ALBEUT R. MANN LIBRARY Cornell University Gift of Thomas Bass From Home Bakings, by Edna Evans San Francisco, 1912. Cornell University Library The original of tliis bool< is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924085805129 IRVING'S 1000 RECEIPTS, OR MODERI & DOMESTIC COOKEEY. A A COMPLETE DIRECTION FOR CAEYII&, PASTEY, COOKING, PRESERVING, PICKLING, MAKING WINES, JELLIES, &c., &c, DISHES. SOUPS, PUDDINGS, FISH, PIES, MEAT, TARTS, VEGETABLES, CUSTARDS, POULTRY, CAKES, OYSTERS, PUFFS, GAME, FRITTERS, &c. &c. WITH A COMPLETE TABLE OF COOKERY, FOR INVALIDS. ALSO OBSF.RVATIONS FOB THE USE OF THE MISTRESS OF THE FAMILY By LUCRETIA IRVING. NEW YORK; CORNISH, LAMPORT & CO. ST. LOUIS, (MO:) McOARTNET & LAMPORT. 1852. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851, 3>Y CORNISH, LAMPOKT & Co. In the Cleik's Office of the District Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New York. OBSERVATIONS FOK TBB USB JV THE MISTRESS OF A FAMILY. In every rank those deserye the greatest praise, who best acquit then>selves of the duties which their station requires. Indeed, this line of conduct is not a matter of choice but of necessity, if we would maintain the dignity of oar character as rational beings. In the variety of female acquirements, though do- mestic occupations stand not so hi^ in esteem as they formerly did, yet when neglected they produce much human misery. There was a time when ladies knew nothing beyond their own family concerns ; but in the present day there are many who know nothing about them. Each of these extremes should be avoided : but is there no way to unite in the fe- male character, cultivation pf talents and habits of tisefuiness 1 Happily there are still great num- bers in every situation, whose example proves that this is possible. Instances maybe found of ladies in the higher walks of life, who condescend to ex- amine the accounts of their house-steward ; and, by overlooking and wisely directing the expenditure of that part of their husbands' income which falls under their own inspection, avoid the inconveniences of embarrassed circumstances. The direction of a table is no inconsiderable branch of a lady's concern, as it involves judgment in ex- 4 penditui-e, respectaoility of appearance, and the comfort of her husband and those who partake their hospitality. If a lady has never been accustomed, while single, to think of family management, let her not upon that account fear that she cannot attain it ; she may consult others who are more experienced, and ac- quaint herself with the necessary quantities of the several articles of family expenditure, in proportion to the number it consists of, the proper prices to pay, &;c. &c. A minute account of the annual income, and the times of payment, should be taken in writing ; like- wise an estimate of the supposed amount of each ar- ticle of expense ; and those who are early accus- tomed to calculations on domestic articles, will ac- quire so accurate a knowledge of what their estab- lishment requires, as will give them the happy me- dium between prodigality and parsimony, without acquiring the character of meanness. Many families have owed their prosperity full as much to the propriety of female management, as to the knowledge and activity of the father. The following hints may be useful as well as eco- nomical : — Every article should be kept in the place best suit- ed to it, as much waste may be thereby avoided ._ Vegetables will keep best on a stone floor, if the air be excluded. — Meat in a cold dry place. — Sugar and sweetmeats require a dry place ; so does salt. — Candles, cold, but not damp. — Dried meats, hams, &c. the same. All sorts of seeds for puddings, saloop, rice, &c. should be close covered, to preserve from insects ; but that will not prevent it. if long kept. Bread is now so heavy an article of expense, that all waste should be guarded against ; and having it cut in the room will tend much to prevent it. — Since the scarcity in 1795 and 1800, that custom has been much adopted. It should not be cut until a day old. Earthen pans and covers keep it best. Straw to lay apples on should be quite dry, to prevent a musty taste. Large pears should be tied up by the stalk. Basil, savoury, or knotted marjoram, or thyme, to be used when herbs are ordered ; biit with dis- cretion, as they are very pungent. The best means to preserve blankets from moths is to fold them and lay them under the feather-beds that are in use ; and they should be shaken occa- sionally. When soiled, they should be washed, not scoured. Soda, by soflening the water, saves a great deal of soap. It should be melted in a large jug of wa- ter, some of which pour into the tubs and boiler •- and when the lather becomes weak, add more. The new improvement in soft soap is, if properly used, a saving of near half in quantity. Many good laundresses advise soaping Imen in warm water the night previous to washing, as facili- tating the operatiou with less friction. Soap should be cut with a wire or twine, in pie- ces that will make a long square when first brought in, and kept out of the air two or three weeks ; for if it dry quick it will crack, and when wet, break. Put it on a shelf, leaving a space between, and let it grow hard gradually. Thus, it will save a full third in the consumption. Some of the lemons and oranges used for juice should be pared first to preserve the peel dry : 1* 6 some should be halved, and when squeezed, the pulp cut out, and the outside dried for grating. If for boiling in any liquid, the first way is best. When these fruits are cheap, a proper quantity should be bought and prepared as above directed, especially by thoSe who live in the country, where Ihey cannot always be had ; and they are perpetu- ally wanted in cookery. When whites of eggs are used forjelly, or other purposes, contrive to have pudding, custard, &c. to employ the yolks also. Should you not want them for several hours, beat them up with a little water, and put them in a cool place, or they will be hard- ened and useless. It is a mistake of old, to think that the whites made cakes and puddings heavy ; on the contrary, if beaten long and separately, they contribute greatly to give lightness, are an advan- tage to paste, and make a pretty dish beaten with fruit, to set in cream. &c. If copper utensils be used in the kitchen, the cook should be charged to be very careful not to let the tin be rubbed off, and t j have them fresh done when the least defect appears, and never to put by any soup, gravy, &c. in them, or any metal utensil ; stone and earthen vessels should be provided for those purposes, as likewise plenty of common dishes, that the table-set may not be used to put by cold meat. Tin vessels, if kept damp, soon rust, which causes holes. Fenders, and tin linings of flower-pots, &c. should be painted every year or two. Vegetables soon sour, and corrode metals and glazed red ware, by which a strong poison is pro- duced. Some years ago the death of several gen- tlemen was occasioned at Salt-hill, by the cook send- ing a ragout to the table, which she had kept from the preceding day'in a copper vessel badly tinned. Vinegar, by its acidity, does the same, the glazing being of lead or arsenic. The best way of scalding fruits, or boiling vinegar, is in a stone jar on a hot iron hearth : or by putting the vessel into a saucepan of water, called a water- bath. If chocolate, coffee, jelly, gruel, bark,&c. be suf fered to boil over, the strength is lost. In the following' and indeed all other receipts, though the quantities may be as accurately directed as possible, yet much must be left to the discretion of the person who uses them. The different tastes of people requires more or less of the flavour of spices, salt, garlic, butter &.c. which can never be ordered by general rules ; and if the cook has not a good taste, and attention to that of her employers, not all the ingredients which nature and art can fur- nish, will give exquisite flavour to her dishes. The proper articles should be at hand, and she must pro- portion them until the true zest be obtained, and a variety of flavour be given to the different dishes served at the same time. Those who require maigre dishes will find abun dance in this little work ; and where they are not strictly so, by suet or bacon being directed into the stuflfings, the cook must use butter instead ; and where' meat gravies (or stock, as they are called) are or- dered, those made offish must be adopted. DIRECTIONS FOR CARVING. The carving-knife for a lady should be light, and of a middling size and a fine edge. Strength is less required than address, in the manner of using it : and to facilitate this the cook should give orders to the butcher to divide the joints of the bones of all carcass-joints of mutton, lamb, and veal, (such as neck, breast, and loin ;) which may then be easily cut into thin sclices attached to the adjoining bones- If the whole of the meat belonging to each bone should be too thick, a small slice may be taken off between every two bones. The more fleshy joints (as fillet of veal, leg or saddle of mutton, and beef,) are to be helped in thin slices, neatly cut and smooth ; observing to let the knife pass down to the bone in the mutton and beef joints. The dish should not be too far off the carver ; as it gives an awkward appearance, and makes the task more difficult. Attention is to be paid to help every one to a part of such articles as are consi- dered the best. In helping fish, take care not to break the flakes ; which in cod and very fresh salmon are large and contribute much to the beauty of its appearance. A fish knife, not being sharp, divides it best on this account. Help a part of the roe, milt, or liver, to each person. The heads of carp, part of those of cod and salmon, sounds of cod, and fins of turbot, are likewise esteemed niceties, and are to be attend- ed to accordingly. In cutting up any wild-fowl, duck, goose, or tur- key, for a large party, if you cut the slices down from pinion to pinion, without making wings, thera will be more prime pieces. THE EXPERIENCED AMERICAN HOUSEKEEPER. FISH. To choose Fish. Rock Fish. — A remarkably fine, firm and well fla- voured fish, should be chosen by the redness of the gills and a full bright eye ; if the eye is sunken and the gills pale, they have been too long out of the water ; their fineness depends on their being cook- ed immediately after they are killed ; the same fish in New-York, and to the eastward of it, is known by the name of Streaked-Bass. ,. Sheep's Head. — This fish is generally esteemed one of the finest brought to our markets. It should be firm and thick, and the eyes bright. They are in season during the whole summer. Sea Bass and Black Fish are fine solid fish, and generally to be had alive in the Philadelphia market and to the eastward, it is seldom seen in the southern market. Salmon. — If new, the flesh is of a fine red, (the gills particularly,) the scales bright, and the whole fish stiff. When just killed, there is a white- ness between the flakes which gives a great firm- 10 ness ; by keeping, this tnelts down, and the fish is more rich. Cod. — The gills should be very red, the fish should be very thick at the neck, the flesh white and firm, and the eyes fresh. When flabby they are not good. They are in season from the be- ginnmg of December till the end of April. Shad. — If good, they are very white and thick, their gills red and the eyes bright ; the whole fish must be stiff and firm. Season, April and May. Herrings. — If good, their gills are ofa fine red and the eyes bright ; as is likewise the whole fish, which must be stiff and firm. Soles. — If good, they are thick, and the belly is of a oream-colour ; if this is of a bluish cast and flabby, they are not fresh. They are in the market almost the whole year, but are in the highest perfection about mid-summer. Mliitings. — The firmness of the body and fins, is to be looked to, as in herrings ; their high season is during the first three months of the year, but they may be had a great part of it. MackereU—C\ioos,& as whitings. Their season is May, June, and July. They are so tender a fish that they carry and keep worse than any other. Pike. — For freshness observe the above marks. The best are taken in rivers ; they are very dry fish, and are much indebted to stufiing and sauce. Carp hve some time out o/ water, and may there- fore get wasted ; it is best to kill them as soon as caught, to prevent this. The same signs of freshness attend them as other fish. Trout. — They are a fine-flavoured fresh-water fish, and should be killed and dressed as soou as caught. — When they are to be bought, examine It whether the gills are red and hard to open, the eyes bright, sind the body stiff. The season is July, August and September. Perch. — Take the general rules given to distin- guish the freshness of other fish. Mullets. — The sea are preferred to the river mul- lets, and the red to the gray. They thould be very firm — Their season is August. Gudgeons. — They are chosen by the same rules as other fish. They are taken in running streams ; come in about midsummer, and are to be had for fife or six months. Eels. — There is a greater difference in the good- ness of eels thaii of any other fish. The true silver- eel (so Ci^lled from the bright colour of the belly,) is caught in all our rivers ; those taken in great floods are generally good, but in ponds they have usually a strong rank flavour. Except the middle of summer, they are always in season. Flounders. — They should be thick, firm, and have their eyes bright. They very soon become flabby and bad. They are in season from January to March, and from July to September. Lobsters. — If they have not been long taken, the claws will have a strong motion when you put your finger on the eyes and press them. The heaviest are the best, and it is preferable to boil them af, home. When you buy them ready-boiled, try whether their tails are stiff, and pull them up with a spring, otherwise that part will be flabby. The cock -lobster is known by the narrow back part of his tail ; and the uppermost fins within it are stiff and hard ; but those of the hen are soft, and the tail broad- er. The male, though generally smaller, has the 12 highest flavour, the flesh is firmer, and the colom when boiled is a deeper red. Crabs. — The heaviest are best, and those of a middling size are sweetest. If light they are watery, when in perfection thejoints of the legs are stiff, and the body has a very agreeable smell. The eyes look dead and loose when stale. Prawns and Shrimps. — When fresh they have a sweet flavour, are firm and stiff, and the colour is bright. — Shrimps are of the prawn kind, and may be judged by the same rules. Oysters. — They are taken m every section of the Union, on the seaboard; those most esteemed are taken in the Chesapeake Bay, on York Bank, in the Bay of New York, and when alive and strong, the shell is close. — They should be eaten as soon as as opened, otherwise they lose their flavour. In choosing, care should be taken to get them with a thin sharp shell, as this is a mark of their being young ; and when open, the oysters should have a plump solid appearance ; the largest are by no means the best. Besides the nbove enumerated fish, our waters afibrd an immense quantity, may of which are ex- tremely delicate, particularly as pan fish ; but as {he directions already given may be applied to them it is deemed unnecessary to go more into detail. Terrapins. — There are several species ; those most preferred are taken in the Chesapeake Bay, at the mouths of the Potomac, Chester, and other rivers. — Those that are full and heavy for the size are the best ; those with a smooth shell are old. Turtle. — There are several species, but the green IS in the highest estimation for the table, and is gen- erally brought to U8 from the West India islands. 13 They weigh from eighty to two hundred pounds ; when an opportunity of choice offers, those which are heaviest in proportion to their bulk, are to be preferred ; and the general livehness of the animal IS also to be attended to. • To boil Salmon. Clean it carefully, boil it gently, and take it out of the water as soon as done. Let the water be warm if the fish be split. If underdone, it is very unwholesome. — Shrimp or anchovy sauce. To hroil Salmon. Cut slices an inch thick, and season with pepper and salt ; lay each slice in half a sheet of white pa- per, well buttered, twist the ends of the paper, and broil the slices over a slow fire six or eight minutes. Serve in the paper with anchovy sauce. An excellent dish of dried Salmon. Pull some into flakes ; have ready some eggs boiled hard and chopped large ; put both into half a pint of thin cream, and two or three ounces of but- ter rubbed with a tea-spoonful of flour ; skim il and stir till boiling hot : make a wall of mashed potatoes round the inner edge of a dish, and pour the above into it. Salmon collared. Split such a part of the fish as may be sufficient to make a handsome roll, wash and wipe it, and, having mixed sa\t, white pepper, pounded mace, and Jamaica pepper, in quantity to season it very high, rub it inside and out, well. Then roll it tight, and bandage it, put as much water and one third vinegar as will cover it, with bay-leaves, salt, and both sorts of pepper. Cover close, and simmer till 2 14 done enough. Drain and boil quick the liquor, and put on when cold. Serve with fennel. It is an elegant dish, and extremely good. To dress Halibut. Having cut the Halibut in thin slices, fry them with butter, afterwards boil the bones of the fish with four onions, some celery and thyme, for half an hour, in a little water. Then strain it, and stew the .fish for half an hour in a little water, with the addition of some butter browned. . Season with white pepper, a spoonful of catsup, salt, and mace, a spoonful of lemon juice, and a little shred lemon neel. Add flour and fresh butter for thicking it. Cod. Some people boil the cod whole ; but a large head and shoulders contain all the fish that is pro- per to help the thinner parts being overdone and tasteless before the thick are ready. But the whole fish may be purchased at times more reasonably ; and the lower half, if sprinkled ant! hung ujS, will be in high perfection one or two days. Or it may be made Salter, and served with egg-sauce, potatoes, and parsnips. Cod's Head and Shoulders. Tie it up, and put it on the fire in cold water which will completely cover it ; throw a handiful of salt into it. Great care should be taken to serve it without the smallest speck of black or scum. Gar- nish with a large quantity of double parsley, lemon, horse-radish, and the milt, roe, and liver, and fried smelts if approved. Serv:e with plenty of Oyster or Shrimp sauce, and anchovy and butter. Crimp Cod Boil, broil, or fry. 15 Cod sounds boiUd. Soak them in warm water naif an hour, then scrape and clean ; and if to be dressed white, boil them in milk and water ; when tender, serye ^m in a napkin, with egg sauce. The salt must notbe much soaked out, unless for fricassee. Cod sounds to look like small chickens. A good maigre-day dish. Wash three large sounds nicely, and boil them in milk and water, but not too tend^ ; when cold, put a forcemeat of chopped oysters, crumbs of bread, a bit of butter, nutmeg, pepper, salt, and the yolks of two eggs ; spread it thin over the sounds, and roll up each in the form of a chicken, skewering it ; then lard them ns you would chickens, dust a little flour over, and roast them in a tin oven slowly. When done pr )ugh, pour over them a fine oyster sauce. Serve foi side or corner dish. To broil Cod sounds. Scald in hot water, rub well with salt, pull off the dirty skin, and put them to simmer till tender ; take them out, flour, and broil. While this is doing, season a little brown gravy with pepper, salt, a tea- spoonful of soy, and a little mustard ; give it a boil with a bit of flour and butter, and pour it over the sounds. Cod sounds ragout. Prepare as above ; then stew them in white gravy seasoned, cream, butter, and a little bit of flour ad- ded before you serve, gently boiling up. A bit of lemon pepl, nutmeg, and the least pounded mace, should give the flavour. To dress salt Cod. Soak and clean the piece you mean to dress, then 16 lay it all night in water, with a glass of Tinegar. Bo«l it enough, then break it into flakes on the dish ; pour over it parsneps boiled, beaten in a mortar, and then boil up with cream and a large piece of butter rub- beS with a bit of flour. It may be served as above with egg-sauce instead of the parsnep, and the root Bent up whole ; or the fish may be boiled and sent up without flaking, and sauced as above. To dresa fresh Sturgeon. Cut slices, rub egg over them, then sprinkle wi h crumbs of bread, parsley, pepper, salt ; fold the^n m paper, and broil gently. Sauce — butter, ancho yy, soy. To roast Sturgeon. Put it on a lark-spit, then tie it on a large spw ; baste it constantly with butter, and, serve with a good gravy, an anchovy, a squeeze of Seville orange or lemon', and a glass of sherry. Perch. Put them into cold water, boil them carefully, and serve with melted butter and soy. Perch are a most dehcate fish. They may be either fried or steweJ, but in stewing they do not preserve so good a flavour. To fry Trout Scale, gut, and well wash ; then dry tltem, and lay them separately on a board before the fire, after dusting some flour over them. Fry them of a fine colour with fresh dripping ; serve with crimp pars- ley, anrl plain butter. — Perch may be done the same way. Trout a-la-Genevoise. Clean the fish very well ; put it into your stew- pan, addinghalfCbampagae, and half Mosselle, or 17 Rhenish, or sherry wine. Season it with pepper, salt, and onion, a few cloves stuck in it, and a small bunch of parsley and thyme ; put it in a crust of French bread ; set it on a quick fire. When the fish is done, take the bread out, bruise it, and then thicken the sauce ; add flour and a little butter, and let it boil up. See that your sauce is of a proper thickness. Lay your fish on the dish, and pour the sauce over it. — Serve it with sliced lemon and fried bread. Mackerel. Boil, and serve with butter and fennel. To broil them, split, and sprinkle with herbs, pepper, and salt ; or stuff with the same, crumbs and chopped fennel. To bake Pike. Scale it, and open as near the throat as you can, then stuff it with the following : — grated bread, herbs, anchovies, oysters, suet, salt, pepper, mace, half a pint of cream, four yolks of eggs ; mix all over the fire till it thickens, then put it into the fish, and sew it up, butter should be put over it in little bits, bake it. Serve sauce of gravy, butter, and anchovy. Note — If, in helping a pike, the back and belly are slit up, and each slice gently drawn down- wards, there will be fewer bones given. To dry Haddock. Choose them of two or three pounds weight, take out the gills, eyes, and entrails, and remove the blood from the back-bone. Wipe them dry, and put some salt into the bodies and eyes. Lay them on a board for a night, then hang them up in a dry place, and after three or four days they will be fit to eat ; skin and rub them with egg, and strew 2* 18 crumbs over them. Lay them before the fire, ana baste with butter until brown enough. Serve with egg sauce. Whitings, if large, are excellent this way ; and it will prove an accommodation in the country, where there is no regular supply of fish Stuffing for Pike, Haddock, and small Cod. Take equal parts of fat bacon, beef-suet and fresh butter, some parsley, thyme, and savoury ; a little onion, and a few leaves of scented tnarjorum shred fine ; an anchovy or two ; a little salt and nutmeg, and some pepper. To fry Smelts. They should not be washed more than is necessa- ry to clean them. Dry them in a cloth, then lightly fleur them, but shake it off. Dip them into plenty of egg, then into bread crumbs grated fine, and plunge them into a good pan of boiling lard ; let them continue gently boiling, and a few minutes will make them a bright yeflow brown. Take care not to take off the light roughness of the crumbs, or their beau- ty will be lost. Spitchcock Eels. Take one or two large eels, leave the skm on, cut them into pieces of three inches long, open them on the belly-side, and clean them nicely ; wipe them dry, and then wet them with beaten egg, and strew over on both sides chopped parsley, pepper, salt, a very little sage, and a bit of mace pounded fine and mixed with the seasoning. Rub the grid- iron with a bit of suet, and broil the fish of a fine colour. Serve with anchovy and butter for sauce Fried Eels. If small, they should be curled round and fried, being first dipped into egg and crumbs of bread 19 Boiled Eels. The small ones are best — do them in a small quantity of water, with a good deal of parsley, vhich should be served up with them and the li- quor. Serve chopped parsley and butter for sauce. Eel broth, very nourishing for the sick. Do as above ; but stew two hours, and add ao onion and peppercorns — salt to taste. Collared Eel. Bone a large eel, but do not skin it ; mix pepper, salt, mace, alspice, and a clove or two, in the finest powder, and rub over the whole inside ; roll it tight, and bind with a coarse tape. Boil in salt and water till enough, then add vinegar, and when cold keep the collar in pickle. Serve it either whole or in slices. Chopped sage, parsley, and a little thyme, knotted marjoram, and savoury, ' mixed with the spices, greatly improve the taste. Flounders. Let them be rubbed with salt inside and out, and lie two hours to give them some firmness. Dip them into egg, cover with crumbs, and fry them. To dress Red Herrings. Choose 'lose that are large and moist, cut them open and j 'ir some boiling small beer over them to soak hai n hour ; drain them dry, and make (hem just hot through before the fire, then rub some cold butter over them and serve. Egg-sauce, or buttered eggs, and mashed potatoes, should be sent up with them. Baked Herrings. Wash and drain without wiping them ; season with alspice in fine powder, salt, and a few whole cloves ; lay them in a pan with plenty of black pep- 20 per, an onion, and a few bay leaves. Add half vine- gar and half small beer, enough to cover them. Put paper over the pan, and bake in a slow oven. If you like, throw saltpetre over them the night be- fore, to make them look red. Gut, but do not open them. Fried Herrings. Serve them of a light brown, with onions sliced and fried. Broiled Herrings. Flour them first, and do of a good colour ; plain butter for sauce. To pot Lobsters. Half-boll them, pick out the meat, cut it into small bits, season with mace, white pepper, nutmeg, and salt, press close into a pot, and cover with but- ter ; bakehalf an hour ; put the spawn in. When cold take the lobster out, and put it into the pots with a little of the butter. Beat the other butter in a mortar with some of the spawn ; then mix that coloured butter with as much as will be sufficient to cover the pots, and strain it. Cayenne may be added, if approved. Stewed Lobster, a very high relish. Pick the lobster, put the berries into a dish that has a lamp, and rub them down with a bit of butter, two spoonfuls of any sort of gravy, one of soy, or walnut-catsup, a little salt and Cayenne, and a spoonful of port ; stew the lobster cut into bits with the gravy as above. Buttered Lobsters. Pick the meat out, cut it, and warm with a little weak brown gravy, nutmeg, salt, pepper, and butter, with a little flour. If done white, a little white gravy and cream. 21 To roast Lobsters. When you have half-boiled the lobster take it out of the water, and while hot, rub it with butter and lay it before the fire. Continue basting it with but- ter till it has a fine froth. Curriefor Lobsters or Prawns. Take them from tlie shells, and lay into a pan, with a small piece of mace, three or four spoonfuls of veal gravy, and four of cream ; rub smooth one or two tea-spoonfuls of currie-powder, a tea-spoon- ful of flour, and an ounce of butter ; simmer an hour ; squeeze half a lemon in, and add salt. Prawns and Cray-fish in jelly, a beautiful dish. Make a savoury fish-jelly, and put some into the bottom of a deep small dish ; when cold lay the cray-fish with their back downwards, and pour more jelly over them. Turn out when cold. To butter Prawns or Shrimps. Take them out of the shells ; and warm them with a little good gravy, a bit of butter and flour, a scrape of nutmeg, salt, and pepper ; simmer a min- ute or two, and serve with sippets ; or with a cream sauce, instead of brown. Hot Crab. Pick the meat out of a crab, clean the shell from the head, then put the meat with a little nutmeg, salt, pepper a bit of butter, crumbs of bread, and three spoonfuls of vinegar, into the shell again, and set it before fire. You may brown it with a sala- mander. — Dry toast should be served to eat it upon. Dressed Crab, cold. Empty the shell, and mix the flesh with oil, vine- ^ir, salt., and a little white pepper and Cayenn<= then put the mixture into the large shell, and serve. Very little oil is necessary. To feed Oysters. Put them into water, and wash them with a birch besom till quite clean ; then lay them bottom down- wards into a pan, sprinkle with flbur or oatmeal and salt, and cover with water.' Do the same every flay, and they will fatten. The water should be pretty salt. To stew Oysters. Open and separate the liquor from them, then wash them from the grit ; btrain the liquor, and put with the oysters a bit of mace and the lemom-peel, and a few white peppers. Simmer them very gently, and put some cream, and a little flour and butter. Serve with sippets. Boiled Oysters Eat well. Let the shell be nicely cleaned first ; and serve in them, to eat with cold butter. To scallop Oysters. Put them with crumbs of bread, pepper, salt, nutmeg and a bit of butter, into scallop-shells or saucers, and bake before the fire in a Dutch oven. Fried Oysters, to garnish boiled fish. Make a batter of flour, milk, and eggs, season it a Very little, dip the oysters into it, and fry them a fine yellow brown. A little nutmeg should be put into the seasoning, and a few crumbs of bread into the flour. Oyster Loaves. Open them, and save the liquor ; wash them m it ; then strain it through a sieve, and put a little of it into a tosser, with a bit of butter and flour, white pepper, a scrape of nutmeg, and a little cream 23 Stc^ them, and cut in dice ; put into rolls sold for the purpose. * — MEATS. To choose Meats. Venison. — If the fat be clear, bright, and thick, and the cleft part smooth and close, it is young ; but if the cleft is wide and tough, it is old. Beef. — If the flesh of ox-beef is young, it will have a fine smooth open grain, be of good red, and feel tender. The fat nhould look white rather than yellow ; for when that is of a deep colour, the meat is seldom good : beef fed by oil cake? is in general so, and the flesh is flabby. Veal. — The flesh of a bull calf is firmest, but not so white. The fillet of the cow-calf is generally preferred for the udder. The whitest is the most juicy, having been made so by frequent bleeding and having had whiting to lick. Mutton.' — Choose this by the fineness of its grain, good colour, and firm white fat. Lamb. — Observe the^eck of a fore quarter ; if the vein is bluish, it is fresh ; if it has a green or yellow cast, it is stale. Pork.- — Pinch the lean, and if young it will break. If the rind is tough, thick, and cannot easily be im- pressed by the finger it is old. A thin rind is a merit in all pork. When fresh, the flesh will be smooth and cool ; if clammy it is tainted. Bacon. — If the rind is thin, the fat firm, and of a red tinge, the lean tender, of a good colour and ad- hering to the bone, yon may conclude it good, and not old. Hams. — Stick a sharp knife under the bone : if 24 it comes out with a pleasant smell, the ham is good ; but if the knife is daubed and has a bad scent, do not buy it. Put the meat into cold water, and flour it well first. Meat boiled quick will be hard ; but care must be taken that in boiling slow it does not stop, or the meat will be underdone. If the steam is kept in, the water will not lessen much ; therefore when you wish it to boil away, take off the cover of the soup-pot. Vegetables should not be dressed with the meat, except carrots or parsnips with boiled beef. Weigh the meat ; and allow for all solid joints a quarter of an hour for every pound, and some min- utes (from ten to twenty) over, according as the family like it done. A ham of twenty pounds will take four hours and a half, and others in proportion. A tongue, if dry, takes four hours slow boiliag, after soaking ; a tongue out of pickle, from two hours and a half to three hours, or more if very large ; it must be judged by feeling whether it is very tender. * A leg of pork, or lamb, takes the allowance of twenty minutes, above a quarter of an hour to a pound. In roasting beef of ten pounds will take alt»o>t; two hours and a half; twenty pounds will take three hours and three quarters. A neck of mutton will take an hour and a inalr, if kept a proper distance. A chine of pork, two hours. The meat should be put at a good distance hitta the fire, and brought gradually nearer when the inner part becomes hot which will prevent its being 25 scorched while yet raw. Meat should be much basted ; and whea nearly done, floured to make it look frothed. Veal and mutton sbould have a little paper put oyer the fat to preserve it. If not fat enough to allow for basting, a little good dripping answers as well as butter. In roasting meat it is a very good way to put a little salt and water into the dripping-pan, and baste for a little while with this, before using its own fat or dripping. When dry, dust it with flour, and baste as usual. Salting meat before it is put to roast draws out the gravy ; it should only be sprinkled when almost done. Time, distance, basting often, and a clear fire of a proper size for what is required, are the first articles of a good cook's attention in roasting. To dress Venison. A haunfeh of buck will take three hours and a half, or three quarters, roasting : doe, only three hours and a quarter. Venison should be rattier under than over done. Spread a sheet of white paper with butter, and put it over the fat, first sprinkle it with a little salt ; then lay a coarse paste on strong paper, and cover the haunch ; tie it with fine packthread, and set it at a distance from the fire, which must be a good one. Baste it often : ten minutes before serving take off the paste, draw the meat nearer the fire, and baste it with butter and a good deal of flour, to make it froth up well. Gravy for it should be put into a boat, and not into the dish (unless there is none in the Venison,) aiM» »tA« thus ; Cut off the fat from two or three a 26 pounds of loin of old mutton, and set in steaks on a gridiron for a few minutes just to brown one side ; put them into a saucepan with a quart of water, cover quite close for an hour, and simmer it gently ; then uncover it, and stew till the gravy is reduced to a pint. Season with salt only. Currant-jelly sauce must be served in a boat. Formerly pap-sauce was eaten with venison : which as some still like it, it may be necessary to direct.. Grate white bread, and boil it with port wine, water and a large stick of cinnamon, when quite smooth take out the cinnamon, and add sugar. Claret may be used for it. Make the jelly-sauce thus. Beat some currant- jelly and a spoonful or two of port wine, and set it over the fire till melted. Where jelly runs short put more wine and a few lumps of sugar, to the jelly, and melt as above. Serve with French beans. Haunch, Neck, and Shoulder of Venison. Roast with paste as above, and the same sauce. To stew a Shoulder of Mutton. Let the meat hang till you judge proper to dress it, then take out the bone, beat the meat with a rol- ling-pin, lay some slices of mutton fat, that have lain a few hours in a little port wine, among it, sprin- kle a little pepper and alspice over it in fine pow- der, roll it up tight, and tie it. Set in a stew-pan that will only just hold it, with some mutton or beef gravy not strong, half a pint of port wine, and some pepper and alspice. Simmer it close covered, and as slow as you can, for three or four hours. When quite tender, take off the tape, set the meat on a dish, and strain the giavy over it. Serve with cur- rant-jelly sauce. 27 This is the best way to dress this joint, unless it IS very fat, and then it should be roasted. The bone should be stewed with it. Breast of Vejiison. Do it as the shoulder, or make it into a small pastry. Hashed Venison Should be warmed with its own gravy, or some without seasoning, as before ; and only warmed through, not boiled. If there is no fat left, cut some slices of mutton fat, set it on the fire with a little port wine and sugar, simmer till dry ; then put to the hash, and it will eat as well as the fat of the venison. For Venison Pastry, look under the head Pastry ; as likewise an excellent imitation. Beef tt'la-mode. Choose a piece of thick flank of a fine heifer or ox — cut into long slices some fat bacon, but quite free from yellow ; let each bit be near an inch thick ; dip them into vinegar, and then into a seasoning ready prepared, of salt, black pepper, alspice, and a clove, all in a fine powder, with parsley, chives, thyme, savoury, and knotted marjorum, shred as small as possible, and well mixed. With a sharp knife make holes deep enough to let in the larding, then rub the beef over with the seasoning, and bind it up tight with tape. Set it in a well tinned pot over a fire 'or rather stove ; three or four onions must be fried brown and put to the beef, with two or three carrots, one turnip, a head or two of celery, and a small quantity of water, let it simmer gently ten or twelve hours, or till extremely lender, turn- ing the meat twice 28 Put the gravy into a pan, remove the tat, keep the beef covered, then put thetn together, and add a glass of port wine. Take off the tape, and serve wiih the vegetable : or you may strain them off, and send them up cut into dice for garnish. Onions roastedj and then stewed with the gravy, areagreat improvement. A tea-cupful of vinegar should be stewed with the beef. Ji fricandean of Beef . Take a nice bit of lean beef; lard it with bacon seasoned with pepper, salt, cloves, mace, and alspice. Put it into a stew-pan with a pint of broth, a glass oi white wine, a bundle of parsley, all sorts of sweet herbs, a clove of garlic, a shallot or two, four cloves, pepper and salt. When the meat is become tender, cover it close, skim the sauce well, and strain it ; set it on the fire, and let it boil till it is reduced to a glaze. Glaze the larded side with this, and serve the meat on sorrel-sauce. To stew a rump of Beef. Wash it well, and season it high with pepper, Cayenne, salt, alspice, three cloves, and a blade oi mace, all in fine powder. Bind it up tight, and lay it into a pot that will just hold it. Fry three large onions sliced, and put them to it, with three carrots, two turnips, a shallot, four cloves, a blade of mace, and some celery. Cover the meat with good beef- broth, or weak gravy. Simmer it as gently as pos- sible for several hours, till quite tender. Clear ofl the fat ; and add to the gravy half a pint of port wine, a glass of vinegar, and a large spoon of catsup. Simmer half an hour, and serve in a deep dish.— Haifa pint of table-beer may be added. The herba to be used should be burnet, tarragon, parsley. 29 thyme, basil, sayour}', marjorum, pennyroyal, knotted marjorum, and some chives, if you can get them, but observe to proportion the quaniities to the, pungency of the several sorts — let there be a good handful altogether. Garnish with carrot's, turnips, or truffles and morels, or pickles of different colours, cut small, and laid in little heaps separate : chopped parsley, chives, beet-root, &c. If, when done, the gravy is too much to fill the dish, take only a part to season for serving, but ti.e less water the better : and to increase the richness, add a few beef bones and shanks of mutton in stewing. A spoonful or two of made mustard is a great improvement to the gravy. To stew a Brisket of Beef. Put the part that has the hard fiit into a stew-pot with a small quantity of water ; let it boil up, and skim it thoroughly; then add carrots, turnips, onions, celery, and a few pepper-corns. Stew it extremely tender ; then take out the flat bones, and remove all the fat from the soup. Either serve that and the meat in a tureen, or the soup alone, and the meat on a dish, garnished with some vegetables. The following sauce is much admired served with the beef : — Take half a pint of the soup, and mix it with a spoonful of catsup, a glass of port wine, a tea-spoonful of made mustard, a little flour, a bit of butter and salt; boil altoeether a few minutes, then pour it round the meat. Chop capers, wal- nuts, red cabbage, pickled cucumbers, and chivea or parsley, small, but in several heaps over it. To press Beef. ' Salt a bit of brisket, thin part of the flank, or the tops of the ribs, with salt and saltpetre five days 30 men boil it gently till extremely tender ; put it un der a great weight, or in a cheese-press, till perfect- ly cold. It eats excellently cold, and for sand- wiches. To make hunter's Beef. To a round of beef that weighs twenty-five pounds, take three ounces of saltpetre, three ounces, of the coarsest sugar, an ounce of cloves, a nutmeg, half an ounce of alspice, add three hand- fuls of common salt, all in the finest powder. The beef should hang two or three days ; then rub the above well intoit, and turn and rub it every day for two or three weeks. The bone must be taken out al first. When to be dressed, dip it into cold water, to take off the loose spice, bind it up tight with tape, and put it into a pan with a tea-cup- ful of water at the bottom, cover the top of the meat with shred suet, and the pan with a brown crust and paper, and bake it five or six hours.^ When cold take oifthe paste and tape. The gravy is very fine ; and a little of it adds greatly to the flavour of any hash, soup, &c. — Both the gravy and the beef will keep some time. An excellent mode of dressing Beef. Hang three ribs three or four days ; take out the bones from the whole length, sprinkle it with salt, roll the meat tight, and roast it. Nothing can look nicer. The above done with spices, &c. and baked as hunters' beef, is excellent. To collar Beef. Choose the thin end of the flank of fine mellow beef, but not too fat ; lay it into a dish with salt and saltpetre, turn and rub it every day for a week, and keep it cool. Then take out evory bone and gristle, 31 remove the skin ot the inside part, and cover it thick with the following seasoning cut small • — a large handful of parsley, the same of sage, some thyme, marjorun, and pennyroyal, pepper, salt, and auspice. Roll the meat up as tight as possible, and bind it, then boil it gently for seven or eight hours. A cloth must be put round before the tape. Put the beef under a good weight while hot, without undoing it: the shape will then be oval. Part of a breast of veal rolled in with the beef, looks and eats very well. Beef steaks Should be cut from a rump that has hung a few days. Broil them over a very clear or charcoal fire : put into the dish a little minced shallot, and a table- spoonful of catsup : and rub a bit of butter on the steak the moment of serving. It should be turned often, that the gravy may not be drawn out on either side. This dish requires to be eaten so hot and fresh done, that it is not in perfection if served with any thing else. Pepper and salt should be added when taking it off the fire. Beef steaks and Oyster sauce. Strain off the liquor from the oysters, and throw them into cold water, to take off the grit, while you simmer the liquor with a bit of mace and lemon- peel ; then put the oysters in, stew them a few minutes, and a little cream, if you have it, and some butter rubbed in a bit of flower ; let them boil up once, and have rump-steaks well seasoned and broiled, ready for throwing the oyster-sauce over, the moment you are to serve. Stewed Beef-steaks. Beat them with a little rolling pin, flour and 32 season, then fry with sliced onion of a fine Yigh\ brown, lay the steaks into a stew-pan, and pour as much boiling water over them as will serve for sauce : stew them very gently half an hour, and add a spoonful of catsup, or walnut liquor, before you serve. Italian Beef-steaks. Cut a fine large steak from a rump that has been well hung, or it will do from any tender part : beal it, and season with pepper, salt, and an onion : lay it into an iron stew pan that has a cover to fit quite close, and set it by the side of the fire without wa- ter. Take care it does not burn, but it must havf a strong heat : in two or three hours it will be quit* tender, and then serve with its own gravy. Beef Collops.. Cut thin slices of beef from the rump, or any other tender part, and divide them into pieces three inches long ; beat them with a blade of a knife, and flour them. Fry the collops quick in butter two minut«=a, then lay them into a small stew-pan, and cover them with a pint of gravy ; add a bit of butter rubbed in flour, pepper, salt, the least bit of shallot, shred as fine as possible, half a walnut, four small pickled cucumbers, a tea-spoonful of capers cut small. Take care that it does not boil, and serve the stew in a very hot covered dish. Beef Palates. Simmer them in water several hours, till they will peel ; then cut the palates into slices, or leave them whole, as you choose ; and stew them in a rich gra vy till as tender as possible. Before you serve, season them with Cayenne, *alt, and catsup. If the 33 gravy was drawn clear, add also some butter and flour. If to be served white, boil them in milk, and stew them in fripassee-sauce, adding cream, butter, flour and mushroom-powder, and a little pounded mace. Beef cakes for a side dish of dressed meat. Pound some beef that is underdone with a little fat bacon, or ham ; season with pepper, salt, and a little shallot, or garlic; mix them well, and make it into small cakes, three inches long, and half as wide and thick ; fry them in a light brown, and serve them in a good thick gravy. To pot Beef. Take two pounds of lean beef, rub it with salt- petre, and let it lie one night ; then salt with com- mon salt, and cover it with water four days in a small pan. Dry it with a clotM, and season with black-pepper ; lay it into as small a pan as will hold it, cover it with coarse paste, and bake it five hours in a very cool oven. Put no liquor in. When cold, pick out the strings, and fat : beat the meat very fine with a quarter of a pound of fine butter, just warm; but not oiled, and as much of the gravy as will make it into a paste ; put it into very small pots, and cover them with melted butter. To dress the inside of a cold Sirloin of Beef. Cut out all the meat, and a little fat, into pieces as thick as your finger, and two inches long : dredge it with flour; and fry in buttfer, of a nice brown, drain the butter from the meat and toss it up in a rich gravy, seasoned with pepper, salt anchovy, and shallot. Do not let it boil on any account. Before you serve add two spoonfuls of vinegar. Garnish w'tb crimped parsley. 34 Fricassee of cold roast Beef. Cut the beef into very thin slices, shred a hand- hi of parsley very small, cut an onion into quarters, and put all together into a stew-pan, with a piece ol butter and some strong- broth ; season with salt and pepper, and simmer very gently a quarter of an hour ; then mix into it the yolks of two eggs, a iglass of port wine, and a spoonful of vinegar ; stir it quick, rub the dish with shallot, and turn the fri- cassee into it. To dress cold Beef that has not been done enough, call- ed Beef-Olives, Cut sclices half an inch thick, and four inches square ; lay them on forcemeat of crumbs of bread, shallot, a little suet, or fat, pepper and salt. Roll them and, fasten with a small skewer ; put them mto a stew-pan with some gravy made ofbeef bones, or the gravy of the meat, and a spoonful of water, and stew them till tender. Fresh meat will do. To mince Beef, Shred the underdone part fine, with some of the fat, put into a small stew-pan, withsome onion orshal- lot, (a very Utile will do,) a little water, pepper, and salt ; boil it till the onion is quite soft ; then put some of the gravy of the meat to it, and the mince. Do not let it boil. Have a small hot dish with sip- pets of bread ready, and pour the mince into it, but first mix a large spoonful of vinegar with it ; if shal- lot-vinegar is used, there will be no need of the onion nor the raw shallot. To hash Beef. Do it the same as in the last receipt ; only the meat IS to be ■«» slices, and you may add a spoonful of walnut liquor or catsup. 35 Observe, that it is owing to loiling hash or minces, that they get bard. AH sorts ot' stews, or meats dressed a second time, should be only simmered ; and this last only hot through. Beef a-la vingrette. Cut a slice of underdone boiled beef three inches thick, and a little fat ; stew it in half a pint-of water, a glass of white wine, a bunch of sweet herbs, an onion, and a bay leaf; season it with three cloves pounded, and pepper, till the liquor is nearly wasfid away, turning it once. When cold, serve it. Strain off the gravy, and mix it with a little vinegar for sauce. Round of Beef. Should be carefully salted, and wet with the pickle for eight or ten days. The bone should be cut out first, and the beef skewered and tied up, to make it quite round. It may be stuffed with parsley if approved ; in which case the holes to admit the parsley must be made with a sharp pointed knife, and the parsley coarsely cut, and stuffed in tight. As soon as it boils it should be skimmed, and after- wards kept boiling very gently. Rolled Beef that equals Hare. Take the inside of a large sirloin, soak it in a glass of port wine and a glass of vinegar mixed, for forty-eight hours ; have ready a very fine stuffing, and bind it up tight. Roast it on a hanging spit, and baste it with a glass of port wine, the same quantity of vinegar, and a tea-spoonful of pounded alspice. Larding improves the look and flavour : serve with rich gravy in the dish ; currant-jelly and melted butter in tureens. 36 To roast Tongue and Udder. After cleaning the tongue well, salt it with com- mon salt and saltpetre three days ; then boil it, and likewise a fine young udder with some fat to it, till tolerably tender ; then tie the thick part of one to the thin part of the other, and roast the tongue and udder. Serve them with good gravy, and currant-jelly sauce. A few cloves should be stucjs in the udder. To stew Tongue. Salt a tongue with saltpetre and common salt for a week, turning it every day. Boil it tender enough to peel ; when done stew it in a moderately strong gravy ; season with soy, mushroom catsup, Cay- enne, pounded cloves, and salt if necessary. Serve with truffles, morels, and mushrooms. In both this, receipt 'and the next, the roots must be taken off the tongues before salting, but some fat left. An excellent way of doing Tongues to eat, cold. Season with common salt and saltpetre, brown sugar, a little bay-salt, pepper, cloves, mace and alspice, in fine powder for a fortnight ; then take away the pickle, put the tongue into a small pan, and lay some butter on it ; cover it with brown crust, and bake slowly till so tender that a straw would go through it. The thin part of tongues, when hungup to dry, grates like hung beef, and also makes a fine addition to the flavour of omlets. Beef-heart. Wash it carefully ; stuff as a hare ; and serve with rich gravy, and carrant-jelly sauce. Hash with the same, and port wine. 37 Stewed Ox-cheek, plain. Soak and cleanse a fine cheek the day before it is to be eaten ; put it into a stew-pot that will cover close, with three quarts of water ; simmer it after it has first boiled up and been well skimmed. In two hours put plenty of carrots, leeks, two or three Inrnips, a bunch of sweet herbs, some whole pep- per, and four ounces of alspice. Skim it often ; when the meat is tender take it out ; let the soup get cold, take off the cake of fat, and serve the soup separate or with meat. It should be a fine brown ; which might be done by burnt sugar ; or by frying some onions quite brown with flour, and simmering them with it. This last way improves the flavour of all soups and gra vies of the brown kind. If vegetables are not approved of in the soup, they may be taken out, and a small roll toasted, or bread fried and added. Celery is a great addition, and should always be served. Where it is not to be got, the seed of it gives quite as good a flavour, boiled in, and strained off. To dress Ox-cheek another way. Soak half a head three hours, and clean it with plenty of water. Take the meat off the bones; and put it into a pan with a large onion, a bunch of sweet herbs, some bruised alspice, pepper and salt. Lay the bones on the top : pour on two or three quarts of water, and cover the pan close with brows, paper, or a dish that will fit close. Let it stand eight or ten hours in a slow oven ; or simmer it by the side of the fire, or on a hot hearth. When done tender, put the meat into a clean pan, and let tt get cold. Take the cake of fat off, and warm the 38 head ia pieces in the soup- Put what vegetables yon choose. Marrow-bones. Cover the top with fl )ured cloth ; boil them, and serve with dry toast. Tripe May be served in a tureen, stewed with milk and onion till tender. Melted butter for sauce. Or fry it in small bits dipped in batter. Or stew the thin part, cut into bits, in gravy ; thicken with flour and butter, and add a little cat- sup. Or fruassee it with white sauce. Soused Tripe. Boil the tripe, but not quite tender ; then put il into salt and water, which must be changed every day till it is all used. When you dress the tripe, dip it into batter of flour and ej^gs, and fry it of a good brown. Ox-feet or Cow-heels, May be dressed in various ways, and are very nu- tritious in all. Coil them, and serve them in a napkin ; with melted butter, mustard, and a large spoonful of vine- gar. Or boil them very tender, and serve them as a brown fricassee : the liquor will do to make jelly sweet or relishing, and likewise to give richness to soups or gravy. Or cut them Into four parts, dip them into an egg ; and then flour and fry them ; and fry onions, (if you like them) to serve round. Sauce as above Or bake them as for laock-turtle. 39 VEAL. To keep Veal. The first part that turns bad of a leg of veal, ia where the udder is skewered back.' The skewer should be taken out, and both that and the meat un- der it wiped every day, by which means it will keep good three pr four days in hot weather. Leg of Veal. ■ Let the fillet be cut largie or small, as best suits the number of your company. Take out the boEe, fill the space with fine stufiing, and let it be skew- ered quite round ; and send the large side upper- most. When half roasted, if not before, put a pa- per over the fat ; and take care to allow a sufficient time, and put it a good distance from the fire, as the meat is very solid ; serve with melted butter pour- ed over it. — You may pot some of it. Knuckle of Veal. As fe^v people are fond of boiled veal, it may be well to leave the knuckle small, and take off some utlets or coUops before it be dressed ; and as the knuckle will keep longer than the fillet, it is best not to cut off the slices tilf wanted. Break the bone to make it take less room ; wash it well ; and put it in a saucepan with three onions, a blade or two of mace, and a ie.yf peeper corns ; cover it with water, and simmer it till quite ready. In the mean time some macaroni should be boiled with it if approved, or rice, or a little rice flour, to give it a small degree of thickness ; but do not put too much. Before it is served, add half a pint of milk and cream, and let it come up either with or without the meat. Or fry the knuckle with sliced onions and butter 40 to a good brown ; and have ready peas, lettuce, oobn, and a cucumber or two, stewed in small quantity of water, an hour ; then add these to the - veal ; and stew it till the meat is tender enough to eat, but not overdone. Throw in pepper, salt, and a bit of shred mint, and serve altogether. Shoulder of Veal. ^ Cut off the knuckle, for a stew or gravy. Roast the other part for stuffing ; you may lard it. Serve with melted butter. The blade-bone, with a good deal of meat left on, eats extremely well with mushroom or oyster-sauce) or mushroom-catsup in butter. MckofFeal. Cut off the scrag to boil, and cover it with onion sauce. It should be boiled in milk and water. Parsley and butter may be served with it, instead of onion-sauce. Or it may be stewed with whole rice, small onions, and pepper-corns, with a very little water. Or boiled and eaten with bacon and greens. The best end may be either roasted, broiled as steaks, or made into^pies. JSTeck of Veal a-la-braise. Lard the best end with bacon rolled in parsley chopped fine, salt, pepper, and nutmeg : put it in- to a tosser, and cover it with water. Put to it the scrag-end, a little lean bacon or ham, an onion, two carrots, two heads of celery, and about a glass of Madeira wine. Stew it quick two hours, or till it i» tender, but not too much. Strain off the liquor: mix a little flour and butter in a stew-pan till brown, and lay the veal in this, the upper side to the bottom f the pan. Let it be over the fire till it gets co- 41 coloured ; then lay it into the dish, stir some of th« liquor in and boil it up, skim it nicely, and squeeze orange or lemon-juice into it. Breast of Veal. Before roasted, if large, the two ends may be ta- ken off and fried to stew, or the whole may be roast- ed. — ^Butter should be poured over it. If any be left, cut the pieces into handsome sizes, put them into a stew-pan, and pour some broth over it ; or if you have no broth, a little water will do ; add a bunch of herbs, a blade or two of mace, some pepper and an anchovy ; stew till the meat is ten- der, thicken with butter and flour, add a little catsup ; or the whole breast may be stewed, after cutting ott' the two ends. Serve the sweetbread whole upon it, which may either be stewed, or parboiled, and then covered with crumbs, herbs, pepper, and salt, and browned in a Dutch oven. To roll a Breast of Veal. Bone it, take o£f the thick skin and gristle, and beat the meat with a roUing-pin. Season it with herbs chopped very fine, mixed with salt, pepper, and mace. Lay some thick slices of fine ham ; or roll it into two or three calves' tongues of a fine red, boiled first an hour or two, and skinned. Bind it up tight in a cloth, and tape it. Set it over the fire to simmer, in a small quantity of water, till it is quite tender ; this, will take some hours. Lay it on the dresser, with a board and weight on it till quite cold. Pigs' or calves' feet boiled and taken from the bones, may be put in or round it. The different colours laid in layers look well when cut j and you 4* 42 may put in yolks of eggs boiled, beet-root, grated ham, and chopped parsley in different parts. Chump of Veal a-la-daube. Cut off the chump end of the loin ; take out the edgebdne : stuff the hollow with good forcemeat, tie it up tight, and lay in a stew-pan with the bone you take out, a little faggot of herbs, an anchovy, two blades of mace, a few white peppers, and a pint of good veal-broth. — Cover the veal with slices of fat bacon, and lay a sheet of white paper over it. Co- ver the pan close, simmer it for two hours, then take out the bacon, and glaze the veal. — Serve it on mushrooms, or with sorrel-sauce, or what else you please. Feal-rolls of either cold Meat or fresh. Cut thin slices ; and spread on them a fine season- mg of a very few crumbs, a little chopped bacon or scraped ham, and a little suet, parsley, and shallot (oi instead of the parsley and shallot, seme fresh mushrooms stewed and minced,) pepper, salt, and a small piece of pounded mace. This stuffing may either fill up the roll like a sau- sage, or be rolled with the meat. In either case tie it up very tight, and stew very slowly in a gravy and a glass of sherry. — Serve it when tender, after skimming it nicely. v A Dunelm of cold Veal or Fowl. Stew a few small mushrooms in their own liquor and a bit of butter, a quarter of an hour ; mince them very small, and add them (with their liquor) to minced veal, with also a little pepper and salt, some cream, and a bit of butter rubbed in less than half a tea-spoonful of flour. Simmer three or four minutes, and serve on thin sippets of bread. 43 Minced Veal Cut cold real as fine as possible, but do Dot chop it. Put to it a very little lemon-peel shred, two grates of nutmeg, some salt, and four ■ .r five spoon- fuls of either a little wreak broth, milk, or water • simmer these gently with the meat, but take care ijot to let it boil ; and add a bit of butter rubbed in fiour. Put sippets of thin toasted bread, cut into a three-cornered shape, round the dish. To pot Veal. Cold fillet makes the finest potted veal ; or you may do it as follows : Season a large slice of the fillet before it is dress- ed, with some mace, pepper corns, and two or three cloves, lay it close into a potting-pan that will but just hold it; fill it up with water, and bake it three hours ; then pound it quite small in a mortar, and add salt to taste ; put a little gravy that was baked to it in pounding, if to be eaten soon, otherwise, only a little butter just melted. When done, cover it over wijh butter. To pot Veal or Chicken with Ham. Pound some cold veal or white of chicken, sea- soned as directed in the last article, and put layers of it with layers of ham pounded or rather shred ; press each down, and cover with butter. Cutlets Maintenon. Cut slices about three quarters of an inch thick, beat them with a rolling-pin, and wet them on both sides with egg ; dip them into a seasoning of bread- crumbs, parsley, thyme, knotted marjoram, pepper, salt, and a little nutmeg grated ; then put them into papers folded over, and broil them, and have in a boat melted butter, with a little mushroom catsup. 4\ Cutlets another leay Prepare as above, and fry themf lav them into a dish, and keep them hot, dredge a little dour, and put a bit of hutter into the pan ; brown It. then pour a little boiling water into it, and boil quick : season with pepper, salt, and catsup, and pour over them Veal Collops. Cut long thin collops ; beat them we"!, and lay od them a bit of thin bacon of the same size, and spread forcemeat on that, seasoned high, and also a little garlic and Cayanne. Roll them up tight, about the size of two fingers^ but no more than Cwo or three inches long ; put a very small skewer to fasten each firmly ; rub egg over : fry them of a fine brown, and pour a rich brown gravy over. To dress Collops quick. Cut them as thin as paper with a very sharp knife, and in small bits. Throw the skin and any odd bits of the veal, into a little water, with a dust of pep- per and salt ; set them on the fire while you beat the collops : and dip them into a seasoning of herbs, bread, pepper, salt, and scrape of nutmeg, but first wet them in egg. Then put a bit of butter into a frying-pan, and give the collops, every quick fry ; for as they are so thin, two minutes will do them on both sides ; put them into a hot dish before the fire ; then strain and thicken the gravy, give it a boil in the frying-pan, and pour it over the collops. A lit- tle catsup is an improvement. Scallops of ccld Veal or Chicken. Mince the meat extremely small ; and set it over the fire with a scrap of nutmeg, a little pepper and salt, and a Httle cream, for a few minutes ; then put it into the scallop shell, and fill them with crumbs 45 of bread, over which put some bits of bvtter, and brown them before the fire. Fricandeau of Veal. Cut a large piece from the fat side of the leg, about nine inches long and half as thick and broad ; beat it with the rolling-pin ; take off the skin, and trim off the rough edges. Lard the top and sides*, and cover it with fat bacon, and then with white pa- per. Lay it into the stew-pan with any pieces of undressed veal or mutton, four onions, a carrot sli- ced, a faggot of sweet herbs, four blades of mace, four bay-leaves, a pint ofgood veal or mutton broth, and four or five ounces of lean ham or gammon. — Cover the pan close, and let it stew slowly three hours ; then take up the meat, remove all the fat from the gravy, and boil it quick to a glaze. Keep the fricandeau quite hot, and then glaze it ; and serve with the remainder of the glaze in the dish, and sorrel-sauce in a sauce tureen. Fricandeau another way. Take two large round sweetbreads and prepare them as you would veal ; make a rich gravy with truffles, morels, mushrooms, and artichoke-bottoms, and serve it round. Veal Olives. Cut long thin collops, beat them, lay on them thin slices of fat bacon, and over these a layer of force- meat seasoned high, with some shred shallot and Cayenne. Roll them tight,j about the size of two fingers, but not more than two or three inches long, fasten them round with a small skewer, rub egg over them, and fry them of a light brown. Serve with brown gravy, in which boil some mushrooms pickled or fresh. Garnish with balls fried. 46 Veal Cake. Boil six or eight eggs hard ; cut the yolks in two, and lay some of the pieces in the bottom of the pet: shake in a little chopped parsley, some slices of veal and ham, add then eggs again ; shaking in after each some chopped parsley, with pepper and salt, till the pot is full. Then put in water enough to cover it, and lay on it about an ounce of butter ; tie it over with a double paper, and bake it about an hour. Then press it close together with a spoon, and let it stand till cold. It may be put into a small mould ; and then it will turn out beautifully for a supper or side dish. Veal Sausages. Chop equal quantities of lean and fat bacon, a handful of sage, a little salt and pepper, and a few anchovies. Beat all in a mortar ; and when used roll and fry it, and serve it with fried sippets, or on stewed vegetables, or on white collops. Scotch Collops. Cut veal into thin bits about three inches over, and rather round ; beat with a rolling-pin, and grate a little nutmeg over them ; dip into the yolk of an egg, and fry them in a little butter of a fine brown : pour the butter off: and ready warm to pour upon them half a pint cf gravy, a little bit of butter rubbed into a little flour, a yolk of egg, two large spoonfuls of rream, and a bft of salt. Do not boil the sauce, bi't stir it till of a fine thickness to serve with the coKops. TnhMl Calf h Head. Clean it very nv'ely and soak it in water, till it may look very whit*; : *ake out the tongue to salt, and the brniiis to wiali? a little dish. Boil the head 47 extremely tender ; then strew It over with crumbs and chopped parsley, and brown them ; or if liked better, leare one side plain. Bacon and greens are to be served to eat with it. The brains must be boiled ^ and then mixed with melted butter, scalded sage chopped ; pepper, and salt. If any of the head is left, it may be hashed next Jay, and a few slices of bacon just warmed and put round. Cold calfs head eats well if grilled. To hAsh Calfs Head, When half boiled cut off the meat in slices, half an inch thick, and two or three inches long : brown some butter, flour, and sliced onion, and throw in the slices with some good gravy, truffles, and mo- rels ; give it one boil, and skim it well, and set it in a moderate heat to simmer till very tender. Season with pepper, salt and Cayenne, at first-, and ten minutes before serving, throw in some shred parsley, and a very small bit of taragon and knotted- marjoram cut as fine as possible ; just before you serve, add the squeeze of a lemon. Forcemeat- balls, and bits of bacon rolled round. Calfs Head Fricasseed. Clean and half boil a head ; cut the meat into small bits, and put it into a tosser,with a little gravy made of the bones, some of the water it was boiled in, a bunch of sweet herbs, an onion and a blade of mace. If you have any young cockrels in the house, Bse the coxcombs ; but first boil them tender, and blanch them ; or a sweet-bread will do as good. Season the gravy with a little pepper, nutmeg, and salt, rub down some flour and butter, and give all a boil together ; then take out the herbs and onion. 48 and add a little cup of crcRin, but do not boil it in.— Serve with small bits of bacon rolled round, and balls. To collar Calf's Head. Scald the skin off a fine head, clean it nicely, and take out the brains. Boil it tender enough to re- move the bones : then have ready a good quantity of chopped parsley, mace, nutmeg, salt, and white pepper, mixed well ; season it high with these ; lay the parsley in a thick layer, then a quantity of thick slice's of fine ham, or a beautiful-coloured tongue skinned, and then the yolks of six nice yel- low eggs stuck here and there about. Roll the head quite close, and tie it up as tight as you can. Boil it, and then lay a weight on it. A cloth must be put under the tape, as for the other collars. Mock Turtle. ' Bespeak a calf's head with the skin on, cut it in half, and clean it well ; then half-boil it, take all tne meat off in square bits, break the bones of the head, and boil them in some veal and beef broth to add to the richness. Fry some shallot in butter, and dredge in flour enough to thicken the gravy; stir this into the browning, and give it one or two boils : skim it carefully, and then put in the head ; put in also a pint of Madeira wine, and simmer till the meal is quite tender. About ten minutes before you serve, put in some basil, taragon, chives, parsley, Cayenne pepper, and salt, to your taste ; also twa spoonfuls or mushroom-catsup, and one of soy. Squeeze the juice of a lemon into the tureen, and pour the soup upon it. Forcemeat-balls and small eggs. A cheaper way. — Prepare half a calf's head -with- out the skin as above : when the meat is cut off, 49 break the boces, and put them into a sauce-jian with some grayy made of beef and veal bones, and sea- soned with fried onions, herbs, mace, and pepper. Have ready two or three ox-palates boiled so ten- der as to blanch, and cut into small pieces ; to which a cow-heel, likewise cut into pieces, is a great im- provement. Brown some butter, flour, and onion, and pour the gravy to it ; then add the meats as above, and stew. Half a pint of sherry, an ancho- vy , two spoonfuls of walnut catsup, the same of mush- room catsup, and some chopped herbs as before. — Balls, &c. Another. — Put into a can a knuckle of veal, two fine cow-heels, two onions, a f^w cloves, pep- pers, berries of alspice, mace, and sweet herbs : cover them with water, then tie a thick paper over the pan, and set it in an oven for three hours. — When cold take off the fat very nicely ; cut the meat and feet into bits an inch and a half square ; remove the bones and coarse parts ; and then put the rest on to warm, with a large spoonful of walnut and one of mushroom catsup, half a pint of sherry or Madei- ra wine, a little mushroom powder, and the jelly of the meat. When hot, if it wants any more season- ing, add some ; and serve with hard eggs, force- meat-balls, squeeze of lemon, and a spoonful of soy. An excellent and very cheap mock tuij'tle may be made of two or three cow-heels baked with two pounds and ahalf of gravy-beef, herbs, &c. as above with cow-heels and veal. Calf's Ldver. Slice it, season with pepper and salt, and broil nicely ; rub a bit of cold butter on it, and serve hot and hot. 5 50 Calf's Liver roasted. Wash and wipe it j then cut a long hole in it, and staff it with crumbs of breads chopped anchovy, herbs, a good deal of fatbaoon, onion, salt, pepper, a bit of butter, and an egg ; sew the liver up ; then lard it, or wrap it in a veal-cawl, and roast it. — Serve with good brown gravy, and currant-jelly. To dress the Liver and Lights. Half-boil an equal quantity of each, then cut them in a middling-sized mince, put to it a spoonful or two of the water that boiled it, a bit of butter, flour, salt, and pepper, simmer ten minutes and serve hot. , Sweetbreads. Half-boil them, and stew them in a white gravy, add cream, flour, batter, nutmeg, salt, and white pepper. Or do them in white sauce seasoned. Or parboil them, and then cover them with crumbs, herbs, and seasoning ; and brown them in a Dutch oven. Serve with butter, and mushroom catsup, or gravy. Sweetbreads roasted. Parboil two large ones : when cold lard them witb bacon, and roast them in a Dutch oven. For sauce, plain butter and mushroom catsup. Smeetiread Ragout. Cut them, about the size of a walnut, wash and dry them, then fry them of a fine brown ; pour to them a good gravy, seasoned with salt, pepper, alspice, and either mushrooms or mushroom catsup ; strain, and thicken with butter and a little flour. Kidney. Chop ve«l-kidney, and some of the fat ; hkewise a little leek er onion, pepper and salt; roll it up with an n '-.to balls, and fry them. 51 Calfs heart stuff and roast as beef's heart : or sliced, make it into a pudding, as directed for steak or kidney pudding. PORK, ETC. Bacon hogs and porkers are differently cut up. Hogs are kept to a lajge size ; the chine, (or back-bone,) is cut down on each side, the whole length, and is a prime part either boiled or roasted. The sides of a hog are made into bacon, and the inside is cut out with very little meat to the bone. On each side there is a large spare-rib ; which is usually divided into two, one sweet-bone, and a blade-bone. The bacon is the whole outside : and contains a fore-leg and a ham ; which last is the bind-leg, but if left with the bacon it is called a gammfon. To roast a leg of Pork. Choose a small leg of fine young pork : cut a slit in the knuckle with a sharp knife ; and fill the space with sage and onion chopped, and a little pepper and salt. When half-done, score the skin in slices, but do not cut deeper than the outer rind. Apple-sauce and potatoes should be served to eat with it. To boil a leg of Pork. Salt it eight or ten days : when it is to be dressed weigh it ; let it lie half an hour in cold water, to make it white : allow a quarter of an hour for every pound, and half an hour over from the time it boils up ; skim it as soon as it boils, and frequently after. Allow iifeter enough. — Save some of it to make peas-sQi^ Some boil it in a very nice cloth, flour- ed • which gives a very delicate look. It should be small and of a fine gram. Serve peas-pudding ii,.iJ turnips with it. 52 Loin atifi J^eck of Pork Roast them. Cut the skin of the loin across, at distances of half an inch, with a sharp pen-knife. Shoulders and Breasts of Pork. Put them into pickle, or salt the shoulder as a a leg : when very nice, they may be roasted. Rolled Neck of Pork. Bone it ; put a forcemeat of chopped sage, a very few crumbs of bread, salt, pepper, and two or three berries of alspice, over the inside; then roll the meat as tight as you can, and roast it slowly, and at a good distance at first. Spring or Forehand of Pork. Cut out the bone : sprinkle salt, pepper, and sage, dried, over the inside ; but first warm a little but- ter to baste it, and then flour it ; roll the pork tight, and tie it ; then roast by a hanging jack. About two hours will do it. Spare-Rib Should be basted wifh a very little butter and a little flour, and then sprinkled with a little dried sage crumbled. — Apple-sauce and potatoes for roasted pork. Pork Griskin Is usually very hard ; the best way to prevent this is, to put it into as much cold water as will cover it, and let it boil'up ; then instantly take it ofi", and put it into a Dutch oven ; a very few minutes will doit. Remember to rub butter over it, and then flour it, before you put it to the fire. Blade-bone of Pork. Is taken from the bacon-hog ; the less meat left en it, in moderation, the better. It is to be broiled ; and when just done, pepper aid salt it. Put to it a 53 piece of butter, and a tea-spoonful of mustard ; and serve it covered, quickly. Pork-steaks. Cut them from a loin or neck, and of middling thickness : pepper and broil them, turning them often ; when nearly done, put on salt, rub a bit of butter over, and serve the moment they are taken off the fire, a few at a time. Sausages. Chop fat and lean pork together ; season it with sage, pepper and salt, and you may add two or three berries of alspice ; half Jill hog's guts that have been soaked and made extremely clean : or the meat may be kept in a very small pan closely covered : and so rolled and dusted with a very little flour be fore it is fried Serve on stewed red cabbage ; or mash potatoes put in a form, brown with salamander, and garnish with the above ; they must be pricked vrith a fork before they are dressed, or they will burst. An excellent Sausage to eat cold. Season fat and lean pork with some salt, saltpetre, black pepper, and alspice, all in fine powder, and rub into the meat ; the sixth day cut it small, and mix with it some shred shallot or garlic, as fine as possible. — Have ready an ox-gut that has been scoured, salted, and soaked well, and fill it with the above stufiing ; tie up the ends, and hang it to smoke as you would hams but first wrap it in a fold or two of old muslin. It must be high-dried. Some eat it without boiling, but others like it boiled first. The tkin should be tied in different places, so as to make each link about eight or nine inches long. Sausages. Chop a pound and a half of pork, and the same of 6* 54 veal, cleared of skin and sinews ; add three quarters of a pound of beef-suet ; mince and mix them : steep the crumb ofa penny-loaf in water, and mix it with the meai, with also a little dried sage, pepper and salt. To roast a sucking Pig. If you can get it when just killed, this is of g" a advantage. Let it be scalded, which the dea-jrs usually do ; then put some sage, crumbs of bread, salt, and pepper, into the belly, and sew it up. Ob- serve to skewer the legs back or the under part will not crisp. Lay it to a brisk fire till thoroughly dry ; then have ready some butter in a dry cloth, and rub the pig with it in every part. Dredge as much flour over as will possibly lie, and do not touch it again till ready to serve ; then scrape off the flour very carefully with a blunt knife, rub it well with the buttered cloth, and take ofi" the head while at the fire ; take out the brains, and mix them with the gravy that comes from the pig. Then take it up ; and without withdrawing the spit, cut it down the back and belly, lay it into the dish, and chop the sage and bread quickly, as fine as you can, and mix them with a large quantity of fine melted butter that has very little flour. Put the sauce into the dish after the pig has been split down the back, and garnished with the ears and the two jaws ; take ofif the upper part of the head down to the snout. Pettitoes. Boil them, the liver, and the heart, in a small quantity of water, very gently ; then cut the meat fine, and simmer it with a little of the water and the feet split, till the feet arc quite tender ; thicken with a bit ©""butter, a little flour, a spoonful of cream. 55 and a little salt and pepper : give it a boil- up, pour it over a few s'ppets of bread, and put the feet on the mince. To make excellent meat of a Hog's Head. Split the head, take out the brains, cut off the ears, and sprinkle it with common salt for a day ; then drain it : salt it well with common salt and saltpetre three days, then lay the salt and head into a small quantity of water for two days. Wash it, and boil it till all the bones will come out ; remove them, and chop the head as quick as possible : but first skin the tongue, and take the skin carefully off the head, to put under and over. Season with pep- per, salt, and a littte mace or alspice berries. Put the skin into a small pan, press the cut head in, and put the other skin over ; press it down. When cold, it will turn out, and make a kind of brawn. If too fat, you may put a few bits of lean pork to be prepared the same way. Add salt and vinegar, and boil these with some of the liquor for a pickle to keep it. To roast a Porker's Head. Choose a fine young head, clean it well, and put bread and sage as for pig ; sew it up tight, and on a string or hanging jack roast it as a pig, and serve with the same sauce. To collar Pig's Head. Scour the head and ears, nicely; take off the hair and snout, and take out the eyes and the brain ; lay it into water one night, then drain, salt it extremely well with common salt and saltpetre, and let it lie five days. Boil it enough to take out the bones ; then lay it on a dresser, turning the thick end of one side of the head towards the thin end of the 56 other, to make the roll of equal size ; sprinkle it well with salt and white pepper, and roll it with tLe ears ; and if you approve put the pig's feet round the outside when boned, or the thin parts of two cow-heels. Put it into a cloth, bind with a broad tape, and boil it till quite tender ; then put a good weight upon it, and do not take off the covering till cold. If you choose it to be more like brawn, salt it longer, and let the proportion of saltpetre be great- er, and put in also some pieces of lean pork ; and then cover it with cow heel to look like the born. - This may be kept either in or out of pickle of salt and water boiled, with vinegar ; and is a conve nient thing to have in the house. If likely to spoil, slice and fry it either witjj or without batter. To force Hog's Ears. Parboil two pair of ears, or take some t^t have been souced : make a forcemeat of an anchovy, some sage, parsley, a quarter of a pound of suet chopped, bread-crumbs, pepper, and only a little salt. Mix all these with the yolks of two eggs ; raise the skin of the upper side of the ears, and stuff them with the above. Fry the ears in fresh butter, of a fine colour ; then pour away the fat, and drain them : make ready half a pint of rich gravy, with a glt.ss of fine sherry, three tea-spoonfuls of made mustard, a little bit of flour and butter, a small onion whole, and a little pepper or Cayenne. Put this with the ears, into a stew-pan, and cover it close ; stew it gently for half an hour, shaking the pan often. — When done enough, take out the onion, place the ears carefully in a dish, and pour the sauce over 57 ihem. If a larger dish is wanted, the meat from two feet may be added to the above. Different ways of dressing Pig's feet and Ears. . Clean carefully, and soak some hours, and boil them tender ; then take them out ; boil some vine- gar and a little salt with some of the water, and when cold put it over them. When they are to be dres- sed, dry them, cut the feet in two, and slice the ears ; fry, and serve with butter, mustard, and vinegar. They m ly be either done in batter, or only floured. Pig's Feet and Ears Fricasseed. Put no vinegar into the pickle, if to be dressed with cream. Cut the feet and ears into neat bits, and boil them in a little milk ; then pour that from them, and simmer in a little veal-broth, witha bit of opion, mace, and lemon- peel. Before you serve, add a little cream, flour, butter, and salt. Jelly of Pig's Feet and Ears. CJean and prepare as in the last article, then boil them in a very small quantity of water, till every bone can be taken out ; throw in half an handful of chopped sage, the same of parsley, and a seasoning of pepper, salt, and mace in fine powder ; simmer till the herbs are scalded, then pour the whole in a melon form. Pig's Harslet. Wash and dry some liver, sweetbreads, and fat and lean bits of pork, beating the latter with a roll- ing-pin to make it tender : season with pepper, salt, sage, and a little onion shred find ; when mixed, put all into a cawl, and fasten it up tight with a needle and thread. Roast it on a hanging jack, or by a string. Or serve in slices with parsley for a fry. Serve with a sauce of port-wine and water, and mustard, just boiled up, and put into a dish. 58 Mock Brawn Boil a pair of neat's feet very tender : take the meat off, and have ready the belly-piece of pork, salted with common salt and saltpetre for a week. — Boil this almost enough : take out the bones, and roll the feet and the pork together. Then roll it very tight with a strong cloth and coarse tape. Boil it till very tender, then hang it up in the cloth till cold, af- ter which keep it in a sousing liquor, as is directed in the next article. Souse for Brawn, and for Pig's Feet and Ears. Boil a quarter of a peck of wheat-bran, a sprig of bay, and a sprig of rosemary, in two gallons of wa- ter, with four ounces of salt in it, for half an hour. Strain it, -and let it get cold. To make Black Puddings. The blood must be stirred with salt till cold. Put a quart of it, or rather more, to a quart of whole grits, to soak one night, and soak the crumb of a quartern loaf in rather more than two quarts of new milk made hot. In the mean time prepare the guts by washing, turning and scraping with salt and water, and changing the water several times. Chop fine a little winter-savoury and thyme, a good quantity of penny-royal, pepper and salt, a few cloves, some alspice, ginger, and nutmeg, mix these with three pounds of beef-suet, and six eggs well beaten and strained : and then beat bread, grits, &.C. all up with the seasoning ; when well mixed, have ready some hog's fat cut into large bits, and as you fill the skins, put it in at proper distances. Tie in links only half filled ; and boil in a large kettle, pricking them ag they swell, or they will burst. When boiled, lay them between clean cloths till cold, and hang them up in the kitchen. When to be used, scald them a 59 few minutes in water, wipe, and put them into a Dutch oven. If there are uot skins enough, put the stuffing in- to basins, and boil it covered with flour cloths ; and slice and fry it when used. Another way. — Boil a quart of half-grits in as much milk as will swell them to the utmost : then drain them and add a quart of blood, a pint of rich cream, a pound of suet, some mace, nutmeg, alspice, and four cloves, all in one powder ; two pounds of the hog's leaf cut into dice, two leeks, a handful of pars- ley, ten leaves of sage, a large handful of penny- royal, a sprig of thyme and knotted marjoram, all minced fine; eight eggs well beaten, half a pound of bread crumbs that have been scalded, with a pint of milk, pepper, and salt. Half fill the skins ; which must be cleaned with the greatest care, turned se- veral times, and soaked in several waters, and last in rose water. Tie the skins in links, boil and prick them with a clean fork, to prevent their bursting. Cover them with a clean cloth till cold. White Hog's Puddings. When the skins have been soaked and cleaned as before directed, rinse and soak them all night in rose- water, and put into them the following fillings ; mix half a pound of blanched almonds cut into seven or eight bits, with a pound of grated bread, two pounds of marrow or suet, a pound of currants, some beaten cinnamon, cloves, mace, and nutmeg, a quart of cream, the yolks of six and while of two eggs, a lit- tle orange-flower water, alittle fine Lisbon sugar, and lemon-peel and citron sliced, and half fill the skins. To know whether sweet enough, warm a little in a panikin. In boiling, much care must be taken to prevent the puddings from bursting. Prick them 60 with a'small fork as they rise, and boil them in milk and water. Lay them in a table-cloth till cold. Hog's Lard Should be carefully melted in ajar, put into a kettle of water and boiled ; run it into bladders that have been extremely well cleaned. The smaller they arc the better the lard keeps, as, after the air reaches it, it becomes rank. Put in a sprig of rcsemar/ when melting. MUTTON Observations on cutting and dressing Mutton. Take away the pipe that runs along the bone of the inside of a chine of mutton ; and it to be kept a great time, rub the part close round the tail with salt, after first cutting out the kernel. Every kernel should be taken out of all sorts ol meat as soon as brought in : then wipe dry. For roasting, it should hang as lougas it will keep, the hind quarter especially, but not so long as to taint ; for whatever fashion may authorize, putrid juices ought not to-be taken into the stomach. Leg of Mutton. If roasted, serve with onion or currant-jelly sauce, if boiled, with caper-sauce and vegetables. JVeck of Mutton'' Is particularly useful, as so many dishes may be made of it ; but it is not advantageous for the family. The bones should be cut short, which the butchers will not do unless particularly desired. The best end of the neck may be boiled, and serv- ed with turnips, or roasted, or dressed in steaks, in pies, or harrico. The scrags may be stewed in broth ; or with a small quantity of water, some small onions, a few 6! peppercorns, ami a little rice, and served together When a neck is to be boiled to look particularly nice, saw down the chine-bone, strip the ribs half- way down, and chop off the ends of the bones about four inches. The skin should not be taken off till boil- ed, and then the fat will look the whiter. To dress Haunch of Mutton. Keep it as long *s it can be preserved sweet by the different modes ; let it be washed with warm milk and water, or vinegar, if necessary ; but when to be dressed, observe to wash it well lest the out- side should have a bad flavour from keeping. Put a paste of coarse flour or strong paper, and fold the haunch in ; set it a great distance from the fire, and allow a proportionable time for the paste ; do not take it ofi" till about thirty-five or forty minutes be- fore serving, and then baste it continually. Bring the haunch nearer to the fire before you take off the paste, and froth it up as you would venison. A gravy must be made of a pound and a half of loin of old mutton, simmered in a pint of water to half, and no seasoning but salt ; brown it with a lit- tle burnt sugar, and send it up in the dish ; but there should be a good deal of gravy in the meat, for though long at the fire, the distance and covering will prevent its roasting out.— Serve with currant- jelly sauce. To roast a saddle of Mutton. Let it be well kept first. Raise the skin, and then skewer it on again; take itofl" a quarter of an hour before serving, sprinkle it with some salt, baste it, and dredge it well with flour. The rump should be split, and skewered back on each side. The joint may be large or small according to the 6 63 company ; it is the most elegant if the latter. Be- ing broad, it requires a high and strong fire. Fillet of Mutton braised. Take off the chump end of the loin, butter some paper and put over it, and then paste as for venison ; roast it two hours. Do not let it be the least brovpn. Have ready some French beans boiled, and drained on a sieve, and while the mutton is glazing, give them one heat-up in gravy, and lay them on the dish with the meat over them. Harrico. Takeoff some of the fat, and cut the middle or best end of the neck into rather thin steaks, flour and fry them in their own fat of a fine light brown, but not enough for eating. Then put them into a dish while you fry the carrots,^ turnips, and onions, the carrots and turnips in dice,'the onions sliced, but they must only be warmed, not browned, or you need not fry them. Then lay the steaks at the bottom of a stew-pan, the vegetables over them, and pour as much boiling water as will cover them, give one boil, skim well, and then set the pan on the side of the fire to simmer gently till tender. In three or four hours skim them, and add pepper, salt, and a spoonful of catsup. To hash Mutton. Cut thin slices of dressed mutton, fat and lean; flour them, have ready a little onion boiled in two or three spoonfuls of water, add to it a little gravy, and the meat seasoned, and make it hot, but not to boil. Serve in a covered dish. Instead of onion, a clove, a spoonful of currant jelly, and half a glass of port wine, will give an agreeable flavour of venison, if the meat be fine. Pickled cucumber, or walnut, 'ut small, warm in it for change. 63 To boil a Shoulder of Mutton with Jysters. Hang it some days, then salt it well for two days, bone it, and sprinkle it with pepper, and a bit of mace pounded ; lay some oysters over it, and roll the meat up tight and tie it. Stew it in a small quan- tity^of water, with an onion and a few pepper-corns, till quite tender. Have ready a little good gravy, and some oysters stewed in it, thicken this with flour and butter, and pour over the mutton when the tape is taken off. The stew-paa should be keot close covered. Breast of Mutton. Cut off the superfluous fat, and roast and serve the meat with stewed cucumbers ; or to eat cold, cover- ed with chopped parsley. Or half broil, and then grill it before the fire ; in which case covei it with crumbs and herbs, and serve with caper-sauce. — Or if boned, take ofi" a good deal of the fat, and co- ,ver it with bread, herbs, and seasoning, then roll and boil, and serve with chopped walnuts, or capers and butter. Loin of Mutton Roasted ; if cut lengthways as a saddle, some think it cuts better. Or for steaks, pies, or broth To roll Loin of Mutton. Hang the mutton till tender ; bone it ; and lay a seasoning of pepper, alspice, mace, nutmeg, and a few cloves, all in fine powder, over it. Next day prepare a stuffing as for hare ; beat the meat, and cover It with the stuffing ; roll it up tight, and tie it. Half-bake it in a slow oven ; let it grow cold ; take off the fal, and put the gravy into a stew-pan ; flour the meat, and put it in likewise, stew it till almost ready ; and add a glass of port wine, some catsup, an anchovy, and a little lemon pickle, half an hour 64 before serving ; serve it in the gravy, and with jelly sauce. A few fresh mushrooms are a great improve- ment ; but if to eat like hare, do not use these, nor the lemon pickle. MwttotirHam, -Choose a fine-grained leg of wether mutton, of twelve or fourteen pounds weight ; let it be cut ham- shape, and hang two days. Then put into a stew- pan half a pound of bay-salt,_ the same of common salt, two ounces of saltpetre, and half a pound of coarse sugar, all in powder ; mix, and make it quite hot ; then rub it well into the ham. Let it be turn- ed m the liquor everyday ; at the end of four days put two ounces more of common salt ; in twelve days take it out, dry it and hang it up in wood smoke a week. It is to be used in slices, with stewed cab- bage, mashed potatoes, or eggs. Mutton Collops. Take -^ loin of mutton that has been well hung ; iind cut from the part next the leg, some collops very thin. Take out the sinews. Season the collops with salt, pepper, and mace ; and strew over them shred parsley, thyme, and two or three shallots ; fry them in butter till half done ; add half a pint of gra- vy, a httle juice of lemon, and a piece of butter rub- bed in flour ; and simmer the whole very gently five minutes. They should be served immediately, or they will be hard. Mutton Cutlets in the Portuguese way. Cut the chops ; and half fry them with sliced shallot or onion, chopped parsley, and two bay leaves ; season with pepper and salt ; then lay a forcemeat on a piece of white paper, put the, chop on it, and twist the paper up,, leaving a hole for the end of the bones to go through. Broil on a gentle 65 fire. Serve vt , oyster, lemon, liver, or celery sauce. If for dinner, ham, tongue or bacon, is usually served to eat with them ; as likewise greens. To boil Fowl with Rice. Stew the fowl very slowly in some clear mutton broth well skimmed ; and seasoned with onion, mace, pepper, and salt. About half an hour before it is ready, put in a quarter of a jfmt of rice well washed and soaked. Simmer till tender ; then strain it from the brotli, and put the rice on a seive before the fire. Keep the fowl hot, lay it in the middle of the dish, and the rice around it without the broth. The broth will be very nice to eat as such ; buttht! less liquor the fowl is done with the better. Gravy, or parsley and butter, for sauce. Fowls roasted. Serve with egg-sauce, bread-sauce, or garnished with sausages or scalded parsley. A large barn-door fowl, well hung, shonld be stnf 73 fed in the crop with sausage-meat ; and served with gravy in the dish, and with bread-sauce. The head should be turned under the wing as a turkey. Fowl broiled. Split tho.m down the back ; pepper, salt, and broil. Serve with mushroom-sauce. Davenport Fowls. Hang young fowls a night ; take the livers, hearts, and tenderest parts of the gizzards, shred very small, with half a handful of young clary, an anchovy to each fowl, an onion, and the yolks of four eggs boil- ed hard, with pepper, salt, and mace to your taste. Stuff the fowls with this, and sew up the vents and necks quite close, that the water may not get in. Boil them in salt and water till almost done : then drain them and put them into a stew-pan with but- ter enough to brown them. "Serve them with 6ne melted butter, and a spoonful of catsup, of either sort, m the dish. A nice way to dress Fowl for a small Dish. Bone-singe, and wash a young fowl ; make a forcemeat of four ounces ot veal, two ounces of scra- ped lean of ham, two ounces of fat bacon, two hard yolks of eggs, a few sweet herbs chopped, two oun- ces ofbeef-suet, a tea-spoonful of lemon-peel minced quite fine, an anchovy, salt, pepper, and a very lit- tle Cayenne. Beat all in a mortar, with a tea-cupful ijf crumbs, and the yolks and whites of thrse egg". Stuff the inside of the fowl, and draw the leg-i Hnd wings inwards ; tie the neck and rump close. Stew the fowl in a white gravy ; wlien it is done through" and tender, add a large cupful, of cream, and a bit of butter and flour : and give it one boil, and serve ■- the last thing add the squeeze of lemon. 74 Fricassee of Chickens. Boil rathei- more than half, in a small quantity of water : let thera cool, then cut up, and put to sim- mer in 11 little gravy made of the liq-ior they are boiled in, and a bit of veal or mutton, onion, mace, and lemon-peel, some white pepper, and a bunch of sweet herbs. When quite tender, keep them hot while you thicken the sauce in the following man- ner : strain It off, and put it back into the sauce- pan with a little salt, a scrape of nutmeg, and a bit of flour and butter ; give it one boil ; and when you are going to serve, beat up the yolk of an egg, and add half a pint of cream, and stir them over the fire, but do not let it boil. It will be quite as good with out the egg. The gravy may be made (without any other meat) of the necks, feet, small wmg-bones, gizzards, and livers ; which are called the trimmings of the fowl. , T'o pull Chickens. Take off the skin, and pull the flesh off the bone of a cold fowl in as large jiieces as you can : dredge it with flour, and fry it of a nice brown in butter. Drain the butter from it ; and them simmer the flesh in a good- gravy wf.ll seasoned, and thickened with a little flour and butter. Add the juice of half a lemon. Chicken Currie. Cut up the chickens raw, slice onions, and/ry both in butter with great care, of a fine light brown, or if you use chickens that have been dressed, fry only the onions. Lay the joints, cut into two or three pieces each, into a stew-pan, with a veal or mutton gravy, and a clove or two of garlic. Simmer till the chicken is quite tender. Half an hour be- fore yon serve it, rub smooth a spoonful or two of 75 currie powder, a spoonful of flour, anJ an ounce of butter ; and add this, with four large spoonfuls of cream, to the stew. Salt to your taste. fVhenserv- tng, squeeze in a little lemon. Slices of under-doue veal, or rabbit, turkey, &c. make excellent currie. Ducks roasted. Serve with a fine gravy : and stuff one with sage_ and onion, a dessert-spoonful of crumbs, a bit of butter, and pepper and salt, let the other be unsea- soned To boil Ducks. Choose a fine fat duck ; salt it two days, then boil it slowly in a cloth. Serve it with onion-sauce, but melt the butter with milk instead of water. To stew Duck. Half roast a duck ; put it into a stew-pan with a pint of beef-gravy, a few leaves of fiage and mint cut small, pepper and salt, and a small bit of onion shred as fine as possible. Simmer a quarter of an hour, and skim clean ; then add near a qu,irt ol green peas. Cover close, and simmer near half an hour longer. Put in a piece of butter and a little flour, and give it one boil ; then serve in one dish. To roast Goose. After it is picked, the plugs of the feathers pulled cut and the hairs carefully singed, let it be well washed and dried, and a seasoning put in of onion, s ige, and pepper and salt. Fasten it tight at the neck and the rump, and then roast. Put it first at a distance from the fire and by degrees draw it nearer. A slip of paper should be skewered on the breast-bone. Baste it very well. Whsn the breast is rising, take off vhe paper ; and be careful 76 to serve it before the breast falls, or it will be spoil ed by coming flatted to table. Let a good gravy be sent in the dish. Gravy and apple-sawce : goosberry-*auce for a green goose. To stew Giblets. Do them as will be directed for giblet-pie, (under the head Pies ,-) season them with salt and pepper, and. a very small piece of mace. Before serving, give them one boil with a cup of cream, and a piece of butter rubbed in a tea-spoonful of flour. Pigeons May be dressed in so many ways, that they are very useful. The good flavour of them depends very much on their being cropped and drawn as soon as killed. — No other bird requires so much washing. To stew pigeons. Take care that they are quite fresh, and carefully chopped, drawn, and washed ; then soak thera half an hour. In the mean time cut a hard white cab- bage in slices (as if for pickling) into water ; drain it, and then boil it in milk and water : dram it again, and lay some of it at the bottom of a stew- pan. Put the pigeons upon it, but first season them well with jiepper and salt ; and cover them with the remainder of the cabbage. Add a little broth, and stew gently till the pigepns are. tender: theu put among them two or three spoonfuls of cream, and a piece of butter and flour, for thickening. After a boil or two, serve the birds in the middle, and the cabbage placed round them. To broil Pigeons. After cleaning, split the backs, pepper and salt them, and broil them very nicely ; po'ir ovei them 77 either stewed or pickled mushrooms in melted bat- ter, and serve as hot as possible. Roast Pigeons Should be slufFed with parsley, either cut or whole, and seasoned within. Serve with parsley and butter. Peas or asparagus should be dressed to eat with them. Pigeons in Jelly. Save some of the liquor in which a knuckle of veal has been boiled, or boil a calf's orneat's foot, put the broth into a pan with a bl«ade of mace, a bunch of sweet herbs, some white pepper, lemon peel, a slice of lean bacon, and the pigeons. Bake them and let them stand to be cold. Season them as you like, before baking. When done, take them out of the liquor, cover them close to pre- serve the colour, and clear the jelly by boiling with the whites of two eggs ; then strain it through a thick cloth dipped in boiling water, and put into a sieve. The fat must be perfectly removed, before it be cleared. Put the jelly over and round them rough. Larks and other small birds. Draw and spit them on a bird-spit ; tie this on another spit, and roast them. Baste gently with butter, and strew bread-crumbs upon them till half done : brown and serve with fried crumbs round. GAME, &c. To keep Game, i^c. Game ought not to be thrown away even when it has been kept a very long time ; for when it seems to be spoiled, it may often be made fit for eating, by nicely cleaning it, and washing with vinegar and wa- ter. If there is danger of birds not keeping, draw, crop, and pick them ; then wash in two or three 73 waters, apil rub them with sa-it. Have ready a large saucepan of boiling water, and plunge them into it one by one, drawing them up and down bj the legs, that the water may pass through them. Let them stay five or six minutes in ; then hang them up in a cold place. When drained pepper and salt the in- sides well. Before roasting, wash them well. The most delicate birds, even grouse, may be preserved thus. T'jose that live by suction cannot be done this way, as they are never drawn ; and perhaps the boat might make them worse, as the water could not pass through them, but they bear being high. Lumps of charcoal put about birds and meat will preserve them from taint, . and restore what is spoiling. i ^ Pheasants and Partridges. Roast them as turkey, and serve with a fine gravy (into which put a very small bit of garlic,) and bread-sauce. When cold, they may be made into excellent patties, but their flavour should not be overpowered by lemon. A very cheap way of potting Birds. When baked and grown cold, cut them into pro- per pieces for helping, pack them close into a large potting pan, and (if possible,) leave no spaces to re- ceive the butter. Cover them with butter, and one third part less will be wanted than when the birds are done whole. The butter that has covered potted things will serve for basting, or for paste or meat pies. To clarify Butter for potted things. Put it into a sauce boat, and set that over the fire in a stew- pan that has a little water in. When melt- ed, take care not to pour the milky parts over tht the potted things ; they will sink to the bottom. 79 To pot Moor Game. Pick, singe, and wash the birds nicely : then dry them . and season, inside and out, pretty high, with pepper, mace, nutmeg, alspice, and salt. Pack them in as small a pot as will hold them, cover them with butter, and bake in a very slow oven. When cold take off the butter, dry them from the gravy, and put one bird into each pot, which should just fit. Add as much more butter as will cover them, but take care that it does npt oil. The best way to melt it is, by warm.iig it in a basin set in a bowl of hot watei*. Grouse. Roast them like fowls, but the head is to be twisted under the wing. They must not be over- done. Serve with a rich gravy in the dish, and bread-sauce. The sauce for wild fowl, as will be described hereafter under the head of Sauces, may be used instead of common gravy. To Roast Wild Fowl. The flavour is best preserved without stuffing. Put pepper, salt, and a piece of butter into each. Wild fowl require much less dressing than tame : they should be served of a fine colour, and well frothed up. A rich brown gravy should be sent in the dish : and when the breast is cut into slices, be- fore taking off the bone, a squeeze of lemon, with pepper and salt, is a great improvement to the fla- vour. To take off the fishy taste which wild fowl some- times have, put an onion, salt, and hot water into the dripping pan, and baste them for the first ten mi- nutes with this ; then take away the pan, and baste constantly with butter. 80 fVild Ducks, Teal. Widgeon, Dun-birds ^ifc. Should be taken ujt with the gravy in. Baste them with butter, and sprinkle a little salt before they are taken up, put a good gravy upon them, and serve with shallot sauce, in a boat. Woodcocks, Snipes, and Quails, Keep good several days. Roast them without drawing, and serve on toast. Butter only should be eaten with them, as gravy takes off the fine fla- vour. The thigh and back are esteemed the most. R^iff's and Reeves Are skewered as quails ; put bars of bacon over them, and roast them about ten minutes. Serve with a good gravy in the dish. To dress Plovers. Roast the green ones in the same way as wood- cocks and quails, (see above,) without drawing ; and serve on a toast. Gray plovers naay be either roasted, or stewed with gravy, herbs, and spice. Plover^ s Eggs Are a nice and fashionable dish. Boil them ten minutes, and serve eiiher hot or cold on a napkin. To roast Ortolans. Pick and singe, but do not draw them. Tie on a bird-spit, and roast them. Some persons like bacon in slices tied between them, but the taste of it spoils the flavour of the ortolan. Cover them with crumbs of bread. Guinea and Pea Fowl Eat much like pheasants. Dress then in the same way. Rabbits May be eaten various ways, as follow : Roasted with stuffing and gravy, or without stuf- 81 fing ; with sauce of the liver and parsley chopped in melted butter, pepper, and salt ; or larded. Boiled and smothered with onion-sauce : the but- ter to be melted with milk instead of water. Fried in joints, with dried or fried parsley. The same liver-sauce, this way also. * Fricasseed, as before directed, for chickens. In a pie, as chickens, with forcemeat, &c. In this way they are excellent when young. Potted. To pot Rabbits. Cut up two or three young but full-grown ones, and take the leg bones o£f at the thigh ; pack them as closely as possibly in a small pan, after seasoning them with pepper, mace, Cayenne, salt, and alspice, all in very fine powder. Make the top as smooth as you can. Keep out the heads and the carcasses, but take off the meat about the neck. Put a good deal of butter and bake the whole gently. Keep it two days in the pan ; then shift it into small pots, adding butter. The livers also should be added, as they eat well. SOUPS AND GRAVIES. General directions respecting Soups and Gravies, When there is any fear of gravy-meat being spoil- ed before it be wanted, season well, and fry it light- ly, which will preserve it two days longer ; but the gravy is best when the juices are fresh. When soups or gravies are to be put by, let them be changed every day into iresh scalded pans. Whatever has vegetables boiled in it, is apt to turn sour sooner than the juices of meat. Never keep any gravy, &c. in metal. 82 When fat remains on any soup, a tea-cupful of flour and water mixed ifuite smooth, and boiled in, will take it ofiF. If richness or greater consistency, be wanted, a good lump of butter mixed with flour, and boiled in the'feoup, will give either of these qualities. Long boiling is necessary to give the full flavour of the ingredients, therefore time should be allowed for soups and gravies : --md they are best if made the day before they are v -ted. Soups and gravies ai e far better when the meat is put at the bottom of the pan, and stewed, and the herbs, roots, &.c. with butter, than when water is put to the meat at first ; and the gravy that is drawn from the meat should be almost dried up before the water is put to it. Do not use the sediment of gra- vies, &c. that have stood to be cold. AVhen onions are strong, boil a turnip with them, if for sauce : this will make them mild. If soups or gravies are too weak, do not cover them in boiling, that the watery particles may eva- porate. A clear jelly of Cow-heels is very useful to keep in the house, being a great improvement to soups and gravies. SOUPS, ETC. Scotch Mutton Broth. Soak a neck of mutton in water for an hour ; cut off the scrag, and put it into a stew-pan with two quarts of water. As soon as it boils, skim it well, and then simmer it an hour and a half ; then take the best end of the Jiutton, cut it into pieces, two Ijones in each, take some of the fat ofif, and put . s many as you think proper : skim the moment 83 ment the fresh nieai. boils up, iimJ every quaiter of an heur allernards. Have rendy four or five car- rots, the same number of turnips, and three onions, al| cut, but not small ; and put them in soon enough to get quite tender ; add four large spoonfuls of Scotch barley, first wetted with cold water. The meat should stew three hours. Salt to taste, and serve all together. Twenty minutes before serving, put in soiiie chopped parsley. Feal Broth. Stew a small knuckle in about three quarts of water, two ounces of rice, a Utile salt, and a blade of mace, till the liquor is half wasted away. Colouring for Soups or Gravies. Put four ounces of lump-sugur, a gill of water, and half an ounce of the finest I 'itter, into a small tosser, and set it over a gentle fii e. Stir it with a wooden spoon, till of a bright brown. Then add half a pint of water ; boil, skim, and when cold, bot- tle and cork it close. Add to soup or gravy as much of this as will give a ])roper colour. j3 clear brown. Stock for Gravy Soup, or Gravy. Put a knuckle of veal, a pound of lean beef, and a pound of the lean of a gammon of bacon, all sliced, into a stew-pan with two or three scraped carrots, two onions, two turnips, two heads of celery sliced, and two quarts of water. Stew the meat quite ten- der, but do not let it brown. When thus prepared, it will serve either for soup, or brown or white gravy ; if for brown gravy, put some of the above colouring, and boil a few minutes. An excellent white Soap. Take a scrag of mutton, a knuckle of veal, after cutting off as much meat as will make co!!up=, two 84 or three shank bones of mutton nicely cleaned, and a quarter of a pound of very fine undressed lean gammon of bacon : with a bunch of sweet herbs, a piece of fresh lemon-peel, two or three onions, three blades of mace, and a dessert-spoonful of white pepper ; boil all in three quarts of water, till the meat fall quite to pieces. Next day take off the fat, clear the jelly from the sediment, and put it into a saucepan ofthe nicest tin. If macaroni is used, it should be added soon enough to get perfectly tender, after soaking in cold water. Vermicelli may be ad- ded after the thickening, as it requires less time to do. Have ready the thickening which is to be made as follows : Blanch a quarter of a pound of sweet almonds, and beat them to a paste in a marble mortar, with a spoonful of water to prevent their oiling ; mince a large slice of dressed veal or chicken, and beat it with a piece of stale white bread ; to all this add a pint of thick cream, a bit of fresh lemon-peel, and blade of mace, in the finest powder. Boil it a few minutes ; add to it a pint of soup, and strain and pulp it through a coarse sieve : this thickening is then fit for putting to the rest, which should boil for half an hour afterwards. A plainer white Soup. Two or three pints of soup may be made of a small knuckle of veal, with seasoning as directed in the last article ; and both served together, with the addition of a quarter of a pint of good milk. Twj spoonfuls of cream, and a little' grOund rice, will give it a proper thickness. Giblet Soup Scald and clean three or four sets of goose or duck giblets j set them to stew, with a pound of 85 grary-beef, scrag of mutton, or the bone of a knuc kle of veal ; an ox-tail, or some shanks of mutton , with three onions, a large bunch of sweet herbs, a tea-spoonful of white pepper, and a large spoonful of salt. Put five pints ofwater, and simmer till the gizzards, (which must be each in four pieces,) are quite tender : skim nicely, and add a quarter of a pint of cream, two tea-spoonfuls of mushroom pow- der, and an ounce of butter mixed with a dessert- spoonful of flour. Let it boil a few minutes, and serve with the giblets. It may be seasoned, instead of cream, with two glasses of sherry or Madeira, a large spoonful of catsup, and some Cayenne. When in the tureen, add salt. Macaroni Soup. Boil a pound of the best macaroni in a quart of good stock till quite tender ; then "take out half, and put it into another stew-pot. To the remainder add some more stock, and boil it till you can pulp all the macaroni through a fine sieve. Then add together that, the two liquors, a pint or more of cream, boiling hot, the macaroni that was firsttaken out, and half a pound of grated Parmesan cheese ; make it hot, but do not let it boil. Serve it with the crust of a French roll cut into the size of a shilling. Old Peas Soup. Save the water of boiling pork or beef; and if too salt, put as much fresh water to it ; or use fresh water entirely, with roast beef bones, a ham orgaro- Eaon-bone, or an anchovy or two Simmer these with some good whole or split peas ; the smaller the quantity of water at first, the better. Simmer till the peas will pulp through a culander : then set the pulp, and more of the liquor that boiled 8 86 the peas, with two carrots ; a turnip, a leek, anil a stick of celery cut into bits, to stew till all is quite tender. The last requires less time ; an hour will do for it. When ready, put fried bread cut into dice, dried mint rubbed fine, pepper, and (if wanted) salt, into the tureen. Green Peas Soup. In shelling the peas divide the old from the young ; put the old ones with an ounce of butter, a pint of water, the outside leaves of a lettuce or two, two onions, pepper and salt, to stew till you can pulp the peas and when you have done so. put to the liquor that stewed them some more water, hearts and tender stalks of the the lettuces, the young peas, a handful of spinach cut small, and salt, and pepper to relish properly, and stew till quite soft. If the soup IS too thin, or not rich enough, either of these faults may be removed by adding an ounce or two of butter, mixed with a spoonful of rice or wheat-flour, and boil with it half an hour. Before serving, boil some green mint shred fine iu the soup. When there is plenty of vegetables, no meat is necessary ; but if meat be preferred, a pig's foot or ham-bone may be boiled with the old peas, which is called the stock. More buiter than is mention- ed above may be used with advantage, if the soup is required to be very rich. When peas first come in, or are very young, the stock may be made of the shells washed, and boiled till they will pulp with the above ; ihore thickening will then be wanted. Gravy Soups. Wash and soak a leg of beef : break the bone and 87 set it on fire with a gallon of water, a large, bunch of sweet herbs, two large on'ons sliced and fried a fine brown, (but not burnt,) two blades of mace, three cloves, twenty berries of alspice, and forty black peppers. Stew till the soup is as rich as you choose ; then take out the meat, which will be nt for the servants' table with a little of the gravy. Next day take oflfthe cake of fat ; which will serve for basting, or for common pie-crust. Have ready such vegetables as you choose to serve. Cut car- rots, turnips, and celery, small ; and simmer till tender : some people do not like them to be sent to table, only the flavour of them. — -Boil vermicelli a quarter of an hour : and add to it a large spoonful of soy and one of mushroom catsup. A French roll should be made hot, put into the soup till moist through, and served in the tureen. Carrot Soup. Put some beef-bones, with four quarts of the li- quor in which a leg of mutton or beef has been boil- ed, two large onions, a turnip, pepper, and salt, into a sauce-pan, and stew for three hours. Have ready six large carrots scraped and cut thin : strain the soup on them, and stew them till soft enough to pulp through a hair sieve or coarse cloth : then boil the pulp with the soup, which is to be as thick as peas-soup. Use two wood&n spoons to rub the car- rots through. Make the soup the day before il is to be used. Add Cayenne. Pulp only the red part of the carrot, and not the yellow. 0-nion Soup. into*!' the water that has boiled a leg or neck ot mutton, put carrots, turnips, and (if you have one) a shank-bone and simmer two hours. Strain it on six onions, first sliced and fried of a light brown ; 88 simmer three hours, skim it carefully, and serve. Put into it a little roll, or fried bread. Spinach Soup. Shred two handfuls of spinach, a turnip, two onions, a bead of celery, two carrots, and a little thyme and parsley. Put all into a stew-pot, with a bit of butter the size of a walnut, and a pint of broth, or the water in which meat has been boiled ; stew till the vegetables are quite tender ; work them through a coarse cloth or sieve with a spoon ; then to the pulp of the vegetables, and liquor, put a quart of fresh water, pepper, and salt, and boil all together. Have- ready some suet dumpltngs the size of a wal- nut ; and before you put the soup into the tureeu, put them into it. The suet must not be shred too fine ; and take care that it is quite fresh. Scotch Leek Soup. Put the water that has boiled a leg of mutton into a stew-pot, with a quantity of chopped leeks, and pepper and salt : simmer them an hour ; then mix some oat-meal, with a little cold water quite smooth, pour it into the soup, set it on a slow part of the fire, and let it simmer gently ; but take care that it does not burn to the bottom. Ox-Rump Sonp. Two or three rumps of beef will make it stronger than a much larger quantity of meat without these, and form a very nourishing soup. Make it like gravy soup, and give it what ilavour or thickening you like. Hesdan Soup and Ragout. Clean the root of a neat's tongue very nicely, and half an ox's head, with salt and water, and soak them afterwards in wilter only. Then stew them in five or six quarts of water, till tolerably tender. 69 Let the soup stand to be cold ; ■ take off the fat, which will make good paste for hot meat-pies, or will do to baste. Put to the soup a pint of split peas, or a quart of white ones, twelve carrots, six turnips, six potatoes, six large onions, a bunch of sweet herbs, and two heads of celery. Simmer them without the meat, till the vegetables are done enough to p>ilp with the peas through a sieve : and the soup will then be about the thickness of cream. Season it with pepper, salt, mace, alspice, a clove or two, and a little Cayenne, all in fine powder. If the peas are bad, the soup may not be thick enough ; then boil in it a slice of roll, and put it through the colander ; or add a little rice-flour, mixing it by de- grees. For the Ragout, cut the nicest part of the head, the kernels, and part of the fat of the root of th« tongue, into small thick pieces Rub these with some of the above seasoning, as you put them into a quart of the Uquor, kept out for- that purpose be- fore the vegetables were added ; flour well, and simmer them till nicely tender. Then put a little mushroom and walnut catsup, a little soy, a glass of port wine, and a tea-spoonful of made mustard ; and boil all up together before served. If for company, small eggs and forcemeat-balls. This way furnishes an excellent soup and a ra- gout at a small expense, and they are not common The other part will warm for the family. Soup a la sap. Boil half a pound of grated potatoes, a pound of beef sliced thin, a pint of gray peas, an onion, and three ounces of rice, in six pints of water, to five ; strain it throug'i a colander : then pulp the peas to it, and turn it into a sauce-pan rgain, with two heads 8* 90 of celery sliced. St'^w it temler, and add pepper and salt ; and when you serve add also fried bread. PortMe Soup. Boil one or two knuckles of veal, one or two shins of beef, and three pounds of beef, in as much water . only as will cover them. Take the marrow out of the bones : put any sort of spice you like, and three large onions. When the meat is done to rags, strain it off, and put it into a very cold place. When cold take off the cake of fat, (which will make crusts for servants' pies,) put the soup in a double-bottomed tin sauce-pan, and set it on a pretty quick fire, but do not let it burn. It must boil fast and uncovered, and be stirred constantly, for eight hours. Put it into a pari, and let it stand in a cold place a day ; then pour it into a round soup china-dish, and set the dish into a stew-pan of boiling water on a stove, and let it boil, and be now and then stirred, till the soup is thick and ropy, then it is done enough. Pour it into the little round part at the bottom of cups or basins turned upside down, to form cakes ; and when cold turn them out on flannel to dry. Keep them in tin canisters. When they are to be used, melt them in boiling water ; and if you wish the flavour of herbs, or any thing else, boil it first, strain off the water, and melt the soup in it. This is very convenient in the country, or at sea, where fresh meat is not always at hand ; as by this means a basin of soup may be made in fifteen minutes. Soup Maigre. Melt half a pound of butter into a stew-pan, shake it round, and throw in six middling onions sliced.— Shake the pan well for two or three minutes ; then put to it five heads of celery, tivo handfuls of spi- nach, two cabbagj -lettuces cut small, and some pars- 91 ley. Shake the pan well for ten minutes ; then put in two quarts of water, some crusts of bread, a tea- spoonful of beaten pepper, three or four blades of mace ; and if you have any white beet leaves, add a a large handful of them cut small. Boil gently -^^ hour. Just before serving beat in two yolks of eggs and a large spoonful of vinegar. Stock for brown or white Fish Soups. Take a pound of skate, four or five flounders, and two pounds of eels. Clean them well and cut them into pieces : cover them with water ; and season them with raace, pepper, salt, an onion stuck with ;loves, a head of celery, two parsley-roots sliced, and a bunch of sweet herbs. Simmer an hour and a half closely covered, and then strain it off for use. If for brown soup, first fry the fish brown in butter, and then do as above. It will not keep more ihan two or three days. Eel Soup. Take three pounds of small eels ; put to them wo quarts of water, a crust of bread, three blades of mace, some whole pepper, an onion, and a bunch of sweet herbs : cover them close, and stew till the fish is quite broken : then strain it off. Toast some bread, cut it into dice, and pour the soup on it boil- ing. A piece of carrot may be put in at first. The soup will be as rich as if made of meat. A quarter of a pint of rich cream, with a tea-spoonful of flour rubbed smooth in it, is a great improvement. Skate Soup. Make it of the stock fish for soup (as directed above) with an ounce of vermicelli boikd in it, a lit- tle before it is served. Then add half a pint of cream, beaten ivitlv the ynlks of two eggs. Stir it near, but not on the fire. Serve it with a small 92 French roll made hot in a Dutch oven and then soaked in the soup an hour. Excellent Lobster Soup Take the meat from the claws, bodies, and tails, of six small lobsters : take away th^' brown fur, and the bag in the head : beat the fins, chine, and small claws in a morter. Boil it very gently in two quarts of water, with the crumb of a French roll, some white pepper, salt, two anchovies, a large onion, sweet herbs, and a bit of lemon-peel, till you have extracted the goodness of them all. Strain it off. — Beat the spawn in a mortar, with a bit of butter, a quarter of a nutmeg and a tea-spoonful of flour : mix it with a quart of cream. Cut the tails into pieces, and give them a boil up with the cream and soup. — Serve with forcemeat balls made of the remainder of the lobster, mace, pepper, salt ; a few crumbs, and an egg or two. Let the balls be made up with a bit-of flour, and heated in the soup. Craw fish or Prawn Soup. Boil six whitings, and a large eel (or the eel and half a thornback, well cleaned,) with as much wa- ter as will cover them ; skim them clean, and put in whole pepper, mace, ginger, parsley, an onion, a little thyme, and three cloves. Boil to a mash. Pick fifty craw-fish, or a hundred prawns ; pound the shells and a little roll ; but first boil them with a little water, vinegar, salt, and herbs : put this li- quor over the shells in a sieve ; then pour the other soup clear from the sediment. Chop a lobster, and add this to it, with a quart of good beef-gravy ; add also the tails of the craw-fish or the prawns, and some flour and butter ; and season as may be liked, if not high enough. 93 Oyster Soup. Take two quarts offish stock, beat the yolks of ten hard eggs, and the hard part of two quarts of oysters, in a mortar, and add this to the stock. Simmer it all for half an hour ; then strain it off and put it and the oysters (cleared of the beards, and nicely washed,) into the soup. Simmer five mi- nutes ; have ready the yolks of six raw e^s well beaten, and add them to the soup. Stir it all well one way, on the side of the fire, till it is thick and smooth, but do not let it boil. Serve all together. Oyster Mouth Soup. Make a rich mutton broth with two large onions, three blades of mace, and black pepper. Whe« strained, pour it on a hundred and fifty oysters, without the beards, and a bit of butter rolled in flour. Simmer gently a quarter of an hour, and serve. GRAVIES. General Directions respecting Gravies. Gravy may be made quite as good of the skirts of beef and the kidney, as of any other meat prepared in the same way. An ox-kidney, or milt, makes good gravy, cut all to pieces, and prepared as other meats ; and so will the shank-end of mutton that has been dressed, if much be not wanted. The shank -bones of mutton are a great improve- ment to the richness of gravy, but first soak them well, and scour them clean. Taragon gives the flavour of French cookery, and in high gravies is a great improvement ; but it should be added only a short time before serving. To dress Gravy that will keep a week Ci' lean beef thin, put it into a frying- p:in n il'i- 94 out any butter, and set it on the fire covered, but take care it does not burn ; let it stay till all the gra- vy that comes out of the meat is dried up into it again; put as much water as will cover the meat, and let that stew away. Then put to the meat a small quantity of water, herbs, onions, spice, and a bit of lean ham : simmer till it is rich, and keep it m a cool place. Do not take off the fat till going to be used. Clear Gravy. Slice beef thin ; broil a part of it over a very clear quick fire, just enough to give colour to the gravy, but not to dress it ; put that and the raw into a very nicely tinned stew-pan, with two onions, a clove or two, whole, black peppers, berries of al- spice, a bunch of sweet herbs; cover it with hot wa- ter, give it one boil, and skim it well two or three times ; then cover it ; and simmer till quite strong. Cullis, or brown Gravy. Lay over the bottom of a stew-pan as much lean veal as will cover it an inch thick ; then cover the veal with thin slices of undressed gammon, two or three onions, two or three bay-leaves, some sweet herbs, two blades of mace, and three cloves. Cover the stew-pan. and set it over a slow fire ; but when the juices come out, let the fire be a little quicker. When the meat is of a fine brown, fill the pan with good beef broth, boil and skim it, then simmer an hour ; add a little water, mixed with as much flour as will make it properly thick -. boil it half an hour, and strain it. This will keep a week. Bechamel, or white Sauce. Cut lean veal into small slices, and the same quantity of lean bacon or ham : put them into a stew-pan with a good piece of butter, an onion, a 95 blade of mace, a few mushroom-buttons, a bit of thyme, and a bay-leaf; fry the whole over a very slow fire, but not to brown it, thicken it with flour ; then put an equal quantity of good broth, and rich cream ; let it boil half an hour, and stir it all the time : strain it through a soup-strainer. j3 rich Gravy. Cut beef into thin slices, according to the quantity wanted ; slice onions thin, and flour both ; fry them of a light pale brown, but do not on any account suffer them to get black ^ put them into a stew pan, pour boiling water on the browning in the frying- pan, boil it up, and pour on the meat. Put to it a bunch of parsley, thyme, and savoury, a small bit of knotted majoram, the same of taragon, some mace, berries of alspice, whole black peppers, a clove or two, and a bit of ham, or gammon of bacon. Sim- mer till you have extracted all the juices ol the meat ; and be sure to skim the moment it boils, and often after. If for a hare or stewed fish anchovy should be added. Gravy for a Fowl when there is no meat to make it of. Wash the feet nicely, and cut them and the neck small ; siimner them with a little bread browned, a slice of onion, a bit of parsley and thyme, some pep- per and salt, and the liver and gizzard, in a quarter of pint of water till half wasted. Take out the liver, bruise it and strain the liquor to it. Then thicken it with flour and better, and add a tea-spoonful of mushi oom-catsup, and it will be very good. F^eal Gravy. Make it as directed for Culliis or brown Gravy, but leave out the spice, herbs, and flour. It should be drawn very slowly ; and if for white dishes, do not let the meat brown. 96 Gravy to make Mutton eat like Venison. Pick a very stale wood-cock or snipe, ciil it into pieces (but first take out the bag from the entrails ; and simmer ivith as much unseasoned meat-gravj as you will want. Strain it and serve in the dish. Strong Fish Gravy. Skin two or three eels, or some flounders ; gut and wash them very clean ; cut them into small pieces, and put into a saucepan. Cover them with water, and add a little crust of bread toasted brown, two blades of mace, some whole pepper, sweet herbs, a piece of lemon-peel, an anchovy or two, and a tea-spoonful of horse radish. Cover close and simmer, add a bit of butter and flour, and boil with the above. Savoury Jelly to put over cold Pies. Make it of a small bare knuckle ofleg or shoulder of veal, or a piece of scrag- of that or mutton ; or if the pie be of fowl or rabbit, the carcasses, necks, and heads, added to any piece of meat, will be sufficient, observing to give consistence by cow-heel or shanks mutton. Put the -meat, or a slice of lean ham or bacon, a faggot of different herbs, twe blades ot mace, an onion or two, a small bit of lemon-pee), and a tea-spoontul of Jamaica pepper bruised, and the same of whole pepper, and three pints of water, in a stew-pot that shuts very close. As soon as it boils, skim it well, and let it simmer very slowly lii) quite strong ; strain it, and when cold, take off tlie fat with a spoon first, and then, to remove evci y particle of grease, lay a clsan piece of cap or blot- ting paper on it. When cold, if not clear, boil it a few minutes with the whites of two eggs (but do not add the sediment,) and pour it through a nice sieve, 97 with a napkin in it, which has been dipped in boil- ing water, to prevent waste. Jelly to cover cold Fish. Clean a maid, and put it in three quarts of water, with a calf^s foot or cow-heel, a stick of horse-radish, an onion, three blades of mace, some white pepper, a piece of lemon-peel, and a good slice of lean gam- mon. Stew until it will jelly ; then strain off ; when cold remove every bit of fet ; take it up from the sediment, and boil it with a glass of sherry, the whites of four or five eggs, and a piece of lemon. Boil with- out stirring ; and after a few minutes set it by to stand half an hour, and strain it through a bag or sieve, with a cloth in it. Cover the fish with it when cold. SAUCES, &C. A very good Sauce, especially to hide the bad colour oj Fowls. Cut the livers, slices of lemou in dice, scalded parsley, and hard eggs ; add salt and mix them with butter; boil them up, and pour over the fowls. This will do for roast rabbit. White Sauce for fricassee of Fowls, Rabbits, Whitt Meat Fish, of Vegetables. It is seldom necessary to buy meat for this favour- ite sauce, as the proportion of that flavour is but smdl. The water that has boiled fowls, veal, or rabbit ; or a little broth, that may be in the house ; or the feet and necks of chickens, or raw or dressed veal, will suffice. Stew with a little water any of these, with a bit of lemon-peel, some shced onions, some white pepper-corns, a little pounded mace oi nutmeg, and a bunch of sweet herbs, until the fla- vour be good, then strain it and add a little good 98 cream, a piece of butter and a little flour ; salt t« your taste. A squeeze of lemon maybe added aftei the sauce is taken off tlie fire, shaking it well. Yolk of egg is often used in fricassee,but if you have any cream it is better, and the former is apt to curdle. Sauce for Wild Fowls. Simmer a tea-cupful of port wine, the same quan- tity of good meat gravy , a little shallot, a little pepper, salt, a grate of nutmeg, and a bit of mace, for ten minutes : put in a bit of butter, and flour, give it all one boil, and pour it through the birds. In general they are not stufied as tame, but may be done so il liked. Sauce for Fowl of any sort. Boil some veal-gravy, pepper, salt, the juice of a Seville orange and a lemon, and a quarter as muclf of port wine as of gravy ; and pour it into the dish, or a boat. Sauce for cold Fowl, or Partridge. Rub down in a mortar the yolks of two eggs boil- ed bard, an anchovy, two dessert-spoonfuls of oil, three of vinegar, a shallot, Cayenne, if approved , and a te»-spoonful of mustard. All should be pounded before the oil is added. Then strain it. Shallot vinegar instead of shallots, eats well. A very fine Mushroom Sauce for Fowls or Rabbits. Wash and pick a pint of young mushrooms and rub them with sialt, to take off the tender skin. Put them into a sauce-pan with a little salt, some nutmeg, a blade of mace, a pint of cream, and a good piece of butter rubbed in flour. Boil them up, and stir them till done ; then pour it round the chickens, &c Garnish with lemon. [f you cannot get fresh mushrooms, use pickled 99 vn^f done white, with r little mushroom powder witb w .^t:: cr«am, &c. Lemon white Sauce for boding Fowls. Put the peel of a small lemon, cut very thin, into a |)int of sweet rich cream, with a sprig of lemon- tb^^me, and ten white pepper-corns. Simmer gen- tlj till it taste well of the lemon ; then strain it, and thicken it with a quarter of a pound of butter, and a dessert-gpoonful of flour rubbed in it. Boil it up ; then pour the juice of the lemon strained into it, stir- ring it weJl. Dish the chickens, aud then mix a lit- tle white gravy, quite hot, with the cream, but do not boil them together : add salt to your taste. Eggs Sauce. Boil the eggs hard, and cut them into small pieces ; then put theifi to melted butter. Onion Sauce. Peel the onions, and boil them tender : squeeze the water from them, then :hop them, and add to them butter that has been melted rich and smooth, as will be hereafter directed, but with a little good milk instead of water ; boil it up once, and serve it for boiled rabbits, partridges, scrag or knuckle of veal, or roast mutton. A turnip boiled with the on- ions makes them milder. Clear Shallot Sauce. Put a few chopped shallots into a little gravy boil- ed clear, and near halfas much vinegar ; season with pepper and salt ; boil half an hour. Green Sauce for Green Geese and Ducklings. Mix a quarter of a pint of sorrel-juice, a glass of white wine, and some scalded gooseberries. Add sugar, and a bit of butter. Boil them up. 100 Bread Sauce. Boil a large onion, cut in four, with some black peppers and milk, till the onion is quite a pap. Pour the milk strained on grated white stale bread, and cover it. In an hour put it into a sauce-pan, with a good piece of butter mixed with a little flour; boil the whole up together, and serve. Dutch Sauce for Meat or Fish. Put six spoonfuls of water, and four of vinegar, in- to a sauce-pan warm, and thicken it with the yolks of two eggs. Make it quite hot, but do not bofl it , squeeze in the juice of half a lemon, and strain it thiflugh a sieve. Sauce Rohart,for Rumps or Steaks. Put a piece of butter, the size of an egg, into a sauce-pan, set it over the fire, and when browning, throw in a handful of sliced onions cut small ; frj them brown, but do not let them burn ; add half a spoonful of flour, shake the onions in it, and give it another fry : then put lour spoonfuls of gravy, and some pepper and salt, aad boil it gently ten minutes ; gfeioa off the fat ; add a tea-spoonful of made mus- tard, a spoonful of vinegar, and the juice of half a lemon ; boil it all, and pour it round the steaks. — They should be of a fine yellow brown, and garnish- ed with fried parsley and lemon. Benton Sauce, for hot or cold Roast Beef. Grate, or scrape very fine, some horse-radish, a little made mustard, some pounded white sugar, and four large spoonfuls of vinegar. Serve in a saucer. Sauce for Fish Pies, tvhere cream is not ordered. Take equal quantities of white wine (not sweet,) vinegar, oyster-liquors, mushroom-catsup; boil them up with an anchovy ; strain ; and pour it through a funnel into the pie after it i= bakefl. iOl Another. — Chop an anchovy small, and boil it up with three spoonfuls of gravy, a quarter of a pint of cream, add a bit of butter and flour. Tomato Sauce, for hot or cold Meats. Put tomateos, when perfectly ripe, into an earthen jar ; and set it in an oven, when the bread is drawn, till they are quite soft ; then separate the skin from the pulp ; and mix this with capsicum-vinegar, and a few cloves of garlic pounded, which must both be proportioned to the quantity of fruit. Add powder- ed ginger and salt to your taste. Some white-wine vinegar and Cayenne may be used instead of capsi- cum vinegar. Keep the mixture in small wide mouthed bottles, well corked, and in a dry cool place. Apple Sauce, for Goose or roast Pork., Pare, core, and slice, some apples ; and put them in a stone jar, into a saucepan of water, or on a hot hearth. The old Currant-Sauce for Venison, Boil an ounce of dried currants in half a pint of water a few minutes ; then add a small tea-cupful of bread-crumbs, six cloves, a glass of port wine, and a bit of butter Stir it till the whole is smooth. Lemon Sauce. Cut thin slices of lemon into very small dice, and put them into melted butter, give it one boil, and pour it over boiled fowls. Carrier Sauce for Mutton. Chop six shallots fine ; and boil them up with a gill of gravy, a spoonful of vinegar, some peppei and salt. Serve it in a boat. Tomatoes. Tomatoes are used in soups, sauces, and to serve as little d'shes at table, at any part of a dinner. 9* 102 A very fine fish Sauce. Put into a very nice tin sauce-pan a pint of fine port wine, a gill of mountain, halfa pint of fine wal- nut-catsup, twelve anchovies and the liquor that be- longs to them, a gill of walnut-pickle, the rind and juice of a large lemon, four or five shallots, some Cayenne to taste, three ounces of scraped horse- radish, three blades of mace, and two tea-spoonfuls of made mustard ; boil it all gently, till the rawness goes off; then put it into small bottles for use. Cork them very close, and seal the top. An excellent substitute Jor Caper Sauce. Boil slowly some parsley, to let it become a bad colour cut, but do not chop it fine ; put it to melted butter, with a tea-spoonful of salt, and a desert- spoonful of vinegar. Boil up and serve. Oyster Sauce. Save the liquor in opening the oysters ; and boil it with the beards, a bit of mace, and lemon-peel. In the mean time throw the oysters into cold water, and drain it off. Strain the liquor, and put it into a saucepan with them, and as much butter, mixed with a little milk, as will make sauce enough ; but first rub a little flour wiih it. Set them over the fire, and stir all the time ; and when the butter has boiled once or twice, take them off, and keep the saucepan near the fire, but not on it ; for, if done too much, the oysters will be hard. Squeeze a little lemon-juice, and serve. A little cream is a great improvement. Observe. the oysters will thin the sauce, so put butter accor- dingly. Lobster Sauce Pound the spawn, and two aucoovies ; pour on 103 them two spoonfuls of gravy ; strain all ict^ some butter aielted as will be hereafter directed ; then put in the meat of the lobster, give it all one boil, and add a squeeze of lemon. Shrimp Savce. If the shrimps are not picked at home, pour a little water over them to wash them, put them to butter melted thick and smooth, give them one boil, and add the juice of a lemon. Anchovy Sauce. Chop one or two anchovies without washing, put them to some flour and butter, and a little drop of water : stir it over the fire till it boils once or twice. When the anchovies are good, they will be dissolv- ed ; and the colour will be better than by the usual way. To melt butter : which is rarely well done, though a very essential article. Mix in the proportion of a tea-spoonful of flour to four ounces of the best butter, on a trencher. Put it into a small sauce-pan, and two or three table- spoonfuls of hot water ; boil quick, a minute, shak- ing it all the time. Milk used instead of water, re- quires rather less butter, and looks whiter. To make Mustard. Mix the best Durham flour of mustard by degrees, with boiling water, to a proper thickness, rubbing it perfectly smooth ; add a little salt, and keep it in a small jar close covered, and put only as much into the glass as will be used soon : which should be wiped daily round the edges. Kitchen Pepper. Mix in the finest powder, one ounce of ginger j of cinnamon, black pepper, nutmeg.and Jamaica pep- 104 per, half an ounce each ; ten cloves and six ounces of salt. Keep it in a bottle — it is an agreeable addi- tion to any brown sauces or soups. Forcemeat, to force Fowls or Meat. Shred a little ham, or gammon, some cold veal, or fowl, some beef-suet, a small quantity of onion, some parsley, very little lemon-peel, salt nutmeg, or pounded mace, and either white pepper, or Cayenne, and bread-crumbs. Pound it in a mortar, and bind it with one or two eggs beaten and strained. For forcemeat patties, the mixture as above. For cold Savoury Pies. The same ; only substituting fat, or bacon, for suet. • The livers (if the pie be of rabbit or fowl,) mixed . with fat and lean of pork, instead of bacon, and sea- soned as above, are excellent. Forcemeat as for Turtle. A pound of fine fresh suet, one ounce of ready dressed veal or chicken, chopped fine, crumbs of bread, a little shallot or onion, salt, white pepper, nutmeg, mace, pennyroyal, parsley, and lemon- thyme, finely shred ; beat as many fresh eggs, yolks and whites separately, as will make the above in- gredients into a moist paste ; roll into small balls, and boil them in fresh lard, putting them in just as it boils up. When of a light brown, take them out, and drain them before the fire. If the suet be moist or stale, a great many more eggs will be necessary. PIES, PUDDINGS, AND PASTRY On Savoury Pies. There are few articles of cookery more generally liked than relishing-pies, if properly made ; and they may be made so of a great variety of things. 105 lome are best eaten when cold, and in that case, there should be no suet put into the forcemeat that is used with them. If the pie is either made of meat that will take more dressing, to make it extremely tender, than the baking of the crust will allow, or if it is to be served in an earthen pie-form, observe the following preparation : Takethree pounds of the very nicest of beef (for instance) that has fat and lean ; wash it ; and season it with salt, pepper, mace, and alspice, in fine pow- der, rubbing them well in. Set it by the side of a siow fire, in a stew-pot that will ju§t hold it ; put to itapiece of butter of about the weighloftwo ounces, and cover it quite close ; let it just simmer in its own steam till it begins to shrink. When it is cold, add more seasoning, forcemeat, and eggs ; and if it js in a dish, put some gravy to it before baking ; but if it is only in crust, do not put the gravy till after it is cold and in jelly. Forcemeat may be put both un- der and over the meat, if preferred to balls. Eel Pie. Cut the eels in lengths of two or three inches, season with pepper and salt, and place in the dish, with some bits of butter, and a little water, and cover it with paste. Cod Pie. Take a piece of the middle if a small cod, and salt it well one night ; next day wash it : season with pepper, salt, and a very little nutmeg, mixed ; place m a dish, and put some butter on it, and a little good hroth of any kind into the dish. Cover it with a crust ; and when done, add a sauce of a spoonful of broth, a quarter of a pint oi cream, a little flour and butter, a grate of lemon and (intmeg, and give it one boil. Oysters maybe added. 106 Mackerel will do well, but do not salt them till used. Parsley picked and put in, may be used instead of oysters. Shrimp Pie, Excellent Pick a quart of shrimps : if they are very salt, season them with only mace and a clove or two. Mince two or three anchovies ; mix these with the spice, and then season the shrimps. Put some but- ter at the bottom of the dish, and over the shrimps, with a glass of sharp white wine. The paste must be light and thin. They do not take long baking. Lobster Pie. Boil two lobsters, or three small, take out the tails, cut them in two, take out the gut, cut each in four pieces and lay in a small dish, then put in the meat of the claws, and that you have picked out of the body ; pick oflf the furry parts from the latter, and take out the lady ; the spawn beat in a mortar ; likewise all the shells ; set them on to stew with some water, two or three spoonfuls of vinegar, pep- per, salt, and some pounded mace : a large piece of butter, rolled in flour, must be added when the goodness of the shells is obtained : give a boil or two, and pour into the dish strained ; stew some crumbs, and put a paste over all ; bake slowly, but only till the paste be done. A remarkable fine Fish Pie. Boil two pounds of small eels ; having cut the fins quite close, pick the flesh ofi", and throw the bones into the liquor with a little mace, pepper, salt, and a slice of onion ; boil till quite rich, and strain it. Make forceraeiitof the flesh, an anchovy, parslej', lemon- peel, salt, pepper, and crumbs, and four ounces of butter warmed, and lay it at the bot- 107 torn of the dish. Take the flesh of a small cod, or dressed turbot, and lay them on the forcemeat, bar- ing rubbed it with salt and pepper : pour the gravy over and bake. Beefsteak Pie. Prepare the steaks as in page 32, and when sea- soned and rolled with fat in each, put them in a dish with pufFpaste round the edges ; put a little water in the dish, and cover it with good crust. Feal Pie. Take some of the middle, or scrag of a small neck ; season it ; and either put to it, or not, a few slices of lean bacon or ham. Ifitis wanted of ahigh relish, add mace, Cayenne, and nutmeg, to the salt a jd pepper : and also forcemeat and eggs ; and if you choose, add truffles, morels, mushrooms, sweet- breads cut into small bits, and cocks'-combs blanch- ed, if liked. Have a rich gravy ready, and pour in after baking. — It will be very good without any of the latter additions. A rich Veal Pie. Cut steaks from a neck or breast of veal ; season them with pepper, salt, nutmeg, and a very little clove in powder; Slice two sweetbreads, and sea- son them in the same manner. Lay a puff paste on the edge of the dish ; then put the meat, yolks of hard eggs, the sweetbreads, and some oysters, up to the top of the dish. Lay over the wholesome very thin slices of ham, and fill up the dish with water ; cover ; and when it is taken out of the oven, pour in at the top, through a funnel, a few spoonfuls of good veal gravy, and some cream to fill up : but first boil it up with a tea-spoonful of flour. Calfs-head Pie Stew a knuckle of veal till fit for eating, with two 108 onions, a few isinglass-shavings, a bunch of herbs, a blade of mace, and a few pepper-corns, in three pints of water. Keep the broth for the pie. Take off a bit of the meat for the balls, and let the other be eaten, but simmer the boneS in the broth till it is very good. Half-boil the head, and cut it into square bits ; put a layer of ham at the bottom ; then some head, first fat, then lean, with balls and hard eggs cut in half, and so on till the dish be full ; but be particularly careful not to place the pieces close, or the pie will be too solid, and there will be no space for the jelly. Meat must be first pretty well seasoned with pepper and salt, and a scrape or two of nutmeg. Put a little water and a little gravy into the dish, and cover it with a tolerably thick crast ; bake it in a slow oven, and when done, pour into it as much gravy as it will possibly hold, and do not cut it till perfectly cold ; in doing which, observe to use a very sharp knife, and first cut out a large bit, going down to the bottom of the dish ; and when done thus, thinner slices can be cut ; the different colours and the clear jelly have a beautiful marbled appearance. A small pie may be made to eat hot, which, with high seasoning, oysters, mushrooms, truffles, morels, &c. has a very good appearance. The cold pie will keep many days. Slices make a pretty side dish. Instead of isinglass, use a calf's foot, or a cow- heel, if the jelly is not likely to be stiff enough. The pickled tongues offormer calves-heads may be cut in, to vary the colour, instead of, orbesides ham. Excellent pork Pies to eat cold. ' Haise common boiled crust into either a round or oval form, as you choose ; have ready the trimming 109 and small bits of pork cut off when a hog is killed ; and if these are not enough , take the meal of a sweet bone. Beat it well with a rolling-pin ; season with pepper and salt, and keep the fat and lean separate. Put it in layers, quite dose up to the top ; lay on the lid ,- cut the edge smooth round, and pinch it ; bake in a slow soaking oven, as the meat is very solid. Directions for raising the crust will be given hereafter. The pork may be put into a common dish, witb a very plain crust, and be quite as good. Observe to put no bone or water into pork pie ; the outside of the pieces will be hard, unless they are cut small and pressed close. Mutton Pie. Cut steaks from a neck or loin of mutton that has hunar ; heat them and remove some of the fat. Season with salt, pepper, and a little onion : put a little water at the bottom of the dish, and a little paste on the edge ; then cover with i ^uoderately thick paste. Or raise small pies, and breaking each bone in two to shorten it ; season, and cover it over, pinching the edge. When they come out, pour into each a spoonful of gravy made of a bit of mutton. SguaA Pie. Cut apples C.S for other pies, and lay them in rows with mutton chops ; shred onion, and sprinkle it among them, and also some sugar Lamb Pie. Make it of the loin, neck, or breast ; the breast of house-lamb is one of the most delicate things that can be eaten. It should be very lightly seasoned with pepper and salt ; the bone taken out, but not the gristles ; and a small quantity of jelly gravy be 10 no put in hot ; but the pie should not be cut till cold. Put two spoonfuls of water before baking. Grass lamb makes an excellent pie, and may either be boned or not, but not to bone it is perhaps the best. Season with pepper and salt only ; put two spoonfuls of water before baking, and as much gra- vy when it comes from the oven. J^ote. — Meat pies being fat, it is best to let out the gravy on one side, and put it in again by a funnel, at the centre, and a little may be added. Chicken Pie. Cut up two young fowls ; season with white pep- per, salt, a little mace, and nutmeg, all in the finest powder ; likewise a little Cayenne. Put the chick- en, slices of ham, or fresh gammon of bacon, force- meat-balls, and hard eggs, by turns, in layers. If it is to be baked in a dish, put in a little water ; but none if in a raised crust. By the time it returns from tlic '>ven, have ready a gravy off a knuckle of veal, or a bit of the scrag, with some shank-bones of mutton, seasoned with herbs, onions, mace, and white pepper. If it is to be eaten hot you may add truffles, morels, mushrooms, &,c. but not if to be eaten cold. If it is made in a dish, put as much gravy as will fill it ; but in a raised crust, the gravy must be nicely strained, and then put in cold as jelly. To make the jelly clear, you may give it a boil with the whites of two eggs, after taking away the meat, and then i un it through a fine lawn sieve. Rabbits, if young and in flesh, do as well : their legs should be cut short, and the breast-bones must not go in, but will help to maue the gravy. Green-Goose Pie. Bone two young green geese, of a good size ; but fift take away every plug, and singe them nicely. ill Wash them clean ; and season them high with salt, pepper, mace, and alspice Put one inside the other, and press them as close as you can, drawmg the legs inwards. Put a good deal of butter over them, and bake them either with or without crust ; if the latter, a cover to the dish must fit close to keep in the steam. It will keep long. Duck Pie. Bone a full grown young duck and a fowl ; wash them and season with pepper and salt, and a small proportion of mace and alspice; in the finest pow- der. Put the fowl within the duck, and in the for- mer a calfs tongue pickled red, boiled very tender, and peeled. Press the whole close ; the skins of the legs should be drawn inwards, that the body of the fowls may be quite smooth. If approved, the space between the sides of the crust may be filled with a fine forcemeat, made according to the receipt as for turtle. Bake it in a slow oven, either in a raised crust, or pie-dish, with a thick crust orna- mented. The large pies in Staffordshire are made as above, but with a goce outwards, then a turkey, a duck next, then a fowl, and either tongue, small birds, or forcemeat, in the middle. Giblet Pie. After nicely cleaning goose or duck giblets, stew them with a small quantity of water, onion, black pepper, and a bunch of sweet herbs, till nearly done. Let them grow cold ; and if not enough to fill the dish, lay a beef, veal, or two or three mutton steaks, at bottom. Put the liquor of the stew to bake with th*! above ; and when the pie is baked, pour into it a large tea-cupful of cream. Sliced potatoes added to it eat extremely well. 112 Pigeon Pie. Kub the pigeons with pepper and salt, inside and out ; in the latter but a bit of butter, and if approved, some parsley chopped with the livers, and a little of the same seasoning. Lay a beef steak at the bottom of the dish, and the birds on it ; between every two, a hard egg. Put a cup of water in the dish ; and if you have any ham in the house, lay a bit on each pigeon ; it is a great improvement to the flavour. Observe when ham is cut for gravy or pies, to take the under part rather than the prime. Season the gizzards, and two joints of the wings, and put them in the centre of the pie ; and over them, in a hole made in the crust, three feet nicely cleaned, to show what pie it is. Partridge Pie in a Disk. Pick and singe four partridges : cut off the legs at the knee, season with pepper, salt, chopped parsley, thyme, and mushrooms. Lay a veal-steak, and a »lice of ham, at the bottom of the dish ; put the partridges in, and half a pint of good broth. Put puff paste on the ledge of the dish, and cover with the same ; brush it over with egg, and bake an hour. Jl French Pi^. Lay a puff paste round on the ledge of the dish, and put in either veal in slices, rabbits, or chickens jointed ; with forcemeat-balls, sweebreads cut in nioces, artichoke bottoms, and a few trufBes. Vegetable Pie. Scald and blanch some broad beans ; cut young carrots, turnips, artichoke-bottoms, mushrooais, peas, onions, lettuce, parsley, celery, or any of them you have ; make the whole into a nice stew, with some good veal-gravy. Bake a crust over a dish with a little hniiw round the edge, and a cup in turned up to keep it from siaking. When baked, open the lid, and pour in the stew. Parsley Pie. Lav a fowl, or a few bones of the scrag of veal, seasoned, into a dish, scald a colander full of picked parsley in milk ; season it ; and add to it the fowl or meat, with a tea-cupful of any sort of good broth, or weak gravy. When it is baked, pour into it a quarter of a pint of cream scalded, with the size of a walnut of butter, and a bit of flour. Shake it round, to mix with the gravy already in. Lettuces, white mustard leaves, or spinach, may be added to the parsley, and scalded before put in. Turnip Pie. Season ^iiutton chops with salt and pepper, re- serving the ends of the neck-bones to lay over the turnips, which must be cut into small dice, and put on the steaks. Put two or three good spoonfuls of milk in. You may add sliced onion. Cover with a crust. Potato Pie. Skin some potatoes, and cut them into slices : sea- son them ; and also some mutton, beef, pork, or veal. Put layers of them and of the meat. An Herb Pie. Pick two handfuls of parsley from the stems, half the quantity of spinach, two lettuces, some mus- tard and cress, a few leaves of borage, and white- beet leaves ; wash, and boil them a little ; then drain, and press out the water ; cut tihem small ; mix and lay them in a dish ; sprinkle with some salt ; mix a batter of flour, two eggs well beaten, a pint of cream, and half a pint of milk, and pour it on ihe herbs ; cover with a good crusf, and bs ke 10* il4 iMtsed Crust, for ."leat Pies, or Fowls, <5"C. fJoil water with a little fine lard, and an equal quantity of fresh dripping, or of butter, but not much of either. While hot, mix this with as much flour as you will want, making the paste as stiff as jju can to be smooth, which you will make it by good knead- ing and beating it with the roUing-pin. When quite Eiciooth, put a lump into a cloth, or under a pan, to soak till near cold. Those who have not a good hand at raising crust may do thus : Roll the paste of a proper thickness, and cut out the top and bottom of the pie, then a long piece for the sides. Cement the bottom to the sides with egg, bringing the former rather farther out, and pinching both togethei : niit egg between the edges of the paste, to make it adhere at the sides. Fill your pie, and put on the cover, and pinch it and the side crust together. The same mode of uniting the paste is to be observed if the sides are pressed into a tin form, in which the paste must be baked, aftei it shall be filled and covered; but in the latter case, the tin should be buttered, and carefully taken off when done enough ; and as the form usually makes the sides of a lighter colour than is proper, the paste should be put into the oven agnin for a quarter of an hour. With a feather, |iut egg over at first. PUDDINGS, ETC. Observations on making Puddings and Pancakes. The outside of a boiled pudding often tastes disa- greeably ; which arises by the cloth not being nice ly washed, and ke ^t in a dry place. It should be liipped in boiling water, squeezed dry, and floured when to be used 115 If bread, it should be tied loose ; if batter, tight over. The water should boil quick when the pudding is put in ; and it should be moved about for a minute, lest the ingredients should not mix. Batter pudding should be strained through a coarse sieve, when all is mixed. In others, the eggs separately. The pans and basins must be always buttered. A pan of cold . water should be ready, ar)d the pudding dipped in as soon as it comes out of the pot, and then it will not adhere to the cloth. Very good puddings may be made without eggs, but they must have as little milk as will mix, and must boil three or four hours. A few spoonfuls of fresh small beer, or one of yeast will answer in- stead of eggs. Or Snow is an excellent substitute for eggs, either in puddings or pancakes. Two large spoonfuls will supply the place of one egg, and the article it is used in will be equally good. J^ote. — The yolks and whiles beaten long and se- parately, make the article they are put into much lighter. Almond Pudding. Beat half a pound of sweet and a few bitter al- monds with a spoonful of water ; then mix tour ounces of butter, four eggs, two spoonfuls of cream tvarm with butter one of brandy, a little nutmeg, and sugar to taste. Butter some cups, half fill, and bake the puddings. Serve with butter, wine, and Bugar. Baked Almond Pudding. Beat fine four ounces of almonds, four or five bit- ter ditto, with a little wine, yolks of six eggs, peel of two lemons grated, six ounces of butter, near a quart 116 of cream, and juice of one lemon. When well mix- ed, hake it ha'lf an hour, with paste round the dish. Sago Pudding. Boil a pint and a half of new milk, with four spoonfuls of sago nicely washed and picked, lemon- peel, cinnamon, and nutmeg ; sweeten to taste ; then mix four eggs, put a paste roum? the dish, and bake slowly. Bread and Butter Pudding. Sliue bread spread with butter, and lay it in a dish with currants between each layer ; and sliced citron, orange, or lemon; if to be very nice. Pour over an unboiled custard of milk, two or three eggs, a few pimentos, and a very little ratafia, two hours at least, before it is to be baked ; and lard it over to soak thebriead. A paste round the edge makes all puddings Jook better, but is not necessary. Orange Pudding. Grate the rmd of a Seville orange : put to it six ounces of fresh butter, six or eight ounces of lump- sugar pounded : beat them all in a marble mortar, and add as you do it, the whole of eight eggs well beaten and strained ; scrape a raw apple, and mix with the rest ; put a paste at the bottom and sides of the dish, and over the orange mixture put cross bars of paste. Half an hour will bake it. Another.— Rather more than two table-spoonfuls of the orange paste, mixed with six eggs, four onnceg of sugar, and four ounce? of butter, melted, will make a good sized pudding, with a paste at the hot lomof the dish. Bake tweny minutes. An excellent Lemon Pudding. Beat the yolk of four eggs ; add four ounces of white sugar, the rind of a lemon being rubbed with some himps of it to taice the essence : then peel, and beat it in a mortar with the juice of a large lemon and mix all with four or five ounces of butter warmed. Put a crust into a shallow dish, nick the edges, and put the above into it. When«erved, turn the pudding out of the dish. A very fine Amber Pudding. Put a pound of butter into a sauce-pan with three quarters of a pound of loaf sugar finely powdered ; melt the butter, and mix well with it ; then add the yolks of fifteen eggs well beaten, and as muchifpesh candied orange as will add colour and flavour to it, being first beaten to a fine paste. Line the di.'li with paste for turning out ; and when filled with the above, lay a crust over, as you would a pie, -tnd bake it in a slow oven — It is as good cold as hot. Baked apple pudding. Pare and quarter four large apples ; boil them tender with the rind of a lemon, in so little water that, when done, none may remain ; beat them quite fine in a mortar ; add the crumb of a small roll, four ounces of butter, melted ; the yolks of five and whites of three eggs, juice o£ half a lemon, and sugar to taste ; beat all together, and lay it in a dish with paste to turn out. Oatmeal pudding Pour a quart of boiling milk over a pint of the best^ne oatmeal : let it soak all night : next day beat two eggs and mix a little salt, butter a basin that will just hold it ; cover it tight with a floured cloth, and boil it an hour and a half. Eat it with cold butter and salt. When cold, slice and toast it, and eat it as oat- cake., buttered. 118 Dutch pudding, or a Souster. Melt (line pound of butter in half a pint of milk ; mix it into two pounds of flour, eight eggs, four spoonfuls of yeast ; add one pound of currants, and a quarter of a pound of sugar beaten and sifted. An hour will bake it in a quick oven. A Dutch rice pudding. Soak foar ounces of rice in warm water half an hour ; drain the latter from it, and throw it into a stew-pan, with half a pint of milk, half a stick of cin- namon, and simmer till tender. When cold, add four eggs well beaten, two ounces of butter melted in a tea-cupful of cream ; and put three ounces of sugar, a quarter of a nutmeg, and a good piece of lemon-peel. Put a light puff paste into a mould or dish, or grated tops and bottoms, and bake in a quick oven. Ldght or German puddings or puffs. Melt three ounces of butter in a pint of cream ; let it stand till nearly cold : then mix two ounces oi fine flour, and two ounces of sugar, four yolks and two whites of eggs, and a little rose or orange-flower water. Bake in little cups buttered, half an hour. They should be served the moment they are done, and onlv wh^ going to be eaten, or they will not be light. Turn out the cups, and serve with white wine and sugar. Little Bread Puddings. Steep the crumb of a penny loaf, grated, in about a pint of warm milk ; when soaked, beat six eggs, whites and yolks, and mix with the bread, and two ounces of butter warmed, sugar, orange-flower wa- ter, a spoonful of brandy, a little nutmeg, and a tea- cupfwl of cream. Beat all well, and bake in tea- £::ps buttered. If currants are chosen, a quarter o) 119 a pound is suftif a if not they are good without • or you may put orange or lemon-candy. Serve with pudding-sauce. Puddings in haste. Shred suet, and put, with grated bread, a few cur- rants, the yolks of four eggs and the whites of two, some grated lemon-peel and ginger. Mix, and make into little balls about the size and shape of an egg, with a little flour. Have ready a skillet of boiling water, and throw them in. Twenty minutes will boil them ; but they will rise to the top when done. Pudding-sauce. Kew College Pudding. n Grate the crumb of a two penny-loaf, shred suet eight ounces, and mix with eight ounces of currants, one of citron mixed fine, one of orange, a handful of sugar, half a nutmeg, three eggs beaten, yolk and white separately. Mix, and make into the size and shape of a goose-egg. Put half a pound of butter into a frying-pan ; and when melted and quite hot, stew them gently in it over a stove ; turn them two or three tiroes till of a fine light brown. Mix a glass of brand3' with the batter. Serve with pudding-sauce. Boiled Bread Pudding. Grate white bread ; pour boiling milk over it, and cover close. When soaked an hour or two, beat it fine and mix with it two or three eggs well beaten. Put it into a basin that will just hold it ; tie a flour- ed cloth over it, and put it into boiling water. Send it up with melted butter poured over. It may be eaten with salt or sugar. Prunes, or French plums, make a fine pudding instead of raisins, eittjf with suet or bread pudding. 120 Another and richer.-- -On half a pint of crumbs.;; of bread pour half a pint of scalding milk ; cover for'>im hour. Beat up four eggs, and when strained, ad^ to the bread, with a tea-spoonful of flour, an ounce - of butter, two ounces of sugar, half a pound of currants^ an ounce of almouds beaten, with oraflge-flDwer' water, half an ounce of orange, ditto lemon, diHc citron. Butter a basin that will exactly hold it, flour the cloth, and tie tight over, and boil one hour. Brown Bread Pudding. Half a pound of stale brown bread grated, ditto ol currants, ditto of shred suet, sugar and nutmeg, mix with four eggs, a spoonful of brandy, and two spoon- fuls of cream ; boil in a cloth or basin that exactly holds 'A, three or four hours. Eve''s Pudding. Grate three quarters of a pound of bread ; mix it with the same quantity of shred suet, the same oi apples, and also of currants ; mix with these the whole of four egi^s, and the rind of half a lemon shred fine. Put it into a shape ; boil three hours, and serve with pudding-sauce, the juice of half a lemon, and a little nutmeg. Quaking Pudding. Scald a quart of cream ; when almost cold, put to it four eggs well beaten, a spoonful and a half of flour, some nutmegs and sugar ; tie it close in a but- tered cloth, boil it an hour, and turn it out with care, lest it should crack. Melted butter, a little wine, and sugar. Transparent Pudding. Beat eight eggs very well : put them Into a stew- pan, with half a pound of sugar pounded very fine, the same quantity of butter, and some nutmeg grated, Set it on the fire, and keep stirring it till it thickens 12 Then set it into a basin to cooi ; put a rich puff ^ste round the edge of the dish ; pour in your fmdding, and bake it in a moderate oven. It will cut hght and clear. — You may add candied orange and citrcfh if you like. Batter Pudding. Rub three spoonfuls of fine flour extremely imooth by degrees into a pint of milk : simmer till it thickens, stir in two ounces of butter, set it to cool ; then add the yolks of three eggs ; flour a cloth that has been wet, or butter a basin, and put the batter into it ; tie it tight, and plunge it into boil- ing watT, the bottom upwards. Boil it an hour and a half, and serve with plain butter. If approv- ed, a httle ginger, nutmeg, and lemon-peel, maybe add^. Serve with sweet sauce. Batter Pudding with meat. Make a batter with .flour, milk, and eggs ; pour a little into the bottom of a pudding-dish ; then put seasoned meat of any kind into it, and a little shred onion; pour the remainder of the batter over, and bake in a slow oven. Some likt a loin of mutton baked in batter, being first cleared of most of the fat. Plain Rice Pudding. Wash and pick some rice ; throw among it some pimento finely pounded, but not much ; tie the rice ia a cloth, and leave plenty cf room to swell. Boil it in a quantity of water for an hour or two. When done, eat it with butter and sugar, or milk. Put lemon-peel if you please. It is very good without spice, and eaten with salt and butter. A rich Rice pudding. Boil half a pound of rice in water, with a little bit ifsrilt, till quite tender, drain it dry; mix it with II 122 the yolks and whites of four e^s, a quarter of a pint of cream, with two ounces of fresh butter melted in the latter, four ounces of beef-suet or marrow, or veal-suet taken from a fillet of veal, finely shred, three quarters of a pound of currants, two SJ)oonful3 of brandy, one of peach- water, or ratafia, nutmeg, and grated lemon-peel. When well mixed, put a paste round the edge, and fill the dish. Slices of candied orange, lemon, and citron if approved. Bake in a moderate oven. Rice Pudding with fruit. Swell the rice with a very little milk over the fire ; then mix fruit of any kind with it, (currants, gooseberries scalded, pared and quartered apples, raisins, or black currants ;) with one egg into the rice, to bind it ; boil it well and serve with sugar. Baked Rice Pudding. Swell rice as above ; then add some more milk, an egg, sugar, alspice, lemon-peel. Bake in a deep dish, An excellent plain Potato Pudding. Take eight ounces of boiled potatoes,»two ounces of butter, the yolks and whites of two eggs, a quarter of a pint of cream, one spoonful of white wine, a morsel of salt, the juice and rind of a lemon : beat all to froth ; sugar to taste. A crust or not, as you like. Bake it If wanted richer, put three ounces more butter, sweetmeats and almonds, and another egg. Potato Pudding tmih meat. Boil them till fit to mash ; rub through a colander, and make into a thick batter with milk and two eggs. Lay some seasoned steaks in a dish, then some batter, and over the last layer pour the remainder of the butter. Bake a fine brown. 123 Steak or Kindey Pudding. If kidney, spilt ai.d soak it, and season that or the meat. Make a paste of suet, flour and milk ; roll it, and line a basin with some ; put the kindey or steaks in, coyer with paste, anu pinch round the edge. Cover with a cloth, and boil a considerable time. Beefsteak pudding. Prepare some fine steaks as in page 31 roll them with fat between : and if you approve shred onion, add a very little. Lay a paste of suet in a basin, a put in the rollers of steaks : cover the basm with a paste, and pinch the edges to keep the gravy in. Cover with a cloth tied close : and let the pudding boil slowly, but for a length of time. Baked Beefsteak pxidding. Make a batter of milk, two eggs, and flour, or, which is much better, potatoes boiled and mashed through a colander : lay a little of it at the bottom of *Jie dish ; then put in the steaks prepared as above, gnd very well seasoned ; pour the remainder of the batter over them and bake it. Mutton pudding. Season with salt, pepper, and a bit of onion : lay one layer of steaks at the bottom of the dish ; and pour a batter of potatoes boiled and pressed through a colander, and mixed with milk and an egg, over tjiem ; then putting the rest of the steaks and batter, bake it. Batter with flour, instead of potatoes, eats well, but requires more egg, and is not so good. Suet pudding. Shred a pound of suet ; mix with a pound and a quarter of flour, two eggs beaten separately, a little 124 salt, and as little milk as wiM make it. Boil four hours. It eats well next d^ ', cut in slices and broiled. The outward fat of loins or necks of mutton finely shred, makes a more delicate pudding than suet Veal suet Pudding. Cu* the crumb of a three penny loaf into slices, boil and sweeten two quarts of new m-ilk, and pour over it. When soaked, pour, out a little of the milk ; and mix with six eggs well beaten, and half a nut- meg. Lay the slices of bread into a dish ; with lay- ers of currants and veal-suet shred, a pound of each. Butter the dish well, and bake; or you may boil it in a basin, if you prefer it. Hunter'' s Pudding. Mix a pound of suet, ditto flour, ditto currants, dit- to rasins stoned and a little cut, the rind of half a le- mon shred as fine as possible, six JaiSaica peppers in fine powder, four eggs, a glass of brandy, a little salt, and as little milk as will make it of a proper consistence ; boil it m a floured cloth, or melon- mould, eight or nine hours. Serve with sweet sauce. Add sometimes a spoonful of peach-water, for change of flavour. This pudding will keep after it is boiled, six months, if kept tied up in the same cloth, and hung up . folded in a sheet of cap paper to preserve it from dust, being first cold. When to be used, it mast boil a full hour. Plum Pudding. The same proportions of flour and suet, and half the quantity of fruit, with spice, lemon, a glass of wine or not, and one egg, and milk, will make an excellent pudding, if long boiled. 125 Custard Pudding. Mix by degrees a pint of good milk with a large _^8poonful of flour, the yolks of five eggs, some orange-flower water, and a little pounded cinnamon. Butter a b;isin that will exactly hold it, pour the bat- ter in, and tie a floured cloth over. Put in boiling water over the fire, and turn it about a few minutes to prevent the egg going to one side. Half an hour will boil it.- ■' Put currant jelly on it, and serve with sweet-sauce. Macaroni Pudding. Simmer an ounce or two of the pipe-sort, in a pint of milk, and a bit of lemon and cinnamon, till tender ; put it into a dish, with milli, two or three eggs, but only one white, sugar, nutmeg, a spoonful of peach- water, and half a glass of raisin wine. Bake with a paste round the edges. A layer of orange-marmalade, or raspberry -jam, in a macaroni pudding for change, is a great im- provement, in which case omit the almond-water, or ratafia, which you would otherwise flavour it with. J}n excellent .Apricot Pudding. Halve twelve large apricots, give them a scald till they are sofl ; mean time pour on the grated crumbs of a penny loaf, a pint of boiling cream ; when half- cold, four ounces of sugar, the yolks of four beaten eggs, and a glass of white-wine. Pound the apri- cots in a mortar, with some or all of the kernels ; mix then the fruit and other ingredients together ; put a paste round a dish, and bake the pudding half an hour. Baked Gooseberry Pudding. Stew gooseberries in a jar over a hot hearth, or in a sauce-pan of water, till they will pulp. Take a 11* 126 pint of the juice pressed through a coarse sieve, and beat it with three yolks and whites of eggs beaten and strained, one ounce and a half of butter ; sweeten it well, and put a crust round the dish. A few crumbs of roll should be mixed with the above to give a lit- tle consistence, or four ounces of Naples biscuit. Brandy Pudding. Line a mould with jar-raisins, stoned or dried cher- ries, then with thin slices of French roll, next i,o which put ratafias, or macaroons ; then the fruit, rolls, and cakes, in succession until the mould be full ; sprinkling in at times two glasses of brandy. Beat four eggs, yolks and whites ; put to a pint of milk or cream, lightly sweetened, half a nutmeg, and the rind of half a lemon finely grateJ. Let the li- quid sink into the solid part ; then flour a cloth, tie it tight over, and boil one hour ; keep the mould the right side up. Serve with pudding-sauce. Boiled Curd Pudding. Rub the curd of two gallons of milk well drained through a sieve. Mix it with six eggs, a little cream, two spoonfuls of orange-flower water, half a nut- meg, flour and crumbs of bread each three spoon- fuls, currants and raisins half a pound each. Boil an hour in a thick well-floured cloth. Pippin pudding. . Coddle six pippins in vine-leaves covered with water, very gently, that the inside be done without rebaking the skins. When soft, skin, and with a tea- spoon take the pulp from the core. Press it through a colandfer ; add two spoonfuls of orange-flower water, three eggs beaten, a glass of raisin-wine, a pint of scalded r.ream, sugar and nutmeg to taste. Lay a thin puff paste at the bottom and sides of the dish : shred very thin lemon-peel as fine as possi- 12'5 ble, and put it into the dish ; likewise Ienwyoonful of white pownerea su- gar is an improvement. Gravy may be added ; but then there will be less of the flavour of the peas. — Chop a,bit of mint, and stew in them. To stew old Peas. - Steep them in water all nij^ht, if not fine boilers ; etherwise only half an hour ; put them into water 13 146 enougn jtist to cover them, with a good bit of butter, or a piece of beef or pork. Stew them very gently till the peas are soft, and the meat is tender, if it is not salt meat, add salt and a little pepper. Serve them round the meat To dress Artichoices. Trim a few of the outside leaves off, and cut the stalk even. If young, half an hour will boil them. They are better for being gathered two or three days first. Serve them with melted butter in as many small tups as there are artichokes, to help with each. Artichoke Bottoms. If dried, they must be soaked, then stewed in weak gravy, and served with or without forcemeat in each. Or they maj- be boiled in milk, and served with cream sauce ; or added to ragouts, French pies, &c. To stew Cucumbers. Slice them thick : or halve and divide them into two lengths ; stew some salt and pepper, and shced onions : add a little broth, or a bit of butter. Sim- mer very slowly ; and before serving, if no butter was in before, put some, and a little flour ; or ifthere was butter in, only a little flour ; unless it wants rich- ness. To stew onions. Peel six large onions ; fry gently of a fine brown, but do not blacken them ; then put them into a small stew-pan, with a little weak gravy, pepper, and salt ; cover and stew two hours genl.y. They should be lightly floured at first. To stew t klery. Wash six heads, and strip off their outer leaves , either halve, or leave them whole, according to their size ; cut into lengths of four inches. Put in- 147 to a stew-pan with a cup ot Droth, or weiik white gravy, stew till tender ; then add two spoonfuls of cream, and a little flour and butter seasoned with pepper, salt, and nutmeg, and simmer all together. To boil Cauliflowers. Choose those that are close and white. Cut off the green leaves, and look carefully that there are no caterpillars about the stalk. Soak an hour in cold water : then boil them in milk and water ; and take care to skim the sauce-pan, that not the icast foulness may fall on the flower. It must be served very white, and rather crimp. Cauliflower in white Sauce. Half boil it; then cut it into handsome pieces, and lay them in a stew-pan with a little broth, a bit of mace, a little salt, and a dust of white pepper ; simmer half an hour : then put a little cream, but- ter and flour ; shake, and simmer a few minutes, and serve. To dreis Cauliflowers and Parmesan. Boil a cauliflower ; drain it on a sieve, and cut the stalk so that the flower will stand upright about two inches above the dish. Put it into the stew- pan, with a little white sauce ; let it stew till done enough, which will be but a few minutes, then dish it with the sauce round, and put Parmesan grated over it. Brown it with a salamander. To dress Brocoli. Cut the head with short stalks, and pare the tr:ugh skin off them. Tie the small shoots into bunches, and boil them a shorter time than the heads Some salt must be put into the water. Serve with or without toast. 148 Spinach. Requires great care in washing and picking it, VVhen that is done, throw it into a saucepan thai will just hold it. sprinkle it with a little salt, and cover close. The pan must be set on the fire, and well shaken. When done, beat the spinach well with a small bit of butter ; it must come to tab'le pretty dry ; and looks well if pressed into a tin mould in the form of a large leaf, which is sold at the tin-shops. A spoonful of cream is an improve- men.'. To dress Beans. Boil tender, with a bunch of parsley, which must be chopped to serve with them. Bacon or pickled pork must be served to eat with, but not boiled with them. Fricasseed Windsor Beans. When growing large, but not mealy, boil, blanch, and lay them in a white sauce ready hot : just heat them through ih it, and serve. If any are not of fine green do not use them for this dish. French Beans. String, and cut them into four or eight ; the last looks best. Lay them in salt and water ; and when the sauce-pan boils, put them in with some salt. As soon as they are done, serve them immediately, to preserve the green colour. Or when half-done, drain the water off, and put them into two spoonfuls of broth strained : and add a little cream, butter, and flour, to finish doing them. To stew red Cabbage. Slice a small, or half a large, red cabbage ; wash and put it into a sauce-pan with pepper, salt, no water but what hengs about it, aad h piece of butter Jievy [lu quite ..enuei , oiBl. viiku ^oui^ .ij icrve, add two or three spoonfuls of vinegar, and give one boil over the tire. Serve it for cold meat, or with sausages on it. Another way, — Shred the cabbage, wash it ; and put it over a sl&w fire, with slices of onion, pepper, and salt, and a little plain gravy When quite ten- der and a few minutes before serving, add a bit of butter rubbed with flour, and two or three spoonfuls of vinegar, and boil up. Mushrooms The cook should be perfectly acquainted with the different sorts of things called by this name by ig- norant people, as the death of many persons has been occasioned by carelessly using the poisonous kinds. The eatable miishrooms first appear very small, and of a round form, on a little stalk. They grow very .fast, and the upper part and stalk is white. As the size increases, the under part gradually opens, and shows a fringed fur of a very fine sal- mon-colour, which continues more or less till the mushroom has gained some size, and then turns to a dark brown. These marks should be attended to, and likewise whether the skin can be easily parted from the edges and middle. Those that have a white or yellow fur should be carefully avoided, though many of them have the same smell, (but not bo strong,) as the right sort. To stew Mushrooms. The large buttons are best, and the small flaps while the fur is still red. Rub the large buttons with salt and a bit of flannel ; cut out the fur, and take off the skin from the others. Sprinkle them with salt, and put into a stew-pan with some pepper- 13* bit 0. butter ana Hour, and two spoonfuls of cream ; give them one boil, and serve with sippets of bread. To stew Sorrel for Fricandeau and roast Meat. Wash the sorrel ; and put it into a silver vessel, or stone jar, with no more water than hangs to the (eaves. Simmer it as slow as you can ; and when done enough, put a bit of butter, and beat it well. Frencn Salad. Chop three anchovies, a shallot, and some parsley, small ; put them into a bowl with two table-spoon- fuls of vinegar, one 6f oil, a little mustard and salt. When well mixed, add by degrees some cold roasl or boiled meat in very thin slices ; put in a few at a time, not exceeding two or three inches long. Shake them in the seasoning, and then put more ; cover the bowl close, and let the salad be prepared three hours before if is to be eaten. Garnish with parsley, and a few slices of the fat. Lobster Salad. Make a salad ; and put some of the red part of the lobster to it, cut. This forms a pretty contrast to the white and green of the vegetables. Do not put much oil, as shell-fish absorb the sharpness of vinegar. Serve in a dish, not a bowl. To boil Potatoes. Set them on a fire, without paring them, in cold water, let them half-boil ; then throw some salt in, and a pint of cold water, and let them boil again till almost done. Pour off the water ; anc'. put a clean cloth over them, and then the saucepan-cover, and set them by the fire to steam till ready. Many per- sons prefer steamers. Potatoes look best M'hen the skin is peeled, not cut. ) >o new potatoes the same ; but be carefui Ihey 9.6 taken off in time, or they will be watery. Be- fore dressing, rub off tb - skin with a cloth and salt, and then wash. To broil Potatoes. Parboil, then slice and broil them Or parboil, and then set them whole on the gridiron over a very slow fire ; and when thoroughly done, send them up with their skins on. This last way is practised in many Irish families. 'i o roast Potatoes. Half-boil, take off the thin peel, and roast them of a beautiful brown. Tofrij Potatoes. Take the skin off raw potatoes, slice, and fry them, either in butter or thin batter. To mash Potatoes. Boil the potatoes, peel them, and break them to paste ; then to two pounds of them, add a quarter of a pint of milk, a little salt, and two ounces of butter, and stir it all well over the fire. Either serve them in this manner ; or place them on the dish iu a form, and then brown the top with a sala- mander ; or in scallops. Carrots Require a good deal of boiling ; when young, wipe off the skin after they are boiled ; when old, boil them with the salt meat, and scrape them first. To stew Cariots. Half-boil, then nicely scrape, and slice them into a stew-pan ; put to them half a tea-cupful of any weak broth, some pepper and salt, and half a cupful of cream : simmer them till they are very tender, but not broken. Before serving, rub a very little flour ; with a bit of butter, and warm up vvith them. II ap- proved, chopped parsley may be added ten minutes before served. To mash Parsnips. Boil them tender ; scrape, then mash them into a stew-pan with a little cream, a good piece of but- ter, and pepper and salt. Fricassee of parsnips. Boil in milk till they are soft. I'hen cut them lengthways into bits two or three inches long ; and simmer in a white sauce, made of two spoonfuls of broth, a bit of mace, half a cupful of cream, a bit of butter and some flower, pepper, and salt. Beet-roots Make a very pleasant addition to wmter salad ; of which they may agreeably, form a full half, instead of being only used to ornament it. This root is cool- ing, and very wholesome. It is extremely good, boiled and sliced with a small quantity of onion ; or stewed with whole onions, large or small as follows. Boil the beet tender with the skin on ; slice it in- to a stew-pan with a little broth, and a spoonful of vinegar ; simmer till the gravy is tinged with the colour; then put it into a small dish, and make a round of the button-onions, first boiled till tender ; take oflf the skin just before serving, and mind they be quite hot, and clear. Or roast three large onions, and peel off the outer skins till they look clear ; and serve the beet-root stewed round them. If beet-root is in the kast broken before dressed, it parts with its cirfour, and looks ill. 153 SWEET DISHES, PRESERVES, SWEETMEATS, &C. Buttered Rice. Wash and pick some rice, drain, and put it with gome new milk, enough just to swell it, over the fire ; when tender, pour off the milk, and add a bit of butter, a little sugar, and pounded cinnamon. Shake it, that it does not burn, and serve. Souffle nf Rice and Jpj^les. Blanch Carolina rice, strain it, and set it to boil in milk, wiih lemon-peel und a bit of cinnamon. Let it boil till the rice is dry ; then cool it, and raise a rim three inches high round the dish ; having egged the dish where it is put, to make it stick. Then€gg the rice all over. Fill the dish half-way up with a marmalade of apples ; have ready the whites of four eggs beaten to a fine froth, and put them over the marmalade : then sift fine sugar over it, and set it in the oven, which should be warm enough to give it a beautiful colour. Snow Balls. Swell rice in milk, strain it off ; and having pared and cored apples, put the rice round them, tying each up in a cloth. Put a bit of lemon-peel, a clove, or cinnamon, in each, and boil them well. Lent Potatoes, Beat three or f^ur ounces of almonds, and three or four bitter, when blanched, putting a little orange- fiower water Vo prevent oiling ; add eight ounces of butter, four eggs well beateJ and strained, half a glass of raisin wine, and sugar to your taste. Beat all well till quite smooth, and grate in three Savoy biscuits. Make balls of the above with a little flour, the size o.f a chestnut ; throw them into a stew-pan of boiling lard, and boil them of a beautiful yellow brown. Drain them. Serve sweet sauce in a boat. 1 54 Jl Taruey Beat seven eggs, yolks and'whites separately ; add a pint of cream, near tiw. same of spinach-juice, and a little tansey-juice gained by pounding in a stone mortar, a quarter of a pound of Naples biscuit, su- gar to taste, a glass of white wine, and some nutmeg. Set all in a sauce-pan, just to thicken, over the fire ; then put it into a dish, lined with paste, to turn out, and bake it. Puits d' Amour. Cut a fine rich puff-pr.ste rolled thin, with tin shapes made on purpose, one size less than another, in a pyramidical form, and lay them so : then bake in a moderate oven, that the paste may be clone suf- ficiently, but very pale. Lay different coloured sweetmeats on the edges. A very nice dish of Macaroni dressed sweet. Boil two ounces in a pint of milk, with s bit of lemon-peel, and agood bit of cinnamon, till the pipes are swelled to their utmost size without breaking. — Lay them on a cu-stard-dish, and pour a custard over them hot. Serve cold. Floating Island. Scald a codlin befo^re it be ripe, or any sharp ap- ple ; pulp it through a sieve. Beat the whites of two eggs with sugar, and a spooni'ul of orange flow- er-water ; mix in by degrees the pulp, and beat all together until you have a large quantity of froth , serve it on a raspberry-cream ; or you may colour the froth with beet-root, raspberry, currant-jelly, and set it on a white cream, having given it the fla- vour of lemon, sugar, and wine ; or put the froth on a custare 155 Flummery. Put thiee large handfuls of very small white oat- meal Ic steep a Aay and night in cold water ; then pour it off clear, and add as much more water, and let it stand the same time. Strain it through a fine hair sieve, and boil it till it be as thick as hasty pud- ding ; stirring it well all the time. When first strained, put to it one large spoonful of white sugar and two of orange-flower water. Pour it into shal- low dishes, and serve to eat with wine, cider, milk or cream, or sugar. It is very good. Rice Flummery. Boil with a pintof new milk, a bit of lemon-peel, and cinnamon ; mix with a little cold milk as much rice flour as will make the whole of a good consis- tence, sweeten, and add a spoon of peach- water, or a bitter almond beaten ; boil it, observing it do not burn ; pour it into a shape or pint basin, taking out the spice. When cold, turn the flummery into a dish, and serve with cream, milk, or custard round : or put a tea-cupful of cream into half a pint of new milk, a glass of white wine, half a lemon squeezed : and sugar. Finnity, To a quart of ready boiled wheat, but by degrees two quarts of new milk, breaking the jelly, and then four ounces of currants picked clean, and washed • stir them and boil till they are done. Beat the yolks of three eggs, and a little nutmeg, with two or three spoonfuls of milk ; add this to the wheat ; stir them together while over the fire ; then sweeten, and serve cold in a deep dish. Some persons like it best warm. Curds and Cream. Put three or four pints of milk into a pan a little 15<> warm, and then aid rennet or gallino. When the curd is come lade it with a saucer into an earthern ghape, perforated, of any form you please. Fill it up as the whey drains off, without breaking or press ing the curd. If turned only two hours before wanted, it is very light ; but those who like it har- der, may hare it so, by making it earlier, and squeez- ing it. Cream, milk or a whip of cream, sugar, wine, and lemon, to be put in the dish, or into a glass bowl, to serve with the curd. A Curd Star. Set a quart of new milk upon the fire with two or three blades of mace ; and when ready to boil, put to it the yolks and whites of nine eggs well beaten, and as much salt as will lie upon a small knife's point. Let it boil till the whey is clear ; then drain it in a thin cloth, or hair sieve ; season it with su- gar, and a little cinnamon, rose-water, orange-flower water, or white wine, to your taste : and put into a star form, or any other. Let it stand some hours before you turn it into a dish : then put round it thick cream or custard. Blanc-mange or Blamange. Boil two ounces of isinglass in three half-pints of water half an hour ; strain it into a pint and a half of cream, sweeten it, and add some peach water, or a few bitter almonds, let it boil once up, and put in- to what forms you please. If not to be very stiff, a little less isinglass will do. Observe to let thp blamange settle before you turn it into the forms, Oi the blacks will remain at the bottom of them, and be on the top of the blamange when taken out of the moulds. Gooseberry, or Apple Trifle. Scald such a quantity of either of these fruits, as, 157 when pulped through a sieve, will make a thick lay- er at the hottom of your dish ; if of apples mix the rind of half a lemon grated fine ; and to both as much sugar as will be pleasant. Mixhalfapintof milk, halfa pint of cream, the yolk of one egg ; give it a scald over the fire, and stir it all the time ; do not let it boil : , add a little su- gar only, and let it grow cold. Lay it over the ap- ples with a spoon ; and then put on it a. whip made the day before, as for other trifle. Chantilly Cake, or Cake Trifle. Bake a rice cake in a mould. When cold, cut it round about two inches from the edge with a sharp knife, taking care not to perforate the bottom. Put in thick custard, and some tea-spoonfuls of raspber- ry jam, and then put on a high whip Gooseberry Fool. Put the fruit into a stone jar, and some good Lis- bon sugar : set the jar on a stove, or in a sauce-pan of water over the fire ; if the former, a large spoon- ful of water should be added to the fruit. When it is done enough to pulp, press it through a colander ; have ready a sufficient quantity of new milk, and a tea-cup of raw cream, boiled together, or an e^ in- stead of the latter, and left to be cold: then sweeten it pretty well with fine Lisbon sugar, and mix the pulp by degrees with it. Orange Fool. Mix the juice of three Seville oranges, three eggs well beaten, a pint of cream, a little nutmeg and cin- namon, and sweeten to your taste. Set the whole over a slow fire, and stir it till it becomes as thick as gord melted buttei . but it must not be bfiiled ; then Dourit into a dish foi eating cold 14 158 j9 Cream. Doil half a pint of cream, andhalfapnt of milk, with two hay-leaves, a bit of lemon-pee!, a tew al- monds, heaten to paste, with a diop of water, a little sugar, orange-flower water, and a tea-spoonful of flour, having been rubbed down with a little cold milk, and mixed with the above. When cold, put a little lemon-juice to the cream, and serve it in cups or lemonade-glasses. An excellent Cream. Whip up three quarters of a pint of very rich cream to a strong froth, with some finely scraped lemon-peel, a squeeze of the juice, half a glass of sweet wine, and sugar to make it pleasant, but not too sweet ; lay it on a sieve or in a form, and next day put it on a dish, and ornament it with very light puff paste biscuits, made in tin shapes the length of a fin- ger, and about two thick, ove-r which sugar may be strewed, or a little glaze with isinglass. Or you may use macaroons, to line the edges of the dish. Burnt Cream. Boil a pint of cream with a stick of cinnamon, and some lemon-peel ; take it off the fire, and pour it very slowly into the yolks of four eggs, stirring till half cold ; sweeten, and take out the spice, &c. ; pour it iuto the dish ; when cold, strew white pound ed sugar over and brown it with a salamander. Sack Cream. Boil a pint of raw cream, the yolk of an egg well beaten, two or three spoonfuls of white wine, sugar, and lemon-peel ; stir it over a gentle fire till it is as thick as rich cream, and afterwards till cold ; then serve it in glasses, with long pieces of dry toast. 1 9 Brandy Cream. Boil two dozen of almonds blanched, and pounded bitter almonds, in a little milk. When cold, add to it the yolks of five eggs beaten well in a little cream, sweeten, and put to it two glasses of the best brandy ; and when well mixed, pour to it a quart of thin cream ; set it over the fire, but do not let it boil : stir it one way till it thickens, then pour into cups or low glasses. When cold it will be ready. A ratafia-drop may be put in each if you choose it. If you wish it to keep, scald the cream previously. Ratafia Cream. Boil three or four laurel, peach, or nectarme leaves, in a full pint of cream ; strain it, and when cold, add the yolks of three eggs beaten and strain- ed, sugar, and a large spoonful of brandy stirred quick into it. Scald till thick, stirring it all the time. Lemon Cream. Take a pint of thick cream, and put to it the yolks of two eggs well beaten, four ounces of fine sugar, and the thin rind of a lemon ; boil it up, then stir it till almost cold ; put the juice of a lemon in a dish, or bowl, and pour the cream upon it, stirring it till quite cold. White Lemon Cream. Is made the same as the above ; only put the whites of the eggs in lieu of the yolks , whisking it extremely well to froth. Almond Cream Beat four ounces of sweet almonds, and a few bitter, in a mortar, with a tea-spoonful of water t3 prevent oiling, both having been blanched. Put the paste to a quart of ""■•wn, and add the juice of three 150 .emons sweetened ; beat it up with a whisk to a froth, which take off on the shallow part of a sieve ; fill glasses with some of the liquor and the froth. Snow Cream. Put to a quart of cream the whites of three eggs well beaten, four spoonfuls of sweet wine, sugar to your taste, and a bit of lemon-peel ; whip it to a froth, remove the peel, and serve in a dish. Cqffee-crcam, much admired. Boil a calf's fool in water till.it wastes to a pint of jelly, clear of sediment and fat. Make a tea-cup of very strong coffee ; clear it with a bit of isinglass to be perfectly bright ; pour it to the jelly, and add a pint of very good cream, and as much fine Lisbon sugar as is pleasant ; give one boil up, and pour into the dish. It should jelly, put not be stiff. Observe that your coffee be fresh. Excellent Orange Cream. Boil the rind of a Seville orange very tender ; beat it fine in a mortar, put it to a spoonful of the best brandy, the juice of a Seville oi"ange, four oun- ces of loaf sugar, and the yolks of four eggs ; beat all together for ten minutes, then, by gentle degrees, pour in a pint of boiling cream, beat till cold, put into custard-cups set into a deep dish of boiling water, and let them stand till cold again. Put at the top small strips of orange-paring, cut thin, or pre- served chips. Raspberry Cream. Mash the fruit gently, and let them drain, Ihen sprinkle a little **igar over, and that will produce more juice, then put the juice to some cream, and sweeten it, after which, if you choose to lower it I6I with some milk, it will not curdle, which it would, if put to the milk before the cream, but it is the best made of raspberry-jelly instead of jam, when the fresh fruit cannot be obtained. Pistachio Cream. Blanch four ounces of pistachio nuts ; beat them fine with a little rose-water, and add the paste to a pint of cream; sweeten, let it just boil, and put it into glasses. Clovted Cream. String four blades of mace on a thread ; put them on a gill of new milk, and six spoonfuls of rose- water, simmer a few minutes, then by degrees stir this liquor strained into the yolks of two new eggs well beaten. Stir the whole into a quart of very good cream, and set it over the fire ; stir it till hot, but not boiling hot ; pour it into a deep dish, and let it stand twenty-four hours. Serve it in a cream dish, to eat with fruits. Many people prefer it without any flavour but that of cream, in which case use a quart of new milk and the cream, or do it as the Devonshire scalded cream. When done enough, a round mark will appear oa the surface of the cream, the size of the bottom of the pan it is done in, which in the country they call the ring ; and when that is seen, remove the pan from the fire. A Froth to set on Cream, Custard, or Trifle, which Af looks and eats well. Sweeten half a pound of the pulp of damsons, or any other sort of scalded fruit, put to it the whites of four eggs beaten, and beat the pulp with them until it will stand as high as you choose ; and being put on the cream, &c. with a spoon, it will tak" aay form it should be rough, fo imitate a rock 14* 162 Calf's Feet Jelly. Boil two feet ^n two quarts and a pint of water till the feet are broken and the water half wasted ; strain it, and when cold, take ofif the fat, and remove the Ully from the sediment ; Uien put it in-t" a sauce- pan, with sugar, raisin nine, lemon juice to your taste, and some lemon-peel. When the flavour is rich, put to it the white of five eggs well beaten, and their shells broken. Set the sauce-pan on the fire, but do not stir the jelly after it begins to warm. Let it boil twenty minutes after it rises to a head ; then pour it through a flannel jelly-bag. first dipping the bag in hot water to prevent waste, and squeezing it quite dry. Run the jelly through and (hrough un- til clear ; then put it into glasses or forms. The following mode w'll greatly facilitate the clearing of jelly. , When the mixture h&s boiled twenty minutes, throw in a tea-cupful of cold water, let it boil five minutes longer : then take t'he sauce- pan off the fire covered close, and keep it half an hour ; after which it will be so clear as to&eed only once running through the bag, and much waste will be saved. Observe, feet for all jellies are boiled so long by the people who sell them, that thay are less nutri- cious : they should only be scalded to take off the hair. The liquor will require greater care in removing the fat, but the jelly will be far stronger, and of course allow more water. J^ote : jeliy is equally good made of cow-heels nicely cleaned ; and as they bear a less price than those of calves, and make a stronger jelly, this observation may be useful. Orange Jelly. Grate the rind of two Seville and two China Oran- ges, and two lemons, squeeze the juice of three of 163 each, and strain, and add the juice of a quarter of a pound of lump sugar, and a quarter ef a pint of wa- ter, and boil till it almost .candies. Have ready a quart of isinglass-jelly made with two ounces; put to it the syrup, and boil it once up; strain off the jelly, and let it ^and to settle as above, before it ia put into the mould. Hartshorn Jelly. Simmer eight ounces of hartshorn shavings with two quarts of water to one ; strain it, and boil it with the rinds of four China oranges and two lemons pared thin ; when cool, add the juice of both, half a pound of sugar, and the whites of sis eggs beaten to froth ; let the jelly have three or four boils without stirring, and strain it through a jelly bag. Cranberry Jelly. Make a very strong isinglass-jelly. When cold, mix it with a double quantity of cranberry-juice, pressed as directed for dressing cranberries, (see preserves;) sweeten and boil it up ; then strain it in- to a shape. The sugar must be good loaf, or the jelly will not be clear. Cranberry and Rice Jelly. Boil and press the fruit, strain the juice and by degrees mix it into as much ground rice as will, whea boiled, thicken to a jelly j boil it gently, stirring it, and sweeten to your taste. Put it in a basin or form, and serve to eat as the afore-directed jelly, with milk or cream. Apple Jelly to serve at table. Prepare twentj' golden pippins ,• boil them in a pint and a half of water from the spring, till quite tender; then strain the liquor through a colander 1(34 To every pint put a pound of fine sugar, add grated orange or lemon, then boil to a jelly. To scald Codlins. Wrap each in a vine-leaf, and pack them close in a nice saoce-pan, and when full, pour as much water as will cover them. Set it over a gentle fire, and let them sjmmer slowly till done enough to take the thin skin off when cold. Place them in a dish, with or without milk, cream, or custard ; if tne latter, there should be no ratafia. Dust fine sugar over the ap- ples. Stewed Golden Pippins. Scoop out the core, pare them very thin, and as you do it, throw them in water. For every pound of fruit, make half a pound of single-refined sugar into syrup, with a pint of water, whenskimmod, put the pippins in, and stew till clear ; then grate the le- mon over, and serve in the syrup. Be careful not to let them break. They are an elegant and good dish for a corner or dessert. Black Caps. Halve and core some fine large apples, put them in a shallow pan, strew white sugar over, and bake them. Boil a glass of wine, the same of water, and sweeten it for sauce. Stewed Pears. Pare and halve, or quarter, large pears, accord- ing to their size ; throw them into water, as the skin is taken off, before they are divided, to prevent their turning black. Pack them round a block -tin stew- pan, and sprinkle as much sugar over as will make them pretty sweet, and add lemon-peel, a clove or two, and some alspice cracked ; just cover them with water, and put some of the red liquor, as directed in 165 another article. Cover them close, and stew three or four hours ; when tender, take them out, an'l pour the liquor from them. Baked Pears. These need not be of a fine sort ; but some taste better than others, and often those that are least fit to eat raw. Wipe but do not pare, and lay them on tm plates, and bake them in a slow oven. When eiiough to bear ii flatten them with a silver spooD. When done through, put them on the dish. They should be baked three or four times and ver^ gently. Orange Butter. Boil six hard eggs, beat them in a mortar with two ounces of fine sngar, three ounces of butter, ana two ounces of blanched almonds beaten to a pMle. Moisten with orange-flower water, and when all is mixed, rub it through a colander on a dish, and serve sweet biscuits between. To prepare Fruit for Children, afar more » holenome way than in Pies and Puddings. Pot apples sliced, or plums, currants, gooseber- ries, &c. into a stone jar, and sprinkle as much Lis bon sugar as necessary among them, set the jar on a hot hearth, or in a sauce-pan of water, and let it re- main till the fruit is perfectly done. jlices of b Savoury Rice. vV ash and pick some rice, stew it very gently ir d small quantity of veal or rich mutton broth, with an onion, a blade of mace, pepper, and salt. When swelled, but not boiled to mash, dry it on the shallow ead of a sieve before the fire, and either serve it dry, c r put it in the middle of a dish, and pour the gravy I 3und, having heated it. Salmagundy Is a beautiful small dish, if in nice shape, and if he colours of the in^edients are varied. For this urpose chop separately the white part of cold chick- m or veal, yolks of eggs boiled hard, the whites of eggs, parsley, half a dozen anchovies, beet-root, red pickled cabbage, ham and grated tongue, or any thing well flavoured, and of a good colour. Some people like a small proportion of onion, but it may be better omitted. A saucer, large tea-cup, or any other base, must be put into a small dish ; then make rows round it wide at bottom, and growing smaller towards the top ; choosing such of the ingredients for each row as will most vary the colours. At the top a little sprig of curie'' parsley may be stuck in, or, without any thing on the dish, the salmagundy may be laid in rows, or put into the half whites of eggs, which may be made to stand upright by cutting ofl' a little bit at the round end. In the latter case, ach half egg has but one ingredient. Curled but- ter and parsley may be put as garnish between. Macaroni as usually served. Boil it in milk, or a weak veal broth, pretty well flavoured with salt When tender, put it into a dish fi no without the liquor, ana among it put some bits Oi butter and grated cheese, and over the top grate more, and a little more butter. Set the dish into a Dutch oven a quarter of an hour, but do not let the top become hard. Another way. — Wash it well, and simmer in half ~ Uk and half broth of veal or mutton, till it is ten- ner. To a spoonful of this liquor put the yolk of an egg beaten in a spoonful of cream, just make it hot to thicken, but not boil: put it over the macaroni, !ind then grate fine old cheese all over, and bits oi butter. Brown with the salamander. Owlet. ' Make a battftr of eggs and milk, and a very little flour ; put to it chopped parsley, green onions, or chives or a very small quantity of shallot (the latter IS best) a little pepper, salt, tmd a scrape or two oi ai.itmeg. Make some butter boil in a small trying- pan, and pour the above batter into it ; when one side is of a fine yellow brown, turn it, and do the other. Double it when served. Some scraped lean ham, or grated tongue, put in at first, js a very plea- sant addition. Four eggs will make a pretty sized omlet ; but many cooks will use eight or ten. A small proportion of flour should be used. Ifthe taste be approved, a HrtZe taragon gives a fine flavour. A good deal of parsley should be used. Ramakins and omlet, though usually served in the course, would be much better if they were sent up after, that they might be eaten as hot as possible. Ramakins. Sorape a quarter of a pound of Cheshire, and ditto of' Gloucester cheese, ditto of good fresh butter ; then beat all in a mortar with the yolks eff^'Jr ejrgs, aud the inside of a small French roll boiled in cream 171 till soft ; mix tbe paste then with the whites of the eggs previously beaten, and put into small papet pans made rather long than square, and bake in a Dutch oven till of a fine brown. They should be eaten quite hot. Some like the addition of a glass of white wine. The batter for ramakins is equally good over ma- caroni when boiled tender ; or on stewed broccoli, celery, or cauliflower ; a little of the gravy they have been stewed in being put in the dish with them, but not enough to make the vegetable swim. Roast Cheese, to come up after Dinr^r. Grate three ounces of fat Cheshire cheese, mix it with the yolks of two eggs, lour ounces of grated bread, and three ouncps of butter,- bea he whole well in a mortar, with a JesarVt-Sfooofu Df mustard, and a little salt and pcopei least sorae bread, cut it into proper pieiJ-s, 'a> tl* ^jaste as above thick upon them, put thim iri.o a ii'utch oren cover ed with a dish, till hot throufjn, remove the dish, and let the cheese brown a ai'de. Serve as hot as possible. WeUh Rauil. Toast a slice of bread on both sides, imd butter it ; toast a slice of Gloucest, y: :heese on one side, and lay that next the bread, and toast he other with a salamander ; rub mustard oyer, Fao. serve rery hot, and covered. Cheer. Toasf. Mix some fine butler, made roustart? M.d salt, into a mass ; spread it on I .esh-made thm ioasts, and grated or scrape Glouce-iter cheese upot them. Ancho 'ly Toast. Bone and skin six or eght "'•-'►>ov.fis : pound them 173 o a mess with an ounce of fine butter till the colouf is equal, and then spread it on toasts or rusks. To poach Eggs. Set a stew-pan with water on the tire ; when boiUng, slip an egg previously broken into a cup, into the water ; when the white looks done enougn slide an egg-slice under the egg, and lay it on toast and batter, of spinach. As soon as enough are done, serve hot. If not fresh laid they will not poach well, and without breaking. Trim the rag- ged part of the whites, and mate them look round To boil Eggs. Put them in when the water boils ; three minutes and a half will boil them soft, and five or six hard Buttered Eggs. Beat four or five eggs, yolks and whites together, put a quarter of a pound of butter in a basin, and then put that in boiling water ; stir it till melted, then pour that butter and eggs into a saucepan ; keep a basin in your hand, just hold the sauce-pan in the other o; er a slow part of the fire, shaking i' one way, as it begins to warm ; pour it into a basin and back, then hold it again over the fire, stirring it constantly in the sauce-pan, and pouring it into a Ik>- sin, more perfectly to mix the egg and butter, until they shall be hot without boiling. Serve on toasted bread : or in a basin, to eat with salt fish, or red herrings. Scotch Eggs. Boil hard five pullet's eggs, and without remov- ing the white, cover completely with a fine relishing forcemeat, in which let scraped ham, or chopped anchovy, bear a due projportion Fry of a beaudf-! 173 yellow brown, and serve with a good gravy in the . OX-FEET, or cow-heels, to dress 38 plain rice ib ORTOLANS, to dress 80 a rich rice lb. PERCH, to boil 16 rice with fruit 133 PIKE, to bake !• PUDDING, an elcelleot potato ib. PRAWNS and Craw-fish in jelly 21 potato with meat ib or shrimps, to butter ib. Bteak or kridoe; 123 PORK, leg- of, to roast ; to boil il beer steak ib. loin and neck ; shoulder ■net ib. anJ breast; neok rolled ; flpringor real nuet 124 forehand J spare-rib ; griskin 52 bunter'a ib. steaks ; sausages 53 plum ib. PORKER'S HEAD, to roast 55 cuatard 125 PIG'S HEAD, to coUar ib. miiatard ib. diiTercnt ways 57 an excellent apricot ib. h-irelet ib. baked g:ooieberry ib feet and ears fnc-i-.^r ,) 58 brandy boiled curd 126 POUI-TRYand GamP, .,5 ^ ■ .s ib for dresaitig 73 pippin ib PIGEONS, to stew; to broil 76 Russian seed, or ground rice .27 to roast ; in ielly 77 PANCAKES, common 128 PHEASANTS. an-I Partridges, 78 fine with butter or lard ib PLOVERS, to drees ; egg. 80 made of rice ib. PIES, savoury 104 New-Eog:land ib eel ; cold 105 PASTE, 139 shjimpa, lobster, fish 106 crust for renisuo lb PIE, beef-steak, reaJ, cairs-head t07 potato 131 pork, to eat co)d 108 for custards or fruit ib. mutton, siiual), lamb IJ9 PASTRY, of beef or mutton Itl chicken, green goose 110 potato 141 duck, giblet Ml venison '33 pigeon, partridge, French, PIES, apple, cherry, currant, raincti vegetable 112 tc. 133 parsley, turnip, potato, herl 113 •egg, raspljrry PATTIES, fried 134 PUDDINGS sod Panr^es, cbaer- 136 Tations on 114 oyster, lobster, beef, tio-key 137 almond, do. baked 115 PUFFS, apple, lemon. 138 •ago 116 cheeee. 139 bread and butter il> • rrall.-* I---' ih [, £16 CONTENTS. PRESERVES, 153 SAUCE, toniata ; apple ; o-jrrani . fruit for winter 183 to 189 lemon : carrier, for mutton 10. RUFFS ind Reeves, 80 fish ; eubstititte for capei ; RABBITS, to pot 81 oyster : lobster : 103 SALMON, to Doil, to broil ; driej, shrimps : anchovy •103 an excellent dish ; collared 13 SWEET DISHES, 15S ti 173 STURGEON, frejh, to dress ; to SWEET MEATS, 173 to 18S roast 16 SICK COOKERy, 207 to 211 STUFFING, for pike, haddock. TROUT, to fry a-la-Genevoise IS and .mall cod 13 TONGUE, and Udder, to roast : to SMELTS, to fry ib. stew : to eat cold 33 SUCKING PIG, to roaati petti- TRIPE, 38 toes • 64 TURKEY, to boil ; to roast 71 SOUSE, for brawn, and fcr pig's pulled 73 feet and eaig 58 TARTS, pippin, prune, orange, 135 SOUPS and Gravies SI codlinand rasplerry 136 colonrin^ for 33 VENISON, to dress 25 SOUP, e.oellent white ib. haunch, neck, and shoulder 2e plain white ; giblet 84 breast of: hashed 27 njaccaroni; peas 85 VEAL, to keep : leg of: knuckle of ■n green peas ; gravy 86 shoulder of . neck of : do. carrot ; onion 87 a-la-bra:se 40 spinach ; Scotch leek ; ox- breast of: do. to roll 41 / nanp ; Hessian ap.j ragout 88 chump of, a-la-double . a-la-sap 89 roils : duDelm of 42 brown or white fish, slock minced : to pot : cutlets for ; eel ; skate 91 maiutejion 43 loljster; crawfish 92 cntlets : collt/ps : scallops 44 oyster 93 fricandeau of ; olives 45 SAUCE, to hide the bad colour of cake : siuisages . collops. fowls ; white for fricassees 97 Scotch 4] for wild fowl , for fowl of broth 8; any „ort j for partridge ; fnr rabbiu 93 VEGETABLES, ooservations nn lemon, or white, for boil- dressing M4 to VSJ | intr fowls egg onion : shallot ; WILD FOWL, to roast 75 lor green g-eese or ducklings 99 WILD DUCKS, Teal, Wiijail, bread ■ Robart ■ Benton ; Dunbirds, &o. 80 (».»' r;v !0» WOODCOCK, " ■flp., and Qutib ».