUCE. 2 c. sugar. Y2 c. butter. 1 tbsp. flour. Ij^ c. water. Grated nutmeg. Ya tsp. salt. Mix sugar and flour, add butter and water, salt and nut- meg. Boil slowly for half an hour. FRITTERS. Fritter batter may be used for fruit, vegetables or meat fritters. With very acid fruits, it is a help to add a little sugar to the batter. In using apples, use only tart apples that will cook very quickly. They must be sliced very thin. In making banana fritters it is better to leave the banana whole, as it makes an attractive shape. It will cook through and still not be soft nor discolored. Fritters that are served as dessert should be rolled in pow- dered sugar. The lard in which fritters are cooked should not be too hot. When the fritters are cooked they should be drained on brown paper. FRITTER BATTER. 1 ^^%. Ya tsp. salt. Ya c. milk. \Ya ^- flour. 1 tsp. baking powder. Beat ^^g lightly, add milk, then the dry ingredients, and beat well. It is well to try a little of the batter, and if it seems too thin add a little more flour. JAPANESE FRITTERS. 2 eggs. 1 c. milk. 1 tbsp. sugar. 1 tsp. flavoring. 154 PRACTICAL COOKERY 1-inch cubes of bread, some fine bread crumbs. Mix egg, milk, sugar together, and pour over the cubes of bread. Then roll the cubes into fine crumbs and fry in deep fat till golden brown. Drain on brown paper, and roll in powdered sugar, and serve with lemon sauce. LEMON SAUCE. Yz c. brown sugar. 1 tbsp. corn starch. 1 c. boiling water. 2 tbsp. butter. Grated rind and juice of ^ lemon. Pinch of salt and grated nutmeg. Cream butter, corn starch and sugar together. Add boil- ing water, lemon, salt and nutmeg, and cook for 15 minutes, stirring constantly. LEMON PUDDING. 2 c. flour. 2 tbsp. baking powder. 1 tbsp. sugar. 2 tbsp. lard. Yi tsp. salt. Water enough to make a soft dough. Press this dough without rolling it into the bottom of large baking dish which has been well greased. 3 eggs. 2 c. sugar. 2 tbsp. butter. 2 lemons, grated rind of one. 4 c. boiling water. Beat eggs slightly, add sugar, lemon juice and butter and grated rind, then the boiling water. Allow this mixture to come to the boiling point; then pour over the dough, and in a moment the dough will rise to the top of dish. Place in a moderate oven and bake three-quarters of an hour. MARSHMALLOW SAUCE. Boil y^ cup sugar and ^ cup milk for six minutes with- out stirring until syrup threads. Set aside to cool. When lukewarm beat until thick and white. Set the pan in boiling water and stir till thin enough to pour (then stir ^ pound marshmallows and 2 tablespoons water until smooth). Pour syrup over melted marshmallows and beat thoroughly. Kee]) warm while in use. CREAMY SAUCE. 2 eggs. 1 c. sugar. 155 PRACTICAL COOKERY 1 lemon. 1 c. grated apple. Beat the yolks and sugar, add grated rind of half a lemon and juice of lemon, then the beaten whites and the apple gradually. Cook three minutes over boiling water, stirring constantly. GOLDEN SAUCE. J/2 c. butter. 1 c. light-brown sugar. y2 c. fruit juice. yi tsp. mace. 2 yolks of ^g^. Cream butter and sugar, put o\er hot water, stir until liquid; then add beaten yolks, mace and fruit juice, and stir until it thickens. Serve at once. HARD SAUCE. 2 c. powdered sugar. Yi, c. butter. 1 tsp. vanilla and a little grated nutmeg. White of 1 ^^^. (The t^^ may be omitted.) Cream the l)utter, add the sugar gradually, beating until it is light and creamy. Add the flavoring, and beat again ; then the white of ^^^. FOAMY SAUCE. 3 tbsp. butter. Yz c. powdered sugar. y^ tsp. salt. 1 tsp. vanilla. Yx tsp. lemon extract. 1 egg- Y2 c. boiling water. Cream the butter, add the sugar and vanilla and the yolk of the ^^%, beaten until light. Add the boiling water slowly Beat the white until stiff; add this to the other ingredients, and beat until the whole mixture is light and foamy. CHOCOLATE SAUCE. 2 squares chocolate. 1 c. powdered sugar. 1 c. milk or cream. Yz c. water. 1 tbsp. butter. Y% tsp. salt. 1 tsp. vanilla. Y?, tsp. cinnamon. 156 PRACTICAL COOKERY Melt chocolate, add sugar, salt, water and butter. Mix well and cook for a few minutes, then add the milk, cook for a few minutes longer, remove from fire and add seasoning. If too thick, add more milk. 157 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XXVI. ICE CREAM. General Rules. The can, cover and dasher of the freezer should be scalded and then chilled before tht mixture which is to be frozen is placed in it. Adjust the can carefully in the tub before pack- ing. I\)ur in the mixture, put in the dasher, cover, adjust the crank and pack with hnely chopped ice and rock salt; this must be higher around the can than the mixture is inside. Use three times as much ice as salt for freezing; use four times as much ice as salt in packing. In freezing ice cream the crank should be turned slowly and steadily ; in freezing sherbet the crank should be turned rapidly and steadily ; in freezing water ice or frozen fruit turn the crank steadily five minutes, allow it to stand five minutes, turn again five minutes, and continue until freezing is completed. When mixture is frozen, remove ice and salt from around the top of the can ; wipe cover and top ; uncover and remove dasher, scrape it ; then beat frozen mixture thoroughly with wooden spoon or paddle ; place paraffin paper or heavy paper over can ; cover and put a cork in the hole. Drain ofif all the water which has collected during the freezing and wdiich should nt)t be removed until freezing is completed ; repack the freezer, putting ice and salt over the top, cover with carpet, blanket or newspaper and allow it to stand in a cold place several hours. In preparing frozen fruit or water ice the sugar and water should be made into a syrup, which should be boiled five minutes, then strained; in preparing ice cream wi-th fruit, the sugar and crushed fruit should stand one hour in a cool place, or until the sugar is dissolved, then add cream and freeze ; in preparing ice creams without fruit the cream should be scalded and the sugar dissolved in it; cool, add flavoring and freeze. Parfaits are cream combinations that are packed solidly in salt and ice for four hours or longer. VANILLA ICE CREAM. 1 qt. cream. 1 c. sugar. 2tbsp. vanilla extract. Part milk may be used, in which case add the beaten white of one egg. PRACTICAL COOKERY In making creams it is economy to use half milk and double-cream. Boiling the milk with the sugar, and adding a speck of salt, then remove from the fire and adding 2 tea spoons of gelatine, which has been dissolved in 34 cup cold milk. Then cool, add cream which has been whipped and^ flavoring. Two squares of melted chocolate may be added if desired. ORANGE ICE CREAM. 2 c. sugar. 1 c. water. 2 c. orange juice. 1 c. milk. 2 eggs. 1 c. double cream (whipped). y^ tsp. salt. Boil sugar and water and salt eight minutes, then add orange juice. Beat yolks of eggs light, add milk which should be boiling hot ; cook in double boiler for a few seconds, then cool. Combine the two mixtures together and add the whipped cream and the wdiites of eggs beaten stilT. Freeze. ORANGE WATER ICE. 1 qt. water. 2 c. sugar. 2 c. orange juice. 34 c. lemon juice. Boil grated rind of two oranges in the syrup. LEMON ICE. 4 c. water. 2 c. sugar. ^ c. lemon juice. 1 tsp. gelatine dissolved in 2 tbsp. cold water. Boil sugar and water together 20 minutes, remove from fire, add gelatine and lemon juice, strain and freeze. CARAMEL ICE CREAM. 1 c. sugar. 34 c. boiling water. 1 qt. cream. 1/2 c. sugar. Melt sugar in iron pan ; when caramel stage is reached, add boiling water gradually ; mix with hot cream and sugar. When cool, freeze. One cup of maple syrup may be used instead of carameled sugar. 159 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM. 2 oz. chocolate. . 1 qt. cream. 94 c. sugar. Yz tsp. vanilla. Spk. cinnamon. Melt chocolate, add cream and sugar ; boil eight minutes. When cool, add vanilla, and freeze. ANGEL PARFAIT. 1 c. sugar. Yx c. water. Whites 3 eggs. 1 pt. double cream (whipped). 1 tbsp. vanilla. Boil sugar and water until syrup will thread when dropped from tip of spoon. Pour slowly on the beaten whites of eggs, beating until the mixture is cool ; add the whi])ped cream and vanilla. Pour into an ice cream mold and ]:)ack in salt and ice for three hours. Chopped cherries, marshmallows and ground nuts may be added to this. APPLE PARFAIT. 4 c. thick apple sauce, highly seasoned. Whites of 2 eggs. 1 pt. double cream (whipped). Yx c. chopped nuts. Beat the whites of the eggs and add them to the apple sauce ; fold in the whipped cream, and add the nuts. Pour into an ice cream mold and pack in salt and ice for four hours. MARSHMALLOW ICE CREAM. Yz c. sugar. 2 c. double cream (whipped stiff). 2 c. milk. Y2 lb. marshmallows. Y2. c. chopped nuts. Ya c. chopped almonds. 2 tsp. vanilla. Y2 c. cherries. Allow milk and sugar to come to boiling point, remove from fire, and when partly cool, add the marshmallows. Cut in half (be sure they are perfectly fresh). When perfectly cold add vanilla, cherries; cut in halves and add the whipped cream. PRACTICAL COOKERY STRAWBERRY WHIP. ^ or 1 c. sugar. 1 box strawberries. White of 1 egg. Wash the berries and put them into a large bowl with the sugar and unbeaten white of egg. Beat with whisk until firm enough to stand up stifif. Serve in cups lined with lady fingers. Perl top with whipped cream. CRANBERRY SHERBET. 1 qt. cranberry syrup, sweetened. Juice of 1 lemon. When cranberry syrup is boiling hot add 1 teaspoon gela- tine which has been softened in 2 tablespoons of cold water. Then freeze. When mixture is partly frozen add the beaten white of 1 egg in which 2 tablespoons of powdered sugar has been added, repack and freeze stifT. RASPBERRY ICE CREAM. (Mrs. Moreno.) ly^ pts. double cream (whipped). Juice 1 box raspberries, squeezed dry. 1 c. sugar. Stirred and frozen. 161 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XXVII. SANDWICHES. It would be hard to give definite rules for making sand- wiches, so many different things may be made into attractive fillings. Small left-overs of meat or \egetables. or fruit, if blended properly, will make good fillings. What is true of soups and salads is also true of sand- wiches. Inventiveness and artistic ability in combining ma- terials count for much. Sandwiches should be cut neatly if used in boxes for lunches. They should be wrapped separately in oiled paper. If they are to be kept for several hours, before using it is best to wraj) them in a damp cloth. This will keep them fresh and moist. FILLINGS. 1. Equal parts of boned and skinned sardines and cream cheese mixed to paste. 2. Chipped beef chopped fine, mixed with olives, pickles, mayonnaise, cream cheese, nuts, green peppers and thin slices of cucumbers. 3. Princess Sandwich. — Beat to a paste the yolks of four hard-boiled eggs with a tablespoonful of butter, a few drops of tobasco sauce, five small sour pickles, cho])ped fine, and salt and pepper to taste. 4. Egg and Olive. — Chop together very fine four hard- boiled eggs and one dozen olives, half a cup of parmeson cheese, one tablespoon of melted butter. Salt to taste and enough mayonnaise to make mixture smooth. 5. Ribbon Sandwich. — Take three squares of thin slices of white bread and two corresponding slices of Boston brown bread, butter a slice of white bread, then put upon it a slice of brown bread; alternate in this manner until slices are used up. Press down hard. 6. Chopped Olives and Cheese. — Put between slices of bread and then toasted on both sides. 6 hard-boiled eggs. Yz doz. olives. Yz doz. sweet cucumber pickles. ^ c. chopped almonds. 162 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XXVIII. COOKING IN PAPER BAGS AND FIRELESS COOKERS. The method of cooking in paper bags and tireless cookers are about the same. The advantages in either of these methods are as follows : 1. The food is superior in flavor and nutritive value, be- cause none of the good extractives have been lost by evapo- ration. 2. There is practically no shrinkage in weight. 3. Food requires no basting. 4. It is a cleanly method and prevents all strong odors from escaping. 5. These methods will help to soften the tough fibers of meat. The juices are all retained, thus improving the flavor of the meat. 6. Paper bags are excellent for warming over roasts, chops, bread or cakes. They will taste as though just freshly cooked 7. The bag mav be greased on the inside specially for fish and pudding. 8. The oven must be moderate and the bag contaming the food must be placed on a grid, and not on a solid baking sheet. This would prevent the air from circulating around the food. The grid on which the food is placed should be put on the groove nearest the top of the oven. 9. If there is an odor of burning paper it is a sign the oven is too warm. 10. The bags should be placed in the oven with the seam side up; this will prevent any leakage. The bag containing the food should be fastened securely with clips after the end of the bag has been rolled over three times. The following table compiled by Mr. Senn gives the aver- age time when food should be tender and fit to serve: Fish (flat). — Allow 15 minutes to the pound. Meat (beef and mutton). — Twenty minutes to the pound Meat (veal and pork). — Twenty-five minutes to the i)ound Meat Stews. — About 45 to 60 minutes. Kidney and Liver (sliced). — About 8 minutes. \'egetab1e Stews. — About 30 minutes. Sausages. — About 10 minutes. Bacon (sliced). — About 10 minutes. PRACTICAL COOKERY Potatoes (sliced) and Carrots. — From 25 to 30 minutes. Pastry, Rissoles and Patties — About 15 minutes. Eggs — About 6 minutes. Chicken — Thirty to 45 minutes. 164 PRACTICAL COOKERY CHAPTER XXIX. CULINARY DICTIONARY. A I'Estragon — With tarragon. A ia Neige — In the style of snow. A la Poulette — Meat or fish warmed in a white sauce with yolks of eggs. A la Relne — Of the queen. Allemande — A thick, white sauce made with cream and the yolks of eggs, and seasoned with nut- meg and lemon juice. Angelica — A plant, the stems of which are preserved in syrup, and used for decorating pastry, etc. Anguilles — Eels. Asperges — Asparagus. Aspic Jelly — A transparent jelly made with stock, and used for garnish- ing. Au Beurre roux — With browned but- ter. Au vert Pie — With sweet herbs. Aux Cressons — With watercress. Aux Rognons — With kidneys. Baba — A very light yeast cake soaked in rum. Bannock — Primitive cake without yeast, cooked on a griddle, in Scot- land made of peas, barley and oatmeal, in America of cornmeal. Barbecue — To roast any animal whole, usually in the open air. Baron of Beef — The two sirloins not cut down the back. Formerly a favorite dish in England. Baron of Lamb — The entire loin, not divided at the backbone, with the upper part of both legs. Bavaroise — Bavarian. Bearnaise — A rich egg sauce flavored with tarragon, named from Beam, birthplace of Henry IV of France. B6casses — Woodcock. Bechamel — A white sauce made with stock and cream, named from a celebrated cook. Beurre noil — Browned butter. Bisque — A shellfish soup. Blanch — To parboil, to scald vege- tables, nuts, etc., in order to re- move their hulls or skins. Blanquette — Any white meat warmed in a white sauce thickened with eggs. Bouchees — Very small Patties. Boeuf — Beef. Bouillabasse — Several kinds of fish boiled quickly, and highly seasoned with onion, orange peel, saffron, oil, etc. Bouille — Broth made from beef. Bouilli — Beef stewed, generally in one large piece, and served with a sauce. Bouquet or Fagot of Herbs — A sprig of each of the herbs used in sea- soning, rolled up in a spiay of parsley and tied securely. Braising — Stewing in a covered pan, with heat applied both below and above. Brawm — Head cheese. Bretonne — A puree of red onions. Brioche Paste — Cakes made with yeast. Broche — -A spit. Brochette — A skewer. Bru noise — Brown soup or sauce. Cafe au Lait^Coffee with hot milk. Cafe noir — BlacK coffee. Caille — Quail. Canellons — Puff paste baked round a form of cardboard, shaped like a cane. Cannelon of Meat — Minced and high- ly seasoned meat, baked in the form of a large roll. Capon — A chicken castrated for the purpose of improving the quality of the flesh. Caramel — A syrup of burnt sugar, named after Count Caramel, who discovered what is called the sev- enth degree of cooking sugai. Cardoon — A vegetable resembling the artichoke. Casserole — A mold formed of rice or potato, and filled with a rechauffe. Champignons — Mushrooms. Charlotte — A preparation of cream or fruit, formed in a mold, lined with cake or fruit. Chartreuse — A pi-eparation of game, fillets, etc., molded in jelly and surrounded by vegetables. Invent- ed by the monks of the monastery of Chartreuse as a convenient way of disguising meat. Chervil — The leaf of an European plant used as a salad. Chou -fleur — Cauliflower. Chutney — A hot acid sauce made from apples, tomatoes, raisins, cayenne, ginger, garlic, shalots. salt, sugar, lemons, and vinegar. Citron — The rind of a fruit of the lemon species pi'eserved in sugar. Cochineal — Coloring matter made from the dried bodies of insects found in Mexico, where they feed on a species of the cactus. Collops — Meat cut in small pieces. Compote — Fruit stewed in syrup. Confitures — Preserves. Consomm6 — Very rich stock. Coriander — A plant cultivated for its tender leaves, which are used in soups and salads and in making curry powder. Cornichons — Pickles. Cotelettes — Cutlets. Cculis — A rich, brown gravy. Creme Brul6e — Browned sugar or caramel with cream. Creole A la — With tomatoes. Crevettes — Shiinip. PRACTICAL COOKERY Crimp To iiiiise lo ('(nil i act , or rcii- Haricot- A small bean; a l)it. A (Icr iiion- I'l-isp, ;is llic llcsli of a slew in wliich the meat and veg- tisli hy K^isliint;: it, vvliiU' living. I'taMcs arc liiiely dlvitleil. witli a Utiil'o. Hodge-podge A Scotch meat stew. Croquettes A preparation of mince Homard — l-obster. with a bread-crumbed coating, and Hors-d'oeuvres — llelishes. cooUeil till crisp. Huitres i).\sters. Croustsde— A lringue. Maraschino- A kind of brandy. Farcle— A kind of force-meat or Marinade— A pickle for boiling tneat stullmg. ... , , or (Ish in. Fillets- Long, thin pieces of meat or ^lith a F'rench dressing lish, g.^nerally rolled and tied. Marrons— Chestnuts. ^o\e — Ijiver. Mayonna'se — Cold sauce, or salad Fondant -- Melting. I'.oiled sugar, dressing, of raw eggs and oil, basis of French candy, (vienu A bill of fare. Fondue— A preparation of melted M6rimue— A kind of icing made of cheese. white of egg and su'.4ar well beaten. Fricandeau A thick piece of meat Mirepoix- A ricti, brown broth used lari'ed and browned, and stewed in jjj braising meat stock, or baked and covered with -» ^ t- j,l;,55t. Oeufs -Rggs. Frlc'asse— A stew in whicli the meat Ognon--_Onions is fiVsl fried slightlv. Okra The green jnucihiginous pods Fromaie— Cheese "' "" =>n"i":>I P'ant, used in tlie G>ac6- Covered with i<- ng. •^"""' '"'• «""!'« ='"'' P'<'l^s. Glaze Stock boiled down to a thin Pana's Parsnips. paste. Pat6 aux Choux— (^ream-cake paste, GnccchI — A light. savory dough so called bee a use when baked it boiled, served with Parmesan. resembles a head of cabbage. G'-ulasch — A Hungarian beef stew, Pat6 de Fole gras .\ pie of fat liv- liiuhlv seasoned. crs. Gratins Served in a lich sauci' vvitli Psrdreux— Partridge. hrowne.l crumbs. Petits Pols — Peas Grilled - Hroiled. Pigeonnaux— Squab. Grcsellles- Ctirrants. Pimento .Allspice or .lamaica pep- Gumbo A dish of food maile of per. yiiiiig capsules of okra, with salt Pistachio .\ pale meenisli nut re- and pepiier. stewed and sel\ed semblinL' the almond. with melted butter. Po'sson Fish. Gumbo F let Powder Made from tli" Pommes Api)Ies. teii'ier voiing lea\es of tile sassa- Pommes de Terre Potatoes. fras. i)icke(l in tlie spring, and Pot-au-feu - The slock pot. dried carefullv in the shade like any Potaae-.\ soup. herb. Powdered tine and bottled Pot-Pourri .\ mixt\iie of minced tight. I'sed in .New Orleans. cooked meat and vegetables. A PRACTICAL COOKERY mixtui'e of fiuits and sugai'. Poulet — A chicken. Praline — Flavor witli burnt almond. Pur6e — A thick soup rubbed through a .sif^ve. Quenelle — A delicate foi'ce-meat used in entrees. Ragout — A highly seasoned stew flav- ored with wine. Ramakins — A preparation of cheese and puff pa.ste or toast, baked oi- browned. Ratlfias — Almond cakes. A kind of li(luor flavor-ed with nuts. R6chauffe — Anything warmed over. Rissoles — Small shapes of puff paste filled with some mixture, and fi-ied or baked. Or balls of minced meat, egged and crumbed, and fried till crisp. Rlzotta — Italian rice and cheese. Roux — Thickening made with butter and flour. Salpicon — A mince of poultry, ham, and other meats used for' entries. Sauce Piquante — An acid sauce. Saut6 — Kiicd and tossed over in a little fat. Scones — Scotch cakes of meal or flour-. Soubise Sauce — A puree of white on- ions nanred after- I'rince Soubise. Souffle — A very light pudding or om- elet. The name means "puffed up." Soy — A Japanese sauce prepared from the seeds of Dollchos Soja. It has an agreeable flavor- and a clear, brfjwn color. Used to c(jlor soups and sauces. Stock — The essence exti-acted from meat. Sultanas — White or yellow seedless grapes, grown in Corinth. Tarragon — An herb, the leaves of which are used as seasoning and in flavor-ing vinegar. Timbale — A drum-like shell of rice or macaroni fllled with force-meat or ragout. Turbans — Ornamental drum-shaped cases containing entrees made of force-meat and fillets of game, etc. Velout6 — A smooth, white sauce. Vinaigrette Sauce — With acid wine or vinegar. Vol-au-vent — A crust of very light puff paste, filled with oyster-s or chickens, warmed in a cream .sauce, or filled with fruit. Zest of lemon — The grated or shaved yellow layer of oil cells. Zwejback — Bread toasted twice. \b1 PRACTICAL COOKERY INDEX. Pages Abbreviations and equivalents 15 Apple sauce 48 Apple, baked 49 Apple, baked, caramel 49 Apple dumplings 132 Apple, fried 4i Apple p vrfait 160 Apple Pie 132 Almond paste 145 Angel pa .-fait 160 Apricot marmalade 52 Baking powder biscuits 120 Barley 37 Batters and doughs 115 Beans, canned 54 Beans, spiced 55 Beans, baked with pork 87 Beef: Location of different cuts 68 General directions for roasting and broiling 71 Cooking of tough cuts 71 Beef stew 72 Beef casserole 73 Beef loaf 73 Beef chartreuse with rice 73 Corn beef hash 74 Cottage pie 74 Fillet of beef 77 Hamburg steak 76 Hash on toast 74 Meat souffle 76 Pigs in blankets 75 Roast beef 77 Swiss steak 75 Spanish steak 75 Beets canned 54 Beverages 18 Breakfast cocoa 21 Bread : General directions 123-124 Plain white bread 124 Bread cases 128 Bran bread 126 Boston brown bread 121 Corn bread 117 Grape nut brown bread 122 Nut bread 121-125 Uses for stale bread 127-128 Brown sugar 46 B'urners of gas ranges 5 Butter 25 Butterine 26 Cabbage 65 Cakes: General directions 136 Apple sauce cake 140 Angel cake 137 Black chocolate cake 138 Butter cake 137 Black fruit cake 139 Canadian fruit cake 138 Devil's food cake 142 Ginger bread 143 Mock angel food cake 140 Marble cake 140 Nut cake 142 Orange cake ...138 Sponge cake !.!l36 Sunshine cake 137 Pages Seed cake 139 Candies: Recipes 45-46-47 Canning of foods 51 Cei'eals 35 Charlotte russe (see desserts. 150). 150 Cheese souffle, Welsh larebit, cheese straws 26-27-28 Cherries (canning) 52 Chicken (see poultry and game), 88-91 Chocolate 19-21 Coffee 19-21 (IJookies: Boston cookies 143 Brown sugar cookies 141 Doughnuts 144 Marshmallow dainties 144 Nut cookies 142 Nut squares 141 Peanut rookies 141 Plain cookies iiA Rocks 143 Rolled oat cookies 141 Corn: Canned 54 Relish . 55 Pudding 64 Crust for meat pie 131 Custard pie 133 Cheese cake 135 Cream 24 Cream puffs 116 Filling 116 Crab apple jelly 53 Cranberry jelly 53 Croquettes 81 JTethod of frying and shaping.. 81 Desserts: >pple dumplings 132 Baldwin pudding 152 Chocol'ite pudding 149 Chocolate fudge pudding 153 Cottage pudding 152 C -earn puf^s 116 En,glish plum pulding 151 English bread pudding 151 Fried cream 151 Fruit pudding 153 Fruit gelatine 148 Lemon pudding 155 Maple charlotte russe 150 Oran.ge charlotte 150 Orange custard 149 Prune souffle 151 Snow pudding 149 Dish washing 4 Doughnuts .144 Dried fi uits 49 Dumplings for stews 80 Eggs: Beating ;ifl Breaking ,30 oare ;;;; 30 Recipes for cooking 31 Egg rolls i?o Egg pipnt. fried 62 Egg plant, stuffed 62 Fish: Salt water fish 93 I PRACTICAL COOKERY Pages Fresh water fish 94 Boiled fish 95 Baked lisli 95 Balved oreani fish 97 Codfish hash 96 F.sh cocked in water 96 Fish cooked in I'at 96 Fish stufting 9(5 Fish balls 96 Fish Bachamel sauce 97 Halibut delight 97 Halibut timbale with peas 97 Frittefs: Fi-itter batters 154 Japanese fritters 154 Fiuits: Classification . 48 Composition . . 48 Fruit punch 22 Gas stoves 5 Giape ju ce 22 Graps jam 53 Granulated sugar 44 Griddle cakes 117 Griddle rice 117 Griddle orange 117 Griddle dried bread crumbs 118 Griddle buckwheat 119 Ham : Boiled 87 Baked 87 Inorganic matter 10 Tee creams: Geneial rules 158 Apple parf ait 160 Angel parfait 160 GrB nbeiry sherbet 161 Caramel ice cream 159 Chocolate ice cream 160 Lemon ice 159 Orange ice 159 Marshmallow ice cream 160 Raspberry ice ci'eam 161 Strawberry whip 161 Vanilla ice cream 158 Rings for crkes: Almond paste 145 E'utter cream 146 Foiled frosting 146 Chocolate cream filling 146 Chocolate fudge frosting 146 Ice cream filling 145 Material for uncooked icing.... 145 IVTarshmallow filling 146 Maple su-rai' fi-osting 147 Orange filling 147 Je'lies, general directions 52 I amb: Braised lamb 84 Crown rib i-oast of Iamb 85 Cui-iy of mutton 85 Leg of lamb 85 Lamb stew 84 Lard 87 Legumes 58 T>emonadp ''2 Maple sugar 46 Macaroni: Macaroni au gratin B4 Macaroni croquettes 64 Molasses taffy 4fi Milk > 23 Pages Muffins: Plain 119 Twin mountain 119 Quaker 119 ^lushrooms, creamed 65 Noodles 120 Omelet 32-34 Oleomargarine 25 Onions, escalloped 64 Orange marmalade 53 Orangeade 22 Organic matter 10 Oysters, fried 98 Fricaseed 98 Celery . , 99 Stew 98 Scalloped 99 Cocktail in peppers 99 Peaches, spiced 54 Canned 52 Pears, canned 52 Gingered 52 Paper bag cookery 163 Pork: Fried chops 86 Boiled ham 87 Ham relish 86 Spare ribs 86 Fried ham 8<) Potatoes: Baked 59 Boiled 61 Balls and curls 61 Candied sweet potatoes 61 Creamed 60 Escalloped fiO Fra uconia 61 French fried 61 O'Brien 61 Lyonnaise 61 Mashed 60 Mashed sweet potatoes 62 Pies: General directions 129 Plain pastry 130 Flaky pastry 130 Puff paste 130 Xear-puff paste 131 Suet crust 131 Crust for meat pies LSI Apple dumplings 132 Apple pie 132 Custard pie 133 Lemon raisin pie 134 Lemon pie 135 Mince meat 134 Pumpkin pie 133 Mock mince pie 132 Fruit pie 133 Poultry and game: Selection 88 Cleaning and preparing 88 How to cut a fowl 89 Roast ch'cken 89 Fried chicken 91 Chicken pie 91 (Crust for chi':>ken pie) 91 Chicken a la King 91 Fricaseed chicken 90 Roast tui-key 90 Turkey dressing 89 Giblet sauce 90 PRACTICAL COOKERY Chicken gravy 89 Chicken stufRng 89 Pop-overs 116 Preservation of foods 15 Refrigerator, care of 3 Rice 38 Rock buns 120 Rolls: Plain 125 Velvet biscuits 126 Potato muffins 126 Sweet rolls 127 Rye 37 Salt 42 Sauces: Thickening for sauces 108 Bachamel 110 Brown sauce Ill Cucumber sauce 113 Caramel sauce 154 Chocolate fudge sauce 153 Custard sauce 150 Cream sauce 110 Creamy sauce (sweet) 155 Chocolate sauce 156 Foamy sauce 156 Golden sauce 156 Gravy 109 Hard sauce 156 Horseradish sauce 110-111 Lemon sauce 155 Marshmallow sauce 155 Mint sauce 113 Olive sauce Ill Tomato sauce 112 Tartar sauce 113 . Sauce tartar 112 Sauce piquante Ill Thick white sauce 110 Velpute sauce 110 White sauce 110 Salads: Plain French dressing 101 Mayonnaise dressing 101 Boiled salad 102 Chicken salad 105 Cold slaw lOS Fruit salad 105 Mixed vegetable salad 102 Spanish salad 102 Stuffed tomato salad 102 Potato 102 Pineapple and cucumber 104 Pear and cheese 105 Stuffed spiced prune 104 Tomato and green pepper 103 Tomato jelly 104 Sandwiches . » ig2 Sinks, care and cleaning 3 Soups without meal: Vegetable soup 106 Cream tomato soup 107 Green pea soup 107 Strawberry preserves 52 Spinach . 62 Sugar 44 Sweetbreads gs Tea — cultivation 19-21 Temperature use in cooking 13 Tomato catsup 55 Towels and dish cloths 4 Toasts: Cream toast 128 French toast 127 Veal: Blanquette . . 82 Croquettes ']' gi Cutlet 79 Fricaseed \\ 79 Loaf ;; ; ; so Roast 79 Pie -, ! '. ! 80 Fried tomatoes 63 Stuffed tomatoes .'. 63 Vegetables . . 57 Waffles ug Water '. *, 9 III i 1 :s,.v', }_ ^f^'^^^V^I^^^^^^^^ ' ,'' .!( , '4 - I'i'