1794 Domestic Economy PDF
1794 Domestic Economy PDF
1794 Domestic Economy PDF
O Rj
A COMPLETE SYSTEM
O F
ENGLISH HOUSEKEEPING:
’CONTAINING
which, together with the ORIGINAL ARTICLES, form the moft com-
plete Syftem of HOUSEKEEPING ever yet exhibited, under the following
Heads, viz.
ROASTING, SOUPS, TARTS,'
BOILING, SAUCES, PIES,
MADI-BISHES, GRAVIES, PASTIES,
FRYING, HASHES, CHEESECAKES,
BROILING, STEWS, JELLIES,
POTTING, PUDDINGS, PICKLING,
CUSTARDS, P R ESE RV 1N G and
FRICASSEES, ,
RAGOUTS, CAKES, -•
CONFECTIONARY.
familiar Inftrudlions for brewing all Sorts of Beer and Ale; including the proper
Management of the Vault or Cellar.
likewise
MAXIMILIAN HAZLEMORE.
LONDON:
PRINTED FOR J. CRESWICK, AND CO,
f 794’
TO THE PUBLIC.
M. HAZLEMORE.
CONTENTS
GENERAL
«
Instru&ions for A , r
Another sauce for a turkey
,
1o
roasting I To roast fowls ib
To roast beef 2 Another way ib
To roast a beef tongue 3 Another way ib
Cold roast beef, family fashion 3 To roast chickens ib
To roast mutton and lamb ib Another way 11
To roast a haunch of mutton, ve- To make egg sauce ib
nison fashion 3 To roast ducks ib
Another way ib Another way ib
Another way 4 To roast wild ducks or teal 12
To roast veal. Ib The best way to dress a wild duck
To roast pork ib ib
To roast a pig 5 To roast woodcocks or snipes ib
Another way to roast a pig 6 Another way ib
Another way ib To roast larks ib
To roast the hind quarter of a Another way to roast larks 13
pig lamb fashion 6 To roast ruffs and rees ib
To make sauce for a pig ib Another way ib
Different sorts of sauce for a pig To roast pheasants or partridges
7 ib
To roast venison ib Another way 14
Another way ib Another way ib
Sweet sauce for venison or hare 8 To roast pigeons ib
Sweet sauce of red wine for veni- Another way ib
son or roasted tongue ib To roast a hare ib
Different sorts of sauces for veni- Another way to roast a hare jy
son ib Different sorts of sauce for a hare
To roast a green goose ib ib
Sauce for a green goose ib To roast rabbits ib
To roast a goose ib Another way ib
Another way to roast a goose ib To roast a rabbit hare fashion ib
Sauce for a goose or duck 9 To roast lobsters ib
To roast a turkey ib Another way ib
Another way ib Another way ib
Sauce for a turkey ib Another way ib
a 3
VI CONTENTS.
pig’s petitocs
,
24
observations 17 To boil salmon crisp ib
To boil ham
a 18 Another way ib
Another way ib To boil salmon another way 25
Another way ib To boil a cod’s head and shoul-
Another way ib ders ib
To boil a tongue ib Another way ib
Another way 19 To boil cod ib
Another way ib To boil salt cod ib
To boil a chicken ib To boil cod sounds 26
To boil a fowl ib To boil a turbot ib
Another way 20 Another way ib
To make sauce for fowls ib To boil a pike 27
To boil a turkey ib Another way ib
Another way ib To boil a sturgeon ib
Sauce for a boiled turkey 21 Another way ib
To boil a duck ib To boil rnackarel 28
Another way 22 Another way ib
To boil a duck ora rabbit, with To boil plaice or flounders ib
onions ib Another way ib
To boil pigeons ib To boil seals ib
Another, way ib Another way 29
To boil a partridge 23 Another way ib
Another way ib To boil herrings ib
Another way ib Another way ib
To boil pheasants ib To boil eels 30
To boil woodcocks ib Another way ib
To boil pickled pork ib
page page
marinade a breast of veal Fillet of veal stewed
TO 48 To ragoo a fillet of veal
53
ib
A ragoo of a breast of veal ib Leg of veal marinaded ib
Another way ib Leg of veal with white sauce ib
To stew a breast of veal in its own Leg of veal daubed, or a la mode
sauce ib ib
Breast of veal stewed -white ib A leg of veal in disguise ib
Breast of veal stewed with peas or A leg of veal and bacon in dis-
asparagus 49 guise ib
Breast of veal In hodge-podge ib To stew a knuckle of veal ib
To collar a breast of veal ib Leg or knuckle of via 1 and spi-
The gristles of a breast of veal nach ib
with a white sauce 50 Shoulder of veal a la Piedmo: -
Another way ib
Calf’s feet with forcemeat ib Veal collops 73
page P a gc
GOOSE ala mode
To marinade a goose
To ragoo a goose
103
ib
104
A turkey the Italian way
Turkey in a hurry
Turkics and chickens after the
109
ib
To smoke a goose ib Dutch way no
To stew giblets ib Turkey stuffed after the Ham-
Another way ib burg fashion ib
Giblets a la turtle 105 To dress a turkey or fowl to per-
Turkey a la daube, to be sent up fection ib
hot ib A glazed turkey ib
Turkey a la daube, to be sent up To roast a turkey with cray-fish
cold 106 111
To stew a turkey brown the nice To hafh a turkey ib
way ib Another way ib
Another way 107 To roast a fowl with chesnuts
To stew a turkey with celery ib 112
Another way ib To force a fowl withragoo of
a
Turkey a I’ecarlate—turkey of a oysters ib
scarlet colour 108 A fowl with a sharp sauce ib
Turkey with onions and pickled A fowl a la braze ib
pork ib Another way 113
To roast a turkey the genteel A fowl with its own gravy ib
way ib A ragoo offowls ib
A turkey in jelly ib To force a fowl ib
CONTENTS
page page
A fowl, servant fashion 113 Another way 1
24
To marinade a fowl lb To dress a wild duck in perfec-
Fowls stuffed 115 tion ib
To hasli fowls ■ lb To stew ducks ib
Another way lb Duckling rolled 125
Pullets a la St. Menehout lb Pigeons en compte ib
To stew a fowl 116 Another way lb
A nice way to dress a cold fowl Pigeons ala duxelle - ib
lb Pigeons a la daube 126
To dress cold fowl or pigeon lb Pigeons in disguise ib
Chickens in savoury jelly lb Pigeons a la charmante 12 y
Chickens cavalier fashion 117 Pigeons in fricandeau ib
To make artificial chickens or Pigeons au solid ib
pigeons ib Pigeons surtout ib
Chickens In jelly lb Pigeons transmogrified 128
Chickens after the Scotch man- Pigeons a la braze ib
ner lb A pupton of pigeons ib
Chickens roasted with forcemeat Pigeons in pimlico ib
and cucumbers ib Pigeons royal fashion 129
A currey the Indian way 118 Boiled pigeons and bacon ib
To stew chickens ib Pigeons a la soussel ib
To force chickens ib To stew pigeons 130
Stewed chickens, or matlot 1 9 / Pigeons in savoury jelly' Jb
Chickens chlringrate ib To bake pigeons lb
Chickens in aspic ib Pigeons in a hole ib
Chickens Italian fashion ib Pigeons boiled with rice ib
Chickens and tongues 120 To brcfil pigeons 13 1
Chicken pulled ib Patridges in panes ib
To fry cold chickens Ib Patridges en aspic ib
To broil chic, ens ib Patridges In ragoo with oranges
Another way ' lb 132
To mince a chicken, or veal, for Patridges a la braze ib
persons who are fick or weak To stew partridges ib
121 Patridges rolled 133
Chickens’ feet with forcemeat ib Partridges broiled with sweet
Ducks a la braze ib herbs ib
Another way lb Partridges with consommce sauce
Macedonian ducks 122 ib
Ducks a la mode ib Patridges a la paisanne ib
To boil ducks the French way ib To hash a partridge or woodcock
To boil ducks with onion sauce J 34
123 Pheasants a la
1
braze ib
Wild ducks, wigeon, or easter- Pheasants a la mongelas ib
ling, in perfe&ion ib To stew a pheasant 135
To boil ducks a la Francoise ib Pheasants a Pltalienne ib
To dress a duck with green peas Snipes or woodcocks in surtout
ib ib
Another way lb Snipes or woodcocks in sahny 136
To hash a wild duck T24 Another way ib
To hash ducks different ways ib Snipes with purslaiu leaves ib
CONTENTS.
page r
page
Snipes duchess fashion 136 To dress ruffs and rees 137
The general method of dressing Small birds in savoury jelly ib
plovers 137 To dress larks pear fashion 138
Plovers perigord fashion ib Larks a la Francoisc ib
To dress ortolans and quails ib A ragoo of larks ib
page page
TO florendine a hare
To dress a hare
139
ib
Hare cake in jelly
Leveret kid fashion
143
ib
Hare a la daube 140 To florendine rabbits ib
To scare a hare ib Rabbits surprise 143
A hare civet ib Rabbits en cassarole ib
To stew a hare ib Another way ib
To hodge-podge a hare 14 1 To roast a rabbit hare fashion ib
To jug a hare ib Portuguese rabbits ib
To bash a hare ib Rabbits pulled ib
.Another way ib A Scotch rabbit ib
To collar a hare ib A Welch rabbit ib
Hare cake 142 An English rabbit 144
page page
TO dress a turtle the West In-
dia way 146
Jo dress a turtle of about thirty
Another way
To dress a mock turtle
Another way
148
145
Iyo
pounds weight 147 Mock turtle from calves’ feet ib
XL Of Soups,
page page
page page
SOUP
Rice soup
maigre 164
Queen’s rice soup maigre ib
ib
Peas soup
Mussel soup
Barley soup
166
167
ib
Oyster soup ib Scate soup ib
Another way 165 Egg soup ib
Green peas soup ib Milk soup ib
Another way ib Milk soup the Dutch way ib
Onion soup 166 Turnip soup Italian fashion ib
Eel soup ib
page page
BROWN gravy without
Good brown gravy ib
meat
169
A strong fish gravy
Mutton broth
Another way
170
171
ib
Gravy for a turkey, fowl, or ra- Veal broth ib
goo ib Scotch barley broth ib
To make gravy Ib Beef broth 172
Gravy for a fowl, when you Strong broth to keep for use ib
have neither meat nor gravy Jelly broth ib
ready 170 Chicken broth ib
Beef gravy ib Broth to sweeten the sharpness of
Mutton or veal gravy ib the blood 17 j
P a£ e
Tpage
0 fricassee chickens 174
A brown fricassee of chick-
r
To fricassee rabbits brown
.
.
page page*
Another way 176 To fricassee carp roes 1 7&
To fricassee calves’ tongues ib To fricassee flounders and plaice
To fricasee neat’s tongues ib ib
To fricassee calf’s feet ib To fricassee scate or thornback ib
To fricassee pigeons 177 To fricassee cod sounds 179
To fricassee lamb cutlets ib To fricassee oysters ib
To fricassee sweetbreads brown To fricassee eggs lb
ib To fricassee mushrooms lb
To fricassee sweetbreads white ib To fricassee artichoke bottoms 180
To fricassee eels 178 To fricassee skirrets ib
P aSc page
To bake herrings
TURBOT
with capers
au court bouillon,
jBi Seals with forcemeat
188
ib
To fry a turbot ib Seals ala Francoise 189
To bake a turbot ib Tostewsoals ib
Turbot with pontiff sauce 182 To stew soals, plaice, flounders
or
Salmon a la braze ib ib
To roll salmon ib To fry soals 190
To broil salmon 183 Another way ib
Salmon in cases ib To marinade soals ib
Salmon with shrimp sauce ib To fry whitings ib
Haslets of salmon ib Another way ib
Salmon with sweet herbs 184 To broil whitings or haddocks
To dress dried salmon ib ib
To dress a jowl of pickled salmon Mackarel ala raaitre d’hotel 19 1
ib To boil mackerel whole ib
To dress sturgeon ib Another way ib
Sturgeon boiled 185 Mackerel au court bouillon ib
Sturgeon Mayence fashion, or a To bake mackarel ib
la Mayence ib To stew a trout ib
To stew cod ib Trout a la Chartreuse 192
To bake a cod’s head ib To fry trout or perch ib
To dress a cod’s head and shoul- To marinade trout ib
ders 186 Pike with forcemeat ib
To broil cod ib To stew pike 193
To dress salt cod ib To dress a brace of carp ib
Fresh cod with sweet herbs ib To stew carp white 194
To crimp cod 187 To stew carp brown ib
To dress cod sounds ib To stew carp the best way ib
To broil cod sounds ib Carp a la Jacobinc ib
To broil crimp cod ib To dress carp au bleu 195
To dress herrings ib To fiy carp ib
To fry herrings ib To stew tench or carp ib
Another way 188 To fry tench Ib
Herrings with mustard sauce ib To fry perch 196
CONTENTS. XV
page page
To dress perch in water souchy Eel a la Nivernois 197
196 To stew eels ib
Smelts a la St. Menehout ib To broil eels ib
Smelts in savoury jelly ib To broil or roast eels 198
To fry smelts ib To fry eels ib
To pitchcock eels 197 To bake sprats ib
Another way ib
page page
polvrade White sauce for fowls or chickens
SAUCE Sauce for a cod’s heads
Parsley and butter
199
ib
ib A white sauce for veal ib
202
page page
ARTICHOKE
eggs
bottoms with A ragooof artichoke bottoms 208
To fry artichoke bottoms
208 A ragoo of celery
ib Another way
ib
ib
To
CONTENTS.
. P age page
To fry celery 208 To ragoo cauliflowers 21 i
Cucumbers stewed ib To boil potatoes ib
To ragoo cucumbers 209 To fry potatoes ib
Cucumbers with eggs ib To mash potatoes ib
Cucumbers stuffed with forcemeat To scollop potatoes lb
ib To fry chardoons ib
To ragoo mushrooms ib Chardoons a la fromage ib
Another way 210 To stew pears 213
To stew mushrooms ib to stew pears in a sauce-pan ib
Mushroom loaves ib To bake pears ib
Stewed peas and lettuce ib Eggs and broccoli ib
Another way ib To broil eggs ib
Another way ib Eggs duchess fashion 214
To ragoo asparagus 211 Spinach and eggs ib
Asparagus and eggs ib To force eggs ib
An amulet of asparagus ib To poach eggs with toasts ib
To make an amulet ib Eggs with sausages *
ib
An amulet with onions ib
221
tions on puddings 215 Norfolk dumplings ib
A baked almond pudding ib An oat pudding ib
A boiled almond pudding ib An oatmeal pudding ib
Almond hog’s puddings ib An orange pudding ib
A baked apple pudding 216 Peas pudding ib
Another way ib A plain pudding 222
Apple dumplings ib Another way ib
An apricot pudding ib An excellent plum pludding ib
A batter pudding 217 A potatoe pudding ib
Another way ib A quaking pudding ib
A bread pudding lb A rabbit pudding 22 J
A nice bread pudding ib A rice pudding ib
A calf’s foot pudding ib A ground rice pudding ib
A carrot pudding 2,1 B A cheap plain rice pudding ib
Green codling pudding* ib Another rice pudding ib
A custard pudding ib A sagoo pudding 224
Damascene dumplings 219 A spoonful pudding ib
A gooseberry pudding ib A spinach pudding ib
A grateful pudding ib A suet pudding ib
Hard dumplings ib A tansey pudding ib
A hasty pudding ib A transparent pudding 225
Herb pudding ib Vermicelli pudding ib
A hunting pudding 220 Yeast dumplings ib
An Italian pudding ib A Yorkshire pudding ib
A lemon pudding ib Another way 226
A marrow pudding lb White puddings in skins ib
Another way ib Black puddings ib
CONTENTS,
PRELIMINARY
tions on pies
Paste for tarts
observa-
227
ib
A French pie
A plain goose pie
A rich goose pie
234
232
ib
Crisp paste foi tarts ib A giblet pie ib
Another way ib A ham pie -
ib
Puff' paste ib A hare pie ib
Short crust ib An herb pie for Lent 233
A good paste for great pies 228 A lobster pie ib
A paste for custards ib Mince pies ib
Another way ib Another way 234
An apple pie ib Mutton and lamb pie ib
An apple tart ib An olive pie ib
A beef steak pie 229 A partridge pie ib
A bride’s pie ib A pigeon pie 233
A calf’s foot pie ib A Cheshire porkpie ib
A calf’s head pie ib A rook pie ib
A cherry pie 230 A rabbit pie ib
A savoury chicken pie ib A salmon pie ib
A rich chicken pie ib A soal pie 236
A codling pie ib A sucking pig pie ib
A Devonshire squab pie 23 1 A sweet veal or lamb pie ib
A duck pie ib A savoury veal pie 237
An eel pie ib A venison pasty ib
An egg pie ib A vermicelli pie ih
page PaS£
CREAM pancakes c v r
238 Strawberry fritters
•
239
Common pancakes ib Plain fritters 240
Batter pancakes ib Tansey fritters ob
Fine pancakes :/
ib Currant fritters ib
Rice pancakes ib Royal fritters ib
Pancakes called a quire of paper Apple fritters ib
2 39 Hasty fritters ib
Cream pancakes ib Water fritters
_
24*
Pink-coloured pancakes ib Fine fritters ib
Clary pancakes ib Apple fraze ib
Common fritters ib Almond fraze ih
CONTENTS.
page page
GENERAL
pickling
observations on
To pickle cucumbers
242
ib
Another way
To pickle mushrooms
To pickle cauliflowers
246
ib
247
To pickle cucumbers in slices 243 To pickle capers ib
To pickle mangoes ib To pickle samphire ib
To pickle onions 244 To pickle beet roots 248
Another way ib To pickle barberries ib
To pickle walnuts black ib To pickle codlings ib
Another way ib Indian pickle, or peccadillo ib
To pickle walnuts green 245 To pickle artichoke bottoms ib
To pickle French beans 246 To pickle nasturtium buds 249
To pickle red cabbage ib
GENERAL
potting
To pot beef
observations on
250
ib
To pot veal
To pot salmon
To pot tongues
252
ib
ib
To pot beef like venison ib To pot lampreys ib
To pot venison 251 To pot pigeons 25 3
To pot a hare ib To pot woodcocks and snipes ib
To pot eels ib To pot moor game ib
To pot chars ib
page page
OBSERVATIONS
See.
on tarts,
259
A rasberry tart with cream
To make rhubarb tarts
359
ib
A spU
CONTENTS.
page
A spinach tart 260 Fine cheesecakes 261
Tart dc moi ib Almond cheesecakes 262
Almond custards ib Common cheesecakes ib
Another way ib Lemon cheesecakes ib
Plain custards ib Bread cheesecakes ib
Another way ib Cheesecakes the French way, call-
Baked custards 261 ed ramequins 263
Orange custards ib Citron cheesecakes ib
Lemon custards ib Rice cheesecakes ib
Rice custards ib
• . .
270
PO make the red colour 264 Icings for cakes ib
,
f
.
, , ,
page page
A DISH of snow
Moonshine
Floating island of apples
299
ib
ib
A desert island
A floating island
A hedge-hog
299
300
ib
Floating island of chocolate ib A fish pond 301
Chap.
CONTENTS.
page Fge
Birch
,
307 wine
Another way ib Raspberry wine 309
Elder wine ib Turnip wine ib
Elder-flower wine ib Gooseberry wine ib
Grape wine ib Cherry wine 310
Orange wine 308 Cowslip wine jb
Another way ib Mead ib
Red currant wine ib Cowslip mead ib
Another way ib Smyrna raisin wine ib
Chap. XXIX, To prepare Bacon, Hams, &c.
page page
TO make bacon
Another way
To cure hams
3 11
ib
ib
Another way
To pickle pork
To make very fine sausages
3 12
313
ib
Another way ib Another way ib
To salt tongues 312 Common sausages 314
To make hung beef ib Oxford sausages ib
page page
To dress cauliflowers
Observations
ing vegetables
To dress artichokes
on dress-
315 To dress French beans
ib To dress parsnips
316
ib
ib
To dress asparagus ib To dress peas ib
To dress beans ib To dress potatoes ib
To dress broccoli ib To dress spinach 3 17
To dress cabbage, See. 3 16 To dress turnips ib
To dress carrots ' ib
CONTENTS.
Necessity of keeping
318
the vessels
ing beer with
Another way
324
ib
clean ib To stop the fret in malt liquors ib
General rules for brewing ib To recover deadish beer ib
The proper time for brewing 3 19 To fine malt liquors ib
The country or private way of To fine any sort of drink ib
business 321 Andtherway ’
325
Of bottling malt liquors 323 To cure cloudy beer ib
To recover a barrel of beer that To make cyder ib
has turned sour ib For fining cyder ib
To recover a musty cask 324 After it has fined 32^
WANT
The
of appetite
asthma
Dr. Mead’s prescription for the
327
ib
Spitting of blood, &c.
The aphthae, or thrush
The tooth-ach
350
35 2
ifi
bite of a mad dog 328 The bite of the viper 354
Burns ib The sting of wasps, hornets, bees.
Colds 329 See. Ib
The Colic 330 Worms ib
Consumption 331 Vomiting 355*
Chilblains Suppression of urine
'
333 357
Costiveness ib Bleeding at the nose ib
Common cough 334 Head-ach 358
The cramp ib The ear-ach 360
The dropsy 335 Pains in the stomach 361
The gout 336 The heartburn ib
The gravel and stone 337 The hiccup 362
The gripes in children 338 Dislocation, vulgarly called a
The hooping, or chin cough 339 breaking of the neck 363
The jaundice 340 Rickets 364
The itch 341 Melancholy 365
A diarrhoea, or looseness 342 Wounds 367
Obstructions in young girls 343 Bruises 368
The bleeding and blind piles 344 General instru&ions which, if at-
The quinsey or inflammation of the tended to, will infallibly pro-
throat ; 345 long life ib
The rheumatism 347 Elffluaries t <viz.
The rickets 348 Ele&uary for the piles 373
The scurvy 349 Electuary for the palsey ib
CONTENTS
page page
Eleduary for the rheumatism 37 3 Medical Wines, viz.
Lenitive eleduary ib Anthelmintic wine 3 8°
Eleduary for the dysentry 374 Antimonial wine ib
Ointments ,
viz. Bitter wine ib
Yellow basilicum ointment 374 Infusions, viz.
Issue ointment ib Bitter Infusion 381
Ointment of calamine ib Infusion of the bark ib
Emollient ointment lb Infusion for the palsy ib
Clysters, viz. Conserves, viz.
Laxative clyster 375 Conserve of red roses 381
Carminative clyster ib Conserve of Hoes 382
Oily clyster lb A most excellent remedy for a
Turpentine clyster ib cold ib
Tinii tires, viz. DecoFlions, viz,
Sacred tindure, or tindure of Decodion of logwood 382
hiera picra 375 Decodion of the bark 383
Volatile tindure of gum guaia- Compound decodion of the bark
cum ib ib
Tindure ofblack helebore ib Plasters, viz.
Tindure of the bark 376 Stomach plaster 383
Bolusses, viz. Adhesive plaster ib
Federal bolus 376 Anodyne plaster 384
Purging bolus ib Blistering plaster ib
Astringent bolus lb Gum plaster ib
Diaphoretic bolus ib Method of destroying the putrid
Mixtures, viz. smell which meat acquires dur-
Astringent mixture 377 ing hot weather ib
Diuretic mixture ib Corns and Teeth,
Elixirs, viz, A remedy for curing corns on the
Stomachic elixir 377 feet 385
Paragoric elixir ib To clean the teeth and gums, and
Powders, viz. make the flesh grow close to
Worm powders 377 the root of the enamel ib
Purging worm powder 378 To strengthen the gums, andfasten
Powder for the tape worm ib loose teeth ib
Astringent powder ib A preservative from the tooth-ach
Pills, viz. ib
Strengthening pill 378 A powder to clean the teeth ib
Stomachic pill 379 An excellent preserver and .cleaner
Composing pill ib of the teeth ib
Pill for the jaundice ib Waters, viz,
Burns and Inflammations, Bruises, A receipt to make the genuine
Sprains, aud Ulcers, all exter- Hungary water 386
nal, viz. To make rose water ib
Goulard’s extrad of Saturn 379 Diredions for making lavender-
Liniment for burns ib water ib
Tar water ib To make orange-flower water 387
Draughts, viz. Virgin’s milk, a soft and excellent
Anodyne draught 3 Bo cosmetic ib
Diuretic draught ib To take iron mould out oflinen ib
draught ib To take out stains of oil ib
b4
CONTENTS.
p age page
To take out the stains on cloth of A liniment to destroy nits 388
whatever colour 388 Receipt to thicken the hair, and
A soap that takes out all manner make it grow on a bald part 389
of spots and stains ib To make hair black ib
To cure warts ib Simple means of producing the
Another safe and experienced me- same effeCt ib
thod ib Observations on a leech, kept for
To destroy fleas ib a weather glass ib
Another way ib Royal Humane Society.
Another way ib Their directions for the recovery
A liniment to destroy lice ib of the apparently dead 390
Proper Articles to cover the Table every Month •
J A N UA R r.
FIRST COURSE.
Chefnut Soup
Leg of Lamb Petit Patties Boiled Chickens
Chickens and Veal Pip Cod’s Head Roafl Beef
Tongue Raifolds Scotch Collops
Vermicelli Soup
SECOND COURSE.
Roaft Turkey
Marinated Smelts Tartlets Mince Pies
Roafted Sweetbreads Stands of Jellies Larks
Almond Tart Maids of Honour Lobllers
Woodcocks
THIRD COURSE.
Morels
Artichoke Bottoms Dutch Beef fcraped Macaroni
Cuftards Cut Paftry Black Cap*
{Scolloped Oyfters Potted Chars Stewed Celery
Rabit fricafleed
FEBRUARY
FIRST COURSE.
Peas Soup
Chickens Chicken Patty Mutton Cojlops
Harrico of Mutton Salmon and Smelts Rump of Beef a la daub
Pork Cutlets
Sauce Robart Oyfter Patties Small Ham
Soup Sante
SECOND COURSE,
Wild fowl
Cardoons Dilh of Jelly Stewed Pippins
Scolloped Oyfters Epergne Ragout Melc
Compbrt Pears Caromel Artichoke Bottoms
Hare
THIRD COURSE*
Two Woodcocks
Cray-fifh Afparagus Preferved Cherries
Pigs Eai s Cr'ocant Lamb Chops larded
Blanched Almonds
Mulhrooms Prawns
,
and Ratlins
Larks a la furprife
MARCH,.
FIRST COURSE.
Soup Lorrain
Sheeps Rumps Almond Pudding Fillet of Pork
Chine of Mutton and Stewed Carp, or
ftewed Celery Tench Lamb’s Head
Veal Ccllops Beef-fteak Pie Cajves Ears
Onion Soup
SECOND COURSE.
A Poulard larded and roafted
Afparagus Blancmange Prawns
Ragooed Sweetbreads A trifle FricalTee of Rabits
Cray-filh Cheefecakes Fricaffee of Mufliroomt
Tame Pigeons roafted
THIRD COURSE.
Ox Palates fhivered
Tartlets Potted Larks Stewed Pippins
Cardoons Jellies Spanilh Pea*
Black Caps Potted Partridge Almond Checfecakcs
Cocks’ Combs
APRIL.
FIRST COURSE.
Crimp Cod and Smelts.
Chickens Marrow Pudding Cutlets a-la Maintenoa
Breaft of Veal in Spring Sopp Beef Tremblant
Rolio
Lamb’s Tails a-Ia- Pigeon Pie Tpnguc
Bafhemel
Whitings boiled and broiled
SECOND COURSE.
Pucklings
Afparagus Tartlets Black Cap*
Roaft Sweetbreads Jellies and Syllabubs Oyfter Loaves
Stewed Pears Tanfey Mufliroom?
Ribs of Lamb
THIRD COURSE,
Petit Pigeons
Mulhrooms French Plums Piftachio Nuts
Marinated Smelts Sweetmeats Oyfter Loaves
Blanched Almonds Railing Artichoke Bottom*
Calves Ears a-la-braife
m a r.
FIRST COURSE.
Calvert’s Salmon broiled
Rabbits with Onions Veal Olives Collared Mutton
pigeon Pie raifed Vermicelli Soup Macaroni Tart
Qx Palates Chine of Lamb Matelot of Tarae Duck
Mackarel
SECOND COURSE.
Green Goofc
Afparagus Cuftards Cocks’ Combs
preen Goofeberry Tarts . Epergne Creep ApricotTarts
Lamb Cutlets Blancmange Stewed Celery-
Roaft Chickens
THIRD COURSE.
Lamb Sweetbreads
Stewed Lettuce Rhenifh Cream Rafpberry Puffs
Lobfters ragooed Compoft of Green Apricots Buttered Crab
Lemon Cakes Orange Jelly French Beans
Ragout of Fat Livers
JUN£.
FIRST COURSE,
Green Peas Soup
Chickens Haunch of Venifon Harrico
Lamb Pie Turbot Ham
Veal Cutlets Neck ofVenifon Orange Pudding
Lobfter Soup
SECOND COURSE.
Turkey Poults
Peas Apricot Puffs Lobflers
Fricaffee of Lalnb Half Moon Roafted Sweetbreads
Smelts Cherry Tart Artichokes
Roailed Rabbits
THIRD COURSE.
Sweetbreads a-la-Blanche
Filtets of Seals
} *
Potted Wheat Ears Ratafia Cream
,
AUGUST.
FIRST COURSE.
Stewed Soals
Fillets of Pigeons Ham Turkcy a-la-daube
French Patty Cray-fifh Soup Petit palsies
Chickens fillet of Veaf Rofard of Beef Palates
Whitings
SECOND COURSE
Roaft Ducks
Macaroni Tartlet Fillets of Sgal s
Chcefecakes Jellies Apple Pics
Matclot ofEels Orange Puffs Fricaffee of Sweetbreads
Leveret
THIRD COURSE.
Partridge a-la-pair
Stewed Peas Potted Wheat Ears Cray-fifti
ApricotTart Fruit Cut Paftry
Prawns Scraped Beef Blanched Celery
Ruffs and Rees
SEPTEMBER.
FIRST COURSE
DUh of Filh
Chickens Chine of Lamb Veal Collop
Pigeon Pie Gravy Soup Almond Tart
Harico of Mutton Road Beef Ham
Difh of Filh
SECOND COURSE,
Wild Fowls
Peas Damafcene Tarts Ragooed Lenders
Sweetbreads Crocant ' Fritd Piths
Gray-filh Maids of Honour Fried Artichokes
Partridges
THIRD COURSE.
Ragooed Palates
Comport of Bifcuits Tartlets Fruit in Jelly
Green Truffles Epergne Cardoons
Blancmange Cheefccakes Ratafia Drop
Calves Ears a-la-braife
OCTOBER.
FIRST COURSE.
Cod and Oyller Sauce
Jugged Hare Neck of Veal a la braife Small Puddings
French Patty Fillet of Beef
Almond Soup larded & roafted
Chickens ■ Tongue and Udder Torrent de Yeau
Eroded Salmon
SECOND COURSE.
Pheafant
Stewed Pears Apple Tarts Mu fh rooms
Road Lobllcrs Jellies Cyder Loaves
White Fricaffee Cullards Pippins
Turkey
THIRD COURSE.
Sweetbread a la braife
Fried Artichokes Potted Eels Pig’s Ears
Almond Cheefccakes Fruit Apricot Puffs
Amkt Potted Lobfters Forced Celery
Larks
N 0 V E M B E R.
FIRST COURSE.
Difh of Fifh
■Veal Cutlets Roafled Turkey Ox Palates
Two Chickens Vermicelli Leg of Lamb
and Brocoli Soup and Spinach
Beef Collops Chine of Pork Harrico
Difh of Fifh
SECOND COURSE,
Woodcocks
Sheeps Rumps Apple Puffs Difh of Jelly
Oyfter Loaves Cfocants Ragooed Lobflers
Blanc mange Lemon Tart Lambs Ear*
Hare
THIRD COURSE.
Pettit Patties
Stewed Pears Potted Chars Fried Oyftcrs
Gallantine Ice Cream Collared Eels
Fillets of Whitings Potted Cray-fifh Pippins
Lambs’ Ears a la braife
DECEMBER .
FIRST COURSE.
Cod’s Head
Chickens Stewed Beef Fricandeau ofVca!
Almond Puddings Soup Santc Calves Feet Pic
Fillet of Pork Chine ofLamb Tongue
with lharp fauce
Soals fried and boiled
SECOND COURSE,
Wild Fowls
Lambs Fry Orange Puffs Sturgeon
Gallantinc Jellies Savoury Cake
Prawns Tartlets Mufhrooms
Partridges
THIRD COURSE.
Ragooed Palates
Savoy Cakes Dutch Beef Scraped China Oranges
Lambs Tails Half Moon Calves Burs
Jargonel Pears Potted Larks Lemon Bifcuits
Fricaffee of Cray-fifh
N. B. Be careful to fend up all kinds of garden fluff fuitable to your meat,
See. in your firft courfe, in different difhes on a watcr-difh on the fide table
;
and all your fauce in boats or bafons, to anfwer each other at the corners.
SUPPERS,
Halhcd Mutton
Anchovy and Butter Pickles
Scolloped or roafted Potatoes
Maintcnons
Sliced Ham Tart
Rabbit Roafted
Boiled Chicken
Cold Beef or Mutton fliced Pickles
ScollopedOyfters
Boiled Tripe
Bologna Saufage fliced Pat of Butter in a glafs
Haflied Hare
Gudgeons fried
Blfcuits Rafped Beef, and a Pat of
Butter in the middle
Duck roafted
Roaftcd Chicken
Potted Beef Checfecakes
Saufages, with Eggs poached
Whitings broiled
Tongue fliced Eifcuits
Calf’s Heart
Veal Cutlet
Tart Radifiies, and Butte*
in the middle
Afparagus
Pigeons roafted
Prawns Tarts Cold Mutton flicecf
Afparagus
Boiled Chickens
Peafe Goofeberry Cream f
Pai c? Butter,
and melted Butter
Fricaffee of Ox Palates
Duck roafted
Sliced Tongue Tart Cray-fifti
Peafe
Spitchcock Eel
Collared Beef Rafpberry Fritters Pickles
Veal Cutlet
Giblets ftewed
Collared Veal fliced Tart Crab
Roafted Pigeons
Buttered Lobfter
Potted Beef Rafpberry Cream Collared Pig’s Head
Calf’s Heart.
DOMESTIC ECONOMY,
'kS'c. (S’c. &c.
Chap. I .—OfROASTING.
General InJiruElions.
WHEN you roaft meat of any kind, put a little fait and
water in your dripping-pan bafte your meat a little
;
with it; let it dry, then duft it well with flour; bafte it with
frelh butter, and it will make your meat a better colour. Ob-
ferve always to have a brilk, clear Are; it will prevent your
meat from dazing, and the froth from falling. Keep it a good
diftance from the fire. If the meat be fcorched, the outfide
will be hard, and prevent the heat from penetrating into the
meat, and will appear enough before it be little more than half
done. Time, diftance, bailing often, and a clear fire, is the
belt method I can prefcribe for roafting meat to perfection.
When the fleam draws near the fire, it is a fign of its being
enough; but you will be the belt judge of that from the time
you put it down. Be careful, ■when you roaft any kind of wild
fowl, to keep a clear brilk fire roaft them a light brown, but
;
not too much. It is a great fault to roaft them till the gravy
runs out of them, as that takes off the fine flavour. Tame
fowls require more roafting; they are a long time before they
are hot through, and mult be often baited to keep up a ftrong
froth it makes them rife better, and a finer colour. Pigs and
;
it, bade it with butter, and do not put it too near the fire; this,
with frequently balling it, a brilk fire, and allowing time
enough, are the only means of roaftlng in perfection; when
the fleam draws to the fire, the meat is done; flour and bafte
it juft before it is fent to the table, that it may have a nice
froth; always allow a longer time for the meat to roaft in
frofty weather; take particular care to have the fpit clean, as
nothing is more diiagreeable than a fpit-mark and remember,
;
before it is drefled, (and indeed mutton and beef are not good
frefh killed) be fure to dry it well with a cloth, and hang it
where it will have a thorough air look at it every day and wipe
;
off all the damp it will keep a long time. Some pepper it a
;
little.
7 o ro'-jl Beef.
Be fure to paper the top, and bafte it well all the time it is
roafting, and throw a handful of fait on it. When you fee the
fmoke draw to the fire, it is near enough; then take off the
paper, bafte it well, and dredge it with a little flour to make a
tine froth. Never fait your roaft meat before you lay it to the
fire, for that draws out all the gravy. Take up your meat, and
garnith your dilh with nothing but horfe-radifh.
To roaft a piece of beef of about ten pounds, will take an
hour and an half, at a good fire. Twenty pounds weight will
take three hours, if it be a thick piece; but if it be a thin
piece of twenty pounds weight, two hours and an half will do
it; and fo on, according to the weight of your meat, more or
lei's, Cbferve, in frofty weather your beef will take half an
hour longer. GlaJJe, 22.
To roaf a Beef-Tongue.
Boil a tongue until it will peel, In broth or water, with fait
and pepper, onions, carrots, parfnips, a nofegay*, two cloves of
garlic, laurel, and thyme; then lard it as a fricandeau-f, and
finifti it in roafting; ferve under it a reliihing fauce, or plain.
Dalrymple 53.
,
*
Afaggot of parfey, onions, fhallots, Isfc.
+ A piece of meat larded, brazed, and glazed.
OF ROASTING. 3
Cold Roajl Beefy family fajhion.
Slice three or four onions, and fry them in butter; when
done, add a little broth, three fhallots chopped, pepper and fait*
then put flices of cold beef to it, boil for a moment; when
ready, add a liafonj made of three yolks of eggs and a little vi-
negar. Cold beef is alfo very good with cold fauce, made of
chopped parfley, fhallots* vinegar* oil, muftard, minced an-
chovy, &c. Dalrympley 67.
To roajl Mutton and Lamb-.
As to roafting of mutton, the loin, the chine of mutton*
(which is the two loins) and the faddle, (which is the two
necks, and part of the fhoulders cut together) mull have the
fkin raifed and fkewered on; and when near done, take off the
fkin, bade and flour it, to froth it up. All other parts of mut-
ton and lamb muft be roafted with a quick clear fire, without
the fkin being raifed, or paper put on. You fhould always ob-
ferve to bafte your meat as foon as you lay it down to roafl;
fprinkle fome fait on, and when near done, dredge it with a
little flour to froth it up. Garnifh mutton with horfe-radifh ;
Another tuay.
Cut a hind quarter of fat mutton like a haunch of venifon ;
let it fleep in the fheep’s blood for five or fix hours; then let it
i Congluiinating different liquors ‘without boiling .
4 OF ROASTING.
hang, in cold dry weather, for three weeks, or as long as it will
keep fweet rub it well with a cloth, then rub it over with frefh
•,
butter; ftrew fome fait over it, and a little flour; butter a fheet
of paper, and lay over it, and another over that, or fome pafte,
and tie it round. If it is large, it will take two hours and an
halfroafting. Before it is taken up, take off the paper, or pafte,
bafte it well with butter, and flour it. Let the jack go round
very quick, that it may have a good froth. Sauce—gravy and
currant jelly. Mafon, 161.
Another way.
Get the largeft and fattcft leg of mutton you can, cut out
like a haunch of venifon, as foon as it is killed, whilft it is
warm, it will eat the tenderer; take out the bloody vein, flick
it infeveral places in the underfide with a fharp pointed knife;
pour over it a bottle of red wine; turn it in the wine four or
five times a day for five days, then dry it exceeding well with
a clean cloth; hang it up in the air, with the thick end upper-
moft, for five days; dry it night and morning, to keep it from
being damp or growing mufty. When you roaft it, cover it
with paper, and pafte it as you do venifon; ferve it up with
venifon fauce. It will take four hours roafting. Raff aid, 107.
To roaft Veal.
As to veal, you muft be careful to roaft it of a fine brown;
if a large joint, a very good fire; if a fmall joint, a pretty little
brifk fire; if a fillet or loin, be fure to paper the fat, that you
lofe as little of that as poflible. Lay it fome didance ftom the
fire, till it is foaked; then lay it near the fire. When you lay
it down, balle it well with good butter; and when it is near
enough, bade it again, and dredge it with a little flour. The
bread you mud road with the caul on till it is enough; and
Ikewer the fweet-bread on the back-dde of the bread. When
it is nigh enough, take off the caul, bade it, and dredge it with
a little flour. Veal will take a quarter of an hour to a pound
in reading; duff the fillet and fhoulder with the following in-
gredients—a quarter of a pound of diet chopped fine, parfley
and fweet herbs chopped, grated bread and lemon peel; pep-
per, fait, nutmeg, and yolk of egg; butter may fupply the want
of diet; road the bread with the caul on, till it is almod enough,
then take it off; flour it, and bade it. Veal requires to be
more done than beef. For fauce—falad, pickles, potatoes,
broccoli, cucumbers raw or dewed, Fx-ench beans, peafe, cauli-
flower, celery raw or dewed. Glajfe, 13. Mafon, 137.
To roaft Pork
.
Mafon advifes to rub the pork over with a feather and fome
oil inftead of fcoring.
To roajl a Pig,
Stick your pig juft above the breaft-bone, run your knife to
the heart. When it is dead, put it in cold water for a few mi-
nutes, then rub it over with a little roftn beat exceeding fine, or
its own blood put your pig into a pail of fcalding water half a
;
minute take it out, lay it on a clean table, pull off the hair as
;
When you have got it all clean off, wafh it in warm water, then
in two or three cold waters, for fear the rofin fhould tafte. Take
off the fore feet at the firft joint, make a flit down the belly, and
take out all the entrails put the liver, heart, and lights, to the
*,
over with fweet oil. When it is done, take a dry cloth and
■wipe it; then take it into a difh, cut it up, and fend it to table
with the fame fauce as aboye.
To roajl the hind quarter of-a Pig, Lamb-fajhion.
At the time of the year when hdufe-lamb is very dear, take
the hind quarter of a large roafting pig take off the fkin and
;
roaft it, and it will eat like lamb, with mint-fauce, or with a falad
or Seville orange. Half an hour will roaft it. Glade 4. Far*
,
ley, 36.
To make Sauce for a Pig,
Chop the brains a little, then put in a tea-cup full of white
gravy with the gravy that runs out of the pig, a little bit of an-
chovy; mix near half a pound of butter with as much flour as
will thicken the gravy, a flice of lemon, a fpoonful of white
wine, a little caper liquor and fait; fliake it over the Are, and
pour it into your difla. Some like currants: boil a few, and
OF ROASTING. 7
lend them in a tea-faucer, with a glafs of currant-jelly in the
middle of it, Raffald 56. ,
and mixed with the gravy and butter. Some love bread fauce
jn a bafon, made thus:—take a pint of water, put in a good
piece of crumb of bread, a blade of mace, and a little whole
pepper; boil it for about five or fix minutes, and then pour the
water off; take out the fpice, and beat up the bread with a good
piece of butter, and a little milk or cream. Some love a few
currants boiled in it, a glafs of wine and a little fugar; but in
that you muft do juft as you like. Others take half a pint of good
beef gravy, and the gravy which comes out of the pig, with a
piece of butter rolled in flour, two fpoonfuls of catchup, and
boil them altogether then take the brains of the pig and bruife
•,
them fine put all thefe together, with the fage in the pig, and
•,
pour into your difh. It is a very good fauce. When you have
not gravy enough comes out of your pig, with the butter, for
fauce, take about half a pint of veal gravy and add to it; or flew
the pettitoes, and take as much of that liquor as will do for
fauce, mixed with the other. —N. B. Some like the fauce fent
in a boat or bafon. Glaffe 4. ,
Do roajl Venifdn,
Mafon. 208.
Another way to roajl Venifon,
1 ake a haunch of venifon and fpit it; rub fome butter all
over your haunch j take four Iheets of paper well buttered, put
two on the haunch then make a pafte with fome flour, a little
;
butter and water roll It out half as big as your haunch, and put
;
it over the fat part then put the other two flieets of paper on,
•,
and tie them with the fame packthread lay it to a brilk fire,
;
To roast Geese.
To roof a Green Goofe.
When your goofe is ready drefled, put in a good lump of but-
ter, fpit it, lay it down, linge it well, dull it with flour, bafte it
with frefh butter, bafte it three or four times with cold butter,
it will make the flelh rife better than if you was to bafte it out
of the dripping pan; if it is a large one, it will take three quar*
ters of an hour to roaft it; when you think it is enough, dredge
it with flour, bafte it till it is a fine froth, and your goofe a nice
brown, and difh it up with a little brown gravy under it. Gar-
jftfh it with a cruft of bread grated round the edge of your difh.
Far ley 38. Raffald, 58.
,
the Are, and they look plump, bafte them again and dredge
them with a little flour, and take them up, Glaffe 5. ,
with this, or with force-meat; paper the breaft till near done,
then flour and bafte it. For fauce —gravy alone, or brown ce-
lery fauce, or mufhroom fauce. For a turkey-poult, gravy and
bread fauce. Mafo?i, 278.
A middling turkey will take an hour; a very large one, an
hour and a quarter a fmall one, three quarters of an hour.
;
Take your fowls when they are ready drefled, put them down
to a good fire, finge, duft, and bafte them well with butter. A
large fowl will be near an hour in roafting. Make a gravy of
the necks and gizzards, ftrain it, put in a fpoonful of browning.
When you difh them up, pour the gravy into the difh; ferve
them up with egg-fauce in a boat. Rajfald 64.,
Make fome force-meat with the flefh of a fowl cut fmall, and
a pound of veal j beat them in a mortar with half a pound of
beef fuet, as much crumb of bread, fome mufhrooms, truffles,
and morels, cut fmall; fome lemon-peel grated fine, fome beaten
mace, a few 7 fweet herbs, and fome parfley, mixed together with
r
the yolks of tw o eggs bone the fowls, fill them with the force-
;
To rcajl Chickens.
Pluck your chickens very carefully, draw them, and cut off
OF ROASTING.
jhelr claws only, and trufs them. Put them down to a good
fire, finge, dull, and bafte them with butter. A quarter of an
hour will roaft them and when they are enough, froth them,
;
and lay them on your dilh. Serve them up hot, with parfley
and butter poured over them. Sarley 38. Rnjfald 65.
, ,
the breads, and wrap them up with thin dices oflard and paper ;
road them, and ferve up what fort of dewed greens you pleafe,
as fpinach, cucumbers, See. Clermont 207.
,
fage leaves; feafon thefe with fait and pepper, and put them into
your ducks. Singe, dull, and bafte them with butter, and a good
fire will roaft them in twenty minutes for the quicker they are
;
done, the better they will be. Before you take them up, dull:
them with flour, and bafte them with butter, to give them a
good frothing and a pleafing brown. Your gravy mull be made
pf the gizzards and pinions, an onion, a tea-fpoonful of lemon-
pickle, a few pepper-corns, a large blade of mace, a fpoonful
of catchup, and the fame of browning. Strain it, pour it into
your dilh, and fend it up with onion-fauce in a bafon. Farley %
40.
Another way to roajl Ducks.
Seafon them with fage and onion flared, pepper, and fait; half
an hour will roaft them- gravy-fauce, or onion-fauce. Always
flew the fage and onion in a little water, as it prevents its eating
flrong, and takes off the rawnefs. Mafon 273. ,
Raffald y 66.
If you love them well done, a wild-duck will take twenty-
five minutes. Glajfe, 14.
A wigeon or eafterling will take near twenty minutes. Ma-
f° »
273.
A teal will be done in fifteen minutes. Mafon 273.
,
fet it over a dove ten minutes; then fend it to table hot in the
didr it was done in, and garnidr with lemon. You may add a
little re d wine, and a drallot cut fmall, if you like it; but it is
apt to make the duck eat hard, unlefs you fird heat the
and pour it in jud as it is done. Glajfe 81.
,
birds, and when you lay them down to the fire, bade them with
a little butter, and let the trail drop on the toad. When they
are roaded enough, put the toad in the didr, and lay the birds
on it. Pour about a quarter of a pint of gravy into the difh,
and fet it over a lamp or chafing-didr for three or four minutes,
when the whole will be in a proper condition to be fent to the
table. Oferve never to take any tiring out of a woodcock ox
fnipe.
Jnother may.
Pluck them, but do not draw them; put them on a fmall
fpit, dud, and bade them well with butter, toad a few dices of a
penny loaf, put them on a clean plate, and fet it under the birds
while they are reading. If the fire be good, they will take about
ten minutes reading. When you draw them, lay them upon the
toafts on the difh; pour melted butter round them, and ferve
them up. Raffald, 66.
Twenty minutes will road woodcocks, and fifteen minutes,
fnipes. Mafoti 274.
,
To roajl Larks.
Put a finall bird-fpit through them, and tie them on another;
OF ROASTING. 13
roaft them, and all the time they are roafting, keep bafting them
very gently with butter, and fprinkle crumbs of bread on them
till they are almoft done; then let them brown before you take
them up.
The beft way of making crumbs of bread is, to rub them
through a fine cullender, and put in a little butter into a ftew-
pan; melt it, put in your crumbs of bread, and keep them
Ifirring till they are of a light brown; put them on a fieve
to drain a few minutes lay your larks in a difh, and the crumbs
;
all round, almoft as high as the larks, with plain butter in a cup,
and fome gravy in another. Glajfe 6. ,
the hind leg, and a Ikewer through the top of the fhoulders and
back part of the head, which will hold the head up. Make a
A French term for forte-meat.
*
OF ROASTING.
pudding thus—take a quarter of a pound of beef fuct, as much
crumb of bread, a handful of parfley chopped fine, fome fweet
herbs of all forts, fuch as bafil, marjoram, winter favory, and a
little thyme, chopped fine; a little nutmeg grated, fome lemon-
peel cut fine, pepper and fait; chop the liver fine, and put in
with two eggs; mix it up, and put it into the belly* and few or
ikewer it up then fpit it and lay it to the fire, which muft be
;
with .chopped fuef, the liver part boiled and bruifed, bread
crumbs, grated bread, and a little lemon-peel; chopped parfley
and fweet herbs, yolk of egg mixed, pepper, fait, and nutmeg j
gravy in the difli. Mafoti 293.
,
43*
Another way.
801 l your lobders, then lay them before the fire, and bade
them with butter till they have a fine froth. Difh them up
with plain melted butter in a cup. This is as good a way to the
full as reading them, and not half the trouble.
Another way.
Half boil your lobder, rub it well with butter, and fet it
before the dre; bade it all over till the died looks a dark
brown ferve it up with good melted butter. Rajfaldy 40.
;
Another way.
More than half boil it; fet it in a Dutch oven, bade It well
till nicely frothed; ferve it with melted butter. Mafony 25 1.
OF BOILING.
it into the water when cold, it will prevent the foulnefs of the
water from hanging upon it. Take the feum off clearly as foon
as it begins to rife, and cover up the pot clofely. Let the meat
boil as (lowly as poflible, but in plenty of water, which will
make your veal rife and look plump. A cook cannot make a
greater miftake than to let any fort of meat boil fall, fince it
hardens the outfide before it is warm within, and contributes to
difcplour It. Thus a leg of veal, of twelve pounds weight will
take three hours and an half boiling 5 and the flower it boils,
the whiter and plumper it will be. When mutton or beef is
the objedlof your cookery, be careful to dredge them well with
flour before you put them into the pot ofcold water, and keep
it covered but do not forget to take otF the feum as often as
•,
three hours, and boil gently two a finall one fhould fimmer
;
two hours, and boil about one and an half. Pull off the fkin,
rub it over with yolk of egg, ftrew on bread crumbs, fet it be-
fore the fire till of a nice light brown. Mafon i 177,
Another way to boil a Ham.
Put your ham into a copper of cold water, and when it boils
take care that it boils flowly. A ham of twenty pounds will
take four hours and an half boiling and fo in proportion for
;
When you boil a ham, put it into your copper when the
water is pretty warm, for the cold water draws the colour out ;
a middle fize, it will take three hours boiling, and a fmall one
two hours and an half. When you take it up pull oft'the Ikin,
and rub it all over with an egg, Ifrew on bread-crumbs, bafie
it with butter, and fet it to the fire till it be a light brown.
If it be to eat hot, garnilh with carrots, and ferve it up. Rafo
fold) 69.
Another way to boil a Ham,
If your ham has been long kept, foak it fome time; if frefh,
you need not; pare it round and underneath, taking care no rufty
part is left; tie it up with packthread, put it in a brazing-pan
much of its own bignefs, with water, a faggot, a few cloves,
thyme, and laurel leaves; boil on a flow fire about five hours,
then add a glafs of brandy, and a pint of red wine finifli boil-
;
ing in the fame manner. If to ferve hot, take up the fkin, and
ftrew it over with bread-crumbs, a little parfley finely chopped,
and a few bits of butter give it a colour in the oven, or with a
;
Fa boil a Fongue.
A tongue, if fait, foak it in foft water all night; boll it three
hours; if frefh out of the pickle, two hours and an half, and
put it in when the water boils; take it out and pull it; trim
it j garnifh with greens and carrots, GlaJJey 9. Ma/on y 132.
OF BOILING.
To boil a Chicken.
Put your chickens into fcalding water, and as foon as the
feathers will flip off, take them out, otherwife they will make
the Ikin hard. After you have drawn them, lay them in flam-
med milk for two hours, and then trufs them with their heads
on their wings. When you have properly finged and duffed them
with flour, cover them in clofe cold water, and fet them over a
flow fire. Having taken off the fcum, and boiled them flowly
for five or fix minutes, take them off the fire, and keep them
clofe covered for half an hour in the water, which will flew them
lufficiently, and make them plump and white. Before you difh
them, fet them on the fire to heat; then drain them, and pour
over them white fauce. made the fame way as for boiled fowls.
Farley y 18. Mafon y 262.
A large chicken takes twenty minutes; a very fmall one, fif-
teen. Mafon y 262. Glajfey 9.
Fowls, chickens, and hpufe-lamb, fhould be boiled in a pot
by themfelves, in a good deal of water; and if any fcum arifes
take it off. They will be both fweeter and whiter than if boiled'
in a cloth. Glajfe y p.
To boil a Fowl.
A large one will be boiled in half an hour. Boil It in a pot,
by itfelf, fcum it very clean, it will be better than if boiled in a
cloth pour fome melted butter over the bread; ferve it with
;
Another way.
When you have plucked your fowls, draw them at the rump,
cut off the head, neck, and legs, take the breaft-bone very care-
fully out, tkevver them with the ends of their legs in the body,
tie themround with a ftring, finge and dull them well with flour,
put them in a kettle of cold water, cover it clofe, and fet it on
the fire when the fcum begins to rife, take it oft'; put on your
;
cover, and let them boil very flpwly twenty minutes take them
;
off, cover them clofe, and the heat of the water will Itew them
enough in half an hour it keeps the fkin whole, and they will
;
put to it fome good cream, with a little flour mixed fmooth in it,
a good piece of butter, a little pounded mace, and fome fait \
To boil a Turkey.
Make a fluffing with grated bread, oyfters chopped, grated
lemon peel, pepper, fait, nutmeg about four ounces of butter,
;
the turkey, put it into water while cold; take off the fcum as
it rifes, and let it boil gently. A middling turkey will take
about an hour. Boil the balls, lay them round it, with oyfter
fauce in the difli, and in a boat. The fluffing may be made
without oyfters, or it may be fluffed with forced-meat, or fau-
fage meat, mixed with a few crumbs of bread and yolks of eggs.
If oyfters arc not to be had, white celery fauce is very good, or
white fauce. Mafon, 257.
A little turkey will be done in an hour; a large one in an
hour and an half, Glaffe, 9.
Another way to boil a Turkey.
Let your turkey have no food the day before you kill it.
When you are going to kill it, give it a fpoonful of allegar it
*,
will make it white, and eat tender. When you have killed it,
hang it up by the legs for four or five days at leaft; when you
have plucked it, draw it at therump if you can take the breaft-
*,
bone out nicely, it will look much better. Cut off the legs, put
the end of the thighs into the body of the turkey, fkewer them
down, and tie them with a firing*, cut off thehead and neck, then
OF BOILING.
grate a penny loaf, chop a fcore or more of oyftcrs fine, Ihred a
little lemon-peel, nutmeg, pepper, and fait to your palate. Mix
it up into a light forced-meat, with a quarter of a pound of but-
ter, a fpoonful or two or cream, and three eggs; fluff the era vr
with it, and make thereft Into balls, and boil them. Sew up the
turkey, dredge it well with flour, put it into a kettle ofcold water,
cover it, and fet it over the fire. When the feum begins to rife,
take It off, put on your cover, and let it boil very flowly for half
an hour; then take off your kettle, and keep it clofe covered. If
it be of a middle fize, let it ftand half an hour in the hot water,
the fleam being kept in, will ftew it enough, make it rife, keep
the fkin whole, tender, and very white. When you difh it up,
pour over it a little of your oyfter-fauce, lay your balls round it,
and ferve it up with the reft of your fauce in a boat. Garnifh
with lemon and barberries.—N.B. Obferve to fet on your tur-
key in time, that it may ftew as above it is the beft way I ever
:
The beft fauce for a boiled turkey, is good oyfter and celery
fauce. Make oyfter-fauce thus:—take a pint ofoyfters, and fet
them off; ftrain the liquor from them, and put them in cold
water, and wafh and beard them put them into your liquor in
;
a pint of cream and boil it all together gently take the lemon
j ;
and mace out, fqueeze the juice of the lemon into the fauce, then
ferve it in your boats or bafons, Make celery-fauce thus —take :
the white part of the celery, cut it about one inch long boil it
;
in fome water till it is tender, then take half a pint of veal broth,
a blade of mace, and thicken it with a little flour and butter;
put in half a pint of cream, boil them up gently together put ;
in your celery, and boil it up, then pour it into your boats,
Glafe, 9.
To boil a Duck .
As foon as you have fcalded and drawn your ducks, let them
remain for a few minutes in warm water. Then take them out,
put them into an earthen pan, and pour a pint of boiling milk
over them. Let them lie in it two or three hours, and when
you take them out, dredge them well with flour put them into
;
Ikim your water, for there will always rife a feum, which if it
boils down, will difcolour your fowls, &c. They will take
about half an hour boiling. For fauce—your onions muft be
peeled, and throw them into water as you peel them then cut
*,
them into thin dices, boil them in milk and water, and {kim the
liquor. Half ah hour will boil them. Throw them into a
clean fleve to drain j chop them, and rub them through a cul-
lender j put them into a faucepan, fhake in a little flour; put to
them two or three fpoonfuls of cream, and a good piece of but-
ter flew them all together over the fire till they are thick and
;
fine lay the duck, or rabbit, in the difh, and pour the fauce all
;
over. If a rabbit, you muft pluck out the jaw-bones, and flick
one in each eye, the fmall end inwards.
Or you may make this fauce for change :—take one large
onion, cut it fmall, half a handful of parfley clean w. flied and
picked; chop it fmall, a lettice cut fmall, a quarter of a pint of
good gravy, a good piece of butter rolled in a little flour add a
;
little juice of lemon, a little pepper and fait. Let them all ftew
together for half an hour then add two fpoonfuls of red wine.
;
This fauce is moft proper for a duck. Lay the duck in your
difh, and pour the fauce over it. GlaJJe H2.
To boil Pigeons,
Scald and draw your pigeons, and take out the craw as clean
as poflible. Wafh them in feveral waters, and, having cut oft’
the pinions, turn their legs under their wings, dredge them, and
put them into foft cold water. Having boiled them very llowly
a quarter of an hour, dilh them up, and pour over them good
melted butter. Lay round them a little broccoli, and ferve them
up with butter and parfley. Farley 20.
,
Another way.
Trufs two or three partridges as for boiling lard them with
;
ikirn and lift the fauce, and add a little cullis. When ready to
ferve, add the fqueeze of a lemon. Dalrymple 234. ,
Another way.
Let your partridges be covered with water. Fifteen minutes
will boil them. For fauce—celery-fauce, liver-fauce, mufh-
room-fauce, or onion-fauce. Mafon 303. ,
To boil Phcafants.
Boil them in a great deal of water; if large, three quarters of
?n hour will boil them if final), half an hour. For fauce—-
;
white celery Hewed and thickened with cream, and a bit ofbut-
ter rolled in flour. Lay the pheafants in the difla, and pour the
fauce over them. Mafon 306. kklnffe, pfl.
,
Obferve fo to flew your celery, that the liquor may not be all
wafted before you put in your cream. Scafon with fait to your
palate. Garnifh with lemon.
To boil Woodcocks.
Take a pound of lean beef, cut it into pieces, and put it into
2 fauce-pan, with two quarts of water, an onion ftuck with three
or four cloves, two blades of mace, and fome whole peppers
boil all thefe gently till half is wafted then ftrain it off into an-
;
fire, and fhake it round till the butter is melted then put in the
;
Take up the heart, liver, and lights, when they have boiled
ten minutes, and Ihred them pretty fmall; let the feet boil till
they are pretty tender, then take them out and fplit them;
thicken your gravy with flour and butter, put in your mince-meat
a flice of lemon, fpoonful of white wine, a little fait, and boil it
a little beat the yolk of an egg, add to it two fpoonfuls of good
;
fait, but no vinegar. When they have boiled ten minutes, fkinl
the water very clean, and put in the flices. When they are
boiled enough, take them out, lay the head and the tail in the
difh, and the flices round. This muft be for a large company.
The head or tail may be drefled alone, or with one or two flices;
or the flices alone.
It is done in great perfe&ion in the falmon countries; but if
the falmon is very frefh, it will be very good in London. Jula~
filly 213.
Another way.
Scale your falmon, take out the blood, wafh it well, and lay
it on a fifh-plate put your water in a fifh-pan with a little fait.
*,
When it boils, put in your fifh for half a minute, then take it
out for a minute or two. When you have done it four times,
boil it till it is enough. When you take it out of the fifh-pan,
fet it over the water to drain; cover it well with a clean cloth
dipped in hot water; fry fome fmall fifhes, or a few flices of
falmon, and lay round it. Garnifh with feraped horfe-raddifh
ind fennel. Rnffald, 23.
OF BOILING.
Another way.
Take a bit of falmon, of any bignefs, without being fcaled ;
the head very clean, rub over it a little fait, and a glafs of alle-
gar; then lay it on your fifh-plate. When your water boils,
throw in a good handful of fait, with a glafs of allegar j then put
in your fifh, and let it boil gently half an hour: if it is a large
one, three quarters. Take it up very carefully, and drip the
Ikin nicely off; fet it before a bride dre, dredge it all over with
dour, and bade it well with butter. When the froth begins to
rife, throw over it fome very fine white bread crumbs. You mud:
keep balling it all the time to make it froth well. When it is a
fine white brown, difh it up, and garnifh it with a lemon cut in
dices, feraped horfe radifh, barberries, a few fmall fifh fried and
laid round it, or fried oyders. Cut the roe and liver in dices,
and lay over it a little of the lobder out of the fauce in lumps,
and then ferve it. Raffald, 21. Farley) 27,
Another way.
Wafh it, drew fait over it, put vinegar and fait into the wa-
ter. If the head be large, it will take an hour’s boiling, Oyder-
fauce, and white-fauce, or what other is agreeable. The fifh
may be grilled in the following manner Strip off the fkin,
when boiled, fet it before the fire, fhake flour over it, and bade
it. When the froth rifes, drew over it bread-crumbs; let it be
a nice brown. Garnifh with fried oyders, the roe, liver, horfe-
radifh, and lemon. Mafon 209. ,
To boil Cod.
Set on a fifh-kettle of a proper fize for the cod 5 put in a large
quantity of water, with a quarter of a pint, or more, of vinegar,
a handful of fait, and half a dick of horfe-radilh let thefe boil
:
it will take out the fait, and make it eat Uke frelh fifh. The
26 OF COILING.
next day boil it. When it is enough, pull it In flakes into your
di(h, then pour egg-fauce over it, or parfnips boiled and beat
•with butter and cream. Send it to the table on a water-plate,
for it will Toon grow cold. Rnjfald 22. ,
To boil a Turbot.
Lay It in a good deal of fait and water an hour or two, and if
it is not quite Tweet, fhift your water five or fix times j fird put
a good deal of fait in the mouth and belly.
In the mean time fet on your fifh-kettle, with clean fpring-
water and fait, a little vinegar, and a piece of horfe-radifh.
When the water boils, lay the turbot on a rilh-plate, put it into
the kettle, let it be well boiled, but take great care it is not too
much done. When enough., take oft' the fifh-kettle, fet it be-
fore the fire, then carefully lift up the fifh-plate, and fet it acrol’s
the kettle to drain. In the mean time melt a good deal of frefh
butter, and bruife in cither the fpawn of one or two lobders,
and the meat cut fmall, with a fpoonful of anchovy liquor; then
give it a boil, and pour it into bafons. This is the bed fauce ;
but you may make what you pleafe. Lay the fidi in the dilh.
Garnifh with fcraped horfe-radifh and lemon. Glajp, 177,
Another way.
Make a brine with a handful or two of fait, and a gallon or
more of water let the turbot lie in it two hours before it is to
:
water, with fome vinegar and fait in it. When it boils, put
in the fifh, it will take more than half an hour, if it is a large
one. Oyfter-fauce. Pour fome over the fifh, the reft in a
boat. Maforiy 232.
Another way.
Take out the gills and guts, wafh it well, then make a good
force-meat of oyllers chopped fine, the crumb of half-a-penny
loaf, a few fweet herbs, and a little lemon-peel fhred fine nut-
;
a boat, and pour a little fauce on the pike. You may drefs a
roafted pike in the fame way.
To boil a Sturgeon.
Clean your fturgeon, and prepare as much liquor as will juft
boil it. To two quarts of water, put a pint of vinegar, a flick
of horfe-radifli, two or three bits of lemon-peel, fome whole
pepper, a bay-leaf, and a fmall handful of fait. Boil your fifh
in this, and ferve it in the following fauce : melt a pound of
butter, diffolve an anchovy in it, put in a blade or two of mace,
bruife the body of a crab in the butter, a few fhrimps or craw-
fifli, a ittle catchup, a little lemon-juice*, give it a boil, drain
your fifh well, and lay it in your dilh. Garnifh with fried oyf-
ters, flicecl lemon, and feraped horfe radilli; pour your fauce
into boats or bafons. So you may fry it, ragoo it, or bake it,
Glajfey 187. Mnjony 218.
Another way.
Boli the fturgeon in juft as much liquid as will do between
boiling and hewing; put to this fome broth, butter, a little vi-
negar and white wine, all forts of fweet herbs, bits of carrots,
flices of onions, whole pepper, and fait, according to the bignefs
of the fifh. If a whole one, when properly cleaned, ftufF it
with all forts of fweet herbs chopped, pepper and fait, all mixed
with good butter, and ferve upon a napkin garnifhed with green
OF BOILING.
parfley. Serve what fau-ce you think proper in boats, fuch as
anchovies, capers, &c. Clermont 364. ,
To boil MackreL
Make a fauce with half a pint of white wine, feme weak
broth, fweet herbs, bits of roots, dices of onions, pepper and
fa.lt; boil thefe together about an hour then boil the filh there-
;
in, and ferve with a fauce made of butter, a little flour, fome
fealded chopped fennel, one fhallot chopped very fine, a little of
the boiling liquid, and a lemon fqueeze when ready. C/er-
montj 382,
Another way.
Gut your mackrel, and dry them carefully with a clean cloth,
then rub them /lightly over with a little vinegar, and lay them
ftraight on your fifh-plate (for turning them round often breaks
them); put a little fait in the water when it boils put them in-
;
to your fifh-pan, and boil them gently fifteen minutes, then take
them up and drain them well, and put the water that runs from
them into a fauce-pan, with two tea-fpoonfuls of lemon-pickle,
one meat-fpoonful of walnut catchup, the fame of browning,
a blade or two of mace, one anchovy, a dice of lemon boil them
;
Let your water boil, throw feme fait in, then put in your fifh;
boil it till you think it is enough, and take it our of the water in
a dice to drain. Take two fpoonfuls of the liquor, with a little
fait, and a little grated nutmeg then beat up the yolk of an
;
ec;g very well with the liquor, and ftir in the egg; beat it well
together, with a knife carefully dice away all the little bones
round the fifh, pour the fauce over it, then fet it over a chafing-
difh of coals for a minute, and fend it hot away. Or, in the
room of this fauce, add melted butter in a cup.
Another way.
Put on a ftew-pan, with water fufHcient to cover the quantity
of flounders, &c. which are to be deeded put in fome vinegar
;
and horfe-radifh. When the water boils, put in the fidi, but
let them be well cleaned, and their dns cut off; do not let them
boil too fad, led they break. When they are enough, lay them
on a dfh-plate, the tails in the middle. Sauce—pardey and
butter. Dabs are boiled in the fame manner. Mafon 248. ,
To boil Soals.
Take a pair of foals, make them clean, lay them in vinegar,
OF BOILING. 29
fait, and water, two hours; then dry them in a cloth, put them
into a flew-pan, put to them a pint of white wine, a bundle of
Tweet herbs, an onion fluck with fix cloves, fome whole pepper,
and a little fait; cover them, and let them boil. When they
are enough, take them up, lay them in your difli, drain the li-
quor, and thicken it up with butter and flour Pour the fauce
over, and garnifh with feraped horfe-radifh and lemon. In this
manner dreTs a little turbot. It is a genteel difli for Tapper.
You may add prawns, or fhrimps, or muflels to your fauce.
Glajfey 189.
Another way.
Take two or three pair of middling foals; when they arc
fkinned and gutted, wafli them in fpring-water, then put them
on a difh, and pour half a pint of white wine over them turn
;
them two or three times in it, and pour it away then cut off
;
the heads and tails of the foals, and fet on a flew-pan, with a
little rich fifh-broth; put in an onion cut to pieces, a bunch of
fweet herbs, pepper, fait, and a blade of mace. When this
boils, put in the foals, and with them half a lemon, cut in flices
with the peel on; let them flmmer flowly, then take out the
fweet herbs, and put in a pint of flrong white wine, and a piece
of butter rol'ed in flour; let them all flmmer together till the
foals are enough.
While the fifh are doing, put in half a pint of veal gravy, and
a quarter of a pint of efTence of ham; let it boil a little, take
up the foals, and pour this over it. Ma/on, 224.
Soals, in the common way, fhould be boiled in fait and water.
Mafony 224.
Another way.
Take three quarts of fpring water, and a handful of fait; let
them boil; then put in your loals; boil them gently for ten mi-
nutes, then difh them up in a clean napkin, with anchovy-fauce,
or fhrimp-fauce in boats.
To boil Herrings.
Scale, gut, and wafh your herrings dry them dean, and rub
;
them over with a little vinegar and fait; fkewer them with their
tails in their mouths, and lay them on your fifh-plate. When,
your water boils, put them in, they will take ten or twelve mi-
nutes boiling. When you take them up, drain them over the
water, then turn the heads into the middle of your difh. Lay
round them feraped horfe-radifh, parfley and butter for fauce.
Raffald, 30.
Another way.
The properefl time for boiling herrings, is when they cotnc
before and at the beginning of the mackrel feafon; they are by
OF BOILING.
many people reckoned better than when full of roe l the flefh Is
much poorer than at this feafon, when their breeding time is
over, and they have had time to feed and recover their flefh
Clean half a dozen herrings, and throw them into a pan of
cold water, (fir them about, and change the water once fet on
;
lour, add a little broth, cullis, a pint of white wine, one dozen
and an half of fmall onions firfl blanched, a few mufhrooms, a
faggot of parfley and fweet herbs, three cloves, whole pepper
and fait j (few this until the onions are near done, then put the
eels to it, cut in pieces; flew on a fmart fire, reduce the fauce
to a proper confidence; when ready, add a chopped anchovy,
and a few whole capers, Garnifli the difh with fried bread.'
Dalrymple t 278,
3i
much to thicken it. After you have put them in, do not dir
them with a fpoon, nor fet your pan on the fire, for fear it
Ihould gather at the bottom, and be lumpy but hold your pan
;
at a proper height from the fire, and keep (baking it round one
way, which will keep the fauce from curdling; and be particu-
larly cautious that you do not differ it to boil. Remember to
take out your collops, meat, or whatever you are drefling, with
a fifh-flicc, and drain your fauce upon it, which will prevent
imall bits of meat mixing with your fauce, and thereby have it
clear and fine. In browning dilhes, be particularly cautious
that no fat floats on the top of the gravy, which will be the cafe-
if you do not properly (kim it. It (hould be of a fine bro>vn,
without any one predominant tade, which mud depend on the
judicious proportion in the mixture of your various articles of in-
gredients. If you make ufe of wine, or anchovy, take off its
rawnefs by putting it in fome time before your dilh is ready; for
nothing injures the reputation of a made-difh fo much as raw
wine, or frefh anchovy. Be furc to put your fried forced-meat
balls to drain on a fieve, that the fat may run from them, and
never let them boil in your fauce, as that will (often them, and
give them a greafy appearance!. To put them in after the meat
is difhed up, is indifputably the bed method. In almod every
xnade-didi, you may ufe force-meat balls, morels, truffles, arti-
choke-bottoms, and pickled muflirooms and in feveral made-
;
deep brown, pour in a little of the wine, and dir it well toge-
ther then add more wine, and keep dirfing it all the time; put
,
and even, put the meat into a pot juft large enough to hold it,
With a gill of vinegar, two large onions, a bunch of fweet herbs,
half a pint of red wine, and fome lemon-peel. Cover it down
Very clofe, and put a wet doth round the edge of the pot, to
prevent the fteam evaporating; when it is half done, turn it,
and cover it up again do it over a ftove, or a very flow fire.
;
123.
Beef A-la-mode another way.
Having boned a rump of beef, lard the top with bacon, and
make the following force-meat:—Take four ounces of marrow,
the crumb of a penny loaf, a few Tweet herbs chopped fmall,
two heads of garlick, and feafon them to your tafle with fall,
pepper, and nutmeg; then beat up the yolks of four eggs.
Mix all together, and fluff it into the beef at the parts from
whence the bone was extracted, and alfo in feveral of the lean
parts. Skewer it round, and fallen it properly with a firing.
Put it into the pot, throw in a pint of red wine, and tie the pot
down with a ftrong paper. Put it into the oven for three or four
hours, and when it comes out, if it is to be eaten hot, fkim the
fat from the gravy, and add a fpoonful of pickled mufhrooms,
and half an ounce of morels. Thicken it with flour and butter,
difli it up, and pour on your gravy. Garnifh it with force-
meat balls. Farley, pi.
Another way.
Cut fome of the round of beef into pieces, lard and fry them,
put to them fome beef broth, a bunch of fweet herbs, an onion,
a feW pepper corns and cloves j flew this gently till tender, co-
vered clofe, then fkim off the fat, and add a few mufhrooms.—
N. B. Water may be ufed inftead of broth. Mafon y 123.
Beef A~la-dauhe.
Take a rump and bone it, or a part of the leg-of-mutton
piece, or a piece of the buttock j cut feme fat bacon, as long as
MADE DISHES OF BEEF. 33
the beef is thick, and about a quarter of an inch fquare; take
eight cloves, four blades of mace, a little all-fpice, and half a
nutmeg beat very fine; chop a good handful of parfley fine, fome
fweet herbs of all forts chopped fine, and fome pepper and fait;
roll the bacon in thefe, and then take a large larding-pin, or a
fmall-bladed knife, and put the bacon through and through the
beef with a larding-pin or knife. When that is done, pour it
into the ftew-pan with brown gravy enough to cover. Chop
three blades of garlick very fine, and put in fome frefh mufh-
rooms or champignons, two large onions, and a carrot: flew it
gently for fix hours; then take the meat out, drain oft' the gravy,
and Ikim all the fat off. Put your meat and gravy into the pan
again put a gill of white wine into the gravy, and if it wants
;
feafoning, feafon with pepper and fait; ftew them gently for
half an hour; add fome artichoke bottoms, truffles and morels,
•oyfters, and a fpoonful of vinegar. Put the meat into a foup-
difli, and the fauce over it; or you may put turnips out in
round pieces, and carrots cut round, fome fmall onions, and
thicken the fauce; then put the meat in, and ftew it gently
for half an hour with a gill of white wine. Some like favoys
or cabbage ftewed, and put into the fauce. Glafs, 36. Far-
ley, 91.
Beef Fremblant, or Trembling Beef
J
'
o y
.
A rump of beef is the beft for this; but it muft be vaftly cut
and trimmed cut the edge of the edge-bone off qnite clofe to
;
the meat, that it may lay Hat in your difh; and if it is large,
cut it at the chump-end fo as to make it fquare; hang it up for
three or four days, or more, without fait; prepare a marinade*,
and leave it all night in foak, fillet it two or three times acrofs,
and put it into a pot, the fat uppermoft; put in as much wa-
fer as will a little more than cover it, take care to fkim it well,
and feafon as you would for a good broth, adding about a pint of
white wine; let it fimmer for as long a time as it will hang to-
gether. There are many fauces for this piece of meat, parti-
cularly carrots, herbs, &c. minced. Your carrots fhould be
cut an inch long, and boiled a little in water, and afterwards
flowed in fome cullis proportionate to your meat. When they
are done tender, difh in a glafs of white wine, a little minced
fhallot and parfley, and the juice of a lemon; take your beef out
upon a cloth, clean it neatly from its fat and liquor, place it
hot and whole in your dilh, and pour your fauce hot over it.
Stew fome minced parfley over it, it looks prettier. Ver-
raly 59.
Another way.
Take the fat end of a brifket of beef, and tie it up clofewith
*
A pickle.
MADE DISHES OF BEEF.
packthread put It in a pot of water, and boil it fix hours very
;
fon with pepper and fait, fkim all the fat clean off, put the
beef in the difh, and pour the fauce all over. Garnifh with
pickle of any fort, or make a fauce thus :—Chop a handful of
parfley, one onion, four pickled cucumbers, one walnut, and a
gill of capers ■, put them in a pint of good gravy, and thicken it
with a little butter rolled in flour, and feafon it with pepper and
fait boil it up for ten minutes, and then put it over the beef;
*,
or you may put the beef in a difh, and put greens and carrots
round it. GlaJJe 33 Farley, 93.
, .
Beef A-la-roynl.
Bone a rump, flrloin, or brifket, and cut feme hole's In it at
a little diftance from each other fill the holes, one with chop-
;
ped oyflers, another with fat bacon, and the other with chopped
parfley j dip each of thefe, before the beef is fluffed, into a fea-
foning made with fait, pepper, beaten mace, nutmeg, grated
lemon-peel, fweet-marjoram, and thyme j put a piece of butter
into a frying-pan, and when it has done hilling, put in the beef,
make it of a fine brown, then put it into fome broth made of
bones, with a bay-leaf, a pint of red wine, two anchovies, and
a quarter of a pint of fmall beer ;cover it clofe, and let it flew
till it is tender j then take out the beef, fkim off the fat, and
ftrain the gravy add two ox-palates ftewed tender and cut into
;
Beef Olives.
Cnt fteaksfrom therump, or infide of the firloin, half an inch
thick, about lix inches long, and four or five broad, beat them a
little, and rub them over with the yolk of an egg j ftrew on
bread crumbs, parfley chopped, lemon-peel Hired, pepper and
fait, chopped luet or marrow, and grated nutmeg roll them
;
or favoy, tied up, and fiewed with it for an hour, fqueeze the fat
and liquor well from them, and put them into a ftew-pan with a
ladle or two of cullis; add a little fhallot, minced parfley, and
the juice of a lemon; take out your beef upon a cloth to drain
it wellj difh it up with your cabbage round it, cut it in notches
acrofs, and pour your fauce over it very hot.
This is fometimes ferved to table with lettuce, tops of afpa •
A Fricando ofBeef
Cut a few flices ofbeef five or fix inches long, and half an inch
thick, lard it with bacon, dredge it well with flour, and fet it be-
fore a briik fire to brown; then put it in a tolling pan, with a
quart of gravy, a few morels and truffles, half a lemon, and flew
them half an hour then add one fpoonful of catchup, the fame
;
Another way.
Take a piece or pieces of beef, of what bignefs you pleafc ;
when your meat is tender, and your fauce quite rich, lay the
meat into a difh, and pour the fauce over it. You may add a
fweet-bread cut in lix pieces, a palate Hewed tender cut into
little pieces, fome cocks’-combs, and a few forced-meat balls.
Thefe are a great addition, but it will be good without.
Note—For variety, when the beef is ready, and the gravy put
to it, add a large bunch of celery, cut fmall and wafhed clean,
two fpoonfuls of catchup, and a glafs of red wine. Omit all
•the other ingredients. When the meat and celery are tender,
and the fauce is rich and good, ferve it up. It is alfo very good
this way:—take fix large cucumbers, fcoop out the feeds, pare
them, cut them into flices, and do them juft as you do the celery.
Glnjfe, 33.
To Jlew a Rump of Beef.
Half roaft your beef, then put it in a large faucepan or caul-
dron, with two quarts of water, and one of red wine, two or
three blades of mace, a fhallot, one fpoonful of lemon-pickle,
two of walnut-catchup, the fame of browning. Chyan pepper
and fait to your tafce let it hew over a gentle fire, clofe co-
;
vered, for two hours, then take up your beef, and lay it in a
deep difh, ikim off the fat, and ftrain the gravy, and put in one
ounce of morels, and half a pint of mufhrooms thicken your
;
gravy, and pour it over your beefj lay round it force-meat balls.
Garnilh with horfe-radifb, and ferve it up. Rajfaldy 114.
Another way.
Having boiled it till it is little more than half enough, take it
MADE DISHES OF BEEF. 37
up, and peel off the (kin
; take fait, pepper, beaten mace, grated
nutmeg, a handful of parfley, a little thyme, winter favory,
fweet marjoram, all chopped line and mixed, and ftuff them in.
great holes in the fat and lean, the reft fpread over it, with the.
yolks of two eggs; fave the gravy that runs out, put to it a
pint of claret, and put the meat in a deep pan pour the liquor
;
in, cover it clofe, and let it bake two hours; then put it into
the difh, Brain the liquor through a fieve, and fkim off the
fat very clean; then pour it over the meat, and fend it to
table.
Rump an Ragout,
Cut the meat from the bone, flour and fry it, pour over it i.
little boiling water, and about a pint of fmall beer add a carrot
;
and juß fimmer it up. Or the celery may be omitted, and the
ragoo enriched by adding mufhrooms frefh or pickled, arti-
choke-bottoms boiled and quartered, and hard yolks of eggs.
N. B. A piece of flank, or any piece that can be cut free from
bone, will do inflead of the rump. Majbn 125. ,
Rump of Beeffmohed.
Bone a rump of beef as well as poffible without fpoiling the
(liape fait it with a pound of fait, and two ounces of falt-petre;
;
again, and (kewer it clofe, and paper it well. When roafted, take
old the fat, and dilli up the firloin; pour over it a fauce made
of a little red wine, a (ballot, one anchovy, two or three dices,
of horfe-raddidi, and ferve it up. Rajj'ald t 11 a.
38 MADE DISHES OF BEEF.
Another way.
When it is quite roafted, take it up, and lay it in the difli with
the infide uppermost; with a fharp knife lift up the fkin, hack
and cut out the infide very fine, fhake a little pepper and fait over
it, with two fhallots, cover it with the Ikin, and fend it to table.
You may add red wine or vinegar, juft; as you like.
To hroil Beef Steaks.
Cut your fteaks off a rump of beef about half an inch thick,
let your fire be clear, rub your gridiron well with beef-fuet;
when it is hot, lay them on, let them broil till they begin to
brown, turn them, and when the other fide is brown, lay them
on a hot difh, with a flice of butter between each fteak; fprinklc
a little pepper and fait over them, let them ftand two or three
minutes, then flice a fhallot (as thin as poflible) into a fpoonful of
water, lay on your fteaks again, keep them turning till they are
enough, put them on your difli, pour the lhallot and water
amongft them, and fend them to table. Farley 49. ,
Another way.
Firft have a very clear brifk fire let your gridiron be very
:
clean put it on the fire, and take a chafing-difh with a few hot
;
coals out of the fire. Put the difli on it which is to lay your
fteaks on, then take fine rump fteaks about half an inch thick ;
put a little pepper and fait on them, lay them on the gridiron,
and (if you like it) take a fhallot or two, or a fine onion, and cut
it fine put it into your difli. Keep turning your fteaks quick
;
till they are done, for that keeps the gravy in them. When the
fteaks are enough, take them carefully off into your difh, that
none of the gravy be loft; then have ready a hot difh and
cover, and carry them hot to the table with the cover on. You
may fend fhallots in a plate, chopped fine.
If you love pickles or horfe radifh with fteaks, never garnifh
your difh, becaufe the garnifhing will be dry, and the fteaks will
be cold, but lay thofe things on little plates, and carry to table.
—The great nicety is to have them hot, and full of gravy.
GlaJJe 7.
i
To fry Beef Steaks.
Take fome fteaks, cut out of the middle of the rump, fry
them in butter j when they are done, put a little fmall beer into
the pan, if not bitter, the gravy which runs from the fteaks, a
little nutmeg, a fhallot, fome walnut-catchup, and a piece of
butter rolled in flour 5 fhake it round the pan till it boils, and
pour it over the fteaks. Some ftewed oyfters may be added, or
pickled mufhrooms. Mafon , 127.
Another way.
Cut year fteaks as for broiling, put them into a ftew pan with
MADE DISHES OF BEEF. 39
a good lump of butter, fet them over a very flow fire, keep
turning them till the butter is become a thick white gravy, pour
it into a bafon, and pour more butter to them When they are
almofl enough, pour all the gravy into your bafon, and put more
butter into your pan, fry them a light brown over a quick fire.
Take them out of the pan, put them in a hot pewter difh, llice a
ihallot among them, put a little in your gravy that was drawn
from them, and pour it hot upon them. 1 think this is the befit
way of drefling beef-fleaks. Half a pound of butter will drefis
a large dilh. Raff aid, 7 1.
Another way.
Take rump-lleaks, pepper and fait them, and fry them In a
little butter, very quick and brown then put them into a difh,
:
and pour the fat out of the frying-pan. Take half a pint of hot
gravy, half a pint ofhot water, and put it into the pan. Add
to it a little butter rolled in flour, a little pepper and fait, and
two or three {ballots chopped fine. Boil them up in your pan
for two minutes, and pour it over the lleaks. You may garnifh
with a little feraped horfe-radifh round your difh. Barley 54,,
Another way.
Take rump-fteaks, pepper and fait them, lay them in a fiew-
pan, pour in half a pint of water, a blade or two of mace, two
or three cloves, a little bundle of fweet herbs, an anchovy, a
piece of butter rolled in flour, a glafs of white wine, and an
onion*, cover them clofe, and let them ftew foftly till they are
tender; then take out the {leaks, flour them, fry them in frefia
butter, and pour away all the fat; llrain the fauce they were
flewed in, and pour intp the pan; tofs it all up together till the
fauce is quite hot and thick. If you add a quarter of a pint
of oyfiers it will make it the better. Lay the {leaks into
the difh, and pour the fauce oyer them. Garnifh with any
pickle you like.
Beef Steaks rolled.
Take fome beef {leaks, what quantity is wanted, beat them
with a cleaver to make them tender make fome force meat
*,
fkewer them tight, put them into the frying-pan, and fry them
of a nice brown; then take them from the fat, and put them
into a ftew-pan with a pint of good drawn gravy, a fpoonful of
red wine, two of catchup, a few pickled mufhrooms, and let
them ftew for an quarter of an hour take up the fteaks, cut
;
them in two, lay the cut ftdc uppermoft. Garnifh with lemon.
Mafon, 128. Gaffe, 40.
N. B. Before you put the force-meat into the beef, you are
to ftir it'all together over a flow fire for eight or ten minutes.
Glajfe 40.
,
nefs, put a flice or two of bacon at the bottom, lay in your beef,
and cover it with the fame to feafon, put in an onion or two,
;
nutmeg, pepper and fait roll it up very clofe, and bind it hard
; ;
pot with a pint of water, lay over the caul of veal to keep it
from fcorching, tie it down with ftrong paper, and fend it to the
oven. When it comes out, Ikim off the fat, and ftrain your
gravy into a faucepan; add to it two fpoonfuls of red wine,
the fame of browning, one of mufhroom catchup, half a lemon.
-MADE DISHES OF BEEF. 4j
thicken it with a lump of butter rolled in flour, difh up the
meat, and pour the gravy on the difh lay round force-meat
;
finews and fat, and put them into a fauce-pan with a few fpoon-
fuls of the gravy, a little red wine, a fmall piece of butter roil-
ed in flour, and fome muftard; fhake your fauce-pan often,
and when the fauce is hot and thick, difh it up, and fend it to
table. Mafon y 121 •
Bouille Beef.
Take the thick end of abrificet of beef, put it Into a kettle of
water quite covered over j let it boil faft for two hours, then,
keep hewing it clofe by the fire for fix hours more, and as the
water waftes, fill up thekettle ; put in with the beeffame tur-
nips cut into little balls, carrots, and fome celery cut in pieces;
an hour before It is done, take out as much broth as will fill
your foup-difh, and boil in it for that hour turnips and carrots
cut out in balls, or in little fquarc pieces, with fome celery, fait
and pepper to your tafte, ferve it up in two difhes, the beef by
itl'clf, and the foup by itfidf. You may put pieces of frled bread,
42 MADE DISHES OF BEEF.
if you like it, in your foup; boil in a few knots of greens; and
if you think your foup will not be rich enough, you mav add a
pound or two of fried mutton chops to your broth when you
take it from the beef, and let it flew for that hour in the broth;
but be fure to take out the mutton when you fend it to the
table. The foup muft be very clear. Raff aid, 113.
Beef in Epigram.
Roafl a firloin of beef, take it off the fpit, then raife the
fkin carefully off, and cut the lean parts of the beef out, but
obferve not to cut near the ends or fldes. Hafh the meat in the
following manner ;—cut it into pieces about as big as a crown
piece, put half a pint of gravy into a tofs-pan, an onion chop-
ped fine, two fpoonfuls of catchup, feme pepper and fait, fix.
fmall pickled cucumbers cut in thin Bices, and the gravy that
comes from the beef; a little butter rolled in flour; put the
meat in, and tofs it up for five minutes, put it on the firloin,
and then put the fkin over and fend it to table. Garnifh with
horfe raddifh.
You may do the infide inflead of the outfide if you pleafe.
GlaJJey 34. Mafony 126. Farley 95. ,
Fo roajl Ox Palates,
Having boiled your palates tender, blanch them, cut them
into flices about two inches long, lard half with bacon then;
a fpit and roail them; then beat,up the yolks of three eggs,
fome nutmeg, a little fait, and crumbs of bread: bafle them
with thefe all the time they are roafling, and have ready two
fweetbreads, each cut in two, fome artichoke bottoms cut into
four and fried, and then rub the difh with fhallots; lay the
birds in the middle, piled upon one another, and lay the other
things all feparate by themfelves round about in the difh.
Have ready for fauce a pint of good gravy, a quarter of a pint
of red wine, an anchovy, the oyfter liquor, a piece of butter
rolled in flour; boil all thefe together, and pour into the difh,
with a little juice of lemon- Garnifh your difh with lemon,
GlnJJcy 44. Farley y 37, from Glafle. MafoUy 134.
Fo Jleao Ox Palates.
Wafh four ox-palatcs in fevcral waters, and then ’ay them in
MADE DISHES OF BEEF. 43
warm water for half an hour, thenwafh them out and put them
in a pot, and tie them down with ftrong paper, and fend them
to the oven with as much water as will cover them, or boil them
till tender then fkin them and cut them in pieces half an inch
*
broad, and three inches long, and put them in a tofling-pan with
a pint of veal gravy, one fpoonful of Madeira wine, the fame
of catchup and browning, one quion Buck with cloves, and a
dice of lemon flew them half an hour, then take out the
*,
gnion and lemon, thicken your fauce, and pqt them in a dilh ;
To broil Ox Palates,
Boil in water as many palates as you pleafe; peel them, and
foak them in faint menoult, which is thus :—put in a ftew-pan
a little butter rolled in flour, fait and pepper, two fhallots, a
clove of garlick, two cloves, parfley, a laurel-leaf, thyme, with
as much milk as will fimmer your palates till tender j then take
them out, and bade them with yolks of eggs and bread crumbs ;
broil them flowly, and ferye them with a fharp fauce. Dal-
rynpfe, 56.
To ragoo Ox Palates.
Take four ox-palates, and boil them very tender, clean them
well, cut fome in fquare pieces, and fome long. Make a rich
cooley thus:—put a piece of butter in your ftew-pan, and melt
it; put a large fpoonful of flour to it, ftir it well till it is fmooth,
then put a quart of good gravy to it; chop three fhallots, and
put in a gill of Lifbon; cut fome lean ham very fine and put in,
alfo half a lemon boil them twenty minutes, then ftrain it
;
through a fteve, put it into your pan, and the palates, with fome
force-meat balls, truffles, and morels, pickled or frefti mufh-
rooms ftewed in grayy; feafon with pepper and fait to
liking, and tofs them up five or fix minutes, then difh them up
Garnifh \yith lemon or beet-root. Glafe, 44.
sHces ofFillet of Beef with clear Gravy and Rocambole.
A pound of meat is enough for this difh. Cut it into bits
about an inch thick, and flat it down with your knife, or a light
cleaver it is better than flicing make it very thin, and jag it
; ;
with the back of your knife crofs and crofs; rub a large ftew-
pan with butter, a little green onion and parfley minced, fry
your beef brifldy for two or three minutes, tolling it that it
may be done on both Tides j take it out into a fmall ftew-pan,
and pour in a ladle of nice gravy, a little pepper, fait, a morfel
of lhallot and parfley boil it but a moment. When dinner is
•,
Waffi a large bullock’s heart clean, and cut off the deaf ears,
and fluffit with fome force-meat, as you do a hare lay a caul
;
roafled take the wine out of the dripping-pan, Ikim off the fat
and add a glafs more of wine. When it is hot put in fome
lumps of red currant jelly and pour it in the difh. Serve it up
and fend in red currant jelly cut in flices on a faucet. Rpjj'ald .
118.
To roajl a Bullock's Heart.
Mix bread-crumbs, chopped fuet (or a bit of butter) parfley
chopped, fweet marjoram, lemon-peel grated, pepper, fait, and
nutmeg, with a yolk of an egg; fluff the heart, and bake or
roafl it. Serve it with gravy, a little red wine in it, melted
butter, and currant jelly in boats. Some lard it with bacon,
Mafon, 135.
Cold Roajl Beef marinaded.
Cut flices of cold roaft beef, and make a marinade with a
little oil, parfley, chibbol, mufhrooms, a trifle of garlic, and
three (ballots, all finely chopped, pepper and fait foak it along
;
with the beef about half an hour make as much of the ma-
;
then put dices of cold beef to it; boil for a moment; when
ready, add a liafon made of three yolks of eggs and a little vine-
gar. Cold beef is alfo very good with cold fauce made of chop-
ped parfley, (ballots, vinegar, oil, muftard, minced anchovy. See.
Clermont, 68.
To male Collops of Cold Beef.
If you Have any cold iufidc of a firloin of beef, take off all the
fat, cut it very thin in little bits, cut an onion very fmall, boil
as much water or gravy as you think will do for fauce feafon •,
Sauce.
Scald a frefh tongue and peel it, lard it with large pieces of
bacon, boil it in the ftock pot, or in broth, with a little fait and
3 nofegay; fplit it, but not quite in two; make a fauce with,
parfley, fliallots, capers, anchovies, all very finely chopped, a
little vinegar, a few crumbs of bread or rafpings, a little cullis
and broth, a little fait and pepper boil all together a little, then
;
■cover the end with a veal caul, or buttered paper, roaft it, bafte
it with butter, and difh it up. Have for fauce good gravy, a
little melted butter, the juice of an orange or lemon, and fome
grated nutmeg boil it up, and pour it into the difh.
;
to the tongues, with lome lalt and fiiced lemon clofe them up.
;
then lay a caul in the bottom of your difh, and fpread upon it
part of your preparation, then the tongue, then the fame as be-
fore on the tongue roll it up in the caul, and garnilh it with
:
bread crumbs put it in the oven to bake, and take a good co-
;
lour; clean the difh free from fat, and ferve it under a fauce
made with cullis, jelly, broth, and lemon. Clermont 53. ,
when enough, have a good gravy in the difh, and fweet fauce in
a cup.
N. B. For variety, you may lard the udder. Glajfe 43. Far-
,
ley, 96.
To pot Neats’ 'Tongues.
Take a neat’s tongue, and rub it with an ounce of faltpetrc
and four ounces of brown fugar, and let it lie two days then ;
boil it till it is quite tender, and take otx the fkin and fide bits,
then cut the tongue in very thin fiices, and beat it in a marble
mortar, with one pound of clarified butter, mace, pepper and
fait to your tafte beat it exceeding fine, then put it clofe down
;
into fmall potting pots, and pour clarified butter over them,
Raffald 296.
,
render, ftrain the fauce if not thick enough, mix a little more
;
Another way.
Halfroaft a bread: of veal, then bone it, and put it into a tof-
ftng-pan with a quart of veal gravy, one ounce of morels, the
fame of truffles ftew it till tender; and juft before you
*,
Boil the Iweet-bread, and cut it very fmall, fome grated bread, a
little beef fuet, two eggs, a little cream, fome nutmeg, fait and
pepper; mix it well together, and fluff the thin part of the
breaff with feme of it, the reft make up into little balls ;
Ikewer the Ikin clofe down, flour and boil it in a cloth in milk
and water; make fome gravy of the ends that were cut off,
with half a pint of oyfters, the juice of a lemon, and a piece of
MADE DISHES OF VEAL. 49
butter rolled in flour; when the veal is enough, put it in the
difli. Garnifli with the balls ftewed, and pour the fauce over it.
Breaf ofVealfenved with Peas or Afparagus.
Cut it into pieces about three inches in fize, fry it nicely;
mix a little flour with fome beef broth, an onion, two or three
cloves; flew this fome time, ftrain it, add three pints or two
quarts of peas, or fome heads of afparagus like peas put in ;
all over of a fine light brown, and then have ready a tea-kettle
of water boiling; pour it in the ftew-pan, fill it up, and ftir it
round; throw in a pint of green peas, a fine lettuce whole,
clean waflied, two or three blades of mace, a little whole pep-
per tied in a muflin rag, a little bundle of fweet herbs, a fmall
onion ftuck with a few cloves, and a little fait. Cover it dole,
and let it flew one hour, or till it is boiled to your palate, if you
would have foup made of it; if you would only have fauce to
eat with the veal, you muft flew it till there is juft as much as
you would have for fauce, and feafon it with fait to your palate;
take out the onion, fweet herbs, and fpice, and pour it all toge-
ther into your difli. It is a fine difli. If you have no peas,
pare three or four cucumbers, fcoop out the pulp, and cut it into
little pieces, and take four or five heads of celery, clean waflied,
and cut the white part fmall; when you have no lettuces, take
the little hearts of favoys, or the little young fprouts that
grow on the old cabbage ftalks, about as big as the top of your
thumb.
,N. B. If you would make a very fine difli of It, fill the in-
fide of your lettuce with force-meat, and tie the top clofe with
a thread ; flew it till there is but juft enough for fauce; fet the
lettuce in the middle, and the veal round, and pour the fauce
over it. Garnifli your difli with rafped bread, made into
figures with your fingers. This is the cheapeft way of drefling
a breaft of veal to be good, and ferve a number of people.
Glafe, 29. Mafon, 142.
To collar a Breaft of Veal,
Take the fineft breaft of veal, bone it, and rub It over with
the yolks of two eggs, and ftrew over it fome crumbs of bread,
a little grated
lemon, a little pepper and fait, a handful of
chopped parfley, roll it up tight, and bind it hard with twine 5
wrap it in a cloth, and boil it one hour and an half j then take
it up to cool. When a Ijttle cold, take off the cloth, and clip
off the twine carefully, left you open the veal; cut it in five
MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
flices, lay them on a difh with the fweetbread boiled and cut Jrt
thin flices and laid round them, with ten or twelve force-meat
balls i pour over your white fauce, and garnifh with barberries
or green pickles.
The white fauce mud be made thus: —take a pint of good
veal gravy, put to it a fpoonful of lemon pickle, half an anchovy,
a tea-fpoonful of mufhroom powder, or a few pickled mufh-
rooms give it a gentle boil; then put in half a pint of cream,
:
the yolks of two eggs beat fine fliake it over the fire after the
;
eggs and cream are in, but do not let boil, it will curdle the
cream. It is proper for a top difh at night, or a fide difh for
dinner. Raffald, 91.
The Grijlles of a Breajl of Veal ivith a White Sauce.
About the half of a breaft of veal will do for this fmall difh;
take off all the upper part, and cut the griftles in fmall bits,
blanch them, and put into a ftew-pan to a ladle of broth flew ;
it very tender, and put a bit of butter mixed with flour, a bunch
of onions and parfley, a blade of mace, pepper, and fait. For
your fauce, you may prepare either peas or afparagus make a ;
liaion and juft before you ferve, pour it in j add the juice of
;
and alfo the gridiron, and fet it over a fire of charcoal put in
•,
in white wine, with the yolks of egss beat up with two or three
fpoonfuls of cream.
Neck of Veal and Jharp Sauce.
Make a marinade with butter and a little flour, fliced onions,
roots, and a little coriander-feed, one clove of garlick, three fpice
cloves, thyme, laurel, bafil, pepper, and fait; warm it, and put
in it a larded neck of veal; let it lie in a marinade about two
hours, then wrap it in buttered paper, and road it, and ferve
with a poivrade or fharp fauce. Dalrymple 102.,
Made dishes of veal. 51
Neck of Veal Jlenued.
Lard it •with large pieces of bacon rolled in pepper and fait,
(ballots and fpices; braze it with dices of lard, diced roots,
onions, a laurel leaf, broth, and a little brandy; Ikim and dft
the fauce, and ferve it on the meat. Clermont 108. ,
Take the bed end, lard it with bacon rolled in pardey chop-
ped, pepper, fait, and nutmeg; put it into a dew-pan, and
cover it with water ■, put in the ferag-end, with a little lean
bacon, or a bit of ham, an onion, two carrots, fome fhallots, a
head or two of celery, and a little Madeira; let thefe dew
gently for two hours, or till tender; drain the liquor, mix a
little butter with fome dour, dir it in a dew-pan till it is brown
;
lay in the veal, the upward dde to the bottom of the pan, let it
do a few minutes till it is coloured, lay it in the dilh, dir in
fome more liquor, boil it up, and fqueeze in orange or lemon,
juice. Mafony 141.
Neck of Veal d-la-rcyal
.
Take a neck of veal, and cut off the fcrag-end, and part of
the chine-bone, in order to make it lie flat in the di(h. Then
chop very fine a little parfley and thyme, a few (ballots and
nrufhrooms, and feafon with pepper and fait. Cut middling
fized lards of bacon, and roll them in the herbs and feafoning.
Lard the lean part of the neck, put it in a ftew-pan with fomc
lean bacon, or the (hank of a ham; and the and
fcrag cut in pieces, with a little beaten mace, a head of celery,
onions, and three or four carrots. Pour in as much water as
will cover it, (hut the pan clofe, and (lew it (lowly two or three
hours, till it is tender. Then drain half a pint of the liquor
through a fieve, fet it over a dove, let it boil, and keep during
it till it is of a good brown; but take care not to let it boil.
Then add more of the liquor, drain off the fat, and keep it
dirring till it becomes thick and of a fine brown. Then take
the veal out of the dew-pan, wipe it clean, and put the larded
fide down upon the glaze fet it five or fix minutes over a
;
gentle fire to take the glaze, and then lay it in the di(h with
the glazed fide upwards. Put into the fame dew pan as much
flour as will lie on a fixpence, dir it about well, and add fome
MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
of the braze powder if any be left. Let it boil till It is of a
proper thicknefs, drain it, and pour it into the bottom of the
difli. Squeeze in a little lemon juice, and fend it to table.
Farley y 98.
Bombarded Veal .
You mud get a fillet of veal cut out of it five lean pieces,
;
gravy, and (lew it gently till it is enough ikim off the fat, put
;
Mafon y 148.
Bombarded Veal another way.
Cut the bone nicely out of a fillet, make a force-meat of the
crumbs of a penny loaf, half a pound of fat bacon feraped, a
little lemon-peel, or lemon thyme, parfley, two or three fprigs
of fweet marjoram, one anchovy chop them all very well,
;
mix all up together with an egg and a little cream, and fill up
the place where the bone came out with the force-meat then;
cut the fillet acrofs, in cuts about one inch from another, all
round the fillet; fill one nick with force-meat, a fecond with
boiling fpinnach, that is boiled and well fqueezed, a third with
bread crumbs, chopped oyftcrs, and beef marrow, then force-
meat, and fill them up, as above, all round the fillet, wrap the
caul clofe round it, and put it in a deep pot with a pint of
water; make a coarfe pafte to lay over it, to keep the oven
from giving it a fiery tafte; when it comes out of the oven,
ikim off the fat, and put the gravy in a ftew-pan, with a fpoon-
ful of lemon-pickle, and another of mufhroom catchup, two of
browning, half an ounce of morels and truffles, five boiled ar-
MADE DISHES OF VEAL. 53
tichoke bottoms cut in quarters; thicken the fauce with flour
and butter, give it a gentle boil, and pour it upon the veal into
your difli. Rajfald 93. ,
till tender, then add one fpoonful of white wine, one of brown-
ing, one of catchup, a tea fpoonful of lemon-pickle, a little caper
liquor, half an ounce of morels; thicken with flour and butter,
and lay round if a few yolks of eggs.
Leg of Veal marinated.
Provide a nice leg of white veal and marinate it; roaft it
with four flices of bacon over it, covered with paper; take four
or five heads of endive, cut into bits about an inch in length,
blanch it a little, and flew it in a little gravy mixed with a la-
dle of cullis ; put a minced fhallot and fome parfley, fqueeze in
the juice of a lemon, and ferve it up with the fauce under it.
Make ufe of capers, olives, or any fort of pickles for a change.
Yerraly 67.
Leg of Veal with white Sauce,
Lard a leg of veal with large pieces of bacon, let it foak
twelve hours in marinade made after this manner piece of
butter and flour, a quart of milk, two lemons peeled and fliced,
flx fhallots, two cloves of garlick, lix onions fliced, eight cloves,
three laurel leaves, thyme and parfley, whole pepper and fait.
Warm the marinade, and put into a pot much about the bignefs
of the veal wipe it dry before fpitting. and cover it with flices
*,
It is larded and brazed with all forts of roots and fpices re-
;
duce the fauce to a jelly, and ferve it with it, either hot or cold,
Dalrymple, 104.
A Leg of Veal in Difguife.
Lard the veal with (lips of bacon, and a little lemon-peel cut
very thin make a huffing as for a fillet of veal, only mix with
;
take it up, and fldm off the fat; fqueeze feme juice of lemon,
fome muffiroom catchup, the crumb of a roll grated fine, and
half a pint of oyfters, with a pint of cream, and a piece of
butter rolled in flour. Let the fauce thicken upon the fire,
put the veal in the diffi, and pour the fauce over it. Ganaifh
with oyfters dipped in butter and fried, and with thin likes of
toafted bacon. Mafon 143.,
take it up, cut the bacon into flices, and have ready fome dried
fage and pepper rubbed fine; rub over the bacon, lay the veal
in the diffi and the bacon round it, ftrew it all over with fried
parfley, and have green fauce in cups made thus:—take two
handfuls of forrel, pound it in a mortar and fqueeze out the
juice; put it into a faucepan with fome melted butter, a little
fugar, and the juice of a lemon. Or you may make it thus:—
beat two handfuls of forrel in a mortar, with two pippins quar-
tered, fqueeze the juice out, with the juice of a lemon, or vine-*
gar, and fweeten it with fugar. Glaffe 56, ,
bottom four clean wooden fkewers, wafh and clean the knuckle
very well, then lay it in the pot with two or three blades of
mace, a little whole pepper, a little piece of thyme, a finall
onion, a cruft of bread, and two quarts of water. Cover it
down clofe, make it boil, then only let it limmer for two hours,
and when it is enough, take it up, lay it in a diffi, and ftrain the
broth over it.
Leg or Knuckle of V°al and Spinach.
It is larded and brazed with all forts of roots, and fpices as
ufual, and ferved upon ftewed fpinach it is the garden fluff
;
them, and lay them in a marinade, fpit them tight upon a lark
fpit, and tie them .to another, with a dice of bacon upon each,
and covered with pepper; when ahnoft done, take that off",
and pour a drop of butter upon them, with a few crumbs of
bread, and roaft them of a nice coldur; take two bunches of
afparagus, and boil them, not fo much as when boiled to cat
with butter; difh up your fweetbreads and your grafs between
them, take a little cuilis and gravy, with a jot of fhallot and
minced parfley; boil it a few minutes, fqueeze in the juice of a
femon or orange, and ferve it up. Vtrral 161.
,
it into your difh lay in your fweetbreads, and lay over them
;
little good gravy with flour; add catchup, a little grated lemon-
peel, pepper, fait, and nutmeg boil it up with a few pickled
;
a bit of flannel, put them into a ftew-pan together, and let them
flew gently for half an hour in a ladle of cullis; but put no
gravy, for the rnufhrooms will produce fome liquor take a ;
Sweetbreads d-la-dauh.
Take three of the largefl: and finefl: fweetbreads you can
get, put them in a fauce-pan of boiling water for five minutes,
then take them out, and when they are cold, lard them with a
row down the middle, with very little pieces of bacon, then a
row on each fide with lemon-peel, cut the fize of wheat ftrawi
then a row on each fide of pickled cucumbers, cut very fine;
put them in a tolling pan, with good veal gravy* a little juice
of lemon, a fpoonful of browning; ftew them gently a quarter
of an hour; a little before they are ready, thicken them with
flour and butter, dilh them up, and pour the gravy over, lay
round them bunches of boiled celery, or oyfter patties. Garnifh
with Hewed fpinach, greemcoloured parfley, flick a bunch of
barberries in the middle of each fweetbread. It is a pretty
forner dilh for either dinner or flipper. Raff aid 98. ,
Tofry Sweetbreads,
Cut them in long flices, beat up the yolk of an egg, and rub
it over them with a feather; make a feafoning of pepper, fait,
and grated bread dip them into it, and fry them in butter.
;
little pepper and fait, fome lemon-peel fhred fine, the yolks of
three eggs, a fpoonful of catchup, and thicken it with a little
butter rolled in flour give it a fhake or two over the fire, and
;
put it into the loin, and then pull the fkin over. If the fkin
fhould not quite cover it, give it a brown with a hot iron, or
put it into an oven for a quarter of an hour. Send it up hot,
and garnifh with barberries and lemon. Majon 144. Glajfe>
,
56. Farley 10 6.
,
MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
Veal d-la-Bourgeofe ,
Lard Tome pretty thick flices with bacon, and feafon them
with pepper, fait, beaten mace, cloves, nutmeg, and chopped
parfley then cover the ftew-pan with flices of fat bacon, lay
;
the veal upon them, cover it, and fet it over a very flow fire
for eight or ten minutes, fo as to be juft hot, and no more ;
then brifk up your fire, and brown your veal on both fides ;
then fhake fome flour over it and brown it. Pour in a quart
of good broth or gravy, cover it clofe, and let it ftew gently till
it is enough then take out the flices of bacon, and fkim all
;
the fat off clean, and beat up the yolks of three eggs with fome
of the gravy. Mix all together, and keep it ftirring one way
till it is fmooth and thick then take it up, lay your meat
;
in the dilh, pour the fauce over it, and garnifh with lemon.
A Fricando of Veal.
Cut fteaks half an inch thick, and fix inches long, out of the
thick part of'a leg of veal, lard them with fmall cardoons, and
duft them with flour; put them before the fire to broil a fine
brown,then put them intoalarge tofling-pan with aquart of good
gravy, and let it ftew half an hour then put in two tea-fpoon-
;
and put two quarts of water, half a pint of white wine, a blade
or two of mace, a bundle of fweet herbs, an anchovy, two
fpoonfuls of walnut and mufhroom catchup, the fame quantity
oflemon pickle, a little fait and pepper lay a coarfe pafte over
;
it to keep in the fleam, and put it for two hours and an half
into a iharp oven. When you take it out, lay the head in a
foup difh, Ikim of the fat from the gravy, and ftrain it through
a fieve into a flew-pan; thicken it with butter rolled in flour,
and when it has boiled a few minutes, put in the yolks of four
eggs well beaten, and mixed with half a pint of cream; have
ready boiled fome force-meat balls half an ounce of truffles and
morels, but don’t put them into the gravy pour the gravy ;
A*lother id ay.
Drefs off the hair of a large calf’s head, as directed in the
ipock turtle then take a
; knife, and raife off the
ff in, with as much of the meat from the bones as you can pof-
hbly get, that it may appear like a whole head when it is huffed,
and be careful you do not cut the fkin in holes; then fcrapea
pound of fat bacon, the crumb of two penny loaves, grate a
fmall nutmeg with fait, chyan pepper, and fhred lemon-peel to
your tafte, the yolks of fix eggs well beat; mix all up into a
rich force-meat, put a little into the ears, and huff the head
with the remainder have ready a deep narrow pot that it will
;
juft go in, with two quarts of water, half a pint of white wine,
two fpponfuls of lemon pickle, the fame of walnut and mufii-
room catchup, one anchovy, a blade or two of mace, a bundle
of fweet herbs, a little fait and chyan peper lay a coarfe paftc
;
over it to keep in the fream, and fet it in a very quick oven two
hours and an half. When you take it out, lay your head in a
foup difti, Ikim the fat clean off the gravy, and ftrain it through
a hair fieve into a tofling-pan ;thicken it with a lump of butter
rolled in flour. When it has boiled a few minutes, put in the
yolks of fix eggs well beat, and mixed with half a pint of cream;
but do not let it boil, it will curdle the eggs. You muft have
ready boiled a few force-meat balls, half an ounce of truffles and
morels, it would make the gravy too dark a colour to ftew them
in it; pour your gravy over your head, and garnifii with the
truffles, morels, force-meat balls, mufhrooms, and barberries,
?nd ferve it up. This is a hand.ome top-difli at a fmall expence.
Rqffald, 88.
60 MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
Calfs Head boiled.
Wafh it very clean, parboil one half, beat up the yolk of an
egg, and rub it over the head with a feather, then ftrew over it a
feafoning of pepper, fait, thyme, parfley chopped final!, flared
lemon-peel, grated bread, and a little nutmeg j ftick bits of
butter over it, and fend it to the oven*, boil the other half white
in a cloth, put them both into a difh boil the brains in a bit
;
Hew then make a ragoo with a quart of good beef gravy, and
*,
half a pint of red wine 5 let the wine be well boiled in the,
gravy add to it fome fweetbreads parboiled and cut in flices,
*,
let thefe ftew till they are tender. When the head is ftewed,
take it up, put it into a difh, take out the brains, the eyes, and
the bones; then flit the tongue, cut it into fmall pieces, cut the
eyes in pieces alio, and chop the brains put thefe into a
*,
baking-difh, and pour fome of the ragoo over them j then take
the head, lay it upon the ragoo, pour the reft over it, and on
that fome melted butter j then ferape fome fine Parmefan
cheefe, ftrew it over the butter, and fend it to the oven. It
does not want much baking, but only requires to he of a fine
brown. Mafon, 154.
and mix all together with the yolks of four eggs; fave enough
of this meat to make about twenty balls, take half a pint of
MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
frefh mufhrddms clean peeled and wafhed, the yolks of fix
eggs chopped, half a pint of oyfters clean wafhed, or pickled
cockles; mix ail thefe together, but firft ftew your oyfters,
put your force-meat into the head and clofe it, tie it tight with
a packthread, and put it into a deep ftew-pan and put to it
;
the brains that are not fried, ftew them together for a minute
or two, pour it over the head, and lay the fried brains and balls
round it. Garnifh with lemon. You may fry about twelve
oyfters and put over. GlaJJe 55.,
put them into hot water, it will make them fkin fooner, and
beat them fine inabafon; then add to them two eggs, one
fpoonful of flour, a bit of lemon-peel fhred fine chop fmall
;
a little parfley, thyme, and fage beat them very well together,
;
ftrew in a little pepper and fait, then drop them in little cakes
62 MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
into a pan full of boiling hog’s lard, and fry them a light
brown then lay them on a fieve to drain take your halh out
; ;
of the pan with a fifh-flice, and lay it on your diffl, and ftrain
your gravy over it; lay upon it a few mufhrooms, force-meat
balls, the yolks of four eggs boiled hard, and the brain-cakes.
Garnifh with lemon and pickles. It is proper for a top or fide-
diffl. Raffald, 86. Farley 64. ,
and the tongue flour it pretty well, and put it into a ftew-pan
;
hour, then add fome catchup, a few truffles and morels, firft
waffled; pickled or ffeffl mufhrooms; if freffl, a little juice of
lemon ftew thefe together a few minutes add force-meat
; ;
balls fried, and hard yolks of eggs. Dip the brains in hot
water, fkim them, beat them fine, and mix them with a little
grated lemon-peel, parfley chopped, and favoury herbs, favoury
Ipice, chyan, fait, bread-crumbs, and yolk of egg fry thefe in
;
finall cakes; garnifh the haffl with them, oyfters fried, and
fiiced lemon. If for a arge company, boil the other half ofthe
head, rub it over with yolk of egg, ftretv on bread-crumbs, with
pepper, fait, and nutmeg, grated lemon-peel, and chopped
parfley bafte it before the fire, let it be a nice brown, and lay
;
it on the haffl.
To hnjh a Calf s Head white.
Take half a pint of gravy, a gill of white wine, a little beaten
mace, a little nutmeg, and a little fait throw into your halh a
;
and a little lemon juice, or lemon juice only. This may be en-
riched with truffles and morels parboiled, force-meat balls, and
hard eggs. Mafan, 155.
MADE DISHES OF VEAL 63
To drefs a Calf ’s Head the beji way.
Take a calf’s head with the fk'n on, and fcald off all the hair
and clean it very well cut in two, take out the brains, boil the
;
head very white and tender, take one part quite off the bone,
and cut it into nice pieces with the tongue, dredge it with a
little flour, and let it flew on a flow fire for about half an hour
in rich white gravy, made of veal, mutton, and a piece, of
bacon, feafoned with pepper, fait, onion, and a very little mace;
it muff be ftrained off before the hafh is put in it, thicken it
with a little butter rolled in flour the other part of the head
;
mull be taken off in one whole piece, fluff' it with nice force-
meat, and roll it like a collar, and flew it tender in gravy; then
put it in the middle of a difh, and the hafh all round. Garnifh
it with force meat balls, fried oyfters, and the brains made into
little cakes dipped in rich butter and fried. You may add
wine, morels, truffles, or what you pleafe, to make it good and
rich. Raff aid, 86.
To grill a Calfs Head.
Wafh your calf’s head clean, and boil it almoft enough, thdn
take it up and hafh one half, the other half rub over with the
yolk of an egg, a little pepper and fait; ftrew over it bread-
crumbs, parfley chopped fmall, and a little grated lemon peel;
fet it before the fire, and keep bailing it all the time to make the
froth rife. When it is a fine light brown, difh up your hafh,
and lay the grilled fide upon it.
Blanch your tongue, flit it down the middle, and lay it on a
foup plate flein the brains, boil them with a little fage and
;
parfley chop them fine, and mix them with fome melted
;
them over the tongue ferve them up, and they are fauce for
;
the head.
To collar a Calffs Head to eat like Brawn.
Take the head with the fkin and hair on, fcald it till the hair
will come off, then cleave it down, and take out the brains and
the eyes wafh it very clean and put it into a pot of clean wa-
;
ter boil it till the bones will come out; then flice the tongue
;
and ears, and lay them all even throw a handful of fait over
;
hours; when the head is cold, put it into brawn pickle. Ma-
fjny 155.
Veal Palates.
Provide about two palates, and boil them half an hour take
;
off the Ikins, and cut them into pieces, as you do ox-palates;
put them into a ftew-p m with a glafs of Champagne, a little
minced green onion, parfley, pepper and fait; tofs it often till
the wine is gone, pour in a ladle of your cullis mixed with.
64 MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
gravy, flew themfoftly in It till very tender, dafh in a fmall glafa
more of your wine, add the juice of a lemon or orange, and
fend it up. Verraly 122.
Calf's Ears with Lettuce,
Six ears will do; flew them very tender in a braze, and your
lettuce may be done thus —take as many as you have ears, and
:
blanch them in water, open the leaves, and put into each a bit
of the middling bacon, with a clove or two ftuck in each ;
clofe the leaves over, and bind with pack-thread put them into
;
der, take your cars out, and clear them from greafe, and put
them to your ears add the juice of a lemon, and ferve them
;
up. Take care your lettuces are preferred whole, and laid
between the ears. Lambs ears may be done the fame. FVr-
taly 123.
Calf’s Ears fried.
Braze the ears in a ftrong braze to make them tender, and
make a batter thus:—take a handful of flour, put into a bowl
or ftew-pan, add one egg, and a little fait; mix with as much
fmall beer as will make it of a proper conliftence, then add
about a table-fpoonful of fine oil; when well mixed, put the ears
to it; have ready a ftew-pan with hog’s-lard properly hot, put
in the ears one by one, with as much of the butter as will ftick
to them; fry of a fine colour, and ferve them with fried parfley ;
half an hour; add pepper and fait, and vinegar to your tahe.
If you would have it white, make a liafon of yolks of eggs and
cream, with lemon or verjuice. Dalrymple 86. ,
pint of milk, and feven or eight new-laid eggs; beat them to-
gether, boil them, but do not let them curdle, fhred a pound of
fuet as fmall as you can, half melt it in a pan, and pour it into
your egg and cream; then pour it into your liver, then mix all
well together, feafon it with pepper, fait, nutmeg, and a little
thyme, and let it (land till it is cold; fpread a caul over the bot-
tom and fides of the ftew-pan, and put in your haftied liver and
cream together; fold it up in the caul in the fflape of a calf’s
liver, then turn it upfide down carefully, lay it in a dilh that
66 MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
•yvill bear the oven, and do it over with beaten egg; dredge it
with grated bread, and bake it an oven. Serve it up hot for a
firfl courfe. Glajfe, 94.
To drefs a Calf’s Pluck.
Boil the lights and part of the liver; roaft the heart huffed
with fuet, fweet herbs, and a little parfley, all chopped fmall,
a few crumbs of bread, fome pepper, fait, nutmeg, and a little
lemon-peel; mix it up with the yolk of an egg.
When the lights and liver are boiled, chop them very fmall,
and put them in a faucepan, with a piece of butter rolled in
Hour, fome pepper and fait, with a little lemon or vinegar, if
agreeable; fry the other part of the liver as before-mentioned,
with fome little pieces of bacon; lay the mince at the bottom,
the heart in the middle, and the fried liver and bacon round,
with fome crifped parfley. For fauce—plain butter. It is a
large difh, but it may eafily be diminifhed. Cole, 84.
Calf’s Feet withforce-meat.
Bone them, and fill them with force-meat, made of whatever
you pleafe; tie them in flices of lard, flew them flowly in broth
and white wine, a faggot of fweet herbs, a few cloves, roots,
and onions. When done, ferve with what fauce you pleafe.
Dairytriple, 89.
Calf’s Feet with lemon-fauce.
Take calve’s feet, plain boiled, put them In a ftew-pan with
a little oil or butter, half a lemon, peeled and fliced, and as
much broth or cullis as will fimmer them on a flow fire for
about half an hour; take them out and wipe them, lift the
fauce, fkim it well, add a little butler rolled in flour, a little
cullis, a chopped anchovy, and the juice of half a lemon.
Clermont, 94.
Ragoo of Calves Feet,
Boil the feet, bone and cut the meat in flices; brown them
in the frying-pan, and then put them in fome good gravy, with
morels, truffles, pickled mufhrooms, the yolks of four eggs
boiled hard, fome fait, and a little butter rolled in flour. For
a tick perfon, a calf’s foot boiled, with parfley and butter, is
efteemed very good. Cole 84.
,
kh 55*
Another way.
Cut part of the neck into cutlets fhorten them, fry them
;
nicely brown, flew them in fome good gravy till tender, with
a little flour mixed fmooth in it; then add catchup, chyan,
fait, a few truffles and morels, pickled mufhrooms* Force-
meat balls may likewife be added. Mafon 147.
Veal Cutlets in Ragoo.
Take fome large cutlets from the fillet, beat them flat; and
lard them; flrew Over them fome pepper, fait, crumbs of
bread, and fhred parfley; then make a ragoo of veal fweet-
breads and mufhrooms; fry the cutlets in melted butter of a
fine brown then lay them in a hot difh, and pour the ragoo
;
them, and take off the little bloody fibres, cut into two pieces
each, and foak them in a marinade of white wine and vinegar,
&c. for an hour; boil your rice in water a few minutes, ftrain
jt off, and flew it in broth till it is tender, with a little fait and
a bit of mace; difh up the brains, and pour fome of the fauce
to the rice; fqueeze in a lemon or orange, and pour over for
ferving to table.
When you procure two or three pair of eyes, they make an
excellent difh done in the manner of doing the fweetbreads.
Vernal, 127.
Veal Griftles and Green Peas.
Cut the griftles of a breaft of veal in pieces; fcald them,
if you would have them white; flew them in broth with a few
flices of lard, half a lemon peeled and fliced, whole pepper
and fait, and a faggot of fweet herbs; when done, wipe them
clean, and ferve the ftewed peas upon them. You may alfo,
when the meat is about a quarter done, take it out of the braze,
and put it in a ftew-pan with the peas, a little butter, parfley,
a little winter-favoury, a flice of ham, and a few cabbage let-
tuces cut fmall; add a little cullis and flour; reduce the fauce
pretty thick; fait only a little before you ferve. Dalrynu
pie, 92.
To drefs Scotch Collops white.
Cut them off the thick part of a leg of veal, the fize and
thicknefs of a crown piece, put a lump of butter into a tof«
ling-pan, and fet it over a flow fire, or it will difcolour your
collops; before the pan is hot, lay the collops in, and keep
turning them over till you fee the butter is turned to a thick
white gravy, put your collops and gravy into a pot, and fet
them upon the hearth, to keep warm; put cold butter again
into your pan every time you fill it, and fry them as above,
and fo continue till you have finiflied. When you have fried
them, pour your gravy from them into your pan, with a tea-
fpoonful of lemon-pickle, mufliroom-catchup, caper liquor,
beaten mace, chyan pepper, and fait; thicken with flour and
butter. When it has well boiled, put in the yolks of two eggs
well beat and mixed, with a tea-fpoonful of rich cream keep ;
{baking your pan over the fire till yqur gravy looks of a fine
MADE DISHES OF VEAL. 69
thicknefs, then put in your collops, and fliake them; when
they are quite hot, put them on your difli, with force-meat
balls, ftrew over them pickled mulhrooms. Garnhh with bar-
berries and pickled kidney beans. Raffaid 9b.
,
Another way.
Cut the veal the fame as above diredled, throw the collops
into a ftew-pan, put fome boiling water over them, and ftir
them about; then ftrain them oft', take a pint of good veal
broth, and thicken it; add a bundle of fweet herbs with fome
mace; put fvveetbread, force-meat balls, and frefh mufhrooms;
if no frefli to be had, ufe pickled ones wafhed in warm water;
ftew them about them fifteen minutes, add the yolks of two
eggs and a pint of cream; beat them well together with fome
nut-meg grated, and keep ftirring it till it boils up; add the
juice of a quarter of a lemon, then put it in your difli. Gar-
nifli with lemon. Glaffe 22.
,
thicken it with flour and butter, let it boil five or fix minutes,
then put in your collops, and fhake them over the fire; if they
boil, it will make them hard. When they have fimmered a
little, take them out with an egg fpoon, and lay them on your
difli, ftrain your gravy, and pour it hot on them; lay over
them force-meat balls, and little flices of bacon curled round a
fkewer and boiled; throw a few mufhrooms over. Garnifh
with lemon and barberries, and ferve them up. Cole 88.
,
Another way.
Take a piece of fillet of veal, cut it in thin pieces about as
large as a crown piece, but very thin fhake a little flour over
;
it, then put a little butter in a frying-pan, and melt it; put in
your collops, and fry them quick till they are brown, then lay
them in a difli. Have ready a good ragoo made thus:—take
a little butter in your ftew-pan, and melt it, then add a large
fpoonful of flour, ftir it about till it is fmooth, then put in a
pint of good brown gravy; feafon It with pepper and fait, pour
in a fmall glafs of white wine, fome veal fwcetbreads, force-
MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
meat balls, truffles and morels, ox-palates, and mufflrooms j
ftew them gently for half an hour, add the juice of half a lemon
to it; put it over the collops, and garnifh with rafhers ofbacon.
Some like the Scotch collops made thus:—put the collops into
the ragoo, and ftew them for five minutes. Cole 88. ,
To hajh Veal.
Cut your veal into round thin flices, of the fize of half a
crown, and put them into a fauce-pan with a little gravy; put
to it fome lemon-peel cut exceedingly fine, and a tea fpoonful
of lemon-pickle; put it on the fire, and thicken it with butter
and flour; put in your veal as foon as it boils, and juft before
you difla it up, put in a fpoonful of cream, and lay fippets
round the difh, Farley 66.
N. B. The fame receipt as the preceding, though conveyed
in language fomewhat different, is to be found in Mrs .Rajfald's
Experienced Englilh Houfekeeper, page 73.
To tofs up cold Veal white.
Cut the veal into little thin bits, put milk enough to it for
fauce, grate in a little nutmeg, a very little fait, a little piece
of butter rolled in flour; to half a pint of milk, the yolks of
two eggs well beat, a fpoonful of mufhroom pickle, ftlr all to-
gether till it is thick, then pour it into your difla, and garnifh
with lemon.
Cold fowl, Ikinned and done this way, eats well; or the
heft end of a cold breaft of veal; firft fry it, drain it from the
fat, then pour this fauce to it. Glajfe 119.
To fry cold Veal.
Cut your veal into pieces of the thicknefs of an half-crown,
and as long as you pleafe; dip them in the yolk of an egg,
and then in crumbs of bread, with a few fweet herbs and flared
lemon-peel in it; grate a little nutmeg over them, and fry them
hi frefli butter. The butter mud be hot, juft enough to fry
MADE DISHES OF VEAL. 71
them in. In the mean time, make a little gravy of the bone
of the veal, and when the meat is fried, take it out with a
fork, and lay it in a difh before the fire. Then fhake a little
flour into the pan, and ftir it round. Then put in a little
gravy, fqueeze in a little lemon, and pour it over the veal.
Garnilh with lemon. Cole, 90.
To mince Veal.
Cut your veal In flices, then cut it in little fquare bits, but
do not chop it; put it into a fauce-pan, with two or three
fpoonfuls of gravy, a flice of lemon, a little pepper and fait,
a good lump of butter rolled in flour, a tea-fpoonful of lemon-
pickle, and a large fpoonful of cream; keep fhaking it over the
fire till it boils, but do not let it boil above a minute; if you
do, it will make your meat eat hard: put fippets round your
dilh, and ferve it up. Raff aid, 73. Farley, 66.
Calf's Chitterlings.
Clean fome of the largefl of the calf’s guts, cut them into
lengths proper for puddings, tie one of the ends clofe, take
fome bacon, and cut it like dice, and a calf’s udder, and fat
that comes off the chitterlings; chaldrons blanched and cut
alfo; put them into a ftew-pan, with a bay-leaf, fait, pepper,
fhallot cut fmall, fome pounded mace, and Jamaica pepper, with
half a pint or more of milk, and let it juft fimmer; then take
off the pan, and thicken it with four or five yolks of eggs, and
fome crumbs of bread fill the chitterlings with this mixture,
;
which muft be kept warm, and make the links like hogs’-pud-
dings. Before they are fent to table they muft be boiled over
a moderate fire; let them cool in their own liquor. They
ferve in fummer when hogs’-puddings are not to be had,
Mafon, 159.
Veal Steaks, Venetian faffion.
Cut thick flices of veal pretty large; marinade an hour in a
little oil, with chopped parfley, fhallots, mufhrooms, fweet herbs,
pepper and fait; make as much of the marinade ftick to them
as poflible roll them in bread crumbs, and boil flowly, bailing
;
Cut thin flices of veal, and between every two put a flice of
ham of the fame fize, firft dipped in eggs, chopped parfley,
fhallots, mufhrooms, truffles, and a little pepper 5, roll them in
flices of lard, and flew flowly with a little broth and white wine;
when done take off the bacon, Ikim and flrain the fauce, add a
little butter and flour, and ferve with a relifhing fauce. In-
ftead of bacon you may bafte them with eggs and bread crumbs.
72 MADE DISHES OF VEAL.
and fry or bake them. Serve with a fauce as above, and gaiv
nifh with parfley. Clermont 116.,
then put them into a fauce-pan, and ftir all together till it boils.
Let it boll a few minutes. Have ready a large flannel bag, pour
it in, it will run through quick; pour it in again till it runs
clear; then have ready a large China bafon, with the lemon-
peel cut as thin as poffible; let the jelly run into that bafon,
and the peels both give it a fine amber colour, and alfo a fla-
vour; with a clean iilver fpoon fill your glafles. Glafe 295. ,
Farley 320.
,
Another way.
To two calf’s feet, put three quarts of water, boil It to one
quart; when cold, take off the fat, and take the jelly from the
fediment; put to it one pint of white wine, half a pound of
fugar, the juice of three lemons, the peel of one. Whiflc the
whites of two eggs, put all into a fauce-pan, boil it a few mi-
nutes put it through a jelly bag till it is fine. Co/c, 91.
;
TAKE a hind quarter of mutton, and cut the leg in the fhape
of a haunch of venifon fave the blood of the fheep,
*,
and fteep it for five or fix hours then take it out, and roll it
;
and cut the upper part crofs-ways, into which you fluff butter
and bread-crumbs, feafoned with pepper, fait, and fweet herbs
chopped then put it in a ftew-pan, with a little of the broth,
;
and a little white wine finiih it, and add the juice of a Seville
;
mixed up with raw eggs; ftufF the mutton under the fkin
in the thickeft part, under the flap, and at the knuckle. For
fauce —fome oyfter-liquor, a little red wine, an anchovy, and
fome more oyfters ftewed, and laid under the mutton. Le
flaiirey 74,
76 MADE DISHES OF MUTTON.
Another way.
Cut feveral holes in the mutton, beard fome oyflers, and roll
them in crumbs of bread and nutmeg; put three oyflers into
each hole if it is roafled, cover it with a caul; but if it is
;
boiled, put it in a cloth, and pour oyfler-fauce over it. Cole 95.
,
and a large glafs of red wine fill up the fkin with the force-
;
meat, but leave the bone and fhank in their place, and it will
appear like a whole leg; lay it on an earthen difh, with a pint
of red wine under it, and fend it to the oven it will take two
;
hours and an half. When it comes out, take off all the fat,
firain the gravy over the mutton, lay round it hard yolks of
eggs, and pickled mufhrooms. Garnifh with pickles, and ferve
it up. Rajfaldy 10 6.
Split Leg of Mutton and Onion fauce.
Split the leg from the fhank to the end, flick a fkewer in to
keep the nick open, bafle it with red wine till it is half roafled,
then take the wine out of the dripping-pan, and put to it one
anchovy; fet It over the fire till the anchovy is diffolved, rub
the yolk of a hard egg in a little cold butter mix it with the
;
wine, and put it in your fauce-boat; put good onion fauce over
the leg when it is roafled, and ferve it up. Du Pont 11 6. ,
fuch a one as has been killed two or three days at leaft, thump
it well, and bind it with packthread, that you keep whole when
you take it out; put it into a pot about its bignefs, and pour in
a little of your broth, and cover it with water put in about a
;
MADE DISHES OF MUTTON. 77
dozen of Spanifh onions with the rinds on, three or four car-
rots, a turnip or two, fome parfley, and any other herbs you
like; cover down clofe, and flew it gently for three or four
hours; but take your onions after an hour’s flewing, and take
the firft and fecond rinds off; put them into a flew-pan, with
a ladle or two of your cullis, a mufhroom or two, or truffles
minced, and a little parlley; take your mutton and drain clean
from the fat and liquor, make your fauce hot and well feafon-
ed, fqueeze in a lemon, and ferve it up with the onions round
it, and pour the fauce over it. Verral 47.
,
per and fait, a little lemon-peel cut fmall, and a few fweet
herbs and crumbs of bread then lay this on the gridiron, and
;
let it be of a fine brown in the mean time take the reft of the
:
per and fait over it, and fet it in a tin oven to broil; cut the
MADE DISHES OF MUTTON.
flaps and the meat off the lhank, in thin dices, into the gravy
that runs out of the mutton, and put a little good gravy to
it, with two fpoonfuls of walnut catchup, one of browning, a
little chyan pepper, and one or two fhallots. When your meat
is tender, thicken it with flour and butter, put your meat in the
difli with the gravy, and lay the blade on the top, broiled a
dark brown. Garniih with green pickles, and ferve It up.
Raff aid) 104.
Mrs Mafon has got this receipt under the title of A Shoul-
.
((
Another way.
Mrs. Raff, 'aid has, In page 105, a receipt fomewhat fimilar
to the above, but as it differs in one or two particulars, I have
thought proper to give it in her own words. They are as fol-
low :—Score a bread: of mutton in diamonds, and rub it over
with the yolk of an egg; then ftrew on a few bread crumbs
and flared parfley, put it into a Dutch oven to broil, bafte it
with frefh butter, pour in the difli good caper fauce, and ferve
it up. Rajfald, 105.
To collar a Breaji of Mutton.
Take the fldn off and bone it, roll it up in a collar like the
breaft of veal, put a quart of milk and a quarter of a pound of
butter in the dripping-pan, and bafte it well while it is roafting.
Sauce—good gravy in the difh and in a boat, and currant jelly
in another, Le Maitre 216.
,
Mutton Kehohbed.
Take a loin of mutton and joint it between every bone fea-
;
fon it with pepper and fait moderately, grate a fmall nutmeg all
over, dip them in the yolks of three eggs, and have ready
crumbs of bread and fweet herbs dip them in, and clap them
;
A Harrico of Mutton.
Take a neck or loin of mutton, cut it into thick chops, flour
them, and fry them brown in a little butter; take them out,
and lay them to drain on a fieve, then put them into a ftew-
pan, and cover them with gravy; put in a whole onion, and a
turnip or two, and flew them till tender; then take out the
chops, ftrain the liquor through a fleve, and fkim off* all the fat;
put a little butter in the ftew-pan, and melt it with a fpoonful
of flour ftir it well till it is fmooth, then put the liquor in, and
;
ftir it well all the time you are pouring it, or it will be in lumps
;
put in your chops and a glafs of Lifbon have ready fome carrot
;
back of two chairs by the rim, have ready three fheets of brown
paper, tear each fheet into five pieces, and dfaw them through
your hand, light one piece, and hold it under the bottom of
the difh, moving the paper about; as fall as the paper burns,
light another till all is burnt, and your meat will be enough.
Fifteen minutes juft does It. Send it to table hot in the difh.
N. B. This difli was firft contrived by Mr. Rich, and is much
admired by the nobility. Glaffe.
To drefs a Neck of Mutton like Venfon.
Cut a large neck before the fhoulder is taken off, broader
than ufual, and the flap of the fhoulder with it, to make it
look handfomer flick your neck all over in little holes with a
;
fharp pen-knife, and pour a little red wine upon it, and let it
lie in the wine four or five days; turn and rub it three or four
times a day, then take it out and hang it up for three days in
the open air out of the fun, and dry it often with a cloth to
keep it from muffing; when you roaft it, bafte it with the
wine it was fteeped in, if any is left; if not, frefh wine put
;
broth, with a glafs of white wine when done fift and fkim the
;
till they come to a proper thicknefs, and put it over the meat.
Mafon 166.
,
A Bafque of Mutton.
Lay the caul of a leg of veal in a copper difli of the fize of
a {mall punch-bowl, and take the lean of a leg of mutton that
has been kept a week. Having chopped it exceedingly final!,
take half its weight in beef marrow, the crumb of a penny
loaf, the rind of half a lemon grated, half a pint of red wine,
two anchovies, and the yolks of four eggs. Mix it as you
would faufage-meat, and lay it in the caul in the infide of the
difli. Fallen the caul, bake it in a quick oven, and when it
comes out, lay your difli uplide clown, and turn the whole out.
Pour over it brown gravy pour venifon-fauce into a boat, and
;
make ufe of pickles for garnifh. Raff aid, 107. Farley, 108,
with very inconfiderable alterations.
Fillet ofMutton with Cucumbers.
Provide one large or two finall necks of mutton, cut off a
good deal of the fcrag, and the chine and fpay-bones clofe to
the ribs, tear off the fat of the great end, and flat it with your
cleaver, that it may lay neat in your difh, foak it in a marinade,
and road it wrapped up in paper well buttered. For your
fauce in the fpring and dimmer, quarter fome cucumbers
nicely, and fry them in a bit of butter, after laying in the fame
marinade, flew them in a ladle or two of your cullis, a morfel
of lhallot or green onion, pepper and fait, a little minced parf-
ley, the juice of a lemon, and ferve it. The only difference
between this and the celery-fauce is, infhead of frying your
celery, boil it very tender in a little water, or broth if you have
plenty, and flew it for a quarter of an hour. Be cautious you
do not break the cucumbers. Verral 81. ,
and fallen it with two fine Ikewers at each fide, and roll it in
well-buttered paper. It will take two hours roafting then take
;
off the paper, bafte the meat, ftrew It all over with crumbs of
bread, and when it is of a fine brown, take it up. For fauce,
take fix large fhallots, cut them very fine, put them into a
fauce-pan with two fpoonfuls of vinegar, and two of white wine j
boil them for a minute or two, pour it into the difh, and garnifh
with horfe-radifh. Glafs 47. ,
of bread all over it, and put it into the oven to brown ftrain
;
the gravy it was Hewed in, and boil it till there is juft enough
for fauce lay the mutton into a difh, pour the fauce in, and
;
ferve it up. If you have not an oven, you muft brown it before
a fire. Mafon 165,,
with the fkin well fattened, braze it (with the fkin undermofi)
with broth, and a faggot of fweet herbs when done, reduce
;
the fauce to caramel or glaze. Glaze all the upper fide. Dal-
ry mple 133.
,
MADE DISHES OF MUTTON. 83
Mutton a-la-Maintenon.
Cut fome fhort fteaks from a leg of mutton, make a force-
meat with crumbs of bread, a little fuet chopped, or a bit of
butter, lemon-peel grated, hired parhey, pepper, fait, and nut-
meg, mixed up with the yolk of an egg; pepper and fait the
fteaks, lay on the force-meat; butter fome half fheets of writing
paper, in each wrap up a fteak, twifting the paper neatly; fry
them, or do them in a Dutch oven ferve them in the paper, a
;
little gravy in the difh, and fome in a boat. Garnifti with pickles.
JLe Maitre 119.
,
all off, without cutting or tearing fcrape a little fat bacon, and
;
minute or two, and put them into a ladle or two of your culiis j
boil them a little while, and throw in fome minced parhey, the
juice of a lemon, and ferve it up. For your fauce of herbs,
prepare juft fuch matters as are fried for the firft part of it,
take a ftew-pan, with as much of your culiis as is neceffary, and
ftrew all in, and boil about half an hour very foftly j take the
paper and Ikin oft' your chine, and fend it to table with the
fauce poured over it, adding the juice of a lemon; and tafte it
to try if it is well flavoured. Verraly 49.
take them out and cut them in two, and put them into a ftew-
pan, with half a pint of good gravy, a gill of white wine, an
onion ftuck with cloves, and a little fait and ehyan pepper.
Cover them cl'ofe,. and flew them till they are tender. Take
them and the onion out, and thicken the gravy with a little
butter rolled in flour, a fpoonful of browning, and the juice
of half a lemon. Boil it up till it is fmooth, but not too
thick. Then put in your rumps, give them a top or two,
and difli them up hot. Garnifh with horfe-radifh and beet-
root. For variety, you may leave the rumps whole, and
lard fix kidnies on one fide, and do them the fame as the
rumps, only not boil them, and put the rumps in the middle
of the difli, and kidnies round them, with the fauce over
all. The kidnies make a pretty fide difli of themfelves. Par-
ley 190.
}
To haJJj Mutton,
ready fome bread toafted and cut into thin tippets, lay them
round the difli, and pour in your hath. Garnifh your difli.
with pickles and horfe-radifh.
Note.—Some love a glafs of red wine or walnut pickle. Yon
may put juft what you will into a halh. If the fippets are
toafted, it is better. Cole, 105.
Another ivay.
Cut mutton in flices, put a pint of gravy or broth into a
toffing-pan, with one fpoonful of mufhroom catchup, and one
of browning; flice in an onion, a little pepper and fait, put in
over the fire, and thicken it with flour and butter; when it
boils, put in your mutton, keep lhaking it till it is thoroughly
hot, put it into a foitp-difh, and ferve it up. Cole 106. ,
>uft enough for fauce, ftrain it, and put it into a fauce-pan,
with a piece of butter rolled in Hour; put in the meat; when
MADE DISHES OF MUTTON.
it is very hot, it is enough. Seafon with pepper and fait.
Have ready lome thin bread loaded brown, cut three-corner
ways, lay them round the difh, and pour in the halh. As to
walnut-pickle, and all forts of pickles, you mud put in ac-
cording to your fancy. Garnil! 1 with pickles. Some love a
imall onion peeled, cut very fmali, and done in the halh. Or
you may ufe made gravy, if you have not time to boil the bones.
Glajft'y 119.
Oxford John.
Tfdce a dale leg of mutton, cut it in as thin collops as you
podibly can, take out all the fat dnews, feafon them with mace,
pepper, and fait; drew among them a little Hired jlarfley,
thyme, and two or three fhallots; put a good lump of butter
into,a dew-pan. When it is hot, put in all your collops, keep
dirring .them with a wooden fpoon till they,are three parts
done, then add half a pint of gravy, a little juice of lemon,
thicken it a little with flour and butter, let them fimmer four'
or five minutes, and they will be quite enough. If you let
them boil, or have them ready before you want them, they
will grow hard. Serve them up hot, with fried bread cut in
dice, over and round them. Rajfald 10S. Farley 113,
,
,
A Hodge-podge of Mutton.
Cut a neck or loin of mutton into deaks, take off all the
fat, then put the deaks into a pitcher, with lettuce, turnips,
carrots, two cucumbers cut in quarters, four or five onions,
and pepper and fait; you mud not put any water to it, and
dop the pitcher very ;then fet it in a pan of boiling water,
let it boil four hours, keep the pan fupplied with frelh boiling
water as it wades. Cole 107.
,
Cut cutlets in the common way, and fi miner them with broth
to about three parts, with a faggot of fweet herbs reduce the
;
iauce till no more remains than what will bathe the cutlets;
garnhh them with force meat round, made of fillet of veal,
fuet, chopped parfley, fliallots, pepper and fait, and bread-
crumbs foaked in cream, all being well pounded; add three
yolks of eggs, then bafte your cutlets with eggs and bread-
MADE DISHES OF MUTTON.
crumbs; bake in the oven till of a good colour; fervc with
con-fomme fauce, gravy, &c. Clermont 133. ,
hot, rub it with frefh fuet, lay on your fteaks, keep turning
them as quick as poflible if you do not take great care, the fat
;
that drops from them will fmoak them. When they are
enough, put them into a hot difh, rub them well with butter,
flice a fhallot very thin into a fpoonful of water, pour it on
them with a fpoonful of mufhroom catchup and fait ferve ;
fix eggs well beat, and four fpoonfuls of flour beat the flour
;
and eggs together in a little milk, and then put the reft to it ;
put in fome beaten ginger and fait, pour it over the fteaks,
and fend it to table. Half an hour will bake it. Mafon 167. ,
are done, then add as many fplit tongues (being ready boiled) as
you think proper; ftew them a quarter of an hour in the
fauce; ferve all together, Garnifh the difh with fried bread.
Dalrymple 117.
,
over, add a little gravy, a glafs of white wine, with all the
feafonings. When done, take out the flices of lard, fkim
the fauce, add a little cullis, or butter rolled in flour, the juice
of half a lemon, and ferve it upon the tongues, Dalrymple ,
118.
MADE DISHES OF MUTTON. 87
Sheeps’ Tongues plain Family faffion.
Split ready boiled tongues in two; marinade In melted
butter, pepper and fait, chopped parfley, and {ballots 5 roll
them in bread-crumbs, and broil them flowly; fcrve them
with a fauce made of a fpoonful of vinegar, a bit of butter
rolled in flour and broth, grated nutmeg, and chopped {bal-
lots reduce the fauce, and ferve it under the tongues. Du
;
Pont , 11 6.
Sheeps’ Trotters of different fajhion.
When well fcalded, boil them in water till you can take
out the great bone; then fplit and clean them properly j boil
them again till they are very tender, and drefs them in what
manner you pleafe, either as a fricaflee, or with a cullis
fauce, &q. taking care to make the fauce relifhing. Clermont,
129.
Sheeps’ Trotters fried in pajle.
The trotters being firfl; brazed or ftewed, bone them with-
out cutting them roll them in good force-meat, then dip them
;
in thick batter made of flour, white wine, one egg, and a little
oil, pepper, and fait; fry them of a good colour, and garnifli
with fried parfley.
Sheeps' Trotters Afpic,
Afpic is a {harp fauce or jelly, wherein is commonly ufed
elder or tarragon vinegar, chopped parfley, {ballots, tarragon
leaves, pepper and fait, oil, muftard, lemon, any forts of cold
meat. Poultry or game may be ferved in afpic, either hot or
cold, DalrympU) \2%,
S8
BOIL too
the head and pluck tender, but do not let the liver be
much done. Take the head up, hack it crofs and
crofs with a knife, grate fome nutmeg over it, and lay it in a
di£h before a good fire then grate fome crumbs of bread, fome
;
throw a little flour over it, and juft as it is done do the fame,
bafte it and dredge it. Take half the liver, the lights, the heart
and tongue, chop them very fmall, with fix or eight fpoonfuls
of gravy or water; flrft ihake fome flour over the meat, and
ftir it together, then put in the gravy or water, a good piece of
butter rolled in a little flour, a little pepper and fait, and what
runs from the head in the difih flmmer all together a few mi-
•,
fpoonful of good cream, and juft boil it up. When your head
is boiled, rub it over with the yolk of an egg, ftrew over it
bread-crumbs, a little flared parfley, pepper, and fait; thicken it
well with butter, and brown it before the fire, or with a fala-
mander; put the purtenance on your difli, and lay the head
over it. Garnifli with lemon or pickle, and ferye it up. Pnf-
fald, 109. Parley (without any material alterations,) 113.
,
pan with a little cullis and white wine, a faggot of fweet herbs,
a little chopped fhallot, pepper and fait j cut the tongue in
dice, which you mix with the fauce j then take the brains out
of the head, and put it in the ragoo or fauce cover it over with
;
the brains cut in flices; bafte them with a little of the fauce.
MADE DISHES OF LAMB. 89
bread-crumbs, and melted butter; bake in the oven till of a
good colour; ferve with Pontiff Sauce. Dalrpnple, 166.
Tofew a Lamb's Head.
In order to ftew a lamb’s head, wafh it and pick it very
dean. Lay it in water for aq hour, take out the brains, and
with a fharp knife carefully extrad the bones and the tongue;
but be careful to avoid breaking the meat. Then take out the
eyes. Take two pounds of veal, and two pounds of beef fuet,
a very little thyme, a good piece of lemon-peel minced, a nut-
meg grated, and two anchovies. Having chopped all thefc
well together, grate two ftale rolls, and mix all with the yolks
of four eggs. Save enough of this meat to make about twenty
balls. Take half a pint of frefh mufhrooms, clean peeled and
wafhed, the yolks of fix eggs chopped, half a pint of oyflers
clean wafhed, or pickled cockles. Mix all thefe together; but
firft ftew your oyflers, and put to them two quarts of gravy,
with a blade or two of mace. Tic the head with packthread,
cover it clofe, and let it flew two hours. While this is doing,
heat up the brains with fome lernon-peel cut fine, a little chop-
ped parfley, half a nutmeg grated, and the yolk of an egg. Fry
the brains in little cakes in boiling dripping, and fry the bails,
and keep them both hot. Take half an ounce of truffles and
morels, and ftrain the gravy the head was ftewed in. Put to
it the truffles and morels, and a few mufhrooms, and boil all
together then put in the reft of the brains that are not fried,
;
and ftew them together for a minute or two. Pour this over the
head, lay the fried brains and balls round it, and garnifh with
lemon, parley, 63.
Lamb's Head Condc fajhion.
Take a lamb’s head, being done in a white braze; ferve with
a fauce made of verjuice, three yolks of eggs, pepper, fait, and
a piece of butter, fealded chopped parfley, and a little nutmeg,
if agreeable make thefe articles in a liafon without boiling,
;
Cut your leg from the loin, boil the leg three quarters of an
hour, cut the loin in handfome fteaks, beat them with a cleaver,
and fry them a good brown then ftew them a little in ftrong
;
gravy; put your leg on the difh, and lay your fteaks round it ;
cut an orange in four, and garnifh the difh, and have butter in
a cup. Some like the fpinach boiled, then drained, put into a
fauce-pan with a good piece of butter, and ftewed. Glajfey 31.
To fry a Loin ofLamh.
Cut your lamb into chops, rub it over on both fldes with the
yolk of an egg, and fprinkle fome bread crumbs, a little parfley,
thyme, marjoram, and winter favory, chopped very fine, and a
little lemon-peel chopped fine; fry it in butter of a nice
light brown, and fend it up in a difh by itfelf. Garnifh with a
good deal of fried parfley. Cole 114,,
the liquor, and take care to keep the lamb hot; ftrain oft* the
gravy, and have ready half a pint of oyfters fried brown, pour
all the fat from them, add them to the gravy, with two fpoon-
fuls of red wine, a few mufhrooms, and a bit of butter rolled
in flour boil all together, with the juice of half a lemon; lay
;
the lamb in the difh, and pour the fauce over it. Mafon 173.
,
fluff it with this under wherethe meat is raifed up, and under the
kidney. Let it be half roafled, then put it in a large ftew-pan,
with a quart of mutton gravy cover it, and let it flew very
;
it in but little boiling water, fkim it well, put in fome flour and
water well mixed, a lemon or two pared and fliced, a bit of fuet,
and a little bunch of onions and parfley; ftir it well from the
bottom, and boil it gently and thefe ingredients will make it as
white as a curd. Prepare your fpinach as for the ham with this
difference—inftead of cullis with that feafoning, put to it about
a pint of cream, a bit of butter mixed with flour, a little pepper,
fait, and nutmeg ftir it over a flow ftove till it is of a nice con-
;
into the diih, pour the gravy which comes out of them over
them, and-then the rice; beat the yolks of three eggs, and pour
all over fend it to the oven, and bake it better than half an
;
dir in a bit of butter with flour, and flew all about half an
hour. Make ready a liafon of two or three eggs and cream,
with a little minced parfley and rutmeg; put in tops of afpa-
ragus that you are to have ready boiled, and pour in your liafon,
and take care it does not curdle; add fome juice of lemon or
orange, and fend it to table. You may make ufe of peas,
young goofeberries, or kidney beans for this, and all make a
pretty dilh. Verralf 118.
To drefs a Dijh ofLambs Bits.
’
Skin the ftones and fplit them, lay them on a dry cloth with
the fweetbreads and liver, and dredge them well with flour,
and fry them in boiling lard or butter a light brown then lay
;
the difh, and the fauce over them. Garnifh with lemon, and
pickles of any fort. You may add truffles and morels, and
pickled mufhrooms, in the fauce, if you pleafe or you may do
;
few capers, the yolks of two eggs beat, with a little nutmeg and
a little fait; and to this the liquor they were fried in, and keep
ftirring it one way all the time till it is thick, then put in the
lamb, keep lhaking the pan for a minute or two, lay the fteaks
in the dilh, pour the fauce over them, and have feme parfley in
94 MADE DISHES OF LAMB.
a plate before the lire to crifp. Garnilh your dilh with that
and lemon. Glajfe 53. ,
and fait, and nutmeg; Hew it a few minutes, and dilh up the
cars upon it, nicely twilled up. Verral 119.
,
in more. When your pig is near enough, take the loaves and
fauce out of your dripping-pan, put to the fauce one anchovy
chopped fmall, a bundle of fweet herbs, and half a lemon. Boil
it a few minutes, then draw your pig, put a fmall lemon or ap-
ple in the pig’s mouth, and a leaf on each fide; ftrain your
fauce, and pour it on them boiling hot; lay barberries and dices
of lemon round it, and fend it up whole to table. It is a grand
bottom difh, It will take four hours roafting. Raff aid in. ,
Mrs. Glaffe page 67, has the above receipt, with only this
,
them one anchovy cut fmall, a bunch of fiveet herbs, and the
juice of a lemon. Take up the pig, put an apple in its mouth,
and a roll on each fide j then flrain the fauce over it.
Some barbecue a pig of fix or feven months old, and flick
blanched almonds all over it; but bafle it with Madeira in the
fame manner, Mafon, 185.
96 MADE DISHES OF PORK.
To drefs a Pig an Pere Duillet.
Cut off the head, and divide it into quarters lard them with
;
bacon, feafon them with mace, cloves, pepper, nutmeg, and fait.
Lay a layer of fat bacon at the bottom of a kettle, lay the head
in the middle, and the quarters round then put in a bay-loaf,
;
all over. Or any one of the quarters is a pretty little difh, laid
in water creffes. If you would have it hot, whilft your pig is
ftewing in the wine, take the firft gravy it was Hewed in, and
ftrain it, flcim off all the fat, then take a fwectbread cut into
jive or fix flices, fome truffles, morels, and mufhrooms flew
-,
all together till they are enough, thicken it with the yolks of
two eggs, or a piece of butter rolled in flour; and when your
pig is enough, take it out and lay it in your difh put the wine
;
it was ftewed in to the ragoo, then pour all over the pig, and
garnifh with lemon. Mafon 185. GlaJJey 66, Farley 67.
, ,
A Pig Matelot.
Gut and fcald your pig, cut off the head and pettitoes, then
cut your pig in four quarters, put them with the head and toes
into cold water; cover the bottom of a flew-pan with flices of
bacon, and place over them the faid quarters, with the pettitoes,
and the head cut in two. Seafon the whole with pepper, fait,
thyme, bay-leaf, an onion, and a bottle of white wine; lay over
more flices of bacon, put over it a quart of water, and let it
boil. Take two larga eels, fkin and gut them, and cut them
about five or fix Inches long. When your pig is half done, put
in your eels, then boil a dozen of large craw-fifh, cut off the
claws, and take oft' the fhells of the tails and when the pig and
;
eels are enough, lay firft your pig and the pettitoes round it, but
do not put in the head (it will be a pretty difh cold); then lay
your eels and craw-fifh over them, and take the liquor they
were ftewed in flcim off all the fat, then add to it half a pint
\
Collared Pig.
Kill a fine young roafting pig, drefs off the hair and draw it,
and \va£h it clean j rip it open from one end to the other, and
MADE DISHES OF PORK, &c. 97
take out all the bones; rub it all over with pepper and fait, a
little cloves and mace beaten fine, fix fage leaves and fweet
herbs chopped fmall; roll up your pig tight, and bind it with a
fillet; fill the pot you intend to boil it in with Toft water, a bunch
of fweet herbs, fome pepper-corns, fome cloves and mace, a
handful of fait, and a pint of vinegar when the liquor boils,
;
put in your pig; boil it till it is tender take it up, and when it
;
is almofl cold, bind it over again, put it into an earthen pan, and
pour the liquor your pig was boiled in over it, and always keep
it covered. When you want it, take it out of the pan, untie the
fillet as far as you want to cut it, then cut it in dices, and lay it
in your difh. Garnifh with parfley. GlaJJey 6s. Mafon, 186.
To bake a Pig.
When necefiity obliges you to bake a pig, lay It in a difh,
flour it well all over, and rub the pig over with butter. Butter
the difh in which you intend to put it, and put it in the oven.
Take it out as foon as it is enough, and having rubbed it over
with a butter cloth, put it into the oven again till it is dry j
then take it out, lay it in a difh, and cut it up. Take off the
fat from the difh it was baked in, and fome good gravy will re-
main at the bottom. Add to this a little veal gravy, with a
piece of butter rolled in flour, and boil it up; put it into the
difh, with the brains and fage in the belly. Farley 46.
A Pig in Jelly.
Cut it into quarters, and lay it into your ftew-pan put in one
;
calf’s foot, and the pig’s feet, a pint of Rhenifh wine, the juice
of four lemons, and one quart of water, three or four blades of
mace, two or three cloves, fome fait, and a very little piece of
lemon-peel; ftove it, or do it over a flow fire two hours; then
take it up, lay the pig into the dilh you intended for it, then
flrain the liquor, and when the jelly is cold, fkim off the fat,
and leave the fettling at the bottom. Beat up the whites of fix
eggs, and boil up with the jelly about ten minutes, and put it
through a bag till it is clear; then pour the jelly over the pig,
and ferve it up cold in the jelly. Glaffe 65. ,
roughly warm, then cut it off the fpit, and divide it into twenty
pieces. Set them to flew in half a pint of white wine and a pint
MADE DISHES OE PORIC, &c.
of ftrong-broth, feafon’ed with grated nutmeg, pepper, two oniofiv 1
cut fmall, and fome driped thyme. Let it flew an hour then ;
do till they are tender, then take them out and drain the li-
quor, put all together with a little fait, and a piece of butter as
big as a walnut; fhake the face-pan often, let it fimmer five or
fix minutes, then cut fome toaded fippets and lay round the
difh lay the mince-meat and fauce in the middle, and the pet-
;
titoes fplit round it. You may add the juice of half a lemon,
or a very little vinegar. Celt, 123’.
Another tv-ay.
Boil the heart, liver, and lights, a few minutes (let the feet
do till tender) flared them, take a little of the liquor they were
•,
boiled in, fome pepper, fait, and nutmeg, a little grated lemon-
peel dir in the mince with a bit of butter and flour, and give
;
it a boil up. Serve it with the feet fplit, laid on the top, and
toaded fippets. Mafon, 187.
A ragoo of Pigs’ Feet and Ears.
Having boiled the feet and ears, fplit the feet down the mid-
dle, and cut the ears in narrow dices. Dip them in butter and
fry them brown. Put a little beef gravy in a tolling-pan, with
a tea-fpoonful of lemon-pickle, a large one of muihroom catch-
up, the fame of browning, and a little filt. Thicken it with a
lump of butter rolled in flour, and put in your feet and ear s
Let them boil gently, and when they are enough, lay your feet
in the middle of the difh, and the ears round them then drain
;
your gravy, pour it over them, and g'arnilh with curled parfley.
Farley y 79'.
Another tv ay.
Take them out of the fauce, fplit them, dip them in egg, then
in bread crumbs and chopped parfley; fry them in hogs’ lard,
drain them cut the ears in long narrow flips, flour them, put
•,
them into fome good gravy; add catchup, morels, and pickled
mufhrooms dew them, pour them into the difh, and lay on
;
the feet.
Or they are very good dipped in butter and fried, eat with
melted butter and muftard. Cole, 124.
MADE DISHES OF PORK, &c. 99
To barbecue a Leg of Pork.
Lay down your leg to a good fire, put Into the dripping-pan
two bottles of red wine, bafte your pork with it all the time it
is roafling, When it is enough, take up what is left in the pan,
put to it two anchovies, the yolks of three eggs boiled hard and
pounded fine, with a quarter of a pound of butter and half a
lemon, a bunch of fweet herbs, a tea-fpoonful of lemon-pickle,
a fpoonful of catchup, and one of tarragon vinegar, or a little
tarragon Hired fmall; boil them a few minutes, then draw your
pork, and cut the fkin down from the bottom of the flank in
rows an inch broad, raife every other row, and roll it to the
fliank; ftrain your fauce, and pour it in boiling hot, lay oyfter
patties all round the pork, and fprigs of green parfley. Raf-
faldy in.
Mrs. Mafia, page 175, has nearly the fame receipt as the
above the only difference is, that flie omits the lemon-pickle
;
Cut the head clofe to the fhoulder, bone the neck part, part
the flefh from the nofe as far as the eyes, cut off the bone, lard
the inlide with bacon, feafon with pepper, fait, and fpices;
rub it all over with fait, and half an ounce of pounded falt-
petre; put it in a pickle-pan, with half a handful of juniper-
berries, fweet herbs, f x laurel-leaves, balil, eight cloves, whole
pepper, and half a handful of coriander-feed let it lie for about
;
eight days, rubbing it every day; then take it out and wipe it
dry; tie it well, boil it with three pints of red wine, and as
much water as will properly boil it, with onions, carrots, a large
faggot of fweet herbs, two cloves of gariick, four cloves, and
two pounds of hogs’ lard when near done, talle the braze.
;
MADE DISHES OF PORK, &c.
and add fait, if neceffary when it gives under the finger, it is
;
the ears round the fides, put the cheeks into a cloth, prefs them
into a fieve, or any thing round, put on a weight for two days;
have ready a pickle of fait and water, with about a pint of malt
boiled together; when cold, put in the head. Cole 126. ,
Ham d-la-braze .
Take off the fkin, clear the knuckle, and lay it in water to
frefhen. Then tie it about with a firing, and take flices of ba-
con and beef; beat and feafon them well with fpices and fweet
herbs, and lay them in the bottom of a kettle, with onions,
parfnips, and carrots fliced, with fome chives and parfley. Lay
in your ham the fat fide uppermoft, and cover it with flices of
beef, and over that with flices of bacon. Then lay on fome
fliced roots and herbs, the fame as under it. Cover it, and ftop
it clofe with pafte. Put fire both over and under it, and let it
flew twelve hours with a very flow fire. Put it into a pan,
dredge it well with grated bread, and brown it with a hot iron;
or put it into the oven, and bake it an hour. Then ferve it
upon a clean napkin. Garnilh with raw parfley. If it is to be
eaten hot, make a ragoo thus;—take a veal fweetbread, fome
livers of fowls, cocks’-combs, mufhrooms, and truffles. Tofs
them up in a pint of good gravy, feafoned with fpice to your
tafte; thicken it with a piece of butter rolled in flour, and a
glafs of red wine. Then brown your ham as above, and let it
ftand a quarter of an hour to drain the fat out. Take the li-
quor it was ftewed in, drain it, fkim off all the fat, put it into
the gravy, and boil It up with a fpoonful of browning. Some-
times you may ferve it up with carp-fauce, and fometimes with
a ragoo of craw-fiftl. Farley 135.,
Halfboil your ham or gammon, then take off the {kin, dredge
it with oatmeal lifted very fine, bafte it with frefh butter it will
;
with fome coarfe tape, and roll it round very tight; tie it up in
a cloth, boil it till it is fo tender that a ftraw may run through
it; let it be hung up in a cloth till it is quite cold, after which
put it into fome fouling liquor, and keep it for ufe.
Chine of Pork, poivrade fauce.
Salt it about three days then roaft it, and ferve with fauce-
;
poivarde. You may alfo fend Robert fauce in the fame boat.
Dalrymple , 145,
Hogs' Pails of different fajhions
.
bade with their own fat, and ftrew them over with bread-
crumbs broil of a fine colour ferve with or without fauce.
} ;
Pork Cutlets.
Skin a loin of pork, and divide it into cutlets; flrew fome
parfley and thyme cut fmall, with fome pepper, fait, and grated
bread over them boil them of a fine brown have ready fome
; ;
them over a flow fire in butter till they are done, turning them
often then lay them upon bread, put a little cullis into the
;
flew pan, give it a boiling, fkim the fat clear off, and add a lit-
tle broth and vinegar; boil a moment, and ferve upon the
toaff. The ham is prepared the fame, if you would ferve it
with poached eggs, or any fort of fiewed greens. Cole, 129.
.Chap. VIII.—MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c.
Goofe d-la-mode.
"HICK a large fine goofe clean, (kin and bone It nicely, and
JL take off the fat. Then take a dried tongue, and boil and
.peel it. Take a fowl and treat it in the fame manner as the
.goofe feafon it with pepper, faft, .and beaten mace, and roll it
;
a’ound the tongue. Seafon the goofe in the fame manner, and
put both tongue and fowl into the goofe. Put it into a little
pot that will juft hold it, with two ,quarts of beef gravy, a
bundle of fweet herbs, and an onion. Put fome flices of hum,
or good bacon, between the fowl and goofe then cover it
;
clofe, and let it flew over the fire for an hour very flowly.
Then take up your goofe, and fkim off all the fat; ffrain it,
and put in a glafs of red wine, two fpoonfuls of .catchup, a veal
fweetbread cut fmall, fome truffles, mufhrooms, and morels, a
piece of butter rolled in flour, and, if wanted, fome pepper and
fait. Put the goofe in again, cover it clofe, and let it flew half
an hour longer. Then take it up, pour the ragoo over it, and
garnilh with lemon. You muff remember tofavethe bones of
the goofe and fowl, and put them into the gravy when it is
firfl; fet on. It will be an improvement if you will roll fome
beef-marrow between the tongue and the fowl, and between
the fowl and goofe, as it will make them mellow and eat the
finer. Before we conclude this article, it may not be amifs to
obferve, that the bell method to bone a goofe or fowl of any
lort is to begin at the bread, and take out all the bones without
.cutting the back for when it is fewed up, and you come to
;
To ragoo a Goofe.
Flat the breaft down with a cleaver, then prefs it down with
your hand, fkim it, dip it into fealding water let it be cold,
;
lard it with bacon, feafon it with pepper, fait, and a little beaten
mace; then flour it all over, take a pound of good heef-fuet
cut fmall, put it into a deep ftew-pan, let it be melted, then
put in your goofe; let it be brown on both lides. When it is
brown, put in a quart of boiling gravy, an onion or two, a
bundle of fweet herbs, a bay-leaf, fome whole pepper, and a
few cloves. Cover it clofe, and let it flew foftly till it is tender.
About an hour will do, if fmall; if a large one, an hour and
an half. In the mean time make a ragoo. Boil fome turnips
alraoft enough, fome carrots and onions quite enough; cut your
turnips and carrots the fame as for a harrico of mutton, put
them into a fauce-pan with half a pint of good beef gravy, a
little pepper and fait, a piece of butter rolled in flour, and let
this flew all together a quarter of an hour. Take the goofe and
drain it well; then lay it in the difh, and pour the ragoo over
it.
Where the onion is difliked, leave it out. You may add
cabbage boiled and chopped fmall. Glajfe 85. Mafon almoft
,
Another way.
Cut your pinions in two, the neck in four pieces, flice the
gizzard, clean it well, flew them in two quarts of water, or
mutton broth, with a handful of fweet herbs, one anchovy, a
few pepper corns, three or four cloves, a fpoonful of catchup,
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, See. 105
■and an onion. "When the giblets are tender, put in a fpoonful
of good cream, thicken it with flour and butter, Terre them up
in a foup-difh, and lay fippets round it. Raffald, 57.
Giblets d-la-Turtle.
Let three pair of giblets be well cleaned and cut, as before,
put them into your ftew-pan, with four pounds of ferag of veal,
and two pounds of lean beef, covered with water; let them
boil up, and fleim them very clean then put in fix cloves, four
;
them till tender, then ftrain them through a fieve, and wafh
them clean out of the herbs in Tome warm water; then take a
piece of butter, put it in your ftew-pan, melt it, and put in as
much flour as will thicken it ftir it till it is Tmooth, then put
•,
your liquor in, and keep ftirring it all the time you pour it in,
or elfe it will go into lumps, which if it happens, you muft
ftrain it through a fieve then put in a pint of Madeira wine.
;
Tome pepper and Talt, and a' little chyan pepper j ftew it for ten
minutes, then put in your giblets; add the juice of a lemon,
and ftew them fifteen minutes then Terve them in a tureen.
;
You may put in Tome egg-balls made thus ;—rßoil fix eggs hard,
take out the yolks, put them in a mortar, and beat them; throw-
in a fpoonful of flour, and the yolk of a raw egg, beat them to-
gether till Tmooth thenroll them in little balls, and Tcald them
;
in boiling water, and juft before you Terve the giblets up, put
them in.
N. B. Never put your livers in at firft, but boil them in a
fauce-pan of water by themfelves. Glujfe, 87.
Turkey d-la-daube, to be fent up hot.
Cut the Turkey down the back, juft enough to bone It, with-
out fpoiling the look of it, then fluff it with a nice force meat,
made of oyfters chopped fine, crumbs of bread, pepper, fait,
(ballots, a very little thyme, parfley, and butter j fill it as full
as you like, and few it up with a thread, tie it up in a clean
cloth, and boil it very white, but not too much. You may
ferve it up with oyfter-fauce made good, or take the bones, with
a piece of veal, mutton, and bacon, and make a rich gravy, fea-
fbned with pepper, fait, (ballots, and a little bit of mace (train
;
turkey, cover the pan, and fet it on the fire five minutes then
;
put in much clear broth as will cover it, let it boil two hours;
when it is more than half done, put in one ounce of ifing-glafs
and a bundle of herbs. When it is done enough, take out the
turkey, and drain the jelly through a hair fieve, fkim offall the
fat, and when it is cold, lay the turkey upon it, the bread down,
and cover it with the red of the jelly. Let it ftand in fome
cold place When you ferve it up, turn it on the clifh it is to
be ferved in. If you pleafe, you may fpread butter over the
turkey’s bread, and put fome green parfley or flowers, or what
you pleafe, .and in what form you like. Cole, 133.
ToJlew a Turkey brown the nice way.
Bone it, and fill it with a force-meat thus :—Take the flefh of
a fowl, half a pound of veal, and the flefh of two pigeons, with
a well-pickled or dry tongue, peel it, and chop it all together;
then beat it in a mortar, with the marrow of a beef bone, or a
pound of the fat of a loin of veal; feafon it with two or three
blades of mace, two or three cloves, and half a nutmeg dried at
a good diffance from the fire, and pounded, with a little pepper
and fait. Mix all thefe well together, fill your turkey, fry them
of a fine brown, and put it into a little pot that will juit hold it
;
lay four or five fkewers at the bottom of the pot, to keep the
turkey from flicking put in a quart of good beef and veal gravy,
;
wherein was boiled fpice and Tweet herbs, cover it clofe, and let
it flew half an hour; then put in a glafs of white wine, one
fpoonful of catchup, a large fpoonful of pickled mufhrooms,
and a few frefh ones, if you have them, a few truffles and mo-
rels, a piece of butter as big as a walnut, rolled in flour j cover
it clofe, and let it flew half an hour longer get the little French
;
rolls ready fried, take fome oyflers, and ftrain the liquor from
them, then put the oyflers and liquor into a fimee-pan, with a
blade of mace, a little white wine, and a piece of butter rolled
in flour; let them flew till it is thick, then fill the loaves, lay
the turkey in the difh, and pour the fauce over it. If there is
any fat on the gravy, take it off, and lay the loaves on each fide
of the turkey. Garnifh with lemon when you have no loaves,
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY. 107
and take oyfters dipped in butter and fried. Glajfe, 73. Far-
ley, 68.
Note.—The fame will do for any white fowl.
Another way.
Take a fmall turkey and bone it; fill it with a force-meat
made as follows:—Take half a pound of veal, and the meat of
two pigeons, a tongue out of the pickle, boiled and peeled chop
;
lay fome Ikewers at the bottom of the pot to keep the turkey
from flicking put in a quart of good beef gravy, cover It clofe,
;
and let it (lew for half an hour very gently; then put in a glafs
ofred wine, one fpoonful of catchup, a large fpoonful of pickled
mufhrooms, fome truffles, morels, and a piece of butter rolled
in flour cover it clofe, and let it flew half an hour longer. Fry
;
fome hollow French loaves, then take fome oyfters, flew them
in a fauce-pan with a bit of mace, their liquor, a little white
wine, and a piece of butter rolled in flour; let them flew till
they are pretty thick, fill the loaves with them lay the turkey
;
in the difli, pour the fauce over it, and lay the loaves on each
ftde. Mafony 258.
To flew a Turkey with Celery.
Stuff the turkey as when Hewed brown (leaving out the oyf-
ters) or with force-meat; boil it till near enough, with an onion,
a little whole pepper, a piece of lemon-peel, and a bunch of
fweet herbs in the water; have fome celery cut into lengths and
boiled till near enough; put them into fome of the liquor the
the turkey was boiled in, lay in the turkey breaft downwards,
ftew It a quarter of an hour, or till it is done but do not over-
;
do it. Take it up, thicken the fauce with a piece ofbutter roll-
ed in flour, and fome good cream; add fait and chyan. Cole, 135,
Another way.
Take a large turkey, and make a good white force-meat of
veal, and fluff the craw of the turkey; llcewer it for boiling,
then boil it in foft water till it is almoft enough, and then take
up your turkey, and put it in a pot with fome of the water it
Was boiled in, to keep it hot; put feven or eight heads of celery,
that are wafhed and cleaned very well, into the water that the
turkey was boiled in, till they are tender then take them up,
;
and put in your turkey with the breafl down, and ftew it a
quarter of an hour; then take it up, and thicken your fauce
with half a pint of butter and flour to make it pretty thick, and
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, See.
a quarter of a pint of rich cream, then put in your celery; pour
the fauce and celery hot upon the turkey’s breaft, and ferve it
up. It is a proper difh for dinner or flipper. Rnjfaldy 120.
Turkey a-V ccarlate.—Turkey of a fearlet colour.
Take up the flan of a fmall turkey from the flcih without
breaking it, and huff as much craw-fifh and butter under it as
poffible; fluff the infi.de with a ragoo made of the liver, mufih-
rooms, pepper, and fait, prepared in a good cullis flrort fauce \
few it up, and wrap it with flices of lard and pepper. Serve
with a craw-fifh cullis, Clermont . 230.
Turkey ’with Onions and pickled Pork.
Scald two dozen of fmall white onions, and boil them in
broth, with half a pound of pickled pork cut into thin flices, a
faggot of parfley, green fhallots, thyme, a bay-leaf, two cloves,
whole pepper, and fait, When done, drain them all, fluff the
turkey therewith, and wrap it in flices of lard and paper to roafl.
Make a fauce with a bit of butter, a flice of ham, two fhallots,
and a few mufhrooms; foak it awhile, then add two fpoonfuls
of broth, and as much cullis fimmer it about an hour, fkim
;
it, and lift it. When ready, add a fmall fpoonful of mullard,
a little pepper and fait, Clermont 227,
,
Cut your turkey down the back, and bone it with a fliarp
pen-knife j then make your force-meat thus —take a large
:
and fait, fill up the places where the bones came out, and fill
the body, that it may look juft as it did before; few up the
back and roaft it. You may have oyfter fauce, celery-fauce. or
juft as you pleafe. Put good gravy in the difh, and garnifh
with lemon. Be fure to leave the pinions on. Qlnffe 32* ,
A Turkey in Jelly,
Boil a turkey or a fowl as white as you can, let it ftand till
cold, and have ready a jeUy made thus; —take a fowl, ikin it,
take off all the fat, do not cut it to pieces, nor break the bones j
take four pounds of a leg of veal, without any fat or Ikin, put
it into a well tinned fauce pan, put to it full three quarts of
water, fet it on a very clear fire till it begins to fimmer ; be fure
to (kirn it well, but take great care it does not boil. When it
is well tkimmed, fet it fo as it will but juft feena to fimmer y put
to it two large blades of mace, half a nutmeg, and twenty corns
of white pepper, a little bit of lemon-peel as big as a fixpence.
This will take fix or feven hours doing. When you think it is
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c.
a ft iff jelly, which you will know by taking a little out to cool,
be fure to fkim off all the fat, if any, and be fure not to ftir the
meat in the fauce-pan. A quarter of an hour before it is done,
throw in a large tea fpoonful of fait, fqueeze in the juice of half
a Sevelle orange or lemon. When you think it is enough ftrain,
it off through a clean fieve, but do not pour it off quite to the
bottom, for fear of fettlings. Lay your turkey or fowl in the
difh you intend to fend it to the table in, beat up the whites of
fix eggs to a froth, and put the liquor to it, then boil it five or
fix minutes, and run it through a jelly bag till it is quite clear,
then pour the liquor over it j let it ftand till quite cold, colour
fome of the jelly in different colours, and when it is near cold,
with a fpoon fprinkle it over in what form or fancy you pleafe,
and fend it to table. A few naftertium flowers ftuck here and
there look pretty, if you can get them but lemon, and all
;
thofe things, are entirely fancy. This is a very pretty difh for
a cold collation, or a fupper.
All forts of birds or fowls may be done this way. Glnjfe,
348. Mrs. Mafon) page 261, has the fame receipt in different
words j but we have chofen the above as being rather more ex-
plicit.
A Turkey the Italian way.
Mince the liver of a young turkey very fine, with fome
chopped parfley, and two or three handfuls offrefh mufhrooms,
fome pepper, fait, and more than an ounce of butter; mix
thefe well together, and put them into the body of the turkey ;
fome flices of bacon over it, and cover it all over with paper ;
put it upon a fpit, and lay it down to roaft. For fauce—cut fome
large mufhrooms very fine, with twice the quantity of parfley,
a few green onions cut fmall. Put on a fauce-pan with half a
pint of white wine; when it is hot, put in thefe ingredients;
add fome pepper and fait, the juice of a lemon, two cloves of
garlick whole; let them boil, and then put in a quarter of a
pint of rich gravy, and a fmall tea-cupful of oil; let all boil up
once or twice, then take out the garlic, and put in a piece of
butter rolled in flour. Lay the turkey in the difh, and pour
the fauce over it. Mafon 259.
,
Turkey in a hurry.
Trufs a turkey with the legs Inward, and flatten it as much as
you can put it in a ftew-pan, with melted lard, chopped parf-
;
and foak it about half an hour on a flow fire then add a glafs
;
of white wine and a little broth, and finifh the brazing; fkim
and lift the faucc, add a little cullis to make it a liafon, reduce
it to a good confidence, and ferve upon the turkey. Clermont ,
231.
'Turkies andChickens after the Dutch way.
801 l them, feafon them with fait, pepper, and cloves; then
to every quart of broth, put a quarter of a pound of rice or
vermicelli. It is eat with fugar and cinnamon. The two lad
may be left out. Cole 138.,
loofen the fkin all round the turkey, and fluff it. It mud be
roaded. Glaffe, 383.
To drefs a Turkey or Fowl to perfection.
Bone them, and make a force meat thus:—take the defh of
a fowl, cut it fmall, then take a pound of veal, beat it in a
mortar, with half a pound of beef fuet, as much crumbs of
bread, fome mulhrooms, truffles, and morels, cut fmall, a few
fweet herbs and parfley, with fome nutmeg, pepper, and fait, a
little mace beaten, fome lemon-peel cut fine; mix all thefe to-
gether with the yolks of two eggs, then fill your turkey, and
road it. This will do for a large turkey, and fo in proportion
for a fowl. Let your fauce be good gravy, with mufhrooms,
truffles, and morels in it. Then garnifh with lemon, and, for
variety lake, you may lard your fowl or turkey. Cole, 139.
A glazed Turkey.
The turkey muft be young, but not I'm all. When it is pick-
ed, drawn and fmged, lay it a little while over a clear charcoal
lire, but turn it often have ready a ragoo of fweetbreads, take
;
off the turkey, fplit it down the back, fill it with this ragoo,
few it up, and lard it with bacon then lay at the bottom of a
*,
deep ftew-pan, fird fome dices of ham, then fome flices of veal,
and then fome dices of beef; lay the turkey upon thefe, drew
over fome fweet herbs, and cover them clofe j let thefe flew
over a dow fire. When they are enough, take off the dew-pan,
take out the turkey, and then pour into the turkey a little good
broth, dir it about and drain off" the liquor; fkim off the fat,
fet it over the fire again, and boil it to a jelly, then put in the
turkey, and fet the pan over a gentle fire or dove j it will be
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c.
foon well glazed then pour into the difh fome eflence of ham>
;
well, and mix the force-meat with them fluff the crop of the
;
turkey, raife the fkin a little upon the breafl, and put as much
of the force-meat as will go in without tearing it; if any is left,
put it into the body, and with it a ragoo of cray-fifh made as
follows:—wafh fome cray-fifh, and boil them in water, then
pick out the tails and bodies cut fome mufhrooms, but not
;
fome fluffing over it, then fome fiices of bacon, and over all
fome buttered paper let it have a good fire, and be thorough-
;
not too fmall, put it into the fauce, with grated lemon-peel,
white pepper, and mace pounded, a little mufhroom powder or
catchup; flmmer it up. Oyfters may be added, Mafon 26\. y
the liver of the fowl, bruife it, cut about a quarter of a pound
of ham or bacon, and pound it then mix thefe all together,
;
a flieet of paper, roaft it; take fome cullis, or good gravy, put
in the oyfters, with their liquor ftrained, a little mufliroom
powder or catchup, lemon juice, thicken it with flour; add
chyan and fait, if wanted, boil it up. When the fowl is done,
take off the bacon. Serve the fauce in the difh.
This fauce is proper for any roafted fowls or chickens;
A Fowl with a jharp Sauce.
Trufs a fowl for roafting; make a force-meat with fcraped
lard or butter, a little tarragon, chervil, burnet, garden-crefs,
pepper, fait, and the yolks of two or three eggs fluff the fowl
;
with it, make a fauce with a little cullis, a few of the above
herbs pounded, two anchovies, and a few capers. When done,
ftrain it. then add a little more cullis, and a little muftard, pep-
per, and fait; warm, without boiling, and ferve with your roaft-
ed fowl. Dalrympley 214.
A Fowl a la-hraze.
Skewer your fowl as for boiling, with the legs in the body,
then lay over it a layer of fat bacon, cut in pretty thin dices,
then wrap it round in beet leaves, then in a caul of veal, and
put it into a large fauce pan with three pints of water, a glafs
of.Madeira wine, a bunch of fweet herbs, two or three blades
MADE DISHES OE POULTRY, See. 113
of mace, and half a lemon flew it till quite tender, take it up,
;
and Ikim off the fat; make your gravy pretty thick with flour
and butter, and ftrain it through a hair fieve, and put to it a
pint of oyfters, a tea-cupful of thick cream keep lhaking your
;
Another 'way.
Tuffs your fowl with the legs turned into the belly, feafon it,
both infide and out, with beaten mace, nutmeg, pepper, and
fait lay a layer of bacon at the bottom of a deep ftew-pan,
;
hour; afterwards take up your fowl, ftrain the fauce, .and after
you have fkimmed off the fat, boil it down till it is of a glaze,
then put it over the fowl. You may add juft what you pleafe
to the fauce. A ragoo of fweetbreads, cocks’-combs, truffles,
and morels; or mulhrooms, with force-meat balls, look very-
pretty. Glajfe 74.
,
Ikim and ftrain the fauce, and ferve with the fowl. You may
alfo do it the fame without larding. Dalrymple 214. ,
A ragoo ofFowls.
Take a large capon, or two pullets, and blanch nicely in a
morfel of butter or fcraped bacon, but cut off your pinions and
feet, and tuck in the legs. Prepare your ragoo in the follow-
ing manner: get a fweetbread of veal, or two of lambs, the fat
livers of a turkey or fowls, fome cocks’ combs, three or four
mufhrooms, a thin flice or two of lemon; blanch all well with
a knot or two of eggs, cut all into very fmall dice, and hew in
a ladle of cullis; you may add to it three or four gizzards, and
a few cock’s combs, boiled very tender; fill up the bellies of
your fowls or capon, and few it up at both ends, but make a re-
ferve of fome of your *agoo to pour over; put them upon a
larkrfpit acrofs, and tie upon another; lard them with bacon.
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c.
cover with paper, and road them foftly, that they may be nice
and white drew in a little minced parfley, a morfel of fhallot;
;
from the bones, and chop it with half a pint of oyders, one
ounce of beef marrow, a little pepper and fait; mix it up with
cream, then lay the meat on the bones, and draw the Ikin over
it, and few up the back; then cut large thin dices of bacon,
and lay them over the bread of your fowl, tie the bacon on
with a packthread in diamonds; it-will take an hour reading
by a moderate fire. Make a good brown gravy fauce, pour it
upon your dilh, take the bacoh off and lay in your fowl, and
ferve it up. Garnilh with pickles, mtffhrooms, or oyders.—
It is proper for a fide difh for dinner, or top for fupper. Raf-
fold, 124.
Mr. Farley y in page 120, gives the above receipt, with only
the following addition;—“ Serve it up garnilhed with oyders,
mulhrooms, or pickles.”
A Fowl fervant fajloion.
Trufs a fowl for reading, make a force meat with the liver,
chopped parlley, fliallots, butter, pepper and fait; duff the
fowl with it, wrap it in buttered paper, and road it. When
three parts done, take oft' the paper, bade it with yolks of eggs
beat up with melted butter, and a good deal of bread crumbs;
finilh reading; it mud be of a fine yellow colour. Make a
fauce with a little butter, one anchovy chopped, a few capers,
a little flour, broth, pepper, and fait, and a little nutmeg;
thicker} with a liafon, and ferve under the fowl. Dalrywple s
215.
To marinade a Fowl.
Raife the fkin from the breaft bone of a large fowl with your
finger, then take a veal fweetbread and cut it fmall, a few oyf-
ters, a few mufhrooms, an anchovy, fome pepper, a little nut-
meg, fome lemon peel, and a little thyme; chop all together
fmall, and mix it with the yolk of an egg, fluff it in between
the fkin and the ftefh, but take great care that you do not break
the fkin; and then fluff what oyfters you pleafe into the body
of the fowl. You may lard the breaft of the fowl with bacon,
if you chufe it. Paper the breaft, and roaft it. Make good
gravy, and garnifh with lemon. You may add a few mufh-
rooms to the fauce. Glaffe 78. Farley 123.
,
,
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c. 115
Fowls fluffed*
Make a force meat with half a pound of beef fuet, as much
crumb of bread grated fine, the meat of a fowl cut very fmali \
of good cream, lay flppets round your difh, and ferve it up.
Cole, 145.
Another way.
Cut your fowl to pieces, and put it into fome gravy, with a
little cream, catchup, or mufhroom powder, grated lemon-peel,
and nutmeg, a few oyfters and their liquor, a piece of butter
mixed with flour; keep it ftirring till the butter is melted, lay
fippets round the difh. Mafon y 264.
Pullets d-la - St. Menehoui,
After having truffled the legs in the body, flit them along the
back, fpread them open on a table, take out the thigh-bones,
and beat them with a rolling-pin then feafon them with pep-
;
per, fait, mace, nutmeg, and fweet herbs; after that, take a
pound and an halfof veal cut into thin flices, and lay it in a flew-
pan of a convenient fize to ftew the pullets in j cover it* and fet
it over a ftove or flow fire; and when it begins to cleave to the
pan, ftir in a little flour, fhake the pan about till it be a little
brown; then pour in as much broth as will ftew the fowls, ftif
it together, put in a little whole pepper, an onion, and a little
piece of bacon or ham; then lay in your fowls, cover them
clofe, and let them ftew half an hour; then take them Out, lay
them on the gridiron to brown on the infide 5 ftrew them over
with the yolk of an egg, fome crumbs of bread, and bafte them
with a little butter; let them be of a fine brown, and boil the
gravy till there is about enough for fauce ftrain it, put a few
;
fire, then fleim and ftrain the braze. When ready, add the
fqueeze of a lemon, and ferve upon the fowl, being well wiped
from fat. Dalrytnple, 219.
A nice way to drefs a cold Fowl l
Feel off all the fkin of the fowl, and pull the flefh off the
bones in as large pieces as you can then dredge it with a little
;
ther, dip them in this batter, and have ready fome dripping hot
in a ftew-pan, in which fry them of a fine light brown. Have
ready a little good gravy, thickened with a little flour, minced
with a fpoonful of catchup; lay the fry in the difb, and pour
the fauce over, Garnifh with lemon, and a few mufhrooms, if
you have any. A cold rabbit eats well done thus.
Chickens in favoury Jelly.
Take trvo chickens and roaft them. Boil fome calves’ feet to
a ftrong jelly ■, then take out the feet, and fldm off the fat;
beat up the whites of three eggs, and mix them with half a pint
of white wine vinegar, the juice of three lemons, a blade or two
of mace, a few pepper-corns, and a little fait. Put them to your
jelly, and when it has boiled five or fix minutes, ftrain it feveral
times through a jelly-bag till it is very clear. Then put a little
in the bottom of a bowl large enough to hold your chickens,
and when they are cold, and the jelly fet, lay them in with their
breafts down. Then fill your bowl quite full with the reft of
your jelly, which you muft take care to keep from fetting, fo
that when you pour it into the bowd it will not break. Let it
Hand all night j and the next day put your bafon into warm
water, pretty near the top. As foon as you find it loofe in the
bafon, lay your difh over it, and turn it out whole. Parleys
lio.
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c. 117
Chickens Cavalier fof non.
Trufs as for boiling as many chickens as you want; marinade
them two hours in oil, with Slices of peeled lemon, parfley,
Shallots, a clove of garlick, thyme, laurel, fait, and fpices: tic
them up in dices of lard and paper, with as much of the mari-
nade as you can broil on a flow fire. When done, take off
;
the paper, lard, and herbs. Serve with what fauce yotf think
proper. Dalrymple 188. ,
not let them touch each other; put them on tin plates well
buttered, as you fend them to the oven. You may fend them
to table dry, or gravy in the difh,juft as you like. Raffald 126.
,
parley, 120.
Chicken in felly.
Pour fome jelly into a bowl; when cold, lay in a cold roafted
chicken, breaft downward; fill up the bowl with jelly juft
warm, but as little as poffible fo as not to be fet; when quite
cold, fet the bowl in warm water, juft to loofen the jelly, turn
ft out. Put the chicken into the jelly the day before it is
wanted. Cole 147.,
Singe the chickens, wafh and then dry them in a clean cloth ;
cut them into quarters, and put them into a fauce-pan with juft
water enough to cover them put in a little bunch of parfley, a
;
the liquor boils, pour the eggs into it. When the chickens are
enough, take out the bunch of parfley, and fend them to table
Vrith the liquor In a deep difh. They mull be well fkimmed
while they are doing. Mafon 267. ,
fill them with fome of the forcer-meat (which you muff take care
to fave) and tie them with a packthread; flour them, and fry
them pf a fine brown. When your chickens are enough, lay
them in the difh, and untie your cucumbers, bqt take care the
meat does not come out; then lay them round the chickens,
with the flat fide downwards, and the narrow end upwards,
You mull have fome rich fried gravy, and pour into the difh ;
put in the chickens, and fry them together till they are brown y
take a quarter of an ounce of turmerjek, a large fpoonful of
ginger and beaten pepper together, and a little fait to your pa-
late ftrew all thefe ingredients over the chickens, whilft fry-
;
ing, then pour in the liquor, and let it Hew about half an hour ;
ToJlew Chickens.
Take two fine chickens, and half boil them. Then take
them up in a pewter difh, and cut them up, feparating every
Joint one from the other, and taking out the breaft bones. If
the fowls do not produce liquor fufficient, add a few fpoonfuls
of the water in which they were boiled, and put in a blade of
mace and a little fait. Cover it clofe with another difh, and fet
it over a ftove or chafing-difh of coals. Let it flew till the
chickens are enough, and then fend them hot to the table.
Farley 6g, from
,
GlaJ/e 79.
}
way.
STo force Chickens.
Roaft your chickens better than half, take off the fkin, then
the meat, and chop it fmall with Hired parfley and crumbs of
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c. 119
bread, pepper and fait, and a little good cream then put in the
;
meat, and clofe the fkin brown it with a falamander, and ferve
;
white wine, flour, pepper,, and fait; let it flew till the chicken
is done, &c. and the fauce reduced take out the faggot and
;
ham, add a chopped anchovy and a few capers, and place the
chicken on the difh flcim the fauce, and ferve it with the
*,
Chickens Chiringrate.
Having cut off the feet of your chickens, beat the breaft-bone
flat with a rolling-pin, but take care you do not break the fkin.
Flour them, fry them of a fine brown in butter, and then drain
all the fat out of the pan, but leave the chickens in. Lay a
pound of gravy beef, cut very thin, over your chicken, and a
piece of veal cut very thin, a little mace, two or three cloves,
fome whole pepper, an onion, a little bunch of fweet herbs, and
a piece of carrot. Then pour in a quart of boiling water, cover
it clofe, and let it flew for a quarter of an hour. Then take
out the chickens, and keep them hot j let the gravy boil till it is
quite rich and good, and then ftrain it off and put it into your
pan again, with two fpoonfuls of red wine, and a few mufh-
rooms. Put in your chickens to heat, then take them up, lay
them into your difh, and pour the fauce over them. Garnifh
with lemon and a few flices of ham broiled. Glaffe 79. Far~
,
ley, 122.
Chickens in dfplc.
Put the pinions, livers, and gizzards into two fmall chickens,
with a piece of butter, fome pepper and fait; cover them with
fat bacon, then with paper; fpit them on a long fkewer, tie
them to a fpit, roaft them. When cold, cut them up, put them
into the following fauce, fhake them round in it, let them lie a
few minutes before they are difhed. Take what cullis is fuffi-
cient for fauce, heat it with fmall green onions chopped, or
fhallot, a little tarragon apcl green mint, pepper and fait. Ma~
/on, 265,
Chickens Italian faffion.
Trufs two chickens as for boiling, lard them with ham and
bacon, give them a fry in butter or oil, then put them into a
ftew-pan, with flices of ves
and the butter they were fried in,
three cloves, a faggot, a clove of garlick, pepper, fait, and half
120 MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, See.
a lemon peeled and fliced cover with flices of bacon, foak it
•,
very flowly about half an hour, then add about a gill of white
wine. When done, fkim and lift the fauce, add a piece of
butter rolled in flour, and ferve it with the chickens. Dai-
ry tuple, 191.
Chickens and Tongues.
Boil fix fmall chickens very white; then take fix hogs’-
tongues boiled and peeled, a cauliflower boiled whole in milk
and water, and a good deal offpinach boiled green. Then lay
your cauliflower in the middle, the chickens clofe all round, and
the tongues round them with the roots outwards, and the fpi-
nach in little heaps between the tongues. Garnifh with little
pieces of bacon toafted, and lay a little piece on each of the
tongues. This is a good difh for a large company. Glajfe 80,,
Farley 122.
,
Chicken Fulled.
Take a chicken that has been roafted or boiled, if under-
done the better, cut off the legs and ihe rump and fide-bone?
together pull all the white part in little flakes, free from fldn
•, ;
fon 26 c.
l
To broil Chickens,
Slit your chickens down the back, feafon them with pepper
and fait, and lay them on the gridiron over a clear fire, and at
a great diftance. Let the infide continue next the fire till it is
nearly half done; then turn them, taking care that the flefhy
fides do not burn, and let them broil till they are of a fine
brown. Have good gravy-fauce, with fome mufhrooms, and
garnifh them with lemon and the liver broiled, and the giz-
zards cut, flafhed, and broiled, with pepper and fait j or you
may ufe any other fauce you fancy. Farley 50.,
Another way.
Cut your chicken clown the back, pepper and fait it, broil
it i pour over it white mufhroom-fauce, or melted butter with
pickled mulhrooms. Mafon 2<k, %
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &<r, 121
very thin fippets, toafted nice and brown, laid in the plate, and
pour the mince-meat over it. GlajJe 242.,
Ducks a-la-braze.
Drefs and finge your ducks, lard them quite through with
bacon rolled in Ihred parfley, thyme, onions, beaten mace,
cloves, pepper, and fait put in the bottom of a ftew pan a few
•,
part of the liquor from the ducks, a little browning, and the
juice of half a lemon boil it up, and cut the ends of the bacon
;
even with the bread; of your ducks, lay them on your difh, pour
the fauce hot upon them, and ferve them up. Raff aid, 128,
Fur ley, 118.
Another way .
hour, drain the fauce, fkim it, put to it chyan, and more wine,
if neceflary, fhallot and tarragon chopped, a very little juice of
lemon. If agreeable, add artichoke-bottoms, boiled and quarter-
ed. Mafon 272.
Macedonian Ducks.
Cut four artichoke-bottoms, each into pieces, and put them
into boiling water, with about a pint of garden beans, firft fcald-
ed and hulked boil thefe together till almod done, then drain
;
them, and put the whole into the dew-pan, with a good piece of
butter, chopped mufhrooms, a little winter favoury, parfley,
and {ballots, all finely chopped add a little flour, two fpoon-
;
fuls of veal gravy, and a glafs of white wine, and fimmer dowly
till all is well done reduce the fauce to a proper confidence,
\
Ducks a-ln-mode t
Slit two ducks down the back, and bone them carefully, make
a force-meat of the crumb of a penny loaf, four ounces of fat
bacon fcraped, a little parfley, thyme, lemon-peel, two fhallots
or onions fhred very fine, with pepper, fait, and nutmeg to your
tafte, and two eggs ftuft' your ducks with it, and few them up,
;
lard them down each fide of the bread; with bacon, dredge them
well with flour, and put them in a Dutch oven to brown then ;
fire for an hour. When enough, thicken your gravy, and put
in a few truffles and morels; ftrain your gravy, and pour it
upon them. You may a-la-mode a goofe in the fame way,
Rajfaldy 129.
To boil Ducks the French ivay.
Lard your ducks, and let them be half roafted 5 then take
them oft' the fpit, put them into a large earthen pipkin, with
half a pint of red wine, and a pint of good gravy, fome chef-
nuts, firft roafted and peeled, half a pint of large oyfters, the
liquor drained, and the beards taken off, two or three little
onions minced fmall, a very little ftripped thyme, mace, pep-
per, and a little ginger beat fine; cover it dole, and let them
ftew half an hour over a flow fire, and the cruft of a French
roll grated when you put in your gravy and wine.—When they
are enough, take them up, and pour the fauce over them.
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c. 123
To boil Ducks with Onion Sauce.
,
Scald your ducks and draw them, put them in warm water
for a few minutes, then take them out put them in an earthen
;
pot, pour over them a pint of boiling milk, let them lie in it
two or three hours. When you take them out, dredge them
well with flour, put them in a copper of cold water, put on
your cover, let them boil flowly twenty minutes, then take
them out, and fmother them with onion-fauce. Raffald, 59.
Wild Duck, Wigeoiiy or Eajlerlingy in perfection.
Half road them; when they come to table, dice the bread,
drew on pepper and fait, pour on a little red wine, and fqueeze
the juice of an orange or a lemon over put fome gravy to this,
;
fet the plate on a lamp, cut up the bird, let it remain over the
lamp till enough, turning it. Mafotiy 273.
To boil a Duck a-la-Francoife.
Put a pint of rich beef gravy into two dozen roafted chefnuts
peeled, with a few leaves of thyme, two fmall onions {if agree-
able a little whole pepper, and a race of ginger; then take a
,
fine tame duck, lard it, and half road it; put it into the gravy,
let it dew ten minutes, put in a quarter of a pint of red wine.
When the duck is enough, take it out, boil up the gravy to a
proper thicknefs; fkim it very clean from fat, lay the duck in
the dilh, and pour the fauce over it. Cole 155.,
now and then give the pan a diake. When they are juft dona,
grate in a little nutmeg, and put in a very little beaten mace,
and thicken it either with a piece of butter rolled in dour, or
the yolk of an egg beat up With two or three fpoonfuls of
cream fhake it all together for three or four minutes, take
;
out the fweet herbs, lay the duck in the difh, and pour the
fauce over it. You may garnifh with boiled mint chopped, or
let it alone. Glajfey 82.
Another way.
Half roaft your duck, put it into fome good gravy, with a
little mint, and three or four fage leaves chopped; flew this
half an hour, thicken the gravy with a little flour, throw in
half a pint of green peas boiled, or fome celery, then take ou,t
the mint. Cole 156.
,
124 MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c.'
To hafj a Wild Duck.
Having cut up your cluck as for eating, put it into,a toffing-
pan, with a fpoonful of good gravy, the fame of red wine, and
an onion diced exceedingly thin. When it has boiled two or
three minutes, lay the duck in the difh, and pour the gravy
over it. You may add a tea-fpoonful of caper liquor, or a little
browning; but remember that the gravy muft not be thickened.
Farley, 70.
To hafh Ducks different ways.
Road two ducks till three parts done, and let them cool;
then cut the bread in thin dices, and take care to preferve the
gravy. The legs will ferve for another difh, which you may
drefs by wrapping them in a caul with a good force-meat, and
ferve with cullis fauce., For the fillets, cut cucumbers, and
marinade them about an hour, with a little vinegar, fait, and
one onion diced; then take out the onion, fqueeze the cucum-
bers in a cloth, and put them into a dew-pan with a bit of but-
ter, a dice of ham, a little broth, flour, and veal gravy; boil
flowly, ddm it well, take out the ham, and add the meat to it,
to warm, without boiling. You may alfo do the fame with
chopped truffles, or mufhrooms, or any thing elfe you think
proper, according to feafon. A cold roafted duck will anfwer
much the fame end for this difh, Clermont, 260.
Another way.
When cut to pieces, flour it; put into a dew-pan dome gravy,
a little red wine, fhallot chopped, fait and pepper, a piece of
lemon boil this, put in the duck, tofs it up, take out the lei-
;
and fet it over a dove ten minutes; then fend it to table hot in
the difh it was done in, and garnifh with lemon. You may add
a little red wine, and a fhallot cut fmall, if you like it; but it is
apt to make the duck eat hard, unlefs you fird heat the wine,
and pour it in jud as it is done, Cole 157.
,
To flew Ducks.
Lard three young ducks down each fide the bread, duft them
with flour, and fet them before the fire to brown; then put
them in a flew-pan, with a quart of water, a pint of red wine,
one fpoonful of walnut catchup, the fame browning, an' am
choyy, half a lemon, a clove of garlic, a bundle of fweet herbs,
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c. 125
chyan pepper to your tafte; let them ftew flowly for half an
hour, or till they are tender; lay them on a difh and keep them
hot, fidm off the fat, ftrain the gravy through a hair fieve, add
to it a few morels and truffles, boil it quick till reduced to a little
more than half a pint, pour it over your ducks, and ferve it up.
It is proper for a fide-difh for dinner, or bottom for fupper,
Rafald, 127.
Pudding rolled .
Pigeons cn Compote.
Take fix young pigeons, and fkewer them as for boiling;
make a force-meat thus: grate the crumb of a penny loaf,
half a pound of fat bacon, ilired fome Tweet herbs and parfley
fine, two fballots, or a little onion, a little lemon-peel, a little
grated nutmeg; feafon it with pepper and fait, and mix it up
with the yolk of two eggs; put it into the craws and bellies,
lard them down the bread:, and fry them brown with a little
butter; then put them in a ffew-pan, with a pint of ftrong
brown gravy, a gill of white wine; flew them three quarters of
an hour, thicken it with a little butter rolled in flour, feafon
with fait and chyan pepper, put the pigeons in the difh, and
ftrain the gravy over them. Lay fome hot force-meat balls
round them, and fend them up hot. Glaffe pr. ,
Another way.
Trufs the pigeons with their legs in their bodies, but firft
fluff them with good force-meat (made in the fame manner as
for pigeons a-la-daube); let them be parboiled, then lard them
with bits of bacon, feafoned with pepper, fpices, minced chives,
and parfley j let them flew as gently as poflible. While they
are hewing, make a ragoo of cocks’ combs, fowls’ livers, truffles,
morels, and mufhrooms; melt a little bacon in a frying-pan,
and put them in, fhake the pan round two or three times then ;
put in fome rich gravy, let it fimmer a little, then put in fome
eullis of veal and ham to thicken it. Take the pigeons, drain
them, and put them into this ragoo. Let them juft fimmer in
it, then take them up, put them into a difh, and pour the ragoo
over them. Mafon y 278.
Pigeons d-la-duxelle.
Cut off the feet and pinions of four or five pigeons, and fpllt
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c.
them down the breaft; then take out the liver, and flat them
with a cleaver. Make a hot marinade of fome fcraped bacon,
feafoned with a mufhroom or two, green onions, pepper, fait,
thyme, and parfley, and a little nutmeg. Fry all a few minutes*
and let the pigeons be heated through in it, and let them re-
main till you put them upon ybur gridiron* Take a thin flicc
of ham for each pigeon* and put them with the ham always at
top. I mean, when you turn your pigeons, turn your ham up-
on them* For your fauce, take a ladle of gravy, fome fweet
bafil, a little thyme, parfley, and fhallot, minced Very fine, and
a few llices of mufhrooms, boiled all together a few minutes }
difh up, your breaft downwards, let your ham continue upon
them, and pour your fauce over, with the juice of a lemon or
orange. Verralt 138.
Pigeons a-la-danhe.
Put a layer of bacon in a large fauce-pan, then a layer of veal,
a layer of coarfe beef, and another little layer of veal, about a
pound of beef, and a pound of veal, cut very thin; a piece of
carrot, a bundle of fweet herbs, an onion, fome black and white
pepper, a blade or two of mace, and four or five cloves. Cover
the fauce-pan clofe, fet it over a flow fire, draw it till it is brown,
to make the gravy of a fine light brown. Then put in a quart
of boiling water, and let it ftew till the gravy is quite rich and
good. Then ftrain it off, and fldm offall the fat* In the mean
time, fluff the bellies of the pigeons with force-meat, made
thus:—Take a pound of Veal, a pound of beef fuet, and beat
both fine in a mortar an equal quantity of crumbs of bread,
•,
Pigeons in difguife.
Draw and trufs your pigeons, feafon them with pepper and
fait; make a nice putf-pafte, and roil each pigeon in a piece of
it j tie them in a cloth, and take care the pafte does not break ;
Pigeons d-la-charmante.
Scald five or fix fmall pigeons, and braze them with a few
fllces of lard and peeled lemon, pepper, fait, a faggot of fweet
herbs, and broth. Lard three or four fweetbreads as for frican-
deaus, and put thefe laft into a ftew-pan by themfelves, with
fome broth, a few thin dices of veal fillet, a faggot, a few chi-
bols, two cloves, and a little bafil. Braze flowly, and when
done, fift and fkim the braze, and reduce it to a glaze, to rub
over the larded fide of the fweetbreads add a little confommee,
;
little more pepper and fait (if neceffary), and a good fqueeze of
lemon. Intermix the pigeons and iweetbreads upon tfie table-
difh, and pour the fauce over the former, but not over the
latter, as it would fpoil the colour of the glaze. Coley 160.
Pigeons in Fricandeau.
Pick, draw, and wafh your pigeons very clean, fluff the
craws, and lard them down the fides of the bread, fry them in
butter a fine brown, and then put them into a toffing-pan with
a quart of gravy. Stew them till they are tender, then take off
the fat, and put in a tea-fpoonful of lemon-pickle, a large
fpoonful of browning, the fame of walnut catchup, a little chy-
an, and fait. Thicken your gravy, and add half an ounce of
morels, and four yolks of hard eggs. Lay the pigeons in your
difh, and put the morels and eggs round them, and ftrain your
fauce over them. Garnifh with barberries aad lemon-peel, and
ferve it up. Rajfald 132. Farley 127.
, ,
Pigeons au Soleil.
Make a force-meat with half a pound of veal, a quarter of a
pound of mutton, and two ounces of beef. Beat them in a
mortar, with fome pepper, fait, and mace, till they are a paftc*
Then take the yolks of three or four eggs, beat them up well,
and put them into a plate. Mix alfo a quarter of a pound of
grated bread, and two ounces of flour, put it into another plate.
Put on a ftew-pan with a little rich beef-gravy, tie up three or
four cloves in a bit of muflin, and put into the gravy. Put in
the pigeons, let them flew till they are almoft enough, then
take them up, and fet them before a fire to keep warm then •,
Pigeons tranfmogrlfed.
Pick and clean fix fmall young pigeons, but do not cut off*
their heads cut off their pinions, and boil them ten minutes, in
;
water, then cut off the ends of fix large cucumbers and ferape
out the feeds; put in your pigeons, but let the heads be out at
the ends of the cucumbers, and flick a bunch of barberries in
their bills-, and then put them into a tofllng pan with a pint
veal gravy, a little anchovy, a glafs of red wine, a fpoonful of
browning, a little flice of lemon, chyan and fait to your tafte;
flew them feven minutes, take them out, thicken your gravy
with a little butter rolled in flour; boil it up, and ffrain it over
your pigeons, and ferve them up. Raff aid 130.,
Pigeons d-la-braze.
Pick, draw, and trufs fome large pigeons, then take a ffew-
pan, and lay at the bottom fome flices of bacon, veal, and
onions fi afon the pigeons with pepper, fait, fome fpice beat
;
fine, and fome fweet herbs lay them into a ftew-pan, then lay
;
upon them fome more flices of veal and bacon let them flew
;
very gently over aftove, the top of theffew-pan put down very
dole. When they arc flowed make a ragoo with veal fweet-
breads,truffles, morels, champignons; the fweet breads muff be
blanched, and put into a ftew-pan with a ladleful of gravy, a lit-
tle cullis, the truffles, morels, &c. Let them all flew together
with the pigeons. When they are enough, put them into a diftn,
and pour the ragoo over them. Cole 161,
,
ft, and when enough, turn it into a difh, and pour gravy round
it. Glaffet 91. Farley 127.
,
Pigeons in Pimlico.
Take the livers, with fome fat and lean of ham or bacon,
mufhrooms, truffles, parfley, and fweet herbs; feafonwith beaten
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY.
tiiace, pepper, and fait; beat all this together, with two raw
eggs, put it into the bellies, roll them all in a thin flice of veal,
bver them a thin flice of bacon j wrap them up in white paper,
fpit them on a fmall fpit, and roaft them. In the mean time
make for them a ragoo of truffles and mufhrooms, chopped
fmall, with parfley cut fmall; put to it half a pint of good veal
gravy; thicken with a peice of butter rolled in flour. An hour
will do your pigeons. Bafie them. When enough, lay them
in your dilh, take oft' the paper, and pour your fauce over them.
Garnifh with patties made thus :—Take veal and cold ham,
beef fuety an equal quantity, fome mufhrooms, fweet herbs, and
fpice ; chop them fmall, fet them on the fire, and moiften with
milk or cream 5 then make a little puft-pafte, roll it, and make
little patties about an inch deep and two inches long 5 fill them
with the above ingredients, cover them clofe, and bake them ;
lay fix of them round a difh. This makes a fine difh for a firft
courfe. Glajje, 93.
Pigeons Royal fajhion .
off the fkin and brown it, put the bacon in the middle of your
difh, and lay the pigeons round it, and lumps of ftewed fpinach ;
pour plain melted butter over them, and fend parfley and butter
in a boat, Rnffald, 133.
Pigeons d-la-fouJJel.
Bone four pigeons, and make a force-meat as for pigeons
compote. Stuffthem, and put them into a ftew-pan -with a pfrit
of veal gravy. Stew them half an hour very gently, and then
take them out. In the mean time, make a veal force-meat, and
wrap it all round them. Rub it over with the yolk of an egg,
and fry them of a nice brown in good dripping. Take the
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY.
gravy they were flewed in,lkim off the fat, thicken with a little
butter rolled in flour, the yolk of an egg, and a gill of cream,
beat up. Seafon it with pepper and fait, mix all together, and
keep it Birring one way till it is finooth. Strain it into your
difh, and put the pigeons on. Garnilh with plenty of fried
parfley. You may leave out the egg and cream, and put in a
fpoonful of browning, and a little lemon-pickle and catchup.
Farley 127.
To Jlcna Pigeons*
the pigeons with their breafts down; fill up your bowl with
your jelly, and turn it out. Rnffald y 283.
To bake Pigeons.
Seafon them with pepper and fait, put a bit of butter Into
each, pour over them the following batter—three eggs, two
fpoonfuls of flour, half a pint of milk, and a little fait. Ma~
fon y 281.
Pigeons in a hole.
Pick, draw, and wafh four young pigeons, ftick their legs in
their bellies as you do boiled pigeons, feafon them with pepper,
fait, and beaten mace. Put into the belly of every pigeon a
lump of butter the flze of a walnut. Lay your pigeons in a pie-
difh, pour over them a batter made of three eggs, two fpoonfuls
of flour, and half a pint of good milk. Bake it in a moderate
oven, and fervq them to table in the lame difh, RaJJald. 130.
Pigeons boiled with rice.
Stuff the bellies of fix pigeons with parfley, pepper and fait,
rolled in a very little piece of butter put them into a quart of
;
and take a good piece of butter rolled in flour, put it in, and
give it a fhake fealbn it within fait, if it wants it; then have
•,
Pour the gravy to the rice, flir it all together, and pour over
the pigeons. Garnifh with hard eggs cut into quarters,
Glajfe, 91.
To broil Pigeons
.
When you fet about to broil pigeons, take care that your
fire is clear. Take fome parfley flared fine, a piece of butter
as big as a walnut, with a little pepper and fait, and put into
their bellies. Tie them at both ends, and put. them oh the
gridiron. Or you may fplit and broil them, having firft fea-
foned them with pepper and fait. Serve them with a little
parfley and butter in the difh. Farley 50.
,
Partridges in Panes.
Take two roafted partridges, and the flefli of a large fowl, a
little parboiled bacon, a little marrow or fweet fuet chopped
fine, a few mufhrooms and morels chopped fine, truffles, and
artichoke bottoms. Seafon with beaten mace, pepper, a little
nutmeg, fait, fweet herbs chopped fine, and the crumb of a two-
penny loaf foaked in hot gravy. Mix all well together with
the yolks of two eggs, make your panes on paper, of a round
figure, and the thicknefs of an egg, at a proper diftance one
from another. Dip the point of a knife in the yolk of an egg,
in order to fhape them bread them neatly, and bake them a
;
Partridges en Afpic.
Chop herbs, fuch as fhallots, parfley, tarragon, chives, gar-
den-crefles, a little bafil, one clove of garlic, and chopped an-
chovies. Mix thefe with muftard, oil, tarragon vinegar, pepper,
and fait. If you ferve the partridges whole, ferve the fauce
cold in a fauce-boat. If for hot, cut the partridges as for a
132 MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, &c.
hath warm them in a little broth, then put them to the fauce
;
;
cut the partridges as for a fricadee, and put to your fauce. Let
it boil but juft long enough to make the meat hot through.
Strip in a morfel or two of the peel, a bit of minced fhallot and
parfley, fqueeze in a good deal of juice, and difh it up. Garnifh
with oranges in quarters. Verral, 131.
Partridges d~la~hra%e.
Take two brace of patridges, trufs the legs into the bodies,
lard them, feafon them with beaten mace, pepper, and fait ;
pour into the pan a pint of thin gravy, let them bull till there
is about half a pint, then drain it off, and fkim of all the fat.
In the mean time have a veal fweetbread cut fmall, truffles and
morels, cocks’ combs, and fowl’s livers dewed in a pint of good
.gravy half an hour, fome artichoke bottoms, and afparagus
tops, both blanched in warm water, and a few mufhrooms.
Then add the other gravy to this, and put in your partridges
to heat. If it is not thick enough, take a piece of butter
rolled in fiour, and tofs up in it. If you will be at the expence,
thicken it with veal and ham cullis, but it will be full as good
without, Glajfe,y6. Farley, 128.
To Jlew Partridges .
them Tome pepper and fait, with fome beaten maca, Tome fliresf
lemon-peel, and fweet herbs cut fmall then take fome thin
;
lay a partridge upon each fteak, and roll it up; tie it round to
keep it together, and pepper the outfide. Set it on a ftew-pan.
with fome flices of bacon, and an onion cut into pieces; lay
the partridges carefully in, put to them fome rich gravy, and
Jet them ftew gently till they are done; then take the par-
tridges out of the beef, lay them in a difh, and pour over them
fome rich effence of ham, Cole 167.
,
paper, with all the feafoning broil flowly. When done, take
;
off the paper, mix the herbs with a little good culiis, add the
fqueeze of a lemon, and ferve with the partridges. Dairyn-
-231.
Partridges with confommeefuuce ,
pan, with flices of veal and bacon, above and below, a flice of
ham, a faggot, three cloves, fliced onions and carrots braze ;
on a very flow Are, When done, lift and Ikim the fauce, and
ferve upon the partridges, Coley 168.
Partridges d-la-paifanne.
Pick, draw, and trnfs your partridges, and put them upon an
iron fkewer 5 tie them to the fpit, lay them down to roai't; put
a piece of fat bacon upon a toafting-fork, and hold it over the
partridges, that as it melts it may drop upon them as they roaft.
When they are well balled with this, dull over them fome
crumbs of bread and fome fait; cut fome fhallots very fine,
with a little gravy, fait, and pepper, and the juice of half a
lemon. Mix all thefe together over the fire, and thicken them
up. Pour them into a dilh, and lay the partridges upon them.
Cole, i 6£.
134 MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, See,
To hajh a Partridge or TPlodcoch.
Cut it up as for eating, work the entrails very fine with the
back of a fpoon, mix it with a fpoonful of red wine, the fame
of water, half a fpoonful of allegar cut an; onion in fllces, and
;
pull it into rings roll a little butter in flour, put them all in
*,
your tofling-pan, and fhake it over the Are till it boils then
•,
Pheafants a-la-Alottgclas.
Provide a large pheafant, cut off the pinions as to roaft, and
make a good force-meat; put it into your pheafant and fpit it,
with fome lards of bacon and paper; take care you roaft it
nicely, and prepare your fauce as follows:—take fome fat livers
of turkies or fowls, blanch them till thoroughly done, and
pound them to a paffe; put to fome gravy and cullis, mix it
well together, and pafs it through an etamine; cut off the
flefh of the pheafant, flice it very thin and put to it, and pre-
ferve the carcafe hot; add to your fauce, which fhould be about
the thicknefs of your cullis, a little pepper, fait, fome minced
parfley, and the juice of two or three oranges j and, if you ap-
prove of it, you may ftrip a few morfels of the orange-peel in.
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, See. 135
and ferve it np with the hafh poured over the breafl, and gar-
jaifh with fome oranges in quarters.. Terra/ 88.
,
To J/eo.u a Pheafatit.
Take a pheafant, and flew it in veal gravy; take artichoke
bottoms parboiled, fome ehefrmts mailed and blanched. When
your pheafant is enough (but it mull flew till there is juft
enough for fauce, then fkim it) put in the chefnuts and arti-
choke bottoms, a little beaten mace, pepper, and fait enough to
feafon it, and a glafs of white wine. If you do not think it thick
enough, thicken it with a little piece of butter rolled in Hour.
Squeeze in a little lemon, pour the fauce over the pheafant, and
have fome force-meat balls fried and put into the difh.
Note.—A good fowl will do full as well, trufTed with the
head on like a pheafant. You may fry faufages inliead of force-
meat balls. GlaJJe 97. ,
bacon, and put it upon a fpit; tie fome paper round it whilft it
is roafting. Take fome oyfters, ftew them a little in their own
liquor take a ftew-pan, put into it the yolks of four eggs, half
;
a demon cut into fmall dice, a little beaten pepper, a little fcraped
nutmeg, a little parfley cut fmall, a rocombole, an anchovy cut
fmall, a little oil, a glafs of white wine, a piece of butter, and
a little ham cullis; put the fauce over the fire to thicken, take
care it does not burn; put in the oyfters, and make the fauce
reiifiling. When the pheafant is done, lay it in the difli, and
pour the fauce over it. Mnfon 306. ,
beaten mace, pepper, and fait, to your tafte; cover it with the
force-meat all over, rub the yolks of eggs all over to colour it,
then fend it to the oven. Half an hour does it, and fend it hot
to table. Cole, 171,
Stupes or Woodcocks in falmy
.
Trufs them, and half roaft them, without flour; cut them in
fncaffee pieces, and take care to fecure all the infide, except the
g'ezards and galls, which you muft be fpre to take clean away •,
toaft ferved the fame as for roafting, and fend them up hot,
Garnifh with lemon. Glajfe , 98.
Snipes with PurJlain leaves.
Draw your fnipes, and make a force-meat for the infide, but
preferve your ropes for your fauce; fpit them acrofs upon a
lark-fpit, covered with bacon and paper, and roaft them gently.
For fauce, you muft take fome prime thick leaves of purflain,
blanch them well in water, put them into a ladle of cullis and
gravy, a bit of fhallot, pepper, fait, nutmeg, and parfley, and
ftew all together for half an hour gently. Have the ropes
ready blanched and put in. Difh up your fnipes upon thin
flices of bread fried, fqueeze the juice of an orange into your
fauce, and ferve it up. Verral 142.
,
piece of butter fluff them with it, few them up dole, and braze
•,
them. While brazing, add a little good cullis and red wine.
When done, Ikim and lift the fauce If not thick enough, add
a little butter and flour, and ferve with the fnipes. Dalrympie4
2 37*
ThruJheS) Plovers ami Lapwings.
,
They are all done as chickens, and may be dreffed in all the
different ways of any other birds. Dalrymple.
The general method of dreffmg Plovers.
Plovers Perigordfafion.
Trufs them as chickens or pigeons for ftewing; braze them
a good braze. When done, ikim and fift the braze. When
ready to ferve, add the fqueeze of a lemon. You may alfo ftuff
and ro ft them as partridges, &c. Thrufhes and lapwings may
be dreffed in the.fame manner, ferved with a cullis fauce. Dal-
rymple, 235.
To drefs Ortolans and details.
Spit them fide-ways, with a vine-leaf between bafte them
;
with butter, and have fried crumbs of bread round the di/h.-
Glnffe ,
100.
To drefs Ruffs and Refs,
Thefe birds are principally found in Lincolnfhire They may
be fatted, like chickens, with bread, milk, and fugar. They
feed very faft, and will die with fat if not killed in time. Draw
and trufs them crofs-legged like fnipes; roaft them. For fauce
—good gravy thickened with butter, and a toaft under them.
Cole, 173.
Small Birds in favoury Jelly,
Put a good piece of butter into the bellies of eight fmall birds,
with their heads and feet on, and few up their vents. Put them
in a jug, cover it clofe with a cloth, and fet them in a kettle of
MADE DISHES OF POULTRY, See.
boiling water till they are enough. When it is fet, lay in three
birds with their breaffs down, and cover them with the jelly.
When it is let, put in the other five, with their heads in the
middle, and proceed in the fame manner as before directed for
chickens. Farley, 129.
Fo drefs Larks Pear fajhion.
Trufs them clofe, and cut off the legs; fcafon them with
fait, pepper, cloves, and mace make a force-meat thus :—Take
;
fweet herbs, a little lemon-peel cut fmall; mix all together with
the yolk of an egg, wrap up the larks in force-meat, and fhape
them like a pear 5 hick one leg in the top like the ftalk of a
pear, rub them over with the yplk of an egg and crumbs of
bread bake them in a gentle oven, ferve them without lance
; ;
every lark put a piece of thin bacon, then tie the Ikewer to
a fpit, and roaft them at a brilk clear fire; bafte them with
butter, and flrew over them fome crumbs of bread mixed \v ith
Hour fry fome bread-crumbs of a fine brown in butter. Lay
;
■a,flttle Hour; put to them fome good gravy; flew them till
they are enough.. If there is any fat, Ikim it off. Add chop-
ped parlley, lemon-juice, pepper, and fait, if neceffary.
Other fmall birds may be drefled in the fame manner,
CFf, 124.
Chap. IX.—MADE DISHES OF HARES,
RABBITS, &c f
To jlorend'ine a Hare
TAKE a grown hare, and let her hang up four or five days,
then cafe her, and leave on the ears and take out all the
*,
bones except the head, which mull be left on whole lay your
;
hare flat on the table, and lay over the infide a force-meat, and
then roll it up to the head fkewer it with the head and ears
•,
fprig of myrtle in the mouth flrain over your fauce, and ferve
;
take up the roafted hare, and lay it in the middle of the difli,
with the flew round, and fauce poured over it, and forae good
gravy in a boat. Mnfon 300. ,
MADE DISHES OF HARES, RABBITS, &c,
Hare d-la-daubc.
Cut a hare in fix pieces; bone and lard them with bacon,
feafoned with fpices, powder of laurel, chopped parlley, thyme,
fhallots, and one clove of garlick braze it with flices of lard,
;
the bones, a little broth, as much of the blood as you can fave,
a glafs of brandy, and a quarter of a pound of good butter; hop
the pan well, and ftew it on a very flow fire, or in the oven,
about four hours then take out the bones, put the hare In a
;
tureen, and the flices of bacon upon it; lift the fauce, and put
it in the tureen let it cool before tiling. It ought tp be like
;
Tofcare a Hare.
Lard a hare, and put a pudding in the belly; put it into a
poJ or fifh kettle, then put to it two quarts of ftrong drawn
gravy, one of red wine, a whole lemon cut, a faggot.of fweet
herbs, nutmeg, pepper, a little fait, and fix cloves; cover it
it dofe, and ftew it over a flow fire till it is three parts done ;
then take it up, put it into a dilh, and ftrew it over with crumbs
of bread, fweet herbs chopped fine, fome lemon-peel grated,
and half a nutmeg; fet it before the fire, and bafte it till it is
of a fine light brown. In the mean time, take the fat off your
gravy, and thicken it with the yolk of an egg. Take fix eggs,
boiled hard and chopped final!, fome pickled cucumbers cut
very thin mix thefe with a fauce, and pour if into the dilh.
;
Ho hodge-podge a Hare.
Take your hare and cut it in pieces, as if you intended it for
hewing, and put into the pitcher, with two or three onions,
a little fait and pepper, a bunch of fweet herbs, and a piece of
butter; hop the pitcher very clofc to prevent the Beam from
getting out, fet it in a kettle full of boiling water, keep the
kettle filled up as the water waftes; let it Hew four or five
hours at leaft. You may, when you firlf put the hare into the
kettle, put in lettuce, cucumbers, celery, and turnips, if you like
it better. Cole 177.
,
To jug a Hare.
Cut your hare into little pieces, and lard them here and there
with little flips of bacon. Seafon them with a little pepper and
fait, and pour them into an earthen jug with a blade or two of
mace, an onion ftuck with cloves, and a bundle of fweet herbs.
Cover the jug clofe, that nothing may get in fet it in a pot
;
of boiling water, and three hours will do it. Then turn it out
into the difli, take out the onion and fweet herbs, and fend it
hot to table. As to the larding, you may omit it if you pleafe.
Farley 71,
*To hajh Hare.
a
Cut your hare into final! pieces if any of the pudding is left,
;
Hare Cale.
Chop the flefh of a hare very fine, take fome bacon in dice
about half the quantity, feafon with pepper, a little fait, and
fpice, a green onion or two, and a morfel of fhallot; mix all
well together, and prepare a ftew-pan juft wide enough, that it
may cut in ftices about two inches thick line your bottom with
;
thin bacon, and cover with the fame pour in a ladle of broth,
;
and a glafs of red wine, fome ftices of carrot, onion and herbs ;
let it limmer gently for two or three hours, take oft'the cover,
and let it cool; the next day take it out, and trim it nice and
round; pound fome of the bacon it was ftewed in, and when
you ferve it to table, fpread it upon the top like fugar upon a
plumb cake, and ferve it to table upon a napkin. If it is well
clone, it will keep a fortnight for ftices.
Veal cake may be done in the fame manner, only Inftead of
red wine put white and do not cover it fo much but that every
;
cold, turn it out. Lay over it the following jelly :—a pound
and an half of ferag of veal, a flice of ham, two or three cloves,
a little nutmeg, fome fweet herbs, a carrot or two, fome fhallot,
two bay leaves, an ounce of iling-glafs, with fome beef broth ;
flew this till it will jelly, pafs it through a fine fleve, then
through a bag add fome lemon-juice. Mafon 303.
; ,
To
Jlorcndine Rabbits.
Skin three young rabbits, but leave on the ears; wafh and
dry them with a cloth, takeout the bones carefully, leaving the
head whole, then lay them flat; make a force-meat of a quarter
of a pound of bacon fcraped, it anlwers better than fuet, it
MADE DISHES OF HARES, RABBITS, &c. 143
makes the rabbits eat tenderer, and look whiter; add to the
bacon the crumb of a penny loaf, a little lemon thyme, or le-
mon-peel Hired fine, parfley chopped fmall, nutmeg, chyan, and
fait to your palate; mix them up together with an egg, and
fpread it over the rabbits, roll them up to the head, fkewer them
Braight, and clofe the ends, to prevent the force-meat from
coming out; Ikewer the ears back, and tie them in feparate
cloths, and boil them half an hour. When you difh them up,
take out the jaw-bones, and flick them in the eyes for ears put
;
13°.
Rabbits Surprize.
Take two half grown rabbits, roaß them, cut off the heads
clofe to the Ihouldcrs and the firß joints then take off all the
;
lean meat from the back bones cut it fmall, and tofs it up with
;
Eerhs cover them down clofe, and let them ftew till
;
tfoen take up the rabbits, ftrain off the fauce. thicken it with
butler and flour, and pour k over them, Mafon, 295.
Another way.
Having divided your rabbits into quarters, you may lard
-
them or not, juft as you pleafe. Shake fome flour over them,
and fry them in lard or butter. Then put them into an
earthen pipkin, with a quart of good broth, a glafs of white
wine, a little pepper and fait, a bunch of fweet herbs, and a
fmall piece of butter rolled in flour. Cover them clofe, and
let them ftew half an hour; then dilh them up, and pour the
fauce over them. Garniffi with Seville oranges cut into thin
fllces and notched. Glajje 104. Farley, 13 1.
,
lows -.—take a little veal broth, boll it up with a little flour and
butter to thicken it, and add a gill of cream. Keep it ftirring
one way till if is fmooth, and then put it into a boat.
Portuguefe Rabbits.
Get fome rabbits, trufs them chicken falhion, the head mull
be cut off, and the rabbit turned with the back upwards, and
two of the le,gs dripped to the claw end, and fo trufled with
two fkewers. Lard them and road: them with what fauce you
pleafe. If you want chickens, and they are appear as fuch,
they mufi be deeded in this manner;—fend them up hot with
gravy in the dilh, and garnifh with lemon and beet-root.
GluJJ'c, 103.
Rabbits Pulled.
Half boil your rabbits, with an onion, a little whole pepper,
a bunch of fweet herbs, and a piece of lemon-peel j pull the
fleflx into flakes, put to it a little of the liquor, a piece of
butter mixed with flour, pepper, felt, nutmeg, chopped parfley,
and the liver boiled and bruifed j boil this up, Shaking it round,
Alafon, 294.
A Scotch Rahhii,
Having toafted a piece of bread very nicely on both fides,
butter it, and toaft a flice of cheefe about as big as the bread
©a- both fides., and lay it on the bread. Cole, 182.
MADE DISHES OF HARES, RABBITS, &c. 145
A Welch Rabbit,
Toaft a piece of bread on both fides, then toaft the cheefe
on one fide lay it on the toaft, and with a hot iron brown the
other fide. You may rub it over with muftard.
An Engltjb Rabbit.
Toaft the bread brown on both fides, and lay it in a plate
before the fire, then pour a glafs of red wine over it, and let
it foak the wine up then cut fome cheefe very thin, and lay
;
it pretty thick over the bread, and put it in a tin oven before
the fire, and it will be prefently toafted and browned. Serve
it hot. Cole 182,
}
i+6
TAKE the turtle out of the water the night before you drels
it, and lay it on its back. In the morning cut its head
off, and hang it up by its hind fins for it to bleed till the blood
is all out y then cut the callapee, which is the belly, round, and
"
fpring water with a little fait, cut the fins off, and fcald them
with the head take off all the fcales, cut all the white meat
;
out, and throw it into fpring water and fait j the guts and
lungs muds be cut out. Walh the lungs very clean from the
blood, then take the guts and maw and flit them open, wafh
them very clean, and put them on to boil in a large pot of
water, and boil them till they are tender. Then take off the
infide fkin, and cut them in pieces of two or three inches long.
Have ready a good veal broth made us follows —Take one :
take the fins out, and put in a pint of Madeira wine, and flew
it for fifteen minutes. Beat up the whites of fix eggs with the
juice of two lemons, put the liquor in and boil it up, run it
through a flannel bag, make it very hot, wafh the fins very
clean, and put them in. Take a piece of butter and put at the
bottom of a ftew-pan, put your white meat in, and fweat it
gently till it is almoft tender. Take the lungs and heart, and
cover them with veal broth, with an onion, herbs, and fpice ;
as for the fins, ftew them till tender; take out the lungs, ftrain
the liquor oft', thicken it, and put in a bottle of Madeira wine,
feafon with chyan pepper and fait pretty high put in the ;
lungs and white meat, ftew them up gently for fifteen minutes j
have feme force-meat balls made out of the white part inftead
of veal, as for Scotch collops. If any eggs, fcald them; if not,
take twelve hard yolks of eggs, made into egg balls. Have
your callapafh, or deep fhell, done round the edges with pafte,
feafon it in the infide with chyan pepper and fait, and a little
Madeira wine bake it half an hour, then put in the lungs and
;
white meat, force meat, and eggs over, and bake it half an
TURTLES AND MOCK TURTLES. 147
hour. Take the bones, and three quarts of veal broth, fea-
foned with an onion, a bundle of Tweet herbs, two blades of
mace j dew it an hour, drain it through a deve, thicken it with
butter and flour, put in half a pint of Madeira wine, dew it
half an hour Teafon with chyan pepper and fait to your liking.
;
This is the foup. Take the callapee, run your knife between
the meat and fhcll, and fill it full of force-meat; Teafon it all
over with Tweet herbs chopped fine, a fhallot chopped, chyan
pepper and fait, and a little Madeira wine put a pade round
;
the edge, and bake it an hour and an half. Take the guts and
maw, put them in a dew-pan, with a little broth, a bundle of
Tweet herbs, and two blades of mace beat fine; thicken with a
little butter rolled in dour, dew them gently for half an hour,
Teafon with chyan pepper and fait, beat up the yolks of two
eggs in half a pint of cream, put it in, and keep dirring it
one way till it boils up, then difh them up as follows:
CALLAPEE.
FRICASSEE. SOUP. FINS.
CALLAPASH.
The fins eat fine, when cold, put by in the liquor. Glajp,
344 to 346. Farley 22 to 26.
,
cut off* the fins, and the callapee from the callapafh ; take care
you do not burft the gall; throw all the inwards into cold water,
the guts and the tripe keep by themfelves, and flip them open
with a penknife, walh them very clean in fcalding water, and
fcrape off all the inward fkin as you do them, throw them
;
into cold water, wafli them out of that and put them into frefh
water, and let them lie all night, fcalding the fins and edges of
the callapafh and callapee cut the meat off the flioulders, and
;
hack the bones, and fet them over the fire with the fins in about
a quart of water put in a little mace, nutmeg, chyan, and fait;
;
let it flew about three hours, then ftrain it, and put the fins by
for ufe. The next morning take fome of them eat you cut off the
flioulders, and chop it final 1, as for faufages, with about a pound
of beef or veal fuet; feafon with mace, nutmeg, fweet marjo-
ram, parfley, chyan, and fait to your tafte, and three or four
glafles of Madeira wine, fo fluff it under the two flefhy parts of
the meat; and if you have any left, lay it over to prevent the
meat from burning; then cut the remainder of the meat and
fins in pieces the fize of an egg; feafon it pretty high with
chyan, fait, and a little nutmeg, and put it into the callapafh |
jinother way.
I have fcen, fays Mr. Verral, many a turtle drefted but I
•,
think not all as they Ihould be. And as I have had the honour
of fending fevefal to table myfelf, to fome of the politeft gentry
in the kingdom, with great applaufe, I fhall give the following
receipt from experience, rather than from the general rule of
hodge-podging it together. To diffeft it then—Let its head
be chopped off dole to the fhell, fet it on that part that all the
blood may run away; have plenty of water in pails or tubs ;
lay your hfh upon the back, or callapafh, cut oft' the under
fhell, or callapee, in the firft line or partition, from the edge of
the callapafh take oft" that, and immediately put it into "water.
\
Next cut off" the four fins in the fhoulder and aich-bone joints,
and put into water too, and with a cleaver chop out the bones
from the fhoulders and hinder parts, and put to the reft. Take
out your guts and tripe clean, and the other entrails, and lay
your callapafh in water while you prepare your callapee, which
fliould be done as follows :—cut offall fuperfluous bits for your
foup, and trim it neatly. Cut little holes in the thick flcfh,
with the point of your knife lay it in a difh, and foak it well
;
in Madeira wine, and feafon with chyan pepper, (but not too
much), a little fait, plenty of fhallot and parfley minced and
ftrewed upon it. Next take the callapafh, and order in the
fame manner; firft cutting off the fhell to the creafe on the
other fide of the edge, and put a neat rim of pafte quite round,
and adorn it well; pour a little cullis round, and fqueeze the
juice of fome lemons or oranges 5 and they are ready for your
oven. The common way is to put fome of the fiefh into the
callapafh but, in my opinion, it is beft to put none. The next
;
to be made ready is your fins and head j blanch them till you
can take oft' the outer fkin trim them, and put them into a
;
all is wafhed and fcraped clean; cut them into pieces about
two inches in length, and blanch them. When your broth is
made of the flefh, to the tripe in a ftew-pan put as much as
will cover it; put in a bunch of herbs, with an onion or two, a
couple of whole fhallots, fome mace, and a little fait; flew all
till pretty tender; take out the herbs, See. and put butter and
flour to thicken it; provide a liafon as for a fricaffee of
chickens, and at your dinner-time tofs it up with the juice of
orange or lemon, and it is ready. Next take the jellies of
your flde fheils, and prepare for a difh done in the fame
manner as the fins and head; fqueeze in fome juice of
orange or lemon, and it is ready. And now four the foup
Moft of which that I have feen or tailed has been poor infipid
fluff. To fay why it was, is faying lefs than nothing. The
whole matter is, to flrew how it may be made good thus, they
;
cut all the flefh from the bones into fmall pieces, and to about
a pound of meat put a quart of water, and to five or fix quarts,
a pint of Madeira. Take care that it is well Ikimmed. Tie
up in a bit of linen three or four onions, fome bits of carrot, a
leek, fome herbs and parfley, with two or three pinches of
chyan, and let it boil with the meat, and fait according to your
tafte. Let it funnier an hour, or a little more, and fend it up v
in a tureen or foup-dilh, only the meat and the broth.
Thefe feven difhes make a pretty firfl courfe; the callapafh
and callapec at top and bottom, foup in the middle, and the
other four the corners. Yerral, 235,
To drefs a Mock Turtle .
Take the largeft calf ’s head you can get, with the fkin on,
put it in fcalding water till you find the hair will come off, clean
it well, and wafh it in warm water, and boil it three quarters
of an hour. Then take it out of the water, and flit it down
the face, cut off all the meat along with the fkin as clean from
the bone as you can, and be careful you do not break the ears
off. Lay it on a flat difh, and fluff the ears with force-meat,
and tic them round with cloths. Take the eyes out, and pick
all the reft of the meat clean from the bone, put it in a tjoffing-
pan, with the niceft and fatteft part of another calf’s head,
without the fkin on, boiled as long as the above, and three
quarts of veal gravy. Lay the fkin in the pan on the meat,
with the fleflx-fide up, cover the pan clofe, and let ft flew over
a moderate fire one hour; then put in three fvveetbreads, fried
a little brown, one ounce of morels, the fame of truffles, five
artichoke bottoms boiled, one anchovy boned and chopped
fmall, a tea-fpooriful of chyan pepper, a little fait, half a lemon.
150 TURTLES AND MOCK TURTLES.
three pints of Madeira wine, two meat fpoonfuls of mufhroom
catchup, one of lemon-pickle, and half a pint of mufhrooms.
Let them flew flowly half an hour longer, and thicken it with
flour and butter. Have ready the yolks of four eggs boiled
hard, and the brains of both heads boiled cut the brains the
;
Another way.
Take a calf’s head, and feald off the hair, as from a pig*
then clean it, cut oft the horny part in thin flices, with as little
of the lean as poflible chop the brains have ready between a
; •,
feet ftew two hours and an half in three quarts pf water then ;
put in the chicken; let it ftew half an hour. Then take the
juice of two lemons, a tea-cupful of Madeira wine, fome chyan
pepper; put that in laft. Let it ftew altogether half an hour,
and ferve it up in a foup-difh.
Force-meat balls of veal may be laid at top, and hard eggs.
Cole, 188.
Chap. XI.—OF SOUPS.
Ohfervations on Soups.
cut the herbs and roots fmall, lay them over your meat, cover
it clofe, fet it over a very flow Are; it will draw all the virtue
out of the roots or herbs, and turn it to a good gravy, and give
the foup a very different flavor from putting water in at the
flrft. When your gravy is aimed dried up fill your pan with
water. When it begins to boil, take off the fat, and follow the
directions of your receipt for what fort of foup you are making.
When you make old peas foup, take foft water; for green peas
hard is preferable; it keeps the peas of a better colour. When
you make any white foup, do not put in cream till you take it
off the fire. Always difh up your foups the laft thing. If it
be a gravy foup, it will fkim over if you let it ftand. If it be a
peas-foup, it often fettles, and the top looks thin. You muft ob-
ferve in all broths and foups, that one thing does not tafte more
than another, but that the tafte be equal, and that it has a fine
agreeable relifh, according to what you defign it for; and you
muft be fure that all the greens and herbs you put in are clean
waflied and picked. Cole 189.,
it, and boil in good broth or gravy, and a bit of bacon. When
boiled tender, take out the bacon, feafon it with fait, and Ikim
off" the fat very clean it muft be ferved of a middling confid-
;
Hare Soup.
This being a rich foup, it is proper for a large entertainment,
and may be placed at the bottom of the table, where two foups
are required, and almond or onion foup be at the top. Hare
foup is made thus :—Cut a large old hare into fmall pieces, and
put it in a mug, with three blades of mace, a little fait, two
large onions, a red herring, fix morels, half a pint of red wine,
and three quarts of water. Bake it three hours in a quick oven,
and then ftrain it into a tofiing-pan. Have ready boiled three
ounces of French barley, or fago, in water. Then put the
liver of the hare two minutes in fealding water, and rub it
through a hair fieve, with the back of a wooden fpoon. Put
it into the foup with the barley or fago, and a quarter of a pound
of butter. Set it over the fire, and keep it ftirring, but do not
let it boil. If you difapprove of the liver, you may put in crifped
bread, fteeped in red wine. Farley 156.
,
Soup d-la-Reine.
Take a knuckle of veal, and three or four pounds of lean
beef, put to it fix quarts of water with a little fait. When it
boils, Ikim it well, then put in fix large onions, two carrots, a
head or two of celery, a parfnip, one leek, and a little thyme.
Boil them all together till the meat is boiled quite down, then
ftrain it through a hair fieve, and let it ftand about half an
hour 5 then Ikim it well, and clear it off gently from the fet-
tlings into a clear pan. Boil half a pint of cream, and pour it
OF SOUPS. 153
«n tiie crumb of a halfpenny loaf, and let it foak well. Take
half a pound of almonds, blanch and beat them as fine as pof-
ble, putting in now and then a little cream to prevent them from
oiling. Then take the yolks of fix hard eggs, and the roll that
is foaked in the cream, and beat them all together quite fine.
Then make your broth hot, and pour it to your almonds.
Strain it through a line hair fieve, rubbing it with a fpoon till
all the goodnefs is gone through into a ftew-pan, and ad 1 more
cream to make it white. Set it over the fire, keep ftirring it
till it boils, fkim off the froth as it rifes, foak the tops of two
French rolls in melted butter, in a flew pan, till they are crifp,
but not brown; then take them out of the butter, and lay
them on a plate before the fire and a quarter of an hour be-
;
fore you fend it to the table, take a little of the foup hot, and
put it to the roll in the bottom of the tureen put your foup on
;
the fire, keep ftirring it till ready to boil, then put it into your
tureen, and ferve it up hot. Be fure you take all the fat off the
broth before you put it to the almonds, or it will fpoil it and
•,
Soup Crejfy.
Take a pound of lean ham, and cut it into fmall bits, and put
at the bottom of a ftew-pan, then cut a French roll and put
over the ham. Take two dozen heads of celery cut fmall, fix
onions, two turnips, one carrot, cut and wafhed very clean, fix
cloves, four blades of mace, two handfuls of water-creffes. Put
them all into a ftew-pan, with a pint of good broth. Cover
them clofe, and fweat it gently for twenty minutes; then fill
it up with veal broth, and ftew it for four hours. Rub it
through a fine fieve, or cloth, put it in your pan again j feafon
it with fait and a little chyan pepper. Give it a fimtner up,
and fend it to table hot, with fome French roll toafled hard in
it. Boil a handful of creffes till tender, in water, and put it
over the bread. Glajpy 126. Mafon 196, Farley 156.
, ,
Another ’way.
Slice all forts of roots, flow them in good butter, with dices
of ham and veal; let them flew in the butter as long as you
poflibly can without letting them burn; then add fome good
broth; let it boil till your roots are become like a marmalade,
then prefs it through a cullis-clo.th y add as much broth as ne-
ceffary for your quantity of foup. If for meagre, inflead of
veal and ham, ufe carps or pike, and meagre broth. Clermont,
25-
Almond Soup.
Blanch a quart of almonds, and beat them in a marble mor-
tar, with the yolks of fix hard eggs, till they are a fine pafle;
mix them by degrees with two quarts of new milk, a quart of
OF SOUPS.
cream, and a quarter of a pound of double refined fugar. beat
fine ftir all well together. When it is well mixed, fet it over
;
a flow fire, and keep it (birring quick all the while, till you find
it is thick enough then pour it into your difh, and fend it to
;
table. If you are not very careful, it will curdle. Majon 205, ,
Another way.
Chop a neck of veal, and the ferag end of a neck of mutton
into fmall pieces, put them in a large tofling-pan; cut in a
turnip, with a blade or two of mace, and five quarts of water ;
fet it over the fire, and let it boil gently till it is reduced to two
quarts ■, ftrain it through a hair fieve into a clear pot, then put
in fix ounces of almonds blanched and beat fine, half a pint of
thick cream, and chyan pepper to your tafte. Have ready three
fmall French rolls, made for that purpofe, the fize of a fmall
tea-cup if they are larger, they will not look well, and drink
;
cut them lengthways, ftick them round the edge of the rolls
flankways, then ftick them all over the top of the rolls, and put
them in the tureen. When diflhed up, pour the foup upon the
rolls. Thefe rolls look like a hedge-hog. Some French cooks
give this foup the name of Hedge-hog Soup. Rajfald, 6. F »
h> r S7*
Soup Saute, or Gravy Soup,
Put fix good rafhers of lean ham in the bottom of a ftew-
pan then put over it three pounds of lean beef, and over the
;
beef three pounds of lean veal, fix onions cut in flices, two car-
rots, and two turnips fliced, two heads of celery, and a bundle
of fweet herbs fix doves, and two blades of mace put a little
;
water at the bottom, draw it very gently till it fticks, then put
in a gallon of boiling water let it ftew for two hours, feafon
;
with fait, and ftrain it oft'; then have ready a carrot cut in fmall
pieces of two inches long, and about as thick as a goofe-quill, a
turnip, two heads of leeks, two heads of celery, two heads of
endive cut acrofs, two cabbage lettuces cut acrofs, a very little
forrel,and chervil; put them in a ftew pan, and fweat them
for fifteen minutes gently; then put them in your foup, boil it
up gently for ten minutes; put it in your tureen, with 9. cruft
of French roll.
N. B. You may boil the herbs in two quarts of water for ten
minutes, if you like them beft fo; your foup will be the clearer,
Glajfe 128. Farley 161.
, ,
the middle, and pour your foup over it and ferve it up with
;
you mud likewife lave; pound the fiielis of the craw fifii and
lobfter fine in a marble mortar, and boil them in four quarts of
water, with four pounds of mutton, a pint of green fplit peas,
nicely picked and wafhed,a large turnip carrot, onion, mace,
C'loves, anchovy, a little thyme pepper, and fait. Stew them
on a flow fire till all the goodnefs is out of the mutton and
fihells, tlien ftrain it through a lleye, and put in the tails of
your craw-fifh and the lobfter-meat, but in very final! pieces,
with the red coral of the lobfter, if it has any; boil it half an
hour, and juft before you ferve it up, add a little butter melted
thick and fmooth ftir it round feveral times when you put it
;
in ferve it very hot; but do not put too much fpice in it.
;
N. B. Pick out all the bags and the woolly part ofyour craw-
fifh, before you pound them. Raffald. 13. Farley 165. ,
cafe, full of gravel, which muff be always taken out before you
pound them for your ftock. Verral 2 l.
OF SOUPS.
Plumb Porridge for Chr ifmas.
Put a leg and dim of beef into eight gallons of water, and
boil them till they are very tender. When the broth is drong,
drain it out. Then wipe the pots, and put in the broth again.
Slice fix penny loaves thin, cut off the tops and bottoms, put
fome of the liquor to them, and cover them up, and let them
ftand for a quarter of an hour. Then boil and drain it, and
put it into your pot. Let them boil a little, and then put in
five pounds of dewed raifins of the fun, and two pounds of
prunes. Let it boil a quarter of an hour, then put in five
pounds of currants clean wafhed and picked. Let thefe boil
till they fwell, and then put in three quarters of an ounce of
mace, half an ounce of cloves, and two nutmegs, all beat fine.
Before you put thefe into the pot, mix them with a little cold
liquor, and do not put them in but a little while before you
take off the pot. When you take off the pot, put in three
pounds of fugar, a little fait, a quart of fack, a quart of claret,
and the juice of two or three lemons. You may thicken with
fago in dead of bread, if you pleafe. Pour your porridge into
earthen pans, and keep it for ufe. Farley, \6%.
Soup and Bouillie.
For the bouillie, roll five pounds of brifket of beef tight with
a tape. Put it into.a dew-pan, with four pounds of the leg of
mutton piece of beef, and about feven or eight quarts of water.
Boil thefe up as quick as pofllble, Ikim it very clean add one
;
the ham then cut fix onions in dices, and put on two or three
;
Another •way.
Provide a peck of peas, fhell them, and boil them In fpring-
water till they are foft; then work them through a hair lieve ;
take the water that your peas were boiled in, and put in a
knuckle of veal, three flices of ham, and cut two carrots, a
turnip, and a few beet leaves, fhred fmall; add a little more
water to the meat, fet it over the fire, and let it boil one hour
and a half; then drain the gravy into a bowl, and mix it with
the pulp, and put in a little juice of fpinach, which mud be beat
and fqeezed through a cloth; put in as much as will make it
look a pretty colour, then give it a gentle boil, which will take
off the tade of the fpinach: flice in the whited part of a head
of celery, pul in a lump of fugar the fize of a walnut, take a
flice of bread, and cut it in little fquare pieces; cut a little bacon
OF SOUPS.
the fame way, fry them a light brown, in frefh butter; cut a
large cabbage lettuce in flices, fry it after the other, put it in
the tureen with the fried bread and bacon have ready boiled,
:
a$ for eating, a pint of young peas, and put them in the foup,
with a little chopped mint. If you like it, and pour it into your
tureen. Raffald, 9.
Soup a-ia-Moufquetairc.
Take a pint of green peas, and a handful of forrel; boil in
your broth and gravy on a flow fire, a neck of mutton which,
;
foup, and flice in another head of celery, chyan pepper, and fait
to your tafte cut a flice of bread in final! dice, fry them a
;
light brown, and put them in your difh; then pour the foup
over it. Farley 160.
,
'Another way.
Cut two large onions, or three or four fmall ones, two car-
rots, fome fpinach, celery, endive, and a turnip, into a ftew-
pan fry them with a bit of butter, fo as to be as little greafy
;
they are boiled Some gravy that has run from a piece of meat
is a great addition. If the foup does not appear quite thick
enough, mix a little flour very fmooth, and add to it; but be
fure to let it boil a few minutes, or the flour will tafle raw.
The liquor of a leg of pork makes good peas-foup in a common
way, or any boiled bones, Mofon 194. ,
Skin two old partridges, and cut them into finall pieces,
with three flices of ham, two or three onions fliced, and fomc
celery; fry them in butter till they are as brown as they can
be made without burning; then put them into three quarts of
water with a few pepper-corns. Boil it flowly till a little more
than a pint is confumed, then ftrain it, put in fome ftewed
celery and fried bread. Glafe, 133. MnJon t 198. Rnjfald, 14.
Farley, 155.
Soup d la Chartre .
derate fire. When you find the gravy begins to draw, keep
taking it up till you have got it all out, then put water in to cover
the meat; fet it on the fire again, and let it boil flowly for four
OF SOUPS.
hours, then ftrain It through a hair fieve into a clean pan, and
let it boil three parts away; then ftrain the gravy that you drew
from the meat, into the pan, let it boil gently yobferving to flcim
the fat off as it rifes) till it looks thick like glue. You mull take
great care, when it is near enough, that it does not burn put in
;
the cakes on diflies, and fet them in the fun to dry. This foup
will anfwer beft to be made in frofty weather. When the cakes
are dry, put them in a tin box, with writing-paper between
every cake, and keep them in a dry place. This is a very
ufeful foup to be kept in gentlemens’ families, for by pouring
a pint of boiling water on one cake, and a little fait, it will
make a good bafon of broth. A little boiling water poured on
it will make gravy for a turkey or fowls. The longer it is kept
the better.
N. B. It will be neceflary to keep turning the cakes, as they
dry. Raff aid, 2. Farley 15Q.
Macaroni Soup,
Mix three quarts of ftrong broth, and one of gravy. Take
half a pound of fmall pipe-macaroni, and boil it in three quarts
of water, with a little butter in it, till it is tender. Then ftrain
it through a fieve. Cut it in pieces of about two inches in
length, put it into your foup, and boil it up for ten minutes.
Send it to table in a tureen, with the cruft of a French roll
toafted. Glaffcy 126. Mafony 121.
Soup au Bourgeois.
Cut ten or a dozen heads of endive, and four or five bunches
of celery into fmall bits; wafh them, let them be well drained
from the water, and put into a large pan ; pour upon them four
quarts of boiling water; fet on three quarts of beef gravy made
for foup, in a large fauce-pan, ftrain the herbs from the water
very dry. When the gravy boils, put them in. Cut oft the
crufts of two French rolls, break them, and put into the reft.
When the herbs are tender, the foup Is enough. A boiled
fowl may be put into the middle, but it is very good without.
If a white foup is liked better, it fliould be veal gravy. Cole,
199-
Onion Soup.
Boil eight or ten large Spanifh onions in milk and water;
change it three times. When they are quite foft, rub them
through a hair ficve. Cut an old cock into pieces, and boil it
for gravy, with one blade of mace. Strain it, and pour it
upon the pulp of the onions boil it gently with the crumb of
;
fald, 8.
Ox-Cheek Soup.
Break the bones of an ox-cheek, and wafh them till they are
perfectly clean. Then lay them in warm water, and throw in
a little fait, which will fetch out the dime. Then take a large
dew-pan, and put two ounces of butter at the bottom of it, and
lay the flefhy fide of the cheek-bone in it. Add to it half a
pound of fhank of ham cut in dices, and four heads of celery,
with the leaves pulled off, and the heads wafhed clean. Cut
them into the foup with three large onions, two carrots, a parf-
nip diced, a few beets cut fmall, and three blades of mace.
Set it over a moderate fire for a quarter of an hour, which will
draw the virtue from the roots, and give to the gravy an agree-
able drength. A very good gravy may be made by this me-
thod, with roots and butter, adding only a little browning to
give it a good colour. When the head has fimmered a quarter
of an hour, put to it fix quarts of water, and let it dew till it is
reduced to two quarts. If you would have it eat like foup,
drain and take out the meat and the other ingredients, and
put in the white part of a head of celery cut in fmall pieces,
with a little browning to make it of a fine colour. Take two
ounces of vermicelli, give it a fcald in the foup, and put it into
the tureen, with the top of a French roll in the middle of it.
If you would have it eat like a dew, take up the face as whole
as pofixble, and have ready a boiled turnip and carrot cut in
fquare pieces, and a dice of bread toaded and cut in fmall
dice. Put in a little chyan pepper, and drain the foup through
a hair fieveupon the meat, bread, turnip, and carrot. Farley ,
198.
Soup Lorraine.
Take a pound of Tweet almonds, blanch and beat them in a
mortar, with a very little water to keep them from oiling; put
to them all the white part of a large road fowl, and the yolks
of four poached eggs; pound all together as fine as poffible.
Take three quarts of drong veal broth; let it be very white,
and Ikim off all the fat. Put it into a ftew-pan with the other
ingredients, and mix them well together. Boil them fofdy
over a ftove, or on a clear fire. Mix the white part of another
road fowl very fine; feafon with pepper, fait, nutmeg, and a
little beaten mace. Put in a bit of butter as big as an egg, and
a fpoonful or two of the foup drained, and fet it over the dove
to be quite hot. Cut two French rolls in thin dices, and fet
them before the fire to crifp. Take one of the hollow rolls,
which are made for oyder loaves, and fill it with thp mince ;
162 OF SOUPS,
lay on the top as clofe as poflible, and keep it hot. Strain the
loup through a piece of dimity into a clean fauce-pan, and let
it flew till it is the thicknefs of cream. Put the crifped bread
in the difh or tureen, pour the fauce over it, and place the roll
with the minced meat in the middle. Mufon 191. ,
Dauphin Soup.
Put a few dices of lard in the bottom of your fauce-pan,
diced ham and veal, three onions diced, a carrot and parlhip.
Soak over the fire till it catches, then add weak broth or boil-
ing water boil it on a dow fire till the meat is done. Pound
;
Afparngus Soup.
Provide four or five pounds of beef, cut it into pieces; fet It
over a fire, with an onion or two. a few cloves, and fome whole
black pepper, a calf’s foot or two, a head or two of celery, and
a very little hit of butter. Let it draw at a didance from the
fire. Put in a quart of warm beer three quarts of warm beef
broth, or water. Let thefe dew till enough. Strain it, take
off the fat very clean, put in fome afparagus heads, cut fmall,
{palates may be added, boiled very tender) and a toaded French
roll, the crumb taken out. Cole, 201.
Calf's Head Soup.
After waffling a calf’s head clean, dew it with a bunch of
Tweet herbs, an onion duck with cloves mace, pearl barley, and
Jamaica pepper. When it is very tender, put to it fome dewed
celery. Seafon it with pepper, and ferve it with the head in the
middle. Cole, 202.
Gravy Soup thickened ivith yellow Peas.
Put in fix quarts of water, a fliin of beef a pint of peas, and
fix onions. Set them over the fire, and let them boil gently
till all the juice is out of the meat. Then drain it through a
fieve; add to the drained liquor one quart of drong gravy to
make it brown put in pepper and fait to your tads, 'i hen
;
put in a little celery and beet-leaves, and boil it till they are
tender. Rajdld, 11.
Gihlet Soup.
Provide about two pounds of drag of mutton, the fame
quantity of drag of veal, and four pounds of gravy beef. Put
OF SOUPS.
163
this meat into two gallons of water, and let it flew very foftly
till it is a ftrong broth. Let it fland till it be cold, and Ikim
off the fat. Take two pair of giblets, fcalded and cleaned,
put them into the broth, and let them fimmer till they are
very tender. Take out the giblets and drain the foup through
a cloth. Put a piece of butter rolled in flour into a ftew-pan,
make it of alight brown. Have ready, chopped fmall, fome
parfley, chives, a little pennyroyal, and a little fweet marjoram.
Put the foup over a very flow fire. Put in the giblets, fried
butter, herbs, a little Madeira wine, fome fait, and fome chyan
pepper. Let them flmmer till the herbs are tender, then fend
the foup to table with the giblets in it. Cole, 7,02.
154
Chap. XII.—SOUPS WITHOUT MEATS.
CALCULATED FOR FAST DAYS.
Soup Maigre.
ftir all together, and pour into the ftew-pan two quarts of boil-
ing water. Take a handful of dry hardcruft, throw in a tea-fpoon-
ful of beaten pepper, three blades of mace beat fine j ftir all
together, and let it boil foftly for half an hour; then take it
<>ff the fire, and beat up the yolks of two eggs, and ftir in, and
one fpoonful of vinegar pour it into the foup-difh, and fend
*,
it to table. If you have any green peas, boil half a pint in the
foup for change. Glajfe 153. Mafon, with little variation,
,
Rice Soup.
Put a pound of rice and a little cinnamon to two quarts of
water; cover it clofe, and let it fimmer very foftly till the rice
is quite tender. Take out the cinnamon, then fweeten it to
your palate j grate half a nutmeg, and let it ftand till it is cold ;
then beat up the yolks of three eggs with half a pint of white
wine. Mix them very well, and ftir them into the rice, fet
them on a flow fire, and keep ftirring all the time for fear of
curdling. When it is of a good thicknefs, and boils, take it up.
Keep ftirring it till you put it into your difh. Glajfe 15 5. ,
Farley 164.
,
Oyjler Soup.
Take a proper quantity of fifh ftock 5 then take two quarts
SOUPS WITHOUT MEAT. 165
of oyfters without the beards beat
*, the hard part in a mortar,
with, the yolks of ten hard eggs; put them to the fifh flock,
fet it over the fire feafon it with pepper, fait, and grated nut-
;
1 66.
Another way.
Make your flock of any fort of fifh the place affords; let
there be about two quarts: take a pint of oyfters, beard them,
put thpm into a fauce-pan, ftrain the liquor, let them flew two
er three minutes in their own liquor j then take the hard parts
of the oyfters, and beat them in a mortar with the yolks of four-
hard eggs mix them with fome of the foup j put them with
;
the other part of the oyfters and liquor into a fauce-pan, a little
nutmeg, pepper and fait; ftir them well together, and let it
boil a quarter of an hour, Difh it up, and fend it to table. Cole,
204.
Green Peas Soup.
In fhelling your peas, feparate the old ones from the young,
and boil the old ones foft enough to ftrain through a cullen-
der then put the liquor, and what you drained through, to
;
the young peas, which muft be whole, and fome whole pepper,
mint, and a little onion Hired fmall j put them in a large fauce-
pan, with near a pound of butter; as they boil up, fhake in
fome flour j then put in a French roll fried in butter, to the
foup; you muft feafon it to your tafte with fait and herbs.
When you have done fo, add the young peas to it, which muft
be half boiled firft. You may leave out the flour, if you think
proper, and inftead of it, put in a little fpinach and cabbage
lettuce, cut fmall, which muft be fried in butter, and well mixed
with the broth, Rajfald 12.,
Another way*
a
801 l quart of old green peas in a quart of water, till they
are as tender as pap, then lirain them through a lieve, and boil
a quart of young peas in that water. In the mean time put
the old peas into a fieve, pour half a pound of melted butter
over them, and ftrain them through a ileve with the back of a
fpoon, till you have got all the pulp. When the young peas are
boiled enough, add the pulp and butter to the young peas and
liquor j ftir them together till they are fmooth, and feafon with
pepper and fait. You may fry a French roll, and let it fwim in
the difh. If you like it, boil a bundle of mint in the peas. GlaJTey
J s3*
Mrs, Mafon page 204, has the fame receipt in different
,
words.
SOUPS WITHOUT MEAT.
Onion Soup,
Brown half a pound of butter with a little flour ; takd care
It does not burn. When it has done hiding, flice a dozen of
large white onions, fry them very gently till they are tender;
then pour to them, by degrees, ti o quarts of boiling water,
r
ftrain it, and toaft fome bread cut it fmall, lay the bread into
;
your difh, and pour in the foup. If you have a ftew-hole, fet
the difh over it for a minute, and fend it to table. If you find
your foup not rich enough, you may let it boil till it is as thick
as you would have it. You may add a piece of carrot to brown
it, Farley, 167.
Peas Soup.
Put a quart of fplit peas into a gallon of water to boil.
When they are qutte foft, put in half a red herring, or two
anchovies, a good deal of whole pepper, black and white, two
or three blades of mace, four or five cloves, a bundle of fweet
herbs, a large onion, the green tops of a bunch of celery, and
a good bundle of dried mint; cover them clofe, and let them
boil foftly till there is about two quarts j then ftrain it off, and
have ready the white part of the celery wafhed clean, and cut
fmall and ftewed tender in a quart of water, fome fpinach
picked and wafhed clean, put to the celery, let them ftew till
the water is quite wafted, and put it to your foup.
Take out the crumb of a French roll, fry the cruft brown in
a little frefh butter 5 take fome fpinach, ftew it in a little butter,
after it is boiled, and fill the roll; take the crumb, cut it in
piecebeat it in a mortar with a raw egg, a little fpinach, and a
Jittle forrel a little beaten mace, a little nutmeg, and. an an-
chovy then mix it up with your hand, and roll them into balls
;
with a little flour, and cut fome bread into dice, and fry them
crifp 5 pour your foup into your difh, put in the balls and bread,
SOUPS WITHOUT MEAT.
and the roll in the middle. Garnish your difh with fpinach.
If it want fait, you mud feafon it to your palate; rub in fume
dried mint. Gla/fe, 152.
Mujfel Soup.
Wafh a hundred models very clean, and put them into a
fauce-pan till they open, then take them from the (hells, beard
them, and drain the liquor through a lawn deve beat a dozen
*,
dices, fry them in butter take the muflel liquor, with a fmall
;
bunch of Tweet herbs, a little parfley and horfe radifh, with the
craw-fith and almonds, a little pepper and fait, and half the
muflels, with a quart of water or more let it boil till all the
;
Carrot and parfnip; at the fame time, take the crud of the roll,
and fry them crifp. Take the other half of the mudels, a
quarter of a pound of batter, a fpoonful of water (hake in a
;
little flour, fet them on the fire till the butter is melted j feafon
it with pepper and fait, then beat the yolks of three eggs, put
them in, dir them all the time for fear of curdling; grate a
little nutmeg. When it is thick and fine, fill the rolls, pour
the foup into the tureen, and fet the rolls in the middle. Coley
206.
Barley Soup.
To a gallon of water put half a pound of barley, a blade or
two of mace, a large crud of bead, and a little lemon-peel.
Let it boil till it comes to two quarts; then add half a pint of
white wine, and fweeten to your palate. Cole t 207.
Scate Soup.
Having fkinned and waffled two pounds of fcate, boil it In fix
quarts of water. When it is boiled, take the meat from the
bones take two pounds of flounders, wafh them clean, put
•,
them into the water the fcate was boiled in, with feme lemon-
peel, a bunch of fweet herbs, a few blades of mace, fome horfe-
radiffl, the crud of a penny loaf, a little parfley, and the bones
of the fcate j cover it very dole, and let it dmmer till it is
reduced to two quarts; then drain it off, and put to it an
ounce of vermicelli; fet it on the fire, and let it boil very foft-
ly. Take one of the hollow rolls which are made for oyders,
and fry it in butter. Take the meat of the fcate, pull it into
little dices, put it into a fauce-pan, with two or three fpoonfuls
168 SOUPS WITHOUT MEAT.
of the foup fhake into it a little flour and a piece of butter,
;
Take a pound of lean beef, cut and hack it well, then flour
It well. Put a piece of butter, as big as an hen’s egg, in a ftew-
pan when it is melted, put in your beef, fry it on all fides a
;
let it boil till there is about a pint or lefs. Then feafon it with
fait, and ftrain it off. Glajfe 125.
,
To wake Gravy.
As gravy is not always to be procured, efpecially by thofe
who live remote from large towns, in fuch cafes the follow-
ing directions may be ufeful: When your meat comes from
the butcher’s, take a piece of beef, veal and mutton, and cut
them into fmall pieces. Take a large deep fauce-pan, with a
cover, lay your beef at bottom, then your mutton, then a very
little piece of bacon, a ft ice or two of carrot, fome mace, cloves,
whole black and white pepper, a large onion cut in fliecs, a
bundle of fweet herbs, and then lay in your veal. Cover it
clofe over a flow fire for fix or feven minutes, and fhake the
fauce-pan often ; then duft fome flour into it, and pour in boil-
GRAVIES AND BROTHS.
Inp water till the meat is fomething more than covered. Cover
it clofe again, and let it flew till it is rich and good. Then Tea-
fon it to your tafle with fait, and ftrain it off when you will
;
Beef Gravy.
Take fome lean beef, according to the quantity of gravy
that is wanted, cut it into pieces put it into a ftew-pan, with
;
then let the meat brown, turning it that it may not burn.
Pour over it boding water add a few cloves, pepper-corns, a
;
firain the broth. Put in the mutton again, with a few dried
marigolds, chives, or young onions, and a little parfley chopped ;
the broth, and pour it into a tureen if agreeable, the meat may
;
be put] in with it. Toaft fome bread, cut it into fquares, and
put it in a plate. Cole, 212.
Strong Beef Broth to keep for ufe.
Take part of a leg of beef, and the fcrag end of a neck of
jnutton, break the bones in pieces, and put to it as much water
sis will cover it, and a little fait and when it bolls, fkim it
;
clean, and put into it a whole onion ftuck with cloves, a bunch
offweet herbs, fome pepper, and a nutmeg quartered. Let
thefe boil till the meat is boiled in pieces, and the ftrength
boiled out of it. Strain it out, and keep it for ufe. Glajfe 206.
,
Mafon ,
128,
felly Broth
Put in your pot or ftew-pan Bices of beef, a fillet of veal, a
fowl, one or two partridges, according to the quantity required \
jput it on the fire till it catches a little, and turn the meat now
;and then to give it a proper colour then add fome good clear
;
Chicken Broth.
Take an old cock, or large fowl, and flay it; pick off all
the fat, and break it to pieces with a rolling pin put it into
;
foftly till it is good, and then ftrain it oft"; feafon with a very
GRAVIES AND BROTHS.
little fait. When you boil the chicken, fave the liquor and
;
when the meat is eat take the bones, break them, and put them
to the liquor you boiled the chicken in, with a blade of mace*
and a cruft of bread, Cole, 212.
Broth to fweeten theJharpnefs of the blood.
Slice half a pound of veal boil it in three pints of water,
*,
fcafon them with pepper and fait, and then put them into a
flew-pan with a little fair water, and a good piece of butter, a
little lemon-pickle, or half a lemon, a glafs of white wine, one
anchovy, a little mace and nutmeg, an onion {luck with cloves,
a bunch of lemon-thyme, and fweet marjoram-, let thefe flew
together till your chickens are tender, and then lay them on
your difh thicken the gravy with flour and butter, flrain it,
;
then beat the yolks of three eggs a little, and mix them with a
large tea-cupful ofrich cream, and put it in your gravy, and fhake
it over the fire, but do not let it boil, and pour it over your
chickens. Raff aidy 125.
A brown fricajfee of Chickens or Rabbits.
Take your rabbits or chickens, and fkin the rabbits but not
the chickens, then cut them into fmall pieces, and rub them
over with the yolks of eggs. Have ready fome grated bread,
a little beaten mace, and a little grated nutmeg mixed together,
and then roll them in it; put a little butter into a flew-pan,
and when it is melted, putin your meat. Fry it of a fine
brown, and take care they do not flick to the bottom of the
pan then pour the gravy from them, and pour in half a pint
;
enough; thicken your gravy and ftrain it, dilh up your rab-
bits, and pour the gravy over. Cole, 214.
Tofricaffee Rabbits white.
Having cut up your rabbits, put them into a tofling-pan,
with a pint of veal gravy, a tea-fpoonful of lemon-pickle, one
anchovy, a flice of lemon, a little beaten mace, chyan pepper
and fait; flew them over a flow fire. When they are enough,
thicken your gravy with flour and butter; brain it, then add
the yolks of two eggs mixed with a large tea-cupful of thick
cream, and a little nutmeg grated in it; do not let it boil, and
ferve it up. Coley 214.
To fr 'coffee Tripe.
Cut a piece of double tripe in pieces of about two inches; put
them in a fauce-pan of water with an onion, and a bundle of
fw set herbs boil it till it is quite tender, then have ready abi-
;
Ihamel made thus Take fome lean ham, cut it in thin pieces,
:
and put it in a frew-pan, and fome veal, having firft cut oft' the
fat, put it over the ham cut an onion in flices, fome carrot
;
and turnip, a little thyme, cloves, and mace, and fome frelh
mulhrooms chopped put a little milk at the bottom, and draw
;
it gently over the fire. Be careful it does not fcorch, then put
in a quart of milk, and half a pint of cream flew it gently
;
Another way.
Cut Tome nice white tripe into flips, put it into fome boiled
gravy with a little cream and a bit of butter mixed with flour ;
flir it till the butter is melted; add a little white wine, lemon-
peel grated, chopped parfley, pepper and fait, pickled mufh-
rooms or lemon-juice; fhake all together; hew it a little.
Mafony 13c.
To fricajjee Ox Palates.
Clean your palates very well, put them into a ftew-pot, and
cover them with water, fet them in the oven for three or four
hours. When they come from the oven, flrip off the fkins.
FRICASSEES.
and cut them in fquare pieces; feafon them with mace, nut-
meg, chyan, and fait mix a fpoonful of flour with the yolks of
*,
two eggs, dip in your palates, and fry them a light brown, then
put them in a fleve to drain. Have ready half a pint of veal
gravy, with a little caper liquor, a fpoonful of browing, and a
few mufhrooms; thicken It well with flour and butter, pour it
hot on your difh, and lay in your palates. Garnifh with fried
parfley and barberries. Raff aid 120.,
Another way.
Boil and peel your palates, and cut them in fmall fillets; put
them into a ftew-pan with a little butter, a flice of ham, mufh-
rooms, a nofegay*, two cloves, a little tarragon, a glafs of white
wine, and broth fimmer them till they are quite tender add
; ;
them till the flein comes well off the ragged parts, and flice
them very thin, put them into a ftew-pan with a ladle or two of
broth, and put in a bunch of onions and parfley, a blade of
mace, pepper and fait. Let all flew foftly till very tender, and
liafon, pour it in when boiling hot, cover it clofe, and let it re-
main fo till your time of dinirig; move it upon a ftove for a
minute or two, fqueeze in a lemon or orange, and diih it up,
Verral 122.
,
cream, and put to them a little grated nutmeg, fome fait, and
*
Afaggot ofparfley, onions,fhallot's s C/V.
FRICASSEES.
a piece of butter; dir it till it is of a proper thicknefs. Cole ,
2i6.
Tofricajfee Pigeons .
over your pigeons, and lay round them force-meat balls, and
garnifh with pickles. Rajfald, 133. Farley 84. ,
Cut a leg of lamb into thin cutlets acrofs the grain, and put
them into a dew-pan in the mean time make fome good broth
;
with the bones, lhank, &c. enough to cover the collops put it;
fkim off the fat, and take out the fweet herbs and mace;
thicken it with butter rolled in dour, feafon it with fait and a
little chyan pepper, put in a few mudirooms, truffles, and
morels, clean wafhed, fome force-meat balls, three yolks of
eggs beat up in half a pint of cream, and fome nutmeg grated.
Keep dirring it one way till it is thick and fmooth, and then
put in your collops. Give them a tofs up, take them out with
a fork, and lay them in a difh pour the fauce over them, and
;
add a little flour, and as many carp roes as you think proper,
with a little good broth flew them about a quarter of an hour,
;
and fry them in clarified butter. When they are enough, lay
them upon a plate, and keep them hot. For fauce—take the
bones of the fifh, boil them in fome water; then put in an an-
chovy, fome thyme, parfley, a little pepper, fait, cloves, and
mace. Let thefe fimmer till the anchovy is diffolved, then take
the butter the fifh was fried in, put it into a pan over the fire;
fhake fome flour into it, and keep ftirring it while the flour is
fhaking in then ftrain the liquor into it, and let it boil till it is
;
thick fqueeze fome lemon-juice into it; put the fifh into a
•,
To fricajfee Oyjlers.
Put a little butter in a ftew-pan, with a flice of ham, a fag-
got of parfley and fweet herbs* and one onion ftuck with two
cloves foak it a little on a flow fire, then add a little flour*
;
To frlcajfee Eggs.
Boil your eggs pretty hard and flice them then take a little
;
Tofricajfee Mtfhrooms .
take them cut and boil them with frdh fait and water When
they are tender, put in a little flared parfley, an onion ftuck
with cloves; tofs them up with a good lump of butter rolled
in a little flour. You may put in three fpoonfuls of thick
cream, and a little nutmeg cut in pieces but take cafe to take
;
out the nutmeg and onion before you fend it to table. Yoti
may leave out the parfley, and flew in a glafs of wine, if yoti
like it, Raffaldj 143, Farley, 86.
XT
FRICASSEES.
To fricajjee Artichoke Bottoms.
Take artichoke bottoms, either dried or pickled If dried,
;
you muft lay them in warm water for three or four hours,
drifting the water two or three times then have ready a little
;
cream and a piece of frefh butter ftirred together one way till
it is melted j then put in the artichokes, and when they are
hot, difli them up. GlaJJe 196.
,
To JricaJfee Shirrefs.
Having walked the roots very well, and boiled them till they
are tender, take the fkin off the roots and cut them into dices.
Have ready a little cream, a piece of butter rolled in flour, the
yolk of an egg beat, a little nutmeg grated, two or three fpoon-
fuls of white wine, a very little fait, and ftir all together. Your
roots being in the difli, pour the fauce over them. It is »
To fry a Turbot.
Take a fmall turbot and cut it acrofs as if it were ribbed.
When it is quite dry, flour it and put it into a large frying-
pan, with boiling lard enough to cover it fry it till it is brown,
*,
then drain it; clean the pan, put into it claret or white wine,
almoft enough to cover it, anchovy, fait, nutmeg, and a little
ginger put in the fifh, -and let it ftew till half the liquor is
*,
thicknefs, rub a hot difh with a piece of fhallot, lay the turbot
in the difh, and pour the fauce over it. Cole 220.,
To bale a Turbot,
Take a difh about the fize of the turbot, rub butter thick all
over it, throw a little fait, a little beaten pepper, and half a large
nutmeg, fome parfley minced fine, and throw all over pour in
;
a pint of white wine, cut off the head and tail, lay the turbot in
the difh, pour another pint of white wine all over, grate the
other half of the nutmeg over it, and a little pepper, fome fait,
and chopped parfley. Lay a piece of butter here and there all
over, and throw a little flour all over, and then a good many
crpmbs of bread. Bake it, and be fure that it is a fine brown ;
OF ITSH,
then lay It in your dilh, ftir the fauce in your dilh all together,,
pour it into a faucepan, lliake in a little flour, let it boil, then
ftir in a piece of butter and two fpoonfuls of catchup, let it
boil, and pour it into bafons, Qarnifh your difli with lemon ;
and you may add what you fancy to the fauce, as fhrimps, an-
chovies, mulhrooms, &c, If a final! turbot, half the wine will
do. It eats finely thus. Lay it in a difli. fleim off,ail the fat,
and pour the reft over it. Let it ftand till cold, and it is good
with vinegar, and a fine difli to fet out a cold table* Glaffey
178. u
is done, then drain the fauce, put the turbot to it, and ftew it
on a flow fire till it is done; then drain it, and ferve it with
pontiff fauce or you may ferve it with the fauce it was dewed
;
Salmon a-la~braife
,
take out the bone, and take the meat quite clean from it;
chop it fine, with two anchovies, fome lemon-peel cut fine, a
little pepper and grated nutmeg, with fome parfley and thyme
cut fine, a yolk of an egg boiled hard. Mix them all together,
and roll them up in a piece of butter; then take a large piece
of fine falmon, or a falmon trout, put the force-meat into the
belly of the filh, few it up, and lay it in an oval ftew-pan that
will juft hold it; then take half a pound of frefh butter, put it
into a ftew-pan. When it is melted Ihake in a little flour ;
To roll Salmon
,
Take a fide of falmon, when fplit and the bone taken out
jalid fealded, ftrew over the infide pepper, fait, nutmeg, and
OF FISH. 183
mace, a few chopped oyfters, parfley, and crumbs of bread,
roll it up tight, put it into a deep pot, and bake it in a quick
oven make the common fifh fauce and pour over it. Garnifh
;
21 5
.
To broil Salmon.
Cut your frefh falmon into thick pieces, and flour and broil
them. Lay them in your difh, and ferve them up with plain
melted butter in a boat. Farley 51.
,
Salmon in Cafes,
Cut your falmon Into fmall pieces, fuch as will lay rolled in
half fheets of paper. Seafon it with pepper, fait, and nutmeg;
butter the infide of the paper well fold the paper fo as nothing
can come out, then lay them in a tin plate to be baked, pour a
little melted butter over the papers, and then crumbs of bread
over them. Do not let your oven be too hot, for fear of burn-
ing the paper. A tin oven before the fire does bell. When
you think they are enough, ferve them up juft as they are.
There will be fauce enough in the papers; or put the falmon
in buttered papers only and broil them. Glajfe 183.
,
Kerbs, pepper, and Talt, mixed with butter, and the yolk of a
raw egg or two} Ikewer them like ballets, with all the Teaion-
184 OF FISH
ing: ftrew them with bread-crumbs, and either roaft or boil
them, bafting with oil or butter. When they are done of a
good colour, ferve dry, with what fauce you think proper in a
boat. Clermont,
361.
Salmon ’with fweet herhs.
Take a piece of butter, and mix it with chopped parfley,.
fhallots, fweet herbs, mufhrooms, pepper and fait 5 put fome
of this in the bottom of the difh you intend for table, then
fome thin dices of falmon upon it, and the remainder of the
butter and herbs upon the falmon; ftrew it over with bread
crumbs, and bafte it with butter bake it in the oven. When
\
it is done, drain the fat from it, and ferve with a clear relifh-
ing fauce. Dalrymple y 294.
To drefs dried Salmon,
Lay your dried falmon in foak for two or three hours, then
lay it on the gridiron, and fhake a little pepper over it..
To drefs a fowl of pickled Salmon
%
cover it. In the mean time let your fauce boil till it is thick
and good. Take out the fpice, onion, and fweet herbs, and
pour it over the fifh. Garnifh with lemon. Ghffe 178. ,
Mrs, Mafon y page 216, has the fame receipt, differently ex-t
preffed.
To drefs Sturgeon.
Wafh your fturgeon clean, lay it all night in fait and water.
The next morning take it out, rub it well with allegar, and let
it lie in it for two hours. Then have ready a fifh kettle full
of boiling water, with an ounce of bay-falt, two large onions,
and a few fprigs of fweet marjoram. Boil your fturgeon till
the bones will leave the fifh. then take it up, take the fkin off,
and flour it well; fet it before the fire, bafte it with frefh
butter, and let it ftand till it is of a fine brown. Then difh,
it up, and pour into the difh what fauce you think
Garnifh with crifp parfley and red pickles.
This is a proper difh for the top or middle. Rajfald 29. ,
K.rley, 29.
OF FISH. 185
Sturgeon broiled.
Take your fturgeon, flew it in as much liquid as will flew it,
being half fifh-broth or water, and half white wine, with a little
vinegar, diced roots, onions, fweet herbs, whole pepper, and
fait. When done, ferve upon a napkin. Garnilh with green
parfley, and ferve with what fauces you pleafe in fauce-boats*
fuch as capers, anchovies, &c. Clermont 365.,
To flew Cod.
Cut feme flices of cod as for boiling feafon them with grated
;
To crimp Cod.
Cut a very frefh cod into dices, and throw it into pump wa-
ter and fait; fet over a dove a filh-kettle, or dew-pan, almod
full of fpring water, and fait enough to make it tade brackifh.
Make it boil very quick, and then put in the dices of cod, and
keep them boiling ddm them very clean they will take about
•, ;
eight or nine minutes; then take out the fifh, and lay them on
a fidi-plate. Shrimp or oyder fauce. Cole, 226.
T0 drefs Cod Sounds.
Steep them as you do the fait cod, and boil them in a large
quantity of milk and water. When they are very tender and
white, take them up, and drain the water out; then pour the
egg-fauce boiling hot over them, and ferve them up. Cole,
227.
'To bi oil Cod Sounds.
Lay them a few minutes in hot water; then take them out,
and rub them well with fait, and take off the dcin and black
dirt, when they will look white. After this, put them into
water* and give them a boil. Take them out, dour them
well, pepper and fait them, and then put them on the gridiron.
As foon as they are enough, lay them on your didi, and pour
melted butter and muftard over them. Cole 227. ,
boil briddy for a few minutes; then take out the dices; take
great care not to break them, and lay them on a deve to drain.
When they are well dried, dour them, and lay them at a dis-
tance upon a very good dre to broil. Lobilcr or Ihrimp fauce,
Mafon , 220.
To drefs Herrings,
The mod: general way of dreffing herrings is to broil or fry
them, with melted butter. Cole 227.,
Tofry Herrings.
Scale them, gut them, cut off their heads, wafh them clean,
dry them in a cloth, dour them, and fry them in butter. Have
ready a good may onions peeled and cut thin. Fry them
OF FISH.
of a light brown with the herrings. Lay the herrings in your
difh, and the onions round butter and muftard in a cup. You
;
Another way,
Scale them, and dry them well; lay them feparately on a
board, and fet them to the fire two or three minutes before you
want them, it will keep the fifli from flicking to the pan dull
;
fry them. Jay fome round your difh, and make onion-fauce for
them or you may cut off the heads, after they are fried, chop
;
them, and put them into a fauce-pan, with ale, pepper, fait, and
an anchovy thicken it with flour and butter, ftrain it, then put
;
To bake Herrings.o
lay them ftraight in a pot, cover them with allegar, tie ftrong
paper over the pot, and bake them in a moderate oven. If your
allegar is good, they will keep two or three months. You may
eat them either hot or cold. Cole 228. ,
croud in as much as you can. J3rulh fome egg over them, and
OF FISH. 189
firew crumbs of bread, a little oil, or oiled butter, poured upon
it. Bake them about half an hour, of a fine colour, and fend
them up, garnifhed with fome litrle pats of your force-meat
fried, and fome parfley. For your fauce, take a little fweet
bafil, pimpernel, thyme, and parfley, a fhallot or two minced
fine, with a ladle of your clear gravy, and a dafli of white wine,
pepper, and fait. Boil all together for a few minutes, fqueeze
in a lemon or two, and fend it up in a fifh fauce-boat.
Small prills are good done in this manner, or any other firm-
flefhed fifh. Verral, 72.
Soals a-la-Francoife.
vinegar and water, let them lie two hours, then take them out
and dry them with a cloth; then put them into a ftew-pan
with a pint of white wine, a quarter of a pint of water, a very
little thyme, a little fweet marjoram, winter favoury, and an
onion ffcuck with four cloves. Put in the foals, fprinkle a very
little bay-falt, and cover them clofe let them fimmer very
;
gently till they are enough Take them out, lay them in a
warm difh before the fire; put into the liquor, after it is
Brained, a piece of butter rolled in flour let it boil till of a
;
proper thicknefs. Lay the foals into a difh, and pour the fauce
oyer them.
A fmall turbot, or any flat fifh, may be drefTed in the fame
manner,
Maflon 225-
,
To flew Soals.
Having taken the flefh from the bones of your foals, cut each
of them into eight pieces. Put into a ftew-pan a quart of boiled
gravy, a quarter of a pint of Madeira, or white wine, fome
white pepper pounded, grated nutmeg, a piece of lemon-peel;
Itew thefe together for near an hour; add fome cream, a piece
of butter mixed with flour. Keep the fauce Birring till it boils,
put in the fifh, Itew it for a quarter of an hour; take out the
lemon-peel, fqueeze in fome lemon-juice. The fifh may be
{tewed whole in the fame fauce, and, if more convenient, cut
the fifh as before direfted, and make a little gravy with the bones
and head. Cole, 229.
To flew Soals Plaice or Flounders.
, ;
'Tofry SonIs.
Having Ikinned them, rub them over with yolk of egg, ftrew
on them very fine bread-crumbs, or flour them fry them with
;
Another nray.
Scale and trim the foals properly, and fkin the black fide j
mix fome bread-crumbs with a very little flour j bafte the foals
with beat eggs, and fixew them over with the bread-crumbs;
fry them in hogs’-lard of a good colour. Garnifli with fried
parfley, and ferve with anchovy fauce, &c. in a fauce-boati
Dalrymplf) 3 12.
To marinade Soals.
Boil them in fait and water, bone and drain them, and lay
them on a dilh with their belly upwards. Boil fome fpinach,
and pound it in a mortar then boil four eggs hard, chop the
;
yolks and white feparate, and lay green, white, and yellow
among the foals, and ferve them up with melted butter in a
boat. Farley 136.
,
To fry Whitings.
Gut the whitings by the gills, trim and dry them well, bathe;
them with beat eggs, and roll them in fine bread-crumbs, mixed
with a very little flour fry them with hogs’-lard of a good co-
;
lour, and garnifli with fried parfley. Serve with plain butter*
or what fauce you think proper, in a fauce-boat. Cole 230.
,
Another way.
Wafli, gut, and fkin them, turn the tails in their mouths*
dry them in a cloth, and flour them Well all over; fill the fry-
ing-pan with lard enough to cover them. When it boils, put
them in, and fry them of a fine brown. Lay them on a coarfe
cloth to drain, then put them on a warm difli. Sauce—flirimp,
oyfter, or anchovy. They are proper garnifli for falmon or
cod. Mafotiy 227.
To broil Whitings or Haddocks.
Gut and wafh them, dry them with a cloth, and rub a little
vinegar over them, it will keep the Ik in on better. Dull them
well with flour, rub your gridiron with butter, and let it be very
hot when you lay the fifh on, or they will flick; turn them two
or three times on the gridiron. When enough, ferve them up,
OF FISH.
and lay pickles round them, with plain melted butter, or cockle
fauce. They are a pretty dilh for flipper. Rajfald 35.,
Mackarel al-a~Maitre~d'Hotel*
Take three mackarel, and wipe them very dry with a clean
cloth cut them down the back from head to tail, but not open
;
be put into a very flow oven, and will take a long time doing.
When they are enough, uncover them, let them fland till they
are cold, then pour away all the vinegar they were baked in,
cover them with fome more vinegar, and put in an onion (luck
with cloves. Send them to a very flow oven again, and let
them fland two hours. They will keep a great while. Always
take them out with a flice; the hands will fpoil them. The
great bones taken out are good boiled. Coley 231.
Toflew a Trout .
Stuff a finall trout with grated bread, a piece of butter, par-
ley chopped, lemon peel grated, pepper, fait, nutmeg, favoury
herbs and yolk of egg, mixed put it into a ftew-pan, with a
•,
the juice of a Seville orange upon them, then the fauce over,
and drew.them over with a few fine bread-crumbs. Dai-
ry mple, 289.
To fry Trout or Perch.
Scale, gut, and wafh them, dry them well, then lay them
feparately on a board before the fire two minutes before you
;
fry them, dull: them well with flour, and fry them a fine brown
in roafl drippings or rendered fuet. Serve them up with melt-
ed butter and crifped parfley. Rajfald 36. ,
To mayinade Trout.
Fry them in a fufficient quantity of oil to cover them, put
them in when the oil is boiling hot. When they are crifp, lay
them to drain till they arc cold then take fome white wine
;
head to tail, turn it round, and fatten the tail in the mouth,
and lay it in a marinade. For your force meat, take the udder
of a leg of veal, or the kidney part of a loin of lamb, fome fat
bacon cut in dice, the fpawn or melt of the fifh, lome green
onions, a mufhroom or two, or truffles, parfley, and fait, a little
nutmeg and pepper; add a morfel of butter to fry it, chop it
all well, and the crumb of a French roll foaked in cream or
milk pound all together in a large mortar, with three or four
;
your fiih, and clofe up that part that is cut in the back, make
OF FISH.
it nice and even; take two or three eggs, daub it well over;
and ftrew fome crumbs of bread upon it, and bake it in a gentle
oven the time, according to the bignefs of your pike. For
;
the fauce over all. You may alfo add artichoke bottoms,
mulhrooms, -carp-roes, &c. Clermont, 33 8.
To drefs a Bract of Carb.
Put a piece of butter into a flew-pan, melt it, and put in a
large fpoonful of flour, keep it ftirring till it is fnioothj then
put in a pint of gravy, and a pint of red port or claret; a little
horfe-radifh fcraped, eight cloves, four blades of mace, and a
dozen corns of all-fpice j tie them in a little linen rag; a bundle
of Tweet herbs, half a lemon, three anchovies, a little onion
chopped very fine} feafon with pepper, fait, and chyan pepper,
to your liking; flew it for half an hour, then ftrain it through
a fleve into the pan you Intend to put your fifh in. Let your
carp be well cleaned and fealed; then put the flfh in with the
fauce, and flew them very gently for half an hour then turn
;
ley, 74*
To Jlew Carp hrowtu
Put a quart of good gravy into the ftew-pan, add the blood
of the carp, (if agreeable) half a pint of fmali beer, (if bitter,
only a quarter of a pint) a quarter of a pint of red wine, a large
onion, half a dozen cloves, a piece of lemon-peel, and horfe-ra-
clifh let. them ftew gently till reduced to the quantity that is
;
them well;. have ready fome rich gravy made ol; beef and mut-
ton, feafoned with pepper, fait, mace, and onion; {train it off
before you Hew your fflh in it; boil your.carp firft before
you-flew it in : .the gravy. 13c careful not to boil them too much
before you put in. the carp then let it .flew oij a flow fire about
;
Carp d-la~Jacohlne.
Put two dozen of fmali onions blanched in a {lew-pan, with
a few fliced truffles, a piece of butter, and a faggot of parfley
OF FISH.
and fweet herbs; fimmer this on a flow fire till it catches a
little; then add three half pints of white wine, and put a carp
to it cut in pieces, with a little broth, pepper, and fait; reduce
the fauce; when ready to ferve, add a liafon made of three
yolks of eggs and cream, and the juice of half a lemon. Dai-
ry tuple, 267.
To drefs Carp au Blue.
Take a brace of carp alive, and gut them, but neither wafli
nor fcale them tie them to a fifli-drainer, and put them into
;
a fifli-kettle, and pour boiling vinegar over till they are blue $
To fry Carp.
Take a brace of carp, fcale, gut, and clean them, dry them
well in a cloth, flour them, and put them into a frying-pan of
boiling lard let them be of a fine brown. Fry the roes, arid
;
cut fome thin flices of bread with three corners fry therri.
;
Lay the fifh on a coarfe cloth to drain 5 then put them into the
difli, the roes on each, the toafts between. Anchovy fauce.
To few Tench or Carp,
Having gutted and fcaled your fifh, wafh them, and dry
them well with a dean cloth dredge them well with flour, fry
;
them in drips ag, or fweet rendered fuet, till they are a light
brown then put them in a ftew-pan, with a quart of water,
;
back, (prinkle a little fait over them, and dredge them with
OF FISH
flour ;fry them of a fine brown in boiling lard. Sauce—an- i
chovy, with mufhrooms, truffles, and capers, all chopped finall,
and flewed in gravy, with the juice of a lemon, and a little fifh-
cullis. Cole 236,
,
To fry Perch.
Scale and gut your perch and wafh them clean fcore them
*,
at feme diflance on the fides, but not very deep; dry them well,
and flour them all over; fry them in oiled butter. When they
are of a fine brown, lay fome crifped parfley round the filh.
For fauce, take plain butter. Some make the following fauce ;
fuls of capers cut fmall; thicken it with butter and flour, and
pour it over them. Mafon y 239.
To drefs Perch in Water Sonchy.
Having fcaled, gutted, and wafbed them, put fome fait in
your water j when it boils, put in your fifh, with an onion cut
in flices, and feparated into round rings, and an handful of
parfley; put as much milk as will turn the water white. The
perch being enough, put them in a foup-difh, and pour a little
of the water over them, with the parfley and the onions j ferve
it up with butter and parfley in a boat; onions may be omitted,
if you think proper. Trout may be boiled the fame way. Cole,
»3 6*
To fry Smelts.
Draw the guts out at the gills, but leave in the melt or roe;
dry them with a cloth, beat an egg, rub it over them with a fea-
ther, and ftrew crumbs of bread over them. Fry them with
hogs’-lard or beef-duet, and put it) your fifh when it is boiling
of fish.
hot. Shake them a little, and fry them till they are of a fine
brown. Drain them on a difh, or in a fieve; and when yon difh
them up, put a bafon, bottom up, in the middle of your difh,
and lay the tails of your fifli on it, Farley 57.
,
turn them backward and forward, and flcewer them; rub your
gridiron with beef-fuet, broil them a good brown, put them on
your difli with good melted butter, and lay round fried parfley,
Rnffald, 37.
Eel a-la-Nivernots.
Skin and trim the eel, cut it In pieces about three inches long,
and marinade it about two hours with oil, chopped parfley, {bal-
lots, mufhrooms, pepper and fait make as much of the mari-
;
as long as your finger; put juft water enough for fauce; put in
a final! onion fluck with cloves, a little bundle of fweet herbs,
a blade or two of mace, and fome whole pepper in a thin mullin
rag. Cover it clofe, and let them flew very foftly.
Take care to look at them now and then put in a little piece
;
draw the fkin oyer it, fkewer it round, hang it in the Dutch
oven, roafl it; or put it on a gridiron, at a great diflance, over
a clear fire. When it is near done, fet it lower to brown*
Anchovy, or white fiffi-fauce. Mafotiy 244*
To fry Eels.
Cut one or two eels In pieces; cut out the back-bone, and
fcore it on both fides; marinade it about an hour in vinegar,
with parfley, fliced onions, {ballots, and four cloves; then drain
it, bafte it with eggs and bread-crumbs, fry it of a good colour.
Garnifh with fried parfley, and ferve with a relifhing fauce in a
fauce-boat. Clermont 344.
,
To bake Sprats*
Rub them with fait and pepper; and to every two pints of
vinegar put one pint of red wine, Diflblve a penny-worth of
cochineal lay your fprats in a deep earthen difh; pour in as
*,
much red wine, vinegar, and cochineal, as will cover them y tie’
a paper over them, fet them in an oven all night. They will
eat well, and keep for forae time. Rajdld 34,-}
Chap. XVL —OF SAUCES.
Sauce Poivrade-.
chop alfo a little parfley very fine, with a little bread grated
very fine, and fome fait; put thefe into butter melted very
fmooth. Some only chop the capers a little, and put them
into the butter, Farley 139, from Mafon 320.
, ,
Shallot Sauce.
Take five or fix {ballots, chopped fine, put them into a fauce-
pan with a gill of gravy, a fpoonful of vinegar, and fome pep-
per and fait ftew them for a minute, then pour them into
\
Egg Sauce.
Take two eggs and boil them hard. Firft chop the whites,
then the yolks, but neither of them very fine, and put them to-
gether. Then put them into a quarter of a pound of good
melted butter, and ftir them well together. Cole 241. ,
Apple Sauce.
Pare, core, and flice your apples, then put a little water in
the fauce-pan to keep them from burning, and a bit of lemon-
peel. When they are enough, take out the peel, bruiie the
add a lump of butter, and a little fugar. Cole 241, ,
Onion Sauce.
Boil eight or ten large onions, change the water two or three
times while they are boiling. When enough, chop them on a
OF SAUCES. 201
board to keep them from growing of a bad colour put them
;
Another way.
Having peeled your onions, boil them in milk and water,
put a turnip with them into the pot (it draws out the ftrength);
change the water twice pulp them through a cullender, or
*,
Goofeberry Sauce.
Put fome coddled goofebcrries, a little juice of forrel, and a
little ginger, into fome melted butter. Cole, 241.
Fennel Sauce.
Having boiled a bunch of fennel and parfley, chop It fmall,
and ftir into it fome melted butter. Cole 241. ,
Bread Sauce.
Put a pretty large piece of crumb of bread, that is not new,
into half a pint of water, with an onion, a blade of mace, and
a few pepper-corns in a bit of cloth boil thefe a few minutes;
;
take out the onions and fpice, math the bread very fmooth, add
a piece of butter and a little fait.
Bread-fauce for a pig is made the fame, with the addition of
a few currants picked, wafhed, and boiled in it. Cole y 241,
Mint Sauce.
Wafh your mint perfectly clean from grit and dirt, chop It
very fine, and put to it vinegar and fugar. Cole 242. ,
Sauce Robert.
Cut fome large onions into fquare pieces, cut fome fit bacon
in the fame manner, put them together in a faucc-pan over the
hre, fhake them round to prevent their burning. When they
are brown, put in fome good veal gravy, with a little pepper
and fait; let them ftew gently till the onions are tender, then
put in a little fait, fome muftard and vinegar, and ferve it hot.
jMafotiy 323. Farley , 140;
Another way.
Slice feveral onions, fry them in butter, turning often till they
take colour; then add a little cullis and good broth, pepper
and fait; let them boil half an hour, and reduce to a fauce;
when ready, add muftard. You may lift it for thofc who only
like the flavour of onions. Dalrymple 41. ,
Anchovy Sauce.
Put an anchovy into a pint of gravy, then take a quarter of a
202 OF SAUCES.
pound of butter rolled in flour, and ftir all t6gether till it
You may add a little juice of lemon, catchup, red wine, and
walnut liquor, juft as you think proper.
Plain butter melted thick, with a fpoonful of walnut pickle*
or catchup, is a good faucc, or anchovy: in fhort, you may put
as many things as you pleafe into fauce. Glajfey 123.
Shrimp Sauce .
Wafh half a pint of flirimps very clean, and put them into a
ftew-pan, with a fpoonful of anchovy liquor, and a pound of
butter melted thick. Boil it up for five minutes, and fqueez£
in half a lemon. Tofs it up, and put it into your fauce*
boat. Cote y 242,
To crijp Parfey,
Having picked and wafhed your parfley, put it into a Dutch
oven, or on a fheet of paper; do not fet it too near the fire ;
turn it till it is quite crifp. Lay little bits of butter on it, but
not to be greafy. It is a better method than that of frying
it. Coky 242.
Plain Sour Sauce.
Take fo'me frefh fortel-leaves, pick off the ftalks, bruife the
leaves, and put them into a plate with their juice; ftrew on
feme pepper and fait, ftir it all together, and ferve it cold. Cole t
242.
White Sauce for Fifh,
Having wafhed two anchovies, put them into a fauce-pan,
with one glafs of white wine, and tWo of water, half a nutmeg,
and a little lemon-peel. When St has boiled five or fb£ minutes,
firain it through a fieVe. Add to it a fpoonful of white wine
vinegar, thicken it a little, then put in near a pound of butter
rolled in- flour. Boil it well, and pour it hot upon your fifli.
Rafalcly 27.
'll hits Sauce for Fowls or Chickens,
Take a little ftrong veal gravy, with a little white pepper,
mace, and fait, boiled in it. Have it clear from any tkin or
fat. As much cream, with a little flour mixed in the cream,
a little mountain wine to your liking. Boil it up gently for
five minutes, then firaln it over your chickens or fowls, or in
beats. Cole, 243.
A white Sauce for Veal,
To a pint of good veal gravy, put a fpoohful of lemon-pickle,
half an anchovy, a tea-fpoonful of mufhroom powdef, or a few
pickled mufhroorns 5 give it a gentle boil; then put in half a
pint of cream, the yolks of two eggs beat line; fhake it over the
tire after the eggs and cream are in, but do not let it boil, as
that would curdle the cream. Co!e 243. }
OF SAUCES.
Sauce Ravigoite d-la-Bourgeofe
Provide fome fage, parfley, a little mint, thyme, and bafil y
tie them in a bunch, and put them into a fauce-pah of boiling
water let them boil a minute, then take them out, and fqueeze
;
the water from them chop tlaem very fine, and add to them
;
a clove of garlick, and two large onions minced fine. Put them
into a ftew-pan with half a pint of broth, fome pepper, and a
little fait boil them upland put in a fpoonful of vinegar, idfa-
;
'
"
Sauce a la-Nivernois.
.
-
Sauce-for -Wild Ducky T.eaiy &c.
Take a proper quantity of veal-gravy, with fome pepper and
fait fqueeze in the juice of two Seville oranges; add a little
;
red wine, and let the red wineTabil fome time in the gravy;
Cole, 244. •
;
242.
An excellent Sauce for mojl kinds of Fifj.
Take fome mutton or veal gravy, put to it a little of the
water that drains from your fifh -, when boiled enough, put it
in a fauce-pan, and put in a whole onion, one anchovy, a
fpoonful of catchup, and a glafs of white wine thicken it with
*,
flour, and fome catchup fhake all up; let it boil, but not
;
much, as it will make the oyfters grow hard and fhrink yet ;
thicken it; then put in half a pound of butter, boil it up till the
butter is melted, then take out the mace and lemon, fqueeze
the lemon-juice into the lance, give it a boil up, ftir it all the
time, and then put it into your boats or bafons.
N. B. You may put in a fpoonful of catchup, or the fame
quantity of mountain wine. Glajfey 123.
Afpic Sauce.
Infufc chervil, tarragon, burnet, garden-crefs, and a little
mint, in a little cullis for above half an hour then lift it, and
;
give it a boil; feafon with a little pepper, fait, and a very fmall
quantity of mace. Cole, 245.
Another way.
Procure a lobfter that has a good deal of fpawn, pull the
meat to pieces with a fork j do not chop it; bruife the body
and the fpawn with the back of a fpoon; break the Ihell, boil
it in a little water to give it a colour ftrain it off, melt fome
;
by
probably be agreeable to fine
of my readers
; though I have fotmd long experience that Lemon-
,
pickle and Browning (which fee J anfwers much better both for tafe
and beauty. It is infinitely cheaper and prevents a great deal of un-
,
place them in your ftew-pan, and then the flices of ham, two
carrots, an onion cut in two cover it clofe, let it ftew foftly at
;
firft, and as it begins to brown, take off the cover and turn it,
to colour it on all ftdes the fame but take care not to burn the
;
A Cullisfor Fifh.
Gut a large pike, and lay it whole upon the gridiron turn ;
it often. When done, take it off; take off the fkin, and take
the meat from the bones y boil fix hard eggs, and take out the
yolks; blanch a few almonds, beat them to a pafte in a marble
mortar, and then add the yolks of the eggs y mix thefe well
with butter, and put in the fifh beat them all to mafh then
; ;
take half a dozen onions, and cut them into flices, two parf-
nips, three carrots; fet on a ftew-pan, put in a piece of butter
to brown, and when it boils, put in the roots; turn them till
they are brown, and then pour in a little pea broth to moiffen
them. When they have boiled a few minutes, ftrain it into
another fauce-pan; put in a whole leek, fome parfley, and
fvveet bafii, half a dozen cloves, fome mulhrooms and truffles,
and a few erumbs of bread let it ftew gently a quarter of
;
an hour, and then put in the fifh from the mortar let it ;
ftew fome time longer; it muff not boil up, becaufe that
would make it brown. When it is done, ftrain it through a
coarfe fteve.
It fcrves to thicken all made-difhes, and foups for Lent. Cole,
247* , .
Ham Cullis.
This is done with flices of veal-fillet, and ham fufficient to
give it a pretty ftrong tafte add all forts of roots then add
; ;
Cut apiece of veal into fmall bits, take fome thin flices of
ham, and two onions cut into four pieces; moiften it with
broth/ feafoned with mufhrooms, a bunch of parfley, green
onions, and three cloves let it ftew. Being ftewed, take out
;
all your meat and roots with a fkimmer, put in a few crumbs
OF SAUCES.
207
of bread, and let it Hew foftly; take the white of a fowl, or
two chickens, and pound it in a mortar; when well pounded,
mix it in your cullis, but it rrmft not boil, and your cullis
muft be very white; but if it is not white enough, you rauft
pound two dozen of Tweet almonds blanched, and put into
your cullis. Let it be of a good tafte, and ftrain it oft', then
put it in a fmall kettle, and keep it warm. You may life
it for white loaves, white cruft of bread and bifcuits, Qlajfet
no.
A Family Cullis.
Take a piece of butter rolled in flour, ftir it in your ftew-
pan rill the flour takes a fine yellow colour; then add fmall
broth, a little gravy, a glafs of white wine, a bundle of parfley,
thyme, laurel, and Tweet bafil, two cloves, a little nutmeg or
mace, a few mufhrooms, whole pepper, and fait; boll for an
hour on a flow fire Tift it through a lawn fieve, well fkimmed
;
from fat. This cullis is made either with meat or fifh broth,
according to your fancy. Clermont, 9.
Fo make Lemcm Fickle.
Take twenty-four lemons, grate off the out-rinds very thin,
and cut them in four quarters, but leave the bottoms whole,
rub on them equally half a pound of bay-falt, and fpread them
on a large pewter dilh either put them in a cool oven, or let
;
them dry gradually by the fire, till all the juice is dried into
the peels; then put them into a well-glazed pitcher, with an
ounce of mace, and half an ounce of cloves beat fine, an ounce
of nutmeg cut into thin flices, four ounces of garlick peeled,
half a pint of muftard feed bruifed a little, and tied in a mufiin
bag; pour two quarts of boiling white wine vinegar upon,
them, clofe the pitcher well up, and let it ftand five or fix days
by the fire j lhake it well up every day, then tie it up, and let
it ftand for three months to take oft' the bitter. When you
bottle it, put the pickle and lemon in an hair fieve : prefs them
well to get out the liquor and let it ftand till another day, then
pour off the fine, and bottle it. Let the other ftand three or
four days, and it will refine itfelf. Pour it off, and bottle it ;
the water it will make them boil in half the time, and they
;
will be white and plump. When you put them up, put the
yolk of an hard egg in the middle of every bottom, and pour
good melted butter upon them, and ferve them up. You may
lay afparagus or brocoli between every bottom. Raff aid 290*,
Cucumbers Jlewed.
Having pared your cucumbers, flice them about the thick-
nefs of a crown piece; flice fome onion. Fry them both;
drain and lhake a little flour over them. Put them into a ftew-
ELEGANT SMALL SAVOURY DISHES &c. 209
pan with fome good gravy, chyan, and fait; ftew them till ten-
der. Or they may be dewed in their own liquor, without be-
ing fried; chyan* and fait. Or take out the feeds, quarter
the cucumbers, ftew them till clear in fome boiled gravy mix ;
a little flour with fome cream, a very little white wine, and
white pepper pounded. Boil it up. Mafon ,
338.
To ragoo Cucumbers.
Slice tWo cucumbers and two onidns, and fry them in a
little butter, then drain them in a fieve, put them into a fauce-
pan, add fix fpoonfuls of gravy, two of white wine, and a blade
of mace let them ftew five or fix minutes. Then take a piece
;
them boil up, and take them out of the water, and put them
into a ftew-pah, with an onion ftuck with cloves, a good flice
of ham, a quarter of a pound of butter, and a little fait j fet it
over the fire a quarter of an hour, keep it clofe covered, flcim
it well, and lhake it often, as it is apt to burn 5 then dredge In
a little flour over them, and put in as much veal-gravy as will
juft cover the cucumbers; ftir it well together, and keep a
gentle fire under it till no fcum will rife then take out the
*
ham and onion, and put in the yolks of two eggs, beat up with
a tea-cupful of cream j ftir it well for a minute, then take it off
the fire, and juft before you put it in the difh, fqueeze in a lit-
tle lemon-juice. Have ready five or fix poached eggs to lay
on the top. Cole 250.
,
ToJlew Mujhroonts.
Firfl: put your mufhrooms in fait and water, then wipe them
with a flannel, and put them again in fait and water then ;
Mtjhroom Loaves.
Take fmall buttons, and wafli them as for pickling; boil
them a few minutes in a little water put to them a little
;
Another way.
Boil and drain the peas, flice and fry the lettuce; put them
into fome good gravy ftiake in a little flour; add chyan and
;
fait, and a very little Aired mint; boil this up, Ihaking it.
Cole 252.
,
Another way.
Having flielled your peas, boil them in hard water, with fait
in it, drain them in a fieve j then dice your lettuces and fry
them in frefh butter put your peas and lettuces into a tolling-
;
pan, with a little good gravy, pepper and fait; thicken it with
dour and butter, put in a little dired mint, and ferve it up in a
foup-difli. . Raffaldy 2B9, •-
-
•
OF VEGETABLES, FRUITS, &c. 211
1o ragoo Afparagus.
Scrape and clean one hundred grafs, and throw them in cold
Water; then cut as far as they are good and green, and take
two heads of endive, clean picked and walked, and cut very
fmall, a young lettuce clean walhed and cut fmall, and a large
onion peeled and cut fmall Put a quarter of a pound of but-
ter into a ftew-pan, and when it is melted, throw in the above
ingredients. Tofs them about, and fry them ten minutes;
then feafon them with a little pepper and fait, lh ike in a little
flour, tofs them about, and pour in half a pint of gravy. Let
them flew till the fauce is very thick and good, and then pour
all into your dilh. Garnilh with a few of the little tops of the
grafs, Farley 80.
,
"with the eggs, and add pepper and fait. Make your pot hot,
and put in a flice of butter then put them in, and fend them
;
Beat fix eggs, (train them through a hair fieve, and put them
into a frying-pan, in which is prepared a quarter of a pound of
hot butter. Throw in a little boiled ham, (craped fine, fome
(bred parfley, and feafon them with pepper, fait, and nutmeg.
Fry it brown on the under fide, and lay it on your difh, but do
not turn it. Hold a hot falamander over it for half a minute,
to take off the raw look of the eggs. Some put in clary and
chives, and fome put in onions. Serve it with curled parfley
ftuck in it. Cole 253.
,
Have ready fome pieces of bread cut like toafts, and fried in
butter. Cut the amulets the fame fize of the bread upon
ELEGANT SMALL SAVOURY DISHES
which you put them. Four a little melted butter over, and
ftrew them with rafped Parmefan cheefe and bread crumbs.
Give them a colour in the oven, and ferve with a relifhing-fauce
under. Dalrymple 413.
,
To ragoo Cauliflowers.
Take a large cauliflower, or two fmall ones, pick as if you
intended them for pickling flew them till they are enough in
:
a rich brown cullis, feafoned with pepper and fait; put them
in a difh, and pour the cullis over them. Boil fome fprigs of
the cauliflower very white, and lay round them. Mafon 337. ,
Farley 81.
,
To broil Potatoes.
Boil them, then peel them, cut them in two, and broil them
till they are brown on both lides j then lay them in the plate
or dilh, and pour melted butter over them. Cole, 253.
To fry Potatoes.
Cut your potatoes into thin fllces, as large as a crown piece,
fry them brown, lay them in the plate or difh, pour melted
butter and fade and fugar over them. Thefe make a pretty
corner plate. Cole 253.
,
To majh potatoes .
Boil them, peel them, and put them into a fauce-pan mafh*,
add a little fait, ftir them well together, and take care that
they do not flick to the bottom then take a quarter of a
;
To fcollop Potatoes.
Having flrft boiled your potatoes, beat them fine in a bowl
with good cream, and a lump of butter and fait; put them in-
to fcollop {hells, make them fmooth on the top, fcore them with
a knife, lay thin flices of butter on the top of them, put them
in a Dutch oven to brown before the fire. Three fhells is fuf-
ficient for a difh. Rajfald 287.
,
Tofry Cbardoons,
Cut them about fix inches long, and ftring them, then boil
them till tender. Take them out, have fome butter melted in
your ftew-pan, flour them, and fry them brown. Send them
in a dilh, with melted butter in a cup. Or you may tie them
up in bundles, and boil them like afparagus. Put a toaft under
them, and pour a little melted butter over them or cut them
•,
into dice, and boil them like peas. Tofs them up in butter,
and fend them up hot. Glajfe 195. ,
Cbardoons d-la-Fromage.
String them, cut them an inch long, ftew them in a little red
OF VEGETABLES, FRUITS, &c. 213
wine till they are tender; feafon with pepper and fait, and
thicken it with a piece of butter rolled in flour j then pour
them into your di£h, fqueeze fome ju p; of orange over it, then
fcrape Parmefan or Chelhire cheefe all over them j then
brown it with a cheefe iron, and ferve it up quick and hot.
Cole, 254.
To Jlew Tears.
Take fix pears, pare them, and either quarter them or ftew
them whole. Lay them in a deep earthen pan, with a few
cloves, a piece of lemon peel, a gill of red wine, and a quarter
of a pound of fine fugar. If the pears are very large, they will
require half a pound of fugar, and half a pint of red wine.
Cover them clofe with brown paper, and ftew them in an oven
till they are enough. They may be ferved up hot or cold.
They make a very pretty difh with one whole and they reft cut
jn quarters, and the cores taken out. Farley 72. ,
To bake Pears.
Pare them, cut them in halves, and core them; then put
them into an earthen pan with a few cloves, a litttle water and
red wine, and about half a pound of fugar to fix pears bake
;
them in an oven moderately hot, then fet them over a flow fire ;
Fo broil Eggs.
Cut a toaft round a quartern loaf, brown It, lay It In your
dlfh, butter it, and very carefully break fix or eight eggs on
the toaft. Take a red-hot Ihovel and hold it over them.
214 ELEGANT SMALL SAVOURY DISHES.
When they are done, fqueczc a Seville orange over them,
grate a little nutmeg over it, and ferve it up for a fide-plate.
Or you may poach your eggs and lay them on a toaft or toaft
;
your bread crifp, and pour a little boiling water over it. Sea-
fon it with a little fait, and then lay your poached eggs upon it.
Cole, 2CC.
Eggs Dutchefs fajhion.
Boil a pint of cream and fugar, a little orange-flower water,
and piece of lemon-peel j poach fix or eight eggs in it take;
out the eggs, reduce the cream for fauce to ferve upon them.
Dalrymple, 416.
Spinach and Eggs.
Pick and wafh your fpinach very clean in feveral waters, put
it into a fauce-pan with a little fait; cover it clofe, and fhakc
the pan often. When it is juft tender, and whilft it is green,
throw it into a fieve to drain lay it in your difh. Have ready
;
To force Eggs.
Scald two cabbage lettuces with a few mufhrooms, parfley,
forrel, and chervil; then chop them very fmall, with the yolks
of hard eggs, feafoned with fait and nutmeg then ftew them
;
in butter, and when they are enough, put in a little cream, then
pour them into the bottom of a difh. Then chop the whites
very fine, with parfley, nutmeg, and fait. Lay this round the
brim of the difh, and 1 un a red T hot flre-fhovel over it to brown
it. Cole 255.
,
flrain the eggs when you beat them. With refpeft to baking,
all bread and cuftard puddings require time, and a moderate
oven, that will raife and not burn them. Batter and rice pud-
dings, a quick oven. Be particularly careful to butter the pan
or difh before you put in your pudding. Cole, 256.
A baked Almond Pudding.
Having boiled the fkins of two lemons very tender, beat
them very fine; beat half a pound of almonds in rofe water,
and a pound of fugar very fine j. then melt half a pound of
butter and let it fland till it is quite cold j beat the yolks of
eight eggs and the whites of four; mix them and beat them all
together, with a little orange-flower water, and bake it in the
oven. Rajfald, 168. Farley 184.,
hour pour round it melted butter and wine j flick it with al-
;
Another way .
Pare twelve large pippins, and take out the cores; put them
into a fauce-pan, with four or five fpoonfuls of water, and boil
them till they are foft and thick. Then beat them well, ftir
in a pound of loaf fugar, the juice of three lemons, and the
peels of two cut thin and beat fine in a mortar, and the yolks
of eight eggs beaten. Mix all well together, and bake it in a
flack oven. When nearly done, throw over it a little fine
fugar. You may, if you pleafe, bake it in a puff pafte, at the
bottom of the difh, and round the edges of it. GloJJe 217;,
Farley, 198,
Apple Dumplings ,
Having pared and taken out the core of your apples, fill the
hole with quince, or orange marmalade, or fugar (which ever
beft fuits)*, then take a piece of cold pafte, and make a hole in
it, as if you was going to make a pie; lay in your apple, and
put another piece of pafte in the fame form, and clofe it up
round the fide of your apple. It is much preferable to the
method of gathering it in a lump at one end. Tie it in a cloth,
and boil it three quarters of an hour; pour melted butter over
them and ferve them up. Five is fufficicnt for a difli. PaJ-
fald, 183. Farley 198.
,
An Apricot Pudding.
v£oddle fix large apricots very tender, break them very final 1,
fweeten them to your tafte j when they are cold add fix eggs
and only two whites, well beat j mix them all well together.
OF PUDDINGS. 217
with a pint of good cream*, lay a puffpafte all over your dilh,
and pour in your ingredients. Bake it half an hour; but the
oven fhould not be too hot. When it is enough, throw a
little fine fugar all over it, and fend it to table. Glajfe 272.
,
Farley y 180.
A Batter Pudding,
Take a quart of milk, beat up the yolks of fix eggs, and the
whites of three, and mix them with a quarter of a pint of milk.
Take fix fpoonfuls of flour, a tea-fpoonful of fait, and one of
beaten ginger. Mix them all together, boil them an hour and
a and pour melted butter over the pudding. \ou
may, if you think proper, put in half a pound of pruens, or
(currants, and two or three more eggs. Or you may make it
without eggs, in the following manner; take a quart of milk,
mix fix fpoonfuls of the flour with a little of the milk firft, a
tea-fpoonful of fait, two of beaten ginger, and two of the tinc-
ture of faflfon. Then mix all together, and boil it an hour.
Farley 200, from Glajfe 219.
,
,
Another.
A pint of milk, four eggs, four fpoonfuls of flour, half a
grated nutmeg, and a little fait; tie the cloth very clofe, and
boil it three quarters of an hour. Sauce, melted butter. Coley
*59•
_ ..
A Bread Pudding.
Slice all the crumb of a penny loaf thin into a quart of milk,
fet it over a chafing-difh of coals till the bread has foaked up
all the milk, then put in a piece of butter, ftir it round, and
let it ftand till cool. Or you may boil your milk and pour
over your bread, and cover it up clofe this method is as good
;
as the other. Then take the yolks of fix eggs, and half the
whites, and beat them up with a little rofe water and nutmeg,
and a little fait and fugar, if you like it. Mix all well together,
and boil it an hour. Glajfe 220. Farley 192.
, ,
A Calf’sfoot Pudding.
Boil four feet tender; pick the niceft of the meat from the
bones, and chop it very fine; add the crumb of a penny loaf
grated, a pound of beef fuet Hired fmall, half a pint of cream,
218 OF PUDDINGS.
feven eggs, a pound of currants, four ounces of citron cut
imall, two ounces of candied orange peel cut like draws, a nut-
meg,, and a large glafs of brandy. Butter the cloth and flour
it, tie it clofe, let it boil three hours. Mafon 370.
>
Mrs. Raffald, page 172, gives the fame receipt, with this
addition: When you take the pudding up, it is belt to put
“
“
it in a bowl that will juft hold it, and let it ftand a quarter
of an hour before you turn it out lay your difh upon the
;
(e
top of the bafon, and turn it upfide down,” Cole, 261.
A Carrot Pudding.
Scrape a raw carrot very clean and grate it. Take half a
pound of the grated carrot, and a pound of grated bread beat ;
up eight eggs, leaving out half the whites, and mix the eggs
with half a pint of cream. Then ftir in the bread and carrot,
half a pound of frefh butter melted, half a pint of fack, three
fpoonfuls of orange flower-water, and a nutmeg grated.
Sweeten to your palate. Mix all well together, and if it is not
thin enough, ftir in a little new milk or cream. Let it be of a
moderate thicknefs, lay a puff pafte all over the difh, and pour
in the ingredients. It will take an hour’s baking. If you
would boil it, you mull melt butter, and put in white wine and
fugar. Cole, 259.
Green Codling Pudding.
Green about a quart of codlings as for a pie, rub them
through a hair fieve, with as much of the juice of beets as will
green your pudding put in the crumb of half a penny loaf,
;
half a pound of butter, and three eggs well beaten beat them
;
five eggs well beaten ftir this over the fire till pretty thick,
;
but you fhould not let it boil. When quite cold, butter a
cloth well, duft it with flour, tie the cuftard in it very clofe,
boil it three quarters of an hour. When taken up, put it into
a bafon to cool a little; untie the cloth, lay the difh on the
bafon, turn it up. If the cloth is not taken off carefully,
the pudding will break; grate over it a little fugar. Melted
butter, and a little wine in a boat. Raffald, 169, from Mafon,
369 with this difference, Mrs, Mafon recommends butft ve
;
Damafcene Dumplings.
Having mads a good hot pafte cruft, roll it pretty thin, lay
Jt in a baftm, and put in a proper quantity of damafcenes wet ;
.the edge of the pafte, and clofe it up; boil it in a cloth one
hour and fend it up whole j pour melted butter over it, and
grate fugar round the edge of the difh.
N. B. Dumplings may be made from any kind of preferved
fruit, in the fame manner. Raff aid 183. ,
Goofeberry Pudding.
Scald a pint of green goofeberries, and rub them through a
fieve put to them half a pound of fugar, and an equal quantity
;
faldy 182. Farley 198. The two laft recommended fix eggs
> ;
and mix with them a pint of milk then ftir in the bread and
;
Put a little fait fome flour and water, and make it into a
to
pafte. Roll them in balls as large as a turkey’s egg roll them ;
in a little flour, throw them into boiling water, and half an hour
will boil them. They are beft boiled with a good piece of beef.
For a change, you may add a few currants.
A Hajly Pudding,
Take a pint of cream and a pint of milk, a little fait, and
fweeten it with loaf-fugar make it boil; then put in fome fine
;
flour, and keep it continually ftirring while the flour is put in,
till it is thick enough, and boiled enough pour it out, and;
ftick the tops full of little bits of butter, It may be eaten with
fugar or fait. Mafon 368. ,
Herb Pudding.
Of fpinach, beet, parfley, and leeks, take each a handful *,
wafh them and fcald them, then fhred them very fine; have
ready a quart of groats fteeped in warm water half an hour,
and a pound of hog’s-lard cut in little bits, three large onions
chopped fmall, and three fage leaves hacked fine; put in a lit-
tle fait, mix ail well together, and tie it clofe up. It will re-
OF PUDDINGS.
quire to be taken up in boiling to loofen the firing a little.
Rojfaldy 182, from Mafon 372.
,
A Hunting Pudding.
Take the yolks of ten eggs, and the whites of fix; beat
them up well with half a pint of cream, fix fpoonfulls of flour,
one pound of beef fuet chopped fmall, a pound of currants well
wafhed and picked, a pound of jar raifins ftoned and chopped
fmall, two ounces of candied citron, orange and lemon, fhred
fine j put two ounce? of fine fugar, a fpoonful of rofe water, a
glafs of brandy, and half a nutmeg grated. Mix all well to-
gether, tie it up in a cloth, and boil it four hours be fure to
\
put it in when the water boils, and keep it boiling all the time;
turn it into a difh, and garnifh with powder fugar. Cole, 261.
An Italian Pudding.
Take a pint of cream, and flice in feme French rolls, as
much as you think will make it thick enough; beat ten eggs
fine, grate a nutmeg, butter the bottom of the difh, flice
twelve pippins into it, throw fome orange-peel and fugar over,
and half a pint of red wine then pour your cream, bread, and
;
eggs over it; firft lay a puff pafte at the bottom of the difh,
and round the edges, and bake it half an an hour. GlaJJe %
217.
A Lemon Pudding.
Take three lemons and grate the rinds off, beat up twelve
yolks and fix whites of eggs, put in half a pint of cream, half
a pound of fine fugar, a little orange flower water, a quarter of
a pound of butter melted. Mix all well together, fqueeze in
the juice of two lemons; put it over the ftove, and keep flir-
ring it till it is thick; put a puff pafte round the rim of the
difh, put in pudding-ftuff, with fome candied fweetmeats cut
finall over it, and bake it three quarters of an hour. Cole, 262,
A Marrow Pudding.
Grate a penny loaf into crumbs, and pour on them a pint of
boiling hot cream. Cut very thin a pound of beef marrow,
beat four eggs well, and then add a glafs of brandy, with fugar
and nutmeg to your tafte. Mix them all well together, and
either boil or bake it. Three quarters of an hour will do it.
Cut two ounces of citron very thin and whep you difh it up,
;
An Oat Pudding.
Take two pounds of oats Ikinned, and new milk enough to
drown it; eight ounces of raifins of the fun ftoned, the fame
quantity of currants neatly picked a pound of fweet fuet
;
finely fined, fix new laid eggs well beat; feafon with nutmeg,
beaten ginger, and fait; mix it all well together, it will make
an excellent pudding. Cole, 263.
An Oatmeal Pudding,
Boil a pint of fine oatmeal in three pints of new milk, ftlr-
rlng it till it is as thick as hafty pudding; take it off", and ftir
in half a pound of frefh butter, a little beaten mace and nut--
meg, and a gill of fack; then beat up eight eggs, half
the whites, ftir all well together, lay puff pafte all over the
difh, pour in the pudding, and bake it half an hour. Or you
may boil it with a few currants. Cole 263. ,
An Orange Pudding.
Take the rind of a Sevelle orange, boll It very foft, beat it
in a marble mortar, with the juice put to it two Naples’ bis-
*,
gether lay a good puff pafte round the edge of your China
;
Take the yolks and whites of three eggs, beat them toge-
ther, with two large fpoonfuls of flour, a little fait, and half a
pint of milk or cream; make it the thicknefs of a pancake
batter, and beat all well together. It will take half an hour
to boil it. Coley 264.
An excellent Plum Pudding.
Take one pound of fuel, one pound of currants, and one
pound of raifins ftoned the yolks of eight eggs, and the whiter
;
A Slinking Pudding.
Take a quart of cream, boil It, and let it {land till almoft
cold, then beat four eggs a full quarter of an hour, with a
fpoonful and a half of flour then mix them with your cream,
;
Rajfaldy 180.
Of puddings. 223
A Rabbit Pudding.
Take the meat of a large roafted rabbit, chop It very line
with the liver, leak the bones in a pint of cream about an
hourboil lix onions in broth, with a faggot of parfley, fhal-
lots, two cloves, pepper and fait; boil it till the liquid is of a
thick confidence, chop the onions very line, mix them with
the meat and bread crumbs Ibaked in cream, and the cream
wherein you Ibaked the bones add eight yolks of eggs, three
;
tar, with the yolks of four eggs, four ounces of butter, and the
Tame quantity of fugar*, grate the rind of half a lemon, and
half a nutmeg, work them well together for half an hour; then
j).ut in half a pound of currants well walked and cleaned, mix
224 OF PUDDINGS.
them well together, butter your cloth, and tie it up. Boil it ais
hour, and ferve it up with white wine fauce. Colei 2 65.
A Sago Pudding.
Take two ounces of fago, boil it with Topic cinnamon and a
bit of lemon-peel, till it is foft and thick. Grate the crumb of
a halfpenny roll, put to it a glafs of red wine, four ounces of
chopped marrow, the yolks of four eggs well beaten, and fugar
to your tafle. When the fago is cold, put thefe ingredients to
it. Mix it all well together. Bake it with a puffpafte. When
it comes from the oven, flick over it citron cut into pieces, and
almonds blanched and cut into flips. Rajfaldy 175, from Ma~
[on. 3 80.
A Spoonful Pudding.
Take a fpoonful of flour, a fpoonful of cream or milk, an
egg, a little nutmeg, ginger, and fait; inix all together, and
boil it in a little wooden dilh half an hour. You may add a
few currants. Cole y 26 6.
A Spinach Pudding-.
Take a quarter of a peck of fpinach, picked and wafhed
clean, put it into a fauce-pan with a little fait; cover it dole,
and when it has boiled jult tender, throw it into a fieve to
drain then chop it with a knife, beat up fix eggs, mix "well
;
with it half a pint of cream, and a flale roll grated fine, a little
nutmeg and a quarter of a pound of melted butter ftir all well
;
together, put it into the fauce-pan the fpinach was flewed in,
keeping it flirring till it begins to be thick, then wet the pud-
ding-cloth and flour it Well; tie it up and boil it an hour y turn
it into a difh, and pour over it melted butter, with a little Se-
ville orange fqueezed in it, and fugar. You may bake it, but
then you Ihould put in a quarter of a pound of fugar. Glajfey
225. Mafotiy 372. Farley 186,,
A Suet Pudding.
Take a pound of flared fuet, a quart of milk, four eggs, two
tea-fpoonfuls of grated ginger, a little fait, and flour enough to
make it a thick batter boil it two hours. It may be made in-
;
A Tanfey Pudding.
Put as much boiling cream to four Naples’ bifcuits grated as
will wet them, beat the yolks of four eggs. Have ready a few
chopped tanfey-leaves, with as much fpinach as will make it a
pretty green. Be careful not to put too much tanfey in, becaufe
it will make it bitter. Mix all together when the cream is
cold, with a little fugar, and fet it over a flow fire till it grows
thick then take it off, and, when cold, put it in a cloth well
\
A Franfparent Pudding .
Beat eight eggs well, put them in a pan with half a pound
of frefh butter, half a pound of fine powdered fugar, and half
a nutmeg grated fet it on the fire, and keep ftirring it till it
;
put a thin puff pafte round the edge of your difli; pour in the
ingredients, bake it half an hour in a moderate oven, and fend
it up hot. It is a pretty pudding for a corner for dinner, and
a middle for fupper. Rajfald 175, Farley iBy, from GlaJJey
, ,
222.
Vermicelli Pudding.
801 l a quarter of a pound of vermicelli in a pint of milk till
it is foft, with a flick of cinnamon; then take out the cinna-
mon, and put in half a pint of cream, a quarter of a pound of
butter melted, and a quarter of a pound of fugar, with the
yolks of four eggs well beaten. Bake it in an earthen difh
without a pafte. Coley 267.
Yeaf Dumplings.
Make a light dough* as for bread, with flour, water, yeaft,
and fait cover it with a cloth, and fet it before the fire for
*,
the blood, and keep ftirring it till the blood is quite cold then
;
mix it with your groats, and flir them well together. Seafon
with a large fpoonful of fait, a quarter of an ounce of cloves,
mace, and nutmeg together, an equal quantity of each dry it,
;
beat it well, and mix in. Take a little winter favoury. Tweet
marjoram and thyme, penny-royal ftripped of the flalks and
chopped very fine juft enough to feafon them and give them
;
a flavour, but no more. The next day take the leaf of the
hog, and cut into dice, ferape and wafli the guts very clean,
then tie one end, and begin to fill them. Mix in the fat as you
fill them; be fure to put in a good deal of fat, fill the ikins
three parts full, tie the other end, and- make your puddings
what length you plcafe prick them with a pin, and put them
;
it very thin. When you have made your tarts, beat the white
of an egg a little, rub it over them with a feather, lift a little
double-refined fugar over them, and bake them in a moderate
oven. Cole 29b.
,
Another way.
Having beat the white of an egg to a ftrong froth, put in by
degrees four ounces of double-refined fugar, with about as
much gum as will lie upon a fix-pence, beat and fifted fine. Beat
them half an hour, and then lay it thin on your tarts, Cole i
269.
Pu Jf Pafe.
Take a quarter of a peck of flour, rub in a pound of butter
very fine, make it up in a light pafte with cold water, juft ftiff
enough to work it up then roll it out about as thick as a crown
;
times, then it is fit for all pies and tarts that require a puff pafte.
Cole, 269.
Short Crujl.
Rub fome flour and butter together, full fix ounces of butter
to eight of flour; mix it up with as little water as polfible, fo
as to have it a ftiffifh pafte beat it well, and roll it thin. This
Is the beft cruft for all tarts that are to be eaten cold, and lor
228 OF PIES
preferred fruit, A moderate oven. An ounce and a half of
lifted fugar may be had. Cole, 270.
A good Pajle for great Pies.
Put the yolks of three eggs to a peck of flour, pour In fome
boiling water, then put in half a pound of fuet, and a pound
and a half ofbutter. Skim off the butter and fuet, and as much
of the liquor as will make it a light good cruft. Work it up
well, and roll it out. Cole 270.
,
An Apple Pie.
Make a good pufF-pafie cruft, lay fome round the fides of the
difh, pare and quarter your apples, and take out the cores, lay
a row of apples thick, throw in half the fugar you intend for
your pie, mince a little lemon-peel fine, throw over, and fqueeze
a little lemon over them, then a few cloves, here and there one j
then the reft of your apples, and the reft ofyour fugar. Sweeten,
to your palate, and fqueeze in a little more lemon. Boil the
peeling of the apples and the cores in fome fair water, Avith a
blade of mace, till it is very good ftrain it, and boil the fyrup
;
with a little fugar, till there is but very little and good pour
;
it into your pie, put on your upper cruft, and bake it. You
may, if you pleafe, put in a little quince or marmalade.
Make a pear pie in the fame manner, but omit the quince.
You may butter them when they come out of the oven. Or,
beat up the yolks of two eggs, and half a pint of cream, with a
little nutmeg fweetened with fugar; put it over a flow fire, and
keep ftirring it till it juft boils up; take oft' the lid, and pour
in the cream. Cut the cruft into little three-corner pieces,
flick about the pie, and fend it to table cold. Glajfe 230. ,
Farley 212.
,
An Apple Tart.
Take eight or ten large codlings, fcald them, and when cold,
fkin them beat the pulp as fine as you can with a filver fpoon,
•,
then mix the yolks of fix eggs, and the whites of four; beat all
together as fine as poflible, put in grated nutmeg, and fugar to
your tafte; melt feme fine frefh butter, and beat it till it is like
OF PIES. 229
a fine thick cream then make a fine puff-pafte, and cover a tin
;
patty-pan with it, and pour in the ingredients, but do not cover
it with the pafte. Bake it a quarter of an hour, then flip it out
of the patty-pan on a difli, and ftrew fome fugar finely beat and
fifted all ova' it. Raff aid) 145.
A Beef-Jleah Pie.
Take four or five rump fteaks, beat them very well with a
"pafte pin, feafon them with pepper and fait, lay a good puff-
pafte round the difli, and put a little water in the bottom j then
lay the fteaks in, with a lump of butter upon every fteak, and
put on the lid. Cut a little pafte in what form you pleafe, and
lay it on. Cole, 271,
A Bride’s Pie.
Having boiled two calves’ feet, take the meat from the
bones, and chop it very fmall take-a pound of beef fuet and a
*,
pound of apples, Aired them fmall, walh and pick one pound of
currants, dry them before the fire, ftone and chop a quarter of
a pound of jar raifins, a quarter of an ounce of cinnamon, the
fame quantity of mace and nutmeg, two ounces of candied
citron, the fame of lemon cut thin, a glafs of brandy, and one
of champagne put them in a china dilh, with a rich puff-pafte
;
over it; roll another lid, and cut it in leaves, flowers, figures,
and put a glafs ring in it. Coley 271.
A Calf’s-foot Pie.
Put your calf’s feet into a fauce-pan, with three quarts of
water, and three or four blades of mace; let them boil foftly
till there is about a pound and a half; then take out the feet,
ftrain the liquor, and make a good cruft. Cover your dilh, then
pick off the flelh from the bones, and lay half in the difli.
Strew over it half a pound of currants, clean walhed and picked,
and half a pound of raifins ftoned. Then lay on the reft of the
meat, fldm the liquor, fweeten it to your tafte, and put in half
a pint of white wine. Then pour all into the difli, put on your
lid, and bake it an hour and an half. Farley y 205, from Glaffe ,
140.
A Calf’s-head Pie.
Take a calf’s head and parboil it; when it is cold, cut it In
pieces, and feafon it well with pepper and fait. Put it in a
raifed cruft, with half a pint of ftrong gravy; let it bake an
hour and an half. When it comes outof the oven, cut off the
lid, and chop the yolks of three hard eggs fmall; ftrew them
over the top of the pie, and lay three or four flices of lemon,
and pour on fome melted butter. Send it to table without a
lid, Coley 272.
OF PIES
A Cherry Pie ,
of ftrong gravy, and make a good puff-pafte; lid it, and bake
it in a moderate oven. French cooks ufually add morels and
yolks of eggs chopped fmall. Raff aid, 151, parley 210. ,
fmall chickens into pieces, feafon them high with pepper and
fait; put'fome of the pieces into the difh, then a fweetbread op
two, cut'into pietes, and well feafoned, a few truffles and
morels, fome artichoke bottoms cut each into four pieces, then
the remainder of the chickens, fome force-meat balls, yolks of
eggs boiled hard, chopped a little, and ftrewed over the top, a
little water cover the pie. When it comes from the oven,
;
to let it boil, as that will curdle it. Pour this in your pie, pare
a little lemon thin, cut the peel like ftraws, and lay it on the top
over your codlings. Farley 214.,
Eel Pies.
After fkinning and walking your eels, cut them in pieces of
about an inch and an half long, feafon them with pepper, fait,
and a little dried fage rubbed fmall; raife your pies about the
fize of the infide of a plate, fill your pies with eels, lay a lid
over them, and bake them in a quick oven. They require to
be well baked. Rajfald x 155,
An Egg Pie.
Cover your dilh with a good cruft, then have ready twelve
eggs boiled hard, cut them in dices, and lay them in youf pie,
walh and pick half a pound of currants, and throw all over the
eggs; then beat up four eggs well, mixed with half a pint of
white wine j grate in a finall nutmeg, and make it pretty fweet
with fugar. Lay a quarter of a pound of butter between the
eggs, then pour in your wine and eggs, and cover your pie.
Bake it half an hour, or till'the cruft is done. Coley 274."
A French Pie.
Lay a puff-pafte half an inch thick at the bottom of a deep
dilh j lay a force-meat round, the ftdes of the difhj cut fome
fweetbreads in pieces, three or four, according to the fize the
pie is intended to be made; lay them in firft, then fome arti-
choke bottoms, cut into four pieces each, then fome cocks’-
OF PIES
combs, (or they may be omitted) a few truffles and morels, Tome
afparagus tops, and frefh mufhrooms, if to be had, yolks of
eggs boiled hard, and force-meat balls feafon with pepper and
;
fait. Almoft fill the pie with water, cover it, and bake it two
hours. When it comes from the oven, pour in fome rich veal
gravy, thickened with a very little cream and flour. Mafon y
357*
A plain Gooje Pie.
Quarter your goofe, feafon it well, and lay it in a raifed cruft
\
cut half a pound of butter into pieces, and put it on the top j
lay on the lid, and bake it gently. Ccley 274.
A rich Goofe Pie.
Take a goofe and a fowl, bone them, and feafon them well;
put the fowl into the goofe, and fome force-meat into the fowl;
put thefe into a raifed cruft, and fill the corners with a little
force-meat; lay half a pound of butter on the top, cut into
pieces cover it, and let it be well baked,
;
A Gihlet Pie,
Let two pair of giblets be nicely cleaned, put all but the livers
into a fauce pan, with two quarts of water, twenty corns of
whole pepper, three blades of mace, a bundle of fweet herbs,
and a large onion-, cover them clofe, and let them ftew very
foftly till they are quite tender; then have a good cruft ready,
cover your difh, lay a fine rump fteak at the bottom, feafoned
with pepper and fait j then lay in your giblets with the livers,
and ftrain the liquor they were ftewed in. Seafon it with fait,
and put into your pie j put on the lid, and bake it an hour and
an half. Glafje 143.
,
A Ham Pie.
Bone the ham, and trim it properly in the trimming, take
-,
care to cut off all the rufty fat or lean, till you come to the
wholefome-looking flefli. If an old ham, foak it twenty-four
hours if frefh, fix or eight hours then braze it with dices
;
over the fire, fill your difli or raifed cruft with it; bake it an
hour, and ferve it up, Cole 275, ,
A Lobfer Pie.
Boil two lobfters, and take the meat out of the fhells; feafou
them with pepper, mace, and nutmeg, beat fine bruife the bo-
;
dies, and mix them with fome oyfters, if in feafon cut fine a
;
fmall onion, and a little parfley, and add a little grated bread:
feafon with a little fait, pepper, fpice, and the yolks of two raw
eggs make this into balls, then make fome good puff-pafte,
;
butter the difh, lay in the tails, claws, and balls; cover them
■with butter, pour in a little fifh gravy, and cover the pie. Hava
a little fifh gravy ready to put into it when it is taken out of the
oven. Mafony 364,
Mince Pies.
Shred three pounds of fuel very fine, and chop it as fmall as
poffible; take two pounds of raifins ftoned and chopped very
fine, the fame quantity of currants, nicely picked, wafhed, rub-
bed, and dried at the fire. Pare half an hundred fine pippins,
core them, and chop them fmall; take half a pound of fine
fugar, and pound it fine a quarter of an ounce of mace, a
*,
good gravy made of bones put half a pound of butter over it,
;
make a light pafte, and lay round the difh; roll the lid half an
inch thick, and lay it on.
A beef olive pie may be made the fame way. Rajfaldy 158.
A Partridge Pic.
Singe, draw, and trufs your partridges as for boiling j flatten
the bread: bones, and make a force-meat with the livers, apiece
of butter or fcraped lard, pepper, fait, chopped parfley, fhallots,
winter lavoury, thyme, and fweet marjoram duffthe partridges
;
with this, and fry them a little in butter j then put themdn a
raifed crttdj upon dices of veal, well feafoned j dnidi it as all
others'. When done, if it is to ferve up hot, add a relifhing
OF PIES. 235
fauce; if cold, add fome good jelly broth before it is quite cold.
Dalrymple 33 6.
,
A Pigeon Pie.
Cover your difh with a puff-pafte cruft, let your pigeons be
very nicely picked and cleaned, feafon them with pepper and
fait, and put a good piece of frelh butter, with pepper and fair,
in their bellies lay them in your pan; the necks, gizzards,
;
livers, pinions, and hearts, lay between, with the yolk of a hard
egg, and beef-fteak in the middle put in as much water as will
;
almoft fill the difh, lay on the top cruft, and bake it well. This
is a very good way to make a pigeon pie but fome French
cooks fill the pigeons with a very high force-meat, and lay
force-meat balls round the infide, with afparagus-tops, artU
choke-bottoms, mufhroorns, truffles, and morels, and feafon
high. Colei 277,
A Chejhire Pork Pie.
Having fkinned a loin of pork, cut it into fteaks; feafon it
with fait, nutmeg, and pepper; make a good cruft, lay a layer
of pork, then a layer of pippins, pared and cored, and a little
fugar, enough to fweeten the pie, and then a layer of pork put
;
in half a pint of white wine, lay fome butter on the top, and
clofe your pie; if it be large, it will require a pint of white
wine. Glajfe, 144. Mafon y 357. Farley y %i\.
A Rook Pie.
Take half a dozen young rooks, fkin them and draw them,
cut out the back bones, feafon them well with pepper and fait,
and lay them in a deep difh, with 3 quarter of a pint of water;
lay half a pound of butter over them, make a good puff-pafte,
and cover the difh; lay a paper over. It requires to be well
baked. Cole, 278,
A Rabbit Pie.
Cut a couple of young rabbits into quarters; take a quarter
of a pound of bacon, and bruife it to pieces in a marble mor-
tar, with the livers, fome pepper, fait, a little mace, and fome
parfley cut fmail, fome chives, and a few leaves of fweet bafil;
when thefe are all beaten fine, make the pafte, and cover the
bottom of the pie with the feafoning, then put in the rabbits;
pound fome more bacon in a mortar, mix with it fome frefh
butter, and cover the rabbits with it, and over that lay fome thin
flices of bacon put on the lid, and lend it to the oven. It will
;
require two hours baking. When done, take off the lid, take
out the bacon, and fleim off the fat. If there is not gravy
enough in the pie, pour in fome rich mutton or veal gravy,
boiling, hot. Mafon 358.
,
A Salmon Pie.
Boil your falmon as if you intended it for eating; take the
236 OF PIES
£kin off, and all the bones out; pound the meat In a mortar
fine, with mace, nutmeg, pepper and fait, to your tafte j raife
the pie, and put flowers or leaves on the walls put in the fal-
;
mon and lid it; let it bake an hour and an half. When done,
take off the lid, and put in a quarter of a pound of rich melted
butter j cut a lemon in flices, and lay over it flick in two or
;
meat from a pair of large foals, and take off the fins, lay it on
the force-meat, then pour in the liquor the eels were boiled in,
and clofe the pie.
Turbot-pie may be made in the fame manner. Glaffe, 232.
Mafon, 363.
A Sucking-Pig Pie
Bone the pig thoroughly; lard the legs and fhoulders with
bacon feafoned with fpices, and fweet herbs chopped put it ;
it over with thin flices of bacon. Finifh the pie, and bake it
about three hours. When near done, add two glaffes of
brandy j let it be cold before uling. Dalrymple 333. ,
Cut your veal or lamb into little pieces, feafon it with pep-
per, fait, cloves, mace, and nutmeg, beat fine. Make a good
puff pafte cruft, lay it in your difh, then lay in your meat, and
ftrew on it fome ftoned raiftns and currants clean walked, and
fome fugar. Then lay on fome force-meat balls made fweet,
and in the fummer fome artichoke-bottoms boiled and in the
;
feafoned with the meat, amd the yolks of fix hard eggs, a pint
of oyfters, and half that quantity of good gravy lay a puff-paft e,
;
of half an inch thick, round your difh, and cover it with a lid
of the fame thicknefs bake it an hour and a quarter in a quick
;
oven when done, cut off the lid, cut the lid into eight or ten
;
pieces, and flick it round the infide of the rim cover the
;
pour the gravy over it, and put one pound of butter over it;
make a good puff-pafte, and lay it near half an inch thick
round the edge of the difh roll out the lid, which muff be a
;
little thicker than the pafte on the edge of the did*, and lay it
on; then roll out another lid pretty thin, and cut in dowers,
leaves, or whatever form you pleafe, and lay It on the lid. If
you do not want It, it will keep in the pot it was baked in eight;
or ten days ; but let the cruft be kept on that the air may not
get to it. A bread: and a fhoulder of venifon is the moft pro-
per for a pafty. Raffalcl, 154. Farley t 205.
A Vermicelli Pie,
Seafon four pigeons with a little pepper and fait, duff them
with a piece of butter, a few crumbs of bread, and a little parf-
ley cut fmall butter a deep earthen didr well, and then cover
;
the pigeons, the breads downwards; put a thick lid on the pie,
and bake it in a moderate oven. When it is enough, take a
didr proper for it to be fent to table in, and turn the pie on it.
The vermicelli is then on the top, and looks very pretty. Af«-
fon t 360.
Chap. XX.—PANCAKES AND FRITTERS.
Cream Pancales.
fine, thickncfs. You muft obferve to mix your flour firft with
a little milk, then add the reft by degrees put in two fpoon-
;
ful's <?f beaten ginger, a glafs of brandy, and a little fait; ftir all
together, make your ftew pan very clean, put in a piece of but-
ler a$ large as a walnut, then pour in a ladleful of batter,
jv-hich will make a pancake, moving the pan round that the
batter may be all over the pan (hake the pan, and when you
;
think that fide is enough, toft it, if you cannot turn it cleverly ;
and when both fides are done, lay it in a difli before the fire,
and fo do the reft. You muft take care that they are dry.
"When you fend them to table, ftrew a little fugar over them.
Glnjey 165.
Commit Paticahes.
Take a pint of milk or cream, a pound of flour, and three
eggs j put the milk by degrees into the flour; add a little fait,
and grated ginger; fry them in lard, and grate fugar over them..
Cole, 281.
Batter Pancakes.
Take a pound of flour and three eggs, beat them well toge-
ther put to it a pint of milk, and a little fait; fry them in lard
;
melted over the fire; mix all well together with three fpoon-
fuls of flour butter the frying-pan for the firft, let them run as
;
thin as you can in the pan, fry them quick, and fend them up
hot. Colei 281,
Rice Pancakes.
Wafh and pick clean half a pound of rice, boil it till it is
tender, and all the water boiled away put it into a tin cullen-
;
der, cover it clofe, and let it Hand all night; then break it
very fmall; take fourteen eggs, beat and ftrain them, and put
them to the rice, with a quart of cream, a nutmeg grated j
beat it well together, then lhake in as much flour as will hold
them together, and flir in as much butter as will fry them*
Cole 281.
,
PANCAKES AND FRITTERS. 239
Pancakes called a Shiire of Paper.
■
•
Cream Pancakes ,
Mix the yolks of two eggs with half a pint of cream, and two
ounces of fugar rub your pan with lard, and fry them as thin
;
as you poflibly can. Grate fugar over them, and let them be
ferved up hot. Cole 282. ,
Pink-coloured Pancakes.
Bail a large beet-root tender, and beat it fine in a marble
mortar -, then add the yolks of four eggs, two fpoonfuls of
flour, and three fpoonfuls of cream fweeten it to your tafte,
;
them all together half an hour, fry them in butter, and garnifh
them with green fweetmeats, preferved apricots, or green fprigs
of myrtle. It is a pretty corner difh for either dinner or fupper.
fiaffaldi 167.
Clary Pancakes.
Take three eggs, three fpoonfuls of fine flour, and a little
fait, beat them well, and mix them well with a pint of milk ;
put lard into your pan 5 when it is hot, pour in your batter as
thin, as poffible, then lay in feme clary leaves, wafhed and dried,
and pour a little more batter thin over them j fry them a fine
brown, and ferve them up. Cole, 282.
Common Fritters.
Get feme large baking apples, pare them, and take out the
core; cut them in round dices, and dip them in batter made
as follows:—Take half a pint of ale, and two eggs and beat
them in. as much flour as will make it rather thicker than a
Common pudding, with nutmeg and fugar to your tafte. Let
it ftand three or four minutes to rife. Having dipping your
apples into this batter, fry them crifp, and ferve them up with
fugar grated over them, and wine fauce in a boat. Farley ,
226.
Strawberry Fritters.
Make a batter with, flour j a fpoonful of oil, white wine, a
little rafped lemon-peel, and the whites of two or three eggs ;
make it pretty foft, juft fit to drop with a fpoon. Mix fome
large ftrawberries with it, and drop them with a fpoon, the
bignefs of a, nutmeg, into the hot fritter. When of a good
PANCAKES AND FRITTERS.
colour, take them out, and drain them on a fleve; when
ready to ferve, flrew fugar over, or glaze them. Dalrymple t
389.
Plain Fritters.
Grate the crumb of a penny loaf, and put it into a pint of
milk; mix it very fmooth when cold, add the yolks of five
;
thick; take it off, and let it Hand two or three hours; then
drop them into a pan full of boiling lard, a fpoonful is enough
for a fritter ferve them up with flices of orange round them,
;
grate fugar over them, and ferve wine fauce in a boat. Rajfald,
163.
Currant Fritters.
Take half a pint of ale that is not bitter, ftir a fufficient
quantity of flour in it to make it pretty thick add a few cur-
;
rants beat this up quick, have the lard boiling, throw in a large
;
Hajly Fritters.
Heat Tome butter in a ftew-pan. Stir a little flour by degrees
into half a pint of ale j put in a few currants, or chopped
PANCAKES AND FRITTERS. 241
apples beat them up quick, and drop a large fpoonful at a
;
time all over the pan. Take care to prevent their flicking to-
gether, turn them with an egg-flice; and, when they are of a
fine brown, lay them on a dilh, and throw fome fugar over
them. You may cut an orange into quarters for garnifh. Far-
ley, 228.
Water Fritters.
For thefe fritters, the batter muft be very thick. Take five
or fix fpoonfuls of flour, a little fait, a quart of water, the yolks
and whites of eight eggs well beat, with a little brandy ftrain
;
them through a hair fieve, and mix them with the other ingre-
dients. The longer they are made before they are fried, the
better. Juft before they are fried, melt half a pound of butter,
and beat it well in. The beft thing to fry them in is lard.
Mctfon, 381. Raffald, 163.
Fine Fritters.
Take fome very fine flour, and dry it well before the fire.
Mix it with a quart of milk, but be careful not to make it too
thick; put to it fix or eight eggs, a little fait, nutmeg, mace,
and a quarter of a pint of fack, or ale, or a glafs of brandy.
Beat them well together, then make them pretty thick with
pippins, and fry them dry. Cole 284.
,
Apple Fraze,
Having cut your apples in thin flices, fry them of a fine light
brown; take them up and lay them to drain, keep them as
whole as you can, and either pare them or not, as you think
proper then make a batter as follows :—Take five eggs, leav-
;
ing out two whites, beat them up with cream and flour, and a
little fack, make it the thicknefs of a pancake-batter, pour in a
little melted butter, nutmeg, and a little fugar. Let your batter
be hot, and drop in your fritters, and on every one lay a llice of
apple, and then more batter on them. Fry them of a fine light
brown; take them up, and ftrew fome double-refined fugar all
over them. Glajfe y 164.
Almond Fraze.
Blanch and beat half a pound of Jordan almonds, and about
a dozen bitter; put to them a pint of cream, eight yolks and
four whites of eggs, and a little grated bread. Fry them, as
pancakes, in good lard; and when done, grate fugaf over them*
Cole 285.
,
Chap. XXI.—OF PICKLING.
General Ohfervatiom on Pickling.
Take fome large cucumbers before they are too ripe, flice
them of the thicknefs of crown pieces in a pewter difh to ;
and let them drain very well. Put them in a jar, cover them
over with white wine vinegar, and let them ftand four hours j
pour the vinegar from them into a copper fauce-pan, and boil
it with a little fait; put to the cucumbers a little mace, a little
whole pepper, a large race of ginger fliced, and then pour the
boiling vinegar on. Cover them clofe, and when they are cold,
tie them down. They will be fit to eat in two or three days*
GlaJTe, 270.
To pickle Mangoes
,
over the tire in milk and water till ready to boil; dry them,
pour over them the following pickle when boiled and cold r
Doublc-diftiled vinegar, fait, mace, and one or two bay leaves j
they will not look white with any other vinegar. Cole 287.)
Ajvther way.
Take a fufficient number of the fmalleft onions you can get,
and put them into fait and water for nine days, obferving to
change the water every day. Then put them into jars, and
pour frefh boiling fait and water over them.. Let them hand
clofe covered till they are cold, then make fome more fait and
water, and pour it boiling hot upon them. When it Is cold,
put your onions into a hair fieve to drain, then put them into
wide-mouthed bottles, and till them up with diftilled vinegar.
Put into every bottle a flice or two of ginger, a blade of mace,
and a large tea-fpoonful of eating oil, which will keep the
onions white. If you like the tafte of bay-leaf, you may put
one or two into every bottle, and as much bay-falt as will lie
on a fixpence. Cork them well up. Farley y 249.
To pickle Walnuts black.
Your Walnuts fhould be gathered when the fun is hot upon
them, and' always before the fhcll is hard, which may be ealily
known by running a pin into them then put them into a flrong
•,
fait and water for nine days ftir them twice a day, and change
*,
the fait and water every three days; then put them in a hair
fleve, and let them ftand in the air till they turn black then\
put them into flrong flone jars, and pour boiling allegar over
them cover them up, and let them hand till they are cold,
*,
then boil the allegar three times more, and let it ftand till it is
cold between every time tie them down with paper, and a
•,
bladder over them, and let them ftand two months; then take
them out of the allegar, and make a pickle for them. To
every two quarts of allegar, put half an ounce of mace, half an
ounce of cloves, one ounce of black pepper, the fame of
Jamaica pepper, ginger, and long pepper, and two ounces of
common fait y boil it ten minutes, and pour it hot upon your
walnuts, and tie them down with a bladder, and paper over it,
Rafald, 347.
Another way.
. Take large full-grown nuts, but before they are hard, and
lay them in fait and water; let them lie two days, then fhift
them into frefh water j let them lie two days longer, then Ihift
them again, and let them lie three in your pickling jar. When
OF PICKLING. 245
the jar is half full, put in a large onion (luck with cloves. To
a hundred walnuts, put in half a pint of muftard-feed, a quarter
of an ounce of mace, half an ounce of black pepper, half an
ounce of all-l'pice, fix bay leaves, and a flick of horfe-raddifh
;
then fill your jar, and pour boiling vinegar over them. Cover
them with a plate, and when they are cold, tie them down with
a bladder and leather, and they will be fit to eat in two or
three months. The next year, if any remains, boil up your
liquor again, and fkim it; when cold, pour it over your wal-
nuts. This is by much the beft pickle for life, therefore you
may add more vinegar to it; what quantity you pleafe. If
you pickle a great many walnuts, and eat them fall, make your
pickle for a hundred or two, the rell keep in llrong brine of
fait and water, boiled till it will bear an egg; and as your pot
empties, fill them up with thofe in the fait and water. Take
care that they are covered with pickle.
In the fame manner you may do a fmaller quantity; but
if you can get rape vinegar, ufe that inllead of fait and water.
Do them thus:—Put your nuts into the jar you intend to
pickle them in, throw in a handful of fait and fill the pot with
rape-vinegar. Cover it clofe, and let them hand a fortnight;
then pour them out of the pot, wipe it clean, and juft rub the
nuts with a coarfc cloth, and then put them in the jar with the
pickle ,as above. Glajfe, 270.
To pickle Walnuts green.
Take the largeft double, or French walnuts, before the fhells
are hard, pare them very thin, and put them intiD a tub of
fpring water as they are pared put to them, if there are two
;
vinegar, and when they have hood all night, pour the vinegar
from them into a copper, with a good quantity of bay-falt; fet
it upon the fire, and let it boil, then pour it hot on the nuts;
tie them over with a woollen cloth, and let them (land a week ;
then pour that pickle from them, rub the nuts clean with a
piece of flannel, and put them again into the jar, with vine-
leaves, as before-mentioned boil frelh vinegar to every gal-
; ;
boiling hot upon the walnuts, and cover them with a woollen
cloth let it ftand four or five days, and repeat the fame four
;
27 6. Farley t 246.
Another way.
Take a fine clofe red cabbage, and cut it thin; then take
fome cold ale-allegar, and put to it two or three blades of mace
and a few white pepper corns make it pretty firong with fait,
;
and put your cabbage into the allegar as you cut it 5 tie it clofe
down with a bladder, and a paper over that. In a day or two
it will be fit for ufe. Cole y 290.
To pickle Mujhrooms.
Take the fmalleft mufhrooms you can get, and put them into
fpring waterthen rub them with a piece of new flannel dipped
in fait, and put them into cold fpxdng water as you do them, to
keep their colour; then put them into a fauce-pan, throw a
handful of fait over them, cover them clofe, and fet them over
the fire four or five minutes, or till you fee they are thoroughly
hot, and the liquor is drawn out of them; then lay them be-
tween two clean cloths till they are cold, then put them into
glafs bottles, and fill them up with difiilled vinegar put a blade
*,
put them into glafs jars, and put in a nutmeg fliced, and two
or three blades of mace in each jar. Cover them with diftilled
vinegar, and tie them down with a bladder, and over that a
leather. They will be fit for ufe in a month. Glaffe 272. ,
To pickle Capers*
Thefe are the flower-buds of a fmall fhrub, preferred in
pickle. The tree which bears capers is called the capcr-fhrub,
or bufh. It is common in the Weftern part of Europe. We
have them in fome gardens, but Toulon is the principal place
for capers. We have fome from Lyons, but they are flatter,
and lefs firm and fome come from Majorca, but they are fait
;
foft, flabby, and half open, are oflittle value. Mafon y 353.
To pickle Samphire.
Take the famphire that is green, put it into a clean pan, and
throw over it two or three handfuls of fait; then cover it with
fprlng-water. Let it lie twenty-four hours, then put it into a
clean fauce-pan, throw in a handful of fait, and cover it with
good vinegar. Cover the pan clofe, and fet it over a flow fire.
Let it hand till it is juft green and crifp, and then take it oft' at
that moment; for fhould it remain till it is foft, it will be
fpoiled. Put it in your pickling-pot, and cover it clofe. As
foon as it is cold, tie it down with a bladder and leather, and
keep it for ufe. Or you may keep it all the year in a very
ftrong brine of fait and water, and throw it into vinegar juft
before you ufe it. Glajfe, 278. Mnfon, 352. Farley, 251.
248 OF PICKLING.
To pickle Beet Roots.
Beet-roots, which are a pretty garnifh for made 'difhes, are
thus pickled :—Boil them tender, peel them, and, if agreeable,
cut them into fhapes; pour over them a hot pickle of white-
wine vinegar, a little pepper, ginger, and horfe-radifh fliced.
Cole 29 1.
,
To piclle Barberries.
Let your barberries be gathered before they are too ripe j
take care to pick out the leaves and dead ftalks, and then put
them into jars, with a large quantity of ftrong fait and water,
and tie them down with a bladder.
N. B, When you fee a feum over your barberries, put them
into frefh fait and water they require no vinegar, their own
;
fet them over a flow fre till they are a fine green then drain
;
them through a hair fieve, and when they are cold, put them
into diftllled vinegar; pour a little meat-oil on the top, and tie
them down with a bladder. Rajfald 345.,
lay them on a hair fieve, ftrew over a large handful of fait, fet
them in the fun for three or four days, or till very dry. Put
them into a flone jar with the following pickle —Put a pound
:
of race ginger into fait and water, the next day ferape and flice
it, fait it, and dry it in the fun flice, fait, and dry a pound of
;
To pickle Artichoke-bottoms.
Take fome artichokes, and boil them till yon can pull the
feaves off, then take off the chokes, and cut them from the
stalk; take great care that you do not let the knife touch the
OF PICKLINQ. 249
top; throw them into fait and water for an hour, then take
them out, and lay them on a cloth to drain then put them in-
;
but beat the meat exceedingly fine. Then put it into your
pots, prefs it clofe down, pour clarified butter over it, and keep
it in a dry place. Farley 262.,
beat the falts all very fine, mix them well together, rub the
falts into the beef j then let it lie four days, turning it twice a
day; then put it into a pan, cover it with pump water, and a
little of its own brinej then bake it in an oven with houfhold
bread till it is as tender as a chicken, then take it from the
gravy, and bruife it abroad, and take out all the fkin and fi-
news then pound it in a marble mortar, and lay it in a broad
;
an ounce of pepper, and one nutmeg, all beat very fine. Mix it
all very well with the meat, then clarify a little frefti butter,
and mix with the meat, to make it a little moift*, mix it very
well together, prefs it down into pots very hard, fet it at the
oven’s mouth juft; to fettle, and cover it two inches thick with
OF POTTING. 251
clarified butter. When cold, cover it with white paper, GlaJTe
,
261.
To pot Venifon .
per, and fait; put it on an earthen difh, and pour over it half
a pint of red wine, and a pound of butter, and fet it in the
oven; if it be a fhoulder, put a coarfe pafte over it and bake
it all night in a baker’s oven. When it comes out, pick it clean
from the bones, and beat it In a marble mortar, with the fat
from your gravy. If you find it not feafoned enough, add
more feafoning and clarified butter and keep beating it till it
is a fine pafie. Then prefs it hard down into your pots, and
pour clarified butter over it; keep it in a dry place. Rajfald ,
*9$•
To pot a Hare
_
Let your hare hang for fome days, then cut it into pieces,
bake it, with a little beer at the bottom of the pan, and fome
butter on the top; pick it from the bones and finews, and beat
it with the butter from the top of the gravy, adding enough to
make it very mellow; add fait, pepper, and pounded cloves;
put it into pots, fet it a few minutes in a flack oven, pour over
clarified butter. Mafon 302.
,
To pot Eels.
Take a large eel, fkin it, cleanfe it, and wafh it very clean;
dry it in a cloth, and cut it into pieces as long as your finger,
Seafon them with a little beaten mace and nutmeg, pepper, fait,
and a little fal prunella beat fine; lay them in a pan, then pour
as much good butter over them as will cover them, and clari-
fied as above. They mull be baked half an hour in a quick
oven, if a flow oven longer, till they are enough, but of that
you mull judge by the fize of the eels. With a fork take them,
out, and lay them on a coarfe cloth to drain. When they are
quite cold, feafon them again with the fame feafoning, and lay
them in the pot clofe; then take off the butter they were baked
in clear from the gravy of the fifh, and fet it in a difli before
the fire. When it is melted, pour the clear butter over the
eels, and let thefm be covered with the butter.
N. B. In the fame manner you may pot what you pleafe.
You may bone your eels, if you chufe it, but then do not put
in any fal prunella. GlaJJey 237. Farley 265. ,
To pot Chars.
Cleanfe your chars, and cut off the heads, tails, and fins; lay
them in rows in a long baking pan, and cover them with
252 OF POTTING.
butter. When they are enough, take them out with a fork, and
lay them on a coarfe cloth to drain. When they are quite
cold, feafon them well, and lay them clofe in the pot; then
take off the butter they were baked in clear from the gravy of
the fifh, and fet it in a difh before the fire. When it is melted,
pour the clarified butter over the char, and let them be covered
with it. Cole 295.
,
To pot Veal.
Take a fillet of veal, cut it into three or four pieces, feafon It
with pepper, fait, and a little mace put it into pots with half a
;
pound of butter; tie a paper over It, fet it in an hot oven, and
bake it three hours. When you take it out, cut off all the
outlldes, then put the veal into a marble mortar, and beat it
with the fat from your gravy; then oil a pound of frefh but-
ter, and put it in, a little at a time, and keep beating It till you
fee it is like a fine pafie then put it cfofe down into your pot-
;
two or three hours, then lay it in a large pot, and put to it half
a pound of butter; put it in an oven, and let it bake an hour.
When it is done, lay it on fomething flat, that the oil may run
from it; then cut it to the fize of the pots it is to be put in, lay
the pieces in layers till the pots are filled, with the fldn upper-
mofl; put a board over it, and lay on a weight to prefs it till
cold; then take the board and weight off, and pour over it
clarified butter. It may be lent to table in pieces, or cut in
flices, Mafon,
216.
To pot Tongues.
Rub a neat’s tongue with an ounce of fdt-petre, and a quar-
ter of a pound of brown fugar, let it lie two days, and then
*,
boil it till it is quite tender j then take off the fkin and fide
bits, cut the tongue into very thin dices, and beat it in a mar-
ble mortar, with a pound of clarified butter, pepper, fait, and
mace to your tafte. Beat the whole very fine, then put it clofc
down into fmall potting-pots, and pour clarified butter over
them. Cole 296.
To pet Lampreys.
Skju them, cleanfe them with fait, and then wipe them dry;
beat feme black pepper, mace, and cloves; mix them with fait
OF POTTING. 253
and feafou them. Lay them in a pan, and cover them with
clarified butter. Bake them an hour. In other refpects, ma-
nage them as above direfled for eels, and one will be enough
for a pot. You mull: feafon them well; let your butter be
good, and they will keep a long time. GlaJJe, 237.
To pot Pigeons.
Seafon your pigeons very high with pepper and fait, put
them into a pot with butter in lumps; bake them, and pour
off the fat and gravy. When it is cold, take the butter from
the top, put more to it; clarify it, pour It over the pigeons,
put fingly into a pot, with a little more feafoning added to them.
Cole, 296.
To pot Woodcocks and Snipes.
Pot them as you do pigeons. Cole, 296.
To pot Moor Game.
Pick and draw them, wipe them clean, and let them be well
feafoned with pepper, fait, and mace put one leg through the
;
other, roaft them till they are enough, and when cold, put them
into potting pots, pour clarified butter over them, and keep
them in a dry place. Cole, 296.
Chap. XXIII.—OF COLLARING.
General Ohfervations on Collaring.
TN collaring any kind of meat, &c, care is required in rolling
it up properly, and binding it clofe. Always boil it till it is
thoroughly done; and, when it is quite cold, put it into the
pickle with the binding on. Take it off, however, the next
day, and it will leave the Ikin clear. If you make frefh pickle
often, your meat will continue good much longer. Coley 297.
To Collar a Breajl of Veal.
Bone your veal, and beat It a little, then rub it over with the
yolk of an egg firew over it a little beaten mace, nutmeg,
;
to table, cut a (lice off one end. Garnilh with pickles and
parfley. Rtf aid, 300.
To Collar Beef.
Take a piece of thin flank of beef and bone It, cut the flein
off and fait it with two ounces of falt-petre, two ounces of fal-
prunella, the fame quantity of bay-falt, half a pound of coarfe
lugar, and two pounds of white fait. Beat the hard fait fine,
and mix all together. Turn it every day, and rub it well with
the brine for eight days. Then take it out of the pickle, wafh
it, and wipe it dry. Take a quarter of an ounce of cloves, a
quarter of an ounce of mace, twelve corns of all-fpice, and a
nutmeg beat very fine, with a fpoonful of beaten pepper, a large
quantity of chopped parfley, and fome fweet herbs chopped fine.
Sprinkle it on the beef, and roll it up very tight; put a coarfe
cloth round it, and tie it up very tight with a beggar’s tape.
Boil it in a large copper of water; and if It is a large collar, it
will take fix hours boiling, but a fmall one will be done in five.
Take it out, and put it in a prefs till it is cold but if you have
;
the outward fkin down, and cut it in rows acrofs, about the
breadth of your finger; but be careful not to cut the outflde
fkin then fill one nick with chopped parfley, the fecond with
;
fat pork, the third with crumbs of bread, mace, nutmeg, pep-
per, and fait, then parfley again, and fo on till you have filled
all your nicks; then roll it up tight, and bind it round with
coarfe broad tape j wrap it in a cloth, and boil it four or five
hours j then take it up, and hang it by one end of the firing
to keep it round; fave the liquor it was boiled in, the next day
fkim it, and add to it half as much allegar as you have liqour, a
little more mace, long pepper, and fait; then put in your beef
and keep it for ufe.
N. B. When you fend it to table, cut a little off* at each end,
and it will be in diamonds of different colours, and look very
pretty fet it upon a difh as you do brawn. If you make a
*,
frefh pickle every week, it will keep a long time. Rajfaldy 303.
To Cellar a Calf’s Head.
Get a calf’s head with the fkin on, feald off* the hair, parboil
the head, and bone It; the fore part muff; be flit; boil the
tongue, peel it, and cut that and the palate into thin flices, put
them and the eyes into the middle of the head j take fame pep-
per, fait, cloves, and mace, and beat them; add fame nutmeg
grated, fealded parfley, thyme, favory, and fweet marjoram,
cut very fmall; beat the yolks of three or four eggs, fpread
them over the head, and then ftrew on the feafoning; roll it
up very tight, and tie it round with tape j boil it gently for
three hours in as much water as will cover it. When the head
is taken out, feafon the pickle with fait, pepper, and fpice, and
add to it a pint of white wine vinegar; when it is cold put ija
the collar, and when fet to table, cut it in flices. Cole 298.
,
To collar a Pig.
Your pig being killed, and the hair drefled off, draw out the
entrails, and walh it clean; rip it open with a fharp knife, and
take out all the bones then rub it all over with pepper and fait
;
pour the liquor your pig was boiled in upon it, keep it covered,
and it is lit for ufe. Mafon 186.
,
To collar Venifon.
Bone a fide of venifon, and take away all the finews, and cut
it into fquare collops of what lize you pleafc. It will make two
or three collars. Lard it with fat clear bacon, and cut your
lards as big as the top of your finger, and three or four inches
long. Seafon your venifon with pepper, Fait, cloves, and nut-
meg. Roll up your collars, and tie them clofe with coarfe tape ;
then put them into deep pots, with feafonings at the bottoms,
fome frefh butter, and three or four bay-leaves. Then put in
the reft, with fome feafoning and butter on the ton, and over
that fome beef-fuet, finely Hired and beaten. Then cover up
your pots with coarfe pafte, and bake them four or five hours.
After that, take them out of the oven, and let them Hand a
littletake out your venifon, and let it drain well from the gravy ;
add more butter to the fat, and fet it over a gentle lire to clarify.
Then take it off, and let it ftand a little, and fkim it well.
Make your pots clean, or have pots ready ft for each collar.
Put a little feafoning, and fome of your clarified butter at the
bottom; then put in your venifon, and fill up your pots with
clarified butter, and be fure that your butter be an inch above
the meat. When it is thoroughly cold, tie it down with double
paper, and lay a tile on the top; they will keep fix or eight
months and you may, when you ufe a pot, put it for a minute
;
into boiling water, and it will come out whole. Let it ftand till
it is cold, flick it round with bay-leaves, and a fprig at the top.
Farley 257.
,
Mock Brawn.
Boil four ox-feet very tender, and pick the fiefh entirely from
the bones; take the belly piece of pork, boil ic till it is almoft
enough, then bone it, and roll the meat of the feet up in the
pork very tight then take a ftrong cloth, with fome coarfe
*,
tape, and roll it round very tight; tie it up in the cloth, boil it
till it is To tender that a ftraw may be run through it. Let it
bf COLLARING.
be hung up in the cloth till it is quite cold; aftel’ Ifciiich put it
into cold fait and water, and it will be fit for life. Mafont
179.
To collar Salmon ,
To collar Eels.
Cafe yotif eel, cut off the head, flit opeii the belly, take out
the guts, cut off the fins, take Out the bones, lay it flat on the
back, grate over it i fmall nutmeg j add two or three blades of
mace beat fine, a little pepper and fait; ftrew over it an hand-
ful of parfley flired fine, with a few fage-leaves j roll it up tight
in a cloth, and bind it well. If it is of a middle fize, boil it in
fait and water three quarters of an hour, hang it up all night
to drain; add to the pickle a pint of vinegar, a few pepper-
corns* and a fprig of fweet marjoram boil it ten minutes, and
*,
let it ftand till the next day; take off the cloth, and put your
eels into the pickle. You may fend them whole on a plate, or
Cut them in flices. Garnifh with green parfley. Lampreys
are collared in the fame manner. Raffald, 46,
To collar Mackarel,
Gut your mackarel, and flit them dowri the Belly; cut off
the head, take out the bones, but take care not to cut it in
holes; then lay it flat upon its back, feafon it with mace, nut-
meg, pepper, and fait, and an handful of parfley fhred fine ;
lirew it over them, roll them tight, and tie them well feparately
OF COLLARING.
in cloths; boll them gently twenty minutes in vinegar, fait,
and water; then take them out, put them into a pot, pour the
liquor on them, or the cloth will flick to the fifh; take the
cloth off the fifh the next day, put a little more vinegar to the
pickle, and keep them for ufe. When you fend them to
table, garnifh with fennel and parfley, and put fame of the
liquor under them. Cole t 301,
Chap. XXIV.—OF TARTS, CUSTARDS, AND
CHEESECAKES;
Obfervatious on Tarts,
be eaten cold, make the fhori
FOR tarts that are meant to
cruft. An apple-tart is made the fame as the pie, but if
to be eaten cold, make the fhort cruft. If you rife tin patties
to bake in, butter them, and put a littl’e cruft all over them, or
you will not be able to take them out; but if you bake them in
glafs or china, only an upper cruft will be receflary, as you will
not want to take them out when you fend them to table. Lay
fine fugar at the bottom, then your cherries, plums, or what-
ever you may want to put in them, arid put fugar at the top.
Currants and rafpberries make an exceeding good tart and do
not require much baking. Cherries require but little baking;
goofebefriesj to look red, rriuft ftand a good while in the oven*
Apricots* if greeri, require more baking than when ripei
Quarter or halve ripe apricots, and put in fome of the kernels.
Preferved frilit, as damafceries and bullace, require but little
baking j fruit that is prefervOd high fhould nor be baked at all;
but the cruft fhould firfi be baked upon a tin the fize the tart
is to be; cut it with a marking-iron, or not, and when cold, take
it off, and lay it on the fruit. Apples and pears intended to
be put into tarts muft be pared, cut into quarters, and cored.
Cut the quarters acrofs again, fet them on in a fauce-pan with,
ias much Water as will barely cover them, and let them fimrher
on a flow fire juft till the fruit is tender Put a good piece of
lemon-peel into the water with the fruit, and then have your
patties ready. Lay fine fugar at bottom, then your fruit, and a
little fugar at top. Pour over each tart a tea-fpoonful of lemony-
juice, and three tea-fpoonfuls of the liquor they were boiled in ;
then put on your lid* and bake them in a flack oven Apricot
tarts may be made in the fame manner, obferving that you muft
not put in any lemon-juice. Cole 301. ,
Put the ftalks of the rhubarb that grows in the garden, and
cut them in pieces of the fize of a goofeberry, and make it as a
gcofeberry-tart. Colc 302.
}
OF TARTS, CUSTARDS, AND CHEESECAKES.
A Spinach Tart.
Scald the fplnach in boiling water, and drain it very well to
chop, then drew it in butter and cream, with a little fait, fugar,
a few pieces of dried comfit citron, and a few drops of orange
flower water. Clermont 422.
,
’
Tart de Mot .
Make fome good pufF-pafte, and lay round your difh, put
fome bifcuits at the bottom, then fome marrow, and a little but-
ter ; then covfer it with different kinds of fweetmeats, as many
as you have, and fo on till your difh is full; then boil a quart of
cream, and thicken with four eggs and a fpoonful of orange
flower water,. Sweeten it with fugar to your palate, and pour
over the reft. Half an hour will bake it. Glaje, 149. Mafon ,
them up well, ftir them into the milk, and bake It in China
bafons, or put them in a deep China difh; have a kettle of wa-
ter boiling, fet the cup in, let the water come above half way,
but do not let it boil too faft, for fear of its getting into the
Cups, and take a hot iron, and colour them at the top. You
may add a little rofe-water. Glaffe 289.
,
Another way.
Set a quart of good cream over a flow fire, with a little cin-
namon and four ounces of fugar. When it has boiled, take it
off the fire, beat the yolks of eight eggs, and put to them a
fpoonful of orange-flower water, to prevent the cream from
cracking. Stir them Jn by degrees as your cream cools, put the
OF TARTS, CUSTARDS, AND CHEESECAKES. 261
pan over a flow fire, ftir it carefully one way till it is almoft
boiling, and pour it into cups. Farley t 305.
Baked Cujlards.
Boil a pint of cream with mace and cinnamon; when cold,
take four eggs, leaving out two of the whites, a little role and
orange-flower water and Tack, nutmeg and fugar to your palate ;
keep beating them till they are cold, then put them in cudard
cups, and fet them in an earthen difh of hot water. Let them
ftand till they are fet, then take them out, and dick preferred
orange on the top. They may be ferved up either hot or cold.
Coley 304.
Lemon Cujiards,
Beat the yolks of ten eggs, ftrain them, beat them with a pint
of cream fweeten the juice of two lemons, boil it with the peel
;
of one; ftrain if. When cold, ftir it to the cream and eggs;
ftir it till it near boils; or put it into a difh, grate over the rind
of a lemon, and brown with a falamander. Mafotiy 398,
Rice Cujiards.
Put a blade of mace and a quartered nutmeg into a quart of
cream; boil it, then drain it, and add to it fome whole rice
boiled, and a little brandy fweeten it, dir it over the fire till it
;
the mortar or bowl till it becomes white and frothy then make
;
Lemon Cheefecales.
Boil the peel of two large lemons very tender, then pound it
well in a mortar with four or five ounces of loaf-fugar, the yolks
of fix eggs, half a pound of frclh butter, and a little curd beat
fine; pound and mix all together, lay a puff-pafte in your
patty-pans, fill them half full, and bake them.
Orange Cheefecakes are done the fame way, only you fhould
boil the peel in ttyo or three waters to take out the bitternefs.
Cole 305.
,
then add as much flour as will make it pretty thick, and quit
the fldes of the pan; put it into another pan, and add eggs to
it, one by one, mixing well with a wooden fpoon till it becomes
pretty light and clear add one or two pounded anchovies, and
*,
Citron Cheefecahei
.
Boil a quart of cream; when cold, mix It well tvith the yolks
<?f four eggs well beaten; then fet it on the fire, and let it boil
till it curds; blanch fome almonds, beat them with orange-
flower water, put them into the cream, with a few Naples*
bifcuirs and green citron fhred fine; fweeten it to your tafte,
and bake them in tea-cups. Cole 306.,
Rice Cheefecakes.
Boil a quarter of a pound ofrice till it is tender, drain It, put
in four eggs well beaten, half a pound of butter, half a pint of
cream, fix ounces of lugar, a nutmeg grated, and a glafs of ra-
tafia water or brandy. Beat them all together, and bake them
in raifed crufts. Cole, 306.
Chap. XXV.—THE ART OF CONFER
TIONARY.
Xhe Colours ufed in Confefiionary.
To make the red, Colour .
This colour is only made for prefent ufe put a little warm
\
water into a plate, and rub an indigo ftone in it till the colour
is come to the tint you would have it, whetfoef pale, or a deep
£lue. Cole, 307,
yellow Colour^
This is done in the fame manner, by pouring 3 little water
into a plate, aqd rubbing it with a bit of gamboge. It is alio
done better with a yellow lilly; take the heart of the flower,
infufe it in milk-warm water, and preferve it iq a bottle well
flopped. Cole y 307
green Colour .
ufe.
Of thefe cardinal colours, you may make any alteration iq
imitation of painters, by mixing to what fhade you pleafe but;
;
OF CAKES.
General Obfervations upon Cubes,
have every thing in readinefs before you begin to
ALWAYS make any kind of cakes, then beat your eggs well, and
pever leave them till they are finilhed, as by that means your
cakes will not be fo light. When you put butter in your cakes, be
particularly fareful in beating it to a fine cream before you put
in your fugar, otherwife double the bating will not have fo
good an effe£l. feed-cakes, or plum-cakes, are bell
baked in wooden garths; for when they are baked in pots or
tins, the outfides of the cakes are burned, and they are fo con-
fined that the heat cannot penetrate into the middle, which
hinders fls fifing. Cole, 307.
A Bride Cake.
Take four pounds of fine flour well dried, four pounds of
frefh butter, two pounds of loaf fugar; pound and lift fine a
quarter of an ounce of mace, and the fame quantity of nut-
megs to every pound of flour put eight eggs; wafli and pick
;
four pounds of currants, apd dry them before the fire; blanch
a pound of fweet almonds, and cut them lengthways very thin,
a pound of citron, a pound of candied orange, a pound of can-
died lem.Qn, and half a pint of brandy; firfl work the butter
with your hand to a cream, then beat in your fugar a quarter
of an hour, beat tfie whites of your eggs to a very flrong froth,
tpix them with your fugar and butter 5 beat your yolks half an
hour at leafl, and mix them with your cake 5 then put in your
flour, mace, and nutmeg; keep beating it till your oven is rea-
dy* put in your brandy, and beat your currants and almonds
fightly in tie three fheets of paper round the bottom of your
;
of
Take pound butter, beat it in an earthen pan with your
a
hand one way, ti iit is like a fine thick cream; then have ready
twelve eggs, but half the whites j beat them well, and beat
them up with the butter, a pound of flour beat in it, a pound
of fugar, and a few carraways. Beat it all well together for an
hour with your hand, or a great wooden fpoon butter a pan,
;
fire, melt the butter in it ftir in the almonds and half a pint of
;
feeds bruifed; butter the pan or hoop 5 lift fugar on the top.
Coley 308.
A rich Seed Cake,
Take a pound of flour well dried, a pound of butter, a pound
ofloaf fugar beat and lifted, eight eggs, two ounces ofcarraway-
feeds, one nutmeg grated, and its weight of cinnamon. Firft
beat your butter to a cream, then put in your fugar, beat the
whites of your eggs half an hour, mix them with your fugar
and butter, then beat the yolks half an hour, put to it the
whites; beat in your flour, fpices, and feeds, a little before it
goes to the oven; put it in the hoop and bake it two hours hr
a quick oven, and let it ftand two hours. It will take twq
hours beating. Raff aid, 2 67.
A good common Cake.
Take fix ounces of rice-flopr, and the fame quantity of wheatr
flour, the yolks and whites of nine eggs, half a pound of lump
fugar pounded and lifted, and half an ounce of carraway-feeds;
beat this an hour, and bake it an hour in a quick pven. This
cake is well calculated for children and delicate ftomachs, as it
js very light, and has no butter in it. Coley 309.
Portugal Cakes.
Mix into a pound of fine flour a pound of loaf-fugar beat and
lifted, then rub it into a pound of pure fweet butter till it is
thick like grated white bread then put to it two fpoonfuls of
;
rofe-water, two of Tack, ten eggs; whip them very well with a
whifk, then put into it eight ounces of currants, mixed all well
together ■, butter the tin pans, fill them but half full, and bakq
them y if made without currants, they will keep half a year.
OF CAKES. 267
Add a pound of almonds blanched, and beat with rofe-water,
as above, and leave out the hour. Thefe are another fort, and
better. Glajp. 283. ?,
Aplain Cake .
Take two pounds and an halfof flour, fifteen eggs, two pounds
and an half of butter, beat to a cream three quarters of a pound
;
Shifetv/biiry Cakes.
Take half a pound of butter, beat it to a cream, then put in
half a pound of flour, one egg, fix ounces of loaf-fugar, beat arid
lifted, half an ounce of carraway-feeds mixed into a palte roll
;
them thin, and cut them round with a fmall glafs, or little tins ;
prick them, and lay them on fheats of tin, and bake them in a
flow oven. ■ Rnjfald 270,%
Bath Cakes.
Take half a pound qf butter, and rub it into a pound of flour;
add one fpoonful of good barm, warm fbme cream, and make
it a light pafte, and fet it to the fire to rife. When you make
them up, take four ounces of carraway comfits, work part of
them in, and flrew the reft on the top. Make them into a
round cake, about the fize of a French roll, bake them on Iheet
tins, and fend them in hot for breakfaft. Coley 310.
Little Fine Cakes.
Take one pound of butter beaten to a cream, a pound and a
quarter of flour, a pound of flue fugar beat fine, a pound of cur-
268 OF CAKES
rants clean wafhed and picked, fix eggs, two whites left out;
beat them fine, mix the flour, fugar, and eggs, by degrees into
the batter, beat it all well with both hands. Either make it
into little cakes, or bake it in one. Cole, 3 io»
Orange Cakes,
Take what quantity you pleafe of Seville-oranges that have
good rinds, quarter them, and boil them in two or three waters
till they are tendtr, and the bitternefs is gone off. Skin them
and then lay them on a clean napkin to dry. Take all the Ikins
and feeds out of the pulp with a knife, Hired the peels fine, put
them to the pulp, weigh them, and put rather more than their
weight of fine fugar into a tofiing-pan, with juft as much water
as will diffolve it. Boil it till it becomes a perfect fugar, and
then by degrees put in your orange-peels and pulp. Stir them
well before you fet them on the fire; boil it very gently till it
looks clear and thick, and then put them into flat-bottomed
glaffes. Set them in a ftove, and keep them in a conftant and
moderate heat; and when they are candied on turn
them out upon glaffes. Farley 299.
,
the whifk, till they are of a fine froth then whip in half an
;
ounce of candied lemon-peel cut very thin and fine, and beat
well j then by degrees, whip in the flour and fugar, then flip
in the yolks, and with a fpoon temper it well together; then
fhape your bifcuits on fine white paper with your fpoon, and
throw powdered fugar over therm Bake them in a moderate
oven, not too hot, giving them a fine colour on the top. When
they are baked, with a fine knife cut them off from the paper,
and lay them in boxes for ufe. Glajfe, 285.
Savoy Bifcuits.
Beat the Whites of eight eggs till they are a ftrong froth,
then put it to the yolks, with a pound of fugar beat them al-
*,
it is well mixed; lay the bifcuits upon the paper, and ice
them. Let the oven be hot enough to bake them quick. Cole,
312.
Drop Bifcuit.
Beat the yolks of ten eggs, and the whites of fix, with one
fpoonful of rofe water, half an hour, then put in ten ounces of
loaf fugar beat and lifted whifk them w T ell for half an hour,
;
Sugar Puffs.
Beat the whites of ten eggs till they rife to a high froth, put
them into a ftone mortar, or wooden bowl, add as much
double-refined fugar as will make them thick put in a little
;
407.
German Puffs:
Mix two fpoonfuls of fine flour with two eggs well
half a pint of cream or milk, and two ounces of melted butter ;
llir it all well together, and add a little fait and nutmeg. Put
them in tea-cups, or little deep tin moulds, half full, and bake
them a quarter of an hour in a quick oven but let it be hot
;
three eggs, and two rinds of lemons grated; mix it well up;
dufl fome fugar on your papers, drop on the puffs in fmall
drops, and bake them in an oven moderately hot. CWr, 313.
To make Wafers.
Put the yolks of two eggs, well beat; tb a pint of cream, mix
it as thick as a pudding with flour well dried, and fugar. and
orange-flower water to the tafte put in warm water enough
;
bake them over a ftove. Butter the irons vvhen they flick. Golej
3*3-
Icings for Cakes.
Take a pound of double-refined fugar, pounded and lifted
fine, and mix it with the whites of twenty-four eggs in an
earthen pan; whilk them well for two or three hours, till it
looks white and thick, and then, with a thin broad board, or
OE CAKES. 27 1
bunch of feathers, fpread it all over the top and Tides of the
cake. Set it at a proper diftance before a clear lire, and keep
turning it continually that it may not turn colour; but a cool
oven is beft, where an hour will harden it. Or you may
make your icing thus :—Beat the whites of three eggs to a
ftrong froth, beat a pound of Jordan almonds very fine with
rofe-water, and mix your almonds with the eggs lightly to-
gether then beat a pound of loaf fugar very fine, and put it
;
To dry Greengagef.
Slit them down the feam, juft feald them in a thih fyrup,
with vine-leaves at the top 5 put them by till the next day,
keeping them under the fyrup then put them into a thick
•,
fyrup cold feald them gently in this, fet them by, repeat it the
;
next day till they look clear fet them by for a few days. If
,
there is occaffion, boil them once more; take them from fh£
fyrup, and dry them. When they are fet by in the lyrtfp, let
it be in fomething rather narrow at the top, as they mull be
covered, or they will be difcoloured. Mafon 435. ,
Candied Orange-flowers'.
801 l fome fugar to a candy-height, put fome orange-flowerS
to it* and take it off the fire for about a quarter of an hour, or
till the flowers difcharge their juice, as it refrefhes the fugar;
put it upon the fire again to bring it to the fame degree let it
;
To candy Ginger*
Grate an ounce of race-ginger very fine, and put it into a
tolling-pan, with a pound of loaf-fugar. beat fine, and as much
water as will diflblye it. Put them over a flow fire, and ftir
them well till the fugar begins to boil; then ftir in another
pound of fine fugar beat fine, and cdntimfe ftirring it till it be-
comes thick. Then take it off* the fire, and drop it in cakei
upon earthen difhes; fet them to dry in a warm place, when
they will be hard and brittle, and have a white appearance.
Cole, 315.
To candy Lemon or Orange-peel.
Cut your lemons, or oranges, long ways; take out all the
pulp, and put the rinds into a pretty ftrong fait and hard water
fix days, then boil them in a large quantity of fpftng water till
they are tender then take them out, and lay them on a hair
;
and fet them in a ftove, or before the fire to dry, and keep theni
in dry place for ufe.
a
N. B. Do not cover your fauce-pan when you boil either le-
mons or oranges. Rajfald 246. ,
To candy Angelica.
Take it in April j boil it in water till It Is tender, then take
it up and drain it from the water very well; then ferape the
outfide of it, and dry it in a clean cloth, and lay it in the fyrupj
and let it lie in three or four days, covered clofe; the fyrup
muft be ftrong of fugar, and keep it hot a good while, but with-
out boiling. After it is heated a good while, lay it upon a pie-
plate, and fo let it dry; keep it near the fire left it diflblve,
Glafey 372.
Orange Chips,
Pare fbme of the beft Seville oranges aflant, about a quarter
of an inch broad, and if you can keep the parings whole, they
will have a prettier effeft. When youhave pared as many as
you intend, put them into fait and fpring-water for a day or
274 CANDYING AND DRYING.
two; then boil them in a large quantity of fpring-water till
they are tender, and drain them on a fieve. Have ready a
thin fyrup, made of a quart of water and a pound of fine
fugar boil them, a few at a time, to keep them from break-
;
ing, till they look clear then put them into a fyrup made of
;
346.
Po dry Damafcenes.
Gather the Damafcenes when full ripe, lay them on a coarfe
cloth, fet them in a very cool oven, let them ftand a day or
two they muft be as dry as a frefli prune if they are not,
; ;
put them in another cool oven for a day or two longer then ;
take them out; they will eat like frefh damafcenes in the
winter. Mafon 436.
, Rajfald, 242. Farley, 347.
STo candy Cinnamon.
Soak fome cinnamon bark in water about twenty-four hours,
cut it into pieces of what length you pleafe, and boll a moment
in fugar of candy height; drain it and dry it in the ftove upon
rails till it comes to a proper fubftance to put in candy moulds ;
To dry Apricots.
Pare and ftone a pound of apricots, and put them In your
tolling-pan; then take a pound of double-refined fugar, pound
and lift it, and ftrew a little among your apricots, and lay the
reft over them. After letting them ftand twenty-four hours*
turn three or four times in the fyrup, then boil them pretty quick
till they feem clear. When cold, take them out, and lay them
on glafles then turn them every half hour the firft day, the
;
ftone them, and fill every one of them with fugar; lay them in
an earthen pot, put to them as much water as will prevent burn-
ing them then fet them in an oven after bread is drawn, let them
\
ftand till they are tender; then put them into a fieve to drain
well from the fyrup; then fet them in an oven again till they
are a little dry; then fmooth the flcins as well as you can, and fo
fill them; then fet them in the oven again to harden then walh
;
them in water fealding hot, and dry them very well; then put
them in the oven again very cool, to blue them. Put them
between two pewter difiics, and fet them in the oven, Clajfe,
372-
CANDYING AND DRYING*
To dry Currants in Bunches.
Stone your currants, and tie them up in bunches j to every
pound of currants put a pound and an half of fugar, and to
every pound of fugar put half a pint of water; boil the fyrup
Very well, lay your currants in it, fet them on the fire, and let
them juft boil; take them off, cover it clofe with a paper, let
them ftand till the next day, then make them Raiding hot let
them ftand for two or three days with paper clofe to them ;
then lay them on earthen plates, and fift them well over with
fugar; put them in a ftove to dry; the next day lay them on
fieves, but do not turn them till the upper fide is dry, then
turn them and fift the other fide well with fugar; when they
are quite dry, lay them between papers, Raffald t 244,
CREAMS.
fire till it is thick, but do not let it boil, then put it into a china
foup-plate i when it is cold, flick fome kernels, cut longways, all
over it, and fend it to table. GlaJJe 292. Raffald 248. Farley
, , ,
310.
Coffee Cream.
Roaft one ounce of coffee, put it hot Into a pint and an half
of boiling cream j boil thefe together a little; take it off put
in two dried gizzards; cover this clofe, let it hand one hour,
fweeten with double-refined fugar; pafs it two or three times
through a fieve with a wooden fpoon put it into a difli with a
;
tin on the top, fet the difh on a gentle ftove, put fire upon the
top upon the tin when it has taken, fet it by. Serve it cold.
;
Barley Cream .
five eggs, and the yolks of one, beaten with a fpoonful of fine
flour, and two fpoonfuls of orange-flower water; then take the
cream off the fire, and mix in the eggs by degrees, and fet it
over the fire again to thicken. Sweeten it to your tafte, pour*
it into bafons, and, when cold, ferve it up. Cole 3 18.
,
Codling Cream.
Pare and core twenty codlings, and beat them in a mortar,
with a pint of cream ftrain it into a difli, and put into it
;
out of the tin, and put it into the mould you intend it to be
turned out of. Then put on the lid, and have ready another
tub, with fait and ice in it as before. Put your mould in the
middle, and lay your ice under and over it; let it ftand four
or five hours, and dip your tin in warm water when you turn it
out ; but if it be fummer, remember not to turn it out till the
moment you want it. If you have not apricots, any other fruit
will anfwer the purpofe, provided you take care to work them
very fine in your mortar. Raff aid 312.
,
Hartjhorn Cream.
Take four ounces of hartfhorn fhavings, and boil it in three
pints of water till it is reduced to half a pint, and run it through
a jelly-bag; put to it a pint of cream and four ounces of fine
fugar, and juft boil it up; put it into cups or glafles, and let
it ftand till it is cold. Dip your cups or glafles in fcalding
water, and turn them out into your difti; ftick fiiced almonds
on them, It is generally eaten with white wine and fugar.
Gla/Je, 292.
Mrs. Raffald) page 250, and Mr. Farley page 311, have the
,
fame receipt, with this tingle alteration—they have left out the
four ounces of fugar, which I fuppofe proceeded from a rriif.
take, inftead of being meant as an improvement,
Blanched Cream,
Seafon a quart of very thick cream with fine fugar and
orange-flower water; boil it and beat the whites of twenty
eggs with a little cold cream; ftrain it, and when the cream is
upon the boil, pour in the eggs, ftirring it very well till it comes
to a thick curd; then take it up, and ftrain it again through a
hair fieve beat it well with a fpoon till it is cold, then put it
;
with half a pint of water, and half a pound of fine fugar beat ;
the whites of five eggs, and mix into it, and fet them on a flow
fire; ftir it one way till it grows thick and white, ftrain it
through a gauze, and ftir it till cold; then beat the yolks of
five eggs very fine, and put into your pan with the cream ftir ;
Mrs. Raffaldy page 252, has the fame receipt, except that
inftead of half a pint of water,” and half a pound of fine
“
Spani/Jj Cream.
Mix well together three fpocnfuls of flour of rice lifted very
line, the yolks of three eggs, three fpoonfuls of water, and two
of orange-flower water then put to them one pint of cream,
;
then tie up the bottle very clofe, and fet it into a pot of water,
with hay at the bottom. Let it ftand fix hours, then take it
out, and let it ftand an hour before you open it, left it fly in
your face; then ftrain it, and it wifi be a ftrong jelly; then take
a pound of blanched almonds, beat them very fine, mix it with
a pint of thick cream, and let it ftand a little; then ftrain it
out, and mix it with a pound of jelly fet it over the fire till it
;
three or four minutes, then pour it into a dilh, and melted but-
ter over it. Send it in hot. Cole 321. ,
PRESERVING.
General Obfervations upon Prefervtng.
then fet a very clean china bafon under, have your glades as
clean as poflible, and with a clean fpoon fill your glaffes. Have
ready fome thin rind of the lemons, and when you have filled
half your glaffes, throw your peel into the bafon and when the
;
jelly is all run out of the bag, with a clean fpoon fill the reft of
the glaffes, and they will look of a fine amber colour. In
putting in the ingredients, there is no certain rule. You
muft put in lemon and fugar to your palate. Moft people love
them fweetj and indeed they are good for nothing unlefs they
are. Glajfc 294.
,
Another way .
Put two quarts of water into a clean pan, with half a pound
©f hart {horn {havings, let it funnier till near one half is re-
duced j ftrain it off, then put in the peel of four oranges and
two lemons, pared very thin boil them five minutes, put to it
;
Calves’-feet Jelly.
To two calf’s feet, put three quarts of water, boil it to one
quart; when cold, take off the fat, and take the jelly from the
fediment put to it one pint of white wine, half a pound of fu-
;
gar, the juice of three lemons, the peel of one. Whifk the
whites of two eggs. Put all into a fauce pan, boil it a few mi-
putes j put it through a jelly-bag till it is fine. M.afon y 447.
Red or white Currant Jelly.
Boil your currants in a preferving pan till the juice will
gafily math through a fieve or cloth put in an equal quantity
;
of clarified fugar and juice, boil and feum it till it will jelly.
When cold, pqt on paper dipped in brandy. Cole 323. ,
a cool oven for two hours having firft tied a paper over them y
then fqueeze them through a very fine cloth, and to every
quart of juice add a pound and an half of loaf-fugar broken
into fmall pieces. Stir it gently till the fugar is melted, and
when it boils, fkim it well. Let it boil pretty thick for half
an hour over a clear fire, then pour it into pots, and put bran-
dy papers over them. Raffald\ 211. Farley 32;. ,
Orange Jelly.
Take half a pound of hartfhorn fhavings, or four ounces of
ifing-glafs, and boil it in fpring-water till it is of a ftrong jelly;
take the juice of three Seville oranges, three lemons, and fix
China oranges, and the rind of one Seville orange and one le-
mon, pared very thin put them to your jelly, fweeten it with
;
a froth, and mix well in, then boil it for ten minutes, then run
it through a jelly-bag till it is very clear, and put it in moulds
till cold, then dip your mould in warm water, and turn it out
into a China difh, or a flat glafs, and garnifh with flowers.
Qlaffe, 295.
Rafpierry Jelly.
Make It In the fame manner as currant jelly, only put one
half currants, and the other half rafpberries. Coley 323.
IJmg-glafs Jelly .
Ribband Jelly*
Take four calf’s feet, take out the great bones, and put the
feet into a pot with ten quarts of water, three ounces of hartf-
horn, three ounces of iflng-glafs, a nutmeg quartered, and four
blades of mace j boil it till it comes to two quarts, drain it
through a flannel bag, let it Hand twenty-four hours, then
fcrape off all the fat from the top very clean, then flice it, put
to it the whites of fix eggs beaten to a froth boil it a little,
;
and drain it through a flannel bag j then run the jelly into
little high glades, run every colour as thick as your finger, one
colour mud be thoroughly cold before you put another on,
and that you put on mud be but blood warm, for fear it mix
together. You mud colour red with cochineal, green with
fpinach, yellow with faffron, blue with fyrup of violets, white
with thick cream, and fometimes the jelly by itfelf. You may
add orange-flower water, or wine and fugar, and lemon, if you
pleafe* but this is all fancy. Glaffe, 295. Farley, 322,
Cherry Jam.
Stone fome cherries, boil them well, and break them take;
them off the fire, let the juice run from them to three pounds
;
but they muft only fimmer, not boil j then put them in your
glades. Cole 324,
,
Gather your currants when they are full ripe, and pick them,
clean from the ftalks, then bruife them well in a bowl, and
to every pound of currants put a pound and an half of loaf-
fugar, finely beaten. Put them Into a preferving-pan, boil
them half an hour, Ikim and ftir them all the time, and then
put them into pots, Farley 318.,
them on a very flow fire. When they are fcalding hot, take
them off; then fet them on again, and then take them off;
they muft be done fo till they are of a good green; lay them
on a fieve to drain, beat them in a marble mortar with their
weight in fugar; then take a quart of water, and a quart of
goofeberries, boil them to a mafh, fqueeze them to every pint
;
of this liquor, put a pound of fine loaf-fugar, boil and Ikim it;
then put in the green goofeberries, let them boil till they are
thick and clear, and of a good green. Mafon 424. }
cieve that the fugar has entered them, take them off, cover
them with white paper, and fet them by till the next day.
Then takethem out of the fyrup, and boil the till It begins
to be ropyj fldm it, and put it to them again, then fet
them on a gentle fire, and let them fimmer gently till you per-
ceive the fyrup will ropej then take them fet them by
till they are cold, cover them with paper; then boil fome
goofeberries in fair water, and when the liquor is ftrong enough,
ffraiii it out. Let it ftand to fettle, and to every pint take a
PRESERVING.
pound of double-refined fugar, then make a jelly of it, put the
goofeberries in glafles when they are cold; cover them with
the jelly the next day, paper them wet, and then half dry the
paper that goes in the infide, it clofes down better, and then
white paper over the glafs, Set in your ftove, or a dry place.
Glajfe, 3 17.
To preferve Apricots.
Peel ripe apricots, dice them, and boil to a marmalade, with
a drop of water reduce it pretty thick on the fire, mix a
;
Gather your apricots before the ftones are hard, put them
into a pan of hard water, with plenty of vine-leaves, fet them
over a flow fire till they are quite yellow, then take them out, and
rub them with flannel and fait to take of the lint; put them
into the pan to the fame water and leaves, cover them clofe,
fet them a great diftance from the fire till they are a fine light
green, then take them carefully up pick nut all the bad-
;
coloured and broken ones; boil the beft gently for two or
three times in a thin fyrup, let them be quite cold every time.
When they look plump and clear, make a fyrup of double-re-
fined lugar, but not too thick give your apricots a gentle bo I
;
in it, then put them into pots or glafles dip paper in brandy,
;
lay it over them, and keep them for ufe then take out all thi
;
broken and bad-coloured ones and boil them in the firfl; fyrup
for tarts. Rajfald 218. ,
Syrup of Quinces,
Grate your quinces, and pafs their pulp through a cloth to ex ?
traft the juice fet their juices in the fun to fettle, or before
;
the fire, and by that means clarify it. For every four ounces
of this juice, take a pound of fugar boiled brown. If the put-
ting in the juice of the quinces Ihould check the boiling of the
fugar too much, give the fyrup fome boiling till it becomes
pearled then take it off the fire, and, when cold, put it into
;
they are foft, then take them off and give the fyrup a boil*
and pour it upon them. Having done fo two or three times,
take them carefully out, and put them into the jars you intend
to keep them in ;then pour over them rendered mutton fuet,
tie a bladder over them, and keep them for ufe in a very cool
place. Cole 327.
,
A conferve of Cherries,
Stone your cherries, and boil them a moment; lift them,
and reduce the juice on a flow lire till it comes to a pretty thick
marmalade add the proportion of a quarter of a pound to a
•,
off the white part from the red, and put the red flowers and
lift them through a lieve, to out the feeds; then weigh
them, and to every pound of flowers take two pounds and an
half of loaf-fugar beat the flowers pretty fine in a ftone mor-
;
tar, then by degrees put the fugar to them, and beat it very
well till it is well incorporated together; then put it into galli-
pots, tie it over with paper, and over that a leather, and it will
keep feven years. Glaffe, 315.
To prefeive Stawberrles.
On a dry day, gather the fined; fcarlet drawberries, with*
their dalks on, before they are too ripe. Lay them feparately
on a china difli, beat and fift twice their weight of double-
-I'efined fugar, and drew it over them. Then take a few ripe
fcarlet draw berries, crufh them, and put them into a jar, with,
their weight of double-refined fugar beat fmall. Cover them
clofe, and let them dand in a kettle of boiling water till they
are foft, and the fyrup is come out of them. Then drain them
through a muffin rag into a toffing-pan, boil and fkim it well,
and when it is cold, put in your whole drawberries, and fet
them over the fire fire till they are milk warm then take
;
them off, and let them dand till they are quite cold; then fet
them on again, and make them a little hotter, and repeat the
fame till they look clear; but be careful not to let them boil,
as that will bring off’ their daiks. When the drawberries are
Cold, put them into jelly-glades, with the dalk downwards, and
286 PRESERVING.
fill up your glafles with the fyrup. Put over them papers dipped
in brandy, and tie them down dole. Farley 399. ,
juft give them a boil up, and cover them till next day then ;
take them out, and either dry them or put them in glafles,
with the fyrup boiled up with a little of the juice of red cur-
rants put brandy-paper over them, and tie them clofe down
;
with another paper, and fet them in a dry place. Rajfald 214. ,
Another way.
Stone your currants, tie the bunches to bits of fticks, fix or
feven together allow the weight of the currants in fugar,
;
which make into a fyrup; boil it high, put in the currants, give
them a boil, fet them by; the next day take them out. "When
the fyrup boils, put them in again, give them a boil or two, and
take them out. Boil the fyrup as much as is neceffary. When
cold, put it to the currants in glades. Cover with brandy-pa-
per. Mafon- 421.
Currants preferi>ed in Jetty.
Clip your currants from the ftalks, cut off the black top, and
flone them. To every pound of fruit, add two pounds of
fugar, and boil it till it blows very ftrong. Put in the currants
and let them boil. Take them from the fire, let them ftand
to fettle, then let them boil again. Put in a pint of currant
jelly, let it all fimmer a little, then take it from the fire. Let
it fettle a little, Ikim it. When cold, put it into glafles. Take
care to difperfe the currants equally. Cole 328.
,
then dip the cherries, ftalks, leaves, and all; then ftick the
branches and fieves, and dry them as you do other fweatmeats.
They look very pretty at candle light in a defert. Clajfe i 312.
Conferve of apricots.
Peel ripe apricots, flice them, and boil to a marmalade, with
a drop of water; reduce it pretty thick on the fire, mix a quar-
ter of a pound of the marmalade to a pound of iugar properly
prepared, and work it well together when it begins to cool.
PRESERVING 287
Peaches and nectarines are doneafter the fame manner. Cler~
Mont, 549.
To preferve Currants fo ■ Tarts .
To preferve Rafpberries .
To preferve Grapes.
Take forae clofe bunches of red or white grapes, before they
are too ripe, and put them them into a jar, with a quarter of a
pound of fugar candy, and fill the jar with brandy. Tie it clofe,
and fet them in a dry place.
Morel cherries may be done in the fame manner. Cole 329.,
Ikim it; put in twelve pippins, pared and cored with a fcoop,
and the peel of an orange cut thin 5 let them boil faft till the
fyrup is thick, taking them off when they appear to part* put-
ting them on the fire again when they have flood a little time j
then put in a pint of the pippin juice, boil them faft till they
are clear, then take them out; boil the fyrup as much more as
is neceifary, with the juice of a lemon. The orange-peel muft
be firft put into water for a day, then boiled, to take out the
bitiernefs, Mafon y 413.
Preserving,
To preferve Cucumbers .
You may take fmall cucumbers ami large ones that will cut
into quarters, (let them be as green and as free from feed as yoii
can get them) put them into a ftrong fait and water, in a nar-
low-mouthed jar., with a cabbage-leaf to keep them down; tie
a paper over them, fet them in a warm place till they arc yel-
low, waih them out, and fet them over the fire in frefh water;
with a little fait in, and a frefh. cabbage leaf over them cover
;
the pan very clofe, but take cate they do not boil; if they are
not of a fine green, change your water, which will help them;
then make them hot, and cover them as before. When they
are of a good green , take them off the fire, let them Hand till
they are cold, then cut the large ones in quarters, take out the
feeds and foft part; then put them in cold water; and let them
ftand two days, but change the water twice each day to take
eut the fait 5 take a pound of fingle refined fugar, and half a
pint of water, fet it ofer the fire. When you have Ikimmed it
clear, put in the find of a lemon, and one ounce of ginger, with
the outfide fcraped off: When your fyrUp is pretty thick, take
it off, and when it is cold, wipe the cucumbers dry, and put
them in boil the fyrup once in two or three days for three
;
then boil it, and fkim it till it is as clear as chryftal, then throw
in your walnuts; juft give them a boil till they arc tender, then
take them out, and lay them in a difh to cool; when cool, put
them in your preferving-pan, and when the fugar is as warm as
milk, pour it over them. When quite cold, paper them down;
Thus clear your fugar for all preferves, apricots/
goofeberries, currants, &c. Glaffe, 318.
To prejerve Walnuts black .
Take walnuts of the fmaller kind, put them in fait and water,*
and change the water every day for nine days. Then put them'
in a fieve, and let them ftand in the. air till they begin to turn,
black. Then put them into a jug, pour boiling water over them,'
and let them fiand till the next day. Then put them into a fieve
PRESERVING. 289
to drain, flick a clove in each end cf your walnut, put them into
a pan of boiling -water, and let them boil five minutes. Then
take them up, make a thin fyrup, and Raid them in it three or
four times a day, till your walnuts are black and bright. Then
make a thick fyrup with a few cloves, and a little ginger cut in
flices. Skim it well, pour in your walnuts, boil them five or
fix minutes, and then put them into your jars. Lay brandy
paper over them, and tie them down clofe with a bladder.
They will cat better the fecond year after their keeping than in
the firfl, as their bitternefs goes off with time. Farley 335.
,
them in, let them boil a minute; and take them out; lay them
on a coarfe cloth, and boil your fugar as dircdted for the white
walnuts 5 then juft give your walnuts a fcald in the fugar, take
them up, and lay them to cool. Put them in your preferving-
pot, and pour on your fyrup. Cole 33 I;
,
bodkin job your oranges as they are boiling, to let the fyrup
into them ftrew on the reft of your fugar while they are boil-
*,
ing, and when they look clear, take them up, and put them in
your glaffes; put one in a glafs juft fit for them, and boil the
fyrup till it is almoft a jelly, then fill up your glaffes. When
they are cold paper them up and keep them in a dry place.
Glajfe, 313.
To preferve Oranges carved.
Get fome fine Seville oranges, cut the rinds with a pen-
knife in what form you pleafe, draw out the part of your peel
as you cut them, and put them into fait and hard water; let
them ftand for three days to take out the bitter, then boil them
an hour in a large faucepan of frefh water, with fait in it, but
do not cover them, as it will fpoil the colour; then take them
out of the fait and water, and boil them ten minutes in a thin
fyrup for four or five days together then put them into a deep
;
jar, let them ftand two months, and then make a thick fyrup,
and juft give them a boil in it; let them ftand till the next
day, then put them in your jar with brandy-papers over tie ;
Marmalade of Oranges.
This is ufually made with China oranges; cut each into
quarters, and fqueeze out the juice j take off the hard parts at
both ends, and boil in water till they are quite tender fqueeze
;
the parings, fill the faucepan almoft full of fpring water, cover
it elofe, and flew them gently till they are quite foft, and of a
deep pink colour; then pick out the quince from the parings,
and beat them to a pulp in a mortar take their weight in loaf-
;
43 8
*
Apricot Marmalade.
Take ripe apricots and boil them in the fyrup till they will
mafia, then beat them in a marble mortar; add half their
weight of fugar, and as much water as will diilblve it; boil and
fkim it well, boil them till they look clear, and the fyrup like
a fine jelly, then put them into your fweetmeat glades, and
keep them for ufe. Cole 335. ,
Transparent Marmalade.
Pick out fome very pale Seville oranges, cut them in quar-
ters, take out the pulp, and put it into a bafon, pick the fkins
and feeds out, put the peels in a little fait and water, let them
fland all night; then boil them in a good quantity of fpring
water till they are tender, then cut them in very thin dices, and
put them to the pulp to every pound of marmalade put a
;
gently all the time, and take care you do not break the dices.
When it is cold, put it into jelly or fweetmeat glades; tie them
down with brandy-papers over them. They are pretty for a
defert of any kind. Raffald, 224.
Apple Marmalade.
Scald Some apples in water, and when tender, drain them
through a fieve put three quarters of a pound of fugar to a
;
pound of apples put them into the preferving pan, and let
;
them firamer over a gentle fire, keep fkimming them all the
time. When they are of a proper thicknefs, put them into
pots or glades. Cole y 336.
SYLLABUBS, BLANC-MANGE, FLUMMERY,
ORNAMENTS, &c.
A whipt Syllabub,
“O UB a lump of fugar on the outfide of a lemon, put it into
pint of thin cream, and fweeten it to your tafte; then
put in the juice of a lemon and a glafs of Madeira wine, 01*
French brandy; mill it to a froth with a chocolate mill, and
take it off as it rifes, and lay it in a hair fieve. Then fill one
half of your poffet glaffes a 1* tie more than half full, with
white wine, and the other half of your glaffes a little more than
half full with red wine then lay on your froth as high as you
;
can, but take care that it be well drained on your fieve, other-
wife it will mix with your wine, and your fyllabub will be
fpoiled. Rajfald, 208. Farley, 327.
Another way.
Take a pint of cream, the whites of two eggs; a pint of
white wine, and the juice and rind of a lemon grate the rind
;
into the wine, and then put in the cream; fweeten them, and
whilk them up with a clean whifk. Cole 336. ,
A Lemon Syllabub.
Take a pint of cream, a pint of white wine, the rind of two
lemons grated, and the juice fugar it to the tafte let it hand
; ;
fome time mill or whip it; lay the froth on a fieve put the
;
;
remainder into glaffes; lay on the froth make them the day-
;
it upon a hair fieve, and let it ftand in a cool place till the next
day. More than half fill your glaffes with the thin, and then
heap up the froth as high as you can; the bottom will look
clear, and keep for four or five days. Cole 337.,
Everlajling Syllabub.
Take five half pints of thick cream, half a pint of rhenifh,
half a pint of fack, and the juice of two large Seville oranges ;
a week, and are better made the day before. The beft way to
whip fyllabub is,—have a fine large chocalate mill, which you
muft keep on purpofe, and a large deep bowl to mill them in;
it is quicker done, and the froth is ftronger. lor the thin that
is left at the bottom, have ready fome calf’s foot jelly, boiled
and clarified. There muft be nothing but the calf’s foot boiled
to a hard jelly. When cold, take off the fat, clear it with the'
whites of eggs, run it through a flannel bag, and mix it with
the clear which you faved of the fyllabub. Sweeten it to your
palate and, give it a boil; then pour it into batons, or what you
pleafe. When cold, turn it out, and it is as a fine flummery.
Glnfey 293.
Blanc-mange with Jfmg-glafs,
Put an ounce of picked ifing-glafs to a pint of water; put
to it a bit of cinnamon, and boil it till the ifing-glafs is melted;
33 8
*
Clear Blanc-mange.
Take a quart of ftrong calf’s foot jelly, Ikim off the fat, and
296 SYLLABUBS, BLANC-MANGE, FLUMMERY, See.
Brain it, beat the whites offour eggs, and put it into a jelly-bag,
and run it through feveral times till it is clear. Beat one ounce
of fweet almonds, and one of bitter, to a pafte, with a fpoonful
of rofe-water fqueezed through a cloth then mix it with the
;
jelly, and three fpoonfuls of very good cream; fet it over the
fire again, and keep ftirring it till it is almoft boiling; then
pour it into a bowl, and ftir very often till it is almoft cold;
then wet your moulds and fill them. Raffald, 196.
Blanc-mangey with a preferred Orange.
Fill your orange with blanc-mange and, when cold, ftick in
;
difh when cold, fet the orange in the middle. Garni fh with
•,
HartJljorn Flummery.
Take half a pound of the fhavings of hartfhorn, boil them in
three pints of water till it comes to a pint, then ftrain it through
a lleve into a bafon, and fet it by to cool; then fet it over the
fire, let it juft melt, and put to it half a pint of thick cream
fpalded and grown cool again, a quarter of a pint of white wine,
and two fpoonfuls of orange-flower water j fweeten it with fu-
SYLLABUBS, BLANC-MANGE, FLUMMERY, &c. 297
gar, and beat it for an hour and an half, or it will neither mix
well nor look well j dip your cups in water before you put in
the flummery, or it will not turn out well. It is beft when it
ftands a day or two before you turn it out. When you ferve it
up, turn it out of the cups, and flick blanched almonds, cut in
long narrow bits on the top. You may eat them either with
wine or with cream. Glajfe 296.
,
Welch Flummery.
Put a little ifing-glafs to a quart of ftiff hartfhorn jelly add
•,
then add a pint of white wine, the rind of one lemon, the juice
of two lemons, the yolks of eight eggs, well beat, and fweeten
it to your tafte, then put it into a tofiing-pan, and continue
flirring it. When it boils, flrain it; and, when almoft cold,
put it into moulds or cups. Cole, 340.
Solomon’s Temple in Flummery.
Uaving made a quart of fliff flummery, divide it into three
parts make one part of a pretty thick colour, with a little co-
;
Oatmeal Flummery.
Put foore oatmeal into a broad deep pan, then cover it with
water ftir it together, and let it ffand twelve hours then pour
$ ;
off that water clear, and put on a good deal of frefli water; fhift
it again in twelve hours, and fo on in twelve more then pour
;
off the water clear, and ftrain the oatmeal through a coarfe hair
£evc, and pour it into a keeping it'ffirring all the
SYLLABUBS, BLANC-MANGE, FLUMMERY, &
c .
time with a flick till it boils, and is very thick; then pour it
into difhes. When cold, turn it into plates, and eat it with
what you pleafe, either wine and fugar, or beer and fugar, or
milk. It eats very well with cider and fugar. Cole 340. ,
French Flummery.
Take a quart of cream, and half an ounce of ifinglafs, beat it
line, and flir it into the cream. Let it boil foftly over a flow
fire a quarter of an hour, keep it flirring all the time thefi ;
and pour it into a glafs or bafon, or what you pleafe and, when
;
it is cold, turn it out. It makes a fine fide difli. You may eat
it with cream, or wine, or what you pleafe. Lay round it
baked pears. It looks very pretty, and eats fine. Glajfey 298,
Farley 324.
,
PUT twelve large apples into cold water, fet them over a
flow fire, and when they are Toft, pour them upon a hair
fieve. Take of the flcins, and put the pulp into a bafon j then,
beat the whites of twelve eggs to a very ftrong froth, beat and
lift half a pound of double-refined fugar, and ftrew it on the
eggs. Then beat the pulp of your apples to a ftrong froth
then beat them all together till they are like a ftiff fnow; lay
it upon a china dilh, and heap it up as high as you can. Set
round it green knots of pafte, in imitation of Chinefe rails, and
flick a fprig of myrtle in the middle of the dilh. Mafotiy 450.
Raff aid 205. Farley 352.
, ,
M-oonfnne.
Take the fhapes of half a moon, and five or {even ftars 5 wet
them, and fill them with flummery let them Hand till they are
;
cold, then turn them into a deep China dilh, and pour lemon-
cream round them, made thus Take a pint of fpring-water,
put it to the juice of three lemons, and the yellow rind of one
lemon the whites of five eggs, well beaten, and four ounces of
;
loaf-fugar j then fet it over a flow fire, and ftir one way till it
looks white and thick. If you let it boil it will curdle. Then
ftrain it through a hair fieve, and let it ftand till it is cokl beat
;
the yolks of five eggs, mix them with your whi es, fet them
over the fire, and keep ftirring it till it is almoft ready to boil,
then pour it into a bafon. When it is cold, pour it among your
moon and ftars. Gamifh with flowers. It is a proper dilh.
for a fLcond courfe, either for dinner or {upper. R aid,
201,
off
Floating Ifand of Apples.
Bake or fcald eight or nine large apples; when cold, pare
them, and pulp them through a fieve; beat this up with fine
fugar; put to it the whites of four or five eggs that have been
beaten, with a little rofe-water; mix it a little at a time, beat
it till it is light j heap it on a rich cold cuftard, or on jeliy,
Mafon , 450.
Floating Ifand of Chocolate.
Take the whites of two eggs, and mix them up with two
ounces of chocolate icraped; pile it on a thin cuftard or jelly.
Cole 342.
,
A Defcrt IJland.
Form a lump of pafte into a rock three inches broad at the
t°P> colour and fct it in the middle of a deep Clvna
ORNAMENTS FOR GRAND ENTERTAINMENTS.
difli. Set a call figure on it, with a crown on its head, and a
knot of rock-candy at its feet; then make a roll of pafte an
inch thick, and flick it on the inner edge of the difli, two parts
round. Cut eight pieces of eringo roots, about three inches
long, and fix them upright to the roll of pafle on the edge.
Make gravel walks of fliot comfits round the difli, and fet final!
figures iu them. Roll out fome pafte, and cut it open like
Chinefe rails. Bake it, and fix it on either fide of the gravel
walks with gum, and form an entrance where the Chinefe
rails are, with two pieces of eringo root, for pillars. Farley ,
35 1 *
A Floating IJland.
Take a foup difli according to the fize and quantity you in-
tend to make, but a pretty deep glafs is beft, and fet it on a
China difli take a quart of thick cream, make it pretty fweet
•,
with fine fugar, pour in a gill of fack, grate the yellow rind of
a lemon in, and mill the cream till it is all of a thick froth then
;
carefully pour the thin from the froth into a difli; take a
French roll, or as many as you want, cut it as thin as you can,
lay a layer of that as light as poflible on the cream, then a layer
of currant jelly, then a very thin layer of roll, and then hartf-
liorn-jelly, then French roll, and over that whip your froth
which you faved off the cream very well milled up, and lay at
the top as high as you can heap it and as for the rim of the
•,
may put the thickeft cream you can get j but that is as you
fancy. Glajp, 300.
A Hedge-Hog.
Blanch, two pounds of almonds, beat them well in a mortar,
with a little canary and orange-flower water to keep them from
oiling. Make them into ftifl-pafte, then beat in the yolks of
twelve eggs, leave out five of the whites, put tp it a pint of
cream, fweetened with fugar; put in half a pound of Tweet
butter melted, fet it on a furnace or flow fire, and keep it con-
ftantly flirring till it is flifl' enough to be made into the form of
an hedge-hog *,then flick it full of blanched almonds, flit and
flack up like the briftles of an hedge-hog. Then put it into a
diflr j take a pint of cream, and the yolks of four eggs beat up ;
A FiJJj-pond.
Fill your large fifli-moulds, and fix finall ones with flum-
mery take a China bowl, and put in half a pint of ftifF clear
;
calf’s-foot jelly; let it ftand till cold then lay two of the finall
;
fifties on the jelly, the right fide down. Put in half a pint more
jelly, let it ftand till cold, then lay in the four finall fifties acrofs
one another, that, when you turn the bowl upfide down, the
heads and tails may be feen. Then alraoft fill your bowl with
jelly, and let it ftand till cold then lay in the jelly four large
;
fifties, and fill the bafon quite full with jelly, and let it ftand till
the next day. When you want to ufe it, fet your bowl to the
brim in hot water for one minute take care that you do not let
;
the water go into the bafon. Lay your plate on the top of the
bafon, and turn it upfide down. If you want it for the middle,
turn it out upon a fiilver. Be furc you make your jelly very
ftill and clear. Raf'cild, 194.
302
POTS, &c.
Sack PoJJ'et.
three Naples bifeuits to one quart of cream or
CERATE
JT new milk let it boil a little, fweeten it, grate fome nut-
;
grated, or fugar rubbed upon it to take out the eflence; boil all
together till it looks thick and clear, then beat it very well.
Then take a pint of mountain wine, the juice ofhalf a Seville
orange, three ounces of Jordan almonds, and one ounce of bit-
ter, beat fine, with a little French brandy and fugar to your
tafte; mix it well, and put it in your poflet, and ferve it up.
Cole, 344.
A lemon pofiet is made in the fame manner.
Wine Pcjjet.
Boil the crumb of a penny loaf in a quart of milk till it is
foft, then take it off the fire, and grate in half a nutmeg; put
in fugar to your tafte then put it in a China bowl, and put in
;
JI fweet Panada.
Slice the crumb of a penny loaf very thin, and put it into a
fauce-pan with a pint of water; boil it till it is very foft and
looks clear then put in a glafs of Madeira wine, grate in a
*,
A White-pot.
Take two quarts of milk, eight eggs, and half the whites,
beat up with a little rofe water, a nutmeg, and a quarter of a
pound of fugar cut a penny loaf in very thin flices, and pour
;
milk and eggs over. Put a little piece of butter on the top.
Bake it half an hour in a flow oven. Cole, 345.
A Rice White-pot.
Boil a pound of rice in two quarts of milk till it is tender and
thick. Beat it in a mortar with a quarter of a pound of fweet
almonds blanched. Then boil two quarts of cream, with a few
crumbs of white bread, and two or three blades of mace. Mix
it well with eight eggs, and a little rofe-water, and fweeten to
to your tafte. Cut fome candied orange or citron-peels thin,
and lay it in. It mull be put into a'flow oven,
GlaJJe 158.
,
Mafon, 453.
White Caudle.
Take two quarts of water, and mix with it four fpoonfuls of
oatmeal, a blade or two of mace, and a piece of lemon-peel.
Let it boil, and keep ftirnng it often. Let it boil about a quar-
ter of an hour, and be careful not to let it boil over; then ftrain
it through a coarie fieve. When you ufe it, fweeten it to your
tafte, grate in a little nutmeg, and what wine you think proper ;
Brown Caudle.
Make your gruel as above, with fix fpoonfuls of oatmeal, and
ftrain it then add a quart of ale that is not bitter; boil it, then
\
POSSETS, GRUELS* WHITE-POTS, &c.
fweeten It to your palate, and add half a pint of white wine of
brandy. When you do not put in white wine or brandy, let
it be half ale. Cole, 346.
Salop.
Salop is fold at the chemifts. Take a large tca-fpoonful of
the powder, and put it into a pint of boiling water, keep ftir-
ring it till it is a fine jelly, and add wine and fugar to your
take. Cole, 346.
Beef ‘Ted.
Cut a pound of lean beef into very thin dices, and put it in
ajar; pour a quart of boiling water over it, and cover it dole
that the fteam may not get out; let it hand by the fire. It is
ftrongly recommended by phyficians for thofe of a weak con-
ftitution. It fliould be drank milk warm. Cole, 346*
White-auine Whey.
Put a pint of fkimmed milk, and half a pint of white wine
into a bafon. Let it dand a few minutes, then pour over it a
pint of boiling water. Let it hand a little and the curd will
gather in a lump, and fettle to the bottom. Then pour your
whey into a China bowl, and put in a lurtap of fugar, a fprig of
balm, or a flice of lemon. Rajfald 313. ,
Water Gruel,
To a pint of water, put a large fpoonful of oafmeal; then
ftir it well together, and let it boil up three or four times, dir-
ring it often. Do not let it boil over. Then drain it through
a fieve, fait it to your palate, put in a good piece of frefli but-
ter, brew it with a fpoon till the butter is all melted, and it will
be fine and fmooth. Cole, 346.
Barley Gruel.
Put a quarter of a pound of pearl barley, and a dick of cin-
namon, into two quarts of waterj and let it boil till it is reduced
to one quart; add a pint of red wine, and fugar to your tade.
You may add two or three ounces of currants. Cde, 347.
Sago.
To three quarters of a pint of water, put a large fpoonful of
fago, ftir it, and boil it foftly till it is as thick as you would have
it; then put in wine and I'ugar, with a little nutmeg to your
palate. Cole, 347.
Rice JVlilk *
Boil half a of
pound rice in a quart of water, with a little cin-
namon let it boil till the water is waded, but take care it does
;
not burn then add three pints of milk, and the yolk of an egg
;
Another way.
Boil two ounces of barley in two quarts of water till it looks
(train the water from the
white, and the barley grows foft, then
barley, and add to it a little currant jelly or lemon.
N. B. You may put a pint more water to your barley, and
boil it over again. Rajfdlcl 314; ,
Capillaire.
Take fourteen pounds of loaf-fugar, three pounds of cbarfe
fugar, fix eggs beat in with the fbells, and three quarts of wa-
ter boil it up twice, Ikim it well, then add to it a quarter of a
;
Lemonade.
Take two Seville oranges and fix lernons,' pare them very
thin, deep the parings four hours in two quarts of water j put
the juice of fix oranges and twelve lemons upon twelve ounces
of fine fugar; when the fugar is melted, put the water to it;
Add a little orange-dower water, and more fugar, if neeeffary.
Pafs it through a bag till it is fine. Cole 348; ,
Goofeberry Fool.
Set quarts of goofeberries on the fire in about a quart of
water. When they begin to fimmer, turn yellow, and begin to
plump, throw them into a cullender to drain the water out;
then with the back of a fpoon carefully fqueeze the pulp through
a fieve into a difh make them pretty fweet, and let them {land
;
till they are cold. In the mean time, take two quarts of milk,*
and the yolks of four eggs, beat up with a little grated nutmeg ;
take it off to cool; take the yolks of four eggs well beaten, add
to them ‘a little cold wine; then mix them carefully with your
hot wine, a little at a time then pour it backwards and for-
;
wards feveral times, till it looks fine and bright; then fet it on
the fire, and beat it a little at a time fur feveral times, till it is
quite hot, and pretty thick, and pour it backwards and forwards
feveral times then fend it in chocolate-cups, and ferve it up
;
Raifin Wine.
Another way.
Take three hundred and an half of Malaga raifins, fixty-fix
gallons of water, in a large tub with a falfe bottom let them
}
let them work as long as they will, filling the hoglhead full
every day for five of fix months} then rack the liquor into
another calk, and put to it two gallons of brandy. Mafon t 465.
Elder* Wine.
Pick your elder-berries when they are full ripe, put them
into a ftone jar, and fet them in the oven, or in a kettle of
boiling water till the jar is hot through then take them out,
}
when you tun your wine, to every gallon of wine put half a
pint of elder fyrup. Cole 349.
,
Grape Wine.
Put a gallon of grapes to a gallon of water} bruife the
MADE WINES.
grapes and let them hand a week without ftirring, then draw,,
it off line. Put to a gallon of the wine three pounds of fugar
and then put in a veffel, but do not flop it till it has 'done
hilling. Mafon 465.
,
Orange Wine.
Put twelve pounds of the bell: powder fugar, with the whites
of eight or ten eggs well beaten, into lix gallons of fpring water,
and boil it three quarters of an hour. When cold, put into it
lix fpoonfuls of yeaft, and the juice of twelve lemons which
;
3.01.
Another way.
Put twenty-four pounds of lump-fugar to ten gallons of wa-
ter, beat the whites of fix eggs very well, and mix them when
the water is cold then boil it an hour, and Ikim it well; take
;
four dozen large rough Seville oranges, pare them very thin,
put them into a tub, and put the liquor on boiling hot; and,
when you think it is cold enough, add to it three or four
fpoonfuls of new yeaft, with the juice of the oranges, and half
an ounce of cochineal beat fine, and boiled in a pint of water ;
ftir it all together, and let work four days, then put it in the
calks, and in fix weeks after bottle it for ufe. Raffald, 31 8.
Red Currant wine.
Gather the currants on a fine dry day, when the fruit is full
ripe; ftrip them, and fqueeze out the juice put a gallon of
;
Another way.
Five quarts of currant juice, and fourteen pounds of fugar,
will make a five gallon calk fill it up with water, and let it all
;
clear off. Put two quarts of white wine to one quart of juice,
then bottle it off, and it will be fit to drink in about a week,
R.afpberry brandy made thus is a very excellent dram. Cole.
35 1-
’Turnip Wine.
Pare and flice a quantity of turnips, put them In a cider-
prefs, and profs out all the juice. To every gallon of juice, put
three pounds of lump fugar. Have a veflel ready, juft large
enough to hold the juice, put your fugar into a veflel, and half a
pint of brandy to every gallon of juice. Pour in the juice, and
lay fomething over the bung for a week, to fee if it works. If
it does, you muft not bung it down till it has done working ;
then ftop it clofe for three months, and draw it off in another
veflel, When it is fine, bottle it off. Glajfe 305.
,
Goofeberry Win,e.
Put three pounds of lump fugar te a gallon of water, boil it a
quarter of an hour, and fkim it very well then let it ftand till
;
a pint of brandy, ftrain the wine through a flannel bag into the
calk, then beat the ifing-glafs in a marble mortar with five
whites of eggs then whifle them together half an hour, and
;
put it in the wine, and beat them all together clofe up your
;
cafk, and put clay over it; let it ftand fix months, then bottle
it ofFforufe put in each bottle a lump of fugar, and two rai-
;
fins of the fun. This is a very rich wine, and when it has been
kept in bottles two or three years, will drink like champaigne.
Rqffald, 321.
MADE WINES,
Cherry Wine.
Take fifty pounds of black cherries, picked clean from the
ftalks, let the hones remain, bruife them well with the hands j
then take half a bufhel of very ripe currants and get as much
juice from them as poflible, and alfo four quarts ofrafpberries
fqueezed in the fame manner. To this quantity of fruit allow
forty pounds of fugar; diffolve it in foft water, and when the
fugar is melted, put it into a veffel with the bruifed cherries and
the juice of the currants and rafpberries then fill the veffel
;
with foft water, only leaving room for the working and, when;
Coujlip Wine.
Take two pounds and an half of powder fugar, and two gal-
lons of water boil them half an hour, taking care to fkim it
;
it has flood about three weeks, or a month, bottle it, not for-
getting to put a lump of fugar into each bottle. Cole 352. ,
Mead.
Take ten gallons of water, two gallons of honey, and an
handful of raced ginger; then take two lemons, cut them in
pieces, and put them into it; boil it very well, keep it fkim-
ming. Let it fiand all night in the fame veflel you boil it in 5
the next morning barrel it up, with two or three fpoonfuls
of good yeaft. About three weeks or a month after' you may
bottle it. GlaJJe 366.
,
Co’wjlip Mead
Take fifteen gallons of water, and thirty pounds of honey,
boil them together till one gallon is wafted ikim it, and take
•,
the liquor with the lemons, and eight fpoonfuls of new yeaft,
mad an handful of fweet-briar ftir them all well together, and
;
let it work three or four days then ftrain it, and put it in your
;
calk, and in fix months time you may bottle it, Raffald, 332.
parley 370.
,
RUB the flitches very well with common fait let them lie
fo that the brine may run from them in about a week
;
;
put them into a tub for that purpofe, rubbing off all the fait.
Rub the flitches with one pound of falt-petre, pounded and.
heated the next day rub them well with fait, dry and hot; let
;
them lie a week, often rubbing them then turn them, add
;
more hot fait, let them lie three weeks or a month in all, rub-
bing them well; then them. The hog may be either
fcalded or finged but finging is beft. Mafou 178.
; ,
Another way.
Take off all the Infide fat of a fide of pork, then lay It on a
long board, or dreffer, that the blood may run away; rub it
well with good fait on both fides let it lie thus a clay; then
;
266. Farley ,
369.
To cure Hams.
Rub a ham with a quarter ox a pound of falt-petre, let it He
twenty-four hours boil one quart of ftrong old beer with half
*,
Another way.
Cut off a fine ham from a fat hind-quarter of pork. Take
two ounces of faltpetre, a pound of coarfe fugar, a pound of
common fait, and two ounces qf fal prunella mix all together,
;
and rub it well. Let it lie a month in this pickle, turning and
bafting it every day, then hang it in wood fmoke as you do
312 TO PREPARE BACON, HAMS, &c.
beef, in a dry place, fo as no heat comes to it; and, if you
keep them long, hang them a month or two in a damp place,
and it will make them cut fine and fliort. Never lay thefe
hams in water till you boil them, and then boil them in a cop-
per, if you have one, or the largeft pot you have. Put them
in the cold water, and let them be four or five hours before
they boil. Skim the pot well and often till it boils. If it is a
very large one, three hours will boil it; if a finall one, two
hours will do, provided it be a great while before the water
boils. Take it up half an hour before dinner, pull off the fldn,
and throw rafpings finely lifted all over. Hold a red-hot fire-
fhovel over; and when dinner is ready, take a few rafpings in
a fieve, and fift all over the difhj then lay in your ham, and
with your finger make fine figures round the edge of your difh.
Be fure to boil your ham in as much water as you can, and
keep it fldmming all the time it boils. It mull be at lealb four
hours before it boils.
This pickle does finely for tongues afterwards, to lie in It a
fortnight, and then hang, in the wood finoke a fortnight, or to
boil them out of the pickle.
Yorkfliire is famous for hams, and the reafon is thistheir
fait is much finer than ours in London it is a large clear fait,
;
and gives the meat a fine flavour. I ufed to have it from Mal-
den, in Eflex 5 and that fait will make any ham as li -e as you
can defire. It is by much the beft fait for faking meat.
When you broil any of thefe hams in fiices, or bacon, have
fome boiling water ready, and let the dices lie a minute or two
In water, then broil them j it takes out the fait, and makes
them cat finer. Glajfe, 265.
Tofait Tongues,
Scrape them and dry them clean with a cloth and fait them
well with common fait, and half an ounce of falt-petere to
every tongue; lay them in a deep pot, and turn them every
day for a week or ten days fait them again, and let them lie
;
a week longer j take them up, dry them with a cloth, flour
them, and hang them up. Raffald, 307.
To make Hung Beef.
Make a ftrong brine with bay-falt, falt-petre, and pump-
water, and put into it a rib of beef for nine days. Then hang
it up in a chimney where wood or faw duft is burnt. When
it is a little dry, wafh the outfide with blood two or three times
to make it look black; and when it is dried enough, boil it
for ufe o Coley 355.
Another way.
Take the navel piece, and hang it up in your cellar as long
$s it will keep good, and till it begins to be a little fappy.
TO PREPARE BACON, HAMS, Sec. 313
Then take it down and wafli it in fugar and water, one piece
after another, for you muft cut it into three pieces. Then take
a pound of falt-petre, and two pounds of bay-falt, dried and
pounded fmall, Mix with them two or three fpoonfuls of
brown fugar and rub your beef well with it in every part then;
ftrevv a fufficient quantity of common fait all over it, and let
the beef lie dole till the fait is dilfolved, which will be in fix
or feven days. Then turn it every other day for a fortnight;
and after that hang it up in a warm, hut not a hot place. It
may hang a fortnight in the kitchen and, when you want it,
;
To pickle Pork.
Having cut your pork into pieces of a convenient fize to He
in your powdering tub, rub them all over with falt-petre then;
Take fix pounds of good pork, free from fkin, griftles, and
fat; cut it very fmall, and beat It in a mortar till it is very fine
;
then fired fix pounds of beef fuet very fine, and free from all
fkin. Shred it as fine as pofiible; th£n take a good deal of
fiige, wafh it very dean, pick off the leaves, and fhred it very
fine. Spread your meat on a clean dreffer or table then lhake
;
the fage all over, about three large fpoonfuls; flared the thin
rind of a middling lemon very fine and throw over, with as
many fweet herbs, when flared fine, as will fill a large fpoon j
grate two nutmegs over, throw over two tea-fpoofuls of pep-
jper, and a large fpoonful of fait ; then throw over the fuet and
mix it all well together, Put it down dofe in a pot. When
you ufe them, roll them up with as much egg as will make them
roll fmooth, Make them the fize of a haulage, and fry them In
butter or good dripping. Be fure it be hot before you put them
in, and keep them rolling about. When they are thoroughly
hot, and of a fine light brown, they are enough. You may
chop this meat very fine, if you do not like it beat, Veal eats
well done thus; or veal and pork together. You may clean
fome guts and fill them. Glajfe 257,
,
Another way.
Take part of a leg of pork or veal, pick It clean from fkln or
fat; to every pound, add two pounds of beef fuet; fhred both
feverally very fine j mix them well with fage-1 eaves chopped
314 TO PREPARE BACON, HAMS, &c.
fine, pepper, fait, nutmeg, and pounded cloves, and a little
grated lemon-peel put this clofe down in a pot. When it is
*,
ufed, mix it with the yolk of an egg, and a few bread crumbs.
Roll it into lengths. Mnfon 182."
,
Common Saujages.
Take three pounds of nice pork, fat and lean together, free
from fkin or griftles, chop it very fine, feafon it with two tea-
fpoonfuls of fait, and one of beaten pepper, fome fage fhred
fine, about three tea fpoonfuls mix it well together, have the
\
guts very nicely cleaned, and fill them, or put them down in a
pot j fo roll them of what fize you pleafe, and fry them. Cole ,
357-
Oxford Saufages.
Take a pound of young pork, fat and lean, without fkin or
griftle, a pound of lean veal, and a pound of beef fuet chopped
all fine together 5 put in half a pound of grated bread, half the
peel of a lemon flared fine, a nutmeg grated, fix fage leaves
wafhed and chopped very fine, a tea-fpoonful of pepper, and
two of fait, fome thyme, favoury, and marjoram fhred fine.
Mix it all well together, and put it clofe down in a pan when
you ufc it; roll it out the fize of a common faufage, and fry
them in frefh butter of a fine brown, or broil them over a clear
fire, and fend them to table as hot as poffible. Glajfey 258,
Chap. XXX.—VEGETABLES.
Obfervations on dreffmg Vegetables
,
wards, that all the dull and fand may boil out. An hour and
an half, or two hours, will do them. Serve them with melted
butter in little cups. Cole, 358.
To drefs Afparagus.
Scrape your afparagus, and tie them In fin all bundles, cut
them even, and throw them into water, and have ready a ftew-
pan boiling. Put in fome fait, and tie the afparagus into little
bundles. 'Let the water keep boiling, and when they are a little
tender, take them up. Boiling them too much will make them
lofe their colour and flavour lay them on a toall which has
;
been dipped in the water the afparagus was boiled in pour over
;
To drefs Beans.
Boil them in plenty of water, with a good quantity of fait in
it till they are tender. Boil and chop fome parfley, put it into
good melted butter, and ferve them up with boiled bacon, and
the butter and parfley in a boat. Never boil them with the ba-
con. Cole, 3 58.
To drefs Broccoli.
Carefully ftrip off all the little branches till you come to the
top one, and then with a knife peel off the hard outfide Ikin
that is on the ftalks and little branches, and then throw them
into water. Have :*eady a ftew-pan of water, throw in a little
fait, and when it boils, put in your broccoli. When the ftalks
are tender, it is enough. Put in a piece of toafted bread, foak~
ed in the water the broccoli was boiled in, at the bottom of your
difh, and put your broccoli on the top of it, as you do afparagus.
Send them up to table laid in bunches, wltfy butter in a boat.
Cole qcB.‘
,
VEGETABLES. 316
To drefs Cabbage &c. ,
you boll them. Slice them into a plate, and pour melted but-
ter over them. Young fpring carrots will be boiled in half an
hour, large ones in an hour, and old Sandwich carrots will take
two hours. Cole
, 358.
To drefs Cauliflowers .
Cut the ftalks off, and leave a little green on boil them in
;
water, with fome fait. When they are tender, they are enough.
They will be foon done.
N. B. Make all greens boil as quick as poflible, as it preferves
their colour. Cole, 359.
To drefs Parfmps .
To drefs Potatoes.
801 l them in as little water as you can without burning the
fauce-pan. Cover the fauce-pan dole, and when the fkln begins
to crack, they are enough. Drain all the water out, and let
them hand covered for a minute or two. Cole 3 551, ,
VEGETABLES.
To drefs Spinach
*
To drefs Turnips.
Pare your turnips thick; when they are boiled, fqueeze
them, and mafh them fmooth heat them with a little cream, a
;
HAVING
wines.
given ample Inflruflions for the preparations of
See. malt liquors fhould not be paffed over unno-
ticed, as the houfe-keeper cannot be faid to be complete in her
bulinefs, without a competent knowledge in the Art of Brew-
ing.
Of Hunter properfor Brewing
*
for this eaflly inflnuates itfelf into the malt, and extracts its
virtues. On the contrary, hard waters aftrirtge and bind the
pores of the malt, and prevent the virtue of it from being freely
communicated to the liquor. It is a rule adopted by many ex-
cellent brewers, that all water which will mix and lather with
foap, is proper for brewing, and they wholly difipprove of any
other. The experiment has been often tried, that where the
fame quantity of malt has been ufed to a barrel of river water
as to a barrel of fpring water, the former has excelled the latter
in ftrength, in a degree almoft double. It may be neceffary to
obferve likewife, that the malt was the fame in quality, as well as
in quantity, for each barrel. The hops were the fame, both in
quantity and quality, and the time of boiling was equal in each;
They were worked in the fame manner, and tunned and kept
in the fame cellar. Hence it is evident, that there could have
been no difference but in the water, and yet one barrel was
Worth almoft two of the other.
But where foft water is not to be procured, that which is
hard may be foftened, by expofing It to the air and fun, and
putting into it fome pieces of foft chalk to infufe or, before
;
you begin to boil it, in order to be poured on the malt, put into
it a quantity of bran, which will foften it a little. Cole 361.
,
over with the facks. Let it dand three hours, fet a broad
fhallow tub under the cock, let it run very foftly, and if it is
thick, throw it up again till it runs fine; then throw an hand-
ful of hops in the under tub, let your mafh run into it, and fill
your tubs till all is run off. Have water boiling in the copper,
and lay as much more on as you have occafion for, allowing
one third for boiling and wafte. Let that fland an hour, boil-
ing more water to fill the mafh-tub for fmall beer; let the fire
down a little, and put it into tubs enough to fill you mafh. Lee
the fecond mafia be run off, and fill your copper with the firfl
wort; put in part of your hops, and make it boll quick. About
an hour is long enough. When it has boiled, throw in an
handful of fait. Have a clean white wand, and dip it into the
copper, and if the wort feels clammy, it is boiled enough then
;
flacken your fire, and take off your wort. Have ready a large
tub, put two flicks acrofs, and fet your draining bafkets over
the tub on the flicks, and drain your wort through it. Put
your other wort on to boil with the red of the hops; let your
mafh be covered again with water, and thin your wort that is'
cooled in as many things as you can j for the thinner it lies,
and the quicker it cools, the better. When quite cool, put it
into the tunning-tub. Throw an handful of fait into every boil.
When the mafh has dood an hour, draw it off; then fill your
mafh with cold water, take off the wort in a copper, and order
it as before. When cool, add to it the fird in the tub. As
Toon as you empty one copper, dll the other, and boil your
fmall beer well. Let the lad mafh run off, and when both are
THE ART OF BREWING.
boiled with frefli hops, order them as the two firft boilings.
When cool, empty the malh-tub, and put the fmall beer to work
there. When cool enough, work it, let a wooden bowl full of
yeaft in the beer, and it will work over with a little of the beer
in the boil. Btir your tun up every twelve hours; let it hand
two days, then tun it, taking off the yeaft. Fill your veflels
full, and have foine to fill your barrels; let it ftand till it has
done working; then lay on your bung lightly for a fortnight,
after which flop it as clofe as you can. Take care to have a
vent-peg at the top of the veffel; in watrh weather open it;
and if your drink hiffes, as it often will, loofen it till it has
done, and then flop it clofe again; If you can boil your ale in
one boiling, it will be beft, if the cOpper will admit of it; if
not, boil as conveniency fervesi
If, when you come to draw your beet*; you perceive it is not
fine, draw off a gallon, and fet it on the fire, with two ounces
of ifing-glafs cut fmall and beat. Diffolve it in the beer over the
fire. When it is all melted, let it ftand till it is cold, and pour
it in at the bung, which tnuft lay loofe on till it has done fer-
menting then ftop it clofe for a month.
;
caufe the air at that time of the year is temperate, and contri-
butes to the proper working or fermentation of the liquor*
which principally promotes its prefervation and good keeping.
Very cold, or very hot Weather, prevents the free fermentation,
or working of liquors therefore, if you brew in very cold wea-
*,
ther, unlefs you contrive fome means to warm the cellar while
new liquor is working, it will never clear itfelf in the manner
you would wifh. The fame misfortune will arife if in very hot
weather you cannot put the cellar into a temperate hate. The
confequence of which will be, that fuch liquor will be muddy
and four, perhaps beyond all recovery. Such misfortunes in-
deed often happen, even in the proper feafon for brewing*
owing folely to the badnefs of a cellar j for when they are dug
in fpringy grounds, or are fubjeft to damps in the winter, the
liquor will chill, and become vapid or flat. Where cellars are
of this kind, it will be advifeablc to brew in March, rather than
October j for you may be able to keep fuch cellars temperate
THE ART OF BREWING. 321
in fummer, but you cannot make them warm in water. The
beer therefore which is brewed in March, will have fufficient
time to fettle and adjuft itfelfbefore the cold can do it any ma-
terial injury. Cole, 363.
The Country, or private W'ay of Bujtnefs ,
bran or malt, and give it to thfe hogs, or lade both the water
and that into the mafh vat, where it is to remain till the Beam
is near fpent, and you can fee your face in it, which will be in.
about a quarter of an hour in cold weatherj then let all but half
a bufhel of malt run very leifurely into it, Birring it all the
while with an bar or paddle, that it may not ball, and when the
malt is nearly mixed with watery it is enough which I am fenfi-
;
ble is different from the old way, and the general prefent prac-
tice but I Biall here clear that point, For, by not Birring or mafh-
;
ing the malt into a pudding confidence, or thin mafh, the body
of it lies in a more lopfe condition* that will eafier and fooner
admit of a quicker and more true pafiage of the afterladings of
the feveral bowls or jets of hot water, which muß run through,
it before the brewing is ended; by which percolation* the wa-
THE ART OF BREWING.
ter has ready accefs to all the parts of the broken malt, fo that
the brewer is enabled to brew quicker or flower, and to make
more ale.or fmall beer. If more ale, then hot boiling water
muft be laded over fo flow, that one boil muft run almoft off
before another is put over, which will occafion the whole brew-
ing to laft about fixteen hours, efpecially if the Oundle way is
followed, of fpending it out of the tap as fmall as a ftraw, and
as fine as fack, and then it will be quickly fo in the barrel. Oh
if lefs or weaker ale is to be .'made, and good fmall beer, then
the fecond copper of boiling water mull be put over expedi-
tioufly, and drawn out with a large and fall fleam. After the
lirfl flirring of the. malt is done, then put over the refcrve of
half a bufhel of frefh malt to the four bufhels and an half that
are already in the tub, which muft be fpread all over it, and
alfo cover the tubs with fome facks, or other cloths, to keep in
the fleam or fpirit of the malt then let it ftand for two or
*,
three hours, at the end of. which, pat over now and then a
bowl of the boiling water in the copper, as is before directed,
and fo continue to do till as much is run off as will almolt fill
the copper. Then, in a canvafs, or other loofe woven cloth,
put in half a pound of hops, and boil them half an hour, when
they muft be taken out, and as many frefh ones put in their
room as are judged proper, to boil half an hour more, if for
ale. But if for keeping beer, half a pound of frefh ones ought to
be put in every half hour, and boil an hour and an half brilkly'.
Now, while the firft copper of wort is boiling, there fhould be
fcalding water leifurely put over, bowl by bowl, and run off,
that the copper may be filled again immediately after the firft is
out, and boiled an hour, with nearly the fame quantity of frefh
hops, and in the fame manner as thofe in the firft copper of
ale-wort were. The reft for fmall beer may be all cold Avater
put over the the grains at once, or at twice, and boiled an hour
each copper, with the hops that have been boiled before. But
here I muft obferve, that fometimes I have not an opportunity
to get hot water for making all my fecond copper of wort,
which obliges me then to make ufe of cold to fupply what is
wanting. Out of five bufhels of malt, I generally make an
hogfhead of ale with the two firft coppers of wort, and an
hogfhead of fmall beer with the other two but this is more
;
wet bottles will make the liquor turn watery or mouldy; and,
by wet bottles, a great deal of good beer has been fpoiled.
Even though the bottles are clean and dry, if the corks are not
new and found, the liquor tvill be ftill liable to be damaged ;
for if the air can get into the bottles, the liquor will grow
and will never rife. Many have plumed themfelves on their
having knowledge, by ufing old corks on this occafion, and
have fpoiled as much liquor as coft them four or five pounds,
to fave the expence of three or four fhillings. If bottles are
corked properly, it will be difficult to pull out the cork without
a fcrew; and, in order to be fure to draw the cork without
breaking, the fcrew ought to go through the cork of courfe,
;
the air will find a paffage where the fcrew has paffied, and con-
fequently the cork muft have been fpoiled. If a cork has once
been in a bottle, though it has not been drawn with a fcrew,
yet that cork will turn mufty as foon as it is expofed to the air,
and will communicate its ill flavour to the bottle in which it is
next put, and fpoil the liquor that way. In the choice of corks,
prefer thofe that are foft and free from fpecks.
When you once begin to bottle a veflel of liquor, never leave
it till it is completed, otherwife it will bear different taftes.
When a veflel of any liquor begins to grow flat, while it is
in common draught, bottle it, and into every bottle put a piece
of loaf fugar, of about the fize of a walnut, which will make it
rife and come to itfelf; and, to forward its ripening, you may
fet fome bottles in hay in a warm place but ftraw will not affift
;
Another way.
Take a peck of egg-fhells, and dry them in an oven, break
and mix them with two pounds of fat chalk, and mix them with
water, wherein four pounds of coarfe fugar have been boiled,
and put into the butt. Cole 367.
,
Take the beft ftaple ifing-glafs cut it fmall with fciflars, and
;
boil one ounce in three quarts of beer; let it lie all night to
cool. Thus diflblved, put it into your hogfhead the next morn-
ing, perfectly cold for if it is but as warm as new milk, it will
;
jelly all the drink. The beer, or ale, in a week after, Ihould be
THE ART OF BREWING.
tapped, or it will be apt to flat; for this ingredient flats as well
as fines. Remember to ftir it well with a wooden paddle when
the ifing-glafs is put into the calk. Qgle, 368.
Another way.
801 l a
pint of wheat in two quarts of water, then fqueeze out
the liquid part through a fine linen cloth. Put a pint of it into
a kilderkin. It not only fines, but preferves. Cole 368. ,
the turmeric and ginger among it j then put all into a fine can-
vafs bag, and hang it in the middle of the hogfhead clofe, and
Jet lie. After the cyder has ftood thus a fortnight, or a month,
you may bottle it at your pleafure. Cole, 369.
THE FAMIAY PHYSICIAN;
O R,
Want of Appetite,
IF want of appetite
part
proceeds from errors in diet, or any other
of the patient’s regimen, It ought to be changed. If
naufea and Teachings fliew that the ftomach is loaded with cru-
dities, a vomit will be of fervice. After this, a gentle purge or
two of rhubarb, or of any of the bitter purging falts, may be
taken. The patient ought next to life fome of the ftomachic
bitters infufed in wine. Though gentle evacuations be neceffary,
yet ftrong purges and vomits are to be avoided, as they weaken
the ftomach, and hurt digeftion.
Elixir of vitriol is an excellent medicine in moft cafes of in-
digeftion, weaknefs of the ftomach, or want ofappetite. Twenty
or thirty drops of it may be taken .twice or thrice a day, in a
glafs of wine or water.- It may likewife be mixed with the
tincture of the bark; one drachm of the former to an ounce of
the latter, and two tea-fpoonfuls of it taken in wine or water,
as above.
The chalybeate waters, if drank in moderation, are generally
of conftderable fervice in this cafe. The fait water has likewife
good effects, but it muft not be ufed too freely. The waters
qf Harrowgate, Scarborough, Moffat, and moft other fpas in
Britain, may be ufed with advantage. We would ad vile all
who are afflicted with indigeftion and want of appetite, to re-
pair to thefe places of public rendezvous. The very change
of air, and the cheerful company, will be of fervice; not to
mention the exercife, diftipation, amufements, &c. Tljfot.
Buchan.
The Afthma.
The paroxyfm of an afthma I muft leave to the phyfician j
but as a palliative, nothing is of fo great importance in the
afthma, as pure and moderately warm. air. Afthmatic people
can feldom bear either the clofe heavy air of a large town, or
the lharp, keen atmofphere of a bleak hilly country: a medium,
therefore, between thefe is to be chofen. The air near a
large town is often better than at a diftance, provided the pa-
tierft be removed fo far as not to be affected by the fmoke.
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN.
Some afthmatic patients indeed breathe eafier in town than in
the country; but this is feldom the cafe, cfpecially in towns
where much coal is burnt. Afthmatic perfons who are obliged
to be in town all day ought, at leaft, to deep out of it. Even
this will often prove of great fervice Thofe who can afford It,
ought to, travel into a warmer climate. Many aftmatic perfons
who cannot live in England, enjoy very good health in the fouth
of France, Portugal, Spain, or Italy.
Exercife is likewife of very great importance in the afthma,
as it promotes the digeftion, preparation of the blood, &c. The
blood of aftmatic perfons is feldom duly prepared, owing to the
proper action of the lungs being impeded. For this realon,
fuch people ought daily to take as much exercife, either on foot,
horfeback, or in a carriage, as they can bear. Buchan.
Dr. Mead’s Prefcription for the Bite of a Mad Dog .
The Cholic .
to arife on the legs, by which It will run off; but this does not
happen to more than one in thirty and in this cafe no plaflers
;
mull be ufed, for they would hinder the difcharge; but you
mull apply red cabbage leaves. If the diforder is caufed by
wind, it difpels the phlegm that retains the wind. It cures
the dropfy in pregnant women, without injury to the mother
or the irtfant. It alfo cures the aflhma, confumption, and dis-
orders of the liver. It is good for bleeding at the nofe, and
for venomous bites and poifons.
The efficacy of the above remedy has been proved by the
cure of upwards of fifty droplical women with child, and by
that of more than three hundred other people of both fexes.
*lf the patient is too »weak to life other exercife after taking the
powder, the body and limbs may be rubbed with a flannel, from time
to time during the hour and an
,
half giving refl at intervals accord-
,
The quantities directed in the recipe have been given alike to men
and to women and there never has been found renfon to think that
;
they were too little for the one or too much for the other.
,
33 6 THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN.
Not long fince, this recipe was recommended to a lady, who
feemed to be in, or nearly in, the lad; flags of a dropfy. She
was lb much fwoln, that flic appeared like a woman in the lad:
month of her pregnancy, and her diforder had redded every
thing that had been done for her by the faculty. She took
the broom-feed, but could not take the whole of the oil; how-
ever, in a very few months; her hufband wrote a letter of thanks
for her fpeedy and dupidng recovery.
Soon after, the report of this extraordinary cure induced an-
other lady, who was afflicted with a dropfy, to -make trial of
the remedy. She was not fo much fwoln as thd former lady,
but die was exceedingly emaciated; and was fo weak, that fhe
was carried like an infant into her carriage, when fhe went to
take the air; and fhe had failed of relief from the advice of
two of the mod eminent phydeians in London, who had pro-
nounced it an afeites; with eheyded water. liappily they
were too liberal minded to fet their faces againd the remedy,
as fome others have dnee done, beciufe it was not of their
acqua'ntance. This lady followed the directions of the re-
cipe very exactly, and was redored to health in a few
months.
Thefe fucceffes induced the lady, at whofe dedre it is pub-
lifhed, to recommend the remedy with avidity whenever occa-
fton offered and it has pleafed God to crown her endeavours
;
with fuch wonderful fuccefs, that fhe thinks fhe may venture
to affirm, that fhe has never known it fail to cure, when taken
according to the recipe and while there was any degree of
drength remaining; and that it is almod as certain a fpecidc
for the dropfy, as the bark is for the intermitting fever. Co/e;
38°.
The Gout.
As there are no medicines yet known that will cure the gout,
we fhall condne our obfervations chiefly to regimen, both in
and out of the ft.
In the fit, if the patient be young and ftrong, his diet ought
to be thin and cooling, and his drink of a diluting nature j but
when the conftiturion is weak, and the patient has been accuf-
tomed to live high, this is not a proper time to retrench. In
this cafe, he muft keep nearly to his ufual diet, and fhould take
frequently a cup of ftrong negus, or a glafs of generous wine.
Wine whey is a very proper drink in this cafe, as it promotes:
the perforation without greatly heating the patient. It will
anfwer this purpofe better, if a tea-fpoonful offal volatile olsofutn,
or fpirits of hartfhorn, be put into a cup of it twice a day. It
will likewife be proper to give atbed- ime, a tea-fpoonful of
the volatile tin&ure of guaiacum, in a large draught of warm
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN. 337
wine whey. This will greatly promote perforation through the
night. . . __
•
Many things will fhorten a fit of the gout, and fonie will
drive it oft* all together but nothing has yet been found which,
;
The ’Jaundice .
*
Sir John Pringle ohferves that, though this difcnfe may feem
,
mind, &c.
The treatment of this difeafe mu ft be varied according to its
caufe. When it is occafioned by any error in the patient’s re-
gimen an oppofite courfe to that which induced the diforder,
jnuft be purfued, and fitch medicines taken as have a tendency
to rcftrain the flux, and counteract the morbid affeftions of the
fyftem from whence it proceeds. Arhuthnot.
The Bleeding and Blind Piles.
A difcharge of blood from the hoemorrhoidal vefiels, is calr
led the bleeding piles. When the vefiels only fvvell and dif-
charge no blood, but are exceeding painful, the difeafe is cal-
led the blind piles.
A blood from the anus is not always to be treated as a
dlfeafe. It is even more falutary than bleeding at the nofe,
and often prevents or carries off difeafes. It is peculiarly bcr
neficial in the gout, rheumatifm, afthma, and hypochondriacal
complaints j and often proves critical in colics and inflamma-
tory fevers. '
°
«
matifm, it is certainly whey j” and adds, “
that he knew a
t(
perfon fubjeft to this difeafe, who could never be cured by
«
any other method but a diet of whey and bread,” He like-
wife fays, C( that cream of tartar in water gruel, taken for
&
feveral days, will eafe rheumatic pains confiderably. This I
the family physician.
“
obflinate rheumatic pains, by rubbing the part affe&ed with
ct tineflure of cantharides ”
apt to weaken it, and too great a degree of cold has the fame
efleff. The limbs ihould be rubbed frequently with a warm
hand, and the child kept as cheerful as poflible.
The diet ought to be dry and nourifhing, as good bread,
roafled flcfli, &c. Bifcuit is generally reckoned the befl: bread,
and pigeons, pullets, veal, rabbits, or mutton, roafled or min-
ced, are the mod proper flefh. If the child be too young for
fiefh meats, he may have rice, millet, or pearl barley, boiled
with raiflns, to which may be added a little wine and fpice.
His drink may be good claret, mixed with an equal quantity of
water. Thofe who cannot afford claret, may give the child
now and then a wine-glafs of mild ale, or good porter.
The family physician.
The Scurvy.
This difeafe may be known by unufual wearinefs, heavinefs,
and difficulty of breathing, efpecially after motion j rottennefs
of the gums, which are apt to bleed on the flighteft touch a ;
creffes, feurvy grals, brook lime, &c. The ufe of thefe, with
milk, pot herbs, new bread, and frelh beer or cyder, will feldom
fail to remove a feurvy of this kind, if taken before it be too far
350 THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN.
advanced ;but to have this effect, they mull be per fifed in for
a conliderable time.
I have often feeri very extraofdinay efFeds in the lartd-fcur-
vy, from a milk diet. This preparation of nature, is a mixture
of animal and vegetable properties, which of all others- is the
moll fit for reftoring a decayed conftitution, and removing
that particular acrimony of the humours which feems to con-
ftitute the very offence of the feurvy, and many other clifeafes.
But people defpife this wholefome and nourifhing food becaufe
it is cheap; and devour with greedinefs flefh and fermented
liquors, while milk is only deemed ft for their hogs.
The moft proper drink in the feurvy is whey or butter-milk.
When thefe cannot be had, found cyder, perry* or fpruce beer,
may be ufed. Wort has likewifc been found to be a proper
drink in the feurvy, and may be ufed at fea, as malt will keep
during the longelf voyage. A decodion of the tops of the
fpruce fir, is likewife proper. It may be drank irt the quantity
cf an Englifli pint twice a-day. Tar water may be ufed for
the fame ptirpofe, or decoctions of any of the mild mucila-
ginous vegetables; as farfaparilld, marfh-mallow roots, &c.
Infufxons of the bitter plants, as ground-ivy, the Idler centaury,
marfli trefoil, &c. are likewife beneficial. I have ften the
peafants in fbme parts of Britain exprefs the juice of the laft-
mentioned plant, and drink it with good effed in thofe foul,
fcorbutic eruptions with which they are often troubled in the
fpring feafon
A flight degree of feurvy may be carried off by frequently
fucking a litrle of the juice of a bitter orange, or a lemon.
When the difeafe affeds the gums only* this pradice, if con-
tinued for fome time, will generally carry it off. We would,
however, recommend the bitter orange, as greatly prefer ableto
lemon it feems to be as good a medicine, and is not nearly fo
;
which cafe they are very dangerous, arid often put at end to
the infant’s life.
If the apthos are of a pale colour, pellucid, few in number.
Toft, fuperficial, and fall eafily off, they are not dangerous bat
;
The Tooth-ach.
This difeafe Is fo well known, that it needs no defcriptiori;
It has great affinity with the rheumatifm, and often fucceeds
pains of the ffioulders, and other parts of the body.
It may proceed from obftrufted perfpiration, or any of the
other caufes of inflammation. I have often known the tooth-
ach occafioned by negle<Sfing fome part of the ufual coverings
of the head, by fitting with the bare head near an open window,
or expofing it any how to a draught of cold air*. Food or
drink taken either too hot or too cold, is very hurtful to the
teeth. Great quantities of fugar, or other fweetmeats, are like-
wile hurtful. Nothing is more deftru£live to the teeth than
cracking nuts, or chewing any kind of hard fubftahces. Pick-
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN.
Ing the teeth with pins, needles, or any thing that may hurt
the enamel with which they are covered, does great mifchief,
as the tooth is lure to be fpoiled whenever any thing gets into
it. Breeding women are very fubjedl to the tooth-ach, ef-
fpecially during the firft three or four months of pregnancy.
The tooth ach often proceeds from fcorbutic humours affedling
the gums. In this cafe the teeth are fometimes wafted, and
fall out without any conftderable degree of pain. The more
immediate caufeof the tooth-ach is a rotten or carious tooth.
In order to relieve the tooth-ach, we muft firft endeavour to
draw off the humours from the part affedled. This may be
done by mild purgatives, fcarifying the gums* or applying
leeches to them, and bathing the feet frequently with warm
water. The perfpiration ought likewife to be promoted, by
drinking freely of weak wine whey, or other diluting liquors,
with fmall dofes of nitre. Vomits too, have often an exceed-
ing good efFedl in the tooth-ach. It is feldom fafe to admi-
nifter opiates, or any kind of heating medicines, or even to
draw a tooth till proper evacuations have been premifed, and
thefe alone will often effedl the cure.
If this falls, and the pain and inflammation ftill increafe, a
fuppuration may be expedled, to promote which, a toafted fig
Ihould be held between the gums and the cheek; bags filled
With boiled camomile flowers, flowers of elder, or the like, may
be applied near the part affedled, with as great a degree of
warmth as the the patient can bear, and renewed as they grow
cold. The patient may likewife receive the fteam of warm
water Into his mouth, through an inverted funnel, or by hold-
his head over the mouth of a porringer filled with warm
water, &c.
Such things as promote the difcharge of faliva, or caufe
the patient to fpit, are generally of fervice. For this purpofe,
bitter, hot, or pungent vegetables may be chewed as gentian,
}
is the mojl likely way for extracting poifon. There can be no danger
in performing this office, as the poifon does no harm unlefs it be taken
into the body by a wound. The perfoti whofucks the wound ought,
however, to wajh his mouth frequently with falad oil, which will
five him from even the leaf inconvcniency. Vhe Blylli in Africa *
and the Merfi in Italy, are famed for curing the bites of poifonout
animals by fucking the wound and we are told that the Indians in
;
ing, ftomachic bitters, with now and then a glafs of good wine*
The beft purge for an adult is jalap and calomel. Five and
twenty or thirty grains of the former, with fix or feven of the
latter, mixed in fyrup, may be taken early in the morning, for
a dofe. It will be proper that the patient keep the houfe all
day, and drink nothing cold. The dofe may be repeated once
or twice a week, for a fortnight or three weeks. On the inter-
mediate days, the patient may take a drachm of the powder of
tin, twice or thrice a day, mixed with fyrup, honey, or treacle.
Thofe who do not chufe to take calomel, may make ufe of
the bitter purgatives; as aloes, hiera picra, tincture of fenna,
and rhubarb, &c.
Oily medicines are fometimes found beneficial for expelling
worms. An ounce of falad oil and a table-fpoonful of com-
mon fait may be taken in a glafs of red port wine thrice a day,
or oftener if the ftomach will bear it. But the more common
form of uling oil is in clyfters. Oily clyfters, fweetened with,
fugar or honey, are very efficacious in bringing away the fhort
round worms called afeardes and likewife the teres.
,
rences.
When a difcharge of blood from the nofe happens in an in~
flammatory difeafe, there is always reafon to believe that it may
prove falutary; and therefore it fhould be fuffered to go on, at
leaft as long as the patient is not weakened by it.
When it happens to perfons in perfect health, who are full
of blood, it ought not to be fuddenly flopped. In this cafe,,
whenever bleeding at the nofe relieves any bad fymptom, and
does not proceed fo far as to endanger the patient’s life, it ought
not to be flopped. But when it returns frequently, or contU
nues till the pulfe becomes low, the extremities begin to grow
cold, the lips pale, or the patient complains of being flek or
faint, it muft impaediately be flopped.
For this purpofe, the patient fhould be fet nearly upright,
with his head reclining a little, and his legs immerfed in water,
about the warmth of new milk. His hands ought likewife to
be put in lukewarm water, and his garters may be tied a little
tighter than ufual.
Internal medicines can hardly be of ufe here, as they have
feldom time to operate. It may not, however, be amifs to give
the patient half an ounce of Glauber’s fait, and the fame quan-
tity of manna, diflblved in four or five ounces of barley-water.
This may be taken at a draught, and repeated, if it does not
operate, in a few hours.
If the genitals be immerfed for fome time in cold water, it
will generally flop a bleeding at the nofe. This generally fuc-
ceeds.
After the b'eeding is flopped, the patient ought to be kept
as eafy and quiet as poflible. He fhould not pick his nofe, nor
take away the tents or clotted blood, till they fall off of their
own accord, and fhould not lie with his head low.
Chambers,
Head-Ach.
Sometimes the pain is Internal, fometimes external; fomc-
times it is an original difeafe, and at other times only fymp-
fcomatic. When the head-ach proceeds from a hot bilioiis
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN 359
habit, the pain is very acute and throbbing, with a confiderable
heat of the part aftefted. When from a cold phlegmatic habit,
the patient complains of a dull heavy pain, and has a fenfe of
coldnefs in the part. This kind of head-ach is fometimes at-
tended with a degree of ftupidity or folly.
In perfons of a full habit, who abound with blood, or other
humours, the head-ach often proceeds from the fuppreffion of
Cuftomary evacuations as bleeding at the nofe, fweating of the
;
fulnefs, looks more grave and compofed than is natural for its
age, and does not chufe to be moved. The head and belly be-
come too large in proportionate the other parts; the face appears
full, and the complexion florid. Afterwards the bones begin to
be affefted, efpecially in the more foft and Spongy parts. Hence
the wrifts and ancles become thicker than ufual; the Spine or
back-bone puts on an unnatural ftxape; the breail is likewife
often deformed.
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN, 365
As this difeafe is always attended with evident figns of weak-
nefs and relaxation, our chief aim in the cure muft be to brace
and ftrengthen the folids, and to promote digeftion and the
due preparation of the fluids. Thele important ends will be
beft anfwered by wholefome nourifhing diet, fuited to the age
and ftrength of the patient, open dry air, and fufficient exercife.
The limbs Ihould be rubbed frequently with a warm hand, and
the child kept as cheerful as pofiible.
The diet ought to be dry and nourifhing, as good bread,
roafted flefh, &c. Bifcuits is generally reckoned the befl bread,
and pigeons, pullets, veal, rabbits, or mutton roafted or minced,
are the molt proper flefh. If the child be too young for flefh
meats he may have rice, millet, or pearl-barley boiled with
raifins, to which may be added a little wine and fpice. His
drink may be good claret, mixed with an equal quantity of
water. Thole who cannot afford claret, may give the child now
and then a wine-glafs of mild ale, or good porter.
Medicines are here of little avail. The difeafe may often be
cured by the nurfe, but feldom by the phyfician. In children
of a grofs habit, gentle vomits and repeated purges of rhubarb
may fometimes be of ufe, but they will feldom carry off the
difeafe ufe the cold bath, efpecially in the warm feafon. It
;
grief, and fuch like alfo from poifons, a fedentary life, folitude,
;
too far, they not only become oftenfive to the fenfes, but hurt-
ful to health.
Animals which feed grofsly, as tame ducks, hogs, &c. are
neither fo eafily digefted, nor afford fuch wholefome nourifli-
ment as others. No animal can be wholefome that does not
take fufficient exercife. Moft of our ftalled cattle are crammed
with grofs food, but not allowed exercife nor free air by ;
which means they indeed grow fat, but their humours, not be-
ing properly prepared or affimilatcd, remain crude, and occafion
indigeftions, grofs humours, and oppreflion of the fpirits, in
thofe who feed upon them.
Animals are often rendered unwholfome by being over-
heated. Exceffive heat caufes a fever, exalts the animal falts,
and mixes the blood fo intimately with the flefh, that it cannot
be feparated. For this reafon, butchers fhould be feverely
punifhed who overdrive their cattle. No perfon would chufe
to eat the flefh of an animal who had died in a high fever; yet
that is the cafe with all over-drove cattle j and the fever is
often raifed even to the degree of madnefs.
But this is not the only way by which butchers render meat
unwholefome. The abominable cuftom of filling the cellular
membrane of animals with air, in order to make them appear
fat, is every day praclifed. This not only fpoils the meat, and
renders it unfit for keeping, but is fuch a dirty trick that the
;
pork, fifh, and fowl, twice or thrice a day, is certainly too much.
All who value health ought to be contented with eating one
370 THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN.
meal of flefh in the twenty-four hours, and this ought to confift
of one kind only.
Our aliment ought neither to be too moift nor too dry
Moift aliments relax the folids, and render the body feeble.
Thus we fee females, who live much on tea, and other watery
diet, generally become weak, and unable to digeft folid food.
Hence proceed hyftcrics, and all their dreadful confequences.
On the other hand, food that is too dry, renders the folids in a
manner rigid, and the humours vifcid, which difpofes the body
to inflammatory fevers, fcurvics, and the like.
Much has been faid on the ill efte&s of tea in diet. They
are, no doubt, numerous; but they proceed rather from the
imprudent ufe of it, than from any bad qualities in the tea itfelf.
Tea is now the univerfal breakfaft in this part of the world ;
but the morning is furely the moft improper time of the day
for drinking it. Moft delicate perfons, who, by the bye, are
the greateft tea drinkers, cannot eat any thing in the morning.
If fuch perfons, after fading ten or twelve hours, drink four or
five cups of tea, without eating almofl any bread, it muft hurt
them. Good tea, taken in moderate quantity, not too ftrong,
nor too hot, nor drank upon an empty ftomach, will feldom do
harm but if it be bad, which is often the cafe, or fubftituted in
•,
ELECTUARIES.
Ehcluary for the Piles.
Take flowers of fulphur, one ounce cream of tartar, half an
;
pound. Melt the wax in the oils over a gentle fire then mix
;
pint and an half of brandy, for live of fix days, in a clofe veil'd j
afterwards ilrain off the tindure.
This tindure is not only beneficial in Intermitting fever?, but
alfo in the flow, nervous, and putrid kinds, efpecially towards
their decline.
The dofe is from one drachm to three or four, every fifth or
fixth hour. It may be given in any fuitable liquor, and occa-
fionally fharpened with a few drops of the fpirit of vitriol.
BOLUSSES.
PeEtoral Bolus.
Take of fperma ceti, a fcruple gum ammoniac, ten grains;
;
ELIXIRS.
Stomachic Elixirs.
Take of gentian root, two ounces; Curafiao oranges, one
ounce Virginian fnake-root, half an ounce. Let the ingre r
;
POWDERS.
JVcrm Powders.
Take of tin reduced into a fine powder, an ounce fEthiop’s
;
mineral, two drachms. Mix them well together, and divide the
whole into fix dofes.
One of thefe powders may be taken in a little fyrup, honey,
or treacle, twice a day, After they have been all ufed, the fol-
lowing anthelmintic purge may be proper.
378 THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN.
Purging Worm Powder.
Take of powdered rhubarb, a Temple; Tcammony and calo-
mel, of each five grains. Rub them together in a mortar for
one dofe.
For children, the above dofes muft be leflened according to
their age.
If the powder of tin be given alone, its dofe may be confider-
ably increafed. The late Dr. Alfton gave it to the amount
of two ounce in.three days; and fays, when thus adminiftered,
that it proved an egregious anthlemintic. He purged his pa-
tients both before they took the powder and afterwards.
Powder for the Pape Worm.
Early In the morning the patient is to take, in any liquid,
two or three drachms, according to his age and conftitution,
of the root of male fern reduced into a fine powder. About
two hours afterwards, he is to take of calomel and refin of fcam-
mony, each ten grains gum gamboge, fix grains. Thefe in-
;
Three or four of thefe pills may be taken twice a day, for in-
vigorating the ftomach, and keeping the body gently open.
Compoftng Pill.
Take of purified opium, ten grains Caftile foap, half a
;
drachm. Beat them together, and form the whole into 20 pills.
When a quieting draught will not fit upon the fiomach, one,
two, or three of thefe pills may be taken, as occafion requires.
Pill for the Jaundice,
Take of Caftile foap, fiuccotorine aloes, and rhubarb, of each
one drachm. Make them into pills with a fufficient quantity
of fyrup or mucilage.
Thefe pills, as their title exprefles, are chiefly intended for the
jaundice, which with the affiftance ofproper diet, they will of-
ten cure. Five or fix of them may be taken twice a day, more
or lefs, as is neceffary to keep the body open. It will be pro-
per, however, during their ufe, to interpofe now and then a vo-
piit of ipecacuanha or tartar emetic.
DRAUG H T S.
Anodyne Draught.
Take of liquid laudanum, twenty-five drops; fimple cinna-
mon water, an ounce common fyrup, two drachms. Mix them.
•,
an ounce.
This draught is of fervice in an obftru&ion or deficiency
of urine.
Purging Draughts,
Take of manna an ounce foluble tartar, or Rochelle fait,
;
MEDICINAL WINES.
Anthelmintic Wine,
Take of rhubarb, half an ounce worm-feed, an ounce,
;
Bruife them, and infufe without heat in two pints of red port
wine for a few days then firain off the wine.
;
however, have fill better effects when joined with bitter and
purgative ingredients.
A glafs of this wine may be taken twice or thrice a day.
Antimonial Wine.
Take glafs of antimony, reduced to a fine powder, half an
ounce; Liibon wine, eight ounces. Digeft, with heat, for
three or four days, now and then fhaking the bottle afterwards;
pints. Infufe without heat for a week, and ftrain out the wine
for ufe.
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN.
In complaint, ariling from weaknefs of the ftomach, or indi-
gcftion, a glafs of this wine may be taken an hour before dinner
and fupper.
INFUSIONS.
The author of the New Difpenfatory obferves, that even from
thofe vegetables which are weak in virtue, rich infufions may
be obtained, by returning the liquor upon frelh quantities of the
fubje£t, the water loading itfelf more and more with the active
parts and that thefe loaded infufions are applicable to valuable
;
prefling the juice, and beating it up with three times its weight
of fine fugar.
In relaxations ofthe uvula and glands of the throat, this makes
an excellent gargle, and may be ufed at diferetion.
Preferves are made by fteeping or boiling frefh vegetables
far ft in water, and afterwards in fyrup, or a folution of fugar.
The fubjeft is either preferred moift in the fyrup, or taken
out and dried, that the fugar may candy upon it. The lalt is
the mod ufual method.
The following is a mojl excellent Remedy for a Cold. I know not
one that isfo efficacious.
Take a large tea-cupful of linfeed, two penny worth of flick-
liquorice, and a quarter of a pound of fun raifins. Put thefe
into two quarts of foft water, and let it flmmer over a flow fire
till it it reduced to one; then add to it a quarter of a pound
of brown fugar-candy pounded, a table-fpoonful of old rum,
and a table-fpoonful of the beft white wine vinegar, or lemon
juice.
Note. The rum and vinegar are beft to be added only to
the quantity you are going immediately to take; for, if it is
put into the whole, it is apt in a little time to grow flat.
Drink half a pint at going to bed, and take a little when the
cough is troublefome.
This receipt generally cures the worft of colds in two or
three days, arid, if taken in time, may be faid to be almoft an
infallible remedy. It is a moft fovereign and balfamic cordial
for the lungs, without the opening qualities which endanger
frefh colds in going out. It has been known to cure colds that
have been almoft fettled into confumptions in lefs than three'
weeks.
DECOCTIONS.
Decoclion of Logwood.
Boil three ounces of the {having, or chips, of logwood, in
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN.
four pints of water, till one half the liquor is wafted. Two or
three ounces of ftmple cinnamon-water may be added to this
deco&ion.
In fluxes of the belly, where the ftronger aftringents are im-
proper,-a tea-cupful of this decodlion may be taken with advan-
tage three or four times a-clay.
Decoction ofBark,
Boil an ounce of the Peruvian bark, grofsly powdered, in a
pint and an half of water to one pint; then ftrain the decoc-
tion. If a tea-fpoonful of the weak fpirit of vitriol be added to
this medicine, it will render it both more agreeable and effica-
cious.
Compound Decoction of the Bark.
Take of Peruvian bark and Virginian fnake-root, grofsly
powdered, each three drachms. Boil them in a pint of water
to one half. To the drained liquor add an ounce and an half
of aromatic water.
Sir John Pringle recommends this as a proper medicine to-
wards the decline of malignant fevers, when the pulfe is low,
the voice weak, and the head affected with a ftupor but with
little delirium.
The dofe is four fpoonfuls every fourth or fixth hour.
PLASTERS.
Platters ought to be of a different confiftence, according to
the purpofes for which they are intended. Such as are to be
applied to the breafts and ftomach, ought to be foft and yield-
ing while thofe defigned for the limbs, fhould be firm and ad-
heiive.
Stomach Plajler.
Take of gum platter, half a pound camphorated oil, an
;
milliard, one ounce. Melt the wax, and while it is warm add
to it the turpentine, taking care not to evaporate it by too much
heat. After the turpentine and wax are diffidently incorpo-
rated, fprinkle in the powders, continually ftirring the mafs till
it be cold.
Though this plafler is made in a variety of ways, one feldom
meets with it of a proper confidence. When compounded with
oils and other greafy fubflances, its effeCls are blunted, and it is
apt to run; while pitch and refin render it too hard and very
inconvenient.
When the bliftering plafter is not at hand, its place may be
fupplied by mixing with any foft ointment a fufficient quantity
of powdered flies j or by forming them into a pafte with flour
and vinegar.
Gum Plajier.
Take of the common plafter, four pounds; gum ammoniac
and galbanum, drained, of each half a pound. Melt them to-
gether, and add, of Venice turpentine, fix ounces.
This plafter is ufed as a 'digeftive, and likewife for difcufllng
indolent tumours.
Method of defraying the putrid Smell which Meat acquires during
. hot Weather.
Put the meat intended for making foup into a fauce-pan full
of water, fcuru it when it boils, and then throw into the fauce-
pan a burning coal, very compact and deftitute of fmoke leave;
it there for two minutes, and it will have contracted all the
fmell of the meat and foup.
If you with to roaft a piece of meat on the fpit, or to bake it,
put it into water till it boils, and, after having fcummed it,
throw in a burning coal as before; at the end of tw o minutes,
r
take out the meat, and, having wiped it well, put it on the fpit,
or into the oven.
When frefh butter has not been faked in proper time, or
when fait butter has become rancid or mu fly, after melting
and feumming it, clip in a cruft of bread well toafted on both
fides, and at the end of a minute or two the butter will lole its
clifaureeable odour, but the bx*ead will be found foetid.
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN.
to foment the corn with warm water, and pare off the fattened
part with a penknife.
To clean the Teeth and Gums and male the Fiefs grow clofe to the
,
mix them well together, and rub the teeth and gums with a
little of this balfam every night and morning.
To frengthen the Gumsy and foften loofe Teeth.
Diffolve an ounce of myrrh as much as pofiible in half a
pint of red wine and the fame quantity of oil of almonds wafh :
mafs into a coarfe canvafs bag, and prcfs out the juice to every
;
quart of which add a pound of frelh damalk rofcs, and let them
fiand in infufion for twenty-four hours. Then put the whole
into a glafs alembic, lute on a head and receiver, and place it
on a fand heat. Diftil at firft with a gentle fire,which is to be
increafed gradually till the drops follow each other as quick as
poflible draw off the water as long as it continues to run clear,
;
then put out the fire, and let the alembic fiand till cold. The
diftilled water at firft will have very little fragrancy, but after
being expofed to the heat of the fun about eight days, in a bottle
lightly flopped with a bit of paper, it acquires an admirable
feent.
Rofe-water is an excellent lotion for the eyes, if ufed every
morning, and makes a part in collyriums preferibed for inflam-
mations of thefe parts it is alfo proper in many other com-
;
plaints.
Directions for making Lavender-Water.
Fill glafs or earthen body two thirds fpll of lavender flowers*
a
and then fill up the veil'd with brandy of molafles fpirits. Let
the flowers Hand in infuflon eight days, or lefs if ftraitened for
time; thendiflil oft'the fplrit, in a water-bath with a brilk fire*
at firft in large drops or even a fmall ftream, that the dTential
oil of the flowers may rife with the fpirit. But as this cannot
be done without the phlegm coming over the helm at the fame
time, the fpirit mult be rectified. The firft diftillation being
fihiftied, unlute the ftill, throw away what remains in the body*
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN. 387
and fill it with frefli flowers of lavender, in the proportion of
two pounds of lavender flowers to one pint of fpirit; pour the
fpirit already diftilled according to the foregoing diredions, on
the lavender flowers, and diftil a fecond time in a vapor bath.
To make Orange-flower Water,
Having gathered (two hours before fun-rife in fine weather) a
quantity of orange-flowers, pluck them leaf by leaf, and throw
away the ftalks and ftems: fill a tin cucurbit two thirds full of
thefe picked flowers; lute on a low bolt head, not above two
inches higher than the cucurbit; place it in balneo maria;, or a
water-bath, and diftil with a ftrong fire. You run no rifle from
prefling forward the diftillation with violence, the water-bath
effectually preventing the flowers from being burnt. In this
method you pay no regard to the quantity, but the quality of
the water drawn off. If nine pounds of orange flowers were
put into the ftill, be fatisfied with three or four quarts of fra-
grant water; however, you may continue your diftillation, and
fave even the laft droppings of the ftill, which have fome fmall
fragrancy. During the operation, be careful to change the
water in the refrigeratory veflel as often as it becomes hot. Its
being kept cool, prevents the diftilled water from having an
cmpyreumatic or burnt fmell, and keeps the quinteffence of
the flowers more intimately united with its phlegm.
Virgin's Milk a fafe and excellent Cofmeiie.
,
little of this mixture on the {lain, letting it remain till dry. Then
wafh the cloth with fair water, and the ftains will difappear.
Water impregnated with mineral alkaline fait, or foda, ox-gall,
and black foap, is alfo very good to take out fpots of grcafe.
A Soap that takes out all Manner of Spots and Stains.
Take the yolks of fix eggs, half a table-fpoonful of bruifed
fait, and a pound of Venetian foap; mix the whole together
with the juice of beet-roots, and form it into round balls, that
are to be dried in the {hade. The method of ufing this foap
is to wet with fair water the flained part of the cloth, and rub
both fides of it well with this foap then wafh the cloth in
\
ration three times a day and at the end of eight days at moll
;
the hair will turn black. If you are defirous of giving the hair
a fine fcent, moiften it with oil of Benjamin.
Simple Means ofproducing the fame Effeft,
The leaves of the wild vine change the hairs black, and
prevent their falling off. Burnt corks roots of the holm-oak
;
a bed expofed to the rays of the fun, and not more than fix
perfons admitted, as a greater number may retard the return of
life. The body is to be well dried with warm cloths, and gently
rubbed with flannels fprinkled with rum, brandy, gin, or muf-
tard—Fomentations of fpirits may be applied to the pit of the
ftomach with advantage,—A warming-pan covered with flannel
fhould be lightly moved up and down the back bladders, or;