MAYONNAISE DRESSING
One-half teaspoonful of mustard, one-half
teaspoonful of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt and
a dash of cayenne pepper; then add two raw egg yolks,
beat well and stir in a teaspoonful of strong vinegar;
add very carefully, drop by drop, a scant three-quarters
of a cup of best olive oil, and as it thickens half
a teaspoonful of vinegar. This recipe never fails,
if the directions are carefully followed. The
eggs and oil should be kept in the refrigerator and
be ice cold. Lemon juice may be used, instead
of vinegar, if preferred.
CREAM SALAD DRESSING
One-quarter of a cup of strong cider
vinegar, one cup and a quarter of water, one-half
cup of butter, one teaspoonful of mustard, one teaspoonful
of salt, one tablespoonful, slightly heaping, of corn
starch, one teaspoonful of sugar, a dash of cayenne
pepper and the yolks of four eggs. Put the vinegar
and water in a saucepan and when it boils add the
butter. Beat the yolks of eggs and the other ingredients
together with an egg-beater, making it quite foamy
and light; pour the boiling vinegar and water upon
this mixture, which will partially thicken. The
bowl in which it is mixed should be placed in a pan
of hot water on the stove, beating it all the time
with the egg-beater. Just before it reaches the
boiling point remove and turn it out into a cold bowl,
beating hard for a few minutes. When perfectly
cold pour it into a glass jar, fasten down the top
and keep in refrigerator.
FRENCH DRESSING
One tablespoonful of vinegar, three
tablespoonfuls of olive oil, a saltspoonful of salt
and one of white pepper, and a few drops of any good
sauce. Lettuce should be well washed in very cold
water, leaf by leaf, and drained in a basket, which
comes for the purpose, then placed on the ice, and
at serving time put into the salad bowl. Lettuce
should never be cut with a knife, but torn with a
fork and spoon, and it should not be allowed to stand
after the dressing is poured over it.
TOMATO ICE SALAD
Put a quart can of tomatoes in a saucepan
over the fire with half an onion, a slice of green
pepper, if convenient, three cloves, two bay leaves,
a sprig of parsley, a teaspoonful of sugar, and pepper
and salt to taste. Cook until the onion is tender about
ten minutes remove from the fire, press
through a sieve fine enough to retain the seeds.
When cold freeze as water-ice and mould a
melon mould is very pretty for it pack
in salt and ice in the usual way; turn it out in a
nest of crisp young lettuce and serve with a mayonnaise
dressing in a sauceboat.
TOMATO JELLY.
One can of tomatoes put on to heat
in a granite or porcelain-lined saucepan with a large
slice of onion, one clove, two bay leaves, a teaspoonful
of chopped green pepper, salt to taste and a little
sugar. Soak half a box of gelatine in a little
water for half an hour, and after the tomatoes have
simmered fifteen minutes let them come to a boil and
pour over the gelatine to dissolve it; strain through
a very fine sieve into a bowl, let it get perfectly
cold, and when it begins to thicken stir well and
turn into an earthenware mould. It looks prettier
in a round one. Set on ice. Serve the jelly
on a round dish in a bed of fresh, crisp young lettuce
leaves, and place a spoonful of tender, finely-cut
celery in each leaf, and pour mayonnaise around it.
The jelly is better made the day before it is needed.
SPAGHETTINA AND CELERY SALAD
Take some cold boiled spaghettina,
chop not too fine and cover with
a French dressing, and let it stand on the ice until
serving time. Have an equal quantity of fresh,
crisp celery cut fine, mix with the spaghettina, cover
with a mayonnaise dressing and garnish with tender
lettuce leaves.
SALAD OF FAIRY RINGS AND PUFF BALL MUSHROOMS
Have both very fresh; cook the fairy
rings until tender, set aside to get cold, then put
on the ice. Take an equal quantity of puff ball
raw, chop fine, mix with the rings, turn into a nest
of tender young lettuce, cover with a mayonnaise dressing
and serve.
SALAD OF FRESH FRUIT
Peel and cut into dice enough fruit,
peaches, tart plums, orange and banana to fill a cup
and a cupful of crisp celery cut fine; have both ice
cold; at serving time mix and cover with a cream dressing
and garnish with celery tops.
CUCUMBER JELLY.
Half a box of gelatine soaked for
an hour in half a cup of cold water. Remove the
seeds from a small green pepper, peel and cut into
slices two large, fine, fresh cucumbers, or three
small ones and a small white onion. Put in a
saucepan, add a bay leaf and a bouquet of parsley,
cover with boiling water and cook until tender; remove
the parsley and bay leaf, add a saltspoonful of sugar,
salt to taste more than a teaspoonful will
be required and press through a fine sieve.
There should be, when strained, two cups and a half.
Pour it over the soaked gelatine if it
is not hot enough to dissolve the gelatine place the
saucepan over the fire for a moment then
run it through the same sieve again; set aside in
a bowl to cool. When perfectly cold and beginning
to congeal, stir it well and pour into a pretty, round
mould; set it on ice until ready to serve. Turn
it out on a plate and arrange fresh, crisp, young
lettuce leaves around it, into each of which put a
spoonful of mayonnaise or cream dressing.
WALNUT AND CELERY SALAD
Three cupfuls of fresh, crisp celery
cut fine and two cupfuls of walnuts, carefully shelled
that they may be as little broken as possible.
Put the walnuts in a saucepan with a small onion sliced,
a bay leaf, a clove and twelve pepper corns, cover
with boiling water, let them cook for ten or fifteen
minutes, remove from the fire, drain and throw the
nuts into cold water, remove the skins and let them
get cold; then set on the ice until it is time to
serve. Mix them with the celery, add mayonnaise
or cream dressing, put on a dish or in a salad bowl,
garnish with the tender green celery leaves and serve.
PINEAPPLE AND CELERY SALAD
Equal parts of celery and shredded
pineapple. Have the celery of the very tenderest,
using only the best of the heads. Select a perfectly
ripe, fresh pineapple, pare it, removing the eyes carefully,
and shred the fruit with a silver fork and cut into
small pieces with a silver fruit knife; put the celery,
cut fine, and the shredded pineapple, each by itself
on the ice, that they may be very cold. When it
is time to serve the salad, mix them together, put
on the salad dish, cover with mayonnaise dressing,
garnish with the green celery leaves and serve at
once.
FRUIT SALAD
Equal quantities of grape fruit or
oranges, bananas, apples and celery. Peel the
grape fruit or oranges, carefully removing all the
bitter white skin, cut the pulp, the bananas and apples
into small dice and the celery fine as for other salads;
put the orange and apple together; the latter will
absorb the juice of the orange. Set all on ice; these
fruit salads must be ice cold. When it is time
to serve, mix the fruit and celery together, put into
a salad bowl, cover with the cream dressing into which
has been stirred a third as much whipped cream as there
is dressing, and add a little more salt to it in mixing.
Serve in a bed of tender lettuce leaves.
POTATO SALAD
Prepare equal parts of cold boiled
potatoes and fresh, crisp celery, cut in small pieces
which will look attractive when mixed with the dressing;
cut in dice four cold, hard boiled eggs, and mix them
in lightly with the potato and celery when adding
the dressing. Use mayonnaise or cream dressing
with this salad, garnish with dainty celery tops and
serve.
SALAD OF TOMATOES STUFFED WITH CELERY
Select nice, smooth, firm tomatoes,
one for each person; blanch them in the usual way,
cut a slice from the stem end and remove the core and
some of the seeds; set on the ice to get cold.
Prepare some celery, shredding it fine and using only
the very tender part; mix it with mayonnaise dressing,
stuff the tomatoes, allowing the celery to come above
the top, serve each in a leaf or two of crisp lettuce
and pour some mayonnaise around them. Salads
should be ice cold.
CELERIAC AND LETTUCE SALAD
Boil two or three celery roots in
water with a little salt until tender; drain and let
them get cold. Cut them in thin slices, make a
nest of crisp lettuce and put the celery slices in
the center. Serve with a French dressing.
RAW JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES AND LETTUCE SALAD
Wash and peel the artichokes, cut
in very thin slices and put into an earthen bowl with
vinegar and water with a lump of ice in it. The
vinegar will prevent them from turning dark. When
ready to serve, place in the center of nice, fresh
lettuce and serve with a French dressing.
SALAD A LA MACEDOINE
Take several kinds of cold boiled
vegetables in equal quantities, such as green peas,
string beans, flowerettes of cauliflower, asparagus
points, a small potato and a French carrot cut in small
dice, and a little green pepper if liked; mix together
and serve in a nest of fresh, crisp lettuce with a
French dressing, or mayonnaise, if preferred.
ASPARAGUS SALAD
Select very tender asparagus, cut
off all the woody part and boil until tender, set
aside to get cold, and then put on ice until serving
time; arrange nicely on a platter or individual plates
and serve with either mayonnaise or French dressing.
CUCUMBER SALAD
Peel and cut in very thin slices,
lay in a bowl, cover with water, sprinkle a little
salt over them and put a lump of ice on top, let them
remain until serving time, drain off the water and
serve in a glass dish with a French dressing.
They should be very cold and crisp. A little
green pepper, chopped very fine, is an addition; also
to rub the spoon used in mixing with a clove of garlic
gives a piquancy to the salad.
COLD SLAW
Select a firm cabbage and shave very
fine on a cutter that comes for this purpose.
Use the cream dressing or French dressing with a little
dry mustard added.
TOMATO SALAD
The tomatoes should be blanched in
the usual way, and either sliced or cut in dice or
served whole; or they may be cut in quarters, not quite
separating them, and arranged in a bed of lettuce with
a spoonful of mayonnaise on top of each tomato and
the lettuce garnished with the same.
ENDIVE
is excellent with French dressing.
EGG SALAD
Boil three eggs hard, cut in half
lengthwise, remove the yolks and mash fine. Mix
together in a saucepan the third of a teaspoonful each
of dry mustard, salt and white pepper, a saltspoonful
of curry powder, a few drops of onion juice, a teaspoonful
of vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of egg well beaten,
two teaspoonfuls of olive oil and a tablespoonful of
rich cream. Put the ingredients together in the
order in which they are named, beat well, set the
bowl over the steam of the kettle and stir constantly
until thick and creamy; remove and stir in the mashed
egg yolks, a little at a time, and set on the ice
to get very cold. To serve, fill the whites of
egg, dividing the mixture among them, put each half
egg on two or three leaves of tender lettuce, with
mayonnaise dressing around them.