The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ice Creams, Water Ices, Frozen Puddings
Together with Refreshments for all Social Affairs, by Mrs. S. T. Rorer
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Title: Ice Creams, Water Ices, Frozen Puddings Together with Refreshments for all Social Affairs
Author: Mrs. S. T. Rorer
Release Date: July, 2005 [EBook #8501]
This file was first posted on July 17, 2003
Last Updated: May 8, 2013
Language: English
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ICE CREAMS, WATER ICES, FROZEN PUDDINGS
TOGETHER WITH REFRESHMENTS FOR ALL SOCIAL AFFAIRS
By Mrs. S. T. Rorer
Author of Mrs. Rorer's New Cook Book, Philadelphia Cook Book, Canning
and Preserving, and other Valuable Works on Cookery
CONTENTS
FOREWORD CONTAINING GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR ALL
RECIPES
PHILADELPHIA ICE CREAMS
NEAPOLITAN CREAMS
ICE CREAMS FROM CONDENSED MILK
FROZEN PUDDINGS AND DESSERTS
WATER ICES AND SHERBETS OR SORBETS
FROZEN FRUITS
MOUSSE
SAUCES FOR ICE CREAMS
REFRESHMENTS FOR AFFAIRS
SOUPS
SWEETBREADS
SHELL-FISH DISHES
POULTRY AND GAME DISHES
COLD DISHES
SALADS
SANDWICHES
SUGGESTIONS FOR CHURCH SUPPERS
INDEX
FOREWORD CONTAINING GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR ALL RECIPES
In this book, Philadelphia Ice Creams, comprising the first group, are
very palatable, but expensive. In many parts of the country it is quite
difficult to get good cream. For that reason, I have given a group of
creams, using part milk and part cream, but it must be remembered that it
takes smart "juggling" to make ice cream from milk. By far better use
condensed milk, with enough water or milk to rinse out the cans.
Ordinary fruit creams may be made with condensed milk at a cost of about
fifteen cents a quart, which, of course, is cheaper than ordinary milk and
cream.
In places where neither cream nor condensed milk can be purchased, a fair
ice cream is made by adding two tablespoonfuls of olive oil to each quart
of milk. The cream for Philadelphia Ice Cream should be rather rich, but
not double cream.
If pure raw cream is stirred rapidly, it swells and becomes frothy, like
the beaten whites of eggs, and is "whipped cream." To prevent this in
making Philadelphia Ice Cream, one-half the cream is scalded, and when it
is very cold, the remaining half of raw cream is added. This gives
the smooth, light and rich consistency which makes these creams so
different from others.
USE OF FRUITS
Use fresh fruits in the summer and the best canned unsweetened fruits in
the winter. If sweetened fruits must be used, cut down the given quantity
of sugar. Where acid fruits are used, they should be added to the cream
after it is partly frozen.
TIME FOR FREEZING
The time for freezing varies according to the quality of cream or milk or
water; water ices require a longer time than ice creams. It is not well to
freeze the mixtures too rapidly; they are apt to be coarse, not smooth,
and if they are churned before the mixture is icy cold they will be greasy
or "buttery."
The average time for freezing two quarts of cream should be ten minutes;
it takes but a minute or two longer for larger quantities.
DIRECTIONS FOR FREEZING
Pound the ice in a large bag with a mallet, or use an ordinary ice shaver.
The finer the ice, the less time it takes to freeze the cream. A four
quart freezer will require ten pounds of ice, and a quart and a pint of
coarse rock salt. You may pack the freezer with a layer of ice three
inches thick, then a layer of salt one inch thick, or mix the ice and salt
in the tub and shovel it around the freezer. Before beginning to pack the
freezer, turn the crank to see that all the machinery is in working order.
Then open the can and turn in the mixture that is to be frozen. Turn the
crank slowly and steadily until the mixture begins to freeze, then more
rapidly until it is completely frozen. If the freezer is properly packed,
it will take fifteen minutes to freeze the mixture. Philadelphia Ice
Creams are not good if frozen too quickly.
TO REPACK
After the cream is frozen, wipe off the lid of the can and remove the
crank; take off the lid, being very careful not to allow any salt to fall
into the can. Remove the dasher and scrape it off. Take a large knife or
steel spatula, scrape the cream from the sides of the can, work and pack
it down until it is perfectly smooth. Put the lid back on the can, and put
a cork in the hole from which the dasher was taken. Draw off the water,
repack, and cover the whole with a piece of brown paper; throw over a
heavy bag or a bit of burlap, and stand aside for one or two hours to
ripen.
TO MOLD ICE CREAMS, ICES OR PUDDINGS
If you wish to pack ice cream and serve it in forms or shapes, it must be
molded after the freezing. The handiest of all of these molds is either
the brick or the melon mold.
After the cream is frozen rather stiff, prepare a tub or bucket of
coarsely chopped ice, with one-half less salt than you use for freezing.
To each ten pounds of ice allow one quart of rock salt. Sprinkle a little
rock salt in the bottom of your bucket or tub, then put over a layer of
cracked ice, another layer of salt and cracked ice, and on this stand your
mold, which is not filled, but is covered with a lid, and pack it all
around, leaving the top, of course, to pack later on. Take your freezer
near this tub. Remove the lid from the mold, and pack in the cream,
smoothing it down until you have filled it to overflowing. Smooth the top
with a spatula or limber knife, put over a sheet of waxed paper and adjust
the lid. Have a strip of muslin or cheese cloth dipped in hot paraffin or
suet and quickly bind the seam of the lid. This will remove all danger of
salt water entering the pudding. Now cover the mold thoroughly with ice
and salt.
Make sure that your packing tub or bucket has a hole below the top of the
mold, so that the salt water will be drained off.
If you are packing in small molds, each mold, as fast as it is closed,
should be wrapped in wax paper and put down into the salt and ice. These
must be filled quickly and packed.
Molds should stand two hours, and may stand longer.
TO REMOVE ICE CREAMS, ICES AND PUDDINGS FROM MOLDS
Ice cream may be molded in the freezer; you will then have a perfectly
round smooth mold, which serves very well for puddings that are to be
garnished, and saves a great deal of trouble and extra expense for salt
and ice.
As cold water is warmer than the ordinary freezing mixture, after you lift
the can or mold, wipe off the salt, hold it for a minute under the cold
water spigot, then quickly wipe the top and bottom and remove the lid.
Loosen the pudding with a limber knife, hold the mold a little slanting,
give it a shake, and nine times out of ten it will come out quickly,
having the perfect shape of the can or mold. If the cream still sticks and
refuses to come out, wipe the mold with a towel wrung from warm water. Hot
water spoils the gloss of puddings, and unless you know exactly how to use
it, the cream is too much melted to garnish.
All frozen puddings, water ices, sherbets and sorbets are frozen and
molded according to these directions.
The quantities given in these recipes are arranged in equal amounts, so
that for a smaller number of persons they can be easily divided.
QUANTITIES FOR SERVING
Each quart of ice cream will serve, in dessert plates, four persons. In
stem ice cream dishes, silver or glass, it will serve six persons. A quart
of ice or sherbet will fill ten small sherbet stem glasses, to serve with
the meat course at dinner. This quantity will serve in lemonade glasses
eight persons.
PHILADELPHIA ICE CREAMS
BURNT ALMOND ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
4 ounces of sweet almonds
1 tablespoonful of caramel
1 teaspoonful of vanilla extract
4 tablespoonfuls of sherry
Shell, blanch and roast the almonds until they are a golden brown, then
grate them. Put half the cream and all the sugar over the fire in a double
boiler. Stir until the sugar is dissolved, take it from the fire, add the
caramel and the almonds, and, when cold, add the remaining pint of cream,
the vanilla and the sherry. Freeze as directed on page 7.
This quantity will serve eight persons.
APRICOT ICE CREAM
6 ounces of sugar
1 quart of cream
1 can of apricots or
1 quart of fresh apricots
If fresh apricots are used, take an extra quarter of a pound of sugar. Put
half the cream and all the sugar over the fire in a double boiler and stir
until the sugar is dissolved; take from the fire and, when cold, add the
remaining cream. Turn the mixture into the freezer, and, when frozen
fairly stiff, add the apricots after having been pressed through a
colander. Return the lid, adjust the crank, and turn it slowly for five
minutes, then remove the dasher and repack.
This quantity should serve ten persons.
BANANA ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
6 large bananas
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Put half the cream and all the sugar over the fire and stir until the
sugar is dissolved; take from the fire, and, when perfectly cold, add the
remaining half of the cream. Freeze the mixture, and add the bananas
mashed or pressed through a colander. Put on the lid, adjust the crank,
and turn until the mixture is frozen rather hard.
This quantity will serve ten persons.
BISCUIT ICE CREAM
6 wine biscuits
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Grate and sift the biscuits. Scald half the cream and the sugar; when
cold, add the remaining cream and the vanilla, and freeze. When frozen,
remove the dasher, stir in the powdered biscuits, and repack to ripen.
This quantity will serve six persons.
APPLE ICE CREAM
4 large tart apples
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 tablespoonful of lemon juice
Put half the cream and all the sugar over the fire and stir until the
sugar is dissolved. When the mixture is perfectly cold, freeze it and add
the lemon juice and the apples, pared and grated. Finish the freezing, and
repack to ripen.
The apples must be pared at the last minute and grated into the cream. If
they are grated on a dish and allowed to remain in the air they will turn
very dark and spoil the color of the cream.
BROWN BREAD ICE CREAM
3 half inch slices of Boston Brown Bread
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla or
1/4 of a vanilla bean or a teaspoonful of vanilla extract
Dry and toast the bread in the oven, grate or pound it, and put it through
an ordinary sieve. Heat half the cream and all the sugar; take from the
fire, add vanilla, and, when cold, add the remaining cream, and freeze.
When frozen, remove the dasher, stir in the brown bread, repack and stand
aside to ripen.
This quantity will serve six persons.
CARAMEL ICE CREAM, No. 1
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Put four tablespoonfuls of the sugar in an iron frying pan over a strong
fire, shake until the sugar melts, turns brown, smokes and burns; add
quickly a half cupful of water; let it boil a minute, take from the fire,
and put it, with all the sugar and half the cream, in a double boiler over
the fire. Stir until the sugar is dissolved, take from the fire, and, when
cold, add the remaining cream and vanilla, and freeze.
This quantity will serve six persons.
CARAMEL ICE CREAM, No. 2
1 quart of cream
1 pint of milk
1/2 cupful of brown sugar
1/2 pound of granulated sugar
2 teaspoonfuls of vanilla
Put the brown sugar in a frying pan over the fire, shake it until it
melts, burns and smokes. Take it from the fire and add two tablespoonfuls
of water; heat until the sugar is again melted, put it in a double boiler
with the milk and all the sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved, and
stand aside to cool. When cold, add half the cream and the vanilla, and
freeze. When frozen sufficiently stiff to remove the dasher, stir in the
remaining pint of cream whipped to a stiff froth, repack and stand aside
for three hours.
This quantity will serve ten persons.
BISQUE ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1/4 pound of almond macaroons
4 kisses
1/2 pound of sugar
1 slice of stale sponge cake or
2 stale lady fingers
1 teaspoonful of caramel
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
If you use it, 4 tablespoonfuls of sherry
Pound the macaroons, kisses, lady fingers or sponge cake, and put them
through a colander. Put half the cream and all the sugar over the fire in
a double boiler; when the sugar is dissolved, stand the mixture aside to
cool; when cold, add the remaining cream, the caramel, sherry and vanilla.
Turn the mixture into the freezer, and, when frozen, add the pounded
cakes; stir the mixture until it is perfectly smooth and well mixed, and
repack. Bisque ice cream is better for a three hour stand.
This quantity will serve six persons.
CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1 pint of milk
1/2 pound of sugar
4 ounces of chocolate
1 teaspoonful of vanilla or 1/4 of a vanilla bean
1/4 of a teaspoonful of cinnamon
Grate the chocolate, put it in a double boiler with the milk; stir until
hot, and add the sugar, vanilla, cinnamon and one pint of the cream. When
cold, freeze; when frozen, remove the dasher and stir in the remaining
pint of the cream whipped to a stiff froth.
This will serve ten persons.
COFFEE ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of pulverized sugar
4 ounces of so-called Mocha coffee
Grind the Mocha rather coarse, put it in the double boiler with one half
the cream, and steep over the fire for at least ten minutes. Strain
through a fine muslin or flannel bag, pressing it hard to get out all the
strength of the coffee. Add the sugar and stir until dissolved; when cold,
add the remaining pint of cream and freeze.
This will serve six persons.
CURAÇAO ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1 wineglassful of curaçao
1/2 pound of sugar
2 tablespoonfuls of orange blossoms water
Juice of two oranges
Put the sugar and half the cream over the fire in a double boiler. When
the sugar is dissolved, take it from the fire, and, when cold, add the
curaçao, orange juice and orange blossoms water; add the remaining cream,
and freeze.
This will serve six persons.
GINGER ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1/4 pound of preserved ginger
1/2 pound of sugar
1 tablespoonful of lemon juice
Put the ginger through an ordinary meat chopper. Heat the sugar, ginger
and half the cream in a double boiler; when the sugar is dissolved, take
it from the fire, and, when cold, add the lemon juice and remaining cream,
and freeze.
MARASCHINO ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 orange
2 wineglassfuls of maraschino
2 drops of Angostura Bitters, or
1/2 teaspoonful of extract of wild cherry
Put the sugar and half the cream in a double boiler, and stir until the
sugar is dissolved. When cold, add the remaining cream, the juice of the
orange, the bitters or wild cherry, and the maraschino, and freeze.
Serve in parfait glasses to six persons.
LEMON ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
9 ounces of powdered sugar
4 tablespoonfuls of lemon juice
Juice of one orange
Grated yellow rind of 3 lemons
Mix the sugar, the grated rind and juice of the lemons, and the orange
juice together. Put half the cream in a double boiler over the fire; when
scalding hot, stand it aside until perfectly cold; add the remaining half
of the cream and freeze it rather hard. Remove the crank and the lid, add
the sugar mixture, replace the lid and crank, and turn rapidly for five
minutes; repack to ripen.
This will serve six people.
ORANGE ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
10 ounces of sugar
Juice of 6 large oranges
Grated rind of one orange
Put the sugar, grated yellow rind of the orange and half the cream in a
double boiler over the fire; when the sugar is dissolved, take from the
fire, and, when very cold, add the remaining cream, and freeze.
When frozen rather hard, add the orange juice, refreeze, and pack to
ripen.
PINEAPPLE ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
12 ounces of sugar
1 large ripe pineapple or
1 pint can of grated pineapple
Juice of one lemon
Put half the cream and half the sugar in a double boiler over the fire;
when the sugar is dissolved, stand it aside until cold. Pare and grate the
pineapple, add the remaining half of the sugar and stand it aside. When
the cream is cold, add the remaining cream, and partly freeze. Then add
the lemon juice to the pineapple and add it to the frozen cream; turn the
freezer five minutes longer, and repack.
This will serve eight or ten persons.
GREEN GAGE ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
4 ounces of sugar
1 pint of preserved green gages, free from syrup
Press the green gages through a sieve. Add the sugar to half the cream,
stir it in a double boiler until the sugar is dissolved; when cold, add
the remaining cream. When this is partly frozen, stir in the green gage
pulp, and finish the freezing as directed on page 7.
If the green gages are colorless, add three or four drops of apple green
coloring to the cream before freezing.
RASPBERRY ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1 quart of raspberries
12 ounces of sugar
Juice of one lemon
Mash the raspberries; add half the sugar and the lemon juice. Put the
remaining sugar and half the cream in a double boiler; stir until the
sugar is dissolved, and stand aside to cool; when cold, add the remaining
cream, turn the mixture into the freezer, and stir until partly frozen.
Remove the lid and add the mashed raspberries, and stir again for five or
ten minutes until the mixture is sufficiently hard to repack.
This will serve eight or ten persons.
STRAWBERRY ICE CREAM
Make precisely the same as raspberry ice cream, substituting one quart of
strawberries for the raspberries.
PISTACHIO ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1/2 pound of shelled pistachio nuts
1 teaspoonful of almond extract
10 drops of green coloring
Blanch and pound or grate the nuts. Put half the cream and all the sugar
in a double boiler; stir until the sugar is dissolved and stand aside to
cool; when cold, add the nuts, the flavoring and the remaining cream, mix,
add the coloring, and turn into the freezer to freeze.
If green coloring matter is not at hand, a little spinach or parsley may
be chopped and rubbed with a small quantity of alcohol.
This quantity will serve six persons,
VANILLA ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 vanilla bean or two teaspoonfuls of vanilla extract
Put the sugar and half the cream in a double boiler over the fire. Split
the vanilla bean, scrape out the seeds and add them to the hot cream, and
add the bean broken into pieces. Stir until the sugar is dissolved, and
strain through a colander. When this is cold, add the remaining cream and
freeze. This should be repacked and given two hours to ripen. Four would
be better.
This will serve six persons.
WALNUT ICE CREAM
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
1 teaspoonful of caramel
1/2 pint of black walnut meats
Put the sugar and half the cream over the fire in a double boiler; when
the sugar is dissolved, stand it aside to cool. When cold, add the
remaining cream, the walnuts, chopped, and the flavoring, and freeze.
This will serve six persons.
NEAPOLITAN CREAMS
In this group we have a set of frozen desserts called by many﹃ice
creams,﹄but which are really frozen custards, flavored. In localities
where cream is not accessible, the Neapolitan Creams are far better than
milk thickened with cornstarch or gelatin.
CHOCOLATE
1 pint of cream
1 pint of milk
1/2 pound of sugar
4 eggs
2 ounces of chocolate
1 small piece of stick cinnamon
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Put the milk and cinnamon over the fire in a double boiler. Beat the yolks
of the eggs and sugar until very light, add the well-beaten whites, and
stir this into the hot milk. As soon as the mixture begins to thicken,
take it from the fire, add the grated chocolate, and, when cold, add the
cream and the vanilla. Freeze and pack as directed on page 7.
This is sufficient to serve ten persons.
CARAMEL
1 pint of cream
1 pint of milk
1/2 pound of sugar
4 eggs
3 tablespoonfuls of caramel
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Beat the yolks of the eggs until creamy and add the sugar; beat until
light, and then add the well-beaten whites of the eggs. Put the milk over
the fire in a double boiler; when hot, add the eggs, and stir and cook
until the mixture begins to thicken. Take from the fire, strain through a
fine sieve, add the vanilla and caramel, and, when cold, add the cream,
and freeze.
This will serve ten persons.
COFFEE
1 pint of strong black coffee
1 pint of cream
2 eggs
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Beat the sugar and the yolks of the eggs until light, add the well-beaten
whites, and pour into them the coffee, boiling hot. Stir over the fire for
a minute, take from the fire, add the vanilla, and, when cold, add the
cream, and freeze.
This will serve eight persons.
VANILLA
1 pint of cream
1 pint of milk
1/2 pound of sugar
3 eggs
1/4 vanilla bean or a teaspoonful of good extract
Put the milk over the fire in a double boiler, and add the vanilla bean,
split. Beat the yolks of the eggs and the sugar until light, add the
whites beaten to a stiff froth, and stir into them the hot milk. Return
the mixture to the double boiler and cook until it begins to thicken, or
will coat a knife blade dipped into it. Take from the fire, strain through
a colander, and, when cold, add the cream, and freeze. Repack and stand to
ripen for three hours or longer.
This will serve eight persons.
WALNUT
1 pint of cream
1 pint of milk
2 eggs
1/2 pint of chopped black walnuts
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
1 teaspoonful of caramel
Beat the yolks of the eggs and the sugar until light; add the well-beaten
whites, and then the milk, scalding hot. Stir over the fire in a double
boiler until the mixture begins to thicken; take from the fire and add the
vanilla and caramel. When cold, add the walnuts and cream, and freeze.
This will serve eight persons.
NEAPOLITAN BLOCKS
These are made by putting layers of various kinds and colors of ice creams
into a brick mold. Pack and freeze. At serving time, cut into slices
crosswise of the brick, and serve each slice on a paper mat.
ICE CREAMS FROM CONDENSED MILK
These creams are not so good as those made from raw cream, but with care
and good flavoring are quite as good as the ordinary Neapolitan Creams.
There is one advantage—condensed milk is not so liable to curdle
when mixed with fresh fruits. These recipes will answer also for what is
sold under the name of "Evaporated Cream." Use unsweetened milk, or allow
for the sugar in the sweetened varieties.
BANANA
6 large bananas
1/4 pound of sugar
1 half pint can of condensed milk
1/2 cupful of water
Juice of one lemon
Press the bananas through a sieve, and add the lemon juice and sugar.
Stand aside a half hour, add milk and water, stir until the sugar is
dissolved, and freeze as directed on page 7.
This will serve six persons.
CARAMEL
1/4 cupful of brown sugar
1/2 cupful of granulated sugar
1 cupful of water
2 half pint cans of condensed milk
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Put the brown sugar in an iron pan, melt and brown it. When it begins to
smoke, add two tablespoonfuls of hot water. Stir until liquid. Pour out
the milk, rinse the cans with the water, add the caramel, vanilla and
granulated sugar. When the sugar is dissolved, freeze as directed on page
7.
This will serve six persons.
COCOANUT
2 large cocoanuts
1 pint of boiling water
1/2 pint can of sweetened condensed milk
Grate the cocoanuts and pour over them the boiling water. Stir until it is
cool, and press in a sieve. Put the fibre in a cheese cloth and wring it
dry; add this to the water that was strained through the sieve. When cold,
add condensed milk, and freeze as directed on page 7.
This will serve eight persons.
CHOCOLATE, No. 1
2 ounces of Baker's chocolate
1/2 pint of water
1 saltspoonful of ground cinnamon
2 half pint cans of condensed milk
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
1/4 pound of sugar
Put the water, chocolate, sugar and cinnamon in a saucepan; stir until
boiling. Take from the fire, add the vanilla and the condensed milk. When
cold, freeze as directed on page 7.
This will serve six persons.
CHOCOLATE, No. 2
4 ounces of Baker's chocolate
1/2 pint of water
1/2 pound of sugar
2 half pint cans of condensed milk
1 pint of milk
2 teaspoonfuls of vanilla
1 saltspoonful of ground cinnamon
Put the chocolate, sugar, water and cinnamon in a saucepan over the fire.
Stir until the mixture boils. Take from the fire, and add all the
remaining ingredients. When cold, freeze as directed on page 7.
This will serve eight persons.
COFFEE
1 pint of strong black coffee
1/2 cupful of sugar
1/2 pint can of condensed milk
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Add the sugar to the hot coffee, and stir until it is dissolved; add the
milk, using water enough to rinse out the cans; add the vanilla. When the
mixture is cold, freeze, turning it rapidly toward the end of the
freezing.
This will serve four persons.
PEACH
12 ripe or canned peaches
4 peach kernels
1/2 pint of water
2 half pint cans of unsweetened condensed milk
1/2 pound of sugar
Put the sugar, water and peach kernels over the fire; stir until the sugar
is dissolved, and boil three minutes. Pare the peaches and press them
through a colander, add to them the strained syrup. When cold, turn the
mixture into the freezer and turn the crank slowly until partly frozen;
add the milk, and continue the freezing.
Omit the water and use less sugar with canned peaches.
This will serve ten persons.
ORANGE, No. 1
1 full pint of orange juice
2/3 cupful of sugar
1/2 pint can of condensed milk
Grated yellow rind of two oranges
Grate the rinds into the sugar, add milk and enough water to rinse cans.
When sugar is dissolved, stand it in a cold place. Put orange juice in the
freezer and freeze it quite hard; add sweetened milk, and freeze again
quickly.
This will serve four persons.
ORANGE, No. 2
Freeze a full quart of orange juice. When quite hard, add a can of
sweetened condensed milk, freeze it again, and serve at once.
This is very nice and will serve eight persons.
ORANGE GELATIN CREAM
1/2 pint of orange juice
1 package of orange Jello
1/2 pound of sugar
1 pint can of unsweetened condensed milk
1/2 pint of water
Add the grated yellow rind of two oranges to the Jello; add the sugar and
the water, boiling. Stir until the sugar and Jello are dissolved, add the
orange juice, and when the mixture is cold, put it in the freezer and stir
slowly until it begins to freeze. Add the condensed milk, and continue the
freezing.
This is nice served in tall glasses, with the beaten whites of the eggs
made into a meringue and heaped on top.
In this way it will serve eight persons.
SOUR SOP
1 large sour sop
1/4 pound of sugar
1/2 pint can of unsweetened condensed milk
4 tablespoonfuls of boiling water
Juice of one lime
Squeeze the sour sop, which should measure nearly one quart; add the sugar
melted in the water with the lime juice and milk, and freeze slowly.
This will serve ten persons.
FROZEN PUDDINGS AND DESSERTS
ALASKA BAKE
Make a vanilla ice cream, one or two quarts, as the occasion demands. When
the ice cream is frozen, pack it in a brick mold, cover each side of the
mold with letter paper and fasten the bottom and lid. Wrap the whole in
wax paper and pack it in salt and ice; freeze for at least two hours
before serving time. At serving time, make a meringue from the whites of
six eggs beaten to a froth; add six tablespoonfuls of sifted powdered
sugar and beat until fine and dry. Turn the ice cream from the mold, place
it on a serving platter, and stand the platter on a steak board or an
ordinary thick plank. Cover the mold with the meringue pressed through a
star tube in a pastry bag, or spread it all over the ice cream as you
would ice a cake. Decorate the top quickly, and dust it thickly with
powdered sugar; stand it under the gas burners in a gas broiler or on the
grate in a hot coal or wood oven until it is lightly browned, and send it
quickly to the table. There is no danger of the ice cream melting if you
will protect the under side of the plate. The meringue acts as a
nonconductor for the upper part.
A two quart mold with meringue will serve ten persons.
ALEXANDER BOMB
1 pint of cream
1 pint of milk
4 eggs
4 tart apples
1 pint of water
1 glassful of orange blossoms water
1 wineglassful of curaçao
1 pound of sugar
Juice of one lemon
Peel, core and quarter the apples; put them in a saucepan with the grated
yellow rind of the lemon, half the sugar and all the water; boil until
tender, and add the juice of the lemon; rub the apples through a sieve.
When cold, freeze. Whip the cream. Beat the eggs and the remaining sugar
and add them to the milk, hot; stir until the mixture thickens, take from
the fire, and, when cold, add the orange blossoms water and the Curaçao;
freeze in another freezer. Divide the whipped cream, and stir one-half
into the first and one-half into the other mixture. Line a melon mold with
the custard mixture, fill the centre space with the frozen apples, and
cover over another layer of the custard; put over a sheet of letter paper
and put on the lid. Bind the seam with a strip of muslin dipped in
paraffin or suet, and pack the mold in salt and ice; freeze for at least
two hours. Serve plain, or it may be garnished with whipped cream.
This will serve twelve persons.
BISCUITS AMERICANA
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1/4 pound of Jordan almonds
1 teaspoonful of almond extract
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Yolks of six eggs
Grated rind of one lemon
Put half the cream in a double boiler over the fire, and, when hot, add
the yolks of the eggs and sugar, beaten until very, very light; add all
the flavoring, and stand aside until very cold; when cold, freeze in an
ordinary freezer. Whip the remaining pint of cream, add one-half of it to
the frozen mixture, repack and stand aside to ripen. Blanch, dry and chop
the almonds. Put them in the oven and shake constantly until they are a
golden brown. At serving time, fill the frozen mixture quickly into paper
cases; have the remaining whipped cream in a pastry bag with star tube,
make a little rosette on the top of each case, dust thickly with the
chopped almonds, and send to the table.
This will fill twelve cases of ordinary size.
BISCUITS GLACÉS
1 pint of cream
3/4 pound of sugar
1 pint of water
1 gill of sherry
2 tablespoonfuls of brandy
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Yolks of six eggs
Put the sugar and water in a saucepan over the fire and stir until the
sugar is dissolved; wipe down the sides of the pan, and boil until the
syrup spins a heavy thread or makes a soft ball when dropped into cold
water. Beat the yolks of the eggs to a cream, add them to the boiling
syrup, and with an egg beater whisk over the fire until you have a
custard-like mixture that will thickly coat a knife blade; strain through
a sieve into a bowl, and whisk until the mixture is stiff and cold. It
should look like a very light sponge cake batter. Add the flavoring. Whip
the cream and stir it carefully into the mixture. Fill the mixture into
paper cases or individual dishes, stand them in a freezing cave or in a
tin bucket that is well packed in salt and ice, cover and freeze for at
least four or five hours.
If you do not have a freezing cave, pack a good sized tin kettle in a
small tub or water bucket. The kettle must have a tight fitting lid. Stand
your cases or molds on the bottom of the tin kettle, which is packed in
salt and ice. Put on top a sheet of letter paper, on top of this another
other layer of molds or cases, and so continue until you have the kettle
filled. Put the lid on the kettle and cover with salt and ice. Make sure
that you have a hole half-way up in the packing bucket or tub, so that
there is no danger of salt water overflowing the kettle. This is a homely
but very good freezing cave.
At serving time, dust the tops of the biscuits with grated macaroons or
chopped almonds, dish on paper mats, and send to the table.
This will fill fifteen biscuit cases.
BISCUITS à la MARIE
1/2 pound of sugar
1 pint of water
1/2 pint of cream
1/2 pound of almond macaroons
1/4 pound of candied or Maraschino cherries
1 teaspoonful of bitter almond extract
Yolks of six eggs
Boil the sugar and water until the syrup will spin a heavy thread. Add the
eggs, beaten until very light. Whip this over the fire for three minutes,
take it from the fire, strain into a bowl, and whip until thick and cold.
Add the flavoring and the macaroons, that have been dried, grated and
sifted. Add the cream, whipped. Fill the mixture into paper cases, and
freeze as directed for Biscuits Glacés.
An extra half pint of cream may be whipped for garnish at serving time, if
desired; otherwise, garnish the top with chopped maraschino cherries, and
send to the table.
This will fill twelve biscuit cases.
BOMB GLACÉ
Pack a two quart bomb glacé mold in salt and ice. Remove the lid, and line
the mold with a quart of well-made vanilla ice cream. Fill the centre with
one half the recipe for Biscuit Glacé mixture, that has been packed in a
freezer until icy cold. Put on the lid, bind the edge with a piece of
muslin dipped in paraffin or suet, cover the mold with salt and ice, and
stand aside three hours to freeze.
This will serve twelve persons.
BISCUIT TORTONI
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 gill of maraschino
2 tablespoonfuls of sherry
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Yolks of six eggs
Put half the cream in a double boiler over the fire. Beat the sugar and
yolks together until very, very light, add them to the hot cream and stir
over the fire until the mixture begins to thicken. Take from the fire,
and, when very cold, add the vanilla, maraschino and sherry, and freeze.
When frozen, stir in the remaining cream, whipped to a stiff froth. Fill
individual dishes or paper cases, stand at once in the freezing kettle or
ice cave; pack and freeze from three to four hours.
This will fill twelve cases.
CABINET PUDDING, ICED
1 quart of milk
6 eggs
1/4 pound of powdered sugar
1 tablespoonful of powdered gelatin
1/4 pound of macaroons and lady fingers, mixed
1/2 pound of conserved cherries or pineapple
1/2 pound of stale sponge cake
Grate the macaroons and lady fingers, and rub them through a coarse sieve.
Cut the sponge cake into slices and then into strips. Put the milk over
the fire in a double boiler and add the eggs and sugar beaten together
until light; stir and cook until the mixture is sufficiently thick to coat
a knife blade. Take from the fire, add the gelatin, strain, and stand it
aside to cool. Garnish the bottom of a two quart melon mold with the
cherries or pineapple, put in a layer of the sponge cake, then a
sprinkling of the macaroons and lady fingers, another layer of the
cherries, then the sponge cake, and so continue until you have all the
ingredients used. Add a teaspoonful of vanilla to the custard, pour it in
the mold, cover the mold with the lid, bind the seam with muslin dipped in
paraffin or suet, pack in salt and ice, and stand aside for three hours.
At serving time, dip the mold quickly into hot water, wipe it off, remove
the lid and turn the pudding on to a cold platter. Pour around a well-made
Montrose Sauce, and send to the table.
This will serve ten or twelve persons.
ICED CAKE
Make an Angel Food or a Sunshine Cake and bake it in a square mold. Make a
plain frozen custard, and flavor it with vanilla; pack it and stand it
aside until serving time. Cut off the top of the cake, take out the
centre, leaving a bottom and wall one inch thick. At serving time, fill
the cake quickly with the frozen custard, replace the top, dust it thickly
with powdered sugar and chopped almonds, and send it to the table with a
sauceboat of cold Montrose Sauce.
This cake may be varied by using different garnishings. Maraschino
cherries may be used in place of almonds, or the base of the cake may be
garnished with preserved green walnuts or green gages, or the top and
sides may be garnished with rosettes of whipped cream.
This will serve twelve persons.
QUICK CARAMEL PARFAIT
Make a quart of Caramel Ice Cream, pack, and stand it aside for two hours.
At serving time, stir in a pint of cream, whipped to a stiff froth, dish
in parfait glasses, and send to the table. The top of the glasses may be
garnished with whipped cream, if desired.
This will fill eight glasses.
QUICK CAFÉ PARFAIT
Make a quart of plain Coffee Ice Cream, freeze and pack it. Whip one pint
of cream. At serving time, stir the whipped cream into the frozen coffee
cream, dish it at once into tall parfait glasses, garnish the top with a
rosette of whipped cream, and send at once to the table.
This will fill eight glasses.
QUICK STRAWBERRY PARFAIT
This is made precisely the same as other parfaits, with Strawberry Ice
Cream, and whipped cream stirred in at serving time. Serve in parfait
glasses, garnish the top with whipped cream, with a strawberry in the
centre on top.
This will fill eight glasses.
QUICK CHOCOLATE PARFAIT
Make one quart of Chocolate Ice Cream, and add one pint of whipped cream,
according to the preceding recipes.
This will serve eight persons.
MONTE CARLO PUDDING
1 quart of cream
6 ounces of sugar (2/3 of a cupful)
4 tablespoonfuls of creme de violette
1/2 pound of candied violets
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Put half the cream over the fire in a double boiler. Pound or roll the
violets, sift them, add the sugar and sufficient hot cream to dissolve
them. Take the cream from the fire, add the violet sugar, and stir until
it is dissolved; when cold, add the flavoring and the remaining cream.
Freeze, and pack into a two quart pyramid mold; pack in salt and ice for
at least two hours. At serving time, turn the ice on to a platter, garnish
the base with whipped cream, and the whole with candied violets.
This will serve six to eight persons.
BOSTON PUDDING
Make Boston Brown Bread Ice Cream and half the recipe for Tutti Frutti.
When both are frozen, line a melon mold with the Brown Bread Ice Cream,
fill the centre with the Tutti Frutti, cover over more of the Brown Bread
Ice Cream, fasten tightly, and bind the seam of the lid with a strip of
muslin dipped in paraffin or suet. Pack in salt and ice for at least two
hours. At serving time, dip the mold quickly into hot water, turn the
pudding on to a cold platter, pour around the base caramel sauce, and
serve at once.
This will serve twelve persons.
MONTROSE PUDDING
1 quart of cream
1 cupful of granulated sugar
1 tablespoonful of vanilla
1 pint of strawberry water ice
Yolks of six eggs
Put half the cream over the fire in a double boiler. Beat the yolks and
sugar together until light, add them to the boiling cream, and cook and
stir for one minute until it begins to thicken. Take from the fire, add
the remaining pint of cream and the vanilla, and stand aside until very
cold. Freeze, and pack into a round or melon mold, leaving a well in the
centre. Fill this well with Strawberry Water Ice that has been frozen an
hour before, and cover it with some of the pudding mixture that you have
left in the freezer. Fasten the lid, bind the seam with a piece of muslin
dipped in suet or paraffin, and pack in salt and ice to stand for not less
than two hours, four is better. Serve with Montrose Sauce poured around
it.
This will serve twelve persons.
NESSELRODE PUDDING
1 pint of Spanish chestnuts
1/2 pound of sugar
1 pint of boiling water
1/2 pint of shelled almonds
1 pound of French candied fruit, mixed
1 pint of heavy cream
1/4 pound of candied pineapple
Yolks of six eggs
Shell the chestnuts, scald and remove the brown skins, cover with boiling
water and boil until they are tender, not too soft, and press them through
a sieve. Shell, blanch and pound the almonds. Cut the fruit into tiny
pieces. Put the sugar and water in a saucepan, stir until the sugar is
dissolved, wipe down the sides of the pan, and boil without stirring until
the syrup forms a soft ball when dropped into ice water. Beat the yolks of
the eggs until very light, add them to the boiling syrup, and stir over
the fire until the mixture again boils; take it from the fire, and with an
ordinary egg beater, whisk the mixture until it is cold and thick as
sponge cake batter. Add the fruit, the chestnuts, almond paste, a
teaspoonful of vanilla and, if you use it, four tablespoonfuls of sherry.
Turn the mixture into the freezer, and, when it is frozen, stir in the
cream whipped to a stiff froth. The mixture may now be repacked in the
can, or it may be put into small molds or one large mold, and repacked for
ripening.
If packed in a large mold, this will serve fifteen persons; in the small
molds or paper cases, it will serve eighteen persons.
NESSELRODE PUDDING, AMERICANA
1 small bottle, or sixteen preserved marrons
1 quart of cream
4 ounces of sugar
4 tablespoonfuls of sherry
1 tablespoonful of vanilla
Yolks of six eggs
Put half the cream in a double boiler over the fire; when hot, add the
eggs and sugar beaten until light. Cook a minute, and cool. When cold, add
one small bottle of marrons broken into quarters and the syrup from the
bottle, the sherry and vanilla. Freeze, stirring slowly. When frozen, stir
in the remaining cream whipped to a stiff froth. Pack in small molds in
salt and ice as directed. These should freeze three hours at least.
This will make twelve small molds.
ORANGE SOUFFLÉ
1 quart of cream
1 pint of orange juice
1/2 box of gelatin
3/4 pound of sugar
Yolks of six eggs
Cover the gelatin with a half cupful of cold water and soak for a half
hour. Add a half cupful of boiling water, stir until the gelatin is
dissolved, and add the sugar and the orange juice. Beat the yolks of the
eggs until very light. Whip the cream. Add the uncooked yolks to the
orange mixture, strain in the gelatin, stand the bowl in cold water and
stir slowly until the mixture begins to thicken; stir in carefully the
whipped cream, turn it in a mold or an ice cream freezer, pack with salt
and ice, and stand aside three hours to freeze. This should not be frozen
as hard as ice cream, and must not be stirred while freezing. Make sure,
however, that the gelatin is thoroughly mixed with the other ingredients
before putting the mixture into the freezer.
This will serve twelve people.
By changing the flavoring, using lemon in the place of orange, or a pint
of strawberry juice, or a pint of raspberry and currant juice, an endless
variety of soufflés may be made from this same recipe. These may be served
plain, or with Montrose Sauce.
PLOMBIERE
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of Jordan almonds
1/2 pound of sugar
1/2 pound of Sultana raisins
Yolks of six eggs
Blanch the almonds and pound them to a paste, or use a half pound of
ordinary almond paste. Put half the cream in a double boiler over the
fire, add the yolks and sugar beaten to a cream, add the almond paste.
Stir until the mixture begins to thicken, take from the fire and beat with
an egg beater for three minutes. Strain through a fine sieve, and, when
very cold, add the Sultanas and the remaining cream. Freeze, turning the
dasher very slowly at first and more rapidly toward the end. Remove the
dasher, scrape down the sides of the can and pull the cream up, making a
well in the centre. Fill this well half full with apricot jam, cover over
the pudding mixture, making it smooth; repack, and stand aside for two
hours.
Serve plain or with a cold Purée of Apricots.
This will serve twelve persons.
QUEEN PUDDING
Make a Strawberry Water Ice or Frozen Strawberries. Pack a three quart
mold in a bucket or tub of ice and salt. Line the mold with the Strawberry
Ice, fill the centre with Tutti Frutti, using half recipe; put on the lid,
bind the seam, and stand aside for at least two hours. When ready to
serve, turn the pudding from the mold into the centre of a large round
dish, garnish the base with whipped cream pressed through a star tube, and
garnish the pudding with candied cherries. Here and there around the base
of the whipped cream place a marron glacé.
This will serve fifteen persons.
ICE CREAM CROQUETTES
Mold vanilla ice cream with the ordinary pyramid ice cream spoon, roll
them quickly in grated macaroons, and serve on a paper mat.
ICED RICE PUDDING WITH A COMPOTE OF ORANGES
FOR THE PUDDING
1/2 cupful of rice
1 quart of cream
1 pint of milk
2 teaspoonfuls of vanilla extract or 1/2 vanilla bean
1/2 pound of sugar
Yolks of six eggs
Rub the rice in a dry towel, and put it over the fire in a pint of cold
water. Bring to a boil and boil twenty minutes; drain, add the milk and
cook it in a double boiler a half hour. While this is boiling, whip the
cream to a stiff froth, and stand it in a cold place until wanted. Press
the rice through a fine sieve and return it to the double boiler. Beat the
yolks of the eggs and the sugar until light, stir them into the hot rice,
and stir and cook about two minutes, until the mixture begins to thicken.
Take from the fire, add the vanilla, and stand aside until very cold. When
cold, freeze, turning the dasher rapidly toward the last. Remove the
dasher and stir in the whipped cream. Scrape down the sides of the can,
and smooth the pudding. Put on the lid, fasten the hole in the top with a
cork, put over the top a piece of waxed paper, and pack with salt and ice.
Stand aside for at least two or three hours. Be very careful that the hole
in the tub is open, to prevent the salt water from overflowing the can.
FOR THE COMPOTE
1 dozen nice oranges
1 pound of sugar
1/2 cupful of water
1 teaspoonful of lemon juice
Put the sugar and water over the fire to boil, wipe down the sides of the
pan, skim the syrup, add the lemon juice, and boil until it spins a
thread. Peel the oranges, cut them into halves crosswise, and with a sharp
knife remove the cores. Dip one piece at a time into the hot syrup and
place them on a platter to cool. Pour over any syrup that may be left.
This syrup must be thick, but not sufficiently thick to harden on the
oranges.
To dish the pudding, lift the can from the ice, wipe it carefully on the
outside, wrap the bottom of the mold in a towel dipped in boiling water,
or hold it half an instant under the cold water spigot. Then with a limber
knife or spatula loosen the pudding from the side of the can and shake it
out into the centre of a large round plate. Heap the oranges on top of the
pudding, making them in a pyramid, put the remaining quantity around the
base of the pudding, pour over the syrup and send to the table. This
pudding sounds elaborate and troublesome, but it is exceedingly palatable
and one of the handsomest of all frozen dishes.
This will serve twenty persons. In ice cream stem dishes it will serve
twenty-four persons.
SULTANA ROLL
1-1/2 quarts of cream
1/2 pound of granulated sugar
1/2 cupful of Sultanas
4 tablespoonfuls of sherry
2 ounces of shelled pistachio nuts
1 teaspoonful of almond extract
10 drops of green coloring
Put one pint of cream and the sugar over the fire in a double boiler, and
stir until the sugar is dissolved; take from the fire, and, when cold, add
a pint of the remaining cream. Chop the pistachio nuts very fine or put
them through the meat grinder, add them to the cream and add the flavoring
and coloring, and freeze. Whip the remaining pint of cream to a stiff
froth. Sprinkle the Sultanas with sherry and let them stand while you are
freezing the pudding. When the pudding is frozen, remove the dasher and
line a long round mold with the pistachio cream. If nothing better is at
hand, use pound baking powder cans, and line them to the depth of one
inch. Add the Sultanas to the whipped cream and stir in two tablespoonfuls
of powdered sugar. Fill the spaces in the cans with the whipped cream
mixture, and put another layer of the pistachio cream over the top. Put on
the lids, wrap each can in waxed paper, and put them down into coarse salt
and ice, to freeze for at least two hours. At serving time, turn the
puddings on to a long platter, fill the bottom of the platter with Claret
or Strawberry Sauce, and send to the table.
This quantity cut into half inch slices will serve twelve persons.
SULTANA PUDDING
1 pint of milk
1 pint of cream
6 ounces of sugar
1 cupful of Sultanas
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
4 tablespoonfuls of sherry (if you use it)
Yolks of four eggs
Put the milk in a double boiler, and, when hot, add the yolks and sugar
beaten together; stir until this begins to thicken. Take from the fire,
add the vanilla, and, when cold, freeze it. Put the sherry over the
Sultanas. Garnish the bottom of a melon mold with the Sultanas, pack it in
coarse ice and salt ready for the frozen pudding. Remove the dasher from
the frozen mixture, and stir in the cream that has been whipped to a stiff
froth. Add the remainder of the Sultanas and pack at once into the mold;
put on the lid and fasten as directed in other recipes.
This may be served plain or with whipped cream garnished with Sultanas.
This will serve eight persons.
THE MERRY WIDOW
Dish a pyramid of vanilla ice cream into a stem individual ice cream
glass. Garnish the base of the ice cream with fresh strawberries, dust the
cream thickly with toasted piñon nuts, and baste the whole with four
tablespoonfuls of Claret Sauce flavored with two tablespoonfuls of rum.
TUTTI FRUTTI PUDDING
1 pint of milk
1 pint of cream
1/2 pint of mixed candied fruits
4 eggs
1 cupful of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
2 tablespoonfuls of sherry
1 tablespoonful of brandy
Put the milk over the fire in a double boiler, add the yolks of the eggs
and the sugar beaten together until light. When the mixture begins to
thicken, take it from the fire and stand it aside until perfectly cold.
Add all the flavorings. When the mixture is cold, add the cream, and
partly freeze it; then add the fruit, and freeze to the right consistency.
This should be packed at least two hours to ripen.
This will serve eight persons.
TUTTI FRUTTI, ITALIAN FASHION
1/2 pound of sugar
1 pint of water
1 pint of cream
1/2 pint of chopped mixed candied fruits
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
4 tablespoonfuls of sherry
Yolks of six eggs
Pour the sherry over the fruit. Beat the yolks until creamy. Put the sugar
and water over the fire, stir until the sugar is dissolved, and boil five
minutes; add the yolks of the eggs, beat until it again reaches the
boiling point, take from the fire and beat until cold and thick. Add the
cream, the fruit and the vanilla. Freeze as directed on page 7.
This is usually served in small ice cream glasses garnished with whipped
cream, or may be served plain. In the absence of ice cream glasses, use
ordinary punch glasses.
This will fill ten glasses.
LALLA ROOKH
Fill a lemonade or ice cream glass two-thirds full of vanilla ice cream.
Make a little well in the centre and fill the space with rum and sherry
mixed. Allow four tablespoonfuls of rum and six of sherry to each half
dozen cups.
PEACHES MELBA
Dish a helping of vanilla ice cream in the centre of the serving plate,
place in the centre of the ice cream a whole brandied peach, press it down
into the ice cream, baste over four tablespoonfuls of Claret Sauce, and
serve.
LILLIAN RUSSELL
Cut into halves small very cold cantaloupes. Remove the seeds; fill the
centres of the half melons with vanilla ice cream, and garnish with
whipped cream pressed through a small star tube. Dish the halves on paper
mats on a dessert plate, and send to the table.
ARROWROOT CREAM
1 quart of milk
6 ounces of sugar
1 level tablespoonful of arrowroot
2 teaspoonfuls of vanilla
Moisten the arrowroot with a little cold milk; put the remaining milk in a
double boiler; when hot, add the arrowroot and cook ten minutes; add the
sugar, take from the fire, and add the vanilla, When perfectly cold,
freeze as directed on page 7.
This will serve six persons.
ENGLISH APRICOT CREAM
1/2 pint of apricot jam
1 pint of cream
1/2 pint of milk
2 tablespoonfuls of noyau
Juice of one lemon
Mix the jam and the cream, then carefully add the noyau and the lemon
juice. Press through a fine sieve, add the milk, and freeze as directed on
page 7.
This will serve six persons.
FROZEN CUSTARD
1 quart of milk
6 ounces of sugar
2 teaspoonfuls of vanilla
Yolks of four eggs
Put the milk in a double boiler, add the yolks of the eggs and the sugar
beaten together, and stir until the mixture thickens. Take from the fire,
and, when cold, add the vanilla. Turn into the freezer and freeze as
directed. A little chopped conserved fruit may be added at last when the
dasher is removed. Chopped black walnuts may also be added.
This will serve six persons.
GELATIN ICE CREAM
1 quart of milk
1/2 pint of cream
6 ounces of sugar
1 tablespoonful of granulated gelatin
2 teaspoonfuls of vanilla
Cover the gelatin with a little cold milk and stand it aside for fifteen
minutes. Put the remaining milk in a double boiler; when scalding hot, add
the sugar and the gelatin; stir until the sugar is dissolved, take from
the fire, and, when perfectly cold, add the cream and the vanilla. Freeze
as directed on page 7.
This will serve six persons.
FROZEN PLUM PUDDING
2 pint cans of condensed milk
1/2 cupful of seeded raisins
1/2 pound of sugar
24 almonds that have been blanched and chopped
2 ounces of shredded citron
1/4 pound of candied cherries
2 teaspoonfuls of vanilla
2 tablespoonfuls of sherry
1/2 pint of water
Yolks of four eggs
Put milk in a double boiler over the fire, and stir until the milk is
thoroughly heated; add the yolks of the eggs and the sugar beaten
together, cook until it begins to thicken, take from the fire and strain.
When cold, add the citron, raisins, the cherries cut into quarters, the
almonds, vanilla and sherry. When this is perfectly cold, freeze as
directed. Do not repack or allow the mixture to stand in the freezer more
than a half hour.
Serve plain or with Montrose Sauce.
One quart of good rich milk may be used in place of the condensed milk.
This will serve twelve persons.
CHARLOTTE GLACÉ
Make a quart of vanilla ice cream and stir into it a pint of cream whipped
to a stiff froth. Line round stiff paper charlotte boxes with lady
fingers, fill them with the iced mixture, and place them at once in a can
or bucket packed in salt and ice to freeze for one or two hours.
This quantity will fill twelve boxes.
MAPLE PANACHÉE
Fill stem ice cream dishes half full with caramel ice cream; on top put a
layer of vanilla ice cream. Smooth it down and dust thickly with toasted
pecan nuts chopped fine.
A pint of each cream will fill six dishes.
GERMAN CHERRY BISCUITS
Fill paper cases half full of pineapple water ice. Put over a layer of
candied cherries chopped, then a layer of vanilla ice cream; smooth it
quickly, place a marron glacé in the centre, and garnish the cream with a
meringue made from the whites of two eggs and two tablespoonfuls of
powdered sugar. Dust this with grated macaroons, and send to the table.
Make the meringue and grate the macaroons before dishing the ice cream.
A pint of each cream will fill eight cases.
FRUIT SALAD, ICED
Make one quart of lemon or orange water ice and stand it aside for at
least one or two hours to ripen. Make a fruit salad from stemmed
strawberries, sliced bananas cut into tiny bits, a few very ripe cherries,
a grated pineapple if you have it, and the pulp of four or five oranges.
After the water ice is frozen rather hard, pack it in a border mold, put
on the lid or cover and bind the seam with a strip of muslin dipped in
paraffin or suet, and repack to freeze for three or four hours. Sweeten
the fruit combination, if you like, add a tablespoonful or two of brandy
and sherry, and stand this on the ice until very cold. At serving
time, turn the mold of water ice on to a round compote dish, quickly fill
the centre with fruit salad, garnish the outside with fresh roses or
violets, and send at once to the table.
This will serve eight or ten persons at luncheon.
COUPE ST. JACQUE
Make a fruit salad as in preceding recipe. Make a pint of orange or
strawberry ice. At serving time fill parfait or ice cream glasses half
full of the fruit salad, fill the remaining half with water ice, smooth it
over, garnish the top with whipped cream, put a maraschino cherry in the
centre, and serve. Other fruits may be used for the salad.
This should make twelve tumblers.
WATER ICES AND SHERBETS OR SORBETS
A water ice is a mixture of water, fruit and sugar, frozen without much
stirring; in fact, a water ice can be made in an ordinary tin kettle
packed in a bucket. If an ice cream freezer is used, the stirring should
be done occasionally. Personally, I prefer to pack the can, put on the lid
and fasten the hole with a cork rather than to use the dasher, stirring
now and then with a paddle. If you use the crank, turn slowly for a few
minutes, then allow the mixture to stand for five minutes; turn slowly
again, and again rest, and continue this until the water ice is frozen. A
much longer time is required for freezing water ice than ice cream.
When the mixture is thoroughly frozen, take out the dasher, scrape down
the sides of the can, give the ice a thorough beating with a wooden spoon;
put the cork in the lid of the can, draw the water from the tub, repack it
with coarse ice and salt, cover it with paper and a piece of blanket or
burlap, and stand aside for two or three hours to ripen just as you would
ice cream.
When it is necessary to make water ice every day or two, it is best to
make a syrup and stand it aside ready for use.
Fruit jellies may be used in the place of fresh fruits, allowing one pint
of jelly, the juice of one lemon and a half pound of sugar to each quart
of water.
When water ice is correctly frozen, it has the appearance of hard wet
snow. It must not be frothy nor light.
A sherbet or sorbet is made from the same mixture as a water ice, stirred
constantly while it is freezing, and has a meringue, made from the white
of one egg and a tablespoonful of powdered sugar, stirred in after the
dasher is removed.
APPLE ICE
1 pound of tart apples
1 cupful of sugar
1 pint of water
Juice of one lemon or lime
Quarter and core the apples, but do not pare them. Slice them, add the
water, cover and stew until tender, about five minutes. Press through a
sieve, add the sugar and lemon juice. When cold, freeze as directed. Serve
in lemonade glasses at dinner with roasted duck, goose or pork.
This will serve six persons.
APRICOT ICE
1 quart can of apricots
1/2 cupful of sugar
1 pint of water
Juice of one lemon
Press the apricots through a sieve, add all the other ingredients, and
serve. This is nice served in lemonade glasses for afternoon tea. Pass
sweet wafers.
This will serve eight persons.
CHERRY ICE
2 full quarts of sour cherries
1 pound of sugar
1 quart of water
Stew the cherries in the water for ten minutes and press through a sieve,
add the sugar, and, if you have it, two drops of Angostura Bitters; when
cold, freeze it as directed on page 63.
This will serve ten persons.
CURRANT WATER ICE
1 pint of currant juice
1 pound of sugar
1 pint of boiling water
Add the sugar to the water, and stir over the fire until it is dissolved.
Boil five minutes, take from the fire; when cool, add the currant juice.
When cold, freeze as directed on page 63.
This will serve six persons.
CURRANT AND RASPBERRY WATER ICE
1 pint of currant juice
1 pint of raspberry juice
1 pint of water
3/4 pound of sugar
Add the sugar to the water, stir until boiling, boil five minutes, and,
when cool, add the raspberry and currant juices, and freeze as directed.
This will serve six persons; in punch glasses, eight persons.
GRAPE WATER ICE
1 pint of grape juice
1 quart of water
1 pound of sugar
Juice of one lemon
Boil the sugar and water together for five minutes, take from the fire,
add the lemon juice, and skim. When cold, add the grape juice, and freeze
as directed.
If fresh grapes are to be used, select Muscatels or Concords. Pulp the
grapes, boil the pulps, press them through a sieve, and add the skins and
the pulps to the sugar and water. Boil five minutes, press as much as
possible through a sieve, and freeze.
This will serve eight persons.
LEMON WATER ICE
4 large lemons
1 quart of water
1-1/4 pounds of sugar
Grate the yellow rind of two lemons into the sugar, add the water, stir
over the fire until the sugar is dissolved, and boil for five minutes.
Strain, and stand aside to cool. When cold, add the juice of the lemons,
and freeze as directed on page 63.
This will serve six persons.
GINGER WATER ICE
6 ounces of preserved ginger
4 lemons
1 quart of water
1 pound of sugar
Put four ounces of the ginger through an ordinary meat grinder, and cut
the remaining two ounces into fine bits. Boil the sugar and water together
for five minutes, and add the lemon juice and ground ginger. Take from the
fire, add the bits of ginger, and, when cold, freeze as directed. Ginger
water ice is better for a two hour stand, after it is frozen. Nice to
serve with roasted or braised beef.
This will serve six persons; in small punch glasses, eight.
MILLE FRUIT WATER ICE
1/2 pint of grape juice
6 lemons
1 orange
4 tablespoonfuls of sherry
1/2 pound of preserved cherries or pineapple, or both mixed
1-1/2 pounds of sugar
1 quart of water
Grate the yellow rind of the orange and one lemon into the sugar, add the
water, stir over the fire until the sugar is dissolved, boil five minutes,
and strain. Add the fruit cut into small pieces, the juice of the orange
and the lemons; when cold, add the grape juice and sherry, and freeze,
using the dasher. Do not stir rapidly, but stir continuously, as slowly as
possible. When the mixture is frozen, remove the dasher and repack the
can; ripen at least two hours.
This is one of the nicest of all the water ices, and may be served on the
top of Coupe St. Jacque, or at dinner in sherbet glasses with roasted veal
or beef.
This will serve ten persons.
ORANGE WATER ICE
12 large oranges
1 pound of sugar
1 quart of water
Grate the yellow rind from three oranges into the sugar, add the water,
boil five minutes, and strain; when cold, add the orange juice, and freeze
as directed for water ices.
This will serve ten persons.
POMEGRANATE WATER ICE
12 good sized pomegranates
1 pint of water
1 pound of sugar
Cut the pomegranates into halves, remove the seeds carefully from the
inside bitter skin; press them with a potato masher in the colander,
allowing the juice to run through into a bowl; be careful not to mash the
seeds. Add the sugar to the juice and stir until it is dissolved; then add
the water, cold, and freeze. This is very nice to serve with a meat
course, and also nice for the garnish of a fruit salad.
This will serve six persons.
PINEAPPLE WATER ICE
2 ripe pineapples or
1 quart can of grated pineapple
1 quart of water
1-1/2 pounds of sugar
Juice of two lemons
Pare the pineapples, remove the eyes, and grate the fruit into the water.
Add the sugar and lemon juice, boil five minutes, and, when cold, freeze
as directed on page 63.
This will serve ten persons.
STRAWBERRY WATER ICE
1 quart of strawberries
1 pound of sugar
1 quart of water
Juice of two lemons
Add the sugar and the lemon juice to the stemmed strawberries, let them
stand one hour; mash them through a colander, and then, if you like,
strain through a fine sieve. Add the water, and freeze as directed on page
63.
This will serve eight persons.
RASPBERRY WATER ICE
1 quart of red raspberries
1 pound of sugar
1 quart of water
Juice of two lemons
Add the sugar and the lemon juice to the raspberries, stir and stand aside
one hour. Press through a sieve, add the water, and freeze as directed on
page 63.
This will serve eight persons.
ROMAN PUNCH
Make one quart of lemon water ice. When ready to serve, fill it into small
punch glasses, make a little well in the centre and fill the space with
good Jamaica rum.
This will serve eight persons.
SOUR SOP SHERBET OR ICE
Squeeze the juice from one large sour sop, strain, and add four
tablespoonfuls of sugar, boiled a moment with four tablespoonfuls of
water. Freeze as directed on page 63.
A quart of sour sop when frozen will serve six persons.
CRANBERRY SHERBET
1 pint of cranberries
1/2 pound of sugar
1/2 pint of water
Add the water to the cranberries, cover, bring to a boil; press through a
colander, return them to the fire, add the sugar, and stir until the sugar
dissolves. Take from the fire, and, when cold, freeze, stirring slowly all
the while.
Serve with the meat course at dinner.
This will serve eight persons.
CUCUMBER SORBET
2 large cucumbers
2 tart apples
1 pint of water
1 teaspoonful of sugar
1/2 teaspoonful of salt
1 tablespoonful of gelatin
1 saltspoonful of black pepper
Juice of one lemon
Peel the cucumbers, cut them into halves and remove the seeds. Dissolve
the gelatin in a half cupful of hot water. Grate the flesh of the
cucumbers; grate the apples, add them to the cucumbers, and add all the
other ingredients. Freeze as you would ordinary sherbet.
Serve in tiny glasses, with boiled cod or halibut.
This will fill eight small stem glasses.
GOOSEBERRY SORBET
1/2 pint of gooseberry jam
4 tablespoonfuls of sugar
1 pint of water
Juice of one lemon
Mix all the ingredients together and freeze, turning slowly all the while.
Serve in small glasses.
This is usually served at Christmas dinner with goose.
This will serve six persons.
ORANGE SHERBET
1 pint of orange juice
2 tablespoonfuls of gelatin
3/4 pound of sugar
1 pint of water
Cover the gelatin with an extra half cupful of cold water and soak for a
half hour. Add the sugar to the pint of water and stir it over the fire
until it boils; add the grated yellow rind of two oranges and the juice;
strain through a fine sieve and freeze, turning the freezer slowly all the
while. Remove the dasher, stir in a meringue made from the white of one
egg, and repack to ripen for an hour at least.
This will serve six persons.
MINT SHERBET
2 dozen stalks of spearmint
1/2 pound of sugar
1 quart of water
Juice of three lemons
Strip the leaves from the stalks of the mint, chop them to a pulp and rub
them with the sugar. Add the water, bring to a boil, boil five minutes,
and, when cold, add three drops of green coloring and the juice of the
lemons; strain and freeze, turning slowly all the while.
Serve at dinner with mutton or lamb.
This will serve six persons; in small stem glasses, eight persons.
TOMATO SORBET OR SHERBET
1 quart can or 12 fresh tomatoes
1 slice of onion
1 blade of mace
1 saltspoonful of celery seed
1 pint of water
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 teaspoonful of paprika
1 tablespoonful of gelatin
Juice of one lemon
A dash of cayenne
Add all the ingredients to the tomatoes, stir over the fire until the
mixture reaches the boiling point, boil five minutes, and strain through a
fine sieve. When this is cold, freeze according to the rule for sherbets,
turning slowly all the time.
Serve in punch glasses at dinner as an accompaniment to roasted beef, or
venison, or saddle of mutton.
If fresh tomatoes are used, simply cut them into halves and cook them
without peeling.
This will fill nine or ten punch glasses.
FROZEN FRUITS
Frozen fruits are mixed and frozen the same as water ices, that is, they
are only stirred occasionally while freezing, but the fruit must be mashed
or it will form little balls of ice through a partly frozen mixture. The
only difference between a water ice and a frozen fruit is that the mixture
is not strained, and more fruit and less water is used. If canned fruits
are used, and these recipes followed, cut down the sugar. Cream may be
used in place of water with sub-acid fruits.
FROZEN APRICOTS
1 quart of apricots
2 tablespoonfuls of gelatin
1 cupful of sugar
1 pint of cream
Drain the apricots from the can, mash them through a colander, add the
sugar and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Cover the gelatin with a half
cupful of cold water and soak for a half hour. Stand it over hot water,
stir until dissolved, add it to the apricot mixture, and freeze. When
frozen, remove the dasher and stir in the cream whipped to a stiff froth.
Repack and stand aside two hours to ripen.
This will serve ten persons.
FROZEN BANANAS
12 large ripe bananas
1 pound of sugar
1/2 pint of water
1 pint of cream
Juice of two lemons
Peel the bananas and mash them through a colander. Add the sugar to the
water, and boil five minutes; when cold, add the lemon juice and the
bananas. Put the mixture into a freezing can, stir slowly until frozen.
Remove the dasher and stir in carefully the cream whipped to a stiff
froth.
This will serve ten or twelve persons.
FROZEN CHOCOLATE
1 quart of milk
3 ounces of chocolate
2/3 cupful of sugar
1 pint of water
1/2 pint of cream, whipped
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Grate the chocolate and put it in a double boiler with the water and
sugar; let the water in the surrounding boiler boil fifteen minutes, beat
well, and add the milk. Stir until thoroughly mixed, and the milk is very
hot. Take from the fire, add the vanilla, and when the mixture is cold,
freeze, turning slowly all the while. Serve in chocolate cups with the
whipped cream on top.
This will fill nine chocolate cups.
FROZEN PINEAPPLE
2 large pineapples
1 quart of water
1 pound of sugar
Juice of one lemon
Peel the pineapples and grate them. Add the sugar to the water, stir until
the sugar is dissolved, boil five minutes and cool; add the pineapple and
lemon juice, and freeze, turning the freezer slowly.
This will serve eight or ten persons.
FROZEN COFFEE
1 quart of cold water
1/2 pound of sugar
6 heaping tablespoonfuls of finely ground coffee
1/2 pint of cream
Put the coffee and the water in a double boiler over the fire, and let the
water in the surrounding boiler boil for at least twenty minutes after it
begins to boil. Strain through two thicknesses of cheese cloth, add the
sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved, and stand aside until very cold.
Add the cream and the unbeaten white of one egg. Freeze, turning the
freezer slowly. This should be the consistency of a soft mush and very
light.
Serve in coffee cups, either plain or with whipped cream on top.
This will serve six persons,
FROZEN PEACHES, No. 1
2 pounds of very ripe peaches
6 peach kernels
1 pint of water
1/2 pound of sugar
Juice of one lemon
Crack the kernels, chop them fine, add them to the sugar, add the water,
and boil five minutes; strain and stand aside to cool. Pare the peaches,
press them through a colander, add them to the cold syrup, turn into the
freezer, and stir slowly until the mixture is frozen. If the peaches are
colorless, add a few drops of cochineal before freezing.
This will serve eight persons.
FROZEN PEACHES, No. 2
1 quart of peach pulp
1 pint of cream
3/4 pound of sugar
Juice of one lemon
Add the lemon juice to the peach pulp, add the sugar, and stand aside,
stirring every now and then until the sugar is dissolved. Freeze the
mixture, stirring slowly; when frozen, remove the dasher, and fold in the
cream whipped to a stiff froth.
This is one of the nicest ices for afternoon or evening collations.
This will serve eight persons; in stem glasses, ten persons.
FROZEN RASPBERRIES
1 quart of raspberries
3/4 pound of sugar
1 pint of water
Juice of one lemon
Add the sugar and the lemon juice to the berries, mash them with a potato
masher. Let them stand one hour, add the water, and freeze.
This will serve eight persons.
FROZEN WATERMELON
Scrape the centre from a very ripe watermelon, chop quickly and press
through a colander. To each pint of this juice, add a half cupful of sugar
and four tablespoonfuls of sherry. Freeze until it is like wet snow. Serve
in glasses. One pint will fill three stem glasses.
FROZEN STRAWBERRIES
1 quart of very ripe strawberries
1 pound of sugar
1 pint of water
Juice of one lemon
Add the sugar and lemon juice to the berries, let them stand one hour.
Mash the berries through a colander, add the water, and freeze, turning
the dasher constantly but very slowly.
This will serve eight persons.
FRAPPÉ
A frappé is nothing more nor less than a water ice partly frozen. For
instance, Café Frappé is a partly frozen coffee. The mixture looks like
wet snow. A Champagne Frappé is champagne packed in salt and ice and the
bottles agitated until the champagne is partly frozen.
PARFAIT
A parfait is a dessert made from frozen whipped cream, sweetened and
flavored. An old fashioned parfait was not frozen in an ice cream freezer;
the mixture was packed at once into a mold, the mold packed in salt and
ice to freeze for two or three hours. To be perfect, the mixture must be
frozen on the outside to the depth of one and a half to two inches, with a
soft centre. The quick parfait given under frozen desserts is now in
general use.
MOUSSE
A mousse is a parfait frozen to the centre. These mixtures are not smooth
like ice cream, but are frozen in crystals and to be exactly correct,
should look like moss when cut.
BURNT ALMOND MOUSSE
1/4 pound of Jordan almonds
2 ounces of almond paste
2/3 cupful of powdered sugar
1 pint of thick cream
1 teaspoonful of almond extract
Whip the cream to a very stiff froth. Blanch, toast and grind the almonds,
putting them through an ordinary meat grinder; rub them with the almond
paste, adding the extract and about two tablespoonfuls of water or sherry.
Sprinkle the sugar over the whipped cream, and then fold in the nut
mixture. Pack at once into a mold, put on the lid, fasten the seam with a
strip of muslin dipped in paraffin or melted suet, and pack in coarse salt
and ice to freeze for two or three hours.
Serve plain or dusted with chopped almonds.
This will serve six persons.
COFFEE MOUSSE
1 pint of cream
1/2 cupful of powdered sugar
2 tablespoonfuls of coffee extract
Whip the cream to a stiff froth, sprinkle over the sugar, add the coffee
extract, and, when well mixed, pack and freeze.
This will serve six persons.
EGYPTIAN MOUSSE
1/2 cupful of rice
1 tablespoonful of gelatin
2/3 cupful of sugar
1/4 pound of dates
1/2 pint of milk
1 pint of cream
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Wash the rice, throw it into boiling water, boil rapidly twenty minutes;
drain, add the milk, and cook in a double boiler fifteen minutes. Add the
sugar, the gelatin that has been moistened in cold water, and the dates
chopped. Take from the fire, add the vanilla, and when the mixture is
cold, fold in carefully the whipped cream. Freeze as directed in a mold,
and serve with cold quince jelly sauce.
This will serve ten persons.
DUCHESS MOUSSE
4 eggs
1/2 cupful of sugar
1 pint of cream
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
5 drops of cochineal
Beat the yolks of the eggs and the sugar until very, very light; fold in
the whites of the eggs and the flavoring. Stand the bowl in a pan of
boiling water and beat continuously until the ingredients are hot; take
from the fire and beat constantly for ten minutes. When this is cool, fold
in the cream whipped to a stiff froth, pack and freeze.
Serve with quince jelly sauce poured over the mousse.
This will serve eight persons.
PISTACHIO MOUSSE
4 ounces of pistachio nuts
1 tablespoonful of gelatin
1 pint of water
1 pint of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of almond extract
3 drops of green coloring
Blanch the pistachio nuts and put them through a meat grinder. Boil the
sugar and water for five minutes; when cool, add the coloring, the
pistachio nuts, and the gelatin moistened in a little cold water. When
this is cold, fold in the cream beaten to a stiff froth, and freeze in a
mold as directed.
If this is not too well mixed the cream will separate, which makes the
handsomer dessert. When the mousse is turned from the mold it will then
have a solid white base with a rather green, beautiful transparent mixture
at the top.
This will serve ten persons.
RICE MOUSSE WITH A COMPOTE OF MANDARINS
1/2 cupful of rice
1 tablespoonful of gelatin
2/3 cupful of sugar
1 pint of milk
1 pint of cream
1/4 pound of candied cherries
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Wash and boil the rice in water for twenty minutes, drain, put it in a
double boiler with the milk and sugar; stir until the sugar is dissolved,
cover the kettle and cook slowly for twenty minutes. Press through a
sieve, add the vanilla, and the gelatin covered with cold water. When this
is cold, fold in the cream whipped to a stiff froth; pack and freeze.
I usually freeze this in the ordinary ice cream can; simply remove the
dasher, put in the mixture and pack it to freeze for two or three hours.
While this is ripening, separate the mandarins into carpels. Boil together
for five minutes one pound of sugar, a half pint of water and the juice of
one lemon; take from the fire, add at once the carpels, stir lightly until
they are thoroughly covered with the syrup and stand aside until very
cold.
At serving time, wipe the outside of the freezing can with a warm towel,
turn the mousse into the centre of a round dish, heap the carpels around
the base and over the top in the form of a pyramid, pour over the syrup,
and send at once to the table.
This will serve twelve persons.
SAUCES FOR ICE CREAMS
HOT CHOCOLATE SAUCE
1/2 cupful of cream or condensed milk
2 ounces of chocolate
1 cupful of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Put all the ingredients into a saucepan and stir over the fire until they
reach boiling point, boil until the mixture slightly hardens when dropped
into cold water. Add the vanilla, turn at once into the sauceboat and send
to the table. This must be sufficiently thin to dip nicely over the ice
cream.
MAPLE SAUCE
1 cupful of sugar
1 teaspoonful of lemon juice
1 cupful of water
1 teaspoonful of maple flavoring
Put half the sugar in an iron saucepan and stand it over the fire until it
melts and browns, add hastily the water, the remaining sugar and the lemon
juice, and boil for about two minutes; take from the fire and add the
flavoring. This may be served plain, or with chopped fruit or nuts added.
CLARET SAUCE
Boil one cupful of sugar and a half cupful of water with a saltspoonful of
cream of tartar for five minutes. Take from the fire and add one cupful of
claret, and stand aside until icy cold.
NUT SAUCE
1 cupful of sugar
1/2 cupful of chopped nuts
1 cupful of water
1 teaspoonful of caramel
2 teaspoonfuls of sherry
Boil the sugar and water with a saltspoonful of cream of tartar or a
teaspoonful of lemon juice for five minutes, take from the fire and add
all the other ingredients, and stand aside to cool.
MONTROSE SAUCE
1/2 tablespoonful of granulated gelatin
1/4 cupful of sugar
1/2 cupful of milk
1 pint of cream
2 tablespoonfuls of brandy
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
Yolks of 3 eggs
Cover the gelatin with milk, let it soak a half hour, and put it, with the
milk, in a double boiler over the fire. Beat the yolks of the eggs and the
sugar together, add them to the hot milk, stir about one minute until the
mixture begins to thicken, take from the fire, and, when cold, add the
vanilla and the brandy, and, if you like it, four tablespoonfuls of
sherry. Stand this aside until very, very cold.
ORANGE SAUCE
1/2 pint of orange juice
1/2 pint of water
1/2 cupful of sugar
1 tablespoonful of arrowroot
Whites of three eggs
Add the sugar to the water, and, when boiling hot, add the arrowroot
moistened. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth, add gradually the
hot mixture, beating all the while. Add the orange juice, beat again. Turn
it into a sauceboat and stand aside until very cold.
WALNUT SAUCE
Melt maple sugar with a little water, and add to each cupful of syrup a
half cupful of chopped black walnuts. Maple syrup may also be used by
adding half the quantity of boiling water and the nuts.
REFRESHMENTS FOR AFFAIRS
In arranging this matter, I have made an earnest effort to be of service
to the housewife without or with one maid, as well as to those who are
fortunate enough to have trained help.
It is, perhaps, unnecessary to say that elaborate refreshments are
entirely out of place at small afternoon or evening cards. An ice, with a
wafer, or cake and coffee, served on card tables, are sufficient. A salad,
with bread and butter sandwiches and coffee, or a salad sandwich with
coffee, make a nice combination. Hot dishes, even light entrées, seem to
call for a dessert, or another course and coffee. For wedding and other
large receptions serve a greater variety of dishes—jellied meats,
boned chicken, salads, sandwiches, ices, cakes and coffee. In winter
creamed dishes may be served in paper cases on the same plate with salads
and other cold dishes. Serve coffee in small cups after refreshments.
Many so called elaborate dishes are quite easily made, and entrées are
frequently quite as good when rewarmed.
Chicken croquettes may be made and fried early in the day, ready to rewarm
on brown paper in a baking pan in a hot oven ten minutes before serving
time. Sandwiches will keep perfectly well for several hours if wrapped in
a damp towel and closed in a tin bread box. Salad sandwiches are better,
however, if made as near serving time as possible.
If a large reception is to be given, even with good help, prepare as many
dishes as possible the day before, to avoid confusion on the fixed day.
Refreshments for small affairs need not necessarily cost much time or
money. A half cupful of chopped left-over steak, a couple of chops or a
bit of chicken or a box of sardines, make a good foundation for molds of
tomato jelly. Served with bread and butter sandwiches and coffee they are
quite sufficient for afternoon or evening cards.
Many of the ices in this book are new and attractive. The new sorbets are
liked by those who are always striving for a change. Many are old and
reliable.
At large affairs, serve from the dining table.
At card parties, large and small, serve on the card tables, using a small
tea cloth on each table.
At afternoon teas, serve from the tea table in the drawing room.
At lawn parties, serve from a large table on the lawn. Small tables may be
placed here and there for the convenience of guests.
Every day afternoon tea may be served, in the summer on the porch, in the
winter, in the living room or library.
If two dishes only are served, be sure that they harmonize with each other
and with the manner of service.
Suitable and hygienic combinations are always to be considered, but the
æsthetic side seems to me of equal importance.
COFFEE FOR LARGE HOME AFFAIRS
Allow eleven ounces of finely ground coffee to each gallon of water. This
will serve twenty five persons with one coffee cup each, and forty persons
with after-dinner cups. The better way to make a large quantity of coffee
without an urn is to purchase a new wash boiler. Wash it and put in the
required quantity of water (cold). Weigh the coffee and divide it into
half pound lots. Put each lot in a small cheese cloth bag; tie the top of
the bag, allowing room for the coffee to swell. Put the bags in the water
an hour before serving time, bring slowly to a boil, and then boil rapidly
for five minutes. Remove the bags at once, pressing them well. Keep the
coffee very hot until it is all served.
Coffee is not spoiled by being kept at boiling point for some time, if the
grounds are removed.
SOUPS
BOUILLON
2 pounds of chopped lean beef
2 quarts of cold water
1 small onion
12 cloves
2 tablespoonfuls of sugar
2 teaspoonfuls of salt
12 whole peppercorns
A dash of cayenne
Juice of half a lemon
Put the sugar in the soup kettle, add the onion, sliced, and shake until
the onion is thoroughly browned and the sugar almost burned; add the meat,
shake it for a moment, and add the water. Cover, bring to boiling point,
and put over a slow fire to simmer for two hours. Add all the seasonings
and simmer one hour longer. Strain through a colander, pressing the meat.
Beat the whites of two eggs slightly, then whisk them into the warm
bouillon, and add the juice of the lemon. Bring to boiling point, boil
rapidly five minutes, let it stand a moment, and strain through two
thicknesses of cheese cloth. This should stand until it is perfectly cold,
so that every particle of fat may be removed from the surface. Reheat to
serve.
This will serve ten persons, using ordinary bouillon cups.
CLAM BOUILLON
50 large clams
2 quarts of water
12 whole peppercorns
1/2 teaspoonful of celery seed
Wash and scrub the clams thoroughly. Put them, a few at a time, in the
soup kettle, the bottom of which has been covered with a pint of boiling
water. Boil rapidly, take the clams out with a skimmer, and put in another
lot, and so continue until all the clams have been cooked. Remove them
from the shells, saving all the liquor. Chop and return them, with the
liquor and remaining water, to the soup kettle. Simmer gently a half hour,
then add the peppercorns, crushed, and the celery seed. Cover the kettle,
take it from the fire and allow it to stand until perfectly cold. Strain
through two thicknesses of cheese cloth. Reheat to serve.
This will serve fifteen persons.
BELLEVUE BOUILLON
1 quart of plain or chicken bouillon
1 quart of clam bouillon
1/2 pint of cream
Paprika
This is one of the most elegant of all bouillons. Heat the bouillons
separately, mix them at the last minute, pour at once into heated cups,
put a tablespoonful of whipped cream on the top of each cup, garnish with
a dusting of paprika, and send to the table.
This will serve ten persons; in a pinch, twelve.
CHICKEN BOUILLON
1 four pound fowl
3 quarts of water
1 onion
2 tablespoonfuls of sugar
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 bay leaf
1 saltspoonful of celery seed, or one half cupful of chopped celery
1 saltspoonful of black pepper
Draw the chicken and cut it up as for a fricassee. Scald and skin the
feet, and crack them thoroughly with your cleaver knife. Put the sugar in
a soup kettle, add the onion, sliced, shake over a quick fire until brown,
add the chicken and the water, bring to boiling point, and skim. Simmer
gently for two hours. Add all the seasonings, simmer one hour longer, and
strain. Add the juice of half a lemon and the whites of two eggs, slightly
beaten. Boil rapidly five minutes, and strain through two thicknesses of
cheese cloth. Reheat to serve. This may be used in place of beef bouillon,
with the clam broth, for Bellevue bouillon.
This will serve twelve persons.
OYSTER BOUILLON
50 fat oysters
2 quarts of water
12 whole peppercorns
12 whole allspice
1-1/2 teaspoonfuls of salt
Drain and wash the oysters. Throw them at once in a hot kettle, shake
until the gills have curled, cover the kettle, and simmer gently for
fifteen minutes. Drain again, this time saving the liquor. Return it to
the kettle with the peppercorns and allspice, crushed, and water. Chop the
oysters with a silver knife, put them back in the kettle, simmer gently a
half hour, and add the salt. Strain through two thicknesses of cheese
cloth, reheat and serve with whipped cream on top of each cup.
This serves fifteen persons.
TOMATO PUREE à la RORER
1 quart can of tomatoes
1/2 pint of cream
1 quart of chicken bouillon
2 tablespoonfuls of butter
2 tablespoonfuls of arrowroot
1 bay leaf
1 blade of mace
1 onion
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 teaspoonful of paprika
Add the onion, paprika, mace and bay leaf to the tomatoes, boil rapidly
five minutes. Moisten the arrowroot with three or four tablespoonfuls of
cold water, add it to the hot tomato, boil ten minutes, and press through
a sieve. Add the chicken bouillon, boil ten minutes, add the butter, and,
when the butter is thoroughly dissolved, turn at once into cups. Put a
tablespoonful of whipped cream on top of each, and serve.
This will serve ten persons.
GLAZE
Glaze is absolutely necessary for fine cooking, either for the browning of
sweetbreads, birds or chickens.
Cover a half box of gelatin with a half cupful of cold water to soak for
an hour. Put one quart of good bouillon, chicken or beef, over the fire,
and boil it rapidly until reduced to a pint; add the gelatin. As soon as
the gelatin is dissolved, strain the mixture. Put four tablespoonfuls of
sugar into an iron saucepan, stir until it is browned, then add to it
slowly the hot glaze, stir until it is thoroughly melted, turn it into a
china or granite receptacle, and stand away to cool. Keep this in the
refrigerator, and use it according to directions.
SWEETBREADS
SWEETBREADS à la CREME, No. 1
2 pairs of calves' sweetbreads
1 can of mushrooms
1 pint of milk
4 level tablespoonfuls of butter
4 level tablespoonfuls of flour
1 level teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
Wash the sweetbreads and trim them. Throw them in a saucepan of boiling
water and simmer gently for one hour; drain and throw them in cold water.
The water in which they were boiled may be used for stock. When they are
thoroughly cold, remove the membrane, and pick them into small pieces. Rub
the butter and flour together in a saucepan, add the milk, stir until
boiling, add the mushrooms, chopped fine, the sweetbreads, salt and
pepper. Stir until it again reaches the boiling point, cover and stand
over hot water for twenty minutes. Serve in ramekin dishes, paté shells or
paper cases. This will fill twelve cases, or fourteen paté shells.
SWEETBREADS à la CREME, No. 2
1 pound of fresh mushrooms
2 pairs of calves' sweetbreads
1/2 pint of milk
4 level tablespoonfuls of butter
4 level tablespoonfuls of flour
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
Wash and stem the mushrooms; do not peel them. With a silver knife cut
them into slices. Put half the butter in a saucepan, add the mushrooms and
half the milk, and the salt and pepper. Cover the saucepan, and stew
slowly a half hour. Rub the remaining butter and flour together; drain the
liquor from the mushrooms, add it, with the rest of the milk, to the
butter and flour. Stir until boiling, add the mushrooms and sweetbreads
that have been boiled and picked apart. Cover the saucepan, stand it over
hot water, or use a double boiler, pushing the boiler to the back of the
stove for twenty to thirty minutes. The saucepan must be kept closely
covered, or the aroma of the mushrooms will be lost.
This will fill sixteen cases, or fourteen paté shells, or alone it will
serve twelve persons.
SWEETBREADS à la BORDELAISE
1 pair of calves' sweetbreads
1/2 pint of stock
1 onion
1 bay leaf
1/2 teaspoonful of salt
1 can of mushrooms
1 teaspoonful of browning or kitchen bouquet
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
2 level tablespoonfuls of flour
Wash the sweetbreads, put them in a saucepan, add the bay leaf, onion and
one pint of cold water; bring to boiling point, and simmer gently one
hour. Save the water in which they were boiled. Throw the sweetbreads into
cold water, remove the membrane and pick them apart. Put the butter and
flour in a saucepan; when thoroughly mixed, add a half pint of stock in
which the sweetbreads were boiled, stir until boiling, add the mushrooms,
drained, and the seasoning. Bring to boiling point, and push to the back
of the fire for ten minutes. Skim off any butter that comes to the
surface, add the sweetbreads, cook gently ten minutes longer, and serve in
either paté cases, ramekin dishes, or paper cases.
This will serve eight persons.
BAKED SWEETBREADS
2 pairs of calves' sweetbreads
1 can of French peas
3 tablespoonfuls of butter
2 tablespoonfuls of glaze
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of pepper
Wash the sweetbreads and soak them in cold water; cut them apart and trim
them neatly. Sprinkle the bottom of a baking pan with a chopped onion, put
the sweetbreads on top, dust them lightly with salt and pepper, baste them
with one tablespoonful of the butter, melted, and run them in a quick oven
to bake for twenty minutes. Then brush them thoroughly with glaze and bake
them ten minutes longer. Drain, wash and heat the peas, add the remaining
butter and season them with salt and pepper. Put the peas in the bottom of
the serving dish, dish the sweetbreads in them and send at once to the
table. These may also be served in individual dishes, cutting the
sweetbreads in small pieces, so they may be eaten with a fork.
They will serve from four to six people. The throat sweetbread may be cut
into halves, but as a rule one sweetbread is served to each person.
LAMBS' SWEETBREADS IN PAPER CASES
8 lambs' sweetbreads
1/2 box of gelatin
1 pint of beef stock or chicken bouillon
1 can of peas
1 head of celery
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
2 level tablespoonfuls of flour
1/2 pint of milk
1 lemon
Hearts of lettuce
Yolks of two eggs
Salt and pepper
Wash the sweetbreads, put them in a saucepan, cover with boiling water,
add two tablespoonfuls of vinegar and a sliced onion. Cook gently for
three-quarters of an hour. Drain, put them in a baking pan, brush them
with butter, add a few tablespoonfuls of glaze or stock, put over three or
four slices of bacon, and cook in the oven a half hour, basting three or
four times. Rub the butter and flour together, add the milk, stir until
boiling, add two tablespoonfuls of the soaked gelatin, a half teaspoonful
of salt and a little white pepper. Take from the fire and add hastily the
beaten yolks of the eggs. Cover the bottom of a cold baking pan with
muffin rings, put one sweetbread into each muffin ring. When the sauce is
a little cool, cover the sweetbreads thoroughly, filling the rings quite
full. Stand these away over night in a cold place.
Dissolve the remaining gelatin in the hot bouillon, season, add the lemon
juice, and stand it aside over night. At serving time, remove the contents
from the rings and place them in paper cases of the same size. Turn the
clear aspic out on to a towel and cut it into pretty shapes. Decorate the
top of the cases with this aspic, placing a sprig of green in the centre.
Drain and press the cold peas through a sieve, and season them with salt
and pepper; put this pulp in a pastry bag with a star tube, and decorate
the top of each mold. Serve at once with mayonnaise passed in a boat.
Another way is to fill the bottom of the paper cases with finely chopped
celery, mixed with mayonnaise, and put the sweetbreads on top, omitting
the peas. If made well, these are exceedingly handsome. One "ring" will be
served to each person.
SWEETBREADS à la NEWBURG
2 pairs of calves' sweetbreads
1 can of mushrooms
4 hard boiled yolks of eggs
1/2 pint of milk
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
1 tablespoonful of flour
1/2 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
1/2 saltspoonful of grated nutmeg
A dash of cayenne
Cook the sweetbreads as directed in first recipe; when cold, pick them
apart, rejecting the membrane. Rub the butter and flour together, add the
milk, stir until boiling, and add this slowly to the mashed yolks of the
eggs. Work and stir until you have a perfectly smooth paste. Press it
through a fine sieve, add the salt, pepper, mushrooms and sweetbreads.
Stand over hot water for twenty minutes, until thoroughly hot. Add, if you
use it, four tablespoonfuls of sherry, and serve.
This will serve ten persons.
SHELL-FISH DISHES
DEVILED CRABS
12 crabs, or one pint of crab flake
4 hard boiled eggs
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
2 tablespoonfuls of soft bread crumbs
1 tablespoonful of flour
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of grated nutmeg
1 teaspoonful of onion juice
1/2 pint of milk
A dash of cayenne
Chop the whites of the hard boiled eggs very, very fine. Put the yolks
through a sieve. Rub the butter and flour together, and add the milk; stir
until boiling, take from the fire, and add the bread crumbs and the eggs.
Add all the seasoning to the crab flake, mix the two together, and fill at
once into the shells. The shells must be quite full, so that there will be
no danger of the fat being held in the shell. Dip the shells in egg, then
cover them thickly with bread crumbs. It is well to egg and bread crumb
the upper side again; in fact both dippings may be on the upper sides,
leaving the shells red underneath. Put these in a frying basket and fry
for a minute in hot, deep fat. Serve one to each person.
This quantity should fill eight shells.
CRAB BACKS à la CARACAS
1 dozen crabs, or six backs and a pint of crab flake
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 teaspoonful of onion juice
A dash of cayenne
Add the seasoning to the crab flakes, and mix without breaking the flakes.
Fill the mixture into the backs, put a teaspoonful of butter on the top of
each, sprinkle lightly with crumbs, and bake in a quick oven twenty
minutes,
CRAB MEAT à la DEWEY
1 pint of crab flake
2 tablespoonfuls of butter
2 tablespoonfuls of flour
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 red and one green pepper
1/2 pint of chicken stock, or milk
2 tablespoonfuls of sherry
Yolks of two eggs
Drop the peppers into hot fat just a moment and rub off the skin, remove
the seeds and chop the flesh fine. Put this, with the butter, in a
saucepan, and shake over the fire until the peppers are soft. Add the
flour, mix, and add the stock or milk; stir until boiling, add the salt
and pepper and the crab flakes. Do not stir, but heat slowly over hot
water. When hot, add the yolks of the eggs, beaten with two tablespoonfuls
of cream. Heat again, just a moment, being careful not to curdle the eggs,
and serve on toast.
This dish is very nice when made in a chafing dish, and will serve six
people.
LOBSTER CUTLETS
1 pint of lobster meat
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
4 level tablespoonfuls of flour
1/2 pint of milk
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 teaspoonful of onion juice
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
1/2 saltspoonful of grated nutmeg
Yolk of one egg
A dash of cayenne
Chop the boiled lobster rather fine with a silver knife, and add to it all
the seasoning. Rub the butter and flour together in a saucepan, add the
milk, stir until you have a smooth, thick paste, add the yolk of the egg,
cook a moment longer, add the lobster, and turn out to cool. When cold,
form into cutlet shaped croquettes, dip in egg, roll in bread crumbs, and
fry in deep hot fat. Put a small claw in the end of each cutlet to
represent the bone. Serve with these either cream sauce or sauce tartar.
This quantity should make eight cutlets.
LOBSTER NEWBURG
Make this precisely the same as crabs Newburg, using one pint of boiled
lobster meat. Cut the lobster in cubes of about one inch. Purchase one
large or two small lobsters.
OYSTER CROQUETTES
50 fat oysters
4 level tablespoonfuls of flour
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 teaspoonful of onion juice
1/2 saltspoonful of nutmeg
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
Yolks of two eggs
Drain and wash the oysters, throw them into a hot kettle, shake until the
gills curl and the liquid boils. Boil five minutes and drain, saving the
liquor. There should be a half cupful of liquor. Chop the oysters and add
them to the liquor. Rub the butter and flour together, add the oysters and
liquor, stir until the mixture reaches boiling point, and push to the back
of the stove where it will cook for ten minutes. Add all the seasoning and
the yolks of the eggs, cook just a minute, and turn out to cool. This must
stand either over night, or must be placed directly on the ice for at
least four hours. When cold, form into small cylinder shaped croquettes,
dip in egg and bread crumbs, and fry in deep hot fat.
This quantity will make one dozen good sized cylinders.
POULTRY AND GAME DISHES
CHICKEN CROQUETTES
1 four pound chicken
1/2 pint of milk
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
4 level tablespoonfuls of flour
2 teaspoonfuls of salt
2 teaspoonfuls of onion juice
2 tablespoonfuls of chopped parsley
1 saltspoonful of grated nutmeg
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
A dash of cayenne
Draw, truss the chicken, put it into boiling water, boil it rapidly for
ten minutes, and let it simmer until tender. When cold, remove the meat,
rejecting the bones and skin. Chop the meat with a chopping knife; do not
put it through the meat grinder. When fine, add all the seasoning and mix
thoroughly. Put the milk in a saucepan over the fire, and add the butter
and flour, rubbed together. Stir and cook until you have a smooth paste,
add the chicken, mix thoroughly, and turn out to cool. When cold, form
into croquettes, dip in an egg, beaten with a tablespoonful of water, roll
in dry bread crumbs, and fry in deep hot fat. Serve plain, or with French
peas.
This will make thirteen large croquettes.
One pair of thoroughly cooked sweetbreads may be chopped with the chicken,
or you may add a pair of parboiled calf's brains; this increases quantity,
and makes the croquettes more creamy.
This should make sixteen large cylinders or pyramids, serving sixteen
persons.
The meat from the chicken after it is chopped should measure one quart.
Any other meat may be substituted for chicken, but could not be used, of
course, for an elegant affair.
CHICKEN à la CREME
The white meat of one cooked chicken
1 pair of calves' sweetbreads
1 can of mushrooms
4 level tablespoonfuls of butter
4 level tablespoonfuls of flour
1 pint of milk
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
10 drops of onion juice
Yolks of two eggs
Cut the chicken into cubes of a half inch. Boil the sweetbreads and pick
them apart, rejecting the membrane. Drain and wash the mushrooms, cut them
into halves and mix them with the sweetbread and chicken. Rub the butter
and flour together, and add the milk; when boiling, add salt, pepper,
onion juice and meat. Stand this over hot water in a covered saucepan for
twenty minutes, add the yolks of the eggs, slightly beaten, and bring just
to boiling point.
Served in ramekins or paper cases this is sufficient for fifteen persons.
Served as a supper or luncheon dish alone, twelve persons.
CHICKEN à la KING
The white meat of one chicken
1/2 can of mushrooms
1 green pepper
1/3 pint of milk
1/2 teaspoonful of salt
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
2 level tablespoonfuls of flour
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
2 tablespoonfuls of sherry
Drop the pepper into hot fat for a moment to remove the skin, then chop it
very fine. Put the butter in a saucepan or chafing dish, add the pepper,
stir until the pepper is soft, add the flour, mix and add the milk, stir
until boiling, and add the salt. Cut the meat into pieces an inch square,
add them to the hot sauce, add the mushrooms, sliced, and, when hot, add
the wine and serve.
This will serve four or five persons.
BOUDINS à la REINE
1 pint of chopped cooked chicken
1/2 can of mushrooms
1 can of peas
2 eggs
1/2 cupful of bread crumbs
1/2 cupful of chicken stock
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of pepper
Brush ordinary timbale cups lightly with butter, put a mushroom in the
centre of the bottom, and around the edge a ring of peas. Put the stock
and bread over the fire, and, when boiling, add the chicken and
seasonings, stir until it reaches the boiling point, take from the fire,
and add the eggs, well beaten. Put this carefully in the cups, cover the
top with oiled paper, stand the cups in a shallow pan partly filled with
hot water, and cook in the oven about twenty minutes, until the contents
are "set" in the centre. Heat the remaining quantity of peas, and season
them with salt and pepper. Turn the boudins on a platter, surround them
with the hot peas, and send them at once to the table.
This will serve eight persons.
These may also be served with plain sauce, or with Sauce Bechamel.
SAUCE BECHAMEL
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
2 level tablespoonfuls of flour
1/2 cupful of chicken stock
1/2 cupful of milk
1/2 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of pepper
Yolk of one egg
Rub the butter and flour together, add the liquids, stir until boiling,
add the salt and pepper, stir, add the yolk of an egg, well beaten, pass
through a fine sieve, and use at once.
CHICKEN TIMBALE
The white meat of one chicken
1/2 pint of soft white bread crumbs
1/2 cupful of milk
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
The whites of five eggs
Put the raw meat of the chicken twice through the meat chopper, then put
it in a mortar and pound it to a paste, or work it in a bowl with a wooden
spoon. Boil the bread and milk, stirring constantly; when this is cold,
add the salt, pepper and four tablespoonfuls of cream; work it gradually
into the chicken meat. This must be a perfectly smooth paste. Add the
unbeaten whites of two eggs; when they are thoroughly incorporated, fold
in the well beaten whites of the three eggs. Put at once into an oiled
Charlotte mold or into small timbale molds.
The molds may be garnished with mushrooms, or chopped truffles, or peas.
Stand them in a pan of hot water, cover with oiled paper and cook in the
oven, small molds twenty-five minutes, a large mold thirty-five. Serve
hot, with cream mushroom sauce.
This quantity in small molds should serve twelve people; in a large mold,
ten.
CREAM MUSHROOM SAUCE
1 can of mushrooms
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
1/2 pint of milk
2 level tablespoonfuls of flour
1/2 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of pepper
Rub the butter and flour together, and add the milk, stir until boiling,
add the seasoning, and the mushrooms, cut into halves. When hot it is
ready to use.
COLD DISHES
POULET EN BELLEVUE
1/2 box of gelatin
1 pint of chicken stock
1 bay leaf
1 onion
The white meat of two chickens
Salt and pepper
Remove the white meat carefully from two boiled chickens; split the
breasts into halves, long ways. Cover the gelatin with a half cupful of
cold water to soak for a half hour. Add the seasonings to the stock or
bouillon, bring to a boil, add the gelatin, and if not clear, clarify with
the white of an egg. Add the juice of a lemon and strain. Take small
oblong china or tin molds, garnish the bottoms with fancy bits of good red
pepper and chopped truffles, baste over a little of the hot aspic, and let
them stand until very cold. Cool the remaining aspic, but do not allow it
to become solid. Put on top of each mold a half breast of chicken, dust
with salt and pepper, pour over the cold aspic and stand them aside over
night. At serving time dip the molds quickly into hot water, turn out the
cutlets, dish them on luncheon plates, and garnish with hearts of lettuce.
Pass mayonnaise dressing.
This will make eight molds and serve eight persons. Use the dark meat for
fricassee or stew of chicken.
TOMATOES à l'ALGERIENNE
The white meat of one chicken
24 perfect tomatoes
1/4 box of gelatin
1/2 pint of chicken stock
1/2 pint of cream
1 teaspoonful of anchovy paste
3 heads of fine lettuce
1/2 pint of mayonnaise
Peel the tomatoes, cut off the stem end and scoop out the hard portion and
the seeds; put the tomatoes on the ice. Put the meat of the chicken
through the meat grinder, season it with the anchovy paste, if you have
it, and salt and pepper. Soak the gelatin in a half cupful of cold water,
add the chicken stock, bring to a boil, add a half teaspoonful of salt, a
dash of pepper, and the juice of half a lemon. Mix a part of this with the
chicken. Whip the cream, stir it into the chicken mixture, and fill it
into the tomatoes, making them smooth on top. When the tomatoes are very
cold and the aspic is cool, but not thick, baste just a little over the
top, dust thickly with chopped parsley and finely chopped almonds, and
stand them in a cold place for several hours. Arrange each tomato in a
little nest of lettuce leaves, and pass with them mayonnaise dressing. If
these are made well, they are the most sightly of the small cold dishes,
and cost almost nothing.
This, of course, will be served to twenty-four persons.
Tongue, sardines, lobster, crab meat or cold left-over meat may be
substituted for chicken.
GALANTINE OF CHICKEN
2 chickens
1/2 pound of boiled ham
1/4 pound of larding pork
1 can of mushrooms
2 teaspoonfuls of salt
1 egg
1 pound of lean veal
2 truffles
Salt and pepper
Singe the chickens, and remove the head and feet; place the chicken on the
table with the breast down. Take a small, sharp-pointed sabatier knife and
cut the skin from neck to rump right down the back bone. Carefully and
slowly run the knife between the bones and the flesh, keeping it always
close to the bone. Take out first the wings, then loosen the carcass, and
then take out the legs. Unjoint and separate each bone, and take it out as
you come to it. Do not take the small bones from the wings; they may be
cut off. When you have removed all the flesh from the bones, keeping it
perfectly whole, and without breaking the skin, wipe the skin and put it
on the table; draw the legs and the wings inside. Take all the raw meat
from the other chicken, rejecting the skin and bones, but you do not have
to bone this one carefully. Put it in the meat grinder, with half the ham,
all the veal and half the bacon. When chopped, season it with two
teaspoonfuls of salt, and two saltspoonfuls of white pepper; add the egg
and mix thoroughly. Put a thin layer of this into the boned chicken, put
in here and there long pieces of the remaining ham and bacon, a layer of
mushrooms, blocks of truffles, then another layer of the forcemeat, and so
continue until you have used all the ingredients. Pull up the skin and sew
it down the back, making a perfect roll. Tie the neck and rump. Roll this
in cheese cloth, fasten it securely, and sew the cheese cloth so that the
roll will be perfect when done.
Put all the bones in the soup kettle, add a sliced onion, a bay leaf, and
sufficient cold water to come just to the top of the bones. Bring to
boiling point, and put in the "galantine," as the chicken roll is called.
Cover the kettle, and boil continuously for four hours. When done,
slightly cool, remove the cloth, and stand it away until perfectly cold.
Strain the water, which should measure two quarts; add to it a box of
gelatin that has been soaked in a cupful of water for an hour. Bring this
to boiling point, season it with salt and pepper, add the juice of a lemon
and the whites of two eggs, slightly beaten. Boil five minutes, and strain
through two thicknesses of cheese cloth. Select a long round pudding mold,
or a regular boned chicken mold, something like a large melon mold; baste
the mold inside with this liquid jelly, decorate it in patterns or
unconventional designs, using green and red pepper, the hard boiled white
of egg and peas. Allow the remaining jelly to cool, but not stiffen. After
you finish the decorations, baste them carefully with, cold gelatin and
stand the mold on ice. Then put in a little more cold jelly, until you
have a good base upon which to rest the "galantine." Put it in, breast
side down, and pour over the remaining gelatin. Stand in a cold place for
twenty-four hours. When ready to serve, wipe the mold with a warm cloth,
and turn the "galantine" on to a long platter. Garnish the platter with
hearts of lettuce. To serve, cut the "galantine" in the thinnest possible
slices, and serve it with a salad, either celery, or mixed vegetables, or
plain lettuce; or it may be served with a sauce tartar or plain mayonnaise
dressing. This is one of the most elegant of cold dishes, and will serve
twenty-five persons.
CHICKEN MOUSSE
1 pint of cooked chopped chicken
1/2 pint of milk
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 level tablespoonful of flour
1 tablespoonful of granulated gelatin
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
1/2 pint of cream
Rub the butter and the flour together over the fire, add the milk, stir
until boiling, and add the gelatin that has been soaked in a couple of
tablespoonfuls of cold water for fifteen minutes. Add the salt, pepper and
chicken, mix thoroughly and stand it aside to cool. Beat the cream to a
stiff froth. Make a half cupful of mayonnaise from the yolk of one egg and
eight tablespoonfuls of olive oil; stir the cream gradually into the
mayonnaise and then add it carefully to the cold chicken mixture. Turn it
into an ordinary melon pudding mold, cover closely and stand it in a
bucket of cracked ice and salt. It is wise to bind the cover seam to keep
out the salt water. When slightly frozen, which will take about two hours,
remove the lid, turn out the mousse, cover the top with first a ring of
hard boiled whites, chopped fine, then a ring of finely chopped parsley,
inside this a ring of the yolks of the eggs pressed through a sieve, and
right in the centre a sprig of curly parsley. Send at once to the table.
Lobster, crab flakes and cold roasted game may be used according to this
recipe.
This will serve eight persons at a reception. At a luncheon only six
persons.
PATE-DE-FOIE-GRAS IN ASPIC
1 box of granulated gelatin
1 teaspoonful of beef extract
1 small onion
1 bay leaf
1 blade of mace
1 truffle
1 carrot
1 green pepper
1 red pepper
1 lemon
1 tureen of foie-gras
Cover the gelatin with a half cupful of cold water to soak for a half
hour. Put all the vegetables and seasoning in one quart of cold water,
bring to boiling point, simmer gently twenty minutes, add the beef
extract, one teaspoonful of salt and a saltspoonful of black pepper. Add
the gelatin, stir until the gelatin is dissolved, and strain. Add the
juice of the lemon and the whites of two eggs, slightly beaten. Bring to
boiling point, boil rapidly for five minutes, and strain through two
thicknesses of cheese cloth. Cut the peppers into fancy shapes. Chop the
truffle fine. Select a dozen dariole molds, moisten them in cold water,
baste them with the aspic, and, when cold, garnish the bottoms handsomely
with a pepper and truffle. Put in another layer of aspic, which must be
cold, but not thick; on top of this place a slice of pate-de-foie-gras,
cover them carefully with the aspic, filling the mold to the top. Stand
these away over night. Serve on crisp lettuce leaves, and pass with them a
mayonnaise. These are the handsomest of all the cold aspic dishes.
A single large mold may be used for ball suppers or large receptions. To
serve, cut it into slices, and pass mayonnaise of celery.
This will serve twelve persons.
BONED TURKEY
Turkey is boned precisely the same as you bone a "galantine" of chicken.
Use for the stuffing:
2 chickens
1 pound of sausage meat
1 pound of veal
3 truffles
1 can of mushrooms
1 pound of ham
Take six hours to cook the turkey. When cold put it in a boned turkey mold
that has been garnished, and fill with aspic.
Cut in very thin slices to serve thirty persons.
BONED QUAIL
Purchase twenty-four quails. Split them down the back and remove the
bones, keeping your knife close to the bone. Do not break the skin nor
tear the flesh. Spread them out, skin side down, on a board and stuff them
with the seasoned sausage meat. Put them into shape, sew them down the
back, cover the breast of each with a slice of bacon, put them in a baking
pan, add a half pint of hot stock, and bake in a quick oven forty minutes,
dusting with pepper and basting frequently. When cold, remove the string
from the back.
For a dozen quails use:
1 box of gelatin
1 quart of milk
1 tablespoonful of grated onion
2 truffles
4 level tablespoonfuls of butter
4 level tablespoonfuls of flour
2 teaspoonfuls of salt
1 saltspoonful of white pepper
Soak the gelatin in the milk a half hour. Rub the butter and flour
together, then add the milk and gelatin, stir until boiling, and add all
the seasoning and strain. Stand aside until cool, but not thick. Place the
birds on a tin sheet or a large platter, and baste them with this cold
white sauce. As soon as the first basting has hardened, baste them again.
This time decorate the breasts with the truffles cut into fancy shapes. To
serve, arrange them around a large mound of mayonnaise of celery. Use
either a meat platter, or two round chop dishes. Have the breasts of the
birds down, and the back slightly pressed into the salad. In between each
bird put a pretty bunch of curly parsley, and garnish the top of the mound
with Spanish peppers cut into strips. Serve one to each person.
SALADS
Salads play a most important part in all conventional suppers. Chicken,
lobster, crab, duck, tongue, and lamb salad take the place of other meats,
although for a large supper there is no objection to serving a meat salad
following a hot course. If one can make a good mayonnaise dressing, salads
are the easiest of all refreshments, and are most acceptable to the
guests.
MAYONNAISE
Put the yolks of three eggs in a clean cold dish, beat slightly and add
slowly, almost drop by drop, a half pint or more of salad oil. After
adding the first half pint, add a half teaspoonful of vinegar now and then
to prevent breaking. You may add a quart of oil, if you like; you may
serve it plain, or stir in at the last moment stiffly whipped cream. One
quart of mayonnaise will hold one quart of whipped cream. For light
colored salads, as sweetbread and Waldorf, it is well to use the whipped
cream slightly colored with a drop of vegetable green.
SAUCE TARTAR
Add to a half pint of mayonnaise dressing a tablespoonful of chopped
gherkin, the same of chopped parsley, four chopped olives and a
tablespoonful of capers.
SAUCE SUEDOISE
1/2 pint of mayonnaise
1/2 pint of cream
2 tablespoonfuls of finely grated horseradish
Whip the cream and drain it, then stir it carefully into the mayonnaise,
and at last add the horseradish. This sauce is appropriate to serve with
boned partridges or quail, and is also nice to serve with mixed cold
meats.
FRENCH DRESSING
Put eight tablespoonfuls of oil in a bowl, add a half teaspoonful of salt,
and a piece of ice the size of an egg. Work the ice with the oil until the
salt is thoroughly dissolved, then add a tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar
and a drop of Tabasco sauce. Remove the ice, beat rapidly until you have a
creamy dressing, and use at once. French dressing should be used over
cucumber or tomato molds, and is nice with fish or chicken mousse and East
Indian Salad.
CUCUMBER MOLDS
2 good sized cucumbers
1/2 box of gelatin
1 pint of chicken stock
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 tablespoonful of onion juice
1 saltspoonful of pepper
The juice of one lemon
Peel and grate the cucumbers. Add the gelatin to the stock, soak for
twenty minutes, bring to a boil and add the seasoning; then stir in the
drained cucumber. Turn into small round timbale cups and stand aside to
harden. Serve with any cold fish dish, as cold boiled slice of halibut, or
fish in aspic. These are nice for Sunday night supper with broiled
sardines.
TOMATO MOLDS
1 can of tomatoes
1 box of gelatin
1 onion
1 saltspoonful of celery seed
1 bay leaf
1 blade of mace
2 tablespoonfuls of tarragon vinegar
1 teaspoonful of paprika
2 teaspoonfuls of salt
Cover the gelatin with a cupful of cold water to soak for fifteen minutes.
Add all the seasoning to the tomatoes, bring to boiling point, add the
gelatin, and strain. Turn into twelve small tomato molds and stand aside
to harden. Serve with mayonnaise dressing as an accompaniment to boned
chicken or turkey, or chicken paté, or alone, with mayonnaise, as a
complete salad. Chopped celery, a little cold cooked meat or nuts may be
added, when the molds are to be served as a salad. With this addition, one
half the recipe will serve twelve persons.
CRABS RAVIGOT
Purchase as many crab shells as you have people to serve. To each six
allow a pint of crab flakes. If you buy the crabs fresh, twelve crabs will
serve six people. Squeeze over the flakes the juice of one lemon, add a
half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of Tabasco. Fill the meat loosely into
the shells, place each shell on a pretty paper doily on a plate, and
spread over a thick layer of mayonnaise dressing, with which you have
mixed a tablespoonful of chopped parsley, a tablespoonful of tarragon
leaves, a tablespoonful of chopped onion or shallot, and a tablespoonful
of green chives.
CHICKEN SALAD
Cut cold boiled chicken into dice, add an equal quantity of tender celery,
season with salt, pepper and lemon juice, mix with mayonnaise dressing,
and serve on lettuce leaves.
A four pound chicken, and six heads of tender celery, three heads of
lettuce, a half pint of whipped cream, and one pint of mayonnaise, will
serve fifteen persons.
LOBSTER SALAD
Cut cold boiled lobster into cubes of an inch, mix with mayonnaise
dressing and serve on lettuce leaves.
One three-pound lobster will serve six persons.
CRAB SALAD
Season crab flakes with salt, pepper and lemon juice, mix them with
mayonnaise dressing, and serve on lettuce leaves, garnished with cress.
One pint of flakes will serve six persons.
TONGUE SALAD
Cut fresh-cooked beef's tongue or calf's tongue into dice. Have ready
peeled perfectly round smooth tomatoes, take out the core and scoop out
the seeds. Fill each tomato with the cubes of tongue, sprinkle over a
teaspoonful of lemon juice and a little salt and pepper. Stand these on
nests of lettuce leaves, put on top of each a large tablespoonful of
mayonnaise. Dust thickly with paprika and serve one to each person.
LAMB SALAD
Cut cold boiled lamb into dice, mix with it half the quantity of freshly
cooked green peas or canned peas. Add a half can of mushrooms, chopped
fine, salt, pepper and lemon juice. Mix with mayonnaise dressing and serve
on lettuce leaves, garnished with large sprigs of mint. Cap the top of the
dish with a good sized sprig of fresh mint, and sprinkle capers all over
the salad.
A nice plain lamb salad is made by mixing left-over cold lamb with
mayonnaise; serve on lettuce leaves and garnish with chopped mint.
A quart will serve ten persons.
TOMATOES EN SURPRISE
This is one of the nicest of the salads for a simple card party. It takes
the place of both vegetables and meat, and with brown bread and nut
sandwiches as an accompaniment, is very attractive. Peel the tomatoes, cut
off the stem end and scoop out the core and seeds. Fill the tomatoes with
either crab flakes, chopped lobster, canned salmon, or sardines. Squeeze
over a little lemon juice, and dust with salt and pepper. Turn them upside
down on a nest of lettuce leaves, and cover the tomato with creamy
mayonnaise.
SWEETBREAD SALAD
2 pairs of sweetbreads
4 ounces of almonds
4 ounces of pecan meats
2 ounces of shelled Brazilian nuts
2 Spanish peppers
1/2 can of mushrooms
2 heads of celery
2 heads of lettuce
1 pint of mayonnaise
1 pint of cream
1 can of French peas
This is the most elaborate of all salads, is palatable and comparatively
wholesome. Put the sweetbreads into boiling water, add a tablespoonful of
vinegar, and simmer gently for one hour. When cold, remove the membrane
and pick the sweetbreads apart. Put them in a bowl, cover them with an
onion, sliced, and squeeze over the juice of a lemon; cover the bowl and
stand it aside over night. Blanch and chop the almonds, and chop the
pecans. Remove the onion from the sweetbreads, mix in the nuts, add the
white portions of the celery, cut the size of the sweetbreads. Add the
mushrooms, sliced, two teaspoonfuls of salt, a saltspoonful of white
pepper and a saltspoonful of paprika. Add the cream, whipped, to the
mayonnaise, and mix a portion of it with the sweetbreads and celery. Have
a round shallow salad bowl lined with the lettuce leaves, turn in the
centre the sweetbread salad and cover it over with the remaining quantity
of mayonnaise. Put the peas in a ring around the base of the salad, and
cap the top with the yolk of a hard-boiled egg. Cut the white of the egg
into eighths and press them upside down around the yolk, forming a sort of
a daisy. Cut the Spanish peppers into rings and arrange them just above
the peas. Put here and there around the base, above the peas, ripe or
green olives, and send to the table.
This will serve at supper or luncheon ten persons.
ROAST BEEF SALAD
For impromptu evening affairs any cold left-over meat may be utilized in a
salad. Beef, mutton and tongue are usually served with French dressing,
seasoned with tomato catsup. Cut the meat into dice, season with salt and
pepper, dish them on lettuce, or they may be mixed in the winter with
chopped celery or chopped crisp cabbage, and basted with French dressing,
seasoned with two or three tablespoonfuls of tomato catsup for beef, mint
sauce, or a drop of Tabasco Sauce for mutton, a little Worcestershire
Sauce for tongue.
A quart will serve ten persons.
EAST INDIAN SALAD
This is purely a vegetable salad; it is exceedingly nice for a simple
evening affair. Shave sufficient cabbage to make a pint, soak it in cold
water for one hour, changing the water once or twice. Cover a half box of
gelatin with a half cupful of cold water to soak for a half hour. Put a
half can of tomatoes in a saucepan, add one onion, chopped, a teaspoonful
of salt, a saltspoonful of pepper and the juice of a lemon, or two
tablespoonfuls of vinegar. Bring to boiling point, and add the gelatin.
Cover the bottom of a large melon mold with finely chopped celery or
cooked carrots, put on top of this a few drops of onion juice, then a thin
layer of cabbage, a dusting of salt and pepper, then a goodly quantity of
India relish; cover this over with chopped nuts, pecans, hickory or
peanuts, then another layer of celery, and so continue until the mold is
full, seasoning the layers with salt and pepper. Have the last layer
chopped celery. Strain over this the tomato aspic, which should be cold,
but not thick, and stand aside for four or five hours. Serve plain, or
garnished with lettuce leaves or cress.
This will serve twelve persons.
POTATO SALAD
Fancy potato salad may be served for an evening affair with an
accompaniment of cold tongue, or it may be garnished with hard-boiled eggs
and form the entire course. Serve with it brown bread and butter and
coffee.
4 potatoes
8 tablespoonfuls of olive oil
2 tablespoonfuls of cream
2 tablespoonfuls of tarragon vinegar
1 level teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of pepper
Wash the potatoes and boil them with skins on. The moment they are done,
drain the water, dry and peel. Put the oil, salt, pepper and vinegar in a
bowl, beat rapidly until thoroughly mixed, and then add one good sized
onion, sliced very thin, or use two tablespoonfuls of grated onion. Put in
the hot potatoes, sliced, toss them a moment, and if you have it, sprinkle
over two tablespoonfuls of vinegar from pickled walnuts, or a
tablespoonful of mushroom catsup. Stand aside to cool. When ready to
serve, turn on to a cold platter, garnish with chopped parsley, and, if
you have them, chopped pickled beets.
This is sufficient for six persons.
FRENCH POTATO SALAD
Moisten a teaspoonful of cornstarch in four tablespoonfuls of milk, add
two tablespoonfuls of cream and stir over hot water until thick; then add
gradually six tablespoonfuls of olive oil, a teaspoonful of French made
mustard, a level teaspoonful of salt and a saltspoonful of pepper. Boil
four potatoes, cut them into blocks, and, when nearly cold, mix them with
this dressing, and stand aside until very cold. Serve with a garnish of
chopped celery or lettuce leaves.
This will serve six persons.
MACEDOINE SALAD
A mixture of vegetables, peas, beans, carrots, turnips, can be purchased,
canned, at any grocery store. Drain, wash them in cold water, dish them on
a bed of shaved cabbage or lettuce leaves, and cover them with French
dressing. All these vegetables may be cooked at home and used cold. String
beans garnished with carrots make an excellent salad.
BANANA SALAD
For this use the red bananas. Roll them out of the skin rather than strip
the skin from them, and cut them into slices a half inch thick. Cover the
bottom of your salad bowl with crisp lettuce leaves, then put over the
bananas, allowing one banana to each two persons. Squeeze over the juice
of a lemon, and, when ready to serve, baste with French dressing.
APPLE AND NUT SALAD
4 tart apples
1 cupful of pecan meats
24 blanched almonds
2 sweet Spanish peppers
The rule for French dressing
Peel the apples, cut them into dice, squeeze over the juice of one or two
lemons, and stand them aside until wanted. The lemon juice will prevent
discoloration. Chop the nuts. At serving time line the salad bowl with a
layer of chopped celery or cabbage or lettuce leaves, then a layer of
apples, nuts, celery, apples and nuts. Baste with the French dressing,
and, if you have them, garnish with the sweet peppers cut into strips, and
use at once.
This, using a pint of chopped cabbage or celery, will serve six persons.
CANTALOUPE SALAD
This is the newest and most sightly of salads. Arrange crisp lettuce or
Romaine leaves on individual plates. Cut a cold ripe cantaloupe into
halves, take out the seeds, and with a large vegetable scoop or teaspoon
scoop out balls or egg-shaped pieces. Heap a half dozen of these on the
lettuce leaves, and, at serving time, baste them well with French
dressing, and serve. Watermelon may be substituted for cantaloupe.
SANDWICHES
Sandwiches may be made from thin white bread, or whole wheat bread, or
Boston brown bread, or nut bread. A nut loaf is easily made at short
notice, and needs only butter to make an excellent sandwich. An endless
variety of sandwiches may be made from materials always at hand.
For CHEESE SANDWICHES: Grind or mash common American cheese, add a
palatable seasoning of tomato catsup, Worcestershire sauce, and a little
melted butter. A teaspoonful of these will be sufficient for a quarter of
a pound of cheese. Put this between thin slices of unbuttered bread. If a
large quantity of sandwiches is to be made, beat the butter to a cream
before using it.
MEATS: All sorts of meats, just a little left over, may be chopped,
seasoned and utilized for sandwiches. If the meat is slightly moistened
with a little olive oil, cream or melted butter, and the sandwiches are
wrapped in a damp cloth, as soon as made, and closed in a tin bread box,
they will keep nicely for several hours.
On a warm day put a few moist lettuce leaves on top of the sandwiches,
under the cloth, and put the box in a cold place.
CANNED SALMON, SARDINES, or BOILED SALT COD, pounded and nicely seasoned
with oil and lemon juice, or mayonnaise, make nice sandwiches to serve
with molded tomato jelly, and coffee, for a "winter evening." They are
quite enough with coffee alone in an emergency.
NUT SANDWICHES are made by putting chopped nuts or nut butter between thin
slices of buttered bread, or crackers.
SWEET SANDWICHES are made by putting a mixture of chopped fruits between
thin slices of buttered bread. The fruits best suited for sandwiches are
dates, raisins, candied ginger and cherries, and washed figs. These may be
used separately or blended, using less ginger than other fruits. A nice
filling may be made from a half pound of dates, an ounce of ginger, and
ten cents' worth of roasted peanuts, or a quarter of a pound of pecans.
Put these through a meat chopper, add the juice of an orange, and pack the
mixture in jelly tumblers. Keep in a cold place. This will keep a month in
winter, and equally long in a refrigerator in summer.
Sweet sandwiches are usually cut into "fingers," or into rounds with an
ordinary biscuit cutter.
HONOLULU SANDWICHES are made by rubbing one roll of Neufchatel cheese with
a half cupful of grated apple, two sweet Spanish peppers, and twenty-four
blanched and chopped almonds. Add salt and a drop of Tabasco sauce. Spread
between thin slices of unbuttered bread.
JELLY OR CANNED FRUIT SANDWICHES are made by spreading jelly or mashed
fruit, drained, on a very thin slice of buttered bread. Trim off the
crusts and roll quickly. Tie with baby ribbon, or press it firmly
together. These are usually served with chocolate or tea.
CHICKEN SALAD OR CELERY MAYONNAISE SANDWICHES are usually served with
coffee, and can be made quickly by mixing any left-over chicken, or tender
white celery, with mayonnaise, and putting the mixture between thin slices
of buttered bread. A lettuce leaf on the bread first holds the salad
nicely. One may use two lettuce leaves if necessary.
NUT BREAD
2 cupfuls of flour
1/2 cupful of chopped nuts
2 teaspoonfuls of baking powder
1 cupful of milk
1 egg
2 tablespoonfuls of sugar
1/2 teaspoonful of salt
Sift the salt, baking powder and flour together, add and mix in the nuts
and sugar. Beat the egg, add the milk, and stir these in the flour. Mix
well, and turn it in a greased bread pan. Cover, and allow it to stand
fifteen minutes. Bake in a moderately quick oven a half hour. Pecans,
hickory nuts, peanuts, or English walnuts may be used.
Use the next day after it is baked. Cut thin, butter lightly, and press
two slices together. Serve whole, or cut into halves. Do not remove the
crusts.
SUGGESTIONS FOR CHURCH SUPPERS
NUT MEAT ROLL
1 pound of chopped beef
1 quart of roasted peanuts in shells
1 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of pepper
3 shredded wheat biscuits
2 eggs
1 tablespoonful onion juice
1 tablespoonful of parsley
Shell and chop the peanuts, mix them with the meat, and add the shredded
wheat rubbed fine; salt, pepper, parsley, chopped, and onion juice. Mix
well. Beat the egg slightly, add three tablespoonfuls of water, and mix
this into the meat. Form in a roll about eight inches long, roll in oiled
paper, place it in a baking pan, add a half cupful of water to the pan and
bake in a moderate oven three-quarters of an hour. Remove the paper and
stand aside to cool. Serve in thin slices with either tomato or potato
salad.
This will serve eight persons at a cost of about four cents each.
JELLIED VEAL
3 knuckles of veal
4 onions
1 carrot
3 teaspoonfuls of salt
8 tablespoonfuls of vinegar
6 gherkins
1 teaspoonful of black pepper
Wash the knuckles, remove the meat and cut it in pieces. Put the bones in
a kettle, the meat on top, and pour over six quarts of cold water. Bring
to a boil, skim, and simmer gently two hours. Add the onion sliced, the
carrot chopped, salt and pepper, and simmer one hour longer. Drain in a
colander. Dip long molds, or ordinary bread pans, in cold water, cover the
bottom with slices of hard boiled eggs, put the meat in bits on top of
this, seasoning it with a little salt. Slice the gherkins and put them in
layers between the meat. Strain the liquid, add the vinegar, and pour it
over the meat. There should be just enough to cover it nicely. If there is
more than this, boil it down before adding vinegar. Stand aside over
night. When cold, dip the mold a second in boiling water, and turn the
jelly in a platter. Serve cut in slices, with either a nice cold slaw, or
cabbage and celery salad. Jellied beef is made the same, substituting a
leg or shin of beef.
This will cost about seventy five cents, and will make twenty-five to
thirty slices.
BAGGED VEAL
2 pounds of lean ham
4 pounds of veal cutlet
3 shredded wheat biscuits
2 eggs
2 onions
1 teaspoonful of powdered sage
1/2 teaspoonful of allspice
1 teaspoonful of salt
1/2 teaspoonful of black pepper
Put the meat, raw, through a meat chopper, add the biscuits crumbed, the
onions grated, and all the seasonings. Work it well with the hands, and
mix in the eggs, slightly beaten. Pack the mixture in clean salt bags or
bags about that size, plunge them in a kettle of boiling water, boil
rapidly ten minutes, and simmer three hours. When cool, turn the bags
wrong side out off the meat. Serve sliced like summer sausage.
This will cost one and a half dollars, and will serve twenty five persons.
A SPANISH STEW FOR ONE HUNDRED PERSONS
25 pounds of round of beef
6 sweet peppers, or
1 can of Spanish pimentos
12 sweet turnips
1/2 bottle of Worcestershire sauce
1 cupful of flour
1 pound of suet
10 large onions
3 gallon cans of peas
12 carrots
1 jar of beef extract
4 tablespoonfuls of salt
4 tablespoonfuls of cornstarch
1/4 pound of butter
Put the suet into a large kettle or in two smaller ones; try it out and
remove the crackling. Add to the hot fat the onions and peppers chopped
fine. Shake until they are well cooked and slightly browned. Add the meat
cut into cubes of one inch, cover the kettles and cook a half hour,
stirring now and then. Dissolve the beef extract in three gallons of hot
water, pour it over the meat, and simmer for two hours. Add the carrots
and turnips cut into dice, and more water if necessary, and cook one hour
longer. Add the flour and cornstarch moistened in cold water, and all the
seasonings. Stir and boil ten minutes, add the peas, drained, and serve.
This is nice garnished with small hot milk biscuits. Taste before serving
it, to see if you have added sufficient salt.
VEAL ROLL
4 pounds of lean veal
3 shredded wheat biscuits
1 teaspoonful of salt
1/2 teaspoonful of sage
1/2 pound of lean ham
2 eggs
1 tablespoonful of parsley
1 saltspoonful of pepper
Put the veal and ham through a meat chopper, add all the seasonings, and
the biscuits rubbed fine. Mix thoroughly, add the egg slightly beaten, mix
again, and form into a roll three inches in diameter. Roll in oiled paper,
place in a baking pan, cover the bottom of the pan with hot water, add a
slice of onion, and, if you have it, a little chopped celery tops. Bake
slowly one and a half hours, basting over the paper every fifteen minutes.
When done, remove the paper, and put in a cold place. Serve in thin slices
with tomato jelly salad.
This will cost about one dollar and will serve eighteen persons.
MAN-OF-WAR SALAD
For twenty-five persons, chop sufficient hard white cabbage to make two
quarts. Cover it with cold water, let it soak for an hour, and then wash
it through several cold waters, and dry it in a towel. Cover three boxes
of gelatin with a pint of cold water to soak a half hour. Open three cans
of tomatoes, put them in a saucepan with four chopped onions, a cupful of
chopped celery tops, if you have them, bring to a boil, add the juice of a
lemon, a level tablespoonful of salt, ten drops of Tabasco sauce, the
juice of a lemon, or two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, and the gelatin. Stir
a moment, and press through a sieve. Dip bread pans or melon molds in cold
water, put in a layer of cabbage, then a very thin layer of Indian relish,
then cabbage, and so continue until the molds are filled. Pour over the
tomato jelly, cold, and stand aside over night. Serve in slices with
cooked or French dressing.
COOKED DRESSING
Put a pint of milk over the fire in a double boiler, add three level
tablespoonfuls of cornstarch moistened in a little cold milk. Cook until
thick and smooth. Take from the fire, add the beaten yolks of four eggs,
and work in slowly two tablespoonfuls of butter. Add a teaspoonful of salt
and a saltspoonful of pepper. When cool add the juice of a lemon or four
tablespoonfuls of vinegar. Fold in carefully the well-beaten whites of the
eggs, and stand aside until very cold.
GRANDMOTHER'S POTATO SALAD
Boil ten large potatoes in their jackets. Peel them and, when cool, cut
eight into dice. Peel and mash the remaining two while hot; add to them a
quarter pound of sweet butter, four tablespoonfuls of grated onion, two
teaspoonfuls of salt, a dash of cayenne, two drops of Tabasco sauce, and
press through a fine sieve. Hard boil two eggs; rub the yolks to a paste,
and add two raw yolks. When smooth, add to these gradually the potato
mixture. Thin to the consistency of good mayonnaise, with vinegar. At
serving time mix the potato blocks and one can of drained peas with the
dressing, being very careful not to break them. Dish on lettuce leaves,
and garnish with chopped red beets, or, better, chopped celery. This is an
excellent cheap salad, and will serve fifteen persons.
SALMON PUDDING
Remove the bone, skin and oil from two pound cans of salmon. Boil together
two cupfuls of white bread crumbs and one cupful of milk. Take from the
fire, and add one cupful of boiled rice, a teaspoonful of salt, a
saltspoonful of pepper, a teaspoonful of onion juice, and four eggs
slightly beaten. Mix and work in the fish. Press the whole through a
colander, and pack it at once into a mold. Cover and steam three-quarters
of an hour. Serve hot with cream sauce. This will serve twelve persons.
NUT CAKE
At suppers where the yolks of eggs are used for mayonnaise or cooked
dressing, the whites accumulate and are lost if not used in some white
cake.
1/2 cupful of butter
2 cupfuls of flour
1-1/2 cupfuls of sugar
3/4 cupful of water
1 cupful of English walnut or hickory nut meats
2 rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder
Whites of four eggs
Cream the butter, add the water and flour, alternately, beating all the
while. Beat the whites, add half of them to the mixture, then all the
nuts, chopped, then the baking powder, dry, and beat well. Fold in the
remaining whites. Bake in a round cake pan in a moderate oven
three-quarters of an hour. When cool, ice the top and decorate it with nut
meats.
SCONES FOR TWENTY-FIVE PERSONS
Sift three quarts of flour with six rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder
and two of salt. Beat, without separating, three eggs. Rub into the flour
a quarter of a pound of butter, or three tablespoonfuls of snowdrift. Add
to the eggs one quart and a half of milk, and stir this into the flour.
Mix quickly and drop by spoonfuls in greased baking pans, and bake fifteen
minutes in a quick oven. Serve at once. These are better and more easily
made than biscuits.
POOR MAN'S FRUIT CAKE
3-1/2 cupfuls of flour
1 cupful of brown sugar
1/2 cupful of New Orleans molasses
1 pound of seeded raisins
1 cupful of sour milk
1/2 cupful of butter
1 teaspoonful of cinnamon
1 teaspoonful of allspice
1 teaspoonful of soda
Cut the raisins into halves and flour them with four tablespoonfuls of the
flour. Dissolve the soda in a tablespoonful of water, add it to the thick
sour milk, beat a minute, add the molasses, beat again, add the butter,
melted carefully, and stir in the flour; add the spices, and beat well.
Stir in the raisins, and turn into a greased bread pan. Bake in a moderate
oven one hour. When done, turn from the pan, baste with a syrup, made by
boiling four tablespoonfuls of sugar with three of water, and add two
teaspoonfuls of currant or grape jelly. Shut the cake in a tin box for a
week or more. If made well this is moist and rich at very little cost.
BANANA LAYER
1/4 cupful of butter
1 cupful of sugar
2/3 cupful of water
2 cupfuls of flour
2 rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder
Whites of four eggs
Put together the same as Ice Cream Cake, and bake in three layers. When
cold, put together with Banana Filling.
BANANA FILLING
Boil together one cupful of sugar and a half cupful of water until they
spin a heavy thread, and pour slowly, beating all the while, into the
well-beaten whites of two eggs. Beat until rather stiff and cold. When the
cakes are cold, spread one-third of this filling over one cake, cover with
thin slices of red bananas, put on another cake, on this another third of
filling and bananas, and the remaining cake; cover this with the remaining
filling, and dust thickly with chopped nuts. Do not let this stand too
long, or the filling will absorb moisture from the bananas and run down
the cake.
ICE CREAM CAKE
1-1/2 cupfuls of sugar
2-1/2 cupfuls of flour
1/4 cupful of butter
1 cupful of water
2 rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder
Whites of five eggs
Cream the butter, adding slowly the sugar. Sift the flour with the baking
powder. Add the water and flour alternately to the sugar mixture, and beat
well. Fold in the well-beaten whites, and bake in three layers. Put
together with a soft icing made from the whites of two eggs.
FRUIT JELLY
Dip a fancy mold into cold water, fill it half full of mixed chopped
candied fruits, or use dates, figs and bananas chopped. Fill the mold with
a well-made lemon or orange gelatin. Serve plain, or with whipped cream.
MOCK EGGS
1/2 box of gelatin
1 can pared apricots
1 cupful of sugar
1 pint of water
Whites of three eggs
Juice of three lemons
Cover the gelatin with a half cupful of cold water to soak for a half
hour, add the sugar and the water boiling; stir until the gelatin is
dissolved; add the lemon juice, strain, and cool until congealed but not
too hard. Add the unbeaten whites of eggs, stand the bowl in a pan of
cracked ice or cold water, and beat until the whole mass is as white as
snow. Pour into ramekin dishes or paper cases, press a half apricot,
rounding side up, in the centre, and stand aside in a cold place.
INDEX
ICE CREAMS, WATER ICES AND FROZEN PUDDINGS
Alaska Bake
Alexander Bomb
Almond Ice Cream, Burnt
Mousse, Burnt
Apple Ice
Ice Cream
Apricot Cream, English
Ice
Ice Cream
Apricots, Frozen
Arrowroot Cream
Banana Ice Cream
Bananas, Frozen
Biscuit Ice Cream
Tortoni
Biscuits à la Marie
Americana
German Cherry
Glacés
Bisque Ice Cream
Blocks, Neapolitan
Bomb, Alexander
Glacé
Boston Pudding
Brown Bread Ice Cream
Burnt Almond Ice Cream
Mousse
Cabinet Pudding, Iced
Café Parfait, Quick
Cake, Iced
Caramel Ice Cream
No. 1
No. 2
Neapolitan
Parfait, Quick
Charlotte Glacé
Cherry Biscuits, German
Ice
Chocolate Ice Cream
Frozen
Neapolitan
Ice Cream, No. 1
No. 2
Parfait, Quick
Sauce, Hot
Claret Sauce
Cocoanut Ice Cream
Coffee, Frozen
Ice Cream
Mousse
Neapolitan
Compote of Oranges with Iced Rice Pudding
Compote of Mandarins, with Rice Mousse
Coupe St. Jacque
Cranberry Sherbet
Cream, Arrowroot
English Apricot
Orange Gelatin
Creams, Neapolitan
Croquettes, Ice Cream
Cucumber Sorbet
Curaçao Ice Cream
Currant and Raspberry Water Ice
Water Ice
Custard, Frozen
Directions for Freezing
Duchess Mousse
Egyptian Mousse
English Apricot Cream
Foreword
Frappé
Frozen Apricots
Bananas
Coffee
Chocolate
Custard
Fruits
Peaches, No. 1
Peaches, No. 2
Pineapple
Plum Pudding
Puddings and Desserts
Raspberries
Strawberries
Watermelon
Fruit Salad, Iced
Water Ice, Mille
Fruits, Frozen
Gelatin Cream, Orange
Ice Cream
German Cherry Biscuits
Ginger Ice Cream
Water Ice
Glacé, Bomb
Charlotte
Glacés, Biscuits
Gooseberry Sorbet
Grape Water Ice
Green Gage Ice Cream
Hot Chocolate Sauce
Ice, Apple
Apricot
Cherry
Currant and Raspberry Water
Currant Water
Ginger Water
Grape Water
Lemon Water
Mille Fruit Water
Orange Water
Pineapple Water
Pomegranate Water
Raspberry Water
Strawberry Water
Sour Sop
Ice Cream, Apple
Apricot
Banana
Biscuit
Bisque
Brown Bread
Burnt Almond
Caramel
Caramel, No. 1
No. 2
Chocolate
Coffee
Croquettes
Curaçao
Gelatin
Ginger
Green Gage
Lemon
Maraschino
Orange
Peach
No. 1
No. 2
Pineapple
Pistachio
Raspberry
Strawberry
Vanilla
Walnut
Ice Creams, Directions for Freezing
from Condensed Milk
Philadelphia
Quantities for
Serving
Sauces for
Time for Freezing
To Mold
To remove from Molds
To repack
Use of Fruits in
Iced Cabinet Pudding
Cake
Fruit Salad
Rice Pudding with Compote of Oranges
Ices, To Mold
To Remove from Molds
Lalla Rookh
Lemon Ice Cream
Water Ice
Lillian Russell
Maple Panachée
Sauce
Maraschino Ice Cream
Melba, Peaches
Merry Widow, The
Mille Fruit Water Ice
Mint Sherbet
Monte Carlo Pudding
Montrose Pudding
Sauce
Mousse
Burnt Almond
Coffee
Duchess
Egyptian
Pistachio
Rice with Compote of Mandarins
Neapolitan Blocks
Creams
Nesselrode Pudding
Americana
Nut Sauce
Orange Gelatin Cream
Ice Cream
No. 1
No. 2
Sauce
Sherbet
Soufflé
Water Ice
Parfait
Quick Café
Quick Caramel
Quick Chocolate
Quick Strawberry
Panachée, Maple
Peach Ice Cream
Peaches No. 1, Frozen
No. 2, Frozen
Melba
Philadelphia Ice Creams
Pineapple, Frozen
Ice Cream
Water Ice
Pistachio Ice Cream
Mousse
Plombiere
Plum Pudding, Frozen
Pomegranate Water Ice
Pudding, Boston
Cabinet, Iced
Frozen Plum
Iced Rice, with Compote of Oranges
Monte Carlo
Montrose
Nesselrode
Nesselrode, Americana
Queen
Sultana
Tutti Frutti
To Mold
To Remove from Molds
Punch, Roman
Quantities for Serving
Queen Pudding
Quick Café Parfait
Caramel Parfait
Chocolate Parfait
Strawberry Parfait
Raspberry and Currant Water Ice
Raspberry Ice Cream
Water Ice
Raspberries, Frozen
Rice Mousse with Compote of Mandarins
Pudding, Iced, with Compote of Oranges
Roll Sultana
Roman Punch
Salad, Iced Fruit
Sauce, Claret
Hot Chocolate
Maple
Montrose
Nut
Orange
Walnut
Sauces for Ice Creams
Sherbet, Cranberry
Mint
Orange
Sour Sop
Tomato
Sherbets
Sorbet, Cucumber
Gooseberry
Tomato
Sorbets
Soufflé, Orange
Sour Sop
Sherbet or Ice
Strawberry Ice Cream
Parfait, Quick
Water Ice
Strawberries, Frozen
Sultana Pudding
Roll
Time for Freezing
Tomato Sorbet or Sherbet
To Mold Ice Creams, Ices or Puddings
Remove Ice Creams, Ices and Puddings from Molds
Repack Ice Creams
Tutti Frutti, Italian Fashion
Pudding
Use of Fruits
Vanilla Ice Cream
Neapolitan
Walnut Ice Cream
Neapolitan
Water Ice, Currant
Currant and Raspberry
Ginger
Grape
Lemon
Mille Fruit
Orange
Pineapple
Pomegranate
Raspberry
Strawberry
Water Ices and Sherbets or Sorbets
Watermelon, Frozen
Walnut Sauce
INDEX
REFRESHMENTS FOR AFFAIRS
Apple and Nut Salad
Bagged Veal
Banana Filling
Layer
Salad
Baked Sweetbreads
Bechamel Sauce
Beef Salad, Roast
Bellevue Bouillon
Boiled Salt Cod Sandwiches
Boned Quail
Turkey
Boudins à la Reine
Bouillon
Bellevue
Chicken
Clam
Oyster
Bread, Nut
Cake, Ice Cream
Nut
Poor Man's Fruit
Canned Fruit Sandwiches
Salmon Sandwiches
Cantaloupe Salad
Celery Mayonnaise Sandwiches
Cheese Sandwiches
Chicken à la Creme
à la King
Bouillon
Croquettes
Galantine of
Mousse
Salad
Sandwiches
Timbale
Church Suppers, Suggestions for
Clam Bouillon
Cod Sandwiches, Boiled Salt
Coffee for Large Home Affairs
Cold Dishes
Cooked Dressing
Crab Backs à la Caracas
Meat à la Dewey
Salad
Crabs, Deviled
Ravigot
Cream Cake, Ice
Mushroom Sauce
Croquettes, Chicken
Oyster
Cucumber Molds
Cutlets, Lobster
Deviled Crabs
Dressing, Cooked
French
East Indian Salad
Eggs, Mock
Filling, Banana
French Dressing
Potato Salad
Fruit Cake, Poor Man's
Jelly
Sandwiches, Canned
Galantine of Chicken
Glaze
Grandmother's Potato Salad
Home Affairs, Coffee for Large
Honolulu Sandwiches
Ice Cream Cake
Jelly, Fruit
Sandwiches
Jellied Veal
Lamb Salad
Lamb's Sweetbreads in Paper Cases
Large Home Affairs, Coffee for
Layer, Banana
Lobster Cutlets
Newburg
Salad
Macedoine Salad
Man-of-War Salad
Mayonnaise Sandwiches, Celery
Meat Roll, Nut
Meat Sandwiches
Mock Eggs
Molds, Cucumber
Tomato
Mousse, Chicken
Mushroom Sauce, Cream
Nut and Apple Salad
Bread
Cake
Meat Roll
Sandwiches
Oyster Bouillon
Croquettes
Pate-de-foie-gras in Aspic
Poor Man's Fruit Cake
Potato Salad
French
Grandmother's
Poulet en Bellevue
Poultry and Game Dishes
Pudding, Salmon
Purée, Tomato, à la Rorer
Quail, Boned
Ravigot Crabs
Refreshments for Affairs
Roast Beef Salad
Roll, Nut Meat
Veal
Salad, Apple and Nut
Banana
Cantaloupe
Chicken
Crab
East Indian
French Potato
Grandmother's Potato
Lamb
Lobster
Macedoine
Man-of-War
Potato
Roast Beef
Sandwiches, Chicken
Sweetbread
Tongue
Salads
Salmon Pudding
Sandwiches, Canned
Salt Cod Sandwiches, Boiled
Sandwiches
Boiled Salt Cod
Canned Fruit
Salmon
Celery Mayonnaise
Chicken Salad
Cheese
Honolulu
Jelly
Meat
Nut
Sardine
Sweet
Sardine Sandwiches
Sauce Bechamel
Cream Mushroom
Suedoise
Tartar
Scones
Shell Fish Dishes
Soups
Bellevue Bouillon
Bouillon
Chicken Bouillon
Clam Bouillon
Glaze
Oyster Bouillon
Tomato Purée à la Rorer
Spanish Stew
Stew, Spanish
Suedoise Sauce
Suggestions for Church Suppers
Sweetbreads
à la Bordelaise
à la Creme
No. 1
No. 2
à la Newburg
Baked
Lambs, in Paper Cases
Sweetbread Salad
Sweet Sandwiches
Tartar Sauce
Timbale, Chicken
Tomatoes à l'Algerienne
en Surprise
Tomato Molds
Purée, à la Rorer
Tongue Salad
Turkey, Boned
Veal, Bagged
Jellied
Roll
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