PRELIMINARY REMARKS.
When fish is to be boiled, it should
be rubbed lightly over with salt, and set on the fire
in a saucepan or fish-kettle sufficiently large, in
hard cold water, with a little salt, a spoonful or
two of vinegar is sometimes added, which has the effect
of increasing its firmness.
Fish for broiling should be rubbed
over with vinegar, well dried in a cloth and floured.
The fire must be clear and free from smoke, the gridiron
made quite hot, and the bars buttered before the fish
is put on it. Fish to be fried should be rubbed
in with salt, dried, rolled in a cloth, and placed
for a few minutes before the fire previous to being
put in the pan.
FISH FRIED IN OIL.
Soles, plaice, or salmon, are the
best kinds of fish to dress in this manner, although
various other sorts are frequently used. When
prepared by salting or drying, as above directed, have
a dish ready with beaten eggs, turn the fish well
over in them, and sprinkle it freely with flour, so
that the fish may be covered entirely with it, then
place it in a pan with a good quantity of the best
frying oil at boiling heat; fry the fish in it gently,
till of a fine equal brown colour, when done, it should
be placed on a cloth before the fire for the oil to
drain off; great care should be observed that the oil
should have ceased to bubble when the fish is put in,
otherwise it will be greasy; the oil will serve for
two or three times if strained off and poured into
a jar. Fish prepared in this way is usually served
cold.
FRIED SOLES IN THE ENGLISH WAY.
Prepare the soles as directed in the
last receipt, brush them over with egg, dredge them
with stale bread crumbs, and fry in boiling butter;
this method is preferable when required to be served
hot.
ESCOBECHE.
Take some cold fried fish, place it
in a deep pan, then boil half a pint of vinegar with
two table spoonsful of water, and one of oil, a little
grated ginger, allspice, cayenne pepper, two bay leaves,
a little salt, and a table spoonful of lemon juice,
with sliced onions; when boiling, pour it over the
fish, cover the pan, and let it stand twenty-four
hours before serving.
FISH STEWED WHITE.
Put an onion, finely chopped, into
a stew-pan, with a little oil, till the onion becomes
brown, then add half a pint of water, and place the
fish in the stew-pan, seasoning with pepper, salt,
mace, ground allspice, nutmeg, and ginger; let it
stew gently till the fish is done, then prepare the
beaten yolks of four eggs, with the juice of two lemons,
and a tea spoonful of flour, a table spoonful of cold
water, and a little saffron, mix well in a cup, and
pour it into the stew-pan, stirring it carefully one
way until it thickens. Balls should be thrown
in about twenty minutes before serving; they are made
in the following way: take a little of the fish,
the liver, and roe, if there is any, beat it up finely
with chopped parsley, and spread warmed butter, crumbs
of bread, and seasoning according to taste; form this
into a paste with eggs, and make it into balls of a
moderate size; this is a very nice dish when cold;
garnish with sliced lemon and parsley.
AN EXCELLENT RECEIPT FOR STEWED FISH
IN THE DUTCH FASHION.
Take three or four parsley roots,
cut them into pieces, slice several onions and boil
in a pint of water till tender, season with lemon
juice, vinegar, saffron, pepper, salt, and mace, then
add the fish, and let it stew till nearly finished,
when remove it, and thicken the gravy with a little
flour and butter, and the yolk of one egg, then return
the fish to the stew-pan, with balls made as directed
in the preceding receipt, and boil up.
FISH STEWED BROWN.
Fry some fish of a light brown, either
soles, slices of salmon, halibut, or plaice, let an
onion brown in a little oil, add to it a cup of water,
a little mushroom ketchup or powder, cayenne pepper,
salt, nutmeg, and lemon juice, put the fish into a
stew-pan with the above mixture, and simmer gently
till done, then take out the fish and thicken the
gravy with a little browned flour, and stir in a glass
of port wine; a few truffles, or mushrooms, are an
improvement.
WATER SOUCHY.
Take a portion of the fish intended
to be dressed, and stew it down with three pints of
water, parsley roots, and chopped parsley, and then
pulp them through a sieve, then add the rest of the
fish, with pepper, salt, and seasoning; and serve
in a deep dish.
A SUPERIOR RECEIPT FOR STEWED CARP.
Clean the fish thoroughly, put it
into a saucepan, with a strong rich gravy, season
with onion, parsley roots, allspice, nutmegs, beaten
cloves, and ginger, let it stew very gently till nearly
done, then mix port wine and vinegar in equal quantities,
coarse brown sugar and lemon juice, a little flour,
with some of the gravy from the saucepan, mix well
and pour over the fish, let it boil till the gravy
thickens. Pike is excellent stewed in this manner.
FILLETS OF FISH.
Fillets of salmon, soles, &c., fried
of a delicate brown according to the receipt already
given, and served with a fine gravy is a very nice
dish.
If required to be very savory, make
a fish force-meat, and lay it thickly on the fish
before frying; fillets dressed in this way are usually
arranged round the dish, and served with a sauce made
of good stock, thickened and seasoned with cayenne
pepper, lemon juice, and mushroom essence; piccalilli
are sometimes added cut small.
BAKED HADDOCK.
Carefully clean a fresh haddock, and
fill it with a fine forcemeat, and sew it in securely;
give the fish a dredging of flour, and pour on warmed
butter, sprinkle it with pepper and salt, and set it
to bake in a Dutch-oven before the fire, basting it,
from time to time, with butter warmed, and capers;
it should be of a rich dark brown, and it is as well
to dredge two or three times with flour while at the
fire, the continual bastings will produce sufficient
sauce to serve with it without any other being added.
Mackarel and whiting prepared in this
manner are excellent, the latter should be covered
with a layer of bread crumbs, and arranged in a ring,
and the forcemeat, instead of stuffing them, should
be formed into small balls, and served in the dish
as a garnish.
The forcemeat must be made as for
veal stuffing, with the addition of a couple of minced
anchovies, cayenne pepper, and butter instead of suet.
A NICE WAY OF DRESSING RED HERRINGS.
Open them, cut off the tails and heads,
soak them in hot water for an hour, then wipe them
dry; mix with warmed butter one beaten egg, pour this
over the herrings, sprinkle with bread crumbs, flour,
and white pepper, broil them and serve them very hot.
BAKED MACKAREL WITH VINEGAR.
Cut off the heads and tails, open
and clean them, lay them in a deep pan with a few
bay leaves, whole pepper, half a tea-spoonful of cloves,
and a whole spoonful of allspice, pour over equal quantities
of vinegar and water, and bake for an hour and a half,
in a gentle oven; herrings and sprats are also
dressed according to this receipt.
FISH SALAD.
Cut in small pieces any cold dressed
fish, turbot or salmon are the best suited; mix it
with half a pint of small salad, and a lettuce cut
small, two onions boiled till tender and mild, and
a few truffles thinly sliced; pour over a fine salad
mixture, and arrange it into a shape, high in the
centre, and garnish with hard eggs cut in slices;
a little cucumber mixed with the salad is an improvement.
The mixture may either be a common salad mixture,
or made as follows: take the yolks of three hard
boiled eggs, with a spoonful of mustard, and a little
salt, mix these with a cup of cream, and four table-spoonsful
of vinegar, the different ingredients should be added
carefully and worked together smoothly, the whites
of the eggs may be trimmed and placed in small heaps
round the dish as a garnish.
IMPANADA.
Cut in small pieces halibut, plaice,
or soles, place them in a deep dish in alternate layers,
with slices of potatoes and dumplings made of short-crust
paste, sweetened with brown sugar, season well with
small pickles, peppers, gerkins, or West India pickles;
throw over a little water and butter warmed, and bake
it thoroughly.
WHITE BAIT.
This is such a delicate fish that
there are few cooks who attempt to dress it without
spoiling it; they should not be touched but thrown
from the dish into a cloth with a handful of flour;
shake them lightly, but enough to cover them well
with the flour, then turn them into a sieve expressly
for bait to free them from too great a quantity of
the flour, then throw the fish into a pan with plenty
of boiling butter, they must remain but an instant,
for they are considered spoilt if they become the
least brown; they should be placed lightly on the
dish piled up high in the centre, brown bread and butter
is always served with them; when devilled they are
also excellent, and are permitted to become brown;
they are then sprinkled with cayenne pepper, and a
little salt, and served with lemon juice.
This receipt was given by a cook who
dressed white bait to perfection.
A DUTCH FRICANDELLE.
Take two pounds of dressed fish, remove
the skin and bones, cut in small pieces with two or
three anchovies, and season well, soak the crumb of
a French roll in milk, beat it up with the fish and
three eggs: butter a mould, sprinkle it with
raspings, place in the fish and bake it; when done,
turn out and serve either dry or with anchovy sauce;
if served dry, finely grated crumbs of bread should
be sprinkled thickly over it, and it should be placed
for a few minutes before the fire to brown.
FISH FRITTERS.
Make a force-meat of any cold fish,
form it into thin cakes, and fry of a light brown,
or enclose them first in thin paste and then fry them.
The roes of fish or the livers are particularly nice
prepared in this way.
FISH OMELET.
Shred finely any cold fish, season
it, and mix with beaten eggs; make it into a paste,
fry in thin cakes like pancakes, and serve hot on a
napkin; there should be plenty of boiling butter in
the pan, as they should be moist and rich; there should
be more eggs in the preparation for omelets than for
fritters.
SCALLOPED FISH.
Take any dressed fish, break it in
small pieces, put it into tin scallops, with a few
crumbs of bread, a good piece of butter, a little
cream if approved, white pepper, salt, and nutmeg;
bake in an oven for ten minutes, or brown before the
fire; two or three mushrooms mixed, or an anchovy
will be found an improvement.
ANOTHER WAY.
Break the fish into pieces, pour over
the beaten yolk of an egg, sprinkle with pepper and
salt, strew with bread crumbs, chopped parsley, and
grated lemon peel, and squeeze in the juice of lemon,
drop over a little warmed butter, and brown before
the fire.