DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING PASTE.
To make good light paste requires
much practice; as it is not only from the proportions,
but from the manner of mixing the various ingredients,
that paste acquires its good or bad qualities.
Paste should be worked up very lightly,
and no strength or pressure used; it should be rolled
out from you, as lightly as possible. A
marble slab is better than a board to make paste on.
The flour should be dried for some
time before the fire previously to being used.
In forming it into paste it should be wetted as little
as possible, to prevent its being tough. It is
a great mistake to imagine lard is better adapted
for pastry than butter or clarified fat; it may make
the paste lighter, but neither the color nor the flavor
will be nearly so good, and the saving is extremely
trifling.
To ensure lightness, paste should
be set in the oven directly it is made.
Puff paste requires a brisk oven.
Butter should be added to the paste in small pieces.
The more times the paste is folded
and rolled, if done with a light hand and the butter
added with skill, the richer and lighter it will prove.
It is no longer customary to line the dish for pies
and fruit tarts.
PLAIN PUFF PASTE.
Mix a pound of flour into a stiff
paste with a little water, first having rubbed into
it about two ounces of butter, then roll it out; add
by degrees the remainder of the butter (there should
be altogether half a pound of butter), fold the paste
and roll about two or three times.
VERY RICH PUFF PASTE.
Mix in the same manner equal quantities
of butter and flour, taking care to have the flour
dried for a short time before the fire; it may be
folded and rolled five or six times. This paste
is well suited to vol-au-vents and
tartlets; an egg well beaten and mixed with the paste
is sometimes added.
PLAIN SHORT CRUST.
Put half a pound of fresh butter to
a pound of flour, add the yolks of two eggs and a
little powdered sugar, mix into a paste with water,
and roll out once.
EGG PASTE, CALLED IN MODERN COOKERY NOUILLES.
This is formed by making a paste of
flour and beaten eggs, without either butter or water;
it must be rolled out extremely thin and left to dry;
it may then be cut into narrow strips or stamped with
paste cutters. It is more fashionable in soups
than vermicelli.
BEEF DRIPPING PASTE.
Mix half a pound of clarified dripping
into one pound of flour; work it into a paste with
water, and roll out twice. This is a good paste
for a common meat pie.
GLAZE FOR PASTRY.
When the pastry is nearly baked, brush
it over with white of egg, cover it thickly with sifted
sugar, and brown it in the oven, or it may be browned
with a salamander.
For savory pies beat the yolk of an
egg, dip a paste-brush into it, and lay it on the
crust before baking.
FRUIT TARTS OR PIES.
A fruit tart is so common a sweet
that it is scarcely necessary to give any directions
concerning it. Acid fruits are best stewed before
putting into a pie: the usual proportions are
half a pound of sugar to a quart of fruit not
quite so much if the fruit is ripe; the fruit should
be laid high in the middle of the dish, to make the
pie a good shape. It is the fashion to lay over
the crust, when nearly baked, an icing of the whites
of eggs whisked with sugar; the tart or pie is then
replaced in the oven.
A VERY FINE SAVOURY PIE.
Lay a fine veal cutlet, cut in pieces
and seasoned, at the bottom of the dish; lay over
it a layer of smoked beef fat, then a layer of fine
cold jelly made from gravy-beef and veal, then hard
boiled eggs in slices, then chicken or sweetbread,
and then again the jelly, and so on till the dish
is filled; put no water, and season highly with lemon-juice,
essence of mushroom, pepper, salt, and nutmeg; also,
if approved, a blade of mace: small cakes of fine
forcemeat are an improvement; cover with a fine puff
paste, and brush over with egg, and bake.
TARTLETS.
Make a very rich light puff paste,
and roll it out to half an inch of thickness; it should
be cut with fluted paste-cutters, lightly baked, and
the centre scooped out afterwards, and the sweetmeat
or jam inserted; a pretty dish of pastry may be made
by cutting the paste in ribbons of three inches in
length, and one and a half in width; bake them lightly,
and pile them one upon another, with jam between each,
in the form of a cone.
CHEESECAKES.
Warm four ounces of butter, mix it
with the same quantity of loaf-sugar sifted, grate
in the rind of three lemons, squeeze in the juice
of one, add three well-beaten eggs, a little nutmeg,
and a spoonful of brandy; put this mixture into small
tins lined with a light puff paste, and bake.
Cheesecakes can be varied by putting
almonds beaten instead of the lemon, or by substituting
Seville oranges, and adding a few slices of candied
orange and lemon peel.
GIBLET PIE.
Prepare the giblets as for “stewed
giblets” they should then be laid in a deep
dish, covered with a puff paste, and baked.
MOLINA PIE.
Mince finely cold veal or chicken,
with smoked beef or tongue; season well, add lemon-juice
and a little nutmeg, let it simmer in a small quantity
of good beef or veal gravy; while on the fire, stir
in the yolks of four eggs, put it in a dish to cool,
and then cover with a rich pastry, and bake it.
VOL AU VENT.
This requires the greatest lightness
in the pastry, as all depends upon its rising when
baked; it should be rolled out about an inch and a
half in thickness, cut it with a fluted tin of the
size of the dish in which it is to be served.
Also cut a smaller piece, which must be rolled out
considerably thinner than an inch, to serve as a lid
for the other part; bake both pieces, and when done,
scoop out the crumb of the largest, and fill it with
a white fricassee of chicken, sweetbread, or whatever
may be selected; the sauce should be well thickened,
or it would soften, and run through the crust.
A VOL-AU-VENT OF FRUIT.
It is now the fashion to fill vol-au-vents
with fruits richly stewed with sugar until the syrup
is almost a jelly; it forms a very pretty entremet.
PETITS VOL-AU-VENTS.
These are made in the same way, but
cut in small rounds, the crumb of the larger is scooped
out, and the hollow filled with any of the varieties
of patty preparations or preserved fruits.
MINCE PIES.
Grease and line tin patty-pans with
a fine puff paste rolled out thin; fill them with
mince-meat, cover them with another piece of paste,
moisten the edges, close them carefully, cut them evenly
round, and bake them about half an hour in a well-heated
oven.
PATTY MEATS
May be prepared from any dressed materials,
such as cold dressed veal, beef and mutton, poultry,
sweetbreads, and fish; the chief art is to mince them
properly, and give them the appropriate flavor and
sauce; for veal, sweetbreads, and poultry, which may
be used together or separately, the usual seasonings
are mace, nutmeg, white pepper, salt, mushrooms minced,
or in powder, lemon-peel, and sometimes the juice also;
the mince is warmed in a small quantity of white sauce,
not too thin, and the patty crusts, when ready baked,
are filled with it.
For beef and mutton the seasonings
are salt, pepper, allspice, a few sweet herbs powdered,
with the addition, if approved, of a little ketchup;
the mince must be warmed in strong well-thickened beef
gravy.
If the mince is of fish, season with
anchovy sauce, nutmeg, lemon-peel, pepper and salt;
warm it, in a sauce prepared with butter, flour, and
milk or cream, worked together smoothly and stirred
till it thickens; the mince is then simmered in it
for a few minutes, till hot; the seasonings may be
put with the sauces, instead of with the mince.