Fish a la Creme
3 pounds of sturgeon or any solid
white fish boiled until tender. Remove bone,
mince fine, and season with salt, pepper, wine and
lemon juic quart milk, boiled with two good-sized
onions until they are in shreds. Rub to a cream
1/2 pound butter and two large tablespoonfuls of flour.
Strain the boiling milk with this and return to the
stew-pan and boil again, taking care to stir to prevent
lumps and burning. Grate the rind of one lemon,
with juice and one tumbler of wine and mix thoroughly
through the fish. Take one loaf of bread, removing
all crust, and pass through the colander. Have
dish very hot, putting fish and crumbs in layers,
bringing crumbs on top. Place in hot oven for
a few minutes. A nice lunch dish.
A Norwegian Fish Dish
Take a fresh codfish weighing about
4 pounds; do not wash it, but wipe with a soft cloth
wrung out in cold water. Scrape all the flesh
from skin and bone; and put the head, bones and skin
on to boil, and when thoroughly cooked, strain.
Take equal parts of scraped fish and chopped suet,
one tablespoon of salt and pound to a paste. Add
2 eggs, 2 tablespoonfuls of flour, a little mace and
ginger. Boil some cream, and when cold, gradually
add enough to make a soft batter. Try a little
of this in the boiling stock to see if the consistency
is right. Then put in a buttered, breaded mould
and cook two hours. If some of the batter is
left, form in balls and cook in the fish stock and
serve as soup.
Finnan haddies (from Delmonico’s)
1/2 pound of fish picked up and braized
in butter and cooked in the following sauce:
1 cup of cream over hard boiled egg cut in squares;
the yolk of 1 raw egg; a tablespoonful of Edan cheese,
a little flour to thicken; a little pepper and Worcestershire
sauce. Serve on toast.
Stuffed Smelt
Ingredients of stuffing: 1/4
cup of melted butter; 1 cup of bread crumbs, 1 teaspoonful
of chopped onion; 1/4 spoon of salt; 1/4 spoon of
pepper and a few herbs. Bone the smelt, stuff
and sew up. Roll in melted butter and fine bread
crumbs. Bake about fifteen minutes.
Sauc/2 cup butter
worked to a cream; yolks of 3 eggs beaten in one by
one; juice of 1/2 a lemon; 1/2 teaspoonful salt, 1/4
teaspoon pepper and 1/2 cup boiling water. Beat
and put on stove in a saucepan of boiling water to
thicken.
Brown Fish Chowder
1 onion fried in butter. Cut
any white fish in small pieces and fry in this after
first rolling the fish in flour. Take the fish
out and lay on brown paper. Put into a saucepan
2 tablespoonfuls dry flour and stir until it is brown;
then gradually stir in a quart of water. When
this has boiled, add the fish and seasoning.