INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.
Boiling is the most simple manner
of cooking, the great art in this process is to boil
the article sufficiently, without its being overdone,
the necessity of slow boiling cannot be too strongly
impressed upon the cook, as the contrary, renders it
hard and of a bad color; the average time of boiling
for fresh meat is half an hour to every pound, salt
meat requires half as long again, and smoked meat
still longer; the lid of the saucepan should only be
removed for skimming, which is an essential process.
Roasting chiefly depends on the skilful
management of the fire, it is considered that a joint
of eight pounds requires two hours roasting; when
first put down it should be basted with fresh dripping,
and afterwards with its own dripping, it should be
sprinkled with salt, and repeatedly dredged with flour,
which browns and makes it look rich and frothy.
Broiling requires a steady clear fire,
free from flame and smoke, the gridiron should be
quite hot before the article is placed on it, and
the bars should be rubbed with fat, or if the article
is thin-skinned and delicate, with chalk; the gridiron
should be held aslant to prevent the fat dripping
into the fire; the bars of a gridiron should be close
and fine. Frying is easier than broiling, the
fat, oil or butter in which the article is fried must
be boiling, but have ceased to bubble before it is
put in the pan, or it will be greasy and black:
there is now a new description of fryingpan, called
a saute pan, and which will be found extremely convenient
for frying small cutlets or collops.
Stewing is a more elaborate mode of
boiling; a gentle heat with frequent skimmings, are
the points to be observed.
Glazing is done by brushing melted
jelly over the article to be glazed and letting it
cool, and then adding another coat, or in some cases
two or three, this makes any cold meats or poultry
have an elegant appearance.
Blanching makes the article plump
and white. It should be set on the fire in cold
water, boil up and then be immersed in cold water,
where it should remain some little time. Larding
(the French term is Pique, which the inexperienced
Jewish cook may not be acquainted with, we therefore
use the term in common use) is a term given to a certain
mode of garnishing the surface of meat or poultry:
it is inserting small pieces of the fat of smoked
meats, truffles, or tongue, which are trimmed into
slips of equal length and size, into the flesh of
the article at regular distances, and is effected by
means of larding pins.
Poelee and Blanc, are terms used in
modern cookery for a very expensive mode of stewing:
it is done by stewing the article with meat, vegetables,
and fat of smoked meats, all well seasoned; instead
of placing it to stew in water it is placed on slices
of meat covered with slices of fat and the vegetables
and seasoning added, then water enough to cover the
whole is added.
Blanc differs from Poelee, in having
a quantity of suet added, and being boiled down before
the article is placed to stew in it.
Braising is a similar process to Poelee,
but less meat and vegetable is used.
TO CLARIFY SUET.
Melt down with care fine fresh suet,
either beef or veal, put it into a jar, and set it
in a stew-pan of water to boil, putting in a sprig
of rosemary, or a little orange flower water while
melting, this is a very useful preparation and will
be found, if adopted in English kitchens, to answer
the purpose of lard and is far more delicate and wholesome:
it should be well beaten till quite light with a wooden
fork.
OLIO.
Put eight pounds of beef in sufficient
water to cover it, when the water boils take out the
meat, skim off the fat, and then return the meat to
the stew-pan, adding at the same time two fine white
cabbages without any of the stalk or hard parts; season
with pepper, salt, and a tea-spoonful of white sugar,
let it simmer on a slow fire for about five hours,
about an hour before serving, add half a pound of
chorisa, which greatly improves the flavor.
AN EXCELLENT RECEIPT FOR STEWING A RUMP OF BEEF.
Chop fine a large onion, four bay
leaves, and a little parsley, add to these half an
ounce of ground ginger, a tea-spoonful of salt, a blade
of mace, a little ground allspice, some lemon sliced,
and some of the peel grated; rub all these ingredients
well into the meat, then place it into a stew-pan
with three parts of a cup of vinegar, a calf’s-foot
cut in small pieces and a pint of water, stew gently
till tender, when the fat must be carefully skimmed
off the gravy, which must be strained and poured over
the meat.
ALAMODE BEEF, OR SOUR MEAT.
Cover a piece of the ribs of beef
boned and filletted, or a piece of the round with
vinegar diluted with water, season with onions, pepper,
salt, whole allspice, and three or four bay leaves,
add a cup full of raspings, and let the whole stew
gently for three or four hours, according to the weight
of the meat; this dish is excellent when cold.
A rump steak stewed in the same way will be found exceedingly
fine.
KIMMEL MEAT.
Place a small piece of the rump of
beef, or the under cut of a sirloin in a deep pan
with three pints of vinegar, two ounces of carraway
seeds tied in a muslin bag, salt, pepper, and spices,
cover it down tight, and bake thoroughly in a slow
oven. This is a fine relish for luncheons.
BEEF AND BEANS.
Take a piece of brisket of beef, cover
it with water, when boiling skim off the fat, add
one quarter of French beans cut small, two onions
cut in quarters, season with pepper and salt, and when
nearly done take a dessert-spoonful of flour, one
of coarse brown sugar, and a large tea-cup full of
vinegar, mix them together and stir in with the beans,
and continue stewing for about half an hour longer.
KUGEL AND COMMEAN.
Soak one pint of Spanish peas and
one pint of Spanish beans all night in three pints
of water; take two marrow bones, a calf’s-foot,
and three pounds of fine gravy-beef, crack the bones
and tie them to prevent the marrow escaping, and put
all together into a pan; then take one pound of flour,
half a pound of shred suet, a little grated nutmeg
and ground ginger, cloves and allspice, one pound of
coarse brown sugar, and the crumb of a slice of bread,
first soaked in water and pressed dry, mix all these
ingredients together into a paste, grease a quart
basin and put it in, covering the basin with a plate
set in the middle of the pan with the beans, meat,
&c. Cover the pan lightly down with coarse brown
paper, and let it remain all the night and the next
day, (until required) in a baker’s oven, when
done, take out the basin containing the pudding, and
skim the fat from the gravy which must be served as
soup; the meat, &c., is extremely savory and nutritious,
but is not a very seemly dish for table. The pudding
must be turned out of the basin, and a sweet sauce
flavored with lemon and brandy is a fine addition.
SAUER KRAUT.
Boil about seven or eight pounds of
beef, either brisket or a fillet off the shoulder,
in enough water to cover it, when it has boiled for
one hour, add as much sauer kraut, which is a
German preparation, as may be approved, it should
then stew gently for four hours and be served in a
deep dish. The Germans are not very particular
in removing the fat, but it is more delicate by so
doing.
BEEF WITH CELERY, AND WHITE BEANS AND PEAS.
Soak for twelve hours one pint of
dried white peas, and half a pint of the same kind
of beans, they must be well soaked, and if very dry,
may require longer than twelve hours, put a nice piece
of brisket of about eight pounds weight in a stew-pan
with the peas and beans, and three heads of celery
cut in small pieces, put water enough to cover, and
season with pepper and salt only, let it all stew slowly
till the meat is extremely tender and the peas and
beans quite soft, then add four large lumps of sugar
and nearly a tea-cup of vinegar; this is a very fine
stew.
BEEF COLLOPS.
Cut thin slices off from any tender
part, divide them into pieces of the size of a wine
biscuit, flatten and flour them, and lightly fry in
clarified fat, lay them in a stew-pan with good stock,
season to taste, have pickled gherkins chopped small,
and add to the gravy a few minutes before serving.
TO WARM COLD ROAST BEEF WHEN NOT SUFFICIENTLY DONE.
Cut it in slices, also slice some
beetroot or cucumber and put them in a saucepan with
a little gravy which need not be strong, two table-spoonsful
of vinegar, one of oil, pepper, salt, a little chopped
lettuce and a few peas, simmer till the vegetables
and meat are sufficiently dressed.
TO HASH BEEF.
The meat should be put on the fire
in a little broth or gravy, with a little fried onion,
pepper, salt, and a spoonful of ketchup, or any other
sauce at hand, let it simmer for about ten minutes,
then mix in a cup a little flour with a little of
the gravy, and pour it into the stewpan to thicken
the rest; sippets of toast should be served with hashes,
a little port wine, a pinch of saffron, or a piece
chorisa may be considered great improvements.
STEAKS WITH CHESNUTS.
Take a fine thick steak, half fry
it, then flour and place it in a stewpan with a little
good beef gravy, season with cayenne pepper and salt,
when it has simmered for about ten minutes, add a quarter
of a hundred good chesnuts, peeled and the inner skin
scraped off, let them stew with the steak till well
done, this is a very nice dish, a little Espagnole
sauce heightens the flavor.
A SIMPLE STEWED STEAK.
Put a fine steak in a stewpan with
a large piece of clarified suet or fat, and a couple
of onions sliced, let the steak fry for a few minutes,
turning it several times; then cover the steak with
gravy, or even water will answer the purpose, with
a tea-cup full of button onions, or a Spanish onion
sliced, a little lemon peel, pepper, salt, and a little
allspice; simmer till the steak is done, when the steak
must be removed and the gravy be carefully skimmed,
then add to it a little browning and a spoonful of
mushroom ketchup; the steak must be kept on a hot
stove or returned to the stewpan to warm up. If
the gravy is not thick enough, stir in a little flour.
BRISKET STEWED WITH ONIONS AND RAISINS.
Stew about five pounds of brisket
of beef in sufficient water to cover, season with
allspice, pepper, salt, and nutmeg, and when nearly
done, add four large onions cut in pieces and half
a pound of raisins stoned, let them remain simmering
till well done; and just before serving, stir in a
tea-spoonful of brown sugar and a table spoonful of
flour.
BRISKET STEWED.
Take about six or seven pounds of
brisket of beef, place it in a stewpan with only enough
water to cover it, season with a little spice tied
in a bag; when the meat is tender and the spices sufficiently
extracted to make the gravy rich and strong, part of
it must be removed to another saucepan; have ready
a variety of vegetables cut into small shapes, such
as turnips, carrots, mushrooms, cauliflowers, or whatever
may be in season; stew them gently till tender in the
gravy, the meat must then be glazed and the gravy poured
in the dish, and the vegetables arranged round.
BEEF RAGOUT.
Take a small well cut piece of lean
beef, lard it with the fat of smoked beef, and stew
it with good gravy, highly seasoned with allspice,
cloves, pepper and salt; when the meat is well done
remove it from the gravy, which skim carefully and
free from every particle of fat, and add to it a glass
of port wine, the juice of a lemon, half a tea-spoonful
of cayenne pepper, and a little mushroom ketchup; the
beef should be glazed when required to have an elegant
appearance.
A few very small forcemeat balls must
be poached in the gravy, which must be poured over
the meat, and the balls arranged round the dish; this
is a very savoury and pretty dish.
TO SALT BEEF.
This may be done by mixing a pound
of common salt, half an ounce of saltpetre and one
ounce of coarse brown sugar, and rubbing the meat
well with it, daily for a fortnight or less, according
to the weather, and the degree of salt that the meat
is required to have. Or by boiling eight ounces
of salt, eight ounces of sugar, and half an ounce
of saltpetre in two quarts of water, and pouring it
over the meat, and letting it stand in it for eight
or ten days.
SPICED BEEF.
Take a fine thick piece of brisket
of beef not fat, let it lay three days in a pickle,
as above, take it out and rub in a mixture of spices
consisting of equal quantities of ground all-spice,
black pepper, cloves, ginger and nutmegs, and a little
brown sugar, repeat this daily for a week, then cover
it with pounded dried sweet herbs, roll or tie it
tightly, put it into a pan with very little water,
and bake slowly for eight hours, then take it out,
untie it and put a heavy weight upon it; this it a
fine relish when eaten cold.
SMOKED BEEF.
As there are seldom conveniences in
private kitchens for smoking meats, it will generally
be the best and cheapest plan to have them ready prepared
for cooking. All kinds of meats smoked and salted,
are to be met with in great perfection at all the Hebrew
butchers.
Chorisa, that most refined
and savoury of all sausages, is to be also procured
at the same places. It is not only excellent fried
in slices with poached eggs or stewed with rice, but
imparts a delicious flavor to stews, soups, and sauces,
and is one of the most useful resources of the Jewish
kitchen.
A WHITE FRICANDEAU OF VEAL.
Take four or five pounds of breast
of veal, or fillet from the shoulder; stuff it with
a finely flavoured veal stuffing and put it into a
stewpan with water sufficient to cover it, a calf’s-foot
cut in pieces is sometimes added, season with one
onion, a blade of mace, white pepper and salt, and
a sprig of parsley, stew the whole gently until the
meat is quite tender, then skim and strain the gravy
and stir in the beaten yolks of four eggs, and the
juice of two lemons previously mixed smoothly with
a portion of the gravy, button mushrooms, or pieces
of celery stewed with the veal are sometimes added
by way of varying the flavor, egg and forcemeat balls
garnish the dish. When required to look elegant
it should be pique.
A BROWN FRICASSEE.
Cut a breast of veal in pieces, fry
them lightly and put them into a stewpan with a good
beef gravy, seasoned with white pepper, salt, a couple
of sliced onions (previously browned in a little oil),
and a piece of whole ginger, let it simmer very slowly
for two hours taking care to remove the scum or fat,
have ready some rich forcemeat and spread it about
an inch thick over three cold hard boiled eggs, fry
these for a few moments and put them in the saucepan
with the veal; before serving, these balls should
be cut in quarters, and the gravy rendered more savory
by the addition of lemon juice and half a glass of
white wine, or a table-spoonful of walnut liquor, if
the gravy is not sufficiently thick by long stewing,
a little browned flour may be stirred in.
CALF’S HEAD STEWED.
Clean and soak the head till the cheek-bone
can be easily removed, then parboil it and cut it
into pieces of moderate size, and place them in about
a quart of stock made from shin of beef, the gravy
must be seasoned highly with eschalots, a small head
of celery, a small bunch of sweet herbs, an onion,
a carrot, a little mace, a dozen cloves, a piece of
lemon peel, and a sprig of parsley, salt and pepper;
it must be strained before the head is added, fine
forcemeat balls rolled in egg and fried are served
in the dish, as well as small fritters made with the
brains; when ready for serving, a glass and half of
white wine and the juice of a lemon are added to the
gravy.
CALVES-FEET WITH SPANISH SAUCE.
Having cleaned, boiled and split two
fine feet, dip them into egg and bread crumbs mixed
with chopped parsley and chalot, a few ground cloves,
a little nutmeg, pepper and salt, fry them a fine brown,
arrange them in the dish and pour the sauce over.
Make the sauce in the following manner: slice
two fine Spanish onions, put them in a saucepan, with
some chopped truffles or mushrooms, a little suet,
cayenne and white pepper, salt, one or two small lumps
of white sugar, and let all simmer in some good strong
stock till the gravy has nearly boiled away, then
stir in a wine glass of Madeira wine, and a little
lemon juice; it should then be returned to the saucepan,
to be made thoroughly hot before serving.
CALF’S FEET AU FRITUR.
Simmer them for four hours in water
till the meat can be taken easily from the bone, then
cut them in handsome pieces, season with pepper and
salt, dip them in egg, and sprinkle thickly with grated
bread crumbs, and fry of a fine even brown; they may
be served dry or with any sauce that may be approved.
The liquor should continue to stew
with the bones, and can be used for jelly.
CALF’S FEET STEWED FOR INVALIDS.
Clean and soak a fine foot, put it
on in very little water, let it simmer till tender,
then cut it in pieces, without removing the bone,
and continue stewing for three hours, till they become
perfectly soft; if the liquor boils away, add a little
more water, but there should not be more liquor than
can be served in the dish with the foot; the only
seasoning requisite is a little salt and white pepper,
and a sprig of parsley, or a pinch of saffron to improve
the appearance; a little delicately-made thin egg
sauce, with a flavor of lemon juice, may be served
in a sauce-tureen if approved; sippets of toast or
well boiled rice to garnish the dish, may also be
added, and will not be an unacceptable addition.
TENDONS OF VEAL.
This is a very fine and nutritious
dish; cut from the bones of a breast of veal the tendons
which are round the front, trim and blanch them, put
them with slices of smoked beef into a stewpan with
some shavings of veal, a few herbs, a little sliced
lemon, two or three onions, and a little broth; they
must simmer for seven or eight hours; when done, thicken
the gravy and add white wine and mushrooms and egg-balls;
a few peas with the tendons will be found excellent,
a piece of mint and a little white sugar will then
be requisite.
FRICANDEAU OF VEAL.
Take a piece from the shoulder, about
three to four pounds, trim it and form it into a well
shaped even piece, the surface of which should be
quite smooth; pique it thickly, put it into
a stewpan with a couple of onions, a carrot sliced,
sweet herbs, two or three bay leaves, a large piece
of chorissa or a slice of the root of a tongue
smoked, a little whole pepper and salt; cover it with
a gravy made from the trimmings of the veal, and stew
till extremely tender, which can be proved by probing
it with a fine skewer, then reduce part of the gravy
to a glaze, glaze the meat with it and serve on a puree
of vegetables.
COLLARED VEAL.
Remove the bones, gristle, &c., from
a nice piece of veal, the breast is the best part
for the purpose; season the meat well with chopped
herbs, mace, pepper, and salt, then lay between the
veal slices of smoked tongue variegated with beetroot,
chopped parsley, and hard yolks of eggs, roll it up
tightly in a cloth, simmer for some hours till tender;
when done, it should have a weight laid on it to press
out the liquor.
CURRIED VEAL.
Cut a breast of veal into pieces,
fry lightly with a chopped onion, then rub the veal
over with currie powder, put it into a good gravy of
veal and beef, season simply with pepper, salt, and
lemon juice.
Fowls curried are prepared in the same way.
CUTLETS.
Cut them into proper shape and beat
them with a roller until the fibre of the meat is
entirely broken; if this is not done, they will be
hard; they must then be covered with egg and sprinkled
with flour, or a preparation for cutlets may be spread
over them, and then fry them of a fine brown, remove
the cutlets to a hot dish, and add to the fat in which
the cutlets have been fried, a spoonful of flour, a
small cup of gravy, salt, pepper, and a little lemon
juice or lemon pickle.
CUTLETS A LA FRANCAISE.
French cooks cut them thinner than
the English, and trim them into rounds of the size
of a tea-cup; they must be brushed over with egg,
and sprinkled with salt, white pepper, mushroom powder,
and grated lemon peel; put them into a saute
pan and fry of a very light brown; pieces of bread,
smoked meat or tongue cut of the same size as the
cutlets, and prepared in the same manner, are laid
alternately in the dish with them; they should be
served without sauce and with a puree of mushrooms
or spinach in the centre of the dish.
CUTLETS IN WHITE FRICASSEE.
Cut them in proper shapes, put them
in a veal gravy made with the trimmings enough to
cover them; season delicately, and let them simmer
till quite tender, but not long enough to lose their
shape; fresh button mushrooms and a piece of lemon
peel are essential to this dish; when the meat is
done remove it, take all fat from the gravy, and thicken
it with the yolks of two beaten eggs; small balls of
forcemeat in which mushrooms must be minced should
be poached in the gravy when about to be served; the
meat must be returned to the saucepan to be made hot,
and when placed in the dish, garnish with thin slices
of lemon.
CUTLETS IN BROWN FRICASSEE.
They must be trimmed as above, fried
slightly and stewed in beef gravy, and seasoned according
to the directions given for a brown fricassee of veal;
balls or fritters are always an improvement to the
appearance of this dish.
BLANQUETTE OF VEAL.
Cut into thin pieces of the size of
shillings and half crowns, cold veal or poultry, lay
it in a small saucepan with a handful of fresh well
cleaned button mushrooms, pour over a little veal gravy,
only enough to cover them, with a piece of clarified
veal fat about the size of the yolk of a hard boiled
egg; flavor with a piece of lemon peel, very little
white pepper and salt, one small lump of white sugar,
and a little nutmeg, stew all together for fifteen
minutes, then pour over a sauce prepared in a separate
saucepan, made with veal gravy, a little lemon juice,
but not much, and the beaten yolks of two eggs, let
it simmer for an instant and then serve it up in the
centre of a dish prepared with a wall of mashed potatoes,
delicately browned; a few truffles renders this dish
more elegant.
MINCED VEAL.
Cut in small square pieces about the
size of dice, cold dressed veal, put it into a saucepan
with a little water or gravy, season simply with salt,
pepper, and grated or minced lemon peel, the mince
should be garnished with sippets of toast.
MIROTON OF VEAL.
Mince finely some cold veal or poultry,
add a little grated tongue, or smoked beef, a few
crumbs of bread, sweet herbs, pepper, salt, parsley,
and if approved, essence of lemon, mix all well with
two or three eggs, and a very small quantity of good
gravy; grease a mould, put in the above ingredients
and bake for three-quarters of an hour; turn out with
care, and serve with mushroom sauce.
FRICONDELLES.
Prepare cold veal or poultry as in
the last receipt, add instead of crumbs of bread,
a French roll soaked in white gravy, mix with it the
same ingredients, and form it into two shapes to imitate
small chickens or sweetbreads; sprinkle with crumbs
of bread, and place in a frying-pan as deep as a shallow
saucepan; when they have fried enough to become set,
pour enough weak gravy in the pan to cover the fricondelles,
and let them stew in it gently, place them both in
the same dish, and pour over any well thickened sauce
that may be selected.
ANOTHER SORT.
Prepare four small pieces of veal
to serve in one dish, according to the directions
given for fricandeau of veal; these form a very
pretty entree; the pieces of veal should be
about the size of pigeons.
SMOKED VEAL.
Take a fine fat thick breast of veal,
bone it, lay it in pickle, according to the receipt
to salt meat, hang it for three or four weeks in wood-smoke,
and it will prove a very fine savoury relish, either
boiled and eaten cold, or fried as required.
SWEETBREADS ROASTED.
First soak them in warm water, and
then blanch them; in whatever manner they are to be
dressed, this is essential; they may be prepared in
a variety of ways, the simplest is to roast them; for
this they have only to be covered with egg and bread
crumbs, seasoned with salt and pepper, and finished
in a Dutch oven or cradle spit, frequently basting
with clarified veal suet; they may be served either
dry with a puree of vegetables, or with a brown
gravy.
SWEETBREADS STEWED WHITE.
After soaking and blanching, stew
them in veal gravy, and season with celery, pepper,
salt, nutmeg, a little mace, and a piece of lemon
peel, they should be served with a fine white sauce,
the gravy in which they are stewed will form the basis
for it, with the addition of yolks of eggs and mushroom
essence; French cooks would adopt the veloute
or béchamel sauce; Jerusalem artichokes cut
the size of button mushrooms, are a suitable accompaniment
as a garnish.
SWEETBREADS STEWED BROWN.
After soaking and blanching, fry them
till brown, then simmer gently in beef gravy seasoned
highly with smoked meat, nutmeg, pepper, salt, a small
onion stuck with cloves, and a very little whole allspice;
the gravy must be slightly thickened, and morels and
truffles are generally added; small balls of delicate
forcemeat are also an improvement. The above
receipts are adapted for sweetbreads fricasseed, except
that they must be cut in pieces for fricassees, and
pieces of meat or poultry are added to them; sweetbreads
when dressed whole look better piqués.
A DELICATE RECEIPT FOR ROAST MUTTON.
Put the joint in a saucepan, cover
it with cold water, let it boil for half an hour,
have the spit and fire quite ready, and remove the
meat from the saucepan, and place it immediately down
to roast, baste it well, dredge it repeatedly with
flour, and sprinkle with salt; this mode of roasting
mutton removes the strong flavor that is so disagreeable
to some tastes.
MUTTON STEWED WITH CELERY.
Take the best end of a neck of mutton,
or a fillet taken from the leg or shoulder, place
it in a stewpan with just enough water to cover it,
throw in a carrot and turnip, and season, but not too
highly; when nearly done remove the meat and strain
off the gravy, then return both to the stewpan with
forcemeat balls and some fine celery cut in small
pieces; let all stew gently till perfectly done, then
stir in the yolks of two eggs, a little flour, and
the juice of half a lemon, which must be mixed with
a little of the gravy before pouring in the stewpan,
and care must be taken to prevent curdling.
A SIMPLE WAY OF DRESSING MUTTON.
Take the fillet off a small leg or
shoulder of mutton, rub it well over with egg and
seasoning, and partly roast it, then place it in a
stewpan with a little strong gravy, and stew gently
till thoroughly done; this dish is simple, but exceedingly
nice; a few balls or fritters to garnish will improve
it.
MAINTENON CUTLETS.
This is merely broiling or frying
cutlets in a greased paper, after having spread on
them a seasoning prepared as follows: make a paste
of bread crumbs, chopped parsley, nutmeg, pepper, salt,
grated lemon peel, and thyme, with a couple of beaten
eggs; a piquante sauce should be served in a
tureen.
A HARRICOT.
Cut off the best end of a neck of
mutton into chops, flour and partly fry them, then
lay them in a stewpan with carrots, sliced turnips
cut in small round balls, some button onions, and
cover with water; skim frequently, season with pepper
and salt to taste, color the gravy with a little browning
and a spoonful of mushroom powder.
IRISH STEW.
Is the same as above, excepting that
the meat is not previously fried, and that potatoes
are used instead of turnips and carrots.
MUTTON A L’HISPANIOLA.
Take a small piece of mutton, either
part of a shoulder or a fillet of the leg, partly
roast it, then put it in a stewpan with beef gravy
enough to cover it, previously seasoned with herbs,
a carrot and turnip; cut in quarters three large Spanish
onions, and place in the stewpan round the meat; a
stuffing will improve it, and care must be taken to
free the gravy from every particle of fat.
MUTTON COLLOPS.
Take from a fine knuckle a couple
of slices, cut and trim them in collops the size of
a tea cup, flatten them and spread over each side
a forcemeat for cutlets, and fry them; potatoe or Jerusalem
artichokes cut in slices of the same size and thickness,
or pieces of bread cut with a fluted cutter, prepared
as the collops and fried, must be placed alternately
in the dish with them; they may be served with a pure
simple gravy, or very hot and dry on a napkin, garnished
with fried parsley and slices of lemon.
The knuckle may be used in the following
manner: put it on with sufficient water to cover
it, season it and simmer till thoroughly done, thicken
the gravy with prepared barley, and flavor it with
lemon pickle, or capers; it should be slightly colored
with saffron, and celery sauce may be served as an
accompaniment, or the mutton may be served on a fine
puree of turnips.
MUTTON CUTLETS.
Have a neck of mutton, cut the bones
short, and remove the chine bone completely; cut chops
off so thin that every other one shall be without
bone, trim them carefully, that all the chops shall
bear the same appearance, then flatten them well;
cover them with a cutlet preparation, and fry of a
delicate brown; a fine puree of any vegetable
that may be approved, or any sauce that may be selected,
should be served with them; they may be arranged in
various ways in the dish, either round the dish or
in a circle in the centre, so that the small part
of the cutlets shall almost meet; if the latter, the
puree should garnish round them instead of being
in the centre of the dish.
MUTTON HAM.
Choose a fine leg of mutton, rub it
in daily with a mixture of three ounces of brown sugar,
two ounces of common salt, and half an ounce of saltpetre,
continue this process for a fortnight, then hang it
to dry in wood smoke for ten days longer.
LAMB AND SPREW.
Take a fine neck or breast of lamb,
put it in stewpan with as much water as will cover
it, add to it a bundle of sprew cut in pieces of two
inches in length, a small head of celery cut small,
and one onion, pepper, salt, and a sprig of parsley,
let it simmer gently till the meat and sprew are tender;
a couple of lumps of sugar improves the flavor; there
should not be too much liquor, and all fat must be
removed; the sprew should surround the meat when served,
and also be thickly laid over it.
LAMB AND PEAS.
Take the best end of a neck of lamb,
either keep it whole or divide it into chops as may
be preferred, put it into a saucepan with a little
chopped onion, pepper, salt, and a small quantity of
water; when half done add half a peck of peas, half
a lettuce cut fine, a little mint, and a few lumps
of sugar, and let it stew thoroughly; when done, there
must not be too much liquor; cutlets of veal or beef
are also excellent dressed as above. Although
this is a spring dish it may be almost equally well
dressed in winter, by substituting small mutton cutlets
and preserved peas, which may be met with at any of
the best Italian warehouses; a breast or neck of lamb
may also be stewed whole in the same manner.
LAMB CUTLETS WITH CUCUMBERS.
Take two fine cucumbers, peel and
cut them lengthways, lay them in vinegar for an hour,
then stew them in good stock till tender, when stir
in the yolks of two or three eggs, a little flour and
essence of lemon, which must all be first mixed up
together with a little of the stock, have ready some
cutlets trimmed and fried a light brown, arrange them
round the dish and pour the cucumbers in the centre.
A NICE RECEIPT FOR SHOULDER OF LAMB.
Half boil it, score it and squeeze
over lemon juice, and cover with grated bread crumbs,
egg and parsley, broil it over a clear fire and put
it to brown in a Dutch oven, or grill and serve with
a sauce seasoned with lemon pickle and chopped mint.
A CASSEREET, AN EAST INDIA DISH.
Take two pounds of lamb chops, or
mutton may be substituted, place them in a stewpan,
cover with water or gravy, season only with pepper
and salt, when the chops are half done, carefully skim
off the fat and add two table spoonsful of cassereet,
stir it in the gravy which should not be thickened,
and finish stewing gently till done enough; rice should
accompany this dish.
TURKEY BONED AND FORCED.
A turkey thus prepared may be either
boiled or roasted; there are directions for boning
poultry which might be given, but it is always better
to let the poulterer do it; when boned it must be filled
with a fine forcemeat, which may be varied in several
ways, the basis should be according to the receipt
given for veal stuffings, forcemeats, sausage meat,
tongue, and mushrooms added as approved. When
boiled it is served with any fine white sauce, French
cooks use the veloute or béchamel.
When roasted, a cradle spit is very convenient, but
if there is not one the turkey must be carefully tied
to the spit.
FOWLS BONED AND FORCED.
The above directions serve also for fowls.
A SAVOURY WAY OF ROASTING A FOWL.
Fill it with a fine seasoning, and
just before it is ready for serving, baste it well
with clarified veal suet, and sprinkle it thickly
with very dry crumbs of bread, repeat this two or three
times; then place it in the dish, and serve with a
fine brown gravy well flavored with lemon juice; delicate
forcemeat fritters should be also served in the dish.
BOILED FOWLS.
Are served with a fine white sauce,
and are often garnished with pieces of white cauliflower,
or vegetable marrow, the chief object is to keep them
white; it is best to select white legged poultry for
boiling, as they prove whiter when dressed.
AMNASTICH.
Stew gently one pint of rice in one
quart of strong gravy till it begins to swell, then
add an onion stuck with cloves, a bunch of sweet herbs,
and a chicken stuffed with forcemeat, let it stew with
the rice till thoroughly done, then take it up and
stir in the rice, the yolks of four eggs, and the
juice of a lemon; serve the fowl in the same dish
with the rice, which should be colored to a fine yellow
with saffron.
FOWLS STEWED WITH RICE AND CHORISA.
Boil a fowl in sufficient water or
gravy to cover it, when boiling for ten minutes, skim
off the fat and add half a pound of rice, and one
pound of chorisa cut in about four pieces, season
with a little white pepper, salt, and a pinch of saffron
to color it, and then stew till the rice is thoroughly
tender; there should be no gravy when served, but
the rice ought to be perfectly moist.
CURRIED CHICKEN.
See curried veal. Undressed chicken
is considered best for a curry, it must be cut in
small joints, the directions for curried veal are
equally adapted for fowls.
A NICE METHOD OF DRESSING FOWL AND SWEETBREAD.
Take a fowl and blanch it, also a
fine sweet bread, parboil them, then cut off in smooth
well shaped slices, all the white part of the fowl,
and slice the sweetbread in similar pieces, place them
together in a fine well-flavoured veal gravy; when
done, serve neatly in the dish, and pour over a fine
white sauce, any that may be approved, the remainder
of the fowl must be cut up in small joints or pieces,
not separated from the bone, and fried to become brown,
then place them in a stew-pan with forcemeat balls,
truffles, and morels; pour over half or three quarters
of a pint of beef gravy, and simmer till finished;
a little mushroom ketchup, or lemon-pickle may be
added; in this manner two very nice entrees
may be formed.
BLANKETTE OF FOWL.
See blankette of veal.
TO STEW DUCK WITH GREEN PEAS.
Stuff and half roast a duck, then
put it into a stew-pan with an onion sliced, a little
mint and about one pint of beef gravy, add after it
has simmered half an hour, a quart of green peas, and
simmer another half hour; a little lump sugar is requisite.
TO WARM COLD POULTRY.
Cut up the pieces required to be dressed,
spread over them a seasoning as for cutlets, and fry
them; pour over a little good gravy, and garnish with
sippets of toast and sliced lemon, or place them in
an edging of rice or mashed potatoes.
BROILED FOWL AND MUSHROOMS.
Truss a fine fowl as if for boiling,
split it down the back, and broil gently; when nearly
done, put it in a stewpan with a good gravy, add a
pint of fresh button mushrooms, season to taste; a
little mushroom powder and lemon juice improve the
flavour.
PIGEONS.
To have a good appearance they should
be larded and stuffed; glazing is also an improvement,
they form a nice entree; they may be stewed
in a strong gravy; when done enough, remove the pigeons,
thicken the gravy, add a few forcemeat and egg balls,
and serve in the dish with the pigeons. Or they
may be split down the back, broiled, and then finished
in the stew-pan.
STEWED GIBLETS.
Scald one or more sets of giblets,
set them on the fire with a little veal or chicken,
or both, in a good gravy; season to taste, thicken
the gravy, and color it with browning, flavor with
mushroom powder and lemon-juice and one glass of white
wine; forcemeat balls should be added a few minutes
before serving, and garnish with thin slices of hard
boiled eggs.
DUTCH TOAST.
Take the remains of any cold poultry
or meat, mince it and season highly; add to it any
cold dressed vegetable, mix it up with one or more
eggs, and let it simmer till hot in a little gravy;
have ready a square of toast, and serve it on it;
squeeze over a little lemon-juice, and sprinkle with
white pepper. Vegetables prepared in this way
are excellent; cauliflower simmered in chicken broth,
seasoned delicately and minced on toast, is a nutritive
good luncheon for an invalid.
TIMBALE DE MACCARONI.
This is a very pretty dish. The
maccaroni must be boiled in water till it slightly
swells, and is soft enough to cut; it must be cut into
short pieces about two inches in length. Grease
a mould, and stick the maccaroni closely together
all over the mould; when this is done, and which will
require some patience, fill up the space with friccassee
of chicken, sweetbreads, or whatever may be liked;
close the mould carefully, and boil. Rich white
sauce is usually served with it, but not poured over
the timbale, as it would spoil the effect of the honeycomb
appearance, which is very pretty.
A SAVOURY PIE FOR PERSONS OF DELICATE DIGESTION.
Cut up fowl and sweetbread, lay in
the dish in alternate layers with meat, jelly, and
the yolks of hard-boiled eggs without the whites,
and flavor with lemon-juice, white pepper, and salt;
cover with rice prepared as follows: boil half
a pound of rice in sufficient water to permit it to
swell; when tender beat it up to a thick paste with
the yolk of one or two eggs, season with a little
salt, and spread it over the dish thickly. The
fowl and sweetbread should have been previously simmered
till half done in a little weak broth; the pie must
be baked in a gentle oven, and if the rice will not
brown sufficiently, finish with a salamander.
DESCAIDES.
Take the livers of chickens or any
other poultry; stew it gently in a little good gravy
seasoned with a little onion, mushroom essence, pepper,
and salt; when tender, remove the livers, place them
on a paste board, and mince them; return them to the
saucepan, and stir in the yolks of one or two eggs,
according to the quantity of liver, until the gravy
becomes thick; have a round of toast ready on a hot
plate, and serve it on the toast; this is a very nice
luncheon or supper dish.