ENGLISH HOUSEWIFERY EXEMPLIFIED
1. To make vermicelly soop.
Take a neck of beef, or any other
piece; cut off some slices, and fry them with butter
’till they are very brown; wash your pan out
every time with a little of the gravy; you may broil
a few slices of the beef upon a grid-iron: put
all together into a pot, with a large onion, a little
salt, and a little whole pepper; let it stew ’till
the meat is tender, and skim off the fat in the boiling;
them strain it into your dish, and boil four ounces
of vermicelly in a little of the gravy ’till
it is soft: Add a little stew’d spinage;
then put all together into a dish, with toasts of
bread; laying a little vermicelly upon the toast.
Garnish your dish with creed rice and boil’d
spinage, or carrots slic’d thin.
2. Cucumber soop.
Take a houghil of beef, break it small
and put it into a stew-pan, with part of a neck of
mutton, a little whole pepper, an onion, and a little
salt; cover it with water, and let it stand in the
oven all night, then strain it and take off the fat;
pare six or eight middle-siz’d cucumbers, and
slice them not very thin, stew them in a little butter
and a little whole pepper; take them out of the butter
and put ’em in the gravy. Garnish your
dish with raspings of bread, and serve it up with
toasts of bread or French roll.
3. To make hare soop.
Cut the hare into small pieces, wash
it and put it into a stew-pan, with a knuckle of veal;
put in it a gallon of water, a little salt, and a
handful of sweet herbs; let it stew ’till the
gravy be good; fry a little of the hare to brown the
soop; you may put in it some crusts of write bread
among the meat to thicken the soop; put it into a dish,
with a little stew’d spinage, crisp’d bread,
and a few forc’d-meat balls. Garnish your
dish with boil’d spinage and turnips, cut it
in thin square slices.
4. To make Green pease soop.
Take a neck of mutton, and a knuckle
of veal, make of them a little good gravy; then take
half a peck of the greenest young peas, boil and beat
them to a pulp in a marble mortar; then put to them
a little of the gravy; strain them through a hair
sieve to take out all the pulp; put all together,
with a little salt and whole pepper; then boil it a
little, and if you think the soop not green enough,
boil a handful of spinage very tender, rub it through
a hair-sieve, and put into the soop with one spoonful
of wheat-flour, to keep it from running: You must
not let it boil after the spinage is put in, it will
discolour it; then cut white bread in little diamonds,
fry them in butter while crisp, and put it into a
dish, with a few whole peas. Garnish your dish
with creed rice, and red beet-root.
You may make asparagus-soop the same
way, only add tops of asparagus, instead of whole
pease.
5. To make onion soop.
Take four or five large onions, pill
and boil them in milk and water whilst tender, (shifting
them two or three times in the boiling) beat ‘em
in a marble mortar to a pulp, and rub them thro’
a hair-sieve, and put them into a little sweet gravy;
then fry a few slices of veal, and two or three slices
of lean bacon; beat them in a marble mortar as small
as forc’d-meat; put it into your stew-pan with
the gravy and onions, and boil them; mix a spoonful
of wheat-flour with a little water, and put it into
the soop to keep it from running; strain all through
a cullender, season it to your taste; then put into
the dish a little spinage stew’d in butter,
and a little crisp bread; so serve it up.
6. Common PEASE SOOP in Winter.
Take a quart of good boiling pease
which put into a pot with a gallon of soft water whilst
cold; add thereto a little beef or mutton, a little
hung beef or bacon, and two or three large onions;
boil all together while your soop is thick; salt it
to your taste, and thicken it with a little wheat-flour;
strain it thro’ a cullender, boil a little sellery,
cut it in small pieces, with a little crisp bread,
and crisp a little spinage, as you would do parsley,
then put it in a dish, and serve it up. Garnish
your dish with raspings of bread.
7. To make PEASE SOOP in Lent.
Take a quart of pease, put them into
a pot with a gallon of water, two or three large onions,
half a dozen anchovies, a little whole pepper and
salt; boil all together whilst your soop is thick;
strain it into a stew-pan through a cullender, and
put six ounces of butter (work’d in flour) into
the soop to thicken it; also put in a little boil’d
sellery, stew’d spinage, crisp bread, and a little
dry’d mint powdered; so serve it up.
8. CRAW-FISH SOOP.
Take a knuckle of veal, and part of
a neck of mutton to make white gravy, putting in an
onion, a little whole pepper and salt to your taste;
then take twenty crawfish, boil and beat them in a
marble mortar, adding thereto alittlee of the gravy;
strain them and put them into the gravy; also two
or three pieces of white bread to thicken the soop;
boil twelve or fourteen of the smallest craw-fish,
and put them whole into the dish, with a few toasts,
or French roll, which you please; so serve
it up.
You may make lobster soop the same
way, only add into the soop the seeds of the lobster.
9. To make SCOTCH SOOP.
Take a houghil of beef, cut it in
pieces, with part of a neck of mutton, and a pound
of French barley; put them all into your pot,
with six quarts of water; let it boil ’till the
barley be soft, then put in a fowl; as soon as ’tis
enough put in a handful of red beet leaves or brocoli,
a handful of the blades of onions, a handful of spinage,
washed and shred very small; only let them have a little
boil, else it will spoil the greenness. Serve
it up with the fowl in a dish, garnish’d with
raspings of bread.
10. To make SOOP without Water.
Take a small leg of mutton, cut it
in slices, season it with a little pepper and salt;
cut three middling turnips in round pieces, and three
small carrots scrap’d and cut in pieces, a handful
of spinage, a little parsley, a bunch of sweet herbs,
and two or three cabbage lettice; cut the herbs pretty
small, lay a row of meat and a row of herbs; put the
turnips and carrots at the bottom of the pot, with
an onion, lay at the top half a pound of sweet butter,
and close up the pot with coarse paste; them put the
pot into boiling water, and let it boil for four hours;
or in a slow oven, and let it stand all night; when
it is enough drain the gravy from the meat, skim off
the fat, then put it into your dish with some toasts
of bread, and a little stew’d spinage; to serve
it up.
11. To stew a BRISKET of BEEF.
Take the thin part of a brisket of
beef, score the skin at the top; cross and take off
the under skin, then take out the bones, season it
highly with mace, a little salt, and a little whole
pepper, rub it on both sides, let it lay all night,
make broth of the bones, skim the fat clean off, put
in as much water as will cover it well, let it stew
over a slow fire four or five hours, with a bunch
of sweet herbs and an onion cut in quarters; turn
the beef over every hour, and when you find it tender
take it out of the broth and drain it very well, having
made a little good strong gravy.
A ragoo with sweet-breads cut into
pieces, pullets tenderly boil’d and cut in long
pieces; take truffles and morels, if you have any
mushrooms, with a little claret, and throw in your
beef, let it stew a quarter of an hour in the ragoo,
turning it over sometimes, then take out your beef,
and thicken your ragoo with a lump of butter and a
little flour. Garnish your dish with horse-radish
and pickles, lay the ragoo round your beef, and a
little upon the top; so serve it up.
12. To stew a RUMP of BEEF.
Take a fat rump of young beef and
cut off the fag end, lard the low part with fat bacon,
and stuff the other part with shred parsley; put it
into your pan with two or three quarts of water, a
quart of Claret, two or three anchovies, an onion,
two or three blades of mace, a little whole pepper,
and a bunch of sweet herbs; stew it over a slow fire
five or six hours, turning it several times in the
stewing, and keep it close cover’d; when your
beef is enough take from it the gravy, thicken part
of it with a lump of butter and flour, and put it upon
the dish with the beef. Garnish the dish with
horse-radish and red-beet root. There must be
no salt upon the beef, only salt the gravy to your
taste.
You may stew part of a brisket, or
an ox cheek the same way.
13. To make OLIVES of BEEF.
Take some slices of a rump (or any
other tender piece) of beef, and beat them with a
paste pin, season them with nutmeg, pepper and salt,
and rub them over with the yolk of an egg; make a little
forc’d-meat of veal, beef-suet, a few bread
crumbs, sweet-herbs, a little shred mace, pepper,
salt, and two eggs, mixed all together; take two or
three slices of the beef, according as they are in
bigness, and a lump of forc’d-meat the size
of an egg; lay your beef round it, and roll it in
part of a kell of veal, put it into an earthen dish,
with a little water, a glass of claret, and a little
onion shred small; lay upon them a little butter,
and bake them in an oven about an hour; when they come
out take off the fat, and thicken the gravy with a
little butter and flour; six of them is enough for
a side dish. Garnish the dish with horseradish
and pickles.
You may make olives of veal the same way.
14. To fry BEEF-STEAKS.
Take your beef steaks and beat them
with the back of a knife, fry them in butter over
a quick fire, that they may be brown before they be
too much done; when they are enough put them into
an earthen pot whilst you have fry’d them all;
pour out the fat, and put them into your pan with
a little gravy, an onion shred very small, a spoonful
of catchup and a little salt; thicken it with a little
butter and flour, the thickness of cream. Garnish
your dish with pickles.
Beef-steaks are proper for a side-dish.
15. BEEF-STEAKS another Way.
Take your beef-steaks and beat them
with the back of a knife, strow them over with a little
pepper and salt, lay them on a grid-iron over a clear
fire, turning ’em whilst enough; set your dish
over a chafing-dish of coals, with a little brown
gravy; chop an onion or Shalot as small as pulp, and
put it amongst the gravy; (if your steaks be not over
much done, gravy will come therefrom;) put it on a
dish and shake it all together. Garnish your
dish with shalots and pickles.
16. A SHOULDER of MUTTON forc’d.
Take a pint of oysters and chop them,
put in a few bread-crumbs, a little pepper, shred
mace, and an onion, mix them all together, and stuff
your mutton on both sides, then roast it at a slow
fire, and baste it with nothing but butter; put into
the dripping-pan a little water, two or three spoonfuls
of the pickle of oysters, a glass of claret, an onion
shred small, and an anchovy; if your liquor waste
before your mutton is enough, put in a little more
water; when the meat is enough, take up the gravy,
skim off the fat, and thicken it with flour and butter;
then serve it up. Garnish your dish with horse-radish
and pickles.
17. To stew a FILLET of MUTTON.
Take a fillet of mutton, stuff it
the same as for a shoulder, half roast it, and put
it into a stew pan with a little gravy, a jill of
claret, an anchovy, and a shred onion; you may put
in a little horse-radish and some mushrooms; stew
it over a slow fire while the mutton is enough; take
the gravy, skim off the fat, and thicken it with flour
and butter; lay forc’d-meat-balls round the mutton.
Garnish your dish with horse-radish and mushrooms.
It is proper either for a side-dish
or bottom dish; if you have it for a bottom-dish,
cut your mutton into two fillets.
18. To Collar a Breast of MUTTON.
Take a breast of mutton, bone it,
and season it with nutmeg, pepper and salt, rub it
over with the yolk of an egg; make a little forc’d-meat
of veal or mutton, chop it with a little beef-suet,
a few bread-crumbs, sweet herbs, an onion, pepper
and salt, a little nutmeg, two eggs, and a spoonful
or two of cream; mix all together and lay it over the
mutton, roll it up and bind it about with course inkle;
put it into an earthen dish with a little water, dridge
it over with flour, and lay upon it a little butter;
it will require two hours to bake it. When it
is enough take up the gravy, skim off the fat, put
in an anchovy and a spoonful of catchup, thicken it
with flour and butter; take the inkle from the mutton
and cut it into three or four rolls; pour the sauce
upon the dish, and lay about it forc’d-meat-balls.
Garnish your dish with pickles.
19. To Collar a Breast of MUTTON another
Way.
Take a breast of mutton, bone it,
and season it with nutmeg, pepper and salt; roll it
up tight with coarse incle and roast it upon a spit;
when it is enough lay it whole upon the dish.
Then take four or six cucumbers, pare them and cut
them in slices, not very thin; likewise cut three
or four in quarters length way, stew them in a little
brown gravy and a little whole pepper; when they are
enough thicken them with flour and butter the thickness
of cream; so serve it up. Garnish your dish with
horse-radish.
20. To Carbonade a Breast of MUTTON.
Take a breast of mutton, half bone
it, nick it cross, season it with pepper and salt;
then broil it before the fire whilst it be enough,
strinkling it over with bread-crumbs; let the sauce
be a little gravy and butter, and a few shred capers;
put it upon the dish with the mutton. Garnish
it with horse-radish and pickles.
This is proper for a side-dish at
noon, or a bottom-dish at night.
21. A Chine of MUTTON roasted, with stew’d
SELLERY.
Take a loyn of mutton, cut off the
thin part and both ends, take off the skin, and score
it in the roasting as you would do pork; then take
a little sellery, boil it, and cut it in pieces about
an inch long, put to it a little good gravy, while
pepper and salt, two or three spoonfuls of cream and
a lump of butter, so thicken it up, and pour it upon
your dish with your mutton. This is proper
for a side-dish.
22. MUTTON-CHOPS.
Take a leg of mutton half-roasted,
when it is cold cut it in thin pieces as you would
do any other meat for hashing, put it into a stew-pan
with a little water or small gravy, two or three spoonfuls
of claret, two or three shalots shred, or onions,
and two or three spoonfuls of oyster pickle; thicken
it up with a little flour, and so serve it up.
Garnish your dish with horse-radish and pickles.
You may do a shoulder of mutton the
same way, only boil the blade-bone, and lie in the
middle.
23. A forc’d LEG of MUTTON.
Take a leg of mutton, loose the skin
from the meat, be careful you do not cut the skin
as you loosen it; then cut the meat from the bone,
and let the bone and skin hang together, chop the
meat small, with a little beef-suet, as you would
do sausages; season it with nutmeg, pepper and salt,
a few bread-crumbs, two or three eggs, a little dry’d
sage, shred parsley and lemon-peel; then fill up the
skin with forc’d-meat, and lay it upon an earthen
dish; lay upon the meat a little flour and butter,
and a little water in the dish; it will take an hour
and a half baking; when you dish it up lay about it
either mutton or veal chollops, with brown gravy sauce.
Garnish your dish with horse-radish and lemon.
You may make a forc’d leg of lamb the same way.
24. To make FRENCH CUTLETS of MUTTON.
Take a neck of mutton, cut it in joints,
cut off the ends of the long bones, then scrape the
meat clean off the bones about an inch, take a little
of the inpart of the meat of the cutlets, and make
it into forc’d-meat; season it with nutmeg,
pepper, and salt; then lay it upon your cutlets, rub
over them the yolk of an egg to make it stick; chop
a few sweet herbs, and put to them a few bread-crumbs,
a little pepper and salt, and strew it over the cutlets,
and wrap them in double writing-paper; either broil
them before the fire or in an oven, half an hour will
do them; when you dish them up, take off the out-paper,
and set in the midst of the dish a little brown gravy
in a china-bason; you may broil them without paper
if you please.
25. To fry MUTTON STEAKS.
Take a loyn of mutton, cut off the
thin part, then cut the rest into steaks, and flat
them with a bill, season them with a little pepper
and salt, fry them in butter over a quick fire; as
you fry them put them into a stew-pan or earthen-pot,
whilst you have fried them all; then pour the fat
out of the pan, put in a little gravy, and the gravy
that comes from the steaks, with a spoonful of claret,
an anchovy, and an onion or a shalot shred; shake
up the steaks in the gravy, and thicken it with a
little flour; so serve them up. Garnish your dish
with horse radish and shalots.
26. To make artificial VENISON of MUTTON.
Take a large shoulder of mutton, or
a middling fore quarter, bone it, lay it in an earthen
dish, put upon it a pint of claret, and let it lie
all night; when you put it into your pasty-pan or dish,
pour on the claret that it lay in, with a little water
and butter; before you put it into your pasty-pan,
season it with pepper and salt; when you make the
pasty lie no paste in the bottom of the dish.
27. How to brown Ragoo a BREAST of VEAL.
Take a breast of veal, cut off both
the ends, and half roast it; then put it into a stew-pan,
with a quart of brown gravy, a spoonful of mushroom-powder,
a blade or two of mace, and lemon-peel; so let it stew
over a slow fire whilst your veal is enough; then put
in two or three shred mushrooms or oysters, two or
three spoonfuls of white wine; thicken up your sauce
with flour and butter; you may lay round your veal
some stew’d morels and truffles; if you have
none, some pallets stew’d in gravy, with artichoke-bottoms
cut in quarters, dipt in eggs and fry’d, and
some forc’d-meat-balls; you may fry the sweet-bread
cut in pieces, and lay over the veal, or fry’d
oysters; when you fry your oysters you must dip them
in egg and flour mixed. Garnish your dish with
lemon and pickles.
28. A Herico of a BREAST of VEAL, French
Way.
Take a breast of veal, half roast
it, then put it into a stew-pan, with three pints
of brown gravy; season your veal with nutmeg, pepper
and salt; when your veal is stew’d enough, you
may put in a pint of green peas boil’d.
Take six middling cucumbers, pare and cut them in quarters
long way, also two cabbage-lettices, and stew them
in brown gravy; so lay them round your veal when you
dish it up, with a few forc’d-meat-balls and
some slices of bacon. Garnish your dish with
pickles, mushrooms, oysters and lemons.
29. To roll a BREAST of VEAL.
Take a breast of veal, and bone it,
season it with nutmeg, pepper and salt, rub it over
with the yolk of an egg, and strew it over with sweet
herbs shred small, and some slices of bacon, cut thin
to lie upon it, roll it up very tight, bind it with
coarse inkle, put it into an earthen dish with a little
water, and lay it upon some lumps of butter; strew
a little seasoning on the outside of your veal, it
will take two hours baking; when it is baked take
off the inkle and cut it in four rolls, lay it upon
the dish with a good brown gravy-sauce: lay about
your veal the sweet-bread fry’d, some forc’d-meat-balls,
a little crisp bacon, and a few fry’d oysters
if you have any; so serve it up. Garnish your
dish with pickles and lemon.
30. A stew’d BREAST of VEAL.
Take the fattest and whitest breast
of veal you can get, cut off both ends and boil them
for a little gravy; take the veal and raise up the
thin part, make a forc’d-meat of the sweet-bread
boil’d, a few bread-crumbs, a little beef-suet,
two eggs, pepper and salt, a spoonful or two of cream,
and a little nutmeg, mix’d all together; so stuff
the veal, skewer the skin close down, dridge it over
with flour, tie it up in a cloth, and boil it in milk
and water about an hour. For the sauce take a
little gravy, about a jill of oysters, a few mushrooms
shred, a little lemon shred fine, and a little juice
of lemon; so thicken it up with flour and butter;
when you dish it up pour the same over it; lay over
it a sweet-bread or two cut in slices and fry’d,
and fry’d oysters. Garnish your dish with
lemon, pickles and mushrooms.
This is proper for a top dish either at noon or night.
31. To stew a FILLET of VEAL.
Take a leg of the best whye veal,
cut off the dug and the knuckle, cut the rest into
two fillets, and take the fat part and cut it in pieces
the thickness of your finger; you must stuff the veal
with the fat; make the hole with a penknife, draw
it thro’ and skewer it round; season it with
pepper, salt, nutmeg, and shred parsley; then put it
into your stew-pan, with half a pound of butter, (without
water) and set it on your stove; let it boil very
slow and cover it close up, turning it very often;
it will take about two hours in stewing; when it is
enough pour the gravy from it, take off the fat, put
into the gravy a pint of oysters and a few capers,
a little lemon-peel, a spoonful or two of white wine,
and a little juice of lemon; thicken it with butter
and flour the thickness of cream; lay round it forc’d-meat-balls
and oysters fry’d, and so serve it up.
Garnish your dish with a few capers and slic’d
lemon.
32. To make SCOTCH COLLOPS.
Take a leg of veal, take off the thick
part and cut in thin slices for collops, beat them
with a paste-pin ’till they be very thin; season
them with mace, pepper and salt; fry them over a quick
fire, not over brown; when they are fried put them
into a stew-pan with a little gravy, two or three
spoonfuls of white wine, two spoonfuls of oyster-pickle
if you have it, and a little lemon-peel; then shake
them over a stove in a stew-pan, but don’t let
them boil over much, it only hardens your collops;
take the fat part of your veal, stuff it with forc’d-meat,
and boil it; when it is boiled lay it in the middle
of your dish with the collops; lay about your collops
slices of crisp bacon, and forc’d-meat-balls.
Garnish your dish with slices of lemon and oysters,
or mushrooms.
33. To make VEAL CUTLETS.
Take a neck of veal, cut it in joints,
and flatten them with a bill; cut off the ends of
the bones, and lard the thick part of the cutlets
with four or five bits of bacon; season it with nutmeg,
pepper and salt; strew over them a few bread crumbs,
and sweet herbs shred fine; first dip the cutlets
in egg to make the crumbs stick, then broil them before
the fire, put to them a little brown gravy sauce, so
serve it up. Garnish your dish with lemon.
34. VEAL CUTLETS another Way.
Take a neck of veal, cut it in joints,
and flat them as before, and cut off the ends of the
long bones; season them with a little pepper, salt
and nutmeg, broil them on a gridiron, over a slow fire;
when they are enough, serve them up with brown gravy
sauce and forc’d-meat-balls. Garnish your
dish with lemon.
35. VEAL CUTLETS another Way.
Take a neck of veal and cut it in
slices, flatten them as before, and cut off the ends
of the long bones; season the cutlets with pepper and
salt, and dridge over them some flour; fry them in
butter over a quick fire; when they are enough put
from them the fat they were fried in, and put to them
a little small gravy, a spoonful of catchup, a spoonful
of white wine or juice of lemon, and grate in some
nutmeg; thicken them with flour and butter, so serve
them up. Garnish your dish as before.
36. To Collar a CALF’S HEAD to eat
hot.
Take a large fat head, and lay it
in water to take out the blood; boil it whilst the
bones will come out; season it with nutmeg, pepper
and salt; then wrap it up round with a large lump
of forc’d-meat made of veal; after which wrap
it up tight in a veal kell before it is cold, and
take great care that you don’t let the head break
in two pieces; then bind it up with a coarse inkle,
lay it upon an earthen dish, dridge it over with flour,
and lay over it a little butter, with a little water
in the dish; an hour and a half will bake it; when
it is enough take off the inkle, cut it in two length
ways, laying the skin-side uppermost; when you lay
it upon your dish you must lay round it stew’d
pallets and artichoke-bottoms fry’d with forc’d-meat-balls;
put to it brown gravy-sauce; you may brown your sauce
with a few truffles or morels, and lay them about
your veal.
Garnish your dish with lemon and pickle.
37. To Collar a CALF’S HEAD to eat
cold.
You must be a calf’s head with
the skin on, split it and lay it in water, take out
the tongue and eyes, cut off the groin ends, then tie
it up in a cloth and boil it whilst the bones come
out; when it is enough lay it on a table with the
skin-side uppermost, and pour upon it a little cold
water; then take off the hair and cut off the ears;
mind you do not break the head in two, turn it over
and take out the bones; salt it very well and wrap
it round in a cloth very tight, pin it with pins,
and tie it at both ends, so bind it up with broad inkle,
then hang it up by one end, and when it is cold take
it out; you must make for it brown pickle, and it
will keep half a year; when you cut it, cut it at
the neck.
It is proper for a side or middle dish, either for
noon or night.
38. To make a CALF’S HEAD Hash.
Take a calf’s head and boil
it, when it is cold take one half of the head and
cut off the meat in thin slices, put it into a stew
pan with a little brown gravy, put to it a spoonful
or two of walnut pickle, a spoonful of catchup, a
little claret, a little shred mace, a few capers shred,
or a little mango; boil it over a stove, and thicken
it with butter and flour; take the other part of the
head, cut off the bone ends and score it with a knife,
season it with a little pepper and salt, rub it over
with the yolk of an egg, and strew over a few bread
crumbs, and a little parsley; then set it before the
fire to broil whilst it is brown; and when you dish
up the other part lay this in the midst; lay about
your hash-brain-cakes, forc’d-meat-balls and
crisp bacon.
To make Brain-cakes; take a
handful of bread-crumbs, a little shred lemon-peel,
pepper, salt, nutmeg, sweet-marjorum, parsley shred
fine, and the yolks of three eggs; take the brains
and skin them, boil and chop them small, so mix them
all together; take a little butter in your pan when
you fry them, and drop them in as you do fritters,
and if they run in your pan put in a handful more
of bread-crumbs.
39. To hash a CALF’S HEAD white.
Take a calf’s head and boil
it as much as you would do for eating, when it is
cold cut in thin slices, and put it into a stew-pan
with a white gravy; then put to it a little shred
mace, salt, a pint of oysters, a few shred mushrooms,
lemon-peel, three spoonful of white wine, and some
juice of lemon, shake all together, and boil it over
the stove, thicken it up with a little flour and butter;
when you put it on your dish, you must put a boil’d
fowl in the midst, and few slices of crisp bacon.
Garnish your dish with pickles and lemon.
40. A Ragoo of a CALF’S HEAD.
Take two calves’ head and boil
them as you do for eating, when they are cold cut
off all the lantern part from the flesh in pieces about
an inch long, and about the breadth of your little
finger; put it into your stew-pan with a little white
gravy; twenty oysters cut in two or three pieces,
a few shred mushrooms, and a little juice of lemon;
season it with shred mace and salt, let them all boil
together over a stove; take two or three spoonfuls
of cream, the yolks of two or three eggs, and a little
shred parsley, then put it into a stew-pan; after
you have put the cream in you may shake it all the
while; if you let it boil it will crudle, so serve
it up.
Garnish your dish with sippets, lemon, and a few pickled
mushrooms.
41. To roast a CALF’S HEAD to eat
like Pig.
Take a calf’s head, wash it
well, lay it in an earthen dish, and cut out the tongue
lay it loose under the head in the dish with the brains,
and a little sage and parsley; rub the head over with
the yolk of an egg, then strew over them a few bread-crumbs
and shred parsley, lay all over it lumps of butter
and a little salt, then set it in the oven; it will
take about an hour and a half baking; when it is enough
take the brains, sage and parsley; and chop them together,
put to them the gravy that is in the dish, a little
butter and a spoonful of vinegar, so boil it up and
put it in cups, and set them round the head upon the
dish, take the tongue and blanch it, cut it in two,
and lay it on each side the head, and some slices
of crisp bacon over the head, so serve it up.
42. SAUCE for a NECK of VEAL.
Fry your veal, and when fried put
in a little water, an anchovy, a few sweet herbs,
a little onion, nutmeg, a little lemon-peel shred small,
and a little white wine or ale, then shake it up with
a little butter and flour, with some cockles and capers.
43. To boil a LEG of
LAMB, with the LOYN fry’d about it.
When your lamb is boil’d lay
it in the dish, and pour upon it a little parsley,
butter and green gooseberries coddled, then lay your
fried lamb round it; take some small asparagus and
cut it small like peas, and boil it green; when it
is boil’d drain it in a cullender, and lay it
round your lamb in spoonfuls.
Garnish your dish with gooseberries,
and heads of asparagus in lumps.
This is proper for a bottom dish.
44. A LEG of LAMB boil’d with
CHICKENS round it.
When your lamb is boil’d pour
over it parsley and butter, with coddled gooseberries,
so lay the chickens round your lamb, and pour over
the chickens a little white fricassy sauce. Garnish
your dish with sippets and lemon.
This is proper for a top dish.
45. A Fricassy of LAMB white.
Take a leg of lamb, half roast it,
when it is cold cut it in slices, put it into a stew-pan
with a little white gravy, a shalot shred fine, a
little nutmeg, salt, and a few shred capers; let it
boil over the stove whilst the lamb is enough; to
thicken your sauce, take three spoonfuls of cream,
the yolks of two eggs, a little shred parsley, and
beat them well together, then put it into your stew-pan
and shake it whilst it is thick, but don’t let
it boil; if this do not make it thick, put in a little
flour and butter, so serve it up. Garnish your
dish with mushrooms, oysters and lemon.
46. A brown Fricassy of LAMB.
Take a leg of lamb, cut it in thin
slices and season it with pepper and salt, then fry
it brown with butter, when it is fried put it into
your stew-pan, with a little brown gravy, an anchovy,
a spoonful or two of white wine or claret, grate in
a little nutmeg, and set it over the stove; thicken
your sauce with flour and butter. Garnish your
dish with mushrooms, oysters and lemon.
47. To make PIG eat like LAMB in
Winter.
Take a pig about a month old and dress
it, lay it down to the fire, when the skin begins
to harden you must take it off by pieces, and when
you have taken all the skin off, draw it and when it
is cold cut it in quarters and lard it with parsley;
then roast it for use.
48. How to stew a HARE.
Take a young hare, wash and wipe it
well, cut the legs into two or three pieces, and all
the other parts the same bigness, beat them all flat
with a paste-pin, season it with nutmeg and salt, then
flour it over, and fry it in butter over a quick fire;
when you have fried it put into a stew-pan, with about
a pint of gravy, two or three spoonfuls of claret
and a small anchovy, so shake it up with butter and
flour, (you must not let it boil in the stew-pan,
for it will make it cut hard) then serve it up.
Garnish your dish with crisp parsley.
49. How to Jug a HARE.
Take a young hare, cut her in pieces
as you did for stewing, and beat it well, season it
with the same seasoning you did before, put it into
a pitcher or any other close pot, with half a pound
of butter, set it in a pot of boiling water, stop
up the pitcher close with a cloth, and lay upon it
some weight for fear it should fall on one side; it
will take about two hours in stewing; mind your pot
be full of water, and keep it boiling all the time;
when it is enough take the gravy from it, clear off
the fat, and put her into your gravy in a stew-pan,
with a spoonful or two of white wine, a little juice
of lemon, shred lemon-peel and mace; you must thicken
it up as you would a white fricassy.
Garnish your dish with sippets and lemon.
50. To roast a HARE with a pudding in the
belly.
When you have wash’d the hare,
nick the legs thro’ the joints, and skewer them
on both sides, which will keep her from drying in the
roasting; when you have skewer’d her, put the
pudding into her belly, baste her with nothing but
butter: put a little in the dripping pan; you
must not baste it with the water at all: when
your hare is enough, take the gravy out of the dripping
pan, and thicken it up with a little flour and butter
for the sauce.
How to make a Pudding for the Hare.
Take the liver, a little beef-suet,
sweet-marjoram and parsley shred small, with bread-crumbs
and two eggs; season it with nutmeg, pepper and salt
to your taste, mix all together and if it be too stiff
put in a spoonful or two of cream: You must not
boil the liver.
51. To make a brown fricassy of RABBETS.
Take a rabbet, cut the legs in three
pieces, and the remainder of the rabbet the same bigness,
beat them thin and fry them in butter over a quick
fire; when they are fried put them into a stew-pan
with a little gravy, a spoonful of catchup, and a
little nutmeg; then shake it up with a little flour
and butter.
Garnish your dish with crisp parsley.
52. A white fricassy of RABBETS.
Take a couple of young rabbets and
half roast them; when they are cold take off the skin,
and cut the rabbets in small pieces, (only take the
white part) when you have cut it in pieces, put it
into a stew-pan with white gravy, a small anchovy,
a little onion, shred mace and lemon-peel, set it
over a stove, and let it have one boil, then take a
little cream, the yolks of two eggs, a lump of butter,
a little juice of lemon and shred parsley; put them
all together into a stew-pan, and shake them over
the fire whilst they be as white as cream; you must
not let it boil, if you do it will curdle. Garnish
your dish with shred lemon and pickles.
53. How to make pulled RABBETS.
Take two young rabbets, boil them
very tender, and take off all the white meat, and
pull off the skin, then pull it all in shives, and
put it into your stew-pan with a little white gravy,
a spoonful of white wine, a little nutmeg and salt
to your taste; thicken it up as you would a white
fricassy, but put in no parsley; when you serve it
up lay the heads in the middle. Garnish your
dish with shred lemon and pickles.
54. To dress Rabbets to look like MOOR-GAME.
Take a young rabbet, when it is cased
cut off the wings and the head; leave the neck of
your rabbet as long as you can; when you case it you
must leave on the feet, pull off the skin, leave on
the claws, so double your rabbet and skewer it like
a fowl; put a skewer at the bottom through the legs
and neck, and tie it with a string, it will prevent
its flying open; when you dish it up make the same
sauce as you would do for partridges. Three are
enough for one dish.
55. To make white Scotch COLLOPS.
Take about four pounds of a fillet
of veal, cut it in small pieces as thin as you can,
then take a stew-pan, butter it well over, and shake
a little flour over it, then lay your meat in piece
by piece, whilst all your pan be covered; take two
or three blades of mace, and a little nutmeg, set
your stew-pan over the fire, toss it up together ’till
all your meat be white, then take half a pint of strong
veal broth, which must be ready made, a quarter of
a pint of cream, and the yolks of two eggs, mix all
these together, put it to your meat, keeping it tossing
all the time ’till they just boil up, then they
are enough; the last thing you do squeeze in a little
lemon: You may put in oysters, mushrooms, or
what you will to make it rich.
56. To boil DUCKS with ONION SAUCE.
Take two fat ducks, and season them
with a little pepper and salt, and skewer them up
at both ends, and boil them whilst they are tender;
take four or five large onions and boil them in milk
and water, change the water two or three times in
the boiling, when they are enough chop them very small,
and rub them through a hair-sieve with the back of
a spoon, ’till you have rubb’d them quite
through, then melt a little butter, put in your onions
and a little salt, and pour it upon your ducks.
Garnish your dish with onions and sippets.
57. To stew DUCKS either wild or tame.
Take two ducks and half-roast them,
cut them up as you would do for eating, then put them
into a stew-pan with a little brown gravy, a glass
of claret, two anchovies, a small onion shred very
fine, and a little salt; thicken it up with flour
and butter, so serve it up. Garnish you dish
with a little raw onion and sippets.
58. To make a white fricassy of CHICKENS.
Take two or more chickens, half-roast
them, cut them up as you would do for eating, and
skin them; put them into a stew-pan with a little white
gravy, juice of lemon, two anchovies, shred mace and
nutmeg, then boil it; take the yolks of three eggs,
a little sweet cream and shred parsley, put them into
your stew-pan with a lump of butter and a little salt;
shake them all the while they are over the stove, and
be sure you do not let them boil lest they should
curdle.
Garnish your dish with sippets and lemon.
59. How to make a brown fricassy of CHICKENS.
Take two or more chickens, as you
would have your dish in bigness, cut them up as you
do for eating, and flat them a little with a paste-pin;
fry them a light-brown, and put them into your stew-pan
with a little gravy, a spoonful or two of white wine,
a little nutmeg and salt; thicken it up with flour
and butter. Garnish your dish with sippets and
crisp parsley.
60. CHICKENS SURPRISE.
Take half a pound of rice, set it
over a fire in soft water, when it is half-boiled
put in two or three small chickens truss’d, with
two or three blades of mace, and a little salt; take
a piece of bacon about three inches square, and boil
it in water whilst almost enough, then take it out,
pare off the outsides, and put it into the chickens
and rice to boil a little together; (you must not
let the broth be over thick with rice) then take up
your chickens, lay them on a dish, pour over them
the rice, cut your bacon in thin slices to lay round
your chickens, and upon the breast of each a slice.
This is proper for a side-dish.
61. To boil CHICKENS.
Take four or five small chickens,
as you would have your dish in bigness; if they be
small ones you may scald them, it will make them whiter;
draw them, and take out the breast-bone before you
scald them; when you have dress’d them, put
them into milk and water, and wash them, truss them,
and cut off the heads and necks; if you dress them
the night before you use them, dip a cloth in milk
and wrap them in it, which will make them white; you
must boil them in milk and water, with a little salt;
half an hour or less will boil them.
To make Sauce for the CHICKENS.
Take the necks, gizzards and livers,
boil them in water, when they are enough strain off
the gravy, and put to it a spoonful of oyster-pickle;
take the livers, break them small, mix a little gravy,
and rub them through a hair-sieve with the back of
a spoon, then put to it a spoonful of cream, a little
lemon and lemon-peel grated; thicken it up with butter
and flour. Let your sauce be no thicker than cream,
which pour upon your chickens. Garnish your dish
with sippets, mushrooms, and slices of lemon.
They are proper for a side-dish or a top-dish either
at noon or night.
62. How to boil a TURKEY.
When your turkey is dress’d
and drawn, truss her, cut off her feet, take down
the breast-bone with a knife, and sew up the skin again;
stuff the breast with a white stuffing.
How to make the Stuffing.
Take the sweet-bread of veal, boil it, shred it fine,
with a little beef-suet, a handful of bread-crumbs,
a little lemon-peel, part of the liver, a spoonful
or two of cream, with nutmeg, pepper, salt, and two
eggs, mix all together, and stuff your turkey with
part of the stuffing, (the rest you may either boil
or fry to lay round it) dridge it with a little flour,
tie it up in a cloth, and boil it with milk and water:
If it be a young turkey an hour will boil it.
How to make Sauce for the Turkey.
Take a little small white gravy, a pint of oysters,
two or three spoonfuls of cream, a little juice of
lemon, and salt to your taste, thicken it up with flour
and butter, then pour it over your turkey, and serve
it up; lay round your turkey fry’d oysters,
and the forc’d-meat. Garnish your dish with
oysters, mushrooms, and slices of lemon.
63. How to make another Sauce for a Turkey.
Take a little strong white gravy,
with some of the whitest sellery you can get, cut
it about an inch long, boil it whilst it be tender,
and put it into the gravy, with two anchovies, a little
lemon-peel shred, two or three spoonfuls of cream,
a little shred mace, and a spoonful of white wine;
thicken it up with flour and butter; if you dislike
the sellery you may put in the liver as you did for
chickens.
64. How to roast a TURKEY.
Take a turkey, dress and truss it,
then take down the breast-bone. To make Stuffing
for the Breast. Take beef-suet, the liver
shred fine, and bread-crumbs, a little lemon-peel,
nutmeg, pepper and salt to your taste, a little shred
parsley, a spoonful or two of cream, and two eggs.
Put her on a spit and roast her before a slow fire;
you may lard your turkey with fat bacon; if the turkey
be young, an hour and a quarter will roast it.
For the sauce, take a little white gravy, an onion,
a few bread-crumbs, and a little whole pepper, let
them boil well together, put to them a little flour
and a lump of butter, which pour upon the turkey;
you may lay round your turkey forc’d-meat-balls.
Garnish your dish with slices of lemon.
65. To make a rich TURKEY PIE.
Take a young turkey and bone her,
only leave in the thigh bones and short pinions; take
a large fowl and bone it, a little shred mace, nutmeg,
pepper and salt, and season the turkey and fowl in
the inside; lay the fowl in the inside of the low
part of the turkey, and stuff the breast with a little
white stuffing, (the same white stuffing as you made
for the boiled turkey,) take a deep dish, lay a paste
over it, and leave no paste in the bottom; lay in
the turkey, and lay round it a few forc’d-meat-balls,
put in half a pound of butter, and a jill of water,
then close up the pie, an hour and a half will bake
it; when it comes from the oven take off the lid,
put in a pint of stew’d oysters, and the yolks
of six or eight eggs, lay them at an equal distance
round the turkey; you must not stew your oysters in
gravy but in water, and pour them upon your turkey’s
breast; lay round six or eight artichoke-bottoms fry’d,
so serve it up without the lid; you must take the fat
out of the pie before you put in the oysters.
66. To make a TURKEY A-la-Daube.
Take a large turkey and truss it;
take down the breast-bone, and stuff it in the breast
with some stuffing, as you did the roast turkey, lard
it with bacon, then rub the skin of the turkey with
the yolk of an egg, and strow over it a little nutmeg,
pepper, salt, and a few bread-crumbs, then put it
into a copper-dish and fend it to the oven; when you
dish it up make for the turkey brown gravy-sauce; shred
into your sauce a few oysters and mushrooms; lay round
artichoke-bottoms fry’d, stew’d pallets,
forc’d-meat-balls, and a little crisp bacon.
Garnish your dish with pickled mushrooms, and slices
of lemon.
This is a proper dish for a remove.
67. POTTED TURKEY.
Take a turkey, bone her as you did
for the pie, and season it very well in the inside
and outside with mace, nutmeg, pepper and salt, then
put it into a pot that you design to keep it in, put
over it a pound of butter, when it is baked draw from
it the gravy, and take off the fat, then squeeze it
down very tight in the pot; and to keep it down lay
upon it a weight; when it’s cold take part of
the butter that came from it, and clarify a little
more with it to cover your turkey, and keep it in
a cool place for use; you may put a fowl in the belly
if you please.
Ducks or geese are potted the same way.
68. How to jugg PIGEONS.
Take six or eight pigeons and truss
them, season them with nutmeg, pepper and salt. To
make the Stuffing. Take the livers and shred
them with beef-suet, bread-crumbs, parsley, sweet-marjoram,
and two eggs, mix all together, then stuff your pigeons
sowing them up at both ends, and put them into your
jugg with the breast downwards, with half a pound
of butter; stop up the jugg close with a cloth that
no steam can get out, then set them in a pot of water
to boil; they will take above two hours stewing; mind
you keep your pot full of water, and boiling all the
time; when they are enough clear from them the gravy,
and take the fat clean off; put to your gravy a spoonful
of cream, a little lemon-peel, an anchovy shred, a
few mushrooms, and a little white wine, thicken it
with a little flour and butter, then dish up your pigeons,
and pour over them the sauce. Garnish the dish
with mushrooms and slices of lemon.
This is proper for a side dish.
69. MIRRANADED PIGEONS.
Take six pigeons, and truss them as
you would do for baking, break the breast-bones, season
and stuff them as you did for jugging, put them into
a little deep dish and lay over them half a pound of
butter; put into your dish a little water. Take
half a pound of rice, cree it soft as you would do
for eating, and pour it upon the back of a sieve, let
it stand while it is cold, then take a spoon and flat
it like paste on your hand, and lay on the breast
of every pigeon a cake; lay round your dish some puff-paste
not over thin, and send them to the oven; about half
an hour will bake them.
This is proper at noon for a side-dish.
70. To stew PIGEONS.
Take your pigeons, season and stuff
them, flat the breast-bone, and truss them up as you
would do for baking, dredge them over with a little
flour, and fry them in butter, turning them round till
all sides be brown, then put them into a stew-pan
with as much brown gravy as will cover them, and let
them stew whilst your pigeons be enough; then take
part of the gravy, an anchovy shred, a little catchup,
a small onion, or a shalot, and a little juice of
lemon for sauce, pour it over your pigeons, and lay
round them forc’d-meat-balls and crisp bacon.
Garnish your dish with crisp parsley and lemon.
71. To broil PIGEONS whole.
Take your pigeons, season and stuff
them with the same stuffing you did jugg’d pigeons,
broil them either before a fire or in an oven; when
they are enough take the gravy from them, and take
off the fat, then put to the gravy two or three spoonfuls
of water, a little boil’d parsley shred, and
thicken your sauce. Garnish your dish with crisp
parsley.
72. Boiled PIGEONS with fricassy Sauce.
Take your pigeons, and when you have
drawn and truss’d them up, break the breast
bone, and lay them in milk and water to make them white,
tie them in a cloth and boil them in milk and water;
when you dish them up put to them white fricassy sauce,
only adding a few shred mushrooms. Garnish with
crisp parsley and sippets.
73. To Pot PIGEONS.
Take your pigeons and skewer them
with their feet cross over the breast, to stand up;
season them with pepper and salt, and roast them;
so put them into your pot, setting the feet up; when
they are cold cover them up with clarified butter.
74. To stew PALLETS.
Take three or four large beast pallets
and boil them very tender, blanch and cut them in
long pieces the length of your finger, then in small
bits the cross way; shake them up with a little good
gravy and a lump of butter; season them with a little
nutmeg and salt, put in a spoonful of white wine,
and thicken it with the yolks of eggs as you do, a
white fricassy.
75. To make a Fricassy of PIG’S EARS.
Take three or four pig’s ears
as large as you would have your dish in bigness, clean
and boil them very tender, cut them in small pieces
the length of your finger, and fry them with butter
till they be brown; so put them into a stew-pan with
a little brown gravy, a lump of butter, a spoonful
of vinegar, and a little mustard and salt, thicken’d
with flour; take two or three pig’s feet and
boil them very tender, fit for eating, then cut them
in two and take out the large bones, dip them in egg,
and strew over them a few bread-crumbs, season them
with pepper and salt; you may either fry or broil
them, and lay them in the middle of your dish with
the pig’s ears.
They are proper for a side-dish.
76. To make a Fricassy of TRIPES.
Take the whitest seam tripes
you can get and cut them in long pieces, put them
into a stew-pan with a little good gravy, a few bread-crumbs,
a lump of butter, a little vinegar to your taste, and
a little mustard if you like it; shake it up altogether
with a little shred parsley. Garnish your dish
with sippets.
This is proper for a side-dish.
77. To make a Fricassy of VEAL-SWEET-BREADS.
Take five or six veal-sweet-breads,
according as you would have your dish in bigness,
and boil them in water, cut them in thin slices the
length-way, dip them in egg, season them with pepper
and salt, fry them a light brown; then put them into
a stew-pan with a little brown gravy, a spoonful of
white wine or juice of lemon, whether you please; thicken
it up with flour and butter; and serve it up.
Garnish your dish with crisp parsley.
78. To make a white Fricassy of
TRIPES, to eat like CHICKENS.
Take the whitest and the thickest
seam tripe you can get, cut the white part in thin
slices, put it into a stew-pan with a little white
gravy, juice of lemon and lemon-peel shred, also a
spoonful of white wine; take the yolks of two or three
eggs and beat them very well, put to them a little
thick cream, shred parsley, and two or three chives
if you have any; shake altogether over the stove while
it be as thick as cream, but don’t let it boil
for fear it curdle. Garnish your dish with sippets,
slic’d lemon or mushrooms, and serve it up.
79. To make a brown Fricassy of EGGS.
Take eight or ten eggs, according
to the bigness you design your dish, boil them hard,
put them in water, take off the shell, fry them in
butter whilst they be a deep brown, put them into a
stew-pan with a little brown gravy, and a lump of
butter, so thicken it up with flour; take two or three
eggs, lay them in the middle of the dish, then take
the other, cut them in two, and set them with the small
ends upwards round the dish; fry some sippets and
lay round them. Garnish your dish with crisp
parsley.
This is proper for a side-dish in lent or any other
time.
80. To make a white Fricassy of EGGS.
Take ten or twelve eggs, boil them
hard and pill them, put them in a stew-pan with a
little white gravy; take the yolks of two or three
eggs, beat them very well, and put to them two or three
spoonfuls of cream, a spoonful of white wine, a little
juice of lemon, shred parsley, and salt to your taste;
shake altogether over the stove till it be as thick
as cream, but don’t let it boil; take your eggs
and lay one part whole on the dish, the rest cut in
halves and quarters, and lay them round your dish;
you must not cut them till you lay them on the dish.
Garnish your dish with sippets, and serve it up.
81. To stew EGGS in GRAVY.
Take a little gravy, pour it into
a little pewter dish, and set it over a stove, when
it is hot break in as many eggs as will cover the dish
bottom, keep pouring the gravy over them with a spoon
’till they are white at the top, when they are
enough strow over them a little salt; fry some square
sippets of bread in butter, prick them with the small
ends upward, and serve them up.
82. How to Collar a PIECE of BEEF to
eat Cold.
Take a flank of beef or pale-board,
which you can get, bone them and take off the inner
skin; nick your beef about an inch distance, but mind
you don’t cut thro’ the skin of the outside;
then take two ounces of saltpetre, and beat it small,
and take a large handful of common salt and mix them
together, first sprinkling your beef over with a little
water, and lay it in an earthen dish, then strinkle
over your salt, so let it stand, four or five days,
then take a pretty large quantity of all sorts of
mild sweet herbs, pick and shred them very small,
take some bacon and cut it in long pieces the thickness
of your finger, then take your beef and lay one layer
of bacon in every nick; and another of the greens;
when you have done season your beef with a little
beat mace, pepper, salt and nutmeg; you may add a little
neat’s tongue, and an anchovy in some of the
nicks; so roll it up tight, bind it in a cloth with
coarse inkle round it, put it into a large stew-pot
and cover it with water; let the beef lie with the
end downwards, put to the pickle that was in the beef
when it lay in salt, set it in a slow oven all the
night, then take it out and bind it tight, and tie
up both ends, the next day take it out of the cloth,
and put it into pickle; you must take off the fat
and boil the pickle, put in a handful of salt, a few
bay leaves, a little whole Jamaica and black pepper,
a quart of stale strong beer, a little vinegar and
alegar; if you make the pickle very good, it will
keep five or six months very well; if your beef be
not too much baked it will cut all in diamonds.
83. To roll a BREAST OF VEAL to eat cold.
Take a large breast of veal, fat and
white, bone it and cut it in two, season it with mace,
nutmeg, pepper and salt, in one part you may strinkle
a few sweet herbs shred fine, roll them tight up, bind
them will with coarse ickle, so boil it an hour and
a half; you may make the same pickle as you did for
the beef, excepting the strong beer; when it is enough
to take it up, and bind it as you did the beef, so
hang it up whilst it be cold.
84. To pot TONGUES.
Take your tongues and salt them with
saltpetre, common salt and bay salt, let them lie
ten days, then take them out and boil them whilst
they will blanch, cut off the lower part of the tongues,
then season them with mace, pepper, nutmeg and salt,
put them into a pot and send them to the oven, and
the low part of your tongues that you cut off lay
upon your tongues, and one pound of butter, then let
them bake whilst they are tender, then take them out
of the pot, throw over them a little more seasoning,
put them into the pot you design to keep them in,
press them down very tight, lay over them a weight,
and let them stand all night, then cover them with
clarified butter: You must not salt your tongues
as you do for hanging.
85. How to pot VENISON.
Take your venison and cut it in thin
pieces, season it with pepper and salt, put it into
your pot, lay over it some butter and a little beef-suet,
let it stand all night in the oven; when it is baked
beat them in a marble mortar or wooden-bowl, put in
part of the gravy, and all the fat you take from it;
when you have beat it put into your pot, then take
the fat lap of a shoulder of mutton, take off the out-skin,
and roast it, when it is roasted and cold, cut it in
long pieces the thickness of your finger; when you
put the venison into the pot, put it in at three times,
betwixt every one lay the mutton cross your pot, at
an equal distance; if you cut it the right way it will
cut all in diamonds; leave some of the venison to
lay on the top, and cover it with clarified butter;
to keep it for use.
86. To pot all Sorts of WILD-FOWL.
When the wild-fowl are dressed take
a paste-pin, and beat them on the breast ’till
they are flat; before you roast them season them with
mace, nutmeg, pepper and salt; you must not roast them
over much; when you dreaw them season them on the
out-side, and set them on one end to drain out the
gravy, and put them into your pot; you may put in two
layers; if you press them very flat, cover them with
clarified butter when they are cold.
87. How to pot BEEF.
Take two pounds of the slice or buttock,
season it with about two ounces of saltpetre and a
little common salt, let it lie two or three days,
send it to the oven, and season it with a little pepper,
salt and mace; lay over your beef half a pound of
butter or beef suet, and let it stand all night in
the oven to stew; take from it the gravy and the butter,
and beat them (with the beef) in a bowl, then take
a quarter of a pound of anchovies, bone them, and
beat them too with a little of the gravy; if it be
not seasoned enough to your taste, put to it a little
more seasoning; put is close down in a pot, and when
it is cold cover it up with butter, and keep it for
use.
88. To Ragoo a RUMP of BEEF.
Take a rump of beef, lard it with
bacon and spices, betwixt the larding, stuff it with
forced meat, made of a pound of veal, three quarters
of a pound of beef-suet, a quarter of a pound of fat
bacon boiled and shred well by itself, a good quantity
of parsley, winter savoury, thyme, sweet-marjoram,
and an onion, mix all this together, season it with
mace cloves, cinnamon, salt, Jamaica and black pepper,
and some grated bread, work the forc’d-meat up
with three whites and two yolks of eggs, then stuff
it, and lay some rough suet in a stew pan with your
beef upon it, let it fry till it be brown then put
in some water, a bunch of sweet herbs, a large onion
stuffed with cloves, sliced turnips, carrots cut as
large as the yolk of an egg, some whole pepper and
salt, half a pint of claret, cover it close, and let
it stew six or seven hours over a gentle fire, turning
it very often.
89. How to make a SAUCE for it.
Take truffles, morels, sweet-breads,
diced pallets boiled tender, three anchovies, and
some lemon-peel, put these into some brown gravy and
stew them; if you do not think it thick enough, dredge
in a little flour, and just before you pour it on
your beef put in a little white wine and vinegar,
and serve it up hot.
90. Sauce for boiled RABBETS.
Take a few onions, boil them thoroughly,
shifting them in water often, mix them well together
with a little melted butter and water. Some add
a little pulp of apple and mustard.
91. To salt a Leg of Mutton to eat
like Ham.
Take a leg of mutton, an ounce of
saltpetre, two ounces of bay-salt, rub it in very
well, take a quarter of a pound of coarse sugar, mix
it with two or three handfuls of common salt, then
take and salt it very well, and let it lie a week,
so hang it up, and keep it for use, after it is dry
use it, the sooner the better; it won’t keep
so long as ham.
92. How to salt HAM or TONGUES.
Take a middling ham, two ounces of
saltpetre, a quarter of a pound of bay-salt, beat
them together, and rub them on your ham very well,
before you salt it on the inside, set your salt before
the fire to warm; to every ham take half a pound of
coarse sugar, mix to it a little of the salt, and
rub it in very well, let it lie for a week or ten
days, then salt it again very well, and let it lie
another week or ten days, then hang it to dry, not
very near the fire, nor over much in the air.
Take your tongues and clean them,
and cut off the root, then take two ounces of saltpetre,
a quarter of a pound of bay-salt well beaten, three
or four tongues, according as they are in bigness,
lay them on a thing by themselves, for if you lay
them under your bacon it flats your tongues, and spoils
them; salt them very well, and let them lie as long
as the hams with the skin side downwards: You
may do a rump of beef the same way, only leave out
the sugar.
95. ... bacon, you may put in two
or three slices when you send them to the oven.
96. How to make a HARE-PIE.
Parboil the hare, take out the bones,
and beat the meat in a mortar with some fat pork or
new bacon, then soak it in claret all night, the next
day take it out, season it with pepper, salt and nutmeg,
then lay the back bone into the middle of the pie,
put the meat about it with about three quarters of
a pound of butter, and bake it in a puff-paste, but
lay no paste in the bottom of the dish.
97. To make a HARE-PIE another Way.
Take the flesh of a hare after it
is skined, and string it: take a pound of beef-suet
or marrow shred small, with sweet-marjoram, parsley
and shalots, take the hare, cut it in pieces, season
it with mace, pepper, salt and nutmeg, then bake it
either in cold or hot paste, and when it is baked,
open it and put to it some melted butter.
98. To make PIG Royal.
Take a pig and roast it the same way
as you did for lamb, when you draw it you must not
cut it up, when it is cold you must lard it with bacon,
cut not your layers too small, if you do they will
melt away, cut them about an inch and a quarter long;
you must put one row down the back, and one on either
side, then strinkle it over with a few breadcrumbs
and a little salt, and set it in the oven, an hour
will bake it, but mind your oven be not too hot; you
must take another pig of a less size, roast it, cut
it up, and lie it on each side: The sauce you
make for a roast pig will serve for both.
This is proper for a bottom dish at a grand entertainment.
99. To roast VEAL a savoury Way.
When you have stuffed your veal, strow
some of the ingredients over it; when it is roasted
make your sauce of what drops from the meat, put an
anchovy in water, and when dissolved pour it into the
dripping-pan with a large lump of butter and oysters:
toss it up with flour to thicken it.
100. To make a HAM PIE.
Cut the ham round, and lay it in water
all night, boil it tender as you would do for eating,
take off the skin, strew over it a little pepper,
and bake it in a deep dish, put to it a pint of water,
and half a pound of butter; you must bake it in puff-paste;
but lay no paste in the bottom of the dish; when you
send it to the table send it without a lid.
It is proper for a top or bottom dish either summer
or winter.
101. To make a NEAT’s TONGUE PIE.
Take two or three tongues, (according
as you would have your pie in bigness) cut off the
roots and low parts, take two ounces of saltpetre,
a little bay salt, rub them very well, lay them on
an earthen dish with the skin side downwards, let
them lie for a week or ten days, whilst they be very
red, then boil them as tender as you would have them
for eating blanch and season with a little pepper
and salt, flat them as much as you can, bake them
in puff paste in a deep dish, but lay no paste in
the bottom, put to them a little gravy, and half a
pound of butter; lay your tongues with the wrong side
upwards, when they are baked turn them, and serve
it up without a lid.
102. To broil SHEEP or HOG’s TONGUES.
Boil, blanch, and split your tongues,
season them with a little pepper and salt, then dip
them in egg, strow over them a few bread-crumbs, and
broil them whilst they be brown; serve them up with
a little gravy and butter.
103. To Pickle PORK.
Cut off the leg, shoulder pieces,
the bloody neck and the spare-rib as bare as you can,
then cut the middle pieces as large as they can lie
in the tub, salt them with saltpetre, bay-salt, and
white salt; your saltpetre must be beat small, and
mix’d with the other salts; half a peck of white
salt, a quart of bay-salt, and half a pound of saltpetre,
is enough for a large hog; you must rub the pork very
well with your salt, then lay a thick layer of salt
all over the tub, then a piece of pork, and do so
till all your pork is in; lay the skin side downwards,
fill up all the hollows and sides of the tub with little
pieces that are not bloody press all down as close
as possible, and lay on a good layer of salt on the
top, then lay on the legs and shoulder pieces, which
must be used first, the rest will keep two years if
not pulled up, nor the pickle poured from it.
You must observe to see it covered with pickle.
104. To fricassy CALF’S FEET white.
Dress the calf’s feet, boil
them as you would do for eating, take out the long
bones, cut them in two, and put them into a stew-pan
with a little white gravy, and a spoonful or two of
white wine; take the yolks of two or three eggs, two
or three spoonfuls of cream, grate in a little nutmeg
and salt, and shake all together with a lump of butter.
Garnish your dish with slices of lemon and currans,
and so serve them up.
105. To roll a PIG’S Head to eat like
Brawn.
Take a large pig’s head, cut
off the groin ends, crack the bones and put it in
water, shift it once or twice, cut off the ears, then
boil it so tender that the bones will slip out, nick
it with a knife in the thick part of the head, throw
over it a pretty large handful of salt; take half
a dozen of large neat’s feet, boil them while
they be soft, split them, and take out all the bones
and black bits; take a strong coarse cloth, and lay
the feet with the skin side downwards, with all the
loose pieces in the inside; press them with your hand
to make them of an equal thickness, lay them at that
length that they will reach round the head, and throw
over them a handful of salt, then lay the head across,
one thick part one way and the other another, that
the fat may appear alike at both ends; leave one foot
out to lay at the top to make a lantern to reach round,
bind it with filleting as you would do brawn, and
tie it very close at both ends; you may take it out
of the cloth the next day, take off the filleting
and wash it, wrap it about again very tight, and keep
it in brawn-pickle.
This has been often taken for real Brawn.
106. How to fry CALF’S FEET in Butter.
Take four Calf’s feet and blanch
them, boil them as you would do for eating, take out
the large bones and cut them in two, beat a spoonful
of wheat flour and four eggs together, put to it a
little nutmeg, pepper and salt, dip in your calf’s
feet, and fry them in butter a light brown, and lay
them upon your dish with a little melted butter over
them. Garnish with slices of lemon and serve them
up.
107. How to make SAVOURY PATTEES.
Take the kidney of a loyn of veal
before it be roasted, cut it in thin slices, season
it with mace, pepper and salt, and make your pattees;
lay in every patty a slice, and either bake or fry
them.
You may make marrow pattees the same way.
108. To make EGG PIES.
Take and boil half a dozen eggs, half
a dozen apples, a pound and a half of beef-suet, a
pound of currans, and shred them, so season it with
mace, nutmeg and sugar to your taste, a spoonful or
two of brandy, and sweet meats, if you please.
109. To make a sweet CHICKEN PIE.
Break the chicken bones, cut them
in little bits, season them lightly with mace and
salt, take the yolks of four eggs boiled hard and
quartered, five artichoke-bottoms, half a pound of
sun raisins stoned, half a pound of citron, half a
pound of lemon, half a pound of marrow, a few forc’d-meat-balls,
and half a pound of currans well cleaned, so make
a light puff-paste, but put no paste in the bottom;
when it is baked take a little white wine, a little
juice of either orange or lemon, the yolk of an egg
well beat, and mix them together, make it hot and
put it into your pie; when you serve it up take the
same ingredients you use for a lamb or veal pie, only
leave out the artichokes.
110. To roast TONGUES.
Cut off the roots of two tongues,
take three ounces of saltpetre, a little bay-salt
and common salt, rub them very well, let them lie a
week or ten days to make them red, but not salt, so
boil them tender as they will blanch, strow over them
a few bread crumbs, set them before the fire to brown
on every side.
To make SAUCE for the TONGUES.
Take a few bread crumbs, and as much
water as will wet them, then put in claret till they
be red, and a little beat cinnamon, sweeten it to
your taste, put a little gravy on the dish with your
tongues, and the sweet sauce in two basons, set them
on each side, so serve them up.
111. To fry CALF’S FEET in Eggs.
Boil your calf’s feet as you
would do for eating, take out the long bones and split
them in two, when they are cold season ’em with
a little pepper, salt and nutmeg; take three eggs,
put to them a spoonful of flour, so dip the feet in
it and fry them in butter; you must have a little
gravy and butter for sauce. Garnish with currans,
so serve them up.
112. To make a MINC’D PIE of Calf’s
Feet.
Take two or three calf’s feet,
and boil them as you would do for eating, take out
the long bones, shred them very fine, put to them
double their weight of beef-suet shred fine, and about
a pound of currans well cleaned, a quarter of a pound
of candid orange and citron cut in small pieces, half
a pound of sugar, a little salt, a quarter of an ounce
of mace and a large nutmeg, beat them together, put
in a little juice of lemon or verjuice to your taste,
a glass of mountain wine or sack, which you please,
so mix all together; bake them in puff-paste.
113. To roast a WOODCOCK.
When you have dress’d your woodcock,
and drawn it under the leg, take out the bitter bit,
put in the trales again; whilst the woodcock is roasting
set under it an earthen dish with either water in or
small gravy, let the woodcock drop into it, take the
gravy and put to it a little butter, and thicken it
with flour; your woodcock will take about ten minutes
roasting if you have a brisk fire; when you dish it
up lay round it wheat bread toasts, and pour the sauce
over the toasts, and serve it up.
You may roast a partridge the same
way, only add crumb sauce in a bason.
114. To make a CALF’S HEAD PIE.
Take a calf’s head and clean
it, boil it as you would do for hashing, when it is
cold cut it in thin slices, and season it with a little
black pepper, nutmeg, salt, a few shred capers, a few
oysters and cockles, two or three mushrooms, and green
lemon-peel, mix them all well together, put them into
your pie; it must be a standing pie baked in a flat
pewter dish, with a rim of puff-paste round the edge;
when you have filled the pie with the meat, lay on
forc’d-meat-balls, and the yolks of some hard
eggs, put in a little small gravy and butter; when
it comes from the oven take off the lid, put into it
a little white wine to your taste, and shake up the
pie, so serve it up without lid.
115. To make a CALF’S FOOT PIE.
Take two or three calf’s feet,
according as you would have your pie in bigness, boil
and bone them as you would do for eating, and when
cold cut them in thin slices; take about three quarters
of a pound of beef-suet shred fine, half a pound of
raisins stoned, half a pound of cleaned currans, a
little mace and nutmeg, green lemon-peel, salt, sugar,
and candid lemon or orange, mix altogether, and put
them in a dish, make a good puff-paste, but let there
be no paste in the bottom of the dish; when it is
baked, take off the lid, and squeeze in a little lemon
or verjuice, cut the lid in sippets and lay round.
116. To make a WOODCOCK PIE.
Take three or four brace of woodcocks,
according as you would have the pie in bigness, dress
and skewer them as you would do for roasting, draw
them, and season the inside with a little pepper, salt
and mace, but don’t wash them, put the trales
into the belly again, but nothing else, for there
is something in them that gives them a more bitterish
taste in the baking than in the roasting, when you
put them into the dish lay them with the breast downwards,
beat them upon the breast as flat as you can; you
must season them on the outside as you do the inside;
bake them in puff-paste, but lay none in the bottom
of the dish, put to them a jill of gravy and a little
butter; you must be very careful your pie be not too
much baked; when you serve it up take off the lid
and turn the woodcocks with the breast upwards.
You may bake partridge the same way.
117. To pickle PIGEONS.
Take your pigeons and bone them; you
must begin to bone them at the neck and turn the skin
downwards, when they are boned season them with pepper,
salt and nutmeg, sew up both ends, and boil them in
water and white wine vinegar, a few bay leaves, a
little whole pepper and salt; when they are enough
take them out of the pickle, and boil it down with
a little more salt, when it is cold put in the pigeons
and keep them for use.
118. To make a sweet VEAL PIE.
Take a loin of veal, cut off the thin
part length ways, cut the rest in thin slices, as
much as you have occasion for, flat it with your bill,
and cut off the bone ends next the chine, season it
with nutmeg and salt; take half a pound of raisins
stoned, and half a pound of currans well clean’d,
mix all together, and lay a few of them at the bottom
of the dish, lay a layer of meat; and betwixt every
layer lay on your fruit, but leave some for the top;
you must make a puff-paste; but lay none in the bottom
of the dish; when you have filled your pie, put in
a jill of water and a little butter, when it is baked
have a caudle to put into it.
To make the caudle, see in receipt 177.
119. MINC’D PIES another way.
Take a pound of the finest seam tripes
you can get, a pound and a half of currans well cleaned,
two, three or four apples pared and shred very fine,
a little green lemon-peel and mace shred, a large nutmeg,
a glass of sack or brandy, (which you please) half
a pound of sugar, and a little salt, so mix them well
together, and fill your patty-pans, then stick five
or six bits of candid lemon or orange in every petty-pan,
cover them, and when baked they are fit for use.
120. To make a savoury CHICKEN PIE.
Take half a dozen small chickens,
season them with mace, pepper and salt, both inside
and out; then take three or four veal sweet-breads,
season them with the same, and lay round them a few
forc’d-meat-balls, put in a little water and
butter; take a little white sweet gravy not over strong,
shred a few oysters if you have any, and a little
lemon-peel, squeeze in a little lemon juice, not to
make it sour; if you have no oysters take the whitest
of your sweet breads and boil them, cut them small,
and put them in your gravy, thicken it with a little
butter and flour; when you open the pie, if there is
any fat, skim it off, and pour the sauce over the
chicken breasts; so serve it up without lid.
121. To roast a HANCH of VENISON.
Take a hanch of venison and spit it,
then take a little bread meal, knead and roll it very
thin, lay it over the fat part of your venison with
a paper over it, tye it round your venison, with a
pack-thread; if it be a large hanch it will take four
hours roasting, and a midling hanch three hours; keep
it basting all the time you roast it; when you dish
it up put a little gravy in the dish and sweet sauce
in a bason; half an hour before you draw your venison
take off the paste, baste it, and let it be a light
brown.
122. To make sweet PATTEES.
Take the kidney of a loin of veal
with the fat, when roasted shred it very fine, put
to it a little shred mace, nutmeg and salt, about half
a pound of currans, the juice of a lemon, and sugar
to your taste, then bake them in puff-paste; you may
either fry or bake them.
They are proper for a side-dish.
123. To make BEEF-ROLLS.
Cut your beef thin as for scotch collops,
beat it very well, and season it with salt, Jamaica
and white pepper, mace, nutmeg, sweet marjoram, parsley,
thyme, and a little onion shred small, rub them on
the collops on one side, then take long bits of beef-suet
and roll in them, tying them up with a thread; flour
them well, and fry them in butter very brown; then
have ready some good gravy and stew them an hour and
half, stirring them often, and keep them covered,
when they are enough take off the threads, and put
in a little flour, with a good lump of butter, and
squeeze in some lemon, then they are ready for use.
124. To make a HERRING-PIE of WHITE
SALT HERRINGS.
Take five or six salt herrings, wash
them very well, lay them in a pretty quantity of water
all night to take out the saltness, season them with
a little black pepper, three or four middling onions
pill’d and shred very fine lay one part of them
at the bottom of the pie, and the other at the top;
to five or six herrings put in half a pound of butter,
then lay in your herrings whole, only take off the
heads; make them into a standing pie with a thin crust.
125. How to COLLAR PIG.
Take a large pig that is fat, about
a month old, kill and dress it, cut off the head,
cut it in two down the back and bone it, then cut it
in three or four pieces, wash it in a little water
to take out the blood: take a little milk and
water just warm, put in your pig, let it lie about
a day and a night, shift it two or three times in that
time to make it white, then take it out and wipe it
very well with a dry cloth, and season it with mace,
nutmeg, pepper and salt; take a little shred of parsley
and strinkle over two of the quarters, so roll them
up in a fine soft cloth, tie it up at both ends, bind
it tight with a little filletting or coarse inkle,
and boil it in milk and water with a little salt;
it will take about an hour and a half boiling; when
it is enough bind it up tight in your cloth again,
hang it up whilst it be cold. For the pickle
boil a little milk and water, a few bay leaves and
a little salt; when it is cold take your pig out of
the cloths and put it into the pickle; you must shift
it out of your pickle two or three times to make it
white, the last pickle make strong, and put in a little
whole pepper, a pretty large handful of salt, a few
bay leaves, and so keep it for use.
126. To COLLAR SALMON.
Take the side of a middling salmon,
and cut off the head, take out all the bones and the
outside, season it with mace, nutmeg, pepper and salt,
roll it tight up in a cloth, boil it, and bind it up
with pickle; it will take about an hour boiling; when
it is boiled bind it tight again, when cold take it
very carefully out of the cloth and bind it about
with filleting; you must not take off the filleting
but as it is eaten.
To make PICKLE to keep it in.
Take two or three quarts of water,
a jill of vinegar, a little Jamaica pepper and whole
pepper, a large handful of salt, boil them altogether,
and when it is cold put in your salmon, so keep it
for use: If your pickle don’t keep you
must renew it.
You may collar pike the same way.
127. To make an OYSTER PIE.
Take a pint of the largest oysters
you can get, clean them very well in their own liquor,
if you have not liquor enough, add to them three or
four spoonfuls of water; take the kidney of a loin
of veal, cut it in thin slices, and season it with
a little pepper and salt, lay the slices in the bottom
of the dish, (but there must be no paste in the bottom
of the dish) cover them with the oysters, strow over
a little of the seasoning as you did for the veal;
take the marrow of one or two bones, lay it over your
oysters and cover them with puff-paste; when it is
baked take off the lid, put into it a spoonful or two
of white wine, shake it up altogether, and serve it
up.
It is proper for a side dish, either for noon or night.
128. To butter CRAB and LOBSTER.
Dress all the meat out of the belly
and claws of your lobster, put it into a stew-pan,
with two or three spoonfuls of water, a spoonful or
two of white wine vinegar, a little pepper, shred mace,
and a lump of butter, shake it over the stove till
it be very hot, but do not let it boil, if you do
it will oil; put it into your dish, and lay round it
your small claws: it is as proper to put
it in scallop shells as on a dish.
129. To roast a LOBSTER.
If your lobster be alive tie it to
the spit, roast and baste it for half an hour; if
it be boiled you must put it in boiling water, and
let it have one boil, then lie it in a dripping-pan
and baste it; when you lay it upon the dish split
the tail, and lay it on each side, so serve it up
with melted butter in a china cup.
130. To make a QUAKING PUDDING.
Take eight eggs and beat them very
well, put to them three spoonfuls of London flour,
a little salt, three jills of cream, and boil it with
a stick of cinnamon and a blade of mace; when it is
cold mix it to your eggs and flour, butter your cloth,
and do not give it over much room in your cloth; about
half an hour will boil it; you must turn it in the
boiling or the flour will settle, so serve it up with
a little melted butter.
131. A HUNTING PUDDING.
Take a pound of fine flour, a pound
of beef-suet shred fine, three quarters of a pound
of currans well cleaned, a quartern of raisins stoned
and shred, five eggs, a little lemon-peel shred fine,
half a nutmeg grated, a jill of cream, a little salt,
about two spoonfuls of sugar, and a little brandy,
so mix all well together, and tie it up right in your
cloth; it will take two hours boiling; you must have
a little white wine and butter for your sauce.
132. A CALF’S-FOOT PUDDING.
Take two calf’s feet, when they
are clean’d boil them as you would for eating;
take out all the bones; when they are cold shred them
in a wooden bowl as small as bread crumbs; then take
the crumbs of a penny loaf, three quarters of a pound
of beef suet shred fine, grate in half a nutmeg, take
half a pound of currans well washed, half a pound of
raisins stoned and shred, half a pound of sugar, six
eggs, and a little salt, mix them all together very
well, with as much cream as will wet them, so butter
your cloth and tie it up tight; it will take two hours
boiling; you may if you please stick it with a little
orange, and serve it up.
133. A SAGOO PUDDING.
Take three or four ounces of sagoo,
and wash it in two or three waters, set it on to boil
in a pint of water, when you think it is enough take
it up, set it to cool, and take half of a candid lemon
shred fine, grate in half of a nutmeg, mix two ounces
of jordan almonds blanched, grate in three ounces
of bisket if you have it, if not a few bread-crumbs
grated, a little rose-water and half a pint of cream;
then take six eggs, leave out two of the whites, beat
them with a spoonful or two of sack, put them to your
sagoo, with about half a pound of clarified butter,
mix them all together, and sweeten it with fine sugar,
put in a little salt, and bake it in a dish with a
little puff-paste about the dish edge, when you serve
it up you may stick a little citron or candid orange,
or any sweetmeats you please.
134. A MARROW PUDDING.
Take a penny loaf, take off the outside,
then cut one half in thin slices; take the marrow
of two bones, half a pound of currans well cleaned,
shred your marrow, and strinkle a little marrow and
currans over the dish; if you have not marrow enough
you may add to it a little beef-suet shred fine; take
five eggs and beat them very well, put to them three
jills of milk, grate in half a nutmeg, sweeten it to
your taste, mix all together, pour it over your pudding,
and save a little marrow to strinkle over the top
of your pudding; when you send it to the oven lye
a puff-paste around the dish edge.
135. A CARROT PUDDING.
Take three or four clear red carrots,
boil and peel them, take the red part of the carrot,
beat it very fine in a marble mortar, put to it the
crumbs of a penny loaf, six eggs, half a pound of clarified
butter, two or three spoonfuls of rose water, a little
lemon-peel shred, grate in a little nutmeg, mix them
well together, bake it with a puff-paste round your
dish, and have a little white wine, butter and sugar,
for the sauce.
136. A GROUND RICE PUDDING.
Take half a pound of ground rice,
half cree it in a quart of milk, when it is cold put
to it five eggs well beat, a jill of cream, a little
lemon-peel shred fine, half a nutmeg grated, half a
pound of butter, and half a pound of sugar, mix them
well together, put them into your dish with a little
salt, and bake it with a puff-paste round your dish;
have a little rose-water, butter and sugar to pour
over it, you may prick in it candid lemon or citron
if you please.
Half of the above quantity will make a pudding for
a side-dish.
137. A POTATOE PUDDING.
Take three or four large potatoes,
boil them as you would do for eating, beat them with
a little rose-water and a glass of sack in a marble
mortar, put to them half a pound of sugar, six eggs,
half a pound of melted butter, half a pound of currans
well cleaned, a little shred lemon-peel, and candid
orange, mix altogether and serve it up.
138. An APPLE PUDDING.
Take half a dozen large codlins, or
pippens, roast them and take out the pulp; take eight
eggs, (leave out six of the whites) half a pound of
fine powder sugar, beat your eggs and sugar well together,
and put to them the pulp of your apples, half a pound
of clarified butter, a little lemon-peel shred fine,
a handful of bread crumbs or bisket, four ounces of
candid orange or citron, and bake it with a thin paste
under it.
139. An ORANGE PUDDING.
Take three large seville oranges,
the clearest kind you can get, grate off the out-rhine;
take eight eggs, (leave out six of the whites) half
a pound of double refin’d sugar, beat and put
it to your eggs, then beat them both together for
half an hour; take three ounces of sweet almonds blanch’d,
beat them with a spoonful or two of fair water to
keep them from oiling, half a pound of butter, melt
it without water, and the juice of two oranges, then
put in the rasping of your oranges, and mix all together;
lay a thin paste over your dish and bake it, but not
in too hot an oven.
140. An ORANGE PUDDING another Way.
Take half a pound of candid orange,
cut them in thin slices, and beat them in a marble
mortar to a pulp; take six eggs, (leave out half of
the whites) half a pound of butter, and the juice of
one orange; mix them together, and sweeten it with
fine powder sugar, then bake it with thin paste under
it.
141. An ORANGE PUDDING another Way.
Take three or four seville oranges,
the clearest skins you can get, pare them very thin,
boil the peel in a pretty quantity of water, shift
them two or three times in the boiling to take out
the bitter taste; when it is boiled you must beat
it very fine in a marble mortar; take ten eggs, (leave
out six of the whites) three quarters of a pound of
loaf sugar, beat it and put it to your eggs, beat them
together for half an hour, put to them half a pound
of melter butter, and the juice of two or three oranges,
as they are of goodness, mix all together, and bake
it with a thin paste over your dish.
This will make cheese-cakes as well as a pudding.
142. An ORANGE PUDDING another Way.
Take five or six seville oranges,
grate them and make a hole in the top, take out all
the meat, and boil the skin very tender, shifting
them in the boiling to take off the bitter taste; take
half a round of long bisket, slice and scald them
with a little cream, beat six eggs and put to your
bisket; take half a pound of currans, wash them clean,
grate in half a nutmeg, put in a little salt and a
glass of sack, beat all together, then put it into
your orange skin, tie them tight in a piece of fine
cloth, every one separate; about three quarters of
an hour will boil them: You must have a little
white wine, butter and sugar for sauce.
143. To make an ORANGE PIE.
Take half a dozen seville oranges,
chip them very fine as you would do for preserving,
make a little hole in the top, and scope out all the
meat, as you would do an apple, you must boil them
whilst they are tender, and shift them two or three
times to take off the bitter taste; take six or eight
apples, according as they are in bigness, pare and
slice them, and put to them part of the pulp of your
oranges, and pick out the strings and pippens, put
to them half a pound of fine powder sugar, so boil
it up over a slow fire, as you would do for puffs,
and fill your oranges with it; they must be baked
in a deep delf dish with no paste under them; when
you put them into your dish put under them three quarters
of a pound of fine powder sugar, put in as much water
as will wet your sugar, and put your oranges with
the open side uppermost; it will take about an hour
and half baking in a slow oven; lie over them a light
puff-paste; when you dish it up take off the lid, and
turn the oranges in the pie, cut the lid in sippets,
and set them at an equal distance, to serve it up.
144. To make a quaking PUDDING another Way.
Take a pint of cream, boil it with
one stick of cinnamon, take out the spice when it
is boiled, then take the yolks of eight eggs, and four
whites, beat them very well with some sack, and mix
your eggs with the cream, a little sugar and salt,
half a penny wheat loaf, a spoonful of flour, a quarter
of a pound of almonds blanch’d and beat fine,
beat them altogether, wet a thick cloth, flour it,
and put it in when the pot boils; it must boil an
hour at least; melted butter, sack and sugar is sauce
for it; stick blanch’d almonds and candid orange-peel
on the top, so serve it up.
145. To make PLUMB PORRIDGE.
Take two shanks of beef, and ten quarts
of water, let it boil over a slow fire till it be
tender, and when the broth is strong, strain it out,
wipe the pot and put in the broth again, slice in two
penny loaves thin, cutting off the top and bottom,
put some of the liquor to it, cover it up and let
it stand for a quarter of an hour, so put it into
the pot again, and let it boil a quarter of an hour,
then put in four pounds of currans, and let them boil
a little; then put in two pounds of raisins, and two
pounds of prunes, let them boil till they swell; then
put in a quarter of an ounce of mace, a few cloves
beat fine, mix it with a little water, and put it
into your pot; also a pound of sugar, a little salt,
a quart or better of claret, and the juice of two
or three lemons or verjuice; thicken it with sagoo
instead of bread; so put it in earthen pots, and keep
it for use.
146. To make a PALPATOON of PIGEONS.
Take mushrooms, pallets, oysters and
sweet-breads, fry them in butter, put all these in
a strong gravy, heat them over the fire, and thicken
them up with an egg and a little butter; then take
six or eight pigeons, truss them as you would for
baking, season them with pepper and salt, and lay
on them a crust of forc’d-meat as follows, viz.
a pound of veal cut in little bits, and a pound and
a half of marrow, beat it together in a stone mortar,
after it is beat very fine, season it with mace, pepper
and salt, put in the yolks of four eggs, and two raw
eggs, mix altogether with a few bread crumbs to a paste:
make the sides and lid of your pie with it, then put
your ragoo into your dish, and lay in your pigeons
with butter; an hour and a half will bake it.
147. To fry CUCUMBERS for Mutton Sauce.
You must brown some butter in a pan,
and cut six middling cucumbers, pare and slice them,
but not over thin, drain them from the water, then
put them into the pan, when they are fried brown put
to them a little pepper and salt, a lump of butter,
a spoonful of vinegar, a little shred onion, and a
little gravy, not to make it too thin, so shake them
well together with a little flour.
You may lay them round your mutton, or they are proper
for a side-dish.
148. To force a FOWL.
Take a good fowl, pull and draw it,
then slit the skin down the back, take the flesh from
the bones, and mince it very well, mix it with a little
beef-suet, shred a jill of large oysters, chop a shalot,
a little grated bread, and some sweet herbs, mix all
together, season it with nutmeg, pepper and salt,
make it up with yolks of eggs, put it on the bones
and draw the skin over it, sew up the back, cut off
the legs, and put the bones as you do a fowl for boiling,
tie the fowl up in a cloth; an hour will boil it.
For sauce take a few oysters, shred them, and put
them into a little gravy, with a lump of butter, a
little lemon-peel shred and a little juice, thicken
it up with a little flour, lie the fowl on the dish,
and pour the sauce upon it; you may fry a little of
the forc’d-meat to lay round. Garnish your
dish with lemon; you may set it in the oven if you
have convenience, only rub over it the yolk of an
egg and a few bread crumbs.
149. To make STRAWBERRY and RASBERRY
FOOL.
Take a pint of rasberries, squeeze
and strain the juice, with a spoonful of orange water,
put to the juice six ounces of fine sugar, and boil
it over the fire; then take a pint of cream and boil
it, mix them all well together, and heat them over
the fire, but not to boil, if it do it will curdle;
stir it till it be cold, put it into your bason and
keep it for use.
150. To make a POSSET with Almonds.
Blanch and beat three quarters of
a pound of almonds, so fine that they will spread
betwixt your fingers like butter, put in water as you
beat them to keep them for oiling; take a pint of
sack, cherry or gooseberry wine, and sweeten it to
your taste with double refin’d sugar, make it
boiling hot; take the almonds, put to them a little
water, and boil the wine and almonds together; take
the yolks of four eggs, and beat them very well, put
to them three or four spoonfuls of wine, then put it
into your pan by degrees, stirring it all the while;
when it begins to thicken take it off, and stir it
a little, put it into a china dish, and serve it up.
151. To make DUTCH-BEEF.
Take the lean part of a buttock of
beef raw, rub it well with brown sugar all over, and
let it lie in a pan or tray two or three hours, turning
it three or four times, then salt it with common salt,
and two ounces of saltpetre; let it lie a fortnight,
turning it every day, then roll it very straight,
and put it into a cheese press day and night, then
take off the cloth and hang it up to dry in the chimney;
when you boil it let it be boiled very well, it will
cut in shivers like dutch beef.
You may do a leg of mutton the same way.
152. To make PULLONY SAUSAGES.
Take part of a leg of pork or veal,
pick it clean from the skin or fat, put to every pound
of lean meat a pound of beef-suet, pick’d from
the skins, shred the meat and suet separate and very
fine, mix them well together, add a large handful
of green sage shred very small; season it with pepper
and salt, mix it well, press it down hard in an earthen
pot, and keep it for use. When you use them
roll them up with as much egg as will make them roll
smooth; in rolling them up make them about the length
of your fingers, and as thick as two fingers; fry them
in butter, which must be boiled before you can put
them in, and keep them rolling about in the pan; when
they are fried through they are enough.
153. To make an AMBLET of COCKLES.
Take four whites and two yolks of
eggs, a pint of cream, a little flour, a nutmeg grated,
a little salt, and a jill of cockles, mix all together,
and fry it brown.
This is proper for a side-dish either for noon or
night.
154. To make a common quaking PUDDING.
Take five eggs, beat them well with
a little salt, put in three spoonfuls of fine flour,
take a pint of new milk and beat them well together,
then take a cloth, butter and flour it, but do not
give it over much room in the cloth; an hour will
boil it, give it a turn every now and then at the
first putting in, or else the meal will settle to
the bottom; have a little plain butter for sauce, and
serve it up.
155. To make a boil’d TANSEY.
Take an old penny loaf, cut off the
out crust, slice it thin, put to it as much hot cream
as will wet it, six eggs well beaten, a little shred
lemon-peel, grate in a little nutmeg, and a little
salt; green it as you did your baked tansey, so tie
it up in a cloth and boil it; it will take an hour
and a quarter boiling; when you dish it up stick it
with candid orange and lay a Seville orange cut in
quarters round the dish; serve it up with melted butter.
156. A TANSEY another Way.
Take an old penny loaf, cut off the
out crust, slice it very thin, and put to it as much
hot milk as will wet it; take six eggs, beat them
very well, grate in half a nutmeg, a little shred lemon-peel,
half a pound of clarified butter, half a pound of
sugar, and a little salt; mix them well together.
To green your tansey, Take a handful or two
of spinage, a handful of tansey, and a handful or sorrel,
clean them and beat them in a marble mortar, or grind
it as you would do greensauce, strain it through a
linen cloth into a bason, and put into your tansey
as much of the juice as will green it, pour over the
sauce a little white wine, butter and sugar; lay a
rim of paste round your dish and bake it; when you
serve it up cut a Seville orange in quarters, and
lay it round the edge of the dish.
157. To make RICE PANCAKES.
Take half a pound of rice, wash and
pick it clean, cree it in fair water till it be a
jelly, when it is cold take a pint of cream and the
yolks of four eggs, beat them very well together, and
put them into the rice, with grated nutmeg and some
salt, then put in half a pound of butter, and as much
flour as will make it thick enough to fry, with as
little butter as you can.
158. To make FRUIT FRITTERS.
Take a penny loaf, cut off the out
crust, slice it, put to it as much hot milk as will
wet it, beat five or six eggs, put to them a quarter
of a pound of currans well cleaned, and a little candid
orange shred fine, so mix them well together, drop
them with a spoon into a stew-pan in clarified butter;
have a little white wine, butter and sugar for your
sauce, put it into a china bason, lay your fritters
round, grate a little sugar over them, and serve them
up.
159. To make WHITE PUDDINGS in Skins.
Take half a pound of rice, cree it
in milk while it be soft, when it is creed put it
into a cullinder to drain; take a penny loaf, cut off
the out crust, then cut it in thin slices, scald it
in a little milk, but do not make it over wet; take
six eggs and beat them very well, a pound of currans
well cleaned, a pound of beef-suet shred fine, two
or three spoonfuls of rose-water, half a pound of
powder sugar, a little salt, a quarter of an ounce
of mace, a large nutmeg grated, and a small stick
of cinnamon; beat them together, mix them very well,
and put them into the skins; if you find it be too
thick put to it a little cream; you may boil them
near half an hour, it will make them keep the better.
160. To make BLACK PUDDINGS.
Take two quarts of whole oatmeal,
pick it and half boil it, give it room in your cloth,
(you must do it the day before you use it) put it
into the blood while it is warm, with a handful of
salt, stir it very well, beat eight or nine eggs in
about a pint of cream, and a quart of bread-crumbs,
a handful or two of maslin meal dress’d through
a hair-sieve, if you have it, if not put in wheat
flour; to this quantity you may put an ounce of Jamaica
pepper, and ounce of black pepper, a large nutmeg,
and a little more salt, sweet-marjoram and thyme, if
they be green shred them fine, if dry rub them to
powder, mix them well together, and if it be too thick
put to it a little milk; take four pounds of beef-suet,
and four pounds of lard, skin and cut it it think
pieces, put it into your blood by handfuls, as you
fill your puddings; when they are filled and tied
prick them with a pin, it will keep them from bursting
in the boiling; (you must boil them twice) cover them
close and it will make them black.
161. An ORANGE PUDDING another Way.
Take two Seville oranges, the largest
and cleanest you can get, grate off the outer skin
with a clean grater; take eight eggs, (leave out two
of the whites) half a pound of loaf sugar, beat it
very fine, put it to your eggs, and beat them for
an hour, put to them half a pound of clarified butter,
and four ounces of almonds blanch’d, and heat
them with a little rose-water; put in the juice of
the oranges, but mind you don’t put in the pippens,
and mix together; bake it with a thin paste over the
bottom of the dish. It must be baked in a slow
oven.
162. To make APPLE FRITTERS.
Take four eggs and beat them very
well, put to them four spoonfuls of fine flour, a
little milk, about a quarter of a pound of sugar, a
little nutmeg and salt, so beat them very well together;
you must not make it very thin, if you do it will
not stick to the apple; take a middling apple and
pare it, cut out the core, and cut the rest in round
slices about the thickness of a shilling; (you may
take out the core after you have cut it with your
thimble) have ready a little lard in a stew-pan, or
any other deep pan; then take your apple every slice
single, and dip it into your bladder, let your lard
be very hot, so drop them in; you must keep them turning
whilst enough, and mind that they be not over brown;
as you take them out lay them on a pewter dish before
the fire whilst you have done; have a little white
wine, butter and sugar for the sauce; grate over them
a little loaf sugar, and serve them up.
163. To make an HERB PUDDING.
Take a good quantity of spinage and
parsley, a little sorrel and mild thyme, put to them
a handful of great oatmeal creed, shred them together
till they be very small, put to them a pound of currans,
well washed and cleaned, four eggs well beaten in
a jill of good cream; if you wou’d have it sweet,
put in a quarter of a pound of sugar, a little nutmeg,
a little salt, and a handful of grated bread; then
meal your cloth and tie it close before you put it
in to boil; it will take as much boiling as a piece
of beef.
164. To make a PUDDING for a HARE.
Take the liver and chop it small with
some thyme, parsley, suet, crumbs of bread mixt, with
grated nutmeg, pepper, salt, an egg, a little fat
bacon and lemon-peel; you must make the composition
very stiff, lest it should dissolve, and you lose
your pudding.
165. To make a BREAD PUDDING.
Take three jills of milk, when boiled,
take a penny loaf sliced thin, cut off the out crust,
put on the boiling milk, let it stand close covered
till it be cold, and beat it very well till all the
lumps be broke; take five eggs beat very well, grate
in a little nutmeg, shred some lemon-peel, and a quarter
of a pound of butter or beef-suet, with as much sugar
as will sweeten it; and currans as many as you please;
let them be well cleaned; so put them into your dish,
and bake or boil it.
166. To make CLARE PANCAKES.
Take five or six eggs, and beat them
very well with a little salt, put to them two or three
spoonfuls of cream, a spoonful of fine flour, mix
it with a little cream; take your clare and wash
it very clean, wipe it with a cloth, put your eggs
into a pan, just to cover your pan bottom, lay the
clare in leaf by leaf, whilst you have covered
your pan all over; take a spoon, and pour over every
leaf till they are all covered; when it is done lay
the brown side upwards, and serve it up.
167. To make a LIVER PUDDING.
Take a pound of grated bread, a pound
of currans, a pound and a half of marrow and suet
together cut small, three quarters of a pound of sugar,
half an ounce of cinnamon, a quarter of an ounce of
mace, a pint of grated liver, and some salt, mix all
together; take twelve eggs, (leave out half of the
whites) beat them well, put to them a pint of cream,
make the eggs and cream warm, then put it to the pudding,
stuff and stir it well together, so fill them in skins;
put to them a few blanch’d almonds shred fine,
and a spoonful or two of rose-water, so keep them
for use.
168. To make OATMEAL FRITTERS.
Boil a quart of new milk, steep a
pint of fine flour or oatmeal in it ten or twelve
hours, then beat four eggs in a little milk, so much
as will make like thick blatter, drop them in by spoonfuls
into fresh butter, a spoonful of butter in a cake,
and grate sugar over them; have sack, butter and sugar
for sauce.
169. To make APPLE DUMPLINGS.
Take half a dozen codlins, or any
other good apples, pare and core them, make a little
cold butter paste, and roll it up about the thickness
of your finger, so lap around every apple, and tie
them single in a fine cloth, boil them in a little
salt and water, and let the water boil before you
put them in; half an hour will boil them; you must
have for sauce a little white wine and butter; grate
some sugar round the dish, and serve them up.
170. To make HERB DUMPLINGS.
Take a penny loaf, cut off the out
crust, and the rest in slices, put to it as much hot
milk as will just wet it, take the yolks and whites
of six eggs, beat them with two spoonfuls of powder
sugar, half a nutmeg, and a little salt, so put it
to your bread; take half a pound of currans well cleaned,
put them to your eggs, then take a handful of the
mildest herbs you can get, gather them so equal that
the taste of one be not above the other, wash and
chop them very small, put as many of them in as will
make a deep green, (don’t put any parsley among
them, nor any other strong herb) so mix them all together,
and boil them in a cloth, make them about the bigness
of middling apples; about half an hour will boil them;
put them into your dish, and have a little candid
orange, white wine, butter and sugar for sauce, so
serve them up.
171. To make MARROW TARTS.
To a quart of cream put the yolks
of twelve eggs, half a pound of sugar, some beaten
mace and cinnamon, a little salt and some sack, set
it on the fire with half a pound of biskets, as much
marrow, a little orange-peel and lemon-peel; stir
it on the fire till it becomes thick, and when it
is cold put it into a dish with puff-paste, then bake
it gently in a slow oven.
172. To make PLAIN FRUIT DUMPLINGS.
Take as much flour as you would have
dumplings in quantity, put it to a spoonful of sugar,
a little salt, a little nutmeg, a spoonful of light
yeast, and half a pound of currans well washed and
cleaned, so knead them the stiffness you do a common
dumpling, you must have white wine, sugar and butter
for sauce; you may boil them either in a cloth or
without; so serve them up.
173. To make OYSTER LOAVES.
Take half a dozen French loaves, rasp
them and make a hole at the top, take out all the
crumbs and fry them in butter till they be crisp; when
your oysters are stewed, put them into your loaves,
cover them up before the fire to keep hot whilst you
want them; so serve them up.
They are proper either for a side-dish or mid-dish.
You may make cockle loaves or mushroom-loaves the
same way.
174. To make a GOOSEBERRY PUDDING.
Take a quart of green gooseberries,
pick, coddle, bruise and rub them through a hair-sieve
to take out the pulp; take six spoonfuls of the pulp,
six eggs, three quarters of a pound of sugar, half
a pound of clarified butter, a little lemon-peel shred
fine, a handful of bread-crumbs or bisket, a spoonful
of rose-water or orange-flower water; mix these well
together, and bake it with paste round the dish; you
may add sweetmeats if you please.
175. To make an EEL PIE.
Case and clean the eels, season them
with a little nutmeg, pepper and salt, cut them in
long pieces; you must make your pie with hot butter
paste, let it be oval with a thin crust; lay in your
eels length way, putting over them a little fresh
butter; so bake them.
Eel pies are good, and eat very well
with currans, but if you put in currans you must not
use any black pepper, but a little Jamaica pepper.
176. To make a TURBOT-HEAD PIE.
Take a middling turbot-head, pretty
well cut off, wash it clean, take out the gills, season
it pretty well with mace, pepper and salt, so put
it into a deep dish with half a pound of butter, cover
it with a light puff-paste, but lay none in the bottom;
when it is baked take out the liquor and the butter
that it was baked in, put it into a sauce-pan with
a lump of fresh butter and flour to thicken it, with
an anchovy and a glass of white wine, so pour it into
your pie again over the fish; you may lie round half
a dozen yolks of eggs at an equal distance; when you
have cut off the lid, lie it in sippets round your
disk, and serve it up.
177. To make a Caudle for a sweet VEAL PIE.
Take about a jill of white wine and
verjuice mixed, make it very hot, beat the yolk of
an egg very well, and then mix them together as you
would do mull’d ale; you must sweeten it very
well, because there is no sugar in the pie.
This caudle will do for any other
sort of pie that is sweet.
178. To make SWEET-MEAT TARTS.
Make a little shell-paste, roll it,
and line your tins, prick them in the inside, and
so bake them; when you serve ’em up put in any
sort of sweet-meats, what you please.
You may have a different sort every
day, do but keep your shells bak’d by you.
179. To make ORANGE TARTS.
Take two or three Seville oranges
and boil them, shift them in the boiling to take out
the bitter, cut them in two, take out the pippens,
and cut them in slices; they must be baked in crisp
paste; when you fill the petty-pans, lay in a layer
of oranges and a layer of sugar, (a pound will sweeten
a dozen of small tins, if you do not put in too much
orange) bake them in a slow oven, and ice them over.
180. To make a TANSEY another Way.
Take a pint of cream, some biskets
without seeds, two or three spoonfuls of fine flour,
nine eggs, leaving out two of the whites, some nutmeg,
and orange-flower water, a little juice of tansey and
spinage, put it into a pan till it be pretty thick,
then fry or bake it, if fried take care that you do
not let it be over-brown. Garnish with orange
and sugar, so serve it up.
181. A good PASTE for TARTS.
Take a pint of flour, and rub a quarter
of a pound of butter into it, beat two eggs with a
spoonful of double-refin’d sugar, and two or
three spoonfuls of cream to make it into paste; work
it as little as you can, roll it out thin; butter
your tins, dust on some flour, then lay in your paste,
and do not fill them too full.
182. To make TRANSPARENT TARTS.
Take a pound of flour well dried,
beat one egg till it be very thin, then melt almost
three quarters of a pound of butter without salt, and
let it be cold enough to mix with an egg, then put
it into the flour and make your paste, roll it very
thin, when you are setting them into the oven wet
them over with a little fair water, and grate a little
sugar; if you bake them rightly they will be very nice.
183. To make a SHELL PASTE.
Take half a pound of fine flour, and
a quarter of a pound of butter, the yolks of two eggs
and one white, two ounces of sugar finely sifted,
mix all these together with a little water, and roll
it very thin whilst you can see through it; when you
lid your tarts prick them to keep them from blistering;
make sure to roll them even, and when you bake them
ice them.
184. To make PASTE for TARTS.
Take the yolks of five or six eggs,
just as you would have paste in quantity; to the yolks
of eggs put a pound of butter, work the butter with
your hands whilst it take up all the eggs, then take
some London flour and work it with your butter whilst
it comes to a paste, put in about two spoonfuls of
loaf sugar beat and sifted, and about half a jill
of water; when you have wrought it well together it
is fit for use.
This is a paste that seldom runs if
it be even roll’d; roll it thin but let your
lids be thiner than your bottoms; when you have made
your tarts, prick them over with a pin to keep it
from blistering; when you are going to put them into
the oven, wet them over with a feather dipt in fair
water, and grate over them a little double-refined
loaf sugar, it will ice them; but don’t let
them be bak’d in a hot oven.
185. A short PASTE for TARTS.
Take a pound of wheat-flour, and rub
it very small, three quarters of a pound of butter,
rub it as small as the flour, put to it three spoonfuls
of loaf sugar beat and sifted; take the yolks of four
eggs, and beat them very well; put to them a spoonful
or two of rose-water, and work them into a paste,
then roll them thin, and ice them as you did the other
if you please, and bake ’em in a slow oven.
186. To make a LIGHT PASTE
for a VENISON PASTY, or other PIE.
Take a quarter of a peck of fine flour,
or as much as you think you have occasion for, and
to every quartern of flour put a pound and a quarter
of butter, break the third part of your butter into
the flour; then take the whites of three or four eggs,
beat them very well to a froth, and put to them as
much water as will knead the meal; do not knead it
over stiff, so then roll it in the rest of your butter;
you must roll it five or six times over at least,
and strinkle a little flour over your butter every
time you roll it up, lap it up the cross way, and
it will be fit for use.
187. To make a Paste for a STANDING PIE.
Take a quartern of flour or more if
you have occasion, and to every quartern of flour
put a pound of butter, and a little salt, knead it
with boiling water, then work it very well, and let
it lie whilst it is cold.
This paste is good enough for a goose
pie, or any other standing-pie.
188. A light Paste for a DISH PIE.
Take a quartern of flour, and break
into it a pound of butter in large pieces, knead it
very stiff, handle it as lightly as you can, and roll
it once or twice, then it is fit for use.
189. To make CHEESE CAKES.
Take a gallon of new milk, make of
it a tender curd, wring the whey from it, put it into
a bason, and break three quarters of a pound of butter
into the curd, then with a clean hand work the butter
and curd together till all the butter be melted, and
rub it in a hair-sieve with the back of spoon till
all be through; then take six eggs, beat them with
a few spoonfuls of rose-water or sack, put it into
your curd with half a pound of fine sugar and a nutmeg
grated; mix them all together with a little salt,
some currans and almonds; then make up your paste
of fine flour, with cold butter and a little sugar;
roll your paste very thin, fill your tins with the
curd, and set them in an oven, when they are almost
enough take them out, then take a quarter of a pound
of butter, with a little rose-water, and part of a
half pound of sugar, let it stand on the coals till
the butter be melted, then pour into each cake some
of it, set them in the oven again till they be brown,
so keep them for use.
190. To make GOOFER WAFERS.
Take a pound of fine flour and six
eggs, beat them very well, put to them about a jill
of milk, mix it well with the flour, put in half a
pound of clarified butter, half a pound of powder sugar,
half of a nutmeg, and a little salt; you may add to
it two or three spoonfuls of cream; then take your
goofer-irons and put them into the fire to heat, when
they are hot rub them over the first time with a little
butter in a cloth, put your batter into one side of
your goofer-irons, put them into the fire, and keep
turning the irons every now and then; (if your irons
be too hot they burn soon) make them a day or two before
you use them, only set them down before the fire on
a pewter dish before you serve them up; have a little
white wine and butter for your sauce, grating some
sugar over them.
191. To make common CURD CHEESE CAKES.
Take a pennyworth of curds, mix them
with a little cream, beat four eggs, put to them six
ounces of clarified butter, a quarter of a pound of
sugar, half a pound of currans well wash’d, and
a little lemon-peel shred, a little nutmeg, a spoonful
of rose-water or brandy, whether you please, and a
little salt, mix altogether, and bake them in small
petty pans.
192. CHEESE CAKES without CURRANS.
Take five quarts of new milk, run
it to a tender curd, then hang it in a cloth to drain,
rub into them a pound of butter that is well washed
in rose-water, put to it the yolks of seven or eight
eggs, and two of the whites; season it with cinnamon,
nutmeg and sugar.
193. To make a CURD PUDDING.
Take three quarts of new milk, put
to it a little erning, as much as will break it when
it is scumm’d break it down with your hand, and
when it is drained grind it with a mustard ball in
a bowl, or beat it in a marble-mortar; then take half
a pound of butter and six eggs, leaving out three
of the whites; beat the eggs well, and put them into
the curds and butter, grate in half a nutmeg, a little
lemon-peel shred fine, and salt, sweeten it to your
taste, beat them all together, and bake them in little
petty-pans with fast bottoms; a quarter of an hour
will bake them; you must butter the tins very well
before you put them in; when you dish them up you
must lay them the wrong side upwards on the dish,
and stick them with either blanch’d almonds,
candid orange, or citron cut in long bits, and grate
a little loaf sugar over them.
194. To make a SLIPCOAT CHEESE.
Take five quarts of new-milk, a quart
of cream, and a quart of water, boil your water, then
put your cream to it; when your milk is new-milk warm
put in your erning, take your curd into the strainer,
break it as little as you can, and let it drain, then
put it into your vat, press it by degrees, and lay
it in grass.
195. To make CREAM CHEESE.
Take three quarts of new-milk, one
quart of cream, and a spoonful of erning, put them
together, let it stand till it come to the hardness
of a strong jelly, then put it into the mould, shifting
it often into dry cloths, lay the weight of three
pounds upon it, and about two hours after you may
lay six or seven pounds upon it; turn it often into
dry cloths till night, then take the weight off, and
let it lie in the mould without weight and cloth till
morning, and when it is so dry that it doth not wet
a cloth, keep it in greens till fit for use; if you
please you may put a little salt into it.
196. To make PIKE eat like STURGEON.
Take the thick part of a large pike
and scale it, set on two quarts of water to boil it
in, put in a jill of vinegar, a large handful of salt,
and when it boils put in your pike, but first bind
it about with coarse inkle; when it is boiled you
must not take off the inkle or baising, but let it
be on all the time it is in eating; it must be kept
in the same pickle it was boiled in, and if you think
it be not strong enough you must add a little more
salt and vinegar, so when it is cold put it upon your
pike, and keep it for use; before you boil the pike
take out the bone.
You may do scate the same way, and
in my opinion it eats more like sturgeon.
197. To Collar EELS.
Take the largest eels you can get,
skin and split them down the belly, take out the bones,
season them with a little mace, nutmeg and salt; begin
at the tail and roll them up very tight, so bind them
up in a little coarse inkle, boil it in salt and water,
a few bay leaves, a little whole pepper, and a little
alegar or vinegar; it will take an hour boiling, according
as your roll is in bigness; when it is boiled you
must tie it and hang it up whilst it be cold, then
put it into the liquor that it was boiled in, and
keep it for use.
If your eels be small you may robe
two or three of them together.
198. To Pot SMELTS.
Take the freshest and largest smelts
you can get, wipe them very well with a clean cloth,
take out the guts with a skewer, (but you must not
take out the milt and roan) season them with a little
mace, nutmeg and salt, so lie them in a flat pot;
if you have two score you must lay over them five
ounces of butter; lie over them a paper, and set them
in a slow oven; if it be over hot it will burn them,
and make them look black; an hour will bake them;
when they are baked you must take them out and lay
them on a dish to drain, and when they are drained
you must put them in long pots about the length of
your smelts; when you lay them in you must put betwixt
every layer the same seasoning as you did before,
to make them keep; when they are cold cover them over
with clarified butter, so keep them for use.
199. To Pickle SMELTS.
Take the best and largest smelts you
can get; gut, wash and wipe them, lie them in a flat
pot, cover them with a little white wine vinegar,
two or three blades of mace and a little pepper and
salt; bake them in a slow oven, and keep them for
use.
200. To stew a PIKE.
Take a large pike, scale and clean
it, season it in the belly with a little mace and
salt; skewer it round, put it into a deep stew-pan,
with a pint of small gravy and a pint of claret, two
or thee blades of mace, set it over a stove with a
slow fire, and cover it up close; when it is enough
take part of the liquor, put to it two anchovies, a
little lemon-peel shred fine, and thicken the sauce
with flour and butter; before you lie the pike on
the dish turn it with the back upwards, take off the
skin, and serve it up. Garnish your dish with
lemon and pickle.
201. SAUCE for a PIKE.
Take a little of the liquor that comes
from the pike when you take it out of the oven, put
to it two or three anchovies, a little lemon-peel
shred, a spoonful or two of white wine, or a little
juice of lemon, which you please, put to it some butter
and flour, make your sauce about the thickness of
cream, put it into a bason or silver-boat, and set
in your dish with your pike, you may lay round your
pike any sort of fried fish, or broiled, if you have
it; you may have the same sauce for a broiled pike,
only add a little good gravy, a few shred capers, a
little parsley, and a spoonful or two of oyster and
cockle pickle if you have it.
202. How to roast a PIKE with a Pudding
in the Belly.
Take a large pike, scale and clean it, draw it at the gills. To make a
pudding for the Pike. Take a large handful
of bread-crumbs, as much beef-suet shred fine, two
eggs, a little pepper and salt, a little grated nutmeg,
a little parsley, sweet-marjoram and lemon-peel shred
fine; so mix altogether, put it into the belly of your
pike, skewer it round and lie it in an earthen dish
with a lump of butter over it, a little salt and flour,
so set it in the oven; an hour will roast it.
203. To dress a COD’S HEAD.
Take a cod’s head, wash and
clean it, take out the gills, cut it open, and make
it to lie flat; (if you have no conveniency of boiling
it you may do it in an oven, and it will be as well
or better) put it into a copper-dish or earthen one,
lie upon it a littler butter, salt, and flour, and
when it is enough take off the skin.
SAUCE for the COD’S HEAD.
Take a little white gravy, about a
pint of oysters or cockles, a little shred lemon-peel,
two or three spoonfuls of white wine, and about half
a pound of butter thicken’d with flour, and put
it into your boat or bason.
Another SAUCE for a COD’S HEAD.
Take a pint of good gravy, a lobster
or crab, which you can get, dress and put it into
your gravy with a little butter, juice of lemon, shred
lemon-peel, and a few shrimps if you have them; thicken
it with a little flour, and put it into your bason,
set the oysters on one side of the dish and this on
the other; lay round the head boiled whitings, or
any fried fish; pour over the head a little melted
butter. Garnish your dish with horse-radish,
slices of lemon and pickles.
204. To stew CARP or TENCH.
Take your carp or tench and wash them,
scale the carp but not the tench, when you have cleaned
them wipe them with a cloth, and fry them in a frying
pan with a little butter to harden the skin; before
you put them into the stew-pan, put to them a little
good gravy, the quantity will be according to the
largeness of your fish, with a jill of claret, three
or four anchovies at least, a little shred lemon-peel,
a blade or two of mace, let all stew together, till
your carp be enough, over a slow fire; when it is
enough take part of the liquor, put to it half a pound
of butter, and thicken it with a little flour; so serve
them up. Garnish your dish with crisp parsley,
slices of lemon and pickles.
If you have not the convenience of
stewing them, you may broil them before a fire, only
adding the same sauce.
205. How to make SAUCE for
a boiled SALMON or TURBOT.
Take a little mild white gravy, two
or three anchovies, a spoonful of oyster or cockle
pickle, a little shred lemon-peel, half a pound of
butter, a little parsley and fennel shred small, and
a little juice of lemon, but not too much, for fear
it should take off the sweetness.
206. To make SAUCE for
HADDOCK or COD, either broiled or boiled.
Take a little gravy, a few cockles,
oysters or mushrooms, put to them a little of the
gravy that comes from the fish, either broiled or boiled,
it will do very well if you have no other gravy, a
little catchup and a lump of butter; if you have neither
oysters nor cockles you may put in an anchovy or two,
and thicken with flour; you may put in a few shred
capers, or a little mango, if you have it.
207. To stew EELS.
Take your eels, case, clean and skewer
them round, put them into a stew-pan with a little
good gravy, a little claret to redden the gravy, a
blade or two of mace, an anchovy, and a little lemon-peel;
when they are enough thicken them with a little flour
and butter. Garnish your dish with parsley.
208. To pitch-cock EELS.
Take your eels, case and clean them,
season them with nutmeg, pepper and salt, skewer them
round, broil them before the fire, and baste them
with a little butter; when they are almost enough strinkle
them over with a little shred parsley, and make your
sauce of a little gravy, butter, anchovy, and a little
oyster pickle if you have it; don’t pour the
sauce over your eels, put it into a china bason, and
set it in the middle of your dish.
Garnish with crisp parsley, and serve them up.
209. To boil HERRINGS.
Take your herring, scale and wash
them, take out the milt and roan, skewer them round,
and tie them with a string or else they will come
loose in the boiling and be spoil’d; set on a
pretty broad stew-pan, with as much water as will
cover them, put to it a little salt, lie in you herrings
with the backs downwards boil with them the milt and
roans to lie round them; they will boil in half a
quarter of an hour over a slow fire; when they are
boiled take them up with an egg slice, so turn them
over and set them to drain. Make your sauce of
a little gravy and butter, an anchovy and a little
boiled parsley shred; put it into the bason, set it
in the middle of the dish, lie the herrings round with
their tails towards the bason, and lie the milts and
roans between every herring. Garnish with crisp
parsley and lemon; so serve them up.
210. To fry HERRINGS.
Scale and wash your herrings clean,
strew over them a little flour and salt; let your
butter be very hot before you put your herrings into
the pan, then shake them to keep them stirring, and
fry them over a brisk fire; when they are fried cut
off the heads and bruise them, put to them a jill
of ale, (but the ale must not be bitter) add a little
pepper and salt, a small onion or shalot, if you have
them, and boil them altogether; when they are boiled,
strain them, and put them into your sauce-pan again,
thicken them with a little flour and butter, put it
into a bason, and set it in the middle of your dish;
fry the milts and roans together, and lay round your
herrings. Garnish your dish with crisp parsley,
and serve it up.
211. To pickle HERRINGS.
Scale and clean your herrings, take
out the milts and roans, and skewer them round, season
them with a little pepper and salt, put them in a
deep pot, cover them with alegar, put to them a little
whole Jamaica pepper, and two or three bay leaves;
bake them and keep them for use.
212. To stew OYSTERS.
Take a score or two of oysters, according
as you have occasion, put them into a small stew-pan,
with a few bread-crumbs, a little water, shred mace
and pepper, a lump of butter, and a spoonful of vinegar,
(not to make it four) boil them altogether but not
over much, if you do it makes them hard. Garnish
with bread fippets, and serve them up.
213. To fry OYSTERS.
Take a score or two of the largest
oysters you can get, and the yolks of four or five
eggs, beat them very well, put to them a little nutmeg,
pepper and salt, a spoonful of fine flour, and a little
raw parsley shred, so dip in your oysters, and fry
them in butter a light brown.
They are very proper to lie about
either stew’d oysters, or any other fish, or
made dishes.
214. OYSTERS in SCALLOP SHELLS.
Take half a dozen small scallop shells,
lay in the bottom of every shell a lump of butter,
a few bread crumbs, and then your oysters; laying
over them again a few more bread crumbs, a little butter,
and a little beat pepper, so set them to crisp, either
in the oven or before the fire, and serve them up.
They are proper for either a side-dish or middle-dish.
215 To keep HERRINGS all the Year.
Take fresh herrings, cut off their
heads, open and wash them very clean, season them
with salt, black pepper, and Jamaica pepper, put them
into a pot, cover them with white wine vinegar and
water, of each an equal quantity, and set them in
a slow oven to bake; tie the pot up close and they
will keep a year in the pickle.
216. To make artificial Sturgeon another
Way.
Take out the bones of a turbot or
britt, lay it in salt twenty four hours, boil it with
good store of salt; make your pickle of white wine
vinegar and three quarts of water, boil them, and put
in a little vinegar in the boiling; don’t boil
it over much, if you do it will make it soft; when
’tis enough take it out till it be cold, put
the same pickle to it, and keep it for use.
217. To stew MUSHROOMS.
Take mushrooms, and clean them, the
buttons you may wash, but the flaps you must pill
both inside and out; when you have cleaned them, pick
out the little ones for pickling, and cut the rest
in pieces for stewing; wash them and put them into
a little water, give them a boil and it will take
off the faintness, so drain from them all the water,
then put them into a pan with a lump of butter, a
little shred mace, pepper and salt to your taste (putting
them to a little water) hang them over a slow fire
for half an hour, when they are enough thicken them
with a little flour; serve them up with sippets.
218. To make ALMOND PUFFS.
Take a pound of almonds blanch’d,
and beat them with orange-flower water, then take
a pound of sugar, and boil them almost to a candy
height, put in your almonds and stir them on the fire,
keep them stirring till they be stiff, then take them
off the fire and stir them till they be cold; beat
them a quarter of an hour in a mortar, putting to
them a pound of sugar sifted, and a little lemon-peel
grated, make it into a paste with the whites of three
eggs, and beat it into a froth more or less as you
think proper; bake them in an oven almost cold, and
keep them for use.
219. To pot MUSHROOMS.
Take the largest mushrooms, scrape
and clean them, put them into your pan with a lump
of butter, and a little salt, let then stew over a
slow fire whilst they are enough, put to them a little
mace and whole pepper, then dry them with a cloth,
and put them down into a pot as close as you can,
and as you lie them down strinkle in a little salt
and mace, when they are cold cover them over with butter;
when you use them toss them up with gravy, a few bread-crumbs
and butter; do not make your pot over large, but rather
put them into two pots; they will keep the better
if you take the gravy from them when they are stewed.
They are good for fish-sauce, or any other whilst
they are fresh.
220. To fry TROUT, or any other Sort of
Fish.
Take two or three eggs, more or less
according as you have fish to fry, take the fish and
cut it in thin slices, lie it upon a board, rub the
eggs over it with a feather, and strow on a little
flour and salt, fry it in fine drippings or butter,
let the drippings be very hot before you put in the
fish, but do not let it burn, if you do it will make
the fish black; when the fish is in the pan, you may
do the other side with the egg, and as you fry it
lay it to drain before the fire till all be fried,
then it is ready for use.
221. To make SAUCE for SALMON or
TURBOT.
Boil your turbot or salmon, and set
it to drain; take the gravy that drains from the salmon
or turbot, an anchovy or two, a little lemon-peel
shred, a spoonful of catchup, and a little butter,
thicken it with flour the thickness of cream, put
to it a little shred parsley and fennel; but do not
put in your parsley and fennel till you be just going
to send it up, for it will take off the green.
The gravy of all sorts of fish is
a great addition to your sauce, if the fish be sweet.
222. To dress COD’S ZOONS.
Lie them in water all night, and then
boil them, if they be salt shift them once in the
boiling, when they are tender cut them in long pieces,
dress them up with eggs as you do salt fish, take one
or two of them and cut into square pieces, dip them
in egg and fry them to lay round your dish.
It is proper to lie about any other dish.
223. To make SOLOMON GUNDY to eat in Lent
Take five or six white herrings, lay
them in water all night, boil them as soft as you
would do for eating, and shift them in the boiling
to take out the saltness; when they are boiled take
the fish from the bone, and mind you don’t break
the bone in pieces, leaving on the head and tail;
take the white part of the herrings, a quarter of a
pound of anchovies, a large apple, a little onion
shred fine, or shalot, and a little lemon-peel, shred
them all together, and lie them over the bones on
both sides, in the shape of a herring; then take off
the peel of a lemon very very thin, and cut it in
long bits, just as it will reach over the herrings;
you must lie this peel over every herring pretty thick.
Garnish your dish with a few pickled oysters, capers,
and mushrooms, if you have any; so serve them up.
224. SOLOMAN GUNDY another Way.
Take the white part of a turkey, or
other fowl, if you have neither, take a little white
veal and mince it pretty small; take a little hang
beef or tongues, scrape them very fine, a few shred
capers, and the yolks of four or five eggs shred small;
take a delf dish and lie a delf plate in the dish
with the wrong side up, so lie on your meat and other
ingredients, all single in quarters, one to answer
another; set in the middle a large lemon or mango,
so lie round your dish anchovies in lumps, picked
oysters or cockles, and a few pickled mushrooms, slices
of lemon and capers; so serve it up.
This is proper for a side-dish either at noon or night.
225. To make LEMON CHEESE CAKES.
Blanch half a pound of almonds, and
beat them in a stone mortar very fine, with a little
rose-water; put in eight eggs, leaving out five of
the whites; take three quarters of a pound of sugar,
and three quarters of a pound of melted butter, beat
all together, then take three lemon-skins, boiled
tender, the rind and all, beat them very well, and
mix them with the rest, then put them into your paste.
You may make a lemon-pudding the same
way, only add the juice of half a lemon: Before
you set them in the oven, grate over them a little
fine loaf sugar.
226. To make white GINGER BREAD.
Take a little gum-dragon, lay it in
rose-water all night, then take a pound of jordan
almonds blanch’d with a little of the gum-water,
a pound of double-refined sugar beat and sifted, an
ounce of cinnamon beat with a little rose-water, work
it into a paste and print it, then set it in a stove
to dry.
227. To make red GINGER BREAD.
Take a quart and a jill of red wine,
a jill and a half of brandy, seven or eight manshets,
according to the size the bread is, grate them, (the
crust must be dried, beat and sifted) three pounds
and a half of sugar beat and sifted, two ounces of
cinnamon, and two ounces of ginger beat and sifted,
a pound of almonds blanched and beat with rose-water,
put the bread into the liquor by degrees, stirring
it all the time, when the bread is all well mix’d
take it off the fire; you must put the sugar, spices,
and almonds into it, when it is cold print it; keep
some of the spice to dust the prints with.
228. To make a GREAT CAKE.
Take five pounds of fine flour, (let
it be dried very well before the fire) and six pounds
of currans well dress’d and rub’d in cloths
after they are wash’d, set them in a sieve before
the fire; you must weigh your currans after they are
cleaned, then take three quarters of an ounce of mace,
two large nutmegs beaten and mix’d amongst the
flour, and pound of powder sugar, and pound of citron,
and a pound of candid orange, (cut your citron and
orange in pretty large pieces) and a pound of almonds
cut in three or four pieces long way; then take sixteen
eggs, leaving out half of the whites, beat your sugar
and eggs for half an hour with a little salt; take
three jills of cream, and three pounds and a half
of butter, melt your butter with part of the cream
for fear it should be too hot, put in between a jack
and a jill of good brandy, a quart of light yeast,
and the rest of the cream, mix all your liquors together
about blood-warm, make a hole in the middle of your
flour, and put in the liquids, cover it half an hour
and let it stand to rise, then put in your currans
and mix all together; butter your hoop, tie a paper
three fold, and put it at the bottom in your hoop;
just when they are ready to set in the oven, put the
cake into your hoop at three times; when you have
laid a little paste at the bottom, lay in part of
your sweet-meats and almonds, then put in a little
paste over them again, and the rest of your sweet-meats
and almonds, and set it in a quick oven; two hours
will bake it.
229. To make ICEING for this CAKE.
Take two pounds of double-refined
sugar, beat it, and sift it through a fine sieve;
put to it a spoonful of fine starch, a pennyworth of
gum-arabic, beat them all well together; take the whites
of four or five eggs, beat them well, and put to them
a spoonful of rose-water, or orange-flower water,
a spoonful of the juice of lemon, beat them with the
whites of your eggs, and put in a little to your sugar
till you wet it, then beat them for two hours whilst
your cake is baking; if you make it over thin it will
run; when you lie it on your cake you must lie it
on with a knife; if you would have the iceing very
thick, you must add a little more sugar; wipe off
the loose currans before you put on the iceing, and
put it into the oven to harden the iceing.
230. To make a PLUMB CAKE.
Take five pounds of flour dried and
cold, mix to it an ounce of mace, half an ounce of
cinnamon, a quarter of an ounce of nutmegs, half a
quarter of an ounce of lemon-peel grated, and a pound
of fine sugar; take fifteen eggs, leaving out seven
of the whites, beat your eggs with half a jill of
brandy or sack, a little orange-flower water, or rose
water; then put to your eggs near a quart of light
yeast, set it on the fire with a quart of cream, and
three pounds of butter, let your butter melt in the
cream, so let it stand till new milk warm, then skim
off all the butter and most of the milk, and mix it
to your eggs and yeast; make a hole in the middle
of your flour, and put in your yeast, strinkle at
the tip a little flour, then mix to it a little salt,
six pounds of currans well wash’d clean’d,
dry’d, pick’d, and plump’d by the
fire, a pound of the best raisins stoned, and beat
them altogether whilst they leave the bowl; put in
a pound of candid orange, and half a pound of citron
cut in long pieces; then butter the garth and fill
it full; bake it in a quick oven, against it be enough
have an iceing ready.
231. To make a CARRAWAY CAKE.
Take eighteen eggs, leave out half
of the whites, and beat them; take two pounds of butter,
wash the butter clear from milk and salt, put to it
a little rose-water, and wash your butter very well
with your hands till it take up all the eggs, then
mix them in half a jack of brandy and sack; grate
into your eggs a lemon rind; put in by degrees (a
spoonful at a time) two pounds of fine flour, a pound
and a half of loaf sugar, that is sifted and dry;
when you have mixed them very well with your hands,
take a thible and beat it very well for half an hour,
till it look very white, then mix to it a few seeds,
six ounces of carraway comfits, and half a pound of
citron and candid orange; then beat it well, butter
your garth, and put it in a quick oven.
232. To make CAKES to keep all the Year.
Have in readiness a pound and four
ounces of flour well dried, take a pound of butter
unsalted, work it with a pound of white sugar till
it cream, three spoonfuls of sack, and the rind of
an orange, boil it till it is not bitter, and beat
it with sugar, work these together, then clean your
hands, and grate a nutmeg into your flour, put in three
eggs and two whites, mix them well, then with a paste-pin
or thible stir in your flour to the butter, make them
up into little cakes, wet the top with sack and strow
on fine sugar; bake them on buttered papers, well
floured, but not too much; you may add a pound of currans
washed and warmed.
233. To make SHREWSBERRY CAKES.
Take two pounds of fine flour, put
to it a pound and a quarter of butter (rub them very
well) a pound and a quarter of fine sugar sifted,
grate in a nutmeg, beat in three whites of eggs and
two yolks, with a little rose-water, and so knead
your paste with it, let it lay an hour, then make
it up into cakes, prick them and lay them on papers,
wet them with a feather dipt in rose-water, and grate
over them a little fine sugar; bake them in a slow
oven, either on tins or paper.
234. To make a fine CAKE.
Take five pounds of fine flour dried,
and keep it warm; four pounds of loaf sugar pounded,
sifted and warmed; five pounds of currans well cleaned
and warmed before the fire; a pound and a half of almonds
blanch’d beat, dried, slit and kept warm; five
pounds of good butter well wash’d and beat from
the water; then work it an hour and a half till it
comes to a fine cream; put to the butter all the sugar,
work it up, and then the flour, put in a pint of brandy,
then all the whites and yolks of the eggs, mix all
the currans and almonds with the rest. There
must be four pounds of eggs in weight in the shells,
the yolks and the whites beat and separated, the whites
beat to a froth; you must not cease beating till they
are beat to a curd, to prevent oiling; to the quantity
of a cake put a pound and a half of orange-peel and
citron shred, without plumbs, and half a pound of
carraway seeds, it will require four hours baking,
and the oven must be as hot as for bread, but let
it be well slaked when it has remained an hour in the
oven, and stop it close; you may ice it if you please.
235. To make a SEED CAKE.
Take one quartern of fine flour well
dried before the fire, when it is cold rub in a pound
of butter; take three quarters of a pound of carraway
comfits, six spoonfuls of new yeast, six spoonfuls
of cream, the yolks of six eggs and two whites, and
a little sack; mix all of these together in a very
light paste, set it before the fire till it rise,
and so bake it in a tin.
236. To make an ordinary PLUMB CAKE.
Take a pound of flour well dried before
the fire, a pound of currans, two penny-worth of mace
and cloves, two eggs, four spoonfuls of good new yeast,
half a pound of butter, half a pint of cream, melt
the butter, warm the cream, and mix altogether in
a very light paste, butter your tin before you put
it in; an hour will bake it.
237. To make an ANGELICA CAKE.
Take the stalks of angelica boil
and green them very well, put to every pound of pulp
a pound of loaf sugar beaten very well, and when you
think it is beaten enough, lay them in what fashion
you please on glasses, and as they candy turn them.
238. To make KING CAKES.
Take a pound of flour, three quarters
of a pound of butter, half a pound of sugar and half
a pound of currans, well cleaned; rub your butter
well into your flour, and put in as many yolks of eggs
as will lithe them, then put in your sugar, currans,
and some mace, shred in as much as will give them
a taste, so make them up in little round cakes, and
butter the papers you lie them on.
239. To make BREAKFAST CAKES.
Take a pound of currans well washed,
(rub them in a cloth till dry) a pound of flour dried
before a fire, take three eggs, leave out one of the
whites, four spoonfuls of new yeast, and four spoonfuls
of sack or two of brandy, beat the yeast and eggs
well together; then take a jill of cream, and something
above a quarter of a pound of butter, set them on
a fire, and stir them till the butter be melted, (but
do not let them boil) grate a large nutmeg into the
flour, with currans and five spoonfuls of sugar; mix
all together, beat it with your hand till it leave
the bowl, then flour the tins you put the paste in,
and let them stand a little to rise, then bake them
an hour and a quarter.
240. To make MACCAROONS.
Take a pound of blanched almonds and
beat them, put some rose-water in while beating; (they
must not be beaten too small) mix them with the whites
of five eggs, a pound of sugar finely beaten and sifted,
and a handful of flour, mix all these very well together,
lay them on wafers, and bake them in a very temperate
oven, (it must not be so hot as for manchet) then
they are fit for use.
241. To make WHIGGS.
Take two pounds of flour, a pound
of butter, a pint of cream, four eggs, (leaving out
two of the whites) and two spoonfuls of yeast, set
them to rise a little; when they are mixed add half
a pound of sugar, and half a pound of carraway comfits,
make them up with sugar and bake them in a dripping
pan.
242. To make RASBERRY CREAM.
Take rasberries, bruise them, put
’em in a pan on a quick fire whilst the juice
be dried up, then take the same weight of sugar as
you have rasberries, and set them on a slow fire,
let them boil whilst they are pretty stiff; make them
into cakes, and dry them near the fire or in the sun.
243. To make QUEEN CAKES.
Take a pound of London flour dry’d
well before the fire, nine eggs, a pound of loaf sugar
beaten and sifted, put one half to your eggs and the
other to your butter; take a pound of butter and melt
it without water put it into a stone bowl, when it
is almost cold put in your sugar and a spoonful or
two of rose water, beat it very quick, for half an
hour, till it be as white as cream; beat the eggs and
sugar as long and very quick, whilst they be white;
when they are well beat mix them all together; then
take half a pound of currans cleaned well, and a little
shred of mace, so you may fill one part of your tins
before you put in your currans; you may put a quarter
of a pound of almonds shred (if you please) into them
that is without currans; you may ice them if you please,
but do not let the iceing be thicker than you may lie
on with a little brush.
244. To make a BISKET CAKE.
Take a pound of London flour dry’d
before the fire, a pound of loaf sugar beaten and
sifted, beat nine eggs and a spoonful or two of rose
water with the sugar for two hours, then put them to
your flour and mix them well together; put in an ounce
of carraway seeds, then put it into your tin and bake
it an hour and a half in a pretty quick oven.
245. To make CRACKNELS.
Take half a pound of fine flour, half
a pound of sugar, two ounces of butter, two eggs,
and a few carraway seeds; (you must beat and sift the
sugar) then put it to your flour and work it to paste;
roll them as thin as you can, and cut them out with
queen cake tins, lie them on papers and bake them
in a slow oven.
They are proper to eat with chocolate.
246. To make PORTUGAL CAKES.
Take a pound of flour, a pound of
butter, a pound of sugar, a pound of currans well
cleaned, and a nutmeg grated; take half of the flour
and mix it with sugar and nutmeg, melt the butter
and put it into the yolks of eight eggs very well
beat, and only four of the whites, and as the froth
rises put it into the flour, and do so till all is
in; then beat it together, still strowing some of
the other half of the flour, and then beat it till
all the flour be in, then butter the pans and fill
them, but do not bake them too much; you may ice them
if you please, or you may strow carraway comfits of
all sorts on them when they go into the oven.
The currans must be plump’d in warm water, and
dried before the fire, then put them into your cakes.
247. To make PLUMB-CAKES another way.
Take two pounds of butter, beat it
with a little rose water and orange-flower water till
it be like cream, two pounds of flour dried before
the fire, a quarter of an ounce of mace, a nutmeg,
half a pound of loaf sugar, beat and sifted, fifteen
eggs (beat the whites by themselves and yolks with
your sugar) a jack of brandy and as much sack, two
pounds of currans very well cleaned, and half a pound
of almonds blanch’d and cut in two or three
pieces length-way, so mix all together, and put it
into your hoop of tin; you may put in half a pound
of candid orange and citron if you please; about an
hour will bake it in a quick oven; if you have a mind
to have it iced a pound of sugar will ice it.
248. To make a GINGER BREAD-CAKE.
Take two pounds of treacle, two pounds
and a quartern of flour, and ounce of beat ginger,
three quarters of a pound of sugar, two ounces of
coriander seeds, two eggs, a pennyworth of new ale
with the yeast on it, a glass of brandy, and two ounces
of lemon-peel, mix all these together in a bowl, and
set it to rise for half an hour, then put it into
a tin to bake, and wet it with a little treacle and
water; if you have a quick oven an hour and a half
will bake it.
249. To make CHOCOLATE CREAM.
Take four ounces of chocolate, more
or less, according as you would have your dish in
bigness, grate it and boil it in a pint of cream,
then mill it very well with a chocolate stick; take
the yolks of two eggs and beat them very well, leaving
out the strain, put to them three or four spoonfuls
of cream, mix them all together, set it on the fire,
and keep stirring it till it thicken, but do not let
it boil; you must sweeten it to your taste, and keep
stirring it till it be cold, so put it into your glasses
or china dishes, which you please.
250. To make white LEMON CREAM.
Take a jill of spring water and a
pound of fine sugar, set it over a fire till the sugar
and water be dissolv’d, then put the juice of
four good lemons to your sugar and water, the whites
of four eggs well beat, set it on the fire again,
and keep it stirring one way till it just simmers
and does not boil, strain it thro’ a fine cloth,
then put it on the fire again, adding to it a spoonful
of orange-flower water, stir it till it thickens on
a slow fire, then strain into basons or glasses for
your use; do not let it boil, if you do it will curdle.
251. To make CREAM CURDS.
Take a gallon of water, put to it
a quart of new milk, a little salt, a pint of sweet
cream and eight eggs, leaving out half the whites and
strains, beat them very well, put to them a pint of
sour cream, mix them very well together, and when
your pan is just at boiling (but is must not boil)
put in the sour cream and your eggs, stir it about
and keep it from settling to the bottom; let it stand
whilst it begins to rise up, then have a little fair
water, and as they rise keep putting it in whilst
they be well risen, then take them off the fire, and
let them stand a little to sadden; have ready a sieve
with a clean cloth over it, and take up the curds
with a laddle or egg-slicer, whether you have; you
must always make them the night before you use them;
this quantity will make a large dish if your cream
be good; if you think your curds be too thick, mix
tho them two or three spoonfuls of good cream, lie
them upon a china dish in lumps, so serve them up.
252. To make APPLE CREAM.
Take half a dozen large apples, (coslings
or any other apples that will be soft) and coddle
them; when they are cold take out the pulp; then take
the whites of four or five eggs, (leaving out the strains)
three quarters of a pound of double-refined sugar
beat and sifted, a spoonful or two of rose-water and
grate in a little lemon-peel, so beat all together
for an hour, whilst it be white, then lay it on a china
dish, to serve it up.
253. To fry CREAM to eat hot.
Take a pint of cream and boil it,
three spoonfuls of London flour, mix’d with
a little milk, put in three eggs, and beat them very
well with the flour, a little salt, a spoonful or
two of fine powder sugar, mix them very well; then
put your cream to them on the fire and boil it; then
beat two eggs more very well, and when you take your
pan off the fire stir them in, and pour them into
a large pewter dish, about half an inch thick; when
it is quite cold cut it out in square bits, and fry
it in butter, a light brown; as you fry them set them
before the fire to keep hot and crisp, so dish them
up with a little white wine, butter and sugar for
your sauce, in a china cup, set it in the midst, and
grate over some loaf sugar.
254. To make RICE or ALMOND CREAM.
Take two quarts of cream, boil it
with what seasoning you please, then take it from
the fire and sweeten it, pick out the seasoning and
divide it into two parts, take a quarter of a pound
of blanch’d almonds well beat with orange-flower
water, set that on the fire, and put to it the yolks
of four eggs well beat and strained, keep it stirring
all the time it is on the fire, when it rises to boil
take it off, stir it a little, then put it into your
bason, the other half set on the fire, and thicken
it with flour of rice; when you take it off put to
it the juice of a lemon, orange-flower water or sack,
and stir it till it be cold, then serve it up.
255. To make CALF’S FOOT JELLY.
Take four calf’s feet and dress
them, boil them in six quarts of water over a slow
fire, whilst all the bones will come out, and half
the water be boiled away, strain it into a stone-bowl,
then put to them two or three quarts more water, and
let it boil away to one: If you want a large
quantity of flummery or jelly at one time; take two
calf’s feet more, it will make your stock the
stronger; you must make your stock the day before
you use it, and before you put your stock into the
pan take off the fat, and put it into your pan to
melt, take the whites of eight or ten eggs, just as
you have jelly in quantity, (for the more whites you
have makes your jelly the finer) beat your whites to
a froth, and put to them five or six lemons, according
as they are of goodness, a little white wine or rhenish,
mix them well together (but let not your stock be
too hot when you put them in) and sweeten it to your
taste; keep it stirring all the time whilst it boil;
take your bag and dip it in hot water, and wring it
well out, then put in your jelly, and keep it shifting
whilst it comes clear; throw a lemon-peel or two into
your bag as the jelly is coming off, and put in some
bits of peel into your glasses.
You may make hartshorn jelly the same way.
256. To make ORANGE CREAM.
Take two seville oranges and peel
them very thin, put the peel into a pint of fair water,
and let it lie for an hour or two; take four eggs,
and beat them very well, put to them the juice of three
or four oranges, according as they are in goodness,
and sweeten them with double refin’d sugar to
your taste, mix the water and sugar together, and
strain them thro’ a fine cloth into your tankard,
and set it over the fire as you did the lemon cream,
and put it into your glasses for use.
257. To make yellow LEMON CREAM.
Take two or three lemons, according
as they are in bigness, take off the peel as thin
as you can from the white, put it into a pint of clear
water, and let it lie three or four hours; take the
yolks of three or four eggs, beat them very well,
about eight ounces of double refin’d sugar,
put it into your water to dissolve, and a spoonful
or two of rose-water or orange-flower water, which
you can get, mix all together with the juice of two
of your lemons, and if your lemons prove not good,
put in the juice of three, so strain them through a
fine cloth into a silver tankard, and set it over
a stove or chafing dish, stirring it all the time,
and when it begins to be as thick as cream take it
off, but don’t let it boil, if you do it will
curdle, stir it whilst it be cold and put it into
glasses for use.
258. To make white LEMON CREAM another Way.
Take a pint of spring water, and the
whites of six eggs, beat them very well to a froth,
put them to your water, adding to it half a pound of
double refin’d sugar, a spoonful of orange-flower
water, and the juice of three lemons, so mix all together,
and strain them through a fine close into your silver
tankard, set it over a slow fire in a chafing dish,
and keep stirring it all the time; as you see it thickens
take it off, it will soon curdle then be yellow, stir
it whilst it be cold, and put it in small jelly glasses
for use.
259. To make SAGOO CUSTARDS.
Take two ounces of sagoo, wash it
in a little water, set it on to cree in a pint of
milk, and let it cree till it be tender, when it is
cold put to it three jills of cream, boil it altogether
with a blade or two of mace, or a stick of cinnamon;
take six eggs, leave out the strains, beat them very
well, mix a little of your cream amongst your eggs,
then mix altogether, keep stirring it as you put it
in, so set it over a slow fire, and stir it about
whilst it be the thickness of a good cream; you must
not let it boil; when you take it off the fire put
in a tea cupfull of brandy, and sweeten it to your
taste, then put it into pots or glasses for use.
You may have half the quantity if you please.
260. To make ALMOND CUSTARDS.
Boil two quarts of sweet cream with
a stick of cinnamon; take eight eggs, leaving out
all the whites but two, beat them very well; take six
ounces of Jordan almonds, blanch and beat them with
a little rose-water, so give them a boil in your cream;
put in half a pound of powder sugar, and a little
of your cream amongst your eggs, mix altogether, and
set them over a slow fire, stir it all the time whilst
it be as thick as cream, but don’t let it boil;
when you take it off put in a little brandy to your
taste, so put it into your cups for use.
You may make rice-custard the same way.
261. To make a SACK POSSET.
Take a quart of cream, boil it with
two or three blades of mace, and grate in a long bisket;
take eight eggs, leave out half the whites, beat them
very well, and a pint of gooseberry wine, make it hot,
so mix it well with your eggs, set it over a slow
fire, and stir it about whilst it be as thick as custard;
set a dish that is deep over a stove, put in your
sack and eggs, when your cream is boiling hot, put
it to your sack by degrees, and stir it all the time
it stands over your stove, whilst it be thoroughly
hot, but don’t let it boil; you must make it
about half an hour before you want it; set it upon
a hot harth, and then it will be as thick as custard;
make a little froth of cream, to lay over the posset;
when you dish it up sweeten it to your taste; you
may make it without bisket if you please, and don’t
lay on your froth till you serve it up.
262. To make a LEMON POSSET.
Take a pint of good thick cream, grate
into it the outermost skin of two lemons, and squeeze
the juice into a jack of white wine, and sweeten it
to your taste; take the whites of two eggs without
the strains, beat them to a froth, so whisk them altogether
in a stone bowl for half an hour, then put them into
glasses for use.
263. To make whipt SILLABUBS.
Take two porringers of cream and one
of white wine, grate in the skin of a lemon, take
the whites of three eggs, sweeten it to your taste,
then whip it with a whisk, take off the froth as it
rises, and put it into your sillabub-glasses or pots,
whether you have, then they are fit for use.
264. To make ALMOND BUTTER.
Take a quart of cream, and half a
pound of almonds, beat them with the cream, then strain
it, and boil it with twelve yolks of eggs and two
whites, till it curdle, hang it up in a cloth till
morning and then sweeten it; you may rub it through
a sieve with the back of a spoon, or strain it through
a coarse cloth.
265. To make BLACK CAPS.
Take a dozen of middling pippens and
cut them in two, take out the cores and black ends,
lay them with the flat side downwards, set them in
the oven, and when they are about half roasted take
them out, wet them over with a little rose water,
and grate over them loaf sugar, pretty thick, set
them into the oven again, and let them stand till
they are black; when you serve them up, put them either
into cream or custard, with the black side upwards,
and set them at an equal distance.
266. To make SAUCE for tame DUCKS.
Take the necks and gizzards of your
ducks, a scrag of mutton if you have it, and make
a little sweet gravy, put to it a few bread-crumbs,
a small onion, and a little whole pepper, boil them
for half a quarter of an hour, put to them a lump
of butter, and if it is not thick enough a little
flour, so salt it to your taste.
267. To make SAUCE for a GREEN-GOOSE.
Take a little good gravy, a little
butter, and a few scalded gooseberries, mix all together,
and put it on the disk with your goose.
268. To make another SAUCE for a GREEN-GOOSE.
Take the juice of sorrel, a little
butter, and a few scalded gooseberries, mix them together,
and sweeten it to your taste; you must not let it
boil after you put in the sorrel, if you do it will
take off the green.
You must put this sauce into a bason.
269. To make ALMOND FLUMMERY.
Take a pint of stiff jelly made of
calf’s feet, put to it a jill or better of good
cream, and four ounces of almonds, blanch and beat
them fine with a little rose-water, then put them
to your cream and jelly, let them boil together for
half a quarter of an hour, and sweeten it to your
taste; strain it through a fine cloth, and keep it
stirring till it be quite cold, put it in cups and
let it stand all night, loosen it in warm water and
turn it out into your dish; so serve it up, and prick
it with blanch’d almonds.
270. To make CALF’S FOOT FLUMMERY.
Take two calf’s feet, when they
are dress’d, put two quarts of water to them,
boil them over a slow fire till half or better be consumed;
when your stock is cold, if it be too stiff, you may
put to it as much cream as jelly, boil them together
with a blade or two of mace, sweeten it to your taste
with loaf sugar, strain it through a fine cloth, stir
it whilst it be cold, and turn it out, but first loosen
it in warm water, and put it into your dish as you
did the other flummery.
271. To stew SPINAGE with POACHED EGGS.
Take two or three handfuls of young
spinage, pick it from the stalks, wash and drain it
very clean, put it into a pan with a lump of butter,
and a little salt, keep stirring it all the time whilst
it be enough, then take it out and squeeze out the
water, chop it and stir in a little more butter, lie
it in your dish in quarters, and betwixt every quarter
a poached egg, and lie one in the middle; fry some
sippets of white bread and prick them in your spinage,
to serve them up.
This is proper for a side-dish either for noon or
night.
272. To make RATIFIE DROPS.
Take half a pound of the best jordan
almonds, and four ounces of bitter almonds, blanch
and set them before the fire to dry, beat them in a
marble mortar with a little white of an egg, then put
to the half a pound of powder sugar, and beat them
altogether to a pretty stiff paste; you may beat your
white of egg very well before you put it in, so take
it out, roll it with your hand upon a board with a
little sugar, then cut them in pieces, and lie them
on sheets of tin or on paper, at an equal distance,
that they don’t touch one another, and set them
in a slow oven to bake.
273. To fry ARTICHOKE BOTTOMS.
Take artichoke bottoms when they are
at the full growth, and boil them as you would do
for eating, pull off the leaves, and take out the
choke, cut off the stalks as close as you can from
the bottom; take two or three eggs, beat them very
well, so dip your artichokes in them, and strow over
them a little pepper and salt; fry them in butter,
some whole and some in halves; serve them up with
a little butter in a china cup, set it in the middle
of your dish, lie your artichokes round, and serve
them up.
They are proper for a side dish either noon or night.
274. To fricassy ARTICHOKES.
Take artichokes, and order them the
same way as you did for frying, have ready in a stew-pan
a few morels and truffles, stewed in brown gravy,
so put in your artichokes, and give them a shake altogether
in your stew-pan, and serve them up hot, with sippets
round them.
275. To dry ARTICHOKE BOTTOMS.
Take the largest artichokes you can
get, when they are at their full growth, boil them
as you would do for eating, pull off the leaves and
take out the choke; cut off the stalk as close as you
can, lie them on a tin dripping-pan, or an earthen
dish, set them in a slow oven, for if your oven be
too hot it will brown them; you may dry them before
the fire if you have conveniency; when they are dry
put them in paper bags, and keep them for use.
276. To stew APPLES.
Take a pound of double refin’d
sugar, with a pint of water, boil and skim it, and
put into it a pound of the largest and clearest pippens,
pared and cut in halves; if little, let them be whole;
core them and boil them with a continual froth, till
they be as tender and clear as you would have them,
put in the juice of two lemons, but first take out
the apples, a little peel cut like threads, boil down
your syrrup as thick as you would have it, then pour
it over your apples; when you dish them, stick them
with long bits of candid orange, and some with almonds
cut in long bits, to serve them up.
You must stew them the day before you use them.
277. To stew APPLES another Way.
Take kentish pippens or john apples,
pare and slice them into fair water, set them on a
clear fire, and when they are boiled to mash, let
the liquor run through a hair-sieve; boil as many apples
thus as will make the quantity of liquor you would
have; to a pint of this liquor you must have a pound
of double refin’d loaf sugar in great lumps,
wet the lumps of sugar with the pippen liquor, and
set it over a gentle fire, let it boil, and skim it
well: whilst you are making the jelly, you must
have your whole pippens boiling at the same time; (they
must be the fairest and best pippens you can get)
scope out the cores, and pare them neatly, put them
into fair water as you do them; you must likewise
make a syrrup ready to put them into, the quantity
as you think will boil them in a clear; make the syrrup
with double refin’d sugar and water. Tie
up your whole pippens in a piece of fine cloth or
muslin severally, when your sugar and water boils put
them in, let them boil very fast, so fast that the
syrrup always boils over them; sometimes take them
off, and then set them on again, let them boil till
they be clear and tender; then take off the muslin
they were tied up in, and put them into glasses that
will hold but one in a glass; then see if your jelly
of apple-johns be boiled to jelly enough, if it be,
squeeze in the juice of two lemons, and let it have
a boil; then strain it through a jelly bag into the
glasses your pippens were in; you must be sure that
your pippens be well drained from the syrrup they were
boiled in; before you put them into the glasses, you
may, if you please, boil little pieces of lemon-peel
in water till they be tender, and then boil them in
the syrrup your pippens were boiled in; then take
them out and lay them upon the pippens before the jelly
is put in, and when they are cold paper them up.
278. To make PLUMB GRUEL.
Take half a pound of pearl barley,
set it on to cree; put to it three quarts of water;
when it has boiled a while, shift it into another
fresh water, and put to it three or four blades of
mace, a little lemon-peel cut in long pieces, so let
it boil whilst the barley be very soft; if it be too
thick you may add a little more water; take half a
pound of currans, wash them well and plump them, and
put to them your barley, half a pound of raisins and
stone them; let them boil in the gruel whilst they
are plump, when they are enough put to them a little
white wine, a little juice of lemon, grate in half
a nutmeg, and sweeten it to your taste, so serve them
up.
279. To make RICE GRUEL.
Boil half a pound of rice in two quarts
of soft water, as soft as you would have it for rice
milk, with some slices of lemon-peel, and a stick
of cinnamon; add to it a little white wine and juice
of lemon to your taste, put in a little candid orange
sliced thin, and sweeten it with fine powder sugar;
don’t let it boil after you put in your wine
and lemon, put it in a china dish, with five or six
slices of lemon, so serve it up.
280. To make SCOTCH CUSTARD, to eat hot
for Supper.
Boil a quart of cream with a stick
of cinnamon, and a blade of mace; take six eggs, both
yolks and whites (leave out the strains) and beat
them very well, grate a long bisket into your cream,
give it a boil before you put in your eggs, mix a
little of your cream amongst your eggs before you
put ’em in, so set it over a slow fire, stirring
it about whilst it be thick, but don’t let it
boil; take half a pound of currans, wash them very
well, and plump them, then put them to your custard;
you must let your custard be as thick as will bear
the currans that they don’t sink to the bottom;
when you are going to dish it up, put in a large glass
of sack, stir it very well, and serve it up in a china
bason.
281. To make a Dish of MULL’D MILK.
Boil a quart of new milk with a stick
of cinnamon, then put to it a pint of cream, and let
them have one boil together, take eight eggs, (leave
out half of the whites and all the strains) beat them
very well, put to them a jill of milk, mix all together,
and set it over a slow fire, stir it whilst it begins
to thicken like custard, sweeten it to your taste,
and grate in half a nutmeg; then put it into your dish
with a toast of white bread.
This is proper for a supper.
282. To make LEATCH.
Take two ounces of isinglass and break
it into bits, put it into hot water, then put half
a pint of new milk into the pan with the isinglass,
set it on the fire to boil, and put into it three or
four sticks of good cinnamon, two blades of mace,
a nutmeg quartered, and two or three cloves, boil
it till the isinglass be dissolved, run it through
a hair-sieve into a large pan, then put to it a quart
of cream sweetened to your taste with loaf sugar,
and boil them a while together; take a quarter of
a pound of blanch’d almonds beaten in a rose-water,
and strain out all the juice of them into the cream
on the fire, and warm it, then take it off and stir
it well together; when it has cooled a little take
a broad shallow dish and put it into it through a
hair-sieve, when it is cold cut it in long pieces,
and lay it across whilst you have a pretty large dish;
so serve it up.
Sometimes a less quantity of isinglass
will do, according to the goodness; Let it be the
whitest and clearest you can get.
You must make it the day before you want it for use.
283. To make SCOTCH OYSTERS.
Take two pounds of the thick part
of a leg of veal, cut it in little bits clear from
the skins, and put it in a marble mortar, then shred
a pound of beef suet and put to it, and beat them
well together till they be as fine as paste; put to
it a handful of bread-crumbs and two or three eggs,
season it with mace, nutmeg, pepper, and salt, and
work it well together; take one part of your forc’d-meat
and wrap it in the kell, about the bigness of a pigeon,
the rest make into little flat cakes and fry them;
the rolls you may either broil in a dripping-pan,
or set them in an oven; three is enough in a dish,
set them in the middle of the dish and lay the cakes
round; then take some strong gravy, shred in a few
capers, and two or three mushrooms or oysters if you
have any, so thicken it up with a lump of butter, and
serve it up hot. Garnish your dish with pickles.
284. To boil BROCOLI.
Take brocoli when it is seeded, or
at any other time; take off all the low leaves of
your stalks and tie them up in bunches as you do asparagus,
cut them the same length you peel your stalks; cut
them in little pieces, and boil them in salt and water
by themselves; you must let your water boil before
you put them in; boil the heads in salt and water,
and let the water boil before you put in the brocoli;
put in a little butter; it takes very little boiling,
and if it boil too quick it will take off all the
heads; you must drain your brocoli through a sieve
as you do asparagus; lie stalks in the middle, and
the bunches round it, as you would do asparagus.
This is proper for either a side-dish or a middle-dish.
285. To boil SAVOY SPROUTS.
If your savoys be cabbag’d,
dress off the out leaves and cut them in quarters;
take off a little of the hard ends, and boil them in
a large quantity of water with a little salt; when
boiled drain them, lie them round your meat, and pour
over them a little butter.
Any thing will boil greener in a large
quantity of water than otherwise.
286. To boil CABBAGE SPROUTS.
Take your sprouts, cut off the leaf
and the hard ends, shred and boil them as you do other
greens, not forgetting a little butter.
287. To fry PARSNIPS to look like TROUT.
Take a middling sort of parsnips,
not over thick, boil them as soft as you would do
for eating, peel and cut them in two the long way;
you must only fry the small ends, not the thick ones;
beat three or four eggs, put to them a spoonful of
flour, dip in your parsnips, and fry them in butter
a light brown have for your sauce a little vinegar
and butter; fry some slices to lie round about the
dish, and to serve them up.
288. To make TANSEY another Way.
Take an old penny loaf and cut off
the crust, slice it thin, put to it as much hot cream
as will wet it, then put to it six eggs well beaten,
a little shred lemon-peel, a little nutmeg and salt,
and sweeten it to your taste; green it as you did
your baked tansey; so tie it up in a cloth and boil
it; (it will take an hour and a quarter boiling) when
you dish it up stick it with a candid orange, and lie
a sevile orange cut in quarters round your dish; serve
it up with a little plain butter.
289. To make GOOSEBERRY CREAM.
Take a quart of gooseberries, pick,
coddle, and bruise them very well in a marble mortar
or wooden bowl, and rub them with the back of a spoon
through a hair sieve, till you take out all the pulp
from the seeds; take a pint of thick cream, mix it
well among your pulp grate in some lemon-peel, and
sweeten it to your taste; serve it up either in a
china dish or an earthen one.
290. To fry PARSNIPS another Way.
Boil your parsnips, cut them in square
long pieces about the length of your finger, dip them
in egg and a little flour, and fry them a light brown;
when they are fried dish them up, and grate over them
a little sugar: You must have for the sauce a
little white wine, butter, and sugar in a bason, and
set in the middle of your dish.
291. To make APRICOCK PUDDING.
Take ten apricocks, pare, stone, and
cut them in two, put them into a pan with a quarter
of a pound of loaf sugar, boil them pretty quick whilst
they look clear, so let them stand whilst they are
cold; then take six eggs, (leave out half of the whites)
beat them very well, add to them a pint of cream,
mix the cream and eggs well together with a spoonful
of rose-water, then put in your apricocks, and beat
them very well together, with four ounces of clarified
butter, then put it into your dish with a thin paste
under it; half an hour will bake it.
292. To make APRICOCK CUSTARD.
Take a pint of cream, boil it with
a stick of cinnamon and six eggs, (leave out four
of the whites) when your cream is a little cold, mix
your eggs and cream together, with a quarter of a pound
of fine sugar, set it over a slow fire, stir it all
one way whilst it begin to be thick, then take it
off and stir it whilst it be a little cold, and pour
it into your dish; take six apricocks, as you did for
your pudding, rather a little higher; when they are
cold lie them upon your custard at an equal distance;
if it be at the time when you have no ripe apricocks,
you may lie preserv’d apricocks.
293. To make JUMBALLS another Way.
Take a pound of meal and dry it, a
pound of sugar finely beat, and mix these together;
then take the yolks of five or six eggs, half a jill
of thick cream, as much as will make it up to a paste,
and some coriander seeds, lay them on tins and prick
them; bake them in a quick oven; before you set them
in the oven wet them with a little rose-water and
double refin’d sugar to ice them.
294. To make APRICOCK CHIPS or PEACHES.
Take a pound of chips to a pound of
sugar, let not your apricocks be too ripe, pare them
and cut them into large chips; take three quarters
of a pound of fine sugar, strow most of it upon the
chips, and let them stand till they be dissolv’d,
set them on the fire, and boil them till they are
tender and clear, strowing the remainder of the sugar
on as they boil, skim them clear, and lay them in
glasses or pots single, with some syrrup, cover them
with double refin’d sugar, set them in a stove,
and when they are crisp on one side turn the other
on glasses and parch them, then set them into the
stove again; when they are pretty dry, pour them on
hair-sieves till they are dry enough to put up.
295. To make SAGOO GRUEL.
Take four ounces of sagoo and wash
it, set it over a slow fire to cree, in two quarts
of spring water, let it boil whilst it be thickish
and soft, put in a blade or two of mace, and a stick
of cinnamon, let it boil in a while, and then put
in a little more water; take it off, put to it a pint
of claret wine, and a little candid orange; shift them,
then put in the juice of a lemon, and sweeten it to
your taste; so serve them up.
296. To make SPINAGE TOASTS.
Take a handful or two of young spinage
and wash it, drain it from the water, put it into
a pan with a lump of butter, and a little salt, let
it stew whilst it be tender, only turn it in the boiling,
then take it up and squeeze out the water, put in
another lump of butter and chop it small, put to it
a handful of currans plump’d, and a little nutmeg;
have three toasts cut from a penny loaf well buttered,
then lie on your spinage.
This is proper for a side-dish either for noon or
night.
297. To roast a BEAST KIDNEY.
Take a beast kidney with a little
fat on, and stuff it all around, season it with a
little pepper and salt, wrap it in a kell, and put
it upon the spit with a little water in the dripping-pan;
what drops from your kidney thicken with a lump of
butter and flour for your sauce.
To fry your STUFFING.
Take a handful of sweet herbs, a few
breadcrumbs, a little beef-suet shred fine, and two
eggs, (leave out the whites) mix altogether with a
little nutmeg, pepper and salt; stuff your kidney with
one part of the stuffing, and fry the other part in
little cakes; so serve it up.
298. To stew CUCUMBERS.
Take middling cucumbers and cut them
in slices, but not too thin, strow over them a little
salt to bring out the water, put them into a stew-pan
or sauce-pan, with a little gravy, some whole pepper,
a lump of butter, and a spoonful or two of vinegar
to your taste; let them boil all together; thicken
them with flour, and serve them up with sippets.
299. To make an OATMEAL PUDDING.
Take three or four large spoonfuls
of oatmeal done through a hair-sieve, and a pint of
milk, put it into a pan and let it boil a little whilst
it be thick, add to it half a pound of butter, a spoonful
of rose-water, a little lemon-peel shred, a little
nutmeg, or beaten cinnamon, and a little salt; take
six eggs, (leave out two of the whites) and put to
them a quarter of a pound of sugar or better, beat
them very well, so mix them all together; put it into
your dish with a paste round your dish edge; have
a little rose-water, butter and sugar for sauce.
300. To make a CALF’S HEAD PIE another
Way.
Half boil your calf’s head,
when it is cold cut it in slices, rather thicker than
you would do for hashing, season it with a little mace,
nutmeg, pepper and salt, lie part of your meat in the
bottom of your pie, a layer of one and a layer of
another; then put in half a pound of butter and a
little gravy; when your pie comes from the oven, have
ready the yolks of six or eight eggs boiled hard, and
lie them round your pie; put in a little melted butter,
and a spoonful or two of white wine, and give them
a shake together before you lie in your eggs; your
pie must be a standing pie baked upon a dish, with
a puff-paste round the edge of the dish, but leave
no paste in the bottom of your pie; when it is baked
serve it up without a lid.
This is proper for either top or bottom dish.
301. To make ELDER WINE.
Take twenty pounds of malaga
raisins, pick and chop them, then put them into
a tub with twenty quarts of water, let the water be
boiled and stand till it be cold again before you
put in your raisins, let them remain together ten
days, stirring it twice a day, then strain the liquor
very well from the raisins, through a canvas strainer
or hair-sieve; add to it six quarts of elder juice,
five pounds of loaf sugar, and a little juice of sloes
to make it acid, just as you please; put it into a
vessel, and let it stand in a pretty warm place three
months, then bottle it; the vessel must not be stopp’d
up till it has done working; if your raisins be very
good you may leave out the sugar.
302. To make GOOSEBERRY WINE of ripe
GOOSEBERRIES.
Pick, clean and beat your gooseberries
in a marble mortar or wooden bowl, measure them in
quarts up-heap’d, add two quarts of spring water,
and let them stand all night or twelve hours, then
rub or press out the husks very well, strain them
through a wide strainer, and to every gallon put three
pounds of sugar, and a jill of brandy, then put all
into a sweet vessel, not very full, and keep it very
close for four months, then decant it off till it
comes clear, pour out the grounds, and wash the vessel
clean with a little of the wine; add to every gallon
a pound more sugar, let it stand a month in a vessel
again, drop the grounds thro’ a flannel bag,
and put it to the other in the vessel; the tap hole
must not be over near the bottom of the cask, for fear
of letting out the grounds.
The same receipt will serve for curran
wine the same way; let them be red currans.
303. To make BALM WINE.
Take a peck of balm leaves, put them
in a tub or large pot, heat four gallons of water
scalding hot, ready to boil, then pour it upon the
leaves, so let it stand all night, then strain them
thro’ a hair-sieve; put to every gallon of water
two pounds of fine sugar, and stir it very well; take
the whites of four or five eggs, beat them very well,
put them into a pan, and whisk it very well before
it be over hot, when the skim begins to rise take
it off, and keep it skimming all the while it is boiling,
let it boil three quarters of an hour, then put it
into the tub, when it is cold put a little new yeast
upon it, and beat it in every two hours, that it may
head the better, so work it for two days, then put
it into a sweet rundlet, bung it up close, and when
it is fine bottle it.
304. To make RAISIN WINE.
Take ten gallons of water, and fifty
pounds of malaga raisins, pick out the large
stalks and boil them in your water, when your water
is boiled, put it into a tub; take the raisins and
chop them very small, when your water is blood warm,
put in your raisins, and rub them very well with your
hand; when you put them into the water, let them work
for ten days, stirring them twice a day, then strain
out the raisins in a hair-sieve, and put them into
a clean harden bag, and squeeze it in the press to
take out the liquor, so put it into your barrel; don’t
let it be over full, bung it up close, and let it
stand whilst it is fine; when you tap your wine you
must not tap it too near the bottom, for fear of the
grounds; when it is drawn off, take the grounds out
of the barrel, and wash it out with a little of your
wine, then put your wine into the barrel again, draw
your grounds thro’ a flannel bag, and put them
into the barrel to the rest; add to it two pounds of
loaf sugar, then bung it up, and let it stand a week
or ten days; if it be very sweet to your taste, let
it stand some time longer, and bottle it.
305. To make BIRCH WINE.
Take your birch water and boil it,
clear it with whites of eggs; to every gallon of water
take two pounds and a half of fine sugar, boil it
three quarters of an hour, and when it is almost cold,
put in a little yeast, work it two or three days,
then put it into the barrel, and to every five gallons
put in a quart of brandy, and half a pound of ston’d
raisins; before you put up your wine burn a brimstone
match in the barrel.
306. To make WHITE CURRAN WINE.
Take the largest white currans you
can get, strip and break them in your hand, whilst
you break all the berries; to every quart of pulp
take a quart of water, let the water be boiled and
cold again, mix them well together, let them stand
all night in your tub, then strain them thro’
a hair-sieve, and to every gallon put two pounds and
a half of six-penny sugar; when your sugar is dissolved,
put it into your barrel, dissolve a little isinglass,
whisk it with whites of eggs, and put it in; to every
four gallons put in a quart of mountain wine, so bung
up your barrel; when it is fine draw it off, and take
off the grounds, (but don’t tap the barrel over
low at the bottom) wash out the barrel with a little
of your wine, and drop the grounds thro’ a bag,
then put it to the rest of your wine, and put it all
into your barrel again, to every gallon add half a
pound more sugar, and let it stand another week or
two; if it be too sweet let it stand a little longer,
then bottle it, and it will keep two or three years.
307. To make ORANGE ALE.
Take forty seville oranges, pare and
cut them in slices, the best coloured seville you
can get, put them all with the juice and seeds into
half a hogshead of ale; when it is tunned up and working,
put in the oranges, and at the same time a pound and
a half of raisins of the sun stoned; when it has done
working close up the bung, and it will be ready to
drink in a month.
308. To make ORANGE BRANDY.
Take a quart of brandy, the peels
of eight oranges thin pared, keep them in the brandy
forty-eight hours in a close pitcher, then take three
pints of water, put into it three quarters of a pound
of loaf sugar, boil it till half be consumed, and
let it stand till cold, then mix it with the brandy.
309. To make ORANGE WINE.
Take six gallons of water and fifteen
pounds of powder sugar, the whites of six eggs well
beaten, boil them three quarters of an hour, and skim
them while any skim will rise; when it is cold enough
for working, put to it six ounces of the syrrup of
citron or lemons, and six spoonfuls of yeast, beat
the syrrup and yeast well together, and put in the
peel and juice of fifty oranges, work it two days and
a night, then tun it up into a barrel, so bottle it
at three or four months old.
310. To make COWSLIP WINE.
Take ten gallons of water, when it
is almost at boiling, add to it twenty one pounds
of fine powder sugar, let it boil half an hour, and
skim it very clean; when it is boiled put it in a tub,
let it stand till you think it cold to set on the
yeast; take a poringer of new yeast off the fat, and
put to it a few cowslips; when you put on the yeast,
put in a few every time it is stirred, till all the
cowslips be in, which must be six pecks, and let it
work three or four days; add to it six lemons, cut
off the peel, and the insides put into your barrel,
then add to it a pint of brandy; when you think it
has done working, close up your vessel, let it stand
a month, and then bottle it; you may let your cowslips
lie a week or ten days to dry before you make your
wine, for it makes it much finer; you may put in a
pint of white wine that is good, instead of the brandy.
311. To make ORANGE WINE another Way.
Take six gallons of water, and fifteen
pounds of sugar, put your sugar into the water on
the fire, the whites of six eggs, well beaten, and
whisk them into the water, when it is cold skim it
very well whilst any skim rises, and let it boil for
half an hour; take fifty oranges, pare them very thin,
put them into your tub, pour the water boiling hot
upon your oranges, and when it is bloodwarm put on
the yeast, then put in your juice, let it work two
days, and so tun it into your barrel; at six weeks
or two months old bottle it; you may put to it in the
barrel a quart of brandy.
312. To make BIRCH WINE another Way.
To a gallon of birch water put two
pounds of loaf or very fine lump sugar, when you put
it into the pan whisk the whites of four eggs; (four
whites will serve for four gallons) whisk them very
well together before it be boiled, when it is cold
put on a little yeast, let it work a night and a day
in the tub, before you put it into your barrel put
in a brimstone match burning; take two pounds of isinglass
cut in little bits, put to it a little of your wine,
let it stand within the air of the fire all night;
takes the whites of two eggs, beat it with your isinglass,
put them into your barrel and stir them about with
a stick; this quantity will do for four gallons; to
four gallons you must have two pounds of raisins shred,
put them into your barrel, close it up, but not too
close at the first, when it is fine, bottle it.
313. To make APRICOCK WINE.
Take twelve pounds of apricocks when
full ripe, stone and pare them, put the paring into
three gallons of water, with six pounds of powder
sugar, boil them together half an hour, skim them well,
and when it is blood-warm put it on the fruit; it
must be well bruised, cover it close, and let it stand
three days; skim it every day as the skim rises, and
put it thro’ a hair sieve, adding a pound of
loaf sugar; when you put it into the vessel close
it up, and when it is fine bottle it.
314. To make ORANGE SHRUB.
Take seville oranges when they are
full ripe, to three dozen of oranges put half a dozen
of large lemons, pare them very thin, the thinner the
better, squeeze the lemons and oranges together, strain
the juice thro’ a hair sieve, to a quart of
the juice put a pound and a quarter of loaf sugar;
about three dozen of oranges (if they be good) will
make a quart of juice, to every quart of juice, put
a gallon of brandy, put it into a little barrel with
an open bung with all the chippings of your oranges,
and bung it up close; when it is fine bottle it.
This is a pleasant dram, and ready
for punch all the year.
315. To make STRONG MEAD.
Take twelve gallons of water, eight
pounds of sugar, two quarts of honey, and a few cloves,
when your pan boils take the whites of eight or ten
eggs, beat them very well, put them into your water
before it be hot, and whisk them very well together;
do not let it boil but skim it as it rises till it
has done rising, then put it into your tub; when it
is about blood warm put to it three spoonfuls of new
yeast; take eight or nine lemons, pare them and squeeze
out the juice, put them both together into your tub,
and let them work two or three days, then put it into
your barrel, but it must not be too full; take two
or three pennyworth of isinglass, cut as small as
you can, beat it in a mortar about a quarter of an
hour, it will not make it small; but that it may dissolve
sooner, draw out a little of the mead into a quart
mug, and let it stand within the air of the fire all
night; take the whites of three eggs, beat them very
well, mix them with your isinglas, whisk them together,
and put them into your barrel, bung it up, and when
it is fine bottle it.
You may order isinglass this way to
put into any sort of made wine.
316. To make MEAD another Way.
Take a quart of honey, three quarts
of water, put your honey into the water, when it is
dissolved, take the whites of four or five eggs, whisk
and beat them very well together and put them into
your pan; boil it while the skim rises, and skim it
very clean; put it into your tub, when it is warm
put in two or three spoonfuls of light yeast, according
to the quantity of your mead, and let it work two nights
and a day. To every gallon put in a large lemon,
pare and strain it, put the juice and peel into your
tub, and when it is wrought put it into your barrel;
let it work for three or four days, stir twice a day
with a thible, so bung it up, and let it stand two
or three months, according to the hotness of the weather.
You must try your mead two or three
times in the above time, and if you find the sweetness
going off, you must take it sooner.
317. To make CYDER.
Draw off the cyder when it hath been
a fortnight in the barrel, put it into the same barrel
again when you have cleaned it from the grounds, and
if your apples were sharp, and that you find your cyder
hard, put into every gallon of cyder a pound and half
of sixpenny or five-penny sugar; to twelve gallons
of this take half an ounce of isinglass, and put to
it a quart of cyder; when your isinglass is dissolved,
put to it three whites of eggs, whisk them altogether,
and put them into your barrel; keep it close for two
months and then bottle it.
318. To make COWSLIP WINE.
Take two pecks of peeps, and four
gallons of water, put to every gallon of water two
pounds and a quarter of sugar, boil the water and sugar
together a quarter of an hour, then put it into a tub
to cool, put in the skins of four lemons, when it
is cold bruise your peeps, and put into your liquor,
add to it a jill of yeast, and the juice of four lemons,
let them be in the tub a night and a day, then put
it into your barrel, and keep it four days stirring,
then clay it up close for three weeks and bottle it.
Put a lump of sugar in every bottle.
319. To make RED CURRAN WINE.
Let your currans be the best and ripest
you can get, pick and bruise them; to every gallon
of juice add five pints of water, put it to your berries
in a stand for two nights and a day, then strain your
liquor through a hair sieve; to every gallon of liquor
put two pounds of sugar, stir it till it be well dissolved,
put it into a rundlet, and let it stand four days,
then draw it off clean, put in a pound and a half
of sugar, stirring it well, wash out the rundlet with
some of the liquor, so tun it up close; if you put
two or three quarts of rasps bruised among your berries,
it makes it taste the better.
You may make white curran wine the
same way, only leave out the rasps.
320. To make CHERRY WINE.
Take eight pounds of cherries and
stone them, four quarts of water, and two pounds of
sugar, skim and boil the water and sugar, then put
in the cherries, let them have one boil, put them
into an earthen pot till the next day, and set them
to drain thro’ a sieve, then put your wine into
a spigot pot, clay it up close, and look at it every
two or three days after; if it does not work, throw
into it a handful of fresh cherries, so let it stand
six or eight days, then if it be clear, bottle it up.
321. To make CHERRY WINE another Way.
Take the ripest and largest kentish
cherries you can get, bruise them very well, stones
and stalks altogether, put them into a tub, having
a tap to it, let them stand fourteen days, then pull
out the tap, let the juice run from them and put it
into a barrel, let it work three or four days, then
stop it up close three or four weeks and bottle it
off.
The wine will keep many years and be exceeding rich.
322. To make LEMON DROPS.
Take a pound of loaf sugar, beat and
sift it very fine, grate the rind of a lemon and put
into your sugar; take the whites of three eggs and
wisk them to a froth, squeeze in some lemon to your
taste, beat them for half an hour, and drop them on
white paper; be sure you let the paper be very dry,
and sift a little fine sugar on the paper before you
drop them. If you would have them yellow, take
a pennyworth of gumbouge, steep it in some rose-water,
mix to it some whites of eggs and a little sugar,
so drop them, and bake them in a slow oven.
323. To make Gooseberry Wine another Way.
Take twelve quarts of good ripe gooseberries,
stamp them, and put to them twelve quarts of water,
let them stand three days, stir them twice every day,
strain them, and put to your liquor fourteen pounds
of sugar; when it is dissolved strain it through a
flannel bag, and put it into a barrel, with half an
ounce of isinglass; you must cut the isinglass in
pieces, and beat it whilst it be soft, put to it a
pint of your wine, and let it stand within the air
of the fire; take the whites of four eggs and beat
them very well to a froth, put in the isinglass, and
whisk the wine and it together; put them into the barrel,
clay it close, and let it stand whilst fine, then
bottle it for use.
324. To make Red Curran Wine another Way.
Take five quarts of red currans, full
ripe, bruise them, and take from them all the stalks,
to every five quarts of fruit put a gallon of water;
when you have your quantity, strain them thro’
a hair-sieve, and to every gallon of liquor put two
pounds and three quarters of sugar; when your sugar
is dissolved tun it into your cask, and let it stand
three weeks, then draw it off, and put to every gallon
a quarter of a pound of sugar; wash your barrel with
cold water, tun it up, and let it stand about a week;
to every ten gallons put an ounce of isinglass, dissolve
it in some of the wine, when it is dissolved put to
it a quart of your wine, and beat them with a whisk,
then put it into the cask, and stop it up close; when
it is fine bottle it.
If you would have it taste of rasps,
put to every gallon of wine a quart of rasps; if there
be any grounds in the bottom of the cask, when you
draw off your wine, drop them thro’ a flannel
bag, and then put it into your cask.
325. To make MULBERRY WINE.
Gather your mulberries when they are
full ripe, beat them in a marble mortar, and to every
quart of berries put a quart of water; when you put
’em into the tub rub them very well with your
hands, and let them stand all night, then strain ’em
thro’ a sieve; to every gallon of water put
three pounds of sugar, and when the sugar is dissolved
put it into your barrel; take two pennyworth of isinglass
and clip it in pieces, put to it a little wine, and
let it stand all night within the air of the fire;
take the whites of two or three eggs, beat them very
well, then put them to the isinglass, mix them well
together, and put them into your barrel, stirring
it about when it is put in; you must not let it be
over full, nor bung it close up at first; set it in
a cool place and bottle it when fine.
326. To make BLACKBERRY WINE.
Take blackberries when they are full
ripe, and squeeze them the same way as you did the
mulberries. If you add a few mulberries, it will
make your wine have a much better taste.
327. To make SYRRUP OF MULBERRIES.
Take mulberries when they are full
ripe, break them very well with your hand, and drop
them through a flannel bag; to every pound of juice
take a pound of loaf sugar; beat it small, put to
it your juice, so boil and skim it very well; you
must skim it all the time it is boiling; when the
skim has done rising it is enough; when it is cold
bottle it and keep it for use.
You may make rasberry syrrup the same way.
328. To make RASBERRY BRANDY.
Take a gallon of the best brandy you
can get, and gather your rasberries when they are
full ripe, and put them whole into your brandy; to
every gallon of brandy take three quarts of rasps,
let them stand close covered for a month, then clear
it from rasps, and put to it a pound of loaf sugar;
when your sugar is dissolved and a little settled,
boil it and keep it for use.
329. To make Black CHERRY BRANDY.
Take a gallon of the best brandy,
and eight pounds of black cherries, stone and put
’em into your brandy in an earthen pot; bruise
the stones in a mortar, then put them into your brandy,
and cover them up close, let them steep for a month
or six weeks, so drain it and keep it for use.
You may distil the ingredients if you please.
330. To make RATIFIE BRANDY.
Take a quart of the best brandy, and
about a jill of apricock kernels, blanch and bruise
them in a mortar, with a spoonful or two of brandy,
so put them into a large bottle with your brandy; put
to it four ounces of loaf sugar, let it stand till
you think it has got the taste of the kernels, then
pour it out and put in a little more brandy if you
please.
331. To make COWSLIP SYRRUP.
Take a quartern of fresh pick’d
cowslips, put to ’em a quart of boiling water,
let ’em stand all night, and the next morning
drain it from the cowslips; to every pint of water
put a pound of fine powder sugar, and boil it over
a slow fire; skim it all the time in the boiling whilst
the skim has done rising; then take it off, and when
it is cold put it into a bottle, and keep it for use.
332. To make LEMON BRANDY.
Take a gallon of brandy, chip twenty-five
lemons, (let them steep twenty-four hours) the juice
of sixteen lemons, a quarter of a pound of almonds
blanched and beat, drop it thro’ a jelly bag
twice, and when it is fine bottle it; sweeten it to
your taste with double refined sugar before you put
it into your jelly bag. You must make it with
the best brandy you can get.
333. To make CORDIAL WATER of COWSLIPS.
Take two quarts of cowslip peeps,
a slip of balm, two sprigs of rosemary, a stick of
cinnamon, half an orange peel, half a lemon peel,
a pint of brandy, and a pint of ale; lay all these
to steep twelve hours, then distil them on a cold
still.
334. To make MILK PUNCH.
Take two quarts of old milk, a quart
of good brandy, the juice of six lemons or oranges,
whether you please, and about six ounces of loaf sugar,
mix them altogether and drop them thro’ a jelly
bag; take off the peel of two of the lemons or oranges,
and put it into your bag, when it is run off bottle
it; ’twill keep as long as you please.
335. To make MILK PUNCH another Way.
Take three jills of water, a jill
of old milk, and a jill of brandy, sweeten it to your
taste; you must not put any acid into this for it
will make it curdle.
This is a cooling punch to drink in a morning.
336. To make PUNCH another Way.
Take five pints of boiling water and
one quart of brandy, add to it the juice of four lemons
or oranges, and about six ounces of loaf sugar; when
you have mixed it together strain it thro’ a
hair sieve or cloth, and put into your bowl the peel
of a lemon or orange.
337. To make ACID for PUNCH.
Take gooseberries at their full growth,
pick and beat them in a marble mortar, and squeeze
them in a harden bag thro’ a press, when you
have done run it thro’ a flannel bag, and then
bottle it in small bottles; put a little oil on every
bottle, so keep it for use.
338. To bottle GOOSEBERRIES.
Gather your gooseberries when they
are young, pick and bottle them, put in the cork loose,
set them in a pan of water, with a little hay in the
bottom, put them into the pan when the water is cold,
let it stand on a slow fire, and mind when they are
coddled; don’t let the pan boil, if you do it
will break the bottles: when they are cold fasten
the cork, and put on a little rosin, so keep them
for use.
339. To bottle DAMSINS.
Take your damsins before they are
full ripe, and gather them when the dew is off, pick
of the stalks, and put them into dry bottles; don’t
fill your bottles over full, and cork them as close
as you would do for ale, keep them in a cellar, and
cover them over with sand.
340. To preserve Orange Chips to put in glasses.
Take a seville orange with a clear
skin, pare it very thin from the white, then take
a pair of scissars and clip it very thin, and boil
it in water, shifting it two or three times in the
boiling to take out the bitter; then take half a pound
of double refined sugar, boil it and skim it, then
put in your orange, so let it boil over a slow fire
whilst your syrrup be thick, and your orange look clear,
then put it into glasses, and cover it with papers
dipt in brandy; if you have a quantity of peel you
must have the larger quantity of sugar.
341. To preserve ORANGES or LEMONS.
Take seville oranges, the largest
and roughest you can get, clear of spots, chip them
very fine, and put them into water for two days, shifting
them twice or three times a day, then boil them whilst
they are soft: take and cut them into quarters,
and take out all the pippens with a penknife, so weigh
them, and to every pound of orange, take a pound and
half of loaf sugar; put your sugar into a pan, and
to every pound of sugar a pint of water, set it over
the fire to melt, and when it boils skim it very well,
then put in your oranges; if you would have any of
them whole, make a little hole at the top, and take
out the meat with a tea spoon, set your oranges over
a slow fire to boil, and keep them skimming all the
while; keep your oranges as much as you can with the
skin downwards; you may cover them with a delf-plate,
to bear them down in the boiling; let them boil for
three quarters of an hour, then put them into a pot
or bason, and let them stand two days covered, then
boil them again whilst they look clear, and the syrrup
be thick, so put them into a pot, and lie close over
them a paper dip’d in brandy, and tie a double
paper at the top, set them in a cool place, and keep
them for use. If you would have your oranges
that are whole to look pale and clear, to put in glasses,
you must make a syrrup of pippen jelly; then take
ten or a dozen pippens, as they are of bigness, pare
and slice them, and boil them in as much water as
will cover them till they be thoroughly tender, so
strain your water from the pippens through a hair
sieve, then strain it through a flannel bag; and to
every pint of jelly take a pound of double refined
sugar, set it over a fire to boil, and skim it, let
it boil whilst it be thick, then put it into a pot
and cover it, but they will keep best if they be put
every one in different pots.
342. To make JELLY of CURRANS.
Take a quartern of the largest and
best currans you can get, strip them from the stalks,
and put them in a pot, stop them close up, and boil
them in a pot of water over the fire, till they be
thoroughly coddled and begin to look pale, then put
them in a clear hair sieve to drain, and run the liquor
thro’ a flannel bag, to every pint of your liquor
put in a pound of your double refin’d sugar;
you must beat the sugar fine, and put it in by degrees,
set it over the fire, and boil it whilst any skim
will rise, then put it into glasses for ale; the next
day clip a paper round, and dip it in brandy to lie
on your jelly; if you would have your jelly a light
red, put in half of white currans, and in my opinion
it looks much better.
343. To preserve APRICOCKS.
Take apricocks before they be full
ripe, stone and pare ’em; then weigh ’em,
and to every pound of apricocks take a pound of double
refined sugar, beat it very small, lie one part of
your sugar under the apricocks, and the other part
at the top, let them stand all night, the next day
put them in a stew-pan or brass pan; don’t do
over many at once in your pan, for fear of breaking,
let them boil over a slow fire, skim them very well,
and turn them two or three times in the boiling; you
must but about half do ’em at the first, and
let them stand whilst they be cool, then let them
boil whilst your apricocks look clear, and the syrrup
thick, put them into your pots or glasses, when they
are cold cover them with a paper dipt in brandy, then
tie another paper close over your pot to keep out
the air.
344. To make MARMALADE of APRICOCKS.
Take what quantity of apricocks you
shall think proper, stone them and put them immediately
into a skellet of boiling water, keep them under water
on the fire till they be soft, then take them out of
the water and wipe them with a cloth, weigh your sugar
with your apricocks, weight for weight, then dissolve
your sugar in water, and boil it to a candy height,
then put in your apricocks, being a little bruised,
let them boil but a quarter of a hour, then glass
them up.
345. To know when your SUGAR is at CANDY
HEIGHT.
Take some sugar and clarify it till
it comes to a candy-height, and keep it still boiling
’till it becomes thick, then stir it with a stick
from you, and when it is at candy-height it will fly
from your stick like flakes of snow, or feathers flying
in the air, and till it comes to that height it will
not fly, then you may use it as you please.
346. To make Marmalade of Quinces white.
Take your quinces and coddle them
as you do apples, when they are soft pare them and
cut them in pieces, as if you would cut them for apple
pies, then put your cores, parings, and the waste of
your quinces in some water, and boil them fast for
fear of turning red until it be a strong jelly; when
you see the jelly pretty strong strain it, and be
sure you boil them uncovered; add as much sugar as
the weight of your quinces into your jelly, till it
be boiled to a height, then put in your coddled quinces,
and boil them uncovered till they be enough, and set
them near the fire to harden.
347. To make Quiddeny of Red Curranberries.
Put your berries into a pot, with
a spoonful or two of water, cover it close, and boil
’em in some water, when you think they are enough
strain them, and put to every pint of juice a pound
of loaf sugar, boil it up jelly height, and put them
into glasses for use.
348. To preserve GOOSEBERRIES.
To a pound of ston’d gooseberries
put a pound and a quarter of fine sugar, wet the sugar
with the gooseberry jelly; take a quart of gooseberries,
and two or three spoonfuls of water, boil them very
quick, let your sugar be melted, and then put in your
gooseberries; boil them till clear, which will be
very quickly.
349. To make little ALMOND CAKES.
Take a pound of sugar and eight eggs,
beat them well an hour, then put them into a pound
of flour, beat them together, blanch a quarter of a
pound of almonds, and beat them with rose-water to
keep ’em from oiling, mix all together, butter
your tins, and bake them half an hour.
Half an hour is rather too long for them to stand
in the oven.
350. To preserve RED GOOSEBERRIES.
Take a pound of sixpenny sugar, and
a little juice of currans, put to it a pound and a
half of Gooseberries, and let them boil quick a quarter
of an hour; but if they be for jam they must boil better
than half an hour.
They are very proper for tarts, or to eat as sweet-meats.
351. To bottle BERRIES another Way.
Gather your berries when they are
full grown, pick and bottle them, tie a paper over
them, prick it with a pin, and set it in the oven;
after you have drawn, and when they are coddled, take
them out and when they are cold cork them up; rosin
the cork over, and keep them for use.
352. To keep BARBERRIES for TARTS all
the Year.
Take barberries when they are full
ripe, and pick ’em from the stalk, put them
into dry bottles, cork ’em up very close and
keep ’em for use.
You may do cranberries the same way.
353. To preserve BARBERRIES for TARTS.
Take barberries when full ripe, strip
them, take their weight in sugar, and as much water
as will wet your sugar, give it a boil and skim it;
then put in your berries, let them boil whilst they
look clear and your syrrup thick, so put them into
a pot, and when they are cold cover them up with a
paper dip’d in brandy.
354. To preserve DAMSINS.
Take damsins before they are full
ripe, and pick them, take their weight in sugar, and
as much water as will wet your sugar, give it a boil
and skim it, then put in your damsins, let them have
one scald, and set them by whilst cold, then scald
them again, and continue scalding them twice a day
whilst your syrrup looks thick, and the damsins clear;
you must never let them boil; do ’em in a brass
pan, and do not take them out in the doing; when they
are enough put them into a pot, and cover them up
with a paper dip’d in brandy.
355. How to keep DAMSINS for TARTS.
Take damsins before they are full
ripe, to every quart of damsins put a pound of powder
sugar, put them into a pretty broad pot, a layer of
sugar and a layer of damsins, tie them close up, set
them in a slow oven, and let them have a heat every
day whilst the syrrup be thick, and the damsins enough;
render a little sheep suet and pour over them, to
keep them for use.
356. To keep DAMSINS another Way.
Take damsins before they be quite
ripe, pick off the stalks, and put them into dry bottles;
cork them as you would do ale, and keep them in a
cool place for use.
357. To make MANGO of CODLINS.
Take codlins when they are at their
full growth, and of the greenest sort, take a little
out of the end with the stalk, and then take out the
core; lie them in a strong salt and water, let them
lie ten days or more, and fill them with the same
ingredients as you do other mango, only scald them
oftner.
358. To pickle CURRANBERRIES.
Take currans either red or white before
they are thoroughly ripe; you must not take them from
the stalk, make a pickle of salt and water and a little
vinegar, so keep them for use.
They are proper for garnishing.
359. To make Barberries instead of preserving.
Take barberries and lie them in a
pot, a layer of barberries and a layer of sugar, pick
the seeds out before for garnishing sweet meats, if
for sauces put some vinegar to them.
360. To keep Asparagus or Green Pease
a Year.
Take green pease, green them as you
do cucumbers, and scald them as you do other pickles
made of salt and water; let it be always new pickle,
and when you would use them boil them in fresh water.
361. To make white Paste of PIPPENS.
Take some pippens, pare and cut them
in halves, and take out the cores, then boil ’em
very tender in fair water, and strain them thro’
a sieve, then clarify two pounds of sugar with two
whites of eggs, and boil it to a candy height, put
two pounds and a half of the pulp of your pippens
into it, let it stand over a slow fire drying, keeping
it stirring till it comes clear from the bottom of
your pan, them lie them upon plates or boards to dry.
362. To make green Paste of PIPPENS.
Take green pippens, put them into
a pot and cover them, let them stand infusing over
a slow fire five or six hours, to draw the redness
or sappiness from them and then strain them thro’
a hair sieve; take two pounds of sugar, boil it to
a candy height, put to it two pounds of the pulp of
your pippens, keep it stirring over the fire till it
comes clean from the bottom of your pan, then lay
it on plates or boards, and set it in an oven or stove
to dry.
363. To make red Paste of PIPPENS.
Take two pounds of sugar, clarify
it, then take rosset and temper it very well with
fair water, put it into your syrrup, let it boil till
your syrrup is pretty red colour’d with it, then
drain your syrrup thro’ a fine cloth, and boil
it till it be at candy-height, then put to it two
pounds and a half of the pulp of pippens, keeping it
stirring over the fire till it comes clean from the
bottom of the pan, then lie it on plates or boards,
so dry them.
364. To preserve FRUIT green.
Take your fruit when they are green,
and some fair water, set it on the fire, and when
it is hot put in the apples, cover them close, but
they must not boil, so let them stand till thye be
soft, and there will be a thin skin on them, peel
it off, and set them to cool, then put them in again,
let them boil till they be very green, and keep them
whole as you can; when you think them ready to take
up, make your syrrup for them; take their weight in
sugar, and when your syrrup is ready put the apples
into it, and boil them very well in it; they will keep
all the year near some fire.
You may do green plumbs or other fruit.
365. To make ORANGE MARMALADE.
Take three or four seville oranges,
grate them, take out the meat, and boil the rinds
whilst they are tender; shift them three or four times
in the boiling to take out the bitter, and beat them
very fine in a marble mortar; to the weight of your
pulp take a pound of loaf sugar, and to a pound of
sugar you may add a pint of water, boil and skim it
before you put in your oranges, let it boil half an
hour very quick, then put in your meat, and to a pint
take a pound and a half of sugar, let it boil quick
half an hour, stir it all the time, and when it is
boiled to a jelly, put it into pots or glasses; cover
it with a paper dipp’d in brandy.
366. To make QUINCES WHITE another Way.
Coddle your quinces, cut them in small
pieces, and to a pound of quinces take three quarters
of a pound of sugar, boil it to a candy height, having
ready a quarter of a pint of quince liquor boil’d
and skim’d, put the quinces and liquor to your
sugar, boil them till it looks clear, which will be
very quickly, then close your quince, and when cold
cover it with jelly of pippens to keep the colour.
367. To make GOOSEBERRY VINEGAR.
To every gallon of water take six
pounds of ripe gooseberries, bruise them, and pour
the water boiling hot upon your berries, cover it close,
and set it in a warm place to foment, till all the
berries come to the top, then draw it off, and to
every gallon of liquor put a pound and a half of sugar,
then tun it into a cask, set it in a warm place, and
in six months it will be fit for use.
368. To make Gooseberry Wine another Way.
Take three pounds of ripe gooseberries
to a quart of water, and a pound of sugar, stamp your
berries and throw them into your water as you stamp
them, it will make them strain the better; when it
is strained put in your sugar, beat it well with a
dish for half an hour, then strain it thro’
a finer strainer than before into your vessel, leaving
it some room to work, and when it is clear bottle it;
your berries must be clean pick’d before your
use them, and let them be at their full growth when
you use them, rather changing colour.
369. To make Jam of Cherries.
Take ten pounds of cherries, stone
and boil them till the juice be wasted, then add to
it three pounds of sugar, and give it three or four
good boils, then put it into your pots.
370. To preserve Cherries.
To a pound of cherries take a pound
of sugar finely sifted, with which strow the bottom
of your pan, having stoned the cherries, lay a layer
of cherries and a layer of sugar, strowing the sugar
very well over all, boil them over a quick fire a
good while, keeping them clean skim’d till they
look clear, and the syrrup is thick and both of one
colour; when you think them half done, take them off
the fire for an hour, after which set them on again,
and to every pound of fruit put in a quarter of a
pint of the juice of cherries and red currans, so boil
them till enough, and the syrrup is jellied, then put
them in a pot, and keep them close from the air.
371. To preserve CHERRIES for drying.
Take two pounds of cherries and stone
them, put to them a pound of sugar, and as much water
as will wet the sugar, then set them on the fire,
let them boil till they look clear, then take them
off the fire, and let them stand a while in the syrrup,
and then take them up and lay them on papers to dry.
372. To preserve FRUIT green all the Year.
Gather your fruit when they are three
parts ripe, on a very dry day, when the sun shines
on them, then take earthen pots and put them in, cover
the pots with cork, or bung them that no air can get
into them, dig a place in the earth a yard deep, set
the pots therein and cover them with the earth very
close, and keep them for use.
When you take any out, cover them up again, as at
the first.
373. How to keep KIDNEY BEANS all Winter.
Take kidney beans when they are young,
leave on both the ends, lay a layer of salt at the
bottom of your pot, and then a layer of beans, and
so on till your pot be full, cover them close at the
top that they get no air, and set them in a cool place;
before you boil them lay them in water all night,
let your water boil when you put them in, (without
salt) and put into it a lump of butter about the bigness
of a walnut.
374. To candy ANGELICA.
Take angelica when it is young
and tender take off all the leaves from the stalks,
boil it in the pan with some of the leaves under, and
some at the top, till it be so tender that you can
peel off all the skin, then put it into some water
again, cover it over with some of the leaves, let
it simmer over a slow fire till it be green, when it
is green drain the water from it, and then weigh it;
to a pound of angelica take a pound of loaf sugar,
put a pint of water to every pound of sugar, boil
and skim it, and then put in your angelica; it
will take a great deal of boiling in the sugar, the
longer you boil it and the greener it will be, boil
it whilst your sugar be candy height by the side of
your pan; if you would have it nice and white, you
must have a pound of sugar boiled candy height in
a copper-dish or stew pan, set it over a chafing dish,
and put it into your angelica, let it have a boil,
and it will candy as you take it out.
375. To dry PEARS.
Take half a peck of good baking pears,
(or as many as you please) pare and put them in a
pot, and to a peck of pears put in two pounds of sugar;
you must put in no water but lie the parings on the
top of your pears, tie them up close, and set them
in a brown bread oven; when they are baked lay them
in a dripping pan, and flat them a little in your
pan; set them in a slow oven, and turn them every day
whilst they be through y dry; so keep them for use.
You may dry pippens the same way,
only as your turn them grate over them a little sugar.
376. To preserve CURRANS in bunches.
Boil your sugar to the fourth degree
of boiling, tie your currans up in bunches, then place
them in order in the sugar, and give them several
covered boilings, skim them quick, and let them not
have above two or three seethings, then skim them
again, and set them into the stove in the preserving
pan, the next day drain them, and dress them in bunches,
strow them with sugar, and dry them in a stove or in
the sun.
377. To dry APRICOCKS.
To a pound of apricocks put three
quarter of a pound of sugar, pare and stone them,
to a layer of fruit lie a layer of sugar, let them
stand till the next day, then boil them again till
they be clear, when cold take them out of the syrrup,
and lay them upon glasses or china, and sift them
over with double refined sugar, so set them on a stove
to dry, next day if they be dry enough turn them and
sift the other side with sugar; let the stones be
broke and the kernels blanch’d, and give them
a boil in the syrrup, then put them into the apricocks;
you must not do too many at a time, for fear of breaking
them in the syrrup; do a great many, and the more
you do in it, the better they will taste.
378. To make JUMBALIS another Way.
Take a pound of meal dry, a pound
of sugar finely beat, mix them together; then take
the yolks of five or six eggs, as much thick cream
as will make it up to a paste, and some corriander
seeds; roll them and lay them on tins, prick and bake
them in a quick oven; before you set them in the oven
wet them with a little rose-water and double refin’d
sugar, and it will ice them.
379. To preserve ORANGES Whole.
Take what quantity of oranges you
have a mind to preserve, chip off the rind, the thiner
and better, put them into water twenty-four hours,
in that time shift them in the water (to take off
the bitter) three times; you must shift them with
boiling water, cold water makes them hard; put double
the weight of sugar for oranges, dissolve your sugar
in water, skim it, and clarify it with the white of
an egg; before you put in your oranges, boil them
in syrrup three or four times, three or four days
betwixt each time; you must take out the inmeat of
the oranges very clean, for fear of mudding the syrup.
380. To make JAM of DAMSINS.
Take damsins when they are ripe, and
to two pounds of damsins take a pound of sugar, put
your sugar into a pan with a jill of water, when you
have boiled it put in your damsins, let them boil pretty
quick, skim them all the time they are boiling, when
your syrrup looks thick they are enough put them into
your pots, and when they are cold cover them with
a paper dip’d in brandy, tie them up close, and
keep them for use.
381. To make clear Cakes of Gooseberries.
Take a pint of jelly, a pound and
a quarter of sugar, make your jelly with three or
four spoonfuls of water, and put your sugar and jelly
together, set it over the fire to heat, but don’t
let it boil, then put it into the cake pots, and set
it in a slow oven till iced over.
382. To make BULLIES CHEESE.
Take half a peck or a quartern of
bullies, whether you please, pick off the stalks,
put them in a pot, and stop them up very close, set
them in a pot of water to boil for two hours, and
be sure your pot be full of water, and boil them whilst
they be enough, then put them in a hair-sieve to drain
the liquor from the bullies; and to every quart of
liquor put a pound and a quarter of sugar, boil it
over a slow fire, keeping it stirring all the time:
You may know when it is boiled high enough by the
parting from the pan, and cover it with papers dip’d
in brandy, so tie it up close, and keep it for use.
383. To make JAM of BULLIES.
Take the bullies that remained in
the sieve, to every quart of it take a pound of sugar,
and put it to your jam, boil it over a slow fire, put
it in pots, and keep it for use.
384. To make SYRRUP of GILLIFLOWERS.
Take five pints of clipt gilliflowers,
two pints of boiling water and put to them, then put
them in an earthen pot to infuse a night and a day,
take a strainer and strain them out; to a quart of
your liquor put a pound and half of loaf sugar, boil
it over a slow fire, and skim it whilst any skim rises;
so when it is cold bottle it for use.
385. To pickle GILLIFLOWERS.
Take clove gilliflowers, when they
are at full growth, clip them and put them into a
pot, put them pretty sad down, and put to them some
white wine vinegar, as much as will cover them; sweeten
them with fine powder sugar, or common loaf; when
you put in your sugar stir them up that your sugar
may go down to the bottom; they must be very sweet;
let them stand two or three days, and then put in
a little more vinegar; so tie them up for use.
386. To pickle CUCUMBERS sliced.
Pare thirty large cucumbers, slice
them into a pewter dish, take six onions, slice and
strow on them some salt, so cover them and let them
stand to drain twenty four hours; make your pickle
of white wine vinegar, nutmeg, pepper, cloves and
mace, boil the spices in the pickle, drain the liquor
clean from the cucumbers, put them into a deep pot,
pour the liquor upon them boiling hot, and cover them
very close; when they are cold drain the liquor from
them, give it another boil, and when it is cold pour
it on them again; so keep them for use.
387. To make CUPID HEDGE-HOG’S.
Take a quarter of a pound of jordan
almonds, and half a pound of loaf sugar, put it into
a pan with as much water as will just wet it, let it
boil whilst it be so thick as will stick to your almonds,
then put in your almonds and let them boil in it;
have ready a quarter of a pound of small coloured
comfits; take your almonds out of the syrrup one by
one, and turn them round whilst they covered over,
so lie them on a pewter dish as you do them, and set
them before the fire, whilst you have done them all.
They are pretty to put in glasses, or to set in a
desert.
388. To make ALMOND HEDGE-HOGS.
Take half a pound of the best almonds,
and blanch them, beat them with two or three spoonfuls
of rose-water in a marble-mortar very small, then
take six eggs, (leave out two of the whites) beat your
eggs very well, take half a pound of loaf sugar beaten,
and four ounces of clarified butter, mix them all
well together, put them into a pan, set them over
the fire, and keep it stirring whilst it be stiff,
then put it into a china-dish, and when it is cold
put it up into the shape of an hedge hog, put currans
for eyes, and a bit of candid orange for tongue; you
may leave out part of the almonds unbeaten; take them
and split them in two, then cut them in long bits
to stick into your hedge hog all over, then rake two
pints of cream custard to pour over your hedge hog,
according to the bigness of your dish; lie round your
dish edge slices of candid or preserved orange, which
you have, so serve it up.
389. To pot SALMON to keep half a Year.
Take a side of fresh salmon, take
out the bone, cut off the head and scald it; you must
not wash it but wipe it with a dry cloth; cut it in
three pieces, season it with mace, pepper, salt and
nutmeg, put it into a flat pot with the skin side
downward, lie over it a pound of butter, tie a paper
over it, and send it to the oven, about an hour and
a half will bake it; if you have more salmon in your
pot than three pieces it will take more baking, and
you must put in more butter; when it is baked take
it out of your pot, and lie it on a dish plate to drain,
and take off the skin, so season it over again, for
if it be not well seasoned it will not keep; put it
into your pot piece by piece; it will keep best in
little pots, when you put it into your pots, press
it well down with the back of your hand, and when
it is cold cover it with clarified butter, and set
it in a cool place; so keep it for use.
390. To make a CODDLIN PIE.
Take coddlins before they are over
old, hang them over a slow fire to coddle, when they
are soft peel off the skin, so put them into the water
again, then cover ’em up with vine leaves, and
let them hang over the fire whilst they be green;
be sure you don’t let them boil; lie them whole
in the dish, and bake them in puff-paste, but leave
no paste in the bottom of the dish; put to ’em
a little shred lemon-peel, a spoonful of verjuice
or juice of lemon, and as much sugar as you think
proper, according to the largeness of your pie.
391. To make a COLLIFLOWER PUDDING.
Boil the flowers in milk, take the
tops and lay then in a dish, then take three jills
of cream, the yolks of eight eggs, and the whites of
two, season it with nutmeg, cinnamon, mace, sugar,
sack or orange-flower water, beat all well together,
then pour it over the colliflower, put it into the
oven, bake it as you would a custard, and grate sugar
over it when it comes from the oven.
Take sugar, sack and butter for sauce.
392. To make Stock for HARTSHORN JELLY.
Take five or six ounces of hartshorn,
put it into a gallon of water, hang it over a slow
fire, cover it close, and let it boil three or four
hours, so strain it; make it the day before you use
it, and then you may have it ready for your jellies.
393. To make SYRRUP OF VIOLETS.
Take violets and pick them; to every
pound of violets put a pint of water, when the water
is just ready to boil put it to your violets, and
stir them well together, let them infuse twenty four
hours and strain them; to every pound of syrrup, take
almost two pounds of sugar, beat the sugar very well
and put it into your syrrup, stir it that the sugar
may dissolve, let it stand a day or two, stirring it
two or three times, then set it on the fire, let be
but warm and it will be thick enough.
You may make your syrrup either of
violets or gilliflowers, only take the weight of sugar,
let it stand on the fire till it be very hot, and
the syrrup of violets must be only warm.
394. To pickle COCKLES.
Take cockles at a full moon and wash
’em, then put them in a pan, and cover them
with a wet cloth, when they are enough put them into
a stone bowl, take them out of the shells and wash
them very well in their own pickle; let the pickle
settle every time you wash them then clear it off;
when you have cleaned ’em, put the pickle into
a pan, with a spoonful or two of white wine and a
little white wine vinegar, to you taste, put in a
little Jamaica and whole pepper, boil it very well
in the pickle, then put in you cockles, let ’em
have a boil and skim ’em, when they are cold
put them in a bottle with a little oil over them,
set ’em in a cool place and keep ’em for
use.
395. To preserve Quinces whole or in quarters.
Take the largest quinces when they
are at full growth, pare them and throw them into
water, when you have pared them cut them into quarters,
and take out the cores; if you would have any whole
you must take out the cores with a scope; save all
the cores and parings, and put them in a pot or pan
to coddle your quinces in, with as much water as will
cover them, so put in your quinces in the middle of
your paring into the pan, (be sure you cover them
close up at the top) so let them hang over a slow
fire whilst they be thoroughly tender, then take them
out and weigh them; to every pound of quince take
a pound of loaf sugar, and to every pound of sugar
take a pint of the same water you coddled your quinces
in, set your water and sugar over the fire, boil it
and skim it, then put in your quinces, and cover it
close up, set it over a slow fire, and let it boil
whilst your quinces be red and the syrrup thick, then
put them in pots for use, dipping a paper in brandy
to lie over them.
396. To pickle SHRIMPS.
Take the largest shrimps you can get,
pick them out of the shells, boil them in a jill of
water, or as much water as will cover them according
as you have a quantity of shrimps, strain them thro’
a hair-sieve, then put to the liquor a little spice,
mace, cloves, whole pepper, white wine, white wine
vinegar, and a little salt to your taste; boil them
very well together, when it is cold put in your shrimps,
they are fit for use.
397. To pickle MUSCLES.
Wash your muscles, put them into a
pan as you do your cockles, pick them out of the shells,
and wash them in the liquor; be sure you take off
the beards, so boil them in the liquor with spices,
as you do your cockles, only put to them a little
more vinegar than you do to cockles.
398. To pickle WALNUTS green.
Gather walnuts when they are as you
can run a pin through them, pare them and put them
in water, and let them lie four or five days, stirring
it twice a day to take out the bitter, then put them
in strong salt and water, let them lie a week or ten
days, stirring it once or twice a day, then put them
in fresh salt and water, and hang them over a fire,
put to them a little allum, and cover them up close
with vine leaves, let them hang over a slow fire whilst
they be green, but be sure don’t let them boil,
when they are green pat them into a sieve to drain
the water from them.
399. To make PICKLE for them.
Take a little good alegar, put to
it a little long pepper and Jamaica pepper, a few
bay leaves, a little horse-radish, a handful or two
of mustard-seed, a little salt and a little rockambol
if you have any, if not a few shalots; boil them altogether
in the alegar, which put to your walnuts and let it
stand three or four days, giving them a scald once
a day, then tie them up for use.
A spoonful of this pickle is good
for fish-sauce, or a calf’s head ash.
400. To pickle WALNUTS black.
Gather walnuts when they are so tender
that you can run a pin thro’ them, prick them
all with a pin very well, lie them in fresh water,
and let them lie for a week, shifting them once a
day; make for them a strong salt and water, and let
them lie whilst they be yellow, stirring them once
a day, then take ’em out of the salt and water,
and boil it, put it on the top of your walnuts, and
let your pot stand in the corner end, scald them once
or twice a day whilst they be black.
You may make the same pickle for those,
as you did for the green ones.
401. To pickle OYSTERS.
Take the largest oysters you can get,
pick them whole out of the shell, and take off the
beards, wash them very well in their own pickle, so
let the pickle settle, and clear it off, put it into
a stew-pan, put to it two or three spoonfuls of white
wine, and a little white wine vinegar; don’t
put in any water, for if there be not pickle enough
of their own get a little cockle-pickle and put to
it, a little Jamaica pepper, white pepper and mace,
boil and skim them very well; you must skim it before
you put in your spices, then put in your oysters, and
boil them in the pickle, when they are cold put them
into a large bottle with a little oil on the top,
set them in a cool place and keep them for use.
402. To pickle large CUCUMBERS.
Take cucumbers and put them in a strong
salt and water, let them lie whilst they be throughly
yellow, then scald them in the same salt and water
they lie in, set them on the fire, and scald them once
a day whilst they are green; take the best alegar
you can get, put to it a little Jamaica pepper and
black pepper, some horse-radish in slices, a few bay
leaves, and a little dill and salt, so scald your cucumbers
twice or thrice in this pickle; then put them up for
use.
403. To pickle ONIONS.
Take the smallest onions you can get,
peel and put them into a large quantity of fair water,
let them lie two days and shift them twice a day;
then drain them from the water, take a little distill’d
vinegar, put to ’em two or three blades of mace,
and a little white pepper and salt, boil it, and pour
it upon your onions, let them stand three days, so
put them into little glasses, and tie a bladder over
them; they are very good done with alegar; for common
use, only put in Jamaica pepper instead of mace.
404. To pickle ELDER BUDS.
Take elder buds when they are the
bigness of small walnuts, lie them in a strong salt
and water for ten days, and then scald them in fresh
salt and water, put in a lump of allum, let them stand
in the corner end close cover’d up, and scalded
once a day whilst green.
You may do radish cods or brown buds the same way.
405. To make the Pickle.
Take a little alegar or white wine
vinegar, and put to it two or three blades of mace,
with a little whole pepper and Jamaica pepper, a few
bay leaves and salt, put to your buds, and scald them
two or three times, then they are fit for use.
406. To pickle MUSHROOMS.
Take mushrooms when fresh gather’d,
sort the large ones from the buttons, cut off the
stalks, wash them in water with a flannel, have a
pan of water ready on the fire to boil ’em in,
for the less they lie in the water the better; let
them have two or three boils over the fire, then put
them into a sieve, and when you have drained the water
from them put them into a pot, throw over them a handful
of salt, stop them up close with a cloth, and let
them stand two or three hours on the hot hearth or
range end, giving your pot a shake now and then; then
drain the pickle from them, and lie them in a cloth
for an hour or two, so put into them as much distill’d
vinegar as will cover them, let them lie a week or
ten days, then take them out, and put them in dry
bottles; put to them a little white pepper, salt and
ginger sliced, fill them up with distill’d vinegar,
put over ’em a little sweet oil, and cork them
up close; if your vinegar be good they will keep two
or three years; I know it by experience.
You must be sure not to fill your
bottles above three parts full, if you do they will
not keep.
407. To pickle MUSHROOMS another Way.
Take mushrooms and wash them with
a flannel, throw them into water as you wash them,
only pick the small from the large, put them into a
pot, throw over them a little salt, stop up your pot
close with a cloth, boil them in a pot of water as
you do currans when you make a jelly, give them a
shake now and then; you may guess when they are enough
by the quantity of liquor that comes from them; when
you think they are enough strain from them the liquor,
put in a little white wine vinegar, and boil it in
a little mace, white pepper, Jamaica pepper, and slic’d
ginger; then it is cold put it to the mushrooms, bottle
’em and keep ’em for use.
They will keep this way very well,
and have more of the taste of mushrooms, but they
will not be altogether so white.
408. To pickle POTATOE CRABS.
Gather your crabs when they are young,
and about the bigness of a large cherry, lie them
in a strong salt and water as you do other pickles,
let them stand for a week or ten days, then scald them
in the same water they lie in twice a day whilst green;
make the same pickle for them as you do for cucumbers;
be sure you scald them twice or thrice in the pickle
and they will keep the better.
409. To pickle large BUTTONS.
Take your buttons, clean ’em
and cut ’em in three or four pieces, put them
into a large sauce-pan to stew in their own liquor,
put to them a little Jamaica and whole pepper, a blade
or two of mace, and a little salt, cover it up, let
it stew over a slow fire whilst you think they are
enough, then strain from them their liquor, and put
to it a little white wine vinegar or alegar, which
you please, give it a boil together, and when it is
cold put it to your mushrooms, and keep them for use.
You may pickle flaps the same way.
410. To make CATCHUP.
Take large mushrooms when they are
fresh gathered, cut off the dirty ends, break them
small in your hands, put them in a stone-bowl with
a handful or two of salt, and let them stand all night;
if you don’t get mushrooms enough at once, with
a little salt they will keep a day or two whilst you
get more, so put ’em in a stew-pot, and set them
in an oven with household bread; when they are enough
strain from ’em the liquor, and let it stand
to settle, then boil it with a little mace, Jamaica
and whole black pepper, two or three shalots, boil
it over a slow fire for an hour, when it is boiled
let it stand to settle, and when it is cold bottle
it; if you boil it well it will keep a year or two;
you must put in spices according to the quantity of
your catchup; you must not wash them, nor put to them
any water.
411. To make MANGO of CUCUMBERS or
SMALL MELONS.
Gather cucumbers when they are green,
cut a bit off the end and take out all the meat; lie
them in a strong salt and water, let them lie for
a week or ten days whilst they be yellow, then scald
them in the same salt and water they lie in whilst
green, then drain from them the water; take a little
mustard-seed, a little horse-radish, some scraped
and some shred fine, a handful of shalots, a claw or
two of garlick if you like the taste, and a little
shred mace; take six or eight cucumbers shred fine,
mix them amongst the rest of the ingredients, then
fill your melons or cucumbers with the meat, and put
in the bits at the ends, tie them on with a string,
so as will well cover them, and put into it a little
Jamaica and whole pepper, a little horse-radish and
a handful or two of mustard-seed, then boil it, and
pour it upon your mango; let it stand in the corner
end two or three days, scald them once a day, and
then tie them up for use.
412. To pickle GARKINS.
Take garkins of the first growth,
pick ’em clean, put ’em in a strong salt
and water, let ’em lie a week or ten days whilst
they be throughly yellow, then scald them in the same
salt and water they lie in, scald them once a day,
and let them lie whilst they are green, the set them
in the corner end close cover’d.
413. To make PICKLE for your Cucumbers.
Take a little alegar, (the quantity
must be equal to the quantity of your cucumbers, and
so must your seasoning) a little pepper, a little
Jamaica and long pepper, two or three shalots, a little
horse-radish scraped or sliced, and little salt and
a bit of allum, boil them altogether, and scald your
cucumbers two or three times with your pickle, so
tie them up for use.
414. To pickle COLLIFLOWER white.
Take the whitest colliflower you can
get, break it in pieces the bigness of a mushroom;
take as much distill’d vinegar as will cover
it, and put to it a little white pepper, two or three
blades of mace, and a little salt, then boil it and
pour it on your colliflowers three times, let it be
cold, then put it into your glasses or pots, and wet
a bladder to tie over it to keep out the air.
415. To pickle Red Cabbage.
Take a red cabbage, chuse it a purple
red, for the light red never proves a good colour;
so take your cabbage and shred it in very thin slices,
season it with pepper and salt very well, let it lie
all night upon a broad tin, or a dripping-pan; take
a little alegar, put to it a little Jamaica pepper,
and two or three rases of ginger, boil them together,
and when it is cold pour it upon your cabbage, and
in two or three days time it will be fit for use.
You may throw a little colliflower among it, and it
will turn red.
416. To pickle Colliflower another Way.
Take the colliflower and break it
in pieces the bigness of a mushroom, but leave on
a short stalk with the head; take some white wine vinegar,
into a quart of vinegar, put six-pennyworth of cochineal
beat well, also a little Jamaica and whole pepper,
and a little salt, boil them in vinegar, pour it over
the colliflower hot, and let it stand two or three
days close covered up; you may scald it once in three
days whilst it be red, when it is red take it out
of pickle, and wash the cochineal off in the pickle,
so strain it through a hair sieve, and let it stand
a little to settle, then put it to your colliflower
again, and tie it up for use; the longer it lies in
the pickle the redder it will be.
417. To pickle WALNUTS white.
Take walnuts when they are at full
growth and can thrust a pin through them, the largest
sort you can get, pare them, and cut a bit off one
end whilst you see the white, so you must pare off
all the green, if you cut through the white to the
kernel they will be spotted, and put them in water
as you pare them; you must boil them in salt and water
as you do mushrooms, and will take no more boiling
than a mushroom; when they are boiled lay them on
a dry cloth to drain out of the water, then put them
into a pot, and put to them as much distill’d
vinegar as will cover them, let them lie two or three
days; then take a little more vinegar, put to it a
few blades of mace, a little white pepper and salt,
boil ’em together, when it is cold take your
walnuts out of the other pickle and put into that,
let them lie two or three days, pour it from them,
give it another boil and skim it, when it is cold put
to it your walnuts again, put them into a bottle,
and put over them a little sweet oil, cork them up,
and set them in a cool place; if your vinegar be good
they will keep as long as the mushrooms.
418. To pickle BARBERRIES.
Take barberries when full ripe, put
them into a pot, boil a strong salt and water, then
pour it on them boiling hot.
419. To make BARLEY-SUGAR.
Boil barley in water, strain it through
a hair-sieve, then put the decoction into clarified
sugar brought to a candy height, or the last degree
of boiling, then take it off the fire, and let the
boiling settle, then pour it upon a marble stone rubb’d
with the oil of olives, when it cools and begins to
grow hard, cut it into pieces, and rub it into lengths
as you please.
420. To pickle PURSLAIN.
Take the thickest stalks of purslain,
lay them in salt and water six weeks, then take them
out, put them into boiling water, and cover them well;
let them hang over a slow fire till they be very green,
when they are cold put them into pot, and cover them
well with beer vinegar, and keep them covered close.
421. To make PUNCH another Way.
Take a quart or two of sherbet before
you put in your brandy, and the whites of four or
five eggs, beat them very well, and set it over the
fire, let it have a boil, then put it into a jelly
bag, so mix the rest of your acid and brandy together,
(the quantity you design to make) heat it and run
it all through your jelly bag, change it in the running
off whilst it look fine; let the peel of one or two
lemons lie in the bag; you may make it the day before
you use it, and bottle it.
422. To make new COLLEGE PUDDINGS.
Grate an old penny loaf, put to it
a like quantity of suet shred, a nutmeg grated, a
little salt and some currans, then beat some eggs in
a little sack and sugar, mix all together, and knead
it as stiff as for manchet, and make it up in the
form and size of a turkey’s egg, but a little
flatter; take a pound of butter, put it in a dish or
stew-pan, and set it over a clear fire in a chafing-dish,
and rub your butter about the dish till it is melted,
then put your puddings in, and cover the dish, but
often turn your puddings till they are brown alike,
and when they are enough grate some sugar over them,
and serve them up hot.
For a side-dish you must let the paste
lie for a quarter of an hour before you make up your
puddings.
423. To make a CUSTARD PUDDING.
Take a pint of cream, mix it with
six eggs well beat, two spoonfuls of flour, half a
nutmeg grated, a little salt and sugar to your taste;
butter your cloth, put it in when the pan boils, baste
it just half an hour, and melt butter for the sauce.
424. To make FRYED TOASTS.
Chip a manchet very well, and cut
it round ways in toasts, then take cream and eight
eggs seasoned with sack, sugar, and nutmeg, and let
these toasts steep in it about an hour, then fry them
in sweet butter, serve them up with plain melted butter,
or with butter, sack and sugar as you please.
425. To make SAUCE for Fish or Flesh.
Take a quart of vinegar or alegar,
put it into a jug, then take Jamaica pepper whole,
some sliced ginger and mace; a few cloves, some lemon-peel,
horse radish sliced, sweet herbs, six shalots peeled,
eight anchovies, and two or three spoonfuls of shred
capers, put all those in a linen bag, and put the
bag into your alegar or vinegar, stop the jug close,
and keep it for use.
A spoonful cold is an addition to
sauce for either fish or flesh.
426. To make a savoury Dish of VEAL.
Cut large collops of a leg of veal,
spread them abroad on a dresser, hack them with the
back of a knife, and dip them in the yolks of eggs,
season them with nutmeg, mace, pepper and salt, then
make forc’d-meat with some of your veal, beef-suit,
oysters chop’d, and sweet herbs shred fine,
and the above spice, strow all these over your collops,
roll and tie them up, put them on skewers, tie them
to a spit and roast them; and to the rest of your
forc’d-meat add the yolk of an egg or two, and
make it up in balls and fry them, put them in a dish
with your meat when roasted, put a little water in
the dish under them, and when they are enough put
to it an anchovy, a little gravy, a spoonful of white
wine, and thicken it up with a little flour and butter,
so fry your balls and lie round the dish, and serve
it up.
This is proper for a side-dish either at noon or night.
427. To make FRENCH BREAD.
Take half a peck of fine flour, the
yolks of six eggs and four whites, a little salt,
a pint of ale yeast, and as much new milk made warm
as will make it a thin light paste, stir it about
with your hand, but be sure you don’t knead
them; have ready six wooden quarts or pint dishes,
fill them with the paste, (not over full) let them
stand a quarter of an hour to rise, then turn them
out into the oven, and when they are baked rasp them.
The oven must be quick.
428. To make GINGER-BREAD another Way.
Take three pounds of fine flour, and
the rind of a lemon dried and beaten to powder, half
a pound of sugar, or more if you like it, a little
butter, and an ounce and a half of beaten ginger, mix
all these together and wet it pretty stiff with nothing
but treacle; make it into rolls or cakes which you
please; if you please you may add candid orange peel
and citron; butter your paper to bake it on, and let
it be baked hard.
429. To make QUINCE CREAM.
Take quinces when they are full ripe,
cut them in quarters, scald them till they be soft,
pare them, and mash the clear part of them, and the
pulp, and put it through a sieve, take an equal weight
of quince and double refin’d sugar beaten and
sifted; and the whites of eggs beat till it is as
white as snow, then put it into dishes.
You may do apple cream the same way.
430. To make CREAM of any preserved Fruit.
Take half a pound of the pulp of any
preserved fruit, put it in a large pan, put to it
the whites of two or three eggs, beat them well together
for an hour, then with a spoon take off, and lay it
heaped up high on the dish and salver without cream,
or put it in the middle bason.
Rasberries will not do this way.
431. To dry PEARS or PIPPENS without
Sugar.
Take pears or apples and wipe them
clean, take a bodkin and run it in at the head, and
out at the stalk, put them in a flat earthen pot and
bake them, but not too much; you must put a quart of
strong new ale to half a peck of pears, tie twice
papers over the pots that they are baked in, let them
stand till cold then drain them, squeeze the pears
flat, and the apples, the eye to the stalk, and lay
’em on sieves with wide holes to dry, either
in a stove or an oven not too hot.
432. To preserve MULBERRIES whole.
Set some mulberries over the fire
in a skellet or preserving pan, draw from them a pint
of juice when it is strain’d; then take three
pounds of sugar beaten very fine, wet the sugar with
the pint of juice, boil up your sugar and skim it,
put in two pounds of ripe mulberries, and let them
stand in the syrrup till they are throughly warm, then
set them on the fire, and let them boil very gently;
do them but half enough, so put them by in the syrrup
till next day, then boil them gently again; when the
syrrup is pretty thick and well stand in round drops
when it is cold, they are enough, so put all in a gally-pot
for use.
433. To make ORANGE CAKES.
Cut your oranges, pick out the meat
and juice free from the strings and seeds, set it
by, then boil it, and shift the water till your peels
are tender, dry them with a cloth, mince them small,
and put them to the juice; to a pound of that weigh
a pound and a half of double refin’d sugar;
dip your lumps of sugar in water, and boil it to a
candy height, take it off the fire and put in your
juice and peel, stir it well, when it is almost cold
put it into a bason, and set it in a stove, then lay
it thin on earthen plates to dry, and as it candies
fashion it with a knife, and lay them on glasses;
when your plate is empty, put more out of your bason.
434. To dry APRICOCKS like PRUNELLOS.
Take a pound of apricocks before they
be full ripe, cut them in halves or quarters, let
them boil till they be very tender in a thin syrrup,
and let them stand a day or two in the stove, then
take them out of the syrrup, lay them to dry till
they be as dry as prunellos, then box ’em, if
you please you may pare them.
You may make your syrrup red with the juice of red
plumbs.
435. To preserve great white PLUMBS.
To a pound of white plumbs take three
quarters of a pound of double refin’d sugar
in lumps, dip your sugar in water, boil and skim it
very well, slit your plumbs down the seam; and put
them into the syrrup with the slit downwards; let
them stew over the fire a quarter of an hour, skim
them very well, then take them off, and when cold cover
them up; turn them in the syrrup two or three times
a day for four or five days, then put them into pots
and keep them for use.
436. To make Gooseberry Wine another Way.
Take gooseberries when they are full
ripe, pick and beat them in a marble mortar; to every
quart of berries put a quart of water, and put them
into a tub and let them stand all night, then strain
them through a hair-sieve, and press them very well
with your hand; to every gallon of juice put three
pounds of four-penny sugar; when your sugar is melted
put it into the barrel, and to as many gallons of juice
as you have, take as many pounds of Malaga raisins,
chop them in a bowl, and put them in the barrel with
the wine; be sure let not your barrel be over full,
so close it up, let it stand three months in the barrel,
and when it is fine bottle it, but not before.
437. To pickle NASTURTIUM BUDS.
Gather your little nobs quickly after
the blossoms are off, put them in cold water and salt
three days, shifting them once a day; then make a
pickle for them (but don’t boil them at all)
of some white wine, and some white wine vinegar, shalot,
horse-radish, whole pepper and salt, and a blade or
two of mace; then put in your seeds, and stop ’em
close up. They are to be eaten as capers.
438. To make ELDER-FLOWER WINE.
Take three or four handfuls of dry’d
elder-flowers, and ten gallons of spring water, boil
the water, and pour in scalding hot upon the flowers,
the next day put to every gallon of water five pounds
of Malaga raisins, the stalks being first pick’d
off, but not wash’d, chop them grosly with a
chopping knife, then put them into your boiled water,
stir the water, raisins and flowers well together,
and do so twice a day for twelve days, then press
out the juice clear as long as you can get any liquor;
put it into a barrel fit for it, stop it up two or
three days till it works, and in a few days stop it
up close, and let it stand two or three months, then
bottle it.
439. To make PEARL BARLEY PUDDING.
Take half a pound of pearl barley,
cree it in soft water, and shift it once or twice
in the boiling till it be soft; take five eggs, put
to them a pint of good cream, and half a pound of
powder sugar, grate in half a nutmeg, a little salt,
a spoonful or two of rose-water, and half a pound
of clarified butter; when your barley is cold mix them
altogether, so bake it with a puff-paste round your
dish-edge.
Serve it up with a little rose-water, sugar and butter
for your sauce.
440. To make Gooseberry Vinegar another
Way.
Take gooseberries when they are full
ripe, bruise them in a marble mortar or wooden bowl,
and to every upheap’d half peck of berries take
a gallon of water, put it to them in the barrel, let
it stand in a warm place for two weeks, put a paper
on the top of your barrel, then draw it off, wash
out the barrel, put it in again, and to every gallon
add a pound of coarse sugar; set it in a warm place
by the fire, and let it stand whilst christmas.
441. To preserve APRICOCKS green.
Take apricocks when they are young
and tender, coddle them a little, rub them with a
coarse cloth to take off the skin, and throw them into
water as you do them, and put them in the same water
they were coddled in, cover them with vine leaves,
a white paper, or something more at the top, the closer
you keep them the sooner they are green; be sure you
don’t let them boil; when they are green weigh
them, and to every pound of apricocks take a pound
of loaf sugar, put it into a pan, and to every pound
of sugar a jill of water, boil your sugar and water
a little, and skim it, then put in your apricocks,
let them boil together whilst your apricocks look
clear, and your syrrup thick, skim it all the time
it is boiling, and put them into a pot covered with
a paper dip’d in brandy.
442. To make ORANGE CHIPS another Way.
Pare your oranges, not over thin but
narrow, throw the rinds into fair water as you pare
them off, then boil them therein very fast till they
be tender, filling up the pan with boiling water as
it wastes away, then make a thin syrrup with part
of the water they are boiled in, put in the rinds,
and just let them boil, then take them off, and let
them lie in the syrrup three or four days, then boil
them again till you find the syrrup begin to draw
between your fingers, take them off from the fire
and let them drain thro’ your cullinder, take
out but a few at a time, because if they cool too
fast it will be difficult to get the syrrup from them,
which must be done by passing every piece of peel
through your fingers, and lying them single on a sieve
with the rind uppermost, the sieve may be set in a
stove, or before the fire; but in summer the sun is
hot enough to dry them.
Three quarters of a pound of sugar
will make syrrup to do the peels of twenty-five oranges.
443. To make MUSHROOM POWDER.
Take about half a peck of large buttons
or slaps, clean them and set them in an earthen dish
or dripping pan one by one, let them stand in a slow
oven to dry whilst they will beat to powder, and when
they are powdered sift them through a sieve; take
half a quarter of a ounce of mace, and a nutmeg, beat
them very fine, and mix them with your mushroom powder,
then put it into a bottle, and it will be fit for use.
You must not wash your mushrooms.
444. To preserve APRICOCKS another Way.
Take your apricocks before they are
full ripe, pare them and stone them, and to every
pound of apricocks take a pound of lump loaf sugar,
put it into your pan with as much water as will wet
it; to four pounds of sugar take the whites of two
eggs beat them well to a froth, mix them well with
your sugar whilst it be cold, then set it over the
fire and let it have a boil, take it off the fire,
and put in a spoonful or two of water, then take off
the skim, and do so three or four times whilst any
skim rises, then put in your apricocks, and let them
have a quick boil over the fire, then take them off
and turn them over, let them stand a little while
covered, and then set them on again, let them have
another boil and skim them, then take them out one
by one; set on your syrrup again to boil down, and
skim it, then put in your apricocks again, and let
them boil whilst they look clear, put them in pots,
when they are cold cover them over with a paper dipt
in brandy, and tie another paper at the top, set them
in a cool place, and keep them for use.
445. To pickle MUSHROOMS another Way.
When you have cleaned your mushrooms
put them into a pot, and throw over them a handful
of salt, and stop them very close with a cloth, and
set them in a pan of water to boil about an hour, give
them a shake now and then in the boiling, then take
them out and drain the liquor from them, wipe them
dry with a cloth, and put them up either in white wine
vinegar or distill’d vinegar, with spices, and
put a little oil on the top.
They don’t look so white this
way, but they have more the taste of mushrooms.
446. How to fry MUSHROOMS.
Take the largest and freshest flaps
you can get, skin them and take out the gills, boil
them in a little salt and water, then wipe them dry
with a cloth; take two eggs and beat them very well,
half a spoonful of wheat-flour, and a little pepper
and salt, then dip in your mushrooms and fry them
in butter.
They are proper to lie about stew’d
mushrooms or any made dish.
447. How to make an ALE POSSET.
Take a quart of good milk, set it
on the fire to boil, put in a handful or two of breadcrumbs,
grate in a little nutmeg, and sweeten it to your taste;
take three jills of ale and give it a boil; take the
yolks of four eggs, beat them very well, then put
to them a little of your ale, and mix all your ale
and eggs together; then set it on the fire to heat,
keep stirring it all the time, but don’t let
it boil, if you do it will curdle; then put it into
your dish, heat the milk and put it in by degrees;
so serve it up.
You may make it of any sort of made
wine; make it half an hour before you use it, and
keep it hot before the fire.
448. To make MINC’D PIES another Way.
Take half a pound of Jordan almonds,
blanch and beat them with a little rose-water, but
not over small; take a pound of beef-suet shred very
fine, half a pound of apples shred small, a pound of
currans well cleaned, half a pound of powder sugar,
a little mace shred fine, about a quarter of a pound
of candid orange cut in small pieces, a spoonful or
two of brandy, and a little salt, so mix them well
together, and bake it in a puff-paste.
449. To make SACK POSSET another Way.
Take a quart of good cream, and boil
it with a blade or two of mace, put in about a quarter
of a pound of fine powder sugar; take a pint of sack
or better, set it over the fire to heat, but don’t
let it boil, then grate in a little nutmeg, and about
a quarter of a pound of powder sugar; take nine eggs,
(leave out six of the whites and strains) beat ’em
very well, then put to them a little of your sack mix
the sack and eggs very well together, then put to
’em the rest of your sack, stir it all the time
you are pouring it in, set it over a slow fire to thicken,
and stir it till it be as thick as custard; be sure
you don’t let it boil, if you do it will curdle,
then pour it into your dish or bason; take your cream
boiling hot, and pour to your sack by degrees, stirring
it all the time you are pouring it in, then set it
on a hot-hearth-stone; you must make it half an hour
before you use it; before you set on the hearth cover
it close with a pewter dish.
To make a FROTH for them.
Take a pint of the thickest cream
you can get, and beat the whites of two eggs very
well together, take off the cream by spoonfuls, and
lie it in a sieve to drain; when you dish up the posset
lie over it the froth.
450. To dry CHERRIES another Way.
Take cherries when full ripe, stone
them, and break ’em as little as you can in
the stoning; to six pounds of cherries take three pounds
of loaf sugar, beat it, lie one part of your sugar
under your cherries, and the other at the top, let
them stand all night, then put them into your pan,
and boil them pretty quick whilst your cherries change
and look clear, then let them stand in the syrrup
all night, pour the syrrup from them, and put them
into a pretty large sieve, and set them either in
the sun or before the fire; let them stand to dry a
little, then lay them on white papers one by one,
let them stand in the sun whilst they be thoroughly
dry, in the drying turn them over, then put them into
a little box; betwixt every layer of cherries lie a
paper, and so do till all are in, then lie a paper
at the top, and keep them for use.
You must not boil them over long in
the syrrup, for if it be over thick it will keep them
from drying; you may boil two or three pounds more
cherries in the syrrup after.
451. How to order STURGEON.
If your sturgeon be alive, keep it
a night and a day before you use it; then cut off
the head and tail, split it down the back, and cut
it into as many pieces as you please; salt it with
bay salt and common salt, as you would do beef for
hanging, and let it lie 24 hours; then tie it up very
tight, and boil it in salt and water whilst it is tender;
(you must not boil it over much) when it is boiled
throw over it a little salt, and set it by till it
be cold. Take the head and split it in two and
tye it up very tight; you must boil it by itself, not
so much as you did the rest, but salt it after the
same manner.
452. To make the PICKLE.
Take a gallon of soft water, and make
it into a strong brine; take a gallon of stale beer,
and a gallon of the best vinegar, and let it boil
together, with a few spices; when it is cold put in
your sturgeon; you may keep it (if close covered)
three or four months before you need to renew the
pickle.
453. To make HOTCH-POTCH.
Take five or six pounds of fresh beef,
put it in a kettle with six quarts of soft water,
and an onion; set it on a slow fire, and let it boil
til your beef is almost enough; then put in the scrag
of a neck of mutton, and let them boil together till
the broth be very good; put in two or three handfuls
of breadcrumbs, two or three carrots and turnips cut
small, (but boil the carrots in water before you put
them in, else they will give your broth a taste) with
half a peck of shill’d pease, but take up the
meat before you put them in, when you put in the pease
take the other part of your mutton and cut it in chops,
(for it will take no more boiling than the pease)
and put it in with a few sweet herbs shred very small,
and salt to your taste.
You must send up the mutton chops
in the dish with the hotch-potch.
When there are no pease to be had,
you may put in the heads of asparagus, and if there
be neither of these to be had, you may shred in a
green savoy cabbage.
This is a proper dish instead of soop.
454. To make MINC’D COLLOPS.
Take two or three pounds of any tender
parts of beef, (according as you would have the dish
in bigness) cut it small as you would do minc’d
veal; take an onion, shred it small, and fry it a light
brown, in butter seasoned with nutmeg, pepper and
salt, and put it into your pan with your onion, and
fry it a little whilst it be a light brown; then put
to it a jill of good gravy, and a spoonful of walnut
pickle, or a little catchup; put in a few shred capers
or mushrooms, thicken it up with a little flour and
butter; if you please you may put in a little juice
of lemon; when you dish it up, garnish your dish with
pickle; and a few forc’d-meat-balls.
It is proper for either side-dish or top-dish.
455. To make white Scotch Collops another
Way.
Take two pounds of the solid part
of a leg of veal, cut it in pretty thin slices, and
season it with a little shred mace and salt, put it
into your stew-pan with a lump of butter, set it over
the fire, keep it stirring all the time, but don’t
let it boil; when you are going to dish up the collops,
put to them the yolks of two or three eggs, three
spoonfuls of cream, a spoonful or two of white wine,
and a little juice of lemon, shake it over the fire
whilst it be so thick that the sauce sticks to the
meat, be sure you don’t let it boil.
Garnish your dish with lemon and sippets, and serve
it up hot.
This is proper for either side-dish or top-dish, noon
or night.
456. To make VINEGAR another Way.
Take as many gallons of water as you
please, and to every gallon of water put in a pound
of four-penny sugar, boil it for half an hour and
skim it all the time; when it is about blood warm put
to it about three or four spoonfuls of light yeast,
let it work in the tub a night and a day, put it into
your vessel, close up the top with a paper, and set
it as near the fire as you have convenience, and in
two or three days it will be good vinegar.
457. To preserve QUINCES another Way.
Take quinces, pare and put them into
water, save all the parings and cores, let ’em
lie in the water with the quinces, set them over the
fire with the parings and cores to coddle, cover them
close up at the top with the parings, and lie over
them either a dishcover or pewter dish, and cover
them close; let them hang over a very slow fire whilst
they be tender; but don’t let them boil; when
they are soft take them out of the water, and weigh
your quinces, and to every pound put a pint of the
same water they were coddled in (when strained) and
put to your quinces, and to every pound of quinces
put a pound of sugar; put them into a pot or pewter
flagon, the pewter makes them a much better colour;
close them up with a little coarse paste, and set them
in a bread oven all night; if the syrrup be too thin
boil it down, put it to your quinces, and keep it
for use.
You may either do it with powder sugar or loaf sugar.
458. To make Almond Cheesecakes another
Way.
Take the peel of two or three lemons
pared thick, boil them pretty soft, and change the
water two or three times in the boiling; when they
are boiled beat them very fine with a little loaf sugar,
then take eight eggs, (leaving out six of the whites)
half a pound of loaf or powder sugar, beat the eggs
and sugar for half an hour, or better; take a quarter
of a pound of the best almonds, blanch and beat them
with three or four spoonfuls of rose-water, but not
over small; take ten ounces of fresh butter, melt
it without water, and clear off from it the butter-milk,
then mix them altogether very well, and bake them in
a slow oven in a puff-paste; before you put them into
the tins, put in the juice of half a lemon.
When you put them in the oven grate over them a little
loaf sugar.
You may make them without almonds, if you please.
You may make a pudding of the same, only leave out
the almonds.