^!iittsi hot vinegar, drain it through a sieve, add one pint of niolasses, one tablespoon cloves, allspice, two ounces of white mustard seed, and cover with cold vinegar. PICCALILLI. Mrs. Lamkin. One peck of green tomatoes ; (if the flavor of onions is desired, take eight, but it is very nice without any,) four green peppers ; slice all, and put in layers, sprinkle on 10 146 THE HOME COOK BOOK. one cja^ of salt, and let them temain over nigKt; in the njfOTning press dry through a sieve, put it in a p6rcela;in Hcettle and cover with vinegar ; add one cup of sugar, a tablespoon of each kind of spice ; put into a muslin bag; stew slowly about an ho_ur, .or until the tomatoes are as soft as you desire. ' SWEET GEEEN TOMATO PICKLES. Mrs. P. • One peck of green tomatoes sliced, sis large onions sliced ; sprinkle through them one teacup of salt, let them stand over night; drain off iii the morning; take two quarts of water and one of vinegar, boil the tomatoes and onions five minutes; drain through a gjAjiider, take four quarts of vinegar, two pounds of brown si|gar, one-half pound of 'ground mustard, -two tablespoons 'of cloves, two of ginger, two of cinnamon, one-half teaspoon of cayenne pepper, or instead five or six green peppers chopped.; boil fifteen minutes. This will keep good a year, if prepared . according to the recipe, and is generally liked. PICKLED GEEElSr TOMATOES. S. S. Pierce. . * One peck tomatoes, two quarts small white onions, one dozen grfien peppers, one cup sa!lt, one cup sugar, one tablespoon of cloves, allspice, stick of cinnamon ;, slice your tomatoes 6Ver night, , and mix in the salt. In the morning drain off the water and throw it away ; put all ' the ingredienfe together and let it come to a boil. Put away for use., VALDABLK KEOIPES. 147 .CHOW-CHOW. Mrs. John Corthell. Two heads of cabbage, two heads cauliflower, dne dozen cucumbers, six roots of celery, six peppers, one quart oi small white onions, two quarts green tomatoes ; cut into small pieces, and boil each vegetable separately until ten- der, then strain them. Two gallons of vinegar, one-fourth pound of mustard, one-fourth pound of mustard seed;, one pot of French mustard, one ounce of cloves, two ounces of turmeric ; jftit the vinegar and spices into a kettle and let them come to a boil ; mix the vegetables and pour over the dressing. CHOW-CHOW. ■ Mrs. C. A. Rogers. One-half .bushel green tomatoes, one dozen onions, one dozen green peppers (chopped fine), sprinkle with salt, and let it stand over night ; then drain off the lime, cover it with vinegar, and cook one hour slowly ; drain again and pack closely in a jar; take two pounds sugar, two tablespoons of cinnamon, one pound of allspice, one each of cloves and pepper, one-half cup ground mustard, one pint horse-radish, and vinegar enough. tomix them; then when boiling hot, pour it over' the mixture in the jar, and cover tightly. CHOW-CHOW. Mrs. King. Take a peck of cucumbers, one peck of onions, half a peck of string beans, three heads of cauliflower, three ^8 THE HOME COOK BOOK. bunches of celery, a half dozen sweet peppers ; soak the whole in strong salt and water over night ; in the morning drain off the brine and scald them all in weak salt and water, but before scalding cut them into shape so that they will go easily into glass jars ; add three-quarters of a pound of mustard, two packages of curry powder, and six quarts of good vinegar; put the mustard and curry pow- der into the vinegar, and let it come to a boil ; put the pickles into the cans, and pour the liquid over them .while hot. Do not cover while scalding. OAETELOPE PICKLES." Mrs. Earle, Take fine ripe cantelopes, wash, pare and cut into small pieces, taking out the seeds ; cover them with vinegar for twenty- four hours ; throw away one quart 'of ithe vinegar to each quart remaining, allow three pounds sugar to a dozen cantelopes, three ounces stick cinnamon, two ounces cloves, two ounces of allspice (spices whole), boil them with the vinegar, when well skimmed put in the fruit, boil fifteen minutes, then take out, boil and skim syrup, and pour boiling hot over the fruit. PICKLED OTSTEES. Mrs. Carl Hammond. Wash the oysters and scald them in strong salt and water ; skim them out and throw into cold water ; scald vinegar well and whole peppers; let it get cold. Put the oysters in a stone jar; make liquor to cover them of water they were scalded in, and vinegar. A cup of vinegar to one quart liquor, to be used cold. VALUABLE EEGIPES. 149 TO PICKLE MAETINOES OK MAKTYNIAS. Mrs. E. S. Chesbrough. Pick when soft enough to run a pin through, or from two to three inches long. Throw in brine till ready to put up. Soak in clear water one night or longer if very salt, then scald in weak vinegar; skim out and throw in cold water ; then pour over them, (after draining from the water,) scalding hot vinegar and sugar in the proportion of five pounds of sugar to each gallon of vinegar, a hand- ful of cloves and cinnamon, or whatever spices desired, scalded in the vinegar. If the martinoes are not tender enough the scalding can be repeated. BREAKFAST AND SUPPER. " Dinner may be pleasant ; So may social tea ; But yet, methinks the breakfast Is best of all the three." — ^Anon. RELISHES. OYSTEE STEW Mrs. A. S. Ewing. Strain the juice from the oysters placed in the colander into a stew pan ; let it- come to a boil ; remove the scum and a clear liquor will remain ; turn cold water upon the oysters, and rinse thoroughly; add them to the liquor, with a cup of cream or milk, butter, salt and cayenne pepper. Have ready buttered dice-shaped pieces of toast upon a meat dish; pour the oysters over, garnish with parsley, and serve hot; TOAST. Toast the bread very quickly, dip each slice in boiling (150) VALUABLE KEOIPES. 151 water (a little salt in the water) ; as soon as you have toasted it ; then spread it with butter ; covef and keep hot as you proceed. Make milk toast in the same way, keep- ing the milk at nearly boiling heat ; it is better to spread the butter on the bread after it is dipped in hot milk, than to melt it in the milk ; thicken what milk is left with a little corn starch, and pour over the toast when sent to the table. FKENCH TOAST. Mrs. M. J. Savage. To one egg thoroughly beaten, put one cup of sweet milk and a little salt. Slice light bread, and dip into the mixture, allowing each slice to absorb some of the milk ; then brown on a hot buttered griddle ; spread with butter and serve hot. TONGUE TOAST. M. A. P. Take cold boiled tongue, mince it fine ; mix it with cream or milk, and to every half pint of the mixture, allow the well beaten yolks of two eggs ; place over the fire and let it simmer a minute or two ; have ready some nicely toasted bread ; butter it ; place it on a hot dish and pour the mixture over ; send to the table hot. LEMON TOAST. E. A. Forsyth. Take the yolks of six eggs, beat them well and add three cups of sweet milk ; take baker's bread not too stale 152 THE HOME COOK BOOK. and cut into slices ; dip them into the milk and eggs, and lay the slices into a spider, with suiificient melted butter hot to fry a nice delicate brown ; take the whites of the six eggs, and beat them to a froth, adding a large cup of white sugar ; add the juice, of two lemons, heating well, and adding two cups boiling water ; serve over the toast as a sauce, and you will find it a very delicious dish. FEIED BREAD IN BATTEE. M. A. T. Take one tablespoon sweet light dough ; dissolve it in one cup sweet milk ; add three or four eggs, one and a half cups flour, one teaspoon of salt ; cut some thin slices of light bread, dip in this batter, and fry in hot lard; sprinkle with powdered sugar, and garnish with jelly. CODFISH BALLS. Mrs. Banks.' Take four cups of mashed potatoes; three cups of boiled codfish minced fine ; add butter ; mix well together ; then add two well beaten eggs, beating it up again thor- oughly ; drop by spoonfuls into hot lard and fry the same as doughnuts. Are nice fried in croquette baskets. CODFISH PUFF. Mrs. Banks. Recipe the same as for codfish balls put in an earthern baking plate ; smooth over the top, and put over some butter, and then in a hot oven to bake. VALUABLE EECIPES. 153 CODFISH HASH. Mrs. N. P. Wilder. One pint boiled picked codfish well freshened, one quart cold boiled chopped potatoes mixed well together, three slices salt pork freshened, cut in very small pieces and fried brown ; rfemove half the pork, and add your fish and potatoes to the remainder ; let it stand and steam five minutes withodt stirring; be careful not to let it burn; then add one-tjjird cup milk and stir thoroughly ; put the remainder of the pork around the edge of the spider, and a little butter over it ; simmer it over a slow fire for half an hour, until a brown crust is formed, when turn it over on a plattdr and serve. BEEF HASH. Chop fine cold beef, either boiled or baked ; have ready cold boiled potatoes ; to one pint of meat put one pint and a little niore of potatoes, chopped fine ; have ready a spider, with a good piece of butter in it ; put in the hash ; season with pepper and salt, and then add rich milk or cream. Milk is a very great improvement. CORNED BEEF HASH. One and one-half pounds nice corned beef, boiled ten- der and chopped fine; one-third more potatoes when chopped than meat ; three large onions sliced fine and browned in butter, and when tender, add the meat and potatoes, well seasoned with salt and pepper; enough water to moisten. A small red pepper chopped fine is a great improvement. It is good without onions also. 154 THE HOME COOK BOOK. BEEAKFAST STEAK. A nice steak of beef or veal; pound it with a steak mallet, if tough ; lay in a baking tin, dredge it lightly with flour, season with salt and pepper, and if you like, a little chopped parsley ; then put in the oven and bake for twenty or thirty minutes, or until sufficiently well done ; take it up, put it on the platter, spread with butter, and dredge into the juices of the meat in the baking pan, a little flour, and season with butter ; let this boil up, and pour over the steak. This is very nice. SIDE DISH. R. A. Sibley. Chopped cold meat well seasoned ; wet with gravy, if convenient, put it on a platter; then take cold rice made moist with milk and one egg, season with pepper and salt ; if not sufficient rice, add powdered bread crumbs ; place this around the platter quite thick ; set in oven to heat and brown. ANOTHEE SIDE DISH. R. A. Sibley. Cold turkey, chicken or any cold meat, chopped fine, seasoned with salt, pepper and gravy ; lay pie crust round the edge of the platter, and cover the same; bake a nice brown in the oven. Very little meat makes a dish for several persons. HAM AIS'D EGGS. Anonymous. Take pieces of cold ham chopped, and after cooking, add beaten eggs to suit your taste. VALUABLE EEaPES. 155 A NICE BEEAKFAST DISH. Harriet N. Jenks. Mince cold beef or lamb ; if beef put in a pinch of pul- verized cloves; if lamb, a pinch of summer savory to season it, very little pepper and some salt, and put it in a baking dish ; mash potatoes and mix them with cream and butter and a little salt, and spread them over the meat ; beat up an egg with cream or milk, a very little ; spread it over the potatoes, and bake it a short time, suffic- ient to warm it through and brown the potatoes. POTATO PUFFS. S. S. Pierce. Take cold roast meat (either beef, veal or mutton) ; clear it from gristle ; chop fine ; season with pepper and salt ; boil and mash some potatoes, and make them into a paste with one or two eggs ; roll it out with a little flour ; cut it round with a saucer; put your seasoned meat on one half; fold it over like a puff; turn it neatly round, and fry it a light brown. Nice for breakfast. POTATO PUFF. Anonymous. Mealy potato, nicely mashed and seasoned with rich milk, butter, salt, pepper and two eggs ; the whites and yolks well beaten separately. Mix all lightly together, put in a pie dish and in the oven to brown. The crust is made richer by spreading with a little butter after putting in the oven. 156 THE HOME COOK BOOK. EIOE CAKES. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. One teacup of soft boiled rice, the yolk of one egg, a pinch of salt, two tablespoons of sifted flour, beaten well together ; add sweet milk until it is about the consistency of sponge cake or thick cream, and just before baking stir in lightly the beaten v/hite of the egg. The less flour used the better for invalids. CHICKEN CEOQUETTES. Mrs. Chaftee, Detroit. One plump chicken, two pounds veal cut from the round. Boil chicken and veal separately in cold water, just enough to cover; pick to pieces and chop. Cut up one-third of a loaf of bread and soak in the broth of the chicken while warm ; put all in a chopping bowl ; season with salt, pepper, mace and nutmeg ; beat three eggs light and mix with the above ingredients ; make up in oblong balls ; fry brown in hot lard and butter, equal parts. VEAL STEW. Two pounds of veal steak cut in strips. Put in cold water in a skillet or spider and over the fire. The water should be just sufficient to cover the meat. Pare, wash and slice one small potato and put in with the meat. Stew for twenty or thirty minutes gently, taking care that the water does not boil away. Have ready two or three eggs boiled in the shell. When the meat is tender add to the broth one cup of fresh milk and one heaping tablespoon of flour wet with milk ; season all with butter, salt and VALUABLE EECIPES. 157 pepper, and, if you like, a little parsley. Cut the hard boiled eggs in slices and put into the broth. Let all boil up once, and serve with or without toast on the platter. A very nice breakfast dish. BAKED EGGS. Mrs. L. M. Angle. Break six or seven eggs into a buttered dish, taking care that each is whole, and does not encroach upon the others so much as to mix or disturb the yolks ; sprinkle with pepper and salt, and put a bit of butter upon each. Put into an oven and bake until the whites are set. This is far superior to fried eggs, and very nice for breakfast, served on toast or alone. POACHED EGGS. Break as many eggs as you wish to use, one at a time, and drop carefully into a spider filled with boiling water. When the whites of the eggs are well set, slip a spoon carefully under and take out, laying each upon a small piece of buttered toast on the platter. Put a very small piece of butter on each egg, a slight dash of pepper, and serve immediately. EGG BASKETS. Mrs. F. M. Cragin. Make these for breakfast the day after you have had roast chicken, duck, or turkey for dinner. Boil six eggs Ijard, cut neatly in half and extract the yolks; rub these to a paste with some melted butter, pepper and salt and 158 THE HOME COOK BOOK. set aside. Pound the minced meat of the cold fowl fine in the same manner and mix with the egg paste, moisten- ing with melted butter as you proceed, or with a little gravy if you have it to spare ; cut off a slice from the hol- lowed whites of the egg to make them stand ; fill in with the paste; arrange close together upon a flat dish and pour over them the gravy left from yesterday's roast, heated boiling hot, and mellowed by a few spoons of cream or rich milk. ESOALOPEC EGGS. Put into a buttered baking dish a layer of bread-crumbs moistened with milk or meat broth. Have ready some hard boiled eggs ; prepare a thick drawn butter gravy, to which you must add a well-beaten egg. (There need be but a small quantity «f this, not more than half a teacup for five eggs.) In the drawn butter dip each slice of egg and place a layer upon the bread crumbs ; sprinkle these with minced meat of ham, veal, or chicken. Upon this place another layer of bread crumbs and eggs and meat until you have used all the egp : cover viih. sifted bread crumbs and heat well through. OMELETS. HOW TO MAKE AN OMELET. A distinguished authority says : In preparing a» oroe- VALUABLE RECIPES. 159 let remember five things — a clean pan; the eggs must not be beaten too much ; the omelet must not be too large; three eggs are better than six eggs, which make two omelets ; they should not be too much cooked ; they should be eaten immediately, or they become tough and more like a pancake. To which we would add that the finest omelets have no milk added to them. The eggs should be broken into a dish and beaten up with a little minced parsley. The butter should be melted in the saucepan, then the omelet poured in, and as soon as well set so the cook can raise the edges, should be folded and taken up. OMELET. With ham, cold tongue and other meats. Beat half a dozen eggs quite light, have ready minced meat of ham or tongue, cold chicken or veal ; put this into a dish with a little butter to warm through, but not to fry. Then turn the eggs into a spider, in which you have previously heated two or three tablespoons of butter. Let the ome- let brown lightly on the lower side and the upper, form- ing a thin custard, and season to taste. Then put in the meat, fold the omelet over and take up quickly. Serve immediately. OMELET. Miss E. C. Harris. One cup of milk, one tablespoon flour stirred into the milk ; four eggs, the yolks and whites beaten separately ; one-half tablespoon melted butter stirred into the mixture ; 160 THE HOME COOK BOOK. a little salt. Stir in the whites before putting it into the spider. Cook on top of the stove about ten minutes, then set the spider in^the oven to brown the top. To be eaten as soon as taken from the oven. Very nice. OMELET SOUFFLE. ■ Mrs. Lamkin. One pint boiled milk, three spoons flour, yolks of seven eggs, beaten with the flour ; season with pepper and salt, and add a piece of butter size of egg ; mix well, then add whites well beaten ; bake twenty minutes. FRIED OMELET. Mrs. F. B. Orr. Three eggs, two gills milk, two tablespoons flour, a lit- tle salt and pepper, fried on hot griddle. FEIAR'S OMELET. Mrs. DeForest, Freeport. Boil a dozen apples, as for sauce ; stir in one-fourth pound of butter, ditto white sugar ; when cold, add four well beaten eggs, and a few spoons of cream ; put it into a baking dish, well buttered, and thickly strewn with bread crumbs on the bottom and sides ; strew currants over the top. Bake forty-five minutes ; turn on a platter, and sift sugar over it. Serve with sugar and cream, or a boiled custard ; the latter is much the nicer. OMELET. E. V. Case, Elmhurst. Take three eggs, beat the whites and yolks separately; VALUABLE EECIPES. lf)l to the yolks after they are beaten, add a half teaspoon of salt and a teacup of rich cream, in which a heaping tea- spoon of flour has been smoothly rubbed ; lastly stir in the whites which have been beaten as for cake; have ready a spider in which has been melted a tablespoon of lard, and which is as hot as can be and not be burned ; pour in the mixture and let it stand till it is a rich brown on the bottom. FEENCH OMELET. M. One cup boiling milk with one tablespoon of butter melted in it; pour this on one cup of bread crumbs (the bread must be light) ; add salt, pepper and the yolks of six eggs well beaten ; mix thoroughly ; and lastly, add the six whites cut to a stiff froth ; mix lightly and fry with hot butter; this will make two; when almost done, turn together in shape of half moon. EOILED OMELET. E. M. Walker. Four eggs well beaten up with a little pepper, salt, nut- meg, chopped parsley and chives; one-half pint of cream (or milk) ; half fill little well buttered cups or moulds and set them in boiling water; boil for ten minutes, then turn. out. They may be served with a sauce. BAKED OMELET. Mrs. Edward Ely. Six eggs, two tablespoons of flour, a little salt, one cup of milk. Take a little of the milk, and stir the flour into 11 162 THB HOJVIE COOK BOOK. it ; add the re,st of the milk, and the yolks of the eggs ; then beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth, and pour into the flour, milk and yolks ; put a piece of butter the size of a small egg into an iron spider, and let it get hot, but not so the butter will burn ; then pour the mixture in and put in a moderate oven to bake in the spider. It takes about ten minutes to bake. Then slip a knife under and loosen, and slip off on a large plate or platter. OMELET. M. A. T. Seven eggs beaten separately ; add the yolks, one-half teacup sweet milk or cream, a tableL;poon of flour, salt and pepper.; after beating them very light, mix well ; lastly, add the whites cut to a stiff froth ; mix very lightly and only a little. Fry with butter on a quick iire. When brown, fold together and serve immediately. This will make two omelets. VEAL OMELET. Mrs. J. S. Gano. . Three pounds of lean veal, two eggs, six small butter crackers, one tablespoon of thyme, one of salt, one of pep- per, two of milk; knead it like bread and bake it two hours in a slow oven, basting it with butter often, then slice for tea. CHEESE SCALLOP. Soak one cup of dry bread crumbs in fresh milk. Beat into this three eggs ; add one tablespoon of butter and one-half a pound of grated cheese ; strew upon the top VALUABLE KEGIPES. 163 sifted bread crumbs, and bake in the oven a delicate brown. An excellent relish when eaten with thin slices of bread and butter. CHEESE SANDWICHES. Anonymous. One-half a pound of mild fresh cheese grated, a table- spoon of butter, the yolk of three hard boiled eggs and a teaspoon of mayonaise. Mash the yolks well, and mix with the other ingredients. Spread thinly cut slices of bread with butter, and spread with the dressing; then roll or fold together as sandwiches. Very nice for lunch. WELSH BABBIT. Mrs. Anna Marble. One pound of cheese, melt ; mix three tablespoons of olive oil, one tablespoon dry mustard, one teaspoon salt ; pepper to taste. Put these in cheese when melted ; add one-half pint ale. CHEESE FOND [J. After Marion Harland. Soak one cup of very dry fine bread crumbs in two scant cups of milk (rich and fresh, or it will curdle) ; beat into this three eggs whipped very light, add one small tablespoon of melted butter, pepper and salt, and lastly one-half a pound of old cheese grated. Butter a neat baking dish, pour \h& fondu into it; strew dry bread crumbs over the top, and bake in a quick oven a delicate brown. Serve immediately in the baking dish, as it soon falls. A delicious relish. 164 THE HOME COOK BOOK. FISH EELISH. After Marion Harland. One cup of drawn butter with an egg beaten in, two hard boiled eggs, mashed potato (a cup will do), one cup of cold fish (cod, halibut or shad), roe of cod or shad and one teaspoon of butter, one teaspoon of minced parsley, pepper and salt to taste. Method : Dry the roe previously well boiled ; mince the fish fine and season ; wash up the roe with the butter and the yolks nf the boiled eggs; cut the white into thin rings; put a layer of mashed potatoes at the bottom of a deep buttered dish ; then alternate layers of fish ; drawn butter with the rings of the whites embedded in this roe; more potato at top ; cover and set in the oven until it smokes and bubbles ; brown by removin.p; the cover a few minutes. Send to table in the baking dish, and pass pickles with it. LAPLANDEES FOK BEEAKFAST. Mrs. A. L. Chetlain. Three eggs, three cups of flour, three cups of sweet milk, one teaspoon of melted butter, and a little salt ; beat well together, then bake in iion moulds. BEEAKFAST GEMS. Mrs. Brown. One cup sweet milk, one and a half cups flour, one egg, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon baking powder; beaten together five minutes ; bake in Aoi gem pans, in a hot oven about fifteen minutes. VAI.UABLB EEOIPES. 165 BEEAKFAST BUNS. Mrs. J. W. Preston. Two cups of flour, three-fourths cup of corn meal, three-fourths cup of butter, one-half cup of sugar, two eggs beaten, one cup of milk, three teaspoons baking powder; bake in hot oven twenty minutes. QUICK SALLY LUNN. One cup of sugar, one-half a cup of butter; stir well together, and then add one or two eggs ; put in one good pint of sweet milk, and with sufficient flour' to make a batter about as stiff' as cake ; put in three teaspoons of baking powder ; bake and eat hot with butter, for tea or breakfast. BEEAKFAST CAKE. Mrs. C. Bradley. One pint of flour, three tablespoons of butter, three tablespoons of sugar, one egg, one cup sweet milk, one teaspoon cream tartar, one-half teaspoon soda; to be eaten with butter. EYE CAKES FOE TEA. Harriet N. Jenks. Two teacups of rye flour, one of wheat flour, one of sour milk, one teaspoon of soda, put in the sour milk, and while foaming stir it in the flour and rye, with one-half teaspoon of salt, one-half teacup of molasses ; make it stiff' and turn it into a buttered pan ; spread it smooth with a spoon dipped in hot water ; bake one-half hour. 166 THE HOME COOK BOOK. EYE GEIDDLE CAKES. Stir into sour milk sufficient rye flour to make a batter for griddle cakes ; add salt and a little spda, and bake on a hot griddle. These are very simple, but very nice. JOLLY BOYS.. Jeannie Brayton. One quart corn meal ; scald and cool ; one pint of flour, two eggs, one teaspoon soda, two of cream tairtar, a little milk, salt ; make as thick as pancakes, and fry in hot lard. Nice for breakfast. GEAHAM BEEAKFAST CAKES. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Two cups of Graham flour, one cup of wheat flour, two eggs well beaten ; mix with sweet milk, to make a very thin batter ; bake in gem irons ; have the irons hot, then set them on the upper grate in the oven ; will bake in fifteen minutes. TEA CAKE. Mrs. H. P. Stowell. One egg, one cup sugar, one cup sweet milk, piece of butter size of an egg, one teaspoon cream-tartar, one- half teaspoon soda, one pint of flour. Eaten warm. COTTAGE OPIEESE. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Pour boiling water on the thick milk in the pan in which it has turned, stirring while you pour; as soon as VALUABLE EEOIPES. 167 the milk separates from the whey and begins to appear cooked, let it settle ; in a minute or two most of the water and whey can be poured off; if not sufficiently cooked, more hot Water may be used ; set the pan on edge, and with your spoon or hand draw the curd to the upper side, pressing out as much water as possible ; if desired, it can stand a few moments in cold water ; when squeezed dry, work the curd fine, rolling it between the hands ; add salt and cream to taste ; in very warm weather when the milk has turned quickly, it is very palatable without the addi- tion of cream. WHITE COEN BREAD. Mrs. E. S. Cheeseborough. One pint of meal thoroughly scalded with hard-boiling *'ater. Butter the size of an egg and one well-beaten «gg; add milk to make it just thin enough to flow over the pan. Have the batter an inch thick, and then bake. TPSILANTI EGG EOLLS. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Allow one egg for each person, two cups of milk for three eggs, four teaspoons of flour. Beat whites and yolks separately, and add the eggs last. Put a very little of the mixture into a hot frying pan well greased with butter; roll as you would omelet and put on a platter. Send in hot. For breakfast or tea. Can be eaten with sugar. VEGETABLES. " Witness, thou best Anana, thou the pride Of vegetable life, beyond whate'r The poets imaged in the golden age. Quick, let me strip thee of thy tufty coat, Spread thy ambrosial stores, and feast with Jove." — Thompson. BOILED POTATOES. Old potatoes are better for being peeled and put in cold water an hotir before being put over to boil. They should then be put into fresh cold water, when set over the fire. New potatoes should always be put into boiling water, and it is best to prepare them just in time for cooking. Are better steamed than boiled. MASHED POTATOES. Mrs. F. D. J. Peel the potatoes, and let them stand in cold water for half an hour ; then put in the steamer over boiling water and cook them until mealy and quite tender. Have ready an earthen basin, or a bright tin pan, into which you will put your potatoes, so that while mashing and preparing, VALUABLE KEOIPES. 169 they can be kept on the stove and hot. Now mash well and finely with the potato-masher, and then season with salt ; allow a generous piece of butter, and lastly, add a teacup of rich milk ; mix altogether well, and then take up on a deep dish. There will now be three or four ways to finish this, and which are, first by putting a little butter on the top, after smoothing nicely, and putting it a moment at the mouth of the oven, and then serving quite hot ; or, you may put it into the oven, which should be quick and hot, and bake the crust of a rich brown. Or, again, the top may be scored a golden brown with steel bars made for this pur- pose. Or, lastly, after mashing the potato, put it into a mold and shape it; then loosen it from the mold and turn it on to a flat piece of sheet iron, large enough to cover the bottom of the mold with handles at the sides. Then have ready hot lard in which you immerse the molded potato and fry a rich golden brown. Take out and with a knife under, slide carefully on your platter. Garnish the dish around with curled parsley leaves. If the potato is put in the oven to brown, it should be put in a baking plate and may be sent to the table in the dish in which it is baked, with a knitted cover over, POTATOES AND CREAM. Mince cold boiled potatoes fine; put them into a spider with melted butter in it; let them fry a little in the butter well covered ; then put in a fresh piece of butter, season with salt and pepper, and pour over cream or rich milk ; let it boil up once and serve. ITO THE HOME COOK BOOK. POTATOES FEIED. Mrs. A. Pare potatoes ; cut in pieces one-half inch wide, and as long as the potato; keep them in cold water till wanted; drop in boiling lard ; when nearly done, take them out with a skimmer and drain them ; boil up the lard again, and drop them back, and fry till done ; this makes them puff up ; sprinkle with salt and serve very hot. SAEATOGA FEIED POTATOES. Cut into thin slices ; put them in cold water over night with a small piece of alum to make them crisp ; rinse in cold water, and dry with crash towel ; fry light brown in boiling lard POTATO CEOQUETTES. Take finely mashed potato and mix through it sufficient salt, pepper and butter to season well, with sweet milk or cream to moisten; mix thoroughly with this one beaten egg, and then make up into small rolls, being careful to have the surface perfectly smooth. Have ready one plate with a beaten egg upon it, and another with cracker crumbs. Dip each roll into the egg and then into the crumbs, and fry of a rich golden brown in hot lard. Lay the croquettes on brown paper first, and serve on a napkin. PAESNIPS. Boil until tender in a little salted water; then take up; skim them, cut in strips, dip in beaten egg, and fry in melted butter or hot lard. VALUABLE KECIPES. 171 TUENIPS. Boil until tender; mash and season with butter, pepper, salt and a little rich milk or cream. Serve with mutton. BEETS. Clean these nicely, but do not pare them, leaving on a short piece of the stalk. Then put over to boil in hot water. Young beets will cook tender in an hour; old beets require several hours boiling. When done, skin quickly while hot ; slice thin into your vegetable dish, put on salt, pepper and a little butter ; put over a little vinegar and serve hot or cold. BAKED SQUASH. Cut in pieces, scrape well, bake from one to one and a half hours, according to the thickness of the squash ; to be eaten with salt and butter as sweet potatoes. FRIED SQUASHES Mrs. F. M. Cragin. Cut the squash into thin slices, and sprinkle it with salt ; let it stand a few moments; then beat two eggs, and dip the squash into the egg ; then fry it brown in butter. SUMMER SQUASHES. Cook them whole ; when tender, if large, skin and remove the seeds; if small, this will not be necessary; drain and press the water out with a plate ; then put them in a stew-pan, and season well with butter, pepper and salt and a tablespoon of cream. 172 THE HOME COOK BOOK. GEEEN C0E:N— BOILED. Throw the ears, when husked, into a kettle of boiling water, slightly salted, and boil thirty minutes. Serve in a napkin. GEEEN COEN OYSTEES. To a pint of grated corn add two well beaten eggs ; one-half cup of cream, and a half cup of flour, with one- half spoon of baking powder stirred in it ; season with pepper and salt and fry in butter, dropping the batter in spoonfuls ; serve a few at a time, very hot, as a relish with meats. COEN OYSTEES. Mrs. W. P. Nixon. One dozen ears of corn ; two eggs ; salt, pepper and a dredging of flour ; grate the raw corn, over which dredge a little flour ; season well ; add the beaten eggs and fry quickly in butter." GEEEN COEN PATTIES. M. Grate as much corn as will make one pint ; one teacup flour, one teacup butter, one egg, pepper and salt to taste. If too thick, add a little milk, and fry in butter. SOUTHEEN WAY OF BOILING EICE. Mrs. James S. Gibbs. Pick over the rice ; rinse it in cold water until perfectly clean, then put it in a pot of boiling water, allowing a VALUABLE RECIPES. 173 quart of water to less than a teacup of rice ; boil it hard seventeen minutes; drain off the water very close, and let it steam fifteen minutes with the lid off. When care- fully done in this way, each kernel of rice stands out by itself, while it is perfectly tender. The water in which the rice has been boiled, makes, it is said, good starch for muslin, if boiled a few minutes by itself. SUCCOTASH. One pint of green corn cut from the cob, and two-thirds of a pint of Lima beans ; let them stew in just enough water to cover them until tender, then season with butter, pepper, salt and a little milk; simmer together a few moments and serve. BOSTON BAKED BEANS. Soak over night one pint of beans in clear water; in the morning parboil the beans, and at the same time, in another dish, parboil a piece of salt pork, about three inches long and wide and thick; drain off the water from the beans and pork ; put both together in a deep pan with the pork at top ; season with one tablespoon of molasses, and bake for several hours. Add a little water when they are put in to bake. YANKEE BAKED BEANS. Mrs. Higgins. Boil the beans until they begin to crack, with a pound or two of salt fat pork ; put the beans in the baking pan ; score the pork across the top, and settle in the middle ; 174 ' THE HOME COOK BOOK., add two tablespoons of sugar or molasses, and bake in a ' moderate oven two hours ; they should be very moist when first put into the oven, or they will grow too dry in baking ; do not forget the sweetening if you want Yankee baked beans. LIMA BEANS. Shell and put into cold water and let them stand awhile ; then drain and put them into boiling water and cook until tender. Pour off the water and season with a little rich milk, butter, pepper and salt, and let them simmer in this dressing a few minutes before serving. Soak dried Lima beans over night, and allow them over two hours for cooking next day for dinner. STRING BEANS. The yellow butter bean is the preferred variety. Cut off each end and the strings from both sides of the pod; then cut the bean* in strips lengthwise or across ; put into boiling water and cook until perfectly tender. It is well to allow two or three hours to these, as they can be kept hot if done before you wish to serve them. Before send- ing to the table drain them and pour over them one-half a teacup of rich milk or cream, and season with butter, pepper and salt. GEEEN PEAS. Shell and put into boiling water, cook from thirtj?;,to thi rty- five minutes ; drain and season with rich milk or cream, butter, pepper and salt; some cooks also add a VALUABLE KECIPES. 175 little flour or corn starch to thicken the gravy, but which should be used very sparingly, not more than a teaspoon. Be sure the peas are young; old peas are fit for nothing but soup. ASPAEAGUS. Cut off the green ends, and chop up the remainder of the stalks; boil until tender, and season with salt and pepper; have ready some toasted bread in a deep dish; mix together equal parts of flour and butter to a cream ; add to this slowly, enough of the asparagus water or clear hot water, to make a sauce ; boil this up once ; put the asparagus on the toast, and pour over all the sauce. BAKED CABBAGE. Boil a cabbage, then put in a colander and drain it until perfectly dry ; then chop fine ; put in pepper, salt and a little cream, and put in an earthern baking pan, and into the oven. Bake one hour. COLD SLAW. One-half a head of cabbage chopped fine ; rub to a paste the yolks of three hard boiled eggs ; add a table- spoon of melted butter, one teaspoon of dry mustard, one tablespoon of sugar, and one gill of vinegar; mix thor- oughly with the cabbage, and garnish with the whites of eggs cut in rings. DliESSED CABBAGE. Mrs. B. J. Seward. One small teacup of vinegar, one egg, two tablespoons 17^ THE HOME COOK BOOK. of sugar, one teaspoon of salt, and butter half the size of an egg; beat the egg before mixing with the other ingre- dients, which should be previously put over the fire, then put in the egg; stir until it boils; cool and pour over chopped or shaved cabbage. CABBAGE. Mrs. A. A. Carpenter. Cut cabbage as fine as you can slice it ; boil in milk thi rty m inutes, then add butter, pepper and salt, and a little flour to thicken. CAULIFLOWER Remove the leaves; cut the main stalk close to the flower; lay it in boiling milk and water slightly salted, with the stalk down ; when done, take out carefully and drain in. a colander, then place in the vegetable dish and pour over it a rich drawn butter dressing. ESCALOPED TOMATOES. Put in an earthern baking dish, a layer of cracker crumbs and small bits of butter ; then a layer of tomatoes with a very little sugar sprinkled over them ; then another layer of cracker crumbs seasoned with butter, and a layer of tomatoes, until your dish is full, with the cracker crumbs at the top ; pour over all this a little water to moisten, and bake half hour. STEWED TOMATOES. Put ripe tomatoes into hot water and skin them ; then throw them into an earthen stew pan (a new tin will do, VALUABLE EEOIPES. 177 but not so good) ; cut up and let the tomatoes cook gently a few minutes; season with butter, pepper, salt, and serve. Or, you may add bread crumbs and sugar to the tomatoes if preferred. Some cooks stew tomatoes for a long time, but the flavor is finer if allowed to simmer but a few moments, just sufficient time to heat well through. BAKED TOMATOES. Wash, wipe and then cut in two ; place them in a baking tin with the skin side down, and season with pepper and salt, and place in a hot oven ; take up carefully when done, and put bits of butter on each piece of tomato. FEIED TOMATOES. Cut a large Feejee tomato in half, flour the cut side, heat very hot, and put the floured side down ; when brown on one side, turn ; when done, pour over a teacup of hot cream or rich milk. TOMATO HASH. Butter the dish well ; put in a layer of sliced tomatoes, a layer of cold meat, sliced thin ; then a layer of bread and butter, and so on until the dish is full, seasoning well with pepper and salt, and beaten eggs poured over the top. Bake brown. EEIED EGG PLANT. Mrs. F. M. Cragin. Slice the egg plant, at least half an inch thick ; pare each piece carefully, and lay in salt and water, putting a. 12 178 THE HOME COOK BOOK. plate upon the topmost, to keep it under the brine, and let them remain for an hour or more. Wipe each slice, dip in beaten egg, then in cracker crumbs, and fry in hot lard until well done and nicely browned. EGG PLANT STEWED. Put the egg plants into cold water slightly salted, and boil until they can be pierced with a fork, having changed the water once in the meantime. Peel and mash and sea- son with salt water, pepper and butter. Serve hot. EGG PLANT FEITTEPS. Cook as above until very tender; then drain, skin and mash finely ; mix with it butter, salt, and an egg, with two or three tablespoons of flour, and drop by spoonfuls into hot lard. MACARONI. Mrs. M. C. Gridley, Evanston. Cook macaroni in water until soft ; then put in a deep dish with alternate layers of grated crackers and cheese, a little salt; fill up the dish with milk and bake one hour. MACARONI. Pour over one-half a pound of macaroni one quart of boiling water and let it stand for half an hour ; then draip and pour cold water over it ; in a few minutes, drain again and put it in a kettle of boiling milk and water ; when tender, which will be in a few minutes, drain it and season with butter, cream, salt and pepper. Serve hot. If liked, add grated cheese to season. VALUABLE RECIPES. 179 ONIONS — BOILED. Select those of uniform size; remove the outer skin, then boil until tender in a large quantity of milk and water ; the flavor will be more delicate. Drain them when tender, and season with butter, salt and pepper. ONIONS — FRIED. Peel and slice and fry in lard or butter; season with pepper and salt, and serve hot. MUSHROOMS FRIED. When peeled put them into hot butter and let them heat thoroughly through — too much cooking toughens them. Season well with butter, pepper and salt. Serve on buttered toast ; a teaspoon of wine or vinegar on each mushroom, is a choice method. MUSHROOMS STEWED. If fresh, let them lie in salt and water about one hour, then put them in the stewpan, cover with water and let them cook two hours gently. Dress them with cream, butter and flour as oysters, and season to taste. SALSIFY STEWED. Scrape well and then cut in round slices ; stew it in suflScient water to cover. When tender turn off nearly all the water ; add cream and butter, salt and pepper and a little flour rubbed smooth in a tablespoon of milk. Sal- sify when boiled tender is excellent scalloped or made into croquettes in the same manner as potatoes. 180 THE HOME COOK BOOK. SCALLOPED OYSTEE PLANT. Boil the oyster plant until perfectly tender, then take out of water and rub through a colander ; add butter, pepper, salt and milk, and mix well. Put in a baking dish and cover the top with bread crumbs, with here and there small pieces of butter. Set in the oven and bake a delicate brown. Celery salt may be used with this for flavor, not using quite the quantity of common salt. SALSIFY CEOQUETTES. Are made prepared as above before baking. The mix- ture should be made thin into balls, dipped in beaten egg and rolled in bread crumbs, and fried as croquettes in wire baskets, always deep in hot lard until of a golde>j brown. PUDDINGS. 'Aad solid pudding against empty praise.' EVE'S PUDDING. If you want a good pudding, mind what you are taught ; Take eggs, six in number, when bought for a groat ; The fruit with which Eve her husband did cozen, Well pared, and well chopped, at least half a dozen ; Six ounces of bread, let Moll eat the crust, And crumble the rest as fine as the dust ; Six ounces of currants, from the stem you must sort, Lest you break out your teeth, and spoil all the sport; Six ounces of sugar won't make it too sweet. Some salt and some nutmeg will make it complete ; Three hours let it boil without any flutter. But Adam won't like it without wine and butter. SUET PUDDING. Mrs. E. R. Harmon. One cup of suet chopped fine, one cup chopped raisins, one cup of molasses, one cup of sweet milk, three tea- spoons baking powder ; spice to your taste ; four cups of flour; mix and steam three hours. (181) 182 THE HOME COOK BOOK. SUET PUDDIWG. Mrs. Bartlett. One cup suet, one cup sugar, one cup milk, one cup chopped raisins, three cups flour, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon soda ; fepice to taste ; boil three hours. SUET PUDDING. Mrs. J. H. Brown. Two cups of chopped suet, two of raisins, two of "mo- lasses, four of flour, one of milk, three teaspoons of baking powder ; boil three and one-half hours ; eat while hot. Sauce for same : One cup of sugar, one- half of butter, one egg, one tablespoon of wine or vinegar ; beat fifteen minutes and heat to a scald. SUET PUDDING. Mrs. Henry Stevens. One teacup of suet chopped fine, one teacup of mo' lasses, one teacup of sweet milk, three and a half teacups of flour, one cup fruit, one teaspoon soda; steam two hours. Sauce for same : One coffee cup pulverized sugar, one-half teacup butter : stir these to a cream ; place the dish in a kettle of boiling water ; stir in white of one egg beaten to a stiff froth: one teaspoon of vanilla ; serve hot. SUET PUDDING. Mrs. Banks. Three cups flour, one cup suet, one cup molasses, one cup sweet milk, one cup raisins, one and a half teaspoons soda; three hours hard boiling in a bag or pudding dish. VALUABLE EECTPIS. 183 SUET PUDDING. Mrs. W. Butterfield. One cup of suet, one cup of molasses, one cup of milk, one cup of raisins, three and a half cups of flour, one egg, one tablespoon of cloves, one tablespoon of cinna- mon, one nutmeg, a little salt, one teaspoon of soda (dis- solve in the milk) ; steam three hours. FRUIT PUDDING. Mrs. Taylor, Ft. Wayne. One quart of flour, two tablespoons of butter, one tea- spoon of salt, two teaspoons of baking powder; make a soft dough of milk or water, roll out thin and spread with fruit ; roll it up and boil three-quarters of an hour. STEAMED PLUM PUDDING. Mrs. J. W. Farlin. One and one-fourth cup beef suet, two cups raisins, four cups flour, one cup milk, one cup molasses, one tea- spoon soda, one teaspoon salt. Season with nutmeg, cloves, cinnamon and allspice to taste ; steam four hours. Do not uncover the steamer, but raise occasionally to fill the kettle with boiling water. PLUM PUDDING. Mrs. H. E. Houghton. One cup suet, one cup sweet milk, one cup molasses, one cup sugar, one cup currants, two and a half cups raisins, four cups flour, one teaspoon cinnamon, one tea- spoon cloves, one teaspoon spice, one teaspoon soda ; boil three hours. 184: THE HOME COOK BOOK. PLUM PUDDING. Mrs. H. S. Towle. One pint chopped suet, one pint sour apples, one pint raisins, one pint currants, one-half pint sugar, one-half pint sweet milk, one cup of citron ; beat eight eggs and mix with the above, and add sufficient flour to make it stick together ; boil three hours in a cloth bag. Serve with brandy sauce. ENGLISIi FEUIT PUDDING. Mrs. H. S. Bristol. One pound currants, one pound stoned raisins, one pound sugar, one pound suet, two pounds of grated or soaked bread, six eggs, one-half teaspoon saleratus, one teaspoon salt, and one grated nutmeg ; crumb the soft part of the bread fine; soak the crust with boiling milk, or water will do ; beat up the eggs and put all together, mixing thoroughly with the hands, take a square piece of cotton cloth and lay it in a tin pan, put the pudding into the cloth and tie down close ; put into a pot of boiling water, and boil five hours ; as the water boils away, keep adding more. ENGLISH PLUM PUDDING. > M. Walker. One pound raisins (stoned), one pound of currants, one pound suet very finely chopped, one pound flour, seven eggs, two wineglasses brandy, three of sweet wine, sugar and spice to taste, (it may require a little sweet milk); tie it tightly in a well floured cloth, which should VALUABLE BEaPKS. 185 be first dipped in hot water, and boil four hovirs, or it may be boiled in a pudding form. PLUM PUDDmG. Mrs. E. Hempstead. One pint raisins, one pint currants, one pint suet, one pint flour, one-half pint bread crumbs, one cup milk, five eggs, spices to taste, a little candied orange and lemon ; mix all together and boil three hours. To be eaten with wine sauce. BLACK PUDDING. Mrs. H. M. Kidder, Evanston, 111. One teacup of molasses, one teacup of butter, one tea- cup of sugar, two teacups of flour, one teacup sour milk; four eggs, one nutmeg, one teaspoon soda ; mix butter and sugar to a cream, add eggs well beaten, then molasses, then nutmeg, then flour and sour milk ; last, soda dissolved in a little warm water ; steam three hours. This pud(}ing can be made Saturday and heated over again for Sunday. Sauce for same : Half cup butter, one of sugar, worked thoroughly together to a cream ; put a teacup and a half of water in a saucepan, and when it boils, thicken with flour to the consistency of cream ; take from the fire, and stir rapidly into it the butter and sugar ; it will be like white foam ; flavor to taste. This is an excellent sauce for all puddings. BIED'S NEST. Mrs. F. M. Cragin. Pare six or eight large apples (Spitzenbergs or Green- 186 THE HOME COOK BOOK. ings are best), and remove the core by cutting from the end down into the middle, so as to leave the apple whole, except where the core has been removed ; place them as near together as they can stand with the open part up- ward in a deep pie-dish ; next make a thin batter, using one quart sweet milk, three eggs with sufficient flour, and pour it into the dish around the apples, also filling the cavities in them ; bake them in a quick oven : eat them with butter and sugar. CHOCOLATE PUDDING. Mrs. Packard. One quart milk, three tablespoons sugar, four table- spoons corn starch, two and a half tablespoons chocolate; scald the milk overboiling water ; dissolve the corn starch in a little scalded milk, and before it thickens add the chocolate dissolved in boiling water ; stir until sufficifently cookedl Use with cream, or sauce of butter and sugar stirred to a cream. COCOANDT PUDDING. C. A. Tinkham. One quart sweet milk, ten tablespoons grated cocoanut, one cup powdered sugar, and whites of ten eggs ; bake one hour, evenly and slowly ; to be served cold, with sugar and cream. ALMOND CUSTARD PUDDING. Mrs. D. Make a delicate sponge cake and stick it full of blanched VALUABLE EECIPES. 187 almonds. Pour over a little wine, and then a rich vanilla custard. POTATO PUDDING. Boil until white, mealy and very tender some potatoes; rub this finely washed through a colander ; to a pint bowl of this while hot add one-quarter of a pound of butter, and mix well ; beat the yolks of six eggs well with one pound of fine sugar ; add the grated rind and juice of one lemon, and then the beaten whites ; stir lightly in, and bake in pie plates lined with paste ; eat cold. A DELMONICO PUDDING. Mrs. De Forest. Three tablespoons of corn starch, the yolks of five eggs, six tablespoons of sugar ; beat the eggs light, then add the sugar, and beat again till very light; mix the corn starch with a little cold milk ; mix all together, and stir into it one quart of milk, just as it is about to boil, having added a little salt ; stir it until it has thickened well ; pour it into a dish for the table, and place it in the oven until it will bear icing ; place over the top a layer of canned peaches, and it improves it to mix the syrup of the peaches with the custard part ; beat the whites to a stiff froth, with two tablespoons white sugar to an egg, then put it into the oven till it is a light brown. QUEEN'S PUDDING. Mrs. A. P. Wightman, Evanston. One quart of sweet milk, one pint of bread crumbs, five 188 THE HOME COOK BOOK. eggs, one teaspoon of corn starch, one large or two small lemons, one cup of common sugar, and one of pulverized sugar ; bring the milk to a scald, pour it over the bread crumbs and let it cool ; beat the yolks of the eggs and one cup of common sugar together, and mix in the corn starch also ; just before putting in to bake, add the grated rind of the lemon, and bake twenty minutes. Beat the whites of the eggs and one cup of pulverized sugar together, and add the lemon juice; when the pudding is done, put this on the top and set it in the oven again for a few minutes ; to be eaten cold. EOLY-POLT. M. Take one quart of flour ; make good buscuit crust ; roll out one-half inch thick and spread with any kind of fruit, fresh or preserved ; fold so that the fruit will not run out ; dip cloth into boiling water, and flour it and lay around the pudding closely, leaving room to swell; Steam one or one and one-half hours ; serve with boiled sauce ; or lay in steamer without a cloth, and steam for one hour. EAILEOAD PUDDING. E. Gage. Cook a dozen apples soft, then stir in about a pint of Graham flour ; salt it ; then eat with sugar, cream and butter; it is very simple, arid good for people troubled with dyspepsia. EICE PUDDING. E. Gage. One quart of milk, with two tablespoons of rice ; let it VALUABLE EECrPES. 189 come to a boil, then pour it over two tablespoons of sugar, one-half cup of raisins, a little lump of butter, flavor with ground cinnamon. Bake until thick. KICE PUDDING WITHOUT EGGS. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler, and others. Two quarts of milk, half a teacup of rice, a little less than a teacup of sugar, the same quantity of raisins, a tea- spoon of cinnamon or allspice ; wash the rice, and put it with the rest of the ingredients into the milk; bake rather slowly from two to three hours ; stir two or three times the first hour of baking. If properly done, this pudding is delicious. COTTAGE PUDDING. Mr. G. S. Whitaker. One cup of sugar, one cup of sweet milk, one pint of flour, two tablespoons of melted butter, one teaspoon of soda, two teaspoons of cream tartar, one egg. COTTAGE PUDDING. M. G. Rand. One teacup of white sugar, one-half cup of butter (or little less) ; one cup sweet milk, one egg, a little nutmeg, one pint of flour, three teaspoons of baking powder : rub the butter, sugar and egg together until light, add the nut- meg and milk, stir the baking powder into the flour while dry, and add just as the pudding is to be put in the oven ; bake in a quart basin, very slowly ; bring to the table hot, cut like cake, and serve with sauce -made according to the 190 THE HOME' COOK BOOK. following- directions : Rub one tablespoon of flour in a little cold water until smooth, then turn it into one pint of boiling water, letting it cook five minutes, stirring con- stantly ; add sugar, salt and nutmeg to suit the taste. COTTAGE PUDDING. Mrs. D. C. Norton. One cup of sugar, butter the size of a large egg, one cup sour milk, one teaspoon saleratus (sweet milk is just as good if two teaspoons of baking powder is used instead of saleratus) ; two eggs, two heaping cups of flour, a little salt. ESTELLE PUDDING. Anonymous. Three eggs well beaten, two and one-half tablespoons of sugar, two tablespoons butter, three-fourths cup sweet milk, one cup raisins chopped fine; one tablespoon baking powder, flour to make the consistency of pound cake; steam thirty-five minutes. PUDDING IN HASTE. Mrs. ¥. E. Stearns. Three eggs, three cups of milk, and three cups of flour; bake in patty tins or cups, and serve with hot sauce. MINUTE PUDDING. C. Kennicott. One-half cup milk, five large spoons flour, three eggs, one-half teaspoon of salt, stirred smoothly together; stir this into one pint of boiling milk. VALUABLE KECIFES. 191 A QTnCK PUDDING. Mrs. A. W. D. One-half pint of milk, one-half pint of cream, three eggs beaten separately, little over one-half pint flour; season with lemon or vanilla. BAKED INDIAN PUDDING— SPLENDID. Two quarts scalded milk with salt, one and one- half cups Indian meal (yellow) • one tablespoon of ginger, letting this stand twenty minutes ; one cup molasses, two eggs (saleratus, if no eggs^ a piece of butter the size of a common walnut ; bake two hours. BAKED INDIAN PUDDING. Mrs. A. W. D. Three cups of raisins, one cup of chopped suet or but- rer, one pint of Indian meal, four sour apples, one quart of milk, one egg, and a little salt. BAKED INDIAN PUDDING. • Mrs. A. W. D. Sevei^ spoons of Indian meal, two spoons of butter, one-half teaspoon salt, one teacup molasses ; ginger or cinnamon to your taste; pour into these a quart of milk while boiling hot ; mix well and put in a buttered dish ; just as you put it in the oven, stir in a teacup of cold water, which will produce the same effect as eggs. Bake three-quarters of an hour. 192 THE HOME COOK BOOK. OOEN MEAL PUDDING. Etta C. Springer. One quart of sweet milk, boiled; stir in four table- spoons of corn meal ; stand till cool ; put in four beaten eggs, sweeten to taste, two tablespoons of butter ; bake two hours. BOILED INDIAN PUDDING. Mrs. DeForrest. One quart of good buttermilk or thick sour milk, two tablespoons of sweet cream, three eggs, one teaspoon soda, three handfuls of flour, a little salt, Indian meal to make a rather thin batter. INDIAN PUDDING. Mrs. Benham. One quart of milk, four tablespoons (heaping) of Indian m'eal, one tablespoon of flour, one teaspoon of ginger, one of cinnamon, one lemon peel, one teaspoon salt, two eggs, one cup molasses ; bake three hours, not in too hot an oven ; boil the meal in half the quantity of milk, one cup raisins, one cup of suet (not too full) ; add the re- mainder of milk before the eggs, GEAHAM PUDDING. Mrs. G. F. DeForest. One and a half coffee cups Graham flour, one-half coffee cup molasses, one-fourth coffee cup butter, one-half coffee cup sweet milk, one egg, one even teaspoon soda, one good half cup raisins, one good half clip currants ; VALUABLE EECIPES. 193 salt and spice to taste ; steam two and a half or three hours ; serve with liquid sauce. SUNDEELAND PUDDIl^G. Mrs. C. M. Dickerman, Rockford. Eight tablespoons flour, four eggs, three pints sweet milk, one tablespoon melted butter, one-half nutmeg; bake in a pie tin ; serve with pudding sauee. DANDY JACK. Mis. Benham. One pint milk, yolks of three eggs, two heaping table- spoons corn starch, one-half cup sugar ; flavor as you like ; for top, the whites of the eggs and a little sugar. PEETTY PUDDING. Mrs. Charles Bradbury. One tablespoon flour wet with one-half cup of cold milk, the yolks of three eggs beaten, one small cup sugar ; mix these together ; put one quart of milk in a kettle and set it in boiling water ; when the milk is at the boil- ing point, stir in the above mixture with vanilla or rose flavoring; stir till it begins to thicken, then take it off' and let it cool a little ; pour it into a pudding dish or cups ; then beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth, add a teaspoon of fine white sugar, and drop it on the top of the custard in rounds about as large as an egg ; put a small spoon of currant or other tart jelly on the middle of each. round ; serve cold. 13 194 THE HOME COOK BOOK. WEBSTER PUDDING-. Mrs. O. L. Wheelock. One cup molasses, one cup milk, one cup suet, one- half cup brandy, or wine if you like, one teaspoon sale- ratus, one teaspoon cloves, one teaspoon cinnamon, one- half nutmeg, two cups curjrants, one teaspoon salt ; mix as soft as pound cake, and steam it two hours. Serve with hard sauce. SPOJ!TGE PUDDING. Mrs. Ada Sturtevant, Delaware, Wis. One-half cup of butter, or one cup of chopped suet, one-third cup molasses, one-half cup wine, one-half cup sweet milk, three cups flour, one teaspoon soda^ raisins and such spices as you prefer, about one-half spoon of each ; dried cherries are nice instead of raisins, or it is good without any fruit ; steam two hours and serve hot with sauce. ■ POUND CAKE PUDDING. Mrs. E. L. Nichols. One cup sugar, one-half of butter, rub to a cream, add one cup of milk, three eggs, the yolks and whites beaten separately, one teaspoon of soda in the milk, two tea- spoons of cream tartar in the flour; fruit; bake or steam an hour. EOME PUDDING. Mrs. M. J. Woodworth. Eight good sized apples stewed and strained, the volks VALUABLE RECIPES. 195 of five eggs, one-quarter pound of butter, one lemon chopped fine, one-half pound sugar, one gill of cream ; put a thin paste on a plate, as for custard pie, and bake. ASTOE HOUSE PUDDING. , Mrs. Lamkin. Two-thirds of a cup of rice, three pints of milk, one cup of sugar, a little salt, a piece of butter one-half the size of an egg ; let it come to a boil ; bake one and one- half hours in a slow oven. BATTEE PUDDING. Mrs. H. L. Bristol. One pint of milk, four eggs, the yolks and whites beaten separately, ten tablespoons of sifted flour, a little salt ; beat in the whites of the eggs the last thing before baking ; bake half an hour. BAKED BATTEE PUDDING. One quart of sweet milk, seven tablespoons of flour (heaping), six eggs well beaten (whites separated), one tablespoon brandy ; put the whites of the eggs in the last thing, and bake half an hour. Serve with brandy sauce. STEAMED BATTEE PUDDING. Mrs. M. G. Hubbel), Cornton, 111. Two eggs to two teacups of sour milk, two teaspoons saleratus and salt ; stir very thick or it will be heavy ; then add any fruit you wish ; steam two hours ; eaten with sweetened cream. 196 THE HOME COOK BOOlC STEAMED BATTEE PUDDING. Mrs. L. H. Davis. Two eggs and one tablespoon of sugar beaten together, one cup of milk, two cups flour, one tablespoon melted butter, half teaspoon soda, one teaspoon cream tartar ; beat well, and pour the batter over either sliced apples or, peaches, and steam one hour and a quarter ; this will fill a three pint basin. Serve with hot sauce. BATTER PUDDING. One quart of milk, twelve tablespoons of flour, nine eggs, a teaspoon of salt ; beat the yolks thoroughly ; stir in the flour and add the milk slowly ; beat the whites of the eggs to a froth, and add the last thing ; put in a tin pudding mould, having a tight cover, and boil two hours; the mould should not be full as the pudding will swell ; the water must not stop boiling. Eat with liquid sauce. AMHERST PUDDING. Mrs. F. M. Cragin. Three cups of flour, one of suet, one of milk, one of molasses, two of raisins ; salt and spice to your taste ; one teaspoon saleratus ; boil in a bag three hours. For sauce : One cup of sugar, one-half of butter, one egg. CORN PUDDING. Mrs. F. M. Cragin. One dozen ears of corn, one pint of milk, two eggs, salt, two teaspoons of sugar, two of flour ; bake one hour in quick oven. VALUABLE IJEOIPES. 197 BEEAD PUDDING. Mrs. Freeman. Soak a pint of bread crumbs in milk for an hour, then squeeze with the hands to a pulp, and mix well with a gill of milk, then add three tablespoons of sugar, one- quarter pound raisins, one-quarter pound of melted butter, and the yolks of four eggs ; then beat the whites of the' eggs to a froth and mix with the rest ; turn the mixture into a dish and bake about forty minutes. Serve with wine sauce, hot or cold, according to taste. BKEAD PUDDING. Mrs. C. M., Winnetka, 111. Put a pint of scalded milk to a pint of bread crumbs, and add the yolks of four'eggs well beaten, a teacup of sugar, butter the size of an egg, and the grated rind of a lemon ; bake, and then beat the whites of the eggs into a cup of powdered sugar and the juice of one lemon ; cover the pudding with it, and set it in the oven till it is a brownish yellow. BEOWN BETTY. Mrs. L. M. Angle. One cup of bread crumbs, two of chopped apples (tart) one-half cup of sugar, one teaspoon of cinnamon, two tablespoons of butter cut into small bits; butter a deep dish and put a layer of chopped apple at the bottom , sprinkle with sugar, a few bits of butter and cinnamon. Proceed in this order until the dish is full, having a layer of crumbs on the top ; cover closely and steam three- 198 THE HOME COOK BOOK. quarters of an hour in a moderate oven ; then uncover and brown quickly ; eat with sugar and cream. This is a plain, but very good pudding, especially for the children's table. BEEAD PUDDING WITHOUT MILK. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Take dry bread pieces, a half pint more or legs, and pour boiling water on them ; when soft, mix with this a cup of fruit of any kind, stewed or fresh, and add two tablespoons melted butter, the yolks of two eggs, spice and sugar to taste ; bake twenty minutes ; just before it is done spread on the beaten whites of the eggs, and brown nicely. To be eaten with wine sailce. OXFORD PUDDING. M. A. Sadler, Aurora. A quarter of a pound of crackers pounded, a quarter of a pound of currants washed, a quarter of a pound of suet shred fine, half a large spoon of fine sugar ; some grated nutmeg ; mince it all together, then take the yolks of four eggs and make it up into balls as big as turkey egg; fry them in fresh butter of a fine light brown. BAKED CEACKER PUDDING. Mrs. H. P. Stowell. Two quarts of sweet milk, seven Boston butter crackers rolled, three eggs, a little nutmeg, a little salt , sweeten with sugar to taste. Bake two hours and a half in a mod- erate oven. VALUABLE RKOIPES. 199 APPLE BKEAD PUDDING. Mrs. O. L. Wheelock. Pare, core and chop one-half dozen sour apples; dry bread in the oven until crisp, then roll ; butter a deep dish and place in it a layer of crumbs and apples alter- nately, with spice, and one-half cup of beef suet chopped fine ; pour in one-half pint of sweet milk, and bake till nicely browned ; serve with hard sauce. APPLE PUDDING. Mrs. W. Guthrie. Five eggs, one pint milk, four tablespoons flour, four apples grated ; bake one hour and a quarter. Serve with sweetened cream or pudding sauce. APPLE PUDDING. Etta C. Springer. Five large sour apples chopped, one cup raisins, one cup sugar, one cup sweet milk, one cup flour, one-half cup butter, two eggs, little salt, butter and sugar worked together ; bake one hour ; any sauce you please. APPLE SAGO PUDDING. Mrs. K. One cup sago in a quart of tepid water, with a pinch of salt, soaked for one hour; six or eight apples, pared and cored, or quartered, and steamed tender, and put in *khe pudding dish , boil and stir the sago until clear, adding water to make it thin, and pour it over the apples ; this is good hot with butter and sugar, or cold with cream and suMr. 200 THE HOME COOK BOOK. HUCKLEBEEEY PUDDING. Mrs. B. J. Seward. ~ One teacup molasses, one dessert spoon saleratus, stirred thoroughly in the molasses; as much flour as can be stirred in with one quart of huckleberries. To be steamed four hours in a basin, or boiled in a pudding bag. Serve with liquid sauce. An excellent "dessert. HUCKLEBEEEY PUDDING. Mrs. Bartlett. One brick loaf, wet it with boiling milk, say one pint, four eggs, little salt, and one quart of berries. Boil one and a half hours. Serve with wine sauce. BLAGKBEEEY PUDDING OE OTHEE BEE- EIES. M. One and one-half pints sifted flour ; put a little of this into one and one-half pints of fresh berries. To the bal- ance of the flour add salt sufficient to season, one even teaspoon soda dissolved in one-half teacup of sweet milk, then fill the cup three-fourths full of syrup or molasses, stir all into a smooth batter, lastly add the berries; mix lightly so as not to break. Put into a buttered mould and place in boiling water that does not quite reach the top of the mould. Do not let it stop boiling for an instant. It mu^ boil at least two hours. Serve with boiled sauce. FIG PUDDING. E. M. Walker. One-half pound figs, one-quarter pound grated bread, VALUABLE EECIPES. 201 two and a half ounces powdered sugar, three ounces but- ter, two eggs, one teacup of milk. Chop the figs small and mix first with the butter, then all the other ingredients by degrees ; butter a mould, sprinkle with bread crumbs, cover it tight and boil for three hours. FIG PUDDING. Mrs. E. Wood. One pound suet chopped fine, one pound wheat flour, one-half loaf of wheat bread, one pound figs chopped, one and a half cups molasses, one teaspoon soda, one tea- spoon cream tartar. To be eaten with sauce. CUREANT PUDDING Mrs. Bartlett. Slice a baker's loaf, add butter, stew and sweeten three pints of currants, turn over the bread, and set away until cold. Serve without sauce, slice the bread thin. ' MUSKMELON PUDDING. Mrs. De Forest. One-half cup butter, one pint of milk, two eggs, three teaspoons baking powder, nearly one quart of flour. Steam two hours. Serve with liquid sauce. SWEETMEATS PUDDING. Mrs. C. E. Browne. Make a nice pie crust, little or much, as you may desire, and roll it out in a long oval shape ; spread thickly with raspberry or currant jam, or with stewed fruit, cherries or 202 THE HOME COOK BOOK. plums, then wet the edges of the dough with cold water, and roll it up, closing the edges tightly. Steam it for an hour or more, and serve in slices with a sauce of butter and sugar beaten well together, with nutmeg or other flavoring. FEUIT PUDDING. Mrs. S. W. Cheever, Ottawa, 111. One cup milk, one cup sugar, two eggs, two teaspoons cream tartar, one teaspoon soda, flour, dried fruit steam two hours. Sauce : To a pint of milk, add a lump of but- ter size of a small egg, let this come near to a boil ; save out from the pudding half teacup batter, thin it, stir it into the hot milk, stir all the time till it begins to thicken; sweeten and flavor to the taste. FEUIT PUDDING. Place in a tin basin fruit of any kind (raspberries, .peaches and apples are the best), put sugar over them, and a little water; if peaches are used put them in after paring them, whole ; have ready a biscuit crust, made of one pint of flour, with a small piece of butter or lard, a little salt, two teaspoons of baking powder, and water or milk to make a dough ; then roll out crust, and place over the top of your fruit in the tin ; cover with another two quart basin, to give room for the crust to rise, and set it on the stove ; as the fruit stews the crust will steam done. Serve with cream and sugar. VALUABLE RECIPES. 203 CHEEEY PUDDIIfG. Mrs. H. S. Towle. One pint flour, one pint sweet milk, one quart cherries, four eggs, a little butter and salt, baking powder ; steamed. Serve with cream and sugar. CHEERY PUDDING. H. N. Jenks. A pint of bread crusts or soft crackers, scalded in a quart of boiling milk, piece of butter the size of an egg, one teaspoon of salt, three eggs, one and a half teacups of sugar if eaten without sauce, and if with sauce a table spoon of sugar; a pinch of pulverized cinnamon, and a quart of stoned cherries ; bake quickly. JELLY PUDDING. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler. One quart of milk, one pint of bread crumbs, yolks of four beaten eggs, one-half cup of sugar; bake about half an hour; when cool, spread jelly over the pudding, beat the whites with a little sugar, and spread on toj) for frost- ing ; set back in the oven a few minutes after the whites have been spread on the pudding ; excellent for Suriday dinners, as it may be eaten cold. BAKEWELL PUDDING. E. M. Walker. Cover a dish with thin puff paste, and put over it a layer of any kind of firm jelly, one-half inch thick ; t^ke the yolks of four eggs, and one white, one-quarter pound 204 THE HOME COOK HOOK. sugar, one-quarter pound butter, twelve sweet and eight bitter almonds, well pounded ; beat all together to a froth, pour over the jelly and bake one-half hour in a moderate oven. KISS PUDDING. Mrs. F. B. Cole. One quart milk, three tablespoons of corn starch, yolks of four eggs, half cup sugar, and a little salt ; put part of the milk, salt and sugar on the stove and let it boil ; dis- solve the corn starch in the rest of the milk ; stir into the milk, and while boiling add the yolks. Flavor with vanilla. Frosting. — Whites of four eggs beaten to a stiff froth, half a cup of sugar; flavor with lemon, spread it on the pudding, and put it into the oven to brown, saving a little of the frosting to moisten the top ; then put on grated cocoanut to give it the appearanco of snow flake. SARATOGA PUDDING. Mrs. A. G. Beardsley. Mix four tablespoons of corn starch in one quart of cold milk ; stir until it boils. When cool, stir in two table- spoons white sugar, six eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately. Put in a large pudding dish, place in a pan of water; bake one and a half hours. Sauce: One cup sugar, half cup butter, the yolks of two eggs, one glass wine. Rub sugar and butter to a cream, add eggs and half the wine. Put the dish in boiling water, stir ten minutes, add the rest of the wine and serve. VALUABLE EECIPES. 205 MEKINGUE PUDDING. Mrs. C. A. Rogers. One pint of stale bread crumbs, one quart of milk, the 3olks of four eggs, butter the size of an egg, a small cup of sugar, salt, the grated rind of one lemon ; bake three- quarters of an hour. When cool, spread the top with preserves or jelly ; beat the whites of the eggs with five tablespoons of pulverized sugar; spread on the pudding and brown in a quick oven ; eat with cream. OSWEGO PUDDING. Kingford's Starch Company. One quart of milk, three tablespoons of corn starch, four eggs ; beat the yolks and mix them with a little of die milk and flour; sweeten and flavor with vanilla. Scald the milk and add the other ingredients, boil three minutei, pour into a dish and set away to cool. Beat the whites with four teaspoons of sugar. Cover the pudding with a layer of currant jelly, and spread the beaten whites over the whole. BAKED PUDDING. Mrs. E. C. Chapin. Three tablespoons of corn starch to one quart of milk. Prepare and cook the same as for blanc mange. After it is cool, stir up with it thoroughly two or three eggs, well beaten, and bake half an hour. COEN STARCH LEMON PUDDING. Glen Cove Starch Company. Grate the rind of two lemons, add the juice and rind 206 THE HOME COOK BOOK. to six ounces of sugar and three ounces of the improved corn starch. Stir this well into some cold water, sufficient to tnake it smooth.. Place three pints of milk on the fire; when boiling add the above, stirring all the time until it thickens. Remove it from the fire and add one ounce of butter and four eggs. Stir again while on the fire, taking care not to allow it to burn ; as soon as it becoms thick, remove it and fill out some small cups or forms, pre- viously dipped in cold water. Place them aside ; in one hour they will be fit to turn out. Cream and sugar or any sauce preferred. Sauce. — One ounce of the improved corn starch in a little cold milk ; blend till smooth ; then pour a pint of boiling milk on it. Beat the whites of four eggs in three ounces of sugar, one glass of brandy; add this to the sauce, and allow it to remain on the fire a short time, stirring all the while. The sauce can be served hot or cold. May be flavored with anything to fancy. ORANGE PUDDIKG. Nellie. Line the bottom of a pudding dish with stale sponge cake, slice upon the cake six oranges ; make a custard of one quart of milk and five eggs, leaving out the whites of four; beat the whites to a stiff froth, adding sugar, put on top of pudding, and put in the oven until brown. OEANGE PUDDING. Mr.s. ]. G. Hamilton. Peel and cut five sweet oranges into thin slices, taking VALtTABLE KECIPES. 207 out the seeds ; pour over them a coffee cup of white sugar ; let a pint of milk get boiling hot, by setting it in a pot of boiling water ; add the yolks of three eggs, well beaten, one tablespoon of corn starch, made smooth with a little cold milk ; stir all the time ; as soon as thickened, pour oyer the fruit. Beat the whites to a stiff froth, adding a tablespoon of sugar, and spread over the top for frosting ; set it in the oven for a few minutes to harden ; eat cold or hot (better cold), for dinner or supper. Berries or peaches can be substituted for oranges. LEMON PUDDING. Mrs. White. Put in a basin one-fourth pound of flour, the same of sugar, same of bread crumbs and chopped suet, the juice of one good-sized lemon, and the peel grated ; two eggs, and enough milk to make it the consistency of porridge ; boil in a basin for one hour ; serve with or without sauce. PINE-APPLE PUDDING. Prom choice recipes by M. S. W., Boston. A grated pine-apple and its weight in sugar ; half its weight in butter ; five eggs ; the whites beat to a stiff froth ; one cup of cream ; cream the butter and beat it with the sugar and yolks until very light ; add the cream, the pine-apple and the whites of the eggs. Bake in pie plates lined with pastry. To be eaten cold. GIPSY PUDDING. L. Osgood. Cut Stale sponge cake into thin slices; spread them 208 THE HOME COOK BOOK. with currant jelly or preserves; put two pieces together like sandwiches, and lay them in a dish ; make a soft custard, pour over while it is hot, let cool before serving. CEACKED WHEAT PUDDING. Mrs. A. M. Lewis. Cook cracked wheat enough for two meals ; stir in a few minutes before taking up, raisins, dates, or any dried fruit ; next day prepare a custard as usual, and stir thor- oughly through the wheat, and bake just long enough to bake the custard ; thus 5'ou have two desserts with but little trouble. Very palatable and nutritious. GEEMAN PUDDING. A. S. Ewing. Beat six eggs separately until very light ; add one pint milk to the yolks, six tablespoons flour, one-half spoon butter, one-half nutmeg and salt spoon salt ; stir in whites of eggs last. Bake half an hour. Sauce. — Six tablespoons sugar, one-half pound butter worked to a cream, one egg, one wineglass wine, one-half nutmeg; put on the fire and let it come to a boil. CHOCOLATE PUDDING. Mrs. E. Wood. One and a half quarts milk, boiled, one-half cake of chocolate stirred in milk, small cup of corn starch dis- solved in little water, add two eggs, with one cup sugar, a little salt. Cream for sauce. VALUABLE EECirES. 209 COLD TAPIOCA PUDDING. Mrs. H. F. Waite. One cup tapioca in five cups water, one cup sugar and one lemon. Wash the tapioca ; add the water ; put it in a tin pail, in a kettle of water ; let it boil two hours or more and until it is perfectly clear; just before taking up, add a teaspoon of salt, one cup of sugar and rind and juice of a lemon; stir thoroughly; place to cool; eat with cream and sugar. TAPIOCA PUDDING. Mrs. Rice. Cover three tablespoons tapioca with water ; stand over night ; add one quart milk, a small piece of butter, a little salt, and boil ; beat the yolks of three eggs with a cup of sugar, and boil the whole to a very thick custard; flavor with vanilla ; when cold cover with whites of eggs beaten. TAPIOCA PUDDING. Mrs. Francis M. Thatcher. Soak one cup of tapioca in milk ; add one quart of milk, one cup of white sugar, two eggs, butter the size of an egg, nutmeg and raisins to suit taste ; steam two hours. CREAM TAPIOCA PUDDING. Mrs. A. T. Hall. Soak three tablespoons of tapioca in water over night ; put the tapioca into a quart of boiling milk, and boil half an hour : beat the yolks of four eggs with a cup of sugar ; add three tablespoons of prepared cocoanut; stir in and 14 210 THE HOME COOK BOOK. boil ten minutes longer; pour into a pudding dish ; beat the whites qi the four eggs to a stiff froth, stir in three tablespoons of sugar ; put this over the top and sprinkle cocoanut over the top and brown for five minutes. APPLE TAPIOCA PUDDING. Mrs. C. Duffield. One cup of tapioca soaked over night in six cups of water ; next morning add about six large tart apples, chopped very fine, (or more, according to the size,) then one cup of white sugar ; bake slowly about four hours ; to be eaten either warm or cold, with cream. Very del- icate for invalids. SNOW PUDDING. Mrs. D. One-half package Coxe's gelatine ; pour over it a cup of cold water and add one and one-half cups of sugar; when soft, add one cup boiling water, juice of one lemon and the whites of four well beaten eggs ; beat all together until very light; put in glass dish and pour over it custard made as follows : One pint milk, yolks of four eggs and grated rind of one lemon ; boil. Splendid. EIOE SNOW BALLS. Boil a pint of rice in two quarts of water, with a tea- spoon of salt, until quite soft, then put it in small cups, having them quite full ; when perfectly cold, turn them into a dish, take the yolks of three eggs, one pint of milk, one teaspoon corn starch ; flavor with lemon, and cook as VALUABU: EECIPES. 211 you do soft custard ; turn over the rice half an hour pre- vious to eating it. This is a nice dessert in hot weather. Sweet meats are a good accompaniment. CHOCOLATE PUFFS. Mrs. O. L. Parker. One pound sugar sifted, one of chocolate chopped very fine ; mix together ; beat the white of an egg, and stir in your chocolate and sugar; continue to beat until stiff paste ; sugar your paper, drop them on it, and bake in a slow oven. CREAM PUFFS. Mrs. Watson Thatcher. One and one-half cups of flour, two-thirds of a cup of butter, one-half pint of boiling water; boil butter and water together, and stir in the flour while boiling ; let it cool, and add five well-beaten eggs ; drop on tins, and bake thirty minutes in a quick oven. Fill them with the following: One pint of milk, one cup of sugar, two- thirds of a cup of flour, two eggs ; beat the eggs, flour and sugar together, and stir them in the milk while it is boiling. When partially cool flavor with lemon. These are favorites in bake shops. DESSERT PUFFS. Mrs. N. C. Gridley, Evanston. One pint sweet milk, scant pint flour, three eggs (whites and yolks beaten separately); bake in cups. To be eaten with liquid sauce. 312 THE HOME COOK BOOK. PUFF PUDDING. Mrs. C. A. Rogers. Five tablespoons of flour, five tablespoons of milk, five eggs stirred smooth ; turn on a pint of boiling milk, and bake twenty minutes. To be eaten with hard sauce. MOLLY PUFFS. Mrs. George B. Gushing. One cup Indian meal scalded ; when it cools add two cups of rye meal, two eggs, one tablespoon of brown sugar, and a small half teaspoon of soda; fry them, dropped from a spoon in boiling lard. GERMAN PUFFS. H. M. Brewer. One pint sweet milk, five tablespoons flour, one table- spoon melted butter, six eggs, leaving out the whites of three ; bake in buttered cups, half fiUed, twenty minutes in hot oven. For Sauce. — Beat the whites of five eggs to a stiff" froth, and one coffee cup powdered sugar, and the juice of two oranges ; turn the pudding from the cups on to a platter, and cover with the sauce just before sending to the table. GERMAN PUFFS. Mrs. E. P. Thomas, Rockford, 111. One pint sweet milk, four eggs, five tablespoons flour, and a little salt. Bake three quarters of an hour. VALUABLE RECIPES. 213 LEMON FKITTERS. After Marion Harland. Beat up the whipped and strained yolks of five eggs with one-half a cup of powdered sugar ; add the grated peel of half a lemon, one teaspoon of mingled nutmeg and cinnamon, a little salt, and one-half a cup of cream ; then the whites of the eggs, and then two heaping cups of prepared flour ; work all together quickly and lightly into a soft paste, just stiff enough to roll out ; pass the rolling-pin over it until it be about three-quarters of an inch thick ; cut into small circular cakes with a tumbler or cake-cutter, and fry in hot lard. They ought to puff up like crullers. Drain on clean hot paper, and eat warm with a sauce made of the juice of two lemons and the grated peel of one, one cup of powdered sugar, one glass of wine, and the whites of two eggs beaten stiff. PUDDING SAUCES. ' I crack my brains to find out tempting sauces, And raise fortifications in the pastry." PUDDING SAUCE. Anonymous. One cup of butter, one cup of milk, one cup of sugar, three eggs, flavor to taste. PUDDING SAUCE. Mrs. Dunham. One-half cup of butter, one cup of sugar, two eggs well beaten, and pour on one cup of boiling water ; flavor with nutmeg or other flavor. PUDDING SAUCE. Mrs. A. R. Scranton. Four tablespoons of white sugar, two tablespoons of butter, one tablespoon of flour; beat all to a cream and add the white of one egr; well beaten ; then add one gUl boiling water ; stir well ; flavor to taste. (214) VALUABLE EKCIPES. 215 FOAMING SAUCE. Mrs. King, v One-half teacup of butter, the same of sugar; beat to a froth ; put into a dish and set in a pan of hot water; add a tablespoon of hot water, or if preferred, a little vanilla j stir one way until it comes to a very light foam. WINE PUDDING SAUCE. One cup of sugar, one-half cup of butter, one-half cup of wine, one egg ; beat butter, sugar and eggs together ; set it on the stove and heat, pour in the wine, add a little nutmeg; pour from one dish to another a few times, and send to the table. "WINE SAUCE. M. A. T. Two teacups of sugar, one teacup of butter ; stir to a cream ; beat two eggs very light, and stir all together ; add one teacup of wine ; mix and set on top of tea-kettle of boiling water. It must not be put on the stove, nor boil. PUDDING SAUCE. Mrs. B. P. Hutchinson. Two eggs well beaten, one cup pulverized sugar ; when mixed pour over one cup of boiling milk, and stir rapidly ; flavor'as you please. PUDDING SAUCE. Mrs. Andrews. One cup of sugar, one-half cup of butter, yolks of three eggs ; one teaspoon of corn starch or arrow root ; stir the 216 THE HOME COOK BOOK. whole until very light; add sufBcient boiling water to make the consistency of thick cream ; wine or brandy to suit the taste. ' SAUCE FOE APPLE PU.DDIN"G M. Boil good molasses with a little butter, and serve hot. HAED SAUCE FOE PUDDINGS, EIOE, ETC. M. Take one teacup sugar, one-half teacup butter; stir together until light ; flavor with wine or essence of lemon ; smooth the top with a knife, and grate nutmeg over it. WINE SAUCE. Brown one cup of sugar and a piece of butter the size of a hen's egg, in a saucepan ; pour two-thirds of a teacup of boiling water slowly over the mixture ; when ready to serve, add one-half cup of currant wine. WINE SAUCE. Mrs. Pulsifer. Two ounces of butter, two teaspoons of flour, one-quar- ter of a pound of sugar, one gill of wine, and half a nut- meg grated ; mix the flour and butter together, add one- half pint boiling water and the sugar and wine; just before serving, add the grated nutmeg. Serve hot. GEEMAN SAUCE. M. D. Harris. The whites of two eggs, the juice of one lemon, sugar enough to beat up to a proper consistency for serving. PIES. PASTRY. Drink now the strong beer, Cut the white loaf here, The while the meat is a shredding For the rare mince pie, , And the plums stand by To fill the paste that's a kneading. — Old Song. FINE PUFF PASTEY. One pound of flour, a little more for rolling pin and board, and half a pound of butter and half a pound of lard. Cut the butter and lard through the flour (which should be sifted) into small thin shells and mix with suf- ficient ice water to roll easily. Avoid kneading it and use the hands as little as possible in mixing. PLAINER PASTRY. One cup of butter, one cup of lard, a little salt, cut through the flour and mix lightly together. Some cooks mix the lard through the flour and mix with water and (217; 218 THE HOME COOK BOOK. then roll out ; when in a sheet cut the batter into thin sheets, fold over and lay aside, cutting off from the roll what is used for the bottom or top crust as wanted. PASTKY OF GEAHAM FLOUE. Half a pound of Graham flour, one cup of sweet cream, a little salt ; mix and roll and bake in the usual way with fruit between the crusts. EICE PIE. Mrs. A. S. Ewing. One quart of milk, boiled; one small teacup of rice flour mixed in a little cold milk ; add to the boiling milk two tablespoons of butter ; when cold, add five eggs well beaten ; sweeten to taste ; flavor with vanilla, and bake. FEUIT PIE. Mrs. M. P. Carroll. Must be baked in a two quart tin basin ; to give it the right shape the basin must be of nearly the same size top and bottom ; first make a nice pie crust ; put a layer of it in the bottom, but not around the side of the dish; then a layer of chopped sour apples, two inches thick ; then a layer of chopped raisins ; sprinkle sugar over this, pieces of butter, and any spice you like — cloves and nutmeg are nice ; another layer of crust and fruit, etc., until your dish is full ; put a crust on top ; bake slowly for two hours ; when done, turn bottom upwards on a plate, and before putting it on the table sprinkle fine sugar over it. It is quite as good when warmed again as when first VALUABLE RECIPES. 219 baked. It takes one pound of raisins, ten or twelve good sized apples, two large cups of sugar, more if you like. TRANSPARENT PUDDING. Mrs. P. H. Smith. Five eggs, one-half pound sugar, one-third pound but- ter, three tablespoons of cream ; divide the sugar, and beat half of it in the butter, and the other half with the yolk of the eggs, and then add the whites and the cream, and one-half teaspoon of vanilla. Prepare crust in two pie plates, and pour the mixture in and bake in a slow oven. ACID PIE. M. A. Bingham, Elgin, 111. One cup of soft bread or crackers, one cup of sugar, two cups of water, little lemon, one egg, one teaspoon of tartaric acid. LEMON PIE. Mrs. H. L. Adams, and others. One tablespoon of corn starch, boiled in a cup of water ; one egg, one cup of sugah, juice and rind of one lemon ; bake in a crust. This will fill one shallow plate. LEMON PIE. Miss Sophia Brownsberg. The rind and juice of one lemon, one cup sugar, the yolks of three eggs ; mix these well together ; two cups 220 THE HOME COOK BOOK. of milk, little salt, one tablespoon corn starch ; thicken the milk with the corn starch and let it come to a boil; then stir it into the other ingredients, pour it into a pie plate covered with a good paste and bake it. Beat the whites of three eggs to a froth, with a tablespoon of sugar, lay it over the top of the pie and set it again in the oven for a few seconds, to brown. LEMON PIE. Mrs. J. W. Preston. Six eggs, (less two whites,) two cups of white sugar, a little salt, one cup of sweet milk, two tablespoons of com starch dissolved in the milk ; two large lemons, juice and rind ; bake slowly until set. Meringue for the top : Whites of two eggs beaten with six tablespoons of pow- dered sugar ; bake to a light brown, after having spread over the surface of the pie. lemon;, PIE. Mrs. G. L. Dunlap. Yolks of six eggs, two cups of pulverized sugar, beaten well together, two and a half cups of milk, three lemons, (only juice,) a little salt, mix well, bake ; then take the whites of the eggs, add one-half cup of pulverized sugar, beaten well together, then spread over the top of pies and brown. This recipe will make two good sized pies. LEMON PIE. Miss Annie Slocum. Two lemons, five eggs, one cup of sugar, one cup of VALUABLE EECIPES. 221 water, two tablespoons corn starch ; grate the outside of the lemon rinds into a dish, then cut in half and remove the seeds, scooping the pulp and juice into the dish with a silver spoon ; add the sugar and water, wetting the starch with some of the water ; mix it in with the yolks and one white of an egg, (the eggs well beaten first,) pour into two tins lined with pastry, and bake ; beat the re- maining whites; gradually stir in ten tablespoons of pul- verized sugar, and when the pies are done, spread the snow over them, and place in the oven until brown. LEMON PIE. M. For three pies, take the rind and juice of four lemons, the yolks of nine eggs, the whites of three, nearIy*one cup of butter, two cups of sugar, one-half cup of sweet milk ; beat the whites of six eggs with six ounces of sugar; put on the top, after baking, and brown slightly. Very rich. LEMOIs" PIE. Mrs. Beyer, and others. For one pie, take one large lemon, the yolks of two eggs, one cup of sugar, one-half cup of cold Vi^ater, one teaspoon of bttter. Icing for the same : Whites of two eggs, two tablespoons of pulverized sugar ; brown it nicely in the oven. LEMON KAISIN PIE. Anonymous. On cup of sugar, one lemon, one cup of raisins, one 222 THE HOME COOK BOOK. cup water ; chop lemon and raisins fine, cook in the water three-quarters of an hour. LEMON PIE. Mrs. A. L. Chetlain. One tablespoon of corn starch stirred in a little cold water ; add one cup of boiling water, let it come to a boil, then add seven tablespoons of sugar, yolks of four eggs, grated rind and juice of two lemons ; bake with a bottom crust, then beat the whites of four eggs and a little sugar, pour this over the top, and then brown. LEMON PIE. Mrs. L. Bradley. One lemon, grate the rind and squeeze the juice; three eggs, one tablespoon of butter, three tablespoons of sugar, one cup of milk ; beat the whites of eggs and stir in after the rest are mixed. MINCE PIES.' Six pounds of lean fresh beef boiled tender, when cold,, chopped fine, a pound of beef suet chopped fine, five pounds of apples chopped, two pounds of raisins, seeded, two pounds of currants, half a pound of citron, two tablespoons of cinnamon, one of grated nutmeg, one tablespoon of cloves, one tablespoon of allspice, one tablespoon of salt, three pounds of brown sugar, a quart of wine, pint of brandy, and the liquor the meat is boiled in. Keep in a stone jar tied over with a double paper. It should be made, at least, the day before it is used, and VALUABLE EECIPES. 233 when you make pies add a little more wine to what you take out for the pies, and more chopped apples. MINCE MEAT. Mrs. Higgins. Six pounds of beef and six pounds of apples, chopped fine ; four pounds of sugar, two of citron, three of raisins, three of currants, one of suet, two quarts of boiled cider, one-half cup of salt, two nutmegs, two tablespoons of ground cloves, two of allspice, two of cinnamon ; when used, enough sweet cider should be added to make the mixture quite moist. MINCE MEAT. Mrs. J. M. Durand. Two pounds of raisins, one of currants, one of suet, two and one-half of sugar, one-quarter of citron, one- eighth of cinnamon, two chopped pippins, three lemons, two nutmegs ; wine, brandy and cloves to taste. MINCE PIE. Mrs. Pulsifer. Two pounds of suet chopped fine, four pounds of mince meat, three cups raisins, three cups of currants, two pieces of citron, twelve cups of fine chopped apples, five large teaspoons of cloves, four large teaspoons ginger, four nut- megs, one quart syrup, four quarts of cider, five teaspoons cinnamon, one teaspoon of pepper, salt to taste, one cup of sugar, two lemons (juice and rind grated); stir all together; let come to a boil, then put in a jar; when making pies put a tablespoon of brandy to a pie. 224 THE HOME CX)OK BOOK. MINCE PIE. Mrs. James Morgan. Boil beef until tender (three pounds after it is boiled); when cold, chop fine; add three pounds of fine chopped suet, and mix with the beef; add a tablespoon of salt, six pounds of apples, four pounds of currants, six pounds of raisins, two pounds of citron ; season to taste with pow- dered cinnamon, mace, cloves and nutmeg; add boiled cider, brandy and wine until quite soft ; mix well and pack in stone jars, pour brandy over the top and cover tightly. This will make about five gallons ; add two pounds sugar. MINCE PIE. C. Kennicott. Three pints apples, one pint boiled beef, one-half pint of butter or beef drippings, one pint molasses, one-half pint of water, one and a half teaspoons allspice, one tea- spoon cinnamon, one teaspoon salt, three-fourths teaspoon cloves, two and a half large spoons of vinegar, one-half of a nutmeg. Young housekeepers will find this recipe a great comfort. MOCK MINCE PIE. Mrs. G. F. DeForest, Freeport, III. One egg, three or four large crackers, or six or eight small ones, one-half cup of molasses, one-half cup sugar, one-half cup vinegar, one-half cup strong tea, one cup chopped raisins, a small piece butter, spice and salt. TALUABLE EECIPES, 225 SHAM MINCE PIE. Eliza Wormley. Ten crackers made fine, two cups of water, one of vinegar, one-half of butter, one of molasses, five eggs; add raisins; beat the eggs, butter and sugar together; spices and sugar to taste. MINCE PIE. Mrs. J. R. Adams. Boil and chop three pounds of lean beef, two pounds of suet, four of good raisins, four of currants, one of citron, four of sugar, grated rind and juice of three lemons, and two sweet oranges, three large tablespoons of cinnamon, three grated nutmegs, two tablespoons of cloves, two of mace, one quart of cooking brandy, some wine, four tablespoons salt ; pack it down tightly in a jar, and stir well before using. In making a pie, take nearly two- thirds of apples and more than one-third meat; add enough cider to make very juicy, and enough sugar to make very sweet. VINEGAR PIE. Ella Guild. One cup of sugar, one-half of vinegar, two teaspoons of flour, one of butter, one of cinnamon, two cups of water ; boil all together till thick, and bake as you would a custard pie. This is very nice. CEEAM PIE. Mrs. M. A. Green. Boil nearly one pint of new milk ; take two small table- 15 226 THE HOME COOK BOOK. spoons of corn starch beaten with a little milk ; to this add two eggs; when the milk has boiled, stir this in slowly with one scant teacup of sugar and one-half cup of butter, two teaspoons of lemon. Cakes : Three eggs, one cup of white sugar, one and a half of flour, one teaspoon of baking powder, mix it in flour; three table- spoons of cold water; bake in two pie-pans in a quick oven ; split the cake while hot, and spread in the cream. CEEAM PIES. Mrs. L. H. Holbrook. One cup of flour, one cup of sugar, three or four eggs (the whites and yolks beaten separately and well) ; half a teaspoon of soda and one of cream of tartar ; beat the eggs to a stiff froth ; add the sugar, which should be of fine quality, and then the flour sifted with the soda and cream of tartar. Pour this into four common- sized pie tins and bake. It will be sufficient for two pies. Cream : Make a nice custard with one pint of, milk, three eggs and one tablespoon of corn starch, cooking the custard in a tin kettle of hot water; before mixing in the corn starch wet it with milk, and add the eggs and sugar ; then stii into the boiling milk; flavor to taste, and when cold spread between two layers of the crust. OEEAM PIE. Mrs. S. Cornell. Butter the size of an egg ; one cup sugar and two eggs stirred together ; then add one-third cup milk, two cups flour, with two teaspoons baking powder, stirred in before VALUABLE EECtPES. 227 sifting into the mixture ; bake in two pie tins for two pies. For the filling : One pint milk, taking out enough to wet one-half cup flour, and boil the rest, two-thirds cup sugar and yolks of two eggs ; stir the filling mixture together and boil three minutes ; when cold flavor with lemon or vanilla, and spread between the upper and lower crusts, when cut smoothly apart. This makes two very delicious pies. CKEAM PIE. Mrs. Bartlett. One cup powdered sugar, one cup flour, one teaspoon cream tartar and one-half teaspoon soda, five eggs beaten separately, grated rind of lemon. Cream : Set in hot water one-half pint of milk ; when scalding hot add one- half cup sugar, a little salt and one egg beaten together ; stir until thick, and when cool add one tablespoon va- nUla put between crusts. PHILADELPHIA BUTTEE PIE. Mrs. A. N. Arnold. Cover a pie plate with crust, as for a custard pie ; take a piece of butter the size of an egg, two-thirds of a cup of sugar, one cup of sweet cream, one tablespoon of flour ; stir butter, flour and sugar together; then stir in the cream ; pour in the plate ; bake until .brown. SQUASH PIE. Mrs. P. B. Ayer. One crust, one small cup of dry maple sugar dissolved 228 THE HOME COOK BOOK. in a little water, two cups of strained squash stirred in the sugar ; add four eggs, two teaspoons of allspice, two cups of milk, one teaspoon of butter, and two of ginger, added last. This makes two pies. SQUASH PIE. Mrs. Rice. One pint of squash, one pint of milk, three eggs, one- half of a nutmeg, one teaspoon of cinnamon, one tea- spoon of vanilla, two cups of sugar ; put everything into the squash, the milk last. SQUASH PIE. Mrs. L. H. Davis. Two teacups of boiled squash, three-fourths teacup of brown sugar, three eggs, two tablespoons of molasses, one tablespoon melted butter, one tablespoon ginger, one teaspoon of cinnamon, two teacups of milk, a little salt^ Makes two plate pies. ■- CUSTAED PIE. Mrs. E. E. Marcy, Evanston. Make a custard of the yolks of three eggs with milk, season to the taste; bake it in ordinary crust; put it in a a brick oven, that the crust may not be heavy, and as soon as that is heated remove it to a place in the oven of a more moderate heat, that the custard may bake slowly and not curdle ; when done, beat the whites to a froth ; add sugar and spread over the top, and return to the oven to brown slightly; small pinch of salt added to VALUABLE EEClJ'ES. 229 a custard heightens the flavor ; a little soda in the crust prevents it from being heavy. Very nice. WASHINGTON PIE. Mrs. A. L. Chetlain. One and one-half cups of sugar, one-half cup of butter, one-half cup of sweet milk, three eggs, two and one-half cups of flour, two teaspoons of baking powder ; bake in three layers, in jelly cake tins ; pare and grate two large apples ; add one cup of sugar, grated rind and juice of one lemon ; put this on the stove and let it steam until it forms a jelly ; then take it off" and stir in the yolk of one egg. When the cake and jelly are both cold put them together. WASHINGTON PIE. Mrs. D. One cup of sugar, three eggs, one and one-half cups of flour, one teaspoon of baking powder ; flavor to taste ; bake as for jelly cake in layers, and spread between the layers raspberry jam. COOOANUT PIE. Mrs. E. P. Thomas, Rockford, 111. Grate fresh cocoanut ; to one cup of cocoanut add one and one-half cups of sweet milk, the yolks of four eggs, a little salt, and sweeten to taste ; one tablespoon of melted butter ; beat the whole five or six minutes ; beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff" froth, and put over the top just long enough to slightly brown before taking the 230 THE HOME COOK BOOK. pie from the oven. If you use dessicated cocoanut, soak it in the milk over night. COCOANUT PIE. Mrs. Taylor, Ft. Wayne. One and one-half pints of milk, six eggs, one cocoa- nut, three cups sugar, one-half cup butter; mix sugar and butter, then the eggs, then the cocoanut, and lastly the milk. POLISH TAETLETS. Roll some good puff paste out thin, cut it into two and a half inch squares ; brush each square over with the white of an egg, then fold down the corners so that they all meet in the middle of each piece of paste ; slightly press the two pieces together, brush them over with the egg ; sift over sugar ; bake in a quick oven for a quarter of an hour; when they are done make a little hole in the middle and fill with jam or jelly. LEMON TAETS. Mix well together the juice and grated rind of two lemons, two cups of sugar, two eggs, and the iCrumbs of sponge cake ; beat it all together until smooth ; put into twelve patty pans lined with puff paste, and bake until the crust is done. CUSTARDS CREAMS, ETC. ' They serve up salmon, venison and wild boars, By hundreds, dozens and by scores, Hogsheads of honey, kilderkins of mustard. Plum puddings, pancakes, apple pies and custard." MES. GEAVE'S CUSTAEDS. Six eggs, one pint milk, one and a half cups sugar, one teaspoon of vanilla; beat sugar and eggs together, and stir into hot milk ; when done, strain ; cook very slowly, not boil ; pour into cups. Another Way. — Instead of boiling, put the mixture into cups; set them in a dripping pan half full of water and bake in the oven till done. EICE CUSTABD. Mrs. G. M. Dickerman, Rockford. To half a cup of rice, add one quart of milk, and a little salt ; steam one hour, or until quite soft ; beat the yolks of four eggs with four tablespoons of white sugar ; add this just before taking off the rice ; stir in thoroughly, but do not let it boil any more ; flavor with vanilla. Beat (231) 232 THE HOME COOK BOOK. the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth, with sugar; after putting the mixture into the pudding dish in which you serve it, put the whites o-'-r it, and let it slightly brown in the oven. EICH CUSTAED. Mrs. Morgan, Rockford, 111. . One quart of cream, the yolks of six eggs, six ounces of powdered white sugar, a small pinch of salt, two table spoons of brandy, one tablespoon of peach water, half a tablespoon of lemon brandy, an ounce of blanched almonds pounded to a paste ; mix the cream with the sugar, and the yolks of the eggs well beaten ; scald them together in a tin pail in boiling water, stirring all the time until sufficiently thick ; when cool, add the other ingredi- ents, and pour into custard cups. BOILED CUSTAED. Mrs. T. Kingsford. ' Two tablespoons of the corn starch to one quart of milk ; mix the corn starch with a small quantity of the milk and flavor it ; beat up two eggs. Heat the remainder of the milk to near boiling, then add the mixed corn starch, the eggs, four tablespoons of sugar, a little butter and salt. Boil it two minutes, stirring it briskly. BOILED CUSTARD. Mrs. R. M. Pickering. One quart milk, eight eggs, one-half pound of sugar; beat to a good froth the eggs and sugar. Put the milk in VALUABLE EEOirKS. 233 a tin pail and set it in boiling water; pour in the eggs and sugar and stir until it thickens. CHOCOLATE CUSTAED. Mrs. Higgins. Three ounces Baker's chocolate, three pints milk, four tablespoons white sugar, two tablespoons brown sugar; prepare a soft custard of the milk and the yolks of five eggs and the white of one ; dissolve the chocolate in a cup of warm milk and heat it to boiling point; when cool, sweeten it with brown sugar and flavor with the extract of vanilla; pour the whole into a dish and cover with the whites of the five eggs beaten stiff, with a little sugar ; brown slightly and serve cold. SAGO CUSTAED. C. D. Adams. Three tablespoons sago boiled in a little water till clear ; add one quart of milk, let it come to a boil, then add five or six well-beaten eggs and sugar to taste. Put the ves- sel containing the custard in a kettle of boiling water ; stir it briskly till it thickens a little; flavor with vanilla after it is partly cool. APPLE CUSTAED. Mrs. F. B. Orr. Pare, core and quarter one dozen tart apples, strew into it the grated rind of one lemon ; stew until tender in very little water; then mash smooth with back of a spoon. To one and a half pints of strained apple add one and a 234 THE HOME COOK BOOK. quarter pounds sugar ; leave it until cold ; beat six eggs light and stir alternately into one quart milk with the apples ;»put into cups or deep dish, and bake twenty min- utes ; to be eaten cold. APPLE CDSTABDS. Mrs. C. M. Dickerman, Rockford. Take six tart apples, pare and quarter them, put into a baking dish with one cup water; cook until tender, but not to pieces, then turn them into a pudding dish and sprinkle sugar over to cover them ; beat eight eggs with sugar, and mix with them three pints of milk, a little nutmeg; turn it over the apples, and bake twenty-five minutes. CARAMEL CX7STAED. Mrs. Perry Smith. One quart of milk, one cup of white sugar, one cup of brown sugar, two tablespoons corn starch, four eggs and a pinch of salt and vanilla. Place the milk with the white sugar and salt in a farina kettle over the fire ; if you have not such a kettle, a tin pail set in a pot of hot water will answer the purpose ; beat the eggs without separating in a large bowl, and wet the corn starch with a little cold milk ; put the brown sugar in a tin pan and set over the fire; stir until it is thoroughly scorched, but not burned; then turn the scalding milk on the eggs ; put the mixture in the kettle again over the fire J stir in the corn starch until it thickens ; lastly, stir in 'the scorched sugar and remove from the fire ; then add a generous amount of VALUABLE 'EECIPES. 235 vanilla. The scorched sugar falls into the custard >n strings, but these will dissolve with vigor9us stirring, after removal from the fire. Turn into custard glasses and serve cold. EENNET CUED. Take a piece of dried rennet two inches square, wash off the salt, put it into two quarts of lukewarm milk, with a thread attached to it so that it can be easily removed ; let it remian in the milk until it begins to thicken, then remove it and place the milk where it will become cold and solid. To be eaten with rich cream, sweetened and flavored to taste. APPLE SOUFFLE. Mrs. A. N. Arnold. Stew th& apples ; add a little grated lemon peel and juice; line the sides and bottom of the dish about two inches thick. Make a boiled custard with one pint of milk and two eggs ; when it is cool, pour it into the center of the dish. Beat the whites of the eggs and spread it over the top ; sprinkle sugar over it, and bake a few min- utes in the oven. floati:ng island. Mrs. E. E. Marcy. One-half package gelatine, one pint of water; soak twenty minutes ; add two cups of sugar, set it on the stove to come to a boil ; when nearly cold, add the whites of four eggs beaten stiff, the juice and rind of two lemons, 236 THE HOME COOK BOOK. 5fid pour into a mould ; turn over the form. Make a cus- / tard of the yolks of four eggs, a quart of milk, and a small tablespoon of corn starch, sweetened to taste. FLOATING ISLAND. From "In the Kitchen"— Mrs. E. S. Miller. One tumbler of currant jelly, one pint of powdered sugar, five eggs ; beat the whites of the eggs very stiff before putting in the jelly ; then beat well; add the sugar gradually and beat it perfectly stiff ; chill it thoroughly on the ice and serve in a glass dish half filled with cold milk ; cover it with the island in spoonfuls standing in peaks. It is to be eaten with cream. FLOATING ISLAND OF FEESH EASPBEE- EIES. Adapted from " In the Kitchen." Crush a pint of very ripe red raspberries with a gill of sugar ; beat the white of four eggs to a stiff froth, and add gradually a gill of powdered sugar; press the rasp- berries through a strainer to avoid the seeds, and by de- grees beat in the juice with the sugar and egg until so stiff that it stands in peaks. Serve as in the above rule. APPLE FLOAT. Mrs. O. L. Parker. To one quart of apples, partially stewed and well mashed, put the whites of three eggs, well beaten, and four heaping tablespoons of loaf sugar ; beat them to- gether for fifteen minutes, and eat with rich milk and nut^ meg. VALUABLE EEOIPES. 237 OEANGE FLOAT. Mrs. M. E. Kedzie, Evanston. One quart of water, the juice and pulp of two lemons, one coffee cup of sugar ; when boiling add to it four table- spoons of corn starch mixed in water ; let it boil, stirring it fifteen minutes ; when cool, pour it over four or five sliced oranges ; over the top spread the beaten whites of three eggs, sweetened, and a few drops of vanilla. Eaten with cream. WHIPPED CKEAM. Mix one pint of cream with nine tablespoons of fine sugar and one gill of wine in a large bowl ; whip these with the cream dasher, and as the froth rises, skim into the dish in which it is to be served. Fill the dish full to top, and ornament with kisses or macaroons. SPANISH CREAM. Mrs. J. P. Booker. One pint milk and one-half box gelatine, heated to- gether ; yolks of three eggs, and five tablespoons sugar beaten together, added to the above ; take off as soon as it thickens, then stir in the whites of three eggs beaten to a stiff froth ; flavor with vanilla ; to be served with cream and' sugar. SPANISH CREAM. Mrs. J. H. Brown. Boil one ounce of gelatine in one pint of new milk until dissolved, add four eggs well beaten and half a pound of 238 THE HOME COOK BOOI^. sugar; stir it over the fire until the^ eggs thicken, take it off the fire and add a full wine-glass of peach water, and when cool pour it into mould? ; serve with cream. YELVET OEEAM. Mrs. R. Harris. Nearly a box of gelatine, soaked over night in a cup of wine ; melt it over the fire, with the sugar ; when it is warm, put in a quart of cream or new milk and strain it into moulds. If the wine is too hot, it will curdle the milk. CHOCOLATE CEEAM. Mrs. Spruance. Soak one box of Coxe's English gelatine (in cold water sufiScient to cover) one hour; one quart of milk boiled; scrape two ounces of French chocolate, mix with eight spoons of white sugar; moisten this with three spoons of the boiling milk ; then stir in the gelatine and the yolks of ten well beaten eggs ; stir three minutes briskly ; take off, strain and add two teaspoons of vanilla; strain and put in moulds to cool. Serve with sugar and cream. CHOCOLATE OEEAM.- Mrs. King. Half a cake of chocolate dissolved in a little hot water ; put in a cup of milk and when it boils have five eggs well beaten and mixed with two cups of milk ; pour the hot chocolate into the eggs and milk ; stir well and boil all together for a few, minutes; sweeten to your taste. To ■ be eaten cold. ' VALUABLE EECIPES. 239 COFFEE CKEAM. Soak half an ounce of Coxe's gelatine in a little cold ^.'ater half an hour ; then place it over boiling water and add one gill of strong coffee, and one gill of sugar ; when the gelatine is well dissolved, take from the fire ; stir in three gills of cold cream and strain into your mould. Be sure that this has been previously wet with cold water. OEANGE CEEAM. Make according to above rule, adding one gill of orange juice, and the grated rind of one orange which has been previously soaked in the orange juice while the gelatine is dissolving over the boiling water, and the beaten yolks of two eggs when you take off, and quite hot. APPLE CEEAM. Mrs. Mann. One cup thick cream, one cup sugar, beat till very smooth; then beat the whites of two eggs, and add; stew apples in water till soft ; take them from the water with a fork ; steam them if you prefer. Pour the cream over the apples when cold. FEUIT CREAMS. These consist of a rich cream ; blanc mange poured over fruit and set on ice to chill. PISTACHIO AND ALMOND CEEAMS. Make a nice vanilla ice-cream ; have ready pistachio nuts, which have been prepared by pouring boiling water 240 THE HOME COOK BOOK. over thfim and letting them stand in it a few moments; then strip off the skins and pound to a paste in a mortar, and mix with the cream. Freeze. BAVARIAN CEEAM. Mrs. Chas. Duffield. One pint of milk, yolks of four eggs, one-fourth pound of sugar, one-half ounce of gelatine ; put all over the fire, and stir until the gelatine is dissolved, then strain through a fine sieve, and when cool, add one pint of cold cream ; flavor with vanilla. ITALIAN CEEAM. E. V. Case, Elmhurst. Take one^ quart of cream, one pint of milk sweetened very sweet, and highly seasoned with sherry wine and vanilla ; beat it with a whip dasher, and remove the froth as it rises until it is all converted into froth. Have ready one box of Coxe's sparkling gelatine, dissolved in a little warm water ; set your frothed cream into a tub of ice ; pour the gelatine into it, and stir constantly until it thickens, then pour into moulds, and set in a cool place. TAPIOCA CEEAM. Two tablespoons of tapioca dissolved very soft, three yolks of eggs beaten and sweetened to the taste; boil one quart of milk, when cool stir in the tapioca and flavor; beat the whites very light and mix all together ; let boil ten minutes, pour into moulds. VALUABLE RECIPES. 241 TAPIOCA MEEINGUE. Mrs. Spruance. One teacup of tapioca soaked in one and a half pints of warm water three hours ; peel and core eight tart apples ; fill apples with sugar, grating a little nutmeg or moistening with wine; one hour before needed, pour the tapioca ovor the apples and bake, serving in the dish baked in ; the addition of the whites of four well beaten eggs spread over the top and browned slightly, improves it. SPANISH MERINGUES. M. Take the whites of eight eggs ; beat until stiff; add one- half pound of powdered sugar and a pinch of salt, and beat well ; grease some paper and lay on a board ; drop the meringues on it and bake in a slow oven ; when done remove with a knife and place the two together ; sprinkle with powdered sugar before baking. SWEET MERINGUES. M. Use the same mixture as above, formed in a ring, using whipped cream with sugar and vanilla to taste, for the centre. MELANGE. Mrs. W. Guthrie. Line a deep pie dish with pie crust, and spread on a thin layer of tart apple sauce, then a layer of buttered bread ; on this another layer of apple. Bake until the 16 242 THE HOME COOK BOOK. crust is done ; when done, spread on the whites of two eggs beaten to a froth and sweetened; brown slightly. Serve with pudding sauce of butter and sugar stirred to a cream, seasoned with lemon. LEMON SPONGE. Mrs. Lamkin. Two ounces of gelatine; pour over one pint of cold ■vsrater; let it stand fifteen minutes; add half a pint of boiling water, three-quarters of a pound of white sugar, and the juice of four lemons. When the gelatine is cold, before it begins to get firm, add the well beaten whites of three eggs ; beat the whole fifteen minutes, until the mix- ture is quite white, and begins to thicken ; then put in a mould first wet in cold water. LEMON SPONGE. Mrs. B. Two ounces isinglass, one and three-fourths pints water, three-fourths pound powdered sugar, juice of five lemons and rind of one, whites of three eggs ; dissolve isinglass in water, strain, add sugar, lemon rind-and juice ; boil the whole ten or fifteen minutes ; strain again ; let it stand until it is cold and begins to stiffen ; beat the whites of the eggs, add them to the mixture ; beat until quite white, then mould and let it stand. SNOW SOUFFLE. Mrs. J. Louis Harris, Keokuk, Iowa. Beat the whites of two eggs to a stiif froth ; dissolve VALUABLE RECIPES. 243 one-half box of gelatine in a little more than a pint of hot water, two cups of sugar, and the juice of two lemons ; when this is dissolved and cooled, stir into it the eggs you have beaten, beat the whole together until it is white and stiff; mould and pour around it soft custard. SNOW PUDDING. Mrs. L. H. Smith, Kenwood. One-third box Coxe's gelatine, soaked ten minutes in one-half pint cold water, and afterwards add one-half pint of boiling water, juice of two good sized fresh lemons, one and a half cups powdered sugar ; allow this to stand over a slow fire only a few moments ; then strain it through a flannel bag into your pudding dish and set away to cool ; then make a smooth custard of the yolks of five eggs with one and a half tablespoons corn starch ; sweeten to taste and cook it a few minutes in a tin pail, set in a kettle of boiling water, stirring all the while ; when sufficiently cooked and partially cooled, flavor with vanilla extract, and when entirely cold, pour this custard over the jelly already in the dish, and beat to a stiff" froth the whites of the five eggs, adding a little sugar and pour over the top of the custard, and it is then ready to serve. This is con- sidered an excellent and delicate dessert, if properly and carefully made. SNOW PUDDING. Mrs, Henry Stevens. One-half box of Coxe's gelatine, dissolve in one pint of boiling hot water ; when nearly cool, add one cup 244 THE HOME COOK BOOK. sugar, juice of one lemon ; strain ; add whites of three eggs beaten to a stiff froth ; beat all thoroughly, and quickly pour into mould. Serve cold with soft custard madq of the yolks of three eggs, and one-half teaspoon corn starch stirred in one pint of boiling milk ; sweeten to taste. APPLE OHAELOTTE. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Put a layer of bread, cut in thin slices and buttered on both sides, in the bottom of your pudding dish, and on this a layer of apples cut as for a pie, seasoning with sugar and a dust of cinnamon, alternating the bread and apples until the dish is filled, having a layer of bread on top. Bake one-half hour. If the bread is in dange^ of becoming too brown and hard, cover with a plate until the apples are cookod. To be eaten* with cream. OHAELOTTE EUSSE. M. One pint cream and whites of six eggs, beaten to a stiff froth separately ; one-fourth ounce of gelatine^soaked in one gill of milk ; set on back of stove to dissolve. Mix cream and eggs, sweeten and flavor; stir in gelatine; when cool, place on sponge cake and set away to get firm ; or you can use two eggs (whites) and one-half ounce gela- tine. Good. OHAELOTTE EUSSE; Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Whip one quart rich cream to a stiff froth, and drain VALUABLE RECIPES. 245 well on a nice sieve. To one scant pint of milk add six eggs beaten very light; make very sweet; flavor high with vanilla. Cook over hot water till it is a thick cus- tard. Soak one full ounce Coxe's gelatine in a very little water, and warm over hot water. When the custard is very cold, beat in lightly the gelatine and the whipped cream. Line the bottom of your mould with buttered paper, the sides with sponge cake or lady-fingers fastened together with the white of an egg. Fill with the cream, put in a cold place or in summer on ice. To turn out, dip the mould for a moment in hot water. In draining the whipped cream, all that drips through can be re- whipped. CHARLOTTE 'EUSSE. Mrs. J. P. Hoit. Take one quart of thin cream, sweeten and flavor; whip the cream until all in froth ; then take half box of gelatine, put in as little cold water as possible to soak, and set on the stove to melt; have the gelatine cool be- fbre putting into the cream ; have a dish already lined with cake or lady-fingers, pour the cream into it and set on ice until ready for use. CHAKLOTTE. Mrs. W. W. Kimball. One quart rich cream, three tablespoons of Madeira wine, whites of two eggs beaten to a stiff froth, one tea- cup of powdered sugar, half a box of gelatine dissolved in half a cup of sweet milk ; flavor with vanilla ; beat 246 THE HOME COOK BOOK. the cream and wine together; add the eggs, then the sugar, and last, the gelatine. EICE CHAKLOTTE. E. M. Walker. Blanch one-fourth pound of rice, and boil in one quart of milk, with a little sugar and vanilla ; when soft, let it cool, and then mix it with one pint of whipped cream ; oil a mould and fill with a layer of rice and preserves, or marmalade, alternately ; let it stand until stiff, and then turn it out. FEUIT BLANO MANGE. Mrs. T. V. Wadskier. Stew nice fresh fruit (whatever you may please, cher- ries and raspberries being the best), strain off the juice, and sweeten to taste ; place it over the fire in a double kettle until it boils ; while boiling, stir in corn starch wet with a little cold water, allowing two tablespoons of starch for each pint of juice ; continue stirring until sufficiently cooked, then pour into moulds wet in cold water ; set them away to cool. This, eaten with cream and sugar, makes a delightful dessert. ELAN C MANGE — AEEOWEOOT. Mrs. P. B. Ayer. Boil one quart of milk, reserving one gill to wet up your arrowroot with ; when it boils up, stir in two and a half tablespoons of arrowroot, and after a few minutes add one tablespoon crushed sugar, one tablespoon rose- water, and a little salt ; pour into moulds. VALUABLE KECIPES. 247 CHOCOLATE MANGE. S. D. F. One box of Coxe's gelatine dissolved in a pint of cold water, three pints of milk ; put over to boil, with one cup of French chocolate ; when the milk is just Scalded, pour in the gelatine ; sweeten to taste ; boil five minutes, then take from the fire, flavor with vanilla, pour into moulds. When cold, serve with powdered sugar and cream. MOUNT BLANC. Mrs. F. B. Orr. One-third box of gelatine, grated rind of two lemons, two cups of sugar, one pint boiling water ; before the mixture gets stiff, stir in the whites of five eggs beaten to a stiff froth. Eat with custard, boiled, made with yolks of eggs and one pint of boiling milk. Sweeten to taste, flavor with vanilla. Excellent. GELATINE BLANC MANGE. C. D. Adams. Soak one-half box Coxe's gelatine in one and a half pints of milk for an hour ; put it over a kettle of boiling water, and when it comes to the boil, add the beaten yolks of three eggs and four tablespoons of sugar, stirring it briskly for a few moments ; when partly cool, add the whites of the eggs, beaten very light ; flavor with vanilla, cool in a mould and serve with sugar and cream. 248 THE HOME COOK BOOK. A SIMPLE DESSERT. A. S. Ewing. Put a teacup of tapioca into suificient cold water ; boil until the lumps become almost transparent ; squeeze the juice of twoi lemons partially into the mixture, then slice them into it, sweeten or not, then eat when cold, with cream and sugar. JELLIED GKAPES. Mrs. A. M. Lewis. A very delicate dish, is made of one-third of a cup of rice, two cups of grapes, half a cup of water, and two spoons of sugar. Sprinkle the rice and sugar among the grapes, while placing them in a deep dish ; pour on the water, cover close and simmer two hours slowly in the oven. Serve cream as sauce, or cold as pudding. If served warm as pudding, increase slightly the proportion of rice and sugar. ICES. Glittering squares of colored ice, Sweetened with syrups, tinctured with spice ; Creams and cordials and sugared dates ; Syrian apples, Othmanee quinces. Limes and citrons and apricots. And wines that are known to Eastern princes. ******* And all that the curious palate could wish. Pass in and out of ths cedarn doors. — T. B. Aldrich. Use one part of coarse table salt to two parts of ice broken the size of a walnut. This should be firmly packed around the cream pail to the height of the freezer. For three pints of cream, one and a half pints of water should be poured over the ice in the freezer, and for every additional quart of cream one pint of water should be added to the ice after packing. When there is no ice- cream freezer convenient, ices may be frozen by putting the cream to be frozen in a tin pail with a close cover. This ice and salt for packing may be put in a larger pail and packed firmly around the pail of cream to be frozen. Let this stand to chill for twenty or thirty minutes, then remove the cover and stir the freezing mixture within (249) 250 THE HOME COOK BOOK. until Stiff. ^ Then re-pack, cover the whole closely with a woolen cloth or carpet and leave for an hour or two in a cool place. CUEEANT ICE. One pint of currant juice, one poupd of sugar, and one pint of water ; put in freezer, and when partly frozen add the whites of three eggs well beaten. OEANGE AND LEMOE" ICES. The rind of three oranges grated and steeped a few moments in a little more than a pint of water ; strain one pint of this on a pound of sugar and then add one pint of orange or lemon iuice; pour in the freezer, and when half frozen add -the whites of four eggs beaten to a stiff froth. OEANGE.ICE. Juice of six oranges, grated peel of three, juice of two lemons, one pint of sugar, one pint of water, and freeze r STEAWBEEEY ICE OEEAM. From "In the Kitchen.'' Mash with a potato pounder in an earthen bowl one quart of strawberries with one pound of sugar, rub it through the colander and add one quart of sweet cream and freeze. Very ripe peaches or coddled apples may be used instead of strawberries. VALUABLE EECIPES. 251 STEAAVBEREY ICE. From "In the Kitchen." Crush two quarts of strawberries with two pounds of sugar; let them stand an hour or more; squeeze them in a straining cloth, pressing out all the juice ; add to this an equal measure of water, and when half frozen, the whisked whites of eggs in the proportion of three to a quart. ICE CEEAM. M. One pint milk, yolks of two eggs, six ounces sugar, one tablespoon corn starch ; scald until it thickens ; when cool, add one pint whipped cream and the whites of two eggs, beaten stiff; sweeten, flavor and freeze. ICE CEEAM. Mrs. A. P. Iglehart. Have ready two quarts of rich cream ; take out three pints, and stir into the pint left one pound of white sugar ; flavor with lemon or vanilla ; after mixing this well add it to the three pints and freeze it. ICE CEEAM. Mrs. W. H. Ovington. Scald one quart of milk with one sheet of isinglass (broken), and a vanilla bean; when cool, strain, mix with one pint o# cream whipped to a froth ; sweeten to taste and freeze. 252 THE HOME COOK BOOK. TUTTI FEUTTI. From "In the Kitchen." A rich vanilla cream with candied cherries, raisins, currants and citron. The fruit must be added when the cream is nearly frozen. AN EXCELLENT DESSEKT. Mrs. J. Young Scammon. One can or twelve large peaches, two coffeecups of sugar, one. pint of water and the whites of three eggs; break the peaches with and stir all the ingredients to- gether; freeze the whole into a form ; beat the eggs to a froth. PEACHES A LA UDE. _ From " In the Kitchen." Make a syrup of a pound of sugar and half a pint of water ; when boiled and skimmed place in it five or six large peaches peeled and halved with the blanched kernels. Let them boil gently until clear, being careful not to break them. Skim them from the syrup and leave them to drain. Squeeze the juice of six lemons and add to the syrup with gelatine, which has been soaked half an hour and melted over boiling water. It must be used in the proportion of one ounce to a quart of syrup ; wet a mould, pour in the jelly to the depth of half an inch, and let it harden on the ice ; then fill the mould with alternate layers of peaches and half formed jellyijand place on the ice. Do not disturb it until perfectly stiff. VALUABLE EECIPKS. 253 MACEDOINE OF rRUIT. From " In the Kitchen." Wine jelly and fruit in alternate layers frozen together. The fruit may be of any and all sorts, and may be candied or preserved, or slices of pear, apple, etc. ; may be boiled in syrup and then drained ; the mould must be filled after the jelly has begun to form, but before it is stiff, and the first layer should be of jelly ; when filled, place the mould in salt and ice prepared as for freezing ice cream ; cover closely, and let it remain several hours. FRUITS. " Fruit of all kinds, in coat Rough, or smooth rind, or bearded husk, or shell, She gathers tribute large, and on the board Heaps with unsparing hand." — Paradise Lost. Bring me berries or such cooling fruit As the kind, hospitable woods provide. — COWPER. Fruits for preserving should be carefully selected, re- moving all that are imperfect. They are in the best con- dition when not fully ripe, and as soon as possible after they are picked. Small fruits should not be allowed to stand over night after they are picked, when they are to be preserved. Use only the finest sugar for preserving. When fruit is sealed in glass cans, wrap paper of two or three thicknesses around the cans. The chemical action of light will affect the quality of the preserves when per- fectly air-tight. With this precaution, glass cans are pre- ferable to any other for preserving fruit. One-half a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit is a good rule for canned fruit, although many housekeepers use but one-quarter of a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit. An excellent rule for canning the larger fruits, as (254^ VALUABLE EECIPES. 255 peaches, pears, etc., is to place them in a steamer over a kettle of boiling water, laying first a cloth in the bottom of the steamer ; fill this with the fruit and cover tightly. Let them steam for fifteen minutes, or until they can be easily pierced with a fork, (some fruits will require a longer time.) Make a syrup of sugar of the right consistency. As the fruit is steamed, drop each for a moment in the syrup, then place in the cans, having each one-half full of fruit, and then fill up with the hot syrup, then cover and seal. A SUGGESTION. For canning all large fruits, where no other method is given by contributors, the directions for canning large fruits are given in the recipe for Preserved Peaches. For canning all of the small fruits, follow the directions given in Preserved Cherries. They are both excellent. If less sugar is preferred, use one-quarter of a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit. The syrup should be prepared by adding a pint of water in your preserving kettle to each pound and a half of sugar, let it boil up gently and skim until perfectly clear, when it is ready for the fruit. SUGAEED FEUITS. Beat the white of the egg just enough to break, then dip fine stems of cherries or currants into the egg and then into powdered sugar, and dry on a sieve. AMBEOSIA. Mrs. S. W. Cheever, Ottawa, 111. Take one dozen sweet oranges, peel off the skins and 256 THE HOME COOK BOOK. cut them in slices ; take a. large sized fresh cocoanut, grate it on a coarse grater, then put alternate layers- of the orange and grated cocoanut in a glass dish, and sprinkle pulverized sugar over each layer of the cocoanut. This makes a beautiful and palatable dish. MOCK STKAWBEERIES AND CEEAM. Mrs. Bartlett. Take any quantity of sound ripe peaches, and well flavored eating apples, say in proportion of three peaches to one apple, peel the fruit nicely, cut a layer of peaches and then of apples, alternately ; they should be cut (not sliced) about the size of a large strawberry. When finished, cover the top with a layer of crushed sugar, then pour over all two or three spoons of cold water. Let the whole stand about two hours ; then mix the peaches and apples indiscriminately ; let stand one hour longer, serve with or without cream. The flavor of strawberry is more perfect without cream. BAKED APPLES. Pare as many apples as you wish of some nice variety, neither sweet nor sour ; core them by using an apple corer or a steel fork; set them in biscuit tins, and fill the cavities with sugar, a little butter, and some ground cin- namon, if you like ; set them in the oven and bake until done. BAKED PEAES. Mrs. J. B. Stubbs. Place in a stone jar, first a layer of pears (without par- VALUABLE KECIPES. 257 ing) ; then a layer of sugar, then pears, and so on until the jar is full. Then put in as much water as it will hold. Bake in oven three hours. Very nice. BAKED QUI^^CES. One dozen nice quinces, cored and well rubbed. Put in baking pans, and fill the centre with pulverized sugar. Bake and serve cold, with or without cream. PKESEEYED QUHSTCES. Mrs. Anna Marble. As you peel and core the quinces, throw them in cold water; strain them out of the water and make a syrup. To a pint of water, put a pound of sugar to every pound of fruit. When the syrup boils, put in fruit and boil until soft. Boil the syrup down as usual with other preserves. PEESEEVED PEACHES. Select peaches of fine quality and firm. If too ripe they are not likely to keep perfectly. Pare them and place them in a steamer over boiling water and cover tightly; an earthen plate placed in the steamer under the fruit will preserve the juices which afterwards may be strained and added to the syrup. Let them steam for fifteen minutes or until they can be easily pierced with a fork ; make a syrup of the first quality of sugar, and as the fruit is steamed drop each peach into the syrup for a few seconds, then take out and place in the cans ; when the cans are full, pour over the fruit the hot syrup and seal immediately. Inexperienced house- wives will do welL 17 268 THE HOME COOK BOOK. to remember, that the syrup should be well skimmed before pouring over the' fruit. We prefer the proportions of half a pound oif sugar to a pound of fruit for canning, although many excellent housekeepers use less. This rule is excellent for all of the large fruits— as pears, quinces, apples, etc. PEESEEVED PLUMS. Jennie June. Allow to every pound of fruit three-quarters of a pound of sugar; put into stone jars alternate layers of fruit and sugar, and place the jars in a moderately warm oven. Let them remain there until the oven is cool. If pre- pared at tea time let them remain until morning; then strain the juice from the plums, boil and clarify it. Re- move the fruit carefully to glass or china jars, pour over the hot syrup and carefully cover with egg, tissue paper, or thick white paper pasted, or bladder tied closely down. PEESEEVED CHEEEIES. Jennie June. Stone the fruit, weigh it, and for every pound take three-quarters of a pound of sugar. First dissolve the sugar in water in the proportion of a pint of water to a pound and a half of sugar ; then add the fruit and let it boil as fast as possible for half an hour, till it begins to jelly. As soon as it thickens put in pots, cover with brandied paper, next the fruit, and then cover closely from the air. VALUABLE EEOIPES. 259 CANNED CHEKEIES. Prepared in the same manner, allowing but half a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit ; after putting the fruit into the syrup let it scald (not boil hard), for ten or fifteen minutes and then can and seal. A few of the cherry stones put in a muslin bag and put into the syrup to scald with the fruit imparts a fine flavor ; they should not be put in the jars with the fruit. This method is excellent for use with all the small fmits, as strawberries, raspberries, and also plums. PKESEEYED OEANGE PEEL. Mrs. A. N. Arnold. Peel the oranges and cut the rinds into narrow shreds, boil till tender, change the water three times, squeeze the juice of the orange over the sugar; put pound to pound of sugar and peel ; boil twenty minutes all together. OITEON PEESEEYES. Carter. Cut the citron in thin slices, boil in water with a small piece of alum until clear and tender, then rinse in cold water. Make a syrup of three-fourths pound of sugar to a pound of citron ; boil a piece of ginger in the syrup ; then pour the citron in and let it boil for a few minutes. Put in one lemon to five of the fruit. SPICED PEACHES OE PEAES. Mrs. Henry M. Knickerbocker. To ten pounds good mellow peaches, use five pounds 260 tup: home cook book. sugar, one pint of good vinegar, and some whole cloves or cinnamon. Take the sugar, vinegar and cloves, and let them come to a boil, and turn over the fruit. This do three days in succession, and the last day put the fruit into the syrup, a few at a time, and let them just boil up. CANNED PINE APPLE. Mrs. F. L. Bristol. For six pounds of fruit when cut and ready to can, make syrup with two and a half pounds sugar and nearly three pints of water ; boil syrup five minutes and skitn or strain if necessary ; then add the fruit, and let it boil up ; have cans hot, fill and shut up as soon as possible. Use the best white sugar. As the cans cool keep tightening them up. CANNED STEAWBEEKIES. Miss Blaikie. After the berries are pulled, let as many as can be put carefully in the preserve kettle at once, be placed on a platter. To each pound of fruit add three-fourths of a pound of sugar ; let them stand two or three hours, till the juice is drawn from them ; pour it in the kettle and let it come to a boil, and remove the scum which rises ; then put in the berries very carefully. As soon as they come thoroughly to a boil, put them in warm jars, and seal while boiling hot. Be sure the cans are air tight. CANNED CUKKANTS. Mrs. Wicker. Put sufficient sugar to prepare them for the table, then boil them ten minutes and seal hot as possible. VALUABLE RECIPES. 261 TO CAN TOMATOES. Mrs. Edward Ely. Wash your tomatoes and cut out any places that are green or imperfect; then cut them up and put over to cook with a Httle salt; boil them till perfectly soft; then strain them through a colander ; turn them back to cook, and when they have come to boiling heat, pour them into stone jugs (one or two gallon jugs as you prefer). They will keep a day or two in winter if all are not used at a time; put the cork in, and have some canning cement hot and pour over the cork. The jug must, of course, be hot when the tomatoes are poured in. CEANBEKRY SAUCE. Mrs. Bartlett. One quart cranberries, one quart water, one quart sugar, stew slowly. PIC NIC LEMON BUTTER. Etta C. Springer. Grate the rind, add juice of three lemons, one pound sugar, two ounces butter, three eggs ; mix "together, let come to boil ; stit all the time. LEMON BUTTER. Mrs. D. S. Munger. Beat six eggs, one-fourth pound butter, one pound sugar, the rind and juice of three lemons; mix together and set it in a pan of hot vater to cook. Very nice for tarts, or to eat with bread. 262 THE HOME COOK BOOK. PEACH BUTTER Mrs. M. L. Take pound for pound of peaches and sugar; cook peaches alone until they become soft, then put in one- half the sugar, and stir for one-half an hour ; then the remainder of sugar, and stir an hour and a half. Season with cloves and cinnamon. TOMATO BUTTER. Mrs. Johnson. Nine pounds peeled tomatoes, three pounds sugar, one pint vinegar, three tablespoons cinnamon, one tablespoon cloves, one and one-half tablespoons allspice ; boil three or four hours until quite thick, and stir often, that it may hot burn. APPLE JELLY. Mrs. J. H. Brown. Take nice green apples that will cook nicely; quarter the apples without paring, put them in a pan or kettle and cover over with water, and keep them covered ; let them boil slowly until entirely done ; then put in a bag and drain (not squeeze) them. Put a pound of white sugar to a pint of juice. This is very easily made in the winter; is best made day before using. APPLE JELLY FOR CAKE. Mrs. P. B. Ayer. Grate one large or two small apples, the rind and juice of one lemon, one cup sugar ; boil three minutes. VALUABLE RECIPKS. 263 APPLE JELLY. Mrs. N. P. Iglehart. Take juicy apples (Ramboes, if possible) ; take the stem and top off, and wash them nicely, then cut up in quarters and put cold water on them, just enough to cover them : boil them soft, afterward strain them through a jelly bag; then take two pints at a time with two pounds of crushed sugar; boil twenty minutes, then do the same with the other juice ; to be economical, pare and core the apples ; don't strain so close, but that you can, by adding a little more water, use the apples for sauce or pies. CEAB APPLE JELLY AND JAM. Mrs. Ludlam, Evanston. Remove stems and blossoms from the apples ; let them scald and pour off the first water ; next put thern in plenty of water and let them cook slowly ; as they begin to soften dip off the juice for jelly, straining it through flannel. One pound of juice to a pound of sugar for jelly. Next add more water ; let apples stew very soft ; strain through a sieve, which takes out cores and seeds ; to this pulp add brown sugar, pound for pound ; it needs careful cooking and stirring. GKAPE JELLY. Anonymous. Allow fourteen ounces of sugar to a pint of juice ; boil fifteen minutes alone; add sugar and boil five minutes. 2C4r THE HOME COOK BOOK. LEMOJSr JELLY. Mrs. W. Guthrie. One paper of gelatine; let it stand one hour in warm water; then add one quart of boiling water, the juice of three or four lemons and a pint and a half of sugar. LEMON JELLY. Mrs. P. B. Ayer, Grate the outsides of two lemons, and squeeze the juice ; add one cup sugar, one-half of butter, yolks of three eggs ; beat the three last ingredients thoroughly, then add the juice and grated rind, and put it over your fire, stirring until thick ; mould to fancy. OEANGE JELLY. Mrs. J. P. Hoit. Soak one package of gelatine in one-half pint cold water for one hour; add the juice of three lemons, two pounds sugar and one quart boiling water ; when all are dissolved add one pint of orange juice ; strain carefully and set on ice till ready for use ; eight oranges usually make it. CUEEANT JELLY. Mrs. J. P. Hoit. Jam and strain the currents; to each pint of juice add one pound sugar; boil the juice fifteen minutes without sugar, and the same time after it is in ; strain into glasses. When pouring hot fruit or jelly in cans or glasses, wring a towel out of cold water, lay it on a table, and set the VALUABLE EECIPES. 2(15 cold cans upon it, pouring the boiling fruit into tliem. Care should be taken not to set two cans on the same spot without first wetting the towel. OURKANT JELLY. Mrs. C. \Vheeler. Use the currants when they first ripen ; pick them from the stems and put them on the stove in a stone jar, bruis- ing them with a wooden spoon ; then when warm, squeeze through a coarse cloth or flannel, and put the juice on in a new tin pan or porcelain kettle ; one quart of juice requires two pounds of sugar, or a pound to a pint ; boil fifteen minutes; to be a nice color, the currants should not come in contact with iron spoons or tin dishes, unless new and bright ; should be made quickly. It never fails to jelly good if the currants are not too ripe. The same method for jam, only do not strain the currants, but mash them well. Currants should not be dead ripe for jelly or jam, GOOSEBERRY JELLY. E. M. Walker. Boil six pounds of green unripe gooseberries in six pints of water (they must be well boiled, but not burst too much) ; pour them into a basin, and let them stand cov.^ ered with a cloth for twenty-four hours, then strain through a jelly bag, and to every pint of juice add one pound of sugar. Boil it for an hour, then skim it, and boil for one- half liour longer with a sprig of vanilla. 268 THE HOME COOK BOOK. LADY MAET'S JELLY. From " In the Kitchen.'' Put half a pint of calf's foot jelly in a mould that has been rinsed with cold water. When stiff and firm, place on it a small bunch of fine hot house grapes and above them two peaches and a nectarine, placing them very carefully, remembering that the whole is to be reversed when turned from the mould. When the fruit is tastefully arranged, add jelly that is partly formed ; pour it in slowly on both sides of the fruit, being sure that it fills all the interstices ; let it reach top of the fruit, and above this place two or three small glossy vine leaves and add a little jelly to keep them firm and fill the mould. It must be carefully turned out. To do this, either loosen from the moi^ld with a knife, or wrap the mould a moment in a towel wrung from hot water. If in this last mode a little melted jelly should settle around the form absorb it with a soft napkin. The fruit may be varied at pleasure. Plums or strawberries, large and firm ; nothing, however, from which the juice would come. OEAE^GE JELLY. From "In the Kitchen." One box of Coxe's gelatine soaked one hour m one pint of cold water ; add one pint of boiling water, one pound of sugar, and one pint of sour orange juice. Pour in moulds rinsed in cold water. COFFEE JELLY. From " In the Kitchen.'' One pint of clear coffee as strong as it is generally VALUABLE EECIPKS. 267 drank ; sugar to taste. Pour one gill of cold water on half an ounce of Coxe's gelatine, and let it soak fifteen minutes ; pour off the water and put the gelatine when well dissolved in the hot coffee ; wet a mould and pour it through a strainer. CIDEK JELLY. Mrs. George Frost, Detroit. One package of gelatine (one and one-half ounces,) the grated rind of one lemon and the juice of three; add one pint of cold water, and let it stand one hour ; then add two and one-half pounds of loaf sugar, three pints of boil- ing water, and one pint of cider, put into moulds and set in a cool place. COEN STAECH JELLY. One quart boiling water ; wet five tablespoons corn starch, one teacup sugar, a pinch of salt, with cold water, and one teaspoon lemon or vanilla extract for flavoring ; stir the mixture into the boiling water, boil five minutes, stir all the while ; pour into cups previously dipped in cold water. This quantity will fill six or seven cups. If wished richer, milk may be used instead of water. Good for invalids. TAPIOCA JELLY. Mrs. O. F. Avery. One cup tapioca, three cups cold water, juice of a lemon, and a pinch of the grated peel ; sweeten to taste ; soak the tapioca in water four hours ; set within a sauce 268 THE HOME COOK BOOK. pan of boiling water ; pour more lukewarm water over the tapioca, if it has absorbed too much of the liquid and heat, stirring frequently. If too thick after it begins to clear, put in very little boiling water. When quite clear, put in the sugar and lemon. Pour into moulds. Eat cold with cream, flavoring with rose water and sweetened. GELATINE JELLY. Dissolve one ounce package of sparkling gelatine in a pint of cold water for one hour ; add the rind and juice of two or three large lemons, one and a half pounds of sugar, then pour on this mixture one quart of boiling water, add one pint of orange or raspberry juice, "and pour into mould. This flavoring is very nice, and is to supersede the necessity of wine, which some consider indispensable in the same proportion. EHUBAEB JAM. Mrs. T. W. Anderson. Cut into pieces about an inch long, put a pound of sugar to every pound of rhubarb, and leave till morning; pour the syrup from it and boil till thickens ; then add the rhubarb and boil gently fifteen minutes ; put up as you do currant jelly in tumblers ; it will keep good a year. GOOSEBEREY JAM. Take what quantity you please of red rough ripe goose- berries, take half this quantity of lump sugar, break them well, and boil them together for half an hour, or more, if necessary. . Put into pots and cover with papers. VALUABLE EECIPES. 269 GEAPE JAM. Mrs. S. W. Cheever, Ottawa, 111. Take your grapes, separate the skin from the pulp, keeping them in separate dishes, put the pulps in your preserving kettle with a teacup of water ; when thor- oughly heated, run them through a colander to separate the seeds ; then put your skins with them and weigh ; to each pound of fruit, put three-fourths of a pound of sugar; add merely water enough to keep from burning; cook slowly three-fourths of an hour. This is a delicious jam, and worth the trouble. BLACKBEEEY JAM. M. A. T. To each pound of fruit add three-fourths of a pound of sugar ; mash each separately ; then put together and boil from one-half to three-fourths of an hour. EASPBEEEY JAM. To five or six pounds of fine red raspberries (not too ripe) add an equal quantity of the finest quality of white sugar. Mash the whole well in a preserving kettle ; add about one quart of currant juice (a little less will do) and boil gently until it jellies upon a cold plate ; then put into small jars ; cover with brandy paper, and tie a thick white paper over them. Keep in a- dark, dry and cool, place.* QUINCE JAM. Mrs. P. B. Ayer. Boil your fruit in as little water as possible, until soft 270 THE HOME COOK BOOK. enough to break easily ; pour off all the water and rub with a spoon until entirely smooth. To one pound of the ' quince add ten ounces of brown sugar, and boil twenty minutes, stirring often. PINE-APPLE JAM. Mrs. P. B. Ayer. Grate your pine-apple ; to one pound of the apple add three-fourths of a pound of loaf sugar ; boil ten minutes. OKANGE MAEMALADE. Mrs. J. Young Scammon. One dozen Seville oranges, one dozen common oranges, one dozen lemons ; boil the oranges and lemons whole in water for five hours ; scoop out the inside, removing the seeds ; cut the peel into thin slices with a knife, and add to every pound of pulp and peel a pint of water and two pounds of sugar. Boil twenty minutes. OEAISTGE MAEMALADE. Mrs. Wm. Brackett. Take seven oranges and five lemons ; boil in water two or three hours; throw away the water, and open the oranges and lemons, taking out the seeds and preserv- ing all the pulp and juice possible ; cut the rinds in small strips or chop them, but cutting in strips is better; weigh it all, when this is done ; then put three pounds of sugar to two of the pulp, and boil slowly till clear. CANDY. " Sweets to the Sweet." In order to understand the secret of candy making, it will be necessary to understand the action of heat upon sugar. The first step in this process is the reduction of sugar to a syrup, and which is done by adding water to sugar in the proportion of a pint and a half of water to three and a half pounds of sugar. When this boils up in the kettle we have simple syrup. A few more minutes of boiling, reduces the water which holds the sugar in a per- fect solution. At this stage, if the syrup is allowed to cool, the candy crystalizes on the sides of the dish, and we have rock candy. If, instead of allowing it to cool at this point, we allow it to reach a higher degree of heat, we shall find, in putting a spoon into the syrup, wlien drawing it out, a long thread of sugar will follow the spoon. It is at this point that confectioners bring the syrup for the greater number of candies produced. The greatest skill is required on the jiart of the operator to push the boiling sugar to this point without allowing it to reach the caramel state, when it beccmes bitter and dark and is no longer fit to use as a confection. The propor- tion of sugar and water for candy making will be three 272 THE HOME COOK BOOK. and one-half pounds of sugar to one and one-half pints of .water. To this add one teaspoon of cream of tartar, which will prevent the tendency of the sugar to assume the granular condition. To test the candy drop into cold water. When this becomes at once hars when properly made. VIEGmiA BISCUITS. Mrs. J. G. Hamilton. Rub a teaspoon of lard into a quart of flour, put the flour into a sifter and sift a teaspoon of soda with the VAI-UABLE EECIPES. 0<)5 flour, one teaspoon of sail, and one pint of buttermilk to moisten the flour ; after beating the mixture with a spoon until thoroughly mixed, turn it out on a biscuit board, work until smooth, cut it out with a cutter and bake with a steady heat. GEEEN MOUNTAIN BISCUITS. Mrs. Lamkin, Evanston. Three cups milk, two cups sugar, one cup butter ; make a stiff batter at night with two tablespoons yeast, one-half , the sugar and one-half the butter melted; in the morning add the other half of sugar and butter, and make it not quite as stiff as yeast bread ; two hours before tea make up the biscuits and set them to rise. GEAFTON BISCUITS. Boil two large, white potatoes, mash and pour boiling water on until of the consistency of gruel ; add one table spoon of sugar and one teacup full of yeast when suffi- ciently cool ; set away to rise ; when light heat one pint of milk until warm enough to melt two tablespoons of butter, add salt and flour enough to make a thick batter; set to rise , when light work twenty minutes ; set it to rise again, then roll out thin and spread melted butter ever; cut out with a tumbler and lay one-balf over the other prick in several places and set to rise ; then bake twenty minutes. FEE^^CH BISCUITS. Mrs. Lind. Two cups of butter, two cups of sugar, one egg, (or the 296 THE HOME COOK BOOK. whites of two,) half a cup of sour milk, half a teaspooiv of soda, flour to roll ; sprinkle with sugar. EAISED BISCUITS. Hannah Johnson ; endorsed by Mrs. A. N. Sheppard. Take one and one-half pints of milk, one spoon of lard, two of white sugar, and one yeast cake or one-half a pack- age of compressed yeast, and two quarts of flour; make a hole in the flour and put in all the ingredients ; set in a warm place to rise until morning, then mix all together and set to rise again ; when well risen, roll out rather thin, cut them out like biscuits, wet one edge with melted but- ter, and fold together like rolls ; when well risen, bake in a quick oven about twenty minutes. If made with com- pressed yeast, six and one-half hours will be sufficient to raise them in winter. TEA BISCUITS. Mrs. O. L. Parker. Make a good soda or cream biscuit ; mould it and roll it out half the thickness of common biscuit ; spread it over with three or four spoons of melted butter; then over this sprinkle half a coffee cup of best sugar ; roll up as compactly as you would a roll of jelly cake ; slice your roll off into inch thick slices ; lay these flat on your tins and bake as biscuits. They are very nice cold. TEA BISCUITS. Mrs. Norcross. One cup of hot water, two of milk, three tablespoons VALUABLE EECIPES. 297 of yeast ; mix thoroughly ; after it is risen, take two-thirds of a cup of butter and a little sugar and mould it ; then let it rise, and mould it into small cakes. TO MAKE STALE BEEAD OR CAXE FEESH. Mrs. M. G. Adams. Plunge the loaf one instant in cold water ; lay it upon a tin in the oven ten or fifteen minutes. Cake and rolls may be thus made almost as nice as if just baked, but must be eaten immediately. EAISED BISCUITS. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler. Make a sponge of one pint of milk, a little salt, and half a cake of compressed yeast (any other will do) ; when light, take a piece of butter the size of an egg, one quarter of a cup of sugar, and one egg ; beat them up together and stir into the sponge, adding flour to make a stiff batter ; stir it well and leave to rise ; then take with a spoon the light dough just enough for each biscuit and work softly into shape ; lay into pans and bake after standing a short time to rise again. GEAHAM BISCUITS. Mrs. A. W. D. Three cups of Graham flour, one of wheat flour, one egg, butter the size of an egg, one tablespoon of sugar, two of cream tartar, one of soda ; salt and milk to mix. 298 THE HOME COOK BOOK. GEAHAM BISCUITS. M. One quart of Graham flour, three and one-half heaping teaspoons of baking powder, one teaspoon of salt, one of butter ; make into soft dough with milk. GEAHAM BISCUITS. Mrs. Phelps. Three cups of Graham flour, one cup white flour, three cups milk, two tablespoons lard, one heaping tablespoon white sugar, one saltspoon of salt, one teaspoon of soda, two teaspoons of cream tartar ; mix and bake as you do the white soda biscuit. EYE BISCUIT. Mrs. Lamkin. Two cups rye meal, one and a half cups flour, one-third cup molasses, one egg, a little salt, two cups sour milk, two even teaspoons saleratus. BUNS. Two cofFeecups bread dough, two eggs, one cup sugar, spices, a few currants ; mould like rusk and let them rise before baking. BUNS. M. Take one large coffeecup of warm milk, one-quarter cake of yeast and salt ; make sponge ; let rise ; when light work into a dough, adding one-half teacup of sugar. VALUABLE KEOIPES. one egg, butter twice size of an egg ; let rise ; r: sheet; butter it; cut into strips three inches wid inches long; fold, not quite in the middle; let ri and bake ; when in a dough, if it rises before ready, push it down. Excellent. EUSKS. Mrs. P. B. Ayer. To one tumbler of warm milk add a half gill of yeast, three eggs and a coffeecup of sugar beaten together, two ounces of butter rubbed into flour, of which use only enough to enable you to mould it; let it rise over night; when very light, roll and put on tins to raise again, after which bake in a quick oven twenty minutes. EUSKS. Milk enough with one-half cup of yeast to make a pint; make a sponge and rise ; then add one and a half cups of white sugar, three eggs, one-half cup of butter ; spice to your taste; mould, then put in pan to rise. When baked, cover the tops with sugar dissolved in milk. SODA BISCUITS. M. To each quart of flour add one tablespoon of shorten- ing, one-half teaspoon of salt, and three and a half heap- ing teaspoons of Price's Cream Baking Powder; mix baking powder thoroughly through the flour, then add other ingredients. Do not knead, and bake quick. To use cream tartar and soda, take the same proportions 300 1 HE HOME COOK BOOK. without the baking powder, using instead two heaping teaspoons cream tartar and one of soda. If good they will bake in five minutes. BAKING POWDEK BISCUITS. Mrs. M. G. Adams. One quart flour, two teaspoons baking powder, one tablespoon butter (or lard), rubbed well together; mix with cold water, stirring quickly with a knife ; when well mixed add flour enough to mould out smoothly; roll about an inch thick, cut with a tumbler or tin cutter, place in pan and bake quickly in a well heated oven. If made properly they will be as light and white as foam. CEEAM BISCUITS. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Three heaping tablespoons of sour cream ; put in a bowl or vessel containing a quart and fill two-thirds full of sweet milk, two teaspoons cream tartar, one teaspoon of soda, a little salt ; pour the cream in the flour, mix soft and bake in a quick oven. STRAWBEERY SHORTCAKE. Make good biscuit crust; bake in two tins of same shape and size ; mix berries with plenty of sugar ; open the shortcake, butter well and place berries in layers, alternated with the crust ; have the top layer of berries and over all put charlotte russe or whipped cream. VALUABLE EECIPES. 301 STKAWBEEKT SHOETOAKE. Make a fine soda biscuit crust, and separate in three pieces, roll out about half an inch thick the size of your pans, which should be round (are best baked in jelly cake pans). As you place the crust in your pan, spread over melted butter, and then roll out another crust and place on this, butter this well and then roll out and put on your last crust, place in the oven and bake. As you take out the separate crusts may be lifted carefully ; butter each crust again and place the berries on, covering again with the layer of crust and then a layer of berries quite thick. Serve with clear or whipped cream and sugar. STEAWBERKY SHOETOAKE. Make a fine sponge cake and bake in very small round pans. When baked put on one layer of berries quite thick with sugar, and then cover with a layer of sponge cake and sift sugar over. The pans in which these are baked should be the size around of a saucer, and served as above described ; one cake to each person with cream handed. OEANGE SHOETOAKE. M. Make a nice shortcake ; spread in layers of sliced oranges with sugar and a little cream. To be eaten with sweetened cream. OEANGE SHORTCAKE. Mrs. A. A. Carpenter. Prepare the crust as you would for strawberry short- 302 THE HOME COOK BOOK. cake. Slide very fine and put down in sugar one dozen nice oranges. When you separate the crust butter it nicely and then add the oranges. APPLE SHOETOAKE. M. Season apple sauce with butter, sugar, etc. ; make a nice shortcake, open and butter it and put the apple sauce in layers. Serve with sweetened cream. ELLEN'S TEA CAKE. Two eggs, two tablespoons sugar, beaten together, three cups flour, one cup milk, one teaspoon soda, two of cream tartar; add last two tablespoons melted butter. Bake half an hour in square or round tin. To be eaten like Sally Lunn, hot with butter. SALLY LUNK Mrs. J. H. Brown. One quart of warm milk, one-half cup of butter, one of sugar, five eggs and one cup of yeast ; flour enough for stiff batter. Bake one hour. SALLY LUWI^. M. Take one pint of milk, three of flour, three eggs, a little salt, two tablespoons of butter, and two of sugar. Yeast enough to raise. VALUABLE RECIPES. 303 SALLY LUNN. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler. One pint of milk, a piece of lard or butter the size of an egg, warmed in the milk ; take from the stove and add three well beaten eggs, three pints of flour, one cup of yeast ; let it stand about three hours or until light ; then pour into flat pans without working or kneading, and let it stand an hour before baking; when baked, split and butter ; eat white hot. SALLY LimJS". Mrs. I. W. Preston, Highland Park. One quart of flour, butter the size of an egg, two eggs, two cups of milk, three spoons of baking powder, a pinch of salt ; rub the salt and baking powder dry with the flour ; melt the butter in one cup of milk ; add the other cold ; break in the eggs without beating ; stir all together hard, and bake twenty or thirty minutes in a hot oven. SALLY LUNN. Miss Annie Yocum, Cairo, III. Three teacups of light dough from hop yeast, three tea- spoons melted butter, one cup of sugar, three well beaten eggs, one-half teaspoon of soda dissolved and strained, a pinch of salt, and flour to make the dough stiff" enough to knead well ; set away to rise, and when light make out by rolling in cakes to fit your pans, one-half inch thick; place one in the pan, cover well with soft butter and lay another on top ; when light bake and serve at once. If properly buttered the layers will separate when baked. 304 THE HOME COOK BOOK. This bread we prize very highly for tea, warm, and any that may be left is good cold for breakfast. SQUASH CAKES. Miss C. Harris. One cup squash, one pint sour milk, one egg, a little salt, half a teaspoon soda, flour for a batter thick enough to fry. CEEAM CAKES. Six eggs, beaten separately, a half pint of sour cream, one pint of sweet milk, one arid one-half teaspoons of baking powder, flour enough to make a thin batter ; bake in cups. BEEAFAST CAKES. Mrs. Rice. One cup milk, one pint flour, three eggs, piece butter size of an egg, two teaspoons cream tartar, one teaspoon soda, one tablespoon butter. TEA CAKES. Mrs. E. S. Chesebrough. One quart of sifted flour, one pint sweet milk, butter , size [of egg, two eggs, two teaspoons sugar, one of soda, two of cream tartar; bake in small patty-pans. WHEAT GEMS. Mrs. W. H. Ovington. One pint milk, two eggs, flour enough to make a batter VALUABLE RECIPES. 305 not very stiff, two large spoons melted butter, yeast to raise them, a little soda and salt. Bake in gem irons. GEMS. Mrs. H. P. Stowell. A heaping tea saucer of Graham flour, one-half teacup of white flour, mix with sweet milk or water until some- what thicker than griddle-cake batter. In the meantime, have your gem-irons a little greased, heating on top of the stove. Bake in a hot oven and in twenty-five minutes you have a dish for your breakfast that is rightly named. Have tried them with and without salt, and we think the latter very preferable. GEAHAM GEMS. Mrs. E. R. Harmon. One quart of sweet milk, one cup syrup, one teaspoon soda, two teaspoons cream tartar, little salt ; mix cream tartar in Graham flour, soda in the milk, and make it as stiff with the flour as will make it drop easily from the spoon into muffin rings. POP OYEES. Mrs. Andrews. One cup milk, one cup flour, one egg, beaten sepa- rately. Bake in cups, a tablespoon to each cup. POP OYEES. S. S. Pierce. One cup flour, one cup milk, one egg, piece butter size of a walnut, a little salt ; to be baked in scallops in a very quick oven This rule makes twelve. 20 306 THE HOME COOK COOK. POP OYEES. Mrs. King. Three cups of milk, three ctips flour, three eggs, a little salt, one tablespoon melted butter put in the last thing ; two tablespoons to a puff. COEN POP OVEKS. Mrs. A. T. Hall. One pint sweet milk scalded ; stir into the hot milk a coffeecup of corn meal, a piece of butter half the size of an egg, a little salt, three eggs well beaten, and stirred in the last thing. No soda. EOSETTES. Mrs. A. S. Ewing. Mix a quart of milk into a pint of flour, beat the whites and yolks of three eggs -separately, one tablespoon of butter cut fine into the mixture, half teaspoon salt ; add the stiffly beaten whites of eggs last of all. Bake in well warmed and greased rosettes or mufSn pans. PUFFS. Mrs. Wren. Two eggs beaten separately, two cups of milk, two cups of flour, butter the size of a walnut ; drop into hot irons and bake quickly. YPSILANTI COGOANUT PUFFS. One grated cocoanut, a little over one-half pound pul- verized sugar stirred in the whites of three eggs, beatet , VALUABLE EKOIPES. 307 light ; drop in small cakes on a dripping pan. Bake in a very quick oven. PUFFS. Four cups of milk, four cups of flour, four eggs, butter the size of two eggs ; put in cups half full, and bake for tea or breakfast. GEAHAM PUFFS. Mrs. O. S. Wheelock. One pint of Graham flour, one egg, teaspoon salt, one tablespoon baking powder ; wet with milk or water. FRITTERS. Mrs. Brown. One pint sweet milk, four eggs, one quart flour and three teaspoons baking powder sifted together. Serve warm with maple syrup. FRITTERS. Mrs. E. R. Harmon. Four eggs, one quart of milk, a little salt ; stir a little stiffer than pancakes, and fry in hot lard. FRITTERS. M. One pint boiling water, one tablespoon butter, one pint flour, stirred into water while boiling ; let it cool a little, and add four eggs, one at a time. Fry in hot lard when the steam rises. 308 THE HOME COOK BOOK. FEITTEKS OR PUFFS. M. One pint milk in sauce-pan ; when it boils, stir in flour until very thick; when cold, mix with six well-beaten eggs, one tablespoon sugar, one-half nutmeg, grated peel of small lemon, one tablespoon brandy. Beat well for fifteen minutes. It should be thicker than pancake bat- ter. Drop into hot lard. Sprinkle with powdered sugar or spiced sugar. FEENCH FEITTEKS. Beat the yolks of four eggs very light, add to them one pint of milk, cut some slices of baker's bread about an inch thick, cutting off all the crust and lay them in the milk about fifteen minutes. Have your griddle hot, and fry the slices a nice brown, using fresh lard for the pur- pose. Beat the whites of the eggs very light, and stir into them one cup of powdered sugar, and flavor with lemon ; to be used as sauce with the fritters. Some prefer liquid pudding sauce. PAESNIP FEITTEES. M. One-half cup milk and a tablespoon of butter ; boil five or six medium sized parsnips till tender, mash very fine, add two eggs, three tablespoons flour and a little salt; fry a delicate brown in hot drippings. Serve on a hot dish, or napkin. VALUABLE EECIPES. 309 GEEEJSr COEN FKITTEES. Mrs. Andrews. Twelve ears of corn grated, four eggs, tablespoon of butter, salt, very little flour ; drop a spoonful of the batter into boiling lard. APPLE FEITTEES. M. One teacup of sweet milk, one tablespoon of sweet light dough dissolved in milk, three eggs beaten separately, one teaspoon of salt, one and one-half teacups of flour, one tablespoon of sugar, and the grated peel of a lemon, peeled apples sliced without the core ; drop into hot lard with a piece of apple in each one ; sprinkle with powdered or spiced sugar. Let them stand after making and they will be lighter. Good. SPICED SUGAE FOE FEITTEES. M. One tablespoon of finely powdered and mixed spices (sifted), three tablespoons of powdered sugar well mixed with spices (two-thirds cinnamon and one-third nutmeg and cloves). GEEEN COE]^ CAKES. A. M. G. Twelve ears of sweet corn grated, one teaspoon of salt, one egg and a little more than a good tablespoon of flour. If the corn is not young and milky, very little or no flour 310 THE HOME COOK BOOK. , need be used. Drop the cakes from the spoon into hot lard or butter. Oyster plant fritters may be made in the' same way — first boiling and mashing the oyster plant; six plants would be sufficient for one egg. &RAHAM MUFFINS. S. L. S. One coffee cup of sour milk, one tablespoon of sugar or molasses, one egg, one scant teaspoon of soda, one- half of salt, enough Graham flour to make a stiff batter ; sweet milk and two teaspoons of baking powder can be used instead of sour milk and soda. Bake in muffin pans twenty minutes. MUFFINS. Mrs. \Vm. H. Low. One tablespoon of butter, two tablespoons sugar, two eggs — stir all together ; add one cup of sweet milk, three teaspoons of baking powder, flour to make a stiff batter. Bake twenty minutes in a quick oven. MUFFINS. From a Southern Lady. Beat four eggs into a full tablespoon of lard, mix into them one and one-half pints sour milk, effervescing with a teaspoon of soda ; add enough flour to make the con- sistency of pound cake. Bake in heated rings. MUFFINS. Mrs. Rice. Three cups flour, one-half cup sugar, two cups milk, VALUABLE EECIPES. 311 large spoon butter rubbed to a cream with the sugar, two eggs, one-half teaspoon soda, one teaspoon cream tartar, one teaspoon salt. Bake one-half hour. MUFFINS. Mrs. Bartlett. One pint sweet milk, one-half cup yeast, one-half cup butter, one-half cup sugar, one teaspoon salt ; stir a little thicker than fritters ; set over night. MUFFINS. Mrs. C. M., Winnetka. Butter size of an egg, three tablespoons of sugar, three eggs, (yolks beaten to a cream,) one-half cup sweet milk, flour to make a stiff batter ; add whites of eggs well beaten. Bake in muffin pans in a hot oven. MUFFINS. M. One-half cup sugar, one-half cup milk, two eggs, two tablespoons butter, two heaping teaspoons baking powder, flour enough to make thick as sponge cake. MUFFINS. Mrs. Hoge. Five eggs, one quart flour, two small cups of milk, two tablespoons melted butter, four tablespoons sugar, three tablespoons baking powder and a little salt. CINNAMON MUFFINS. Mrs. N. C. Gridley, Evanston. One teacup sour milk, one cup not quite half full sugar, 312 THE HOME OOOK BOOK. one teaspoon soda, one tablespoon cinnamon, one egg ; stir thick with flour and bake in gem irons. MUFFINS. Mrs. P. B. Ayer. No. I. — One cup milk, three teaspoons baking powder, two tablespoons cream, one egg, flour enough to make a stiff batter ; bake in rings. No. 2. — Melt one-half teacup of butter in a pint and a half of milk, one gill of yeast, four eggs well beaten, and flour enough to make a stiff batter. When light, bake in rings. GEAHAM MUFFINS. Lake Forest. One and a half pints of Graham flour, one-half pint wheat flour. Take a pint cup three-fourths full of sour milk ; add sour cream until full, soda to sweeten, and lit- tle molasses and little salt. Bake in gem irons, and have the irons hot before turning in the mixture. GEAHAM MUFFINS. Mrs. L. Cornell. One egg, butter half size of an egg, three cups Graham flour, three teaspoons baking powder, a pinch of salt, one- half pint milk, or milk and water; to be of thickness of ordinary cake batter. Corn cake may be made same way only use two cups of flour and one of meal, instead of the Graham flour, as above. Excellent. VALUABLE KECIPES. 313 GEAHAM MUFFINS. Mrs. L. J. Tilton. One egg, half a cup of sugar, piece of butter the size of an egg, one cup milk, three teaspoons baking powder, Graham meal to make a batter thick enough to drop in rings without spreading; thoroughly mix the baking pow- der with the meal ; melt the butter and mix well with the sugar and egg ; add the milk and pjradually stir in the meal. GEAHAM MUFFINS Mrs. J. H. Brown. One egg, one and a half cups of sour milk, one tea- spoon saleratus, a little salt, two tablespoons of melted lard or butter, two tablespoons molasses ; make stiff enough to drop from spoon. Bake fifteen minutes. EYE MUFFINS. Mrs. Bartlett. Two cups of rye, one of flour, one of sugar, one egg, one teaspoon of soda, and a little salt ; mix quite stiff with sour milk. INDIAN MEAL MUFFINS. Two cups of Indian meal scalded with as little water as possible, one coffeecup of flour, one teacup of sweet milk, one tablespoon of shortening, one-half cup of brown sugar, a small cup of yeast ; mixed over night. 314 THE HOME COOK BOOK. CORN MEAL MUFFINS. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Soak a pint of meal over night in sweet milk, just enough to wet it ; in the morning dissolve half a teaspoon of soda in a tablespoon of boiling water, then fill the cup with buttermilk or sour milk; add this with the yolks of two eggs and a tablespoon of thick cream or melted but- ter to the meal, also half a teaspoon of salt. Have your rings or muffin frames hot, and bake twenty minutes. If preferred, a shallow pan can be used. WAFFLES. Yolks of three eggs, one quart milk, half cup melted butter, one heaping teaspoon baking powder. After- wards add the whites of the eggs and flour enough to make a thin batter. WAFFLES. M. One pint sour milk, three tablespoons melted butter three eggs, beaten separately, one teaspoon soda, a little salt, flour enough to make a thick batter. EICE CROQUETTES. C. T. C, Evanston, 111. Boil one cup of rice in one quart of milk or water, till tender; while warm add a piece of butter the size of an egg, two eggs; make into rolls, dip them in cracker crumbs and fry them in lard or butter. VALUABLE EEdPES. 315 EIOE CROQUETTES. Mrs. N. C. Gridley, Evanston. To abojit one quart of boiled rice, add the yolks of three eggs and a little salt; make it up into balls, roll them in flour and fry them in hot lard, as you would doughnuts. EICE CROQUETTES. One teacup rice, one pint milk, one pint water, a little salt; butter a tin, put in the mixture and swell on the stove, where it will not quite simmer. When dry, add two eggs, beaten light, with two tablespoons of sugar and one of butter. Have ready cracker crumbs spread on a board thickly. Make a roll of the rice in the crumbs ; drop in hot lard and brown. RICE CROQUETTES. Mrs. Anna Marble. Rice boiled in milk and flavored with lemon or orange flower water ; add sugar and eggs ; when cold, cut in small pieces; roll them in flour dipped in egg, then roll again in bread crumbs, fry in hot fat, as you would dough- nuts. CORN MEAL PONES. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Scald a quart of milk ;' stir into one pint of meal six eggs beaten separately, a little salt, one tablespoon flour, two teaspoons baking powder; bake in white cups or small bowls and send to the table in the cups, so they may be hot to be turned out on to the plate and eaten with butter or syrup. For tea or breakfast. 316 THE HOME COOK BOOK. GOOD BEEAKFAST CAKES. Mrs. J. H. Brown. Three eggs well beaten, two and a half teacups of flour, one pint of sweet milk, a little salt; make a batter of these, put in cups or rings and bake in a quick oven. BANNOCKS. M. One pint corn meal, pour on it boiling water to thor-' oughly wet it ; let it stand a few minutes ; add salt and one egg and a little sweet cream, or a tablespoon melted butter. Make into balls and fry in hot lard. INDIAN BANNOCKS. R. A. Sibley. One quart Indian meal, with a little salt, wet it quite soft with boiling water or milk — must be boiling; wet your hands ; pat them out in small flat cakes ; fry in hot lard, not enough to cover them. Cook one side first then turn. Cheap and good for breakfast. STELLA'S COEN CAKE. Mrs. F. M. Cragin. No. I. — One pint milk, one pint meal, two eggs, a piece of butter size of an egg, one and a half teaspoons cream tartar, three-fourths teaspoon soda, one-half teaspoon salt, a little sugar. No. 2. — One pint sour milk, two eggs, one pint meal, one tablespoon melted butter, one teaspoon saleratus. No. 3. — One pint sour milk, one-half pint water, one VALrABLE EECIPES. 317 quart meal, three tablespoons melted lard, one teaspoon saleratus, one teaspoon salt. GEEEN COKN CAKES. Mrs. A. M. One pint of grated sweet corn, three tablespoons milk, one teacup of drawn buttjjr, one teaspoon salt, one-half teaspoon black pepper, if liked one egg. Drop by the tablespoon in hot butter. Fry from ten to twenty minutes. CORE^ CAKES. Mrs. B. F. Adams. Three cups Indian meal, one cup flour, two cups sweet milk, one cup sour milk, one egg, teaspoon salt, teaspoon soda. Bake half an hour. This, with half a cup molasses and one cup suet, makes a nice pudding. Steam four hours. COEJN CAKES. Mrs. Pulsifer. One pint of milk, one-half pint of corn meal, two table- spoons of flour, two eggs, one tablespoon of lard or but- ter, three tablespoons of sugar, one-half teaspoon baking powder. Beat well. COEN CAKES. S. S. Pierce. One pint meal, one pint flour, one cup white sugar, two eggs, piece of butter size small egg; melt the butter; teaspoon soda, two teaspoons cream tartar, salt, sweet milk ; made as thick as griddle cakes. 318 THE HOME COOK BOOK. GOOD COEN CAKES. Mrs. Wm. C. Harris. ^ Scald about a pint of corn meal at night, adding a little salt ; in the morning stir in one egg, and milk enough to make it thin enough to drop from a spoon on a tin. COKN C^KES. E. E. Marcy. One and one-half cups of Indian meal, one-half cup fine flour, one-half of molasses, one of milk, one-half teaspoon soda, a little salt. For weak stomachs, it is an improvement to add a little ginger. GREEN COKN GEIDDLE CAKES. Mrs. C. M. Dickerman, Rockford, 111. Twelve ears corn grated, four eggs, one cup sweet milk (cream is better) ; one cup flour, three tablespoons butter, if you use milk, none if you use cream ; a little salt, Bake on a griddle. GEIDDLE CAKES. Mrs. Orson Smith. Two quarts warm water, one teaspoon salt, one cup flour, one cup corn meal, one-half teacup yeast, two eggs well beaten and added the last ; raise over night. EICE CAKES. Mrs. Lunt, Evanston. One cup soft boiled rice, add one-half cup milk, the yolks of three eggs, two tablespoons flour, a, little salt; VALUABLE RECIPES. 319 then beat the whites to a stiff froth and mix with the rest. Fry on a buttered griddle as soon as possible after adding the whites of the eggs. Nice for invalids. SQUASH GEIDDLE CAKES. Mrs. Rice. One cup squash, two eggs, one and a half pints milk, salt to flavor, flour to make it of a consistency for frying ; add a little soda dissolved in milk. QUICK BUCKWHEAT CAKES.' One quart of buckwheat flour, one-half a teacup of corn meal or wheat flour, a little salt, and two tablespoons of syrup. Wet these with cold or warm water to a thin bat- ter, and add lastly four good tablespoons of baking powder. BUCKWHEAT CAKES. Lake Forest. One quart buckwheat flour, four tablespoons yeast, one teaspoon salt, one handful Indian meal, two tablespoons molasses, not syrup. Warm water enough to make a thin batter ; beat very well and set in a warm place. If the ■ batter is the least sour in the morning, add a little soda. COKN MEAL GKIDDDE CAKES. Lake Forest, Soak three-fourths of a pint of meal over night in three cups of sour milk and one of sour cream ; in the morning add one pint of flour, a little salt and two eggs; soda to sweeten the mixture. 320 THE HOME COOK BOOK. CORN MEAL GEIDDLE CAKES. M. One pint of corn meal, two tablespoons melted butter, one' teaspoon salt, two eggs, one tablespoon sugar, sour milk enough to make batter; saleratus (if you should get in a little two much it is easily remedied by adding a few drops of vinegar). OAT MEAL GEIDDLE CAKES. Mrs. J. M. Wetherell, Englewood, 111. One cup oat meal, one cup flour, one teaspoon sugar, one teaspoon baking powder, one-half teaspoon salt; sift the baking powder in with the flour; add cold water to _make a batter of the consistency of buckwheat cakes; beat very well together and bake immediately. This recipe is sufficient for a family of three. M[JSH. Indian or oat meal mush is best made in the following manner : Put fresh water in a kettle over the fire to boil, , and put in some salt; when the water boils, stir in handv, ful by handful corn or oat meal until thick enough for use. In order to have excellent mush, the meal should be allowed to cook well, and long as possible while thin, and before the final handful is added. When desired to be fried for breakfast, turn into an earthen dish and set away to cool. Then cut in slices when you wish to fry ; dip each piece in beaten eggs and fry on a hot griddle. OAT MEAL GEUEL. Take two tablespoons of oat meal, pour on it a pint of VALUABLE ItECIPES. 321 cold water; let it stand half a day, then pour it through a sieve and boil well one-quarter of an hour, stirring all the time ; season according to taste. The coarse meal to be rejected. Good for invalids or children. WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. Ten eggs are equal to one pound.. One pound of brown sugar, one pound of white sugar, powdered or loaf sugar broken, is equal to one quart. One pound of butter, when soft, is equal to one quart. One pound and two ounces Indian meal is equal to one quart. One pound and two ounces of wheat flour is equal to one quart. Four large tablespoons are equal to one-half gill. Eight large tablespoons are equal one gill. Sixteen large tablespoons are equal to one-half pint. A common sized wine glass holds half a gill. A common sized tumbler holds half a pint. Four ordinary teacups of liquid are equal to one quart. 21 CAKES. But then my fare was all so light and delicate ; The Fruit, the Cakes, the Meats so dainty frail, They would not bear a bite — no, not a munch — But melted away like ice. t- Hood. SUGGESTIONS. In making Cake, it is very desirable that the materials be of the finest quality. Sweet, fresh butter, eggs and good flour are the first essentials. The process of putting together is also quite an important feature, and where other methods are not given in this work by contributors; it would be well for the young housekeeper to observe the following directions : Never allow the butter to oil, but soften it by putting it in a moderately warm place before , you commence other preparations for your cake ; then put it into an earthen dish (tin, if not new, will discolor your cake as you stir it), and add your sugar ; beat the butter and sugar to a cream ; add the yolks of the eggs, then the milk, and lastly the beaten whites of the eggs and flour Spices and liquors may be added after the yolks of the eggs are put in, and fruit should be put in with the flour. The oven should be pretty hot for small cakes, and (322) VALUABLE EECIPES. 323 moderate for larger. To ascertain if a large cake is suffi- ciently baked, pierce it with a broom-straw through the centre ; if done, the straw will come out free from dough ; if not done, dough will adhere to the straw. Take it out of the tin about fifteen minutes after it is taken from the oven (not sooner), and do not turn it over on the top to cool. ICING. The following rules should be observed where boiled icing is not used : Put the whites of your eggs in a shallow earthen dish and allow at least quarter of a pound or sixteen table- spoons of the finest white sugar for each egg. Take part of the sugar at first and sprinkle over the eggs ; beat them for about half an hour, stirring in gradually the rest of the sugar; then add the flavor. If you use the juice of a lemon, allow more sugar. Tartaric acid and lemon juice whitens icing. It may be shaded a pretty pink with straw- berry juice or cranberry syrup, or colored yellow by put- ting the juice and rind of a lemon in a thick muslin bag and squeezing it hard into the egg and sugar. If cake is well dredged with flour after baking, and then carefully wiped before the icing is put on, it will not run and can be spread more smoothly. Put/rosting on to the cake in large spoonfuls, commencing over the center; then spread it over the cake, using a large knife, dipping it occasionally in cold water. Dry the frosting on the cake in a cool, dry place. 324 THE HOME COOK BOOK. FEOSTING. Mrs. Louise Dewey. One pint of granulated sugar, moisten thoroughly with water sufficient to dissolve it when heated; let it boil until it threads from the spoon, stirring often ; while the sugar is boiling, beat the whites of two eggs till they are firm ; then when thoroughly beaten, turn them into a deep dish, and when the sugar is boiled, turn it over the whites, beating all together rapidly until of the right consistency to spread over the cake. Flavor with lemon if preferred. This is sufficient for two loaves. FEOSTIJJ^G FOE OAKE. Ella Guild. One cup frosting sugar, two tablespoons of water boiled together; take it off the stove and stir in the white of one egg beaten to a stiff froth ; stir all together well; then frost your cake with it, and you will never want for a nicer frosting than this. ICE CEEAM ICING FOE "WHITE CAKE. Mrs. P. B. Ayer. Two cups of pulverized sugar boiled to a thick syrup; add three teaspoons vanilla ; when cool, add the whites of two* eggs well beaten, and flavored with two teaspoons of citric acid. ICING. Mrs. H. P. Stowell. One pound pulverized sugar, pour over one tablespoon VALUABLE EEOIPES. 325 cold water, beat whites of three eggs a little, not to a stiff froth ; add to the sugar and water ; put in a deep bowl ; place in a vessel of boiling water and heat. It will become thin and clear, afterward begin to thicken. When it becomes quite thick remove from the fire and stir while it becomes cool till thick enough to spread with a knife. This will frost several ordinary sized cakes. CHOCOLATE FKOSTING. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler. Whites of two eggs, one and one-half cups of fine sugar, six great spoons of grated chocolate, two teaspoons of vanilla; spread rather thickly between layers and on the top of cake ; best when freshly made. It should be made like any frosting. BLACK FKUIT CAKE. Mrs, C. H. Wheeler. Three-fourths pound butter, one pound sugar (brown), one pound flour, two pounds currants, three pounds raisins (seeded), one-half pound citron, one-fourth pound almonds, eight eggs, one nutmeg, cloves and cinnamon, one wine glass of brandy. The raisins are better to be soaked in brandy over night. BLACK CAKE. Mrs. G. F, DeForrest. Two pounds of flour, two pounds sugar, two pounds butter, eight pounds raisins, four pounds currants, one pint brandy, two pounds citron, twenty-four eggs, two 326 THE HOME COOK BOOK, ounces nutmeg, two teaspoons of cloves; add a little molasses to make it more moist and black. This makes two very large loaves, baked in tin pans or hoops. For weddings. Splendid. MOTHEK DOECHESTEE'S BLACK CAKE. Mrs. Kate Johnson.' ' One pound sugar, one pound butter, one pound flour, ten eggs, three pounds raisins, three pounds currants, one-half pound citron, two teaspoons cinnamon, one tea- spoon cloves, two teaspoons nutmeg, one wine glass of brandy or alcohol. Stone the raisins and pour the liquor over them, and cover tight over night. Brown the flour to darken the cake. Bake from two to four hours. Will keep good two or three years. FEUIT CAKE. Mrs. N. C. Gridley, Evanston. One pound flour, one pound brown sugar, three-quar- • ters of a pound of butter, three pounds seeded raisins, one pound currants, one pound citron, one-quarter pound almonds, blanched and powdered in rose water; one nutmeg, one wine glass brandy, ten eggs. Stir butter and sugar to a cream, then add whites and eight yolks of eggs, beaten separately. Stir in the flour, then spices, and add the fruit just before it is put in the pans. Bake slowly. This cake will keep two years. CHEAP FEUIT CAKE. Mrs. Earle, Peoria, 111. Three- teacups flour, one coffee cup of sugar, three-. VALUAnLE EEOIPES. 327 quarters of a teacup of butter, three-quarters of a teacup of milk, three eggs, raisins and currants, one teaspoon of baking powder. FRUIT CAKE. Mrs. W. Guthrie. ' Twelve eggs, one pound flour, one pound sugar, one pound butter, two pounds raisins, two pounds currants, one pound citron, two tablespoons cinnamon, four nut- megs, one cup sweet milk, one cup molasses, one tea- spoon cream tartar, one teaspoon soda, one gill brandy. Bake two hours or more. FRUIT CAKE. Louisa Churchill. One pound of sugar, one pound of butter, one pound flour, four pounds raisins, two pounds currants, one and one-half pounds citron, one gill brandy, one cup sour cream, one nutmeg, one teaspoon soda. FRUIT CAKE. Mrs. Creole. One pound of flour, one pound sugar, one pound but- ter, three pounds raisins, three pounds currants, one pound citron, two grated lemons, ten eggs, three nutmegs, three ounces cinnamon, one gill brandy, one gill wine. Bake two and one-half hours in a ten quart pan. FARMER'S FRUIT CAKE. Mrs. W. P. Cragin. Take three cups of dried apples, wash them and soak 328 THE HOME COOK BOOK. over night in water. In the morning drain off the water and chop them ; add two cups of molasses and let them simmer two hours, or until the molasses is all absorbed. Let them cool before adding them to the other ingre- dients, then take one cup of brown sugar, three-fourths cup butter, two eggs, one cup milk, one small teaspoon soda, one and one-half teaspoons cream tartar, one large tablespoon cloves, one of allspice, two of cinnamon, one nutmeg, the grated rind of two lemons and the juice of one, one-fourth pound of citron, one cup of raisins, flour enough to make it the consistency of cup cake. Bake in a moderate oven. DRIED APPLE CAKE. Mrs. G. W. Gage. One cup dried apples soaked over night, then steamed till soft ; put them into a cup of molasses and simmer slowly till well cooked ; when cool add one egg, one-half cup of sugar, one-half cup of butter, one-half cup of milk, two and a half cups of flour, one teaspoon soda, two of cream tartar and spice to taste. PHILADELPHIA PLUNKETS. Mrs. J. A. Ellis. One pound of sugar, one half-pound of butter, six eggs beaten separately ; one pound of corn starch. Bake in small tins. NEW ENGLAND ELECTION CAKE. Mrs. John King, Jr. Take three pounds sifted flour, leaving out a pint to put VALUABLE EECIPES. 329 in with fruit, and mix in warm milk till it is a stiff batter ; weigh one and a half pounds of sugar, one pound butter; mix them to a cream, then mix one-half this with the batter of milk and flour, and one-half pint good home- made yeast ; beat very thoroughly together ; when light, which will take several hours in winter, better to mix at night and stand in a warm place till next morning, add the remainder of butter and sugar with six eggs and one pound raisins, one glass brandy, cinnamon, mace or nut- meg, as the taste, and a little soda; if in season of scarcity of eggs, it is very good without any ; should rise the second time before pouring in pans for baking. The more such cake is beaten the finer and lighter it will be. A PLAIN FKUIT CAKE. Mrs. Ada Sturtevant, Delavan, Wis. One cup of butter, three of brown sugar, three of sour milk, six of flour, two eggs, nutmeg, cinnamon and cloves, one and one-half teaspoons soda; two cups of raisins and currants improve it. Add the fruit the last thing. Bake in two tins. FRUIT CAKE. Mrs. E. H. Dennison, One-half cup of butter, one-half cup of brown sugar, one-half cup of molasses, one-half cup of sour milk, the yolks of four eggs, one-half teaspoon of soda, one tea- spoon of cream tartar, one and one-half cups of flour, one cup of raisins chopped fine, one cup of currants, one teaspoon each of cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg ; whites can be used for deliqate cakes. 330 THE HOME COOK BOOK. DOUGH OAKE. Mrs. W. P. Nixon. One pint bowl of dough as it is ready to mould into loaves, four eggs beaten separately, one cup of butter, two cups of white sugar, one tablespoon of cinnamon, one nutmeg, one-half teaspoon of soda, one pint bowl of stoned raisins ; mix by hand ; put the dough in a large bowl ; first work in the butter well, then the sugar and spice, next the yolks, then the whites of the eggs, then the soda, first dissolved in a little warm water ; lastly, the raisins. Bake about as long as you would bread. This quantity makes two loaves. Let it stand to rise after put- ting into the pans. BKEAD OAKE. Mrs. W. H. Ovington. Three teacups of light dough, three-fourths cup butter,; two cups sugar, three eggs, small teaspoon soda dissolved in a little warm water, nutmeg or; cinnamon for spice, a coffeecup of raisins or currants : mix all well together and let it raise before setting it in the oven. EAISED LOAF CAKE. Mrs. F. D. Gray. Three cups of milk, two cups of sugar, one cup yeast, flour to make a thick batter. Stand till light ; then add two cups sugar, two cups butter, two eggs, raisins and spices. Stand from one to three hours in the tins. VALUABLE KEOIPES. 331 LOAF CAIvE. Mrs. John King, Jr. Four pounds light dough, two pounds sugar, one pound butter, four eggs, one pound stoned and chopped raisins, (sliced citron if you like,) one wine glass brandy or wine, small teaspoon soda, mace or nutmeg ; mix sugar and butter with the eggs, well beaten; then with the hands mix the dough to the ingredients, beating very thoroughly ; add spices and fruit, and allow to rise before baking, after putting in the pans. Plainer Loaf Cake. — Six cups light dough, three cups sugar, one and one-half cups butter, three eggs, small tea- spoon of saleratus, spice and fruit as you please ; mix as the fruit. Dough for cake should always be light, either bread or biscuit ; if biscuit dough is used, a little less shortening is needed, and to insure light cake, the bread should be made from good home-made yeast. LOAF CAKE. Mrs. G. F. De Forrest, Freeport. Four pounds flour, two pounds sugar, two and a half pounds butter (or one and a quarter pounds butter and three-quarters of a pound lard) ; three and a half pounds raisins, a little citron ; add wine, brandy, four eggs, one teaspoon soda, and spice as you please ; rub the butter and sugar together, then take half and work into the flour; add half a pint of domestic yeast; make the dough not quite as stiff as biscuit. When it has well risen, work in the other half of the butter and sugar, with the spices and brandy. When thoroughly light, add the eggs, beaten 332 THE HOME COOK BOOK. separately, and the fruit. Let it rise an hour in the tins ; bake one and a quarter hours. It will keep all winter if frosted. This rule makes eight loaves. LOAF CAKE. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler. Two cups light dough, one cup sugar, one cup chopped raisins, small half cup of soft butter, one egg, half a nut- meg, teaspoon of cinnamon ; one-half a wine glass of wine or brandy can be added if desired ; dissolve one-half tea- spoon of soda in two tablespoons of milk; mix the butter and sugar well into the dough with the hand, before adding the rest of the ingredients; flour the raisins; a little flour may be added if the brandy is used and the cake seems too thin. Mix or stir very thoroughly, and raise about an hour or until it looks light. QUICK LOAF CAKE. Mrs. H. M. Buell. One cup of sugar, one-half of butter, one of milk, one egg, two and one-half cups of flour, one-half teaspoon of soda, one teaspoon of cream ta.rtar. POUND CAKE. Mrs. W. H. Ovington. One pound of flour, one of sugar, ten eggs ; beat the yolks and sugar together; add one pound of butter, put- ting in the whites beaten to a froth, and the flour last. Very nice baked in small patty pans and frosted. VALUABLE EEOTPEa. 333 WHITE POUND CAKE. Mrs. G. S. Whitaker. One pound sugar, one of flour, fourteen ounces butter, one cup sour milk, or sweet milk with soda or cream tartar mixed in milk, whites of twelve eggs ; flavoring and citron. IMPEKIAL CAKE. M. A. T. One pound sugar, one of flour, one of butter, ten eggs, one pound almonds, three-quarters of citron cut fine, one glass of brandy and mace ; put the fruit in the flour, and bake in thick loaves. MOUNTAIN POUND CAKE. Mrs. C. M. Dickerman, Rockford, 111. One pound sugar, one of flour, one-half of butter, six eggs (the whites an-d yolks beaten separately) ; three- fourths cup sweet milk, one teaspoon soda, two of cream tartar; sift the soda and cream tartar together into the flour, after sifting the flour ; then rub butter and sugar to a cream, and add a part of the whites and yolks of the eggs, also a part of the flour, and then the milk. IMPERIAL CAKE. Mrs. De Forrest. OiTe pound sugar, one of flour, three-fourths of butter, one of almonds, blanched and cut fine, one-half of citron, oile-half of raisins, rind and juice of one lemon, one nutmeg, ten eggs. This is very delicious and will keep for months. Elegant. 334 THE HOME COOK BOOK. WHITE CAKE. Elmina Meeker, Cortland, 111. Two cups of white sugar, one of cream (sweet) ; two of flour, one tablespoon of butter, the whites of five eggs, one teaspoon of cream tartar, one-half of soda. Flavor with lemon. WHITE CAKE. Marian Ely, Cortland, 111. One cup of sugar, one-half of butter, one-half of sweet milk, whites of two eggs, one teaspoon of cream tartar, one-half of soda, two and one-half cups of flour. WHITE CAKE. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler. Two cups of sugar, one-half of butter, the whites of four eggs, one cup sweet milk, three of flour, three small teaspoons of baking powder sifted with the flour. Beat the sugar and butter to a cream, then stir in the milk and flour, a little at a time ; add the whites last. All cake should be well stirred before the whites of the eggs are added. Never fails. PRIZE WHITE CUP CAKE. Mrs. Kate W. Hoge. One cup of butter, four cups sifted flour or three of unsifted, two cups of white sugar, one of sour milk with one-half teaspoon soda, five eggs, beaten separately. Beat the yellow of the eggs until light, then add the sugar, and beat it well together, then add the whites of VALUABLE RECIPES. 335 the eggs (beaten well beforehand) alternating with the flour (after being sifted.) Mix the whites of the eggs and flour very slowly and bake in a moderately heated oven at first, then finish with a hotter oven. Try it with a straw or knife ; when the dough don't stick, it is done. Use flavoring to taste. This will make one large or two small cakes. SNOW. CAKE. Mrs. Laiukin. Three-fourths cup of butter, two cups sugar, one cup milk, one cup corn starch, two cups flour, one and one- half teaspoons baking powder. Mix corn starch, flour and baking powder together ; add to the butter and sugar alternately with the milk ; lastly, add the whites of seven eggs ; flavor to taste. Never fails to be good, DELICATE CAKE. Mrs. Anson Gorton. One coffeecup butter, two coffeecups sugar, four coffee- cups flour, one-half coffeecup milk. The whites of eight eggs, two teaspoons cream-tartar, even teaspoon of soda. Flavor to taste. DELICATE CAKE. Marian Ely. The whites of four eggs well beaten, one cup white sugar, one-half cup butter, one-half cup sweet milk, two cups flour, one teaspoon cream tartar, one-half teaspoon soda. 336 THE HOME COOK BOOK. DELICATE CAKE. Mrs. J. A. Ellis. One and a half cups powdered sugar, one-half of butter, one and a half of flour, one-half of corn starch, sifted with' the flour, one-half of milk, the whites of six eggs beaten to a froth, one small teaspoon cream-tartar, one-half tea- spoon soda ; flavor with almond or vanilla. Bake in a moderate oven. DELICATE. CAKE. Mrs. A. T. Hall. One cup butter, two of sugar, one of sweet milk, whites of eight eggs, three cups flour one teaspoon of cream tar- tar, one-half teaspoon soda. DELICATE CAKE. Mrs. C. E. Browne, Evanston. Two eggs, a trifle over half a cup of butter, one cup sweet milk, one and a half of sugar, and three teaspoons baking powder. Put together in the usual manner, and flavor with extract of almonds or lemon. Made with the whites of four eggs, it is admirable for cocoanut cake ; or with yolks for chocolate. Use your judgment in adding flour. This recipe I have had in use for fifteen years, and while inexpensive, it is nice enough for most any occasion. WHITE POUND CAKE. Mrs. M. J. Woodworth. One pound of flour, one pound sugar, three-fourths pound butter, the whites of sixteen eggs beaten to a stiff froth ; flavor with bitter almond. Elegant. VALUABLE RECIPES. 337 FEATHEE CAKE. Mrs. A. P. Wightraan. One cup sugar, one cup flour, one egg, one tablespoon melted butter, one-half cup sweet milk, one teaspoon bak- ing powder, pinch of salt, flavor to taste ; put in the bak- ing powder and run through a seive. FEATHEE CAKE Mrs. W. 11. Ovington. One cup sugar, three eggs beaten well together, butter the size of an egg, one cup flour, one teaspoon cream tar- tar mixed with flour, one-half teaspoon soda dissolved in eight teaspoons of water. Season to taste. OEEAM CAKE. Mrs. M. J. Woodworth. Three eggs, one and one-half cups flour, one cup sugar, two teaspoons baking powder, three tablespoons water, bake in jelly cake pans, making four cakes; cream, one pint milk, one egg, one and one-half tablespoons corn starch, two tablespoons sugar ; flavor when cool. Very nice. CEEAM CAKE. Mrs. James Wadsworth, Hyde Park. Beat five eggs thoroughly, add two cups sugar, two table- spoons cream, two cups flour in which has been mixed one and one-half teaspoons baking powder, a little salt, bake in five jelly tins, leaving about one-sixth of the bat- ter, to this add one cup of milk, also lemon or vanilla ; 22 338 THE HOME COOK BOOK.' boil till it thickens, stirring constantly ; then spread it over the cakes as they are laid together. CEEAM CAKE. Mrs. Cliesebrough. Four eggs, three teacups flour, not quite two of sugar, one 'teaspoon of soda, two of cream tartar, or three of baking powder ; mix flour, sugar and cream tartar together ; dissolve the soda in one cup good cream and add with the beaten eggs to the mixture. Flavor with lemon or vanilla. Bake twenty minutes. Is made quickly and very nice. COEN STAEOH CAKE. Mrs. Dickinson. Gne cup of butter, two cups sugar, one cup sweet milk, two-thirds cup corn starch and fill it up with flour, two cups flour, two teaspoons baking powder, whites of seven eggs. COEN STAECH CAKE. Lucy D. Fake. One cup white sugar and one-half cup butter beaten together, one-half cup starch, the whites of three eggs beaten to a stiff froth, one cup milk, one cup flour, one teaspoon cream tartar, one-half of soda. Flavor with' lemon. LADY CAKE. Mrs. Ewing. One pound sugar, one-half pound butter, one pound of flour, whites of sixteen eggs, one and one-half teaspoon! soda, one and one-half teaspoons cream tartar. Rub but- ter and sugar together, then stir the whites of eggs into it Sift the flour three times with cream tartar and soda in it and add lastly. LADY CAKE. One cup of boiled milk, one-half cup butter, two cups powdered sugar, three cups flour, one even teaspooi> crean tartar, one-half teaspoon soda, whites of two eggs ; flavoi with bitter almond. LEMON CAKE. Lake Forest, 111. Three cups of sugar, one cup butter, one cup milk, five eggs, four cups flour ; 'stir the butter and sugar to a cream beat the eggs separately, the whites to a stiff froth, and dissolve a little soda in the milk. Mix all together ; sifl the flour and put in by degrees, and add the juice and grated rind of a fresh lemon. This cake is delicious. LEMON CAKE. Mrs. H. B. Hurd. Five cups flour, one cup butter, three cups sugar, one cup cream, five eggs, one teaspoon saleratus and the peel and juice of two lemons. SPICE CAKE. -Vlrs. A. T. Hall. Two cups of sugar, two cups butter, six cups flour, one 340 THE HOME COOK BOOK. cup molasses, one cup milk, six eggs, one glass brandy, two teaspoons cream tartar, one teaspoon soda, two tea- spoons cloves, one nutmeg, two pounds raisins. SPICE CAKE. Mrs. J. C. Mooar. One and one-half cups sugar, two-thirds cup butterj one cup raisins, two-thirds cup sweet milk, three cups flour, two eggs, one teaspoon cream tartar, one-half tea- spoon soda, cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves to suit taste. CUEEAl^T CAKE. Fanny L., Evanston. One and one-half pounds flour, one pound sugar, three- fourths pound butter, seven eggs,_one gill milk, one-half teaspoon saleratus, one pound currants. POOE MAN'S CAKI3. Fanny L. Two cups raised dough, one egg, one-half cup molasses, one cup sugar, butter size of an egg, one teaspoon soda ; one cup raisins, flour to stiifen. CLOYE CAKE. Mrs. H. P. Merriman. Four and one-half coffee cups of sifted flour, three cups sugar, one and one-half cups butter, one teacup cream or milk, one teaspoon saleratus, four eggs, one tablespoon clovesj^ one tablespoon cinnamon, one tablespoon nutmeg, one pound fruit and citron. VALUABLE EECIPES. 341 COFFEE CAKE. Mrs. E. S. Chesebrough. One cup butter, one of sugar, one of molasses, one of strong coffee, five of flour, one pound of raisins, one tea- spoon of soda, one of cinnamon, one of allspice, one- half a nutmeg, three eggs (it can be made with one or two). Sift the soda in molasses. Excellent. PUFF CAKE. Mrs. A. M. Lewis. One cup brown sugar, one-half of butter, two eggs, one-half cup sweet milk, two of Graham flour (sifted), one-half teaspoon soda, one of cream tartar, or two tea- spoons of baking powder, one cup of raisins. MAEBLE CAKE. Mrs. J. Gilbert, Evanston. White Part.: — One cup white pulverized sugar, one- half cup butter, one-half cup sweet milk, whites of four eggs, two and one-half cups flour, two heaping teaspoons baking powder, or one teaspoon crearn tartar and one- half teaspoon soda. Stir butter and sugar together to a cream, and beat whites of eggs to a stiff froth, which are to be added the last of all ingredients, with the half cup of flour, which must contain the baking powder well mixed in the flour ; season to taste. This is a very good recipe for delicate cake also. Dark Part. — One cup brown sugar, one-half cup molasses, one-half cup sour milk, two and one-half cups flour, one level teaspoon soda dissolved in the milk and 342 THE HOME COOK BOOK. in the molasses, yolks of four eggs and one-half cup but- , ter, to be rubbed well together with the sugar; add one- half teaspoon cinnamon, allspice and cloves. Either of these make good cake used separately, or well mixed to represent marble. CHOCOLATE CAKE. C. A. Tinkham. One cup butter, two of sugar, five eggs (leaving out the whites of two), one cup sweet milk, one teaspoon cream tartar, one-half of soda, both dissolved in the milk, three and one-half cups of flour, scant measure. For frosting : Take the whites of the two eggs, one and one-half cups of powdered sugar, six large tablespoons grated chocolate, two teaspoons vanilla ; frost while the cake is hot. COCHINEAL MARBLE CAKE. Mrs. Anna Yocum, Cairo, 111. One cup butter, three cups pulverized sugar, five cups flour, one cup water, ten eggs (whites only), three tea- spoons yeast powder sifted with flour ; cream the buttei and sugar by stirring together; beat the whites of the eggs to a froth, and gradually add all together. Before beginning the cake, put a small teaspoon of cochineal to soak in two tablespoons of hot water; bruise it with a spoon, and strain through a piece of Swiss muslin into three-fourths teacup of the cake batter, and as you pour the batter into the cake tin, marble with the red dough. A little practice will produce very satisfactory results. VALUABLE EECIPES. 34;-> MAEBLE CAKE. Mrs. Frances M. Thatcher. One-half cup sour cream, one-half cup butter, two and one-half cups flour, one cup white sugar, the whites of five eggs, two-thirds teaspoon soda; prepare another mixture, except substituting dark sugar for white, and the yol^s instead of the whites ; fill a tin with alternate layers of each and bake. HICKOEY-NUT CAKE. Mrs. Hobbs. One cup meats (broken), one and one-half of sugar, one-half of butter, two of flour, three-fourths of sweet milk, two teaspoons baking powder, the whites of four eggs well beaten ; add the meats last. HICKOEY-NUT CAKE. Mrs. C. C. Stratton, Evans ton. Two cups pulverized sugar, one cup butter, one cup new milk, four cups sifted flour (winter wheat flour), whites of eight eggs, one and one-half cups hickory-nut meats, one tablespoon vanilla, three heaping teaspoons baking powder; put the baking powder into the flour, and stir well before using, beat and add the eggs the last ; bake slowly one hour. HiCKOEY-NUT CAKE. Nellie Gould. Not quite a cup of butter, one and one-half cups sugar, three-fourths cup sweet milk, three cups flour. 34i THE HQME COOK BOOK. three teaspoons baking powder, whites of four eggs, one cup hickory-nuts. NUT CAKE. Mrs. Taylor, Fort Wayne. Two and a half cups sugar, one of butter, three and a half of flour, one of sweet milk, five eggs, one pound stoned raisins, one-half pound of citron, one-half of a lemon peel, one-half of an orange peel, one pint hickory, nut meats, one nutmeg, two teaspoons baking powder. COCOANUT CAKE. Mrs. Bartlett. One pound of sugar; one pound of flour; one pound of butter; whites of twelve eggs; one cocoanut ; two- thirds teaspoonful soda ; half cup of wine. WHITE CUP CAKE. Mrs. A. S. Ewing. Two cups of sugar, one-half of butter, four ot flour, one of sweet cream, one teaspoon soda dissolved in the cream, two teaspoons cream tartar mixed through the flour, whites of eight eggs. COMPOSITION CAKE. Mrs. H. F. Waite. Five eggs, four cups sifted flour, two and one-half of sugar, one of butter, one of milk, two teaspoons cream tartar, one of soda. Beat sugar, butter and yolks of eggs a long time, then add milk and part of the flour; with VALUABLE KECIFES. 34.") the rest of the flour add the whites, beat very light; raisins or citron, if desired. VANILLA CAKE. A. E. W. One-half cup of butter stirred into one cup of sugar till it is like cream, three eggs, one and one-half cups flour, two teaspoons vanilla ; bake on tins, dropping. KEBECCA'S PLAIN CAKE. Mrs. G. H. L. One cup sugar, two of flour, one-half of butter, one- half of sour milk, one egg, one teaspoon saleratus. One loaf. PLAIN CAKE. Harriet N. Jenks. One cup of Indian meal sifted, one of flour, one of sugar, one teaspoon soda, about a pint of sour milk, tea- spoon of salt, one egg, piece of butter size of a common egg. Wholesome for children. ONE EGG CAKE. Mrs. P. B. Ayer. One and a half cups sugar and one-half of butter beaten together, one egg, one cup milk, two and a half of flour, two and a half teaspoons of baking powder. This cake should have icing of some kind between, chocolate for example. 346 THE HOME COOK BOOK. TIPSY CAKE. Mrs. Gen. N. J T. Dana. Take sponge cake aud stick it full of almonds which have been blanched ; turn over it as much white wine as it will absorb ; put it in a., deep dish or glass bowl, and let it stand one hour, then pour over it as much soft custard as the dish will hold. Let it stand two or three hours. Very simple and very nice. •EUNAWAY CAKE. Mattie Winslow, Aurora, 111. One egg, one teaspoon sugar, two tablespoons butter, one cup milk, two teaspoons cream' tartar, one teaspoon soda, flour to make a little thicket than griddle cakes. This is very nice eaten hot with butter for breakfast and tea. TUMBLER CAKE. Mrs. Lamkln. Four eggs, one tumbler sugar, one tumbler butter, one- half tumbler molasses, one- third tumbler milk, one tea- spoon saleratus ; spices to taste ; one-half pound raisins, one-fourth pound currants, flour to make it the usual con- sistency. Bake one and one-fourth hours in a slow oven. ADAMS' CAKE. Mrs. H. P. Stowell. One cup sugar, two-thirds cup butter, four eggs, one and one-eighth cups flopr, very little soda. Very nice. VAXjUAJJljJi IJJliUlfJiS. ft I CLAY CAKE. Mrs. Ada Sturtevant. One cup butter, two and one-half cups sugar, one cup sweet milk, four cups flour, the yolks of five eggs and the whites of seven, two spoons cream tartar, one spoon soda, one spoon extract of lemon ; stir the butter and sugar till it looks like cream ; beat the yolks separately and well, the whites to a stiff froth, adding the whites and flour last, and beat all very thoroughly. This will make two cakes. If you lack time, and wish variety, by changing the flavoring and adding fruit to one, you will have two cakes entirely unlike, and very good. HAEEISON CAKE. Mrs. B. F. Adams.' One and one-half cups butter, one cup sugar, one cup molasses, one cup sour milk, four eggs, one teaspoon soda, flour to nmke as thick as pound cake ; fruit and spice. GOLD CAKE. Mrs. Russell. One and one-half cups sugar, one-half cup butter, one cup sweet milk, one teaspoon cream tartar, one-half tea- spoon soda, nutmeg, three cups flour, yolks of six eggs. SILVEE CAKE. Mrs. Russell. One and one-half cups sugar, one-half cup butter, one cup sweet milk, one-half teaspoon soda, one teaspoon 348 THE HOME COOK BOOK. cream tartar, whites of six eggs beaten to a froth, and three cups flour. GOLD CAKE. Mrs. L. Bradley. Take yolks of twelve eggs, five cups sifted flour, three cups white powdered sugar, one cup butter, one and a half cups of cream or sweet milk, one teaspoon crefem tartar and half a teaspoon of soda. SILYEK OAKE. Mrs. L. Bradley. Take whites of one dozen eggs, five cups flour, three cups powdered sugar, one cup butter, one cup cream or sweet milk, one teaspoon cream tartar, half a teaspoon soda. FRENCH SPONGE CA^E. Mrs. James Wadsworth, Hyde Park. Two eggs, two cups of sugar, one of milk, three of flour, two tablespoons butter, two teaspoons baking powder. CEEAM SPONGE CAKE. Mrs. W. G. Morgan. Break two large eggs into a teacup and fill it with sweet cream ; add one cup white sugar, a little salt, and put in a pan ; add two cups of sifted flour, two teaspoons baking powder, one of lemon essence ; put in a s'quare baking tin and bake fifteen minutes. VALUAISLE EECIPES. 349 WHITfe SPONGE CAKE. Mrs. L. H. Smith. One tumbler sifted flour, one and one- half of powdered sugar, one heaping teaspoon cream tartar, and a little salt ; sift all together into a dish ; beat the whites of ten fresh eggs, and stir (not beat) very carefully into the flour and sugar until well mixed. Bake with great care in a mod- erate oven, in one good sized round tin, with an opening in the center. Flavor with extract lemon, -and put it in with the whites of the eggs. This is an excellent cake. beewice: sponge cake. Fannie L. Beat six eggs two minutes (yolks and whites together) ; add three cups sugar, and beat five minutes ; two cups flour and one teaspoon cream tartar, and beat two min- utes ; add one cup cold water with one-half teaspoon saleratus dissolved in it, and beat one minute ; add the grated rind and half the juice of a lemon, a little salt and two more cups of flour, and beat another minute, observing the time exactly. Bake in rather deep cake pans. Extract of lemon will answer. LEMON SPONGE CAKE. Mrs. Pulsifer. Eight eggs, ten ounces of sugar, half pound of flour, the juice and grating of one lemon; separate the eggs, beat the yolks, sugar and lemon until thick and light ; whisk the whites until dry, which add with the flour, half of each at a time ; mix all together, but avoid beating ; butter your pan well and bake in a moderate oven. 350 THE HOME COOK BOOK. MES. WILDEE'S SPONGE GINGEEBEEAD. In two cups molasses, sift two teaspoons soda and a dessert spoon ginger. Stir to a cream, then add four well beaten eggs, one cup butter melted, one cup sour milk in which is dissolved one teaspoon soda ; mix all together, then add flour to the consistency of pound cake. Two loaves. BEST SOFT GINGEEBEEAD. One cup molasses, one of sugar, one of milk, half of butter, five cups sifted flour, one tablespoon ginger, half teaspoon or rather more of soda, a little cloves can be added if liked. Melt the butter in molasses and sugar, allowing the mixture to become hot, then add spices, milk, with soda and flour. Persons measure flour so dif- ferently, if you would be quite sure to have it right, try a small cake first. If it falls add a little more flour. HAED GINGEEBEEAD. Mrs. J. A. Ellis. One pound lard, one-half pound butter, beaten to a cfeanj, one and one-half pounds brown sugar, three pints of West India molasses, ginger, cinnamon, allspice and cloves, enough flour to make a stiff dough ; roll out very thin and cut with a cutter. MES. HAMILTON'S GINGEEBEEAD. Mattie M. Winslow, Aurora, 111. Two eggs, one cup molasses, one cup sour cream, tw«> tablespoons ginger, one teaspoon soda. Stir quite thin. VALUABLE EEOIPES. 35l LAYER CAKES. GENTLEMAIST'S FAVORITE. Miss Anna M. "Whitman, Indianapolis, Ind. Seven eggs beaten separately, one-half cup butter, two cups white sugar, two cups flour, two tablespoons baking powder, two tablespoons water, one-half teaspoon salt; bake in jelly-cake pans in quick oven. The jelly for the cake : One egg, a cup of sugar, three grated apples and one lemon ; stir till it boils and becomes thick, let it cool before putting between the layers. IMPEOMPTU JELLY CAXE. Mrs. P. B. Brown. One cup butter, two cups sugar, three cups flour, four eggs ; stir the sugar and butter to a cream, then add the yolks of the eggs, and lastly the beaten whites and flour. Have ready the jelly, made as follows : One grated apple, the grated rind and juice of one lemon, one cup sugar and one egg; boil until it jellies, stirring constantly ; cool before using. Bake your cake in jelly-cake pans, or in thin layers, putting the jelly between each layer as in ordinary jelly cake. JELLY CAKE. Mrs. John Edwards. One and one-half cups of sugar, one-half of butter, one- half of sweet milk, two and one-half of flour, three eggs. 352 THE HOME OOOK BOOK. whites and yolks beaten separately, and add two teaspoons baking powder. The Jelly. — One cup of sugar, one egg, grate the rind and use the juice of one lemon, one tablespoon, of water, one teaspoon of flour; put your dish in a kettle of boiling water, and let it come to a boil ; have your cake ready and put it together. APPLE JELLY CAKE. Mrs. W. G. Morgan. Prepare and grate three large apples, (Greenings pre- ferred,) the juice and rind of a lemon, half a cup of sugar, one egg well beaten ; put the ingredients together in'a tin. basin; simmer until cooked, with constant stirring; set to cool until the cake is ready. Take three eggs, stir whites and yolks separately ; to a cup and a half of white sugar, add half a cup sweet milk and a piece of butter the size of an egg; mix butter and sugar together, four cups of flour and three teaspoons of baking powder; divide in four equal parts, and put in baking tins or jelly pans ; use the jelly as in other cases while the cake is hot. JELLY CAKE — MADE WITH THE YOLKS OF EGGS. Mrs. Brown. One and one-half cups sugar, one-halt cup butter, one- half cup milk, one egg and yolks of four; stir well, then sift in two cups flour and two teaspoons baking powder ; bake in five cakes. This makes a delicious cocoanut cake by spreading between, and on the top of the cakes; VALUABLE EKCIPES. 353 instead of jelly, a soft frosting, thickly strewn with des- sicated cocoanut, which has been soaked half an hour in warm milk. CHOCOLATE CAKE. Mrs. Monroe Frank. One cup of butter, two cups sugar, four cups flour, four eggs, three teaspoons of Royal Baking Powder, one cup sweet milk. For Frosting. — One- half cake Baker's chocolate, one- half cup sugar (pulverized) ; enough hot water to^ cover ; set in a pan of boiling water over the fire three minutes ; when cold, add one-half teaspoon vanilla. Spread the same as for jelly cake. WHITE MOUNTAIN CAKE. Mrs. John Edwards, Rockford. Two cups sugar, two-thirds cup butter, whites of seven eggs well beaten, two-thirds cup sweet miUt^ two cups flour, one cup com starch, two teaspoons baking powder; bake in jelly-cake tins. Frosting. — Whites ol three eggs and some sugar beaten together — not quite as stiff as for frosting; spread over the cake ; add Sf^e grated cocoanut, then put your cakes together ; put* dScoanut or frosting for .top. t^t YELLOW MOUNTAIN CAKE. Nellie Spencer. Yolks of ten eggs, one cup butter, two of sugar, one of milk, three of flour, one teaspoon soda, two of creaic tartar. 23 354: THE HOME COOK BOOK. COCOANUT MOUNTAIN CAKE. Mrs. J. P. Hoit. One cup butter, three cups sugar, one cup milk, three and a half cups flour, whites of ten eggs, one teaspoon cream tartar, one-half teaspoon soda, essence of almond ; bake in sheets. Make an icing of the whites of three I, ,. . ■ eggs and one pound sugar ; ice each sheet, and sprinkle one grated oecoanut lightly over all. OOCOAMIT CAKE. Mrs. M. G. Hubbell, Shabbona, 111. T#6!^gs, one cup 'sugar, two-thirds cup of milk, one- half cup butter, two 'cups^ flour, two heaping teaspoons baling powder. Frosting. — Whites of two egg, eight teaspoons sugar, flavor to suit. Bake the same as jelly cake ; spread a thin layer of ftftting, sprinklfed with prepared cocoanut, and frost the top and thickly sprinkle with the cocoac.j*|, ALMOJSTD CAKE. Mrs. Henry StPvens. Two cups sugar, om^^U cup butter, one cup sweet railk, two and one-half cups flour, whites of eight egg^ane teaspoon cream tartar, one-half teaspoon soda ; m^butter IWid'Sugar to a cream ; mix other ingredients alternately, putting'in soda last ; bake in layers like jelly cake ; spread each layer with soft frosting, and add blanched split almonds about an inch apart on each layer. VALUABLE RECIPES. 355 BOSTON CREAM CAKE. Mrs. E. S. Chesebrough. One pint of -water, one-half pound butter, three-fou||^ pound flour, ten eggs ; boil the butter and water together ; stir in the flour when boiling ; when cool, add the eggs, and soda the size of a pea; drop by the spoonful on a buttered baking pan, leaving space so that the cakes will not touch when risen. Bake in a very quick oven about ten minutes. When cold, make an incision at the side and fill with the following cream : Six gills of milk, one and one-half cups flour, two cups isugar, six eggs ; beat the flour, sugar and eggs together and stir into the milk while boiling. Flavor with the rind of a lemon. CUSTAED CAEE. Mrs. James P. Clarke. Two cups sugar, six tablespoons melted butter, six eggs beatenseparately, two and one-half cups flour, one-half cup;t^!c, Mdlteaspoon soda, two teaspoons cream tartar. CuhJ-ARD FOR THE Same. — One-half pint milk, two eggs, sweeten to taste, flavor with vanilla; bake on pie plates, and put custard between as jelly cake. jQUSTAED CAKE. ' Mrs. F. M. Cragin. Three eggs, one cup of sugar, two cups of flour, two tea- spoons of melted butter, 6ne teaspoon of cream tartar, one- half teaspoon of soda dissolved in two tablespoons of milk. Custard. — One egg, one-half cup of sugar, flavor with lemon ; one-third cup of flour, beaf and put it in one-half 356 THE HOME COOK BOOK. pint of milk. Cook in a pail or pitcher set in boiling water until it thickens ; when the cakes are cold, split and jt this in. The above is enough for twp cakes. This ;e can be baked in layers. OEANGE CAKE. Mrs. S. W. Cheever, Ottawa, 111. Beat the whites of three and the yolks of five eggs sep- arately ; stir to a cream ; two cups sugar, one-half cup , butter; add one-half cup cold water, two and one-half cups flour with two teaspoons baking powder, grated rind ' of one orange and a..l the juice (except about one table- spoon), stirred into the cake. Bake in two square tins. Frosting. — Whites of two eggs, two small cups sugar, with a tablespoon of the orange juice sved from the cake. When the c^ke is cold, join them with this "frosting and frost the tops. OEANGE CAKE. Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. <|^ Two cups flour, one of corn starch, one tablespoon bak- ing powder, one teaspoon of extract of lemon, one tea- spoon of vanilla mixed with the flour and put all through the sieve together; one cup of butter, two cups of sugar stirred to a cream; add one teacup'ofmilk an^one^ffilf of above ingredients; stir well, and add the whiT?? of seven eggs well beaten, and then the rest of the flour mix- ture. Bake in jelly tins. The Jelly. — Whites of two eggs, one cup of pulver-^ ized sugar, juice and grated pulp of two oranges ; meringue top adds to its appearance when piled on quite high. VALtTABLE EECIPES. 357 LEMON HONEY CAKE. Home Messenger, Detroit. Two cups of sugar, two-thirds of a cup of butter, one cup of milk, one cup of corn starch, three cups of flour three teaspoons baking powder ; rub the butter and sug9.r to a cream, then add the milk ; lastly, the whites of eight eggs beated to a stiff froth, then the corn starch and flour, to which has been added the baking powder. Bake in jelly tins. Lemon Honey for the Cake. — One pound loaf sugar, yolk of eight eggs with two whole ones, the juice of six lemons and grated rind of two, one- fourth pound butter. Put the sugar, lemon and butter into a sauce pan, melt over a gentle fire ; when all is dissolved, stir in the eggs which have been well beaten ; stir rapidly until it is as thick as honey. Spread this between the layers of cake ; set aside the remainder in a closely covered vessel for future use. SMALL CAKES AND COOKIES. CHESS CAKES. Mrs. Lamkin. Peel and grate one cocoanut, take one pound sugar, one-half pint water, and boil fifteen minutes ; stir in the grated cocoanut, boil fifteen minutes longer, while warm 358 THE HOME COOK BOOK. Stir in one-fourth pound butter, then add the yolks of seven well beaten eggs. Bake in patty pans lined with a rich paste ; will keep some time, and mixes prettily in a basket of cake. The small oval patty tins are prettier than scallops. FINGEK CAKES. Mrs. Lamkin. Two eggs, beaten very light, to which add a cup of granulated sugar (excepting a tablespoonful) ; sift in a very small teaspoon cream tartar, half as much soda, a little salt ; stir in flour enough for a stiff dough ; roll very thin, and sprinkle with a tablespoon of sugar from the cupful, giving it a light roll ; cut the dough in strips a finger width ; do not let them touch in the pan. Bake in quick oven, watching them, as they readily scorch. Add a good size teaspoon of vanilla. WINE CAKES. I Mrs. A. M. Chetlain. One pint of sweet milk, three eggs well beaten, flour to make a thick batter, have hot lard and try as you would fried cakes ; take a spoon of batter and let your hand shake as you drop into the lard. Serve warm with wine and sugar, or sweet cream. OLD-FASHIONED YANKEE DOUGBCNTJTS. Mrs. H. M. Riddle, Evanston. One pint milk, one teacup yeast; put yeast in milk, stir in flour and let it rise over night ; in the morning^ add VALUABLE RECIPES. oir,> two teacups sugar, one teacup lard, two eggs, one tea- spoon soda ; work in flour and let it rise very light ; add nutmeg or cinnamon to suit taste. DOUGHNUTS. Mrs. Benham. Two cups milk, one cup sugar, one-half cup butter, one-half cup lard, one cup sponge yeast, two eggs ; add flour to make a stiff dough ; let it rise ; when light roll it out, and after they are cut out let them stand on the moulding board until light. Fry in hot lard, and when hot dip them in pulverized sugar. DOUGHNUTS. Mrs. H. W. JLoomis, Rockford, 111. One quart new milk, four eggs, one cup of yeast, one cup of butter, two cups of sugar, one large nutmeg ; at night, take one quart scalding milk, and stir in your flour until very thick ; beat the eggs with one cup of sugar, and add the butter as soon as it can be done ^\ ithout scalding the eggs ; then add the cup of yeast and let it rise until morning. In the morning add the butter and sugar that has previously been stirred ; then the nutmeg, with flour enough to make it as stiff as soft biscuit; let it rise again. When very light, roll out three-fourths of an inch thick, and cut with a small cake cutter; let them stand two hours before frying. Roll in sugar when nearly cold. DOUGHNUTS. Mrs. L. H. Clement. One cup of sugar, one and one-half of sour milk, one- 360 THE HOME COOK BOOK. half of butter, two eggs, and one teaspoon of soda; flavor with nutmeg. FKIED CAKES. Mrs. B. J. Seward. I One cup of sugar, four tablespoons of butter, three eggs, one cup sweet milk, one teaspoon soda, two of cream tartar, or three teaspoons baking powder; roll half an ipch thick after mixing soft, and fry in hot lard. FEIED CAKES. Mrs. A. Kesler, Eviinston. Two quarts unsifted flour, two teaspoons soda, four of cream tartar, two of salt, two eggs, one-half cup shorten- ing, two of sugar, milk to mix. CRULLEKS. Ella Waggoner, Toledo. Eight heaping tablespoons sugar, four eggs, four table- spoons melted butter, two tablespoons milk, and two of wiije (or four of milk), and a pinch of soda dissolved in water. Fry in hot lard ; sprinkle sugar over when hot. CRCJLLEES. Mrs. Fred. A. Arnold. Three eggs, two cups sugar, one-half cup butter, one cup of sweet milk, three teaspoons baking powder ; spice to taste. EUSK COOKIES. Mrs. E. A. Forsyth. One cup melted butter, one and a half cups sugar, one VALTJABLE EEaPKS. 361 cup of tepid water, two teaspoons Dr. Price's baking powder mixed well with sifted flour ; roll out very thin, and cut with a round cake cutter, baking in a quick oven. WATEE COOKIES. Mrs. ¥. D. Gray. One cup of sugar, one-half of butter, one-half of water, caraway seed, wet hard and roll very thin, indeed ; sprinkle with sugar after putting them in the tins. LEMON COOKIES. Ella J. Roe. One pint sugar, one cup butter, one teaspoon soda, juice and grated rind of one lemon. Roll soft and thin, and bake quickly. VAISTILLA COOKIES. Mrs. C. S.-Barllett. One cup of butter and two cups of sugar, beaten well; one cup of cold water, one teaspoon of soda, two tea- spoons of vanilla, flour to make a very stiff dough. Roll very thin and bake brown. BOILED COOKIES. Mrs. F. Boil one cup of milk, two of sugar, three of flour; cool it off; then add one teaspoon of soda, the yolks of three ^ggs; cut in rounds and bake in a quick oven, EYEELASTING COOKIES. Mrs. John Edwards, Rockford. Two CI113 su^ar, one of butter, three-fourths of sweet 362 THE HOME COOK BOOK. milk, two teaspoons baking powder ; season to taste ; rub butter and sugar together; then add two eggs, milk and flour to make a soft dough; roll thin, sprinkle a littl" sugar over the top, and bake in quick oven. COOKIES. Mrs. Russell. One cup butter, two of sugar, one of sour cream, one teaspoon soda, two of cream tartar, three eggs, three tablespoons caraway seed, a little nutmeg, flour enough to form a soft dough ; roll out thin and bake in a quicfc oven. COOKIES. Mrs. Solomon Thatcher, Sr. Two cups of sugar, one of butter, one of sour cream, three eggs, beat separately, one teaspoon of soda ; beat cream and yolks well together, then mix soft and roll out very thick ; bake in a quick oven. COOKIES. Virginia West, Evanston. Two eggs, two teacups sugar, one teacup butter, one teacup milk, one nutmeg, one teaspoon cream tartar, one- half teaspoon soda ; flour to roll. WHIG JUMBLES. Mrs. W. H. Ovington. One teacup and a half of butter; three teacups of sugar, one cup of sour cream, four eggs, one teaspoon of VALUABLE RECIPES. oOS soda dissolved in it, six cups of flour, nutmeg ; drop in heaping teaspoons on buttered paper in pans. JUMBLES. Mrs. W. H. Ovington. One pound of butter, one pound of sugar, six eggs, grated peel of a fresh lemon, flour sufficient to make a soft dough; put in teaspoons in papered pans ; on top of each cake put a blanched almond, and some coarse lumps of crushed sugar before baking. EICH JUMBLES. Mrs. Kate Johnson. One-half pound butter, one-half pound sugar, two eggs well beaten, three-quarters pound flour ; have plenty of rolled sugar on the board, and work little lumps of the dough (which is very soft) in it; make into little rings, and turn them over into buttered pans and bake with care ; they will keep for two or three months. EXCELLENT JUMBLES. Mrs. J. H. Brown. One cup butter, two cups sugar, one cup cream, one teaspoon soda, one egg, a little bit of nutmeg, flour enough to stiffen it so as to bake in rings ; bake quickly. COCOANUT JUMBLES. Mrs. F. Two cups of sugar, one of butter, two eggs, small tea- spoon of soda, mixed with the flour, two cups of cocoanrt. 364 THE HOME COOK BOOK. JACKSON JUMBLES. Mrs. C. A. Rogers. One cup of butter, one cup cream, three cups of sugar, five eggs, five cups of flour. SAND TAKTS. Mrs. W. H. Ovington. One pound sugar, three-fourths pound of butter, two ■ eggs, flour enough to make very stiff: roll them out and wet the tops with whites of eggs, then put two almonds on each one ; sprinkle over them cinnamon and sugar. SUGAE DROPS. Mrs. H. M. Buell. One pound flour, three-fourths pound of sugar, one-half of butter, four eggs, a gill of rose water. To be baked on paper. This will make sixty drops. COCOANUT DEOPS. Mrs. H. M. Buell. The meat of one cocoanut, pared and grated, weight ol the same in sugar, one-half cup of flour, white. NO MATTEES. < M. A. Bingham. Three cups sour milk, three tablespoons of cream or butter; one cup of sugar; roll about the size of a plate, fry in hot lard, cover each with nicely seasoned apple sauce ;- lay over each other. VALUABLE EEOH^ES. 365 CINNAMON WAFEliS. Mrs. Beyer. Two and a half cups of sugar, one-half cup butter, three eggs, one tablespoon cinnamon, one-half teaspoon soda ; put in enough flour to roll out. GINGEE CAKE. Mrs. Mann, Freeport. One half cup butter, one of molasses, one of sugar, one of cold water, one heaping teaspoon soda, one quart of flour. Ginger and salt to taste; drop on the tins and bake in a quick oven. GINGER COOKIES. Mrs. J. O. Knapp. One cup of sugar, one of butter, one of molasses, two tablespoons ginger, and two teaspoons saleratus dissolved in three tablespoons of hot water. Bake quickly. GINGER SNAPS. Miss Gilbert, Evanston. One cup molasses, one-half of sugar, two-thirds of butter, one-half of water, one tablespoon ginger, one-half teaspoon of alum dissolved in hot water, two teaspoons saleratus, dissolved in the molasses ; mix the whole, with flour enough to roll out nicely. GINGER SNAPS. Mrs. John Edwajrds, Rockford. One cup of molasses; let it come to a boil, then add 366 THE HOME COOK BOOK. two teaspoons of soda, when cool; mix one cup of butter, three-fourths of sugar, and two eggs well together; then add your molasses and two tablespoons of water, two tablespoons ginger, some cinnamon, and some cloves, and' allspice; add flour and roll very thin; bake in a quick oven. DRINKS. The bubbling and loud hissing urn Throws up a steaming column ; and the cups That cheer, but not inebriate, wait on each ; So let us welcome peaceful evening in. — COWPER. TEA. When the water in the tea-kettle begins to boil, 4iave ready a tin tea-steeper; pour into the tea-steeper just a very little of t'ne boiling water, and then put in tea, allow- ing one teaspoon of tea to each person. Pour over this boiling water until the steeper is little more than half full ; cover tightly and let it stand where it will keep hot, but not to boil. Let the tea infuse for ten or fifteen minutes and then pour into the tea urn, adding more boiling water, in the proportion of one cup of water for every teaspoon of dry tea which has been infused. Have boiling water in a wafer pot, and weaken each cup of tea as desired. Do not use water for tea that has boiled long. Spring water is best for tea, and filtered water next best, TEA A LA KUSSE. Pare and slice fresh, juicy lemons ; lay a piece in the (367) 368 THE HOME COOK BOOK. bottom of each cup, sprinkle with white sugar and pou hot, strong tea over. Or the lemon may be sent around i slices with the peel on. No cream is used. ICED TEA A LA RTJSSE. To each glass of tea add the juice of half a lemon fi up the glass with pounded ice and sweeten. COFFEE. Cleanse the coffee, dry and roast the berries evenly bu quickly, until they are browned to the centre, and are o a dark chestnut color. Grind as you u§e it, keeping th rest in a closely covered glass can. Allow one heapin tablespoon of ground coffee for every person, and one o two over. Mix with the grounds, a part or whole of ai egg, according to the amount of coffee used. Pour boil ing water in the coffee-pot before using, and scald it well then put in the coffee and pour over half as much wate as will be used. Let the coffee froth up, stir down th grounds, and let it boil for about five minutes ; then stani the coffee-pot where it will be hot (but not to boil th coffee), for five or ten minutes longer. Mocha is th^ richest and most delicate flavored coffee. Old Govern ment Java is an excellent coffee, and more economica than Mocha. An excellent authority in coffee making allows to one pound of Mocha coffee, five quarts of watei made' after the above recipe. CHOCOLATE. Scrape Baker's chocolate fine, mix with a little cok water and the yolks of eggs well beaten ; add this to equa VALUABLE RECIPES. 36|l parts of milk and water, and boil well, being careful that ,it does not burn. Sweeten to taste and serve hot. SODA CEEAM. M. G. Rand. Two and one-half pounds white sugar, one-eight pound tartaric acid, both dissolved in one quart of hot water; when cold, add the beaten whites of three eggs, stirring well ; bottle for use. Put two large spoons of this syrup in a glass of cold water, and stir in it one-fourth of a spoon of bicarbonate of soda. Any flavor can be put in the syrup. An excellent drink for summer. KASPBEKEr ACID. Mrs. G. W. ritkin. Dissolve five ounces of tartaric acid in two quarts of water; pour it upon twelve pounds of red raspberries in a large bowl ; let it stand twenty-four hours ; strain it with- out pressing ; to a pint of this liquor add one and a half poundsof white sugar; stir until dissolves. Bottle, but do not cook for several days, when it is ready for use. Two or three tablespoons in a glass of ice water will make delicious beverage. EASPBEKEY VINEGAE. Mrs. W. S. Walker. To four quarts red raspberries, put enough vinegar tO' cover, and let them stand twenty-four hours ; scald and strain it ; add a pound of sugar to one pint of juice ; boil it twenty minutes, and bottle ; it is then ready for use and mil keep years. To one glass of water, add a great spoonful. It is much relished by the sick. Very nice.. 24 370 THE HOME COOK BOOK. EASPBERET VINEGAE. Mrs. Joseph B. Leake. Fill a jaf with red raspberries picked from the stalks. Pour in as much vinegar as it will hold. Let it stand ten days, then strain it through a sieve. Don't press the ber^ ries, just let the juice run through. To every pint add one pound loaf sugar. Boil it like other syrup; skim, and bottle when cold. i BLACKBEEEY SYRUP. Mrs. Bausher. To one pint of juice, put one pound of white sugar, one- half ounce of powdered cinnamon, one-fourth ounce mace, and two teaspoons cloves ; boil all together for quarter of an hour, then strain the. syrup, and add to each pint a glass of French brandy. LEMON SYEUP. Mrs. De Forrest. Pare oif the yellow rind of the lemon, slice the lemon and put a layer of lemon and a thick layer of sugar in a deep plate ; cover close with a saucer, and set in a warm place. This is an excellent remedy for a cold. SPLENDID GINGEE BEER Mrs. H. L. Bristol. Five gallons of water, one-half pound ginger root boiled, four pounds sugar, one-eighth pound cream tartar, one bottle essence of lemon, one ounce of tartaric acid, one quart of yeast. VALUABLE EEOIPES. 371 HOP BEEE. Mrs. Dickinson. One handful of hops, boil an hour, strain, and add one pint of molasses, and enough water to make two gallons. When milk-warm, add one cup or cake of yaast ; let it stand over night ; skim and pour it off from the yeast care- fully ; add one tablespoon of wintergreen, and bottle for use. MISCELLANEOUS. What does cookery mean ? It means the knowledge of all fruits and herbs and balms and spices,- and of all that is healing and sweet in fields and groves, and savory'' in meats. It means carefulness, and inventiveness, and watchfulness, and willingness, and readiness of appliance. It means the economy of your great grandmother and the science of modern chemists. It means much tasting and no wasting ; it means English thoroughness, and French art, and Arabian hospitality ; and it means, in fine, that you are to be perfectly and always ladies — loaf givers ; I and as you are to see imperatively that everybody has something pretty to put on, so you are to see even yet more imperatively that everybody has something nice to eat. — RusKiN. GENEEAL HINTS. It is a matter of great convenience to have a covered tub or pail of sifted flour ready for use. It will save half the time in an emergency. Always sift . soda, when not dissolved in hot water," through a fine wire sieve. Sugar for fried cakes should be dissolved in the milk, to prevent the cake from absorbing the lard while frying. (■672) VALUABLE KECIPES. 378 Two kinds of coffee mixed, (Java and Mocha,) are bet- ter than one alone ; but should be browned separately. Tea should never be boiled, but be sure that the water boils that you use for steeping. From three to five min- utes is sufficient time; if it stands longer the tea is apt to lose its aroma and have the bitter taste of the leaf. An old housekeeper of fifty years' experience thinks ihe very best way of makiog coffee, is to use the National Pot, no egg ; nothing to settle is required, simply use a muslin bag and let the water boil around it ten or fifteen minutes. A very important advantage is, that none of the aroma is lost by standing. If the " gude mon " of the home is late to breakfast, his coffee is just as nice and hot as when first made. When bread is like a honey comb all through, is the time to make it up in loaves. When the [loaves do not retain the dent of the finger, it is ready for the oven. When meats are put in to roast, have no water in the pan. When they begin to brown is time enough for water. Chicken for salad is nicer cut with a knife than chop- ped in a bowl, and the celery should always be cut with a knife. If you would be a true economist, do not burn letters, envelopes, etc., but tear them across once or twice, and put them in the scrap bag for the rag man. A silver spoon put into a glass jar, will temper it so that it can at once be filled with anything hot, even to the boiling poiiit. Marion Harland says that putting old and nsw milk 374 THE HOME COOK BOOK. into cake will have a tendency to injure the quality of the cake. A caution is given by an excellent authority not to put glass goblets that have held milk, into hot water, as this causes the milk to penetrate the glass and can never be removed. In furnishing your house, have conveniences for put- ting away food for preservation. The greatest of the many advantages to be derived from modern cookery are the many palatable dishes which can be made with the remains of cold meat, a few bread crumbs, combined with other simple ingredients. It has often been observed that a French housekeeper can supply a family, with pleasing and nutritious food, of that which forms the waste of an ordinary American household. We cannot recommend too strongly to young house- keepers the policy of mixing the sponge for bread at night, as the bread will thus be ready for baking early in the morning. Otherwise bread-making becomes the ^ dread of the housekeeper and the anxiety of the whok ' day. Prepare the potatoes for the sponge at dinner, or tea-time, having the flour sifted in the bread pan. If the yeast is rapid, and the weather warm, do not mix the sponge until late in the evening. In cool weather this should be done at tea-time. Coffee sacking cut into the shape of mats, and em- broidered about the borders in simple patterns with bright worsted, are very pretty and useful ornaments, especially for bed-room service, to lay in fAnt of dress- ing bureaus, tables, stands, lounges, etc., thus preventing VALUABLE ItECIPKS. 37.'> the wear of carpets. They should have the border threads of the sacking drawn out, to form a fringe, and are best lined with a piece of old carpet. Very pretty coverings for chair covers are made of Turkish toweling, trimmed with fine colored skirt braid, stitched neatly on and embroidery each side, forming stripes alternately of braid and embroidery ; or a border, with embroidery, each side of the braid, and a monogram, or small piece of simple embroidery in the center. Many pretty fancies may be produced from these ma- terials, as slipper pockets, comb and brush pockets, etc. An oil cloth on the kitchen floor will save a good deal of Bridget's time. It is easily kept clean and does not absorb dirt and grease. The floors of all closets through the house should be covered with oil cloth. Dust and moths are not thus harbored as when carpets are used, and are much prettier than a bare or painted floor. Instead of the custom so common of putting fresh newspapers on closet and pantry shelves, we would recom- mend the pretty marbled oil cloth, which is used for " splashers," " stand covers," etc. This is easily cleaned^ and when the edge is finished with a crocheted border of some bright colored worsted, it has a pretty effect hang- ing over the edge of the shelf. An excellent method of preserving a table-cloth clean for the longest time is to lay a clean towel under any spots immediately after clearing the table, then washing the table-cloth with a fresh clean cloth in clean soap suds, then rinse it with clear water, dry it as much as possible 376 ' THE HOMfi COOK BOOK. with a clean dry towel, then fold and lay it under a heavy weight. In this way a table-cloth may be made to last clean for a long time. The tea-table is the only meal where the table ma:y be laid without a cover. An excellent fancy are the pretty crocheted mats for every dish, preserving the polished surface of the table from being defaced. When these are used a large oval mat for the tea service is appro- priate. ' Do not use a salver for the tea service. Fringed nap- kins are the choice for this meal. LIME WATER. Mrs. E. B. Lynde, Milwaukee. One of the most useful agents of household economy, if rightly understood, is lime water. Its mode of prepa- ration is as follows : Put a stone of fresh unslacked lime about the size of a half-peck measure into a large stone jar or ;unpainted pail, and pour over it slowly and care- fully, (so as not to slacken too rapidly,) a teakettle full (four gallons,) of hot water, and stir thoroughly; let it settle, and then stir again two or three times in twenty-' four hours. Then bottle carefully, all that can be poured off in a clear and limpid state. Uses. — It is often sold by druggists as a remedy for children's summer complaints, a teaspoon being a dose in a cup of milk, and when diarrhoea is caused by acidity of the stomach, it is an excellent remedy, and when put into milk gives no unpleasant taste, but rather improves the flavor. VALUABLE RECIPES. 377 When put into milk that might curdle when heated, it will prevent its so doing, and can then be used for pud- dings and pies. A little stirred into cream or milk, after a hot day or night, will prevent its turning when used for tea or coffee. It is unequaled in cleansing bottles or small milk ves- sels, or babies' nursing bottles, as it sweetens and purifies without leaving an unpleasant odor or flavor. A cupful, or even more, mixed in the sponge of bread or cakes made over night, will prevent it from souring. PKESERVING AUTUMN LEAVES. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler. These may be easily preserved and retain their natural tints, or nearly so, by either of the following methods : As they are gathered they may be laid between the leaves of a magazine until the book is full, and left with a light weight upon them until the moisture of the leaves has been absorbed ; two or three thicknesses of paper should intervene between the leaves. If the leaves are large or in clusters, take newspapers, lay them on a shelf and use in the same manner as above. Then dip the leaves into melted wax (such as is used for moulding fruits, etc.) into which you have put a few drops of turpentine and lay upon newspapers to harden perfectly. This will make the leaves pliable and natural and gives sufiftcient gloss. Great care should be taken that the wax is of right tem- perature. This can be ascertained by the first leaf which is dipped in. Draw out gently over the pan both sides of the leaf and hold it up by the stem. If the wax is 378' THE HOME COOK BOOK. too hot the leaf will shrivel — if too cool it will harden in lumps on the leaf. Another method is to iron each leaf with a middling hot iron until the moisture is all out of them. Are best without varnish. SKELETON LEAVES. Boil the leaves in equal parts of rain water and soft soap until you can separate the pulp from the skin ; take them out into clear water ; lay the leaf to be cleaned on glass, the upper side of the leaf next to the glass ; then with a tooth-brush remove all pulp and skin, turn the leaf and repeat the process ; when thoroughly done, put the leaf to bleach in this solution : One pound sal soda, dissolved in five pints rain water ; one-half pound chlo- ride of lime, in three pints water ; allow twenty-four hours for the latter to dissolve. Strain out the sediment, and ppur the clear solution of iinj*-e \nto the solution of sal soda. The result will be a thicL batter-milk solution, otherwise the lime was not strong enough. Filter this until it is perfectly clear. For leaves, use one part of solution to one pah of water; for ferns, use the solution full strength. When perfectly white, remove to clear water; let stand for several hours, changing two or three times ; the last water should be a little blue ; float out on paper, press in books when nearly dry. In mounting use mucilage made of five parts of gum arable, three parts white sugar, two parts of starch ; add a very little water, ,,boil and stir until thick and white. VALUABLE EECIPES. 379 FOE OETSTALIZING GEASS. Mrs. Ludlam, Evanston. Take one and one-half pounds of rock alum, pour on three pints of boiling water ; when quite cool, put into a wide-mouth vessel, hang in your grasses, a few at a time. Do not let them get too heavy, or the stems will not sup- port them. You may again heat alum and add more grasses. By adding a little coloring, it will give variety. CAMPHOE ICE. Mrs. A. M. One ounce of lard, one ounce, spermaceti, one ounce camphor, one ounce almond oil, one-half cake of white wax ; melt and turn into moulds. CAMPHOE ICE. Mrs. Bartlett. One-half ounce each of camphor gum and white wax, spermaceti and sweet oil; melt slowly the hard ingre- dients and then add the oil. COLD CEEAM. Mrs. Anna Marble. Four ounces sweet almond oil, two of rose water, two of white wax, two of cocoa butter, two of spermaceti; put a bowl in a pan of boiling water ; cut the spermaceti, white wax and cocoa butter in small pieces ; put them in the bowl, also the oil and rose water. When melted, stir contents until cold. 380 THE HOME COOK COOK. TO BEAUTIFY TEETH. Dissolve two ounces of borax in three pints of boiling water, and before it is cold, add one teaspoon of spirits of camphor; bottle it for use. A teaspoon of this with an equal quantity of tepid water. HAIE TO]SriO. Mrs. A. M. One-half ounce sugar of lead, one-half of lac sulphur, one quart of rose water, six tablespoons castor oil. FOE CLEANING HAIE BEUSHES. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler. Use spirits of ammonia and hot water ; wash them well and shake the water out, drying on a coarse towel ; they will look white and clean as new; little or no soap is needed. TO CLEAN HAIE BEUSHES. E. A. Forsyth. Do not use soap, but put a tablespoon of hartshorn into the water, having it only tepid, and dip up and down until clean ; then dry with the brushes down, and they will be like new ones. If you do not have ammonia, use soda ; a teaspoon dissolved in the water will do very well. JAPANESE CLEANSING CEEAM. One-fourth pound white castile soap, three ounces ammonia, one of ether, one of spirits of wine, one of glycerine; cut the soap fine and dissolve in one quart VALTJABLE EECIPES. 331 rain water ; then add four quarts rain water, and then all the ingredients. For cleansing silks. FOE CLOTHES THAT FADE. One ounce sugar of lead in a pail of rain water. Soak over night. TO WASH CALICO. Mrs. Edward Ely. Blue calicoes or muslins will retain their color if one small teaspoon of sugar of lead is put into a pail of water and the articles washed in the water. BLACK CALICOES. Wash black percales or calicoes as usual, rinse in water with a strong solution of salt. This will prevent black from running, and also colors. TO WASH WOOLEN BLANKETS. Mrs. J. A. Packard. Dissolve soap enough to make a good suds in boiling water, add a tablespoon of aqua ammonia ; when scald- ing hot, turn over your blankets. If convenient, use a pounder, or any way to work thoroughly through the suds without rubbing on a board. Rinse well in hot water. There is usually soap enough from the firs#suds to make the second soft ; if not, add a little soap and ammonia; and after being put through the wringer, let two persons, standing opposite, pull them into shape ; dry in the sun. White flannels may be washed in the same way without shrinking. 382 THE HOME OOOK BOOK. TO WASH WOOLEN. E. A. Forsyth. To every pail of water, add one tablespoon of ammo- nia, and the same of beef gall; wash out quickly, and rinse in warm water, adding a very little beef gall to the water. This will remove spots from carpets, making them look fresh. TO WASH OAKPETS. E. A. Forsyth. Spread the carpet where you can use a brush; take Irish potatoes and scrape them into a pail or tub of water and let them stand over night, using one peck to clean a large carpet ; two pails of water is sufficient to let them stand in, and you can add more when ready to use; add two ounces of beef gall and use with a brush, as to scrub , a floor; the particles of potato will help cleanse; when dry, brush with a broom or stifi brush. WASHING FLUID. Mrs. A. P. Iglehart. Nine tablespoons unslacked lime, two pounds of sal soda, four quarts water; let this simmer half an hour, then bottle up. Take a small teacup to a boiler of water.. WASHING FLUID. Mrs. A. W. D. One pound sal soda, one pound potash, each dissolved in one gallon of water (separately); then mix together and bottled. VALUABLE EECIPES. 388 TO MAKE GOOD STAECH. Mrs. D. Mix the starch with cold water, add boiling water until it thickens, then add dessert spoon of sugar, and a small piece of butter. Makes a stiff and glossy finish equal to laundry. AN EXCELLENT HAED SOAP. Mrs. Kate Johnson. Pour twelve quarts soft boiling water on two and one- half pounds of unslacked lime ; dissolve five pounds sal soda in twelve quarts soft hot water ; then mix and let them remain from twelve to twenty-four hours. Pour off all the clear fluid, being careful not to allow any of the sediment to run off; boil three and one-half pounds clean grease and three or four ounces of rosin in the above lye tUl the grease disappears ; pour into a box and let it stand a day to stiffen and then cut in bars. It is as well to put the lime in all the water and then add the soda. After pouring off the fluid, add two or three gal- lons of water and let it stand with the lime and soda dregs a day or two. This makes an excellent washing fluid to boil or soak the clothes in, with one pint in a boiler of water. CLEANING SILVER Mrs. O. L. Parker. Never put a particle of soap about yo\ir silver if you would have it retain its original lustre. When it wants polish, take a piece of soft leather and whiting and rub 384 THE HOME COOK BOOK. hard. The proprietor of one of the oldest, silver estab- lishments in the city of Philadelphia says that house- keepers ruin their silver in soa;^ suds, as it makes it look like pewter. POLISH FOE ZINC OK TIN. Mrs. Thos. A. Hill. To three pints of water add one ounce of nitric acid, two ounces of emery, and eight ounces of pumice stone ; shake well together. Any druggist will fill it for fifteea cents. STOYE POLISH. , Mrs. O. L. Parker. Stove lustre, when mixed with turpentine and applied in the usual manner, is blacker, more glossy, and more durable than when mixed with any other liquid. The turpentine prevents rust, and when put on an old rusty stove will make it look as well as new. TO extHaot ink. To extract ink from cotton, silk and woolen goods, saturate the spot with spirits of turpentine and let it remain several hours ; then rub it between the hands. It will crumble away without injuring either the color or texture of the article. TO TAKE INK OUT OF LINEN. Dip the spotted part in pure tallow, melted ; then wash out the tallow and the ink will disappear. \ALUABLE RECIPES. 385 PATENT SOAP. Mrs. Ludlam. Five pounds hard soap, one quart ley, one-fourth ounce pearl-ash ; place on the fire and stir well until the soap is dissolved; add one-half pint spirits turpentine, one gill spirits hartshorn and stir well. It is then fit for use. The finest muslin may be put to soak in this suds, and if left for a time will become beautifully white. A small portion of soap put into a little hot water, and a flannel cloth will save hard labor and a brush in cleaning paint. One who has tried it thinks it worth the price of the book. FOK BLEACHING COTTON CLOTH. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler. One pound chloride of lime, dissolved and strained; put in two or three pails water ; thoroughly wet the cloth and leave it in over night ; then rince well in two waters.: This will also take out mildew, and is equally good for brown cotton or white that has become yellow from any cause, and vfi.ll not injure the fabric. TO EEMOVE TAE. Rub wsU with clean lard, afterwards wash with soap and warn), water. Apply this to either hands or clothing. JATELLE WATEE FOE MILDEW STAINS. One pound of chloride of lime, two of washing soda, two gallons of soft water ; pour one gallon of boiling water to the ingredients to dissolve them, adding the cold water when dissolved. 25 386 THE HOME COOK BOOK. OOLOEIlSrG COTTON OAEPET RAGS. Mrs. S. I. Parker, Channahon, 111. Blue. — For five pounds of cloth, take five ounces of copperas, with two pails of water in a tin or copper boiler; set it over the fire till the copperas is dissolved and it be- gins to heat, then put in the cloth, stirring it frequehtljr till it -boils, one-half or three-fourths of an hour; then re- move the cloth where it can drain ; pour away the cop-;^ peras water and take two ounces of prussiate of potas^i in about two pails of water in the same vessel ; when it is well dissolved and hot, put in the cloth from the copperas - water, stirring it thoroughly till it' boils, one-half an hour, then remove the cloth ; add (with care and caution, on account of the spattering which ensues,) one tablespoon of oil of vitroil, and stir it well in the dye; replace the cloth, stirring it briskly till it has boiled one-half an hour. Should be well rinsed and washed in clear water to pre- vent the dye from making it tender after- coloring. Yellow. — For five pounds of cloth, dissolve one-half •; pound of sugar of lead in a tub of warm water and twelve . ounces of bichromate of potash in another tub of cold water; soak, rinse, and wring the cloth in the lead water first, then in the other, and return from one to the other till the right shade of color is obtained. Orange. — Dip the yellow colored cloth into'strong lime water — if it should not turn, boil it, rinse all well. Green. — Put your blue cloth in the yellow dye in the same manner as for coloring yellow. Old calico will take a darker shade of blue or green in the same dye with the white cloth. VALUABLE RECIPES. 387 TO BOIL COEN BEEF. Mrs. E. A. Forsyth. Put into boiling water when you put it on to cook, and do not take it out of the pot when done, until cold. This will leave the meat juicy, instead of dry, when cold. TO PKEVENT EED ANTS. Put one pint of tar in an earthen vessel, pour on it two quarts of boiling hot water, and place it in your closet. FOR PEESERVI^iTG EGGS. Mrs. B. F. Adams. To one pint of unslaked lime and one pint of salt, pour one pail of boiling water ; when cold, pour over the eggs, having placed them in a jar or tub, with the small end of the egg down. CLEANING MAEBLE. Mrs. Gray. Dissolve a large lump of Spanish whiting in water which has previously dissolved a teaspoon of washing soda, take only sufficient water to moisten the whiting, and it will become a paste ; with a flannel cloth rub the marble well, leaving it on for a while and repeating the process two or three times, if necessary. Wash off with soap and water, then dry the marble well and polish with a soft duster. FURNITURE POLISH. No. I. Shellac varnish, linseed oil and spirits of wine, equal parts. No. 2. Linseed oil, alcohol, equal parts. 388 THE HOME COOK BOOK. No. 3. Linseed oil five ounces, turpentine two ounces, oil of vitriol one-half ounce. CLEANING WHITE PAINT. Mrs. C. H. Wheeler, Spirits of ammonia, used in sufficient quantity to soften the water and ordinary hard soap, will make the paint : look white and clean with half the effort of any other method I have ever tried. Care should be taken not to have too much ammonia, or the paint will be injured. HAED SOAP. Mrs. Mary A. Odell. Six pounds of clean grease, six pounds of sal soda,' three pounds of stone lime ; slake the lime aiid put it into , four gallons of soft water; add the sal soda, and when 1 dissolved let it settle. Pour off the water into an iroii kettle, and add the grease melted, and boil. If the soap does not come after boiling a few minutes, add more soft water till it is of the consistency of honey. Wet a tub and pour the hot soap into it. When cold, cut it inta- pieces and lay it away to dry. Always make soap in «p iron kettle. THE SICK ROOM. Egg Gruel. — Boil eggs from one to three hours until hard enough to grate ; then boil new milk and thicken with the egg, and add a little salt. Excellent in case of liausea. — Mrs. Bartlett. Gruel for Infants. — To make a gruel for infants suf- fering from marasmus, take one pint of goat's milk and the yolks of two eggs boiled sufficiently hard to reduce to an impalpable powder ; add a pint of boiling water, a lit- tle salt or sugar, and administer by a nursing bottle. — Dr. Small. Beef Tea. — To one pound of lean beef add one and one-half tumblers of cold water; cut the beef in small pieces, cover and let it boil slowly for ten minutes, and add a little salt after it is boiled. Excellent. Beef Jelly for Invalids. — Three small onions, three small or one and one-half large carrots, a few whole cloves and black pepper, one small teaspoon of sugar, one slice of ham, two calf's feet, one and a half pounds of beef Put in the onions and other ingredients in succession. Place the ham on top, then the calf 's feet, and lastly the beef; no water ; put on the side of the range, and let it (389) 390 THE HOME COOK BOOK. Stand until reduced to a soft mass, then add a quart of water and let it boil one hour ; strain and let stand until cold, when take off the fat. Use by dissolving a little in hot water. — Mrs. J. A. Ellis. ' Panada. — Two thick slices of stale bread half an inch in thickness ; cut off the crust, toast them a nice brown, cut them into squares of two inches in size, lay them in a bowl, sprinkle a little salt over them and pour on a pint of boiling water. Remedy for Cancer. — Col. Ussery, of the Parish of De Soto, informs the editor of the Caddo Gazette, that he fully tested a remedy recommended by a Spanish womart, native of the country. Take an egg and break it, pour out the white, retaining the yolk in the shell ; put in salt, mix with the yolk as long as it will receive it ; stir them together until the salve is formed ; put this on a piece of sticking plaster and apply it to the cancer twice a day. A citizen of Philadelphia using a weak solution of car^ bolic acid as a wash to neutralize the offensive odor ariss ing from a cancer, discovered that the latter was removed by the application. The solution consisted of one-fourth' of an ounce of acid diluted in a quart of water. — Mrs'. R. A. Sibley. Fever and Ague. — Four ounces galangal root in a quart of gin, steeped in a warm place,; take often. — Mrs. R. A. Sibley. Small Pox Remedy. — The following remedy a friend- tried in Ohio in a case of confluent small pox, when the VAI^UABLE EECIl'ES. 391 doctor had little hope of saving the patient, and it saved the woman's life. The remedy is sure in scarlet fever. " I herewith append a recipe which has been used to my own knowledge in a hundred cases. It will prevent or cure the small pox, even though the pittings are filling. When Jenner discovered cow pox in England, the world of science hurled an avalanche of fame upon his head, and when the most scientific school of medicine in the world (that of Paris), published this panacea for the small pox, it passed unheeded. It is unfailing as fate, and con- quers in every instance. It is harmless when taken by a well person. It will also cure scarlet fever. Take sul- phate of zinc, one grain ; fox glove (digitalis) one grain ; half a teaspoon of water. When thoroughly mixed, add four ounces water. Take a spoonful every hour, and either disease will disappear in twelve hours. For a child, smaller doses, according to age." For Hydrophobia. — Franklin Dyer, a highly respec- table farmer of Galena, Kent county, Md., gives the fol- lowing as a sure cure for the bite of a mad dog. He has tested it with most gratifying results : Elecampane is a plant well known and found in many gardens. Imme- diately after being bitten, take one and a half ounces of the root of the plant, the green root is preferable. The dried, to be found in drug stores, will answer; bruise it, put it in a pint of fresh milk, boil down to half a pint, strain, and when cold, drink it, fasting at least six hours afterwards. The next morning repeat the dose, fasting, using two ounces of the root. On the third morning, take another dose prepared as the last, and this will be suffi- 392 THE HOME COOK BOOK, cient. After each dose, nothing to be eateti for at least , six hours. I had a son who was bitten by a mad dog eighteen years ago, and four other children in the neigh-, borhood were also bitten. They took the above, and are now alive and well. I have known many who were cured. It is supposed that the root contains a principle, which, being taken up by the blood in its circulation, counteracts or neutralizes the deadly effect of the virus of h|ydro-; ■ phobia. I feel so much confidence in this simple remedy that I am willing you should give my name in connection with this statement. For Felon. — Take common rock salt, as used for salting down pork or beef, dry in an oven, then pound it fine and mix with spirits of turpentine in equal parts;- put it in a rag and wrap it around the parts affected ; as it gets dry, put on more, and in twenty-four hours you are cured. The felon will be dead. No harm to try it, as I have with success. Cure for Neuralgia. — A friend who suffered horrible pains from neuralgia, hearing of a noted physician in Germany who invariably cured' the disease, ;went to hini, and was permanently cured after a shprt sojourn. The doctor gave him the remedy, which was nothing but a , poultice ^nd tea made from our common field thistle. The leaves are macerated and used as a poultice on the ' parts affected, while a small quantity of the same is boiled down to the proportion of a quart to a pint, and a small wine glass of the decoction drank before each meal. Our; friend says he has never known it to fail of giving relief VALUABLE EECIPBS. 393 while in almost every case it has effected a cure. God gave herbs for the healing of the nations. For Hoarseness. — Squeeze the juice of half a lemon in a pint bowl, add loaf sugar (two tablespoons), one full teaspoon of glycerine, and one full tablespoon of whisky ; pour over this boiling hot water to nearly fill the bowl, and drink hot just before going to bed. For Sore Throat. — Cut slices of salt pork or fat bacon ; simmer a few moments in hot vinegar, and apply to throat as hot as possible. When this is taken off, as the throat is relieved, put around a bandage of soft flannel. A gargle of equal parts of borax and alum, dissolved in water, is also excellent. To be used frequently. Healing Lotion. — One ounce glycerine, one ounce rose-water, ten drops carbolic acid. This preparation prevents and cures chapping of the skin, and at the same time bleaches it. It is also excellent for sore lips and gums. I consider it an indispensable adjunct to the toilet table. — Mrs. A. Yocum, Cairo, 111. To STOP Bleeding. — A handful of flour bound on the cut. — Mrs. A. M. To Prevent Contagion from Eruptive Diseases. — Keep constantly, in plates or saucers, sliced raw onions in the sick room, if possible. As fast as they become discolored, replace by fresh ones. During any epidemic of skin diseases that are eruptive, onions, except those taken fresh from the earth, are unsafe, as they are pecu- liarly sensitive to disease. ' 394 , TfTE HOME COOK BOOK. To Restore from Stroke of Lightning. — Shower with cold water for two hours; if the patient does not show signs of life, put salt in the water, and continue to shower an hour longer. For Toothache. — Of powdered alum and fine salt, equal quantities; apply to the tooth and it will give speedy relief.— Mrs. Bartlett. For Headache. — Pour a few drops of ether on one- half ounce of gum camphor and pulverize ; add to this an equal quantity of carbonate ammonia pulverized; add twenty drops peppermint; mix and put in an open- mouthed bottle and cork. — Mrs. A. M. Gibbs. Salve for Chilblains. — Fry out nicely a little mutton tallow; into this while melted, and after it is nicely strained, put an equal quantity of cpal oil ; stir well together while it is cooling. To Remove Discoloration from Bruises. — Apply a cloth wrung out in very hot water, and renew frequently until the pain ceases. Or, apply raw beefsteak. ' Cure for Wasp Sting. — Apply a poultice of saleratus water and flour, and bind on the sting. Apply slices of raw onion for a bee sting. Cure for Summer Complaint. — Two ounces tincture rhubarb, one of paregoric, one-half of essence of pep- permint, one-half of essence of annis, one-half of pre- , pared chalk. Dose for adult, one teaspoon in a little water; take as often as needed. — Mrs. L. Bradley. VALUABLB EECIPES. 395 The best Deodorizer. — Use bromo-chloralum in the proportion of one tablespoon to eight of soft water ; dip cloths in this solution and hang in the rooms ; it will will purify sick rooms of any foul smells. The surface of anything may be purified by washing well and then rub- bing over with a weakened solution bromo-chloralum. A weak solution is excellent to rinse the mouth with often, when from any cause the breath is offensive. It is also an excellent wash for sores and wounds that have an offensive odor. To Destroy Bed Bugs, Moths and Other Vermin. — Dissolve alum in hot water, making a very strong solu- tion ; apply to furniture or crevices in the walls with paint brush. This is sure destruction to these noxious vermin, and invaluable because easily obtained ; is perfectly safe to use, and leaves no unpleasant traces behind. When you suspect moths have lodged in the borders of carpets, wet the edges of the carpets with a strong solution; whenever it reaches them, it is certain death. BILLS OF FARE. In the accompanying Bills of Fare, tiie arrangement of the various courses will be suggested by the form in which they are given : MENU. BEEAKFAST.— BTo. 1. Fine Hominy.. Buttered Toast. Beefsteik. French Rolls. Potatoes a la Creme. Buckwheat Cakes. Tea. Coffee. Chocolate. BREAKFAST— BTo. 2. „ Broiled Spring Chickens. Parker House Rolls. Saratoga Potatoes. Scrambled Eggs. Fried Oysters. Rye and Indian Loaf. Coffee. Tea. Chocolate. BBEAKFAST— ITo. 3. While Fish. Potatoes. Muffms. Fried Ham. Egg Omelette. Coffee. Tea. Chocolate. LUNCHES. liUWCH PAETY— JSTo. 1. Beef Tea, served in small porcelain cups. Cold Chicken and Oyster and other forms of Croquettes. Chicken Salad. Minced Ham Sandwiches. Escalloped Oysters. .Tutti Frutti. Chocolate Cream. Cake Basket of Mixed Cake. Mulled Chocolate. Mixed Pickles. Biscuits, etc. Ice Cream and Charlottes can eithef^ije'added or substituted. For twenty guesTs, alkiw one gallon. (396) BILLS OF FAEE. 397 LXTBTCH PAKTY— No. 2. Oyster Pie. Boiled Partridge. Cold Ham. Sweet Pickles. Sandwiches. Pound and Fruit Cake. Pyramids of Wine Jelly. Blanc Mange. Snow Jelly. Pineapple Flummery. Kisses. Macaroons. Ice Cream. DINNERS. DUTWEK — ITo. 1. FIRST COURSE. Oyster Soup, with Celery. SECOND eOUSSE. Roast Turkey. Croquettes of Rice. Sweet and Irish Potatoes. THIRD COURSE. Quail on Toast. Vegetables. Pickles. Escalloped Tomatoes. Macaroni. Jelly. DESSERT. Almond Pudding. , Mince Pie. Lemon Pie. Cheese. Fruits. Nuts. CoSee. DIITNER-No. 2, FIRST COURSE. Raw Oysters. White and Brown Soup. SECOND COURSE. Boiled White Fish, with Sauce and Sliced Lemon. THIRD COURSE. Roast Beef. FOURTH COURSE. Roast Turkey. Pucks. Vegetables in season. Croquettes of Rice or Hominy. Cranberry Sauce. Currant Jelly. DESSERT. Cream'Xlustard. Lemon Pie. Fruits, ^^utdi Cofifee. ,„ BILLS OF FAEE. TEA COMPANY TEA COMPABTT — Wo. 1. Tea. Coffee. - C;hocolate. Biscuits. Oyster Sandwiches. Chicken Salad. Cold Tongue. Cake and Preserves. Ice Cream and Cake later in the evening. TEA COMPAWir — Uo. 2. Tea, Coffee, or Chocolate. Escalloped or Fried Oysters. Muffins. ' Sliced "Sarketyi and Ham. Cold Biscuits. Sardines and Sliced Lemons. Thin slices of Bread, rolled. Sliced Pressed Meats. Cake in variety. SUPPERS. STJFPEB — Wo. 1. Cold Roast Turkey. Cliicken Salad. Quail on Toast. Ham Croquettes. Frica's.seed Oysters. Charlotte Russe. Vanilla Cream. Chocolate Cake. Cocoanut Cake. Mixed Cakes. Fruit. Coffee and Chocolate. SUPPEK-ISro. 2. Cold Roast Partridges or Ducks. Oyster Patties. Cold Boiled Ham. Dressed Celery, Oysters or Minced Ham Sandwiches. Raw Oysters. Chicken Croquettes or Fricasseed Oysters Wine Jelly. Ice Cream. Biscuit Glace. Cakes. Fruits. Chocolate. Coffee. Pickles and Biscuits. VALITABLE EECIPES. 399 Allowance op Supplies for an Entertainment. In inviting guests, it is safe to-calculate that out of one hundred and fifty, but two-thirds of t'.^e«BniIWt will be present. If five hun- dred are invited, not more than three hundred can be counted upon as accepting. Allow one quart of oysters to every three persons present. Five chiclcens [or, what is better, a ten pound turkey, boiled and minced], and fifteen heads of celery, are enough for chicken salad for fifty guests ; one gallon of ice cream to ejtery twenty guests ; one hundred and thirty sandwiches for one hundred guests ; and six to ten quarts of wine jelly for each hundred. I'br a company of twdttty, allow three chickens for salad ; one hundred pickled oysters ; two moulds of Charlotte Russe ; one gallon of cream ; and four dozen biscuits. Cold Lunches fob Washing Days, or Other Days of Extra Labor. '' Lunch No. i. — Cold com beef, nicely sliced'; baked potatoes ; bread, butter and pickles. Dessert — mince pie and cheese. Lunch No. 2. — Chicken pie , baked potatoes ; rolled bread or biscuit. Dessert — cake and custard. Lunch No. 3. — First course : Raw oysters, with lemon and crack- ers. Second course : Cold veal, with jelly and Saratoga potatoes ; bread and butter. Dessert — cherry pie with cheese. Lunch No. 4. — Casserole of fish, with mushroom cutsup; bread and butter. Dessert — pie with cheese. ■ 'ECflgtJUmJALADiNNERS. Sunday. — Roast beef, potatoes and gi^B|^ i liessert — pudding or ^0 THE HOME COOK BOOK. Monday. — Hashed beef, potatoes and bread pudding. Tuesday. — Broiled beef, vegetables, apple pudding. Wednesday. — Boiled pork)^jF2iiP°'^t°«s, greens, and pie or rice pudding. ■ ^^ Thursday. — Roast or broiled fowl, cabbage, potatoes, lemon pie, cheese. Friday. — Fish, potato croquettes, escalloped tomatoes, pudding, Saturday. — A la mode beef, potatoes, vegetables, suet pudding and mince pie, cheese. Ws;>Ms';>j~,;' *- -M *'