"COMMON SENSE IN THE HOUSEHOLD" SERIES. THE DINNER YEAR-BOOK BY MABIOF HAUL AND, * ' AUTHOR OF "COMMON SENSE IN THE HOUSEHOLD," '^BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON AND TEA," ETC. NEW YORK: CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 1883. COPYRIGHT BY CHARLE3 SCRIBNER'S SONS. 1878. \ TROWS PRINTING & BOOKBINDING Go. f 205-213 Rast izth St. t NEW YORK. TX737 .familiar (ftalk will] tl)e Heater. " Do not laugh when I tell you that one of the most serious perplexities of my every-day life is the daily recur- ring question, ' What shall we have for dinner ? ' " writes a correspondent. I do not smile at the naive confession. I feel more like sighing as I recollect the years during the summers and winters of which the same query advanced with me into the dignity of a problem. There were several im- portant ends to be compassed in the successful settle- ment of the question. To accomplish an agreeable vari- ety in the family bill of fare ; to accommodate appetites and individual preferences to the season and state of the local market ; to avoid incongruous associations of meats, vegetables, sauces, entrees and desserts ; to build frag- ments into a structure about which should linger no flavor of staleness or sameness ; so to manage a long succession of meals that yesterday's repast and the more frugal one lof to-day should not suggest the alternation of fat and lean [in the Hibernian's pork, or the dutiful following of pen- ance upon indulgence ; to shun, with equal care, the rock of parsimony and the whirlpool of extravagance ; but why extend the list of dilemmas ? Are they not written in the mental chronicles of every housewife whose conscience be her purse shallow or deep will not excuse her from a continual struggle with the left-overs ? Such uncompro- 282080 2 ^ FAMILIAR TALK. inising bits of facts do these same "left-overs" appear in the next day's survey of^ways, means, and capabilities, that timid mistresses are the less to blame for often wink- ing at the Alexandrine audacity with which the cook has disposed of the knotty subject by emptying platters and tureens into the swill-pail, which should stand for the armorial bearings of her tribe wherever found, or satisfied indolence, and what goes with her for humanity, by toss- ing crusts, bones, and " cold scraps " into the yawning basket of the beggar at the basement door. One of these days I mean to write an article, scientific and practical, upon the genus, " basket-beggar." For the present, take the word of one who has studied the species in all its varieties, who has suffered long, and certainly not been unkind in the acquisition, of experience upon this head, and prohibit their visits entirely, and at all seasons, " Cold cuts " and the " heels " of loaves belong to you as certainly as do hot joints and unmutilattrd pies. Issue your declaration of independence to the effect that you choose to dispense charity in your own way, and that, as an intelligent Christian woman, you can better judge by what methods to relieve want and aid the really worthy poor, than can the ignorant, irresponsible creature who*' lavishes what costs her nothing upon every chance spe- culator whose lying whine excites her pity. Sympathy which, by the way, would generally lie dormant, were the ; listener to the piteous tale obliged to satisfy the peti- tioner from her own- purse or wardrobe. Returning from what is not, although it may seem to| be a digression, let us talk together more briefly than ia our wont in these familiar conferences, of the considera- tions that have moved and sustained me in the prepara- tion of this volume, and which will, I hope, make it a welcome and useful counsellor to you. First, then, the FAMILIAR TALK. 3 suggestion and interrogation of sincere seekers for help- ful advice pertaining to that most important of the triad of daily meals " THE FAMILY DINNER," superadded to my own observation and experience of the difficulties that beset the subject. Secondly, the discovery, that so far as I have been able to push my investigations and my searching has been keen and extensive no directory upon this particular branch of culinary endeavor has been published, at least none in the English language. We have had books, some of them admirable helps to skilful, no less than to inexperienced housekeepers, upon dinner- giving, and company dinners, and " little dinner" parties, not to refer to the mighty mountain of manuals upon cookery in general ; but, up to the time of the present writing, I have found nothing that, to my appreciation, meets the case stated by the friend whose plaint heads this chapter. My aim has been to write out, for seven days of four weeks in each month, a menu adapted, in all things, to the average American market ; giving meats, fish, vegeta- bles, and fruits in their season, and, so far as I could do so upon paper, rendering a satisfactory account of every pound of meat, etc., brought, by my advice, into the kit- chen. I have taken the liberty accorded me by virtue of our long and intimate acquaintanceship, of inspecting not only the contents of your market-basket, but each morning the treasures of larder and refrigerator ; of offering counsel concerning crumbs, bones, and such odds-and- ends as are held in contempt by many otherwise thrifty managers to wit, other cold vegetables than potatoes, and dry crusts of bread and cake, while of gravy and dripping I have made specialties. I have tried, more- over, to. inspire such respect for made-over dinners,, as we fee', for the pretty rugs made of the ravellings of Axmin- 4 FAMILIAR TALK. ster carpets. We do not attempt to impose them upon ourselves or our friends as " pure Persian." But neither do we blush for them because Mrs. Million Aire across the way would scorn to give them house-room. Let " CONSISTENCY " be stamped upon every appointment of your household, and even the parvenue opposite cannot despise you. Once learn the truth that moderate, or even scanty means do not make meanness or homeliness a necessity, and act upon the lesson, and you can set criti- cism at defiance. Apropos to this point of consistency, let me say, in explanation, not apology, for the small space devoted to company-dinners, that I have dealt with them upon the principle that ten times one makes ten. Hav- ing, in emulation of the Eastern beauty, carried the calf with ease for four weeks, you will hardly appreciate the difference in the weight of the cow you lift upon the fifth. In plainer phrase, give John and the children good din- ners, well-cooked, and daintily served, every day, and the entertainment of half-a-dozen friends in addition to the family party will cease to be a stupendous undertaking. They have a saying in the Southern States that aptly expresses the labor and excitement attendant upon such an event in too many families ; the straining after Mrs. Million Aire's diners a la Russe> which presuppose the despotism of a chef in the kitchen, and the solemn pomp of a Chief Butler in the salle a manger. The Southern description of the frantic endeavor is " Trying to put the big pot into the little one," and it is invariably used with reference to preparations for company. Be content, my dear sister, to put into your little pot only so much as it will decently hold, and be thankful that you have in it a sure gauge of responsibility. I have spoken of dinners for four weeks in each month. I have written receipts for this number, not in forgetful FAMILIAR TALK. 5 ness of the fact that there is but one February per annum, but because the need of adapting the bills of fare to the days of the week, instead of the month, was absolute, and if I wished the Dinner Year-Book to be a perpetual calen- dar, I must say nothing of the broken week that some* time ends and sometimes begins the month. The diffi- culty of disposing satisfactorily of the two or three odd days brought to my mind, while blocking out my work, the summary manner in which one of my baby-girls once dismissed a somewhat analogous difficulty. "My dear," I said to her one night as she concluded her prayer at my knee, f * you have forgotten to pray for your little cousins. How did that happen? Don't you want our Heavenly Father to take care of them ? " She^made a motion of again bending her knees, yawned sleepily, and tumbled into bed. " Can't help it, mamma ! Baby is too tired ! Horace and Eddie must scuffle for themselves just this one night ! " I have given you twenty-eight nay, counting your possible company-meal twenty-nine dinners in succes- sion to little purpose if you cannot collate from previous receipts one or" two for yourself, and be the better for the practice. I need hardly say that I do not anticipate or desire slavish adherence to the plan sketched for your day or week. I have sketched that is all not worked out a sum in which addition or subtraction would materially affect the sum-total. The framework is, I would fain hope, symmetrical. I expect you to build thereupon as convenience or discretion may dictate. TOUCHING SAUCEPANS. oucl)ing Saucepans. WHILE it is true that the finest tools will not impart skill to the untrained workman, it is equally a matter of fact that the best artisan is he who cares most jealously for the quality and condition of his instruments as well as for the finish of his workmanship. A visitor once asked permission to witness the opera- tion of cooking a beefsteak in my kitchen, saying that her husband had spoken in terms of commendation of those he had eaten at my table. Like the good wife she was, she desired to " catch the trick," whatever it might be, of preparing them to his liking. I willingly acceded to her request, and upon her return to the parlor her hus- band inquired eagerly : " Did you learn 4he secret? " " Yes," was the smiling answer. "You must buy me a gridiron ! " Up to that time, she then explained, fried steaks had been the rule in her house, and gridirons a thing unheard or unthought of. A fried beefsteak being, as I have elsewhere stated, a culinary solecism, I have, perhaps, selected an extreme case as the test of my discourse upon the necessity of a supply of fitting utensils for the proper prosecution of home-cookery. Mrs. Whitney's idea of the " art-kitchen," so charmingly set forth in " We Girls," may not be so chimerical (with limitations) as most practical housewives practised in nothing more than in the exercise of pa- tience are apt to suppose. They tell us the tale- known already too sadly well to each of us of the im- possibility of inducing "girls" who are tractable and respectful in most things, to accept labor-saving machines, TOUCHING SAUCEPANS. 7 and the thousand-and-one ingenious contrivances for making cooking easier and even graceful ; of the hard usage to which expensive implements are subjected in rude hands, the motive-power of which is the until! ed brain, unrestrained by the conscienceless will ; of how innovations are openly flouted, or secretly sneered at, " until," say they, " we find it easier to let the cook have her own way down-stairs, and reconcile ourselves, as best we may, to obstinate stupidity and unmerciful breakages. As to art- kitchens," a shrug and a groan, " we are thank- ful if our tenderest care can keep the upper stories free from the vandalism that rages below." Nevertheless, acknowledging, as I have, personally, rea- sons for doing the truth of all these things I make an- swer, " Have an art-kitchen for yourself ! " First, give your cook, or maid-of-all-work, a fair trial. It is a duty you owe to humanity and to her to prove, conclusively, whether her careless or destructive habits be ingrain and wilful, or merely the result of ignorance and bad training. There are bad mistresses, let us remember, and more still who are indifferent or incompetent. If " our girl " has a heart or a conscience, let us find it. Make her understand the value and usefulness of the appliances you have furnished for her work, where and how they are to be kept, and set her the example of always looking for and putting them in their proper places. If they are misused, show your re- gret decidedly, but still kindly. Should all means of civilizing her taste up to your standard fail, make, as I have advised, an art-kitchen for your own use. Appro- priate one corner of the room, where cooking is done, for your operations, and arrange there your pet tools. Have your scoop flour-sifter ; your patent pie-lifter and oyster- broiler ; your star-toaster ; your pie-crimper, vegetable and nutmeg graters ; gravy-strainer, colander, biscuit-cutter, TOUCHING SAUCEPANS. skimmers, larding needles, wire, and perforated, and slit and fluted spoons ; your weights and measures, and the tidy, serviceable tinned and enamelled saucepans, Scotch kettles, frying-pans, etc., that will retain tidiness and serviceable qualities so long in your care, and so soon come to grief in boorish clutches. Set all these, and as many others as you like and can afford to buy always including the Dover egg-beater and its " Baby " (made for whipping one egg to more purpose than one egg, or anything else as small was ever whipped before) in array upon walls and shelves,* and. let the logic of daily events prove how far they will deprive work of the wearing vexations attendant upon long searches for the right article, and its wrong condition when found. Make your helpers one and all comprehend that these are your especial property, to be used and kept clean by no one else. Let them be looked down upon as the toys of a would-be-busy womaii by the superior intellects about you, should they see fit thus to do, and provide such tools as are suited to coarser fingers for 'them to use. The chances are many to one that your dexterous manipulation of your instruments ; the excellence of the products achieved by yourself and them ; even the attractive neatness of the display and your corner, will win skeptics, first, to indulgence, then, admir- ation, then, to imitation. If you can afford the great * It gives me pleasure to state, in this connection, that all of the articles named in the above catalogue (and many more) are made by the DOVER STAMPING COMPANY, BOSTON, MASS., 88 AND 90 NORTH STREET. The inventors of the inimitable Egg-Beater have proved themselves as appreciative in other respects of the needs of American housewives, and as ingenious in meeting these. I call at- tention to their wares, as a simple act of justice to what is so excel- lent in itself, and as an unsolicited thank-offering to the stranger-ben- efactors who have made many of my culinary duties a pastime, rather than a toil. TOUCHING SAUCEPANS. 9 luxury of a pastry or mixing-room, adjoining the kitchen, so much the better for you and your pious undertaking. But without regard to what may be the effect upon others, have your saucepans, of whatever designs and in whatever quantities you like taking " saucepan " as a generic term for every description of mute helpers in the task of elevating cookery into a fine art, or, at the least, in re- deeming it from the stigma of coarseness and vulgarity. Have, also, as an indispensable adjunct of saucepans, appliances for cleansing them. There is nothing inhe- rently degrading in dish-washing. Provide plenty of towels and hot water ; a mop with a handle and a loop by which to hang it up when it has been squeezed and shaken after use ; a soap-shaker a neat wire cup, enclosing the soap, and furnished with a handle of tinned wire, and a dish-pan, with a partition running across the middle, that the soiled articles may be rinsed from grease in one of the compartments before they are purified thoroughly in the other. Have, also, at hand a can or box of wash- ing soda, and a bottle of ammonia for taking off the grease more effectually ; a cake of Indexical silver soap in a cup, with a brush, for restoring lustre to tins, Britannia or plated, or silver ware. Thus armed, the cleansing of your implements will be a matter of brief moment, and your work in the kitchen be, in no sense, a hindrance to the stated duties of the day, while your methods and occa- sional presence cannot fail to be a refining influence upon all except the very common and spiritually unclean. Ladyhood, if thorough, will assent itself, even behind a scullion's apron. JANUARY. first tOeek, Btmktg. Beef Soup. Chicken smothered with Oysters. Celery Salad. Mashed Potatoes. Cauliflower au gratin, Stewed Tomatoes. Blanc Mange and Cream. Sponge Cake. Cocoa. BEEF SOUP. 3 Ibs. of lean beef, with a marrow-bone. \ Ib. lean ham (or a ham-bone, if you have it). i turnip. I onion. i carrot. J of a cabbage. 3 stalks of celery. 3 quarts of water cold, of course. Salt and pepper to taste. Cut the meat very fine, and crack the bones well. Put these on in a pot with a close top ; cover with a quart of water, and set where they will come very slowly to a boil. If they do not reach this point in less than an hour, so much the better. When the contents of the pot begin to bubble, add the remaining two quarts of cold water, And let all boil slowly for three hours : for two hours with the top closed, during the last with it slightly lifted. Wash and peel the turnip, carrot, and 'onion, scrape the celery, and wash with the cabbage. Cut all into dice and lay in cold water, a little salted, for half an hour. Put the carrot on to stew in a small vessel by itself ; the others all together, with enough water to cover them. Some 12 JANUARY. think the carrot keeps color and shape better if hot,, instead of cold water be used for it. Let it stew until tender, then drain off the water and set it aside to cool. The other vegetables should be boiled to pieces. Half an hour before the soup is to be taken up, strain the water from the cabbage, etc., pressing them to a pulp to extract all the strength. Return this to the saucepan, throw in a little salt, let it boil up once to clear it ; skim and add to the soup. Put in pepper, and salt unless the ham has salted it sufficiently and boil, covered, twenty minutes. Strain into an 'earthenware basin ; let it gefcool enough for the fat to arise to the surface, when take off all that will come away. Return to the pot, which should have been previously rinsed with hot water, boil briskly for one minute, and throw in the carrot. Skim and serve. This is a good, clear soup. If you like it thicker, dis- solve a tablespoonful of gelatine in enough cold water to cover it well this may be done by an hour's soaking and add to the soup after the latter is strained and cleared of the fat. When practicable, make Sunday's soup on Saturday, so far as to prepare the " stock," or meat base. Set it away in an earthenware crock, adding a little salt. This not only lessens Sunday's work, but the unstrained soup gathers the whole strength of the meat, and the fat can be removed in a solid cake of excellent dripping. Indeed, it is a good rule always to prepare soup stock at least twenty-four hours before it is to be used for the table. Try, likewise, to make enough soup for Sunday to last over Monday as well. A little forethought on Saturday will lessen the labors and increase the comfort of what has been somewhat profanely named " Job's birthday," the an* niversary which was to be accursed for evermore. CHICKEN SMOTHERED WITH OYSTERS. i full-grown, tender chicken. 1 pint* of oysters. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 3 " " cream. i tablespoonful of corn-starch. Yolks of three hard-boiled eggs. FIRST WEEK SUNDAY. 13 i scant cup bread-crumbs. Pepper, salt, and chopped parsley. Prepare the chicken as for roasting. Stuff with a dress- ing of the oysters chopped pretty fine, and mixed with the bread-crumbs, seasoned to taste with pepper and salt. Tie up the neck securely. (This can be done on Satur- day, if the fowl be afterwards kept in a very cold place.) Put the chicken thus stuffed and trussed, with legs and wings tied close to the body with soft tape, into a tin pail with a tight top. Cover closely and set, with a weight on the top, in a pot of cold water. Bring gradually to a boil, that the fowl may be heated evenly and thoroughly. Stew steadily, never fast, for an hour and a half after the water in the outer kettle begins to boil. Then open the pail and test with a fork to see if the chicken be tender. If not, re-cover at once, and stew for half or three-quarters of an hour longer. When the chicken is tender through- out, take it out and lay upon a hot dish, covering imme- diately. Turn the juices left in the pail into a saucepan, thicken with the corn-starch, which should first be wet up with a little cold milk, then the chopped parsley, butter, pepper and salt, and the yolks of the hard-boiled eggs chopped fine. Boil up once, stir in the cream, and take from the fire before it can boil again. Pour a few spoon- fuls over the chicken, and serve the rest in a sauce-tureen. CELERY SALAD. 2 bunches of celery. l tablespoonful of salad oil. 4 tablespoonfuls of vinegar. i small teaspoonful fine sugar. Pepper and salt to taste. Wash and scrape the celery, lay in ice-cold water until dinner-time, when cut into inch-lengths, season, tossing all we!l up together, and serve in a salad bowl. CAULIFLOWER au gratin. i large cauliflower. 4 tablespoonfuls grated cheese. i cup drawn butter. Pepper and salt. A pinch of nutmeg. 14 JANUARY. Boil the cauliflower until tender (about twenty minutes), having first tied it up in a bag of coarse lace or tarlatan. Have xeady a cup of good drawn butter, and pour over the cauliflower, when you have drained and dished the latter. Sift the cheese thickly over the top, and brown by holding a red-hot shovel so close to the cheese that it singes and blazes. Blow out the fire on the instant, and send to the table. MASHED POTATOES. Pare the potatoes very thin, lay in cold water for an hour, and cover well with boiling water. (" Peach-blows" are better put down in -cold water.) Boil quickly, and when done, drain off every drop of water ; throw in a little salt ; set back on 'the range for two or three minutes. Mash soft with a potato-beetle, or whip to a cream with a fork, adding a little butter and enough milk to make a soft paste. Heap in a smooth mound upon a vegetable dish. STEWED TOMATOES. Open a can of tomatoes an hour before cooking them. Leave out the cores and unripe parts. Cook always in tin or porcelain saucepans. Iron injures color and flavor. Stew gently for half an hour ; season to taste with salt, pepper, a little sugar, and a tablespoonful of butter. Gook gently, uncovered, ten minutes longer, and turn into a deep dish. BLANC MANGE. i liberal quart of milk. 1 oz. Cooper's gelatine. of a cup of white sugar. 2 teaspoonfuls vanilla. Soak the gelatine for two hours in a breakfast-cup of cold water. Heat the milk to boiling in a farina-kettle, or in a tin pail set in a pot of hot water. Add the soaked gelatine and sugar, stir for ten minutes over the fire, and strain through a thin muslin bag into a mould wet with cold water. Flavor and set in a cold place to form. To loosen it, dip the mould for one instant in hot water, de FIRST WEEK SUNDAY. IS tach the surface from the sides by a light pressure of the fingers, and reverse over a glass or china dish. Serve with powdered sugar and cream. By all means have Sunday desserts prepared upon the preceding day. To this end, I have endeavored to give such receipts for the blessed day as can be easily made ready on Saturday. COCOA. 6 tablespoonfuls of cocoa to each pint of water. As much milk as you have water. Sugar to taste. Rub the cocoa smooth in a little cold water. Have ready on the fire the pint of boiling water. Stir in the grated cocoa-paste. Boil twenty minutes ; add the milk and boil five minutes more, stirring often. Sweeten in the cups to suit different tastes. There is a preparation of cocoa, already powdered, called " cocoatina," which needs no boiling. It is very good, and saves the trouble of grating and cooking. I regret that, although I have used it frequently and with great satisfaction, I have forgotten the name of the manu- facturer. It is put up in round boxes, like mustard, and is quite as economical for family use as the cakes of cocoa. SPONGE CAKE. 6 eggs. The weight of the eggs in sugar. Half their weight in flour. i lemon, juice and rind. Beat yolks and whites very light, separately of course, the powdered sugar into the yolks when they are smooth and thick ; next, the juice and grated peel of the lemon ; then the whites with a few swift strokes ; at last, the flour, in great, loose handfuls. Stir in lightly, but thor- oughly. Too much beating after the flour goes in makes sponge cake tough. Bake in round tin moulds, buttered. Your oven should be steady. When the cakes begin tc color on top, cover with paper to prevent burning. When cool, wrap in a thick cloth to keep fresh. 16 JANUARY. Jir0t tDeek. Soup a 1'Italienne. Breaded Mutton Chops. Baked Macaroni, with Tomato Sauce. Potato Puff. Apple Sauce. Corn Starch Hasty Pudding. Coffee. Said an irascible householder to a friend from another city, whom he chanced to meet in the street one day, " Come and dine with me ! But I give you warning we shall have nothing for dinner but a confounded dress- maker !" Few of the great middle class, who are the strength and glory of our land, would dare take an unex- pected guest home on washing-day, although fewer still would dare reveal, as frankly as did our blunt citizen, the cause of their reluctance to unveil the penetralia of what are, upon all days save Black Monday and Blue Tuesday, orderly and brightsome households. Don't interrupt me, please, my much-tried and much- trying sister, upon whose brow the plaits of Monday's tribulations have left enduring traces ! I know Bridget is always cross on wash-day, and that Katy wears an ag- grieved air from morning until night ; that dusting, china- washing, and divers other unaccustomed tasks are ap- pointed unto your already busy self; that John and the boys hate " pick-up dinners ; " that the modest bills jf fare set down in this book for the second and third days of the week will, at the first glance, seem preposterous and unfeeling. You will survey them with very much the same feeling as moved Pope to exclaim, with tears in his eyes, " From an old friend I had not expected this ! " when his host, having allowed him to eat to repletion ft less savory viands, had brought on, without a note of preparation, the poet's favorite dish, a fine hare, roasted with truffles. But the fact remains that people cannot swallow enough on Sunday to support Nature through the two days' journey into the wilderness of making-clean that FIRST WEEK MONDAY. 1 7 follows the season of rest and devotion. It is also true that your husband and yourself, with school-children and servants, work harder on Monday than upon any other one day of the seven, and that your food should be nourishing. Should Bridget protest against " hot mate and soup " as unprecedented and " onfaling," Bridget's mistress (by courtesy) must bring another unknown commodity to the obstiuate Celt, to bear upon the subject to wit, BRAINS. As I shall try to show, an hour given by your- self to the lower regions too often an inferno on that direful day will put such a repast before unexpectant John as shall have for his eye and taste none of the char- acteristics of a " pick-up dinner." SOUP 1 L'ITALIENNE. The stock of Sunday's soup strained from the carrots. Half a cup of grated cheese and a cup of milk. 2 tablespoon fuls of corn-starch wet up with water. 2 eggs beaten light. Put the soup on fifteen minutes before dinner, where it will heat quickly. The moment it boils, draw it to one side, stir in the corn-starch and milk and heat anew, stir- ring constantly until it begins to thicken. Set it again upon the side of the range, and add the beaten eggs. Cover and leave it where it will keep hot, but not cook, while you scald the tureen and, put the grated cheese in the bottom. In five minutes pour the soup upon the cheese, stir all up well, and it is ready for the table. This is a delicious soup and easily made. BREADED MUTTON CHOPS BAKED. Trim the chops neatly and put aside the bones and bits of skin for the sauce for macaroni. Pour a little melted butter over the meat. Do this as early in the day as convenient, cover them and let them stand until an hour before they are to be served. Then, roll each in beaten egg, next, in fine cracker-dust, (you can buy it ready powdered) .and lay them in your dripping-pan with a very little water in the bottom just enough to keep them from burning. Bake quickly covering the dripping-pan with another foi half an hour. Then remove the upper 1 8 JANUARY. baste the chops with butter and hot water, and let them brown. When done, lay them upon a hot dish and set in the open oven to keep warm. Add to the gravy in the dripping-pan a little hot water, a teaspoonful of browned flour, a tablespoonful of catsup, a small quan- tity of minced onion, pepper and salt. Boil up once, slrain, and pour over the chops. MACARONI WITH TOMATO SAUCE. Break the macaroni into short pieces and set over the fire with enough boiling water to cover it well, as it swells to treble its original dimensions. In twenty min- utes it should be tender. Drain off the water carefully, not to break the macaroni, and stir lightly into it pepper, salt, and a tablespoonful of butter. Turn it into a deep dish and pour over it a sauce made as follows : To the bones and refuse bits left from trimming the chops, add a pint of cold water, and stew slowly upon the back of the range, (lest Bridget should be' inconvenienced thereby,) until you have less than a cupful of good gravy. Strain out the bones, etc., season to taste, and add what was left from the stewed tomatoes of yesterday. Having had the provision for to-day's dinner in mind, you will have acted wisely in seeing for yourself that it did not go into the swill-pail under the head of "scraps." Cook tomatoes and gravy together for three minutes after they begin to simmer, and pour, smoking hot, over the macaroni. Let it stand covered a few minutes before serving. POTATO PUFF. To two cupfuls of cold mashed potato (more of yestei- day's leavings), add a tablespoonful of melted butter, and beat to a cream. Put with this two eggs whipped light, and a cupful of milk, salting to taste. Beat all well ; pour into a greased baking-dish, and bake quickly to a light brown. Serve in the dish in which it was cooked. CORN-STARCH HASTY PUDDING. i quart of fresh milk, i tablespoonful of butter. 4 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch wet up with water. i teaspoonful of salt. FIRST WEEK TUESDAY. 19 Heat the milk to scalding, and stir into it the corn- starch until it has boiled ten minutes and is thick and smooth throughout. Add salt and butter, let the pud- ding stand in the farina-kettle in which it has been boiled the hot water around it for three minutes before turning it into a deep open dish. Eat with butter and sugar, or with powdered sugar and cream, with nutmeg grated over it. COFFEE. A French coffee-pot is a convenience on Monday. If you have one, you know how to use it. If not, put a quart of boiling water into your coffee-pot ; wet up a cupful of ground cotfee with the white of an egg, adding the egg-shell, and a little cold water. Put this into the boil- ing hot water, and boil fast ten minutes. Then, add half a cup of coldwater, and set it upon the hearth or table to " settle" for five minutes. Pour it off carefully into your metal or china coffee-pot or urn. Jir0t UJtck. Scotch Broth. Rolled Beefsteaks. Cabbage Salad. Browned Potatoes. Baked Beans. Apple and Tapioca Pudding. Hard Sauce. SCOTCH BROTH. 3 Ibs. of veal and bones from neck or knuckle. 3 quarts of water, i onion. i turnip. 3 stalks of celery, i cupful pearl barley. Salt and pepper to taste. 20 JANUARY. Crack the bones and mince the meat early in the day, if you dine near midday, and put on with the cold water. Soak the barley in lukewarm water, after washing it well, and when it has lain in the tepid bath for two hours, put it in the same over the fire to cook slowly, keeping it covered fully by adding hot water from the kettle. Wasli, scrape and chop the vegetables ; cover with cold water, and stew in a saucepan by themselves. When they are very soft, rub them through a colander ; add the water in which they were cooked, and keep hot until the meat in the soup-kettle has boiled to rags. For this purpose four hours are better than three. Strain out bone's and meat ; put soup-stock, barley (with the water in which it has boiled), vegetable broth, pepper, and salt, into one kettle and boil slowly for thirty minutes. A little chopped parsley is an improvement. ROLLED BEEFSTEAKS. 2 good sirloin steaks. Bread-crumbs. A slice of fat salt pork. Seasoning, a little minced onion, pepper and salt. Take out the bones from the steak and throw them into the soup-pot. If your butcher has not already done so, beat the meat flat with the broad side of a hatchet, and cover it with a force-meat made of bread-crumbs, minced pork, and half an onion. Moisten this slightly with water, and season to taste. Roll each steak up,' closely enclosing the stuffing ; bind with twine into two com- pact bundles and lay in a dripping-pan. Dash a cupful of boiling water over each, cover with an inverted pan, and bake about three-quarters of an hour, in their own steam. At the end of this time remove the cover, baste with butter and dredge with flour to brown the meat. When they are of a fine color, lay upon a hot dish. Thicken the gravy with a little browned flour, boil up and send to table in a boat. In removing the strings from the rolled beef prior to serving, clip them in several places, that the form of the meat may not be disturbed. FIRST WEEK TUESDAY. 21 CABBAGE SALAD. i small head of cabbage, chopped fine, or cut into shreds. t cup of boiling milk. of a cup of vinegar, i tablespoonful of butter. 1 tablespoonful of white sugar. 2 eggs well beaten. i teaspoonful essence of celery. Pepper and salt. Heat milk and vinegar in separate vessels. To the boiling vinegar add butter, sugar, and seasoning, lastly the chopped cabbage. Heat to scalding, but do not let it boil. Stir the beaten eggs into the hot milk. Cook one minute together after they begin to boil. Turn the hoi: cabbage into a bowl ; pour the custard over it ; toss up and about with a wooden or silver fork, until all the ingredients are well mixed. Cover and set in a very cold place for some hours. This is a very delightful salad, quite repaying the trouble of cooking the dressing. BROWNED POTATOES. Boil large potatoes with their skins on ; peel them, and, when you uncover your beef for browning, lay the pota- toes in the dripping-pan about the meat. Dredge and baste them as well as the beef. If not quite brown when the meat is ready, leave them in the gravy for awhile, before thickening the latter. Drain in a hot colander, and arrange neatly around the steaks in the dish. BAKED BEANS. Soak dried beans all night in soft water, exchanging this in the morning for lukewarm, and this, two hours later, for still warmer. Let them lie an hour in this, before putting them on to boil in cold water. When they are soft, drain and turn them into a bake-dish. Sea- son with pepper and salt, with a liberal spoonful of butter. Add enough boiling water to prevent them from scorching and bake, covered, until they smoke and bubble. Re move the cover, and brown. Serve in the bake-dish. 22 JANUARY. APPLE AND TAPIOCA PUDDING. i teacupful tapioca, soaked for five hours in 3 teacup- fuls of warm (not hot) water. 8 juicy pippins, pared and cored. 3 tablespoonfuls of sugar and a saltspoonful of salt, with a few whole cloves. Arrange the apples in a deep dish ; add a cup of cold water ; cover, and steam in a moderate oven until tender all through, turning them once or twice. Turn off -half the liquid and pour the tapioca, which should have been soaked in a warm place, over the apples, when you have filled the hollows left by the cores with sugar and put a clove in each. The tapioca should be slightly salted. Bake one hour, or until the tapioca is clear and crusted on top. Serve in pudding-dish. HARD SAUCE. To two cups of powdered sugar add half a cup of butter, slightly warmed, so that the two can be worked up together. When they are well mixed, beat in half a tea- spoonful of nutmeg and the juice of a lemon. Whip smooth and light, mound neatly upon a butter-plate, and set in the cold to harden. JFirst Split Pea Soup. Halibut Steaks. Boiled Leg of Mutton Caper Sauce. Spinach. Stewed Potatoes. Cottage Pudding with Liquid Sauce. SPLIT PEA SOUP. 1 pint of split peas. 4 quarts of water. 2 Ibs, of beef and some bones. Ib. of lean bacon or ham. FIRST WEEK WEDNESDAY. 2$ 3 stalks of celery, the white part only, cut fine. Juice of a lemon. Stale bread cut into dice and fried. Soak the peas all night in soft water, changing it in the morning for warm not hot. Throw this off after an hour and cover the peas with four quarts of cold water. Boil in this adding the meat, cut small, the bones well cracked and the celery -four hours. Always boil soups slowly. The neglect of this rule leaves in the kettle a mass of toughened meat and an ocean of dish-water. When you are ready to take up your soup, strain in a colander, picking out and casting aside bits of bones and shreds of meat. Rub the peas and celery through the holes of the strainer until nothing more will pass. Season with pepper and salt ; add the juice of a small lemon, and return to the kettle, which must first be rinsed with hot water. Let all boil together two minutes. Should it not seem so thick as you would like, you can put in, while it is boiling, a little corn-starch wet up with cold water. Put a couple of slices of stale bread, cut into dice and fried crisp in dripping, in the heated tureen, and pour the soup upon them. HALIBUT STEAKS FRIED. Wash and wipe the steaks. Roll each in flour, and fry upon a buttered griddle, turning carefully with a spatula, or cake-turner, when the lower side is done. They should be of a nice brown, and tender throughout. Remove to a hot dish and garnish with sliced lemon ; in carving, see that a bit of the lemon goes to each person, as many pre- fer it to any other sauce for fish. Send around potatoes' with the steak. Worcestershire is a good store-sauce for fish and game. Anchovy is pre-eminently a fish sauce, buf many do not like it. LEG OF MUTTON BOILED. Do not have the mutton too fat or too large. Cut off the shank, which the butcher will have nicked for you, leaving about two inches beyond the ham. Wash and wipe carefully and boil in hot water, with a little salt, unti! 24 .JANUARY. a fork will readily pierce the thickest part. About ten or twelve minutes to the pound is a good rule in boiling fresA meat. Serve with caper sauce. Since you intend to use the liquor in which the meat is boiled for to-morrow's soup, do not oversalt it. But sprinkle, instead, salt over the leg of mutton after it is dished ; rub it all over with butter and jet in a hot oven for a single minute. CAPER SAUCE. 1 cup of the liquor in which the meat has been boiled. 2 teaspoonfuls of flour rubbed smooth in a little water. Salt to taste. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. About two dozen capers or green nasturtium-seed. Heat the liquor to boiling, and skim before stirring in the flour, which must be perfectly free from lumps, and rubbed smooth in cold water. Stir until the sauce thickens evenly. It is best to cook all sauces in a vessel set within a larger one of hot water. When it has boiled about a minute, add the butter gradually, stirring each bit in well before putting in more. Salt, and drop in the capers. Let it just boil, and turn into a sauce-boat. SPINACH. Pull the spinach from the stalks, leaf by leaf; wash care- fully, and leave in cold water one hour. Boil in hot water fifteen minutes. Drain very dry in a colander ; chop ex- tremely fine in a wooden bowl, then return to the saucepan with a tablespoonful of butter, a little salt, and a teaspoon- ful of white sugar. As it heats beat it up with a wooden spoon until it is a soft paste. Let it bubble up once, and dish. Lay a hard-boiled egg or two, cut in thin slices, upon the surface. Few vegetables are more often ruined in the cooking than spinach. The above receipt is simple and good. STEWED POTATOES. Pare and cut into large dice some good potatoes. Lay in cold water half an hour. Stew in cold water, a little salted. There should be enough water to cover there FIRST WEEK WEDNESDAY. 2$ well. When they are tender and begin to crumble at the edges, drain off half the water, and pour in as much milk. When they are again scalding hot, stir in a lump of butter the size of an egg (for a large dish) rolled in flour, salt, pepper and chopped parsley to taste. Boil up once and serve in a covered dish. COTTAGE PUDDING. i cup of powdered sugar, i cup of sweet milk. 1 tablespoonful of butter. 2 eggs, beaten light, yolks and whites separately. Saltspoonful of salt. About 3 cups of Hecker's prepared flour, enough for cake-batter. Rub the butter well into the sugar ; add beaten yolks ; the milk, salt, then whipped whites and yolks alternately. Bake in a buttered mould. When you can bring out the testing-straw clean from the middle of the loaf, turn it out upon a dish. Cut in slices while hot, as it is wanted. One who has never tried it can hardly believe that the result of a receipt which may be tried fearlessly by a novice in cookery, could be the really elegant pudding just described. It is also as economical as toothsome. SAUCE FOR COTTAGE PUDDING. 2 cups of powdered sugar. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. i cup of boiling water. i glass sherry wine. Nutmeg or cinnamon to taste. Rub the butter into the sugar; add hot water gradu- ally ; then spice and wine. Cover tightly to keep in the strength of the wine, and set for twenty minutes in a saucepan of boiling water. Stir up and send to table. 2 26 JANUARY. first tthek. Vermicelli Soup. Scalloped Oysters. Mince of Mutton with Potato Frill, Baked Tomatoes. Celery. Tipsy Trifle. Apples and Nuts. VERMICELLI SOUP. Take off all the fat from the broth in which your mutton was cooked yesterday, and boil it down slowly to two- thirds of the original quantity. Stew to pieces, in another vessel, a stalk of celery, one small onion, a carrot, -and a bunch of sweet herbs all cut up fine. A ham-bone, if you have it, or a couple of slices of lean ham, will be an improvement to the broth. Strain the soup ; rub the vegetables through a fine colander with the water in which they were boiled ; return to the fire with a double handful of vermicelli broken into short pieces ; boil for ten minutes ; add a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour ; boil up and serve. Send around a saucer of grated cheese with vermicelli and macaroni soups. It is a great improvement to the flavor arid consistency. Each person may take as much or as little as he likes. SCALLOPED OYSTERS. i quart of fine oysters. 1 coffee-cupful of pounded crack-er. 2 great spoonfuls of butter. cupful of cream or rich milk. Pepper and salt to taste. Butter a baking-dish and cover the bottom pretty thickly with pounded cracker. Wet with oyster liquor and a few spoonfuls of cream. Next, lay oysters, one deep, closely over these. Pepper and salt, and stick a bit of butter upon each. Another layer of crumbs, wet FIRST WEEK THURSDAY. 27 as before ; more oysters, and proceed in like order until your dish is full, making the top layer of crumbs with butter dotted over it. Set in the oven, invert a plate or tin pan over the dish, and bake until the juice bubbles up to the top. Uncover ; set upon the upper grating of the oven to brown, and send to table in the bake-dish. Pass around sliced lemon with it. Oysters, like fish, follow immediately after soup, and are a course by themselves. MINCE OF MUTTON WITH POTATO FRILL. The remains of yesterday's mutton, minced, but not very fine. e 1 cupful of drawn butter. 2 tablespoonfuls of cream, or rich milk. Pepper, salt, and mace to taste, also chopped parsley. 1 button onion. 2 eggs, well beaten. Heat the sauce to a boil, add the seasoning and the onion, chopped very fine ; then, the meat. Draw the saucepan to the side of the range, and let it stand, closely covered, in boiling water for ten minutes. Set again over the fire and bring to boiling point. Add the eggs and milk and set back at the side for five minutes, still covered. The mince should never really boil after the meat goes in. POTATO FRILL. Boil and mash some potatoes ; working in a little milk and butter, but not so much as to make the paste very soft. Season with salt, and, while still hot, knead in a beaten egg. Shape this paste into a fence, on the inside round of a shallow dish ; fluting it regularly with the round handle of a knife.. Set for one minute in a hot oven, but not long enough to cause the fence to crack. Glaze quickly with butter, and pour the meat carefully within the wall. The mince should not be so thin as to wash away the "frill." If well managed this is a pret f v and a savory dish. 28 JANUARY. BAKED TOMATOES. i can of tomatoes. Stale bread, crumbed fine. i tablespoonful of butter. Pepper, salt, a little chopped parsley, and white sugar. Drain off two-thirds of the liquor from the tomatoes \ salt it and set aside for another day's soup. One has no excuse for waste whose "stock-pot" is always near at hand. Little comes amiss to it. Cover the bottom of a bake-dish with crumbs ; lay the tomatoes evenly upon this bed ; season with pepper, salt, sugar, and parsley, with bits of butter here and there. Strew bread-crumbs over all, a thicker layer than at the bottom ; put tiny pieces of butter upon this, ^nd bake, covered, about thirty-five min- utes. Take off the cover and brown upon the upper shelf of the oven. Do not let it stay there long enough to get dry. C E LERY RAW. Wash, trim, and scrape the stalks, "selecting those that are white and tender. Crisp by leaving them in very cold water until they are wanted for the table. Arrange neatly in a celery-stand. Pass between the oysters and meat. TIPSY TRIFLE. i quart of milk. 3 e gg s > whites and yolks beaten separately. i stale sponge-cake. i cup of sugar. Flavoring of vanilla. i cup of sherry wine. A few spoonfuls of currant jelly. Make a custard of the milk, sugar, the yolks of the eggs and the whites of two. Put in the latter ingredients when the milk almost boils, and stir until it begins to thicken. Flavor when cold. Put a layer of sliced cake in the bottom of a glass bowl. Wet with the wine and a few spoonfuls of custard, and when it is quite soaked, put on more cake. Proceed in this manner until the cake and wine are -used up, when pour on, a little at a time, the FIRST WEEK FRIDAY. 2$ remainder of the custard ; holding down the cake with a broad spoon as you do this to keep it from floating. Lay a heavy plate upon it. for the same purpose, while you pre- pare a meringue by whipping stiff the rest of the whites, and then beating in the currant jelly. Cover the trifle with this just before dinner-time. APPLES AND NUTS. Polish the apples, and crack the nuts, unless you have plenty of nut-crackers. Give a knife to each apple-plate, and teach the children to pare them neatly for themselves, instead of " munching " like rabbits at family dinners, and being awkwardly ill at ease when " company " is present. Silver or ivory knives are better for fruit than steel. fmt Soupe Maigre. Boiled Cod. Roast Duck with Bread Sauce. Mashed Potatoes. Rice Croquettes. Stewed Celery. Apple Pie. SOUPE MAIGRE. i quart of milk. 3 pints of water. i onion. i turnip. 3 stalks of celery. 1 potato (large). Quarter of a small cabbage, sliced. J cup of bread-crumbs, very dry. 2 eggs, beaten light. Parsley, pepper, and salt to taste. 4 tablespoonfuls of butter. 30 JANUARY. Clean, scrape, and mince the vegetables, and put on to cook in cold water, enough to cover them well. When they are scalding hot, drain, and cover them with three pints of boiling water. Stew slowly in this until they are reduced to pulp. Rub through a colander, season, and heat again to boiling. Stir in the bread-crumbs ; then the butter, very gradually. Have the milk ready, heated in another vessel, and pour into the soup- kettle at this junc- ture. Let the soup get very hot, but not boil. Set upon the side of the range, and, dipping out a cupful, add it, a little at a time, to the beaten eggs. When well mixed, return eggs and liquor to the rest of the soup ; stir over the fire for an instant, but never to boiling, and serve in a hot tureen. The eggs should not be allowed to curdle in the liquor ; hence the need of carefulness in following the directions above given. A little grated cheese is a pleasant accom- paniment to this soup, each person adding it as pleases him. BOILED COD. Lay the fish in cold water, a little salt, for half an hour. Wipe dry, and sew up in a linen cloth, coarse and clean, fitted to the shape of the piece of cod. Have but one fold over each part. Lay in the fish-kettle, cover with boiling water, salted at discretion. Allow nearly an hour for a piece weighing four pounds. SAUCE. To one gill of boiling water allow as much milk ; stir into this, while boiling, two tablespoonfuls of butter, added gradually, a tablespoonful of flour wet up with cold water, and, as it thickens, the chopped yolk of a boiled egg and one raw egg, beaten light. Take directly from the fire, season with pepper, salt, a little chopped parsley and the juice of a lemon, and set, covered, in boiling water, but not over the fire, for five minutes, stirring occasion- ally. Pour part of the sauce over the fish when dished ; the rest in a boat. Send around mashed potatoes with it. FIRST WEEKFRIDAY. 31 ROAST DUCK. Clean the duck very carefully, rinsing it out with a little soda and water, and afterwards with fresh water. Lay in cold, salted water for an hour. Wipe dry, inside anc* out, and stuff with a dressing of bread-crumbs, seasoned with pepper and salt, a very little powdered sage and a " suspicion " of minced onion. Sew up ; dash a cup of boiling water over them, as they lie in the dripping-pan, and roast, covered, for the first half-hour. Remove the Cover, and baste freely three times with butter and water, four or five times with the gravy from the pan. Stew the giblets in a little salted water, and reserve to piece out to-morrow's salmi. Dish the ducks upon a hot platter. BREAD SAUCE. Skim the fat well from the gravy left in the dripping- pan ; have ready a handful of bread-crumbs (stale), wet up with hot water. Thicken the gravy with these when it has come to a boil ; season with pepper, salt, and a pinch of mace. Boil all together once and serve. MASHED POTATOES. See receipt for Sunday. While I would spare you all waste of time and pains in looking up receipts in other parts of this volume, I yet deem it hardly worth while to write out in full the same directions twice for the same week or month. RICE CROQUETTES. i cup of cold boiled rice. i teaspoonful of sugar, and half as much salt i teaspoonful of melted butter. i egg, beaten light. Enough milk to make the rice into stiff paste. Sweet lard for frying. Work rice, butter, egg, etc., into an adhesive paste, beat ing each ingredient thoroughly into the mixture. Flour your hands and make the rice into oval balls. Dip each in beaten egg, then in flour, or cracker -dust, and fry 32 JANUARY. in boiling lard, a few at a time, turning each with great care. When the croquettes are of a fine yellow-brown, take out with a wire spoon and lay within a heated col- ander to drain off every drop of fat. Serve hot, with sprigs of parsley laid about them, in an uncovered dish. STEWED CELERY. Cut the celery into inch lengths ; cover with cold water and stew until tender. Turn off the water and sup- ply its place with enough milk to cover .the celery. When this begins to boil stir in a good lump of butter rolled in flour ; pepper and salt to taste, and stew gently five min- utes. You will like this vegetable thus prepared. Eat, if you like, with a little lemon- juice or vinegar. APPLE PIE. i quart of flour, dried and sifted. Ib. of lard. \ Ib. of butter. Ice-water to make stiff paste. Chop the lard into the dry flour. Wet with ice-water into stiff paste, touching as little as may be with your hands. Roll out very thin, always from you. Stick bits of butter all over the sheet ; roll up tightly as you would a sheet of paper. Beat flat with your rolling-pin, roll out again, and again baste with butter. Repeat the operations of rolling up, rolling out, and basting until your butter is used up. Set the roll of pastry in a cold, dry place for at least one hour. All night would not be too long. When it is crisp and firm, roll out and line your buttered pie-plates. The bottom crust should be thinner than the upper. And. as a rule, you would do well to give the roll of pastry intended for the latter a " baste " or two more than that meant for the lower. Pare, core and slice juicy, tart apples ; put a layer upon the inner crust, sprinkle with sugar thickly scatter a few cloves upon the sugar ; then another layer of ap- ples, and so on, until the dish is fall. Cover with crust, FIRST WEEK SATURDAY. 33 pressed down firmly at the edges, and bake. Eat warm, or cold, with white sugar sifted over the top. y Apple pie is very good with cream poured over each slice. ,fir0t Macaroni Soup. Ham and Eggs. Salmi of Duck. Fried Parsnips. Stewed Salsify. Sweet Potatoes in Jackets. Rosie's Rice Custard. MACARONI SOUP. 4 quarts of cold water. 3 Ibs. of coarse, lean beef, cut into thin strips. 2 or 3 Ibs. of bones, broken small. 4 onions, sliced. i bunch of sweet herbs, chopped. Tomato juice or catsup. J Ib. of macaroni. A few salt pork bones. Fry the meat until half done, in a very little dripping. Take it out and fry the onions and bones in the same gravy. Put all into a soup-kettle with the herbs, and cover with 4 quarts of water (cold). Bring to a slow boil, and, at the end of four hours, strain into a great bowl to cool, in order that the fat may rise and be taken off. Meanwhile, make ready your macaroni by breaking it into short bits, covering well with boiling water, a little salted, and stewing slowly twenty minutes, or until tender. Add a lump of butter the size of a walnut ; let it stand, covered, for a few minutes, while you season the soup, adding the tomato juice or catsup. Boil, skim, 2* 34 JANUARY. and thicken with a tablespoonful of corn-starch wet up with cold water. When it is again on the boil, turn in the macaroni, taking care not to break it. Heat to scalding, but do not boil ; pour out, and serve. HAM AND EGGS. Cut your slices of ham of a uniform size and shape, cutting off the rind. Fry quickly in their own fat. Re- move from the pan with a wire spoon so soon as they are done, and arrange upon a Hot dish, setting this within the open oven, or upon a pot of boiling water to keep warm. Drop the eggs, as you break them, into the hot fat left in the frying-pan. Do not put so many in as to crowd one another. Each egg should preserve its individuality. Cook about three minutes, without turning. Take up with a spatula, or cake-turner, and lay one upon each slice of ham. Do not send the gravy to table. Strain, and use for dripping. SALMI OF DUCK. From the cold ducks left after yesterday's dinner cut all the meat in as neat slices as you can, leaving the joints of legs and wings whole. Take off the skin ; break the carcass into pieces, and put these, with the stuffing, into a saucepan with a fried onion, some sweet herbs, pepper, salt, and a pinch of allspice! Cover with cold water and stew gently, after it reaches the boil, for one hour. Cool, that the fat may rise and be taken" off. Strain the gravy when you have skimmed it ; return to the saucepan, boil and skim again, and stir in two table- spoonfuls of browned flour, wet with cold water ; lastly, stir in a great spoonful of butter. Stew five minutes long- er, and put in the meat. Draw to one side of the range, and set, closely covered, in a pot of boiling water for ten minutes. The meat must be thoroughly heated and steeped in the gravy, but not boil. Take the meat out with a perforated spoon, pile neatly upon a dish and pour the gravy over it. Garnish with triangles of stale bread fried crisp, and send a piece to each person who is helped to salmi. FIRST WEEK S A TURD A Y. 35 FRIED PARSNIPS. Boil, until tender, in hot water slightly salted ; let them get almost cold, scrape off the skin, and cut in thick, long slices. Dredge with flour and fry in hot dripping, turning as they brown. Drain very dry in a hot colan- der ; pepper and salt and serve. STEWED SALSIFY. Scrape the roots, dropping each into cold water as you do this, that they may not change color. Cut in pieces an inch long ; cover with hot water and stew until tender. Drain off two-thirds of the water and add enough milk to cover the salsify. Stew ten minutes in this ; put in a good lump of butter rolled thickly in flour. Pepper and salt. Boil up for one minute. SWEET POTATOES IN JACKETS. Parboil in their skins when you have washed them, se- lecting such as are of like size. Then put in a moderate oven and bake until soft all through. You can ascer- tain this by pinching the largest. Wipe off and serve in their skins. ROSIE'S RICE CUSTARD. i quart of milk. 3 eggs, well beaten. 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar, i tablespoonful of butter, i cup boiled rice. A little salt. Half the grated rind of a lemon. Boil the rice, drain, and stir, while hot, into the milk. Beat the eggs well ; rub butter and sugar to a cream with lemon-peel and a little salt, and stir into the warm milk. Mix well and bake in a buttered dish in a brisk oven. Eat warm or cold. We like it better warm, with a little cream poured over it when served in saucers. 36 . JANUARY. Beconir QJak. Sunbag. Soupe au Julienne. Roast Turkey. Cranberry Sauce. Mashed Potatoes, Browned. Stewed Corn. Celery. Tropical Snow. Light Cakes and Coffee. SOUPE AU JULIENNE. 6 Ibs. of lean beef. If possible, get it from the shin and have the accompanying bones cracked to bits. 6 quarts of water cold. Prepare the stock on Saturday. Put meat and bones into a pot with a close cover, pour on the water, and set it where it will heat very slowly. Boil, also very slowly, six hours, at the back of the range. Should the water sink fast in the pot, replenish from the boiling tea-kettle. At the end of six hours, turn the soup, meat, bones and all, into an earthenware vessel ; pepper and salt it and set on the cellar floor, covered, until next day. Take off, then, the cake of excellent dripping from the top ; strain the soup and set over the fire, about an hour before dinner, and heat gradually. The vegetables should be 2 carrots. 3 turnips. Half a head of cabbage. i pint Shaker corn, soaked overnight. 6 stalks of celery. i quart of tomatoes. i large onion. Clean, scrape, and mince all these, except the corn and tomatoes. Cut the carrot into dice and stew, by it- self, in a little cold water. Boil the corn in enough water to cover it, and add more hot water as it swells. Cover SECOND WEEK SUNDAY. 37 the minced vegetables with cold water, and so soon as it boils, turn it off, and replenish with boiling, from the ket- tle. This will take away the rank taste from cabbage and onion. When they are soft enough to pulp, strain well, but without pressing, into the soup. It is needless to add the vegetables, as the strength is in the liquor. Boil up and skim the soup before putting in the boiled corn and the canned tomatoes, which should be cut up small, and the unripe parts removed. Boil fifteen minutes, add the carrot, season to taste, and serve.* ROAST TURKEY. Rinse out the turkey well with soda and water ; then with salt, lastly with fair water. Stuff with a dressing made of bread-crumbs, wet up with butter and water and seasoned to your taste. Stuff the craw and tie up the neck. Fill the body and sew up the vent. I need hardly say that these strings are to be clipped and removed after the fowl is roasted. Tie the legs to the lower part of the body that they may not " sprawl," as the sinews shrink. Put into the dripping-pan, pour a teacupful of boiling water over it, and roast, basting often, allowing about ten minutes' time for every pound. Be careful not to have your oven too hot especially during the first half-hour or so. The turkey would, otherwise, be dry and blackened on the outside and raw within. And remember how much of the perfection of roasting meats and poultry de- pends upon basting faithfully. Boil the giblets tender in a little water. When the turkey is done, set it where it will keep warm ; skim the gravy left in the pan ; add a little boiling water ; thicken slightly with browned flour ; boil up once and add the giblets minced fine. Season to taste ; give another boil, and send to table in a gravy- boat. CRANBERRY SAUCE. Wash and pick over the cranberries ; put on to cook in a tin or porcelain vessel, allowing a teacupful of water * As I have mentioned in " Breakfast, Luncheon, and Tea," you can spare yourselves the trouble of preparing the vegetables for this %oup by buying those shred and dried for this purpose, put up ill packages and sold by grocers. 38 JANUARY. to each quart. Stew slowly, stirring often until they are as thick as 'marmalade. Take from the fire in little over an hour, if they have cooked steadily, sweeten plentifully with white sugar, and strain through coarse tarlatan, or mosquito-net, into a mould wet with cold water. Do this on Saturday. On Sunday, turn out into a glass dish. MASHED POTATOES BROWNED. Having mashed them in the usual manner, mound them smoothly upon a shallow earthenware dish and set them in a quick oven, glazing them with butter as they color. They should be of a light brown. Slip the mound from a coarser to a finer platter by the help of your cake-turner. It is still better if you have one of the pretty " enamelled " bake-dishes lined with porcelain, with silver stands for the table. They are invaluable for puddings, scallops, etc. STEWED CORN. Stew one quart of canned corn in its own liquor, set- ting the vessel containing it in an outer, of hot water. Should the corn be exceptionally dry, add a little cold water. When tender, pour in enough milk to cover the corn, bring to a boil, and put in a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour, and salt to taste. Stew gently, stirring well, three or four minutes, and turn into a deep dish. Keep the vessel containing the corn closely covered while it is cooking. The steam facilitates the process and pre- serves the color of the corn. CELERY Is the usual accompaniment of roast turkey. Prepare by selecting the blanched stalks, scraping off the rust, cut- ting off all but the youngest and tenderest tops, and laying these in cold water to crisp until wanted for the table. Garnish your turkey with alternate light and dark green sprigs of celery. SECOND WEEK MONDAY. 39 TROPICAL SNOW. 8 sweet oranges. i grated cocoanut. i glass of pale sherry. i cup of powdered sugar. 5 red bananas. Peel and cut the oranges into small pieces by dividing each lobe crosswise into thirds. Extract the seeds and put a layer of the fruit in the bottom of a glass dish. Pour a little wine upon it, and strew with powdered sugar. The cocoanut must have been prepared by removing the rind and throwing it into cold water for some time before grating it. Over the layer of oranges spread one of cocoa- nut ; cut the bananas into very thin, round slices, and lay these, one deep, upon the cocoanut. Repeat the order just given until your dish is full and the oranges and bana- nas used up. The top layer must be of cocoanut, heaped high, sprinkled with powdered sugar and garnished about the base with slices of banana. Eat soon, as the oranges toughen in the wine. Supplement this pretty, but not substantial dessert by a salver of lady's-fingers, and macaroons, and a good cup of coffee. Seronir tDeek. fttonfoag. Next Day's Soup. Turkey Scallop. Panned Oysters. Roast Potatoes. Tomato Sauce. Floating Island. Tea. NEXT DAY'S SOUP. Julienne soup, like most other soups the base of which is meat, is better when warmed over the second day. Set 4O JANUARY. it over the fire where it will heat, not too quickly, almosi to a boiL It will not " put back " the business of the day twent) minutes, and be a welcome addition to your dinner. TURKEY SCALLOP. Cut the meat from yesterday's turkey. .Crack the car cass to pieces, and put, with bits of skin, fat, and gristle, into a saucepan ; cover with cold water, and set on to stew slowly into gravy. Chop the meat very fine ; strew the bottom of a greased bake-dish with crumbs, and cover this with a thick stratum of minced turkey, stuffing, and tiny bits of butter. Pepper and salt, and put on more crumbs, then meat, and so on. Stale bread is better for this scallop than cracker-dust. Having used up all your meat and reserved enough crumbs for a thick upper crust, cover the dish and put aside in a cool place until your gravy is ready. It is economy of time, on Monday, to slip in such work as this between the many " must be's " of the season. Your scallop will be none the worse for waiting some hours before, or after, the gravy is added, provided you keep it covered. When the gravy has drawn all the substance from bones, etc., strain it and return to the saucepan with what was left in yesterday's gravy-boat, having first skimmed the latter. Boil up, thicken with browned flour wet up with cold water ; bring to another boil ; pour over the scallop, saving a little to wet the top. Now comes your layer of fine bread-crumbs. Wet these with the gravy in a bowl, season to taste, beat to a soft paste with a couple of eggs and spread evenly over the scallop. Invert a plate over the bake-dish and set in the oven. When, at the end of half an hour or so, the gravy bubbles up at the sides, remove the cover and brown. Serve in the pudding-dish. PANNED OYSTERS. A four-course dinner is hardly in order in most house- holds on Monday. You can, if you like, and have an effi- cient table-waiter, bring on oysters, as usual, between soup and meat. But there will be no violation of the " unities SECOND WEEK MONDAY. 4* of the drama" of a family dinner, if you send around >oui oysters, scallop, and vegetables together. i quart of oysters. Some thin slices of toast. Butter, salt, and pepper. Have ready some " patty pans " the more nearly upright the sides the better. Cut stale bread in rounds to fit the bottoms of these. Toast, and lay a piece in each. Wet with oyster liquor and put into each pan as many oysters as it will conveniently hold. Pepper and salt ; put a bit of butter upon each ; arrange all in a large dripping-pan ; invert another of the same size over it, and bake eight minutes, or until the oysters "ruffle." Send hot to table in the pans. You can toast the bread at breakfast-time if you choose. The oysters can go into the oven when the soup is poured out, and be in good season on the table. By this arrange- ment they will not interfere with the other "baked meats." Panned oysters are always popular, and there is no more simple manner of cooking this favorite shell-fish. ROAST POTATOES. Choose large, fair potatoes, wash and wipe, and bake until soft to the grasp. Three-quarters of an hour should suffice. Take out, before the oysters go in ; wipe off dust and ashes, and serve in a heated napkin. This will keep them hot a long time, yet prevent them from." sweating." TOMATO SAUCE. Open a can of tomatoes at least one hour before it is to be used, and empty into an earthenware basin, that no close or metallic taste may linger about them. Cook in tin or porcelain. Stew half an hour, gently ; add salt, pepper, a teaspoonful of sugar, and three of butter, a handful of dry bread-crumbs or, if you have any stewed corn left from yesterday, use that instead of bread. Cook ten minutes longer, and turn out. 42 JANUARY. FLOATING ISLAND. 1 quart of milk. 4 eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately. 4 tablespoonfuls (great ones) of sugar. 2 teaspoonfuls extract of bitter almond or vanilla. (COLGATE'S extracts are the best in market, and do not spoil within a few days after they are uncorked, as the manner of some is.) \ cup of currant jelly. Heat the milk to scalding, but not boiling. Beat the yolks, stir into them the sugar, and pour upon them, gradually and mixing well, a cupful of the hot milk. Re- turn to the saucepan and boil until it begins to thicken. You can do this while breakfast is cooking, before the Moloch clothes-boiler goes on. When cool, flavor -and pour into a glass dish. Heap upon the top a meringue of the whites whipped until you can cut it, into which you have beaten the jelly, a teaspoonful at a time. TEA. " A comfortable cup of tea " never comes amiss to a fagged housewife, be it served at breakfast, luncheon, or dinner. The best way to insure its goodness that is, that it be strong, hot and fresh is to have your own tea- urn or kettle on the table, with a spirit-lamp burning under it. Scald the tea-pot, put in the tea ; cover with boiling water ; put a " cosey " or a thick napkin about it, and let it stand five minutes before filling with more boiling water. Wait a minute longer and pour out. SECOND WEEK TUESDAY. 43 geeonir Mutton Soup with Tapioca. Salmon Pudding. Beefsteak. Potatoes a la Lyonnaise. Macaroni with Cheese. Susie's Bread Pudding. MUTTON SOUP WITH TAPIOCA. 3 Ibs. perfectly lean mutton. The scrag makes good soup and costs little. 2 or 3 Ibs. of bones, well pounded. 1 onion. 2 turnips. 2 carrots. 2 stalks of celery. A few sprigs of parsley. If you have any tomatoes left from yesterday, add them. 4 tablespoonfuls of pearl or granulated tapioca (not heaping spoonfuls). 4 quarts of water. Put on the meat, cut in small pieces, with the bones, in two quarts of cold water. Heat very slowly, and when it boils pour in two quarts of hoi water from the kettle. Chop the vegetables ; cover with cold water. So soon as they begin to simmer, throw off the first water, replenishing with hot, and stew until they are boiled to pieces. The meat should cook steadily, never fast, five hours, keeping the pot-lid on. Strain into a great bowl ; let it cool to throw the .fat to the surface ; skim and re- turn to the fire. Season with pepper and salt, boil up, take off the scum ; add the vegetables with their liquor. Heat together ten minutes, strain again, and bring to a slow boil before the tapioca goes in. This should have been soaked one hour in cold water, then cooked in the same within another vessel of boiling water until each grain is clear. It is necessary to stir up often from the 44 JANUARY. bottom while cooking. Stir gradually into the soup until the tapioca is dissolved. Send around grated cheese with this soup. SALMON PUDDING. i can preserved salmon. 3 e gg s * 4 tablespoonfuls melted butter. cup fine bread-crumbs. Pepper, salt, and minced parsley. Mince the fish, draining off the liquor for the sauce. Rub in the butter until thoroughly incorporated. Work in the crumbs, the seasoning, at last the beaten eggs. Put into a buffered pudding-mould, set in a dripping-pan full of hot water. Cover the mould, and steam in the oven, keeping the water in the pan at a fast boil, filling up as it evaporates, for one hour. Set it in cold water one minute when you have taken it from the oven. This will make it shrink from the sides and turn out easily upon a flat dish. SAUCE FOR THE ABOVE. i cupful of milk heated to a boil and thickened with a tablespoonful of corn-starch, previously wet up with cold water. The liquor from the salmon. i great spoonful of butter. i raw egg, beaten light. Juice of half a lemon. Mace and cayenne pepper to taste. Put the egg irito the thickened milk when you have stirred in the butter and liquor ; take from the fire, season, and let it stand in hot water three minutes, covered. Lastly, put in the lemon-juice and turn out immediately. Pour it all over and about the pudding. Cut the latter into slices when helping it out. BEEFSTEAK. First of all, let me recommend the plan of broiling a steak under, instead of over the grate. I have found so SECOND WEEK TUESDAY. 45 many and manifest advantages in the former method that I have had a gridiron made to fit beneath my range. Wipe the steak dry, and broil upon a buttered gridiron, turning frequently, whenever it begins to drip. When done, which should be in twelve minutes, if your fire is clear and strong, lay upon a hot dish a chafing-dish is best season with pepper and salt (not until then), and butter very liberally. Put over it a hot cover, and wait five minutes before sending to table, to draw the juices to the surface and allow the seasoning to pene- trate the steak. POTATOES X LA LYONNAISE. Parboil a dozen potatoes at breakfast-time, and set aside, when you have peeled them, as they should get perfectly cold. When you are ready to cook them, heat some butter, or good dripping, in a frying-pan ; fry in it one small onion, chopped, fine, until it begins to change color say about one minute. Then put in the potatoes, cut into dice, not too thick or broad. Stir well and cook five minutes, taking care the potatoes do not break to pieces. They must not brown. Put in some minced parsley just before taking them up. Drain dry by shaking in a heated colander. Serve very hot. MACARONI WITH CHEESE. Cook half a pound of pipe macaroni, broken into inch lengths, in boiling water until tender. Drain this off, and substitute a cupful of cold milk. When the macaroni has again come to a boil, season with pepper and salt and stir in a great spoonful of butter ; lastly, two tablespconfuls of dry, grated cheese. Turn into a deep dish, strew moie cheese thickly over it, and it is ready for use. SUSIE'S BREAD PUDDING. i quart of milk. 4 eggs. 3 cups very fine, dry bread-crumbs, i tablespoonful of melted butter. i teacupful white sugar. Juice and half the grated peel of a lemon. 46 JANUARY. Rub butter and sugar together. Beat the yolks of the four eggs and the white of one very light ; mix the butter and sugar with these. Soak the crumbs in the milk, and beat in with the other ingredients, hard and fast. Add the lemon last. Bake in a buttered dish. When nearly done and fully " set," even in the middle, spread with a meringue made of the reserved whites, beaten stiff with a little sugar. It is good eaten warm not really hot or cold, especially if a little cream be poured over each saucerful. tiftttk. Bean Soup. Fillet of Veal, Stuffed. Baked Corn. Potato Cakes. Canned String-Beans. Baked Apple Dumplings. . Brandy Sauce. BEAN SOUP. Soak a quart of dried beans all night in soft water. Throw this off next morning, and cover the beans for two hours in water a little more than lukewarm. Put over the fire with five quarts of cold water, and one pound of salt pork. A -bone of veal or beef may be added, if you have it. Boil slowly for at least four hours : shred into it a small onion, four stalks of celery, pepper the pork may salt it sufficiently simmer half an hour longer, rub through a colander until only husks and fibres remain, and send to table. Pass sliced lemon with it. FILLET OF VEAL STUFFED. Make ready a force-meat of bread-crumbs, chopped thyme and parsley ; pepper, salt, and a pinch of nutmeg \ SECOND WEEK WEDNESDAY. 47 a little dripping for shortening ; moisten with warm water and bind with a raw egg. If your butcher has not "put up" the fillet, remove the bone, pin the meat into a round with skewers ; then bind firmly with a strip of muslin passed two or three times about it. Fill the cavity left by the bone with dressing, and thrust the same between the folds of the meat, besides making cuts with a sharp knife to receive more. Tuck in a strip of fat pork here and there. Baste three times with salt and water while roasting, afterwards with its own gravy. At last, dredge once with flour and baste with butter. Cut the bands, draw out the skewers carefully, and serve. BAKED CORN. To one can of corn allow a pint of milk (more if the corn be dry), three eggs, two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one of white sugar, pepper and salt to taste. Beat the eggs very light, rub butter and sugar together and stir in hard ; next, the corn and seasoning ; finally, the milk. Beat hard, and bake in a buttered dish for half an hour, covered. Then brown by lifting the top. Send up in the bake-dish. POTATO CAKES. Boil and mash the potatoes, working in salt and butter and an egg or two beaten light. Let them get cold ; make into cakes of size and shape to suit yourself; roll in raw egg, then in flour, or cracker-dust, and fry quickly in hot dripping. Take each up as soon as it is done, and drain with a wire spoon, before laying upon a hot dish. CANNED STRING-BEANS. Cook in their own liquor half an hour, or until very tender. First, however, cut them into neat lengths. The comeliness of the dish depends upon this. When almost done, stir in a tablespoon ful of butter, with salt and pepper. Simmer ten minutes longer, and serve by draining off the liquid and heaping the beans upon a hot dish, with a bit of butter on the top. If the can does not 4$ JANUARY. contain liquor enough to cover the beans, add a little cold water in cooking them. BAKED APPLE DUMPLINGS. i quart prepared flour. i tablespoonful of butter and the same of lard. i pint of milk. i saltspoonful of salt. Some ripe apples. - Chop the shortening into the flour when you have sifted and salted the latter. Wet up with milk and roll out quickly in a sheet less than half an inch thick. Cut into squares ; lay in the centre of each a tart, juicy apple, pared and cored. Bring the corners of the square to- gether and pinch to join them neatly. Lay in a baking- pan, the joined edges downward, and bake to a fine brown. When done, brush over with butter and shut the oven-door for a minute more to glaze them. Sift powdered sugar over them, and eat hot. These are more wholesome and more easily prepared than boiled dumplings. Eat with sweet sauce. BRANDY SAUCE. 2 cups of powdered sugar. j- cup of butter. i wineglass of brandy. That from brandied peaches the liqueur, if you have it. i teaspoonful mixed cinnamon and mace. Warm the butter slightly, work in the sugar until they form a rich cream, when add brandy and spice. Beat hard ; shape by putting into a mould made very wet with cold water, and set in a cool place to harden. Should it not turn out readily by shaking gently, d'p for a second in hot water. SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. 49 Veal and Sago Soup. Jugged Rabbit. Scalloped Potatoes. Sweet Potatoes, Fried. Minced Celery with Egg Dress jng. Macaroni and Almond Pudding. VEAL AND SAGO SOUP. 3 Ibs. veal. \ Ib. pearl sago. 3 quarts of water. 4 eggs. i pint of milk. Cut the meat into bits ; put on with the water and boil very slowly, with the pot-lid laid on loosely, four hours, until the meat is in rags. Strain through coarse net, or a wire soup-strainer (which you ought to possess), season with pepper and salt, and return to the kettle when you have scalded it out. . Meanwhile, the sago should have been washed and soaked in lukewarm water, for an hour. .Stir it into the broth and let them simmer, stirring often, half an hour. Heat the milk scalding hot in another vessel, beat the yolks of the eggs light, reserving the whites for your pudding; pour gradually over these a cupful of the hot milk, and stir carefully into the soup with all the milk. Taste, to see if it needs more seasoning ; add a little Chopped parsley, if you like ; let it almost boil and pour into the tureen. It should be about as thick as boiled custard. Should the sago thicken it too much, add boil- \ng water. A relishful and wholesome soup. JUGGED RABBIT. i full-grown but tender rabbit or hare. Ib. corned ham. i cup of good gravy, saved from yesterday's roast. 50 JANUARY. Dripping for frying. i onion, sliced. Juice of i lemon. i tablespoonful currant jelly. Parsley, pepper and salt, and browned flour. Joint the rabbit, and lay for an hour in salted water. Wipe dry and fry in the dripping, with the onion, until brown. Put in the bottom of a tin pail, or farina-kettle, a layer of salt pork cut into strips ; upon this one of rabbit. Sprinkle with pepper and a little salt. Scatter fried onion over the rabbit and proceed in this order un- til your meat is used up. Pour in the gravy ; cover the vessel, and set it in another of cold water. Bring gradually to a boil and stew steadily one hour, or until tender. Arrange the meat upon a dish ; strain the gravy, thicken with browned flour wet up with cold water ; boil up once ; stir in the jelly and lemon-juice, heat to boiling, and pour over the rabbit. If you have no gravy, use a little butter and water instead. SCALLOPED POTATOES. 3 cups mashed potato. 3 tablespoonfuls of milk. 3 hard-boiled eggs. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. i handful very dry bread-crumbs. Salt. Work butter, milk, and salt into the hot mashed potatoes. Put a layer in the bottom of a pudding-dish well greased ; cover this with thin slices of egg ; salt and pepper ; an- other stratum of potato, and so on, until the dish is full. Strew bread-crumbs thickly over the uppermost layer of potatoes. Stick bits of butter over this and bake, covered, until hot throughout; then brown quickly. Send up in the pudding-dish. A simple and nice side-dish. SWEET POTATOES FRIED. Boil, peel, and when cold, slice the potatoes neatly. Fry in good dripping until they are of a light brown Drain from the fat and eat hot. SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. 5 1 MINCED CELERY WITH EGG DRESSING. Scrape and wash the celery and cut into half-inch lengths, having first crisped it. in cold water. Rub the yolks of two hard-boiled eggs to a paste with a tablespoon- ful of oil ; add salt, pepper, a little powdered sugar, vinegar to make the mixture liquid, and pour over the celery Serve in a salad-bowl and eat at once, lest the celery should toughen in the vinegar. MACARONI AND ALMOND PUDDING. J Ib. macaroni. 3 pints of milk. 1 cup of white sugar. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 5 eggs. \ Ib. sweet almonds, blanched and chopped. Rose-water and bitter almond flavoring. A little salt and nutmeg. Simmer the macaroni half an hour in a pint of the milk. When tender, but not broken, put in butter and salt. Take the saucepan from the fire and turn out the con- tents to cool while you make a custard of the rest of the milk, the eggs and sugar. Add the latter to the scalding milk, but do not boil the custard. Chop the almonds when you have blanched them, /. y. Stew constantly, but never fast, for one hour after it comes to a boil, or until the chickens are tender. The time will depend upon their age. If they are tough, put them on early and cook all the more slowly. Add now the onion, parsley, and pepper, with salt, if needed. Heat again, and stir in the flour wet up in the cup of milk. Beat the egg's and pour upon them a cupful of hot gravy ; mix well, and put back into the soup with the butter. Just as the stew begins to simmer again, remove from the fire. Take out and pile the chicken upoi* a dish ; then pour the gravy over all. POTATOES A L'ITALIENNE. Instead of mashing the potatoes with a beetle or spoon, whip them up light with a silver fork. When they are fine and mealy, beat in a few spoonfuls of milk, a table- spoonful of butter, the yolks of two eggs, pepper and salt. Whip into a creamy heap before adding, with a few Dex- terous strokes, the stiffly-frothed whites. Pile roughly up on a buttered pie-dish ; brown quickly in the oven, and transfer, with the help of a cake-turner, to a flat dish. Make a rather too abundant dish, according to this re- ceipt, as the residue will be found useful in to-morrow's bill of fare. TOMATOES STEWED WITH ONION. Stew in the usual manner, adding a small onion minced fine. When they have cooked half an hour, season with 54 JANUARY. pepper, salt, a little sugar, and a good spoonful of butter, Simmer ten minutes more, uncovered, and turn out. CHEESE FONDU. <* 1 cup of bread-crumbs, dry and fine. 2 scant cups of fresh milk. J- Ib. dry, rich cheese, grated. 3 eggs, whipped light. i tablespoonful of melted butter. Pepper and salt. A. pinch of soda, dissolved in hot water. Soak the crumbs in the milk ; beat in the eggs, the but- ter, seasoning lastly, the cheese. Pour into a neat pud- ding-dish, strew dry bread-crumbs over the top, and bake in a quick oven until delicately browned. Serve in the pudding-dish, and at once, as it falls in cooling. Very good ! SPONGE GINGERBREAD. 5 cups of flour, dried and sifted. Measure after sifting. 1 cup of molasses. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. i cup of sugar. 1 rather larger cup of sour, or buttermilk. 2 teaspoonfuls of saleratus (not soda), dissolved in hot water. 2 teaspoonfuls ginger. i teaspoonful of cinnamon. Mix molasses, sugar, butter, and spice together. Warm slightly, and beat hard for five minutes. Add the milk, then the soda, lastly the flour. Beat three minutes, and bake in a broad, shallow pan. Take heed that it does not burn. Eat warm. CHOCOLATE. 6 tablespoonfuls of chocolate to each pint of boiling water. As much milk as you have chocolate. Sweeten to taste. Rub the chocolate smooth in a little cold water, and stir into the hot. Boil twenty minutes ; put in the milk, SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. 5$ and boil five minutes more, stirring often. Sweeten a/ pleasure, while boiling, or in the cups. Send around with the warm gingerbread and some slices of mild cheese. You will not regret not having prepared a more pretentious dessert. Seccmb iDeek. Clear Gravy Soup. Oyster Salad. Calf's Liver a la Mode. Salsify Fritters. Ftetatoes a la Duchesse. Corn-meal Fruit Pudding. CLEAR GRAVY SOUP. 5 Ibs. lean beef, the coarser parts, of course. Some bones. 2 slices of lean corned ham. 2 carrots. 2 turnips. 6 stalks of celery. J package Coxe's gelatine. Pepper and salt. A bunch of sweet herbs. Dripping. 5 quarts of cold water. Cut the meat into dice and slice the onions. Fry the latter brown in some good dripping. Take them out, and fry the meat in the same fat, turning often, until it has a thick brown coat. Put it, drained from the fat, into the soup-kettle, with two quarts of cold water, and set where it will come to a boil in about an hour. The bones should also be fried, and put into the pot with the meat. When these fairly boil, skim, add three quarts of cold water, and stew gently four hours. If you dine early, the soup should go on before breakfast. Put herbs and vegetables, in- cluding the fried onions, all chopped up, into a saucepan, 56 JANUARY. with enough cold water to cover them, and boil to pieces. Strain the soup half an hour before dinner ; season, re- turn to the pot ; boil and skim. Strain the vegetable liquor into it, without squeezing or rubbing. Boil up once more, skim well, and put in the gelatine, which should have soaked one hour in a little cold water. Sim- mer five minutes and pour out. The soup should be of a clear, light brown. Should the color not suit you, burn a tablespoonful of sugar in a tin cup, add three or four spoonfuls of boiling water, stir until you get a deep color, and turn off the water into the soup. It will not injure the flavor. Please never lose sight of the cardinal principle that all the essence, strength,and taste should be extracted from meat, vegetables, etc., in soup-making, and that the soup which boils fast is lost. Take plenty of time, and cast an eye into the kitchen from hour to hour until you have edu- cated your cook up to a glimmering appreciation of this law of enlightened cookery. OYSTER SALAD. i quart of oysters, cut, not chopped, into small piece:.. i bunch of celery, also cut small. i tablespoonful best oil. i small spoonful of salt, and the same of pepper, like- wise of mustard (made). J cup cider vinegar. Saltspoonful of powdered sugar. Drain the liquor from the oysters and cut them up. Add the minced celery. Prepare the seasoning, putting in the vinegar last, and pour the mixture over the celery and oysters. Toss up well with a silver fork. Do this, just before dinner, as the salad will be injured by lying long in the dressing. CALF'S LIVER A LA MODE. 1 calf s liver. Ib. fat salt pork. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, or dripping. 2 small onions. i tablespoonful chopped parsley and marjoram. SECOND WEEK -SATURDAY. 57 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar. i teaspoonful mixed cloves, mace, and allspice. i tablespoonful Worcestershire sauce. Pepper and salt to taste. Wash the liver thoroughly, and soak half an hour in salted water. Wipe, make incisions about an inch apart, and lard with strips of pork, projecting slightly on each side. Fry the onions and herbs in the dripping. Take them out, put in the liver, and fry both sides to a light brown. Turn all into a saucepan, with the vinegar and water to cover the liver barely. Cover closely, and stew gently an hour and a half. Lay the liver on a hot dish, strain the gravy, return to the fire, thicken with a tablespoonful of browned flour, put in the sauce and spice ; boil up and pour some of it over the liver, the rest into a gravy-boat. What is left from dinner will be nice for luncheon or tea, cut horizontally in thin slices. SALSIFY FRITTERS. 1 bunch salsify. 2 eggs. cup milk. Flour for thin batter. Lard, or dripping. Salt to taste. Scrape and grate the roots, and stir into a batter made of the beaten eggs, the milk, and flour. Grate the salsify directly into this, that it may not blacken by exposure to the air. Salt, and drop a spoonful into the boiling fat to see if it is of the right consistency. As fast as you fry the fritters, throw into a hot colander to drain. One great spoonful of batter should make a fritter. POTATOES A LA DUCHESSE. Cut the remnants of yesterday's potatoes a I Italienne into rounds with a cake-cutter, dipped in cold water. Set like biscuits, but not so near as to touch one another, in a greased pan, and bake quickly, brushing top and sides with beaten egg when they begin to brown. Serve upon a heated napkin folded flat, on a platter. 3* 5 JANUARY. CORN-MEAL FRUIT PUDDING. i heaping cup white Indian meal. 3 pints of milk. i cup of flour. 4 beaten eggs. 1 cup of white sugar. 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter. J- Ib. of raisins, seeded and cut in two. i teaspoonful of salt, and same of mixed mace and cin- namon. i teaspoonful of soda, and two teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar, sifted twice with the flour. Scald a pint of milk and wet up the meal with it, stirring well. While it is cooling, add the flour, wet into batter with a pint of cold milk. Heat the remaining pint, and when scalding, add sugar and eggs. Beat this gradually, hard and long, into the cooled paste. When well mixed, put in butter, spice, and the fruit dredged with flour. Beat fast and deep for two minutes. Bake in a buttered dish, in a tolerably brisk oven. Cover with paper as it brow as. It ought to be done in three-quarters of an hour. Eat Uot, with butter and sugar. l)u*j& ftjttk. Stmtrag. Tomato Soup. Roast Beef, with Yorkshire Pudding, Macaroni al Napolitano. Potatoes au naturel. French Beans, Saute. Apple Sauce. Made Mustard. Narcissus Blanc-mange. Coffee. TOMATO SOUP. Stew one can of tomatoes half an hour ; strain and rub through a colander iwto the soup left from yesterday. THIRD WEEK SUNDAY. 59 Heat to a slow boil, and simmer together ten minutes before serving. ROAST BEEF, WITH YORKSHIRE PUDDING. Have your meat ready for roasting on Saturday, always Roast upon a grating or several clean sticks (not pine) laid over the dripping-pan. Dash a cup of boiling water over the beef when it goes into the oven ; baste often, and see that the fat does not scorch. About three-quarters of an hour before it is done, mix the pudding. YORKSHIRE PUDDING. 1 pint of milk. 4 eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately. 2 cups of flour prepared flour is best, i teaspoonful of salt. Use less flour if the batter grows too. stiff. Mix quickly ; pour off the fat from the top of the gravy in the dripping-pan, leaving just enough to prevent the pudding from sticking to the bottom. Pour in the batter and con- tinue to roast the beef, letting the dripping fall upon the pudding below. The oven should be brisk by this time. Baste the meat with the gravy you have taken out to make room for the batter. In serving, cut the pudding into squares and lay about the meat in the dish. It is very delicious. MACARONI AL NAPOLITANO. \ Ib. of macaroni. < 2 nice sweetbreads. 1 small onion, minced. Parsley, pepper, and salt. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. Wash the sweetbreads ; lay in salted water fifteen min- utes, and stew with the onion, in a pint of cold water, a little salt, until done, as may be seen by cutting into the thickest part. Wash the macaroni when you have broken it into small bits, and cook gently until tender, but not to breaking, in the hot broth from which you have taken the sweetbreads and strained the onion. Stew in a farina 6O JANUARY. kettle or tin saucepan set in hot water. Chop the sweet- breads ; stir the butter into the macaroni, which should have absorbed all the broth ; then the minced sweet- breads. Season with parsley, pepper, and salt ; cover closely and leave in the hot water, but not over the fire, five minutes before turning into a deep dish. POTATOES AU NATUREL Are, with all their high-sounding name, only the homely vegetables boiled in their skins. Put on in cold water, bring to a slow boil, and increase the heat until a fork will pierce the largest. Throw in salt ; turn off every drop of the water ; set back on the range, without the cover, for two minutes to dry, peel, and send to table in a napkin. FRENCH BEANS, SAUTE. Open a can of French or "string" beans; cut into inch lengths and boil in the can liquor, adding a little cold water, if needed, for twenty minutes. Drain, return to the saucepan with two tablespoonfuls of butter and a little salt and pepper. Toss constantly with a fork until they are hissing hot, but not until they scorch. Serve in a hot vegetable dish. APPLE SAUCE. Pare, core, and slice tart apples, and stew in water enough to cover them until they break to pieces. Beat to a pulp with a good lump of butter and plenty of sugar. *Eat cold. Make enough for several meals, as it will keep a week at this season. MADE MUSTARD. 4 tablespoonfuls English mustard. 2 teaspoonfuls of salt. The same quantity of salad oil and white sugar, i teaspoonful of pepper. Vinegar to make a smooth paste that from celery, or onion pickle, if you have it. Rub mustard, oil, sugar, pepper, and salt together \ wet, THIRD WEEK SUNDAY. 6 1 by degrees, with vinegar, beating very hard at the last, when the proper consistency has been gained. This is far superior to mustard as usually mixed for the table. NARCISSUS BLANC-MANGE. i quart of milk. 1 package of Cooper's gelatine, soaked in two cups of cold water. Yolks of 4 eggs, beaten light. 2 cups of white sugar. Vanilla and rose-water for flavoring. Less than 2 cups of rich cream. Heat the milk to scalding ; stir in gelatine and sugar. When these are dissolved, take out a cupful and pour, by degrees, over the beaten yolks. Return to the saucepan and stir together over the fire for two minutes after the boiling point is reached. Take from the range, flavor with rose-water, and pour into a mould with a cylinder in the centre, previously wet with cold water. Next day, turn cut upon a dish with a broad bottom, and fill the hollow in the middle with the cream, whipped light with a little powdered sugar and flavored with vanilla. Pile more whipped cream about the base. Send your coffee around after the blanc-mange has been eaten. A spoonful of whipped cream, without the vanilla, will give a touch of elegance to the beverage. Let this happy thought come to you while you are preparing the cream, and before the flavoring goes in. 62 JANUARY. JHontraj). Variety Soup. Beef Pudding. Scored Potatoes. Canned Peas. Mixed Pickles. Apple Meringue. Crackers and Cheese. VARIETY SOUP. Chop a quarter of a small cabbage, a turnip, and some sweet herbs ; cover with cold water, and heat to boiling. Throw off the first water, and add a quart more of cold. Put in the roast-beef bones, after you have cut off the meat, with a slice or two, or bone, of ham. Stew all two hours at the back of the range. Half an hour before dinner, warm up what was left from Sunday's soup. Strain the hot liquor in which your cabbage, etc.. have boiled, into this. Pick out bits of bones and meat from the colander, mashing the vegetables as little as possible ; put these into the soup, with any macaroni or beans you may have left over ; season to your liking ; simmer for ten minutes ; thicken with a tablespoonful of corn-starch, and pour out. This will not be a "show-soup," but it will be savory and nutritious. BEEF PUDDING. i pint of milk. 3 eggs. A cupful of prepared flour. A little salt. i tablespoonful of melted butter. Cut the meat from yesterday's roast into neat pieces ; lay them in the bottom of a buttered pudding-dish, season well, and pour a few spoonfuls of cold gravy over them, letting it soak into the meat while you prepare a batter according to the above directions, taking care not to get it too stiff. Pour over the meat and bake in a quick oven, Eat hot. THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 63 SCORED POTATOES. Mash in the usual way, mixing rather soft ; heap and /ound upon a greased pie-plate ; score deeply in triangles with the back of a carving or butcher's knife ; brown in the oven, and slip carefully to another dish. CANNED PEAS. Open a can of peas an hour before cooking them, that there may be no musty, airless taste about them, and turn into a bowl. When ready for them put on in a farina- kettle or one saucepan within another of hot water. If dry, add cold water to cover them, and stew about twenty-five minutes. Drain, stir in a generous lump of butter ; pepper and salt. APPLE MERINGUE. Butter a neat pudding-dish, and nearly fill it with apple sauce. Cover and leave in the oven until it is smoking hot. Draw to the oven door and spread with a meringue made of the whites of three eggs, whipped stiff with a little powdered sugar. (Your pudding will be much nicer, by the way, if you have beaten the yolks into the stewed apple before putting it into the dish.) Shut the oven door long enough to brown the meringue very lightly. Eat nearly or quite cold, with sugar and cream. Send around crackers and cheese as an accompaniment. l)tvb fttek. Celery Soup. Veal Cutlets with Ham. Cauliflower with Cream Saucd Stewed Potatoes. , Mixed Pickles. Jam Pudding. Tea, and Albert Biscuits. CELERY SOUP. 3 Ibs. of veal, and some bones of the same. 2 onions. 64 JANUARY. 2 bunches of celery, using the white parts only. 3 quarts of cold water. 1 pint of fresh milk. 2 dessertspoonfuls of corn-starch. Pepper and salt. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. Some fried bread. Cut the veal up small, crack the bones, and put on in cold water. Boil slowly four hours, replenishing with boiling water should the broth sink to less than two- thirds of the original quantity. Strain, pressing all the strength out of the meat. Cut the celery into bits, and stew in the broth, with the minced onions, until so soft that you can rub through a colander. Strain a second time, and return the soup, with the pulped celery, to the fire. Season, and thicken with the corn-starch wet up in the pint of milk. Stir until it boils, and lastly, put in, carefully, the butter, after which take from the range. Have ready a double handful of fried bread in the tureen, and pour the soup upon it. VEAL CUTLETS AND HAM. 2 Ibs. of veal cutlets, neatly trimmed, and the same of sliced ham. Yolks of 2 eggs. Bread- or cracker-crumbs. Dripping for frying. Divide each cutlet into pieces about two inches wide by three inches long, and cut the ham into slices of corre- sponding size. Dip in the egg, then roll in the bread- crumbs, and fry the ham first, afterwards the veal, until nicely browned on both sides. Sprinkle salt upon the veal cutlets. Arrange upon the dish in alternate slices of veal and ham, overlapping one another. Anoint the ham with butter mixed with a little mustard ; the veal with butter melted up with a spoonful of tart jelly. CAULIFLOWER WITH CREAM SAUCE. Boil your cauliflower, when you have washed and trimmed it, and tied it up in coarse net or taiietan. THIRD WEEK TUESDA Y. 6$ Cook in boiling water slightly salted, keeping the stalk end uppermost. Prepare, in another saucepan, the dress- ing, by adding to a cup of scalding milk a tablespoonful of corn-starch wet up with cold water, two tablespoonfuls of butter, pepper and salt at discretion. Drain, the cauli- flower, remove the net, put into a deep dish, the flower up, and drench with the boiling sauce. STEWED POTATOES. Cut into slices, cook until tender, but not to breaking, in hot water. Turn half of this off and replace by as much milk, in which some slices of onion have been boiled and strained out. Add pepper and salt, a good lump of butter rolled in flour, and some chopped parsley. Simmer three minutes, and turn into a vegetable dish. MIXED PICKLES, Home-made or bought, should be passed with the cutlets. JAM PUDDING. 3 cups of milk. 4 eggs. f of a cup of sugar. Bread and butter. Sweet jam berry, peach, or quince. Spread slices of stale bread with butter, then with jam. Fit them closely into a buttered pudding-dish until it is two-thirds full. Make a custard by adding the beaten eggs and sugar to the scalding milk, but do not let them boil. Lay a heavy saucer upon the bread and butter to prevent floating, and moisten gradually with the hot cus- tard. Let all soak for f.fteen minutes before the dish goes into the oven. When it is hot throughout, take off the saucer, that the pudding may brown equally. Eat cold. TEA, AND ALBERT BISCUITS May follow the pudding. 66 JANUARY. Sheep's-head Soup. Roast Hare, with Currant Jelly. Macaroni, with Ham. Stuffed Potatoes. Turnips. Fig Pudding. SHEEP'S-HEAD SOUP. Get your butcher to clean a sheep's head with the skin on, as he would a calfs head for soup. Let him also split it in half that you may get at the brains.- Take them out, with the tongue, and set aside. Break the bone of the head, wash it well in several waters, and soak for half an hour in salted water. Cover it with fresh water, and heat gradually to a boil. Drain off the water, and thus remove any peculiar odor from the wool or other causes, and add four quarts of cold water, with two turnips, two roots of salsify, two carrots, two stalks of celery, and a bunch of sweet herbs, all chopped .fine. Boil slowly four hours. Strain the soup into a bowl, pressing all the nourishment out of the meat, and let it stand in a cool place until the fat rises thickly to the surface to be taken off. The vegetables should be soft enough to pass freely through a fine colander, or coarse strainer, when rubbed. While the soup cools, prepare the force-meat balls. The tongue and brains should have been cooked and chopped up, then rubbed to a paste together and mixed with an CvUial quantity of bread-crumbs, salt, pepper, and parsley, bound with a raw egg, and rolled into small balls, dipped in flour. Set them, not so near as to touch one another, in a tin plate or dripping-pan, and put in a quick oven until a crust is formed upon the top, when they must be allowed to cool. Return the skimmed broth to the fire ; season ; boil up once ; take off the scum, and add a cup of milk in which you have stirred a tablespoonful of corn-starch. Simmer, stirring all the while, for two minutes after it boils. Put the force-meat "balls into the THIRD WEEK WEDNESDAY. 6? tureen and pour the soup gently over them so as not to break them. This is a good and cheap soup, and deserves to be better known. ROAST HARE. Have the hare skinned and well cleaned. Cooks are often careless about the latter duty. Stuff, as you would a fowl, with a force-meat of bread-crumbs, chopped fat pork, a little sweet marjoram, onion, pepper, and salt, just moistened withjiot water. Sew up the hare with fine cotton ; tie the legs close to the body in a kneeling posi- tion. The English cook it with the head on, but we take it off as more seemly in our eyes. Lay in the dripping-pan, back uppermost ; pour two cups of boiling water over it ; cover with another pan and bake, closely covered, except when you baste it with butter and water, for three-quar- ters of an hour. Uncover, baste freely with the gravy until nicely browned : dredge with flour and anoint with butter until a fine froth appears on the surface. Take up the hare, put on a hot dish, and keep covered while you make' the gravy. Strain, and skim that left in the pan ; season, thicken with browned flour, stir in a good spoon- ful of currant-jelly, and some chopped parsley; boil up; pour a few spoonfuls of it over the hare ; serve the rest in a gravy-boat. Clip, instead of tearing hard at the cot- ton threads. Send currant-jelly around with it. MACARONI AND HAM. Break the macaroni into inch lengths, and stew ten minutes in boiling water. Meanwhile, cut two slices of corned (not smoked) ham into dice, wash well and put on to boil in a cup of cold water. Drain the macaroni, and when the ham has cooked (or ten minutes after coming to a boil, pour it, with the liquor, over the macaroni. Sea- son with pepper, simmer in a closed farina-kettle for fif- teen minutes ; add a little chopped parsley, covei, and let it stand a minute more, and serve in a deep dish. The fatter the ham the better for this dish. Always pass grated cheese with stewed macaroni. 68 JANUARY. STUFFEJO POTATOES. Wash and wipe large, fair potatoes, and bake soft. Cut a round piece from the top of each, and carefully pre- serve it. Scrape out the inside with a spoon without breaking the skin, and set aside the empty cases with the covers. Mash the potato which you have taken out, smoothly, working into it butter, a raw egg, a little cream, pepper, and salt. When soft, heat in a saucepan set over the fire in boiling water. Stir until smoking hot, fill the skins with the mixture, put on the caps, set in the oven for three minutes, and send to table wrapped in a heated napkin. TURNIPS. Boil, sliced or quartered, until soft all through ; drain well and mash in a colander with a wooden spoon or beetle, very quickly, lest they should cool. Cold turnips are detestable. Work in a little salt and a good lump of butter ; serve in a hot dish, smoothly rounded on top, with a pat of pepper here and there. FIG PUDDING. J- Ib. good dried figs, washed, wiped, and minced. 2 cups fine, dry bread-crumbs. 3 e gg s - j- cup beef suet, powdered. 2 scant cups of milk. J- cup of white sugar. A little salt. A pinch of soda, dissolved in hot water and stirred into the milk. Soak the crumbs in the milk. Add the eggs, beaten light, with the sugar, salt, suet, and figs. Beat three min- utes, put in a buttered mould with a tight top ; set in boiling water with a weight on the cover, to prevent the mould from upsetting, and boil three hours. Eat hot, with hard sauce, or butter and powdered sugar, mixed with nutmeg. It is very good. THIRD WEEK THURSDAY. 69 Sljuir tthek. Veal and Rice Broth. Stewed Mutton a la Jardiniere. Potato Puff. Pork and Beans. Grape Jelly. Miijced Pudding. Apples, Nuts, and Raisins. VEAL AND RICE BROTH. 4 Ibs. knuckle, of veal, well broken up. 1 onion. 2 stalks of celery. cup of rice, washed and picked over. Chopped parsley, pepper, and salt. i cup of milk. 4 qts. of cold water. i tablespoonful corn-starch. Put on the veal and bones, with the onion and celery minced, in four quarts of cold water. Boil gently after it begins to bubble, four hours, keeping the pot-lid on. Soak the rice in lukewarm water, enough to cover it well adding warmer as it swells for one hour. Cook in the same water, never touching with a spoon, but shaking up from the bottom, now and then. Strain and press the soup into a bowl ; cool to throw up the fat for the skimmer, and return to the pot. Salt and pepper ; boil up and skim, and stir in the corn-starch wet up in the milk. Simmer three minutes ; put in the rice with the water in which it was boiled, and the parsley. Simmer \ ery gently five minutes, and pour out. MUTTON I LA JARDINIERE. 5 Ibs. of mutton, breast or neck, all in one piece. 2 onions, } 1 carrot, v peeled. 2 turnips, ) 7O JANUARY. 1 pint canned tomatoes. A few sprigs of cauliflower. 2 stalks of blanched celery. Pepper and salt. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. i tablespoonful of corn-starch. Dripping for frying. Fry the mutton (whole) in a large frying-pan, until it is lightly browned on both sides. . Put into a deep, broad saucepan with all the vegetables (also whole) except the tomatoes ; cover with cold water, and stew, closely cov- ered, for an hour after they begin to boil. Take out the vegetables, and set aside ; add boiling water to the meat, if it is not covered, and simmer steadily, never fast, two hours longer. The meat should be tender throughout, even the fibres. Turn off all the gravy, except about half a cupful, fit the pot-lid on very tightly, and leave the meat where it will keep just below the cooking-point. Strain the gravy you have poured off; leave it to cool until the fat rises. Skim, and return to the pot with the tomatoes. Season, and boil fast, skimming two or three times, until it is reduced to one-half the original quantity, or just enough to half cover the meat. Thicken with corn-starch, and put in the meat, with its juices from the bottom of the pot. Simmer, closely covered, half an hour. Cut the now cooled vegetables into neat dice ; put the butter into a saucepan, and when it is hot, the vegetables. Shake all together until smoking hot, season, add a little gravy from the meat, and leave them to keep hot in it while you dish the mutton. Put it in the middle of a flat dish, and put the vegetables around it in separate mounds, with sprigs of parsley or celery between. Pour gravy over the mutton. Try this dish. It is not difficult of preparation, diffuse as I have made the directions. It is, if well managed and discreetly seasoned, a family dinner of itself, and a very cheap one. POTATO PUFF. Mash the potatoes as usual ; beat in more milk than is your custom, and a couple of eggs, whipping all to a cream, THIRD WEEK THURSDAY. Jl and seasoning well. Pour into a buttered pudding-dish, and bake quickly to a good brown. PORK AND BEANS. Soak a quart of dried beans overnight in soft water. Change this for more and warmer" in the morning, and, two hours later, put them on to boil in cold. When they are soft, drain well, put into a deep dish ; and sink in the middle a pound of salt pork (the ."middling" is best), leaving only the top visible. The pork should have been previously parboiled. Bake to a fine brown. It is well to score the pork in \ong furrows to mark the slices, before baking. MINCED PUDDING. 4 large juicy pippins, pared, cored, and chopped. Ib. of raisins, seeded and chopped. 2 tablespoonfuls beef suet, freed from strings and rubbed to powder. 12 almonds, blanched and minced. J cup of sugar for pudding, and three tablespoonfuls for custard. 1 pint of milk. Stale bread. Butter to spread it. 2 eggs. Nutmeg. Cut the crust from the bread and slice evenly. Butter a shallow pudding-dish, and line it with the slices, fitted neatly together, and well buttered. Spread thickly with a mixture of the ingredients just enumerated, to wit : apples, raisins, suet, and almonds, sweetened, with sugar, and spiced with nutmeg. They should form a paste and ad- here to the bread. Make a custard by scalding and sweetening the milk, then pouring gradually over the eggs Soak the bread, etc., with this by pouring it on, a few spoonfuls at a time, until the dish is full. Bake in a moderate oven, for a time covered, lest it should dry out Eat cold, with powdered sugar sifted over the top. APPLES, NUTS, AND RAISINS Should be served on clean plates after the pudding. 72 JANUARY. and cut into bits. Season, and return to the fire to stew for twenty minutes longer, closely covered. Stir in the butter divided into teaspoonfuls, each rolled in flour. Boil up and serve. Dice of fried bread should be put into the tureen. FRIED BASS. Clean, wipe dry, inside and out, dredge with flour, and season with salt. Fry in hot butter, beef-dripping, or sweet lard. Half butter half lard is a good mixture for frying fish. The moment the fish are done to a good brown, take them from the fat and drain in a hot colander. Gar- nish with parsley. THIRD WEEK FRIDAY. 73 MASHED POTATOES Must accompany the fish. ROAST CHICKEN. Wash well in three waters, adding a little soda to the second. Stuff with a mixture of bread-crumbs, butter^ pepper, and salt. Fill the crops and bodies of the fowls ; sew them up with strong, not coarse thread, and tie up the necks. Pour a cupful of boiling water over the pair, and roast an hour or more, if they are large. Baste three times with butter and water, four or five times with their own gravy. Stew the giblets, necks, and feet in water, enough to cover them well. When you take up the fowls, add this liquor to the gravy left in the dripping-pan, boil up once, thicken with browned flour ; add the giblets chopped fine ; boil again, and send up in a gravy-boat. Should there be more gravy than you need, set it away carefully. Each day brings forth a need for such. CRAB-APPLE JELLY Is a pleasing sauce for roast fowls. STEWED CELERY. Select the best blanched stalks, and lay aside in cold water. Stew three or four stalks of the coarser parts, minced, with a small onion, a few sprigs of parsley, also chopped, and a bone of ham, or other meat. Stew for an hour in enough water to cover them ; strain, pressing hard. Cut the choicer celery into pieces two inches long ; pour over them the " stock " from the strainer, season with pep- per, and, if needed, salt. Stew until very tender. Stir in a good tablespoonful of butter, and a little corn-starch, wet up in cold water. Simmer gently three minutes, and dish. FRIED SALSIFY. Scrape and lay in cold water ten minutes. Boil tender, drain, and when cold, mash with a wooden spoon, picking ' out the fibrous parts. Wet to a paste with milk, work-ia a little butter, and an egg and a half for each cupful of 74 JANUARY. salsify. Beat the eggs very light. Season to taste, make into round, flat cakes, dredge with flour, and fry to a light brown. Drain off the fat, and serve hot. MARGHERITA LEMON CUSTARD. 5 eggs. i quart of milk. Half the grated peel of a lemon. 5 tablespoonfuls of white sugar. Beat the whites of two eggs and the yolks of five very light ; add the sugar and 1 pour over these the milk, scald- ing hot. Lastly, put in the grated peel, pour into a but- tered pudding-dish, and set in a pan of hot water. Put both into the oven, and bake the custard until it is well " set." Then spread with a meringue made of the re- served whites beaten stiff with a little powdered sugar. Shut the oven door, and cook the meringue until slightly tinged with yellow-brown. Eat cold. (Jtjirir English Soup. Mutton Chops, Broiled. Browned Potato. Stewed Tomatoes. Sweet Pickle*. Orange Fritters with Beehive Sauce. Coffee. ENGLISH SOUP. 6 Ibs. brisket of beef, cut into thin strips, 2 onions, sliced and fried in dripping. The bones of yesterday's chickens. 2 carrots. 3 turnips. 4 stalks of celery. i bunch of sweet herbs. THIRD WEEK SATURDAY. ?$ % lb. of vermicelli. Pepper and salt at discretion. 6 quarts of cold water. Put the beef, cut into strips, the " carcasses " of the chickens broken to pieces, and three quarts of cold water, ir.to a large soup-pot, and heat gradually. When it boils, skim well, and add the fried onion and other vegetables, cut fine, and three quarts more of cold water. Stew, with the pot-lid on, five hours, after it again boils, giving it no attention save to see that it never J^oils fast, and that the liquid has not diminished to less than three-quarters of the original quantity. Strain at the end of this time, first tak- ing out the meat that has not boiled to shreds, and the bones. Rub the vegetables through the colander ; after- wards strain the soup again through your wire strainer or sieve, into the kettle when you have washed it put. Sea- son, and simmer ten minutes after the boil recommences, skimming often. Break the vermicelli into short lengths, put into the soup when you have taken out two quarts for Sunday's " stock." Cook gently twelve minutes after the vermicelli goes in. At first glance, the quantity of meat prescribed for this soup may seem extravagant ; but, apart from the fact that the coarser and cheaper quality is used, you must note that you have now the foundation of three days' soups, and that you have saved time, no less than moneyy fey making this as I have directed. It is by the -long, intell gent look ahead that the mistress proves her right to title. MUTTON CHOPS BROILED. Next to beef, good mutton, properly cooked, desei the most prominent place among the meats upon y weekly bill of fare. It is digestible, nutritioiis, and, a rule, popular. I therefore offer no apology for the re: lar and frequent appearance of these two standard artic of diet upon these pages. They may well be named the two staves of healthful existence for civilized humanity^ at least. Trim your mutton chops, if your butcher has negle< to do it, leaving a naked end of bone as a " handle " upon 76 JANUARY. each. Lay them for fifteen minutes in a little melted butter, turning them several times. Then hold each up for a moment, to let all the butter drip off that will, and broil over a clear fire, watching constantly and turning them often when the falling fat threatens a blaze from be- low. If your gridiron is beneath the grate, they can be cooked far more satisfactorily, and with one^tenth of the trouble. Pepper and salt when they are laid upon a hot dish, and put a bit of butter upon each. SWEET PICKLES " Go " well with broiled chops. For receipts for these and other pickles, with preserves and fruit jellies, the reader is respectfully referred to " COMMON SENSE IN THE HOUSEHOLD, No. i, GENERAL RECEIPTS." BROWNED POTATO. Mash your potatoes with milk, butter, and salt ; hea,p as irregularly as possible in a vegetable dish, and hold a red-hot shovel close to them. They will brown more quickly if you glaze them with butter so soon as a crust is formed 'by the hot shovel, then heat it again and repeat the browning. STEWED TOMATOES. fo one can of tomatoes allow a saltspoonful of salt, as much pepper, a teaspoonful of sugar, and a great lespoonful of butter. Drain off half the liquor, season and stew fast for twenty minutes, in a vessel set iin another filled with water on the hard boil. This jipt was given to me by a notable housewife. It ii th trying for her sake and variety's. ORANGE FRITTERS. 3 cups of milk. 2 cups of prepared flour. 4 eggs. A little salt. Lard for frying. 6 or 8 sweet oranges. A little powdered sugar. THIRD W^EK SATURDAY. 77 Take the peel and thick white skin from the oranges. Slice, and take out the seeds. Make a batter of the in- gredients given above, taking care not to get it too thin. Dip each slice in this dexterously and fry in boiling lard. Drain in a hot colander, and eat with the sauce given below. BEEHIVE SAUCE. cup of butter. 2 cups of sugar. Juice and peel of a lemon. teaspoonful of nutmeg. \ cup of currant jelly, or cranberry syrup. Make hard sauce in the usual way by creaming the but- ter and sugar. Before beating in the lemon-juice and nutmeg, set aside three tablespoon fuls to be colored. Having added lemon and spice to the larger quantity, color the less by whipping in currant jelly or cranberry syrup, until it is of a rich pink. Shape the white sauce into a conical mound. Roll & sheet of note paper into a long, narrow funnel, tie a string about it to keep it in shape, and fill with colored sauce. Squeeze it gently through the aperture at the small end, beginning at the base, and winding round the cone to the top, guiding it so that the white will show prettily between the pink ridges. The effect is pleasing and costs little trouble to pro- duce. COFFEE Is believed by some to aid digestion, and, since fritters are not generally classed among very wholesome dainties, it may be as well to give John and John's wife not the children a cup of the fragrant elixir as a possible pre- ventive against an attack of dyspepsia. It always lendi grace even to a homely dinner. JANUARY. German Sago Soup. Boiled Turkey with Oyster Sauce. Savory Rice Pudding* Potatoes au Maitre d'hotel. Celery. Grape Jelly. Mince Pie. Bananas and Oranges. GERMAN SAGO SOUP. Soak half a cup of German sago in enough water to cover it entirely for two hours. Heat yesterday's soup to boiling, with a little of the reserved " stock," should the supply be too small ; stir in the sago with a little salt, until dissolved, and serve. BOILED TURKEY AND OYSTER SAUCE. 15 oysters. A little milk, bread-crumbs, butter and seasoning. Wheat flour. Chop about fifteen oysters and work up with them bread-crumbs, a spoonful of butter, with pepper and salt. Stuff the turkey as for roasting ; sew it up, neatly, in a thin cloth fitted to every part, having dredged the cloth well inside with flour. Boil slowly, especially at first, allowing fifteen minutes to a pound. The water should be luke- warm when the turkey goes in. Salt and save the liquor in which the fowl was boiled. OYSTER SAUCE. 12 oysters, cut into thirds. 1 cupful of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 2 teaspoonfuls rice, or wheat flour. Flavoring to taste. Chopped parsley. FOURTH WEEK SUNDAY. 79 Drain the liquor from the oysters before you cut them up. Boil the liquor two minutes, and add the milk. When this is scalding hot strain and return to the sauce- pan. Wet the flour with cold water and stir into the sauce. As it thickens, put in the butter, then pepper and salt, with a very little parsley. The juice of a half a lemon is a pleasant flavoring. Stir it in after taking the sauce from the fire. Before this, and so soon as the flour is well incorporated with the other ingredients, add the oysters, each cut into three pieces. Simmer f ve minutes and pour into a gravy-tureen. Some also pour a little over the turkey on the dish. Garnish with slices of boiled egg and celery tops. SAVORY RICE PUDDING. i teacupful of rice. Giblets of the turkey. A slice of fat salt pork, chopped very fine. Half a small onion, also minced. i small cup of milk. i tablespoonful of butter. Pepper and salt. Wash the rice thoroughly ; clean the giblets ; soak them an hour in salted water, cut each into several pieces, and put on to stew with the pork and rice in nearly a quart of cold water. Cook slowly until the giblets are tender and the rice soft. The grains should be kept as whole as possible, so do not use a spoon in stirring, but shake up the saucepan, which should be set in another of boiling water. The rice should, by this time, be nearly dry. Take out the giblets and chop fine. Pour on the rice the milk, previously heated with the minced onions > and then strained. When this is again scalding, stir in the giblets, then the butter and seasoning. Cover and simmer for ten minutes. Wet a round or oval pan with cold water ; press the rice firmly into it, so that it may take the shape, and turn out carefully upon a flat dish. Set in the oven for two minutes before sending to table, It should be stiff enough to take the mould, yet not dry. 8O JANUARY. POTATOES AU MAiTRE o'H6TEL. Slice cold boiled potatoes a quarter of an inch thick, and put into a saucepan containing enough milk, already heated, to cover them barely. When all are smoking hot, add a tablespoonful or more of butter, pepper, salt, and minced parsley. Add a teaspoonful of flour wet in cold water; heat quickly to a boil ; put in the juice of ha?f a lemon ; pour into a deep dish without further cooking. . CELERY AND GRAPE JELLY Should flank the castor, or epergne, or whatever may be your centre-piece. MINCE PIE. A receipt for mince-meat will be found in the proper order in the menu for next December. I take it for granted that, like the wise woman you are, you have laid up in the store-room enough from your Christmas supply to last for some weeks to come. If not, let me advise you to get a box of " ATMORE'S CELEBRATED MINCE- MEAT," and fill your pastry-crusts, instead of repeating so soon the tedious operation so lately performed. It comes in neat, wooden cans, and is really good. If you like, you can add more sugar and brandy. N. B. My John has a sweet tooth. Has yours ? Make the paste by rubbing into a quart of your best flour one-third of a pound of sweet lard. Chop it in with a broad knife, if you have plenty of time. Wet up with ice- water, roll out very thin, and cover with " dabs " of butter, also of the best. Fold into a tight roll, flatten with a few strokes of the rolling-pin, and roll out into a sheet as thin as the first ; baste again with the butter ; roll up and out into a third sheet hardly thicker than drawing- paper ; a third time dot with butter, and fold up closely. Having used as much butter for this purpose as you have lard, set aside your last roll for an hour in a very cold place. Then roll out, line your pie-plates with the paste, fill with mince-meat ; put strips, cut with a jagging-iron, across them in squares or triangles, and bake in a steady, never a dull, heat. FOURTH WEEK MONDAY. 8 1 These pies, like all others, must be made on Saturday, and warmed up for Sabbath unless you prefer to line your plates on Saturday, and set them aside until next day, then fill the raw, crisp paste with the mince-meat, and bake. The paste will be the better, instead of worse, for standing overnight, and the trouble of baking scarcely exceed that of warming over. BANANAS AND ORANGES May solace the disappointment of the dyspeptic or very juvenile members of the family party, who " dare not touch mince pie." Jburtl) tlUek. illonbag. Combination Soup. Mince of Fowl. Turkey Salad. Sweet Potatoes, Baked. Brussels Sprouts. Sweet Macaroni, with Brandied Fruit. Chocolate. COMBINATION SOUP. Put the remains of yesterday's soup and of the stock reserved on Saturday together, and heat almost to boiling. Split and toast crisp half a dozen Boston crackers ; butter while hot, set in the oven until the butter has soaked in, when put on more. Lay in the bottom of your soup- tureen, wet with a little boiling milk, and when they have soaked this up, pour on the soup. MINCE OF FOWL. Set what was left of yesterday's oyster-sauce over the fire to heat, thinning, if necessary, with a little milk. Or, if you have no sauce, substitute a cupful of drawn butter, made from the liquor in which the turkey was boiled OB 4* 82 JANUARY. Sunday, reserving the rest for another day's soup. Cut the meat closely fiom the bones of the turkey (saving these, also). Set aside the white flesh for a nice little dish of salad. Cut the rest, freed from skin and gristle, into pieces of nearly uniform length, not more than an inch long. When your sauce boils, put in the meat, simmer until smoking hot, then take off the saucepan, and pour gradually over two beaten eggs. Cover the bottom of a pudding-dish with bread-crumbs, when you have greased it well ; season the mince to taste ; fill up the dish with it ; put another layer of bread-crumbs, on top, and stick bits of butter over these. Bake covered, until bubbling hot, then brown lightly. This will be found very delightful. TURKEY SALAD. The white meat of the turkey cut up in small pieces. An equal quantity of blanched celery, also cut into lengths. Salt slightly, and when dinner is nearly ready pour over them a dressing made of the yolks of three hard-boiled eggs rubbed to a powder with a teaspoonful of sugar, naif as much salt, pepper and made mustard, when worked into a paste with two tablespoonfuls of oil, and six of vinegar. Toss up the salad well with a silver fork, and garnish with white of egg cut into rings. SWEET POTATOES BAKED. Select those which are nearly of a size, and not too large, or so small as to shrivel into dry husks. Wash, wipe, and bake in a moderate oven until, by pinching, you find that they are soft at heart. BRUSSELS SPROUTS. Wash carefully, cut off the lower part of the stems, and lay in cold water, slightly salted, for half an hour. Cook quickly, in boiling water, with a very little salt, for fifteen minutes, or until tender. Drain thoroughly, heap neatly upon a dish, and put a few spoonfuls of melted butter, peppered to taste, upon them. Eat hot. FOURTH WEEK TUESDAY. 83 SWEET MACARONI. Ib. of macaroni. 1 pint of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 4 tablespoonfuls of cream. 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Nutmeg and vanilla. A little salt. Break the macaroni into short pieces, put into a farina- kettle, cover with the milk, put on the lid of the kettle, and cook with boiling water in the outer vessel, until the milk is soaked up and the macaroni looks clear, but has not begun to break. Add the butter, sugar, and flavor- ing, and, if you have it, a few spoonfuls of cream. If you have not, thicken a little milk slightly with corn-starch, and use instead. Cover, and set in the boiling water for ten minutes longer. Serve in a deep dish, and send around canned or brandied peaches with it. CHOCOLATE. To one pint of boiling water allow six tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate wet up to a paste in cold water. Boil twenty minutes, put in one pint of milk and boil ten minutes more. Stir often. It saves time, if you know the tastes of those who are to drink it, if you sweeten it in the saucepan. Jbuvtl) tDeek. Mother's Soup. Beefsteak and Onions. Sweet and Irish Potatoes, Chopped Mixed Pickles. Corn and Tomatoes, Stewed. Creme du The, Cafe et Chocolat. MOTHER'S SOUP. Bones of yesterday's turkey, with the stuffing. A slice of lean ham. 84 JANUARY. The bone from your steak, and half a can of sweet corn* i onion, small. i stalk of celery. Bunch of sweet herbs. Pepper and salt. 3 quarts of water. Put on bones, ham (chopped), and the vegetables, cut up with the sweet herbs, but not the corn, in a soup-kettle ; cover well with the liquor in which the turkey was cooked, and boil slowly, untouched, two- hours. Take out the bones, and strain the soup, nibbing the vegetables through the strainer, into a bowl. Return this to the fire and with it the corn and turkey dressing. Bring to a gentle boil and keep it steady, for fully half an hour. Season, and simmer a quarter of an hour longer. The corn and dressing will thicken it sufficiently. BEEFSTEAK WITH ONIONS. While your steak is broiling, watched by some one else, fry three or four sliced onions in a pan with some beef dripping or butter. Stir and shake them until they begin to brown. Dish your steak, salt and pepper, and lay the onions on top. Cover, and let all stand where they will keep hot, for five minutes. Do not help onions to any one unless you are sure that he likes them. There is no dish sp good for keeping a steak hot, yet juicy, as a hot-water chafing-dish. No household can afford to be without one, if no more. MIXED PICKLES Give the needed piquancy to steak. Home-made onei are best. SWEET AND IRISH POTATOES CHOPPED. Chop cold boiled Irish potatoes and mix with them the cold sweet ones left from Monday in equal parts, if convenient or, if you have but two or three, make them do. There is philosophy, and religion, too, sometimes, in "making things do." Heating a little butter in a saucepan, stir in the potatoes when it begins to u fizzle." FOURTH WEEK TUESDAY. 85 Shake and toss them up with a wooden fork until they are very hot ; season with pepper and salt, and dish. CORN AND TOMATOES STEWED. To a can of tomatoes add the half can of corn left from your soup. Stew together half an hour, with a little minced onion ; then pepper and salt to taste, and stir in a great spoonful of butter with a very little sugar. Simmei ten minutes before turning out. CREME DU TH, CAF ET CHOCOLAT. quart of milk. package of Cooper's gelatine. cup of sugar. tablespoonfuls grated chocolate. cup strong tea. cup of strong coffee. Soak the gelatine for an hour in a cup of cold water. Heat the milk to boiling and add the gelatine. So soon as this is dissolved, put in the sugar, stir until melted, and take the saucepan from the fire. Strain through thin muslin and divide into three parts. Into the largest stir the chocolate, rubbed smooth in cold water ; into another the tea, and into a third equal to the second, the coffee. Return that containing the chocolate to the farina-kettle, and heat scalding hot, stirring all the while. Rinse out the kettle well with boiling water, and put in, successively, those portions flavored with the tea and the coffee, scald- ing the vessel between each. Wet several small cups or glasses with cold water. Pour the chocolate into some, the tea into others, and the coffee blanc-mange into the rest. When cold, turn out upon a flat dish, and eat with sugar and sweet cream. It will "form" in about six hours. This is a dessert by no means tedious or difficult of preparation, and is worth trying, being both dainty and wholesome, 86 JANUARY. Lexington Soup. Boiled Chickens and Macaroni. Whipped Potatoes Chow-chow. Parsnip Cakes. Jam Roley-Poley with Wine Sauce. Apples and Nuts. LEXINGTON SOUP. 2 Ibs. of veal. i Ib. of mutton, with some bones. i onion. i carrot. J cup of rice. i cup of split peas. 4 quarts of water. Sweet herbs, pepper and salt. Mince the meat and vegetables and crack the bones. The peas should have been soaked overnight in soft water, the rice washed and picked over. Put all together in your soup-kettle, pour in the water and stew gently, covered, five hours. Should the water waste too much, put in more from the tea-kettle. At the end of this time, strain, rubbing the vegetables through a colander. Return to the fire, season, and boil slowly ten minutes, skimming caiefully. Put sliced lemon, from which the yellow rind has b,een pared, into the tureen, and pour the soup upon it. Serve a slice in each plateful. BOILED CHICKENS AND MACARONI. Clean, wash, and stuff your chickens as for roasting ; sew each up in a piece of new tarlatan, fitted snugly to the shape. Boil, putting them down in pretty hot, but not scalding water, allowing twelve minutes to the num- ber of pounds in one of the pair, and that the larger. About half ar hour before they are to be served take out FOURTH WEEK WEDNESDAY. ' 87 a large cupful of the liquor from the pot and put into a saucepan. Season it, and boil for five minutes with a small chopped onion. Strain, and when again hot, drop in a double handful of macaroni, broken into short lengths. Cook until tender, by which time the liquor should be ab- sorbed by the macaroni. The saucepan should be set in another, holding boiling water, that there may be no danger of scorching while stewing. Make a flattened mound of the macaroni upon a hot dish ; lay the chickens upon it, and anoint them well with melted butter, made more salt than usual. Serve them out together, and have grated cheese for such as wish it. CHOW-CHOW, Or " picklette," in American store-rooms is a keen appe- tizer and especially harmonious with boiled fowls. For receipt for making in winter or summer, see " General Receipts, No. i, Common Sense Series," page 491. PARSNIP CAKES. Scrape, wash, boil, and mash the parsnips. When cold, season with salt and pepper, and, flouring your hands, make them into small, flat cakes. Roll in flour and fry in boiling dripping. Drain dry and send up on a hot dish. WHIPPED POTATOES. Instead of mashing the potatoes in the ordinary way, whip with a fork until light and dry. Then whip in a little melted butter and some milk with salt to taste, beat- ing up fast until you have a creamy compound, almost like a meringue. Pile as lightly and irregularly as you can upon a hot dish. JAM ROLEY-POLEY. i quart of prepared flour. 1 tablespoonful of butter and ihe same of lard. 2 cups of milk, or enough to make soft dough, i large cup of fruit or berry jam. Rub lard and butter into the flour, with a little salt, and 28 JANUARY. wet with cold milk into a soft paste. Roll out into a pretty thick crust say about a quarter of an inch and trim into an oblong sheet. Spread this generously with jam, leaving a margin at each end. Roll up closely, the fruit inside. Pinch the open ends together, and baste neatly in a floured bag fitted to the roll, but not so tightly as to interfere with the swelling of the pudding. Boil an hour and a half in hot water that, from first to last, is not once off the boil. Dip the cloth into cold water before attempting to turn the roley-poley out but for one hasty second only. WINE SAUCE. 3 tablespoonfuls of butter. 2. cupfuls of powdered sugar. ij- cup of wine. Grated peel of half a lemon. \ cupful of boiling water. i teaspoonful of corn-starch. Nutmeg. Cream the butter and sugar, adding the boiling water, a little at a tinie, until you have used the half cupful. Put on in a saucepan, and stir in the corn-starch wet up with cold milk. When it has thickened, put in the lemon- peel and nutmeg. Simmer one minute, add the wine, put on the lid of the saucepan and set in hot water to keep warm until wanted. APPLES AND NUTS, Being cheap and abundant at this season, should form the sequel of many dinners. FOURTH WEEK THURSDAY. 89 Jbttrtl) tDttk. Ijur0irag. White Soup. Langue de Bceuf, or Beef's Tongue. Fried Brains and Green Peas. Sauce Piquante. Hominy Croquettes. Cold Slaw. Brown Betty. WHITE SOUP. Skeletons of yesterday's chickens. 3 or 4 Ibs. of veal bones, cracked to pieces. i Ib. of lean veal, cut small. i pint of milk. 1 egg. i small cup of boiled farina. Salt, pepper, minced onion and parsley for seasoning. i quart of water, and liquor in which chickens were boiled. Cover the broken chicken and veal bones, the minced veal, parsley, and onion with the cold water and chicken liquor and simmer three hours, until the three quarts are reduced to two. Strain the liquor ; put back into the pot ; salt and pepper ; boil gently and skim for ten min- utes before adding the milk and boiled farina. Simmer another ten minutes ; take out a cupful and pour over the beaten egg. Mix well, and put with the soup ; let all stand covered, off the fire, two minutes, and serve. LANGUE DE BCEUF, OR BEEF'S TONGUE. Get your butcher to save you a fresh, large beefs tongue, the finest he can get. Soak, in cold water, a little salt, six hours overnight, if you choose changing the water before you go to bed. Wipe it, trim and scrape it, and plunging into boiling water, keep it at a slow boil foi an hour and a half. Take il up, pepper and salt ; brush 9 JANUARY. over with beaten egg and coat thickly with bread-crumbs j lay in your dripping-pan and bake, basting often with but- ter melted in a little water. Half an hour in a good oven should suffice. Put on a hot dish and cover while you prepare the sauce. SAUCE PIQUANTE. 1 cupful of the liquor in which the tongue was boiled. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. i teaspoonful of made mustard. A little salt and pepper. i heaping tablespoonful of browned flour. i teaspoonful mixed parsley and sweet marjoram. i tablespoonful of onion vinegar. Brown the butter by shaking it over a clear fire in a saucepan. Heat the cupful of liquor to a boil, skim and season it with salt and pepper. Skim again before stir- ring in the flour wet up with cold water. As it thickens, put in the butter, herbs, mustard, and vinegar. Boil up, pour half over the tongue, the rest into a sauce-boat. FRIED BRAINS AND GREEN PEAS. Open a can of green peas an hour before cooking them, and turn into a bowl. If there is not liquor in the can to cover them, add a little water, slightly salted, and cook over twenty minutes after they boil. Drain, pepper and salt ; stir in a lump of butter nearly as large as an egg, and put into a vegetable dish, the fried brains arranged along the base of the mound. Wash a calf's brains in several waters ; scald in boil- ing, then lay in ice-cold water, for half an hour. Wipe, and beat them into a paste ; season, work in a little butter, a beaten egg, and enough flour to hold the paste together. Fry upon a griddle in small cakes. Drain off every drop of fat. Eat hot. A nice and savory garnish. HOMINY CROQUETTES. 2 cups fine hominy, boiled and cold. 2 beaten eggs. FOURTH WEEK THURSDAY. 91 i tablespoonful of melted butter. Salt to taste. i teaspoonful of sugar. Work the butter into the hominy until the latter is smooth ; then the eggs, salt and sugar. Beat hard with a wooden spoon to get out lumps and mix well. Make into oval balls with floured hands. Roll each in flour, and fry ..in sweet dripping or lard, putting in a few at a time and turning over with care as they brown. Drain in a hot colander. COLD SLAW. Chop or shred a small white cabbage. Prepare a dress- ing in the proportion of one tablespoonful of oil to four of vinegar, a teaspoonful of made mustard, the same quantity of salt and sugar, and half as much pepper. Pour over the salad, adding, if you choose, three table- spoonfuls of minced celery ; toss up well and put into a glass bowl. BROWN BETTY. 2 cups chopped apples, tart ones. % cup of sugar. 1 cup of bread-crumbs. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. i teaspoonful of nutmeg. Put a layer of chopped apple in the bottom of a buttered pudding-dish. Sprinkle well with sugar, stick bits of butter here and there and add a pinch or two of nutmeg^ Cover with bread-crumbs, then more apple. In this order of alternation fill the dish, spreading the surface with bread-crumbs. Cover, steam nearly an hour in a moderate oven ; then brown quickly. For sauce, mix a teaspoonful of cinnamon with a cup of powdered sugar. Butter the hot "Betty" as you fill each saucer, and strew with this mixture. Or it is excel- lent, eaten warm, not hot, with cream and sugar. 92 JANUARY. Jbttrtl) ttJttk. Potato Soup. Fried Oysters. Roast Mutton. Spinach a la Creme. Potatoes Stewed Whole. French Tapioca Custard. POTATO SOUP. i dozen mealy potatoes. 1 can of tomatoes. 2 onions. 3 stalks of celery. 4 tablespoonfuls of butter, cut into bits and rolled in flour. i bunch of sweet herbs. i lump of white sugar. Salt and pepper to taste. 3 quarts of water. Fried bread. Parboil the potatoes; then slice and put them into the soup-pot with the tomatoes, the onions, minced, and the celery and herbs chopped small. Pour on three quarts of water, and stew for one hour, or until the vegetables can be rubbed easily through the colander. Strain, re- turn to the pot, drop in the sugar, pepper and salt judi- ciously, boil up and skim. Stir in the butter, and simmer, covered, for ten minutes. Have dice of fried bread in the tureen, upon which pour the soup. FRIED OYSTERS. Select for this the finest oysters. Drain, and wipe them by spreading them upon a cloth, laying another over them, and pressing lightly. Roll each in beaten egg, then in cracker-crumbs with which have been mixed a little salt and less pepper, and fry in a mixture of equal parts of lard and butter. FOURTH WEEK FRIDAY. 93 Drain each in a wire spoon, and eat them hot, with bread and butter. ROAST MUTTON. Wash the meat well and wipe with a clean cloth. Put into the dripping-pan, pour a cup of boiling water over it, and roast, basting often, for a while, with salt and water, afterwards with its own gravy. Allow twelve minutes to each pound of meat, and keep the" fire at a steady, moder- ate heat. Should it brown too fast, cover with a sheet of paper. Take up the meat, put it on a hot dish ; thicken the gravy with browned flour, having first taken off all the fat you can season with pepper and salt, boil up, skim and serve. Pass currant jelly with it. SPINACH A LA CREME. Pick over and wash the spinach, and cut the leaves from the stalks. Boil in hot water, a little salted, about twenty minutes. Drain, put into a wooden tray, or upon a board ; chop very fine, and rub through a colander. Put into a saucepan ; stir until it begins to smoke through- out. Add then two tablespoonfuls of butter for a good- sized dish, a teaspoonful of white sugar, three tablespoon- fuls of milk, salt and pepper to liking. Beat, as it heats, with a silver fork or wire spoon. Some put in a little nutmeg, and most people like it. Cook thus until it begins to bubble up as you beat it. Pour into a deep dish, surround with sliced egg, and serve. POTATOES STEWED WHOLE. Pare the potatoes and boil in water which was cold when they went in. When they are done, as is proved by piercing the largest with a fork, turn off the water, and cover them barely with milk already heated. Stew in this five minutes ; take the potatoes out, and put into a covered deep dish. Add to the milk in the saucepan a good lump of butter, rolled in flour, some chopped parsley, pepper and salt. Boil up once. Crack each potato as it lies in the dish, by pressing with the back of a spoon ; pour the hot milk over them ; let them stand three minutes in it, and send to table. 94 JANUARY. FRENCH TAPIOCA CLSTARD. 5 dessertspoonfuls of tapioca. i quart of milk. i pint of cold water. 3 eggs. i teaspoonful of vanilla. i heaping cup of sugar. A pinch of salt. Soak the tapioca in the water five hours. Heat the milk to scalding ; add the tapioca, the water in which it was soaked, and the salt. Stir to boiling, and pour gradu- ally upon the yolks and sugar, which should have been beaten together. Boil again, stirring constantly, about five minutes, or until it begins to thicken well. Turn into a bowl and stir gently into the custard the frothed whites and the flavoring. Eat cold. Jburtl) Deek. Saturirag. Old Hare Soup. Hot Pot. Turnips with White Sauce. Boiled Rice, au Geneve. Cucumber Pickle. Cabinet Pudding. Cabinet Pudding Sauce. OLD HARE SOUP. i hare, or rabbit, full grown. The bones from yesterday's mutton broken up well. A slice of corned ham, or some bones of salt pork. i onion. Chopped parsley. Pepper and salt. i tablespoonful of mushroom or waln'jt catsup. 3 quarts of water. FOURTH WEEK SATURDAY. Q$ Clean the hare carefully and cut to pieces, cracking all the bones. Put into the soup-kettle with the mutton bones, the bacon, onion, and parsley. Pour on three quarts of cold water; put on the lid tightly, and stew four hours very slowly. By this time the meat should be in shreds. Strain it, return to the fire, season it, stew and skim five minutes. Slice three boiled eggs and put into the tureen and pour the soup over them. HOT POT. Put into a deep bake-dish a layer of cold mutton left from your roast, freed from fat and skin and cut into strips two inches long by one wide. Overlay these with slices of parboiled potatoes, a little minced onion, an oyster or two chopped, some tiny bits of butter, .with salt and pepper. Repeat this process until your meat is used up. The top layer should be potatoes. Add a cupful of gravy from Friday's dinner (or elsewhere), cover very closely and bake one hour before lifting the lid. Peep in to see if the contents are done they will be if your fire is tolerably strong. Turn out into a deep dish. CUCUMBER PICKLES Are a better condiment for this dish than any others. TURNIPS WITH WHITE SAUCE. Peel and quarter your turnips. Leave in cold water half an hour. Put on in hot water, and boil until tender. Drain and cover with a sauce prepared by heating a cup of milk, thickening it with a heaping teaspoonful of corn- starch, and stirring in a great spoonful of butter with pep- per and salt to season it well. Put this, when you have added the turnips, into a vessel set within another of boiling water, and let them stand covered, without cook- ing, ten minutes before serving. BOILED RICE AU GENEVE. Pick over and wash the rice, and boil in a farina-kettle, with enough cold water, a little salted, to cover it an inch deep. Shake now and then as the rice swells. Take from X> JANUARY. your hare soup, when you have strah-ed it, a cupful of the liquor and about half as much of the toiled shreds of meat. Chop these extremely fine, season with salt and pepper. Heat the cup of liquor to a boil, stir into it a scant tablespoonful of browned flour, then the chopped meat and a tablespoonful of butter, and stew gently five minutes. Pile the boiled rice, which should be almost dry, in a dish, and pour the gravy over it. It is very savory, and makes a pleasant variety in the list of winter vegetables. CABINET PUDDING. J Ib. of prepared flour. Ib. of butter. 5 eggs. % Ib. of sugar. J Ib. of raisins seeded and cut into three pieces each. Ib. of currants, washed and dried. |- cup of milk. % lemon, grated peel and juice. Cream the butter and sugar ; add the beaten yolks ; the milk and the flour alternately with the whites. Lastly, stir in the fruit, well dredged with flour ; beat up thor- oughly, pour into a buttered mould ; put into a pot of boiling water and do not let it relax its boil for two hours and a half. Dip the mould into cold water for one moment before turning it out. CABINET PUDDING SAUCE. Yolks of 2 eggs, whipped very light. i lemon, juice and half the grated peel. i glass of wine. i teaspoonful of cinnamon. i cup of sugar. i tablespoonful of butter. Rub the butter into the sugar ; add the yolks, lemon, and spice. Beat five minutes and put in the wine, stirring hard. Set within a saucepan of boiling water, and stir until it is scalding hot. Do not let it boil. Pour over the pudding. FIRST WEEK-SUNDAY. 97 FEBRUARY. fmt tDttk. Btmirag. Clear Vermicelli Soup. Stewed Ducks. Fried Apples and Bacon. Mashed Carrots. Potatoes a la Reine. Potato Pie. Oranges and Bananas. CLEAR VERMICELLI SOUP. 6 Ibs. of veal the knuckle is best. i Ib. of lean ham, cut fine. i bunch of sweet herbs. ^ Ib. of vermicelli. 5 quarts of water. Pepper and salt with half a teaspoonful ground mace. Cut the meat from the bones in thin shreds, and crack the bones to splinters. Mince the ham and herbs. Put into a soup-kettle, add the water, cover very tightly with a weight upon the lid, and stand where it will slowly boil, for five hours. Then turn into a jar, salt and pepper, and shut up while hot. Leave the jar all Saturday night upon the side of the range, where it will keep warm until morn- ing. Pour into a bowl before breakfast and let it get cold. Take off the cake of fat two hours before dinner, turn the soup-jelly, bones and all, into the soup-pot, and when it is melted strain through your wire sieve. Put in the mace, boil for an hour and a half, and skim. Put the vermicelli, already broken into short bits and boiled tender, into the tureen (but not . the water in which it was boiled) and strain the soup over it through double tarlatan. Let it stand ten minutes before serving. This is a showy soup, and easily made, really requiring little attention. 5 98 FEBRUARY. STEWED DUCKS. On Saturday, draw, wash, and stuff your ducks, adding a touch of onion and sage to the dressing. On Saturday, also, make a gravy of the giblets, cut small, an onion, sliced, with a pint of water. Stew, closely covered, for two hours ; take off, season, and set away with the giblets in it still. Next day on Sunday lay the ducks in the dripping-pan, put in the gravy, adding water if there is not enough to half cover the fowls, at least. Invert another pan of the same size over them, and let them stew, at a moderate heat, for two hours. Or, you can put them into a large saucepan, pour in the gravy, fit on the lid, and cook upon the range for the same time. In either case they will take care of themselves, as will the soup, if Bridget be reasonably obedient to orders, while you go to church. When the ducks are done, lay them upon a hot dish, thicken the gravy with browned flour, add a glass of brown sherry and the juice of a lemon. Lay three-cornered bits of fried bread around the inside of the dish, and pour the gravy over all. FRIED APPLES AND BACON. Pare, core, and slice round, some well-flavored pippins, or greenings. Cut into thin slices some streaked middling of excellent bacon, and fry in their own fat almost to crisp- ness. Take out the meat and arrange it upon a hot chaf- ing-dish, while you fry the apples in th.e fat left in the pan from the bacon. Drain and lay upon the slices of meat. This is a Southern dish, and not so homely as it would seem from the mere reading. POTATOES i LA REINE. Mash as usual, beating up light with butter and milk, but not so soft as not to take any shape you like to give them. Make a rounded hillock, or a four-sided pyramid of them upon a flat dish. Brush this all over with beaten yolk of egg, set in the oven a few minutes to harden the coating, and send to table. FIRST WEEK SUNDAY. 99 MASHED CARROTS. Scrape, wash, lay in cold water half an hour; then cook tender in boiling water. Drain well, mash with a wooden spoon, or beetle, work in a good piece of butter, and season with pepper and salt. Heap up in a vege- table dish, and serve very hot. POTATO PIE. i Ib. mashed potato, rubbed through a colander. Ib. of butter, creamed with the sugar. 6 eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately, i lemon, squeezed into the potato while hot. 1 teaspoonful of nutmeg and the same of mace. 2 cups of white sugar. Cream the butter and sugar ; add the yolks, the spice, and beat in the potato gradually until it is very light. At last, whip in the whites. Bake in open shells of paste. Eat cold. When making these pies on Saturday forecasting Mon- day's needs and superabundance of cares prepare more pastry than you need for the two large pies which the above quantity of potato mixture will fill, and set aside a trim roll of raw crust tp be rolled out in due time we shall see to what end. I take it for granted (once more) that all of Sunday's receipts'will be diligently conned on the day when the old distich tells us, even " lazy people work the best." This potato pie will be pronounced delicious. ORANGES AND BANANAS. These will make a pretty finish to what I flatter myself with the hope that you will find a good, and not inelegant repast 100 FEBRUARY. first iDtek. Jttontrag. Blanche's Soup. Duck Pate. Succotash. Sweet Potatoes, Boiled. Crab-apple Jelly. Cup Custard, Boiled. Cut or Fancy Cake. BLANCHE'S SOUP. Strain out the vermicelli left in yesterday's " stock.' Heat very hot, and add two cups of milk in which has been stirred a tablespoonful of rice-flour, or, if you cannot get that, corn-starch. Stir until it thickens ; take out a cupful and pour it over two beaten eggs. Return to the soup, taste, and supply what seasoning is needed ; lift from the fire and leave covered five minutes before pour- ing into the tureen. DUCK PAT^J. Cut the meat from the bones of yesterday's ducks, in season to make gravy. Do this by breaking the skeletons to pieces, and putting them, with the stuffing, into a saucepan, pouring in a quart of cold water, and letting it in two hours boil down to half as much, or even one- third. Boil slowly, with the lid slightly lifted after the boiling begins. Let this get cold ; skim and season. In the bottom of a pudding-dish put some neat slices of duck ; on this a layer of boiled egg sliced thin ; then, a few slices of corned tongue. (That of a calf will do as well as beef, and be cheaper. It should be boiled and cold.) Sprinkle each layer with pepper and a little salt, with a tiny pinch of mace upon the tongue. When your mate- rials are used up, pour in the gravy, and, just before it goes into the oven, cover with a crust of pastry kept over from Saturday. Bake about three-quarters of an hour for a large dish half an hour for one of medium size. There FIRST WEEK MONDAY. IOI must be a slit in the centre of the crust to let out the steam. By proper foresight, the manufacture of this very pala- table pie will consume but little of a busy woman's time on Monday. Do not forget that with gravies and soups, after you have placed them over the fire in a well-chosen location, they will need nothing more than a hasty glance for, perhaps, several hours, during which much work in other parts of the household can be done. SWEET POTATOES, BOILED. It is poor economy, in buying sweet or Irish potatoes^ to get either very large or very small ones. So, in cook- ing, select those of uniform size. Put on in hot water ; boil until a fork will go easily into the largest. Peel quickly and set in the oven for a few minutes to dry. Eat hot, with butter. SUCCOTASH. i can of sweet corn. i can of string beans. i great spoonful of butter. Pepper and salt. i cup of milk. A little flour. Cut the beans into inch lengths ; put them into a sauce- pan with the corn, and cover with cold water. Stew hall an hour, after they begin to cook, turn off most of the water and put in the milk cold. When it is hot, stir in the butter, rolled in flour. Season, simmer for five min- utes, and pour into a deep dish. This will make a large quantity of succotash for a small family, but what is not eaten will be nice warmed over for breakfast. ^ CUP CUSTARDS BOILED. i quart of milk. Yolks of 5 eggs and whites of 3 (reserving 2 for th meringue}. 6 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Vanilla flavoring, i teaspoonful to the pint. 102 FEBRUARY. Heat the milk almost to boiling. Take out a cupful and add, slowly, to the beaten yolks and sugar, whipped up with three of the whites. Return to the fire and stir until it begins to thicken, but not until it curdles. Pour into a bowl and, when cold, flavor. Fill glass, or china cups with it. Whip the reserved whites to a meringue with a little powdered sugar, and heap a spoonful upon the top of each cup. Watch your opportunity for boiling the custard. I have often slipped into the kitchen and made it while the coffee was boiling for breakfast. This once off the fire, no more cooking is needed. CUT, OR FANCY CAKE, Of which every housewife keeps a supply in her pantry, for luncheon and tea, makes, with these custards, a nice dessert, to which you need never be ashamed to seat John And his friends. . first tihek. Family Soup. Rolled Beef. Baked Tomatoes. Browned Potatoes Whole. Apple Sauce. Unity Pudding. Cream Sauce. FAMILY SOUP. * 2 Ibs. fresh beef bones, broken small, i Ib. calf's liver, sliced, i slice of ham, minced, i Ib. of coarse mutton, also minced." i turnip. 3 stalks of celery, i onion. FIRST WEEK: TUESDAY. 103 Bunch sweet herbs. cup of raw rice. Pepper and salt. 4 quarts of cold water. Put the cracked bones, the meat, and the chopped vegetables into the soup-pot, and cover with the water. The liver should lie in salted water one hour before it is sliced. Stew very slowly five hours. Then strain, rub- bing hard ; cool enough to bring the fat to the top. Take it off, season the soup, put over the fire, and when it boils stir in the rice, previously cooked soft in a little salted water. Simmer together half an hour, and pour out. ROLLED BEEF. Get a njlet of beef that is, the tenderloin of several steaks cut in one piece. It will not be cheap, but there will be no waste. Therefore, as one weighing four or five pounds will make a roast for one day, your dinner will not be really expensive. Roll it up round ; pin tightly with skewers not to be removed, except by the carver, and roast with care, basting often that it may not dry up. Carve horizontally. BROWNED POTATOES WHOLE. Peel and parboil some fine potatoes, and half an hour before your beef is taken up, lay them in the dripping- pan. Baste with the meat and turn several times. Drain off the grease when they are done to a fine brown, and lay about the meat in the dish when it goes to table. BAKED TOMATOES. Open a can of tomatoes, and turn into a bowl. After an hour, season them with a teaspoonful of sugar, half as much salt, a little pepper and a tablespoonful of butter cut into bits, each bit rolled in flour and all distributed evenly throughout the tomatoes. Cover with very dry bread-crumbs. Bake in a pudding-dish, covered, about thirty minutes, then brown on the upper grating of the oven. IO4 FEBRUARY. APPLE SAUCE. Make this on Saturday, by stewing sliced tart apples in a little water until soft, draining and mashing them, adding a bit of butter while doing this. Sweeten abun- dantly and season with nutmeg. UNITY PUDDING. cup of milk, tablespoonful of butter. egg- generous pint ot prepared flour, cup of sugar, i saltspoonful of salt. Rub butter and sugar together ; beat in the egg, and whip up very light. Then, milk and salt, finally the flour. Bake in a buttered mould, until a straw thrust into the thickest part comes out clean. Turn out upon a plate. Cut in slices and eat hot. If for this and other receipts which prescribe prepared flour, you cannot conveniently procure it, add one tea- spoonful of soda and two of cream of tartar to each quart of flour. Sift all several times through a sieve. You can keep this for a week or two in a dry place. CREAM SAUCE. 2 cups rich milk half cream, if you can get it. 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Whites of 2 eggs whipped stiff. i teaspoonful extract of bitter almonds. % teaspoonful of nutmeg. i even tablespoonful of corn-starch wet up with cold water. Heat the milk to scalding ; add the sugar, stir in the corn-starch. When it thickens beat in the stiffened whites, then the seasoning. Take from the fire, and set in boiling water to keep warm but not cook until wanted. FIRST WEEK WEDNESDAY. I OS -first fthek. Split Pea Soup. Fricasseed Chicken, Brown. -Ladies' Cabbage. Baked Potatoes. Stewed Salsify. Soft Gingerbread. Cafe au Lait. SPLIT PEA SOUP. i quart of split peas, soaked in soft water all night. 1 Ib. streaked salt pork, cut into thin strips. 2 Ibs. of beef bones, cracked well. 3 stalks of celery, and i onion, chopped. Salt and pepper to taste. 4 quarts of cold water. A sliced lemon. Put soaked peas, pork, bones and vegetables ovei the fire, with the water, and boil slowly for three hours, until the liquid is reduced nearly one half. Strain through a colander, rubbing the peas into a tolerably thick puree into the vessel below. Season, simmer ten minutes over the fire, and pour over the lemon, sliced and pared and laid in the tureen. FRICASSEED CHICKEN BROWN. i pair of chickens. J ft>. salt pork, minced. 1 small onion. Tablespoonful of chopped parsley. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. Browned flour. Pepper, and a little salt. Joint the chickens, cutting them with a sharp knife. Put, with the pork, into a pot with a quart of water, and stew until tender. Do not boil fast, especially at fiist 5* 106 FEBRUARY. Strain off the liquor and cover the chickens while ycu prepare the gravy. Put it into a large frying-pan. There will not be too much after the chickens are taken out of it. Add to it the parsley and chopped onion, with sea- soning. Boil up, thicken with browned flour ; stir in the butter and cook rapidly, stirring often, ten minutes. Ar- range the chickens upon a hot dish and pour the gravy over it. Let all stand for five minutes before sending to the table. LADIES' CABBAGE. i firm white cabbage, boiled and left to get cold. 2 beaten eggs. i tablespoonful of butter. 3 tablespoonfuls of rich milk. Pepper and salt. Boil the cabbage in two waters. When it is cold, chop fine, and mix with it the beaten eggs, butter, milk, pepper and salt to your liking. Beat up well and bake in a (buttered pudding-dish until brown. Serve in the dish in which it was cooked, and eat hot. BAKED POTATOES. Select large, fair potatoes of equal size, wash, wipe and put into the oven to bake until soft all through. Send to table wrapped in a napkin. STEWED SALSIFY. Scrape and drop into cold water as fast as you clean them. Cut into inch lengths ; cover with hot water and stew tender. Turn off the water ; put in a cupful of cold milk. Stew in this ten minutes after the boil begins ; add a lump of butter rolled thickly in flour ; pepper and salt as you fancy. Boil up once and pour ir.to a deep dish. SOFT GINGERBREAD. i cup of butter, i cup of molasses. i cup of sugar. FIRST WEEKTHURSDAY. IO7 i cup of sour or butter milk. \ Ib. of raisins, seeded and cut in half. i teaspoonful of soda, dissolved in boiling water. 1 teaspoonful of cinnamon. 2 eggs. Nearly 5 cups of sifted flour, enough for tolerably thick batter. Cream butter, sugar, molasses, and spice ; set the mix- ture on the range until lukewarm. Add the milk, then the beaten eggs, the soda, and at last the flour. Beat hard five minutes ; put in the fruit dredged with flour ; beat three minutes, and bake in small round tins. Eat warm all that is needed for dessert. The rest will keep well. This gingerbread is uncommonly fine. CAF AU LAIT. 2 cups strong made coffee fresh and hot. 2 cups of boiling milk. Strain the coffee from the boiler into the table coffee- pot, through thin muslin. Add the boiling milk and set in a vessel of hot water, a "cozey," or a thick clqth wrapped about it, for five minutes. Then it is ready for use. Pass with the gingerbread. Jrat Dundee Broth. Baked Calf's Head. French Beans and Fried Brains, Stewed Tomatoes. Potatoes in cases. Snowballs. Sweet Cream. DUNDEE BROTH. 3 Ibs. of mutton cut into strips. 2 Ibs of bones cracked. 108 FEBRUARY 1 carrot. 2 turnips. 2 onions. Bunch of herbs. Handful of chopped cabbage. Pepper and salt. J Ib. of barley. 4 quarts of cold water. Put on the meat, bones, and sweet herbs, to stew in four quarts of water. Do not disturb for four hours. Meanwhile, pare and cut the vegetables into dice, and boil until tender in just enough water to cover them. Drain this off and throw it away. Cover the vegetables with cold water, a little salt, and let them stand until you have strained the soup. This should be allowed to cool to throw up the fat. Skim it with care ; put back over the fire. Salt and pepper, boil up, and skim again before putting in the vegetables, without the water in which they have been standing. The barley should, all this time, be soaking in warm water, just deep enough to cover it. Turn it now, with the water in which it has lain, into the soup. Let all simmer together one hour, and serve the vegetables in the soup. 'BAKED CALF'S HEAD. Take out the brains and set aside. Wash the head carefully. It should, of course, be cleaned with the skin on. Soak it in cold, salted water, one hour, then in hot water ten minutes. Boil in three quarts of cold water for about an hour after the water begins to bubble. Take it out, saving the liquor when you have salted it, as stock for to-morrow's soup. Plunge the head into cold water for five minutes. Wipe carefully, put into your dripping-pan, brush it over with beaten egg, sprin- kle with bread-crumbs, and bake until nicely browned, basting three times with butter. Make a gravy of a cup- ful of the liquor, seasoned and thickened. Fry strips of ham, about an inch wide by four inches long, almost crisp in their own fat, and having laid the head upon a flat dish, dispose these about it. Serve a piece with each plate of the head. FIRST WEEK THURSDAY. 109 FRENCH BEANS AND FRIED BRAINS. Open a can of string-beans one hour at least before they are to be cooked. Cut into short pieces, cover with hot water, and stew thirty minutes, but not until they break. Drain well ; stir into them two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, in which have been mixed salt, pepper, and a tablespoonful of lemon-juice. Heap within a deep dish, and garnish with the brains. Wash the brains and lay in cold salt and water for an hour, then boil ten minutes. Leave in very cold water until firm say a quarter of an hour. Wipe, and chop fine, add a little parsley, pepper and salt ; make into small cakes by flouring your hands ; dip in beaten egg, then in cracker-crumbs, and fry in hot dripping. Drain thoroughly. STEWED TOMATOES. Season a can of tomatoes with salt, pepper, sugar, and a little chopped onion. Stew for twenty-five minutes and Stir in a large tablespoonful of butter. Simmer ten min- utes, and serve. POTATOES IN CASES. Roast large potatoes. Cut off a piece from the top of each, and lay it aside. Empty the insides carefully by the help of a small spoon not tearing the skins. To this potato, when mashed, add -butter, grated cheese, pep- per and salt, as suits your taste. Bind the mixture with a beaten egg ; heat in a saucepan, stirring to prevent scorching refill the cases, fit on the top of each, and set in a hot oven three minutes before sending to table in a warm napkin. SNOWBALLS. J Ib. raw rice. i quart fresh milk. 5 tablespoonfuls of sugar. A little nutmeg. Wa/ih the rice in several waters, and boil in the milk (always in a farina-kettle), adding a little salt and five HO FEBRUARY. tablespoonfuls of sugar, with a pinch of nutmeg. Stew gently until the rice is soft and has soaked up the milk. Fill small cups with the rice, pressing it down firmly, and let it get cold. At dinner-time, turn it out upon a large flat dish, or pile within a glass bowl. Eat with sweet- ened cream. SWEET CREAM. 2 cups of cream. 3 tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar. 2 teaspoonfuls of rose-water. Stir the sugar into the cream until it is dissolved ; then the rose-water. Jir0t tDedt. Jiribaj). Calf's Feet Soup. Salt Mackerel with Cream Sauce. Larded Sweetbreads, Stewed, Mashed Potatoes. Stewed Celery. Omelette Souffle. Tea and Toasted Crackers. CALF'S FEET SOUP. 4 calf's feet. 1 onion. Bunch of sweet herbs. 2 stalks of celery. 4 cloves. 2 eggs. i cup of milk. Pepper and salt. i quart of cold water, and the liquor in which the calf I head was boiled, yesterday. FIRST WEEK FRIDAY. Ill In bespeaking your calf s head from your butcher, ask also for four nice feet, already cleaned. (You can secure your sweetbreads at the same time. ) Put on the feet in a quart of cold water. Cover closely and heat gradually to a very gentle boil. Keep this up until the feet begin to shrink from the bones about two hours. Should the water fall perceptibly, fill up from the tea-kettle. Have ready the vegetables, herbs, and spice, the former cut up small. Put them into the liquor left from yesterday's head, and when you have heated this to a boil, add the feet with the water in which they are cooking. Boil for another hour, still slowly. Strain the soup, cool to make the grease rise. Skim, season, and return to the fire. When again boiling, stir in the milk, and the meat from the feet, cut into dice. Take out a cupful of the soup and pour, by degrees, over the beaten eggs. Return to the pot, stir two minutes, and serve. A very nice soup, and a nutritious. If you cannot get calf s feet, use those of a pig instead, cooking exactly in the same way. SALT MACKEREL, WITH CREAM SAUCE. Soak overnight in lukewarm water, changing this in the morning for ice-cold. Rub all the salt off, and wipe dry. Grease your gridiron with butter, and rub the fish on both sides with the same, melted. Then broil quickly over a clear fire, turning with a cake-turner so as not to break it. Lay upon a hot-water dish, and cover until the the sauce is ready. Heat a small cup of milk to scalding. Stir into it a teaspoonful of corn-starch, wet up with a little water. When this thickens", add two tablespoonfuls of butter, pepper, salt, and chopped parsley. Beat an egg light, pour the sauce gradually over it, put the mixture again over the fire, and stir one minute, not more. Pour upon the fish, and let all stand, covered, over the hot water in the chafing-dish. Put fresh boiling water under the dish before sending to table. 112 FEBRUARY. MASHED POTATOES* Beaten light with milk and butter, and smoothed into a mound, should be served with the fish. If you have a pretty butter-print, wet it, and stamp the top of the mound. Remember that everything tastes better for looking well. LARDED SWEETBREADS, STEWED. 3 or 4 fine sweetbreads. J Ib. fat salt pork, cut into " lardoons," or long narrow strips, i cup of gravy (saved from the roast calf s head of yesterday). 1 tablespoonful of tomato or other catsup. Juice of half a lemon. Season with pepper. Parboil the sweetbreads for five minutes. The water should boil when they are dropped in. Take out and lay at once in ice-cold water. This makes them firm. Leave in this five minutes, wipe dry, and set aside to get cold. Then lard with the strips of pork, passing them quite through, so as to project on both sides. If you have no larding-needle, use a long-bladed penknife. Put them into a saucepan ; cover with the gravy. If there is not enough, put in a few spoonfuls from the boiling soup. The gravy should be cold, however, when poured over the sweetbreads. Stew about twenty-five minutes after the boil begins. Take out the sweetbreads ; thicken the gravy with browned Hour, add catsup, lemon, and pep- per, the lardoons having salted it sufficiently. Lay the sweetbreads upon a hot dish, pour the gravy over them, and serve ; in carving, cut perpendicularly. STEWED CELERY. 2 bunches of celery, the white stalks only, scraped and cut into short pieces, a beaten eggs. i cup of milk. FIRST WEEK FRIDAY. 113 i tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour. Pepper, salt, and a pinch of nutmeg. Stew the celery in a little salted hot water until quite tender. Drain off the water and put in the milk, cold. So soon as it boils, stir in the butter, rolled in flour, pep- per, salt, and nutmeg. Add a few spoonfuls of the hot milk to the beaten eggs that they may not curdle in the saucepan ; put with the celery and sauce over the fire ; boil up once, and dish. OMELETTE SOUFFLE. 8 eggs. 5 tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, i tablespoonful of butter. Vanilla or rose-water flavoring. Whip the whites to a very stiff froth, thick enough to be cut with a knife. Beat the yolks smooth and long ; add to these the sugar, whip up well, and flavor. Grease a neat pudding-dish abundantly with the tablespoonful of butter. The last thing before you take your seat at the table, do all this ; stir -whites and yolks together, and put into a steady, not too hot, oven. If you have a teachable cook, let her learn how to put the prepared ingredients together after dinner has gone in. The oven-door should be opened as seldom as possible, certainly not under fifteen minutes. By this time the omelette should have risen high, and be of a golden brown. Partly close the oven- door, to keep it hot, and let it be served as soon as possi- ble in the bake-dish. Never attempt this or any other nerve-trying dish, for the first time, for others than a family party. Yet it is easy enough when you have once learned for yourself how long to cook it, and how soon it will fall. TEA AND TOASTED CRACKERS. Split Boston crackers, toast, butter ; put where they will keep hot, and pass with an after-dinner cup of tea. 114 FEBRUARY. fmt tDtek. Gravy and Sago Soup. Boiled Corned Beef. Baked Macaroni. Cauliflower, with Sauce. Mashed Turnips. Jelly Tartlets. Apples and Nuts. GRAVY AND SAGO SOUP. 4 Ibs. coarse beef, cut into strips. 3 Ibs. of bones. i slice of lean corned ham. 4 onions. 4 cloves. 1 bunch 'of sweet herbs. Ib. of German sago. Pepper and salt. 5 quarts of water. 2 stalks of celery, cut small. ' Cut the beef into narrow strips, the onions into slices. Fry the latter brown in dripping, strain them out, and set aside. Return the dripping to the pan, and fry the meat until it is nicely browned, but not crisp. Lastly, fry the bones in the same fat. They should be broken up small. Put meat, bones, celery, spice, and onions into a pot with a quart of cold water ; cover closely, and put where it will not boil under an hour, but will heat all the time. This is to draw out color and open the pores (so to speak) of the meat. So soon as it boils add four quarts more of cold water. Set where it will boil steadily, but never fast, for five hours. Strain, and cool sufficiently to make the fat rise. Take it off, put back over the fire, season, boil up and skim ; put in the sago, which should have been soaked two hours in a little water, simmer fifteen minutes and serve. Save all that is left from dinner, for Monday. FIRST WEEK SATURDAY. 1 15 BOILED CORNED BEEF. Wash well, and put over the fire in hot water plenty of it and boil twenty minutes for each pound of meat. Turn three times while cooking. Drain dry, and serve with drawn butter in a boat. " Draw " the butter in liq- uor taken from the pot. Keep the rest of the liquor for the base of Sunday's soup. MASHED TURNIPS. Pare, quarter, and lay in cold water half an hour. Put on in boiling water, and cook until tender. Drain, mash, and press to get out the water, work in pepper, salt, and a generous lump of butter. Do all this quickly not to cool the turnips, and pile smoothly in a hot, deep dish. CAULIFLOWER, WITH SAUCE. Pick off the leaves and cut the stem close. Do not cut the cauliflower unless very large. Lay in cold water for thirty minutes, tie in coarse bobbinet lace or mosquito net, and cook in boiling water, slightly salted, until tender. Lay the cauliflower, flower upward, within a hot dish, and pour the sauce over it. SAUCE FOR THE ABOVE. Stir into a cup of boiling water a tablespoonful of flour, wet up with cold. When it has boiled two minutes, add two tablespoonfuls of butter, the white of an egg whipped stiff, pepper and salt, and the juice of a lemon. Boil one minute, and pour over the cauliflower. BAKED MACARONI. Break half a pound of macaroni into pieces an inch long, and cook in boiling water, slightly salted, twenty minutes. Drain, and put a layer in the bottom of a greased bake-dish, upon this some grated cheese Parmesan, if you can get it and tiny bits of butter. Then more macaroni, and so on, filling the dish, with grated cheese on top. Il6 FEBRUARY. Wet with a little milk, and salt lightly. Bake, covered half an hour, then brown. Serve in the bake-dish. JELLY TARTLETS. i Ib. of flour. \ Ib. of butter. Ib. of lard. Yolk of an egg. Ice-water. Wash the butter in three waters, working it over well to get out the salt. Melt it in a tin cup set in boiling water, take the scum from the top, and let it get almost cold, when beat, little by little, into the whipped egg. Work these into the flour, adding just enough ice-water to make the paste soft enough to roll out. When you have rolled it into a thin sheet, spread all over with the lard, put on with a knife. Sprinkle lightly with flour, roll up, and flatten with three or four strokes of the rolling-pin. Roll again into a yet thinner sheet ; again lubricate with the lard and sprinkle with flour, and, once more, make into a tight roll. Set for an hour in a cold place. Cut in two. Set aside enough for your Monday's dessert ; line small "patty-pans" with the rest, pricking the paste on the bottom to keep it from puffing too high. Bake in a quick oven, and when cold put a tablespoonful of sweet jelly or jam in each. APPLES AND NUTS, Especially the former, are better for very young stomachs than pastry, SECOND WEEK SUNDAY. II? Seconir Mock Turtle Bean Soup. Haunch of Venison. Moulded Potatoes. Lima Beans. Sweet Potatoes, Browned. Wine Jelly with Whipped Cream. Coffee and Fancy Cakes. MOCK. TURTLE BEAN SOUP. 1 quart of mock turtle soup beans. 2 onions, chopped. 4 stalks of celery, cut small. Liquor in which the corned beef of yesterday was boiled. Pepper. Dice of fried bread. i quart of cold water. i tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour. Soak the beans overnight. In the morning, pour on a quart of cold water, and set them where they will heat for an hour, without burning. Stir up often from the bot- tom. At the end of this time add the beef liquor (after taking off the fat), the onions, and celery. Cook gently three hours, until the beans are boiled to pieces. Strain, season, put back into the kettle, boil up, season with pep- per, stir in the butter rolled in flour. Simmer five min- utes, and pour upon the fried bread in the tureen. If you cannot get the purple "mock turtle soup beans," use the common white ones. HAUNCH OF VENISON. Wash all over with lukewarm vinegar and water ; then rub well with butter or lard to soften the skin. Cover the top and sides with foolscap paper, well greased, and coat it with a paste of flour and water, half an inch thick. Lay over this a large sheet of thin wrapping-paper, and Il8 FEBRUARY. over this another of stout foolscap. Tie all down in place .by greased pack-thread. The papers should also be thoroughly greased. Thus much on Saturday and set the venison in a very cold place. Next day, about three hours before it will be needed, put into the dripping-pan, with two cups of boil- ing water in the bottom. Invert another pan over it to keep in the steam ; be sure that the fire is good, and leave it to itself for an hour. Then see that the paper is not scorching ; wet it all over with hot water and a ladleful of gravy ; cover and let it alone for an hour and a ha'.f more. Remove the papers and paste, and test with a skewer in the thickest part. If it goes in readily, close the oven, and let it brown for half an hour. Baste freely four times with claret and butter ; at last dredge with flour and rub over with butter to make a froth. Take it up, put upon a hot ^dish. Skim the gravy left in the dripping pan, strain it, thicken with browned flour ; add two teaspoonfuls of currant-jelly, a glass of claret, pepper and salt. Boil up for an instant, and serve in a gravy- boat. Allow a quarter of an hour to the pound in roast- ing venison. The neck can be roasted in the same way as the haunch. MASHED POTATOES MOULDED. Having mashed and seasoned them as usual, grease well the inside of a fluted pudding or cake mould, put in the potato, cover, and set for half an hour in a dripping- pan half full of boiling water, within a moderate oven. Then remove the lid, dip, for a moment, the mould ia cold water, and turn the potato out upon a flat dish. LIMA BEANS. You can get them canned, but they are nearly, if not quite as good dried. In this case soak them overnight in soft water. Change this in the morning for fresh, and put them on to boil in hot water, a little salted. Cook slowly until soft. Do not boil so fast as to break the skins. . Drain well, stir in a good piece of butter, a little pepper and salt, and eat very hot. SECOND WEEK SUNDAY. SWEET POTATOES BROWNED. Boil in their skins, peel while hot, and set them in a quick oven v Glaze presently with butter, repeating the process, several times, as they brown. WINE JELLY WITH WHIPPED CREAM. 1 package of Coxe's gelatine, soaked for two hours in a large cup of cold water. 2 cups of white wine, or pale sherry. i lemon, all the juice and half the grated peel. 1 teaspoonful of bitter almond extract. 2 cups of white sugar. 2 cups of boiling water. Put soaked gelatine, lemon, sugar, and flavoring extract together, and cover closely for half an hour. Pour on boiling water, stir and strain. Add the wine, strain again through a flannel bag, without squeezing, and leave in a mould wet with cold water, until just before the Sunday dinner. Whip a cup of rich cream to a thick froth in a syllabub- churn. The jelly should have been formed in an open mould one with cylinder in the middle. Fill the hollow left by this with the whipped cream ; or, if your jelly be a solid mass, heap the cream about the base. COFFEE AND MACAROONS Should be the final course. I make no apology for hot and good Sunday dinners. There is a vast deal of straining out infinitesimal gnats and swallowing gigantic camels upon this, as upon most other questions of con- science. We have neither time nor space for their dis- cussion. I have simply tried to deal with the fact that most husbands, brothers, and fathers expect a better din- ner on Sabbath, and enjoy it more, than upon other days, by showing, to the best of my ability, how they can be gratified without imposing heavy duties upon mistress and servants at a season when both mind and body need com- parative rest. I2O FEBRUARY. geconir " Second Thoughts " Soup. Larded Venison. Scalloped Tomatoes. Grape Jelly. Fried Sweet Potatoes* Raspberry and Currant Jelly Tart. "SECOND THOUGHTS" SOUP. Heat Saturday's soup to a boil ; add two cups of milk, and when this heats, pour a little of it upon two beaten eggs. Return these to the soup, add whatever seasoning is necessary ; simmer all together for one min- ute, and pour upon three or four tablespoonfuls of grated cheese placed in the bottom of the tureen. Stir up well, and it is ready. LARDED VENISON. Trim the remains of the roast haunch into a neat shape, and lard with strips of fat pork, making incisions to re- ceive it with a thin, sharp-edged knife. Pour what gravy you have over it, or should there be none, use butter and water instead. Put into a dripping-pan, turn another over it and roast or steam for one hour. Meantime, make a gravy of the trimmings, bits of bone, etc., by covering them well with cold water, and adding half an onion, sliced. Stew until the gravy is reduced one-half. Strain, season with pepper ; a tablespoonful of currant- jelly, one of catsup and two of claret. Thicken slightly with browned flour, boil up to mix well, and pour gradu- ally over the meat. Baste abundantly with this for half an hour if the piece of meat be large. Less time may suffice for a small roast. Never let it dry for an instant. When done, it should seem to have been stewed rather than roasted. Serve the gravy in a sauce-boat. Like some other " second thoughts," this dish will be even better than at its first appearance. SECOND WEEK MONDAY. 121 SCALLOPED TOMATOES. Turn nearly all the juice off from a can of tomatoes. Salt and pepper this, by the way, and put aside in a cool place for some other day's soup. Put a layer of bread- crumbs in the bottom of a buttered pie-dish ; on them one of tomatoes ; sprinkle with salt, pepper, and some bits of butter, also a little sugar. Another layer of crumbs, another of tomatoes seasoned then a top layer of very fine, dry crumbs. Bake covered until bub- bling hot, and brown quickly. FRIED SWEET POTATOES. Slice cold ones left from yesterday, or boiled this fore- noon ; roll in flour and fry in dripping. Drain well. RASPBERRY AND CURRANT JELLY TART. Roll out the raw paste reserved for to-day from Satur- day, and line two pie-dishes. Fill them nearly full of canned raspberries, sweetened to your liking. Spread a coating of currant jelly over the top, and cover with a lattice-work of pastry, cut with a jagging-iron. Watch your chance of putting them into the oven, as they are better when not hot. You will like them, I think. Clam Soup. Ragout of Veal. Rice and Cheese. Potato Puff. Celery Salad. A Mere Trifle. CLAM SOUP. 50 clams, ready opened, i quart of milk. 122 FEBRUARY. I pint of water. 3 tablespoonfuls of butter. 12 whole peppers. A few bits of red pepper pods. 6 blades of mace. Salt to taste. i stalk of celery, cut small. i tablespoonful rice-flour or corn-starch. Diain off the liquor from the clams and put it over the fire in a large farina-kettle, with a pint of water, the peppers, mace, celery, and salt. When it has boiled ten minutes, strain and put back into the kettle with the clams. Shut the lid down closely, and boil, fast, thirty minutes. Heat the milk in another vessel, stir into it the rice-flour, wet up with cold water, and the butter. Pour into the kettle with the clams, take at once from the tire, pour into the tureen, in the bottom of which you have laid four or five Boston crackers, split. Cover, and wait five minutes before serving. RAGOUT OF VEAL. 5 Ibs. of knuckle of veal. 1 onion. 2 stalks of celery. Bunch of sweet herbs. Juice of tomatoes set aside yesterday. Juice of half a lemon. 1 tablespoonful of butter. 2 tablespoonfuls of browned flour. J Ib. of streaked fat pork. Pepper and salt. Crack the bones, when you have taken the meat off, and put them into a saucepan with the minced onion, celery, and herbs, with a quart of water. Stew slowly until the liquor has boiled down to a pint. Meanwhile, cut the veal into neat slices, and fry until they begin to brown, in some good dripping. Strain the gravy made from the bones and vegetables over this, and put all on to stew, adding the tomato-juice, pepper, and pork, the last cut up fine. Simmer, with the lid on, for two hours. SECOND WEEK TUESDAY. 12$ Then add the browned flour, wet up in cold water, salt, if needed, the butter and lemon-juice. Boil up once, and dish. RICE AND CHEESE. Boil a cup of rice in a quart of water, slightly salted, and when half-done add two tablespoonfuls of butter. By the time the rice is soft, the water should have been soaked up entirely, and each grain stand out whole in the mass. Never stir boiling rice, but shake up the saucepan instead. Stir into the rice, at this point, three tablespoon- fuls of grated cheese, salt and pepper to taste. Toss up with a fork until the cheese is dissolved, and pour into a deep dish. POTATO PUFF. Mash the potatoes while hot. Beat in butter, milk, and two whipped eggs, with salt to your liking, until you have a light, soft paste. Bake in a buttered pudding- dish in a quick oven. CELERY SALAD. Cut up blanched stalks of celery into short pieces. Mix a dressing of one tablespoonful of oil to one tea- spoonful of sugar, one of salt, half as much pepper, and four tablespoonfuls of vinegar with half a teaspoonful of made mustard. Heat the vinegar to scalding, and pour over a beaten egg, a little at a time, and beating i in well. To this add the oil and other ingredients, whipping up the mixture with an egg-beater. When cold, pour over the salad, toss up with a silver fork, and put into a glass bowl. A MERE TRIFLE. i quart of fresh milk. 5 eggs. 6 Jablespoonfuls of sugar. Vanilla, or other essence, 2 teaspoonfuts. Heat the milk to boiling, and pour, gradually, upon the beaten yolks and sugar. Put again over the fire, stii 124 FEBRUARY. steadily for about ten minutes, or until it begins to thicken. Take it off, and while still very hot, stir in with a few light strokes half of the frothed whites. Let it get cold before flavoring it. Pour into a glass bowl. Whip the remaining whites to a meringue with a little powdered sugar. Heap upon the custard. Put bits of bright jelly, or preserved strawberries, here and there upon the snowy mass. Swonir Hotch-Potch. Stewed Pigeons. Potatoes a la Lyonnaise. Kidney Beans. Mixed Pickles. English Tapioca Pudding. HOTCH-POTCH. 2 Ibs. of lean beef, without bones, and cut into mince- meat. 2 onions. 2 carrots. 2 turnips. ? stalks of celery. J- small cabbage, cut fine. 2 potatoes. 1 cup of corn. Half a can of tomatoes. Bunch of sweet herbs, chopped. Pepper and salt. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. Wash, scrape, and slice the vegetables, and put all ex- cept the tomatoes into a pot ; cover with h6t water and boil gently ten minutes. Drain off the water, put a hand- ful of the mixed vegetables, including now the tomatoes, in the bottom of a stone jar. Pepper and salt, strew SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. 12$ thickly with the minced raw beef, repeat the order until your materials are all in the jar. Fit a top or a small plate over the mouth ; tie down with stout greased paper, set it within the oven, and let it alone for five or six hours, except that you must look, now and then, to see that the paper does not take fire. Prevent this by greasing it abundantly. At the end of this time, turn out the hotch- potch ; stir in the butter, and, if needed, additional season- ing through it, and serve in a tureen. STEWED PIGEONS. Pick, clean, and wash the pigeons, and put into a pot with a cupful of water to keep them from burning, and a tablespoonful of butter for each one. Shut the lid down tightly, and subject to a slow heat until they are of a nice brown abuout nut-color. Once in a great while turn them, and see that each is well wet with the liquor. Take them out and cover in a warm place a colander set over a pot of hot water is best while you make the gravy. Chop the giblets of the pigeon " exceeding small " with a little onion and parsley. Put into the gravy, pepper and salt, boil up and thicken with browned flour. Return the pigeons to the pot, cover again tightly, and cook slowly until tender. If there should not be liquor enough in the pot to make the gravy, add boiling water before the giblets go in. This is an admirable receipt. POTATOES A LA LYONNAISE. Cut parboiled potatoes into dice. Chop an onion and fry it, with a little minced parsley, in good dripping or butter, for one minute. Then put in the potatoes. Stir briskly until they have fried slowly for five minutes. They must never stick to the bottom, nor brown. Sprinkle with pepper and salt, drain free of fat by shaking them in a heated colander, and send up hot. KIDNEY BEANS. Soak over night in soft water ; next morning cover with lukewarm, and cook slowly for one hour. Salt slightly 126 FEBRUARY. and boil until tender, but not to actual breaking. Drain very well, stir in a liberal spoonful of batter, pepper, and serve. ENGLISH TAPIOCA PUDDING. i cup of tapioca. 5 eggs. 3 pints of milk. 1 cup of sugar. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. \ Ib. of raisins. Half the grated peel of a lemon. A little salt. Soak the tapioca for one hour in a pint of the milk pour into a farina-kettle, surround with warm water, sa,i very slightly, and bring to a boil. When soft throughout, turn out to cool, while you make the custard. Heat a quart of milk to scalding ; pour over the beaten eggs and sugar, this last having been rubbed to a cream with the butter. Mix with the tapioca lemon-peel and raisins last. Dredge the fruit lightly with flour, and beat all up hard. Bake in a buttered dish one hour at first covered. Eat warm, with powdered sugar. It is better for not being too hot. 0minlr UUek. Celery Soup. Mutton Cutlets Fried. Stewed Corn and Tomatoes. Brussels Sprouts. Mashed Potatoes. Apple Meringue Pie. CELERY SOUP. 2 Ibs. of veal. 1 slice of corned ham, or a ham-bone. bunches of celery. 2 cups of milk. SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. 12? 2 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch wet up in water. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. I teaspoonful of sugar. i onion. Dice of fried bread. Pepper and salt. 3 quarts of water. Chop the meat, onion, and herbs ; cover with the watei and put on to stew early in the day. When the meat has boiled to rags and the liquid reduced one-half, strain, and put in the celery, cut into small pieces. Use the best parts only. Stew soft ; rub through a colander and return with the broth to the saucepan. Season, add the sugar, boil up and skim, and put in the milk. Heat, and add corn starch. When it again boils, you stirring all the while, put in the butter. Take off so soon as this has melted, and pour over the fried bread in the tureen. MUTTON CUTLETS FRIED. Beat them flat with the broad side of a hatchet ; season with pepper and salt, dip first in beaten egg, then in bread-crumbs, and fry in lard or dripping. Drain per- fectly free from the fat, and arrange them, standing on end and touching one another, around a mound of mashed potatoes. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual, and shape with a knife into a smooth mound, with a hedge of cutlets about the base. STEWED CORN AND TOMATOES. Take a half-can of tomatoes and the same of corn, the rest of that which was opened for your " hotch-potch " yesterday, and, after mixing them up well, season with pepper, salt, and a little sugar. Set on where they will cook slowly. At the end of twenty-five minutes, stir in a great spoonful of butter. Put on the lid and stew very gently ten minutes more. Serve in a deep dish. 128 FEBRUARY. BRUSSELS SPROUTS. Pick over, trim, and lay in cold water for half an hour cook quickly in boiling water, a little salt, for fifteen min utes. Drain carefully, put upon a flat dish, and pour drawn butter over them. APPLE MERINGUE PIE. i quart of flour, j- Ib. of butter. Jib. of lard. Ice-water. Chop the lard in flour, wet up with ice-water to a stiff paste. Roll thin, and baste with one-third of the butter, sprinkle lightly with flour, and roll up. Again roll out, even thinner than before, baste again with half the re- maining butter, sprinkle with flour, and make a second roll. Repeat this process yet a third time, and set in a cold place for one hour. Cut the roll of paste into two pieces, reserving one for to-morrow's oyster-pie. With the other, line two pie- dishes and fill with good apple-sauce, well sweetened, and seasoned with nutmeg. Bake until just done. Draw to the oven door, and spread with a meringue made by whipping stiff the whites of three eggs for each pie, sweet- ening with a tablespoonful of sugar for each egg. Flavor with a little rose-water or lemon-essence, beat until you can make a clean cut in it, and spread three-quarters of an inch thick upon each pie. Shut the oven door until the meringue is well set. Do not let it scorch. Eat cold. SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. 129 Seconi tDwk. Jnirag. Friars' Soup. Oyster Pie. Calf's Liver a TAnglaise. Apple Sauce. Stewed Parsnips. Potatoes au gratin. Picklette. Chocolate Custard. FRIARS' SOUP. 4 onions. 3 stalks of celery. of a small cabbage. 2 turnips. 4 tablespoonfuls of butter. \ cup raw rice. 2 eggs. Pepper and salt to taste. i tablespoonful of chopped parsley. 3 quarts of water. Boil the vegetables, all chopped fine (reserving the parsley for seasoning), in three quarts of water until they can be pulped through a colander. Return them, with the water in which they were cooked, to the fire. Boil the rice, meantime, in a little water until it swells and absorbs it all. Stir into the vegetable porridge, season, and simmer 'for fifteen minutes. Add the butter, sim- mer ten minutes, dip out a cupful and beat into the eggs. Stir this into the broth, and before it begins to boil, take from the fire and pour out, lest the eggs should curdle. OYSTER PIE. Roll out the raw paste made yesterday into a pretty thick sheet. Fill a pudding-dish with crusts of stale bread, or light crackers. Butter the edges of the dish that the crust may be easily removed. Cover the mockpie with 6* 130 FEBRUARY. the pastry ; lay a strip cut in scallops or points, around the edge, to keep it in place, and bake. To each pint of oyster-liquor allow a cup of milk, but heat them in separate vessels. So soon as the liquor boils, put in the oysters and cook five minutes more. Stir a tablespoonful of corn-starch into the pint of hot milk, having, of course, first wet it up with cold water, and, when it thickens, pour over the oysters and liquor. Season with pepper and salt, and add two tablespoonfuls of butter, if there be a quart of oysters. Lift the hot crust from the pudding dish with great care. Remove the stale bread, wipe out the inside ; pour in the stewed oysters with enough of the soup to cover them well ; re- place the pastry and set in the oven for two or three min- utes. CALF'S LIVER A L'ANGLAISE. " 2 Ibs. of fresh liver. J Ib. fat salt pork. i tablespoonful of butter. of a small onion. i teaspoonful of chopped parsley. Pepper. The pork should salt it sufficiently. Put the butter into a warm not hot saucepan. Cut the liver into slices half an inch thick, and lay upon the butter. Mince the pork and cover the liver. Sprinkle the parsley and onion, with pepper, on top. Cover the saucepan closely and set in a kettle of hot water. Keep this water below the boiling-point for an hour. Then let it boil another hour. The liver should by this time be very tender and juicy, if the heat has been properly man- aged. Take it out, and put it upon a chafing-dish to keep warm. Boil up, and thicken the gravy with browned flour ; pour over the liver and serve. The inner saucepan should be made of tin. POTATOES AU GRATIN. Mash your potatoes, soft with butter and milk ; mould in a round pan or tin jelly-mould, made very -wet with SECOND WEEKFRIDAY. 13* cold water. Turn out upon a flat plate a sheet of tin is better well-greased, strew with fine, dry bread-crumbs ; set upon the upper grating of the oven to brown quickly. Slip dexterously from the plate to a hot dish. STEWED PARSNIPS. Boil tender and cut in long slices. Heat in a sauce- pan a cup of milk, thicken it with a tablespoon ful of butter cut into bits and rolled in flour, season with pep- per, salt, and a little nutmeg. Put in the parsnips, boil up once gently, take from the fire, and leave covered ri the saucepan for five minutes before you serve. PlCKLETTE AND APPLE SAUCE. Pass the first with the oyster pie, which is a course of itself; the apple sauce with the meat. CHOCOLATE CUSTARD. i quart of milk. 5 eggs. 1 cup of sugar. 4 heaping tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate. 2 teaspoonfuls vanilla extract. Scald the milk, rub the chocolate to a smooth paste in a little cold milk. Stir into the milk and cook two min- utes in it. Beat up the yolks of the five eggs with the whites of two, and the sugar. Pour the hot mixture, gradually, upon them, stirring deeply. Turn into a but- tered pudding-dish, and set in a dripping-pan of boiling water. Bake until firm. When " set " in the middle, spread quickly, without taking from the oven, with a m- ringue made by whipping the reserved whites stiff with a very little sugar. Bake until this is done. Eat cold. 132 FEBRUARY. Becontr QJeek. Macaroni Soup. Baked Ham. Cheese Fondu. Stewed Potatoes. Spinach with Eggs. Seymour Pudding. MACARONI SOUP. 3 Ibs. knuckle of veal. 2 Ibs. of lean beef. 1 Ib. lean ham. 2 onions. 1 carrot. 2 turnips. Bunch of sweet herbs. J Ib. of macaroni cut into fancy shapes, usually known as" "Italian Paste." 6 cloves. 3 table spoonfuls of butter. 6 quarts of water. 3 stalks of celery. Mince the meat, crack the bones, and slice the vege- tables. Mix all together. Put the butter in the bottom of a soup-pot, next the meat, then the vegetables and herbs ; fit on a tight lid, and set the pot where it will warm very slowly. At the end of an hour, open it, pour off the gravy ; increase the heat until the meat begins to brown on the sides of the pot. Return the gravy to the rest of the ingredients ; cover with six quarts of cold water, and boil until the liquor has fallen to four quarts. This should be in four hours. Strain the soup ; press- ing out all the nourishment, and rubbing the vegetables through the sieve. Add the paste, or, if you cannot obtain it, the same quantity of pipe macaroni, boiled a few minutes in hot water, and left to get cool. Then, with a sharp knife or scissors, clip it into very short bits, and put into the soup. Season, boil up, skim well, and SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. *33 let all cook gently together for ten minutes. Half of the above quantity of stock will be enough for Saturday's dinner. Therefore, before adding the macaroni, take out about two quarts, season well, and set aside for Sunday's > soup. BAKED HAM. Soak overnight in warm water. In the morning, scrub it hard ; trim away the rusty part of the under side and edges ; wipe dry ; cover the bottom with a stiff paste of flour and water, and lay, upside down, in the dripping- pan, with enough water to keep it from burning. Allow, in baking, twenty-five minutes to the pound. Baste a few times, to prevent the skin from cracking, and keep hot water in the pan. When a skewer will pierce the thickest part, take it up, plunge for one minute into cold water ; skin carefully, brush all over with beaten egg, then strew very thickly with cracker-crumbs, and set in a hot oven to brown. Eat hot or cold, garnished with sprigs of celery or parsley. CHEESE FONDU. i pint of boiling milk. i cup very dry bread-crumbs. (Crush the crusts baked in yesterday's oyster pie.) j- Ib. dry cheese, grated. 3 eggs. Pepper and salt. Soak the crumbs in the hot milk ; beat in the cheese ; then the yolks of the eggs, pepper and salt. Have a buttered pudding-dish ready, and just before the fondu goes into the oven whip in the whites of the eggs, already frothed. Pour into the dish, bake in a brisk oven, and send at once to table, as it soon falls. This is a delightful accompaniment to ham. SPINACH WITH EGGS. Pick the leaves from the stems, wash well, and boil in hot water, a little salted, for twenty minutes. Chop and drain. Return to the saucepan with a tablespoonful of 134 FEBRUARY. butter, a teaspoonful of sugar, a little pepper and salt, Have ready the yolks of three eggs, rubbed to powder, then wet up with a little cream or milk. Stir all together in the saucepan, beating with a wire spoon, until they are smooth and thick. Turn into a deep dish and garnish with the whites of the eggs cut into rings. STEWED POTATOES. Pare the potatoes ; cut into quarters, and these into long, even strips. Lay in cold water half an hour, and cook in boiling water until tender, with half a minced onion. Drain off nearly all the water ; pepper and salt, and add a cup of cold milk with a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour. When it thickens, stir in a little chopped parsley. Simmer five minutes and serve. The potatoes should not be allowed to break so much as to lose their shape. SEYMOUR PUDDING. J cup of molasses. i scant cup of milk. cup of raisins, seeded and cut in half. J cup of currants. J cup of suet, powdered. % teaspoonful of soda dissolved in hot water. 1 egg- I teaspoonful mixed cinnamon and mace. A little salt. i cups of Graham flour. Stir molasses, suet, and milk together, add the egg, spice, flour, fruit, well dredged with flour at last, the soda. Beat hard five minutes before putting it into a buttered pudding-mould. Boil two hours and a half. Eat with butter and sugar. THIRD WEEK SUNDAY. 135 Beef and Barley Soup. Steamed Turkey. Naples Rice Pudding. Cranberry Sauce. Boiled Sweet Potatoes. Pumpkin Pie. BEEF AND BARLEY SOUP. Use the two quarts of stock set aside yesterday. Soak five or six tablespoonfuls of barley in cold water two hours. Boil half an hour or until tender, in a little salted water. When you have taken the cake of cold fat from the top of the soup, put in the barley and simmer all together half an hour. Then stir in two tablespoonfuls of shred gelatine previously soaked one hour in cold water. When this has dissolved, the soup is ready for use. STEAMED TURKEY. Prepare the turkey as for roasting, and. if you have no steamer, put a gridiron upon the top of a pot of boiling water ; lay the fowl upon it, invert a deep pan, as nearly as possible the size of the mouth of the pot, over it, stuff wet cloths into whatever space may be left between the pot and the pan, and keep the water at a hard boil, allowing twenty minutes for each pound of turkey. Two or three times, replenish the water by pulling away one of the cloths so as to leave an aperture large enough to admit the nose of the boiling tea-kettle. When the tur- key is half done, lift the pan and turn it ; replace the cloths and steam again. When it is done, lay upon a hot dish and baste with a mixture of melted butter and chopped parsley, anointing all parts of it well. Serve drawn butter in a boat, with a couple of boiled eggs chopped fine, stirred up in it. Save the giblets of the turkey for Monday's soup. CRANBERRY SAUCE In a mould, as .strained jelly, or the plainer dish of stewed cranberries, well-sweetened, must accompany this dish. FEBRUARY. NAPLES RICE PUDDING. Take a few tablespoonfuls of the meat boiled in yes- terday's soup, mince fine, add half a chopped onion, a tablespoonful of dripping from the top of the soup, and put on to warm with a very little hot water. Sim- mer, but do not boil, fifteen minutes. Boil one cup of rice in enough water, slightly salt, to cover it well. Shake up from time to time, but do not stir. When the rice is soft and has soaked up the water, add a cup of cold milk in which has been stirred a tablespoonful of corn-starch, one raw egg, and a tablespoonful of butter. Take from the fire before you do this and turn into a bowl. Stir in now the minced meat and gravy (there should be very little of the latter), season to taste, mix all up well, and put into a buttered cake-mould. Set this in a dripping-pan . of hot water and bake one hour, closely covered. Turn out upon a hot dish. It is a very good entree, and easily made. BOILED SWEET POTATOES. Boil in their skins until soft to the touch ; pare quickly, lay upon a flat dish, butter each, and serve hot. PUMPKIN PIE. 1 quart of stewed pumpkin, rubbed through a fine colander. 6 eggs. 2 quarts of milk. i teaspoonful of mace. i teaspoonful of cinnamon and the same of nutmeg. i cups of sugar. Beat the eggs light and whip in the sugar, then the pumpkin and spice. At last, mix in the milk, stirring up well from the bottom. Bake in open shells of paste made according to the re- ceipt given last Thursday. Eat cold, and send around a plate of cheese with it. THIRD WEEK MONDAY. 137 Jttonbag. Giblet Soup. Turkey and Ham. Corn Puddings. Peach Pickles. Baked Potatoes. Farina Custard. GIBLET SOUP. Cut the giblets of your turkey into six pieces each, and stew, closely covered, in a pint of water until tender. Strain out the barley from the remains of yesterday's soup and if you have any of Saturday's in the pantry, strain out the vermicelli and add that. Warm this to a boil with the liquor in which the giblets were cooked. Boil up sharply and skim ; add the giblets, and while they simmer together, put two tablespoonfuls of butter cut into bits, and rolled in browned flour, into a frying-pan. Stir until it is hissing hot. Add to the soup with a handful of chopped parsley, and a tablespoonful of walnut or mush- room catsup. Boil up once and serve. TURKEY AND HAM. Cover the uncarved side of your steamed turkey with rather thick and fat slices of cooked ham. Three or four large ones will suffice. Bind them to the body with greased packthread. Lay the turkey, cut side downward, and the ham up, in the dripping-pan with a little boiling water in the bottom. Bake about three-quarters of an hour, basting the ham, when it begins to drip, with its own grease. Ten minutes before taking it up, clip the strings, and remove the ham to a hot dish. Dredge the upper side of the turkey with flour, and baste with butter to make a brown froth. Dish, with the ham laid around it. CORN PUDDINGS. Add to a can of sweet corn, i cup of milk. 3 138 FEBRUARY. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 1 of sugar. 2 tablespoonfuls of flour., i teaspoonful of salt. Beat up the eggs, add the sugar and butter, the milk, corn, and, lastly, the flour. Bake in earthenware cups well buttered, or in neat patty-pans. Turn out upon a dish, or eat from the cups. They are very nice when hot. BAKED POTATOES. Wash, wipe, and bake in a moderate oven. When done, cut a round piece of skin almost entirely from the top of each, leaving a " hinge " at one side. With a small knife make an incision in the mealy part of the potato, /'. e., the heart, put in a pinch of salt, and a bit of butter, replace the flap of skin, and send hot to table. FARINA CUSTARD. i quart of milk. 4 tablespoonfuls of farina. 3 eggs well beaten, i cup of sugar. Vanilla essence 2 teaspoonfuls. i saltspoonful of salt. Heat the milk to scalding ; stir in the farina, which should have been previously soaked in a little cold water for an hour. Cook in a farina-kettle fifteen minutes, stir- ring often. Take out a cupful and beat into the eggs already whipped up with the sugar. Put into the kettle, stir in salt and flavoring, boil two minutes, and pour into a deep dish. Eat warm, putting a teaspoonful of sweet fruit jelly upon the top of each saucerful in serving. THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 139 Sfytrir Plain Calfs Head Soup. Boiled Mutton. Minced Cabbage. String-Beans. Beetroot Salad, Corn Meal Puffs. PLAIN CALF'S HEAD SOUP. Wash a calf s head (cleaned with the skin on), in three waters, and soak one hour in salted water. Then put on to boil in five quarts of cold water. Cook until the meat slips easily from the bones. Take out the head, remove the bones, and throw back into the soup. Set aside three-quarters of the meat the best portions for to-morrow's dinner. Chop the ears and other refuse parts fine ; season with salt, pepper, onion, sweet marjoram, a teaspoonful of ground cloves, and as much allspice even spoonfuls. Mix all up well, return to the soup and boil down to three quarts. Mash the brains and make into forcemeat balls with raw egg, seasoning and enough flour to hold them together ; roll in flour and set in a cool place until wanted. Put two tablespoonfuls of butter into a saucepan with two tablespoonfuls of browned flour wet up with cold water, and stir together five minutes. Strain the soup, put back two quarts over the fire, stir in the thickening of flour and butter, boil up and put in the forcemeat balls. Simmer ten minutes, add the juice of a lemon, and a glass of brown sherry, and pour out. The reserved quart of " stock " is for another day's soup. Do not put the calf s tongue into the soup. It is indispen- sable in to-morrow's ragout. BOILED MUTTON. Tli 2 best part for boiling is the leg. Put on in boiling water and cook, allowing fifteen minutes to the pound. Make a sauce by taking out a cupful of liquor when it is nearly done, cooling it until you can take off the fat, then heating again in a saucepan and stirring into it one 140 FEBRUARY. tablespoonful of butter, two teaspoonfuls of flour, wet up with cold water. Stir for five minutes, putting in a tea- spoonful of chopped parsley, and after another boil, take from the fire before you put in the juice of a lemon. In this, as in other cases where the liquor in which meat is boiled is to be used for broth, salt slightly vfhile cooking, sprinkling all over lightly with salt the moment you take it from the fire. Serve the sauce in a boat. MINCED CABBAGE. Boil a firm head of cabbage, quartered, in two waters, tnrowing the first away after ten minutes' cooking and putting in more as hot, and a little salted. When it is tender all through, drain and chop quite fine, seasoning with salt, pepper, and a liberal .portion of butter. Serve hot in a vegetable dish. STRING BEANS. Open a can of string beans an hour before they are to be used. Cut them into short pieces when you are ready to cook them ; turn off the liquor and cover them with cold water. Put into a pot with a bit of salt pork a little more than an inch square. Boil slowly until tender, strain, season with pepper, and serve hot, with the pork on top of the pile of beans. BEETROOT SALAD. Boil the beets until tender ; scrape clean ; drop into cold water for three -minutes. Slice, and pour over them a dressing of vinegar, salt, sugar, made mustard, pepper, and one tablespoonful of oil to four of vinegar. Cover," and let all stand together for two hours. This salad will keep for a couple of days. CORN-MEAL PUFFS. 1 quart of boiling milk. 2 scant cups of white " corn-flour." cup of wheat-flour. i scant cup of powdered sugar. A little salt. THIRD WEEK WEDNESDAY. 14* 4 eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately. i tablespoonful of butter. \ teaspoonful of soda. i teaspoonful of cream tartar. J- teaspoonful mixed cinnamon and nutmeg. Sift soda and cream tartar twice through the flour. Then, mix flour and meal together, and sift a third time. Boil the milk and stir into it the meal, flour, and salt. Boil ten minutes, stirring well up from the bottom. Take it off, put into a bowl, add the butter and beat hard for three minutes. Let it cool while you whip the eggs light, then the yolks and sugar and spice together. Beat these into the cold mush, and lastly the frothed whites. Whip all together faithfully, and bake in greased cups or small " corn-bread moulds," set within a steady oven. When done, turn out and eat hot, breaking not cutting them open, and after buttering sprinkling with white sugar. ffiljiri tDak. tDetme0irag. Marie's Soup. Ragout of Calf's Head and Mushrooms. Mashed Turnips. Creamed Potatoes. Tomato Soy. Sponge-cake Pudding. Nuts and Raisins. MARIE'S SOUP. 2 sweetbreads. i quart of soup jelly, left from yesterday's stock. i quart of cold water. 1 onion. Bunch of parsley. 2 blades of mace. 142 FEBRUARY. A dozen mushrooms. Pepper and salt. i tablespoonful of corn-starch wet up in cold water. Wash and scald the sweetbreads, and put on to stew in the cold water. When they have boiled slowly half an hour, salt, boil up and skim. Take all the fat from the top of the cold soup-stock, and stir into the liquor already on the fire. Add the onion and parsley minced, and the mace ; season to taste, cover and stew gently for one hour. Take out the sweetbreads and lay them where they will cool quickly. Strain the soup, return to the fire ; put in a dozen mushrooms (you can buy the French champignons in cans) stew fifteen minutes ; cut the sweetbreads into small squares, drop into the soup ; thicken with the corn- starch wet with cold water ; boil up once and serve. This soup is very fine. RAGOUT OF CALF'S HEAD AND MUSHROOMS. I cold boiled calf s head, cut into slices with the tongue, i can French mushrooms, minus those used for the soup. i sliced onion. Pepper, salt, and sweet herbs. teaspoonful mixed mace and allspice. Juice of a lemon. Butter or dripping for frying. Cut three-quarters of the calf s head-^-the best parts- into neat slices, also the tongue. Chop the rest, season with the onion, pepper and salt, cover with three cups of cold water, and stew gently down to one cup of gravy. Meanwhile fry the slices of meat in good dripping. Take them out with a wire spoon and put into the bottom of a tin vessel set within another of warm not boiling water. Cover and set over the fire. Drain, slice and fry the mushrooms in the fat left in the frying-pan. Drain and lay these upon the meat in the inner vessel. Time the cooking of the gravy so as to have it ready, spiced, and seasoned, to be strained, hot over the meat and mush- rooms. Put on a tight lid and simmer fifteen minutes, never boiling once Strain off the gravy into a sauce- THIRD WEEK WEDNESDAY. 143 pan. Thicken, and let it boil up once. Add the lemon- juice, put the meat and mushrooms into a deep dish, and pour the hot gravy over all. i MASHED TURNIPS. Boil soft, drain and mash, pressing the water out well, return to the saucepan, with a generous lump of butter ; pepper and salt ; stir constantly until the butter is dis- solved, and all smoking hot, and serve in a covered dish. CREAMED POTATOES. In mashing them, add more milk than usual, whipping up hard with a silver fork. While still very hot, beat in the white of an egg, already frothed stiffly ; pile in a deep dish and set, uncovered, within the oven, until a light crust begins to form on the top, but not long enough to injure the dish. Brush over with butter to glaze it, and serve. TOMATO SOY Is an excellent " stock " pickle. For directions for mak- ing it, please refer to page 488, " GENERAL RECEIPTS, No. i, OF COMMON-SENSE SERIES." SPONGE-CAKE PUDDING. 1 stale sponge-cake. 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar. 4 eggs, beaten light. 2 cups of milk. i tablespoonful of corn-starch, wet up with cold milk. Juice of one lemon and half the grated peel. Slice the cake and lay some of it in the bottom of a buttered pudding-dish. Make a custard by scalding the milk, stirring into it the corn-starch, then pouring it, by degrees, upon the beaten eggs and sugar. Add the lem- on ; pour over the cake, put another layer of slices ; more custard, and so on, until the mould is full. Put a small, heavy plate on top, and let all stand until the custard is soaked up. Cover and bake, half an hour, or until done throughout. Turn out upon a flat dish, sprinkle thickly with white sugar, and eat warm or cold. 144 FEBRUARY. NUTS AND RAISINS. Crack the nuts, and select for table use fair bunches of plump, fresh raisins. aijirb Potage au Riz. English Pork Pie. Mock Stewed Oysters. Potato Balls. Mixed Pickles. Lemon Jelly and Light Cake. POTAGE AU Riz, In plainer English, rice-broth, can be achieved for to- day, with little trouble, by the help of the liquor in which your mutton was boiled on Tuesday. Wash and soak a cup of rice in cold water. At the end of half an hour, add it, with the water in which it has soaked, to the mutton-broth, from which you must first take the fat. Boil very slowly two hours, and should the water sink be- low the original level more than an inch, replenish with boiling. In another saucepan heat a cup of milk, thick- ened with a tablespoonful of rice-flour. Season the mut- ton-broth with pepper and parsley it will hardly need salt. (Boil up and skim,' before the parsley goes in.) Pour the hot milk over two beaten eggs, stir in well ; add to the soup in the kettle, and take instantly from the fire. ENGLISH PORK PIE. 3 Ibs. of lean fresh pork, cut into strips as long as youi finger. 6 large juicy apples. 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Pepper, salt, and mace to taste. 1 cup of sweet cider. 2 tablespoorfuls of butter. THIRD WEEK THURSDAY. 145 Good pie-paste for an upper crust, made according to receipt given for Thursday of second week in this month. Put a layer of pork within a pudding-dish ; season with pepper, salt, and nutmeg, or mace. Next a layer of sliced apples, strewed with sugar and bits of butter. Go on in this order until you are ready for the crust, having the last layer of apples. Pour in the cider, cover with a thick crust of good pastry, ornamented around the edge ; make a slit in the middle, and bake in a moderate oven one hour and a half. Should the crust threaten to brown too fast, cover with paper. When nicely browned, brush over with butter and close the oven door for a moment ; then wash well with white of egg. Eat hot. You will find it very good, odd as the receipt may seem. MOCK STEWED OYSTERS. Scrape and drop into cold water a bunch of salsify, or oyster-plant. Cut into short pieces and stew tender in boiling water, a little salted. Drain off nearly all the water, and pour into the saucepan a cup of cold milk. When again hot, add a heaping tablespoonful of butter and a handful of fine cracker-dust, with pepper and salt. Stir very slowly for five minutes, and pour out. It should be about as thick as oyster soup. POTATO BALLS. Mash potatoes with a little butter and salt, and let them get cold. Then work in "a beaten egg. Make into balls about twice the size of a walnut, with floured hands, roll them well in flour, and fry yellow- brown in good drip- ping or lard. Dram in a colander, and pile upon a flat dish. LEMON JELLY AND LIGHT CAKE. 5 lemons juice of all and grated peel of two. 2 large cups of sugar. 1 package of Coxe's gelatine,' soaked in two cups of cold water. 2 glasses pale sherry. i pint of boDing water. 7 146 FEBRUARY. Stir sugar, lemch-juice, peel, and soaked gelatine to- gether, and leave, covered, for an hour. Then pour over them the boiling water ; stir until the gelatine is dis- solved ; strain through a flannel bag, without pressing. Add the wine, and let all drip, untouched, through double flannel. Pour into a wet mould. In cold weather, or if set on ice, it will be ready for use in six hours. Pass a basket of light cake with it. tDeek. Lobster Bisque. . Stewed Chicken. Rice Croquettes. Crab-apple Jelly. Winter Squash. Apple Snow. Tea and Macaroons. LOBSTER BISQUE. I can of lobster. i quart of milk. i quart of cold water. 3 tablespoonfuls of butter. % cup of pounded cracker. i teaspoonful of salt. A little cayenne pepper. Free the lobster from all bits of shell, and cut up small, tearing as little as may be. Put the water into a sauce- pan, with the salt and pepper. When boiling, stir in the lobster and stew half an hour. Heat the milk in another vessel* and, when scalding, stir in the cracker and set in hot water for ten minutes. The lobster having cooked for thirty minutes, add the butter, and simmer five min- utes longer. Then potfr in the milk ; mix all up well ; set for five minutes in hot water, and serve in a tureen, Pass sliced lemon with it. This bisque is delicious. THIRD WEEKFRIDA Y. 147 STEWED CHICKEN. Prepare a fine young fowl as for roasting, with the ex- ception of the dressing, which should be left out. Early in the day (if you have no gravy already made) put on the feet and giblets to stew in two cups of cold water, with a little minced onion. When the giblets are very tender, and the liquid has boiled down to one cupful, strain it and set aside the giblets to cool. Chop a quarter of a pound of pork, put it in the bottom of a pot, lay the chicken upon it ; pour the gravy over it ; cover tightly and set where it will heat steadily, but not reach the boil under an hour. Increase the heat, not allowing the steam to escape, for an hour longer, but it should not stew fast at any time. By this time the fowl should be thoroughly done. Remove carefully to a hot dish ; sea- son the gravy, adding a little hot water if needful, and strain out the pork. Add the giblets, chopped fine, stew fast for one minute, pour over the chicken, and it is ready for the table. RICE CROQUETTES. 2 cups of cold boiled rice. 1 tablespoonful of melted butter. 2 eggs, well beaten. i tablespoonful sugar. A little flour. Salt to taste. Work butter and sugar to a cream, and these into the rice. Salt, and stir up with the eggs to a smooth paste. Make into oval balls or rolls, with well-floured hands. Roil in flour, and fry, a few at a time, in sweet lard. Drain well and eat hot. WINTER SQUASH. Pare, take out the seeds, cut into strips, and lay in cold water, one hour. Cook in boiling water, a little salt, until very soft. Drain off every drop of water, and mash with a potato beetle, stirring in a large spoonful of butter, and seasoning with pepper and salt. Mound up in a vegetable dish and serve hot. 148 FEBRUARY. APPLE SNOW. 6 fine pippins (raw). 2 cups of milk. 4 eggs. i cup of powdered sugar. Make a custard by stirring into the hot milk half the sugar, the yolks of all the eggs, and the white of one, and cooking, stirring constantly until it thickens. Let this cool while you whip the whites to a stiff meringue with the rest of the sugar. Peel the apples, and grate directly into the meringue, stirring in at once that the coating of egg may prevent them from changing color. Put the cold custard in the bottom of a glass dish, and heap the snow upon it. Eat soon after making it. TEA AND MACAROONS. Pass after dinner in the dining-room, or send into the parlor. Sfyirir \ftttk. Saturbag. Ayrshire Soup. Mutton Chops and Tomato Puree. Potato Strips. Sweet Pickles. Boiled Beans. Macaroni Pudding. AYRSHIRE SOUP. 4 Ibs. of lean beef. 2 Ibs. of marrow-bones well cracked. 2 onions. 2 turnips. 3 stalks of celery. Bunch of sweet herbs. 6 large potatoes. ^ cup of oatmeal. THIRD WEEK SATURDAY.. 149 Pepper and salt. 6 quarts of cold water. Chop the vegetables and herbs ; cut the meat fine, and break up the bones. Put the oatmeal to soak in a pint of water. Slice the potatoes, and parboil them in hot water for ten minutes. Add them then to the other vegetables, and put them all, with the meat and bones, into a soup-pot, with the water. Stew for four hours, until the liquor in the pot has fallen one-third. Strain through a colander, set aside two quarts of the stock until to-morrow, after seasoning it all, and return the rest to the fire. Boil up and skim ; add the oatmeal, and stew, covered, forty minutes, stirring often, lest it should burn. MUTTON CHOPS AND TOMATO PUKE'S. Broil the chops, after trimming them neatly ; rub, as soon as they leave the gridiron, with butter on both sides ; pepper and salt, and cover, for a few minutes, in a hot water dish, that they may take up the seasoning. Make the puree by stewing a can of tomatoes until almost dry, then seasoning, and stirring in a tablespoon- ful of butter rolled in flour. Simmer three minutes, ar- range the chops on their sides, overlapping each other, inside of the curve of a flat dish, and pour the puree within their enclosure. POTATO STRIPS. Pare and cut the potatoes in long strips, the length of the potato, and not more than the sixteenth of an inch thick. Lay in ice-water for one hour ; dry by laying on one clean towel and pressing another upon it, and fry, not too many at once, in hot lard, a little salt. Take out so soon as they are browned lightly, toss in a hot colander, and serve in a deep dish lined with a napkin. BOILED BEANS. Soak all night, and in the morning change the cold water for lukewarm. Leave in this two hours ; drain it off and put them on to boil in cold water, with a piece of fat salt ISO FEBRUARY. pork two inches square. Cook slowly until soft. Take out the pork, drain the beans well, season with pepper, and dish. MACARONI PUDDING. Ib. of macaroni broken into inch lengths. 2 cups of boiling water, i tablespoonful of butter. 1 large cup of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Grated peel of half a lemon. A little cinnamon and salt. Boil the macaroni in the water until it is tender, and has soaked up the liquid. It must be cooked in a farina- kettle. Add the butter and salt. Cover for five min- utes without cooking. Put in the rest of the ingredients. Simmer, after the boil begins, ten minutes longer, before serving in a deep dish. Be careful, in stirring, not to break the macaroni. Eat with butter and powdered su- gar, or cream and sugar. Potato Soup. Roast Beef. Baked Hominy. Sweet Potatoes, baked. Cabbage Salad. Arrow- Root Pudding^ Cold. Coffee. POTATO SOUP. 3 pints of good stock, i quart of cold water. 12 mealy potatoes, i onion. \ cup of rice. FOURTH WEEKSVNDAY. 15 1 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. Seasoning to taste. Slice the potatoes, cover with boiling water, and cook ten minutes. Throw away this water, and add the quart of cold, slightly salted, and the onion, to the potatoes. Boil to pieces, and pass, with the water in which they were boiled, through a colander into the stock. Heat all together, and cook gently half an hour, before adding the rice, which should have been boiled soft in a very little water. When the rice is nearly dry, stir in the butter, put into the soup, and simmer five minutes. ROAST BEEF. A rib-roast is best for family use. Make your butcher saw off about half of the bone, after cutting the ends of the ribs clear of the meat ; then fold the flap neatly around to the thick part, and secure with skewers. The " trimmings " are yours a fact housekeepers often fail to insist upon. The meat is weighed before you buy it. Take all that you pay for and you will seldom be at a loss for a " base " for soup or gravy. Between butchers and cooks, there is enough wasted in American kitchens to supply a National Soup-house that might feed all the poor in the land. Put your beef in the dripping-pan ; pour a cup of boil- ing water over it, and roast ten minutes for every pound, Bake as soon as the juices begin to flow the oftener in reason the better. Jf your meat has much fat on top, cover it the fat with a paste of flour and water. When nearly done, remove this, dredge the beef with flour, baste well with gravy, strew salt over the top, and serve. Pour the fat off from the gravy ; return to the fire, thicken with browned gravy, season, and boil up once. SWEET POTATOES BAKED. Parboil, take off the skins, and, half an hour before you take up your beef, lay the potatoes in the dripping-pan to brown, basting them with the meat. They should be of a fine brown. Drain off the grease, and lay about the beef when dished. FEBRUARY. BAKED HOMINY. 1 cupful of cold boiled hominy (small grained). 2 cups of milk. 1 large teaspoonful of butter. The same of sugar. A little salt. 2 eggs. Work the melted butter well into the hominy, mashing all lumps. Then come the beaten yolks ; next, sugar and salt ; then, gradually, the milk ; lastly the whites. Beat until perfectly smooth, and bake in a greased pud- ding-dish until delicately browned. Serve in the bake- dish. CABBAGE SALAD. Chop a firm white cabbage with a sharp knife. A dull one bruises it. Make a dressing of two tablespoonfuls of oil ; six of vinegar; a teaspoonful each of salt and sugar ; half as much each of made mustard and pepper. Work all in well, the vinegar going in last, and then beat in a raw egg, whipped light. Pour over the salad, toss up with a fork, and serve in a glass dish. ARROW-ROOT PUDDING (COLD). 3 even tablespoonfuls of arrow-root. Get the Bermuda if you can, or you may require more. 3 cups of fresh milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar. i tablespoonful of butter. Ib. of crystallized peaches, chopped fine. Heat the milk to scalding, and stir in the arrow- root wet up with cold milk. Stir ten minutes, and add sugar and butter. Stir five minutes more, and pour out. When nearly cold, beat in the fruit. Pour into a wet mould. Make on Saturday, and on Sunday, turn out upon a dish, and eat with sugar and cream. It is very good without the fruit, but needs more sugar in making. COFFEE Should be served last of all. FOURTH WEEK MONDAY. 1 53 Jburtl) tihek. JHon&ag. Bread Soup. Cannelon of Beef. Pork and Beans. Chow-chow. Potato Stew. Peach Batter Pudding. BREAD SOUP. A few raw beef-bones and trimmings, spoken of yester- day. Bones, bits of skin, gristle, etc., left from Sunday's roast when you have cut off the meat for the cannelon. i pint of stock. 1 onion. 2 stalks of celery. Bunch of sweet herbs. 4 quarts of cold water. 1 Ib. stale bread-crusts, the drier the better, provided they are not mouldy or sour. Salt and pepper. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. Crack the bones, chop meat and vegetables ; put on in the water, and boil slowly down to two quarts. Strain the liquor ; let it cool ; take off all the fat, season, and re- turn to the pot with the stock. Boil up and skitn ; put in the crusts ; stew, covered, half an hour. Take it from the range and beat in the butter, taking out indissoluble bits. Then simmer, in a vessel set within another of boiling water, half an hour. As you will see, by a careful perusal of these directions, the preparation of this soup requires little actual expendi- ture of time. I beg, therefore, that you will " gather *up the fragments " from larder and bread-box, and give your family a hot, nourishing, u comforting " dish of porridge, if it is wash-day. CANNELON OF BEEF. Cut the meat from your cold roast, and chop it fine. Season well, and beat into it the yolks of three eggs and the white of one. Add one-third as much cold mashed 7* 154 FEBRUARY. potato as you have meat, wet up with gravy, and make, with floured hands, into a long roll three times as long as it is broad. It should be just soft enough to handle. Dredge thickly with flour, and lay in a greased baking- pan. Invert another one over it, and bake until it is hissing hot on top and sides, when uncover, and brown quickly. Brush over the outside with white of egg ; dredge again with flour, shut the oven-door to brown this, glaze again with egg, and shut up the oven for one min- ute. Carefully, with the aid of a cake-turner, slip the cannelon to a hot dish and serve. CHOW-CHOW Should go around with the cannelon. POTATO STEW. Pare and cut the potatoes into dice. Stew in hot water, with a slice of fat salt pork, cut very small, half a minced onion and a little chopped parsley, until the pork is dissolved and the potatoes very tender. Pepper, and if necessary, salt, and pour into a hot, deep dish. The " stew " should not be too liquid, nor yet stiff. PORK AND BEANS. This is a good, nourishing dish for Monday, and easily managed, if you have boiled the beans on Saturday. Fill a bake-dish nearly full of them, and put in the middle a piece of fat salt pork, about three inches wide, which you have parboiled in your soup. It will improve the taste of the " stock " and be itself the better for the temporary association. Pour in a little hot water to keep the beans from burning. Pepper and bake, covered, for half an hour. Remove the cover and brown. PEACH BATTER PUDDING. Open a can of peaches whole ones, if you have them and pour into the bottom of a buttered pudding-dish before you make your batter. There should be just syrup enough to half cover the fruit. For batter, take i quart of milk. 10 tablespoonfuls of prepared flour. FOURTH WEEK TUESDAY. 155 5 eggs, beaten light. i tablespoonful of melted butter. i saltspoonful of salt. Beat the jolks light, add the milk and salt, and pour slowly into a hole made in the middle of the flour. Finally, stir in the whites lightly, but not until you have beaten the batter smooth. Pour over the peaches and bake quickly. You can put it in the oven after the beans are done, setting the latter aside to keep warm. If you have not time to make sauce, eat with butter and sugar. Do not let the pudding stand after drawing from the oven, or it will fall. Jourtl) Cream Soup. Roast Breast of Veal. Stewed Tomatoes. Plain Boiled Potatoes. Celery. Essex Pudding with Jelly Sauce. CREAM SOUP. 3 Ibs. lean veal. 3 beaten eggs. 2 blades of mace. 1 onion. 2 quarts of water. 2 cups of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of rice flour (or corn-starch). Pepper and salt. Chop the meat and onion fine, cover with the water, and stew slowly three hours. Strain, cool and skim. Season and set back on the fire. Boil up and skim care- fully ; add the milk, and when hot, the corn-starch wet with cold water. As it thickens, take out a cupful, pour upon the eggs ; stir into the soup, and take at once from the fire. 156 FEBRUARY ROAST BREAST OF VEAL. Mak2 incisions between the ribs and the meat, and stuff with a force-meat of dry bread-crumbs, chopped pork or ham, pepper, sweet marjoram, and one beaten egg. Save a little to thicken the gravy. Roast slowly, basting often and copiously. Dredge at the last with flour, and baste well, when this has colored, with butter. STEWED TOMATOES. Stew a can of tomatoes twenty -five minutes ; season with pepper, salt, a little sugar, and a tablespoonful of butter. Cook five minutes and serve. .PLAIN BOILED POTATOES. Pare very thin, and put on (after having lain half an hour in cold water) in boiling water. Cook fast until a fork will go easily into the largest ; drain off every drop of water, and throw in salt. Set back, uncovered, on the side of the range, or where they will dry quickly, yet not scorch. Serve in an uncovered dish. CELERY. Wash, scrape, trim off the green tops, and throw aside for seasoning soups, vinegar, etc., the rank green stalks. Lay the better parts in cold water until wanted for the table. Put into a tall glass or celery-stand. ESSEX PUDDING. 2 cups of fine bread-crumbs. 2 tablespoonfuls of sago, soaked three hours in a little water. f of a cup of powdered suet. 5 eggs, beaten light. i cup of milk, i cup of sugar. i tablespoonful flour, wet in cold milk. j- Ib. of whole raisins, " plumped " by laying them in boiling water for two minutes. A little salt. Cook the sago in enough water to cover it until tender and nearly dry. Heat the milk and pour upon the beatei FOURTH WEEK WEDNESDAY. 1 57 eggs and sugar, add the crumbs, beating into a good batter in a bowl ; then suet, flour, sago, and salt. Butter a mould thickly and lay the raisins, dredged with flour, in the bottom and sides, in whatever designs you fancy. Fill the mould with the batter well beaten up at the last putting it in by cautious spoonfuls not to dislodge the raisins, which should be imbedded in the butter. Put on the lid of the pudding mould, and boil one hour, never relaxing the heat. Dip in cold water and turn out upon a flat dish. Eat with jelly sauce. JELLY SAUCE. cup of currant jelly. 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter. i lemon juice and half the grated peel. \ teaspoonful of nutmeg. i tablespoonful of powdered sugar. i glass of wine. i cup of boiling water. i teaspoonful flour. Beat the hot water gradually into the jelly, and add the butter, lemon, and nutmeg. Warm almost to a boil, put in the sugar, then the flour wet up with cold water. Boil up once sharply ; add the wine, and take from the fire. Set, closely covered, in a vessel of hot water until wanted. Stir well before pouring it out. tUeek. Julienne Soup. Veal and Ham Pie. Halibut Steaks, Broiled. Scalloped Potatoes. Stewed Cauliflower. Pancakes with Preserves. JULIENNE SOUP ENNE OU. a Ibs. of mutton, and a like quantity of veal, with some - 158 FEBRUARY. 2 carrots. 2 turnips. Half a cabbage. 3 onions. 3 stalks of blanched celery. \ can of tomatoes. 5 quarts of cold water. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 2 teaspoonfuls of sugar. Bunch of sweet herbs. Pepper and salt. Cut the meat small, crack the bones, and put on to cook in five quarts of water with the herbs. While it simmers, prepare the vegetables, with the exception of the cabbage and tomatoes, by cleaning, paring, and cutting them into narrow strips about two inches long, and as nearly as possible of uniform size. Lay them in cold water for one hour. Drain very dry, and put them into a frying-pan in which you have melted, but not cooked, the butter, and dissolved the sugar. Toss them over a hot fire until they are coated with the butter, but do not let them scorch. Set aside in a clean vessel set within one of hot water. When the meat has boiled to rags, and the liquid is reduced one-third, strain it and set by until the fat rises and can be taken off. Return the soup to the fire, season, boil up and skim ; add the glazed vegetables, with the chopped cabbage which should have been par- boiled, then drained and the tomatoes, cut up small. Stew gently for one hour. Serve with the vegetables in it. This will make enough soup for two days, unless your femily be large. HALIBUT STEAKS BROILED. Wash and wipe the steaks dry. Broil upon a buttered gridiron, turning when the lower side is done. Remove carefully to a chafing-dish, and anoint with a mixture of butter, salt, pepper, and a little lemon-juice. Always serve fish upon hot plates. Pass , potatoes, and no other vegetable, with it. FOURTH WEEK WEDNESDAY. 1 59 SCALLOPED POTATOES. 3 cups of mashed potatoes. 3 tablespoonfuls of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. Yolks of four hard-boiled eggs. (Cut the whites in rings to garnish your fish.) Handful of dry bread-crumbs. Salt and pepper. Beat butter, milk, and seasoning into the potatoes while hot. Put a layer in the bottom of a buttered pudding- dish ; cover this with thin slices of yolk ; pepper and salt them ; spread another layer of potato over these, and proceed in this order until the dish is full, having the top layer of potato. Strew thickly with bread-crumbs. Bake covered until hot through, then brown quickly. Serve in the bake-dish. VEAL AND HAM PIE Cut the meat from the cold roast of yesterday. Put the bones, well-cracked, the refuse bits of meat and skin into a saucepan with an onion, a few spoonfuls of tomatoes, and three cups of cold water, and cook slowly until there remains but one cup of gravy. Strain and season, thick- ening with a tablespoonful of browned flour. Cut the veal into small, even slices. If you have no cold boiled ham, cook half a pound on purpose by boiling in your gravy stock. Slice this also, and lay upon the veal, with now and then a slice of hard-boiled egg. Fill the dish with alternate layers of veal and ham ; pour in the gravy, and cover with a thick crust of good pastry, such as you made last Thursday for your pork-pie. Bake one hour. STEWED CAULIFLOWER, When your soup is about half done, and before yooil up, pour over the pigeons. Cover again, and leave in the hot water ten minutes before serving. SHRED MACARONI. Break half a pound of pipe macaroni into pieces two inches long, and cook in boiling water, a little salted, ten minutes. Drain off the water, and spread the macaroni out to cool upon a dish. When cold, take a sharp knife or a pair of scissors, and split each piece in half, length- wise. Put on in a farina-kettle with a cup of hot milk and a tablespoonful. of butter, seasoning with pepper and salt. Cover and stew tender, but not to breaking. Ten minutes after the boil should do this. Then stir in three tablespoonfuls of grated cheese. Serve in a deep dish. BRUSSE LS-SPROUTS. Wash and pick over very carefully. Put on in plenty of boiling water with a little salt, and cook fifteen minutes after the water begins to boil anew. Drain well and pile upon a dish, with drawn butter poured over them. SPONGE-CAKE FRITTERS. 8 penny sponge-cakes very stale. i cup of boiling milk, with a pinch of soda stirred in. 4 eggs whipped light. i tablespoonful of flour wet up in cold milk. J Ib. currants, washed and dried. Roll the cakes into fine crumbs ; pour over them the hot milk, with the soda and flour stirred into it. Cover for fifteen minutes, then beat until cold. Add the whipped eggs the yolks first, then the whites ; finally, the currants dredged with flour. Beat all well. Drop in great spoonfuls in boiling lard, trying one first to be sure that the batter is of the right consistency ; drain quickly in a hot colander ; sprinkle with powdered sugar mixed with nutmeg, and serve hot. FIRST WEEK SUNDAY. 167 MARCH. ' fmi \3Jttk. Suniag. Mushroom Soup. Roast Ducks. Savory Scotch Pudding. Spinach in a Mould. Grape Jelly. Green Peas. Turret Cream. Coffee. MUSHROOM SOUP. 3 Ibs. of knuckle of veal, well cracked, i onion. Bunch of parsley. A slice of ham, or some ham or salt-pork bones. i can of French mushrooms. 1 tablespoonful of butter. 2 tablespoonfuls of flour. 2 beaten eggs. Pepper and salt. i cup of milk. 4 quarts of cold water. Crack the bones and mince the meat, onion, and pars- ley. Cover with the water, and boil gently three hours, or until the stock has diminished one-half. Strain, season, boil up and skim. Add the mushrooms, drained from the can liquor, and sliced. Stew twenty minutes ; put in the milk, the flour, wet up in cold water, and when it thickens, beat a cupful into the whipped eggs. Stir into this the butter, return to the soup, let it almost boil, and pour out. To the lovers of mushrooms this is a delicious soup. ROAST DUCKS. Draw, clean and wash a pair of ducks. Stuff one only with a dressing made of bread-crumbs, the hard-boiled 168 MARCH. yolk of an egg, a little minced sage and onion. Rub the inside of the other with melted butter, pepper and salt. Many do not like the taste of onion and sage, while others do not enjoy roast duck without the flavor of these con- diments. Put the fowls into the dripping-pan, pour a cup of boiling water over them, and roast about an hour, basting frequently. At the last, dredge with flour, and baste with butter ; then brown. Chop the giblets fine, pour the fat from the top of the gravy in the dripping- pan, thicken with browned flour that which is left, and stir in the giblets. GREEN PEAS Have, from time immemorial, been the adjunct of roast ducks. As the best substitute to be had at this season, open a can of preserved green peas the French cans are best ; let them stand an hour to get rid of the airless taste that is apt to cling to canned vegetables ; pour off the liquor ; cook twenty minutes in boiling water, a little salt ; drain dry, and stir up in them a teaspoonful of but- ter, with pepper to your liking. SAVORY SCOTCH PUDDING. i quart of milk. i cup of best oatmeal, soaked all night in cold water. i cup of gravy. 4 tablespoonfuls of bread-crumbs. i tablespoonful of butter. 3 eggs. Pepper and salt. When your soup is ready to strain, dip out a cupful and set by to cool. Take off the fat and stir into the soaked oatmeal. Mix up well ; put in a farina-kettle with boil- ing water around it, and add by degrees, as it thickens, the milk heated to scalding. When all is in, salt and pepper to taste and cook fast, stirring often, ten minutes. Take from the fire, and let it cool. N.B. If you have the gravy, all this can be done on Saturday. When cold, beat in the butter, melted, working out all the lumps and taking the skin from the top. Beat in the FIRST WEEK SUNDAY. 169 whipped eggs, working up fast and hard. Pour into a buttered pudding-dish ; bake, covered, one hour, then brown. Serve in the bake dish. SPINACH IN A MOULD. Pick over carefully, clip off the stems and put on the leaves in boiling water, with salt stirred in. Boil hard fifteen minutes. When done, drain, pressing out all the water. Chop fine ; put back into the saucepan with a piece of butter a large spoonful for a good dish a little powdered sugar, salt and pepper to taste. Stir and toss until very hot ; press hard into a mould wet with hot water, and turn out with care upon a heated dish. Lay round slices of hard-boiled eggs on the top. TURRET CREAM. i quart of milk. i package Coxe's gelatine. i heaping cup of white sugar. 3 eggs beaten light, whites and yolks separately. Ib. crystallized fruit Vanilla flavoring. Juice of a lemon in which half the grated peel has been soaked, then strained out. Soak the gelatine three hours in a large cup of cold water. Scald the rnilk, stir in the sugar, and when this has melted, the gelatine. Stir over the fire five minutes ; pour out half of the mixture into a bowl, and add the whipped yolks to that left in the saucepan. Stir one minute, and take from the fire. Flavor the yellow gelatine with lemon the white with vanilla. As soon as the yellow begins to congeal, whip one-half of the stiffened whites into it, a little at a time, with a Dover egg beater. Add the rest to the white gelatine, in the same manner, whip- ping each in until it stiffens before adding more, and not ceasing until both are heaps of " sponge." Wet the in- side of a tall fluted mould with water, and arrange in the bottom, close to the outside of the mould, a row of crys- tallized cherries. Then, put in a layer of the white mix- ture ; on this, close to the outside, strips of apricots or peaches ; then a layer of yellow mixture, another border 8 I/O MARCH. of cherries, and so on, until the materials are used up. Do this on Saturday. Next day, dip for one instant in hot water, -and invert upon a flat dish. Eat with brandied fruit. It will be a beautiful dessert. COFFEE. Pass with light cakes or sweet biscuits. ftloniag. Tomato and Bean Soup. Ham and Eggs. Fricassee of Duck. Stewed Corn. Glazed Potatoes, Queen's Pudding. TOMATO AND BEAN SOUP. Open a can of tomatoes ; take out the hard and unripe portions, cut up the rest in small pieces, and heat to a boil before adding the bean soup set aside from Saturday. Simmer all together half an hour, season to taste, and pour over the dice of fried bread you have put in the bottom of the tureen. HAM AND EGGS. Pour a little hot water in a frying-pan, if you use smoked raw ham for this dish, and cook the slices in it ten minutes. Let them get perfectly cold. Fry in their own fat until tender throughout and crisp at the edges. Drain the fat from them and arrange them upon a hot dish. Strain the fat, return to the pan, and fry the eggs without turning. Cut the ham in neat slices, lay an egg upon each, and serve. FRICASSEE OF DUCK. Cut the meat from the bones of yesterday's ducks, di- viding the joints neatly, and slicing the breast, etc. Crack the skeleton to pieces, and put it, with the skin, FIRST WEEK MONDAY. 1?1 stuffing, and gristly bits, into a saucepan. Cover with cold water, and ste,v until a cupful of good gravy is ex- tracted. Strain and season this ; put in the sliced duck. Set within a pot of hot water and bring the contents of the inner saucepan almost to a boil. Add a couple of beaten eggs ; stir up well and set aside in the hot water, covered, for five minutes. The meat must not actually boil once. STEWED CORN. Open a can of corn, an hour before cooking it. Put it into a saucepan when you are ready for it ; cover with boiling water, and let it stand without cooking, for ten minutes. Drain off the water ; cover the corn with hot milk, a little salted ; set within a vessel of hot water, and cook for half an hour, or until tender. Stir in a table- spoonful of butter, cut into thirds, each rolled in flour ; simmer ten minutes, pepper, and turn into a deep covered dish. GLAZED POTATOES. Parboil them in their skins ; peel quickly and lay in the dripping-pan within a hot oven. As soon as they begin to " crust " over, baste with good dripping or butter. Repeat this three times until they are of a glossy brown. Eat hot. QUEEN'S PUDDING. 10 fine pippins, pared and cored. Ib. macaroons, pounded fine. 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar. teaspoonful cinnamon. \ cup crab-apple or quince jelly. i tablespoonful of brandy. i pint of milk. i tablespoonful corn-starch. Whites of 3 eggs. A little salt. Put the apples into a buttered pudding-dish. Fill this half full of cold water : cover closely and bake until a straw will pierce them. Let them stand, covered, until cold. (Do this on Saturday.) Drain off the water the day you mean to use them. Put a spoonful of jelly and 172 MARCH. a few drops of brandy into each apple. Strew with cin- namon and sugar. Cover and let them stand while you scald the milk, and stir in the macaroons, the salt and the corn-starch wet up in cold milk. Boil for one min- ute. Take from the fire, beat up well, and let it cool before whipping in the frothed whites. Pour this mixture over the apples and bake half an hour in a brisk oven. Eat warm with a sauce made of the water in which the apples were stewed, well sweetened and spiced, a table- spoonful of butter, rolled in flour and the beaten yolk of an egg. Heat the liquor, sweeten and season ; thicken with butter and flour ; boil up ; pour gradually over the egg, and set in hot water until it is needed. Jir0t German Sago Broth. Beefsteak and Onions. French Beans Oarnis with Sausages. Hot Slaw. Hasty Farina Pudding. GERMAN SAGO SOUP. 3 Ibs. knuckle of veal, well cracked. 1 onion. 2 stalks of celery. Some pork bones, if you have them. Bunch of sweet herbs, minced. 4 quarts of cold water. Pepper and salt. of a cup of German sago, soaked two hours in cold water. Chop the meat, celery, herbs, and onion, and crack the bones. Cover with the water, and cook slowly three hours, or until the meat is boiled to shreds. Strain, season, FIRST WEEK TUESDAY. boil up and skim well, put in the soaked sago and cook slowly half an hour. The sago should be entirely dissolved, BEEFSTEAK AND ONIONS.. Broil your steak as usual. Fry in a little butter one onion, sliced, until brown. Strain it out, and when your steak is done, and laid upon a hot dish, pour the butter in which the onion was fried over it. Add pepper and salt, and the faintest suspicion of made mustard, turn over it a hot cover and let it stand five minutes before serving. FRENCH BEANS GARNIS WITH SAUSAGES. Open a can of " string " beans, cut in short pieces, cover with boiling water, slightly salted, and cook tender. Drain well, stir in a tablespoonful of butter, a little pepper and salt, and heap upon a hot dish. Surround with sau- sages, in cakes or in cases, fried in their own fat, and drained from the grease. Serve hot. HOT SLAW. i small, firm head of cabbage, shred fine, i cup of vinegar, i tablespoonful of butter. 1 tablespoonful of sugar. 2 tablespoonfuls of sour cream. J teaspoonful of made mustard. i saltspoonful of pepper and the same of salt. Put the vinegar, and all the other ingredients for the dressing, except the cream, in a saucepan, and heat to a boil. Pour scalding hot over the cabbage ; return to the saucepan, and stir and toss until all is smoking again. Take from the fire, stir in the cream, turn into a covered dish and set in hot water ten minutes before you send to the table. HASTY FARINA PUDDING. i quart of milk. 4 tablespoonfuls (heaping) of farina, previously soaked in a little cold water for one hour, i tablespoonful of butter. 1 teaspoonful of salt. 2 eggs, beaten. 174 MARCH. Scald the milk ; stir in the salt, then the soaked farina, and cook steadily (always in a farina-kettle) three quarters of an hour. Add the butter ; take a cupful of the boiling mixture, and beat into the whipped eggs. Put back into the saucepan, stir for two minutes and pour into a deep, open dish. Eat with milk, or cream, and sugar. Jirat Baked Soup. Devilled Lobster. Calf s Liver a la Mode. Baked Celery. Potatoes au Gratin, with Vermicelli. Lemon Pudding. BAKED SOUP. 2 Ibs. of lean beef, cut into dice. 3 stalks of blanched celery. 2 turnips. Handful of chopped cabbage, i onion. 1 carrot. 2 roots of salsify, cut small. Chopped parsley. J cup of rice, previously boiled for fifteen minutes. can of tomatoes, cut up. Pepper and salt. i quart cold water. Prepare beef and vegetables early in the day ; mix all up well, and put into a strong earthenware jar, with a good cover of the same material. Coat this top thickly with a stiff paste of flour and water to exclude the air, and set in the oven for six hours. Once in a while, grease the paste to prevent it from scorching or cracking. It is also well to set the jar in a dripping or bake pan of boiling water. Serve without straining. DEVILLED LOBSTER. i can of preserved lobster. 3 tablespoonfuls of butter. FIRST WEEK WEDNESDAY. 4 tablespoonfuls of vinegar. teaspoonful of made mustard. A good pinch of cayenne pepper. Boiled eggs for garnishing. Salt. Open the lobster-can and empty it into a bowl an hour before using it. Min'ce evenly. Put vinegar, but- ter and seasoning into a saucepan, and when it sim- mers, add the lobster. Cook slowly, covered, half an hour, stirring occasionally. Turn into a deep dish, and garnish with slices of egg. Eat hot with buttered Boston crackers. CALF'S LIVER A LA MODE. 1 fine, fresh liver. J Ib. salt pork, cut into lardoons. 3 tablespoonfuls good dripping. 2 sliced onions, small ones. 1 tablespoonful Harvey's Sauce. 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar. i teaspoonful mixed spices. i tablespoonful sweet herbs, chopped. Pepper. Wash the liver,, and soak half an hour in cold, salted water. Wipe dry and lard with the fat pork, allowing it to project on both sides. Heat dripping, onion, herbs, and spice in a frying-pan. Put in the liver and fry both sides to a light brown. Turn all into a saucepan, add the vinegar, and water enough to cover it ; put on a close lid and stew gently one hour and a half. Lay the liver on a hot dish, add the sauce to the gravy, strain it, thicken with browned flour, boil up ; pour half over the liver, and send the rest up in a sauce-boat. BAKED CELERY. Cut two bunches of celery, the best stalks only, into inch-lengths, and stew in boiling water, a little salt, for ten minutes. Drain off the water, and add a cup of milk, a tablespoonful of butter, rolled thickly in flour, a little pepper and salt. Simmer three minutes after heating, and pour into a shallow bowl to cool. Butter a bake-dish, strew the bottom with fine bread-crumbs. When the MARCH. celery is almost or quite cold, beat into it two eggs, and pour into the dish. Strew bread-crumbs thickly over the top, turn a tin plate over all, and bake twenty minutes. Remove the cover and brown. POTATOES AU GRATIN, WITH VERMICELIJ. Mash the potatoes as usual, with butter, milk, and salt. Smooth into a hillock upon a pie-plate, and strew with a handful of vermicelli broken small, cooked soft in boiling water, a little salt, then drained perfectly dry and spread out to cool. Brown all in a quick oven, glaze with butter, slip to a hot dish, and it is ready. LEMON PUDDING. 6 butter crackeis, soaked in water, and beaten smooth. Juice of three lemons and half the grated peel. i cup of molasses. A pinch of salt. i tablespoonful of melted butter. Pie-paste for shells. Chop the pulp of the lemons, leaving out the thick white peel, very fine; stir into the crushed crackers, with the butter and salt. Beat the molasses into this, gradu- ally, with the grated peel. Line two pie-dishes with good paste, fill with the mixture and bake, without upper crusts. Eat warm, or cold. They are best fresh. first tDetk. Beef Soup with Barley. Stuffed Loin of Veal. Baked Tomatoes. Kidney Beans with Sauce. Plain Boiled Pudding. Hard Sauce. BEEF SOUP WITH BARLEY. 3 Ibs. of beef from the shin. 2 Ibs. of bones. FIRST WEEK- THURSDAY. 1/7 1 onion stuck with cloves. 2 stalks of celery. The half can of tomatoes left from yesterday's soup. 2 turnips. Nearly a cup of pearl barley. 4 quarts of water. Pepper and salt. Cut up the meat and crack the bones. Cut up celery, turnips, and tomatoes. Put all these, with the onion, into the soup-pot, with the gallon of cold water, and boil gently three hours. The liquor should be reduced one-third. Wash the barley and boil fifteen minutes in a very little water. Strain the soup, pressing hard. Season ; let it boil up once, and skim before adding the barley and the water in which it has boiled. Simmer half an hour, and serve. STUFFED LOIN OF VEAL. Prepare a dressing of bread-crumbs, a little chopped corned ham, parsley, pepper and salt, moistened with milk. Have the bones taken out of the meat, and fill the holes thus left with the stuffing. Secure the meat into a good shape with skewers, and cover the top and sides with thick foolscap paper, binding it with strings. Grease paper and strings, put the veal into your dripping-pan with a cup of hot water, and bake, basting the paper now and then with dripping, to prevent scorching. At the end of an hour, take out the meat and remove the paper. Pour off the gravy, carefully setting it by; return the meat to the oven with a cupful of milk in the pan instead of the gravy. Baste with butter, lavishly, once, afterwards, and often with the milk as it heats. Roast, not too fast, nearly an hour more, or until your meat is tender. Should the milk evaporate too rapidly, add a little hot water. Indeed, this is a wise precaution against scorching. Take up the veal, thicken the gravy left in the oven, with a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour, salt, and pepper, heat carefully that the milk may not "catch," and pour some over the meat, serving the rest in a boat. Veal cooked in this way is very nice, but requires much atten lion at the last. I7B MARCH. BAKED TOMATOES. Strew the bottom of a pie-dish with fine crumbs, having greased it first. Drain off much of the liquor from a can of tomatoes, add it to the soup, pour the tomatoes upon the crumbs, season with pepper, salt, and butter ; strew more crumbs thickly over the top. Bake, covered, twenty minutes ; then brown. KIDNEY BEANS WITH SAUCE. Soak the beans overnight. The next day boil them until soft in salted water. Drain this off. Strain the first gravy taken from the roast veal before the milk is sub- stituted into a saucepan ; add a tablespoonful of butter, and half a small onion, minced. Boil five minutes, strain through a soup-sieve, pressing the onion hard ; season with pepper, salt, and a little chopped parsley ; pour over the beans, simmer fifteen minutes, closely covered, drain off half of the liquor, and serve in a covered dish. PLAIN BOILED PUDDING. 3 cups full ones of good flour. 2 cups of " loppered" milk or buttermilk ; sour cream is best of all. i full teaspoonful of soda dissolved in hot water. A little salt. J cup finely-powdered suet. Stir the milk and soda gradually into the flour, working it smooth. Put suet and salt in, and beat all thoroughly. Boil in a buttered mould an hour and a half. HARD SAUCE. 1 cup of sugar. 2 tablespoon fuls of butter. J glass of wine. Juice of a lemon and half of the grated peel. Warm the butter, and rub into the sugar, working into a light cream. Add lemon and wine. Mould as you like, and set aside to cool. FIRST WEEK FRIDAY. 179 Jir0t tihek. Jrfoag. Oyster Soup. Brown Fricassee of Chicken. Ladies' Cabbage. Potatoes au naturel. Grape Jelly. Sliced Apple Pie. OYSTER SOUP. Drain the liquor from the oysters through a colander. Put the liquor over the fire with half as much water, salt, pepper, and a large tablespoonful of butter for each quart of soup. Let it boil up well, and put in the oysters. Heat slowly, and as soon as they "ruffle," which should be about five minutes after they reach the boil, strain off the soup. Have in another vessel as much boiling milk as there was oyster liquor. Pour the oysters into a hot tureen, put a large spoonful of butter upon them ; when it melts entirely, turn in the milk. Stir in well, add the hot soup, cover, and serve with sliced lemon and crackers. BROWN FRICASSEE OF CHICKEN. Joint the chicken neatly, and lay in salted cold water half an hour. Cut a quarter of a pound of salt pork into strips, and fry in good dripping. Strain it out, skin the chicken as far as possible, and fry in the same fat, with a sliced onion. Chop the pork fine and put into a sauce- pan ; next, the onion ; at last, the fowl. Sprinkle a tea- spoonful of mixed allspice and cloves over all, pour on cold water to cover them well, put on a tight lid, and stew gently for an hour or more, until the meat is tender. Arrange the fowl upon a hot dish ; strain the gravy ; season to taste with pepper, salt, and parsley ; thicken with browned flour ; boil up once ; pour over the chicken ; cover, and let all stand for five minutes before serving. LADIES' CABBAGE. Boil a firm cabbage in two waters. Drain, then set aside to get cold. Chop fine ; add two beaten eggs, a tablespoonful of butter, pepper, salt, and three table ISO MARCH. spoonfuls of milk. Stir all well, and bake brown in a buttered pudding-dish. Eat very hot. POTATOES AU NATUREL. Choose those of uniform size ; put on in their skins, in boiling water. When about half done, check the boil sud- denly by a cupful of cold water. This is said to make old potatoes mealy. Boil again until a fork will pierce them. Drain off the water ; sprinkle with salt to make the skins crack, and dry out in the uncovered pot, on the range, for a few minutes before peeling. SLICED APPLE PIE. i Ib. of prepared flour. f Ib. of butter. Ice-water to make stiff dough. Chop half of the butter into the flour. Work up with ice-water. Roll out thin ; baste all over with butter, and sprinkle lightly with flour ; fold closely into a long roll ; flatten, and re-roll as thin as at first ; then baste again. Repeat this three times. Set the last roll in a cold place for at least an hour. Roll out, and line two buttered pie-plates, reserving enough for upper crusts. Pare, core and slice juicy pippins ; put a layer within the crust ; sprinkle sugar liberally over it, strew half a dozen whole cloves upon this ; then more apples, etc., until the dish is full. Cover with crust and bake. Eat barely warm, with sugar and cream. Jtr0t iDeek. Saturtrqj. A Plain Soup. Breaded Mutton Chops. Milanaise Potatoes. Currant Jally. Green Peas. Cocoanut Sponge Pudding. A PLAIN SOUP. 5 Ibs. shin of beef. 2 stalks of celery. FIRST WEEK SATURDAY. l8l 2 carrots. 2 onions. 2 turnips. 5 quarts of water. 2 tablespoonfuls of tomato catsup. \ cup coarse corn-meal. Pepper and salt. i cup of boiling milk. Slice the meat and crack the bones. Cut the vegeta- bles into strips and fry the onions in good dripping. Then put all, with meat and bones, into a soup-pot with the water. Cover and cook gently five hours. Strain the liquor from the shreds of meat and rub the vegeta- bles through the colander. Season and set aside half the stock for to-morrow. Put that meant for to-day into a soup-kettle ; season and boil up for a minute, that you may skim it ; then add the corn-meal, previously scalded with a cup of boiling milk. Stir in well, and simmer half an hour before adding the catsup and pouring into the tureen. BREADED MUTTON CHOPS. Trim the chops from fat and skin, leaving a bit of bone clean at the end of each. Beat up a raw egg ; dip the chops in this having peppered and salted them ; roll in cracker- dust, and fry brown in good dripping or sweet lard. Drain, and arrange in rows upon a hot dish, the large end of each overlapping the small end of the next. Garnish with parsley. MILANAISE POTATOES. 12 boiled potatoes. cupful of gravy left from yesterday's fricassee. Juice of half a lemon. Yolks of 2 raw eggs. 4 tablespoonfuls o'f dry grated cheese. \ cup stale bread-crumbs. i tablespoonful of butter. Pepper and salt. Heat and strain your gravy. Put into a saucepan with the seasoning, butter, and lemon, bring to a boil, and stir it into the beaten egg. Slice the potatoes ; lay a 182 MARCH. row within the outer round of a neat pie-plate. (I hope you have one with a silver stand for the table.) Pour a few teaspoonfuls of sauce upon these ; lay an- other and smaller row inside of the first ; more sauce, and so on, until you have a low cone of sliced potato ; pour sauce over all, coat with the Dread-crumbs and cheese, mixed together ; pepper and salt, and bake twenty min- utes in a quick oven. GREEN PEAS. Open a can of green peas ; turn off the liquor and cover with boiling water, a little salt. Boil fast until tender ; drain well ; stir in a tablespoonful of butter ; pepper and salt, and serve in a deep dish. COCOANUT SPONGE PUDDING. 2 cups of stale sponge-cake crumbs. 2 cups of milk. i cup of grated cocoanut. Yolks of two eggs and whites of four. i cup of white sugar. i tablespoonful rose-water. A little nutmeg. Scald the milk and beat into this the cake-crumbs. When nearly cold add the eggs, sugar, rose-water, and lastly the cocoanut. Bake three-quarters of an hour in a buttered pudding-dish. Should it brown too fast, cover with white paper. Eat cold, with white sugar sifted over it. Seconir ill celt. Tapioca Soup. Roast Beef and Potato Balls. Sliced Sweet Potatoes. Gherkin Pickle. Cauliflower au Gratin. Southern Rice Pudding, meringued. TAPIOCA SOUP. Take the fat from the stock reserved for to-day. Bring the soup to a boil and stir in half a teacupful of " grained " SECOND WEEK SUNDAY. 183 tapioca, which has been soaked three hours in a little cold water. Add also seasoning, if needed ; simmer half an hour and pour out. Send around grated cheese with it. ROAST BEEF AND POTATO BALLS. When your beef is about three-quarters done, pout nearly all of the gravy from the dripping-pan. Have ready some mashed potato worked smooth with a beaten egg, pepper and salt, then made into balls and rolled in flour. Place them in the pan around the meat and baste until well browned. Serve in. the same dish with the beef. SLICED SWEET POTATOES. Boil in their skins until a fork will go easily into them. Pare and slice with a sharp knife lengthwise ; fry lightly and quickly in good dripping, or butter ; drain off the grease, and serve hot. CAULIFLOWER AU GRATIN. Wash the cauliflower, cut off green leaves and stalks, and divide into neat bunches. Boil in hot water, salted, until tender. Drain well; dip each piece in melted butter, and strew thickly with fine, dry crumbs, mixed with pepper and salt. Arrange flower end uppermost, in a pudding-dish, and brown the crumbs upon the upper grating of an oven. Serve in a vegetable dish, and pass a boat of drawn butter with them. SOUTHERN RICE PUDDING MISRINGUED. i qt. of fresh milk. 1 cup of raw rice, 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, i cup of sugar. 4 eggs beaten light. i teaspoonful grated lemon-peel. A pinch of cinnamon, and the same of mace. Soak the rice two hours in the milk. Simmer in a farina-kettle until tender. Rub butter and sugar to a cream. Beat up the eggs, and whip the mixture into them while the rice is cooling. Stir all together ; flavor, and bake three-quarters of an hour in a buttered dish lS4 MARCH. If baked too long, the custard will break. So soon as it is well set in the middle of the dish, draw to the oven- door, and spread with a meringue made of the whites of three eggs whisked stiff with one tablespoonful of pow dered sugar and juice of half a lemon. Close the oven door, and brown delicately. Eat cold. Make it on Saturday. Seconir Hasty Soup. Larded Beef. Stewed Parsnips. Browned Potatoes. Made Mustard. "Brown Betty." Tea and Albert Biscuit. HASTY SOUP. The trimmings of your roast beef, and any other cold 'meat you may have about two and a half pounds in all, chopped very fine. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. * 2 tablespoonfuls of browned flour. 2 quarts of water. 2 handfuls of fried bread. Pepper and salt. i tablespoonful of walnut catsup. Put meat, butter, salt and pepper into a saucepan ; add two quarts of cold water, and bring slowly to i boil. Cook half an hour after the boil fairly begins. Strain hard through a thin cloth ; thicken with browned flour ; add the catsup ; boil up once, and pour over the fried bread in the tureen. LARDED BEP;F. Trim yesterday's roast on top, bottom, and sides, sav- ing all the fragments for your soup. Then make inci- sions quite through the meat, and thrust in numerous lar- doons of fat salt pork, projecting above and below. Rub SECOND WEEK MONDAY. 185 the meat all over with vinegar, and then with melted butter, rubbing both in well. Put in a dripping-pan. Take the fat from the top of yesterday's gravy ; thin it with a little hot water ; strain this into the dripping-pan, and" baste the meat plentifully with it, keeping another pan inverted over it between times. If your oven be moderately good, the beef should be ready for table in forty-five minutes. Pour a few spoonfuls of gravy over it when dished. Put the rest into a sauce-boat. STEWED PARSNIPS. Scrape, slice lengthwise, and lay in cold water half an hour. Cook tender in boiling water, a little salt. Drain off half the water, and stir in a tablespoonful of butter rolled thickly in flour. Pepper and salt to your taste, and stew gently five minutes before pouring into a deep, covered dish. BROWNED POTATOES. Mash soft with butter, milk, and salt. Heap as irregu- larly as possible upon z pie-dish, and set in a quick oven. Mem. : The dish should be well greased. As the potato browns, glaze it with butter. Slip carefully to a hot dish. " BROWN BETTY." 1 cup bread-crumbs. 2 cups chopped tart apples. J cup of sugar. 1 teaspoonful of cinnamon. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. Put a layer of chopped apple in a buttered pudding- dish ; strew with sugar, butter, and cinnamon. Covet with bread-crumbs ; then more apple. When your dish is full, cover with crumbs. Invert a tin plate over it, and " steam " forty-five minutes in a good oven. Then, un- cover and brown. Eat warm, with sugar and butter, or cream. TEA AND ALBERT BISCUIT. Pass these after the pudding. Tea-drinking is restful as well as refreshing on a busy day. Weary housekeepers can have no more innocent nervine. 1 86 MARCH. Sttonft tUesk. Sfoesfcaj). White Soup. Boiled Shoulder of Mutton, with Oysters. Creamed Potatoes. Baked Beans. Sweet Pickles. Cottage Puffs. WHITE SOUP. Knuckle of veal weight 5 or 6 pounds. J Ib. lean ham raw or cooked. 2 onions. Bunch of sweet herbs. 4 blades of mace. 2 cups of milk. 2 eggs. J- cup raw rice. 5 qts. of cold water. Ib. almonds, blanched and pounded. Crack the veal-bones, and cut off the meat in small pieces. Put into the soup-pot with the chopped ham ; the onion sliced, the herbs and spice. Pour on the water, and boil very slowly five hours. The water should be reduced to three quarts. Strain off the liquor. Sea- son thFee pints, and pour back upon the bones, etc. Cover tightly in a stone crock, and put away for to-mor- row's stock. To the remainder add the rice and the pint of water in which it has been soaking for two hours. Season, and cook gently, taking care it does not burn, while you blanch the almonds by scalding off their skins, and pound them in a Wedgewood mortar. When the rice is soft, put in these, and cook slowly ten minutes. Scald the milk, pour it upon the beaten eggs by degrees, add to the soup ; stir one minute, but not to the boil, and pour into the tureen. BOILED SHOULDER OF MUTTON WITH OYSTERS. Take the main bones out of a shoulder of mutton ; fill the cavity with oysters, and bind the meat firmly over the SECOND WEEK TUESDAY. 1 8? incision. Sew the shoulder into a neat shape in a piece of stout tarlatan ; put on in boiling water, slightly salted, allowing eighteen minutes to each pound in cooking. When done, unbind carefully upon the dish in which you are to serve it. Pour over it a sauce made of equaJ parts of oyster liquor and the broth from the boiling meat, seasoned, then thickened with a generous lump of butter, cut into bits, and rolled in flour, and some chopped pars- ley. Boil up once well, and put half upon the meat, the rest in a sauce-boat. CREAMED POTATOES. Mash in the usual way, whipping very light with a fork, adding a cupful of rich milk and two tablespoonfuls of softened butter, beating in gradually. Return to the saucepan ; stir constantly for three minutes ; turn into a bowl and whip with an egg-beater, hard, one minute. Pile in a hot ^leep dish, and set in the open oven until you are ready to send it to table. . . BAKED BEANS. Soak overnight. Next day, put on in cold water salted and cook soft. Drain dry, .turn into a greased bake-dish, stir in a great spoonful of butter, and when this has melted, enough milk to fill the dish one quarter full. Season with pepper and salt ; cover and bake forty minutes. Remove the top, and brown. COTTAGE PUFFS. 2 cups of rich milk half cream if you can get it. 4 eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately, i good tablespoonful of butter, chopped into the flour. A pinch of salt. Enough prepared flour for thick batter. Try two cups, and add, by degrees, as you need more. Mix the beaten yolks with the milk ; then the salt and whites ; at last, the flour. Bake in greased iron pans, such as are used for " gems " and corn-bread. The oven should be quick. Turn out and eat with sweet sauce. 1 88 MARCH. Beconir fthek. Giblet Soup. Smothered Chickens. Macaroni with Tomato Sauce. Peach Pickles. Potato Chips. Apple Cake. Coffee. GIBLET SOUP. Clean and cut the giblets of your fowls into three pieces each. Stew tender in a pint of water. Take the cake of fat from the broth set by yesterday. Put a half cupful aside for your macaroni sauce. Warm the rest and strain out the bones, etc. Return to the fire, boil up and skim, chop the giblets fine and put them in with the water in which they were boiled. Simmer a quarter of an hour ; stir in half a cupful of fine, dry bread-crumbs. Season, if necessary ; boil ten minutes longer, stirring often, and pour out. SMOTHERED CHICKENS. Prepare the chickens as for broiling, splitting each down the back. Lay flat in a dripping-pan, pour a cup- ful of boiling water upon them ; set in the oven and in- vert another pan over them, so as to cover them tightly. Roast half an hour, lift the cover and baste freely with butter. In ten minutes more, baste with gravy from the dripping-pan. In five more, with melted butter abun- dantly going all over the fowls. Keeping the chickens covered except while basting them, increase the heat, until you ascertain, by testing with a fork, that they are done. They should be coffee-colored all over, rather than brown. Dish, salt and pepper them ; cover while you thicken the gravy with browned flour, adding a little hot water, pepper, salt, and chopped parsley. Boil up ; put a few spoonfuls over the chickens the rest in a gravy tureen. They are extremely nice, if faithfully basted. SECOND WEEK WEDNESDAY. 1 89 MACARONI WITH TOMATO SAUCE. Break half a pound of macaroni into inch lengths. Cover with salted boiling water, and cook twenty minutes, or until tender. Have ready a sauce prepared as follows : open a can of tomatoes ; take out half the contents and cut up very small. Add, with pepper and salt, and a little minced onion, to the half cup of broth reserved for this purpose, and stew together twenty minutes. Put the macaroni into a deep dish, stir well into it a large table- spoonful of butter. Add to the sauce two great spoon- fuls grated cheese ; boil once and strain over the maca- roni, loosening the latter with a fork that the sauce may penetrate. Serve hot. POTATO CHIPS. Peel and slice, round, some fine potatoes. Lay in cold water for one hour. Dry by laying them upon a dry towel and pressing with another.. Fry in salted lard, quickly, to a delicate brown. Take -out as soon as they are done ; shake briskly in a hot colander to free them from fat, and send to table in a deep dish uncovered lined with a napkin. APPLE CAKE. 2 cups of powdered sugar. 3 even cups of prepared flour. cup of corn-starch, wet up with a little milk. % cup of butter, rubbed to a cream with the sugar. cup of sweet milk. The whites of 6 eggs whipped stiff. Add the milk to the creamed butter and sugar ; then the corn-starch, lastly the flour and whites alternately. Bake in greased jelly cake tins. FILLING. 3 tart pippins, grated, i beaten egg. i cup of sugar. Juice and grated peel of one lemon. Beat sugar, egg, and lemon together. Grate the apples MARCH. into this mixture. Put into a farina-kettle and stir until it boils. Cool before putting between the cakes. COFFEE May to-day be passed with the cake. Seconb tthek. Chicken Broth. Rolled Beefsteak. Salsify Fritters. Scalloped Tomatoes. Cucumber Pickles. Fig Custard Pudding. CHICKEN BROTH. Cut an old fowl into quarters. Lay in salt and water an hour ; put on in a soup-kettle with an onion, and four quarts of water. Bring very slowly to a gentle boil, and keep this up until the liquid has diminished one-third, and the meat shrinks from the bones. Take out the chicken, salt it, and set aside with a cupful of the broth, in a bowl (covered), until to-morrow. Season the rest of the broth and put back over the lire. Boil up and skim, and add nearly a teacupful of rice, previously soaked for two hours in a cup of water. Cook slowly until the rice is tender. Stir a cup of hot milk into two beaten eggs, and then into the soup. Let all come to the boil barely when you have added a handful of. finely-minced parsley, pour out into the tureen. ROLLED BEEFSTEAK. Beat a large sirloin steak flat with the broad side of a hatchet. Fry a sliced onion in a little butter. Take it out with a skimmer, and put the meat into the pan. Fry quickly on both sides, soaking up all the butter and leaving a brown glaze upon the steak. Spread it upon a dish. Chop the onion, mix with bread-crumbs, minced herbs and a few chopped mushrooms, and lay this force- SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. IQ1 meat upon the steak. Roll the meat up tightly upon the dressing. Fasten with soft packthread and skewers. Put into a saucepan with a cupful of cold water. Set where it will heat very slowly, keeping on a close lid. Simmer thus two hours, turning now and then. Transfer the meat to a hot dish. Strain the gravy, add a little hot water, if needed ; thicken with browned flour ; stir in some minced mushrooms, a tablespoonful of catsup and another of butter. Boil about three minutes, pour over the steak, when you have removed the threads. The skewers are to be withdrawn by the carver. SALSIFY FRITTERS. Scrape, wash, and grate the roots into a mixture made of a beaten egg, one cap of milk, an'd enough flour for a vory thin batter. Thicken with the grated salsify ; salt and pepper, and drop, in large spoonfuls, into boiling lard or dripping. Drain in a hot colander. Eat while fresh. SCALLOPED TOMATOES. Drain off the liquor from a can of tomatoes ; salt it, and put aside for another day's soup. Strew the bottom of a bake-dish with fine crumbs ; cover with tomatoes, sliced thin. Scatter over these a little minced onion and some bits of butter, with pepper, salt, and sugar. Pro- ceed thus until the tomatoes are used up. Cover thickly with crumbs, fit a plate or tin lid over the scallop^ and bake half an hour. Brown quickly upon the upper grat- ing of the oven. FIG CUSTARD PUDDING. i Ib. best Naples figs. i quart of milk. Yolks of five eggs and whites of two. package of gelatine soaked in half cup of water. i cup sweet fruit jelly, slightly warmed. 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Flavor to taste. Soak the figs in warm water until quite soft. Split them ; dip each piece in jelly, and line a buttered mould with them. Heat the milk, stir into the beaten eggs and sugar, 192 MARCH. return to the farina-kettle, and cook until it thickens well. Set by to cool. Beat the whites of two eggs to a stiff froth. Melt the soaked gelatine by adding two table- spoonfuls of boiling water, and. setting it within a vessel of hot water. Stir until melted, and let it cool. When it begins to congeal, whip with the Dover egg-beater, gradually, into the whisked whites, until all is white and thick. Beat into the cold custard rapidly and thoroughly, and fill the fig-lined mould. Set on ice, or in a cold place, until firm. Dip the mould in hot water to loosen the pudding when you are ready for it. It is delicious. Seconir iDeek. Jrtirag. Split Pea Soup, without Meat. Baked Halibut. Chicken and Ham Pudding. Mashed Potatoes. Mixed Pickles. Cottage Pudding. Wine Sauce. SPLIT PEA SOUP, WITHOUT MEAT. 1 pint of split peas. 2 onions. 2 stalks of celery. Bunch of sweet, herbs, i carrot. i turnip. 3 tablespoonfuls of butter, cut into bits and rolled in flour. Tomato juice, saved from yesterday. Pepper, salt, and fried bread. 3 quarts of water. Soak the peas all night. In the morning, put them on, with the vegetables and herbs cut small, and the tomato juice ; cover with the water, and cook slowly three hours, or until you can rub all to a pulp through a colander. Season ; simmer fifteen minutes, stir in the butter, cook SECOND WEEK FRIDAY. 193 five minutes longer, and pour upon the fried bread in the tureen. BAKED HALIBUT. Lay a cut of halibut, weighing five pounds, in salt and water for two hours. Wipe dry, and score on top. Bake an hour, basting often with butter and water melted to- gether. Test with a fork to see if it be done, and trans- fer to a hot dish. Strain the gravy from* the dripping-pan to a saucepan. Stir in a tablespoonful of walnut catsup, the juice of a lemon, and a tablespoonful of butter, cut up in three tablespoonfuls of browned flour. Boil, and pour into a sauce-boat. CHICKEN AND HAM PUDDING. The meat from yesterday's chickens, minced fine. Half as much cooked ham, also minced. J Ib. pipe macaroni, broken into inch lengths. 2 beaten eggs. i tablespoonful of butter. i cup of gravy. Pepper and salt. Add a little hot water to the chicken broth reserved yesterday ; strain, heat, and cook the macaroni tender in it. Drain the latter ; mix well with the ham and chicken, beaten eggs, butter, and seasoning. Pour into a greased pudding-mould with a tight top, and boil for two hours. Dip the mould into cold water for half a minute ; invert a hot dish, and strike gently upon top and upon sides to turn it out. MASHED POTATOES. Pare and boil until a fork will pierce the largest. Drain oft the water, leaving the potatoes in the pot. Set back on the range, strew with salt, and dry for three minutes. Whip up with a stout, four-tined fork until they are a mass of meal. Add, then, a great spoonful of butter, a cup of milk, salt, if necessary, whipping all in lightly. Form into a smoothed mound in a vegetable-dish. Pass with the fish. MIXED PICKLES Should go around with both fish and meat, to-day. 194 MARCH. COTTAGE PUDDING. I cup of sugar. 1 tablespoonful of butter. 2 eggs. 1 cup of sweet milk. 3 cups of prepared flour. .1 teaspoonful of butter. Cream the butter and sugar. Beat in the yolks, then the milk, salt, and the beaten whites alternately with the flour. Bake in a buttered mould until a straw will come out clean from the middle ; turn out upon a plate. Eat hot with wine sauce. WINE SAUCE. J cup of butter. 2^ cups of powdered sugar. 2 glasses of pale sherry, j- cup of boiling water. i teaspoonful of nutmeg. Cream butter and sugar, whipping up, by degrees, with the hot water. Beat five minutes before adding, gradu- ally, the wine and sugar. Heat in a tin vessel set in boil- ing water, stirring often, but not to a boil. Leave in warm water until you are ready for it. Stir up from the bottom as you serve. Seconb tDeek. Saturbag. Bone Soup. Pigeon Pie. Roast Sweet Potatoes. Grape Jelly. Baked Hominy. Willie's Favorite Pudding, BONE SOUP. 6 or seven Ibs. of uncooked bones, beef, mutton, veal, and salt pork, bought in market for a trifle, and pounded to pieces. 2 minced carrots. SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. 195 2 turnips. 2 onions. 2 stalks of celery. Bunch of sweet herbs. Salt and pepper. cup tapioca, soaked two hours in one cup of cold water. 5 quarts of water. Put on the bones and vegetables early in the day. Pur- thise soup meat a day beforehand, whenever you can. Cover with half the water. When the scum arises after the boil is reached, remove it, and pour in another quart of cold water. This will bring up more scum. Skim, after boiling again, and pour in the rest of the water. When no more scum comes up, cover the pot, and cook gently four hours, if you can give it so much time. Divide the liquor into two parts. Set away half in a stone jar, with the bones in the bottom, fit on the lid, having salted the liquor. This is Sunday's " stock." Strain the rest through.a fine soup-sieve, without pressing the. residuum in the bottom, season it, and having skimmed it carefully after the boil, stir in the soaked tapioca. Simmer twenty min- utes, and it is ready. PIGEON PIE. Clean, wash, and cut the pigeons into quarters. Wipe- dry and fry lightly in butter or dripping. Sprinkle well with salt and pepper. Have ready a greased pudding-dish and a good paste, made accordfng to the receipt given on Friday of last week. Lay some pieces of pigeon in the bottom of the dish, and cover with a mixture of chopped eggs, and the giblets, boiled tender in a little water, then minced. More pigeons, and another layer of the force- meat. Stir two tablespoonfuls of butter, rolled in fjour, into the hot water in which the "giblets were boiled ; season, and pour enough into the pie to half cover the birds. Cover with a thick crust with a slit in the middle, and bake an hour if the pie be of fair size. Glaze with beaten egg, just before you take it from the oven. ROAST SWEET POTATOES. Parboil them, and lay in a moderate oven until soft to the touch. Wipe, and serve with the skins on. MARCH. BAKED HOMINY. 1 cupful cold boiled hominy (the small grained). 2 cups of milk. 1 large spoonful melted butter. 2 teaspoonfuls of sugar. 3 eggs- A little salt. Rub the butter into the hominy until there are no lumps left. Work up very thoroughly. Scald the milk ; pour upon the beaten yolks and sugar, add the salt, and beat, by degrees, into the hominy. At the last, whip in the frothed whites, and pour into a buttered bake-dish. Put at once into the oven and bake until lightly browned. WILLIE'S FAVORITE PUDDING. 1 loaf stale baker's bread. J- cup of powdered suet. Ib. of citron, chopped fine. j Ib. sweet almonds, blanched and cut in thin strips. 5 pippins, also chopped. 2 cups of milk. i cup of powdered sugar. A little salt, stirred into the milk. Cut the bread into thick slices, and pare off the crust. Cover the bottom of a greased mould (with plain sides) with these, fitted in nicely. Soak with milk, spread with the suet and fruit mixed together. Sprinkle this with sugar, and strew almond shavings over it. Fit on another stratum of bread, soaking it likewise with milk, more of the suet and fruit mixture, sugar and almonds, and so on to the top- most layer which must be bread, and very moist with milk. Cover the mould, set in a dripping-pan, which you must keep full of boiling water, and cook in the oven one hour and a half. Pass a knife carefully between the pudding and the sides of the mould ; turn it out ; sift white sugar thickly over it and eat with sweet sauce. You may have enough left from yesterday. THIRD WEEK SUNDAY. . 197 (Ztyirlr tDeek. Sunbag. Macaroni Soup. Roast Mutton. Potato Rissoles. Lettuce Salad. Spinach a la Creme. Transparent Puddings. Coffee. MACARONI SOUP. J Ib. macaroni, broken into short pieces. The stock set aside yesterday. A heaping tablespoonful of corn-starch, wet up with cold water. i tablespoonful of butter. i onion sliced. A little salt. Boil the onion five minutes in a pint of salted water. Strain it out, and when the water again boils, put in the macaroni with the butter. Boil very gently until quite tender. Drain off the water, and spread the macaroni out to cool somewhat. Meanwhile, take the fat from the top of your cold soup ; thin the latter with a cup of boiling water, and strain into the soup pot. Heat to aboil, skim, season, stir in the corn-starch, and when this has thickened it, put in the macaroni. Simmer ten minutes, and it can be put into the tureen. ROAST MUTTON. The breast, fore leg, and saddle are best for this purpose. A nice way of cooking the breast is to sew it up in stout tarlatan and boil it eight minutes for each pound. Then take it out (saving the liquor), wipe as clean as possible, and put it into a dripping-pan ; score the skin with a sharp knife, rub in pepper and salt ; wash with beaten egg, strew thickly with bread-crumbs, and' bake half an hour in a good oven. Baste twice with melted butter. Make a gravy of a cupful of the broth, thickened with a table- spoonful of butter, rolled in flour. When it has boiled, 198 MARCH. stir into it a little chopped parsley; a teaspoonful of minced onion, and three times as much chopped pickled cucumber, with the pounded yolks of two hard-boiled eggs. Stew three minutes ; pour part of it over the mutton ; the rest into a gravy-boat. N. B. Test your mutton with a skewer before taking it from the oven. If not done, leave it in a while longer. POTATO RISSOLES. Work into cold mashed potato, a beaten egg, a little but- ter, pepper and salt. Make into egg-shaped balls ; roll in beaten egg, then in pound'ed cracker, and fry in hot lard, or dripping, to a light brown. Drain well in a col- ander, and serve in a hot napkin-lined dish. LETTUCE SALAD. One-third as much oil as you have vinegar ; pepper and salt at discretion. Cut up the young lettuces with a sharp knife ; pile in a salad-bowl ; sprinkle with pow- dered sugar, and pour the rest of the ingredients mixed together over the salad. Toss up with a silver fork, to mix all well. SPINACH A LA REINE. Boil the spinach in salted water twenty minutes. Drain very thoroughly. Chop fine ; return to the saucepan with a teaspoonful of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of butter, three tablespoonfuls of cream, a little nutmeg, pepper and salt. Stir constantly until almost dry. Have ready an egg-cup dipped in boiling water. Fill it with spinach, press hard and turn out upon a hot dish. Do this until all is moulded. Put a slice of egg upon the top of each. TRANSPARENT PUDDINGS. Ib. butter, i Ib. of sugar. 6 eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately. Juice of i lemon and grated rind of two. J nutmeg. \ glass of brandy. Cream butter and sugar, beat In all the yolks and the whites of three eggs, the lemon, spice and brandy Bake THIRD WEEK MONDAY. 199 in open shells of good paste. (Add another " baste " of butter to the crust made for your pigeon pie ; roll out and line pate-pans with it.) When nearly done, spread each with a meringue made of the reserved whites, whipped up with a little powdered sugar. Color very lightly. As they are to be eaten cold make them on Saturday. COFFEE, Hot and strong, should be handed at the close of dinner particularly if you attend afternoon service 1 SLIjtri tUeek. ittonirag. Savory Porridge. Minced Mutton and Eggs. Potatoes au Maitre d'HdteL String-Beans, Saute. Sweet Pickles. Jaune Mange. SAVORY PORRIDGE. Cut the meat from yesterday's roast, and take the least desirable portions, with any remains of other meat you may have veal, pork, or poultry. Chop extremely fine ; and rub them through a coarse sieve or colander. Skim the fat from the liquor in which your, mutton was boiled ; add a chopped onion, a bunch of sweet herbs and a stalk of celery, chopped. Boil down to three pints ; strain, season, and when it boils up again, skim and stir in ycur chopped meat, with half a cupful of dry bread-crumbs. Cook, covered, twenty minutes ; put in a tablespoonful of butter, rolled in flour, and a little minced parsley. Stew five minutes before serving. MINCED MUTTON AND EGGS. Mince the cold mutton. Have ready warmed a cupful of gravy, left from yesterday, or made from the bones of the roast. Season the meat well and stir into this, but 2OO MARCH. do not cook it as yet. Strew the bottom of a buttered bake-dish thickly with dry crumbs ; pour the mince upon it; cover with crumbs, and set in the oven, covered, until bubbling hot. Then break enough eggs over the top to cover the mince well ; stick bits of butter here and there, pepper and salt, and bake quickly until well "set." Serve in the bake-dish. POTATOES AU MA!TRE D' HOTEL. Slice cold boiled potatoes a quarter of an inch thick, and put into a saucepan with four or five tablespoonfuls of milk, two or three of butter, pepper, salt, and chopped parsley. Heat quickly, stirring all the time until ready to boil, when stir in a tablespoonful of flour, and two min- utes later, the juice of a lemon. Take instantly from the fire so soon as this last ingredient goes in. STRING-BEANS SAUT. Open a can of string-beans and drain off the water. Cut them into inch lengths ; cook twenty minutes in salted boiling water. Drain them, put them back into the saucepan with two tablespoonfuls of butter, a pinch of salt and a little pepper. Toss them over a clear fire for three minutes, until they are very hot; then turn out into a deep dish. JAUNE MANGE. 1 package Coxe's gelatine, soaked in a cup of cold water. 2 cups of boiling water. Yolks of 4 eggs, beaten light. i orange juice and one-half the grated rind. Juice of one lemon and one-third of the grated peel. i cup sherry wine. i cup of powdered sugar. A good pinch of cinnamon. Put gelatine (soaked), sugar, juice, peels, and spice into a bowl and pour the boiling water over them. Stir until dissolved ; put over the fire in a saucepan, and heat almost to boiling. Pour, very gradually, upon the beaten yolks Return to the fire in a farina-kettle and stir THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 2O1 one minute. It must not boil. Take it off, add the wine, and strain through double tarlatan. If you have ice, or if the weather be cold, set the mould containing this in the refrigerator, or in a very cool closet from Saturday to Monday. By making it on the former day, you can add to the excellence of your m- ringue on the transparent puddings by using the whites of the four eggs required for the receipt. Pass light cakes with the jaune mange. (fruesbctg. Quick Lobster Soup. Roast Tenderloin of Beef. Mashed Potatoes. Made Mustard. Canned Succotash. Apple Trifle. Lady's-Fingers. QUICK LOBSTER SOUP. Three Ibs. of fish the less choice parts of halibut or cod will do those which are too bony for table use. Cover with three quarts of cold water and boil down to less than two or until the fish is in rags. Strain through a fine sieve and put on to boil. Season with salt and pepper. When you have skimmed it well, stir in a cup of milk in which has been mixed two lablespoonfuls of corn-starch. Boil up well ; then add two tablespoonfuls of butter. Stir it in, take out a cupful of soup and beat ii into two eggs. Return to the soup and leaving the saucepan on the range, but not over the fire, stir in a can of preserved lobster, freed from bones and cut up small. Cover and stand in a pot of hot water ten minutes before pouring out. ROAST TENDERLOIN OF BEEF. As I have before stated, this is the best, and not the least economical cut for the table, there, being no waste 9* 202 MARCH. and scarcely any bone. Put in the dripping-pan, pour a cup of boiling water over it, and roast carefully, basting often with its own gravy. When nearly done, dredge with flour and baste once with butter. Do not let it once get dry while cooking. Allow about ten minutes per pound if you 'like it rare and juicy that is, if your oven be of moderate heat. Pour the fat from the gravy, thicken what is left with browned flour, pepper, and salt, boil up, and put into a gravy-boat. Pass made mustard with it. MASHED POTATOES. Please see receipt given last Friday. CANNED SUCCOTASH. Open the can an hour before it is to be cooked, and turn into a bowl. Drain off the liquor, put the succotash into a saucepan, cover with boiling water, and stew half an hour. Throw off half the water, and add as much cold milk. When it boils, put in a tablespoonful of butter, cut into quarters and rolled in flour ; pepper and salt ; simmer five minutes and serve in a vegetable-dish. APPLE TRIFLE. 2 heaping cupfuls of good apple sauce, well sweetened and flavored with grated lemon peel. 4 eggs. 2 cups of milk. 4 tablesjDoonfuls of sugar. Heat the milk, and pour over the beaten yolks and sugar. Put back in a farina-kettle, and stir until it begins to thicken, say about eight minutes. Set by in a shallow vessel to cool. Beat the whites very stiff, then whip grad- ually into the apple. When all is in, and well beaten, pile up in a glass dish, and pour the cold custard about the base. LADY'S-FINGERS, Or small, fresh sponge-cakes, should be passed with the trifle. THIRD WEEK WEDNESDAY. 2O3 Mock-Turtle Soup. Veal Cutlets and Brains. Potatoes au Gratin. Lettuce. Stewed Tomatoes and Onion. Steamed Bread Pudding. MOCK-TURTLE SOUP. 1 calf's head, well-cleaned, with the skin on. 2 onions. Bunch of sweet herbs. 5 tablespoonfuls of butter. 5 tablespoonfuls of browned flour. i tablespoonful of allspice. teaspoonful of mace. 1 teaspoonful of pepper. 2 teaspoonfuls, at least, of salt. 2 raw eggs. A little flour. 2 glasses of brown sherry. i tablespoonful mushroom, or walnut catsup. 5 quarts of water, cold, of course. i sliced lemon. Soak the calf s head an hour in cold water, and boil in the five quarts of water until the bones will slip easily from the flesh. Take out the head, leaving the bones and broth in the pot. Take out the tongue and brains, and put them in separate plates. Set aside, also, the cheeks and the fleshy parts of the scalp to cool. Chop the rest, including the ears, very fine. Reserve four spoonfuls of this for force-meat balls. Season the rest with pepper, salt, onion, allspice, herbs, and mace, and put back into the pot. Cover closely, and cook four hours. Should the liquor sink to less than four quarts, replenish with boiling water. Just before straining the soup, take out half a cupful ; put into a frying-pan ; heat, and stir in the browned flour, wet up in cold water, also the butter. Simmer these together ten minutes, stirring almost con- stantly. Strain the soup ; scald the pot and return the 204 MARCH. broth to the fire. Have ready the tongue and fleshy parts of the head cut, after cooling, into small squares ; also, about fifteen balls made of the chopped meat, highly seasoned, worked into the proper consistency with a little flour and bound with the raw eggs, beaten into the paste. They should be as soft as can be handled. Grease a pie- plate, flour the balls and set in a quick oven until a crust forms upon them, then cool. Now, thicken the strained broth with the mixture in the frying-pan, stirred in well. Should there not be enough to make it almost like cus- tard, add more flour. Then drop in the dice of tongue and fat meat. Cook slowly five minutes. Put the force- meat balls and thin slices of a peeled lemon into the tureen. Pour the soup upon them, add catsup and wine ; cover five minutes and serve. This king of soups having, of right, received such a long and minute notice, I shall not repeat the receipt in full in this work, but take the liberty of referring you, from time to time, to that just given. VEAL CUTLETS AND BRAINS. Flatten the cutlets with the broad side of a hatchet ; dip in beaten egg, then in cracker-dust, and fry rather slowly in ham-dripping, if you have it ; if not, in salted lard. Drain off the fat ; put into a hot-water dish, pepper, and cover while you fry, in the same fat, after straining it, the brains from the head of which your soup was made. They should first have been boiled for ten minutes, drained, and cooled ; then beaten to a paste with egg, seasoned with pepper and salt, and dropped by the spoon- ful into the scalding fat. Drain, and lay about the cut- lets as a garnish. POTATOES AU GRATIN. Mash as usual; put into a shallow pie -plate well greased ; strew thickly with dry crumbs, and brown upon the upper grating of the oven. Glaze with butter, when the gratin begins to brown well. Slip dexterously to a flat dish. STEWED TOMATOES AND ONION. To one can of tomatoes add a small onion, minced fine. Season with pepper, salt, a little sugar, and stetf THIRD WEEK THURSDAY. 2O$ twenty-five minutes. Stir in a tablespoonful of butter; cook two minutes, and serve. LETTUCE. Treat as directed on last Sunday. STEAMED BREAD PUDDING. 2 cups of milk. 2 cups fine bread-crumbs. \ Ib. suet, powdered. Ib. Sultana raisins, picked, washed, dried, and dredged with flour. 3 eggs. i even tablespoonful of corn-starch. i tablespoonful of sugar. A little salt. Heat the milk ; pour over the eggs and sugar, beaten together. Stir in the corn-starch; cook one minute, and pour upon the bread-crumbs, beating all. to a batter. Put a layer of this in the bottom of a buttered pudding- mould. Cover this with suet ; then with raisins ; sprinkle with sugar; then more butter, and proceed in the fore- going order until the mould is nearly full. Fit on the top, put into the steamer over a pot of boiling water, and steam at least two hours. If you have no steamer, boil one hour and a half. When done, dip the mould into cold water for half a minute, and turn out, with care, upon a hot, flat dish. Eat hot with wine sauce. I)irb Curry Soup. Stewed Beef. Bermuda Potatoes, au Naturel. Macaroni, Baked. Gherkin Pickles. White Puffs. Custard Sauce, CURRY SOUP. You can, if you dislike the taste of curry, warm up what was left from your mock-turtle soup, just as it is. 2O6 MARCH. But you can vary it, agreeably to most palates, by stirring into it, when melted, and almost on the boil, a tablespoon- ful of curry powder, if there be more than three pints of soup half as much, should there be but a quart. Wet the powder up in cold water, add to the soup, and cook three minutes. STEWED BEEF. 3 Ibs. of beef not too lean coarse steak or brisket. i chopped onion. Bunch of thyme, sweet marjoram, and summer savory. Pepper, salt, parsley. \ teaspoonful of allspice. i tablespoonful of Worcestershire sauce. i tablespoonful of browned flour. i pint of cold water. \ glass of wine. Cut the meat into strips about an inch long. Cover with a pint of water, and stew gently two hours. The meat should be ready to fall to pieces. Add the onion and herbs cut up fine, the spice, salt and pepper, and stew half an hour, closely covered. Then stir in the browned flour, and when it has thickened, the sauce and wine. Cover the bottom of a deep dish with strips of fried bread, and pour the stew over it. If cooked long and slowly enough, it will be a rich brown mixture, with no hard lumps of meat in it. Save half a cupful of gravy for to-morrow. BERMUDA POTATOES AU NATUREL. Wash and boil in hot salted water, until a fork will easily pierce them. Drain off the water, throw salt over them, and "dry off" upon the range for a few minutes. Peel, and serve whole. BAKED MACARONI. Break half a pound of macaroni into short pieces ; cook in boiling water, salted, twenty minutes. Drain, put a layer into a greased bake-dish ; strew thickly with grated cheese, and stick bits of butter over it. Go on in this order until the dish is full, strewing cheese and but- ter on top. Pour in a cup of milk ; bake, covered, thirty minutes ; then brown nicely. Serve in the pudding-dish THIRD WEEK FRIDAY. 2O? WHITE PUFFS. 2 cups of rich milk. Whites of 4 eggs whipped stiff. 2 cups prepared flour. i scant cup of powdered sugar. Grated peel of half a lemon. A little salt. Whisk eggs, lemon, and sugar to a meringue, and add alternately with the flour to the milk. The salt should be sifted with the flour. Beat very light, and bake in small, well-buttered tins, or cups. Turn out, sift powdered sugar over them, and eat with custard sauce. CUSTARD SAUCE. 2 beaten eggs. i large cup of sugar. i scant cup of scalding milk. J- teaspoonful of arrowroot, wet with cold milk. i tablespoonful of butter. j- teaspoonful of nutmeg. Rub the butter into the sugar, add the eggs, and beat light. Put in corn-starch and spice ; finally, pour upon this mixture, by degrees, the boiling milk. Set within a saucepan of boiling water five minutes, stirring all the while, but do not let it really boil. tUeek. Clam Chowder. Braised Duck. Weak Fish, Fried. Grape Jelly. Puree of Green Peas. Cauliflower a la Creme. Corn Meal Pudding without Eggs. CLAM CHOWDER. Fry five or six slices of fat salt pork crisp, and cnop fine. Sprinkle a layer in the bottom of a pot ; cover 208 MARCH. with clams ; sprinkle with pepper, salt, and bits of butter, then with minced onion. Next, have a stratum of small crackers, split and soaked in warm milk. When the pot has been filled in this order, cover all with cold water, and cook slowly (after the water is heated) three-quarters of an hour. Strain the chowder, without pressing or shaking ; put clams, etc., into a covered tureen ; return the liquor to the pot. Thicken with rolled crackers ; add a glass of wine, a tablespoonful of catsup ; boil up, and pour over the chowder. Pass sliced lemon with it. FRIED WEAK FISH. Clean, wash, and dry the fish. Lay in a broad pan or dish ; salt, and dredge with flour. Fry in hot lard or very nice dripping to a light brown. In serving, lay the fish side by side, the head of each to the tail of the one next him. Garnish with parsley. BRAISED DUCK. Clean and wash the duck. Stuff with a dressing of bread-crumbs seasoned with pepper and salt, a little onion and sage. Sew up the vent, and tie the neck to keep in the flavor. Fry the duck in a great spoonful of butter until lightly browned, turning it often. Add the butter used for frying to the gravy saved from yesterday ; thin with boiling water, and, having put the duck into a saucepan, strain this gravy over it. It should half cover the fowl. Stew slowly forty-five minutes, or until tender, keeping the lid on all the while. Take up the duck, cover to keep it warm, straki the gravy, and if very oily, take off the top. Boil sharply ten minutes in an open saucepan ; thicken with browned flour ; put back the duck into it, and set the saucepan, again covered, in boil- ing water for a quarter of an hour. Serve the gravy in a boat. PURE"E OF GREEN PEAS. Open a can of peas, drain off the liquor, and cook twenty minutes in boiling water slightly salted. Strain off the water through a colander ; mash the peas with the THIRD WEEK FRIDAY. back of a wooden spoon, and rub through the colander into a bowl below. Put two tablespoonfuls of butter into a saucepan, with pepper, salt, and a little sugar, and, if you fancy it, three mint leaves finely chopped. Heat, but not to boiling, stir in the pulped peas, and toss about with a silver fork or spoon until they are a smoking mass. Pile in a hot dish, with triangles of fried bread laid up around the base. CAULIFLOWER 1 LA CREME. Boil a fine cauliflower, tied up snugly in coarse tarla- tan, in hot water, a little salt. Drain and lay in a deep dish, flower uppermost. Heat a cup of milk ; thicken with two tablespoonfuls of butter, cut into bits, and rolled in flour. Add pepper, salt, the beaten white of an egg, and boil up one minute, stirring well. Take from the fire, squeeze the juice of a lemon through a hair sieve into the sauce, and pour half into a boat, the rest over the cauliflower. CORN-MEAL PUDDING WITHOUT EGGS. * 2 cups Indian meal. 1 cup of flour. 2 tablespoonfuls of molasses. 3 cups of sour milk "loppered," or "bonny-clab- ber," if you can get it. i great spoonful of melted butter, i full teaspoonful: of soda, i teaspoonful of salt. \ teaspoonful of cinnamon. Sift the salt with the flour, and mix up well with the meal. Make a hole in the middle, and pour in the milk, stirring the meal and flour down into it. Beat smooth. Mix molasses, spice, butter, and the soda this last, dis- solved in hot water-^-all together, ar.d beat into the bat ter well and hard. Butter a tin mould with a cover ; pour in the pudding, and boil steadily an hour and a half Eat hot with butter and sugar. 210 MARCH. tfytrlr tDeek. Chicken Broth. Pate of Salt Cod. Boiled Chicken and Riee. Mashed Turnips. Egg Sauce. Ambrosia. Cafe au Lait and Sponge-Cake. CHICKEN BROTH. Clean, wash, and truss, but do not stuff, a full-grown fowl. Set aside the giblets for another use. Bind the legs and wings of the fowl closely to its sides. Put into a pot with four quarts of water (cold), and cook gently until the liquor has fallen one-third. Then add a full cup of rice, soaked for one hour in a very little water, and boil half an hour more, or until the chicken is tender and the rice soft, but not broken to pieces. Take out the chicken. Wipe off the adhering grains of rice, wash over with butter, salt and pepper, and set, covered, upon a pot of boiling water to keep hot. Season the soup with pep- per and salt, and simmer ten minutes more. Then strain out the rice, and cover it to keep hot. Return the soup to the pot, stir in a cup of hot milk, a tablespoonful of corn-starch wet with cold water, and a handful of very finely minced parsley. Boil up, take, from the fire, and pour by degrees upon two beaten eggs. Cover for three minutes ; then pour into the tureen. PAT& OF SALT COD. i cup of cold salt cod, soaked all night in soft water, boiled in the morning, left to cool, then " picked " into boneless flakes. 1 cup of oyster-liquor. 2 even tabiespoonfuls of rice flour, or corn starch. 3 tabiespoonfuls of butter. Chopped parsley and pepper. 3 hard-boiled eggs, minced. N THIRD WEEK SATURDAY. 211 Some rich paste. (See " French Puff Paste," page 352, No. i, COMMON SENSE SERIES GENERAL RE- CEIPTS.) Boil the oyster-liquor, stir in the corn-starch wet up with cold milk. When it thickens, add the butter and pepper ; next the parsley and fish. Heat almost to boil- ing, and stir in the chopped egg. Take from the fire, and cover, over a pot of boiling water, ten minutes. Make the shell by lining a profusely buttered cake- mould, or round pan with nearly straight sides, with a thick sheet of puff-paste, pricking it at the bottom to pre- vent too much puffing. Cut a round piece exactly the size of the top, for a cover, and bake separately. Bake both in a quick oven. Let them get almost cool, turn out the shell with the utmost care ; fill slowly with the prepared fish, that the sides may not give way ; fit on the top ; hold an inverted hot plate firmly upon it and re- verse the pate skilfully, leaving the closed side upper- most. It is easily done, if one is only fearless yet dex- terous. Eat hot. BOILED CHICKEN AND RICE. Boil the giblets tender in a little salted water ; chop ' fine, and when the rice is strained from the soup, mix them well through it. Pile the rice, when you are ready to serve it, upon a meat dish ; lay the chicken upon the top ; pour a few spoonfuls of egg sauce over it, and send to table. EGG SAUCE. One cup of the broth in which the chicken was boiled, heated ; thickened with a tablespoonful of butter rolled thickly in flour ; poured over two beaten eggs ; boiled one minute, with a tablespoonful of parsley stirred in ; then seasoned and poured upon the pounded yolks of two boiled eggs placed in the bottom of a bowl. Stir up well, and it is ready. MASHED TURNIPS. Boil in salted water, until tender ; mash and drain in a hot colander, working in butter, salt, and pepper, Mound up in a hot, deep dish, covered. 212 MARCH. AMBROSIA. 8 fine oranges, peeled and sliced. \ grated cocoanut. cup of powdered sugar. Arrange slices of orange in a glass dish ; scatter grated cocoanut thickly over them ; sprinkle this lightly with sugar, and cover with another layer of orange. Fill the dish in this order, having a double quantity of cocoanut and sugar at top. Serve soon after it is prepared. CAF AU LAIT AND SPONGE-CAKE. To one pint strong made coffee, add the same quantity of boiling milk. The coffee should be first strained through muslin into the table-urn, then the milk poured in with it. Wrap the urn in a woollen cloth, if you have no " cozy," for five minutes before serving. Send around sponge-cake, home-made or bought, with it. Jburtl) tihek. A Good Stock Soup. Beef a la Mode de Rome. Potato Puff, Hominy Croquettes. Spinach. Chow-chow. Snow Custard. Nuts and Raisins. A GOOD STOCK SOUP. 5 Ibs. brisket of beef. 2 Ibs. mutton-bones. 2 onions, sliced and fried. 2 carrots. 2 turnips. 4 stalks of celery. Bones of chicken or duck, if you have them. 6 cloves. FOURTH WEEK SUNDAY. 213 f cup of sago or barley. 6 quarts of cold water. Sweet herbs. Pepper and salt. Slice the meat, crack the bones, chop the vegetables, and put all on over the fire with the water. Boil slowly five or six hours ; strain ; pick out the meat as well as you can, and set aside. Then, rub the vegetables through a colander, prior to straining all through your soup-sieve. Set aside half the stock for Monday. Do thus much on Saturday. Or, if you choose, do not strain the soup at all until Sunday morning. It will be the richer for cooling with meat, etc., in it. In either case, season before setting it away, or it may sour. Put Sun- day's stock back into the pot ; boil up and skim, before adding the half cup of pearl sago, previously soaked for two hours in a very little cold water. Simmer twenty minutes and pour out. BEEF 1 LA MODE DE ROME. Cut a quarter of a pound of streaked salt pork, and the same quantity of lean beef into strips, and fry, with a sliced onion, in good dripping. Put them in the bottom of a pot and lay a rib roast of beef, rolled round, upon them. Add a pint of boiling water, cover, and cook ten minutes to the pound, turning the beef three times meanwhile. Transfer the meat to a dripping-pan, dredge the top with flour, then baste with its own gravy, once. Keep kot, without cooking, while you strain the gravy left in the pot, thicken it with browned flour (always after taking the fat from the top), season with pepper, and stir in a teaspoon- ful of sugar, a handful of Sultana raisins, picked and washed, and the same quantity of blanched almonds, cut into tiny strips. Boil gently three minutes, dish the beef, and pour the sauce over it. Odd as this receipt may seem to an American house- wife, the result is extremely palatable, and a good change of fare at this season. POTATO PUFF. Mash the potatoes soft with milk and butter, season and beat very light with two raw eggs. Smooth and bake to 214 MARCH. a light brown in a greased pudding-dish, in which, also, serve it. HOMINY CROQUETTES. 2 cups of fine-grained hominy, boiled and cold. 2 beaten eggs. 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Salt to taste. } cup of finely chopped beef, left over from your soup, after straining the latter. Pepper. Work hominy, butter, and salt to a smooth paste ; beat in the eggs, finally the chopped meat, after peppering and salting it. Stir up in a farina-kettle until hot. and pour out to cool. When cold, make into long rolls with floured hands, flour each well by rolling upon a dish, and fry to a yellow-brown in sweet lard. Drain off the fat and pile upon a hot dish. SPINACH. Boil in hot, salted water, twenty 'minutes, drain and press hard ; chop fine, and return to the saucepan with a large spoonful of butter, pepper, salt, a little sugar and a pinch of mace. Stir, and beat until very hot; then pour into a deep dish. SNOW CUSTARD. \ package of Coxe's gelatine. 3 eggs. 1 pint of milk. 2 cups of sugar. Juice of one lemon. i large cup boiling water. Soak the gelatine one hour in a teacupful of cold water, then stir in two-thirds of the sugar, the lemon-juice and the boiling water. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth, and when the strained gelatine is quite cold, whip it into the whites, a spoonful at a time for half an hour, if you use the Dover egg-beater (at least one hour with any other). When all is white and stiff, pour into a wet mould, and set in a cold place. Make this on Saturday, and on Sunday dip the mould into hot water, and turn out into a glass dish. Make, a custard of the milk, eggs, and the resl FOURTH WEEKMONDAY. 21 5 of the sugar, flavoring with vanilla ; boil until it begins to thicken. When the meringue is turned into the dish, pour this custard, cold, about the base. NUTS AND RAISINS Serve as another and a last course. Jcmrti) Vermicelli Soup. Browned Mince of Beef. Stewed Potatoes, Creamed. Mixed Pickles. Broccoli. Canned Peaches and Cream. Myrtle's Cake. Tea. VERMICELLI SOUP. Boil a quarter of a pound of vermicelli in a little salted water fifteen minutes. Heat the stock set aside for to- day, 'when you have taken the fat from the top, and when scalding, add the vermicelli. N. B. Always break vermicelli and macaroni small before cooking. Add a little chopped parsley ; simmer fifteen minutes and pour out. BROWNED MINCE OF BEEF. Cut all the meat from the bones of yesterday's roast, setting away the bones for another day's soup. Mince the beef fine ; mix with it one-fourth as much mashed potato, season highly with pepper, salt, a little mustard and cat- sup ; work soft with the remains of yesterday's gravy; heat in a saucepan, then heap upon a stone china dish, cover the mound with fine crumbs, and brown upon the upper grating of your oven. Put bits of butter thickly over the top as it begins to brown. 2l6 MARCH. STEWED POTATOES CREAMED Chop cold boiled potatoes coarse ; put on in a saucepan with a cup of milk, and heat in an outer vessel of hot water. When scalding, pepper and salt ; stir in a table- spoonful of butter, cut up and rolled in flour, and when this has melted, a beaten egg, stirred in while the pota- toes are not boiling. Simmer one minute, and turn out. BROCCOLI. Wash, and let stand in salt and water one hour. Cook in boiling salted water fifteen minutes. When tender, drain dry, and serve with melted butter (peppered) poured over it. CANNED PEACHES AND CREAM. Open the can at least an hour before using, and turn into a glass disk ; sprinkle with sugar. Serve in saucers, sending around powdered sugar and cream to each person. MYRTLE'S CAKE, Or any other good cup cake, made last week, may be sliced and passed with the fruit and cream. If you desire a receipt for this particular cake please consult " Break- fast, Luncheon and Tea," No. 2, COMMON SENSE SERIES, page 334. Barley Broth. Boiled Leg of Mutton. Kidney Beans. Oyster Sauce. Bermuda Potatoes, Baked, Cocoanut Pudding. BARLEY BROTH. 2 Ibs. knuckle of veal. Beef bones from yesterday, i onion, i turnip. i stalk of celery. Chopped parsley. FOURTH WEEK TUESDAY. 2 1/ i cup Scotch barley. 3 quarts of water. Break the bones to splinters and chop the meat Mince the vegetables, and put all into a soup-kettle, with the water. Boil slowly three hours, until the liquor has fallen one-third. Meanwhile wash the barley and boil half an hour in a little salted water. Strain your soup ; cool to let the fat arise, and take this off. Season with pepper and salt and boil up. Skim, put in the barley, and cook gently half an hour longer. BOILED LEG OF MUTTON. The mutton will be cleaner and in better shape if boiled tied up in coarse net or tarlatan. Put on in boiling water, plenty of it, slightly salt, and cook steadily fifteen minutes to the pound. Save the broth for soup. Undo the net from the meat, rub the latter over with butter, lay on a hot dish, and send the oyster sauce in a boat. Garnish the mutton with sliced cucumber pickles. OYSTER SAUCE. 1 pint of oysters. Half a lemon. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, rolled well in flour, i teacupful of milk. Cayenne and nutmeg to taste. Heat the oyster liquor, and when it boils, skim, and put in the oysters. So soon as they boil, stir in the butter, cut up and well floured, the spice -and lemon-juice. Boil five minutes, take from the fire and put with the milk which has been heated in another vessel. Stir up well, and pour out. KIDNEY BEANS. Soak all night. In the morning put on in warm not hot water slightly salted, and cook tender. Drain dry, stir in a great lump of butter, a little salt and pepper, and turn into a deep dish. BERMUDA POTATOES BAKED. Select those of uniform size ; wash, and bake in a moderate oven until soft to the pinching fingers. Wipe clean, and serve in their skins, wrapped in a napkin. 218 MARCH. COCOANUT PUDDING. i heaping cup fine bread-crumbs, i cocoanut, pared and grated, i tablespoonful corn-starch, wet in cold water. J cup of butter. 1 cup of powdered sugar. 2 cups of milk. 5 eggs. Nutmeg and rose-water to taste. Soak the crumbs in the milk. Rub butter and sugar to a cream, and whip in the beaten yolks. Beat this into the soaked crumbs ; stir in the corn-starch, then the whisked whites finally, the grated cocoanut. Beat very hard, pour into a neat pudding-dish, well buttered, and bake in a moderate oven forty-five minutes. Eat cold, with powdered sugar on top. Jamil) tihek. Tomato Soup. Swiss Turnovers. Salmon Pudding. Mashed Potatoes. Lettuce Salad with Cream Dressing. Wayne Pudding. TOMATO SOUP, Open a can of tomatoes, and cut them up small. Take the fat from the top of the liquor in which your mutton was cooked yesterday ; put over the fire with the toma- toes and half a cup of raw rice, and cook slowly one hour. Season to taste, adding a lump of loaf sugar and a table- spoonful of butter, rolled in flour ; simmer five minutes, and poui into the tureen. SALMON PUDDING. i can preserved salmon. 4 eggs, beaten light. 4 tablespoonfuls of melted butter. FOURTH WEEK WEDNESDAY. 219 \ cup fine bread-crumbs. Pepper, salt, and minced parsley. Chop the fish fine, rub to a paste with the butter. Beat the bread-crumbs up with the eggs and seasoning ; work all together ; put into a buttered mould, with a tight top, and boil one hour. Dip in cold water ; turn it out upon a hot dish. Have ready a cupful of drawn butter with a raw egg beaten into it, and pour over the pudding. Swiss TURNOVERS. Mince the cold mutton left from yesterday. Put half a cupful of hot water into a saucepan ; stir in a great spoon- ful of butter, cut up in flour ; season with pepper, salt, and tomato catsup. Pour over a beaten egg, mix well, and, returning to the saucepan, add the mince, well sea- soned with pepper, salt, a little grated lemon-peel and nutmeg. Stir up until very hot, but not boiling. Set by to keep hot while you make a batter of one pint of flour, four eggs, a little salt, and a quarter spoonful of soda, dis- solved in vinegar, and about four cups of milk enough for thin batter. Beat very light. Put a spoonful of lard (a small one) into a hot frying-pan, run it over the bottom, turn in a half cupful of batter, and fry quickly. Invert the pan upon a hot plate, and this, in turn, upon another, to have the browned side of the pancake downward ; cover the lighter side with the mince ; fold up neatly and lay upon a hot dish in the open oven to keep warm, while you fry and spread the rest. They are very nice. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual, and pass with both fish and meat. LETTUCE SALAD WITH CREAM DRESSING. cupful of new milk, if you have no cream. 1 teaspoonful of corn-starch. Whites of 2 eggs, beaten stiff. 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar. 2 tablespoonfuls best salad oil. 2 teaspoonfuls powdered sugar, i teaspoonful of salt. 22O MARCH. J teaspoonful of pepper. i teaspoonful of made mustard. Heat the milk (or cream) almost to boiling ; stir in the corn-starch wet up with cold milk. Boil up, add the sugar, and take from the fire. Cool, beat in the frothed whites, oil, pepper, mustard and salt, and, when the let- tuce is shred fine, add the vinegar to the dressing, and pour over it. Toss up with a silver fork. Eat very soon, WAYNE PUDDING. . 2 full cups of prepared flour. cup of butter. i cup of powdered sugar. i lemon, the juice and half the grated peel. J Ib. of citron, cut into very thin strips. 5 eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately. Cream butter and sugar ; add the beaten yolks ; whip up light with the lemon, then add the whites, alternately with the flour. Butter a mould abundantly, line it with the strips of citron ; put in the batter, a few spoonfuls at a time ; cover and set in a pan of boiling water, in a good oven. Keep plenty of boiling water in the pan, and cook steadily one hour and a half. Dip into cold water and turn out upon a hot plate. Eat warm with wine or brandy sauce. Leave room in the mould for the pudding to swell. Never heat a pudding or cake mould before greas* ing it or the batter will stick. Jottrtl) Ox-tail Soup. Irish Stew. Corn Pudding. Potatoes a la Lyonnaise. Queen's Toast. OX-TAIL SOUP. 1 ox-tail. 2 Ibs. of lean beef. 4 carrots. FOURTH WEEK THURSDAY. 221 3 onions. Thyme and parsley. Pepper and salt. 2 tablespoonfuls of browned flour. 4 quarts of cold water. Cut the tail into joints and fry brown in good dripping. Slice the onions and two carrots, and fry in the same, when you have taken out the pieces of tail. When done, tie them, with thyme and parsley, in a lace bag, and drop into the soup-pot. Put in the tail, then the beef, cut into strips. Grate over them the two whole carrots, pour over all the water, and boil slowly four hours. Strain and season ; thicken with brown flour wet with cold water j boil fifteen minutes longer, and pour out. IRISH STEW. 3 Ibs. of lean beef a sirloin steak is best. 8 parboiled potatoes. 2 onions, or one, if it be large, also parboiled. Browned flour for thickening. Thyme and sweet marjoram. Pepper and salt. A little pie-paste not rich for dumplings. Cut the meat into pieces an inch wide by two long. Slice the parboiled potatoes and onions. Put a layer of meat in a pot ; then one of potatoes, next one of onions. Pepper and salt each sparingly ; scatter the herbs upon the onions ; put in more meat, and so on. When all are in, cover barely with cold water, and stew slowly two hours. Strain out the meat, and put into a covered dish a chafing-dish, if you have one. Return the gravy to the saucepan ; thicken with browned flour ; cut your paste into narrow strips two inches long, and drop, one by one, into the boiling gravy. Slew about eight minutes, and pour over meat, potatoes, etc., which await it in the dish. CORN PUDDING. To one can of corn add 3 beaten eggs. 1 cupful of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 222 MARCH. i table spoonful of sugar. A little salt. Rub butter and sugar together ; beat in the eggs ; salt the milk, and put in next ; lastly, the corn, drained of can liquor. Beat up well ; pour into a greased bake-dish, and set, covered, in the oven. At the end of half an hour, take off the lid, and brown. POTATOES 1 LA LYONNAISE. Parboil double the quantity of potatoes required for your Irish stew, and lay aside eight for this dish. Cut, when cold, into dice; fry a small chopped onion in a heaping spoonful of butter, for one minute, then put in the potatoes. Stir briskly to keep them from browning ; cook until very hot; add a tablespoonful of chopped parsley ; stir a minute longer ; turn all into a heated col- ander ; shake hard to get rid of the grease, and serve hot in a vegetable-dish. QUEEN'S TOAST. Cut slices of stale baker's bread round with a cake-cut- ter, taking off all the crust. Fry in sweet lard to a light brown. Dip each round quickly into boiling water to re- move the fat. Sprinkle thickly on both sides with a mix- ture of powdered sugar and nutmeg, and pile upon a het plate. You may dispense with sauce if you will heat a glass of wine, and put a teaspoonful, or less, upon each piece, after dipping it into the water, and before sugar- ing it. Serve hot. Jburtl) Rechauffe Soup. Chickens with Mushroom Sauce. Lobster Croquettes. Cabbage Sprouts. Boiled Macaroni. Nursery Plum Pudding. RECHAUFFE SOUP. .? excellent a soup as ox-tail deserves repetition, and the probability is that, since Friday is a fast day from FOURTH WEEK FRIDAY. 22$ meat with Roman Catholic servants, you have enough soup left over for your family proper. Warm it up, ma- king very hot, but not to boiling. If you like, you car put some dice of crisp fried bread in the tureen. LOBSTER CROQUETTES. To a can of preserved lobster, chopped fine, add pep- per, salt, and powdered mace. Mix with this one-fourth as much bread-crumbs as you have meat, work in two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, and make into egg-shaped rolls. Roll these in raw egg, then in cracker-dust, and fry in butter or very sweet lard. Serve dry and hot with cresses or parsley laid around them. CHICKENS WITH MUSHROOM SAUCE. Split a pair of chickens down the back as for broiling, and lay in a dripping-pan, with two cups of boiling water, a little salt, poured over them. Cover very securely with another pan of the same size inverted and cook an hour and a half if the fowls are of fair size. Baste at least six times ; twice with butter in which has been mixed a little pepper ; three times, copiously, with their own gravy, and, just before they are done, again with butter. Boil half a can of mushrooms ten minutes in clear, hot water. Drain and mince them very fine. Take up the chickens and keep hot in a covered dish. Put the gravy into a saucepan ; add a little chopped onion; boil three minutes, thicken with browned flour; and stir in the chopped mushrooms. Simmer, covered, five minutes, and pour half over the chickens, the rest into a sauce-boat. Save all the gravy left after dinner. CABBAGE SPROUTS. Wash, trim, and boil in hot, salted water, with a bit of streaked salt pork, an inch square. When tender, drain, season, and chop fine. Stir in a tablespoonful of melted butter and the juice of half a lemon. Eat very hot. BOILED MACARONI. Break half a pound of pipe macaroni into short lengths. Cover well with boiling water, salted, and boil not too 224 MARCH. fast about twenty minutes, or until tender and clear at the edges. Drain well ; pour a little into a hot, deep dish, and butter it, then strew with grated cheese. Do this three times in filling the dish, with cheese scattered over the top. NURSERY PLUM PUDDING. 1 scant cup of raw rice. 3 pints of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar. j Ib. raisins, seeded, and cut in half. 3 well-beaten eggs. Soak the rice two hours in a farina-kettle, just covered with warm water. When all the water is soaked up, shake the rice hard, to reach that at the bottom, and add a pint of milk. Simmer gently, still in the inner kettle, until the rice is again dry, and quite tender. Shake up anew, and add another pint of milk. When this is hot, put in the raisins, dredged with flour ; cover the saucepan and cook twenty minutes. Turn into a bowl ; put with it the but- ter, rice-flour, the remaining pint of milk, heated and mixed with the beaten eggs and sugar, and stir all up thoroughly. Bake in a buttered pudding-dish, about forty minutes. Eat warm with butter and sugar, or sugar and cream. Jbtrrtl) uhek. Saturbap. Dresden Soup. Boiled Blue Fish. Baked Calf s Head, Canned Succotash. Casserole of Rice with Tomato Sauce. Belle's Dumplings. DRESDEN SOUP. 2 Ibs. of lean beef, cut into strips. 4 pig's feet, cleaned well. FOURTH WEEK SATURDAY. 22$ 4 Ibs. of mutton and beef bones, cracked. 2 onions. 1 bunch of sweet herbs. 2 carrots. 2 blades of mace. 4 tablespoonfuls of butter, and the same of rice-flour. Juice of a lemon. i tablespoonful of Worcestershire sauce. i raw egg for force-meat. Salt and pepper. 6 quarts of cold water. i glass of claret. Early in the day, ptit on the meat, pig's feet and bones, and cook slowly five hours in six quarts of water. Skim then, carefully, add the onions, mace, and herbs, cut small, and the carrots, grated. Stew half an hour ; take out the meat and the feet, leaving the bones, etc., on the fire. Cut the flesh from the feet, and return the bones to the pot. Set aside half this flesh, with a few pieces of beef, to get cold. Chop the rest fine, and make up with pepper, salt, and a raw egg, into small force-meat balls. Roll them in flour, lay upon a greased plate, and set within the oven to " crust." When quite firm, take out and cool. Cut the reserved meat into small, square bits. When the soup has cooked half an hour after the meat was taken out, strain and season it. Divide into two portions. Into that designed for Sunday drop the dice of meat, from the pig's feet as well as the beef, and set away,- covered, in an earthenware vessel. Return the rest to the fire ; thicken with the butter, melted and worked up into the rice-flour ; add the sauce, lemon- juice, and a glass of claret. Put the force-meat halls into the heated tureen ; pour on the soup, cover five minutes, and serve. BOILED BLUE FISH. Sew up the fish neatly in a thin cloth, put on in scald- ing water with a little salt, half a small cup -of vinegar, a quarter of an onion, six whole black peppers, and a blade of mace. Let it stand, just below boiling heat, half an hour ; then increase the heat and boil thirty minutes more* 226 MARCH. Take out, unwrap, lay upon a hot dish and pour over it a cupful of drawn butter, with a little lemon-juice stirred in it. BAKED CALF'S HEAD. Put on, having removed the brains, in four quarts of cold water, and boil gently one hour. Take out the head ; salt and pepper the liquor and set by as the foundation of Monday's soup, keeping out a cupful for gravy. Put the calf's head in a dripping-pan, rub over with butter, pour the gravy into the pan, and bake, covered basting four times for half an hour. Uncover, wash over with a mixture of melted butter, pepper, and salt, and a tea- spoonful of catsup. Dredge with browned flour, baste again, and when the surface is of a fine froth, dish the head. Strain and thicken the gravy, and serve in a boat. The brains should be washed well, boiled quickly, then cooled ; mashed to a smooth paste with pepper, salt, a dust of flour, and a raw egg, and fried, by the spoonful, in hot lard. Drain, and lay about the head. CANNED SUCCOTASH. Drain from the liquor ; cut the beans if French or string beans into short pieces ; cook half an hour in salted boiling water; drain this off; add a cup of hot milk, thicken with a great spoonful of butter, cut up in flour, pepper, and salt, and simmer ten minutes more. CASSEROLE OF RICE WITH TOMATO SAUCE. Boil one cup of rice tender in hot water, a little salt, shaking up from time to time, but never stirring. Drain dry, add a very little milk in which has been stirred a beaten egg. a teaspoonful of butter, a little pepper and salt. Simmer for five minutes, and if the rice has not absorbed all the milk, drain it again. Pile it around the inner edge of a flat dish ; smooth it neatly, rounding the top, into a sort of fence ; wash over carefully with the beaten yolks of two eggs, and set it in the oven until firm. Drain more than half the juice from a can of tomatoes ; season with a little chopped onion, pepper, salt, and sugar. Stew twenty minutes ; stir in a tablespoonful of butter, and two tablespoonfuls of fine bread-crumbs ; stew FIRST WEEK SUNDAY. 227 three or four minutes to thicken it well, and pour within the hedge of rice. BELLE'S DUMPLINGS. 1 quart prepared flour. 2% tablepoonfuls of mixed lard and butter. 2 cups of milk, or enough for soft dough. Roll out a quarter of an inch thick, cut into oblong pieces, rounded at the corners. Put a great spoonful of damson, cherry, or other tart preserve, in the middle, and roll into a dumpling. Bake about forty minutes, brush over with beaten egg, while hot, and shut up in the oven three minutes to glaze. Eat hot with brandy sauce. (For receipt for sauce see Wednesday, zd Week in January.} APRIL. Jtr0t tDeek. Clear Soup. Fricasseed Chickens, White. Buttered Parsnips. Savory Potatoes. Lettuce Salad, Plain, Pie-Plant (April) Fool. Coffee and Cake. CLEAR SOUP. Take the grease from the soup-jelly you will find in the crock into which the stock was poured yesterday. Take it up by the ladleful, leaving the meat and sediment at the bottom, and put on to heat in a squp-kettle. When it boils, stir in the beaten white of an egg ; take off the scum as fast as it rises, and when quite clear add two teaspoonfuls of Coxe's gelatine, previously soaked in cold water. Add, meanwhile, a little boiling water to the sediment and meat dice in the pot ; strain off the liquid ; pick out the bits of meat, and see that they arc clean. Drop into the soup at 228 APRIL. the same time that you add four tablespoonfuls of colored water, made by burning a tablespoonful or two of sugar in a tin cup, pouring a little boiling water upon it, and stirring until you get a clear brown liquor. After these go in, do not let your soup really boil, but simmer a few minutes to throw up and remove any remaining scum. Pass sliced lemon with the soup. FRICASSEED CHICKENS WHITE. Clean, wash, and joint the fowls. Lay in cold salt and water for one hour. Put them into a pot, with half a pound of salt pork cut into strips, and cold water enough to cover them. Cover closely, and heat very slowly to a gentle boil. The excellence of the fricassee depends mainly upon care in this respect. If the fowls are full-grown and rea- sonably tender, stew more than one hour after they begin to boil. When done add half a chopped onion, parsley and pepper. Cover again for ten minutes. Stir up two tablespoonfuls of flour in cold water, then into a cup o/ hot milk, and this, in turn, into two beaten eggs. Then put in a great spoonful of butter, and pour all into the saucepan ; mix well, boil fairly, and, having arranged the chickens upon a hot dish, pour the gravy over them. BUTTERED PARSNIPS. Boil tender and scrape. Slice lengthwise. Put three tablespoonfuls of butter into a saucepan with pepper, salt and a little chopped parsley. When it heats, put in the parsnips, and shake and turn until the mixture boils. Lay the parsnips in order upon a hot dish, and pour the but- ter over them. SAVORY POTATOES. Pare and cut into squares some raw potatoes. Lay in cold water half an hour, put into a saucepan, cover with boiling water, slightly salted, and stew half an hour, not sc fast as to break them. Then throw off the water and add a cupful of sauce made from the gravy of Friday's chick- ens, thinned with a little hot water, and strained ; seasoned to taste, and again thickened with a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour. Simmer all for ten minutes, and turn into a deep dish. FIRST WEEK MONDAY. 22$ LETTUCE SALAD PLAIN. Wash the lettuce ; pull leaf from leaf, and pile over a lump of ice in a salad-bowl. Pass the oil and vinegar, salt, pepper, and powdered sugar to each person, with the lettuce, that he may season for himself. PIE-PLANT (APRIL) FOOL. i pint of stewed pie plant, rubbed through a colander. i tablespoonful of butter. i cup of sugar. Yolks of four eggs. Meringue of the whites. 3 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Juice of half a lemon. Put the strained pie-plant into a saucepan ; set it in boiling water, and, when hot, beat in the butter, sugar, and beaten yolks. Stir two minutes, and turn out to cool. This can be done on Saturday. On Sunday, a few min- utes' whirl of your egg-beater will give you the meringue. Beat in the powdered sugar with a few more, and when you have poured the stewed fruit (or vegetable) into a glass bowl, pile the meringue (the " fool " ?) on the top. COFFEE AND CAKE Can be handed with, or after the sweets. Jtr0t Milk and Bread Soup. Larded Mutton Chops. Mashed Potatoes. Green Peas. Tomato Catsup. Corn-meal Hasty Pudding. MILK AND BREAD SOUP. Boil down the liquor in which Saturday's calf s head was cooked, to less than two quarts. Add a pint of milk pre- 230 APRIL. viously heated, and mixed with three beaten eggs. Thicken with two tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in flour, and take at once from the fire. Salt and pepper, if needed. Have ready in a tureen a cupful of fine, dry crumbs. Pour on the soup, stir up for a moment, cover and send to table with a plate of grated cheese. LARDED MUTTON CHOPS. Trim off superfluous fat and skin ; beat flat with the broad side of a hatchet, and lard each with four strips of fat, salt pork, drawn quite through, so as to project on both sides. Put into a saucepan, sprinkle with minced onion, pepper, and parsley, and barely cover with weak broth. The gravy from yesterday's chickens will do, or any other you may chance to have. Put on the saucepan lid, set it where it will not boil under an hour, and think no more about it until the time is up. Then increase the heat and simmer half an hour, or until tender. Take up the chops and keep hot. Thicken the gravy with browned flour ; add the juice of a lemon, a great spoonful of mushroom catsup, a glass of sherry, and boil one minute. Put back the chops ; cover, and heat just to a feeble boil. Lay the chops in order upon a dish and pour the gravy over them. GREEN PEAS. Open a can of peas ; turn out into a bowl, and let alone for an hour. Then, strain off the liquor, put the peas into a saucepan, and cover with salted, boiling water. Cook twenty minutes ; drain, pepper, stir in a tablespoon- ful of butter, and dish. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual, and heap in a covered dish. Wet a pretty butter-print and press firmly upon the top. CORN-MEAL HASTY PUDDING. i heaping cup of Indian meal. % cup of flour. 1 quart of boiling milk. 2 cups of boiling water. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. FIRST WEEK TUESDAY. 2$1 i tablespoonful of brown sugar. i teaspoonful of salt. teaspoonful mixed cinnamon and mace. Wet up meal and flour with the water and stir into the boiling milk. Mem. Cook all sorts of milk-puddings (boiled) in a farina-kettle. Boil steadily half an hour, stirring very often from the bottom. Put in salt, sugar, butter, and spice, and cook ten minutes more. Pour into a bowl, or other uncovered dish. Eat hot with sugar and butter. Jir0t Bean and Corn Soup. Beefsteak Pudding. Stewed Potatoes. Mashed Turnips. Cold Slaw. Baked Chocolate Custards. Fancy Cakes. BEAN AND CORN SOUP. T quart of dried beans, soaked overnight in soft water, i Ib. of streaked salt pork, cut into shreds, i Ib. of lean beef also cut up. 2 stalks of celery, minced, i bunch of chopped parsley. 1 small onion, sliced. Pepper and salt. T can of corn. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in two of flour. 5 quarts of water. Put on the beans, pork, beef, and all the vegetaljdes except the corn, with the water, and boil slowly until the beans are thoroughly broken, and the meat in rags. Meanwhile, cook the corn tender in just enough boiling water to cover it. When done, stir in half the butter and flour, salt and pepper, and cover to keep hot while you 232 APRIL. strain the soup, rubbing the beans, onion, and celery to a pulp through a colander. Set aside half for to-morrow. Return the rest to the fire ; pepper to taste ; add the corn with the water in which it was cooked. Simmer fifteen minutes ; stir in the rest of the butter and flour ; boil up well, and serve. BEEFSTEAK PUDDING. i quart of prepared flour. \ lb. powdered suet. 1 cup of ice-water. 2 Ibs. good steak without bone. Pepper and salt. i tablespoonful of tomato catsup. Rub the suet into the flour, salt slightly, and make, with the water, into a paste just soft enough to roll out. Roll into a sheet nearly half an inch thick. Butter well a round bottomed pudding mould ; line with the paste, and leave in a cold place while you cut the steak into small squares, seasoning with pepper, salt, and catsup. Fill the paste-lined mould (or bowl) with this. Cut a piece of paste for the top. Cover with this, pinching the two sheets of paste tightly together at the edges. Let an assistant hold up the bowl while you cover with a stout pudding-cloth and tie tightly under the bottom, not strain- ing the cloth so strongly -over the top as to hinder the paste from swelling. (Flour the cloth before tying it over the bowl.) Plunge into a gallon of boiling water, and keep it at a fast boil for two hours, filling up from the tea-kettle when the water sinks. Turn the bowl bottom upward and dip in cold water ; untie the cloth, invert a hot dish upon the mould, and turn over carefully, to get the pudding out without breaking. This is a favorite English dish. . . STEWED POTATOES. Old potatoes, by this time, need a little management to make them acceptable at a season when appetites crave fresh vegetables. This is a good way to cook them. Pare very thin, and leave in cold water one hour. Put on to cook in cold water, bringing it soon to a boil FIRST WEEK TUESDAY. 235 When a fork will run easily into the largest, strain off' the water, throw in a handful of salt, and dry, for a minute ; on the stove. Then take out the potatoes ; crack each one by pressing with a wooden spoon ; put into a deep dish, and pour over them a cup of hot milk thickened with two tablespoonfuls of butter, cut up in flour ; cooked for a minute, then seasoned with pepper, salt, and a table- spoonful very finely-minced parsley. Cover the dish ; set in boiling water ten minutes, and serve. MASHED TURNIPS. Boil tender ; press all the water out in a colander, as you mash them; return to the fire with a good lump of butter, pepper, and salt, and stir until smoking hot. COLD SLAW. Shred the heart of a white cabbage, and pour over It a dressing of two tablespoonfuls of* oil, four of vinegar, one teaspoonful each of salt and sugar, and half as much pep- per and mustard, beaten up well with the whipped yolks of two eggs. The mixture should be quite thick. Use an egg-beater in mixing. BAKED CHOCOLATE CUSTARDS. i quart of milk. 6 eggs. i cup of sugar. 4 great spoonfuls grated chocolate. Vanilla flavoring. Scald the milk ; wet up the chocolate and stir in. Boil two minutes. Beat the yolks into the sugar, and pour the hot mixture slowly upon them, stirring con- stantly. Season and fill small cups, which should be set ready in a dripping-pan of boiling water. See that there is no danger of their boiling over the tops. Cook twenty minutes, or until the custards are firm. While they cool whip the whites to a stiff meringue with a little powdered sugar. When the custards are cold, heap this upon the tops. 234 APRIL. FANCY CAKES, Macaroons, lad/s-fmgers, or jumbles, should go around with the custards. fmt tthek. " Red Pottage." Boiled Cod with Caper Sauce. Scalloped Chicken. Mashed Potatoes, Browned. Split Pea Pancakes. Queen of Puddings. "RED POTTAGE." To the bean-stock set by on yesterday add a can of red tomatoes, cut small, and two lumps of sugar, and simmer, set in boiling water for fear of burning, until they are one mass of pulp. Strain through a colander, add seasoning, and stir in a generous glass of claret which was poured, two hours before, upon a sliced, deep-colored beet, warm from the boil. Strain the juice from the beet by squeez- ing in a cloth. Put a double-handful of fried bread into a tureen, and pour the soup upon it. This, if not " that same red pottage " for which poor hungry Esau who certainly came honestly, by hereditary right, by his love of "good eating" bartered his birth- right, is yet very pretty and savory. BOILED COD WITH CAPER SAUCE. Sew the fish up neatly in a thin cloth and cook in boil- ing water, fifteen minutes to the pound. Unwrap, lay upon a hot dish, and pour over it the following sauce : Put a cupful of boiling water into a saucepan, and stir in two tablespoonfuls of butter, cut up in a heaping tea- spoonful of flour. Beat in, when thick, the whipped yolk of an egg, the juice of a lemon, and twenty-four capers, Stir up well, cook half a minute, and take from the fire. FIRST WEEK WEDNESDAY. 235 SCALLOPED CHICKEN. Clean, wash, and cut an old fowl to pieces. Put into a pot with four quarts of cold water and cook very slowly until tender. Take it out, salt and pepper the broth, and put by for to-morrow's soup, reserving one cupful for your gravy. Let the chicken cool, and cut cleanly into pieces an inch long by one fourth that width. Put the gravy, well- seasoned, over the fire, thicken with a tablespoonful of butter, cut up and rolled in flour ; stir in the chicken, and just before it boils, take from the fire, and beat in two whisked eggs, with a little finely minced parsley. Strew the bottom of a bake-dish with crumbs ; pour in the chicken ; cover with a deeper coating of bread : crumbs ; stick bits of butter over this, and bake, covered, until bub- bling hot ; then brown delicately. MASHED POTATOES BROWNED. Mash soft with milk and butter, season, and round into a heap upon a greased pie-dish. Brown in a quick oven ; glaze with butter ; slip carefully to a hot dish SPLIT PEA PANCAKES. Soak a pint of split peas all night. Put on, in the morning, in cold water and cook soft. Rub through a fine colander. While hot, stir in a tablespoonful of but- ter, and season with pepper and salt. When quite cold, beat in two eggs, a cupful of milk, and half a cupful of flour in which has been sifted twice a quarter teaspoon- ful of soda and twice as much cream-of- tartar. Beat hard and long, and fry as you would griddle-cakes. QUEEN OF PUDDINGS. *J- cups of sugar. 5 eggs. 2 cups of dry bread-crumbs. 1 tablespoonful of butter. 2 teaspoonfuls vanilla, or other extract Colgate's, if you can get it. i quart of fresh milk. cup sweet fruit-jelly, or jam. APRIL. Cream butter and sugar and whip in the yolks. Soak the crumbs in the milk and add next then flavor. Pour into a buttered pudding-dish, filling it two-thirds of the way to the top, and bake until well " set " in the middle. Draw to the oven door, spread quickly with the jelly, and this with a meringue of the whites and half a cup of sugar. Shut the oven and bake quickly until the meringue begins to color. Eat cold with cream. Jirst ftJeck. SH)ur0iag. Chicken Soup. Mayonnaise of Fish. Veal Chops with Tomato Sauce. Potato Strips. Macaroni and Eggs Jelly Cake Fritters. CHICKEN SOUP. Take the fat from the top of the liquor in which your chicken was boiled yesterday, and put on the soup to heat. Meanwhile, boil half a cupful of rice tender in a pint of salted milk, and when the rice is soft, stir in a tablespoonftil of butter worked up in flour to prevent oil- ing. When the soup boils up clear, skim and add the rice and milk, with two tablespoonfuls of minced parsley. Pepper and salt to taste ; simmer ten minutes. Chop up three hard-boiled eggs fine ; put into the tureen and pour the soup upon them. MAYONNAISE OF FISH. Yolks of 3 boiled eggs. 2 tablespoonfuls of best oil. 2 teaspoonfuls of sugar. 6 ta.blespoonfuls of vinegar. i teaspoonful of salt, and half as much each of pepper and made mustard. FIRST WEEK THURSDAY. 237 White of i raw egg. 2 cupfuls of cold boiled fish (yesterday's cod). 2 heads of lettuce. Rub the yolks smooth with the oil, add sugar, salt, pep- per, and mustard, and, when all are mixed, the vinegar, a little at a time. Set by, covered, while you cut not chop the fish into strips an inch long, and shred the let- tuce. Mix these in a bowl. Whip the frothed white of egg into the dressing, and pour upon the salad. Stir up with a silver fork and put into a glass dish. Garnish with rings of the whites of boiled eggs. VEAL CHOPS WITH TOMATO SAUCE. Trim and flatten the chops. Dip in raw egg, then in cracker dust, and fry, rather slowly, in lard or dripping. Open a can of tomatoes, and drain off the liquor. Salt the rest of the tomatoes and reserve for Friday's soup. Put the liquor into a saucepan with a sliced onion, and stew ten minutes. Strain out the onion, return the juice to the fire ; thicken with a great spoonful of butter, worked up in a teaspoonful of corn-starch ; pepper and salt. Boil up sharply, and when you have laid the chops upon a dish, pour the sauce over them. MACARONI WITH EGGS. Break half a pound of macaroni into short bits ; cook tender in boiling, salted water. Drain well ; put into a deep dish and pour over it a cupful of drawn butter in which have been stirred two beaten eggs, and two table- spoonfuls of grated cheese, with salt and pepper. Loosen the macaroni to allow the sauce to penetrate the mass. Pass more grated cheese with it. POTATO STRIPS. Pare, cut in long, even strips ; lay in cold water for one hour ; dry by spreading them upon a towel and press ing another upon them. Fry to a light brown in salted lard. Shake off the fat in a hot colander. Line a deep dish with a napkin and put in the strips. They should not be crowded in frying, but each should be distinct and fref from the rest. 238 APRIL. JELLY-CAKE FRITTERS. Cut stale sponge or very plain cup cake into rounds with a cake-cutter. Fry to a nice brown in sweet lard. Dip eac'h round in boiling milk, to soften it and get rid of the grease. Lay upon a hot dish and spread with sweet jelly or jam. Pile neatly one upon another. Send around hot, sweetened cream to pour over them. fvcsl ID felt. Graham Soup. Sjcalloped Oysters. Stewed Sweetbreads, Brown. Moulded Potato. Lettuce. Quaking Custard. GRAHAM SOUP. 2 onions. 2 carrots. 4 turnips, j cabbage. A little celery-seed tied in a thin muslin bag. The tomatoes set by yesterday. cup raw rice. J cup of cream (with a pinch of soda added to prevent curdling). 2 lumps of white sugar. Pepper, salt, and parsley. 3 tablespoonfuls of butter cut up in flour. 3 quarts of cold water. Chop the cabbage and slice the onions ; pare and grate the other vegetables, and put over the fire with the rice, the bag of celery-seed, and the water. Stew one hour ; add the tomatoes and stew twenty minutes more. Rub all to a pulp through a colander ; return to the soup-pot, season, and when it boils, stir in the butter. Heat the cream to scalding in a separate vessel, and poui FIRST WEEK-FRIDAY. 239 into the tureen. Stir the soup into it by degrees, and serve. Pass Boston crackers split and buttered with it. SCALLOPED OYSTERS. Butter a pudding-dish, and strew the bottom with rolled cracker. Wet this with oyster-liquor and milk, slightly warmed. Then lay on oysters, set closely to- gether. Sprinkle with pepper, salt, and bits of butter, with a few drops of lemon-juice. Another stratum of moistened crumbs, and so on, until the dish is full. Let the top layer be of crumbs, with bulter dots here and there. Bake, covered, half an hour, then brown quickly. STEWED SWEETBREADS BROWN. 4 sweetbreads. i cup of gravy (yesterday's broth will do). i onion. j- cup butter. \ pint of mushrooms. Pepper and salt. Boil the sweetbreads quickly ten minutes are enough blanch by throwing them into cold water, then leaving them to cool. Slice them lengthwise. Slice, also, the onion and mushrooms, and fry brown in half the butter* Strain them out, return the fat to the pan, with the rest of the butter. Heat, and fry the sweetbreads. When the latter are done, put all into a tin pail, with a tight top ; add the gravy ; set, covered, in boiling water, and stew gently, at the side of the range,- half 'an hour. Arrange the sweetbreads upon a hot dish ; thicken the gravy with browned flour, and pour over them. Garnish with triangles of fried bread. MOULDED POTATO. Mash soft with butter and hot milk, in which has been stirred a beaten egg. Salt and put into a buttered cake or pudding mould. Set in a pan of hot water, put on the lid of the mould, and keep the water at a hard boil half an hour. Dip the mould in cold water, and turn out the potatoes upon a flat dish. 240 APRIL. LETTUCE. Treat as directed upon last Sunday. QUAKING CUSTARD. 3 cups of milk. Yolks of 4 eggs, reserving the whites for the meringue. \ package Cooper's gelatine. 6 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Vanilla flavoring. Juice of i lemon for meringue. Soak the gelatine two hours in a cup of the cold milk. Then add to the rest of the milk, which must be boiling hot, and stir until dissolved. Let it stand a few minutes, and strain through muslin over the beaten yolks and sugar. Put over the fire and stir five minutes, or until you can feel it thickening. Stir up well when nearly cold, flavor, and let it alone until it congeals around the edges of the bowl into which you have poured it ; then stir again, and put into a wet mould. Set upon ice, or in cold water until firm. Turn it, when you are ready for it, into a glass bowl. Have ready a meringue made by whipping the whites stiff with three tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, and the lemon-juice. Heap irregularly about the base. Saturbajj. Vermicelli Soup. Glazed Ham. Spinach a la Parisienne. Chow-chow. Baked Potatoes. Rhubarb Tart. VERMICELLI SOUP. 4 Ibs. knuckle of veal. 2 Ibs. of coarse, lean beef. 2 slices of corned ham, or some bones of salt pork. FIRST WEEK SATURDAY. 241 2 onions. Thyme and parsley. Ib. vermicelli. Pepper and salt. 6 quarts of water. Crack the bones into splinters ; cut the meat into strips ; slice the onions and chop the herbs. Put on in six quarts of water, and cook slowly five hours. Strain, pressing meat, etc., hard in the colander. There should be about four quarts of soup. Set aside half, when you have salted it, for Sunday. Return the rest to the clean kettle, season and skim. The vermicelli should have been broken small, and boiled in a little hot, salted water, three minutes. Strain, without squeezing ; butter and pepper ; stir into the soup ; simmer very gently five min- utes, and pour out. GLAZED HAM. Wash a fine corned not smoked ham ; soak all night in cold water, and boil about eighteen minutes to the pound. There should be plenty of water in the pot. cold at first, and brought gradually to a boil. Skim well from time to time. Let it get cold in the water in which it was boiled, if you can spare the time. We always boil a ham the day before it is to be eaten. Take it out ; remove the skin carefully, and put the latter back into the cold liquor when you have skimmed all the fat which" makes excel- lent dripping from the surface of the liquid. Press soft paper on the top of the ham, to take off the clinging drops of grease. Brush all over with beaten egg. Work a cup of rolled cracker into a paste with warm milk, butter, pep- per, salt, and a beaten egg. Coat the ham thickly with this, and set to brown in a moderate oven. Twist frilled paper around the knuckle, and garnish with cresses. SPINACH A LA PARISIENNE. Pick off the leaves from the stalks ; put on in boiling water, a little salt, and cook twenty minutes. Drain hard and dry, chop fine, return to the fire with a good piece of butter, a teaspoonful of sugar, a little nutmeg, pepper and salt, and stir two minutes. Then, beat in two or three ii 242 APRIL. tablespoonfuls of cream, or rich milk, and whip as you would a custard. It should be smooth to taite and sight, Boil up barely and dish. CHOW-CHOW " Goes well," as the French say, with ham. BAKED POTATOES. Parboil, peel, and lay in a dripping-pan, with a bit of butter upon each. As they brown, put on each a tea- spoonful of warm milk mixed with butter, salt, and pepper. They should be of a light brown. Butter again just before you dish them. RHUBARB TART. Scrape the stalks, cut into small bits, and stew in a very little water. When tender, take from the fire and sweeten. Have ready some open shells of pastry, freshly baked. Fill with the fruit, and sift sugar on top. Eat warm or cold never hot. Make more paste than you need, and keep raw in a cold place. Srconb ttUck. Stmiran. Pea and Rice Soup. Fillet of Veal with Ham. Potato Balls. Stuffed Cabbage. French Beans. ** ** *** ______ Charlotte Cachee. Bird's Nest in Jelly. PEA AND RICE SOUP. Open a can of green peas, and turn them into a bowl for an hour. Boil half a cup of rice soft in a cup of milk. Skim the stock made yesterday, and heat to a boil before adding the peas (drained) and the rice, which should have absorbed all the milk. Stew slowly half an hour ; add what seasoning you like, and stir in a tablespoonful of butter cut up in flour. Simmer five minutes and pour out SECOND WEEK SUNDAY. 243 FILLET OF VEAL WITH HAM. Have the fillet rolled and skewered by your butcher. Stuff a good force-meat of crumbs and minced fat ham be- tween the folds of meat, and lay sliced ham over the top and sides, binding it in place with packthread. Put into a dripping-pan with a cup of boiling water, and roast twelve minutes for each pound. Baste very often. Half an hour before you take it up, remove the ham, and lay on one side of the pan ; dredge the meat with flour and baste abundantly and frequently until well browned. Dish with the ham cut into strips and laid next the edge of the dish the potato balls close to the meat. Send around sweet pickles with it. Strain the gravy, thicken with browned 'flour, add pepper and a tablespoonful of tomato catsup ; boil up and pour into a boat. POTATO BALLS. To one cup of mashed potato add a beaten egg, pep- per, and salt, and work smooth. Make into balls ; roll them in flour. When the veal is half done, skim off the fat from the gravy, lay the balls in the ^an, basting, now and then, and turning until they are browned all over. Drain well, and lay about the dished veal. STUFFED CABBAGE. Boil a large, firm cabbage, whole, on Saturday, tying coarse net over it to keep it in shape, Do not remove the net until next day. Then, bind a broad strip of muslin about it that it may not crack in the stuffing. Extract the stalk with a thin, sharp knife. Without making a wide external aperture, " dig out " the heart, until you have room for nearly a cupful of force-meat. Chop the bits you have taken out, mix with cooked sausage-meat, a very little onion, pepper, salt^, a pinch cf thyme and bread-crumbs. Stuff the cabbage with this, remove the band, tie up firmly again in a net bag, and put it into a pot, covering with the liquor in which your ham was boiled yesterday, having first again skimmed the latter. Stew gently one hour. Take out the cabbage, unbind, with care, and pour a cup of drawn butter over it. Strain the useful " pot liquor," and put away heedfully. 244 APRIL. FRENCH BEANS. Cut into short lengths, when you have poured off the can liquor ; cook half an hour in boiling water, salted. Drain well, stir up with a tablespoonful of butter, with pepper and salt to taste. CHARLOTTE CACHE. i thick loaf of sponge or plain cup cake. 2 kinds of fruit-jelly, tart and sweet. Whites of 5 eggs. i heaping cup of powdered sugar. Juice of i lemon. Cut the cake into horizontal slices of uniform width. Spread each with jelly first, the tart, then the sweet, and fit into their 'former places. Ice thickly with a frosting made of the whites, sugar, and lemon -juice. Set in a sunny window, or slow oven, to harden. The former is the better plan. BIRD'S NEST IN JELLY. i quart of wine jelly not too thin. 3 cups of white blanc-mange. 9 empty egg-shells. Rind of 2 oranges cut into strips and stewed in water, until tender, then in syrup until clear, or, if you have it, use preserved orange-peel. Empty the eggs carefully through a hole in the small end ; wash them out with cold water, and while wet inside set firmly in a pan of bran or meal, to keep them steadily upright. Fill them with blanc mange. Next morning, fill a glass dish two-thirds full with clear jelly, reserving a large cupful. So soon as the jelly is firm enough to bear their weight, break the shells, with care, from the blanc- mange eggs, and pile them upon the jelly. Lay the "stiaw" i. e. y the orange-peel over and about them; pour the rest of the half congealed jelly over all, and set in a very cold place. A beautiful variation of this dessert can be made for Eas- ter Sunday, by coloring part of the blanc-mange brown with chocolate, part pink with currant jelly or cranberry juice, part yellow with yolk of egg, and leaving the rest white. SECOND WEEK MONDAY. 24$ 0econb illcek. Ham and Egg Soup. Veal Pates. Creamed Parsnips. Salad of Lettuce and Veal. Mashed Potatoes. Corn-Starch Hasty Pudding. HAM AND EGG SOUP. Skim once more and reheat the liquor in which your ham was cooked, and, when boiling, take off the. scum ; stir in two tablespoonfuls of corn-starch, wet in a half cup of milk. Take out a pint of the soup, and pour slowly, stirring well, upon four beaten eggs. Return to the soup, with a handful of very finely minced parsley. Stir one minute, without letting it boil, and pour upon half a dozen split Boston crackers, lining the tureen. VEAL PATE'S. Chop up the meat left from Sunday's fillet reserving some for salad also the crisped ham. Season well, warm up the gravy, when you have removed the fat ; mix a little oyster liquor with it, and stir in the mince. Heat almost to boiling, and set by, covered, where it will keep warm. Line /#/e-pans with the paste reserved for this purpose from Saturday. If kept in the refrigerator or cool cellar, it will be perfectly good. Bake these " shells," buttering the tins well ; slip out while hot ; ar- range on a warm dish ; fill with the mince, 'sprinkling the top of each with fine, dry crumbs ; set upon the upper grating of your oven for a minute or so, and send to table. CREAMED PARSNIPS. Boil, scrape, and slice lengthwise. Have ready in a saucepan a great spoonful of butter, with pepper and salt. Put in the parsnips, shake and turn until very hot ; lay the parsnips upon a disli ; add to the sauce three table- spoonfuls of cream, or four of milk, in which has been rubbed a teaspoonful of rlour. Boil up briskly, and pom over the sliced vegetable. 246 APRIL. SALAD OF LETTUCE AND VEAL. Cut half a pound of your cold veal into inch-long strips, and strew with salt and pepper. Shred a head of lettuce, and chop two boiled eggs not too finely. Mix these together in a bowl. Prepare a dressing thus : Beat the yolks of two eggs (add the whites to the soup) ; salt lightly, and beat in, a few drops at a time, four table- spoonfuls of oil ; then, as gradually, three teaspoonfuls of best vinegar, and half a teaspoonful of celery essence Colgate's, if you can get it. The mixture should be thick as cream. Pour over the meat and lettuce, toss up with a silver -fork, and transfer to a glass dish. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as often before directed. CORN-STARCH HASTY PUDDING. i quart of fresh milk. 3 full tablespoonfuls of corn-starch. i tablespoonful of butter. i teaspoonful of salt. Scald the milk, and stir in the corn-starch, previously wet in cold water to .a white liquid. Boil steadily, stir- ring constantly, ten minutes. Salt and butter. Let the pudding stand three minutes in hot water, after you take it from the fire, and turn out into a deep, open dish. Cook, of course, in a farina-kettle. llkck. Melange Soup. Ragout of Mutton. Canned Corn Pudding. Baked Tomatoes. Damson, or Plum Pickles. Peach Batter Pudding. MELANGE SOUP. i cup of rice (scant). 3 Ibs. of coarse, lean beef. SECOND WEEK- TUESDAY. 2tf Some mutton bones. 2 carrots. 2 turnips. i onion. Essence of celery, two teaspoonfuls. Pepper and salt. 4 quarts of cold water. i cup of tomato -juice. Cut the meat into dice, and put on in the water. Boil gently two hours, when add the rice, tomato-juice, and the vegetables cut into small squares, and already cooked five minutes in hot water, to take off the rank taste. Stew half an hour, or until the vegetables and rice are tender, but not a pulp ; season ; boil up once and pour out meat, vege- tables, and all into the tureen. RAGOUT OF MUTTON. 3 Ibs. of mutton lean and boneless cut into strips four inches long by one inch wide. i cup of gravy, made of bones, etc. A tablespoonful of walnut catsup. Browned flour. Salt and pepper. i slice of lemon. Parsley. A slice of ham or fat pork, cut small. Dripping. Fry the mutton to a nice brown, quickly, in the drip- ping. Lay in a saucepan, the chopped ham upon it, and cover with the gravy, highly seasoned. Stew slowly until very tender j take up, and keep hot, while you add the lemon to the gravy, with the catsup. Boil five minutes ; strain, and return the gravy to the saucepan. Thicken, and put in the parsley minced fine. Boil up, and pour over thi; meat in a flat dish. Put sippets of fried bread around the edge of the dish. CANNED CORN PUDDING. 1 can of corn, drained. 3 e ggs. 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter. 248 APRIL. 1 tablespoonful of sugar. A little salt. 2 cupfuls of milk. i tablespoonful of corn-starch, wet up in the milk, Beat eggs, sugar, and butter together ; then add the corn. Salt the milk, and dissolve the corn-starch well in it, and pour, by degrees, upon the rest, mixing well. Bake in a greased bake-dish three-quarters of an hour. Keep covered until nearly done ; then, brown. BAKED TOMATOES. Drain off the liquor from a can of tomatoes, and put it into your' soup. Pare the crust from some slices of bread, cut them to fit the bottom of a greased pie-dish, and fry to a light brown in dripping. Dip each in boil- ing, salted milk, fit to their places in the dish, pour the tomatoes upon them, season with pepper, salt, butter, and a little sugar. Strew thickly with crumbs, and bake, cov- ered, twenty minutes ; then, brown. PEACH BATTER PUDDING. 1 quart of milk. 2 cups of prepared flour, or enough for soft batter. 4 beaten eggs. i tablespoonful of butter, slightly warmed. i saltspoonful of salt. ^ i can of peaches, drained. Lay the drained peaches in a buttered bake-dish. Salt the flour, and sift into a pan. Beat eggs and butter to- gether, stir in the milk, and pour, by degrees, into a hole in the middle of the flour, until you have a smooth batter. Pour upon the peaches, and bake in a brisk oven. Add a glass of brandy to the peach syrup ; sweeten to taste ; stir in two tablespoonfuls of butter, and set in boiling water until the butter is melted. Serve the pudding in the bake-dish and eat with this sauce. SECOND WEEK WEDNESDAY. 249 Seomtr Eel Soup. Boiled Chicken. Potatoes a la Creme. Egg Sauce. Rice Croquettes. Steamed Corn-Meal Pudding. EEL SOUP. 4 Ibs. of eels. i onion. 12 whole peppers. 3 tablespoonfuls of butter. Tablespoonful of chopped parsley. 1 cup of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of flour, rubbed into the buttei. 2 quarts of water. 2 slices of toast cut into strips. Dripping. Clean the eels with care, removing all the fat ; cut them into short pieces, and fry for five minutes in dripping. Drain, put into a saucepan with the water, onion, and pepper, and stew slowly one hour, or until they are ten- der, without breaking. Strain through a colander ; pick out the eels and cover in a tureen, the bottom of which is lined with strips of buttered toast. Strain the soup, through a soup-sieve, back into the saucepan ; heat, and stir in butter, flour, and parsley. Boil up., add the milk, already heated, and pour over the eels and toast. BOILED CHICKEN. Clean and stuff as for roasting. Bind legs and wings to the sides ; tie in a net, and put on in boiling water if tender. If doubtful, use cold water, and cook very slowly. When the fork-test shows that it is done, unwrap and lay on a dish. Salt, pepper, and butter well, and cover while preparing the sauce. Take out a cup of the liquor, cool, and skim, put on in a saucepan ; put in a table- spoonful of butter, rolled in flour, and stir to a boil. Take n* 250 APRIL. off, and pour gradually over two beaten eggs. Return to the fire, with minced parsley, almost boil, and pour over the fowl. Salt the liquor and set aside for soup. POTATOES A LA CREME. Mash thin, whip up with a fork, at first, with butter, salt, and milk ; at last, with the frothed white of an egg. Heap roughly upon a dish, set upon the upper grating of the oven until they begin to color, and serve. RICE CROQUETTES. 2 cups cold boiled rice. 2 tablespoonfuls melted butter. 2 beaten eggs. i tablespoonful of flour. 1 raw egg, and some cracker dust. 2 tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar. A pinch of grated lemon peel, and the same of nutmeg. Lard for frying. Work the butter into the rice, then the seasoning, lastly, the beaten eggs. Make into long balls, roll in egg, then in powdered cracker, and fry, a few at a time, in hot lard. STEAMED CORN-MEAL PUDDING. 2 cups Indian meal. 1 cup of flour. 2 tablespoonfuls of white sugar. 2j cups of " loppered " milk, or buttermilk. i teaspoonful of soda, sifted twice through the flour. i teaspoonful of salt. i heaping tablespoonful of butter, melted. Put meal, flour, salt, sugar, and soda in a bowl ; mix thoroughly ; make a hole in the middle and work in the milk and butter. Beat hard and long when all are in ; put into a buttered mould with a tight top, and steam one hour and a half. If you have no regular steamer, fit the mould in the top of a pot of boiling water, taking care it does not hang into the water. Lay a thick wet towel, SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. folded, over the top of the mould to keep in all the heat. Or, you may simply boil it. Eat hot, with butter and sugar. Seconb Cream Almond Soup. Beefsteak. Chopped Potatoes. Chicken Salad. Moulded Spinach. Soft Gingerbread and Chocolate. CREAM ALMOND. SOUP. Broth in which yesterday's chickens were boiled. - Ib. of almonds. 1 cup rich milk half cream, if you can get it. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, rubbed up with two of flour. Pepper and salt. 3 boiled eggs. 2 blades of mace. Skim and heat the soup. Meanwhile, blanch (that is, scald and skin) the almonds, and pound in a mortar. Rub to a powder the yolks of three hard-boiled eggs, and work up, with the butter, flour, and almonds, to a paste. When the soup boils, pepper and salt, and put in the mace. Skim clean, strain out the mace ; return to the pot and stir in the paste of almonds, etc. Boil up gently, have the milk scalding hot in the tureen, and pour in the soup, mixing all up well. Serve at once. BEEFSTEAK. Flatten with the broad side of a hatchet ; broil over (or under) a clear fire upon a buttered gridiron turning often. Lay upon a hot dish ; salt, pepper, and butter, plentifully. Cover with a hot dish or lid, and let it stand five minutes to draw out the juices. 252 APRIL. CHOPPED POTATOES. Chop cold boiled potatoes into dice. Put some buttei or nice dripping into a frying-pan ; heat, and stir in the potatoes. Shake to prevent them from sticking to the pan, and when very hot, and glazed with the butter, pepper and salt, and turn into a hot colander. Shake and toss for a moment, and pour into a deep dish. CHICKEN SALAD. Cut the meat from the " carcasses " of yesterday's chickens. If you have but a little it may be worth while to give John a piquant side-dish. Add an equal quan- tity of shred lettuce, when you have cut your chicken into narrow strips, two inches long. Mix in a bowl ; prepare a dressing according to the receipt given on Monday ; pour over it, mix well and lightly ; put into a salad-dish, and lay sections of two hard-boiled eggs on top, with a chain of sliced whites left from the yolks used for the soup* around the outer edge. MOULDED SPINACH. Boil twenty minutes in hot, salted water ; drain, press- ing hard. Chop fine, and put into a saucepan, with a good lump of butter, a little pepper, salt and sugar. Beat and toss until nearly dry. Press hard into an oblong pan or mould. Invert this upon a hot dish. Lay slices of egg upon the top. SOFT GINGERBREAD. i cup of sugar. i cup of molasses. i cup of butter. i cup of sweet milk. 4 cups of flour. 4 eggs. i tablespoonful mixed ginger and mace. i small teaspoonful of soda dissolved in the milk. Beat molasses, butter, sugar, and spice to a cream ; whip in the beaten yolks, the milk, and lastly, the whites, alternately with the flour. Bake in two loaves, or in round tins or cups. SECOND WEEK FRIDAY. 253 CHOCOLATE. 6 tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate. 2 cups of boiling water and the same of milk. Wet the chocolate in cold water ; stir into the hot. Boil fifteen minutes ; add the milk, and simmer ten min- utes longer. Sweeten, upon the fire, or as you pour it out. Stconb ID ttk. Oyster Soup. Fillets of Halibut. Potato Marbles. Pate of Sweetbreads. Lima Beans. Boston Cream Cakes. OYSTER SOUP. 2 quarts of oysters. 1 quart of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 1 teacupful of water. 2 eggs. Cayenne pepper, salt, mace. i tablespoonful of corn-starch. Strain the liquor from the oysters into a saucepan, mix- ing in the water. Season and spice to taste. When the liquor boils, add a quarter of the oysters chopped fine. Boil five minutes ; strain through muslin and put back into the saucepan. Thicken with the butter rubbed up in a tablespoonful of corn-starch. When this boils, drop in the whole oysters. Cook until they "ruffle." Mean- while, make a sugarless custard by heating and salting the milk, adding the beaten eggs, and stirring four minutes over the fire. Put some split crackers into the tureen ; pour on the custard, then the oyster-soup, stirring all up well. Ssnd around oyster crackers and sliced lemon with it, 254 APRIL. FILLETS OF HALIBUT. Cut a tolerably thick halibut steak into strips four inches long by two wide. Put three tablespoonfuls of butter, with pepper and salt, into a saucepan, and simmer gently not frying until tender. Then drain, and put upon a hot water dish to keep hot. Cut some potatoes into small balls. There is a little instrument for this pur- pose, like a rounded gouge, which turns them out rapidly and neatly. A small iron spoon will give you oval balls. Or, if you find it easier, cut the potatoes into equal cubes ; lay in cold water half an hour, then cook fifteen minutes in boiling water. Drain and dry, and after taking your fish from the butter, strain the latter, put in the potatoes, and shake over a hot fire until they begin to brown. Drain, and lay about the fish-fillets. Add a tablespoonful of butter to that in the pan (previously cut up in flour), a teaspoonful of anchovy-sauce, and the juice of a lemon, with a little minced parsley. Boil once, and pour over fish and potatoes. PAT OF SWEETBREADS. Cut good puff-paste into rounds a quarter of an inch thick. Reserve one of these for the bottom of each pate. With a smaller cutter take out the centre of three others and pile upon this, making a deep well over an inch across. Bake quickly, glazing with white of egg when nearly done. Boil three sweetbreads ten minutes , leave in cold water as long ; cut into dice, put into a saucepan with a great spoonful of butter, a little pepper and salt, and a few spoonfuls of boiling water, and stew twenty minutes. Stir, meanwhile, into half a cup of boiling milk a table- spoonful of butter, cut up in as much flour.. Add to the sweetbreads with a little minced parsley. Boil up. Fill the pates, and arrange upon a heated dish. LIMA BEANS. If dried, soak over night, put on next day in cold water, salted, and cook gently until soft. Drain, stir in butter and pepper. If you use the canned beans, pu< on in boiling water, then proceed as above directed. SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. BOSTON CREAM CAKES. Ib. of butter. Ib. of flour. 6 eggs. i pint water warm not scalding. Stir the butter into the warm water, and heat slowly to a boil. Then put in the flour, boil and stir one minute ; empty into a dish to get cold. Beat the eggs light, and whip, first the yolks, then the whites, into the cooled paste. Drop in great spoonfuls, upon buttered paper, not letting them touch each other, and bake, in a quick oven, ten minutes. They should puff up to quadruple their original size. Pass a sharp knife lightly around each, split, and fill with the following mixture : 1 quart of milk. 4 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch. 2 eggs. 2 cups of sugar. i teaspoonful butter. Vanilla. Heat three cups of milk, and stir in the corn-starch wet with the other cupful. Beat the eggs and sugar together, and add the boiling mixture, by degrees. Put in the butter; mix well and cool before adding the vanilla. Soup Verte. Baked Mutton Cutlets. Hominy Pudding. Potato Cakes. Lettuce. Tapioca Pudding. SOUP VERTE 2 Ibs. coarse beef, chopped fin< i turqip. i onion. APRIL. Celery-seed tied in a bag. 1 grated carrot. Nearly a quart of spinach leaves. 2 lumps of sugar. 1 tablespoonful of butter, rubbed in flour. Bunch of parsley. Pepper and salt. A little of yesterday's pastry, cut into strips like " noo- dles." 2 quarts of cold water. Stew the beef with the celery-seed in a quart of water for two hours, or until the meat is in rags. Strain hard in a bag. Add the other quart of water in which have been simmering, for half an hour, the grated carrot, the spinach cut small, and the other vegetables sliced. Stew all to- gether fifteen minutes ; rub entirely through a colander ; return to the fire, season ; add sugar, chopped parsley, butter and flour ; boil up and drop in the noodles, one by one. Simmer ten minutes, and pour out. It is a very good and wholesome soup for the spring-time. BAKED MUTTON CUTLETS. Trim neatly and put the bits of bone, skin, etc., on in a pint of cold water to stew down into gravy. Pour a little melted butter upon the cutlets and set over hot water, fifteen minutes. Then dip each in egg, next in rolled cracker, and lay in your dripping-pan with a very little water. Bake rapidly, basting with butter and water. When the gravy has boiled down to one cupful, strain into a saucepan ; season with pepper, salt, and tomato catsup. Thicken with browned flour ; strain into it the gravy from the dripping-pan ; lay the chops carefully in a frying-pan, as being broad and easily managed. Pour over them the gravy, simmer ten minutes ; arrange the chops upon a dish, and serve the gravy in a boat. HOMINY PUDDING. 1 cupful cold boiled hominy the small-grained kind, 2 cups of milk. i great spoonful of melted butter. SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. I teaspoonful of white sugar. 3 eggs. A little salt. Work the butter into the hominy ; then the beaten yolks and sugar ; then, by degrees, the milk, and when all are smoothly mixed, the whites. Bake in a buttered pudding-dish. POTATO CAKES. Make cold mashed potatoes into flat cakes, seasoning well, and flouring all over. Fry to a good brown in drip- ping. Take up and drain as soon as they are done, and serve hot. LETTUCE. Wash and pile the best parts in a salad-dish. Pass oil, vinegar, pepper, salt, and powdered sugar to each one and let him season for himself. It is well to do this, once in a while, that the children may learn how to prepare their own salad. TAPIOCA PUDDING. i cup of tapioca. 1 quart of milk. 5 e gg s - 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter, and the same of sugar. Soak the tapioca in cold water three hours ; drain off the water, if it be not all absorbed. Soak another hour in the warmed milk. Then, beat eggs and sugar up with the butter, add the milk and tapioca, stir up well from the bottom, after it goes into the oven, and bake in a buttered pudding-dish until firm and nicely browned. Eat warm with sweet sauce, It is also good cold, eaten with sugar and cream. 258 - APRIL. 0tmirat). Calfs Head Soup. Imitation Turtle. Chopped Macaroni. Bermuda Potatoes. String-Beans and Fried Brains. Alice's Pudding. Coffee and Whipped Cream. CALF'S HEAD SOUP. The liquor in which a calf's head has been boiled, i Ib. of lean beef cut into dice and fried brown. 3 sliced and fried onions. 1 grated carrot. Bunch of sweet herbs. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter rubbed warm into the same quantity of browned flour. i tablespoon ful of Worcestershire sauce. i glass brown sherry. Dice of meat from the head. Pepper and salt. Boil a calf's head on Saturday until the flesh slips from the bones. Salt and pepper the meat and set away, with the brains also salted and cooked in a cool place. Re- turn the bones to the liquor with the vegetables and herbs cut small, the fried beef and onions, and boil one hour. Season highly and put by in a cool cellar until Sunday. Take off the fat, and melt the soup-jelly under it by heat- ing all together in a soup-kettle. When hot, strain, and set aside half the stock for Monday. Boil up that meant for to-day, stir in the butter and flour, and a cupful of dice made from one cheek of the cold head. Simmer ten minutes, add sauce and wine, and pour out. IMITATION TURTLE. The cold calf's head, with the tongue, i cup of good gravy. If you have nothing else, borrow a cupful from your soup-jelly. THIRD WEEK SUNDAY. 2$$ A dozen force-meat balls, made of the ears chopped fine, mixed with bread-crumbs, bound with beaten egg and rolled in flour. i teaspoonful minced parsley and thyme. A little minced onion. Browned flour. 4 hard-boiled eggs. Pepper and salt. Slice the meat from the head neatly. Heat the gravy with seasoning, herbs, and onion, and boil ten minutes. Strain ; put the meat into the saucepan ; pour the gravy over it, and set all in boiling water fifteen minutes. Put over the fire with the sliced eggs and force-meat balls. Let them begin to boil, and take off. Lay the meat evenly upon a dish, and the eggs upon it, the force-meat balls around all, and pour half the gravy over it, sending up the rest in a boat. CHOPPED MACARONI. Boil half a pound of macaroni tender in hot salted water, and let it cool. Then chop small. Have ready in a saucepan a cupful of hot milk in which an onion has been boiled and strained out. Stir into this a great spoon- ful of butter, pepper, salt, and two tablespoonfuls of grated cheese. When these are well mixed, put in the macaroni, and shake not stir until very hot. Turn into a deep dish, and grate more cheese on the top. Pass a red hot shovel over this until the cheese browns or if dry, takes fire. Blow it out, and serve. STRING-BEANS AND FRIED BRAINS. Cut 'the beans into short lengths and cook in boiling water salted. Drain, stir in butter, pepper, and salt, and dish. Garnish with the brains, rubbed smooth, seasoned, beaten up with a raw egg and a little flour, and fried by the spoonful in hot fat. BERMUDA POTATOES. Put on in boiling water ; cook until a fork will go in easily ; dry off, and serve in their skins. 260 APRIL. ALICE'S PUDDING. i quart of milk. 4 eggs. i cup dry crumbs. cup of strawberry or other sweet jam. fa cup of sugar. Sprinkle the bottom of a buttered bake-dish wilh crumbs. Pour in the jam, and cover this with the rest of the crumbs, wet with a little milk. Scald the remainder of the milk, and pour, gradually, upon the beaten eggs and sugar. Heat and stir three minutes ; put it, spoonful by spoonful, upon the crumbs, so as not to displace them, and when all is in, bake until well set and slightly colored by the. heat. Eat cold with cream, if you can get it. COFFEE AND WHIPPED CREAM. Whip a little cream in a syllabub churn, and lay a spoon- ful upon the surface of each cup of made coffee. I)iru 111 ttk. fHonuati. A Good White Soup. Ham and Eggs. Succotash. Oyster Salad. Stewed Potatoes. Plain Macaroni Pudding. A GOOD WHITE SOUP. Skim the stock set aside yesterday ; heat and season, then strain through thin muslin, and return to the fire. Skim again ; add a great spoonful of butter, cut up in flour, and boil up. Have ready in your tureen a cupful of hot milk, in which has been soaked half a cupful of bread-crumbs ; beat into these the whites of two eggs ; pour in the soup, by degrees, stirring in well, and serve. THIRD WEEK MONDAY. 26 1 HAM AND EGGS. Cut slices of ham of equal size ; cover with boiling water, and cook ten minutes, then let them get cold. Cut off the rind and fry in their own fat, until browned. Lay upon a hot dish ; strain the fat, returning it to the pan with a little butter, and when hot break in the eggs. Fry upon one side ; trim off the ragged edges, and lay upon the ham. Dust with pepper, and serve. x SUCCOTASH. Open a can of succotash ; drain off the liquor, cut the beans into short lengths, and put on in boiling water, salted. Cook twenty -five minutes ; drain off the water, and add as much cold milk. When this is hot, stir in a great spoonful of butter, cut up in flour ; pepper and salt, cook three minutes more and serve. OYSTER SALAD. Cut the oysters into thirds ; pull the hearts out of nice lettuce heads and shred up one-third as much as you have oysters. Make a dressing in the proportion of two table- spoonfuls of best oil to four of vinegar ; one teaspoon- ful of salt and the same of sugar ; half as much pepper, and made mustard. Rub all up well, and pour over oysters and lettuce just before serving. STEWED POTATOES. Cut into small squares and put on in boiling water, slightly salted. When tender, but not broken, throw off half the water, and proceed as with the succotash, only adding a teaspoonful of finely minced parsley. PLAIN MACARONI PUDDING. J Ib. macaroni, broken in pieces an inch long, boiled tender (or about' twenty minutes) in hot, salted . water, i tablespoonful of butter. 1 large cup of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls powdered sugar. 262 APRIL. 2 eggs. Grated peel of half a lemon. A little cinnamon and salt. When the macaroni is tender, dra'n off the water and add the salt and butter. Heat the milk and pour over the beaten eggs, sugar and flavoring. Mix with the maca- roni, and bake in a buttered pudding-dish, covered, for half an hour \ then brown. Eat with butter and sugar. l)trir Pot-au-feu. Boiled Leg of Mutton. Potatoes a la Lyonnaise. Stewed Pie-Plant. Caper Sauce. Peach Leche Crema. POT- AU- FEU. 3 Ibs. of lean beef, cut into dice. 1 sliced and fried onion. 2 carrots, cut into small squares. 2 turnips, ditto. 1 bunch of sweet herbs, minced. 2 potatoes, parboiled and sliced. e Pepper and salt. 3 quarts of water. Put on the beef in two quarts of water and cook slowly until it is tender, and the water reduced to one quart. Put the vegetables except the potatoes on in boiling water. Cook ten minutes ; throw away the water and cover with a quart of cold. Add the potatoes ; pepper and salt and cook gently half an hour. Put in the meat and the quart of gravy and simmer ten minutes more, with the minced herbs. Then pour out. This is only a family soup, but is a good one when properly cooked. BOILED LEG OF MUTTON. Do not have the shank too long, nor cut it so short as to make the leg " chunky." The meat will look cleanei THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 263 and less sodden if you boil it in a piece of mosquito net or tarlatan, sewed about it somewhat tightly. Put on in boiling salted water, plenty of it, and cook fifteen minutes to the pound. Unwrap and lay upon a hot dish. Butter all over, and sprinkle lightly with salt. Twist frilled pa- per about the end of the shank. CAPER SAUCE.. Take out a cupful of the liquor in which the mutton was boiled (putting away the rest for soup), strain, heat, and skim ; stir in two tablespoonfuls of butter rubbed in a teaspoonful of flour ; pepper, boil up, pour upon a beaten egg ; return to the fire and stir for a minute ; add two dozen capers or nasturtium-seed, and pour into a sauce-boat. Pass, of course, with the mutton. POTATOES A LA LYONNAISE. Parboil the potatoes, and cut into dice. Chop a small onion and mince a tablespoonful of parsley. Put two tablespoonfuls of butter or excellent dripping into a fry- ing-pan, and when hot, stir in potatoes, onion, and parsley. Shake and toss until all are hissing hot, but do not let them brown. Shake off the fat in a hot colander, and serve in a deep dish. STEWED PIE-PLANT. Skin and wash the stalks, and cut into half inch lengths. Stew tender in a little water., with a handful of seedless raisins. Sweeten to taste. Eat cold with meat. PEACH LECHE CREMA. 1 can of peaches. Yolks of 3 eggs and whites of fqur. 3 cups of milk. J cup of powdered sugar. 2 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch. i tablespoonful of melted butter. Scald the milk ; stir in the corn -starch wet with cold milk, and cook, still stirring, until it begins to thicken. Take from the fire, and beat in the butter, then the 264 APRIL. whipped yolks, two whites and sugar. Whisk to a light cream. Drain the syrup from the peaches ; lay them in the bottom of a bake-dish, and pour the mixture gently over them. Bake in a quick oven ten minutes, then spread with a meringue of four whites whisked stiff with a little sugar. Shut up in the oven until this is slightly tinged. Eat warm with sauce, or cold with cream. l)trir tthck. Scotch Broth. Mutton Pie. Stewed Tomatoes. Cabbage Salad. Mashed Potatoes. Lemon Puffs. SCOTCH BROTH. Take the fat from the top of the broth in which the mutton was boiled yesterday. Chop up an onion, a good sized one, and put in it. Boil half an hour and strain. Add a cup of barley, previously soaked two hours in cold water, and cook for two hours more. Chop up some parsley fine and add. When the barley is very soft, and the broth has boiled down one-half, pour out and serve, having peppered to taste. MUTTON PIE. Cut the meat from yesterday's mutton, into strips two inches long by half an inch wide. Chop a pickled cu- cumber to pieces, also two boiled eggs. Put a layer of meat in a bafee-dish, strew with pickle and egg ; salt and pepper and drop, pretty thickly, over it, bits of butter rolled in flour. Go on in this order, until your meat is used up, when pour in a cup of oyster-liquor or cold water. Cover with a good crust, ornamented around the edges ; make a slit in the middle, and bake one hour. N. B. The bare bones will " help out " to-morrow's soup. THIRD WEEK WEDNESDAY. 26$ STEWED TOMATOES. Receipts for these, as also for plain mashed potatoes, have been given so lately that repetition here is needless. CABBAGE SALAD. i small, firm white cabbage, shred fine. i cup of boiling milk. i smaller cup of vinegar, also hot. 1 tablespoonful of butter, and the same of sugar. 2 eggs, well beaten. i teaspoonful essence of celery. Pepper and salt to taste. When the vinegar boils, put in butter, sugar, and sea- soning. Boil, and add the shred cabbage. When this is scalding hot, take from the fire. Pour the hot milk upon the eggs, and cook one minute, stirring constantly. Turn the cabbage into a bowl, pour over it the smoking cus- tard, toss up and mix well, and set it, covered, in ice-cold water. Eat perfectly cold. LEMON PUFFS. i cup of prepared flour. J- cup of powdered sugar. t tablespoonful of butter. 3 eggs whites and yolks beaten separately. Grated peel of r lemon. 3 tablespoonfuls of milk. A little salt. Cream butter and sugar, whip in the yolks, milk, and lemon-peel ; then, the whisked whites and flour, alter- nately. Bake in small, buttered tins, or in "gem" pans. Turn out while hot, and eat with sweet sauce. 12 266 APRIL. whites and yolks beaten separately. i stale sponge-cake. i cup of sugar. i cup of sweet cream. Ripe strawberries. Heat the milk ; beat in yolks and sugar. Cook and stir until the custard begins to thicken. Slice your cake, and put a layer in a glass dish. Wet with the cream ; cover with fresh, ripe berries, sprinkled with sugar, then more cake, cream, and berries, until the dish is three- quarters full. Pour the custard, gradually, over all. Beat the* whites stiff with a little sugar and strawberry-juice, and heap roundly on the top. Lay rows of bright berries upon the meringue. JUNE. Seconb tUttk. Jirifcag. Puree of Potatoes. Salmon Scallops. Fricassee of Sweetbreads, Raw Tomatoes. Roasted Potatoes. Baked Cherry Dumplings. PURE OF POTATOES. 8 large potatoes, peeled, boiled, and rubbed through a colander. 2 quarts of boiling water. i cup of hot milk. 3 tablespoonfuls of butter, rubbed in flour. i tablespoonful of rninced parsley, with salt and pepper. Pour the water upon the potato, season with pepper and salt, and boil gently one hour, taking care that it does not burn. Then stir in the butter, and when this is melted, the hot milk. Let it begin to boil, and pour out. SALMON SCALLOPS. 1 J Ibs. of cold salmon, left from steaks, or a can of pre- served salmon. 2 beaten eggs. cup good drawn butter. \ cup bread-crumbs. Pepper, salt, and minced parsley. Chop the fish fine ; rub the butter and seasoning into it, and stir into the hot, drawn butter. Butter scallop- shells, or pate-pans, fill with the mixture, and strew it with fine crumbs. Bake a few minutes in a quick oven to brown them lightly. Serve in the shells. FRICASSEE OF SWEETBREADS. 3 fine sweetbreads. 2 eggs. 4 tablespoonfuls of cream, i great spoonful of butter. SECOND WEEK FRIDAY. 37* I teaspoor ful of chopped parsley. A pinch of nutmeg. i cup of gravy a cup of yesterday's soup, strained, will do. Pepper and salt to taste. Wash the sweetbreads ; boil five minutes ; then lay in ice-cold water. Slice and cover them with the gravy, and stew three-quarters of an hour. Heat the cream or milk in another saucepan, putting in a pinch of soda. Pour upon the eggs, and returning these to the fire, cook one minute. Stir in the butter and the paTsley. Take both saucepans from the fire and empty one into the other. Stir all together well, and pour into a hot deep dish. RAW TOMATOES. See receipt for last Monday. ROASTED POTATOES. Wash fair-sized potatoes and bake on the oven floor until soft to the grasp of thumb and forefinger. Wipe and send to table wrapped in a napkin. BAKED CHERRY DUMPLINGS. 1 quart prepared flour. 2 heaping tablespoonfuls of lard. 2 cups fresh milk. A little salt. 2 cups of stoned cherries. J cupful of sugar. Rub the lard into the salted flour, wet up with the milk ; roll into a sheet a quarter of an inch thick ; and cut into squares about four inches across. Put two great spoon- fuls of cherries in the centre of each ; sugar them ; turn up the edges of the paste and pinch them together. Lay the joined edges downward, upon a floured baking-pan, and bake half an hoar 01 until browned. Eat hot with a good sauce. 372 JUNE. Swontr IDeek. Ox-head Soup. Corned Beef. Mashed Turnips. Green Peas. Mashed Potatoes. Raspberries and My Lady's Cake. OX-HEAD SOUP. 1 well cleaned ox-head. 2 turnips. 1 carrot. 2 onions. Bunch of sweet herbs. Salt and pepper. i teaspoon ml mixed allspice and mace. 6 quarts cold water. Wash the head in three waters ; break the bones with a a few smart blows of a hammer. Put it on in the cold water ; bring to a slow boil and skim well. Then add the sliced vegetables, and stew gently three hours. The liquor should be reduced to four quarts. Take out the head and set in the open air to cool. Strain the liquor, rubbing the vegetables to a pulp. Return half of it to the fire season and skim as it boils, for five minutes ; then add three-fourths .of the meat from the head, cut into dice. Simmer half an .hour, and serve. Put bones and the rest of the meat, well seasoned, into ajar;season the reserved "stock," and pour it in, and keep in the refrigerator until to-morrow. CORNED BEEF. Boil in plenty of hot water, fifteen minutes at least to the pound. Serve drawn butter (made from the pot- liquor), with chopped cucumber-pickle stirred in it, in a sauce-boat. Save the liquor and set in a cool place. MASHED TURNIPS. Boil tender in hot salted water. Drain, mash and press, and stir in butter, salt and pepper. THIRD WEEK SUNDAY. 373 MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual, and serve without browning. GREEN PEAS. See Sunda} of First Week in this month. RASPBERRIES AND MY LADY'S CAKE. Send around powdered sugar with the berries. Foi directions for the cake-making, I beg to refer to " BREAK- FAST, LUNCHEON and TEA," page 329. ftlerk. Rice and Tapioca Soup. Smothered Chickens, Mashed Squash. String-Beans, Beets Sautes. Cream Pudding. RICE AND TAPIOCA SOUP. Take the fat from your stock ; pour it from the bones and meat, and heat slowly. Have ready a cup of boiled rice hot and half a cup of granulated tapioca, which has been soaked two hours in a little cold water. When the soup boils, put them in, and simmer gently half an hour. Should it be too thick, add a little boiling water. SMOTHERED CHICKEN. Clean and split a pair of young chickens down the back as for broiling. Lay them in a dripping-pan ; dash a cup of boiling water, in which have been stirred two table- spoonfuls of butter, over them, and, covering with an- other par., cook until tender, and of an equal yellow- brownish tint all over. Lift the pan, now and then, to 374 JUNE. baste freely four times with the gravy twice, toward the last, with melted butter. Lay the chickens in a hot water dish ; add pepper, salt, a chopped boiled egg, finely minced, and a little minced parsley, with browned flour, to the gravy. Boil up, and pour half over the chicken, the rest into a gravy-boat. MASHED SQUASH. Peel, seed, and slice fresh summer squashes. Lay in cold water ten minutes ; put into boiling water, a little salt, and cook tender. Twenty minutes will suffice if the squash be young. Mash in a colander, pressing out all the water ; heap in a deep dish, seasoning with pepper, salt and butter. Serve hot. STRING-BEANS. See Thursday of Second Week in this month. BEETS SAUTES. , Boil young sweet beets until nearly done say forty- five minutes. Skin and slice them. Have ready in a saucepan two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one table- spoonful of vinegar, a small onion minced, salt and pepper. When this begins to simmer, put in the beets, and cook ten minutes, shaking the saucepan frequently, to prevent scorching. Put the beats into a root-dish, and pour the dressing upon them. CREAM PUDDING. i quart of milk. i cup of hot boiled rice well cooked, but not broken, i cupful of sugar. i heaping tablespoonful of corn-starch. 5 eggs. \ teaspoonful of cinnamon and the same of grated lemon peel. Heat the milk, stir in the corn-starch wet up with cold milk ; then the beaten yolks and sugar. Add to these the heaping cup of boiled rice. Stir until it begins to thicken, add the seasoning, and pour into a buttered THIRD WEEK MONDAY. 375 bake-dish. Bake until well ' set " ; spread with a mtringut of the whites and a little sugar, made very stiff. When this has colored lightly, take from the oven. Make on Saturday, and set on ice until Sunday. The colder it is, the better. l)tri tthek. Green Pea Soup. Beef Miroton. Asparagus Omelette. Tomato Salad. Green Peas. Mountain Custard, or " Junket." Tea and Fancy Biscuits. GREEN PEA SOUP. Take the fat from the top of the corned-beef liquor ; add the beef-bones and any others you may have. Boil gently one hour, skimming often. Strain, and put in two quarts of green peas, a minced onion, and a bunch of sweet herbs. Cook forty-five minutes and rub to a pulp through a col- ander. Add pepper, heat to a boil and pour upon dice of fried bread laid in the tureen. BEEF MIROTON. Mince the remains of your corned beef; season with pepper, salt, a little chopped pickle, two boiled eggs chopped fine ; wet with whatever gravy you may have, and put into a greased pudding-dish. Cover with mashed potatoes, made very soft with milk aud butter, sift bread- crumbs over all, and bake, covered, half an hour, then brown. This is a nice way of warming over cold meat. ASPARAGUS OMELETTE. 6 eggs beaten very light. 1 bunch of asparagus, the green tops only. (The stalkf will be an improvement to your soup.) 2 tablespoonfuls of milk. 376 JUNE. Beat whites and yolks together, add the milk, then the boiled asparagus heads, cold and chopped fine. Have ready a frying-pan with a tablespoonful of butter in it, hot, but not frying. Pour in the . mixture ; shake well from the bottom as it forms, loosen from the pan with " spat- ula" or cake-turner; fold over in the middle, and turn the pan upside down upon a hot dish. TOMATO SALAD. Peel and slice your tomatoes, put into a salad-dish, and pour over them a dressing prepared as follows : 3 yolks of hard-boiled eggs, pounded. i beaten raw egg. i teaspoonful of salt. A pinch of cayenne. 1 teaspoonful white sugar. 2 tablespoonfuls of salad oil. i teaspoonful of made mustard. J- teacupful of vinegar. Rub yolks, mustard, pepper, salt, sugar and oil to a paste. Beat in the raw egg with your whisk, finally, the oil, a little at a time. Stir a great lump of ice into the dressing, whirling rapidly for half a minute. Take it out and pour the mixture over the salad. For Green Peas Receipt, see Sunday of First Week in this month. MOUNTAIN CUSTARD, OR "JUNKET." 2 quarts of milk. 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar. Vanilla, or other essence. 2 teaspoonfuls of liquid rennet to be had at most of the grocers and all the druggists. Pour the milk, slightly warmed, into a glass bowl ; sweeten, flavor, and stir in the rennet. Set in a rather warm place until it is firm, like " loppered " milk or blanc- mange ; then put on ice. If at the end of an hour it remains liquid, put in more rennet. Do not let it stand until the whey separates from the curd. Two hours in THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 377 warm weather should be enough. Eat with cream and sugar. TEA AND FANCY BISCUITS. Peek & Freans, Mackenzie & Mackenzie, and Huntley & Palmer make the best fancy biscuits that come to the American market. Vermicelli Soup. Beefsteak. Young Onions. Potato Puffs. Spinach. Strawberries and Cream. Mother's Cup-Cake. VERMICELLI SOUP. 6 Ibs. of beef-shin, meat chopped and bones cracked. 2 onions. 2 carrots. 2 turnips. 6 large tomatoes. Bunch of herbs. Pepper, salt, and i tablespoonful mushroom catsup. Ib. vermicelli, broken small. 6 quarts of water. Put meat, bones, and sliced vegetables and herbs on in the water early in the day, and stew gently five hours. Strain and season. Set aside two quarts of stock, with the bones and meat, highly seasoned, until to-morrow, keep- ing upon the ice. Boil and skim the rest ; add the ver- micelli ; simmer fifteen minutes, and pour out. Put in the catsup after the soup goes into the tureen. BEEFSTEAK. Flatten with the broad side of a hatchet, and broil quickly about ten minutes over a clear, hot fire. Lay 378 JUNE. between two hot dishes, with salt, pepper, and a great lump of butter upon it to draw the juices to the surface, for five minutes before serving. YOUNG ONIONS. Cut off stems and tops, skin and cook them in plenty of boiling water for fifteen minutes. Have ready another saucepan with a large spoonful of butter melted in it, but not hissing hot. Put in the onions, with a little chopped parsley, and let them warm slowly ten minutes. Then add a cup of milk in which have been stirred salt, pepper; and half a teaspoonful of corn-starch. Simmer all for three minutes, stirring several times, and pour out. SPINACH. Boil in hot, salted water twenty minutes. Drain well, and chop fine. .Put into a saucepan with a good spoon- ful of butter, a little sugar, salt and pepper, a dust of nutmeg, and a few teaspoonfuls of milk, and beat until all resolve themselves into a smooth, soft paste. POTATO PUFFS. Mash and whip the potatoes very light with milk, but- ter, salt and pepper ; lastly, the frothed white of an egg. Pile irregularly within a bake-dish, and set in the oven until light and delicately browned. Glaze with butter before taking it from the oven. STRAWBERRIES AND CREAM. Cap, but do not wash the berries. Never put berries that need washing upon the table as an uncooked dessert. Pile in a glass bowl, and pass sugar and cream with them. MOTHER'S CUP-CAKE. Please see " BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON AND TEA," page 322. THIRD WEEK WEDNESDAY. 379 l)h*b llUek. tUtiin^bag. Julienne Soup. Lamb Cutlets. Puree of Green Peas. Potato Strips. Lettuce. Ristori Puffs. JULIENNE SOUP. Pare and cut into small dice, 2 carrots. i turnip. i cup small string-beans. 6 tomatoes. i onion. of a cabbage-heart. Cook ten minutes in salted boiling water, leaving out the tomatoes. Drain away the water, and spread the vege- tables upon a dish to cool, while you take the fat from your cold soup- stock ; strain the latter from the bones and meat, and heat to a gentle boil. Continue this for five minutes, skimming well ; put -in the parboiled vegetables, the tomatoes, and a pint of green peas, and stew steadily, but not fast, for half an hour. Pour out all together. LAMB CUTLETS. Trim carefully, lay in a little warmed butter for an hour, turning several times. Then broil upon a greased gridiron, taking care they do not drip. Butter, pepper, and salt each, and lay them in a circle about the peas puree. PURE"E OF GREEN PEAS. Boil three pints of green peas until soft. Rub them, while hot, through a fine colander. Work in a tablespoon- ful of butter, cut up in flour ; pepper and salt to taste ; add three teaspoonfuls of milk, and stir in a saucepan until very hot and smooth. -Put in the centre of a hot, flat dish, with the cutlets about it, and help out both at the same time. . JUNE. .POTATO STRIPS. Pare large potatoes : cut into long strips ; lay in ice. cold water one hour ; dry between two towels and fry in salted dripping to a light brown. Drain well, and dish upon a folded napkin. LETTUCE. Pull out and tear apart the white hearts, and heap within a salad-bowl. Rub together 2 tablespoonmls of salad oil. i teaspoonful, each, of sugar and salt. Half as much made mustard and pepper, and whip in a few drops a time 4 tablespoonfuls of vinegar. Pour over the salad. RISTORI PUFFS. 5 eggs. The weight of the eggs in flour. Half their weight in sugar. One-quarter their weight in butter. Juice of one lemon and half the grated peel. Soda. Use prepared flour always in this receipt. Cream but- ter and sugar, and beat in the yolks. Add the lemon ; a pinch of soda, dissolved in a teaspoonful of hot water, then the beaten whites, alternately with the flour. Bake in muffin rings in a quick oven. Eat hot, with jelly sauce. Jelly Soup. Stewed Sheep's Tongues. Potatoes a la Louisa Spinach. Lima Beans. Raspberry Short-cake with Cream. JELLY SOUP. 4 calf s feet, well cleaned. 2 Ibs. of lean veal, cut from the knuckles. THIRD WEEK THURSDAY. 3^1 i onion stuck with three cloves. Teaspoonful of celery essence. Bunch of sweet herbs. i blade of mace. Juice of half a lemon. Pepper and salt. 5 quarts of cold water. cup of German sago. Boil the feet, onion, herbs, and the veal, cut into strips, in the water for four hours, diminishing the liquid to three quarts. Strain, and cool. Put two of the feet and the veal back into one quart of the broth ; season, and set by on the ice. Take the fat from the rest ; put the liquor, seasoned, over the fire, boil gently and skim, add the sago, previously soaked two hours in a cup of cold water, sim- mer tender, and pour out. You can, if you like, add 4 glass of pale sherry. STEWED SHEEP'S TONGUES. Speak for six sheep's tongues several days before you want them, unless you have access to a large market. Wash well in several waters. Boil in hot, salted water half an hour, to loosen the skins. Take these off and trim neatly. Put a cupful of your soup before adding the tapioca into a saucepan, with a quarter-pound of sliced salt pork, a teaspoonful of chopped onion, pepper, and a lump of white sugar. Lay in the tongues, sliced lengthwise, and stew half an hour. Lay the slices in rows, overlapping one another, upon a hot dish ; thicken the gravy with browned flour, add the juice of a lemon, boil once, and pour upon the tongues. POTATOES A LA LOUISE. Mash the potatoes, and whip with a fork to a light cream, adding milk and butter, salt and pepper. Heap upon a shallow pie-plate, well greased, and set in the oven until a^white crust has gathered over it. Then, wash the mound well with beaten egg. Set in a moder- ate oven long enough to harden this, but not until the yellow changes to brown. Slip, without breaking, to another dish, by the help of the spatula. 382 JUNE. SPINACH. See receipt for Tuesday of this week. LIMA BEANS. See receipt for Sunday, Second Week in this month. RASPBERRY SHORTCAKE WITH CREAM. Substitute white or red raspberries for strawberries in the receipt for shortcake, given on Friday of First Week in this month. STIjirir 1X1 ak. Halibut Chowder. Chicken Pot-pie, with Dumplings. Sea-Kale. Baked Tomatoes. Gherkin Pickles. Charlotte Russe. HALIBUT CHOWDER. 3 Ibs. of halibut, freed from bones, and cut into strips two inches long. 6 parboiled potatoes, sliced. 2 cups of milk. i good-sized onion, sliced. Chopped parsley. 3 tablespoonfuls of butter, rolled in flour, with butter for 6 Boston crackers, split. Enough boiling water to cover fish and potatoes. Pepper and salt. Put a layer of fish in the bottom of a pot ; season, and sprinkle with parsley. Hide this with sliced potato. More fish, and yet more potatoes, until all are in, when cover with boiling water. Put on the lid, and simmer half an hour after the boil recommences. Have ready the hot milk in another saucepan ; stir in tjie floured but- ter. Dip the crackers in boiling water, butter and salt them, and line the bottom of your tureen with them. Pour in the boiling milk; then the fish and potatoes. Send around sliced lemon with it. THIRD WEEKFRIDAY. 383 CHICKEN POT-PIE, WITH DUMPLINGS. Clean and cut up the chicken as for fricassee. Put a good layer of salt pork \n the bottom of a broad, not too deep pot ; then a small onion, sliced, the chicken, peppered, and enough cold water to cover it well. Over this lay a thick sheet of good " family " pie-crust. Stew one hour and a half; then brown the crust by put- ting a red-hot stove-cover on the top of the pot. Take off the crust with care, and set by. Take out the chicken and arrange upon a hot-water dish. If the gravy has boiled down too low, add a little hot water. Drop in while the liquor is boiling hot, squares or rounds of raw pie-paste ; cook ten minutes, and lay upon the chicken. Stir into the gravy a large spoonful of butter rolled in flour ; boil up, and pour upon the dumplings and chicken. Lay the crust on top. SEA-KALE. Boil fifteen minutes in hot, salted water. Drain well, and return to the fire, with a spoonful of butter, pepper, salt, and a little lemon-juice. Stir, or toss, five minutes, and heap upon rounds of buttered toast in a hot dish. BAKED TOMATOES. Peel and slice large, ripe tomatoes. Chop fine a little streaked salt pork, or ham. Butter a pudding-dish, and cover the bottom with slices of tomato. Season with pepper and sugar, and strew with bread-crumbs. Then scatter chopped pork over it. Fill the dish in this order, having crumbs at the top. Cover closely, and bake hall an hour, or until the juice bubbles up at the sides. Brown nicely, and serve in the dish. CHARLOTTE RUSSE. A large sponge-cake, i pint of cream. , % Ib. of sugar, powdered. Whites of 2 eggs. Line a tin mould with straight sides with slices of cake, having the bottom in one piece, if possible. Whip the cream in a syllabub-churn, and, with your egg-beater, 384 JUNE. whisk into this, gradually, the frothed whites and the sugar, flavoring to taste. Fill the cake-lined mould with this, cover with more slices, and set in ice for an hour or so. Pass a knife around the inside of the mould to loosen the cake, and invert upon a plate. Sift powdered sugar over it. ttjtrb tiJeck. Cream Soup. Boiled Mutton. Hot Slaw. Buttered Potatoes. Mashed Squash. Cherry Roley-Poley. CREAM SOUP. If your jelly-soup stock has been kept upon the ice these two days, it is as good now as on Thursday. Take off the fat, add a pint of boiling water to the soup, and stew slowly for half an hour. Strain, add more seasoning, and skim for a few minutes until quite clear in boiling. Heat in another vessel a pint of milk; stir in a table- spoonful of butter and the same of corn-starch wet up in cold milk, with a little nutmeg. Pour this upon two beaten eggs, cook one minute, and put into the tureen. Add the boiling soup, and stir all up well. It will be wise to put a pinch of soda in the milk before boiling. BOILED MUTTON. Put on in plenty of boiling water, salted, and cook twelve minutes to the pound. Take out, wipe carefully with a hot, wet cloth ; butter all over, and serve with a cup of drawn butter sent up in a sauce-boat. Season the pot-liquor, and, when cool, put upon the ice. HOT SLAW. Shred a small white cabbage. Boil for fifteen minutes in hot water, salted. Throw this away, and add four tablespoonfuls of vinegar, the same quantity of your soup- THIRD WEEK S A TURD A Y. stock, with pepper and salt. Simmer in this ten minutes, stirring often. Turn out into a deep dish ; pour over it half a cupful of drawn butter ; set in a pan of boiling water five or six minutes, and serve. BUTTERED POTATOES. Slice cold boiled potatoes lengthwfse. Put into a saucepan a good lump of butter, with pepper and salt. Add the potatoes as the butter melts, and shake over the fire until they are very hot and covered with a sort of glaze, but not browned. MASHED SQUASH. Receipt given last Sunday. CHERRY ROLEY-POLEY. i quart of flour Hecker's prepared. i heaping tablespoonful of lard, and the same of butter. 1 teaspoonful of salt. 2 cups of milk. 2 cups of stoned cherries. T cup of sugar. Make a soft paste of flour, with the shortening chopped into it, and the milk. Roll out, a quarter of an inch thick, into an oblong sheet. Cover this with cherries ; sprinkle with sugar, and roll up closely upon the fruit. In spreading the cherries, leave a narrow margin on both sides of the sheet. Baste the roll up in a bag floured well on the inside, and make a " felled " seam at the open end to keep out the water. Fit it exactly, but not tightly, to the shape of the pudding. Plunge into a pot of boiling water and keep it at a steady boil for one hour and a half. Dip the bag into cold water, rip the stitches, and turn out upon a hot dish. Eat with hard sauce. 17 386 JUNE. Jouvtl) tDeek. 0unirag. Mutton, Rice, and Tomato Broth. Glazed Ham. Green Peas. Potatoes au Gratin. Stewed Lima Beans Tomato Salad. Spanish Cream. Coffee and Macaroons. MUTTON, RICE, AND TOMATO BROTH. Take the fat from the surface of the liquor in which your mutton was boiled yesterday. Add to this broth the bones of the cold mutton well cracked, and let them boil slowly one hour and a half. Strain and cool to throw up the fat ; remove this, and put the soup over the fire with one quart of ripe tomatoes, peeled and cut very fine, and half a cup of raw rice. Stew, forty minutes. Add a lump of sugar ; more pepper and salt, if needed, and a table- spoonful of corn-starch, wet in cold water. Boil one minute, and oour out. GLAZED HAM. Boil a ham on Saturday, allowing twenty minutes to the pound, and let it get cold in the liquor. Set by then, and, early Sunday morning, skin it carefully, and trim away the rusty edges. Brush all over with beaten egg, and cover with a paste of rolled cracker wet up with milk, seasoned with pepper, and bound with beaten egg. It should 'be a quarter of an inch thick. Set the ham in the oven until this is lightly browned. Serve cold and slice thin. Garnish with frilled paper about the shank. GREEN PEAS. Shell and lay in cold water fifteen minutes. Cook from twenty to twenty-five minutes in boiling salted water. Drain, put into a deep dish with a good lump of butter ; pepper and salt to taste. FOURTH WEEK SUNDAY. 38? POTATOES AU GRATIN. Mash with milk and butter, and press firmly into a 'pretty mould wet with cold water. Turn out at once ; sift fine dry crumbs all over the mould of potato ; set in the oven five minutes to get it quite hot again, and serve. STEWED LIMA BEANS. Shell ; lay in cold water ten minutes. Boil tender in hot, salted water. Drain this off, and add a scant cup of hot milk ; a good spoonful of butter, rolled in a very little flour, with pepper and salt. Simmer three minutes and pour into a deep dish. TOMATO SALAD. Peel with a keen knife, and slice red, ripe tomatoes. Make a dressing like that for lettuce on Wednesday. SPANISH CREAM. J- box of Coxe's Gelatine, i quart of milk. Beaten yolks of 3 eggs. 1 small cup of sugar. 2 teaspoonfuls flavoring extract orange is very good in this cream. A little soda. Soak the gelatine in the milk two hours. Stir in the soda, and heat, stirring often. When scalding hot, pour upon the beaten yolks and sugar, and return to the farina- kettle. Boil one minute, stirring ceaselessly. Strain through tarlatan, and when cold, flavor and put into a wet mould. Set on the ice until wanted, and eat with cream and sugar. Make this, of course, on Saturday. COFFEE AND MACAROONS. Bring these on last of all. $88 JUNE. Jburtlj lUeek. iflontraj). Bisque of Lobster. A Good "Pick-up" Dish. Baked Potato Ball* String-Beans. Lettuce. Strawberries and Cream. Wine Cake. BISQUE OF LOBSTER. Meat of one boiled lobster, or a can of preserved lobster, i quart of milk. 1 quart of boiling water. J- cup rolled cracker. 4 tablespoonfuls of butter. Pepper (cayenne) and salt. Pound the coral and other soft parts of the lobster to a paste, and simmer five minutes in the boiling water ; then rub through a colander back into the water. Cut the rest of the lobster-meat into dice, and put into a saucepan with the cracker-crumbs. Pour the red water over them, and heat to a boil, when acid pepper, salt, and the butter. Simmer, covered, half an hour, taking care it does not scorch. Heat the milk, with a pinch of soda, in another vessel, and after the lobster is in the tureen, pour this in, boiling hot. Pass sliced lemon with it. A GOOD " PICK-UP " DISH. 2 Ibs. of calf s liver, boiled and cold, i Ib. cold cooked ham. A cup of gravy, saved from yesterday's soup, and strained. \ cup bread-crumbs. 3 eggs, beaten light. Parsley. A very little minced onion, with pepper and a little salt. Chop liver and ham ; wet with the gravy ; mix in sea- soning and crumbs, and beat the eggs in. Put the mix- FOURTH WEEK TUESDAY. ture into a well-greased mould ; cover this and put into a dripping-pan full of boiling water. Cook thus one hour and a half, keeping plenty of water in the pan, and at a steady boil. Turn out upon a dish ; pour a cup of drawn butter over it, and serve. BAKED POTATO BALLS. Rub cold mashed potato, left from yesterday, smooth with a spoonful of warmed butter, and soft with warmed milk. Beat up an egg in it, and stir, until hot, in a clean, greased frying-pan, not allowing it to " catch " on the side. Then let it cool. When cold and stiff, make into balls, roll these in flour, and bake upon a greased pan. until well browned. Pile upon a hot dish. STRING-BEANS. See Thursday of Second Week in this month. LETTUCE. See Wednesday of Third Week in this month. STRAWBERRIES AND CREAM, AND WINE CAKE. For Receipt for Cake please refer to " BREAKFAST LUNCHEON AND TEA," page 341. Jcmrtt) lUeek. Bread-and-Cheese Soup. Breast of Lamb with Macaroni. Whole Baked Tomatoes. Stewed Peas and French Beans. Sweet Pickle. Corn Bread Pudding. BREAD-AND-CHEESE SOUP. 3 Ibs. lean veal, cut into dice. A ham bone, cracked. i sliced onion. 1 cup of milk. 2 beaten eggs. i cupful fried bread-dice. 390 JUNE. \ Ib. dry cheese, grated. Pepper and salt. Chopped parsley. 3 quarts of cold water. i tablespoonful of corn-flour. Put meat, bone, onion, and water together, and cook slowly four hours. Strain, pressing hard, cool, and ta.ke off the fat. Season, and heat to a boil ; put in the pars- ley and corn-starch the latter wet with cold water and simmer five minutes. Heat the milk in a farina-kettle, pour upon the eggs, and re-heat, stirring constantly until they begin to thicken. Put bread-dice and cheese into the tureen ; pour on the milk and eggs ; then the hot soup. Stir up and serve. BREAST OF LAMB WITH MACARONI. Cover the bottom of a broad pot with very thin slices of fat salt pork or ham. Lay the lamb upon them. Take all the peel from a small lemon, and slice it, also very thin. Cover the lamb with this ; then with more sliced pork. Mince a small onion and a bunch of sweet herbs, and scatter over these. Pour in a pint of boiling water. Put on a close lid with a weight on top, and cook very slowly two hours, turning the meat over at the end of the first hour. Meantime, boil half a pound of maca- roni, broken into short pieces, twenty minutes in a little broth, borrowed from your soup ; drain, pepper and salt, and arrange into a flat bed, upon a hot meat-dish. Keep hot until the lamb is done, when lay it upon the pre- pared mound, and set both in the oven while you strain the gravy. Thicken it with a little browned flour, and boil up once. Pour over the lamb and macaroni. WHOLE BAKED TOMATOES. Chop fine a half cupful of the veal left after straining off the soup. Add half as much chopped ham, and one- third the quantity of bread-crumbs. Pepper (and salt, if needed). Pat a few spoonfuls of gravy into a saucepan ; stir in this force-meat, with a very little onion, and the pulp and seeds you have scraped carefully from six or eight fine smooth tomatoes. When all are smoking hot, add a FOURTH WEEK TUESDAY. 391 tablespoonful of butter, and when this has melted, take from the fire. Set the tomatoes you have hollowed out in a pudding-dish. Fill with the mixture ; cover with the neat slices you took from the tops ; fill the interstices with what remains of the force-meat, and bake nearly an hour, or until soft and brown. Keep the dish covered for the first half hour. STEWED PEAS AND FRENCH BEANS. i quart of shelled green peas. i pint of string-beans, carefully trimmed. 1 small onion, sliced thin. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in flour. Pepper, salt, and a tablespoonful of tomato catsup. 1 pint of boiling water. Cover peas, beans, and onion with salted boiling water. Put on the saucepan lid, and stew for half an hour. Then stir in the floured butter, pepper, and catsup ; cover again, and simmer fifteen minutes. Turn out into a deep dish. The beans should be young, and cut into small pieces. CORN-BREAD PUDDING. 2 heaping cups of white Indian meal, i heaping cup of flour. 3 beaten eggs. z\ cups of milk. i large tablespoonful of melted butter, and twice as much white sugar. i teaspoonful of soda, and two of cream of tartar, sifted twice through the flour. i teaspoonful of salt. J teaspoonful mingled mace and cinnamon. Rub butter and sugar together ; beat in the yolks ; then the milk ; the spice ; the salted meal, previously mixed with the flour, cream of tartar, and soda. Beat hard for five minutes. Pour into a buttered mould, with a top. Set in a pot of boiling water the water not quite reaching the top and boil steadily two hours. Turn out, cut i* slices, and eat with butter and sugar. 392 JUNE. JbtirtI) iDeek. tt)etme0irag. A Stew Soup. Stuffed Beef's Heart with Horseradish Sauce. Beets. Scalloped Squash. New Potatoes, Gooseberry Tart. A STEW SOUP. 3 Ibs. of lean beef. 1 Ib. of lean ham. 2 Ibs. of lean veal. 2 carrots. 2 turnips. 2 onions. Bunch of sweet herbs. Pepper, salt. 2 blades of mace. \ cup Scotch barley. 6 quarts of water. 4 tablespoonfuls good dripping beef or ham. Cut the meat into strips, and slice the vegetables. Pu1 the dripping into the soup-pot ; next the beef ; then a layer of vegetables ; next one of ham ; more vegetables the veal, the rest of the vegetables, and a cup of cold water. Cover, and heat very slowly, then stew until the meat is covered with a brown glaze, but not burned. Be very careful on this latter point. Now. pour in your six quarts of water, and cook steadily at least three hours. Strain, take out the scraps of meat, and pulp the vege- tables into the soup. Take out two quarts of stock, sea- son, and put by, with the meat in it, for to-morrow. Let tjie rest cool ; take off the fat ; season, boil up and skim, and put in the barley, already soaked two hours in a little cold water. Simmer half an hour, and pour out. STUFFED BEEF'S HEART WITH HORSERADISH SAUCE. Wash and soak the heart ten minutes in cold, salt water. \\\full with a force-meat of fat salt pork, minced FOURTH WEEK WEDNESDAY. 393 fine with an equal weight of bread-crumbs, a little chopped parsley, with pepper, and a small quantity of grated lemon- peel. Sew up the swollen heart trimly in coarse net or tarlatan, and put on in a saucepan with two cups of weak broth, made by taking a cupful from the soup and diluting it with water, and half a minced onion. Boil two hours, turning twice. Keep closely covered. Make ready a cup of drawn butter, and let it get almost cold. Then whip in the frothed whites of two eggs, and when stiff, two tablespoonfuls of grated horseradish. You can buy it in any market. Add the juice of a lemon, unless your horse- radish is put up in vinegar. The mixture should look like whipped cream. Put into a sauce-boat. When your heart is done, remove the cloth, and lay upon a hot dish. Strain the gravy ; thicken with browned flour, and pout over the heart. Pass the white sauce with it. SCALLOPED SQUASH. Boil and mash the squash in the customary way, and let it cool. Beat the yolks of the two eggs, the whites of which were used for the horseradish sauce, and when the squash is nearly cold, whip these into it, with three table- spoonfuls of milk, one of butter, rolled in flour and melted in the milk ; pepper and salt to taste. Pour into a but- tered bake-dish, cover with fine crumbs, and bake to a light brown in a quick oven. Eat hot. BEETS. Wash and cut off the tops. Boil more than an hour if they are of a fair size. Scrape, slice, and lay in a dish. Pour over them a tablespoonful of butter, heated with one of vinegar, and seasoned with salt and pepper. If any are left over, save them for salad, by pouring vinegar upon them. NEW POTATOES. Rub the skins off, and cook until tender in boiling salted water. Serve whole. GOOSEBERRY TART. Top and tail a quart of green gooseberries. Put into a tin or porcelain saucepan with enough water to prevenl 17* 394 JUNE. burning, and stew 'slowly until they break, stirring often Sweeten abundantly, and set by to cool. When cold, pour into a pie-dish lined with puff-paste, cover with a top crust, and bake in a good oven. Eat cold, but fresh, with powdered sugar sifted over the top. Jourtl) llUck. String-Bean Soup. Breaded Mutton Chops. Stewed Tomatoes with Onion, Green Corn Boiled Whole. Mashed Potatoes. Cherries. Raspberries and Cream, and Light Cakes. STRING-BEAN SOUP. Boil three cups of string-beans rid of all the fibres and cut small in hot salted water until very tender. Drain and chop them, rub them through a colander to a pulp. Take the fat from the stock kept in the ice-box since yesterday ; pour off from the meat, and strain into a soup pot. Bring to a boil ; skim, and stir in the beans, with a great spoonful of butter cut up in as much flour. Simmer fifteen minutes ; add seasoning, if necessary, and pour upon dice of fried bread in the tureen. BREADED MUTTON CHOPS. Trim the chops well, leaving an inch of bare bone at the small end of each. Dip in beaten egg, then in rolled cracker, and fry in hot lard or dripping. Drain, and stand upon the large ends in a row about the base of your hillock of potatoes. STEWED TOMATOES WITH ONION. Loosen the tomato-skins with boiling water. Peel and slice them, and put into a saucepan with a sliced onion, a good piece of butter, pepper, salt, and a little sugar Stew gently half an hour. FOURTH WEEK FRIDAY. 395 GREEN CORN BOILED WHOLE. Strip off the outer husks ; turn down the innermost covering, and pull off the silk with great care. Re-cover the eai with the thin inner husk ; tie at the top with a bit of thread, and cook in salted boiling water from twenty- five to thirty. minutes. Cut off the stalks close to the cob, and send the corn to the table wrapped in a napkin MASHED POTATOES. Mash, and mould into a shapely hillock, fenced about with a chevaux de frise of chops. CHERRIES. Wash, handling gingerly, and heap about a lump of ice in a glass bowl. RASPBERRIES AND CREAM, WITH LIGHT CAKES. Do not sugar the berries in the dish, but pass sugar and cream with each saucerful. Jotirtl) iDtek. Jrtban. Convent Soup. Boiled Salmon. Chicken Fried Whole. Stewed Onions. Green Peas. Potatoes a la Duchesse. Cherry Pie. CONVENT SOUP. 3 potatoes. 2 onions. 2 carrots. 2 turnips. i pint of green peas. i cup of string-beans, cut into short length* of a .small cabbage. 6 tomatoes, peeled and sliced. Bunch of sweet herbs. 396 JUNE. J cup of good dripping. 2 tablespoonfuls of flour. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, rolled in flour. 2 qts. and i pint of boiling water. Pepper and salt. Parboil, and leave to cool, turnips, carrots, an I pota- toes, sliced ; also the chopped cabbage. Slice the onions, and fry in the hot dripping for five minutes. Then stir in the flour, and simmer until well colored. Turn into a soup-kettle the contents of the frying-pan, rinsing out the latter with two cups of boiling water, and pour this, also, into the soup-pot. When it bubbles, add all the vegeta- bles. Stir a few minutes, and put in another pint of hot water. Cover, and simmer until all are heated through and begin to boil, when put in the rest of the water. Cook slowly for two hours, or until all are soft and break- ing. Strain, and pulp the vegetables through the colan- ander. Season the puree with salt, pepper, and sweet herbs, chopped ; stir in your floured butter ; simmer five minutes, stirring well, and serve. BOILED SALMON. The middle slice of salmon is the best. Sew up neatly in a mosquito-net bag, and boil a quarter of an hour to the pound in hot, salted water. When done, unwrap with care, and lay upon a hot dish, taking care not to break it. Have ready a- large cupful of drawn butter, very rich, in which has been stirred a tablespoonful of minced parsley and the juice of a lemon. Pour half upon the salmon, and serve the rest in a boat. Garnish with parsley and sliced eggs. FRIED CHICKEN WHOLE. Truss a young, tender chicken as for roasting, but do not stuff it. Put into a steamer, or cover closely in a colander, over a pot of fast-boiling water for half an hour. Have ready some very nice dripping, or a mixture of one- third butter, two-thirds lard, in a deep frying- or saucepan. Flour the chicken all over, and put in when the fat is hot. When the lower side is of a fine brown, turn the fowl. When both are cooked, take it out, lay a few slices of FOURTH WEEK SATURDAY. 397 o\iion in the bottom of a tin pail, and put in the chicken. Fit on the top, and set in a pot of water, which must be kept at a slow boil, half an hour. Rub the chicken well with melted butter, in which have been stirred pepper, salt, and chopped parsley, and serve. STEWED ONIONS, See Tuesday of Third Week in this month. GREEN PEAS. See Sunday of this week. POTATOES 1 LA DUCHESSE. Cut cold mashed potatoes, round or square, with a cake-cutter ; flour well, and bake in the oven, buttering as they begin to brown. If the potatoes are too pliable to cut out well, mould by pressing firmly into your cutter, which should first be wet with cold water. Serve with the salmon. CHERRY PIE. Line a pie-dish with cold crust ; fill with whole cher- ries tart and sweet, in equal proportions ; sugar plenti- fully ; put on a top crust, and bake in a tolerably brisk oven. Eat cold, with powdered sugar sifted over the top. Jbuvtl) Gravy Soup. Lemon Veal. Stewed Squash. String-Beans. Raw Cucumbers. Bananas and Oranges. Cherries. GRAVY SOUP. 6 Ibs. of lean beef. i Ib. of ham. i carrot. 398 JUNE. 1 turnip. 6 tomatoes. Bunch of herbs. Pepper and salt. 2 teaspoonfuls of celery essence. 1 cucumber. 2 onions. 6 quarts of cold water. Toasted bread cut into dice. i tablespoonful walnut catsup. Dripping for frying. Cut the meat into strips ; pare and slice the vegetables. Fry the onions brown in dripping. Put all together into the soup-kettle, with one quart of cold water, and bring slowly to a boil. Then pour in a quart of hot water. Cook an hour longer still slowly and pour in the rest of the water cold. Boil steadily three hours after the bubbling recommences. The meat should be done to rags, the vegetables broken to pieces. Strain, pulping the vegetables through a colander ; then strain a second time through a soup-sieve, or squeeze through a double tarlatan or mosquito-net bag. Season the soup, and set aside your Sunday portion, seasoning the rags of meat highly, and returning them to it. (Keep on the ice.) Put to-day's soup back into the pot ; boil and skim ; add a tablespoonful of walnut catsup and pour upon dice of well-buttered toast, laid in the tureen. LEMON VEAL. 3 Ibs. of raw, lean veal, chopped fine. J- Ib. of fat salt pork, also minced. 1 small onion, minced. A pinch of lemon peel. 2 lemons peeled and sliced. 3 eggs beaten light. i cup well-seasoned and strained tomato sauce. Pepper and salt. Rolled cracker. Work meat, eggs, onion and seasoning up soft with the tomato -sauce, and stir in enough cracker to enable you FOUKitf WEEK SATURDAY. 399 to mould it with your hands. Press firmly into a wel bowl, and invert upon a pie-dish, withdrawing the bowl cautiously. Now, sift cracker-dust thickly all over it, and cover the top and half-way down the sides with thin slices of lemon. Bake one hour in a good oven ; pick off the lemon with care and dispatch, and brown nicely on the upper grating of the oven. Serve in the pie-dish. STEWED SQUASH. Pare, slice, lay in cold water fifteen minutes. Cook tender in boiling water, salted, drain well, and mash with pepper, salt and butter, pressing out all the water. STRING-BEANS. See Receipt for Monday of this week. RAW CUCUMBERS. Pare and lay them in ice-water one hour, then slice and season to taste with vinegar, pepper and salt. Never omil the soaking in ice-water. BANANAS AND ORANGES. Serve in the same fruit-basket or dish. CHERRIES. Pile upon a lump of ice in a glass dish. 400 JULY. JULY. $\v$\ tUeek. Stmbag. Clear Sago Soup. Larded Shoulder of Mutton. Scalloped Tomatoes. Boiled Corn. New Potatoes Stewed. Raspberry and Currant Jelly with Whipped Cream. Coffee and Sponge- Cake. CLEAR SAGO SOUP. Remove the fat from the surface of your cold " stock,' pour off without disturbing the sediment, and heat to a boil. Skim as long as the scum rises ; then stir in the beaten white of an egg, and simmer, skimming well until it has brought up with it all the impurities, leaving the soup clear. Add half a cup of German sago, previously soaked two hours in a little water, and cook gently until this is melted ; then serve. LARDED SHOULDER OF MUTTON. Cut half a pound of salt fat pork into narrow, long lar- doons. Roll them in a mixture of pepper, allspice and vinegar. If you have no iarding-needle, make incisions in the shoulder of mutton with a thin, narrow-bladed knife, and thrust in the strips of pork, leaving about a quarter of an inch projecting on the upper side. Put into a drip- ping-pan, pour two cupfuls of boiling water over it, in which has been mixed a glass of claret. Cover with another pan, and cook two hours, if the shoulder be of full size. Baste frequently for an hour and a half with its own gravy then three times with a mixture of melted butter and cur- rant jelly, leaving off the upper pan that the meat may brown. Dish the meat ; thicken the strained gravy with browned flour, and after one boil, serve in a boat. To save labor and time on Sunday, lard the meat over night. FIRST WEEK SUNDAY. 4O1 SCALLOPED TOMATOES. Skin and slice. Cover the bottom of a pie-dish (but- tered) with dry crumbs ; lay tomatoes over them. Season with pepper, salt, sugar and butter. Put alternate layers of crumbs and seasoned tomatoes until the dish is full, having crumbs on top. Bake, covered, half an hour, and brown slightly. BOILED CORN. Please see Thursday, Fourth Week in June. f NEW POTATOES STEWED. Rub or scrape off the skins ; boil in hot salted water until done. Turn off the water and dry out on the range. Then crack each one by steady pressure with the back of a spoon, and drop into a saucepan containing a cup of hot milk, pepper, salt, chopped parsley, and a great spoonful of butter cut up in flour. Simmer five minutes, and pour into a vegetable dish. RASPBERRY AND CURRANT JELLY WITH WHIPPED CREAM. 1 quart of red currants and the same of red raspber- ries. 2 cups of white sugar. i package Coxe's gelatine, soaked in one cup of cold water. i cup of boiling water. i pint of whipped cream. Crush the fruit and strain out every drop of juice through coarse muslin. Stir sugar, soaked gelatine, and boiling water together. When clear, strain into the fruit juice. Strain again through a flannel bag. Pour into a wet mould that has a cylinder in the centre. Do this on Saturday, and bury in the ice. On Sunday, turn out into a glass dish, fill the open centre with whipped cream, and pile more about the base. 402 JULY. Jtr0t tUcek. ittonfoag. Jugged Soup. Potato Barter Pudding. Mashed Squash, Chopped Corn and Potatoes. Currant Jelly. Corn-starch Custard. JUGGED SOUP. Early in the day put on the cracked bones from which you have cut the cold mutton, with refuse bits of skin, crisped meat, etc., into a soup-pot with three quarts of water, and boil at the back of the range down to two quarts. Strain ; let the liquid cool to throw up the fat, and remove this. Have ready in a stone jar, with a top, six parboiled potatoes, sliced, laid upon slices of streaked pork, cut very thin ; upon this a sliced onion ; next, three sliced tomatoes ; then a sliced turnip ; on this a cupful of green peas ; three more tomatoes ; then a quar- ter-cup of raw rice ; cover this with a grated carrot, and this with another layer of sliced pork. Sprinkle a little salt and pepper, and a few dots of butter upon each layer of vegetables, and put upon the pork some chopped sweet herbs. Pour the cooled broth over all ; put on the jar lid, with a paste of flour and water around the edge to ex- clude the air and keep in the steam, and set in a pan of boiling water in the oven. Leave it there as long as possible four hours at the least. Pour into the tureen without further preparation. POTATO BATTER PUDDING. Mince and season your cold mutton, wet it with the remains of yesterday's gravy and put into a bake-dish. Mash six boiled potatoes soft with butter; beat in two eggs ; a heaping tablespoonful of prepared flour, and a cup of milk. Mix well, and pour over the mutton. Bake to a good brown in a moderate oven. One hour will be needed to cook it properly. MASHED SQUASH. See Receipt for Saturday of Third Week in June. FIRST WEEK TUESDAY. CHOPPED CORN AND POTATOES. Cut the corn from the cobs left cold from yesterday and chop the cold new potatoes, also left over. Have ready in a frying pan a large spoonful of good dripping, well seasoned, and hot. Stir in corn and potatoes, and toss about until hot and glazed, but not browned. Serve in a deep dish. CORN-STARCH CUSTARD PUDDING. 4 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch. i quart of milk. 4 beaten eggs. i cup of sugar. Nutmeg and cinnamon. i tablespoonful of butter. Heat the milk ; stir in the corn-starch wet up in cold milk, and cook in a farina-kettle three minutes. Take from the fire ; beat in the butter, and let it cool. When cold, beat in the eggs and sugar, with the spice. Whip two min- utes, and bake in a buttered dish until lightly browned and well set. Eat cold, with sugar sifted over it. first Veal Broth. Beefsteak. Boiled Onions. Mashed Potatoes Moulded. String-Beans Sautes. Raspberries, Cream, and Cake. VEAL BROTH. 3 Ibs. scrag of veal the meat chopped and bones splintered. t onion. T cup of raw rice. Chopped parsley, pepper and salt. Some salt-pork bones and rind, if convenient. i turnip. 3 quarts of water. 404 JULY. Put meat, bones, and vegetables, with the water, over the fire, and cook slowly three hours. Strain the broth and pulp the vegetables. Take off the fat ; season the broth, add the rice, and stew gently until this is soft. BEEFSTEAK. See Tuesday of Third Week in June. BOILED ONIONS. Top, tail, and skim. Cook fifteen minutes in boiling water. Drain this off and throw it away. Replenish the pot with boiling water, put in a little salt, and stew ten- 'der. Drain, dish, season well with pepper and salt, and butter liberally. MASUED- POTATOES MOULDED. Mash smooth, but not too soft, with butter and milk. Wet a jelly-mould, fill with the potatoes, pressed in firmly. Shake gently out upon a flat dish, set one minute in the hot oven, and serve. STRING-BEANS SAUTES. Trim, cut in short pieces, and cook tender in boiling salted water. Meanwhile, take half a cup of broth from your soup, season well, boil, and skim for fifteen minutes ; then add a tablespoonful of butter. While these are boil- ing stir in the beans ; shake and stir for three minutes, add a teaspoonful of vinegar, and pour out. RASPBERRIES, CREAM, AND CAKE. When you can give an uncooked dessert, which is more palatable and more wholesome than a cooked one, and that costs no more, it is wise policy to avail yourself of the consequent lightening of your labors, especially in hot weather. Except when it is necessary to deviate from the rule in order to secure the requisite variety, let cold desserts be the order of the day in your bills of fare, while the "heated term " lasts. FIRST WEEK WEDNESDAY. 4OS tXUek. French Potage. Beef a la Mode. Macaroni with Tomato Sauce. Lima Beans. Fried Cucumbers. Lemon Trifle. * FRENCH POTAGE. 2 Ibs. lean beef. 2 Ibs. of lean veal. \ Ib. of lean ham. 1 sliced onion. Chopped sweet herbs. 12 large prunes. Pepper and salt. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. 2 tablespoonfuls soaked granulated tapioca. 5 quarts of water. Put the veal, cut into strips, and the sliced onion, into a soup-pot with the butter, and simmer, stirring con- stantly, until they are coated with a brown glaze. They must not scorch. Now pour in one quart of boiling water ; cover, and stew half an hour. Check the boil suddenly with a gallon of cold water, and put in beef, ham, and herbs. Cover again, and bojl gently three hours. Take out the strips of veal, beef, and ham, when you have strained oft" the water, and pulp the onion. Set aside half the stock, highly seasoned, with the meat in it, for to-mor- row. Skim the fat from the rest, season, and put back over the fire with the prunes, stoned, and cut into thirds, after being well washed. Simmer half an hour, put in the tapioca ; cook until this is clear, and pour out. BEEF i LA MODE. For full and explicit directions concerning this dish please refer to spare me work, time, and space to Sun day, Second Week in May. 406 JUL y. MACARONI WITH TOMATO SAUCE. Bieak half a pound of macaroni into inch-lengths, and cook twenty minutes in boiling salted water. Meantime, take a cup of broth from your soup ; strain, boil, and skim it, and slice into it four ripe tomatoes. Stew tender, and strain through net or tarlatan, into a saucepan. Season well ; stir into it a great spoonful of butter rolled in flour. Sim- mer five minutes ; put the macaroni into a deep dish, sprinkling grated cheese over each layer, and pour the hot sauce over it, opening the mass with a fork, to let it reach the lower layers. LIMA BEANS. Shell, lay in cold water fifteen minutes, and cook from twenty-five to thirty minutes in salt boiling water. Drain well ; season with pepper, salt, and butter. FRIED CUCUMBERS. Pare, cut into lengthwise slices, more than a quarter of an inch thick, and lay for half an hour in ice-water. Wipe each piece dry ; sprinkle with pepper and salt, and dredge with flour. Fry to a light brown in good dripping or but- ter. Drain well, and serve hot. LEMON TRIFLE. i large sliced sponge cake, i quart of milk. 3 e gg s - 5 heaping tablespoonfuls of sugar. i teaspoonful extract of lemon. i lemon all the juice and half the rind finely grated. Heat the milk, stir in four tablespoonfuls of sugar into the beaten yolks and pour the hot milk upon it, by de- grees, stirring well. Return to the custard-kettle, and stir until it begins to thicken. Flavor, and pour, quite hot, upon the sliced cake laid in the bottom of a deep dish. If the dish be of glass, roll it in hot water before cake and custard go in. Put a heavy saucer on the cake to keep it from rising, and let it cool. When perfectly cold, heap upon it a meringue of the beaten whites, whipped up with the other tablespoonful of sugar, the lemon-juice and rind: Set on ice until wanted. FIRST WEEK THURSDAY. ;fir0t fthek. Italian Paste Soup. Cold Beef a la Mode. Broiled Spanish Mackerel Mashed Potatoes. Green Peas. Raw Tomatoes. Cream Raspberry Pie, ITALIAN PASTE SOUP. Take the fat from your cold soup-stock ; pour off from the sediment ; boil and skim, adding a tablespoonful of walnut or mushroom catsup. When the scum, ceases to rise, put in a quarter of a pound of Italian paste i. e. t something like macaroni cut into small figures, letters, stars, and the like. Simmer twenty minutes and pour out. BROILED SPANISH MACKEREL. Clean, wash, and wipe dry. Split, so that when laid flat the backbone will be in the middle. Sprinkle with salt and lay, inside down, upon a buttered gridiron, over a clear fire, until it is nicely colored, then turn. When done, put upon a hot dish, butter plentifully and pepper. Put a hot cover over it and send to table. COLD BEEF A" LA MODE. Smooth the round on the top and garnish with pickled beets and parsley. Shave off horizontal slices in carving. MASHED POTATOES. Pass with the fish, and, if you like, again when the meat comes on. GREEN PEAS. Shell, lay in cold water fifteen minutes ; cook from twenty to twenty-five minutes in boiling saltwater, adding a lump of sugar unless they are just gathered. Drain very well, dish, pepper, salt, and butter. 408 JULY. RAW TOMATOES. Pare and slice with a sharp knife. Lay in a glass dish and pour over them a dressing made thus : Rub a tea- spoonful of sugar, half as much each of salt, pepper, and made mustard, into two tablespoonfuls of oil. Beat into this the yolk of a raw egg, and then, a few drops at a time, five tablespoonfuls of vinegar. CREAM RASPBERRY PIE. Line a pie-dish with puff paste, and fill with raspberries, sweetened bountifully. Cover with a paste-crust, but do not pinch this down at the edges. Also rub the edge of the lower crust with butter to prevent adhesion. Bake in a good oven. While it is cooking, heat a small cup of rich milk, putting in a pinch of soda stir into it half a teaspoonful of corn-starch, wet in cold milk, one tablespoonful of white sugar, and cook three minutes. Take it oft", and beat in the frothed whites of two eggs. Whip to a cream, and let it get cold. When the pie comes out of the oven, lift the top crust and pour in the mixture. Replace the crust and set aside to cool. Sift sugar upon the top before serving. J"u*0t lUcek. Tomato Soup without Meat. Chicken, Stewed Whole. Baked Squash, Rice Croquettes. Potato Omelette. Cherry Bread Pudding. TOMATO SOUP WITHOUT MEAT. 12 large red tomatoes, peeled and sliced. 1 small onion, sliced. 2 tablespoonfuls nice dripping. 1 tablespoonful chopped parsley. 2 tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in flour. Pepper and salt. i teaspoonful of sugar. i small cupful of hot boiled rice. i quart of boiling water. FIRST WEEK FRIDAY. 409 Fry the onion in the soup-pot in the dripping. When they are of a reddish-brown, add the tomatoes and stir all up until very hot, when put in the boiling water and pars- ley. Stew half an hour, and strain, rubbing the tomato through a sieve into the hot liquid. Return to the pot, season, and when boiling again, stir in the floured butter, and a minute later the rice. Simmer ten minutes and pour out. CHICKEN STEWED WHOLE. Truss as for roasting ; but do not stuff it. Put a layer of fat salt pork in the bottom of a saucepan ; then, some sliced onion and parsley. Lay in the chicken and put in a cupful of gravy made by boiling the feet and giblets, and, when these are taken out, add a good spoonful of butter to the weak broth. Cover the saucepan closely, and stew one hour, slowly. Turn the fowl, and stew one hour more, keeping it covered. Take it out of the pot ; lay upon a dish, and thicken the gravy, after straining it, with a little browned flour. Pepper, also, to taste, and pour over the fowl, which should be so tender as to fall apart under the carver's knife. BAKED SQUASH. Boil, mash, and let it get cold. Then, beat up light with a tablespoonful of melted butter, two raw eggs ; three tablespoonfuls of milk, with pepper and salt to liking. Put into a buttered bake-dish ; sift dry crumbs over the top, and bake in a quick oven. RICE CROQUETTES. Boil a cup of rice soft ; work into it, while hot, a table- spoonful of butter, one of grated cheese, pepper, salt, and a beaten egg. Spread out to cool. Chop the boiled gib- lets of your chicken fine with a slice or so of your cold beef, wet with a little gravy, but not too soft. Make the cold rice into square, flat cakes. Lay in the centre of each a teaspoonful of the mince. Close the cakes so as to have this in the middle ; mould into oval balls ; dip in beaten egg : then, roll in cracker-crumbs and grated cheese, and fry in good dripping, or lard. Drain well, and heap upon a hot dish. 18 410 JULY. POTATO OMELETTE. 6 eggs. cup of milk. i small cup mashed potato, seasoned with pepper and salt. Bu tter for frying. Beat yolks and whites together. Thin the potato with the milk, and strain through a colander. Stir into the eggs, have the butter warm in the pan, pour in the mix- ture ; shake, and loosen with a spatula, and when nearly done, hold it under the red-hot grate to brown the upper side. Invert the pan above a very hot dish, and turn out without folding. Serve at once, as it soon falls. CHERRY BREAD PUDDING. i quart of milk, with a pinch of soda stirred in. Loaf of stale baker's bread, pared and sliced. Butter to spread the bread. 4 eggs. i cup of sugar. i full cup of stoned cherries. Butter the bread on both sides. Put a layer into a buttered bake-dish ; pour upon it a little raw custard, made of the eggs, sugar, and milk. Strew over this some of the cherries, and lay in more buttered bread. Proceed in this order until the dish is full. The upper layer should be bread particularly well-buttered and soaked. Cover the dish closely ; set in a dripping-pan full of boiling water, and cook one hour ; then ur cover, and brown delicately. Turn out upon a plate, and eat hot with sauce. FIRST WEEK S A TURD A Y. 4 1 ' Jfcrt Consomme Soup. Braised Veal. Cauliflower with Sauce. Raw Cucumbers. Green Corn Pudding. Cottage Puffs. CoNSOMMis SOUP. ' . ' \ I old chicken. 3 Ibs. of lean beef, i onion. 1 turnip. 2 carrots. Bunch of sweet herbs. 7 quarts of cold water. 4 cup sago, soaked in cold water. Pepper and salt. Cut the beef into strips, and joint the chicken. Slice the vegetables, chop the herbs, and put on all with the water, to cook slowly for six hours. Take out the chicken and beef; salt and pepper and put into a jar. Strain the soup, pulping the vegetables through a colan- der. Season and divide it ; pouring half upon the meat in the jar, and setting in a pot of hot water to cook, cov- ered, two hours more. Heat the rest, and skim ; put in the sago, and simmer for half an hour ; then pour out. When the two hours have elapsed, pour out the stock into a bowl, and, when cold, put upon ice. BRAISED VEAL. The breast is a good piece for this purpose. Put three or four spoonfuls of sweet dripping in a broad saucepan, and when hot, lay in the veal and fry on both sides. Pour over it two cupfuls of broth, taken from your soup ; a minced onion and a couple of sliced tomatoes. Cover and stew forty-five minutes. Take out the veal and keep warm, while you strain and skim the gravy, and return to the pot with pepper, salt, and minced summer savory, 412 JULY. also, a pinch of mace, a lump of sugar, and a piuch of grated lemon -peel. Put back the meat, and stew half an hour more. Lay on a dish, thicken the gravy, boil once, and pour over the veal. CAULIFLOWER, WITH SAUCE. i head of cauliflower. i cup of drawn butter. Juice of a lemon. Tie the cauliflower in a net and boil in hot, salted water from thirty-five to fifty minutes, in proportion to its size. Take up, undo the net, lay in a deep dish, blossom Upward, and pour over it a cup of rich drawn butter, with the juice of a lemon stirred in. RAW CUCUMBERS. See Saturday, Fourth Week in June. GREEN CORN PUDDING. Grated corn of 12 large ears. 1 quart of milk. 3 eggs. 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter. i tablespoonful of sugar. A little salt. Beat the yolks well ; then add the corn, the butter and salt, and stir up hard with your " beater." Then comes the milk, next the sugar ; lastly, the whites. Bake in a greased pudding-dish, covered, one hour. Then brown well. Serve hot in the bake-dish. COTTAGE PUFFS. i cup of milk and one of cream. 4 beaten eggs. i tablespoonful of butter, rubbed into the flour. A little salt. 4 cups of prepared flour, or enough for cake batter. Mix the whipped yolks with the milk and cream ; then the salt and the whites ; lastly, the flour. Beat fast and well, and bake in "gem" pans. The oven should be quick. Eat hot, with sauce. SECOND WEEK SUNDAY. 4*3 0C0ntr Bechamel Soup. Boiled Mutton. Chicken Rissoles. String Beans. Green Peas. Raw Tomatoes. Self-freezing Ice-Cream. BECHAMEL SOUP. Take the fat from the jellied stock in your refrigerator ; dip it out carefully from the meat taking care of the chicken and heat in a saucepan. Scald a quart of milk in another vessel, and stir into it a large spoonful of corn- starch, wet with cold milk. Pepper and salt to taste (the milk should have had a pinch of soda in it), and pour into the tureen. Add the boiling soup, stir up well, and serve. BOILED MUTTON. The leg is best for this purpose, and will look much nicer when served, if it has been tied up in very coarse, thin muslin, or in white mosquito-netting. Put on in plenty of boiling salted water, and cook a quarter of an hour to the pound. Unwrap .when done, brush all over with butter, and serve with a boat of drawn butter, in which have been stirred two dozen capers or pickled nasturtium-seed. Take care of the liquor. CHICKEN RISSOLES. Cut the chicken, boiled in your soup, from the bones, and chop fine. Add to it a cupful of mashed potato, whipped to a cream, a beaten egg, pepper arid salt ; wet soft with a little of the soup, and heat in a frying-pan, in which has been melted a little butter. Stir until very hot, and let it get perfectly cold. You can see that this is done before morning service, if you have an early din- ner on Sunday. When cold, make into balls ; roll in egg, then in cracker-crumbs, and fry to a light brown in 4H JULY. lard or nice dripping. Drain off the fat, and serve hot upon a folded napkin. STRING-BEANS. See Monday of Fourth Week in Juno. GREEN PEAS AND RAW TOMATOES. See Thursday of First Week in July. SELF-FREEZING ICE-CREAM. i quart of rich milk. 8 beaten eggs, 3 pints of rich, sweet cream. 4 cups of sugar. i vanilla bean, broken in two, and boiled in the cus- tard, or 5 teaspoonfuls of vanilla essence. Heat the milk ; pour it upon the eggs and sugar. Cook, stirring steadily fifteen minutes, or until it has thickened well. When perfectly cold, add the cream. Make the cus tard on Saturday, and set on ice. Early Sunday morning, beat in the cream, and put ail in an old-fashioned up- right freezer, set in its pail. Put a block of ice within a stout sack, or between the folds of a piece of carpeting, and beat small with a hammer. Put a thick layer into the outer part, then one of rock-salt. Fill the pail in this order, and, before covering the freezer with ice, beat the custard for five minutes witli a flat sticlc or ladle. Shut tightly ; pack pounded ice and salt over it, and put a folded carpet over all. In an hour and a half, open the freezer, first wiping off the salt from about the top. Dislodge the frozen custard from sides and bottom with a long knife, and beat and stir with your stick, faithfully, until the custard is a smooth paste. Replace the cover ; let off the water, and pack more pounded ice and salt about it, com- pletely concealing the freezer. Put back the folded car- pet. The cream will take care of itself for three hours, and more, and you can, if you like, leave it all day, with a visit of three minutes every few hours, to let off the water and pack in more salt and ice. Do not open the freezer until you are ready for the cream. Then take it out, wipe it off, wrap a towel wrung out in hot watef SECOND WEEK MONDAY. 41 5 about the lower part, and invert it upon a .flat dish. Should the weather be very hot, you may have to let off the water oftener than once in three hours ; but this sel- dom happens if the freezer be set in a cool cellar. \ Seconir tDttk. Ulonirag. Brown Soup. Ragoflt of ^Mutton. Squash a la Creme. Mashed Potatoes. Lettuce Salad. Raspberries, Cream, and Cake. Iced Coffee. BROWN SOUP. Ib. lean bacon ; 2 onions ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter ; i scant teaspoonful mixed allspice and cloves ; 2 table- spoonfuls browned flour ; liquor in which your mutton was boiled ; pepper. Cut the bacon into strips, and slice the onions. Put the butter into your soup-pot with these, and simmer, stir- ring often, until they are browned, but not scorched. Add the flour, wet up in cold water, and stir until very hot. Then, having taken the fat from the top of your mutton " pot-liquor," pour it in, with pepper and parsley. Add by degrees, stirring well, not to lump the flour. Cover, and set at the back of the range to simmer for two hours more would not hurt it. When ready for it, strain into the tureen. RAGOUT OF MUTTON. Slice even, rather thick slices, without skin or fat, from your boiled mutton, and lay in a deep dish. Pour a good glass of claret wine over them, and cover for an hour. Make a gravy of the bones and refuse portions with a quart of cold water. When this has boiled down to a pint, strain it off. Let it cool, and take off the fat. Put into a saucepan with a little minced onion, pepper, salt, and a tablespoonful of tomato catsup, and boil down to a 416 JULY. large cupful. Then. 'stir in a tablespoonful of browned flour, wet up in cold water ; simmer three minutes ; add the sliced meat and wine, with a little grated lemon-peel and a teaspoonful of currant jelly. Let all get hot slowly, but the meat must not boil, or it will be tough. Set at one side of the range to heat, until you are ready to pour it into a deep dish. SQUASH A LA CRME. Boil and mash in the customary manner ; press out all the water, and beat in a tablespoonful of melted butter, with two of cream, heated, pepper and 'salt to taste; lastly, a beaten egg. Put the mixture into a pail, and set in boiling water fifteen minutes, stirring often, and keep- ing the water at a boil. It should look like rich custard. Serve in a deep dish. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual, and serve without browning. LETTUCE SALAD. Pick out and pull apart the hearts ; pile in a glass dish ; sprinkle with sugar, and season to taste with oil, vinegar, pepper, and salt. RASPBERRIES, CREAM, AND CAKE. Since your soup and ragout have taken more time and labor than you like to give to Monday's dinner, make up for the loss by serving the dessert given above, sure that nobody will murmur. ICED COFFEE. Make more coffee than usual at breakfast-time, and stronger. Add one-third as much hot milk as. you have cotfee, and set away. When cold, put upon ice. Serve at dessert, with cracked ice in each tumbler. SECOND WEEK TUESDAY. 4*7 Seconb Cabbage Soup. Mock Pigeons. Green Peas. Cucumber Salad. Lima Beans. Farina Pudding, Cold. CABBAGE SOUP. 2 Ibs. of lean beef, chopped, and the same of mutton- bones, well cracked ; i small, firm white cabjpage ; i onion ; bunch of sweet herbs ; i cup of milk, heated, with a pinch of soda ; i tablespoonful of butter, rubbed in one of flour ; pepper and salt ; 3 quarts of water. Cook beef, onion, and bones in the water four hours, boiling slowly. Boil the cabbage in two waters ; let it get cold, and shred only the white parts into rather coarse dice. Cool the soup, and take off the fat. Put over the fire with pepper and salt and the chopped herbs. Hav- ing boiled it one minute, skim, and put in the cabbage. Heat the milk in a separate vessel ; stir in the floured butter ; boil until it thickens, and pour into the tureen. When the cabbage-soup reaches the boil, pour it upon the milk, and stir up well. MOCK PIGEONS. Take the bone from two nice fillets of veal ; flatten them with the broad side of a hatchet, and spread with a good force-meat of crumbs and chopped ham, seasoned well. Roll the meat up on this ; bind into oblong rolls with soft string ; lay in a dripping-pan, and pour over them two cups of your boiling soup before the cabbage goes in or any other hot broth will do as well. Turn a pan over them and bake nearly two hours, basting well with the gravy. When done, lay upon a hot dish, while you thicken the gravy with browned flour, and season well with pepper, salt, and tomato catsup. Boil one minute, and pour part over the pigeons, the rest into a boat. Clip the strings carefully, and do not pull them 18* 41 S JULY. hard in removing thei i, lest you spoil the shape of the meat. GREEN PEAS. See Wednesday, First Week in this month. LIMA BEANS. See Thursday of First Week in July. CUCUMBER SALAD. See Saturday of First Week in July. FARINA PUDDING COLD. i quatf fresh milk ; 3 tablespoonfuls of farina, soaked one hour in a little cold water ; 3 eggs ; 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; a little salt ; flavoring essence. Heat three-quarters of the milk, salt it, and stir in the farina. Cook half an hour, stirring often ; take it off, and pour upon the eggs, sugar, and the other cup of milk, beaten together. Return to the farina-kettle, and stir ten minutes longer. Pour out, beat in the flavoring, and put into a wet mould. Set on the ice, when cool. It will soon form. Eat with cream, or fruit syrup. lUetk. Crab Soup. Savory CalPs Head. Stewed Tomatoes. Potato Puff. Boiled Corn. Cherry Souffle. CRAB SOUP. Two pounds of lean veal chopped, covered with two quarts of cold water, boiled down one-half, strained, cooled, skimmed and seasoned ^'th pepper and salt. Meat of three large crabs, boiled and cold. One pint milk, and a pinch of soda stirred into it. Pepper, salt, nutmeg, one teaspoonful of anchovy paste. One cup of SECOND WEEK WEDNESDAY. 419 boiled rice soft and hot. Tablespoonful of floured butter. Return the broth prepared as directed above to the fire, with the rice, and simmer until the latter is broken to pieces. Strain, rubbing the rice through the sieve ; set over the fire, adding the nutmeg and anchovy ; then the crab meat, cut into small dice. Simmer ten minutes lon- ger it must not actually boil and pour into the tureen. Add the boiling milk, which has been thickened with the floured butter ; stir up well and serve. Pass sliced lemon, crackers and butter with it. SAVORY CALF'S HEAD. Wash the head well it should of course have been cleaned with the skin on ; take out the tongue and brains ; boil them in a separate vessel, and keep on ice for to- morrow's soup. Put on the head (the two sides tied into th< original shape by, a band of tape) in plenty of cold water, slightly salt, and cook gently one hour and a half. Ta.ke out, wipe dry, score the cheeks in squares, and wa.sh the head on top and sides, with beaten egg. Sift over it a mixture of rolled cracker, pepper and salt ; and set in a quick oven. In ten minutes, baste with melted butter ; five minutes later, with a cupful of broth from the pot poured gradually over it. Cover with thick white paper and cook ten minutes longer, then dish, with thin slices of crisped ham laid about it. Thicken the gravy in the pan with browned flour, and send up in a boat. Save the pot-liquor for soup, seasoning it, and keeping in a cold place. STEWED TOMATOES. Loosen the skins by pouring boiling water upon them. Peel, slice, and put into a saucepan with a little minced onion, pepper, salt and sugar, and stew from twenty-five to thirty minutes. Just before taking them 'up, add a good lump of butter. POTATO PUFF. Mash the potatoes very light and soft ; whipping in milk, butter, salt, and two beaten eggs. Heap within a greased bake-dish, and set in a good oven until well browned. Serve in the bake-dish. 420 JULY. BOILED CORN. See Thursday, Fourth Week in June. CHERRY SOUFFLE". 2 cups of milk ; i cup of prepared flour ; 5 eggs ; 4 tablespoonfuls sugar ; i teaspoontul bitter almond flavor- ing ; i cup of stoned cherries, dredged with flour ; a pinch of salt. Scald the milk and pour it a little at a time upon the flour, stirring constantly, to a smooth batter. Return to the custard kettle, and stir until thick as hasty pudding. Pour, still hot, upon the yolks beaten up with the sugar. Whip up thoroughly and let it cool. Whisk the whites very stiff and beat rapidly into the cold paste. Butter a mould, line thickly with the dredged cherries, and put in the mix- ture, carefully, not to disturb the cherries, which should stick to the buttered sides. Allow room for swelling in the mould. Put on the top, set in a pot of boiling water, and cook for an hour and a half. Dip into cold water, and turn out upon a hot dish. Eat soon, with a good pudding sauce. Scconir tDeek. Plain Calf's Head Soup. Fried Chickens. Fried Kidney-Beans. New Potatoes. Lettuce Salad. Beets, Sautes. Blackcap Shortcake, Hot. PLAIN CALF'S HEAD SOUP. i Ib. of lean, beef cut into strips and fried brown, with a sliced onion, in dripping ; i grated carrot ; i sliced tur- nip ; bunch of herbs chopped ; pot-liquor from yesterday's calf s head. Skim the cold broth, and put on with the fried meat SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. \2\ and onions, the herbs and vegetables. Cook gently three hours, and strain. Add a tablespoonful heaping of browned flour wet in cold water ; simmer a minute, and put in the cold tongue and brains kept from yesterday cut into dice. Cook gently three minutes, and pour out. FRIED CHICKENS. Cut up a pair of young chickens, as for fricassee. Lay in cold water for one minute, and, without wiping them, pepper and salt each piece ; roll in flour and fry in hot lard to a fine brown. Pile upon a hot-water dish ; fry some whole bunches of green parsley in the lard, and lay over and about them. This is the famous fried chicken of the South. FRIED KIDNEY-BEANS. Boil tender in hot salted water, drain, and when nearly cold, mash them, partially, leaving here and there a whole grain. Have ready in a frying-pan some strips of fat salt pork fried crisp in their own grease. Season this with pepperj and stir in the beans. Cpok, stirring briskly, until smoking hot. Dish with the crisped pork on top. NEW POTATOES. Rub, or scrape off the skins ; cook until tender, in hot salted water ; dry in the open pot on the range, after drain ing them, and serve. BEETS SAUTES. Boil and slice as for plain boiled beets. Put into a saucepan with a great spoonful of butter, the same of vin- egar, with pepper and salt. Shake and toss until they are glazed with the hot butter ; then dish. LETTUCE SALAD. See Monday of this Week. BLACKCAP SHORTCAKE HOT. Please see Wednesday of Second Week in June. 422 JULY. tUcck. Soup a la Bonne Femme. Mashed Potatoes. Roast Ducks, Raw Tomatoes. Green Peas. Currant and Raspberry Tart. SOUP A LA BONNE FE-MME. 2 Ibs. of good white fish halibut, bass, or pickerel will "o ; 3 eggs ; i cup of milk ; i onion ; bunch of sweet herbs ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter rubbed in flour ; cayenne and salt to taste ; a little nutmeg ; 3 quarts of water. Boil together fish, herbs, and onion in cold water for two hours. Strain ; pick the fish from the bones, and chop so fine that you can rub it through the colander into the soup. Season, and put back into the soup-pot. Sim- mer ten minutes and stir in the butter. Heat the milk in a farina-kettle ; pour it upon the beaten eggs, and stir over the fire until it begins to thicken. Pour into the tureen, add the soup, stir up well, and serve. It is well to add a pinch of soda to the milk in heating. ROAST DUCKS. Clean, wash, and stuff the ducks ; adding sage and onion to the force-meat for one. Fill the other with the ordinary poultry dressing. Lay in the dripping-pan ; pour a cup of boiling water over them, and roast, basting often, about twelve minutes to the pound, unless they are very young and tender. Take them up ; strain the gravy, and take off the fat. Season ; thicken with browned flour, and pour into a boat. MASHED POTATOES. Whip boiled mealy potatoes to pieces with a fork, and, when they are a powdery pile, whip in butter, milk, and salt. They should be light and creamy. Pile roughly upon a hot dish. GREEN PEAS. Shell ; lay in cold water fifteen minutes ; put on in boil- ing salted water, with a lump of loaf-sugar, if they are SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. 423 market peas. Boil twenty minutes, if young ; drain very dry ; dish, and season with pepper, salt and plenty of butter. RAW TOMATOES. Peel with a keen knife. Slice, and lay in a glass bowl, and pour on a dressing made by rubbing together half a teaspoonful each of pepper, salt, sugar, and made- mus- tard, with two tablespoonfuls of best oil, beating into this, a few drops at a time, five tablespoonfuls of vinegar, and at last the yolk of a raw egg. Set the salad upon the ice for half an hour. CURRANT AND RASPBERRY TART. Mix together three cups of currants and one of rasp- berries. Sweeten abundantly ; fill shells of good pie-paste with them ; cover with crust, and bake. Eat cold, with powdered sugar sifted over them. iDeek. Sciturircit). Pea and Tomato Soup. Salmi of Ducks. Mashed Squash. String-Beans. Cucumbers. Almond Corn-Starch Blanc-Mange. PEA* AND TOMATO SOUP. i Ib. of lean ham ; 2 Ibs. of lean beef ; 2 Ibs. of lean veal; 2 onions; bunch of sweet herbs; 12 tomatoes; i quart of green peas ; 5 quarts of water ; pepper and salt to taste ; corn-starch ; sugar. Cook the meat, cut into strips, and the herbs and onions in the cold water four hours. Strain ; put the meat and half the stock on the ice after seasoning well for Sun- day. Season the rest, when you have cooled and skimmed it, and put over the fire with the sliced tomatoes and peas. Boil slowly half an hour. Pulp through a colan- der ; stir in a tablespoonful of corn-starch wet with cold water, and a tablespoonful of white sugar. Simmer five minutes, and pour out. 424 JULY. SALMI OF DUCKS. Cut the meat neatly from the bones, having the slices as nearly as possible of uniform size. Make a gravy of the bones, stuffing, skin, etc., and a quart of water, boiling gently down to one large cupful. Skim and strain this into a saucepan. Add the juice of a lemon, and browned flour for thickening ; stir smooth, and lay in the sliced duck. Warm slowly at one side of the range, but do not let it boil. When very hot, pour upon oblong slices of fried toast covering the bottom of a hot dish. MASHED SQUASH. Peel, quarter, and boil soft. Mash in a hot colander, pressing hard. Serve in a deep dish, with butter, pepper, and salt beaten in. STRING-BEANS. Cut off the strings from both sides; cut in to 'short lengths, and cook tender in boiling salt water. They .re- quire twice as much time as peas. Drain, season with pepper, salt, and butter. Set aside half for to-morrow's salad. CUCUMBERS. Peel and lay in ice-water one hour. Slice ; put upon & lump of ice in a salad-dish, and season to taste upon sau- cers after they are helped out. ALMOND CORN-STARCH BLANC-MANGE. i quart of milk ; 4 tablespoonfuls of corn starch ; 3 eggs ; J Ib. almonds, blanched, dried, and pounded ; rose-watei and bitter almond ; cup of powdered sugar.' Scald the milk, with a pinch of soda stirred in. Have the almonds beaten to a paste with a teaspoonful of rose- water, and stir into the hot milk. Simmer five minutes; . then strain through thin muslin, pressing hard upon the almonds. Add this, hot, to the beaten eggs and sugar ; put upon the fire, and stir in, with the eggs, the corn-starch wet up in cold milk, never taking the spoon out until it is thick. Takeoff; flavor, and pour into a wet mould. Set in ice, and it will soon form. Eat with sugar anc cream. THIRD WEEK- SUNDAY. 42$ Sunbau. Rice Soups Stuffed Veal with Garnish of Green Peas. Boiled Corn. New Potatoes. Bean Salad. Orange Snow. Iced Tea and Cake. RICE SOUP. Take the fat from your cold stock, and strain it from the meat. Boil up once and skim. Add half a cup of rice, and simmer until this is very tender. Add the water in which have been soaked two tablespoonfuls of burnt sugar, and pour out. STUFFED VEAL WITH GARNISH OF GREEN PEAS. Take the large bones from a piece of loin of veal ; stuff the cavities thus made with a good force-meat of chopped pork crumbs and seasoning a few chopped mushrooms are an improvement cover the sides with greased sheets of thick writing-paper ; put a cupful of soup stock or othei gravy in the dripping-pan, and baste well, for one houi with butter and water, afterwards with the gravy. Cook fully twelve minutes to the pound. Take off the paper during the last half hour ; dredge with flour, baste with butter, and brown nicely. Take up and keep hot while you skim the fat from the*gravy, stir into it half a cupful of chopped mushrooms and a little browned flour. Serve this having cooked it three minutes in a boat. Have ready some green peas, boiled and seasoned, and make a fence of them about the veal when dished. NEW POTATOES. Refer to Thursday, Second Week in July. BOILED CORN. See Thursday, Fourth Week in June. 426 JULY. BEAN SALAD. Cut the beans into inch-lengths, pile in a salad-dish and pour upon them such a dressing as you compounded for the raw tomatoes on Friday of Second Week in July. Garnish with curled lettuce. ORANGE SNOW. 4 large sweet oranges, all the juice, and the grated peel of one ; juice and half the grated peel of i lemon ; i package of Coxe's gelatine soaked in a cup of cold water ; whites of 4 eggs, whipped stiff; i large cup of white sugar ; 3 cups of boiling water. Mix the juice, and peel of the fruit with the soaked gelatine, also the sugar. Leave them covered for one hour, then pour on the boiling water and stir clear. Strain through flannel, wringing hard. When quite cold, whip in the frothed whites very gradually until the mixture is a white sponge. Put into a wet mould on Saturday, and set on the ice. ICED TEA AND CAKE. Set the tea aside after breakfast in a pitcher, or bottle, which you can keep in ice. When you serve it, half fill each glass with ice, put in more sugar than you would use for hot tea, and pour on the cold liquid. iHoniag. Summer Squash, or " Cymbling " Soup. Scalloped Veal. Mashed Turnips. S.tewed Tomatoes. Potatoes, Boiled Whole. Bananas, Oranges, and Cherries. Iced Coffee and Fancy Biscuits. SUMMER SQUASH, OR CYMBLING SOUP. The bones from your cold veal ; 2 Ibs. lean, raw veal, chopped fine ; i onion ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter rubbed in flour ; i cup of milk, with a pinch of soda ; i tablespoon- THIRD WEEK MONDAY. ful of white sugar ; 2 beaten eggs ; 2 good- sized white squash pared and quartered ; pepper and salt ; fried bread ; 4 quarts of water. Boil bones, meat, and onions in four quarts of water until this is reduced to two. Strain, cool, and take off the fat. Cook the squash in one pint of the stock until soft enough to rub through a colander ; pulp, and put this, with its liquor, in the remaining three pints of broth ; also the sugar, seasoning, and floured butter, and cook slowly without boiling, five minutes. Heat the milk, pour upon the eggs, stir over the fire until it begins to thicken. Put dice of fried bread into the tureen ; pour on the milk and eggs, then the soup, and stir up well. SCALLOPED VEAL. Chop the cold veal and stuffing ; put a layer into a greased bake-dish ; season, and wet with the cold gravy. Lay chopped mushrooms upon this ; then bread-crumbs, with butter scattered over them. More meat seasoning, mushrooms and crumbs should fill the dish, with plenty of crumbs, profusely buttered, on top. Wet each layer of meat with gravy. Cover the dish, and bake until it bub- bles on top. Brown lightly, and send to table in the dish in which it was cooked. MASHED TURNIPS. Peel, slice, and cook soft in boiling salted water. Mash in a hot colander, pressing well. Season with salt, pepper and butter ; smooth into a heap in a root-dish, and put pats of pepper on top. STEWED TOMATOES. See Wednesday of Second Week in July. POTATOES, BOILED WHOLE. Peel as thin as possible. Put on in boiling water, a little salt, and cook fifteen minutes. Then, pour in a pint of cold water. This checks the boil and throws the meal, or starch, to the surface, Increase the heat, and boil until a fork will pierce the largest. Throw oft" the water ; set the pot on the range, and let the moisture evaporate. 428 JULY. Put the potatoes in a deep dish ; pour upon them a few spoonfuls of melted butter mixed with chopped parsley, and serve. BANANAS, ORANGES, AND CHERRIES. Put bananas and oranges in one dish ; the cherries, bestrewed with cracked ice, in another. ICED COFFEE AND FANCY BISCUITS. See Monday of Second Week in July. fflljtvb tUeclf. Bread-and-Cheese Porridge. Lamb Chops. Puree of Peas and Onion. Lima Beans. Moulded Potato. Currant Jelly. Currants and Raspberries. Unity Cake. BREAD-AND CHKESE PORRIDGE. 2 Ibs. of beef-bones cracked ; 2 Ibs. coarse mutton lean and chopped ; i Ib. stale bread-crusts, dried to crispness in the oven ; 4 quarts of water ; 4 tablespoon- fuls fine grated cheese ; 2 tablespoon fills of butter, rolled in flour ; pepper, salt, and chopped parsley ; i onion. Put on the bones, meat, and onion in the water, and boil three hours. Cool, and take off the fat. Season, and re-heat. Put in the crusts ; cook very slowly until they are like a jelly. Take them from the fire ; beat in a bowl until smooth ; put back into the soup, and simmei fifteen minutes. Stir in the butter ; cook five minutes, and pour upon the cheese in the tureen. Stir up well. LAMB CHOPS. Trim very neatly, and broil upon a buttered gridiron over a clear fire, turning often. Wind a strip of frilled tissue-paper about the bit of bare bone left upon each one. THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 429 PUR E OF PEAS AND ONION. T^ke a cupful of broth from your soup-pot, before adding the bread. Cool, and take off the fat, and return to the fire with two quarts of green peas and a sliced onion. Set the vessel containing it in a saucepan of boiling water, and cook, closely covered, until the peas begin to break. Put into a bowl ; bruise the peas with a potato pestle, and return to the fire with the liquor in which they were stewed. Add a little parsley and a lump of sugar, with pepper, salt, and butter. Simmer five min- utes, and turn out into a deep dish. LIMA BEANS. Shell, and cook in boiling, salted water twenty-five minutes. Drain, season, and serve. MOULDED POTATO. Mash or rather, beat up lightly with a fork. Work in butter and milk, but do not get it too soft. Fill small cups wet with cold water with the potato, pack down firmly and turn out upon a greased bake- pan. Brown in a quick oven until they are of a russet hue ; glazing with butter, as they color. Transfer to a flat, hot dish. CURRANTS AND RASPBERRIES. Slightly mash the currants, leaving as many whole ones as you break. Sweeten plentifully, and, just before serv- ing, mix with them an equal quantity of red or white raspberries, fresh and whole. UNITY CAKE. Make fresh for the day, according to directions given in "BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON, AND TEA," page 333. 430 JULY. ttytrti ffittk. Ox-tail Soup. Beefsteak with Wine Sauce. Cream Onions. Baked Squash. Raw Tomatoes. Ambrosia Custard. OX-TAIL SOUP. 2 ox-tails ; bunch of thyme and parsley ; i large onion, sliced ; 2 grated carrots ; Ib. fat salt pork ; 6 quarts of water ; i small onion stuck with six cloves ; browned flour; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter. Slice the pork, and fry. When the fat has covered the bottom of the pan, put in the large sliced onion and fry to a good brown. Then add the tails, cut at each joint. When they have been in five minutes, take them out and put into the soup-pot with the fried onion and water. Cover and cook slowly two hours. Then put in the car- rots, herbs, and clove onion, and stew two hours more. Strain, pulping the vegetables ; cool, take off the fat, and season the soup. Put over the fire, and when it again simmers, stir in the butter melted and rubbed into the browned flour to form a paste. Boil up once and it is ready. Put the remnants of the tails into a jar, or bowl, and add to them half the soup. When cold put on ice for to-morrow. BEEFSTEAK WITH WINE SAUCE. Flatten and broil your steak as usual, but when you lay it upon the hot-water dish, have ready this sauce : i glass of brown sherry ; i large spoonful of mushroom or walnut catsup ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, rolled in a mere dust of flour ; pepper and salt to taste. Heat to boiling quickly in a saucepan, and when it has been poured upon the steak, cover and let stand a few minutes before you serve. CREAM ONIONS. Boil in two waters. Drain, and if they are large, cut into quarters, and pour over them a cup of scalding milk THIRD WEEKTHURSDAY. 43* in which a pinch of soda has been stirred. Set over the fire, add a tablespoonful of butter, half a teaspoonful of corn-starch, wet with milk, a little minced parsley, with pep- per and salt. Simmer three minutes, and pour out. BAKED SQUASH. See Friday, First Week in July. RAW TOMATOES. See Friday, Second Week in July. AMBROSIA CUSTARD. i quart of milk ; 5 eggs ; 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar for custard and 2 for meringue ; i grated cocoanut; bitter almond flavoring. Heat the milk ; pour upon the sugar beaten up with the yolks of all the eggs and the whites of two. Cook, stirring all the time, until it begins to thicken. Pour it hot upon one-third of the grated cocoanut. Stir up well ; flavor, and when cold put into a glass dish. Cover it with grated cocoanut, and heap high upon this a meringue made of the reserved whites and sugar. tUeek. Yesterday's Soup. Roast Chickens. Stewed Potatoes. Stuffed Tomatoes. . Green Corn Pudding. Lemon Meringue Pie. YESTERDAY'S SOUP. Take every particle of fat from the cake of soup jelly you will find in your refrigerator ; add a cup of boiling water to thin it sufficiently to pour off from the meat ; strain it into the soup-pot, boil gently once and skim ; add seasoning if you find it needed, also a glass of wine and the juice of a lemon, and pour out. 432 JULY. ROAST CHICKENS. Clean, wash out in several waters, and stuff with crumbs mixed in tepid water, then drained and put over the fire in a saucepan with a little hot butter in the bottom. Stir the crumbs until hot and almost dry, add chopped parsley, salt and pepper ; take it off and beat in two frothed eggs. Fill the chickens, sew up the vents, and tie up the necks. Cover the breasts with very greasy writing-paper. Put a cup of boiling water into the dripping-pan and roast one hour, basting freely. Ten minutes before taking up the fowls, remove the papers and baste the breasts three times with butter while browning. Pour off the fat from the gravy ; add the chopped yolks of two eggs, a little browned flour, with pepper and salt. Boil up and serve in a boat. Salt the giblets slightly and keep upon ice for to-mor- row's soup. STEWED POTATOES. Pare and cut in rather large dice. Stew twenty minutes in boiling salted water. Pour nearly all of this off and put on as much cold milk. Stew ten minutes more ; stir in a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour ; a little minced parsley, pepper and salt. Simmer five minutes and pour out. STUFFED TOMATOES. Select enough large, smooth tomatoes to fill a bake- dish. Cut a piece from the top of each to serve as a cover. Scoop out the pulp, taking care not to injure the skin. Chop up a few spoonfuls of the meat from the soup ; mix with it a little chopped pork and bread-crumbs. Add the tomato pulp, pepper and sugar, and fill the skins. Put on the tops, and bake, covered, half an hour. Un- cover and brown. GREEN CORN PUDDING. See Saturday, First Week in July, LEMU>N MERINGUE PIE. 3 e gg s ) I great spoonful of butter ; j- cup 'i>f white sugar. Juice and grated peel of i lemon. THIRD WEEK FRIDAY. 433 Cream butter and sugar ; beat in yolks and lemon, and fill one large open shell of paste, or two small ones. Beat the whites to a stiff meringue, with three tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, and a little rose-water. When the pies are done, draw to the door of the oven, spread quickly with this mixture, and shut them in again for three min utes. Eat cold. l)trb lllttk. Jriban. Giblet Soup. Halibut a la Royale. Chicken Cutlets. Mashed Potatoes. Lettuce Salad. Green Peas. Coffee Cream. GIBLET SOUP. Break up the skeletons of your roast chicken. Put bones, stuffing, and giblets into a soup-pot with four quarts of water. Boil one hour, and take out the giblets. Boil the rest an hour more ; strain, cool, and skim. Then put back over the fire to simmer. Meanwhile, you should have fried an onion sliced in two tablespoonfuls of butter ; then taking out the onion, have stirred in a great spoonful of browned flour, and cooked it, stirring inces- santly five minutes. Now thin this mixture with a few spoonfuls of your soup, and strain it into the soup-kettle. Lastly, add the chopped giblets ; season well, and pour out. HALIBUT A LA ROYALE. 6 Ibs. of halibut in one piece ; \ cup of bread crumbs ; 2 tablespoonfuls chopped fat salt pork; 2 teaspoonfuls es-st-nce of anchovy ; cup of melted butter ; i cup of boil- ing water. Juice of i lemon. Pepper and salt. Lay the halibut in salt and water two hours. Wipe it ; make incisions on each side of the back-bone, and put in a dressing made of bread-crumbs, chopped pork, pepper, salt and a little anchovy. Pour into the bottom of a neat 434 JULY. bake-dish the butter, hot water, lemon and anchovy es- sence. Lay in the fish ; cover, and bake one hour, bast- ing often. Send to table in the dish. CHICKEN CUTLETS. The meat of your cold fowls chopped very fine ; i cup- ful of drawn butter or gravy ; 4 eggs ; cupful of bread- crumbs ; pepper and salt ; beaten egg and rolled cracker. Put the gravy into a saucepan, and when hot, stir in the meat, well seasoned, and the bread-crumbs. As they heat, add the beaten eggs, and mix all well together, stir- ring constantly for three minutes ; then pour out upon a broad dish to cool. When cold and stiff, cut into oblong cakes, three inches long by two wide ; dip in egg, then in cracker, and fry in hot lard. Drain, and pile upon a flat dish, log-cabin-wise, and serve. MASHED POTATOES. Serve with the fish. GREEN PEAS. See Friday of Second Week in July. LETTUCE SALAD. See Monday, Second Week in July. COFFEE CREAM. i quart of rich milk ; i cup of strong, made coffee ; i pint of sweet cream, whipped in a syllabub churn ; yolks of 3 beaten eggs ; i cup of sugar ; i package of Cooper's Gelatine, soaked one hour in a little cold water. Scald the milk ; add a pinch of soda ; put in the hot coffee, and pour upon the beaten yolks and sugar. Re- turn to the fire, and stir until it begins to thicken ; when, add the gelatine, and take off. Stir until the gelatine has dissolved. When perfectly cold, whip in, by degrees, the frothed cream, and put in a wet mould to form. Keep upon the ice until wanted. THIRD WEEK SATURDAY. 435 Sljirtr tthtk. Julienne Soup. Mutton Stew with Peas. Potato Croquettes. Boiled Corn, Cucumbers. Cream Cake and Chocolate. JULIENNE SOUP. 2 Ibs. of beef, and the same of lean veal ; r Ib. of lean ham ; 2 carrots ; 2 turnips ; 2 onions ; I cup of Lima beans; 3 tablespoonfuls of butter; sweet herbs; pepper and salt ; 6 quarts of water. Cut the meat small, and cook with herbs in the water four hours. Strain. Put the meat and half of the stock, well seasoned, upon the ice. Cool the rest, skim, season, and put back into the pot. Prepare your vegetables in the following manner : Put the butter into a frying-pan, and when hot, fry the onion, sliced, in it ; then, carrots and turnips cut into strips less than an inch long. When they have cooked five minutes, put them into the soup. Sim- mer half an hour ; skim, and put in the beans. Cook gently half an hour more, and pour out. MUTTON STEW WITH PEAS. Take three pounds from the breast, and cut it into inch-square pieces. Dredge these with flour, and fry brown in good dripping ; add a small, sliced onion, and a tablespoonful of chopped herbs. Cover well with cold water, put on the saucepan-lid, and stew gently until very tender. Take out the meat, and keep hot over boiling water ; strain and season the gravy ; put in a quart of young peas, and stew slowly until the peas are done. Put back the meat, boil up once, and serve. POTATO CROQUETTES. Mash two cups of potatoes light and smooth ; season with pepper, salt, and a little nutmeg, and beat in two eggs. Put a spoonful of dripping into a frying-pan, arid 436 JULY. when it hisses, stir ih the potato mixture. Keep stirring until it is very hot. Spread upon a dish to cool. When cold, mould into croquettes ; dip in beaten egg, then in rolled cracker, and fry to a fine yellow-brown. Drain well, and heap upon a dish. BOILED CORN. See Thursday, Fourth Week in June. RAW CUCUMBERS. See Saturday, Second Week in July. CREAM-CAKE AND CHOCOLATE. 2 cups of powdered sugar; J cupful of butter; 4 eggs; J cupful of milk ; 3 cups of prepared flour. Cream butter and sugar ; add the beaten yolks, the milk, finally the frothed whites, alternately with the flour. Bake in jelly-cake tins. When cold, spread the following mixture between them : i cup of milk ; 2 small teaspoonfuls of corn-starch ; i egg ; i teaspoonful of vanilla ; cup of sugar. Scald the milk ; add the corn-starch, wet with a little cold milk ; pour upon the beaten eggs and sugar. Re- turn to the fire, and stir until quite thick. Flavor when cold. Make a good cup of chocolate, and pass with this delicious cake. Jburtl) Uhek. Snniag. Chicken Soup with Eggs. Braised Beef. Stewed Onions. Whipped Potatoes. Cream Squash. Tomato Salad. Claret Jelly and Cake. CHICKEN SOUP WITH EGGS. i large chicken ; 4 quarts of water ; i cup of milk ; i cup of raw rice ; pepper, salt, and chopped parsley ; 6 eggs FOURTH WEEK SUNDAY. 437 Put on the chicken, trussed, but not stuffed, in the water with the rice. Boil three hours, or until the bones are ready to slip from the meat. Take out the chicken, salt it and put by in a cool place for to-morrow. Cool and skim the soup ; season it, and rub through a soup- sieve back into the pot, rice and all. The rice should be boiled to pieces, and pass freely through the sieve. 'Put in the parsley, and simmer, while you heat the milk in a separate vessel, and poach an egg for each person who is to partake of the soup. Trim each egg round when you have taken it from the water, and lay carefully upon a flat dish. Pour the hot milk into the tureen ; then the soup. Stir well, and lay the eggs upon the top, one by one, taking pains not to break them. BRAISED BEEF. Lay a piece of beef-fillet, without bone, weighing five or six pounds, in a broad pot. Scatter sliced onion over it, salt slightly, and, if you have any good gravy, add this to the cupful of boiling water you pour over the meat. Cover tightly, and cook slowly an hour and a half, adding boiling water should the gravy sink too low. When done, dredge with flour, set in a hot oven, and, as the flour browns, baste with butter, to glaze. It should not remain longer than ten minutes in the oven. Strain the gravy ; pour off the top fat : put into a saucepan with a little browned flour and a tablespoonful of catsup. Boil until thickened ; pour a few spoonfuls over the meat, the rest into a boat. STEWED ONIONS. Cook as on Wednesday, Third Week in July. WHIPPED POTATOES. Pare, boil, and dry out the potatoes, and whip, first into powder, then, adding milk and butter, to a cream ; at last, beat in the stiffened white of an egg. Pile roughly in a deep dish, and set in the oven to warm up, but not to " crust " or brown, and send to table. 438 JUL Y. CREAM SQUASH. Pare, quarter, boil in hot, salted water, and mash. Put into a saucepan a half-cup of hot milk, a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour, and a little salt and pepper. Stir in the squash until well mixed and ready to boil. Turn out into a deep dish. TOMATO SALAD. Refer to Friday, Second Week in July. CLARET JELLY AND CAKE. i package Coxe's gelatine, soaked in a large cup of water ; 2 cups of sugar ; 2 cups fine claret ; i pint of boiling water ; the juice of one lemon ; a pinch of mace. Put soaked gelatine, sugar, and lemon together, and cover for half an hour. Pour on the boiling water ; stir until melted, and strain through a flannel bag. Add the wine, and strain, without squeezing, through double flan- nel. Put in a wet mould, and set in ice. Turn out upon a cold glass dish, and pass cake with it. Make it on Saturday. Jburtl) lUtek. fllcmbaj). A Baked Soup. Chicken Scallop. Green Peas. New Potatoes. Lettuce. Huckleberries, Cream, and Cake. A BAKED SOUP. 3 Ibs. of lean mutton, boneless, and cut into strips , i carrot ; i turnip ; i onion all cut into dice ; 6 ripe tomatoes, sliced thin ; i pint young green peas ; i cup of green corn cut from the cob; bunch of sweet herbs, FOURTH WEEK MONDAY. 439 chopped ; 2 quarts of cold water ; pepper and salt ; i tablespoonful of sugar ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, cut into bits and rolled in flour. Put all these into a stout- stone jar early in the day. Fit on a tight top, putting a paste of flour and water over the crack between the mouth of the jar and the cover, and set within a dripping-pan of boiling water in the oven. Do nothing more to it until dinner-time, except to add more boiling water as that in the pan evaporates. When ready for the soup, pour into the tureen without straining. CHICKEN SCALLOP. Cut cold boiled chicken into pieces less than an inch long. Have ready a cup of yesterday's soup in a sauce- pan or some drawn butter and, when hot, stir in the meat. Just boil, and pour upon a beaten egg. Cover the bottom of a bake-dish with fine crumbs ; pour in the mix- ture, rather highly seasoned ; strew with more crumbs ; put drops of butter over the surface, and bake, covered, half an hour ; then brown quickly. GREEN PEAS. Shell, and boil in hot salted water from twenty to twenty-five minutes, adding a lump of sugar, if they are not freshly gathered. Drain well ; dish, and season with pepper, salt, and butter. NEW POTATOES. Scrape off the skins, and cook in boiling salted water, until a fork will go in easily. Turn off all the water. Set the uncovered pot for a moment upon the range, throw- ing in a little fine salt. Then send up in a dish, with a napkin thrown lightly over it. LETTUCE. Do not trouble yourself to-day with making salad-dress- ing. Pick apart the lettuce leaves, put into a salad-bowl with cracked ice below and among them, and pass the oil, pepper, salt, and vinegar with it. 440 JULY. HUCKLEBERRIES, CREAM, AND CAKE. Pick over and wash the berries. Drain, and serve in a glass dish. Send around sugar and cream with them, and follow with the cake-basket. Jcrnrtl) ttlcek. , Potage aux Croutons. Devilled Crab. Corned Beef and Turnips. Lima Beans. Beets. Plain Boiled Pudding. POTAGE AUX CROUTONS. 3 Ibs. of lean beef; fried bread; i onion, sliced; 3 quarts of water ; chopped herbs ; i carrot, cut up ; pep- per, salt, and i great spoonful of clear catsup walnut or mushroom ; dripping. Fry meat and vegetables ten minutes in plenty of hot dripping. Drain this off, and set by in the pan while you put meat, vegetables, and herbs on in the water, and set where they will heat slowly to a boil. Prepare the cro&- tons by cutting out, with the top of a pepper-box, small rounds of stale bread, and frying them in the dripping used for the beef, etc. Drain, and set these in an open oven, that they may get very dry. Boil the soup three hours. Strain ; cool, skim, season ; boil and skim five minutes, and put in the croutons. Heat three minutes, but do not boil, and pour out. DEVILLED CRAB. i cup of crab-meat, picked from the shells of well-boiled crabs; 2 tablespoonfuls of fine bread-crumbs or rolled cracker ; yolks of two hard-boiled eggs, chopped ; juice of a lemon ; teaspoonful of made mustard ; a little Cayenne pepper and salt ; i cup of good drawn butter. FOURTH WEEK TUESDAY. . 441 Mix one spoonful of the crumbs with the chopped crab- meat, yolks, seasoning, and drawn butter. Fill scallop- shells large clam-shells will do, or small pate-pans with the mixture ; sift crumbs over the top, and heat to slight browning in a quick oven. CORNED BEEF AND TURNIPS. Cook the beef in plenty of cold water, bringing slowly to the boil. Cook fifteen minutes to the pound after it begins to simmer. When about three-quarters done put in a dozen turnips, peeled and quartered. When you dish the beef, lay these unmashed about it. Serve the meat with drawn butter, having as a base the pot-liquor. Save the rest of the liquor for to-morrow's soup. LIMA BEANS. Shell, and cook in boiling salted water about twenty- five minutes. Then drain, pour over them a little drawn butter, well peppered, and serve. BEETS. Be careful, in cutting off the tops and washing them, not to break the skins, or they will bleed away their color in the water. Cook in boiling water one hour. Scrape ; slice ; salt, pepper, and butter, and pour a few spoonfuls of boiling vinegar upon them after they are dished. PLAIN BOILED PUDDING. 3 heaping cups of flour ; 2 cups of buttermilk or "lop* pered " milk ; \full teaspoonful of soda, dissolved in boil- ing water ; cupful of powdered suet ; i teaspoonful of salt. Stir the sour milk into the flour gradually until it is free from lumps. Put in salt and suet ; lastly, beat in the soda water quickly and faithfully. Put into a buttered mould, and boil an hour and a half. Eat hot with sauce. 19* 442 JULY. ir.r.. i . : ;> ^Jmnr^ ^;:->m> ylU Jourtl) tDeek. it)ebne0bag. Butter (or Lima) Bean Soup. Breaded Veal Cutlets. Mashed Potatoes Succotash. Devilled Tomatoes. Baked Huckleberry Pudding. BUTTER (OR LIMA) BEAN SOUP. The pot-liquor from your beef; i quart of butter (or Lima) beans ; ^ cup corn-meal, scalded and left to cool ; i onion ; bunch of parsley ; 2 teaspoonfuls essence of celery ; 2 beaten eggs ; pepper. Take the fat from the pot-liquor and put over the fire with the beans, onion, and scalded meal. The latter should be soft as thin mush. Stir until this is well mixed with the soup, and boil gently, stirring now and then, until the beans are broken to pieces. Rub to a puree through a colander ; put in pepper and chopped parsley. Simmer five minutes, and pour a cupful upon the beaten eggs. Stir this back into the soup ; cook one minute, without quite boiling, and serve. Pass sliced lemon with it. BREADED VEAL CUTLETS. Trim and flatten the cutlets ; pepper and salt, and roll in beaten egg ; then in pounded cracker. Fry rather slowly in good dripping ; turning when the lower side is brown. Drain off the fat; squeeze a little lemon-juice upon each, and serve in a hot, flat dish MASHED POTATOES. Mash very soft with butter and milk ; season and heap irregularly upon a dish. SUCCOTASH. 6 ears of corn ; i pint of string-beans, trimmed and cut into short pieces ; i tablespoonful of butter rolled ic flour ; i cup of milk ; pepper and salt. FOURTH WEEK WEDNESDAY. 443 Cut the corn from the cob, bruising as little as possible. Put over the fire with the beans in enough hot water, salted, to cover them, and stew gently half an hour. Turn off nearly all the water, and add a cupful of milk. Simmer in this, stirring to prevent burning, twenty min- utes ; add the floured butter, the pepper and salt, and stew ten minutes. Serve in a deep dish. DEVILLED TOMATOES. 12 fine, firm tomatoes, pared and sliced nearly half *an inch thick ; yolks of 3 hard-boiled eggs, pounded ; 3 tablespoonfuls of melted butter, and same of vinegar ; 2 raw eggs, beaten light ; i teaspoonful sugar, and half as much, each, of made mustard and salt ; a pinch of Cayenne. Rub butter, pounded yolks, pepper, salt, mustard and sugar together. Beat hard, add vinegar, and heat to a boil. Put this upon the beaten eggs and whip to a smooth cream. Set in hot water while you broil the tomatoes in an oyster-broiler, over clear coals. Lay this upon a hot chafing-dish, and pour the scalding dressing upon them. BAKED HUCKLEBERRY PUDDING. i pint of milk ; 2 eggs ; i quart of flour (sifted) ; i gill yeast ; i saltspoonful of salt ; i teaspoonful of boiling water ; nearly a quart of berries, dredged with flour. Make a batter of these ingredients leaving out the berries and set in a warm place to rise, for about four hours. If light then, stir in the dredged berries ; pour into a buttered cake-mould, and bake one hour in a mod- erate oven. Turn out, and eat with hard sauce. 444 JULY. Jburtl) ttleek. Bean and Tomato Soup. Fricasseed Chickens. Boiled Onions with Sauce Green Pea Cakes. Potatoes a la Lyonnaise. Baked Cup Custards. BEAN AND TOMATO SOUP. Cut up a quart of ripe tomatoes ; season with pepper, salt and sugar, and stew until broken to pieces. Rub through a colander ; add what was left of yesterday's bean soup ; heat together almost to boiling, and pour upon dice of fried bread in the tureen. FRICASSEED CHICKEN. Clean, wash, and cut the fowls into joints. Put a layer of fat salt pork in the bottom of a pot ; lay the chicken upon this * pepper and salt. Cover with more pork, and pour in three tablespoonfuls of hot water mixed with as much butter. Finally, drop in a little minced onion. Cover tightly, and heat very slowly. After the chickens begin to stew, cook steadily one hour, if they are tender. If not, increase the time at discretion. When they are done, take up and keep hot. Add a little boiling water to the gravy ; strain, thicken with browned flour, boil up and pour upon the fowls. BOILED ONIONS. WITH SAUCE. Boil fifteen minutes in hot salted water. Throw this off; add a little gravy (made, if you have none ready, by boiling a chicken-scrag and feet in a pint of water, until there is less than a cupful of broth, then seasoning and thickening this), with chopped parsley. Stew five minutes longer, or until tender, and dish. GREEN PEA CAKES. 2 cups of boiled green peas, mashed hot with pepper, FOURTH WEEK FRIDAY. 445 salt, and butter ; 2 beaten eggs ; i cup of milk ; cup of prepared flour. Mix and beat hard. Fry as you would griddle- cakes. POTATOES 1 LA LYONNAISE. Chop cold parboiled potatoes into coarse dice. Put some butter in a frying-pan, and, when hot, throw in a ta- blespoonful of chopped onion and a little parsley. Cook one minute ; add the potatoes, and stir until very hot and glazed with the butter, but not until colored. Serve hot. BAKED CUP CUSTARDS. i quart of milk ; 5 eggs ; i cup of sugar ; lemon flavor- ing for custard, and lemon-juice for the meringue. Heat the milk, add all but two tablespoonfuls of sugar to the beaten yolks of all the eggs and the whites of two, and pour the scalding milk upon them, mixing in well. Fill buttered stone-china cups with this custard ; set in a dripping-pan of hot water, and bake until " set." Then pile upon them roughly a meringue made of the reserved whites, whipped stiff with the rest of the powdered sugar and. the lemon-juice. Shut the oven until these begin to be tinged. Eat cold from the cups. -fotirtl) tDetk. Corn Soup, Mayonnaise of Lobster. Beefsteak au Maitre d'Hdtel. Stewed Lima Beans. Fried Cucumbers. Boiled Potatoes. Blackberry Pie. Iced Tea. CORN SOUP. i pint of grated corn just from the cob ; 3 pints of boiling water j i pint of hot milk ; 3 tablespoonfuls of 446 JULY. butter ; i heaping tablespoonful of flour ; pepper ; salt ; yolks of 2 eggs. Put on the cobs, after you have grated off the corn, in the boiling water, and cook half an hour. Take them out and put in the corn. Boil one hour or until very soft. Pulp through the colander back into the water. Season, and set over the fire to simmer. Put the butter into a saucepan, and, when hot, stir in the flour. Cook ten minutes, stirring all the while. Add a little of the soup to thin it, and empty the saucepan into the soup-pot, stir- ring the contents until smooth. Heat the milk in another saucepan, pour upon the beaten yolks, cook one minute, and pour into the tureen. Season with pepper and salt, and stir the soup into it. This is a remarkably nice soup. MAYONNAISE OF LOBSTER. Meat of one large boiled lobster, cold and cut into dice. Lay aside the coral for the dressing. Make this of these ingredients : 4 hard boiled eggs ; 2 tablespoon- fuls best salad-oil ; i teaspoonful, each, of made mustard, salt, white sugar, and anchovy sauce ; vinegar and cayenne to taste. Pound the yolks perfectly smooth, and rub in the coral and other ingredients with great care, moistening with vinegar as they stiffen, until a smooth cream is the result. Pour this over the minced lobster, and toss up well with a silver fork. Heap in the centre of your salad-bowl, and lay cool, white lettuce-hearts around it, helping out these with the lobster. Inside of the lettuce lay a chain of the sliced boiled whites. BEEFSTEAK AU MA!TRE D' HOTEL. Broil your beefsteak in the usual manner. Lay upon the chafing-dish and pour upon it a sauce made of i great spoonful of butter ; i teaspoonful very finely minced pars- ley ; pepper, salt and the juice of a lemon heated almost to boiling in a clean saucepan. Put a hot cover over the steak, and let it stand five minutes before serving. FOURTH WEEK SATURDAY. 447 STEWED LIMA BEANS. Boil in hot salted water fifteen minutes. Drain half of this off and stir in for a quart of beans a tablespoonful of very finely chopped sweet salt pork the whitest fat slice you can get a teaspoonful of minced onion, a little chopped parsley : pepper and a cupful of hot milk, with' a pinch of soda stirred in to prevent curdling. Stew slowly fifteen minutes more ; stir in a scant tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour ; cook ten minutes and pour out. FRIED CUCUMBERS. See Wednesday, First Week in July. BOILED POTATOES. See Monday of this wejk. BLACKBERRY PIE. Line a pie-dish with good crust, and fill with ripe berries, sweetening plentifully. Cover with another crust and bake in a moderate oven. Eat cold with white sugar sifted over it. ICED TEA. See Sunday, Third Week in July. JFottrtl) tihek. Kilkenny Soup. Mutton Chops. Ragout of Vegetables. Stewed Tomatoes. Indian Pudding. KILKENNY SOUP. 3 Ibs. of lean beef; 2 Ibs. scrag of mutton, cut up small ; I Ib. lean ham ; 3 sliced onions ; 3 carrots ; 2 tur- 448 JULY. nips ; bunch of sweet herbs ; of a cup of Irish oatmeal; previously soaked four hours in a little tepid water ; 6 quarts of cold water ; pepper and salt ; 6 parboiled pota- toes, sliced. Crack the bones, and cut the meat into strips. Cover with the water, and bring slowly to the boil. When this has lasted one hour, skim off the top of the pot, and put in the onions fried brown in dripping, the other vegeta- bles sliced, and the herbs; cook three hours longer, and strain the soup. Season the meat pretty highly and pour upon it in a jar or bowl half the clear stock. Set upon the ice for Sunday, when cold. Rub the vegetables through the colander into the rest of the stock : cool, take off the fat, season, add the sliced potatoes and the oatmeal, and cook one hour more. Strain into the tureen. MUTTON CHOPS. Trim, leaving a bit of bare bone at the end of each. Pepper, and broil over a clear fire. Lay upon a hot dish ; salt and butter both sides of each chop, and lay outside of your stewed tomatoes. RAGOUT OF VEGETABLES. Parboil i carrot, i turnip, 2 potatoes, 2 ears of corn, i cup of Lima beans, and the same of peas, i onion, and with them Ib. of fat salt pork. Drain off the water, and lay aside the pork. Slice carrots, turnips, potatoes and onion. Put into a saucepan with a cup of your soup taken out before thickening ; season well ; cut the corn from the cob. and add with the peas, beans, and a sliced tomato as soon as the rest are hot. Stew all together half an hour. Stir in a great lump of butter rolled in flour ; stew five minutes and pour into a deep dish. STEWED TOMATOES. Loosen the skins with hot water, peel and slice. Stew until broken to p:eces. .Pulp through a coarse sieve, rub- bing out all that will pass. Return to the fire with a little sugar, pepper and salt, and boil briskly fifteen minutes. FOURTH WEEK SATURDAY. 449 Stir in, then, enough fine crumbs to make it like a toler- ably thick batter ; add a great spoonful of butter ; stew, stirring well, five minutes ; pour in the middle of a flat dish, and arrange the chops around it. INDIAN PUDDING. i quart of milk ; 4 cups white Indian meal ; 3 eggs ; 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; i teaspoonful of salt ; Ib. powdered suet i teaspoonful of cinnamon ; teaspoon- mi of soda in the milk. Scald the milk, and, while hot, stir in meal, suet, and salt. When cold, beat in the yolks and sugar, the spice at last the whites. Beat long and hard ; pour into a buttered mould, leaving room for swelling and plenty of it put into a pot of boiling water almost up to the top, and boil four hours. Turn out, and eat hot with sauce. 45 AUGUST. AUGUST. Smt Macaroni Soup. Stewed Ducks. Green Peas. Boiled Corn. Fried Egg-plant, Potato Salad. Almond Custard with Cocoanut Frost. MACARONI SOUP. Take the fat from your cold soup ; pour the latter care- fully from the meat, and heat to a slow boil. Having re- moved all the scum that will rise, add a quarter pound of macaroni, broken into short pieces, boiled twenty minutes in hot salted water, and left to get cold. Simmer fifteen minutes, and serve. STEWED DUCKS. Clean, wash, and truss neatly, but do not stuff the ducks. Put into a broad saucepan, such as is generally known as a braising-pan. Strew with a little onion ; pour over them a cupful of weak broth made by boiling the gib- lets in a pint of water and reducing one-half. Season this well, and when you have poured it upon the ducks, cover the saucepan and cook gently an hour and a half or until the ducks are tender. Turn them when half done. Take up when ready ; keep hot while you strain and thicken the gravy with browned flour. Pour a little over the ducks, the rest into a boat. GREEN PEAS. See Monday, Fourth Week in July. FIKST WEEK SUNDAY. 451 BOILED CORN. Strip off all except the inner thin husk. Turn this down, and pick off the silk. Put back the husk, tie with a bit of thread, and cook in boiling water from twenty-five to thirty minutes. Break off the stalks and husks, and send to table wrapped in a napkin. FRIED EGG-PLANT. Cut in slices half an inch thick ; pare each carefully, and lay for one hour in salt and water, to remove the bit- ter taste. Then slightly salt and pepper each piece, and dip in a batter made of two eggs, half a cup of milk, and about a cup of flour, or enough for thin batter. Fry in hot lard or dripping to a fine brown ; drain well, and serve hot. POTATO SALAD. Slice six or eight cold boiled potatoes ; put them into a salad-dish, and season as follows : To two tablespoon- fuls of salad-oil add one teaspoonful of sugar, half as much, each, of made mustard, salt, and pepper, and nearly as much essence of celery. Rub to a smooth paste, and whip in, a teaspoonful at a time, five tablespoonfuls of vin egar. When well mixed, pour upon the salad. ALMOND CUSTARD, WITH COCOANUT FROST. 2 caps fresh milk, with a pinch of soda stirred in ; Ib. almonds, blanched, dried, and pounded ; 3 beaten eggs ; J cup powdered sugar ; rose-water ; i cocoanut, pared, thrown into cold water, and grated. Scald the milk ; stir in the almond-paste, which should have been mixed with rose-water, to prevent oiling. Boil one minute, and pour upon the beaten eggs and sugar. Return to the fire, and stir until the mixture be- gins to thicken. Take oft", and pour into a bowl. When cold, put on ice until Sunday. Then turn the custard into a glass dish, and heap high with the grated cocoanut Strew powdered sugar over all. 452 AUGUST. first ilUek. fttonbag. Clam Soup. Ragout of Duck and Green Peas. Onions, Potatoes, with Cheese Sauce. Raw Tomatoes. Blackberries, Huckleberries, and Cream. Sliced Cake. CLAM SOUP. 50 clams ; i quart of hot water ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter ; i tablespoonful of flour ; i teaspoonful chopped onion, and same of mixed thyme and parsley ; 2 cups of hot milk ; salt anc 1 cayenne ; 2 blades of mace. Cut the hard parts off from the cldms, putting the soft halves on ice. Strain off all the liquor, and put with the hard bits over the fire, with a quart of hot water, the onion, herbs, and mace. Simmer forty minutes. Heat the milk in another vessel not forgetting the pinch of soda ; stir in the butter, cut up in the rlour, and set in hot water until the soup is ready. At the end of the forty minutes, strain the clam broth, leaving out the hard parts. Put in the soft, season with salt and cayenne, and let them just boil. Pour into the tureen, add the milk and butter, and set the tureen in hot water five minutes before serving. RAGOUT OF DUCK AND GREEN PEAS. Cut the meat from the carcasses left since yesterday, making the slices as neat as you can. If you have not a large cupful of gravy left, make it by stewing down the bones and stuffing in a quart of water, cooling, skimming, and seasoning it. Put this in a saucepan with the pieces of duck, and set where it will get very hot, but not boil. Cook a quart of tender green peas in boiling water twenty minutes ; drain, and season them with pepper, salt, and butter. Take out the duck and pile in the ceil- tre of a dish ; put the peas around it like a green hedge, FIRST WEEK MONDAY. 453 Boil up the gravy once when you have stirred in a little browned flour, wet with cold water, and pour upon the meat. ONIONS. Boil in two waters, and after draining off the last, cover, barely, with boiling milk ; stir in a good piece of butter rolled in flour ; season with salt and pepper ; boil once, and pour into a deep dish. POTATOES, WITH CHEESE SAUCE. 12 boiled potatoes, mashed soft with milk and butter ; 4 tablespoonfuls of dry, grated cheese ; i cup of rich drawn butter; 2 beaten eggs ;. pepper, salt, and nutmeg ; triangles of fried bread ; cracker-dust. Stir into the hot drawn butter the pe^pper, salt, nutmeg, beaten eggs, and half the cheese, and heat, stirring con- stantly, until it thickens. Put a layer of potato upon a flat stone-china dish or a block-tin one round it to suit the shape of the dish, and cover with the sauce ; this, in turn, with a narrowing round of potatoes, but of equal thickness, and this with sauce, and so on, until you have a mound rounded on, top. Coat with sauce, then with the rest of the cheese and some pounded cracker. Lay the sippets of fried bread up against it at the base, and heat to brown- ing in a quick oven. BLACKBERRIES, HUCKLEBERRIES, AND CREAM. CAKE. Put the blackberries in a dish of their own. Some per- sons like them with cream, but more prefer to eat them simply strewed with sugar. Wash the huckleberries, and pass cream and sugar with them ; then a basket of simple cake. 454 AUGUST. Jirst 111 ttk. A Summer Soup. Veal Collops. Tomato Sauce, Raw Cucumbers. String Beans. Apple Compote au Gratin. A SUMMER SOUP. 3 Ibs. coarse, lean beef, cut into strips ; i Ib. ham or salt-pork bones ; 4 quarts of water ; 2 carrots ; 2 turnips ; 12 very small and young onions, minus the stalks ; i cup of strained tomato sauce ; i cup of green peas ; % cup of green corn, cut frem the cob ; pepper and salt. Cook the beef and bones in the water down to two quarts of liquid. Strain, cool, and skim. Meanwhile cut carrots and turnips into neat dice or strips, and par- boil with the onions five minutes in boili-ng water. Return your skimmed and seasoned stock to the fire, and when almost on the boil, put in the parboiled and drained vege- tables, with peas and corn. Simmer half an hour, add the tomato sauce, and cook ten minutes more, then pour out. VEAL COLLOPS. 3 Ibs. of lean veal, cut into square bits, two inches across, and more than half an inch thick ; Ib. fat salt pork, cut into lardoons ; i cup of gravy taken from your soup be- fore adding the vegetables ; i cup of drawn butter ; yolks of 2 eggs ; juice of half a lemon ; pepper, salt, nutmeg, and a pinch of mace. Lard the veal with the pork, and lay in a pan of boiling water three minutes. Have ready a cup of gravy seasoned with nutmeg, pepper, salt, and lemon-peel. Put in the meal, and simmer half an hour very gently. Beat the yolks into the drawn butter ; stir in the lemon-juice ; add to the contents of the saucepan, and stir, carefully, not to break the lardoons, five minutes. Heap the collops into a block upon a dish, and pour on the gravy. FIRST WEEK WEDNESDAY. 455 TOMATO SAUCE. Peel, slice, and stew twenty minutes ; then season with pepper, salt, butter rolled in flour, and sugar. Simmer five minutes, and pour out. STRING-BEANS. Cut off the ends \ " string " well, paring both sides with a keen knife ; cut into short pieces, and cook in boiling salt water forty minutes. Drain ; salt, pepper, and stir in a tablespoonful of butter, heated with a teaspoonful of vinegar. RAW CUCUMBERS. Pare, lay in ice-water one hour ; slice, and mix with pounded ice, in a glass bowl. Pass vinegar, salt, pepper, and oil with them. APPLE COMPOTE AU GRATIN. Make a quart of good apple sauce ; rubbing it very smooth, and beating in, while hot, sugar to make it quite sweet, nutmeg, and a great spoonful of butter. Make a heap of it (it should be rather stiff when cold) upon a deep plate, or pie-dish. Wash all over with beaten egg, and sift rolled cracker thickly upon it. Bake half an hour, and eat hot with butter and sugar. Jirst UJttlf. illebuesirag. Beef Noodle Soup. Boiled Chickens and Tongue. Fried Egg-plant. Lima Beans. Potato Puffs. Peaches and Cream. BEEF NOODLE SOUP. First to borrow an idea from worthy Mrs. Glass make the noodles. 456 AUGUST. Take 4 eggs, beaten one minute ; 3 tablespoonfuls of water ; enough flour (prepared) for stiff dough, and a saltspoonful of salt. Make up, and knead fifteen minutes. Roll into a thin sheet, and cut half of it into long strips, less than half an inch wide, and these, again, across at in- tervals of four inches. Now, roll the other half of the sheet up very closely, making a long scroll like a quill. Cut this across, with a keen knife, into little wheels less than a quarter of an inch wide. Lay all in a sunny win- dow to dry. Those intended for to-day will be fit to use in two hours. The rest will keep in a dry, cool place several days, and can be used as a vegetable, or in soups. Make a stock of 2 Ibs. of beef bones, the same of mut- ton bones and a slice of lean ham boiled in three quarts of water, with i onion, i carrot, and a bunch of herbs chopped. Boil down to two quarts, strain ; cool, skim and season, and put in a good handful of the noodles a few at a time so soon as it boils. Simmer twenty minutes. BOILED CHICKENS AND TONGUE. Clean, wash, and truss the chickens ; bind legs and wings down closely by tying up the fowls in white, per- fectly clean bobbinet lace, or mosquito net. Put on in plenty of boiling salted water and cook one hour, unless they are large and tough. In that case cook very slowly and long. Have ready a tongue, which has soaked sev- eral hours in warm water boiled, skimmed, and trimmed. Lay upon a dish with a chicken on each side. Pour a few spoonfuls of melted butter, heated, with a little chopped parsley, over all three ; set in a quick oven three minutes : anoint again with the butter and parsley, and send to table upon a hot, clean dish. ^Pass a boat of drawn butter with them. Save the chicken liquor, well seasoned, for to morrow's soup, also the water in which the tongue was boiled. If it is a smoked tongue, you can use the fat from the top for dripping. If corned, the liquoi can be added to soups and gravies. FRIED EGG-PLANT. Please refer to Sunday of this week FIRST WEEK THURSDAY. 457 LIMA BEANS. Shell and cook in boiling salted water about thirty min utes. Drain, dish, and stir in salt, pepper, and a good lump of butter. POTATO PUFFS. 6 boiled potatoes, mashed soft, with a tablespoon ful of milk, and as much butter ; 3 beaten eggs ; 6 table- spoonfuls of prepared flour, or enough to enable you to make into soft dough. Make into balls like doughnuts ; roll these in flour, and fry to a fine brown in hot lard. PEACHES AND CREAM. Pare and slice the peaches just before dinner, and cover the glass dish containing them to exclude the air as much as may be, since they soon change color. Do not sugar them in the dish. They then become preserves not fresh fruit. Pass " fruit sugar" and cream with them. ;ftr0t Chickens and Corn Soup. Game Mutton. Green Peas. Beets. Mashed Potatoes. Huckleberry Shortcake. CHICKEN AND CORN SOUP. The pot-liquor from yesterday's chickens; 12 ears of corn, grated from the cob ; i cup of milk ; i tablespoon- ful of butter, rolled in flour ; pepper, salt, and parsley. Take the fat from the top of your liquor, and save in the dripping-pot. Heat the broth to a boil ; put in the cobs from which the corn has been cut, and cook half an hour. Strain the soup ; put again over the fire and put in the ml corn. N. B. It is well to split each row of grains AUGUST. before cutting them off. Cook forty minutes, stir in but- ter and flour, with the parsley. Simmer five minutes, and serve. GAME MUTTON. Cut away the under-side of a nice leg of mutton, to make it as tlat as may be without exposing the bone. Put the pieces thus trimmed off over the fire, with a quart of water, and stew down one-half. Cool, skim, season, and re-heat. Meantime, lard the upper side of the meat with slender lardoons. . If you have not a larding-needle which is a pity use a long-bladed jack-knife to make diagonal incisions in the mutton ; then thrust in the lar- doons with your fingers, bringing both ends to the surface. Now rub the meat all over with hot butter and vinegar, letting the surplus trickle into the dripping-pan. Pour the boiling pint of gravy over the leg, and roast twelve minutes to the pound, basting every ten minutes, copi- ously. Just before taking it up, pour off the fat from the gravy ; dip up a few spoonfuls of the brown juice, and, mixing with as much currant jelly, beat in a little browned flour, wet up with cold water. Baste the. meat with this until a fine brown glaze covers it. Serve the gravy, well skimmed, in a boat. This is a delightful dish. Carve judiciously, so as to leave a seemly joint cold for to-mor- row. GREEN PEAS. See Sunday of this week. BEETS. See Tuesday, Fourth Week in July. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual, and serve without browning. HUCKLEBERRY SHORTCAKE. Please see Wednesday, Second Week in June, FIRST WEEK FRIDAY. 459 Jtr0t tlhek. Jriiratj. Sister Anne's Soup. Boiled Bass. Cold Mutton. Boiled Potatoes. Tomato Salad. Green Corn Pudding. Apple Custard Pie. SISTER ANNE'S SOUP. 12 potatoes, pared a-nd quartered; i onion, sliced; tablespoonful of minced parsley ; i cup of unskimmed milk (cream is still better) ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter ; i tablespoonful vf corn-starch, wet with cold milk ; i tea- spoonful of sugar ; 2 quarts of boiling water ; pinch of soda in the milk. Parboil the potatoes ten minutes ; throw off the water,* and put on two quarts of boiling water. -Cook in this one hour with the onion, replenishing from the kettle as it boils away. Then rub through a fine colander, season with pepper, salt, and parsley, and re-heat When it bub- bles up, stir in the butter and corn-starch ; boil up, add the hot milk, and serve. BOILED BASS. Put enough water in . the pot for the fish to swim in, easily. Add half a cup of vinegar, a teaspoonful of salt, an onion, a dozen black peppers, and a blade of mace. Sew up the fish in a piece of clean net, fitted to its shape. Heat slowly for the first half hour, then boil eight min- utes, at least, to the pound, quite fast. Unwrap, and pour over it a cup of drawn butter, based upon the liquor in which the fish was boiled, with the juice of half a lemon stirred into it. Garnish with sliced lemon. COLD MUTTON. Put on the larded joint, cold, garnished with nasturtium flowers and curled parsley. 460 AUGUST. BOILED POTATOES. Pass with the fish. Please see Monday of Fourth Week in July. TOMATO SALAD. Peel with a sharp knife. Slice, arrange in a salad-dish, and pour over it a dressing such as you made for potato salad on Sunday of this week. GREEN CORN PUDDING. 12 ears of sweet corn, each row of grains split length- wise, then cut close to the cob ; 4 eggs ; 2 cups of milk ; I tablespoonful of sugar, rubbed up with one of butter ; j[ teaspoonful of salt ; 2 tablespoonfnls of flour. Mix as you would a rice pudding, and bake one hour in A buttered dish. Serve in the bake-dish, hot. APPLE CUSTARD PIE. * Make a very sweet apple sauce t in which not a lump remains. To each cupful add two eggs beaten light and half a cupful of perfectly fresh milk. Have ready some paste-shells in pie-plates, fill with the custard and bake at once without an upper crust. Sivsi Dttk. Satttvbag. Pot au Feu. Ham and Eggs. Casserole of Potato. String-Beans. Cream Squash. Jelly Omelette. POT AU FEU. 5 Ibs. of brisket of beef bones cracked, and meat sliced ; the broken bones of your cold mutton, after you have sliced off the meat ; 2 grated carrots ; 2 grated tur- FIRST WEEK SATURDAY. nips ; i large fried onion ; bunch of sweet herbs ; I whole carrot ; i whole turnip, cut into dice ; i very small cauliflower, the bunches clipped apart ; 6 quarts of water ; pepper and salt. Put on the meat, bones, onion, grated vegetables and herbs in the soup-pot with the water ; cover closely and cook slowly five hours. Then strain ; take out the meat and set aside with half the stock, well seasoned, for Sun- day. Put on the ice when cold. Cool and skim the rest ; season ; put oack in the pot with a parboiled tur- nip, carrot, and cauliflower, the latter clipped into small clusters ; the others cut into dice.^ Simmer half an hour, and serve. BROILED HAM AND EGGS. Cut slices of cooked ham of equal size ; broil upon a gridiron over a clear fire. Lay upon a hot dish ; pepper, and spread each slice with a mixture of melted butter and a very little made mustard. Lay on each a poached egg, trimmed neatly. CASSEROLE OF POTATO. Mash eight or ten potatoes smooth with butter, salt, and work in the beaten whites of two eggs. Then fill a greased jelly-mould with it, pressing down firmly. Set aside to harden. When cold, scoop out about a teacup- ful, or less, from the middle, leaving firm, thick walls. Fill the cavity with a mince of cold mutton, highly seasoned, mixed with crumbs and moistened with gravy, and not too soft. Fit a piece of fried bread in the mouth of the filled cavity ; turn out the casserole carefully upon a stone-china or block-tin dish ; wash all over with beaten egg and set in a hot oven ten minutes to heat and glaze. The mince should be very hot when it goes in and stiff enough to keep its shape. STRING-BEANS. See Tuesday of this week. CREAM SQUASH. Boil and mash as usual ; then return to the saucepan with half a cup of milk to a quart of mashed squash \ 462 AUGUST. and when this simmers, stir in a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour ; pepper and salt to taste. Stir three min- utes and pour out. JELLY OMELETTE. Beat six eggs light yolks and whites separately ; then mix them and stir in lightly a tablespoonful of powdered sugar. Put a tablespoonful of butter into a frying-pan , and, when it boils, pour in the omelette. Lift at the edges and bottom with your spatula, as it cooks, and when " set " in the middle, put on one side of it a fe.w spoonfuls of fruit-jelly ; fold over, and turn out upon a hot dish. Strew po\vdered sugar over it. Second tlleek. Suntrag. Noodle Soup. Braised Chicken. Green Corn Sauta, Fried Egg-plant. Baked Tomatoes. Ice Cream and Cake. NOODLE SOUP. Take the fat from the top of your cold stock ; put the latter in a soup-pot ; heat to a gentle boil. Strain through thin muslin ; set again over the fire ; boil and skim one minute ; add nearly a cupful of dried noodles and simmer twenty minutes. If you have no noodles made, break a handful of vermicelli small, and cook the same length of time. BRAISED CHICKEN. Clean, wash, and stuff a pair of fowls. Lay slices of fat salt pork in a broad saucepan, and upon these the chickens with thin slices of pork tied over their breasts. Put two cupfuls of hot water in the pan, cover very securely and cook slowly an hour and a half longer should the chickens be tough and this is a good way to SECOND WEEK SUNDAY. cook such. At the end of that time remove the chicken to the hot-water dish ; cover to keep hot ; strain the gravy and return half to a small saucepan. Add a little browned flour wet with cold water, and boil fast to a bright brown glaze. Put the fowls in a quick oven ; take off the pork ; brush all over with the glaze, and when brown, serve. Take the fat from the reserved gravy, add the water in which the giblets were boiled ; the chopped giblets themselves, and a little browned flour, also pep- per. Boil up and serve in a boat. FRIED EGG-PLANT. Please see Sunday of First Week in- August. GREEN CORN SAUTE". Boil ; then cut from' the cob ; have ready in a sauce- pan a little butter, seasoned with salt and pepper. Stir in the corn and shake and toss until hot and glazed with the butter. BAKED TOMATOES. Pare with a sharp knife ; cut in thick slices. Put a layer of crumbs in the bottom of a bake-dish ; wet them with a little of your soup-stock, or other gravy ; cover with tomatoes, seasoned with butter, salt, pepper and sugar, more crumbs moistened with gravy, and so on, to the top of the dish, having well-moistened crumbs for the last layer. Cover, and bake half an hour ; then uncover and brown quickly. Serve in the bake-dish. ICE CREAM AND CAKE. For directions, too full and explicit to need repetition; please see Sunday, Second Week in July. * AUGUST. Seionfo tUeek. ittonbag. A Monday Soup. Scallop with Baked Eggs. Mashed Potatoes. Green Peas. Raw Cucumbers. Huckleberry Cake and Iced Coffee. A MONDAY SOUP. Strip all the meat from your chicken-bones, and set in a cool place, while you break the skeletons to pieces, and put in a soup-pot at the back of the range, with the dress- ing, skin, and gristly bits. Pour on three quarts of water and leave it to simmer always covered for three hours. Strain, rubbing the stuffing through the colander ; cool and skim ; return to the fire with a cupful of yesterday's soup (there is always a little left over, if it is only saved from the swill-pail), also strained. Have ready six Boston crackers split and dried in the oven for half an hour, but not scorched. Butter these ; lay in the heated tureen ; pour upon them two cups of boiling milk, and let soak, covered, while you salt and pepper your soup, and add a little minced parsley. Should there not be dressing enough to thicken it well, stir in a little corn-starch, wet with milk. Boil up, and pour upon the crackers. This soup need not consume fifteen minutes of your time, and is very savory. SCALLOP AND BAKED EGGS. Mince your chicken, but not small ; cover the bottom of a pudding-dish with fine crumbs ; put in the chicken, wet with gravy and seasoned to taste ; strew a good coat- ing of crumbs on top, and this with butter-bits. Set, cov- ered, in the oven. When the gravy bubbles to the surface remove the lid and break upon the scallop enough eggs to cover 'it well. Pepper and salt ; lay a piece of butter on each, and bake until well " set." SECOND WEEK MONDAY. 465 MASHED POTATOES. Boil, mash, and whip to a cream with a fork, mixing in butter, milk, salt and a dust of pepper, as you go on. Serve in a deep dish. GREEN PEAS. See Sunday of First Week in August. RAW CUCUMBERS. Pare ; lay in ice- water one hour ; slice and pile upon pounded ice in a glass dish, sending around condiments with them. HUCKLEBERRY CAKE. This cake should have been made on Saturday. It keeps well, and is much better the second day than the first. 5 e gg s > 3 CU P S f powdered sugar ; i cup of butter ; i cup of sweet milk ; 4 cups of prepared flour ; i teaspoon- ful mixed nutmeg and cinnamon ; 2 cups of huckleber- ries dredged with flour ; teaspoonful of soda stirred in boiling water and mixed with the milk. Cream butter and sugar; add the beaten yolks, the milk, the flour, alternately, with the whipped whites, and, lastly, the dredged berries. Bake in small loaves, or in patty-pans, in a moderate oven, covering as it begins to brown. It takes a longer time to bake than plain cake. ICED COFFEE. Make more coffee than needed for breakfast. Set by three or four cups of strong coffee, adding nearly one- third as much boiled milk, while both are hot. Set in ice, and, in seiving, put a lump of ice in each glass. ao* 466 AUGUST. Sucsiratt. Tapioca Soup. Beefsteak. Tomatoes and Corn, Stewed. Potatoes in Jackets. Mashed Squash. Peaches and Cream. TAPIOCA SOUP. 2 Ibs. lean veal ; 2 Ibs. beef-bones, cracked ; i slice of corned ham ; i carrot ; bun'ch of herbs ; i onion ; 8 large tomatoes ; i tablespoonful of sugar ; pepper and salt : J cup granulated tapioca, previously soaked two hours in a little cold water ; 3 quarts of water. Slice the meat and vegetables, and put on leaving out the tomatoes in the water, to boil slowly four hours. At the end of the second hour, skim well, and add the tomatoes. When the time is up, strain the soup, take out the meat, and rub the vegetables through the colander. Cool and skim ; season with sugar, pepper, salt, and minced herbs, and heat up anew. When it boils, add the tapioca ; stir clear, and serve. BEEFSTEAK. Flatten with the broad side of a hatchet, and broil upon a buttered gridiron over a clear fire. Lay upon a hot dish, pepper, salt, and put a bountiful spoonful of butter, cut into bits, upon it. Cover with a hot dish or lid for five minutes before it is to be carved. TOMATOES AND Coiysr, STEWED. Slice eight large tomatoes, when you have skinned them. Add the corn cut from six ears ; put into a sauce- pan and stew twenty minutes ; season with pepper, salt, and sugar. Add a great lump of butter rolled in flour, and cook ten minutes longer. POTATOES IN JACKETS. Put on in boiling salt water, and cook twenty minutes; then throw in a cup of cold water. Bring rapidly to the SECOND WEEK WEDNESDAY. second boil, and, when a fork pierces the largest easily, turn off the water, and set the uncovered pot upon the range, to dry off the moisture. Serve in a dish lined with a napkin. MASHED SQUASH. Pare, quarter, lay in cold water ten minutes, and cook soft in hot, salted water. Mash in a hot colander very quickly ; season with butter, pepper, and salt, and dish very hot. PEACHES AND CREAM. See Wednesday of First Week in August. Second Uhek. lUebne0ban. Cream Soup. Baked Calf s Head, with Mushrooms. Spinach. Succotash. Lettuce. Apple Pudding. CREAM SOUP. The liquor in which your calf's head was boiled ; i onion ; bunch of parsley ; i blade of mace ; i cup of milk ; yolks of 2 eggs ; pepper and salt ; i teaspoonful corn-starch, rubbed in cold water. Boil your calf's head early in the day, until you can just handle it without breaking it to pieces. It will be firmer for baking if left to get cold at this juncture. Skim the pot-liquor, put in the sliced onion, parsley, and mace, and boil slowly two hours. Strain, cool, skim, season, and thicken slightly with the corn-starch. Beat the yolks in a bowl, add the boiling milk, and pour into the heated tureen. Add the soup, stir up well, and serve. BAKED CALF'S HEAD, WITH MUSHROOMS. Set the cold boiled calf's head in the oven ; pour a cup of pot-liquor, boiling hot, over it, and bake half an hour, 468 AUGUST. basting very often.' Then dredge well with flour and baste twice with butter. Now coat thickly with a paste made of the brains, boiled, cooled and beaten smooth with an egg, and seasoned with pepper and salt. When this has browned, dish the head. Strain the gravy, add half a cupful of mushrooms, boiled and chopped, a very little browned flour, the juice of a lemon, and, if needed, a little boiling water. Stew one minute and send up in a boat. SPINACH. Boil in hot water, a little salt, about twenty minutes. Drain and press ; then chop very fine and return to the fire with a good lump of butter, salt, pepper, sugar, a few tablespoonfuls of cream, and beat to a smooth mixture like custard. Pour into a deep dish and serve. SUCCOTASH. Cut the corn from six or seven cobs ; mix with it one- third the quantity of Lima beans ; just cover with water, and stew gently half an hour. Turn off most of the water, add a cup of milk, and when this heats, a great lump of butter rolled in flour, with pepper and salt. Simmer half an hour longer, stirring up often. LETTUCE. Pick apart the heads and pile upon pounded ice, on a glass dish. Pass vinegar, pepper, salt, and powdered sugar with it. APPLE PUDDING. Sliced tart apples ; bread-crumbs ; butter ; sugar ; cin- namon. Butter a pudding-dish very well, and put in a layer of crumbs ; then dots of butter ; next, sliced apples strewed with sugar and cinnamon more buttered crumbs. Re- peat the layers in this order until your dish is full, with crumbs on top. Bake, covered, half an hour or forty minutes for a large dish. Turn out, pour liquid sauce over it, and eat hot with more. SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. 469 Seconb tDak. t)ur0irap. Beef Bouillon. Boiled Beef and Vegetables. Mashed Potatoes. Raw Tomatoes Peach Pie. BEEF BOUILLON. 4 6 Ibs. of round of beef, bound into a good shape with tape ; 3 small carrots ; 3 turnips ; 8 very small young onions, and one large one stuck with four cloves. Bunch of herbs ; i pint of string-beans and same of green peas ; i small head of cauliflower ; 4 quarts of water ; pepper and salt ; noodles, rice or sago. Put the beef whole into the water, and heat slowly to a boil. When you have taken off the scum, dip out a pint of the liquor, an$ put by for cooking the vegetables. Add to the .liquor left with the beef one sliced carrot, one tur- nip, also sliced, the large onion and the herbs. Stew slowly four hours ; take out the beef and keep hot over boiling water. Strain the soup, pulping the vegetables ; cool and skim, return to the fire, and, when it heats, add noodles, boiled rice or soaked German sago. Simmer five minutes and pour into the tureen. THE BEEF AND VEGETABLES. Pare the. two turnips and two carrots ; string the beans ; top, tail and skin the onions, and cook these, with the cauliflower, half an hour in the pint of hot broth, slightly salted. Then add the peas, and cook twenty minutes more. Serve the beef upon a hot dish ; slice the turnips and carrots and clip the cauliflower into bunches, and lay, each kind of vegetable by itself, about the meat. Make a sauce by heating and skimming a cupful of the soup- broth, stirring into it a great spoonful of butter rolled in a heaping teaspoonful of flour, and, when it has thickened, seasoning with pepper, salt, a little French mustard, and the juice of half a lemon. Serve in a boat. 47O AUGUST. MASHED POTATOES. Treat as directed on Monday of this week. RAW TOMATOES. See Friday of First Week in August. PEACH PIE. Pare, but do not stone ripe, rich peaches. Have ready your pie plates lined with a good paste ; put in the fruit ; sweeten well ; cover with pastry, and bake. Eat fresh not warm with powdered sugar sifted over them. Seconir tihek. Eel Soup. Broiled Chickens. Broiled Tomatoes. Scalloped Squash. Grape Jelly. Watermelons and Nutmeg Melons. EEL SOUP. 4 Ibs. of eels ; 3 quarts of water ; i chopped onion ; minced parsley ; a blade of mace ; pepper, salt, and lemon -juice ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in flour ; dripping. Clean the eels, removing all the fat, and cufinto short pieces. Fry a chopped onion brown in plenty of dripping ; wipe the eels dry and fry them in the same. Put into a pot with the onion and mace ; cover with three quarts of cold water, and stew slowly two hours. Then season ; stir in the floured butter ; simmer three minutes, add the lemon-juice, and pour out. BROILED CHICKENS. Clean, wash off the blood, but do not soak ; split down the backs, and lay upon a gridiron, or sticks laid over a SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. 47 l dripping-pan of boiling water. Cover with another pan and steam half an hour, in the oven or upon the range. Wipe off the moisture lightly, and cook upon a buttered gridiron over hot coals, turning when it drips. Let it get tender and brown without scorching. When done, lay upon a hot dish ; biitter well, pepper and salt, and send up at once. BROILED TOMATOES. Slice fine ripe tomatoes without peeling them, and cook, held between the wires of an oyster-broiler, until hissing hot and slightly browned. Lay upon a hot dish, and dress with a mixture of butter heated almost to boiling, with a little vinegar, salt, pepper, and mustard. SCALLOPED SQUASH. Mash in the usual way ; put upon a layer of crumbs laid in the bottom of a pudding-dish, having seasoned the squash with butter, pepper, and salt. Pour a little cream on top, and strew with buttered crumbs. Bake, covered, half an hour, then brown. NUTMEG AND WATER MELONS. Keep both on ice for several hours. Serve, by wiping the watermelon and laying it whole upon a long dish, to be carved at table. If cut up too long before it is to be eaten, it becomes insipid. Cut the nutmeg melons in two ; take out the seeds, and put a lump of ice in each half. Second Uttk. Saturbag. Vegetable Soup with Eggs. Larded Mutton Chops. Green Peas. Boiled Green Corn. Whole Boiled Potatoes Blackberry Roley-Poley. VEGETABLE SOUP WITH EGGS. 3 Ibs, of beef coarse and cut into strips ; 2 Ibs. veal from the scrag ; 2 Ibs. marrow-bones of any kind ; 2 car 47-2 AUGUST. rots ; i turnip ; i krge onion ; 6 tomatoes ; corn from three ears, grated oft"; i pint of green peas ; sweet herbs ; pepper and salt ; 6 quarts of water ; 6 or S eggs. Put the meat, bones, and all the vegetables on in the water, early in the day, and boil slowly five or six hours. Should the liquid sink more than one-third, add boiling water. The meat should be in rags, and the vegetables broken to pieces. Strain ; pulp the vegetables through the colander; cool, and skim the stock, and season well. Divide, and set aside a goodly portion for Sunday, keep- ing it on ice. Boil up, skim again, pour into the tureen, and lay on the surface the. poached yolks of as many eggs as there are people to be served. Use the whites for white, silver, or lady cake. LARDED MUTTON CHOPS. Trim off all the fat and skin, leaving a bare piece of bone at the end of each. Lard closely with fat salt pork, passing the lardoons quite through the meat. Put on in a sauce- pan, with enough gravy to cover them, and what remains of your can of mushrooms from day before yesterday. They will have kept well on ice. Cut each mushroom in two. Cover, and simmer gently until the chops are tender. (The gravy should be cold when it is poured upon them.) Take up the chops ; arrange upon a dish. Add a heaping tea- spoonful of currant jelly and a little browned flour to the gravy, boil once, and pour over the meat. Garnish with sliced lemon. GREEN PEAS. See Sunday of First Week in August. BOILED GREEN CORN. See Sunday of First Week in August. POTATOES BOILED WHOLE. Treat as directed on Tuesday of this week, only strip- ping off the skins after they are boiled, and, when they are dished, dressing them with hot butter mixed with minced parsley and pepper and salt. Serve very hot. THIRD WEEK SUNDAY. 4/3 BLACKBERRY ROLEY POLEY. i quart of prepared flour ; i heaping tablespoonful of lard ; and the same of butter, rubbed with a little salt, into the flour ; enough milk about two cups to make soft dough. Roll out into a sheet a quarter of an inch thick. Strew, leaving a narrow margin at the sides, with sound black' berries, sprinkled with sugar. Roll tightly. Sew up with a "felled" seam, in a cloth, leaving room for swelling. Put into a pot of boiling water, and keep at the boil an hour and a quarter. Dip the cloth in cold wate'r to loosen it, and turn out. Eat cold with hard sauce. SEtytrtr Ukek. Sunirag. Tomato Soup. Fillet of Veal. Chopped Potatoes. Green Corn Pudding. String-Beans. Peach Leche Crdma. Marbled Cake. * TOMATO SOUP. Take the fat from the top of your soup-stock ; heal and add a pint of strained tomato sauce well seasoned Simmer ten minutes, and it is ready. FILLET OF VEAL. Boil, blanch, and chop two sweetbreads ; mix with them a slice of cooked corned ham, minced, and some fine bread- crumbs ; season with pepper, salt, a pinch of lemon-peel, and bind with a beaten egg. Stuff a fillet of veal with this mixture. Bind a broad strip of muslin about it, as wide as the meat is high ; set in a dripping-pan, and pour a cup of hot water around it. Cover the top with milk in which has been mixed a tablespoonful of melted butter. Pom 474 AUGUST. on carefully so as not to run down the sides. Bake, bast- ing for one hour with milk and butter, for another hoin with cream, in which has been stirred a pinch of soda. Unbind the muslin from the fillet, dish it ; add to the gravy a little hot water and a teaspoonful of corn-starch wet in cold water ; boil up, and pour half upon the veal, the rest into a boat. CHOPPED POTATOES. Chop cold, boiled potatoes into rather coarse dice ; cover with warm milk in which a pinch of soda has been dropped ; when very hot, stir in a lump of floured butter and a little minced parsley and onion. Simmer five min- utes and serve. GREEN CORN PUDDING. See Friday of First Week in August. STRING-BEANS. See Tuesday of First Week in August PEACH LECHE-CRMA. 12 ripe peaches, pared, stoned and cut in halves; 3 eggs, and the whiter of 2 more ; \ cup of powdered sugar ; 2 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch wet in cold milk ; i table- spoonful melted butter ; i pint of milk. Scald the milk, stir in the corn-starch, and, when it begins to thicken, take from the fire and put in the but- ter. When lukewarm, whip in the beaten yolks until all Are very light. Put a thick substratum of peaches into a dish; strew with sugar, and pour the creamy compound over them. Bake in a quick oven ten minutes and spread with a meringue made of five whites whipped stiff with a little powdered sugar. Shut the oven-door until this is firm. Eat cold with cream. THIRD WEEK MONDAY. 475 5ll)irb Quick Soup. Dijon Pate. Lima Beans. Mashed Potatoes. Raw Tomatoes. Pears, Peaches, and Bananas. Iced Coffee, Crackers and Cheese. QUICK SOUP. 2 Ibs. of raw lean beef, chopped very fine ; 3 pints of boiling water in which an onion, a turnip, and a carrot all pared and sliced have been boiled twenty minutes : pepper, salt, and a tablespoonful of tomato catsup. Put the beef into a tin pail and set in cold water. Bring this slowly to a boil, then pour in the boiling water upon the smoking hot meat inside. Cover closely, boil for half an hour in the hot water ; turn into a saucepan ; season, simmer ten minutes, strain, pressing and wringing the meat, and pour into the tureen. DIJON PAT. i large cup of cold boiled rice ; 2 raw eggs ; \ cup of milk ; 2 cups of minced veal ; \ cupful of gravy or drawn butter; 4 hard boiled eggs, sliced; pepper and salt. Butter a pudding-mould one without a cylinder and line it with a thick coating of the rice worked to a paste with the milk and beaten eggs, and seasoned with pepper and salt. The paste should be quite stiff. Line the in- side of this in turn with the sliced eggs, and within this pack the minced veal, wet with gravy and seasoned to taste. The stuffing of the fillet of veal should be chopped with the meat. Cover with rice ; put on the lid of the mould ; set it in boiling water and cook one hour. Turn out carefully, and serve with a good gravy in a boat. The gravy, if you have no other, can be made of odds- and-ends of the veal boiled down in water. Or a cup of your tomato soup of yesterday will make a good sauce. 476 AUGUST. LIMA BEANS. See Wednesday, First Week in August. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual, and do not brown. RAW TOMATOES. See Friday of First Week in August. PEARS, PEACHES, AND BANANAS. Arrange tastefully in fruit dishes or baskets, with green leaves about them. ICED COFFEE, CRACKERS, AND CHEESE. See Monday of Second Week in August. Mutton Broth. Brunswick Stew. Onions Stewed Brown. Potatoes a la Duchesse. Cucumbers. Peaches and Cream. Sponge-Cake. MUTTON BROTH. 3 Ibs. of lean mutton ; 2 turnips ; i carrot ; 2 onions ; bunch of parsley ; i cup of milk ; i tablespoonful of corn- starch ; 3 quarts of water. Boil meat, cut into strips, and the vegetables, sliced, in the water two hours and a half. The water should be re- duced one-third. Strain, taking out the meat, and rub- bing the vegetables to a pulp through the colander. Cool, skim, season, and return to the fire. Heat, stir in THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 477 the corn-starch wet up with water, and pour into the tureen. Add the milk, boiling hot, stir well, and serve. BRUNSWICK STEW. 3 fine gray squirrels, skinned and cleaned joint as you would chickens for a fricassee; \ Ib. of fat salt pork; i onion, sliced ; 12 ears of corn cut from the cob ; 6 large tomatoes, pared and sliced ; 3 tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in flour ; parsley ; enough water to cover the squir- rels. Put on squirrels, pork cut up small onion, and pars- ley in the water, and bring to a boil. When this has lasted ten minutes, put in the corn, and stew until the squirrels are tender. Then add the tomatoes, cut up thin. Twenty minutes later, stir in the butter and flour. Sim- mer ten minutes, and pour into a large, deep dish. ONIONS STEWED BROWN. 10 or 12 small onions ; i cup of gravy from your soup, before it is strained ; seasoning. Top, tail, and skin the onions. Parboil for ten min- utes ; throw off the water, and cover with the cooled and skimmed gravy. Season, and stew until the onions are tender. Then stir in a tablespoonful of butter rubbed up with browned flour. Simmer five minutes. POTATOES 1 LA DUCHESSE. Work a beaten egg and a little butter into each cup of mashed potatoes ; put a tablespoonful of butter into a saucepan, and stir and turn the potato in it until very hot. Do not let it " catch " on the sides. Turn out, and mould in greased muffin-rings. Leave it to cool in these ; then loosen gently upon a greased baking-pan, and bake until delicately browned. CUCUMBERS. See Monday of Second Week in August. PEACHES AND CREAM, WITH SPONGE-CAKE. See Wednesday of First Week in August. 478 AUGUST. 5lI)irJr tihtk. ttUiitealtog. Ox-cheek Soup. Roast Beef. Mashed Squash Qreen Corn cut from the Cob. Fried Egg-plant. Open Apple Custard Tart. OX-CHEEK SOUP. The meat from the cheeks of an ox-head ; 2 sliced onions, fried brown ; sweet herbs ; i small cup of rice ; i teaspoonful of curry-powder ; 3 quarts of water ; pepper and salt ; bones of the head. Cut the meat very small ; put with the ' fried onions and bones into a pot, and pour on the water. Stew slowly three hours. Strain, cool, skim ; put in seasoning, herbs, and the rice, previously soaked two hours. Stew half an hour ; add the curry-powder, wet in cold water ; boil up, and pour out. ROAST BEEF. Lay a neat cut of rib-roast, trimmed and skewered, in a dripping-pan ; dash a cupful of boiling water all over it, and roast ten minutes to the pound, if you like it rare. Just before taking it up. baste it with butter the previous and abundant bastings should have been with its own gravy dredge with flour, and, as it browns, again with butter. Pour off the fat from the gravy before thicken- ing and seasoning it. Much of the so-called beef gravy is only fit for the dripping-pot. MASHED SQUASH. Pare, quarter, seed, and boil in hot, salted water. Drain, and mash in a hot colander ; season with pepper, salt, and butter, and dish hot. GREEN CORN CUT FROM THE COB. After boiling, cut the corn, with a sharp knife, from the cob, into a hot dish ; stir in butter, pepper, and salt, and cover to keep hot until eaten. THIRD WEEK THURSDAY. 479 FRIED EGG-PLANT. Please see Sunday, First Week in August. OPEN APPLE CUSTARD TART. 12 juicy, tart apples ; i cup of sugar ; grated peel of a lemon ; i pint of milk ; 3 eggs, and 3 tablespoonfuls of sugar, for the custard ; good pie-paste. Put a border of pie-crust around the flat brim of a pie- plate, without lining the bottom. Fill the plate with sliced apple, sugared, with lemon-peel scattered here and there. Put in a little water. Cover with a crust, in the centre of which you have marked a circle with a cake- cutter, or large tumbler. Bake the pie ; with a sharp knife, cut out the marked circle \ lift ihe centre-piece, and fill the inside of the pie with a warm custard made of the milk, eggs, and sugar, boiled until it begins to thicken, Eat cold. .*;);.) .;. 'V 1 '- "^ ''' ' ' Rock-work. QUICK LOBSTER SOUP. i quart of stock, made by adding a little water to the strained remnant of yesterday's soup. Or, if you have 23* SEPTEMBER. nothing of this sort, make a broth of coarse bits of veal and any bcnes you may have ; i can of preserved lob- ster ; i cup of milk, with a pinch of soda stirred in ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter, rolled in flour ; yolks of 2 eggs ; minced parsley, cayenne, and salt. Heat your broth ; skim and season. Put in the lob- ster, picked to pieces ; simmer ten minutes, then boil up sharply, once. Heat the milk in a saucepan ; stir in the floured butter ; pour upon the beaten yolks. Cook one minute. Pour the lobster into the tureen; stir in the thickened milk, and send to table. Pass oyster crackers and butter with it. ROAST LAMB. Lay in the dripping-pan. Dash boiling water over it, and cook fifteen minutes for each pound. Baste often with the gravy. Ten minutes before taking it up, dredge with flour, and baste with butter. Pour the fat from the top of the gravy ; thicken with browned flour, and stir in a tablespoonful of currant jelly. Boil, and send up in a boat salting and peppering to taste. BAKED SQUASH. Boil, drain, and mash in a hot colander. Season with pepper, salt, and butter ; add a few spoonfuls of milk and two beaten eggs. Pour into a buttered dish, and bake to a light brown in a quick oven. GREEN CORN CUT FROM THE COB. Boil the corn until tender. Split each row of grains, then shave them close to the cob. Butter, pepper, and salt, and serve hot in a deep dish. SWEET POTATOES. Boil with the skins on ; peel quickly, and lay in a bak- ing-pan, within a hot oven, a few minutes, to dry, before piling them upon a flat dish. ROCK-WORK. i quart of milk ; 5 eggs ; 6 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; /anilla, or other essence. FOURTH WEEK WEDNESDAY. 539 Heat the milk : pour upon the beaten yolks and sugar. Cook until the custard begins to thicken. Pour out, and. when cold, flavor, and pour into a glass bowl. Whip the whites stiff with two spoonfuls of the sugar, flavor, and poach by laying, a spoonful at a time, upon boiling milk, and, carefully withdrawing the spoon from underneath, leaving the oval mass of meringue floating upon the sur- face. Turn it over when one side is done, and, presently, take it up, and lay upon the custard. Heap them irregu- larly on the top, and let all get cold before serving. Pass light cakes with this custard. -fourtl) Julienne Soup. Cold Lamb. Tomato Sauce. Eggs and Mushrooms. Breaded Egg-plant. _ Potato Fritters. JULIENNE SOUP. 4 Ibs. of beef ; 2 carrots ; 3 turnips ; head of cab- bage ; i pint green corn ; i quart tomatoes ; bunch of herbs ; 4 quarts of water ; pepper and salt. Put on the beef, herbs, and water early in the morning, with some well-cracked bones, if you have them, and let it boil at the back of the range, very slowly, for five or six hours. Should the water sink below two-thirds of the original quantity, replenish from the boiling tea-kettle. An hour before dinner, strain the soup ; put meat and bones into the stock-pot, and season well. Pour upon them all that you can spare from the liquor, and leave enough for to-day. Set this in a cool place. Cool, and remove the fat from that meant for to-day ; return to the soup-kettle, and put in the vegetables, cut into shreds, and parboiled for ten minutes. The cabbage should have 540 SEPTEMBER. been cooked in two waters. The corn must be cut from the cob, and the tomatoes pared and sliced. Simmer gently half an hour ; season ; cook one minute, and pour out. COLD LAMB. Trim the remains of your roast into a presentable shape ; garnish with parsley and nasturtium-blooms. TOMATO SAUCE. Pare, slice, and stew the tomatoes for twenty minutes. Strain, and rub through a colander, leaving the hard and tough parts behind. Put into a saucepan with a little minced onion, parsley, pepper, salt, and sugar. Bring to a boil ; stir in a good spoonful of butter rolled in flour. Boil up, and serve. *' .':,'.. f > * ' ** EGGS AND MUSHROOMS. Slice the rest of the can of mushrooms, opened for Monday's stew, into halves. Stew ten minutes in a little butter, seasoned with pepper and salt, and a very little water. Drain ; put the mushrooms into a pie- dish ; break enough eggs to cover them over the top ; pepper, salt, and scatter bits of butter over them \ strew with bread- crumbs, and bake until the eggs are " set." Serve in the dish. BREADED EGG-PLANT. Slice nearly half an inch thick ; pare each slice and lay in salt and water one hour. Wipe dry, dip in beaten egg, then in rolled cracker, and fry to a fine brown in salted lard or dripping. POTATO FRITTERS. 6 tablespoonfuls mashed potato rubbed through a col- ander ; cup rich milk, or cream ; 5 eggs, beaten light ; 2 tablespoonfuls sugar ; 2 tablespoonfuls prepared flour ; juice of i lemon, and half the grated peel ; % grated nut- meg. Work the cream into the potato ; add beaten yolks and sugar, and whip to a froth. Put in lemon, flour, nutmeg, FOURTH WEEK THURSDAY. 541 and beat three minutes before stirring in the whites. Drop, by the spoonful, into hot sweet lard, and fry to a light brown. Drain upon clean, heated paper, sift white sugar thickly over them and serve at once. Eat if you like with wine sauce, or with powdered sugar only. Jimrtl) Bread-and-Meat Soup. Braised Breast of Veal. Cauliflower with Sauce. Stewed Squash. Fried Potatoes. Boiled Apple Dumplings. BREAD-AND-MEAT SOUP. Take the fat from the top of your cold stock. Add a pint of boiling water to it, with a sliced onion, and coolc slowly, with the meat in, for forty minutes. Strain, press- ing all the strength out of the meat ; stir in a tablespoon- ful of catsup, and as much browned flour wet up in cold water. Have ready a sweetbread, boiled and blanched, then cut into neat dice. Put these into the soup, and boil one minute ; add a great handful of fried bread, cut into dice, and pour out. If you have any soup left from your "Julienne," heat, strain, and add to this. BRAISED BREAST OF VEAL. Make a deep incision between the ribs and meat : stuff with a good force-meat made of crumbs, chopped salt pork, seasoning and a little onion. Skewer the flap of meat back into its place ; put a layer of thin fat salt pork into a broad saucepan ; lay the veal upon it. Pour in a cup of gravy from the soup, if you have no other cover with more fat pork, or ham, put on a close lid, and cook fifteen minutes to the pound. Take out the meat ; set in a very quick oven, dredge with flour, and, as it browns, baste well with butter once. Keep hot upon a dish, while you 542 SEPTEMBER. strain the gravy in' the braising-pan ; thicken it with browned flour, season to taste, and stir in the juice of half a lemon, and a glass of claret. Boil up and pour a little upon the veal, the rest into a boat. CAULIFLOWER WITH SAUCE. See Sunday, Third Week in September. STEWED SQUASH. Pare, seed and quarter. Cook in boiling water salted, until soft. Mash in a colander ; rub through it, and put back into a saucepan, with a tablespooriful of butter rolled in flour ; a few teaspoonfuls of milk, pepper and salt to taste. Stir until it begins to bubble; then pour into a deep dish. FRIED POTATOES. Pare, slice thin, and lay in ice-water half an hour. Dry between two towels, and fry to a pale brown in hot lard, a little salt. Drain by shaking in a colander, and serve in a dish lined with a napkin. BOILED APPLE DUMPLINGS. i quart prepared flour ; J Ib. suet, powdered ; i tea- spoonful salt ; cold water to make a pretty stiff paste ; fine juicy apples, pared and cored. Make the paste ; roll into a sheet a quarter of an inch thick ; cut into squares ; put in the centre of each an apple ; bring the corners together, and pinch the edges. Have ready some small square cloths, dipped in hot water, and floured on the inside. Enclose each dumpling in one of these, leaving room to swell, and tie it up, bag- wise, with a stout string. Boil one hour ; turn out and serve with plenty of sweet sauce. FOURTH WEEK FRIDAY. 543 Onion Soup Maigre. Baked Blue Fish. Imitation Oyster Scallops. Potato Puff a la Geneve. Raw Cucumbers. Cream Cakes. ONION SOUP MAIGRE. 3 large onions, sliced ; 3 boiled potatoes rubbed through a colander ; 3 tablespoonfuls of rice boiled in i quart of milk ; 2 quarts of cold water ; 3 tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in one of flour ; chopped parsley ; pepper and salt to taste. Parboil the onions ten minutes ; throw off the water and let them cool. Then slice, and put over the fire with the cold water, and boil down to three pints. The onions should be reduced to a pulp. Strain ; rub through the colander, and set over the fire. When it boils, add the mashed potatoes, the butter, seasoning, parsley, and simmer ten minutes. Have the rice boiled soft in the milk with a pinch of soda ; strain it out and add to the soup in the kettle. Cook gently five minutes, and turn into the tureen. Pour in the boiling milk, and it is ready. BAKED BLUE FISH. Score the fish down the back, and lay in a dripping- pan. Pour over it a cup of hot water in which have been melted two tablespoonfuls of butter. Bake one hour, basting every ten minutes ; twice with butter, twice with the gravy, and again twice with butter. Take up the fish and keep hot, while you strain the gravy into a saucepan ; thicken with flour ; add a teaspoonful of anchovy paste, the juice of half a lemon with a little of the grated peel, pepper and salt. Boil up, pour half over the fish, the rest into a boat. Garnish the fish with eggs, quartered lengthwise, lettuce hearts, and quartered lemons. IMITATION OYSTER SCALLOPS. Cut the best pieces from your cold roast veal, in squares about an inch long and half as thick and wide* 544 SEPTEMBER. Make a cup of ridr drawn butter, and put these into it. Set over the fire in a saucepan, and add a very little minced onion and parsley. Heat for ten minutes, but do not boil. Chop a pickled cucumber quite fine, stir into the mixture, season with salt and cayenne ; fill scallop, or clam shells, or /0/e-pans lined with baked paste, with the scallop ; cover with fine crumbs, and brown in a brisk oven. POTATO PUFF 1 LA GENEVE. Whip mashed potatoes light and soft with milk, butter, and two raw eggs ; season with pepper and salt, and beat in a few spoonfuls of powdered cheese. Pile upon a neat bake-dish, and brown nicely. Serve in the dish* RAW CUCUMBERS. See Friday, Second Week in September. CREAM CAKES. Some good puff-paste; whites of 2 eggs; \ cup cf sweet jelly ; i cup of cream, whipped to a froth ; 3 table, spoonfuls powdered sugar ; vanilla, or other flavoring. Roll out the paste as for pies. Cut into squares five inches across. Have ready well-greased muffin-rings, three inches in diameter. Lay one in the centre of each square ; turn up the four corners so as to make a cup of the paste ; pinch the tips upon the upper edge of the ring to keep it in place, and having prepared all, bake in a quick oven. When done, pull out the rings with care ; brush the paste, outside and in, with the white of egg, and set back to brown. When cold, wash on the inside with the jelly, and fill vith the whipped cream, sweetened and flavored. FOURTH WEEK SATURDAY. 545 Jburtl) UJeek. Vegetable Soup a la Crecy. Glazed Ham. Lettuce Salad. Potatoes a la Lyonnaise. Cabbage au Gratin. Peach Pudding. VEGETABLE SOUP 1 LA CRE"CY. 2 Ibs. of coarse, lean beef, cut into strips ; 2 Ibs. of knuckle of veal, chopped to pieces ; 2 Ibs. of mutton bones, and the bones left from your cold veal, cracked to splinters ; i Ib. of lean ham ; 4 large carrots ; 2 turnips ; 2 onions ; bunch of herbs ; 3 tablespoonfuls of butter, and 2 of flour ; i tablespoonful of sugar ; salt and pep- per ; 7 quarts of water. Put on meat, bones, herbs and water, and cook slowly five hours. Strain the soup, of which there should be five quarts. Season meat and bones, and put into the 'stock-pot with three quarts of the liquor. Save this for days to come. While the soup for to-day is cooling that you may take off the fat, put the butter into a frying-pan with the sliced carrots, turnips, and onions, and fry to a light brown. Now, add a pint of the skimmed stock, and stew the vegetables tender ; stir in the flour wet with water * and put all, with your cooled stock, over the fire in the soup-kettle. Season with sugar, cayenne and salt ; boil five minutes ; rub through a colander, then a soup- sieve, heat almost to boiling, and serve. GLAZED HAM. Soak and boil a ham twenty minutes to the pound, and let it get almost cold in the water. Skin it neatly, and coat with a paste made of a cup of cracker-crumbs, one of milk, two beaten eggs, and seasoned with pepper. Set the ham in the oven until the glazing is browned, moisten- ing, now and then, with a few spoonfuls of cream. Wind frilled paper about the shank, and garnish with parsley. 546 SEPTEMBER. < 'LETTUCE SALAD. Pull out and tear to pieces the hearts of lettuce ; pile in a salad-bowl ; sprinkle with white sugar, and season with oil, pepper, salt, and vinegar, in the proportions so often given. Toss up with a silver fork. POTATOES A LA LYONNAISE. See Saturday, First Week in September. CABBAGE AU GRATIN. Quarter a small white cabbage, and boil tender in pot- liquor taken from your ham. Let it get cold ; chop and season with pepper, salt, a good spoonful of butter, three or four of milk, and beat smooth with two raw eggs. Put into a buttered dish ; strew thickly with crumbs ; wet these with pot -liquor, and bake, covered, forty -five min- utes, then brown. PEACH PUDDING. 12 ripe peaches, pared, stoned, and stewed in a little water ; i cup bread-crumbs ; 2 cups of boiling milk ; 5 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; 5 beaten eggs ; tablespoonful of butter. Soak the crumbs in the hot milk ; stir in the butter, the beaten eggs and sugar, at last the cooled and mashed peaches. Beat up light ; put into a buttered pudding- mould ; set in a pan of boiling water ; cover, and cok one hour in a good oven. Turn out, and eat with sweetened cream. FIRST WEEK SUNDAY. 547 OCTOBER. JFtr0t ItJeek. Tapioca Soup. Fricassee of Ducks. Tomatoes in a Mould. Sweet Potatoes. Potato Rissoles. Ruby's Pudding. TAPIOCA SOUP. Remove the fat from your soup-stock; pour off two quarts ; heat, and strain through coarse muslin back into the pot. Stir in half a cup of soaked tapioca the fine- grained simmer until clear; add half a glass of brown sherry, and serve. FRICASSEE OF DUCKS. Clean, wash, and cut the ducks into four pieces each. Flour, and fry them to a light brown. Drain ; put into a saucepan, with a cup of gravy (a little of your soup- stock will do), a glass of claret, some chopped parsley, a small onion, minced, salt and pepper. Cover closely, and stew half an hour, or until the ducks are tender. Take them out ; strain, and set the gravy in cold water to throw up the fat. Take it off; thicken with browned flour wet with water ; boil up, and, having laid the ducks upon a flat dish, pour the gravy over them. This is a very fine fricassee. TOMATOES IN A MOULD. Peel and slice eight tomatoes. Put them in a coarse cloth, and press out most of the juice into a bowl. Save this carefully. Chop the tomatoes ; mix in two table- spoonfuls of fine crumbs, pepper, salt, sugar, and a table- spoonful of melted butter. Stir up well, and put into a 543 OCTOBER. buttered mould. Fit on the top, and set in a pot of boil- ing water. Keep at a fast boil for one hour. When done, turn out upon a flat dish, and pour over them this sauce : Heat the tomato-juice ; stir in a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour, season with pepper, sugar, and salt ; boil one minute. SWEET POTATOES. See Tuesday, Fourth Week in September. POTATO RISSOLES. Mash the potatoes fine, and whip with a fork, adding pepper, butter, and milk, lastly, a beaten egg. Have ready one-third as much chopped ham as you have potato ; mix all together ; make into round balls a little larger than an English walnut ; dip in egg, then in cracker-dust, and fry quickly in plenty of good dripping. Drain upon paper, and serve hot. RUBY'S PUDDING. Some good puff-paste ; Ib. of stale sponge-cakes, pounded ; i cup of milk ; i tablespoonful of butter ; i teaspoonful corn-starch wet in milk ; yolks of 2 eggs ; i heaping spoonful of sugar ; a little nutmeg ; whites of 3 eggs ; strawberry, or other sweet jam. Line a pie-dish with the paste. Put a layer of jam at the bottom, then one, half an inch thick, of the pounded cakes. Heat the milk ; stir in the butter and corn-starch ; boil one minute. When cold, whip in the yolks and sugar, with nutmeg, and beat light. Fill the dish with this mixture, and bake about half an hour. Then cover with a meringue made of the three whites, a little sugar, and the juice of half a lemon. Spread quickly, and shut the oven-door until it has " set " well. Do this on Saturday, and you will have a delightful Sunday pudding. It is also good warm. FIRST WEEK MONDAY. 549 Jir0t llleck. Ulonbag. Curry Soup. Breaded Mutton Chops, Baked. Spinach. Whipped Potatoes. Boiled Rice, with Sauce Apple Charlotte. Coffee. CURRY SOUP. Add a pint of boiling water to your soup -stock, and cook, with the meat in, half an hour, at the back of the range. Strain, squeezing the meat to a tasteless mass in a coarse cloth. Return the soup to the fire, stir in a cup of rice, boiled as I shall presently direct, and season to taste. Finally, put in a teaspoonful of curry-powder, wet up with water, and bring to a boil ; then pour out. If you do not like curry, you will find the soup very good without it. BREADED MUTTON CHOPS BAKED. Trim off fat and skin ; dip in egg, then in rolled cracker, mixed with pepper, salt, nutmeg, and powdered parsley. Lay upon a dripping-pan. Pour over each a teaspoonful of melted butter, and set in the oven. When they begin to hiss, baste with hot water, in which has been boiled a little onion, mixed with butter. If the oven be good, half an hour should be enough for them. They should be tender, juicy, and brown. Baste six or seven times. Strain the gravy, and thicken with browned flour. Add a little lemon -juice and tomato catsup, and send up in a boat. Lay the chops around your spinach. SPINACH. Boil twenty minutes in plenty of, boiling salt water. Drain, and chop very fine. Return to the saucepan, with a little sugar, pepper, salt, and a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour. Stir until hot, and dry enough to be moulded. Turn out ; shape into a flat-topped ridge upon a hot dish, and lay the chops at the base 550 OCTOBER. WHIPPED POTATOES Whip boiled potatoes to creamy lig'itness with a fork ; beat in butter, milk, pepper, and salt ; at last, the frothed white of an egg. Toss irregularly upon a dish ; set in the oven two minutes, to reheat, but do not let it color. BOILED RICE, WITH SAUCE. Dilute what gravy you have left from your duck fricas- see with water, or make a weak broth of the duck bones, boiled with a little lean ham in a quart of water, until you have less than a pint left. Or, add hot water to the re- mains of yesterday's soup, and strain it. But get a pint of weak gravy from somewhere, and, having soaked a cup of rice in just enough water to cover it, for an hour, put it over the fire in a farina-kettle, pour in the gravy, and cook until the rice is soft, shaking up from the bottom, now and then, but never stirring. Take out some for your soup. Heap the rest in a deep dish, and pour over it a cup of drawn butter, in which have been stirred a beaten egg and two tablespoon fills of tomato sace. N. B. The gravy should be well seasoned. APPLE CHARLOTTE. Beat two cups of nice apple sauce, well sweetened and flavored, to a high froth, with the whipped whites of three eggs. Make into a mound in a glass dish, and cover with lady's-fingers, or other small sponge-cakes, fitted neatly to- gether. Send around sugar and cream with it. COFFEE. Pass, while you are still at table, or afterward, in the library or sitting-room. FIRST WEEK TUESDAY. 551 Jir0t Barley Broth. Stewed Beef, with Macaroni. Mashed Turnips. Kidney Beans. Southern Rice Pudding. BARLEY BROTH. 2 Ibs. of lean mutton, cut into strips ; -J Ib. lean ham, or a cracked ham-bone ; i onion ; i turnip ; \ cup of barley, soaked two hours in a little tepid water ; 3 quarts of cold water ; pepper, salt, and chopped parsley. ' Cook meat, bones, and the sliced vegetables together in the water three hours. Strain, cool, and skim the broth ; season ; put back over the fire, with the barley, and stew gently half an hour. STEWED BEEF. . Have a piece of beef cut from what is known as the "roll" of the shin. It should weigh between three and four pounds. Put into a large saucepan, with a minced onion, and cover completely with water, in which pour a cup of your soup, so as to make a weak broth. Pepper and salt the meat all over before it goes in. Cover, and cook very slowly an hour and a half. Turn the beef, and cook as long again, making three hours in all. It should have been so slowly cooked as to be tender as butter, yet not broken at the edges. Dish, wash all over with melted butter, and set in the oven three minutes. Then arrange the macaroni about it. MACARONI. Boil half a pound of macaroni, broken into short pieces, in hot salted water, ten minutes ; drain, pepper and salt, and lay about the beef. Cool and skim the gravy after taking out the beef; strain into a saucepan, thicken with browned flour, add a little French mustard ; boil once, pour half over the beef, the rest into a boat. 552 OCTOBER. % MASHED TURNIPS. Pare, quarter, and cook tender, in boiling salted watei Mash in a colander, pressing hard. Stir in butter, pep per and salt, and turn into a deep dish. KIDNEY BEANS. Shell ; put on in boiling water with an inch or so of fat salt pork, and cook tender. Drain well, salt, pepper, and butter. SOUTHERN RICE PUDDING. i quart fresh, sweet milk ; i cup of raw rice ; 2 table- spoonfuls of butter ; i cup of sugar ; 5 beaten eggs ; I teaspoonful of grated lemon-peel ; a pinch of cinnamon and same of mace. Soak the rice in the milk two hours. Heat in a farina- kettle until the rice is soft. Cream butter and sugar ; stir in the beaten eggs and whip hard. When the rice is luke- warm, put all together, and bake in a buttered mould about forty-five minutes. Eat warm with sauce, or cold with sugar and cream. Jir0t Squirrel Soup. Fricassee of Calf's Tongues. Fried Egg-plant. Squash. Stripped Potatoes, Stewed. Jelly Custards and Cake. SQUIRREL SOUP. Skin, clean, and cut into quarters a pair of fine gray squirrels. Fry a large onion, sliced, in dripping ; take it out, and fry the squirrels in the same fat. Put them then into a soup-pot with the onion, a sliced turnip, a sliced carrot, a slice thick of lean ham, some parsley, and two blades of mace ; add three quarts of water cover FIRST WEEK WEDNESDAY. 553 closely and boil gently three hours ; take out the pieces of squirrel, and put away for a breakfast dish. A toler- able fricassee can be made by warming it up in drawn butter, then adding a beaten egg. Revenons a nos inoutons in this case, our soup. Rub the vegetables through the colander ; cool, skim and sea- son the broth. Heat again ; add a tablespoonful of but- ter cut up in flour, a tablespoonful of catsup, the juice of half a lemon, a glass of claret, boil up and pour into the tureen. FRICASSEE OF CALF'S TONGUES. Boil the tongues one hour. Pare, and cut into thick slices. Roll these in flour, and fry in dripping five min- utes. Put the tongues into a saucepan ; add sliced onion, thyme and parsley. Cover with a cupful of your soup or other gra'vy. Simmer half an hour, covered tightly. Take up the tongues and keep them warm ; strain the gravy ; thicken, put in four or five thin slices of lemon, from which the peel has been taken ; boil one minute, and pour over the fricassee. FRIED EGG-PLANT. i fine egg-plant ; 2 eggs ; cup of milk ; flour for thin batter, salt, and fat for frying. Slice, and pare each slice. Lay in salt and water one hour ; dry between two towels and dip each slice in a batter made of the materials above given. Fry in hot fat to a good brown. Drain well. SQUASH. Pare, quarter, and cook soft in boiling salted water. Drain, mash smooth in a heated colander, work in butter, pepper and salt, and serve in a deep dish. STRIPPED POTATOES, STEWED. Pare, and cut into lengthwise strips ; cover with boil- ing water, and stew twenty minutes. Turn off nearly all the water ; put in a cupful of cold milk, with salt and pepper. When this boils, stir in a spoonful of butter, rolled in flour, with a little chopped parsley. Cook two minutes, and serve. 24 554 OCTOBER. JELLY CUSTARDS AND CAKE. i quart of milk; 5 eggs; i cup of sugar ; vanilla 01 "other flavoring ; crab-apple and currant jelly. Heat the milk ; pour upon the beaten eggs and sugar. Heat and stir until it begins to thicken. When cold, flavor ; fill your custard-cups nearly to the tops, and lay a slice of firm, bright jelly upon each tart upon some, sweet upon the rest. Eat with cake. fivst tUcck. PuRisE OF POTATOES. Mash boiled potatoes; rub through a colander ; add a few spoonfuls of milk, one of butter rolled in flour, and stir over the fire five minutes. Season with salt and pep- per. Pour into a deep dish. BAKED MACARONI. Break half a pound of macaroni into inch lengths, and cook twenty minutes in boiling salt water. Drain ; cover the bottom of a buttered dish with it ; strew with grated cheese and butter-bits, pepper and salt lightly, and put in another layer of macaroni. Fill the dish in this way ; strew cheese and butter on top ; pour in half a cup of milk, and bake, covered, half an hour then, brown quickly. BAVARIAN SALAD. 2 small onions ; 2 heads of lettuce, pulled to pieces ; 1 boiled beet, cold and sliced ; 3 tablespoonfuls salad-oil ; 2 of vinegar ; yolk of i raw egg ; I saltspoonful of salt, and same of made mustard. Chop the onions exceedingly small, and beat into the whipped egg the salt, mustard, the oil, last of all, the vinegar. Put the lettuce into a dish ; cover with the beet-root, and pour on the dressing. LEMON CREAM PIE. T cup of sugar; i tablespoonful of butter; i egg ; i lemon, pared carefully, even to the white rind, and the seeds removed ; i tablespoonful corn-starch, wet in cold water ; T cup of boiling water. Stir the corn-starch into the water, and pour over the creamed butter and sugar. When cold, add the minced lemon and grated peel, with the egg. Beat hard and bake in open shells of paste. Eat cold. 568 OCTOBER. Jkconb fthek. Turnip Soup. Oyster Pates. Rissoles of Sweetbreads. Chopped Cabbage. Mashed Potatoes Browned. Quince Souffle. TURNIP SOUP. 12 turnips; 4 tablespoonfuls of butter; 2 tablespoon- fuls of flour ; i quart of milk ; 2 quarts of water ; i onion ; chopped parsley ; salt and cayenne. Pare, slice, and put the turnips on with the onion in the water. Cook soft, pulp through a colander, and return, with the water, to the fire. Melt the butter in a saucepan, stir in the flour, and cook ten minutes, stirring all the time in one direction. Add the milk, stirring it in gradually ; take from the fire. Simmer the turnip puree five minutes after adding seasoning and chopped parsley ; pour in the thickened milk, boil up once, and serve. OYSTER PATE'S. i quart of oysters, minced fine with a sharp knife ; i cup of rich drawn butter, based upon milk ; cayenne and pepper to taste. Stir the minced oysters into the drawn butter and cook five minutes in a farina-kettle. Have ready some shapes of pastry, baked in /#/e-pans, then slipped out. Fill these with the mixture ; set in the oven two minutes to heat, and send to table. RISSOLES OF SWEETBREADS. Boil and blanch three fine sweetbreads. Mince, and add one-third the quantity of fine crumbs. Season with pepper and salt, a little nutmeg, and two beaten eggs. Work and beat smooth ; roll into long balls ; flour these well. Have ready a little gravy in a saucepan, well- seasoned ; add as much drawn butter. When it boils, put SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. in the rissoles, a few at a time, and cook ten inmates. Drain off the gravy; transfer the sweetbreads carefully to a hot dish ; pour the gravy upon a beaten egg ; heat to thickening, and pour over the rissoles. CHOPPED CABBAGE. Boil a firm cabbage in two waters having taken off the outer leaves and quartered it. Chop very an ; put into a saucepan two tablespoonfuls of butter and the same of vinegar, with pepper and salt. Stir in the cab- bage, and when very hot, dish. MASHED POTATOES BROWNED. Mash in the usual way ; heap roughly upon a greased pie-plate ; set in a quick oven, and when delicately Drowned, slip to another dish. . QUINCE SOUFFLE". Pare, slice, and stew the fruit soft. Sweeten well, and rub through a colander. Put into a glass dish. Make a custard of i pint of milk, 3 yolks, and half a cup of sugar. When cold, pour, two inches deep, upon - the quince. Whip the whites of the eggs light with sugar and lemon-juice, and heap upon the custard. Stconir Ueek. Satttrirag. Mock Turtle Soup. Hot Pot. Cauliflower a la Crdme. Mashed Parsnips. Lima Beans. Cocoanut Pudding. MOCK TURTLE SOUP. Please consult receipt for Wednesday, Third Week it March. There should be enough for two days at least. 57O OCTOBER. HOT POT. 2 Ibs. of lean veal ; calfs brains from your boiled head ; i pint of oysters ; pepper cayenne is best ; a little minced onion; salt; a tablespoonful of butter; J Ib. of oyster crackers, buttered and split ; minced parsley and lemon- peel. Cut the veal into squares, and parboil for twenty min- utes. Put a layer in the bottom of a buttered bake-dish ; season well ; sprinkle on a little onion, and put a layer of split crackers next. The brains should be beaten up with a raw egg, and seasoned. Drop in small spoonfuls upon the crackers ; next, put a few oysters, strewed with pepper, salt and butter-bits ; more veal, and so on to the top, which should be crackers. Fill the dish with the water in which the veal was boiled, seasoned, and an equal quantity of oysjer liquor. Cover closely, and bake in a moderate oven an hour and a half. Serve in the dish. It should not be uncovered for browning. CAULIFLOWER A LA CR&ME. Boil a fine cauliflower in plenty of hot salted water, having tied it up in a bit of mosquito-net. When done, put into a deep dish, blossom upward, and pour over it a cupful of drawn butter in which has been beaten, and then cooked, a raw egg. MASHED PARSNIPS. Scrape, slice lengthwise, and put on to boil in hot salted water. They will take more than an hour to cook. When tender, drain and press in a colander. Mash smooth; put into -a clean saucepan with a little butter, pepper and salt. Stir until very hot, then dish. LIMA BEANS. See Thursday of First Week in October. COCOANUT PUDDING. i heaping ~up fine crumbs ; cup of butter ; i c up powdrred sugar; i grated cocoanut ; 2 cups milk; THIRD WEEK SUNDAY. 57 * tablespoonful corn-starch wet with cold water ; 5 eggs , nutmeg and rose-water to taste. Soak the crumbs in the milk, and add to the creamed butter and sugar, and the beaten yolks. Beat well ; put in the corn-starch ; the whisked white ; at last the grated cocoanut. Beat one minute ; pour into a buttered pud- ding-dish, and bake in a moderate oven forty-five minutes Eat cold, wilh sugar sifted on top. tljirl tlUclu 0unbaj). Yesterday's Soup. Roast Leg of Lamb. Potato Croquettes. Sweet Potatoes. Fried Egg-plant. Currant Jelly. Rice Snow. White Mountain Cake. YESTERDAY'S SOUP. Your mock-turtle soup will, be even better the second day than on the first. Take off the fat ; dip out enough of the stock for your family, and bring slowly to a boil. You can make a little variety in it by serving the force- meat balls the first day; 'the meat dice the second, or vice versa. ROAST LEG OF LAMB. Lay in the dripping-pan ; pour a cup of boiling water over it, and roast steadily, twelve minutes to the pound, basting very often. Ten minutes before taking it up, dredge with flour, and baste well with butter to make a Brown froth. Lay on a dish, and keep hot. Pour the gravy into a basin set in very cold water. This will send the grease to the top. Remove it all ; pour the brown gravy into a saucepan ; thicken with browned flour ; season, boil one 2, and serve in a boat. Pass currant-jelly with lamb. 572 OCTOBER. POTATO CROQUETTES. 2 cups mashed potatoes, free from lumps ; 2 beaten eggs ; i tablespoonful melted butter ; salt and pepper to taste ; a little flour. Mix all well together ; heat, and stir over the fire until smoking hot. Let it get cold, and make into small rolls flattened at the ends. Roll in flour and fry to a good brown. Drain off upon paper and eat hot. SWEET POTATOES. Boil until a fork will go easily into the largest. Skin, and lay in a bake-pan in the oven a few minutes to dry then serve. FRIED EGG-PLANT. See Wednesday, First Week in October. RICE SNOW. i quart of milk ; 5 table spoon fills of rice flour ; the whites of 4 eggs ; i great spoonful of butter ; i cup of powdered sugar ; a pinch of cinnamon, and same of nut- meg ; vanilla, or other extract ; a little salt. Scald the milk, and stir in the flour wet up to a thin paste with cold milk. Cook until it begins to thicken ; add sugar and spice ; simmer five minutes, stirring all the while ; pour out, and beat in the butter. Let it get cold ; flavor, and whip, a spoonful at, a time, into the whisked whites. Set to form in a wet mould. Prepare on Satur- day. Turn out on Sunday, and eat with sweet cream. If more convenient, you can substitute corn-starch for the rice flour. WHITE MOUNTAIN CAKE. See "GENERAL RECEIPTS No. i, COMMON SENSE IN THE HOUSEHOLD SERIES," page 3x9. THIRD WEEK MONDAY 573 Sfyirtr tteek. Sago Soup. Lamb Pudding. Stewed Corn. Potatoes au Naturel. Cabbage Salad Grapes, Pears, and Bananas. Tea a la Russe, Crackers and Cheese. SAGO SOUP. Cut all the meat from your cold leg of lamb ; crack the bone to splinters ; put on, with gristly bits of meat, skin, etc., in three quarts of water, with an onion, and boil slowly, at the back of the range, down to one quart. Strain, cool, and skim. Add to what has been saved from the mock-turtle stock made on Saturday. Heat, and stir in half a cup of pearl sago, previously soaked three hours in a very little water. Season, and simmer half an hour. LAMB PUDDING. The cold meat from yesterday's joint ; bread-crumbs ; i tablespoonful of butter ; 2 eggs ; a little gravy ; pep- per, salt, and a pinch of nutmeg. Chop the cold lamb fine, season, and wet up with a little good gravy. Mix in one-fourth as much crumbs as you have meat ; beat in the melted butter, the eggs, and pour into a buttered mould. Set in a pan of hot water, and cook, covered, in a good oven for one hour. Turn out, and pour a little gravy over it. STEWED CORN. Green corn, even iij city markets, is both indifferent and dear at this season. We do better, therefore, to fall back upon the invaluable canned vegetables that have made American housewives almost independent of chang- ing seasons. Open a can of corn one hour before it is to be cooked. When ready for it turn into a farina-kettle ; pour on just enough hot water to cover it, and cook half 574 OCTOBER. an hour. Then, a'dd a little milk, a good lump of butter cut up in flour, pepper and salt to taste, and cook fifteen minutes longer. POTATOES AU NATUREL. Put over the fire in cold water ; bring to a boil, and, fifteen minutes thereafter, pour in a cup of cold water to arrest the boil suddenly. After the beginning of the second bubble, cook quite fast until a fork will enter the largest potato without forcing. Turn off the water, set the uncovered pot upon the fire for a minute ; strip off the skins quickly, and serve. CABBAGE SALAD. Shred a white cabbage fine ; and pour over it a dress- ing such as you made on Thursday, Second Week in October, but without the chopped onion. GRAPES, PEARS, AND BANANAS. Heap the grapes in one salver or basket, with a spray of some climbing or clinging vine thrown around it. Group pears and bananas together, and garnish with autumn leaves. TEA 1 LA RUSSE. Slice a fresh lemon ; take off all the skin ; lay the slices, with powdered sugar strewed over them, in a plate , pour out the tea, hot and t strong, with plenty of sugar, and pass the . lemon with it. Serve, without cream. I shall never forget a surprise that was startling as well, as a disappointment, that came to me one day, when, sinking under the depression of an incipient headache, brought on by miles of picture galleries, I called for a cup of hot tea in a foreign restaurant, and was served with what I instantly pronounced to be "poison!" "Motto buono" protested the waiter, opening the* tea-urn to show me a whole lemon, skin and all, swimming upon the steaming decoction of leaves. The combination of rind and the cream with which I had " trimmed " my share of the too- fragrant beverage, was indescribable.. Still, I rather 'ike tea a la Russe without lemon-peel and cream. THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 575 ffiijtrb Soup and Bouilli. Stewed Potatoes. Mixed Pickles. Alice's Pudding. SOUP AND BOUILLI. 6 Ibs. brisket of beef, all in one neat cut, with as little bone as possible ; 3 carrots ; i small head of cauliflower cut into clusters ; 4 turnips ; 6 small onions ; bunch of sweet herbs ; 2 blades of mace ; i tablespoonful of but- ter cut up in flour ; dice of fried bread ; pepper, salt, and French mustard. Cover the meat well with water ; bring to a very slow boil, and continue this for four hours, skimming often and filling up with boiling water as that in the pot sinks. At the end of that time, put in the vegetables, cut into neat squares. Season, and simmer about forty-five minutes, or until the carrots are tender. Take up the meat ; rub over with butter and cover upon a heated dish. Strain the soup from the vegetables without breaking them, and set the colander in which they are left over boiling water until after the soup is served. Strain this again through a soup-sieve, and pour upon plenty of fried bread in the tureen. If you like a thicker soup, return it after the second straining, to the fire with a handful of tapioca, or of German sago, ready-soaked, and simmer until clear. When the soup is out of the way, arrange the vegetables in little heaps around the beef, all of a kind together. Put a cupful of the soup ovar the fire, stir in the floured butter, mustard, pepper, and salt, to your liking ; boil up and pour over the beef. STEWED POTATOES. See Wednesday, First Week in October. ALICE'S PUDDING. i quart of milk ; 5 eggs ; i cup dry crumbs ; $ cup strawberry, or other sweet jam ; cup of sugar. 576 OCTOBER. Butter a pudding-dish ; strew crumbs on the bottom ; pour in the jam ; cover this with the rest of the crumbs ; wet with milk. Heat the quart of milk to scalding ; take from the fire and pour upon the beaten yolks and sugar. Then, whip in the frothed whites. Heat this three min-, utes, and put upon the layer of crumbs in the dish, spoonful by spoonful, letting each soak in well before adding more. Bake in a steady oven until " set," and slightly colored. Eat cold with cream. tl)trtr Poor Roger's Soup. Beefsteak and Onions. Canned Succotash, Potatoes a la Parisienne. Spinach. Baked Apple Dumpling. POOR ROGER'S SOUP. . The bones of yesterday's roast boiled down in 3 pints of water to i pint ; i pint of stock left from yesterday's soup ; 6 parboiled potatoes sliced thin ; cabbage sliced small ; i tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour ; i sliced and fried onion ; i quart of hot water. Parboil the cabbage ; then put it on, with the potatoes and fried onion, in the hot water ; cook until the cabbage is tender, and the potatoes broken to pieces. Take the fat from the top of your sto*ck ; add the latter to the cab- bage-soup ; season to taste ; stir in the floured butter ; cook five minutes, and pour out. BEEFSTEAK AND ONIONS. Flatten the steak with the broad side of a hatchet ; broil over clear coals ; lay upon a chafing-dish, and pom ever it a little melted butter in which has been stewed a quarter of an onion sliced. Strain out the onion ; pep- THIRD WEEK WEDNESDAY. 577 per and salt the butter ; squeeze in the juice of half a lemon. "After it is poured over the steak, put a hot cover over it, and let it stand five minutes before serving. Steak thus treated has a delicious flavor. CANNED SUCCOTASH. Put on in enough boiling water to cover it. Salt slightly ; stew half an hour ; turn off most of the water, and put in as much cold milk. Heat to boiling ; stir in a good lump of butter rolled in flour ; pepper and salt ; simmer ten minutes, and pour out. POTATOES A LA PARISIENNE. Pare, and cut into small balls with your potato-gouge. (The scraps should be boiled and mashed.) Boil in hot salted water, until tender ; drain, and drop into a sauce- pan containing a cupful of drawn butter seasoned with pepper and parsley. Stew three minutes. SPINACH. Pick off the leaves, and boil in plenty of hot salted water. Drain ; chop upon a board, or in a tray ; put into a saucepan, with a tablespoonful of butter, a little sugar, pepper and salt, nutmeg, and a few spoonfuls of milk or cream. Stir, and heat until bubbling hot ; pour out upon small squares of fried bread. BAKED APPLE DUMPLINGS. i quart of prepared flour ; 2 tablespoonfuls of lard, and i of butter ; i saltspoonful of salt ; 2 cups of milk. Mix into a paste, rubbing shortening and salt into the flour, then wetting with the milk. Roll out less than half an inch thick ; cut into squares ; lay a pared and cored apple in the centre of each ; bring the corners together, and join neatly. Lay in a buttered baking-pan, the j Dined edges down, and bake to a nice brown. Glaze with white of egg just before you take them up. Sift powdered sugar over them, and eat with hot, sweet sauce. 25 578 OCTOBER. iDeek. Dieppe Soup. Stewed Chickens. Boiled Bea?s. Browned Potatoes. Stewed Tomatoes. Tapioca Pudding. DIEPPE SOUP. 2 Ibs. of beef, cut from the shin, and sliced; 2 sH;ed onions ; 2 carrots ; i teaspoonful of sugar ; dripping for frying ; 3 stalks of celery ; 5 quarts of water ; cup of farina, soaked two hours in a little milk. Pepper and salt. Flour, and fry the beef with the onion, sugar, pepper, and salt, to a good brown in the dripping. Put into a soup-pot, with five quarts of water, the carrots, and cel- ery, and cook slowly four hours, at least. Strain, cool, and skim ; season ; add the farina, and simmer half an hour longer, stirring faithfully. STEWED CHICKENS. Truss and stuff the fowls as for roasting. Cover the bottom of the pot with thin slices of salt pork or corned ham ; strew a little onion, a bunch of sweet herbs, chopped, three blades of mace, a pinch of lemon-peel, a little salt and pepper, upon this. Put in the chickens ; cover with weak broth water will do, but is not so good cover closely and stew tender. The time will depend upon the size and age of the chickens. When done, take up and keep hot. Strain and skim the gravy ; thicken with browned flour, and pour over the fowls. BOILED BEANS. If you use dried beans, soak over night. Put on in cold water, and cook slowly until soft. Drain, pepper, salt, and butter ; then dish hot. BROWNED POTATOES. Work cold mashed potatoes soft with milk and butter ; season with pepper and salt. Make into round, flat cakes ; flour well, and bake brown in a quick oven. THIRD WEEK FRIDAY. 579 STEWED TOMATOES. Pare, slice, and stew twenty minutes. Season with pepper, salt, sugar, a lump of butter rolled in flour ; put in a tablespoonful of fine bread-crumbs, and simmer ten minutes longer. TAPIOCA PUDDING. i cup tapioca, soaked six hours in a little cold water ; i quart of milk ; i large cup of sugar ; 5 eggs ; grated peel of ^ lemon ; a little salt. Scald the milk, and pour upon the yolks and sugar ; beat the soaked tapioca into this custard ; salt ; whip in the frothed whites. Pour into a buttered mould ; put on the top, and set in a pan of boiling water, and this into a moderate oven. Cook three-quarters of an hour, or until firm. Turn out carefully, and eat with sauce. l)trir Clam Soup. Boiled Cod. Puree of Eggs. Mashed Potatoes. Cauliflower au Gratin. Coffee Meringue Custard. CLAM SOUP. 50 clams ; i quart of milk ; i pint of water ; 2 table- spoonfuls of butter ; 12 whole peppers ; a few bits of cay- enne-pods ; 6 blades of mace ; salt to taste ; i tablespoon- ful of corn-starch. Cut the hard parts from the clams, and set by the soft portions. Put the hard bits into the soup-pot, with the clam-liquor, the water, and spices. Boil half an hour ; strain, salt, and return to the fire, with the soft parts. When the soup begins to simmer, stir in the butter and corn-starch. Stew five minutes, and pour into the tureen 58O OCTOBER. ' Stir in the boiling milk, and serve. Send oyster-crackers and sliced lemon around with it. BOILED COD. Sew up the fish in a clean bit of mosquito-net, and cook in boiling salted water, fifteen minutes to the pound. Un- wrap, and pour over it a few spoonfuls of sauce, putting the rest into a boat. SAUCE. A cupful of the liquor in which your fish is cooking, strained and skimmed. Put into a saucepan ; heat, and stir in a great spoonful of butter rolled in a teaspoonful of flour. When this boils, add the pounded yolks of two boiled eggs, and a tablespoonful of minced cucumber pickle. Boil once, and serve. Garnish the fish with rings of whites of eggs, and pickles, sliced. PURE OF EGGS. 8 hard-boiled eggs ; 3 raw eggs ; i cup of gravy saved from yesterday's chickens ; i tablespoonful of butter ; chopped parsley ; pepper, salt, and nutmeg ; some fine crumbs ; fried bread. Pound the boiled yolks, and work in butter, parsley, seasoning, and the raw eggs. Beat stiff, and rub through a colander. Mince the whites until they are like coarse snow, and stir over the fire in the hot gravy five minutes, with a tablespoonful of crumbs. Make a mound of the yolks in the middle of a stone-china dish ; form a ring of the whites around them, with an outer wall of triangles of fried bread. Sift fine crumbs over all, and brown nicely upon the upper grating of the oven. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual, and send in with the fish-course. CAULIFLOWER AU GRATIN. Boil, tied up in a net, in plenty of hot salted water, forty minutes, if large. Put into a buttered bake-dish. THIRD WELK SATURDAY. 5^1 blossom upward ; cover with drawn butter ; sift fine crumbs over it, and set in the oven ten minutes to color the crumbs. COFFEE CUSTARD MERINGUE. 6 eggs whites and yolks separated ; i quart of milk ; i cup of sugar ; i cup of strong made coffee. Whip the whites to a stiff froth with a little powdered sugar. Heat the milk with a pinch of soda in it ; lay the meringue upon it in great spoonfuls, turning when the lower side is poached. Lift with a skimmer, as each spoonful is done, and lay upon a sieve to cool and drain. When all are out of the milk, pour it upon the beaten yolks and sugar. Return to the farina-kettle, and stir until it begins to thicken. Take from the fire, and stir in die hot coffee. When all are cold put the meringues into a glass bowl, and pour the custard over them. The me~ ringues will at once rise to the surface, coated with the custard. llleek. 0atttrba. Excellent Stock Soup. Veal Collops with Tomato Sauco, Rice Croquettes a la Princesse. Boiled Potatoes. Squash, Lausanne Pudding. EXCELLENT STOCK SOUP. i knuckle of veal, all the bones well cracked, and all the meat, except what is taken off your collops ; 4 pig's feet, cleaned and cracked ; 3 Ibs. of beef marrow-bones ; bunch of herbs ; 3 onions ; 3 carrots, sliced ; 6 blades of mace ; 4 stalks of celery ; 9 quarts of water ; pepper and salt ; % cup of rice. Put the meat, bones, and feet on in the water over- night, cooking two hours before the fire goes down, and leaving on the range in the pot (which must be scrupu 582 OCTOBER. lonsly clean) all night, salting it a little. In the morning, add the herbs and vegetables, and simmer gently six hours. Take from the fire, and strain, picking out the meat and bones, and rubbing the vegetables through the colander. Put meat and bones into the stock-pot ; salt and pepper highly, and pour on them all the soup, except two quarts. There should be at least six quarts of strong broth, the extra waste in boiling having been made up by adding hot water from time to time. Season the stock well, and put away in a cold place. Cool and skim to-day's soup, sea- son, and put over the fire with the rice. Simmer until the rice is tender. VEAL COLLOPS WITH TOMATO SAUCE. Cut three pounds of meat- from your veal knuckle, and this into pieces two inches long and one wide. Flatten with the side of a hatchet ; flour well, and fry in dripping, with half of a sliced onion. Put a cup of your soup-stock into a saucepan, season well, and lay in the collops. Have ready a cup of tomato sauce, rubbed smooth through a colander, and seasoned. When the collops have stewed ten minutes in the broth, add a tablespoonful of the sauce, and the same quantity, at intervals of five minutes, until all is used up. Be careful to follow these directions im- plicitly. When the sauce is all in, put in a tablespoonful of butter rolled thickly in browned flour. Simmer five minutes, and serve in a deep dish. RICE CROQUETTES A LA PRINCESSE. 2 cups boiled rice ; 2 eggs ; cup of milk ; pepper and salt; a boiled sweetbread, minced fine, or boiled fowl-giblets, or any cold meat minced, and worked to a paste with the pounded yolks of two boiled eggs, and well seasoned with butter, salt, cayenne and a pinch of lemon ; lard for frying. Mix beaten eggs and milk with salt into the hot rice, and stir in a saucepan until stiff. Let it get cold ; make into thin round cakes ; enclose a spoonful of the meat- paste in the centre of each, and roll the rice-ball round. Dip in beaten egg, then in cracker-dust, and fry carefull} in plenty of hot lard. Drain and serve hot. FOURTH WEEK SUNDAY. $83 BOILED POTATOES. See Monday of this week. SQUASH. Pare, slice and cook soft in boiling water. Drain, mash, and press in a hot colander ; season with pepper, salt, and butter, and smooth in a mound within a deep dish. LAUSANNE PUDDING. i pint of milk ; 3 eggs ; 2 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch ; \ cup of sugar ; i teaspoonful of vanilla or other essence ; sweet jam or jelly. Heat the milk, and stir in the corn-starch wet up with cold milk. . Stir until thick. Take from the fire, and beat in sugar and egg, with flavoring. Melt a tablespoon- ful of butter in a square, shallow baking-pan ; pour in the pudding and bake half an hour. Take it up ; spread, while hot, with the sweetmeats ; roll up closely, lay upon a dish, and sift sugar over it. Cut in slices an inch and a half wide. Jourtt) White Broth. Roast Beef. Yorkshire Pudding. Browned Sweet Potatoes. Fried Parsnips. Made Mustard. Potato Pudding. Grated Cheese. WHITE BROTH. Remove the fat from your jelly-stock. Take out enough for to-day's use ; also, two of the pig's feet. Cut the best part of the meat from these into as neat squares as you can contrive, and lay aside. Heat the stock, with OCTOBER. the addition of a cup of boiling water, and put, meantime, two tablespoonfuls of butter into a clean saucepan. When it heats, stir in two tablespoonfuls of flour. Stir fast, and, to keep it from browning, put in, now and then, a few spoonfuls of soup. Cook five minutes ; add grad- ually to the soup ; put in the pieces of meat, with more seasoning, if required ; boil once, pour into the tureen, and add a cup of boiling milk. ROAST BEEF. Lay in a dripping-pan, pour a cupful of boiling water over it, and cook, basting often, about ten minutes per pound. If there is much fat on it, cover these parts with a paste of flour and water, until the meat is nearly done. Ten minutes before taking it up, dredge with flour, then baste once with butter. If you like made gravy with beef, pour off the fat from the top ; thicken with browned flour, season and boil once. YORKSHIRE PUDDING. 10 tablespoonfuls prepared flour ; i cup of cold water; 2 cups of milk ; 3 eggs ; salt. Rub the flour smooth in the water and milk ; salt, beat in the yolks, and, just before putting into the oven, whip in the beaten whites. Put two tablespoonfuls from the fat " top " of your beef gravy into a square baking-pan ; pour in the batter, and put into the other oven until " set." Baste then, every few minutes, with the hot drip- ping until it is of a rich brown. Cut in squares, and lay about the meat. Some much prefer this Yorkshire Pud- ding to that cooked with the meat. BROWNED SWEET POTATOES. Boil with their skins on about twenty minutes. Peel carefully. Pour off nearly all the fat from the top of the beef-dripping. Lay the potatoes in the pan around the meat, and baste when you baste the beef. Drain well in a colander. FOURTH WEEK MONDAY. $85 FRIED PARSNIPS. Boil tender in hot, salted water ; scrape, slice length- wise when they are nearly cold ; flour all over, and fry in salted lard or dripping. Drain well. POTATO PUDDING. i Ib. mashed potato, rubbed through a colander ; lb. butter, creamed with the sugar 6 eggs whites and yolks beaten separately ; i lemon, squeezed into the hot potato ; i teaspoonful of nutmeg, and the same of mace ; 2 cups white sugar. Beat the yolks into the creamed butter and sugar ; add the potato. Beat very hard, and whip in the whisked whites, with the spice. Bake in open shells of paste on Saturday. Send grated cheese around with it. JFourtl) tDeek. IKonJrag. Macaroni Soup. Rechauffee of Beef. Potatoes au Gratin. Kidney Beans, Fricasseed. Grated Horseradish. Grapes, Boiled Chestnuts. Apples. MACARONI SOUP. Heat the contents of your stock-pot to boiling, after adding a pint of hot water. Cook a few minutes ; strain off as much broth as you want for to-day, and return the rest to the jar when you have scalded it well. Put in more pepper and salt, and put by for future soups. Heat and season the soup left out for to-day ; add a handful of macaroni, broken short, and cooked twenty minutes in hot, salted water. Simmer five minutes. RECHAUFFE'S OF BEEF. Trim your cold roast neatly. Make incisions at short distances apart, and thrust strips of fat salt pork quite 25* 586 OCTOBER. through it. Set in * a round, deep baking-pan. Sprinkle with minced onion, and pour over it a pint of gravy the remains of that which accompanied the roast, mixed with some from the stock-pot. Season the gravy well with pepper, salt, minced herbs, and a suspicion of French mustard. It should be cold, and the oven slow, for the first hour never fast. Cover very tightly ; open the dish at the end of one hour, and turn the meat, but pay it no further attention until two hours have passed. Then dish it ; strain the gravy ; thicken as much as you want for your meat with browned flour ; boil up, and pour over the beef. The rest can be set by for other uses. If the beef has been cooked slowly and steadily, it will be tender and most savory. POTATOES AU GRATIN. Boil and mash the potatoes ; press firmly in a greased bowl ; turn out upon a shallow pie-plate, also greased ; wash all over with raw egg ; sift fine crumbs upon it, and brown in a quick oven. Slip to a hot, flat dish. KIDNEY BEANS FRICASSEED. Soak all night. Next day, put on in cold water, at the back of the range, and cook tender. When you turn your beef, after an hour's cooking, dip out half 'a cupful of the gravy. Cool and skim it ; add a little minced parsley and onion, and, when your beans are soft, pour off nearly all the water, and add this gravy. There should be just enough to keep them from getting dry. Simmer ten min- utes, and dish without draining. GRAPES, BOILED CHESTNUTS, APPLES. Arrange the grapes in a fruit-dish, ornamented with leaves. Put on the chestnuts in warm (not hot) water, slightly salted. Bring to a boil, and cook fast fifteen min- utes. Drain in a colander ; stir a spoonful of butter intc the chestnuts, tossing in the colander until dry. Serve in a deep dish, lined with a napkin. Polish the apples, and lay a fruit-knife at each rlace. FOURTH WEEK TUESDAY. Jotull) tUeck. ue0traj). Beef-olives Soup. Mutton Stew, with Dumplings. Baked Potatoes. Stewed Tomatoes. Beets Sautes. Omelette Meringue. BEEF-OLIVES SOUP. Chop a few slices of the twice-served cold beef very fine ; mix with one-third as much cold mashed potato, wet with gravy ; season well ; bind with a beaten egg, and stir in a greased saucepan until quite stiff. Let it get cold ; make into small olive-shaped balls ; flour, and lay aside. Strain off the liquid from your stock-pot : bring to a boil, adding hot water or seasoning, as the case may require ; boil, and skim for five minutes, and drop in the beef-olives carefully. Simmer one minute fast boiling would break them and pour out. If you have any pickled olives in the house, add a dozen to the soup when you put in the beef-balls. MUTTON STEW, WITH DUMPLINGS. 3 Ibs. of lean mutton, cut into short strips ; J Ib. of salt pork, chopped ; \ onion, minced ; chopped parsley and thyme; T cup of milk ; i tablespoonful of flour wet up with the milk ; pepper and salt. Put on the mutton in enough cold water to cover it, and cook very slowly one hour. Then add the pork, onion, pepper, and herbs, and stew an hour longer. Make out a little paste, in the proportion used for the apple dump- lings on Wednesday, Third Week in October ; cut into strips, and drop into the stew. Cook ten minutes ; take out meat and dumplings with a skimmer ; lay upon a dish ; add milk and flour to the gravy ; stir until thickened, and pour over the contents of the dish. . BAKED POTATOES. Wash well ; lay in a good oven, and bake until soft Wrap in a napkin, and dish. 588 OCTOBER. STEWED TOMATOES. Open the can an hour before cooking, and pour out Put into a saucepan with a little minced onion, and stevr twenty minutes. Season with sugar, pepper, salt, and a good piece of butter rolled in flour, and cook ten minutes more. BEETS SAUTES. Wash, cut off the tops, and boil more than an hour. Scrape, cut into round slices, and put into a saucepan with two tablespoonfuls of butter, one of vinegar, and pepper and salt to taste. Heat, toss, and stir ten minutes. OMELETTE MERINGUE. 8 eggs ; juice of a lemon, and half the grated peel ; 4 tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar ; a little sweet jam or jelly ; a pinch of salt ; but.ter. Beat eight yolks and four whites light ; add salt, lemon- juice, and a tablespoonful of powdered sugar. Put a tablespoonful of butter in a frying-pan, and when it heats, run it all over the bottom. Pour in the omelette, shaking and loosening from the sides with a spatula. So soon as it is done at the edges sufficiently to be folded, lay a great spoonful of jam or jelly upon it ; fold over, and turn out upon a stone-china dish. The meringue, made of the remaining whites and sugar, should be ready beaten with the lemon-peel. Heap upon the omelette, and set upon the upper grating of the oven to " set " and brown. Jburtl) Barley Cream Soup. Boiled Ham. Chopped Cabbage. Corn Pudding. Beet-root Salad. Drunken Dominie. BARLEY CREAM SOUB. 3 Ibs. lean veal ; i onion ; \ Ib. pearl barley ; 4 quart! of water : salt, pepper, and a cup of milk. FOURTH WEEK WEDNESDAY. 589 Cut the veal and onion very small ; put on with the barley. Boil slowly until reduced to two quarts. Strain, rubbing the barley through a sieve. Season with pepper and salt ; simmer three minutes. It should be white and thick as cream, when you have added the cup of boiling milk, after which it must not boil. BOILED HAM. Soak a ham four or five hours. Scrub it well, and put on to boil in plenty of cold water. Cook eighteen or twenty minutes to the pound. When done, leave in the water one hour in the open air, or where it will cool rapidly. Take off the skin carefully ; rub all over with flour ; sift fine crumbs over the top and sides, and set ten minutes in a quick oven. Wind frilled paper about the shank, and where the paper joins the body of the ham, twine a wreath of parsley. CHOPPED CABBAGE. Cut off stalks and green leaves, and quarter a cabbage Boil fifteen minutes in hot salted water ; pour this off, and cover the cabbage with pot-liquor, taken from the ham- kettle, and the fat skimmed off. Cook tender ; drain, pressing hard ; chop, and again drain ; season with pep- per, salt, and a little vinegar, and dish very hot. CORN PUDDING. Drain a can of corn. Chop the grains fine with a chop- ping-knife. Add a cup of milk, three eggs, a tablespoon- ful of melted butter, pepper and salt to taste. Beat all together, and bake, covered, forty-five minutes, in a good oven ; then brown. BEET- ROOT SALAD. Chop the cold beets left from yesterday into ratber coarse dice. Mix with an equal quantity of cold chopped potatoes, and pour over them such a dressing as was used for Bavarian Salad, Thursday, Second Week in October. DRUNKEN DOMINIE. i long or square stale sponge-cake ; Ib. of citron ; i glass of brandy ; i cup of sherry wine ; i pint of milk ; 3 eggs ; i cup Df sugar. 590 OCTOBER. Cut the citron into strips, and stick in regular rows in the top of the cake. Six hours before you will want to use it, pour over it, a little at a time, the liquor. It should absorb it all, and hold it with Dutch perseverance. Heat the milk ; pour upon the beaten yolks and sugar. Stir and cook until it thic"kens. When cold, pour around the cake, as it lies upon a long dish, and cover the domi- nie and his bed with a meringue of the whites, beaten up with a little sugar. The citron spikes should be just visi- ble through the snowy blanket. Jburtl) Itleek. A Western Soup. Roast Chickens and Cresses. Polenta. Stewed Salsify. Mashed Potatoes. Apricot Trifle. A WESTERN SOUP. i sheep's head, cleaned, with the skin on ; 4 cleaned pig's feet ; 2 onions ; 2 carrots ; 2 turnips ; bunch of sweet herbs ; 6 quarts of water ; 12 whole peppers ; salt to taste. Put the head and feet into the soup-pot, and pour over them the water. When they have boiled slowly two hours, and been often skimmed, put in the sliced vegeta- bles and herbs, and cook three hours longer, replenishing with boiling water as the liquid sinks. There should be five quarts of soup. Strain ; lay aside the sheep's tongue to cool, with the meat from one of the feet. Season the rest of the meat and bones; put into the stock-pot ; pour over it all the soup not needed for to-day, also the skimmed pot-liquor from your ham, if it was corned not smoked. Season, and set in a cold place. Cool and skim the soup meant for to-day ; season, and put in the sliced tongue and dice of pig's feet. Boil one minute. FOURTH WEEK THURSDAY. 59 1 * ' ROAST CHICKENS AND CRESSES. Roast as directed on Thursday, First Week in October, and lay a thick border of fresh water-cresses around them on the dish, with a bunch under or over each wing. POLENTA. i pint of boiling water ; i cup of coarse yellow meal, or enough for thick mush ; a little salt. Put the water over the fire ; add the salted meal, and stir constantly until it has cooked twenty minutes, and bubbles up in the middle. Turn upon a flat dish, and, when cold and stiff, cut into squares ; dip these into flour, and fry to a yellow-brown. Drain off the fat. This is a favorite dish with the Italian peasantry, who generally, however, eat it without frying. STEWED SALSIFY. Scrape ; clean, without cutting the roots ; drop into cold water as you clean them. Put on in boiling water, a little salt ; when tender, take out a cupful of the water, thicken with two tablespoonfuls of butter rolled thickly in flour ; boil up and pepper. Dish the salsify, pour the sauce over it, and cover over hot water five minutes, to let it soak in. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual. APRICOT TRIFLE. i can of California apricots ; i quart of milk ; 4 eggs ; i cup of sugar ; -J- package of Cooper's gelatine ; 2 table- spoonfuls even ones of corn-starch, wet up with milk. Sweeten the apricots with half the sugar, and set aside in a bowl. Heat the milk .; stir in the corn-starch ; pour over the beaten eggs and sugar. Cook until it begins to thicken, and pour hot upon the gelatine, which should have been soaked in a little cold water, and then dissolved in a /ery little hot milk. Beat all up well, and let them get cold. Wet a mould; put in a cupful of the custard ; 592 OCTOBER. cover with apricots,* drained from the syrup ; wait fifteen minutes, and pour on more cream ; in a few minutes, more apricots, and so on until all are used up. Set in ice to form, and, when firm, turn out, and pour the apri- cot-syrup over the trifle. If the apricots are large, you would do well to cut them up. Jourtl) tihek. Jribag. Peas Porridge. Fried Pickerel. Chicken Croquettes. Puree of Potatoes. Baked Squash. Apple Fritters. PEAS PORRIDGE. Soak a quart of split peas overnight. Next morning put them on to boil in enough cold water to cover them well. When this has fairly begun to boil, pour it off, and add stock from your store in the stock-jar. Cook slowly, taking care it does not burn, until the peas are very soft. Rub through a colander and serve. Save a pint as a foundation for to-morrow's soup more than a pint, if you can. Never forget that soup makes soup. FRIED PICKEREL. Clean and wash the fish. Wipe carefully inside and out. Dredge with flour all over the outside, and fry to a nice brown never to a crisp in lard or dripping. Drain off the fat ; lay upon a hot dish the head of one fish to the tail of the other and garnish with curled parsley and quartered lemon. CHICKEN CROQUETTES. Chop the meat from your roast chickens, and mix with one-third as much mashed potato. Season ; moisten wel FOURTH WEEK FRIDAY. 593 with a gravy made by boiling down the bones and stuffing in water, then straining and seasoning it. Beat into the mixture one or two whipped eggs ; heat and stir over the fire until quite stiff. Turn out and cool ; then roll into croquettes, dip in egg and pounded cracker, and fry to a golden brown. PTJRE"E OF POTATOES. Mash the potatoes with butter and milk, working them smooth and soft. Season, put over the fire and stir until almost stiff. Mound upon a flat dish, and strain over them a little of yesterday's gravy, skimmed and heated. BAKED SQUASH. Pare, quarter, boil, and mash the squash. Season with pepper, salt, butter, and whip in two beaten eggs. When y 4 cake Baker's chocolate, grated ; i table- spoonful corn-starch, dissolved in milk ; 3 tablespoonfuls of milk ; 4 tablespoonfuls of white sugar ; 2 tablespoon- fuls of vanilla ; \ teaspoonful cinnamon, and a little salt ; i heaping teaspoonful of melted butter. Rub the chocolate smooth in the milk ; heat over the fire, and add the corn-starch wet in more milk. Stir until 6l8 NOVEMBER. thickened, and pour but. When cold, beat in the yolks and sugar, with the flavoring. Bake in open shells lining pate-pans. Cover with a meringue made of the whites and a little powdered sugar, when they are nearly done, and let them color slightly. Eat cold. Second iUeek. Saturirag. Winter Pea Soup. Ham and Eggs. Macaroni with Cod. Fried Beans. Cold Slaw, with Cream Dressing. Squash Pie. , WINTER PEA SOUP. 3 Ibs. of beef, cut into strips ; i Ib. of lean ham ; 2 Ibs. of cracked bones ; 5 quarts of water ; i turnip, sliced ; 2 onions, chopped ; pepper ; salt ; 3 stalks of celery ; i pint of split peas. Soak the peas all night. In the morning, put them on in a farina-kettle covered with a quart of warm water, and cook soft. Put into a soup-kettle the beef, ham, and vegetables, with five quarts of water, and cook slowly four hours, filling up with hot water should the water sink below four quarts. Strain off the liquor ; pick out meat and bones from the colander ; put into the stock-jar, and season well. Pour over them all but three pints of the soup, and set away. Pulp the vegetables through the colander into. to day's broth; season, and add the peas, also rubbed through a colander. Cook slowly, stirring often, half an hour, and pour upon dice of fried bread into the tureen. HAM AND EGGS. Boil slices of him fifteen minutes, and let them gel cold. Trim and cut into pieces of uniform size ; put a small piece of butter in a fryij g-pan, and cook the ham, SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. 6l not too quickly, turning when the under side is done. Strain the fat when the ham has been taken out and put upon a hot-water dish ; return to the fire, and fry the eggs. Cut off the ragged edges and lay one upon each slice of ham. MACARONI WITH COD. Break a quarter of a pound of macaroni into short pieces ; boil twenty minutes in hot salted water ; drain ; stir in a tablespoonful of butter and three tablespoonfuls of grated cheese ; mix up with one-third as much chopped cod as you have macaroni, and put into a buttered bake- dish. Wet with a little milk ; scatter bread-crumbs on the top, and bake, covered, half an hour, then brown. FRIED BEANS. Boil as directed on Sunday of this week ; put a lit- tle dripping in a frying-pan with a little powdered, or chopped parsley ; heat, put in the beans, and stir until they are a pale yellow ; pepper and salt, and serve hot. COLD SLAW, WITH CREAM DRESSING. i small head of white cabbage, chopped fine ; i cup scalding milk ; rather less than a cup of vinegar ; i tablespoonful of butter ; 2 beaten eggs ; i tablespoonful of white sugar ; i teaspoonful essence of celery ; pepper and salt to taste. Heat milk and vinegar in separate vessels. Put butter, sugar, and seasoning into the hot vinegar. Boil up once, and put in the cabbage. Heat to scalding and take off. Add the beaten eggs to the hot milk ; cook until they be- gin to thicken. Put the hot cabbage into a bowl ; pour the custard over it ; toss and stir with a silver fork ; cover to keep in the strength of the vinegar, and cool suddenly. SQUASH PIE. i pint of stewed and strained squash ; i pint of milk ; | cup of sugar ; 3 eggs, beaten light ; % teaspoonful of gin- ger, and same of mace and cinnamon mixe'd. Beat all well together, and bake in open shells of paste 62O NOVEMBER. fthek. Potage au Riz Roast Turkey. Cranberry Sauce Mashed Potatoes, Browned. Sweet Potatoes. Queen's Pudding. POTAGE AU Riz. Take the fat from the top of the soup-stock. Pour off and strain what is needed for to-day. Heat and skim ; add half a cup of rice which has been cooked soft in a little milk also the milk which has not been soaked up ; put in what seasoning is needed ; simmer fifteen minutes, and serve. ROAST TURKEY. Clean, and wash out the crop and body of the turkey with soda and water, rinsing it out afterwards. Stuff with a force-meat made of crumbs, a little cooked sausage, pep- per, salt, and a little butter. Truss the turkey neatly. (Salt the giblets, and set by for to-morrow's soup.) Lay it in the dripping-pan ; pour boiling water over it, and roast about ten minutes to the pound, after the cooking actual- ly commences. Cook slowly at first, or it will be dry with- out and raw within. Baste often and freely. Ten minutes before taking it up, dredge with flour, and baste with but- ter. Pour off the fat from the top of the gravy, thicken with browned flour, and season ; boil once and serve in a boat. CRANBERRY SAUCE. Put a quart of clean cranberries into a saucepan, with a cupful of cold water. Stew slowly, stirring often, for an hour and a half. Take from the fire, and sweeten abun- dantly with sugar ; rub through a fine colander and set to form in a wet mould. Do this on Saturday. MASHED POTATOES BROWNED. Whip light with milk, butter, and salt ; pile upon a greased pie-dish, and brown in a good oven. Slip to a hot dish by the aid of your cake-turner. THIRD WEEK MONDAY. 621 SWEET POTATOES. Boil until tender ; strip off the skins ; lay in an oven to dry for some minutes and serve. QUEEN'S PUDDINCJ. 2 cups of milk ; 4 eggs ; package of gelatine ; cup of sugar ; vanilla or other essence ; i sponge-cake ; 2 glasses of wine ; raspberry or other jelly. Soak tne gelatine in the milk for one hour. Put into a farina-kettle and heat to boiling, stirring until the gelatine is dissolved. Pour upon the beaten eggs and sugar ; re- turn to the fire and cook one minute. Pour half, when cold, into a wet mould. After half an hour, cover this with slices of sponge cake with jelly spread between them. Wet these well with wine. Add the rest of the custard, and set the mould upon ice, or in a cold place. Make this pudding on Saturday. filjirlr ti)k. JflouJrag. Giblet Soup. Turkey Scallop. Boiled Rice. Stewed Tomatoes. Baked Potatoes. Apple Meringue Pie. GIBLET SOUP. Boil the turkey giblets in a c quart of water. Take them out ; add the water to the entire contents of your stock- pot, and simmer at the back of the range for one hour, adding water if it should boil down. Strain and season. Have ready the giblets the gizzard chopped fine, the liver pounded with half a cupful of turkey-stuffing. Cook all together fifteen minutes, and pour out. TURKEY SCALLOP. Cut the meat from your cold turkey. Break the bones , cover them with two quarts of cold water ; boil one hour, 622 NOVEMBER. season and put in{o a bowl. Chop the meat and season -with pepper and salt. Put a layer of buttered crumbs in the bottom of a bake-dish ; cover with the mince ; moisten with gravy ; more crumbs buttered and wet with milk. Having filled the dish in this way, cover with cracker- crumbs, seasoned, wet with oyster-liquor (or milk) and beaten light with two eggs. Strew butter on top ; bake, covered, half an hour ; then brown. BOILED RICE. Skim the fat from the cooled broth made by boiling your turkey-bones. Put into a saucepan with a cup of soaked rice, and cook until the latter is soft, shaking the pot from time to time. Drain off the liquor, and put into your stock-pot ; serve the boiled rice in a deep dish, and pass grated cheese with it. STEWED TOMATOES. See Thursday, Second Week in November. BAKED POTATOES. Wash, and bake soft in a moderate oven. Wipe, and serve wrapped in a napkin. APPLE MERINGUE PIE. Beat into some good, sweet apple-sauce a little melted butter, and season to taste with nutmeg. Fill a shell of pie-paste with this ; bake, and when done, spread with a meringue made of the whites of three beaten eggs and a little sugar. Shut up in the oven a few minutes, to " set." You can keep raw paste in a cold place from Saturday to Monday, and spare yourself the trouble of making it to-day. THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 62$ tthek. Veal and Oyster Soup. Beefsteak Pie. Ladies' Cabbage au Maitre d'Hatel, Puree of Potatoes. Canned French Beans. Flour Hasty Pudding. VEAL AND OYSTER SOUP. Knuckle of veal meat sliced and bones cracked ; i qt. of oysters ; i cup of milk ; 2 teaspoonfuls of flour ; T tablespoonful of butter cut up in the flour; 2 stalks of celery ; pepper and salt ; 6 quarts of water. Put meat, bones, celery, and water over the fire and cook slowly four hours. Strain; put meat and bones, highly seasoned, into your stock-jar with all the soup ex- cept two quarts, and set away. Cool and take the fat from that kept out for to-day ; return to the fire with seasoning. When it boils, add the oysters. Cook five minutes ; pour out and add the boiling milk thickened with the floured butter. BEEFSTEAK PIE. 3 Ibs. of steak ; i chopped onion ; i tablespoonful of mushroom catsup ; a little water ; i tablespoonful of but- ter cut up into floured bits ; pepper and salt ; some good plain paste. Cut the steaks into small squares ; beat each flat, and leave out bone, fat, and gristle. Strew a little onion in the bottom of a bake-dish ; put in a layer of meat, peppered and salted ; scatter bits of floured butter over it ; then more onion. When all are in, pour in the catsup and a little water or gravy is better cover with crust, and bake nearly two hours. LADIES' CABBAGE AU MAFTRE D' HOTEL. Boil a cabbage in two waters. (Salt the second, and put into your stock-pot.) Let it get perfectly cold ; chop fine ; mix with two beaten eggs, a few spoonfuls of your 624 NOVEMBER. soup-stock, a great spoonful of butter, the juice of a lemon, pepper and salt. Pour into a buttered pudding- dish, bake covered, forty minutes, brown, and serve in the dish. PURE OF POTATOES. Whip boiled potatoes light, and rub through a colander. Add milk and butter, salt to taste, and when very soft, pour into a buttered saucepan. Stir until hot and stiff; pour into a deep dish. CANNED FRENCH BEANS. Clip the beans into short and equal lengths. Put into a saucepan, cover with hot salted water, and stew half an hour. Drain, stir in a lump of butter, with pepper and salt, and dish. FLOUR HASTY PUDDING. Heat to boiling a quart of milk. Salt, and stir in three tablespoonfuls of flour, rubbed smooth in a little cold milk. Boil and stir fifteen minutes, and add a tablespoon- ful of butter. Cook two minutes ; turn into an uncovered deep dish, and eat with butter and sugar, or cream and sugar. Sprinkle each saucerful with nutmeg. tDeirtuairag. Cauliflower Soup. Pork Chops, with Tomato Gravy. Beets, Potato Croquettes. Apple Sauce. Batter Pudding. CAULIFLOWER SOUP. Skim your soup-stock. Heat and boil it for ten min- utes. Strain off two quarts, and return the rest to the stock-jar. Parboil a small cauliflower ; clip it into small THIRD WEEK WEDNESDAY. $2$ clusters, and drop into the soup when you have brought it again to a boil. Cook slowly fifteen minutes. Stir in a tablespoonful of butter cut up in half as much flour. Season to taste ; boil up fairly, and serve. PORK CHOPS, WITH TOMATO GRAVY. Trim off skin and fat ; rub all over with a mixture of powdered sage and onion. Put a small piece of butter into a frying-pan ; put in the chops, and cook rather slowly, as they should be well done. Lay the chops upon a hot dish ; add a little hot water to the gravy in the pan ; a great spoonful of butter rolled in flour ; pepper, salt, and sugar, and half a cup of juice drained from a can of tomatoes keeping the tomatoes themselves for 'a tomato omelette for breakfast. Stew five minutes, and pour over the chops. BEETS. Wash ; cut off the tops ; boil more than an hour ; scrape. Cut into round slices, and put into a root-dish. Pour over them a tablespoonful of butter, heated with as much vinegar, and seasoned with pepper and salt. POTATO CROQUETTES. Mash soft with butter, salt, and milk. Beat light with two eggs (for a large dish). Heat in a greased saucepan, stirring all the while, until quite stiff. Let it get cold; make into croquettes ; roll in raw egg, then in cracker- crumbs, and fry to a nice* brown in plenty of dripping, Drain off the fat, and serve. APPLE SAUCE. See Wednesday, Second Week in November. BAITER PUDDING. i liberal pint of milk ; 4 eggs ; 2 even cups of flour prepared ; i teaspoonful of salt. . Beat the yolks; add njilk and salt; then the flour; lastly, the whites. Bake at once in a buttered dish, forty- five minutes. Eaf hot, with a good sauce. 27 626 NOVEMBER. Slftrir llhek. Chicken Cream Soup. Ragout of Rabbits. Parsnip Fritter*. Stewed Celery. Glazed Sweet Potatoes. Orange Tartlets. CHICKEN CREAM SOUP. Boil an old fowl, with an onion, in four quarts of cold water, until there remain but two quarts. Take it out, and let it get cold. Cut off the whole of the breast, and chop very fine. Mix with the pounded yolks of two hard- boiled eggs, and rub through a colander. Cool, skim, and strain the soup into a soup-pot. Season ; add the chicken-and-egg mixture ; simmer ten minutes, and pour into the tureen. Then add a small cup of boiling milk. RAGOUT OF RABBITS. Pair of rabbits ; \ Ib. of fat salt pork ; i large onion ; / tablespoonful of butter, and same of browned flour ; pep- per and salt ; lemon, peeled and sliced thin ; glass of sherry ; cup of gravy. Slice the onion ; dredge with flour, and fry brown in the butter. Add half a cupful of gravy, and, when well mixed, turn all into a saucepan. Put in the rabbits, jointed as for fricassee, the sliced bacon, and lemon. Sea- son ; cover closely, and stew an hour, or until the meat is tender. Thicken with browned flour ; boil once, and pour out. PARSNIP FRITTERS. Scrape and halve the parsnips. Boil tender in hot salted water. Mash smooth, picking out the woody bits. Add a beaten egg to every four parsnips, a teaspoonful of flour pepper and salt at your discretion, and enough milk to make into a thick batter. Drop, by the spoonful, into hot lard, and fry brown. Drain in a hot and dish. THIRD WEEK FRIDAY. 62/ STEWED CELERY. Scrape, and cut into short bits. Cook tender in hot salted water. Pour this off; add enough cold milk to cover the celery. Heat to a boil ; stir in a good spoonful of butter rolled in flour, pepper and salt. Stew five min- utes longer. GLAZED SWEET POTATOES. Boil soft, peel carefully, and lay in a greased dripping- pan in a good oven. As they begin to crust over, baste with a little butter, repeating this several times, as they brown. When glossy, and of a golden russet, dish. ORANGE TARTLETS. 2 fine oranges, juice of both, and grated peel of one ; j cup of sugar; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter; juice of \ a lemon ; i tea spoonful of corn-starch, wet up with lemon- juice and a little cold water. Beat all to a smooth cream, and bake in small paste shells. iri) tltek. Jribag. Egg Soup. Panned Oysters. Fowl and Rice Croquettes. Potatoes a 1'Italienne. Canned Corn Pudding. Boiled Custards and Cake. EGG SOUP. Heat all your soup-stock, adding hot water, should there not be two quarts. Cook gently half an hour ; strain, pressing all the strength out of the meat ; cool, skim off the fat ; season ; return to the fire, and when it boils, pour upon six beaten raw eggs. Put back into the soup-kettle, and stir until it begins to thicken. It must not boil. Put strips of crisp toast into the tureen, and pour on the soup. 628 NOVEMBER. BANNED OYSTERS. Butter a number of small tins with upright sides, like those of muffin-rings. Cut rounds of bread to fit the bottoms ; toast these, butter well, and fit each into its place. Wet with oyster-liquor ; then lay in as many oysters as the tins will hold ; dust with pepper and salt ; put a bit of butter upon each, arrange the tins in a large dripping-pan ; cover with another to keep in steam, and flavor, and cook eight minutes, or until the oysters "ruf- fle." Send up in the tins " hot and hot." FOWL AND RICE CROQUETTES. Cut the meat from the skeleton of your cold chicken. Break up the bones, and cover with a quart of cold water, adding skin and gristle. Boil down to a pint, cool, take off the fat ; return to the fire ; salt, and put in half a cup- ful of raw rice. Cook in a farina-kettle until the rice is soft and dry ; stir in, then, a tablespoonful of butter, and turn upon a flat dish, to cool. Meanwhile, put the minced chicken into a saucepan with a little of yesterday's soup ; season, and stir over the fire until very hot. Beat a raw egg into the cold rice ; flour your hands, and make into oblong flat cakes. Put a great spoonful of mince in the hollowed centre of each ; enclose by folding the rice upon it ; roll each in flour ; then in raw egg ; lastly in pounded cracker, and fry to a fine yellow brown. POTATOES A L'ITALIENNE. Whip the boiled potatoes to a dry meal with a fork ; still using the fork, beat in butter, salt, pepper, and two tablespoonfuls of cream. Pile, like rock-work, upon a stone-china dish, or within a pudding-dish that has a silver stand for the table, and brown delicately and quickly upon the upper grating of the oven. CANNED CORN PUPDING. Drain and chop the corn ; add a cupful of milk, 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter, and i of sugar ; pepper, salt, and 2 beaten eggs. Beat all light ; pour in a greased bake-dish ; bake, covered, half an hour ; then brown. THIRD WEEK SATURDAY. 629 BOILED CUSTARDS AND CAKE. i quart of milk ; yolks of 5 eggs and the whites of 2, reserving 3 for the meringue ; 6 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; flavoring extract, i teaspoonful to the pint. Heat the milk to scalding ; pour gradually, upon the beaten yolks and two whites, whipped light with the sugar. Return to the custard-kettle, and stir until it begins to thicken. When cold, flavor ; pour into glass or china cups ; whip the whites to a froth with a little sugar, and pile upon the top. Lay a preserved berry, or a bit of bright jelly, upon the top of each snowy heap. Eat with cake. Good Beef Soup. Breaded Lamb Chops. Fried Potatoes. Scalloped Tomatoes. Baked Onions. Suet Dumplings. GOOD BEEF SOUP. 6 Ibs. of shin beef, cut in strips ; 2 Ibs. of bones, cracked ; 4 stalks of celery ; i onion ; 3 carrots ; 2 tur- nips ; bunch of sweet herbs ; pepper and salt ; 7 quarts of water. Put on the meat and bones in the water, and cook slowly, skimming often, for two hours. Add the herbs and all the sliced vegetables except one carrot, and cook two hours more. Strain off the liquor ; put bones and meat, well seasoned, into your stock -pot ; add the soup (ihere should be at least five quarts in all) except what is needed for to-day, and put away for future use. Pulp the vegetables into to-day's soup ; cool, take off the fat ; season ; put back over the fire ; add the reserved car- rot, which should have been cut into dice and cooked by itself in a little water ; simmer ten minutes, and pour out 630 NOVEMBER. BREADED LAMB CHOPS. Trim neatly ; flatten with the side of a hatchet ; pep per and salt ; dip into beaten egg, then in cracker-dust^ and fry in good dripping, turning when the lower side is done. Drain off the fat, and lay upon a dish, overlapping each other, with a wall of fried potatoes around them. FRIED POTATOES. Pare ; slice thin ; lay in cold water half an hour ; dry between two towels, and fry to a light brown in nice drip- ping or salted lard. Shake off all the fat in a hot colan- der, and pile around the chops. SCALLOPED TOMATOES. Drain off most of the liquid from a can of tomatoes into the boiling soup-kettle. Put a layer of crumbs in the bottom of a buttered bake-dish ; butter them, and lay in the tomatoes, seasoned with pepper, salt, and sugar. Cover with buttered crumbs, and bake, covered, half an hour then brown. BAKED ONIONS. Cook in two waters the second, salted and boiling. When tender, drain ; set closely together in a bake-dish. Pepper, salt, and butter liberally ; pour over them a little of your soup-stock, strained through a cloth ; brown in a good oven ; lay in a deep dish, and pour over them the gravy thickened with browned flour, and cooked one minute. SUET DUMPLINGS. 2 cups fine crumbs soaked in a cup of hot milk ; i cup powdered suet ; 4 beaten eggs ; i tablespoonful of sugar ; i teaspoonful cream-tartar mixed with i tablespoonful of flour ; teaspoonful of soda dissolved in the milk ; a little salt. Beat the eggs into the soaked crumbs ; add salt, suet, sugar, lastly, the flour. Beat and knead hard , make into balls ; put into floured cloths ; leave room to swell ; tie tightly, and boil one hour. Eat hot, with sauce. FOURTH WEEK SUNDAY. 63! Jbtirtl) tMeek. Macaroni Soup. Roast Goose. Apple Sauce. Sweet Potatoes. Canned String-Beans Cauliflower. Chocolate and Cocoanut Blanc-Mange. White Cake. Coffee. MACARONI SOUP. Skim your stock ; pour off and strain two quarts ; heat to a slow boil ; add a tablespoonful of walnut catsup ; skim well, and drop in half a cupful of fancy macaroni, which has been cooked ten minutes in a little boiling water. Simmer five minutes, and serve. ROAST GOOSE. Be wary in the selection of even what the poulterer assures you is a "green goose," and should you be " sold," as well as the bird, take the disappointment good-naturedly. Wash out and wipe dry the oody of the goose ; add to the usual dressing of crumbs, pepper, salt, etc., a tablespoonful of melted butter ; a tablespoonful of minced onion ; half as much powdered sage, some bits of fat pork, and the yolks of two eggs. Put into the drip- ping-pan with two cupfuls of boiling water, and roast, if of fair size, two hours, basting often and very copiously. When half done, cover the breast with a stiff paste of flour and water, removing when you are ready to brown it. Take the fat from the gravy ; thicken with browned tiour, add a glass of sherry, salt, and pepper ; boil and serve in a boat. APPLE SAUCE. See Wednesday Second Week in November. SWEET POTATOES. Cook as directed on Sunday, Third Week in November 632 NOVEMBER. CANNED STRING-BEANS. See " French Beans," Tuesday, Third Week in Novem- ber. CAULIFLOWER. Tie in a net, and cook about forty-five minutes in boil ing salted water. Drain ; lay in a deep dish, blossom upward, and pour on a cupful of rich drawn butter, with the juice of a lemon stirred in. t CHOCOLATE AND COCOANUT BLANC-MANGE. i quart of milk ; 3 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch heap- ing ; i cup of sugar ; whites of 4 eggs ; vanilla flavoring ; 3 tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate ; i grated cocoanut. Heat the milk ; rub the corn-starch smooth with a little cold milk ; stir into the hot milk, first the sugar, then the corn-starch. When it is a smooth paste, whip in the .frothed whites ; cook one minute, and pour off half of the mixture into a bowl upon half the grated cocoanut. Beat in well. Add to that on the fire the chocolate, rubbed smooth in a little milk, and stir until the blanc-mange is colored. Wet a mould ; when the chocolate-mixture is cold, pour half into the mould, 'and set where it will get cold fast. *After half an hour, or so soon as it will bear the weight, put the cocoanut in carefully, and when this is quite firm, add the rest of the chocolate. Next day turn it out upon a dish, and heap the other half of the cocoanut newly grated over it. Send around a good boiled custard cold with it. Do this on Saturday. WHITE CAKE. * Please refer to " General Receipts," Series No. i, of "COMMON SENSE IN THE HOUSEHOLD," page 334. FOURTH WEEK MONDAY. 633 Jourtl] tDeek. Medley Soup. Rechauffe of Goose. Stewed Salsify. Potato Cones, Baked. Cranberry Sauce. Apple Meringue. MEDLEY SOUP. When you have cut the meat from the carcass of the goose, break up the bones ; put on with the stuffing in two quarts of water, and boil down to one. Strain ; skim ; add what stock remains in your stock-jar, and simmer half an hour. The stuffing should thicken the soup suffi- ciently, and almost season it. Pour out into the tureen. RCHAUFF OF GOOSE. Cut the meat into neat slices, and lay in a saucepan with minced ham, and a little onion between the slices. Cover with gravy, and heat slowly until near the boiling- point. Take up the meat ; lay upon a dish ; thicken the gravy with browned flour ; add a spoonful of currant jelly ; boil up, and pour over the meat. STEWED SALSIFY. Scrape, and cut each root in two, dropping into water as you scrape them. Stew in boiling wat.er, a little salt, until tender; pour off the water; add enough milk- to cover the roots ; when it boils, stir in a piece of butter rolled in flour ; pepper and salt ; simmer five minutes, and pour out. POTATO CONES BAKED. Mash or whip boiled potatoes light ; mix with a little very finely minced parsley a little butter, a great spoon- ful of cream, and the yolks of two beaten eggs. Make into cone-shaped loaves, about as large as an egg ; set in a greased baking-pan ; wash over with beaten egg, and brown in a quick oven. 27* 634 NOVEMBER CRANBERRY SAUCE See Sunday, Third Week in November. APPLE MERINGUE. Sweeten and spice some nice apple sauce ; beat in two or three eggs. Pour into a pudding-dish, and bake quickly. When well crusted over, cover with a meringue made by whipping stiff the whites of three eggs with a little sugar. Shut the oven-door, and tinge slightly. Jburtl) tthek. Baked Bean Soup. Veal Cutlets. Fried Parsnips Sausage and Cabbage. Celery Salad, Macaroni Pudding. BAKED BEAN SOUP. On Monday morning put a quart of beans in soak. By evening, put them to boil at the back of the range, and cook until soft. Early on Tuesday morning put them into a pudding-dish with a pound of parboiled streaked pork, and bake brown. Cut the bacon into strips ; put into a soup-pot with the beans, a sliced onion, and three stalks of celery. Pour on three quarts of cold water, and boil down to two. Rub through a colander ; return to the fire ; season to taste ; add a teaspoonful of flour into which a tablespoonful of butter has been rubbed. Sim- mer ten minutes, and pour upon dice of fried bread placed in the tureen. VEAL CUTLETS. Flatten with side of a hatchet ; pepper, salt, dip in raw egg, then in cracker-dust ; fry in a little butter, turning as they brown. Dish, and pour over them some drawn but- ter in which has been cooked a great spoonful of tomatc catsup. FOURTH WEEKWEDNESLAY. 63$ FRIED PARSNIPS. Boil tender in a little hot water, salted. Scrape, cut into long slices ; dredge with flour and fry in hot lard or drip ping. Drain off the fat, and serve. SAUSAGE AND CABBAGE. Quarter and parboil a fine, white cabbage, and put on to boil in hot water with six or eight "link " sausages, having previously pricked these slightly. When the cab- bage is tender, drain and chop, adding pepper, salt, a little butter and vinegar heated together. Pile upon a hot dish, laying the sausages about the cabbage. CELERY SALAD. Scrape and cut blanched celery into inch lengths. Put into a glass dish, and pour over it a dressing made by rub- bing a teaspoonful of sugar with half as much, each, of pep- per, salt, and made mustard, with two tablespoonfuls of oil, and twice the quantity of vinegar, added gradually. MACARONI PUDDING. i cup macaroni broken into equal lengths ; i quart of milk; 4 eggs ; lemon ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter ; j- cup of sugar, a little mace. Simmer the macaroni in half the milk until tender. Heat and add the other pint. While hot stir in the butter, the yolks beaten up with sugar, the mace, lemon juice and peel finally the whisked whites. Bake half an hour in a buttered mould covered then brown. fourtl) Venison Soup. Boiled Leg of Mutton. Mashed Turnips. Stewed Tomatoes. Stuffed Potatoes. Pancakes. VENISON SOUP. 3 Ibs. of venison, the coarser parts of the meat will do ; Ib. lean ham ; i onion sliced ; 3 stalks of celery ; 5 636 NOVEMBER. quarts of water ; i can of corn, drained and chopped , pepper and salt ; butter and flour. Cut up the meat and put on with the onion, celery, and water. Stew slowly three and a half hours. Strain, pressing hard ; cool, skim, and return the soup to the fire with the chopped corn. Stew half an hour ; add the seasoning, a lump of butter rolled in flour, a half-cup of tomato-juice, and simmer ten minutes more. If you cannot get venison use mutton for this soup. BOILED LEG OF MUTTON. Put on in plenty of boiling water, a little salt. Cook fifteen minutes to the pound. When done, wipe dry and rub all over with butter. Make a boat of drawn butter, using as a base a cup of the strained pot-liquor, and, when made, add a great spoonful of chopped cucumber pickle. Of course you will pour the pot-liquor into the stock- jar. MASHED TURNIPS. Pare, quarter, and cook .the turnips tender in boiling salted water. Mash in a hot colander; add butter, pep- per, and salt, and serve in a hot dish. STEWED TOMATOES. See Thursday, Second Week in November. STUFFED POTATOES. Bake large potatoes soft, and cut a round piece from the top of each. Scrape out the insides carefully and mash smooth with butter, cream, and a little grated 1 cheese. Beat soft with milk, season with pepper and salt, and heat in a greased saucepan, stirring all the time. Fill the skins with the mixture, put on the caps and set in the oven for three minutes. Serve upon a dish lined with a napkin. PANCAKES. 2 cups of prepared flour ; 6 eggs ; i saltspoonful of salt ; milk to make a thin batter. Beat the *ggs light ; add salt, two cups of milk, then, the FOURTH WEEK THURSDAY. 637 whites and flour alternately with milk, until the batter is of the right consistency. Run a teaspoonful of lard over the bottom of a hot frying-pan, pour in a large ladleful of batter, and fry quickly. Roll the pancake up like a sheet of paper ; lay upon a hot dish ; put in more lard, and fry another pancake. Keep hot over boiling water, sending half a dozen to the table at a time. Eat with sauce. Jcmrtl) Mutton and Rice Soup. Chickens a la Viennoise. Hominy Croquettes Spinach. Lima Beans, Bread and Custard Pudding. MUTTON AND RICE SOUP. Take all the fat from the liquor in which your mutton was boiled ; put it over the fire with a cup of raw rice, and cook slowly until the latter is boiled to pieces. Strain through the soup-sieve, add seasoning to taste, and some finely minced parsley. Heat to boiling, and pour into the tureen. Add a cup of hot milk, in which have been beaten two raw eggs the milk having cooked for a minute to thicken them. CHICKENS 1 LA VIENNOISE. Clean, wash, and wipe a pair of chickens. Parboil the giblets; chop them fine, with a very little onion, the pounded yolks of two hard-boiled eggs, and seasoning to your taste. Add a handful of crumbs, and stuff the chickens with this force-meat. Boil in plenty of hot water, slightly salt, three-quarters of an hour, having sewed up each in coarse netting. Put them into a broad saucepan, in which have been melted two tablespoonfuls of nice dripping, and the same of butter. The fowls should have been wiped dry, and the fat be hot when you put them in Turn twice wlrle you brown them over a quick fiie 638 NOVEMBER. When russet-colored all over, dish, and pour over them a few spoonfuls of butter, heated with a tablespoonful of tomato catsup. Save the liquor in which the fowls were boiled. HOMINY CROQUETTES. 2 cups of fine-grained hominy, boiled, and cold ; 2 beaten eggs; 2 tablespoonfuls melted butter; i table- spoonful of sugar ; salt to taste. Rub butter and sugar into the hominy until the latter is smooth ; then beat in the eggs. Make into rolls with floured hands; roll in flour, and fry to a good color. Drain well. SPINACH. Pick off the leaves. Boil in hot salted water twenty minutes. Drain, chop fine, and return to the saucepan, with a piece of butter, salt, sugar, pepper, and a pinch of mace. Beat in two tablespoonfuls of cream, and, when smooth and hot, turn out. LIMA BEANS. Soak the dried beans all night ; then proceed as with " Kidney Beans a 1' Anglaise," on Sunday, Second Week in November. Cook enough for a hot dish to-day, and bean salad to-morrow. BREAD AND CUSTARD PUDDING. i quart of milk ; 2 even cups of dried crumbs ; 4 eggs ; 5 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; cinnamon ; Ib. raisins, seeded and chopped ; 2 tablespoonfuls melted butter. Soak the crumbs in a pint of the milk, and heat to scalding in a custard-kettle. Beat to a mush ; put in the butter, and beat again one minute. Butter a pudding- dish ; pour a half-cupful of the mush in the bottom ; sprinkle with cinnamon, and strew with raisins, more bat- ter, spice, and fruit, until all are in. Heat the other pint of milk ; pour upon the beaten yolks and sugar ; pour this custard, without boiling, over the pudding. Bake, covered, half an hour. Uncover, spread upon the custard if fully " set " a meringue of the whites, whipped stiff with a little powdered sugar. Eat warm not hot with cream and sugar, or butter and sugar. FOURTH WEEK FRIDAY. 639 Jburtl) Graham Soup. Fricassee of Canned Salmon. Chicken Dumplings Salsify Saute. Macaroni, with Bacon Bean Salad. Pumpkin Pie. GRAHAM SOUP. 3 onions ; 3 carrots ; 3 turnips ; \ cabbage ; 6 stalks of celery ; can of tomatoes ; 3 tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in flour ; cup of milk (cream is better) ; pepper and salt ; 3 quarts of water ; a little sugar ; sweet herbs. Chop the vegetables, and put all over the fire in the water, excepting the cabbage and tomatoes. Parboil the cabbage, and add at the end of half an hour's boil. Half an hour later, put in the tomatoes and chopped herbs. Boil sharply twenty minutes ; add sugar, pepper, and salt. Rub the soup thr6ugh a colander. Return to the fire ; stir in the floured butter ; simmer five minutes, turn into the tureen, and stir in the hot milk or cream. FRICASSEE OF SALMON. i can fresh salmon ; 2 beaten eggs ; i cup of drawn but- ter ; i teaspoonful anchovy sauce ; 2 hard-boiled eggs, chopped fine ; cayenne and salt to taste ; capers, or minced green pickles. Stew the fish broken into rather coarse bits in the can-liquor ten minutes. If there is not enough liquor, cook in a little water. Add the drawn butter, and, when these are well mixed, the beaten eggs. Stir five minutes ; put in the chopped eggs and pickles. Heat one minute, and pour into a deep dish. CHICKEN DUMPLINGS. Meat from your cold fowls, minced fine ; cup of gravy ; yolks of 3 raw eggs ; i tablespoonful of flour ; pep 640 NOVEMBER. per and salt ; batter 'made of i egg; % cup of milk, and a little flour; cracker-crumbs. Put chopped meat and seasoning, with a little of the liquor in which the chickens were boiled, into a saucepan, and heat to a gentle boil. Stir in the flour wet in a little cold water, and a minute later the beaten yolks. Stir to thickening ; pour out, and let it get cold and stiff. Flour your hands, and make the paste into flattened balls. Roll in cracker-dust, dip in the batter, again in the cracker, and fry in hot lard. Drain, and serve hot. N.B. Boil the skeletons and stuffing of the chickens in the rest of the pot-liquor, and put by, well seasoned, in the stock-jar. SALSIFY SAUTED See Thursday, First Week in November. MACARONI WITH BACON. Boil half a pound of macaroni, broken up small, in a little weak " stock," salted, twenty minutes. Drain ; stir in a quarter of a pound of streaked bacon, boiled and minced very fine ; put into a buttered bake-dish ; pour on a very little soup-stock ; cover with rolled crackers, seasoned well ; put bits of butter on top ; bake, covered, half an hour then brown. BEAN SALAD. Put the cold Lima beans into a salad-dish; and pour on such a dressing as was made for cold slaw on Monday, First Week in November. PUMPKIN PIE. i quart milk ; i 'pint stewed pumpkin, rubbed through a colander ; 4 eggs ; i teaspoonful mixed cinnamon and mace, and half as much nutmeg ; i scant cup of sugar ; a little salt. Beat all well together, and bake in open crust. Ea> ooU FOURTH WEEK SATURDAY. 64! JFomrtl) tthek. Saturbag. Ox-head Soup. Pork Steaks. Apple Sauce Mashed Turnips. Potatoes Scalloped with Eggs. Apple Pie and Cream. OX-HEAD SOUP. J an ox's head, well cleaned, including the fresh tongue ; 6 potatoes, boiled and mashed ; 3 turnips ; 3 onions ; 4 carrots ; 4 stalks of celery ; pepper, salt, and mace ; bunch of sweet herbs ; 8 quarts of water ; the stock already in your jar. Put the head, tongue, and vegetables (leaving out the potatoes) over the fire, with the water, early in the day. Bring slowly to boiling, and keep this up five hours. At the end of three hours take out the .tongue with enough liquor to cover it, and let it get cold. When the five hours have passed, strain off the liquor ; take out bones and meat ; season highly, and put into your emptied and scalded stock -jar. Pulp the vegetables into the soup ; season it, and pour all not needed for to-day into the stock-pot. Add to that kept out the skimmed and strained broth made yesterday from the chicken-bones ; the pota- toes, boiled and rubbed hot through the colander. Boil slowly ten minutes, and pour out. When tongue and the stock in the jar are both cold, add the one to the other. PORK STEAKS. Cook precisely as yf claret, pepper and salt to taste, Boil up, and serve in a boat. 644 DECEMBER. SWEET POTATOES. Boil in hot water until a fork will enter the largest easily ; peel ; lay in a dripping-pan, and set in a good oven a few minutes to dry out. MOULDED POTATOES. Mash boiled potatoes with milk, butter, and salt not too soft ; press hard into a greased mould, and turn out upon a hot dish. STEWED CELERY. Scrape and cut into equal lengths the best stalks of a bunch of celery. Cook tender in boiling water, a little salt ; drain, pepper and salt, and when dished pour on a cupful of drawn butter in which has been stirred the juice of half a lemon. BARLEY CUSTARD. \ cup of pearl barley ; i quart of milk ; 5 eggs ; I dessertspoonful of corn-starch wet up in a little cold milk ; nearly a cupful of sugar ; a pinch of salt ; vanilla, or other flavoring. Boil the barley tender in just enough water to cover it, with a pinch of salt. Drain, and put into a custard-ket- tle with the milk. Heat slowly, and when it fairly boils, pour irpon the beaten eggs and sugar. Return to the fire ; stir until thick ; turn into a bowl, and, when cold, flavor. On Sunday, pour into custard-cups, with, if you like, a spoonful of whipped cream upon the top of each. MARTHA'S CAKE. Please consult " COMMON SENSE IN THE HOUSEHOLD/' Series No. i, General Receipts, page 314. FIRST WEEK MONDAY. 645 JFtr0t tDtek. Tapioca Soup. Venison Pasty. Stewed Tomatoes Kidney Beans au Maltre d'H6tel. Potato Cakes. Apple Jelly. Fruit, Nuts, and Raisins. TAPIOCA SOUP. Pour oft as much stock as will suffice for the wants of your family to day. Strain, and heat it. Take off the scum, and add a generous handful of tapioca, soaked two hours in a little cold water. Simmer until clear. VENISON PASTY. Cut off slices of the least-done part of your roast veni- son ; divide into neat squares, season with pepper and salt. Make a gravy by cooking bits of skin and refuse pieces of meat in a little water ; boiling the liquid down one-half; cooling : taking off the top and seasoning well. Cut the best parts of the tongue left from yesterday's soup very small. Put a layer of venison into a deep dish ; sprinkle with butter-bits rolled in flo-ur, and cover with the minced tongue. Upon this drop a few bits of currant jelly. Fill the dish thus ; pour on the gravy, and put a thick crust of paste (kept over from Saturday's pas- try-making) above all. Bake to a pale brown ; wash over with white of egg, and, when this hardens, with butter, and shut the oven-door to glaze it. STEWED TOMATOES. Empty a can of tomatoes into a saucepan. Cook twenty-live minutes ; season with sugar, pepper, salt, and a tablespoonful of butter rolled in pounded cracker. Sim- mer ten minutes longer. KIDNEY BEANS .AU MAFTRE D'HOTEL. Soak the beans all night. Boil soft in water, slightly salt. Drain, and put hot into a saucepan with two table- 646 DECEMBER. spoonfuls of butter, a little parsley, chopped fine, pepper, salt, and a little minced onion. Shake over the fire until hissing hot, add the juice of half a lemon, and dish. POTATO CAKES. J^Iake the cold mashed potato left from yesterday into flat, round cakes ; flour abundantly ; lay in a floured baking-pan and set in a hot oven to brown. Serve upon a hot. flat dish. APPLE JELLY. 12 fine pippins; 2 cups of powdered sugar; juice of 2 lemons ; grated peel of one ; package Coxe's gelatine soaked in i cup of cold water. Pack the apples, when pared and cored, into a stone- ware or glass jar with a- cup of cold water ; put on the top loosely to allow the escape of the steam : set in a pot of warm water, heat slowly, and boil until the apples are very soft. Have ready in a bowl the soaked gelatine, sugar, femon-juice and grated peel. Strain and squeeze the hot apples over them ; stir until the gelatine is dissolved, strain again through a flannel bag. Wet a mould and pour it in. This can be made on Saturday and kept in a cold place. FRUIT, NUTS, AND RAISINS. Put apples, pears, and oranges upon one dish ; nuts and raisins together. Canned Pea Soup. Beefsteak. Graham Savory Pudding. Baked Potatoes. Cream Parsnips. Susie's Bread Pudding. CANNED PEA SOUP. As your stock must be running low, add a quart of boiling water to the contents of the jar, and boil slowly at FIRST WEEK TUESDAY. 647 the back of the stove for an hour and a half. Strain, cool, skim, and add a can of green peas. Cook until these are tender ; pulp through a colander into the soup, season with pepper and salt, also a lump of white sugar, stir in a lump of floured butter, and when it has boiled once- more, pour upon dice of fried bread placed in the tureen. . BEEFSTEAK. Flatten and broil upon a greased gridiron over a clear fire. Turn as it drips. It should be done in ten or twelve minutes. Lay upon a hot-water dish ; pepper, salt, and butter liberally. Cover with another hot dish, or a heated cover of block-tin. GRAHAM SAVORY PUDDING. 2 heaping tablespoonfuls of Irish oatmeal, soaked two hours in a little cold water ; 2 cups of boiling milk ; hand- ful of fine crumbs ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter ; i table- spoonful minced onion ; r teaspoonful mixed sweet marjo- ram and parsley ; 3 eggs. Pour the hot milk upon the soaked oatmeal, and stir over the fire for fifteen minutes. Add the bread-crumbs, beat up well; put in the onion, herbs, butter, pepper, and salt, lastly the whipped eggs. When very light, butter a mould, pour in the pudding, set in a pan of boiling water, and this in a moderate oven. Bake one hour, turn out, and send around a boat of drawn butter with it. BAKED POTATOES. Bake in a steady oven until soft ; wipe, and send to table without peeling them. CREAMED PARSNIPS. Boil tender, scrape and slice lengthwise. Put over the fire with two tablespoonfuls of butter, pepper, and salt, and a little minced parsley. Shake until the mixture boils. Dish the parsnips, add to the sauce three table- spoonfuls of cream in which has been stirred a quarter- spoonful of flour. Boil once, and pour over the parsnips. 648 DECEMBER. SUSIE'S BREAD PUDDING. i quart of milk ; 4 eggs; the whites of three, more foi meringue; 2 cups fine dry crumbs; i tablespoonful melt- ed butter ; i cup of sugar ; juice and half the grated peel of i lemdn. Beat eggs, sugar, and butter light. Soak the crumbs in the milk, and mix well, beating long and hard. When nearly done spread with a meringue made of the whipped whites of three eggs and a little powdered sugar. Eat cold. tl)ebne0bag. A Plain Soup. Jugged Rabbits. Macaroni with Cheese. Cauliflower. Beets. Rusk Fritters. A PLAIN SOUP. 5 Ibs. shin of beef meat sliced and bones cracked ; 4 turnips ; 4 carrots ; 3 stalks of celery ; i large onion stuck with 6 cloves ; bunch of herbs ; pepper and salt ; 6 quarts of water. Put meat, bones and sliced vegetables on with the water, and cook slowly four hours. At the end of two hours take out a cupful of the meat, and spread out tc cool. When the four hours are up, strain the soup, rub- bing the vegetables through a colander ; cool, skim, and sea- son ; add the cooled meat cut into dice, heat to boiling, and serve. Put the meat and bones left in the colander into the stock-jar, with all of the soup not used to-day. JUGGED RABBITS. Skin, clean with care, and joint the rabbits as for fricas- see. Lay thin slices of fat salt pork in the bottom of a stoneware jar ; lay upon them pieces of rabbits ; strew with minced onion and parsley ; put in more pork and more rabbit, etc. Add a cup of your soup or other gravy. FIRST WEEK WEDNESDAY. 649 When all are in put on the cover of the jar, fitting closely, and set in a pot of warm water. Tie a piece of thick paper over the top of the jar to keep in the steam. Cook steadily two hours longer should you find, upon opening the jar, that the meat is not tender. When it is done, dish the meat, strain the gravy into a saucepan, and set in cold water to throw up the fat. Take this off; add a little currant jelly, browned Hour, wet with water, and a glass of claret. Boil one minute and pour over the meat. MACARONI WITH CHEESE. Break half a pound of macaroni into short pieces, and cook tender in hot salted water. When nearly done, stir in a tablespoonful of butter. When tender, drain ; stir in two great spoonfuls of grated cheese, salt to taste, and a little cayenne. Stir over the fire until the cheese is melted ; put in a spoonful of butter, and dish. CAULIFLOWER. Boil the cauliflower in plenty of hot salted water. When done, which should be in about twenty minutes, drain and dish, the flower upward. Pour over it a cup of drawn butter, seasoned with pepper, salt, and the juice of half a lemon. BEETS. Boil more than an hour, scrape and slice round. Dish, and pour upon them a little butter heated with a like quantity of vinegar, and seasoned with pepper and salt. RUSK FRITTERS. 12 stale rusks ; 5 eggs; 4 tablespoonfuls of white sugar ; 2 glasses of sherry. Cut all the crust from the rusks and divide each into two or three pieces of equal size. The slices should be an inch thick. Pour the wine over them ; let them lie in it five minutes, then drain upon a sieve. Beat eggs and sugar together. Lay the soaked rusks in these for a min- ute, turning over and over, so as to coat them well. Fry in boiling lard^to a golden brown. Drain well and sprinkle with powdered sugar mixed with cinnamon, and serve hot with or without sauce. 28 6$0 DECEMBER. Jtrat Celery Soup. Boiled Beef Tongue with Sauce Piquante. Baked Beans. Baked Tomatoes. Chopped Potatoes. Lemon Puddings. CELERY SOUP. 12 stalks of celery ; 3 pints of soup-stock; i cup of milk ; pepper and salt ; i teaspoonful of sugar ; -J onion ; i teaspoonful of flour wet up in cold milk. Scrape and cut up the celery into inch lengths. Cook fifteen minutes in a little hot water ; drain and add three pints of stock with the onion ; stew gently until the celery is very soft. Pulp through a colander into the soup ; season and return to the fire. Boil up ; put in the sugar and pour into the tureen. Add a cup of boiling milk thickened with the flour. BOILED BEEF'S TONGUE WITH SAUCE PIQUANTE. Soak the tongue a corned one three hours; wash well and cook in plenty of boiling water, fifteen minutes per pound. Trim off the root ; skin and dish, pouring over it a cupful of rich drawn butter in which has been stirred a great spoonful of capers, pickled nasturtium-seed, or of green pickle chopped. BAKED BEANS. Soak a quart of navy or kidney-beans all night. In the morning put on to boil in cold watep, and cook soft. Half an hour before taking them up, put in a piece of streaked salt pork, three or four inches square. When the beans are soft, drain ; put into a bake-dish with the pork half browned in the middle. Score the rind of the parboiled pork ; cover the dish, and bake one hour then brown. BAKED TOMATOES. Drain off most of the juice from a can of tomatoes (Add to the tongue pot-liquor, by and by ; boil together FIRST WEEK FRIDAY. 6$ I ten minutes, and pour into the stock -jar.) Put the toma- toes into a pudding-dish ; season with pepper, salt, sugar, and butter; strew fine crumbs over all; bake, covered, half an hour, and brown quickly. CHOPPED POTATOES. Boil potatoes, and let them get cold. Chop rather coarsely ; put into a saucepan, with a couple of spoonfuls of butter, a little pepper and salt, and shake and stir until very hot. LEMON PUDDINGS. 6 butter crackers, soaked in water, and crushed to a pulp ; 3 lemons ; half the grated peel ; i cup of molasses ; i tablespoonful melted butter ; a pinch of salt ; good pie- paste. Pare away all the skin of the lemons, when you have grated off half the yellow peel. Chop the pulp very fine, and remove the seeds. Stir this into the crushed crack- ers with the butter and salt. Beat in the molasses grad- ually, then the lemon-peel. Have ready small pate-pans lined with paste ; fill with the mixture, and cook. Eat cold, but fresh. JFtrst Bread Soup. Lobster Croquettes. Braised Grouse. Salsify Fritters. Sweet Potatoes. Indian Meal Puffs. BREAD SOUP. Save your crusts for several days for this soup. Break about half a pound of them into small pieces, and lay in an open oven to dry, while you skim your soup-stock ; add an onion, and put over the fire to boil. Cook gently half an hour ; strain ; return to the kettle, and when it boils again put in the crusts. Cook slowly twenty min- utes, stir, and beat the bread to a porridge, add seasoning and a little minced parsley, and boil one minute. 652 DECEMBER. LOBSTER CROQUETTES. i can of preserved lobster ; 2 eggs ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter ; cup fine crumbs ; yolks of two hard-boiled eggs pounded, then worked into the butter ; juice of half a lemon ; salt, cayenne pepper, a pinch of mace, and -one of lemon-peel ; beaten yolks of 2 raw eggs. Mince the meat ; work in the warmed butter and pound- ed yolks, the seasoning, raw eggs at last, the crumbs. Make into oblong balls or rolls ; roll in flour, and fry in sweet lard. Drain upon clean paper, rolling each cro- quette lightly upon it, and dish. Pass cream crackers and sliced lemon with these excellent croquettes, and make a separate course of them. BRAISED GROUSE. Clean thoroughly, washing out the inside in soda and water, and then rinsing and wiping. Truss, but do not stuff the birds ; tie them in shape. Cover the bottom of a saucepan with slices of fat salt pork ; lay the grouse upon these ; sprinkle minced onion and parsley over them with pepper, salt, and a little sugar. Cover with more pork, and pour in a large cupful of soup-stock, or other broth. Jf you cannot spare this, put butter and water, although it is not so good. Cover very closely ; simmer one hour ; turn the birds, and cook always covered until tender. Dish the grouse ; strain the gravy ; thick- en with browned flour ; boil up, and pour into a boat. Partridges, wild pigeons, and tough chickens may be cooked in this way also ducks. SALSIFY FRITTERS. Wash, scrape, and grate the roots, letting them fall from the grater into a batter made of two eggs, half a cup of milk, flour enough for thin batter, and a little salt and pepper. It should be like raw fritters when mixed. Drop, by the spoonful, into the hot fat. As fast as they are fried throw into a hot colander, set over a bowl in the oven. Eat hot. SWEET POTATOES. See Sunday of this week. FIRST WEEKSATURDAY. 653 INDIAN MEAL PUDDING. 4 beaten eggs ; i quart of boiling milk ; 2 scant cups white "coin-flour," or very fine meal; cup of wheat dour; i scant cup powdered sugar ; i tablespoonful but- ter ; a little salt ; i tablespoonful of cream of tartar, and half as much soda sifted twice through the flour; tea- spoonful mixed cinnamon and nutmeg. Boil the milk ; stir in the meal, flour, and salt. Boil fifteen minutes, stirring up well from the bottom. Put into a bowl, and beat hard for three minutes. When cold add beaten eggs and sugar, with the spice. Whip long and thoroughly. Bake in greased cups or muffin-tins, in a steady oven. When done, turn out, and eat with but- ter and powdered sugar. JFtrat tDeek. Mock Turtle Soup. Baked Mutton Chops. Macaroni Pudding. Winter Squash. Cold Slaw. Cracker and Jam Pudding. MOCK TURTLE SOUP. Please refer to Wednesday, Third Week in March, foi a long and minute receipt for this soup. Make enough for three days. BAKED MUTTON CHOPS. 3 Ibs. of mutton chops ; 5 fine potatoes ; i onion ; I kidney ; i pint of oyster-liquor ; pepper, salt, and parsley ; I tablespoonful of butter. Lay one-third of the chops rid of all the fat and skin in a baking-dish ; cover with potatoes and onions, sliced very thin ; sprinkle with salt and pepper. Put on another layer of chops, more potatoes and onions, then the sliced kidney. Cover with potatoes ; season ; put in the rest of the chops ; cover with onion and potatoes. Pour in the oyster-liquor and melted butter, with parsley, pepper, and 654 DECEMBER. salt. Cover very closely, and bake in a moderate oven three hours. Turn out upon a heated flat dish. MACARONI PUDDING. Break half a pound of macaroni into short pieces, and boil twenty minutes in hot, salted water. Drain ; add two tablespoonfuls of grated cheese, the minced remains of yesterday's game, or some other cold meat, a little chopped ham, and four beaten eggs. Mix all well, wet- ting with a little soup-stock adding, finally, a cup of milk, in which has been stirred a pinch of soda. Pour into a greased mould, and boil one hour. Turn out, and serve with a gravy made of cold gravy left from yesterday, mixed with a little hot stock, strained, thickened, and boiled for one minute. WINTER SQUASH. Pare, cut up, and cook soft in boiling water, a little salt. Drain; mash smooth, pressing out all the water; work in butter, pepper, and salt, and mound in a deep dish. COLD SLAW. Shred a firm cabbage, and pour over it a dressing made in these proportions : One teaspoonful of sugar, half as much salt, pepper, and made mustard, rubbed smooth in two tablespoonfuls of oil, and then beaten up very gradu- ally with five tablespoonfuls of vinegar, and a teaspoonful Colgate's essence of celery. CRACKER AND JAM PUDDING. 3 e gg s ) k CU P cracker-crumbs ; % CU P sugar ; i table- spoonful of butter ; i cup of milk ; lemon juice and grated peel; 3 tablespoonfuls of jam. Heat milk and crumbs together until scalding. Turn out to cool, while you rub butter and sugar to a cream adding the lemon. Stir in the beaten yolks, the soaked cracker and milk at last, the whites. Butter a bake-dish ; put the jam at the bottom ; fill up with the mixture, and bake, covered, half an hour ; then brown. Eat cold, with sifted sugar on top. Or, if you like, you can put a meringue over it befere taking from tie oven. SECOND WEEK SUNDAY. 6$$ " That Soup " Again. Roast Turkey, Garnished with Sausages. Mashed Turnips Canned Corn Pudding. Sweet Potatoes. Cranberry Sauce. Orange Snow and Snowdrift Cake. Hot Coffee. " THAT SOUP " AGAIN. Remove every particle of fat from the top of your stock. Take out what is needed for to-day, and heat to boiling slowly. ROAST TURKEY, GARNISHED WITH SAUSAGES. Wash out the turkey carefully. Stuff as usual, adding a little cooked sausage to the dressing. (Salt the giblets, and keep for to-morrow.) Lay the turkey in the dripping- pan, pour a great cupful of boiling water over it, and roast about ten minutes per pound slowly for the first hour. Baste faithfully and often, dredging with flour, and basting with butter at the last. Dish the turkey, laying boiled sausages around it. Pour the fat from the gravy ; thicken with browned flour ; salt, and pepper. Boil once, and serve in a boat. MASHED TURNIPS. Pare, quarter, and cook tender in boiling water, a little salt. Mash arvd press in a heated colander ; work in butter, pepper, and salt ; heap smoothly in a deep dish, and put **clabs " of pepper on top. CANNED CORN PUDDING. Drain, and chop the corn fine, add a tablespoonful of melted butter, four beaten eggs ; a large cup of milk, with an even teaspoonful of corn- starch stirred in it, with salt and pepper to taste. Bake, covered, in a greased pud- ding-dish one hour ; then brown quickly. 656 DECEMBER. SWEET POTATOES. See Sunday of First Week in December. CRANBERRY SAUCE. Cook a quart of cranberries with a very little water, slowly, in a porcelain or tinned saucepan. Stir often, and when they are broken all to pieces, and thick as mar- malade, take off, sweeten liberally, and rub through a col- ander. Wet a mould, and put them in to form. ORANGE SNOW AND SNOWDRIFT CAKE. 4 large sweet oranges, juice of all, and grated peel of one ; juice and half the grated peel of i lemon ; T pack- age of gelatine soaked in i cup of cold water ; whites of 4 eggs, whipped stiff; i large cup of powdered sugar ; 2 cups of boiling water. Mix the juice and peel of the fruit with the soaked gelatine, add the sugar, stir well, and leave them for one hour. Pour on boiling water, and stir until clear. Strain, and press through a coarse cloth. When cold, and be- ginning to congeal, whip a spoonful at a time into the frothed whites. Put into a wet mould. Do this of course on Saturday. For Snowdrift Cake, please refer to BREAKFAST, LUNCH- EON AND TEA, page 340. )D tele. Brown Giblet Soup. Minced Turkey and Eggs. Baked Tomatoes. Stewed Potatoes. Raw Celery. Plain Rice Pudding. A " Comfortable Cup of Tea." BROWN GIBLET SOUP. Cut each giblet into three pieces, and put on to boil in stock made of the remnant of your mock turtle soup, SECOND WEEK-MONDAY. diluted with water and strained. Simmer all together one hour. Chop the gizzard fine, pound the liver. Make what is called technically a roux, by putting two tablespoonfuls of butter into a saucepan, and when it bubbles, stirring in a teaspoonlul of browned flour, and continuing to stir until they are well mixed and smooth. Add, spoonful by spoonful, half a cup of boiling soup, then the pounded liver ; the gizzard, juice of half a lemon, and half a glass of brown sherry. Stir all this into the soup, and boil up once. Have in the tureen the yolks of four hard-boiled eggs, each quartered with a keen knife, and pour the soup upon them. MINCED TURKEY AND EGGS. Cut all the meat from the skeleton of the turkey. Put the bones, sinews, skin, and stuffing into a pot with three quarts of cold water. Set at the back of the range and let it simmer down to two quarts. Season, and set away in your stock-pot. Divide the meat intended for to-day into inch long pieces, tearing rather than cutting it. Heat the skimmed gravy ; add as much drawn butter ; two beaten eggs ; pep- per and salt ; put in the minced turkey ; set back over the tire, and stir until very hot. Cover the bottom of a pudding-dish with fine crumbs ; pour in the mixture ; strew crumbs on top, and bake to a light brown in a quick oven. Serve in the bake- dish. BAKED TOMATOES. Please see Thursday of last week the First Week in December. Add the surplus juice to your turkey-bone "stock." STEWED POTATOES. Pare and cut into small squares. Lay in cold water half an hour ; cook tender in hot water, a little salt. When done or nearly pour this off, add a- cup of cold milk, and when this begins to simmer, a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour, pepper, salt, and a little minced parsley. Boil gently one minute, and pour into a deep dish. 658 Df.CEAlBER. CELERY. Wash, scrape, and cut off the green leaves. Arrange the best stalks in a celery-glass. Put two or three green pieces into to-morrow's soup-stock while boiling ; and if you have time cut up the rest into short bits, and put in a jar or wide-mouthed bottle of vinegar to keep for salad- dressing. A PLAIN RICE PUDDING. i large cup of rice ; 2 quarts of milk ; 8 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; i teaspoonful of salt ; I great spoonful of but- ter, melted ; nutmeg and cinnamon to taste. Soak the rice two hours in a pint of the milk. Add, then, the rest of the milk and the other ingredients. Bake, covered, two hours ; brown, and eat cold. Qeconb illeck. Simple White Soup. Stewed Fillet of Veal. Spinach. Boiled Beans. Mashed Potatoes. Queen's Toast. SIMPLE WHITE SOUP. Take the fat from the top of your turkey soup-stock ; strain, rubbing the dressing through the colander. Sim- mer one hour, with half a sliced onion and four tablespoon- fuls of soaked rice in it, or until the rice is soft. Be care- ful that it does not scorch. Strain through the soup-sieve into the tureen, add pepper and salt, if needed finally a cup of hot milk in which has been stirred and cooked for one minute two beaten eggs. STEWED FILLET OF VEAL. Lard the fillet on top with strips of fat salt pork ; lay a few slices of corned ham in the bottom of a saucepan ; on SECOND WEEK-TUESDAY. 659 these the veal ; cover with sliced ham ; season with pep- per, salt, and a pinch of mace ; pour in a cup of yester- day's soup, weakened with water. Cover closely and stew two hours, turning the meat at the end of the first hour ; take up and keep the meat hot over boiling water ; add some browned flour and a tablespoonful of soaked gela- tine to the gravy when you have strained it, boil fast and hard until it is thick, and of a glassy brown. Pour on the veal, set in the oven, the larded side upward, and shut the door for a few minutes to "glaze " it. Garnish with light and dark green celery-tops. Lay the ham about it. SPINACH. Boil in plenty of hot salted water, for twenty-five min- utes. Drain, chop very fine, put back in the saucepan with a teaspoonful of sugar, a little pepper, salt, and mace, and a few spoonfuls of milk or cream. Beat and toss until it is like a thick green custard, and pour out upon slices of fried bread. BOILED BEANS. Soak all night. In the morning, put on in cold water, and cook gently until soft. Drain, pepper and salt, and pour over them, when dished, a little good drawn butter. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare as usual without browning. QUEEN'S TOAST. Cut thick slices of stale baker's "bread into rounds with a cake-cutter and fry to a nice brown in hot lard. Dip each slice into boiling water to remove the grease ; sprinkle with a mixture of powdered sugar and cinnamon, and pile one upon the other. Serve a sauce made of powdered sugar, dissolved in the strained juice of a lemon and thinned with a glass of wine. Put a very little upon each round. Butter sauces are too rich for queen's toast 560 DECEMBER. Seconfo tDeek. Beef Gravy Soup. Cannelon of Veal, Oysters, and Sweetbreads. Potatoes Sautes. Succotash. Cranberry Sauce. Impromptu Plum Pudding. BEEF GRAVY SOUP. 4 Ibs. of coarse lean beef; 3 Ibs. of bones; 2 sliced onions ; 2 turnips ; 2 carrots ; bunch of sweet herbs; 3 stalks of celery; pepper and salt ; i tablespoonful corn-starch, wet up in cold water ; 5 quarts of water. Cut the beef in small strips and fry to a good brown, in plenty of dripping. Take out the meat and lightly fry the bones. Remove these and put with the meat into the soup-pot. Now fry in the same fat the sliced onions ; add these, when brown, to the meat and bones, and pour on them the five quarts of water. Cook slowly one hour ; take off the scum, and put in the sliced carrots, turnips, the celery and herbs. Boil gently four hours. Strain ; pick out the meat and bones, and put, well-seasoned, into the stock-jar. Pulp the vegetables into the soup ; season ; pour all but two quarts into the stock-jar, and set aside. Cool that left out for to-day, skim and re-heat ; add the corn- starch' boil up and serve. CANNELON OF VEAL, OYSTERS, AND SWEETBREADS. Chop the remains of your stewed fillet ; boil, blanch, and cool two sweetbreads, and mince very fine. Chop, also, twelve oysters. Mix all these together with a cup of fine bread-crumbs ; add plenty of seasoning and two beaten eggs. Work to a paste ; flour your hands and make into a roll *;ven or eight inches long, and three or four inches in diameter. Envelope this in a crust of good pie-paste, closing the open ends with rounds of paste. Lay in a floured baking-pan, the joined edges downward, and bake in a steady oven. Just before taking it up glaze with butter. SECOND WEEK THURSDAY. 66 1 POTATOES SAUTES. Boil an J slice while hot. Put into a frying-pan with a large spoonful of butter, pepper, salt, and powdered pars- ley. Stir constantly until very hot, and dish. They must not be at all brown or even dry. Serve very hot. SUCCOTASH. Empty a can of succotash into a saucepan ; cover with boiling water, a little salt, and cook half an hour. Turn off the water ; pour in a cup of milk, and when this boils, stir in a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour ; season with pepper and salt ; boil once, and dish. CRANBERRY SAUCE. If you have none ready made, prepare according to re- ceipt given for Sunday of this week. It is well to make a good supply at a time, since it keeps well in cold weather. IMPROMPTU PLUM PUDDING. 2 cups of made mince-meat " Atmore's " is very good ; i\ cups prepared flour; 6 beaten eggs. Whip the yolks and stir (with additional sugar, if needed,) into the mince-meat. Beat hard for two or three minutes. Put in whisked whites and the flour alternately. Butter a large mould ; put in the mixture, leaving room for the swelling of the pudding, and boil, without the intermission of a moment, for five hours. Turn out upon a hot dish ; pour brandy over it, and light just as it goes into the dining-room. Eat with rich sauce. Scconir \Sttk. Tomato Soup. Glazed Ham. Potato Puff, Chopped Cabbage, with Sauce. Celery Salad. Corn-Starch Cup-Cake. Chocolate. TOMATO SOUP. Skim the fat from your soup stock, and put it, meat. 662 DECEMBER. bones and all, over the fire with a can of tomatoes. Sim- mer one hour and strain, rubbing the tomatoes through the colander. Season to taste ; return to the fire, and when it boils, put in a lump of sugar, and a tablespoonful of butter cut up in half as much flour. Boil up once. GLAZED HAM. Put into cold water about ten o'clock on Wednesday night, and let it soak until the fire is made next morning. Put on then in plenty of cold water, and cook eighteen or twenty minutes per pound. Set out of doors when done, in a large, shallow pan, and cover with the pot-liquor. You should have made, meanwhile, the " glaze," by boil- ing down a cup of yesterday's soup, with an equal quan- tity of strained pot-liquor, until the result was a thick brown broth. Add a tablespoonful of soaked gelatine, and set the mixture in boiling water. When the ham is nearly, or quite cold, skim carefully ; wash all over with the glaze, and set in the oven to harden. If not quite thick enough, apply a second coat when the first is dry. Twist frilled paper about the shank. POTATO PUFF. Whip hot boiled potatoes light and soft with milk, but- ter, and salt. Beat in two whisked eggs, and heap irregu- larly within a buttered bake-dish. Brown quickly, and serve in the dish in which it was baked. CHOPPED CABBAGE WITH SAUCE. Quarter a cabbage, and boil tender in hot salted water. Chop when you have drained it ; season with pepper and salt. Drain again, pressing out the water; put into a hot dish and pour over it a cup of drawn butter, having for a base some of the strained ham- liquor, into which have be*er. stirred a tablespoonful of celery vinegar and a little made mustard. Send up hot. CELERY SALAD. Scrape and cut into short pieces. Put into a salad- bowl, and pour over it a dressing such as was made for cold-slaw on Saturday, First Week in December. SECOND WEEK FRIDAY. 663 CORN-STARCH CUP-CAKE. 5 e gg s ') * CU P f butter ; 2 cups of sugar ; i cup sweet milk ; i cup of corn-starch ; 2 cups of prepared flour ; vanilla flavoring. Cream butter and sugar; beat in the yolks, the milk, the corn-starch and flour mixed together, alternately with the whites lastly, the vanilla. Bake in small loaves, and eat while fresh. Pass hot chocolate with them. BeconJr Oyster Soup. Boiled Chickens. Browned Potatoes. Baked Sweet Potatoes. Scalloped Squash. Baked Custards. OYSTER SOUP. 2 quarts of oysters ; i quart of milk ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter ; i teacupful hot water ; pepper, salt and a blade of mace. Strain all the liquor from the oysters ; add the water, and heat. When near the boil, add the seasoning, then, the oysters. Cook about five minutes from the time they begin to simmer, until they " ruffle." Stir in the butter, cook one minute and pour into the tureen. Stir in the boiling milk, and send to table. BOILED CHICKENS. Clean and truss the chickens, but do not stuff them. Sew up each in a piece of mosquito-netting, and boil in plenty of hot salted water. Allow about twelve minutes to the pound. Undo the netting ; wipe the chickens, and rub all over with butter. Send up in a boat a cup of melted butter in which have been stirred the pounded yolks of two hard boiled eggs, and some powdered 01 minced parsley. Pour a few spoonfuls over the chickens, 664 DECEMBER. BROWNED POTATOES. Boil with their skins on. Throw off the water ; take each potato in a clean towel, and hold it while you strip oft* the skin. Lay them, when peeled, in a greased baking- pan, and set this in a hot oven. Roast, with good drip- ping, until they are well colored. BAKED SWEET POTATOES. Wash, and bake soft in a moderate oven. Serve in their "jackets." SCALLOPED SQUASH. Pare, slice, and mash. Stir in, while it is hot, a good spoonful of butter, pepper and salt to taste, and two beaten eggs. Pour into a buttered dish ; strew fine crumbs on the top, and bake, covered, half an hour then brown slightly. BAKED CUSTARDS. i quart of milk ; 4 beaten eggs ; 5 tablespoonfuls of sugar, beaten with the eggs ; nutmeg, and 2 teaspoonfuls of flavoring extract. Scald the milk ; pour upon the other ingredients ; stir together well ; flavor, and pour into stone-china cups. Set these in a pan of hot water ; grate nutmeg upon each, and bake until firm. Eat cold from the cups. 0econfo iUeek. atari* ag. Chicken and Sago Soup Beefsteak Pudding. Boiled Onions. Mashed Potatoes. Fried Hominy. Sweet Potato Pie. CHICKEN AND SAGO SOUP. Take the top from your chicken pot-liquor ; add the cracked bones of the chickens, from which you cut the SECOND WEEK SATURDAY. 66$ meat for " breakfast, luncheon, or tea ; " boil gently one hour. Strain, and season to taste ; add a cup of soaked sago, and simmer until it is soft and clear. BEEFSTEAK PUDDING. 3 Ibsi. of rump steak ; 3 eggs ; 2 cups of milk ; 5 table- spoonfuls of prepared flour ; pepper and salt ; melted butter ; parsley ; French mustard. Cut the steaks into pieces rather more than an inch wide and long. Beat with a rolling-pin ; pepper and salt, and dip each in a mixture of melted butter and minced par- sley, with a Tittle French mustard. Lay in the bottom of a greased bake-dish ; pour over them a batter made of the eggs, flour, and milk, bake an hour and a quarter. Serve in the bake-dish. BOILED ONIONS. Cook and boil in salted water fifteen minutes ; throw this off, and cover with milk and water. Cook tender ; drain ; pepper and salt, and pour in a cupful of drawn butter. Simmer five minutes, and turn out. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare in the usual manner, taking care not to get them too stiff. FRIED HOMINY. Boil hominy the fine-grained the day before you want to use it. When perfectly cold and stiff, remove the skin from the top, and cut the hominy into neat squares. Flour and salt these, and fry to a nice brown in hot lard or dripping. Drain well, and eat hot. SWEET POTATO PIE. Parboil ; skin ; ccTol, and slice crosswise firm sweet potatoes. Line a pie-dish with a good crust ; put in a layer of sliced potatoes ; sprinkle abundantly with sugar ; scatter in four or five whole cloves, and cover with more slices. Fill the dish thus : put in a liberal tablespoonful of melted butter ; pour in a little water and a teaspoonful of lemon-juice ; cover with puff-paste, and bake. Eat cold. This is a Virginia dish, and very nice. 666 DECEMBER. l)irir Ox-tail Soup. Ducks a la Mode. Canned Green Peas Mashed Turnips. Scalloped Cauliflower. Sponge Cake Souffle Pudding. OX-TAIL SOUP. 2 ox-tails ; i onion ; 2 turnips ; 2 carrots ; bunch of sweet herbs ; 6 whole cloves ; 2 tablespoonfuls of catsup ; i glass of wine ; pepper and salt ; % lb. of lean ham ; but- ter ; water. Joint the tails, and slice the vegetables and ham. Put two tablespoonfuls of butter into the soup kettle, with the tails, ham, vegetables, herbs, and a pint of water. Cover closely, and simmer half an hour after they begin to smoke. Add, then, six quarts of water, if the tails are of a fair size, and simmer four hours, or until the vegetables are boiled to pieces and the tails very tender. Do this on Saturday ; season the soup, and turn all into the stock- jar. On Sunday take off the fat, and strain the soup, pulping the vegetables, and taking out the pieces of tail. Put these into the stock-jar, with all the soup you do not need for to-day ; also the bits of ham. Heat the portion left out for to-day ; stir in a good spoonful of browned flour wet in water, the catsup and wine, and boil up fairly before serving. DUCKS A LA MODE. Joint the ducks ; pepper, salt, and flour them. Fry to a light brown in a little butter. Put into a saucepan with a cup of your soup-stock strained off before pulping the vegetables a tablespoonful of minced onion, pepper and salt to taste. Cover, and stew tender ; say about forty minutes from the commencement of the boil. Keep hot over boiling water while you strain the giavy ; add a glass of wine, and thicken with browned flour. Boil until thick, and pour over the ducks THIRD WEEK-MONDAY. 66 J CANNED GREEN PEAS. Drain, cover with boiling water, and cook tender. Pour off the water ; dish, and stir in a little hot butter, mixed with pspper, salt, and a dust of powdered sugar. Tos? and mix well, and serve hot. MASHED TURNIPS. See Sunday, Second Week in December. SCALLOPED CAULIFLOWER. Boil twenty minutes tied up in netting in hot salted water. Cut into small clusters, rejecting the main stalk altogether. Set these closely together in a buttered bake- dish ; pour drawn butter over them, and sift fine crumbs thickly upon the top. Bake in a good oven until browned. SPONGE-CAKE SOUFFLE" PUDDING. 12 square (penny) stale sponge-cakes; 5 eggs; i cup of milk ; 2 glasses of sherry ; ^ cup of sugar. Lay the cakes in a buttered pudding-dish ; pour the wine over them, and cover for half an hour. Heat the milk ; pour upon the beaten yolks and half the sugar. Stir over the fire until quite thick. Pour, gradually, upon the cakes, letting it soak in well before adding more. Put into the oven, and, when very hot, cover with the whites, whisked stiff with the rest of the sugar, and shut the oven-door until the meringue is colored. Make on Saturday, and eat cold on Sunday. l)tvtJ Second Edition Soup. Boiled Cornel Beef. Roast Potatoe Scalloped Cabbage. Horseradish Sauce. Farina Pudding. SECOND EDITION SOUP. Strain off the soup from the meat in your stock-jar- heat slowly to a boil ; put in a cupful of the best parts of 668 DECEMBER. the meat, cut neatly from the joints, and divided into square bits. Boil one minute, and pour out. BOILED CORNED BEEF. Put a piece of brisket, weighing six or eight pounds, in plenty of cold water. Set at the back of the range out of everybody's way, and cook slowly, allowing eighteen min- utes per pound. Take up ; wipe carefully ; rub all over with butter, and dish. Serve horseradish sauce with it. Pour the pot-liquor into the stock-jar. ROAST POTATOES. Select those of uniform size, and roast in a moderate oven until soft. Wipe, and wrap in a napkin, spread upon a flat dish. SCALLOPED CABBAGE. When your beef has begun to boil fairly, put in a firm white cabbage, from which you have stripped the outer leaves. Cook in the boiling pot-liquor until tender. Take out, quarter, and let it cool rapidly. When quite cold, chop ; stir in pepper and salt, and put into a greased bake-dish. Pour over it half a cupful of soup-stock ; sift crumbs thickly on the top, and bake, covered, half an hour, or until very hot throughout ; then brown. HORSERADISH SAUCE. Stir two tablespoonfuls of grated horseradish and a tablespoonful of vinegar into a cup of drawn butter until it is like white cream. If the horseradish be put up in vinegar, omit the tablespoonful of that condiment. FARINA PUDDING. i quart new milk ; 4 tablespoonfuls of farina ; 4 eggs ; 5 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; nutmeg. Soak the farina two hours in a little water. Scald the milk ; stir in the farina, and cook ten minutes, using the spoon constantly. Pour upon the beaten eggs and sugar. Beat all together well. Put in nutmeg to taste, and pour into a buttered pudding-dish. Bake half an hour, or until firm and well colored. Eat warm not hot. THIRD WEEK TUESDAY. 669 5Ll)trb UUfk. (fuesirag. Split Pea Soup. Larded Mutton Chops. Tomato S.auce. Lima Beans. Macaroni a la Crme. Apple and Tapioca Pudding. SPLIT PEA SOUP. Soak a quart of split peas overnight. Next day, put on in the pot-liquor from your corned beef having re- moved the fat from the latter. Add an onion, sliced, and three stalks of celery, with a few sprigs of parsley, cut fine. Boil gently adding boiling water should the liquid sink too much three hours. Rub through a colander ; return to the fire ; pepper, and stir in a cup of milk, in which has been cooked for one minute a tablespoonful of butter, cut up in a teaspoonful of flour. Pour out at once upon dice of fried bread laid in the tureen. LARDED MUTTON CHOPS. Cut off the skin and fat. Lard the chops thickly with strips of fat pork. Season them with a mixture of pepper, salt, and mace. Put into- a saucepan ; cover with a little of yesterday's soup, if you have no other gravy, and a spoonful of tomato catsup. If you have a spoonful or two of green peas left from Sunday, put them in, and a little minced onion. Cover, and cook slowly half an hour. Turn the chops, and cook twenty minutes longer. Take out, and keep warm. Strain the gravy ; thicken with browned flour awd a tablespoonful of chopped cucumber pickle ; boil two minutes. Put in the chops, and simmer three minutes. Arrange the chops upon a hot dish, and cover with the gravy. TOMATO SAUCE. Stew a can of tomatoes twenty minutes. Pulp through a colander, and put back into the saucepan, with pepper, salt, sugar, and a great spoonful of butter rolled in flour. Simmer twenty minutes more, or until the sauce is of the consistency of boiled custard. 6/O DECEMBER. LIMA BEANS. Soak the dried beans all night. Next day, cook soft, putting them on in cold water, and boiling slowly. Drain ; season with pepper, salt, and butter, and dish. MACARONI A LA CRME. Cook having broken it into short pieces half a pound of macaroni ten minutes in boiling water. Pour this off, and add a cupful of milk, with a little salt. Stew tender in this. In another saucepan heat a cup of milk, thicken with a teaspoonful of flour, stir in a tablespoonful of but- ter, and, at last, a beaten egg. Drain the macaroni ; dish ; stir through it two heaping tablespoonfuls of grated cheese, with a little cayenne. Pour on the sauce, and serve. APPLE AND TAPIOCA PUDDING. i teacupful tapioca ; 6 pippins, pared and cored ; i quart of water ; i teaspoonful of salt ; a little grated lemon-peel ; sugar ; cloves. Cover the tapioca with three cups of tepid water, and set in a warm place for five hours, stirring once in awhile. Pack the apples in a pudding-dish, with a pinch of lemon- peel in each. Add a cup of warm water ; cover closely, and cook in a moderate oven, turning as they cook at the bottom. When soft, drain off the water, fill the centre of each apple with sugar, put a clove in each, and pour over them the tapioca. Cover, and bake one hour. Eat warm, with hard sauce. (Zfytrb Rabbit Soup. Venison Steaks. Oyster Salad. Stewed Celery. Potatoes a la Lyonnaise. Cottage Pudding RABBIT SOUP. i large rabbit ; 2 Ibs. of beef-bones ; 2 slices lean corned ham ; i large onion ;. bunch of sweet herbs ; a THIRD WEEK WEDNESDAY. t>J I tablespoonfuls of tomato sauce ; 3 quarts of water ; raw egg- crumbs. Put the rabbit, jointed, the cracked bones, sliced ham and onion, and chopped herbs on in the water. Fit a tight cover upon the pot ; set a weight on "top, and stew four hours. The meat should be in rags. Strain, rubbing the vegetables through the colander. Season, cool, and take off the fat. Put over the fire, add some tomato sauce left from yesterday/ boil up, and pour out. Chop a little of the soup-meat fine while the soup is cooling ; season; work in some fine crumbs and a beaten egg. Make into balls, flour well, and fry in dripping. Put these into the tureen before the soup goes in. VENISON STEAKS. Trim off the hard skin, and flatten each steak with the side of a hatchet. Butter the gridiron well, and have the fire clear and hot. Turn often, not to lose a drop of the juice. Cook three or four minutes longer than you would beefsteaks. The Vertical Broiler is admirably adapted ' for broiling venison. Have ready, in a hot chafing-dish, a tablespoonful of butter for each pound of venison, a pinch of salt, a little pepper, a tablespoonful of currant jelly for each pound, and a glass of wine for every four pounds. This should be warmed by the hot water beneath the dish, by the time the venison is laid in it. Turn the steaks twice in it ; cover ; put fresh boiling water below, or light the lamp, and let it stand five min- utes before serving. OYSTER SALAD. i quart of oysters cut, not chopped, to pieces ; i bunch of celery, also cut small ; 2 tablespoonfuls best salad oil ; i teaspoonful of powdered sugar ; % teaspoon- ful of salt, and the same of pepper and of made mustard ; yolks of 2 raw eggs ; 4 tablespoonfuls cider vinegar. Beat the yolks light, with sugar, salt, pepper, and mus- tard. Whip in, gradually, the oil until the mixture is thick ; add the vinegar beating still a little at a time. Put the oysters, drained and cut up, with the celery, into a sal-id-dish ; pour over them the dressing ; stir in well ; 672 DECEMBER. garnish with a fringe of delicate celery-tops, and serve as soon as possible. STEWED CELERY. Scrape, and cut the stalks into rather short pieces. Cook tender in boiling salted water ; drain this off, and add a cupful of drawn butter, well seasoned. Simmer in, this five minutes, and pour into a deep dish. POTATOES A LA .LYONNAISE. 12 parboiled and cold potatoes; i chopped onion; chopped parsley, pepper, and salt ; butter, or dripping, for frying. Slice, or chop the potatoes. Heat the dripping in a frying-pan. Put in the onion, and fry one minute ; then cook the potatoes, adding the parsley and seasoning.. Shake and stir constantly lest the potatoes should stick to the pan, or brown. They should be done in five minutes. Drain off the fat by shaking to and fro in a hot colander then dish. COTTAGE PUDDING. i cup of sugar ; i tablespoonful of butter, creamed with the sugar ; 2 eggs ; i cup of milk ; 3 cups of prepared flour ; i teaspoonful scant of salt. Rub butter and sugar together ; beat up with the } ; olks ; add the milk, the whipped whites lastly, the flour. Bake in a buttered cake-mould. Turn out, when done, upon a hot plate. In serving, cut in slices, and eat with liquid sauce. fflijirb ittttk. Sfyuvstrag. Vermicelli Soup. Veal Cutlets a la Milanaise. Stewed Beans. Hominy Pudding. Hot Slaw. Pumpkin Pie. VERMICELLI SOUP. 4 Ibs. knuckle of veal ; i Ib. lean ham ; 2 carrots ; i onion ; 4 stalks of celery ; bunch of herbs : i great spoon THIRD WEEK THURSDAY. 6/3 ful of butter ; 6 quarts of water ; 4 tablespoonfuls of ver- micelli, broken small, and boiled ten minutes in hot salted water. Cut up the veal and ham into small pieces ; slice the vegetables ; put into a soup-pot in which you have melted a great spoonful of butter. Set where it will heat slowly ; cover closely, and leave it for one hour, stirring now and then. Pour in, then, the cold water, and cook gently four hours. Drain off the liquid, pick out meat and bones, and put into the stock-jar; pour on all the soup not wanted for to-day's use, season, and set away. Pulp the vegetables into to-day's soup ; season ; cool, and re- move the fat. Put over the fire, and boil and skim five minutes. Add the vermicelli simmer one minute, and pour out. VEAL CUTLETS A LA MILANAISE. Make your butcher cut the cutlets very thin about half the thickness of those usually sold. Flatten with the side of a hatchet ; dip in beaten yolk of egg, then in cracker-dust, mixed with pepper and salt. Fry to a fine brown in hot dripping. Drain off the fat ; lay upon a hot dish, and put upon the middle of each slice (they should not be more than four inches long by three wide) a spoon- ful of the following sauce : Make a half-cup of drawn but- ter ; stir in the stiffened white of an egg, with a table- spoonful of chopped parsley, and the juice of half a lemon. Beat light with your egg- whisk ; heat very hot, and pour out. STEWED BEANS. Soak white beans all night. Put them on in the morn- ing in cold water, and cook soft. Drain, and pour over them some nice gravy soup-stock, if you have no other ; add a little finely-minced onion, and simmer ten minutes. Turn out without draining. HOMINY PUDDING. i cupful of cold boiled hominy (the small-grained) ; 2 cups of milk ; i heaping teaspoonful of butter warmed ; i teaspoonful of sugar ; 3 eggs ; a little salt. 29 6/4 DECEMBER. Mix all together in a smooth batter/and bake in a but tered pudding-dish. Eat hot. HOT SLAW. Boil the cabbage in two waters. Drain, when tender ; chop quickly, press out all the water, and put into a deep dish. Heat in a saucepan half a cup of vinegar, one tablespoonful of butter, one tablespoonful of sugar, pep- per and salt at discretion. When scalding, add a half teaspoonful of flour wet with water. Boil one minute, and pour upon the cabbage. If you have celery vinegar at hand, use for this dressing. PUMPKIN PIE. See Friday, Fourth Week in November. Jrtirag. Corn and Tomato Soup. Baked Halibut. Stewed Pigeons. Mashed Potatoes. Fried Salsify. Dorchester Cracker Plum -Pudding. CORN AND TOMATO SOUP. Take the fat from the top of your stock. Drain off the soup, and add a can of corn, chopped fine, and the same of tomatoes, rubbed through a colander. Cook all slowly one hour ; add what seasoning is required, and pour out. BAKED HALIBUT. Get a cut of halibut weighing five or six pounds, and lay for two hours in salt and water. Wipe dry, and score the outer skin. Set in the baking-pan ; pour a cupful of boil- ing water, in which has been mixed a tablespoonful of butter, over it, and bake one hour, basting often with but- ter-and-water. When a fork will penetrate it easily, it is THIRD WEEK FRIDAY. 6?$ done. Lay upon a hot dish ; add a little boiling water to the gra /y, stir in a teaspoonful of anchovy sauce, the juice of half a lemon, and a little browned flour, wet up with cold water. Serve in a boat when you have boiled it one minute. STEWED PIGEONS. Clean the pigeons, tie them in shape, and cook pre- cisely as you did the grouse on Friday, First Week in December. MASHED POTATOES. Serve with the halibut. FRIED SALSIFY. Scrape, and boil until tender. Drain and cool. Mash to a paste, picking out the fibres. Add a very little milk, a spoonful of butter and a beaten egg and a half for each cupful of mashed salsify. Make into flat, round cakes ; roll in flour, and fry brown. DORCHESTER CRACKER PLUM-PUDDING. 2 quarts of milk ; 6 Boston crackers, split and buttered ; 8 eggs, beaten very light ; 2 cups of sugar -, nutmeg, cloves, and cinnamon to taste ; i Ib. of raisins, seeded and cut in two ; i teaspoonful of salt. Heat the milk almost to boiling, and pour upon the beaten eggs and sugar, with the seasoning. Do not boil it again. Butter a pudding-dish ; put a layer of buttered crackers in the bottom, buttered side up, and moisten with a few spoonfuls of custard. Cover thickly with raisins, and these with crackers, buttered side downward. Moisten with hot custard, and repeat the order given, until crackers and fruit are all in the dish. Pour in cus- tard until only the surface of the upper layer is visible, but not enough to float them. Cover, and leave all night in a cold place Add the rest of the custard in the morn- ing, at intervals of five or six minutes between the cupfuls. Bake, covered, two hours in a moderate oven; then brown. Eat hot, with sauce. 6/6 DECEMBER. tihek. Sheep's Head and Barley Soup. Bacon and Eggs. Cheese Fondu Canned String-Beans. Mashed Turnips. Lemon Tartlets. SHEEP'S HEAD AND BARLEY SOUP. i sheep's head, carefully cleaned, with the skin on ; 4 pig's feet, also cleaned nicely ; 2 onions ; 2 turnips ; 2 carrots ; bunch of sweet herbs ; i can of tomatoes ; cup of soup-barley, soaked two hours in a little water ; 7 quarts of water ; pepper, salt, mace, and sugar. Crack the bones of the head and feet ; wash very well ; put the sliced vegetables and the herbs into a pot with the water, and cook gently five hours. At the end of three hours add the tomatoes. Should the liquid boil down to less than five quarts by the time you are ready to add the tomatoes, replenish from the tea-kettle. When the five hours are up, strain off the soup. Put bones and meat into the stock -jar, and add all the clear soup you do not want to-day. Season, and set aside. Now pulp the vegetables into the soup left out for Saturday's dinner t season, cool, and skim off the fat. Return to the fire with the barley, and simmer half an hour. BACON AND EGGS. Cut one pound of streaked bacon into thin long slices ; put into a frying-pan and cook slowly, turning often, until quite crisp. Pour off and strain the fat, and pour two tablespoonfuls of it into a stone-china or block-tin dish. Add two larger spoonfuls of good gravy left from yester- day's pigeons, with as much cream, in which have been mixed half a teaspoonful of flour and a pinch of soda. Set this in a dripping-pan, with boiling water in the bottom, but not enough to overflow the dish, and stir upon the top of 'the range until quite hot. Then break upon it seven or eight, or more eggs, and put into a quick oven to " set" When firm, send to table with the bacon laid about them. THIRD WEEK SATURDAY. CHEESE FONDU. i cup dry and fine bread-crumbs ; 2 scant cups of milk, ivith a pinch of soda stirred in ; Ib. dry cheese, grated ; 3 beaten eggs ; i small tablespoonful of melted butter \ pepper and salt. Soak the crumbs in the milk ; beat in eggs, butter, sea- soning finally the cheese. Butter a pudding-dish ; pom in the mixture, strew crumbs on the top, and bake in a rather quick oven to a light brown. Serve at once, as it soon falls. CANNED STRING-BEANS. Cut into short lengths ; cover with hot, salted water, and cook forty minutes. Drain ; dish, and stir in pepper, salt, and butter. MASHED TURNIPS. See Sunday, Second Week in December. LEMON TARTLETS. 5 e gg s ) 5 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; i quart of milk ; cup of prepared flour; i lemon, a large one juice and grated peel ; a pinch of salt. Heat the milk ; stir in the flour wet with a little cold milk, and heat again, stirring all the while. Pour upon the beaten yolks and sugar ; cook for one minute. Take from the fire, and beat in the lemon-juice and grated rind. Have ready, baked and hot, some shells of purl-paste lining " patty-pans. " Fill with the mixture and cover each with a meringue made of the whipped whites and a little powdered sugar. Put into the oven to set, and Hght- ly color the meringue. Eat fresh, but not hot. 678 DECEMBER. Jottrtl] tflcek. Clear Sago Soup. Roast Beef. Potato Balls. Fried Sweet Potatoes. Apple Sauce. Celery. Ribbon Blanc-Mange. Coffee and Cake. CLEAR SAGO SOUP. Remove the fat from your soup-jelly. Pour off as much as you need for to-day, without disturbing the sedi- ment. Heat, simmer and skim until the scum ceases to rise ; put in half a cup of German sago which has been soaking one hour in a little water. Cook gently until clear. ROAST BEEF. Lay in a dripping-pan and pour a cup of boiling water over it. Roast, about ten minutes per pound, basting frequently and copiously. When done, dish ; pour the strained gravy into a bowl and set -in ice-water to throw up the fat. Remove this, return the gravy to the fire, pepper, salt, and thicken with browned flour. Boil once, and serve in a boat. POTATO BALLS. Mash potatoes very light with butter, milk and salt, and beat in two raw eggs. Put into a buttered saucepan, and stir until hot and stiff. Turn out and let the paste get cold. Then make into balls ; roll each in flour ; half an hour before taking up the roast beef, pour off nearly all the gravy, and lay the balls about the meat in the dripping-pin. Baste them whenever you baste the meat, and cook to a fine brown. Drain off the grease, and serve as a garnish to the beef, when dished. FRIED SWEET POTATOES. Boil, peel, and let them get cold. Then slice length- wise; pepper, salt, flour, and fry quickly in good drip, ping. Drain well and serve hot. FOURTH WEEKSUNDAY.. 6/9 APPLE SAUCE. See Wednesday, Second Week in November. CELERY. See Monday Second Week in December. RIBBON BLANC-MANGE. i quart of milk ; i package Cooper's gelatine ; f cup of sugar ; i great spoonful of grated chocolate, wet in a very little cold milk ; beaten yolk of one egg ; i great spoonful of cranberry juice ; vanilla extract. Soak the gelatine one hour in a cup of the milk. Heat the rest to scalding ; add sugar and soaked gelatine, and stir eight minutes over the fire. Strain through a muslin bag into four bowls, putting equal p'ortions in all. Color one brown by stirring in the wet chocolate ; another yel- low, by beating in the yolk ; a third, pink with cranberry juice, or currant jelly. Leave the fourth white. Return each portion, excepting this last, to the fire in its turn, and stir until very hot. When all are cold and beginning to congeal, wet a mould, and pour in, first, half of the white ; next, half of the pink ; thirdly, half of the yellow ; fourthly, half of the brown. Upon this brown empty the rest of the white, and let the pink, yellow, and brown fol- low in course. Let each of the eight courses get firm enough to bear the next before adding more. Do all this on Saturday. On Sunday, turn out and pass with light cake, followed by coffee. The vanilla extract is intended for the chocolate only. This is a beautiful dish, easy and safe. 68O DECEMBER. Jonrtl) tthfk. fftonbag. Cream Soup. Larded Beef. Mashed Potatoes, Baked Tomatoes, French Mustard. Apples, Oranges, and Nuts. Tea and Crackers. CREAM SOUP. Put the contents of your stock-pot over the fire ; add as much boiling water as is needed to make soup for to- day. First, however, take out the sheep's tongue, and lay it aside. Simmer the soup for one hour ; strain and season ; return to the fire, and when it is hot, add a table - spoonful of butter rolled in flour ; next, the sheep's tongue, skinned and cut into dice. Boil up ; pour into the tureen, and stir in a cup of hot milk in which two beaten eggs have been cooked one minute. LARDED BEEF. Thrust lardoons of fat salt pork quite through your cold roast, when you have trimmed off the ragged parts. Put into a deep pan ; strew with chopped herbs, and minced onion, pepper, salt, and four or five whole cloves ; also, a tablespoonful of chopped green pickle. Half cover with broth made from yesterday's skimmed gravy, and a little soup-stock. Cover the pan closely, .set in a moderate oven, and cook one hour more, if the piece be large. Turn, when the time is half gone. Dish the meat, strain, and thicken the gravy. Give it one boil , pour a little upon the meat, the rest into a boat. MASHED POTATOES. Mash, or whip up light with milk, butter arid salt, and heap roughly upon a hot dish. BAKED TOMATOES. See Thursday of First Week in December. Save the surplus juice. FOURTH WEEK TUESDAY. 68 1 APPLES, ORANGES, AND NUTS. S ipply clean plates, fruit-knives, and nut-crackers with this course. TEA AND CRACKERS. Pass, without further change of plates. -fourtl) Baked Soup. Mock Pigeons. Spinach. Potato Puff. Stewed Corn. Arrowroot Pudding, Hot. BAKED SOUP. 3 Ibs. of beef, cut into small squares ; \ Ib. lean ham, chopped ; i Ib. of veal, cut small ; 2 onions ; 2 carrots ; 2 tablespoonfuls German sago ; can of green peas ; pep- per and salt ; 6 quarts of water. Put the chopped ham in the bottom of a broad jar that will go into your oven : cover with sliced vegetables, some of the peas and sago, and this with beef or veal. Pack vegetables and meat in alternate layers, seasoning each with pepper and salt. Pour in six quarts of water, if the jar will hold so much; fit on a close cover; spread a paste of flour and water around the edge to keep in the steam ; set in a dripping-pan of hot water, and leave in a moderate oven six hours, replenishing the water in the pan, now and then. Dip out as much soup just as it comes as you want for to-day, at the end of this time ; let it cool sufficiently to enable you to take off the fat ; heat in a saucepan just to the boiling point, and pour into the tureen. Add a quart of boiling water and a little salt to the contents of the jar; cover, while hot, and set away in a cold place, as stock and excellent stock it will be. MOCK PIGEONS. 2 large cutlets of veal, cut rather thin, and beaten flat ; \ Ib. of fat salt pork ; yolks of two hard-boiled eggs ; I 29* 682 DECEMBER. cup of bread-crumbs ; pepper, salt, and r tablespoonful of chopped onion pickle ; a little sugar ; powdered or minced parsley ; a little oyster-liquor. Lay the cutlets upon a dish, and spread the upper side with a force-meat made of the ingredients above enume- rated ; roll each up closely ; bind in shape with soft string, and lay in a dripping-pan. Pour over them two cupmls of boiling water, in which have been mixed two tablespoon- fuls of butter, and the surplus tomato-juice saved from yesterday's can of tomatoes. Cover with another pan of the same size inverted and set in a steady oven. Bake a little over an hour half an hour more, should the " pigeons" be large. Take them up when tender, and brown, clip, and withdraw the strings, and keep hot while you strain, season, and thicken the gravy. Boil one min- ute, and pour into a boat. SPINACH. See Tuesday, Second Week in December. POTATO PUFFS. See Thursday, Second Week in December. STEWED CORN. Empty a can of corn into a saucepan ; cover with boil- ing salted water, and stew half an hour. Drain off the water, and cover the corn with a cupful of drawn butter, well seasoned. Simmer, stirring often, fifteen minutes, and pour out. ARROWROOT PUDDING HOT. 3 even tablespoonfuls arrowroot ; i quart fresh milk ; i tablespoonful of butter ; 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; 4 eggs, beaten light ; nutmeg and vanilla flavoring. Scald the milk ; wet the arrowroot with cold water, and stir into the hot milk, until the latter is well thickened. Cream the butter and sugar ; beat up very light with the eggs, and stir into the thickened milk. Flavor ; pour into a buttered mould ; set in a pot of boiling water not deep enough to float it and boil steadily for one hour. Set in cold water one minute, and turn out upon a hot dish. Eat with brandy or wine sauce. It is very nice. FOURTH WEEKWEDNESDAY. 683 Jiourtt) ilUek. Uhfrncstrag. Sweetbread Ball Soup. Chicken and Ham Pie. Rice Croquettes Stewed Salsify. Creamed Potatoes. Cup Puddings. SWEETBREAD BALL SOUP. Boil, blanch, cool, and chop very fine two sweetbreads mix with them one-third their bulk of fine crumbs, previous- ly soaked, and rubbed smooth with a little cream. Beat up the yolk of a raw egg, and work all with pepper and salt to a paste. 'Make into small balls with floured hands, and set by for half an hour in a cold place. Strain off two quarts of soup from your stock-jar, when you have skimmed it. Heat and boil slowly five minutes, skimming it well. Drop in the balls very carefully not to break them ; simmer ten minutes very gently, to avoid the same catastrophe, and pour into the tureen. CHICKEN AND HAM PIE. 1 chicken ; i Ib. of lean veal ; Ib. corned ham ; yolks of 3 hard-boiled eggs ; i cup of gravy or stock ; |- can of mushrooms ; pepper and salt ; good paste for cover. Joint the chicken; cut the veal and ham into dice/ slice the mushrooms and yolks ; place in alternate layers, seasoned with pepper and salt, in a large pudding-dish ; pour in the gravy, and cover with a thick crust of good pastry. Ornament the edges, and make a slit in the middle. Bake in a steady oven, and when almost done, wash over with beaten egg. RICE CROQUETTES. 2 cups of cold boiled rice ; 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter ; 3 beaten eggs ; a little flour ; 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar ; a large pinch of grated lemon-peel, and salt to taste ; raw egg and pounded cracker. Beat eggs and sugar together, and work the butter into the rice. Stir all together ; season ; make into cro- 684 DECEMBER. quettes ; roll in egg and cracker-crumbs, and fry, a few at a time, in sweet lard. Drain, by rolling them on soft white paper,, and eat hot. STEWED SALSIFY. Scrape, dropping into cold water as you do it ; cook tender in boiling salted water; drain this off; pour on a cupful of drawn butter, and stew five minutes. Serve in a hot, deep dish. CREAMED POTATOES. Boil, and, while hot, slice the potatoes. Make a sauce by heating a cup of milk, stirring into it a great spoonful of butter, a scant teaspoonful of corn-starch, wet in cold water, a little chopped parsley, and boiling until thickened. Beat in the frothed white of an egg, and pour upon the potatoes, which should first have been put into a deep dish and sprinkled with pepper and salt. CUP PUDDINGS. 3 e gg s ) tne weight of the eggs in flour, prepared ; half their weight in sugar ; one-quarter of their weight in but- ter ; 2 tablespoonfuls of milk ; a little nutmeg. Rub butter and sugar together ; add the beaten yolks, the milk ; at last, the whisked whites and flour, alternately.. Bake in small buttered tins, or cups. Eat warm, without or with sauce, according to your preference. Jburtl) Noodle Soup. Roast Pig. Apple Sauce. Mashed Potatoes. Stewed Celery. Mince Pie. NOODLE SOUP. Empty your stock-jar into the soup-pot, adding as much boiling water as you' may need, with additional seasoning, FOURTH WEEK THURSDAY. 685 and any bones you may chance to have. Simmer one hour, or more ; strain, return to the fire, and boil and skim for five minutes, before dropping in a generous handful of noodles dried, or fresh. Simmer twenty min- utes. For receipt for noodles, please consult Wednesday, First Week hi August. ROAST PIG. See that your butcher has done his part well in clean- ing the month-old pig. Rinse out with soda and water, chen with fair water, wiping the pig dry, inside and out. Prepare a dressing of a cupful of crumbs, half a chopped onion, two teaspoonfuls powdered sage, three tablespoon- fuls of melted butter, a saltspoonful of salt, and as much pepper, half a grated nutmeg, and the yolks of two beaten eggs. Moisten with half a cup of soup-stock, and .stuff the little fellow into his original size and shape. Sew him up, and place in a kneeling posture in a dripping-pan, skewering or tying his legs in the proper position. Dredge with flour. Pour a little hot salted water in the dripping-pan. Baste with butter and water three times as the pig warms ; afterward, with gravy from the dripping- pan. When he begins to smoke all over, rub every ten minutes with a rag dipped in melted butter. This will keep the skin from cracking. Roast in a moderate, steady oven two hours. Put the innocent still kneeling upon a large hot dish ; surround with parsley and blanched celery-tops. Put a wreath of green about his neck, and a sprig of cel- ery in his mouth. Skim and strain the gravy ; thicken with browned flour ; boil up, add a glass of wine and the juice of a lemon, and serve in a boat. In carving, cut off the head first ; then split down the back ; take off hams and shoulders, and separate the ribs. MASHED POTATOES. Prepare and serve as usual. STEWED CELERY. See Wednesday, Third Week in December ' O50 DECEMBER MINCE PIE. 2 Ibs. lean fresh beef, boiled, and, when cold, chopped fine ; i Ib. beef suet, powdered ; 5 Ibs. of apples, pared, cored, and chopped ; 2 Ibs. of raisins, seeded and chopped ; I Ib. sultana raisins, washed, and picked over ; 2 Ibs. of currants, washed, and carefully picked over ; Ib. of citron, cut up fine ; 2 tablespoonfuls of cinnamon ; i powdered nutmeg ; 2 tablespoonfnls of mace ; i table- spoonful of cloves, and the same, each, of allspice and fine salt ; 2^ Ibs. of brown sugar ; i quart brown sherry ; i pint best brandy. Mix all these thoroughly, putting in the liquor last. Make it, at least, twenty-four hours before it is needed. Keep in a stone jar, with a tight cover, and a piece of bladder tied over the top. When ready to bake your pies, line greased pie-dishes with good paste, put in the mince-meat, and lay strips of pastry, notched with a jag- ging-iron in a lattice pattern, over the top. This mince-meat will keep all winter if not used up. Jburtt) tDeck. Jribag. Lobster Soup. Ragout of Roast Pig. Puree of Canned Peas. Sweet Potatoes. Cabbage Salad. Rice Pudding Meringue. LOBSTER SOUP. i can of preserved lobster ; 2 anchovies ; i onion ; i quart of milk ; bunch of sweet herbs ; grated rind of half a lemon ; pinch of soda, stirred in the milk ; 3 tablespoon- fuls of butter rolled in flour; i quart of water; pepper and salt ; 2 raw eggs. Put sliced onion, anchovies, chopped herbs, lemon-peel and the can-liquor on in the water, and boil down to a pint. Strain, put in the chopped lobster meat, with pep- per and salt. Heat to a boil ; stir in the floured butter ; FOURTH WEEK FRIDAY. ' 687 simrner fifteen minutes and pour into the tureen. Add the milk boiling hot in which have been cooked for two minutes two beaten eggs. Send around sliced lemon and crackers with this soup. RAGOUT OF ROAST PIG. Slices of cold roast pig ; the rest of the can of mushrooms opened on Wednesday ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter ; 3 beaten eggs ; i Cupful of gravy or stock ; juice and grated peel of half a lemon ; chopped parsley, cayenne, salt and mace to taste. Put gravy and mushrooms into a saucepan ; heat to boiling, put in the butter rolled in flour,; cut the slices of pig of nearly equal size ; rub over with pepper, salt, mace, and lemon-peel ; put them into the gravy and make very hot, but do not boil. Stir in the beaten eggs and lemon- juice ; simmer three minutes and pour into .a dish lined with crustless slices of fried bread. PUR^E OF CANNED PEAS. Boil the peas soft in hot salt water ; drain, and pulp through a colander into a saucepan. Add a great spoonful of butter rolled in flour ; three tablespoonfuls of milk or cream, a little sugar, pepper and salt. Simmer five minutes stirring constantly and pour out. SWEET POTATOES. See Sunday, First Week in December. CABBAGE SALAD. See " Cold Slaw," Saturday, First Week in December. RICE PUDDING MERINGUE. i quart of fresh milk ; i cup of raw rice ; 2 tablespoon- fuls of butter ; i cup of sugar ; 4 eggs ; grated peel of ^ lemon ; a little mace and cinnamon. Soak the rice in the milk three hours, then heat in a farina-kettle, and simmer tender. Cream butter and sugar, add the beaten yolks and one beaten white, and 688 DECEMBER. when the rice has cooled a little, beat all together with the seasoning. Bake about forty minutes in a buttered pud- ding-dish. When firmly set, cover with a meringue made of three whisked whites beaten up with a little sugar and lemon-juice. Jbtrrtl) tlUek. Transparent Soup. Larded Rabbits. Scalloped Cauliflower. Fried Parsnips. Mashed Turnips. Cabinet Pudding. TRANSPARENT SOUP. 4 Ibs. of lean, coarse beef, cut into strips ; 2 slices of lean ham, also stripped ; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter ; 2 turnips ; i carrot ; 2 onions ; 2 stalks of celery ; pepper and salt to taste ; i tablespoonful of gelatine, soaked two hours in a little cold water ; 5 quarts of water ; sweet herbs. Put the butter into the soup-kettle ; when it heats, add the meat, cover close, and set where it will heat without scorching. In half an hour set directly over the fire and stir until the meat is coated with a brown glaze. Put in a pint of lukewarm water, and when this has boiled down to one-half, add four quarts and a half of cold water ; skim off the top and boil slowly four hours. Cook, in a separate saucepan, the sliced carrot, turnips, herbs, celery and the onions ; these last already sliced and fried in drip- ping. Cover with a quart of water, and boil down to a pint. Strain off the clear liquor, and add to the soup. Set aside the vegetables without pulping them. Now, strain off as much of the soup as is needed for to day, and let it cool. Put the rest, .well seasoned with salt and pepper, into the stock-jar with the boiled vegetables, and keep for another day. Take all the fat from your cooled soup, strain through muslin back into the scalded soup-kettle, season, boil up and skim ; add the soaked gelatine, and stir until clear. FOURTH WEEK SATURDAY. 689 LARDED RABBITS. . 2 rabbits ; \ Ib. fat salt pork ; i cup of soup-stock di- luted with hot water ; bunch of herbs ; onion ; a glass of wine ; pepper and salt, butter and flour. Divide each rabbit into quarters ; lard the upper sides of these with strips of pork. Fry until lightly browned. Put into a saucepan and nearly cover with broth ; strew with onion, parsley, pepper and salt, and simmer forty-five minutes, or until tender. Dish, and keep the rabbits hot ; strain the gravy, add a good lump of butter rolled in browned flour, and a glass of wine ; boil fairly and pour over the rabbits. SCALLOPED CAULIFLOWER. See Sunday, Third Week in December. 9 FRIED PARSNIPS. Boil tender ; scrape ; slice lengthwise, season with pep- per and salt, dredge with flour, and fry to a golden brown with lard or dripping. Drain and serve hot. MASHED TURNIPS. See Sunday, Second Week in December. CABINET PUDDING. Ib. of prepared flour; J Ib. of butter; '5 eggs; i Ibs. of sugar ; Ib. of raisins, seeded and cut into thirds ; J Ib. currants, washed and dried ; cup of milk ; -J lemon juice and grated peel. Cream butter and sugar ; add the beaten yolks, the milk, then the flour and whipped whites, by turns. Last of all, stir in the fruit, well dredged. Turn into a well- buttered mould and boil steadily nearly three hours. Be careful that the water does not bubble over the top of the mould. When done, dip in cold water for one minute ; turn out, and eat with hot, sweet sauce. Company Dinners. JANUARY. OYSTERS ON THE HALF SHELL. JULIENNE SOUP. HALIBUT A LA ROYALE. ROAST TURKEY, CRANBERRY SAUCE. POTATOES A LA DUCHESSE. CELERY. JUGGED RABBIT. ROAST BEEF. FRENCH BEANS SAUTES. SALAD, CRACKERS AND CHEESE. MINCE PIE. VANILLA CREAM. FRUIT. COFFEE, FEBRUARY. OYSTERS ON THE HALF SHELL. CLEAR VERMICELLI SOUP. BOILED COD, SAUCE HOLLANDAISE. STEWED PIGEONS. POTATOES AU NATUREL. GREEN PEAS. ROAST DUCK. FILET DE BCEUF. CELERY, STEWED. SALAD. CHEESE AND WAFERS. CABINET PUDDING. TUTTI FRUTTI CREAM. FRUIT. COFFEE. 692 COMPANY DINNERS. MARCH. ROMAN PUNCH. MOCK TURTLE SOUP. OYSTER PIE. SMOTHERED CHICKEN. GREEN PEAS CELERY. VENISON STEAKS. BEEF A LA MODE DE ROME, LETTUCE SALAD. BAKED TOMATOES. CRACKERS AND CHEESE. SLICED APPLE PIE. TURRET CREAM. FRUIT. CAFE" NOIR. APRIL. OYSTERS ON THE HALF SHELL. OX-HEAD SOUP. BAKED SHAD. PATE" OF SWEETBREADS. SPINACH AND EGGS. WHOLE BERMUDA POTATOES, SNIPE ON TOAST. CELERY. BOILED LEG OF MUTTON, CAPER SAUCE. SALAD SCALLOPED CAULIFLOWER. BIRD'S NEST PUDDING. LEMON ICE. FRUIT. COFFEE, MAY. CLEAR SOUP. BOILED BASS, WITH MUSHROOMS. ROAST SWEETBREADS. BERMUDA POTATOES, AU NATUREL. GREEN PEAS, BROILED SQUABS. ROAST LAMB, MINT SAUCE. ASPARAGUS ON TOAST. TOMATO SALAD. STRAWBERRY SHORT-CAKE AND CREAM. CHOCOLATE BLANC-MANGE. FRUIT AND ICES, COFFEE. COMPANY DINNERS. JUNE. ROMAN PUNCH. GREEN PEA SOUP. BOILED SALMON. LAMB CHOPS. POTATOES A LA LOUISE. STUFFED TOMATOES. SMOTHERED CHICKENS. LANGUE DE BCEUF. ASPARAGUS ON TOAST. GREEN PEAS. SNOW CUSTARD. ICES. FRUIT AND DESSERT. STRAWBERRIES. COFFEE. JULY. CONSOMME SOUP. BROILED SPANISH MACKEREL. FRIED CHICKENS. RAW CUCUMBERS. SALAD. SALMI OF DUCKS. BEEF A LA MODE. BOILED CORN. NEW POTATOES. CREAM RASPBERRY PIE. SELF-FREEZING ICE-CREAM, CRACKERS AND CHEESE. FRUIT. COFFEE. AUGUST. MRS. B.'s CORN SOUP. FILLETS OF HALIBUT, WITH POTATOES. DIJON PATE\ DEVILLED TOMATOES. BROILED WOODCOCK. BOILED CHICKEN AND TONGUE. GREEN PEAS. STUFFED EGG-PLANT. PEACH LECHE CREMA. MELONS. CAKES AND CHEESE, ICES. COFFEE. 694 COMPANY DINNERS. ' SEPTEMBER. RAW OYSTERS. TAPIOCA SOUP. BAKED BLUE FISH. CASSEROLE OF RICE, WITH CHICKEN AND TONGUE. POTATOES AU MAITRE D'HdTEL. DEVILLED CRABS. MOCK QUAILS. ROAST LAMB. SPINACH A. LA CREME. SALAD. CREAM SQUASH. DIPLOMATIC PUDDING. PEACH ICE CREAM. COFFEE. FRUIT. OCTOBER. RAW OYSTERS. MOCK TURTLE SOUP. OYSTER PATE". FRICASSEE OF CALF'S TONGUES. SALAD. POTATOES A LA PARISIENNE. CHICKENS AND MUSHROOMS. ROAST BEEF AND YORKSHIRE PUDDING. CAULIFLOWER AU GRATIN. SWEET POTATOES. AMBER PUDDING. DRUNKEN DOMINIE. FRUIT. ICES, NUTS AND RAISINS. CAFE NOIR. NOVEMBER. ROMAN PUNCH. CHICKEN AND CREAM SOUP. PANNED OYSTERS. LAMB CHOPS, BREADED. CELERY SALAD. BAKED TOMATOES. FRICASSEE OF GROUSE. ROAST SADDLE OF MUTTON. POTATOES A LA DUCHESSE. SALSIFY SAUTE. CRACKERS AND CHEESE. APPLE MERINGUE PIE. CHOCOLATE TARTLETS. FRUIT AND ICES. COFFEE. COMPANY DINNERS. 695 DECEMBER. OYSTERS ON THE HALF SHELL. MOCK TURTLE SOUP. LOBSTER CROQUETTES. STEWED PIGEONS* POTATOES X LA LYONNAISE. CHEESE FONDU. ROAST HAUNCH OF VENISON. BOILED BEEF TONGUE, SAUCE PIQUANTE. SWEET POTATOES. OYSTER SALAD. MACARONI A LA CREME. MINCE PIE. CABINET PUDDING. FRUITS AND ICES, CAFE NOIR. INDEX. SOUPS. PAGE A la Bonne Femme Soup .... 422 ..... .... 266 Al'Italienne " .... 16 " .... 302 All-night " ---- 345 Amber " .... 329 Asparagus (Green) ' .... 322 (White) " .... 353 Au Julienne " .... 36 Ayrshire Broth ............... 502 Baked (A) Soup ............. 438 11 (B) " ............. 174 " Hotch Potch .......... 333 Barley Broth ................. 216 " Cream Soup Bean " " Baked " " and Celery " 11 " Corn " " " Tomato " Bechamel " . Beef " and Barley " " with " " 588 46 634 165 231 444 413 ii 135 176 Beef Bouillon ................ 469 " Gravy Soup ............ 513 " Noodle " ............ 455 ' Olives " ............ 587 " Stock " . ........... 495 " Tea with Noodles ...... 601 Bisque of Lobster ........... 388 30 Blanche's Soup 100 Bone " 194 Bouillon of Beef 278 Bread Soup 153 " " 651 " and Cheese Soup 389 " " " Porridge.. 428 " " Meat Soup 541 Broiled Bones " 365 Brown Beef " 320 " Soup 415 Butter (or Lima) Bean Soup.. 442 Cabbage " .. 417 Calf's feet " .. no " head " .. 258 " " (plain) " .. 420 Catfish " ..556 Cauliflower " .. 624 " (without Meat) " .. 493 Celery Soup 63 126 " 650 Cheap " 564 Chicken Broth 160 " 190 " " 210 " and Corn Soup 457 523 " Cream " 626 " Panada 368 ." and Sago Soup 664 " Soup 236 " (with Eggs) Soup 436 698 INDEX. PAGE Clam Chowder .............. 207 " .............. 355 " Soup .................. 121 " .................. 270 Clear Gravy Soup ........... 55 " Sago " ........... 400 " Soup .................. 227 " " .................. 287 " " .................. 484 ' ' Vermicelli Soup ....... 97 Combination " ........ 81 Consomme " ........ 411 Convent " , ....... 395 Corn " ........ 445 " (Canned) " ........ 297 " Mrs. B.'s " ....... 479 Crab " ........ 418 Cracker " ........ 335 Cream " ........ 384 11 ........ 467 " ........ 155 " Almond " ........ 251 Crust Soup ................. 275 Curry " ................. 205 " ................. 549 Dieppe " ................. 578 Dresden " ................. 224 Dundee Broth ..... .......... 107 Eel Soup ................... 249 " ............ . ...... 470 Egg " ................... 516 " ................... 566 " ................... 627 English Soup ................ 74 Excellent Stock Soup ....... 581 Family " ........ 606 11 " ........ 102 Fancy Macaroni " ........ 534 Farina " ........ 487 Fine White " ....... .- 37 Fish Chowder ............... 52 " ............. 481 PAGB Fish Chowder Soup ....... 506 French Potage .......... .... 405 Friar's Soup ............... 129 Frugal " ................ 280 Game " ............... ^ 614 German Sago Soup ......... 78 Giblet Soup ................. 137 ................. 188 " ................. 433 " " ................. 536 " (Brown) Soup ......... 656 Good Stock " ......... 212 " White " ......... 260 Graham " ......... 238 " ......... 639 Gravy and Sago " ......... 114 " Sou P ................... 397 Green Bean Soup ............ 562 " Pea ............ 375 ...... .. .......... 306 Halibut Chowder ............ 382 Ham and Egg Soup .......... 245 " Veal " .......... 490 Hash (A) .......... 500 Hasty " .......... 184 Hot Pot ..................... 293 Hotch-Potch ................. 124 Irish Broth .................. 610 Italian Minestra Soup ........ 295 Paste " ........ 407 Jelly Soup .................. 380 Jugged Soup ................ 402 Julienne " ................ 157 " ................ 379 " ................ 539 Kilkenny " ................ 447 Lexington Soup ............. 86 Lobster Bisque .............. 146 " (Quick) Soup ........ 201 " ........ 537 Soup ............... . 686 Macaroni Soup .............. 33 INDEX. 699 PAGE Macaroni Soup 132 " 197 " 304 Marie's " 141 Marlowe " 357 Marrow-Bone Soup 554 Medley " 486 " 633 Melange " 246 Milk " 604 " and Bread " 229 Minced Beef " 300 Mock Turtle " 203 41 Bean Soup 117 White " 482 Monday Soup 464 Mother's " ,. 83 Mulligatawny Soup 310 Mutton Broth 476 ' ' Noodle Soup 520 " and Oyster Soup.... 611 " Rice, and Tomato Broth 386 " with Tapioca, Soup. 43 Next Day's Soup 274 Noodle " 684 Oberlin " 518 Okra and Tomato Soup 284 Old Hare " 94 Onion . " 282 " Maigre 543 Ox-cheek Soup 478 " 527 Ox-head " 271 " 372 Ox-tail " 220 " SS8 Oyster " 179 " 253 Pea and Potato Soup 342 Peas, Puree of 72 44 Peas Porridge Hot " 268 Pea (split) Soup 105 PAGB Pea (split) Soup ............. 22 " " without meat, Soup 192 41 and Tomato Soup ....... 423 Poor Roger's " ....... 576 Porridge, Savory .......... . . 199 Potage d Croutons ........... 440 Potage au Riz ............... 144 Pot au Feu .................. 262 Pottage, Red ................ 234 Plain Soup .................. 180 .................. 648 Potatoes, Puree of ........... 370 Potato Soup ....... .......... 92 ................. 150 Quick Beef Soup .... ........ 349 " Soup ................. 475 Rabbit 44 ................. 670 Rechauffe Soup ............. 233 Rice 44 ............. 425 Rice and Tapioca Soup ...... 373 Rissole " ...... 528 Rule-of-Three 4 ' ...... 532 Sago " ...... 316 Scotch Broth ................ 19 ................ 337 " ................ 264 44 Second Thought" Soup... 120 Sheep's Head 44 ... 66 " ... 324 " and Barley 4 ' ... 676 Sister Anne's ' 4 ... 459 Soup and Bouilli ........... 575 44 Maigre .............. 312 ............... 29 Soupe 3. la Langue ......... 643 Soupe Verte ................. 255 Squash Soup ..... ........... 426 Squirrel 44 ................ 489 " ................ 553 St. Remo Broth ............. 525 Stew Soup ............ ...... 392 String-Bean Soup ........... 394 INDEX. PAGE Summer Soup 454 44 Melange Soup 363 Sweetbread 314 Ball " 683 Tapioca Soup 182 * " 466 Tomato and Bean Soup 170 41 Pea " 359 Tomatoes, Puree of 327 Tomato Soup 347 " 58 218 " (without meat) Soup. 408 Transparent Soup 688 Turnip " 568 Veal and Rice Broth 69 " Sago Soup 49 " Tapioca Broth 291 Veal Broth 403 " and Oyster Soup 623 Vegetable Consomme Soup.. 512 dlaCrecy " .. 545 " with Eggs " .. 471 Venison Soup. . . . . 635 Vermicelli " 26 44 215 41 " 240 " 377 Wednesday's Soup .......... 163 Western 4< 590 White Broth 583 44 Stock Soup 508 44 Soup 89 44 186 44 (Simple) Soup 658 Winter Pea " 618 FISH. Bass, Boiled 459 44 4< with Mushrooms. 327 44 Fried 72 Blue Fish; Baked 543 44 Boiled 225 PACK Cod, Boiled 30 44 4< with Sauce 163 41 * 4 4 ' Caper Sauce 234 44 with Macaroni 619 44 Salt, Pate of 210 Crab, Devilled 440 Fish Chowder 52 44 Mayonnaise of 236 Halibut, Baked 193 44 a la Royale 433 44 Fillets of 254 41 4< with Pota- toes 493 44 Steaks 23 44 " Broiled 158 Lobster, Devilled 174 44 Croquettes 223 44 " 652 41 Fricassee 341 44 Mayonnaise of 446 Mackerel, Salt, with Cream Sauce in 44 Spanish, Broiled. 407 Oysters, Fried 92 44 Panned 40 Oyster Pates 568 Pie 129 44 Salad 26! 44 56 44 Sauce 78 Oysters, Scalloped 26 " 556 Pickerel, Baked 356 4< Cream 518 Fried 592 Salmon, Boiled 396 44 Scallops 370 14 Croquettes 283 44 Pudding 44 44 Canned, Fricasseed. 639 Shad, Baked 268 Boiled 296 44 Fried 312 INDEX. 701 Shad, Price, au Gratin. .'. .... 351 44 Roe Croquettes 313 " Roes Scalloped 298 Weak Fish, Fried '. . 208 For receipts for cooking Trout, the reader is referred to u COM- MON SENSE IN THE HOUSE- HOLD," No. i, pages 64 and 65. MEATS, ENTREES, ETC. Bacon and Apples, Fried 98 " " Eggs 676 Beef d la Mode 303 44 " " du Rome 213 " 4< Reine 560 " Boiled, and Vegetables.. 469 44 Bouillon of ....278 4 ' Braised 437 " " Larded 499 " Browned Mince of 215 44 Cannelon of 564 " Corned, Boiled 115 266 44 4< and Turnips... 441 Beefs Heart 285 44 44 Stuffed 392 Beef, Larded 347 " 154 14 Miroton 375 ^' of 268 " and Potato Pasty 341 " Pressed 305 " Pudding 62 44 Rechauifeof 385 Roast 151 " 44 Tenderloin of. ... 201 *' " and Round Pota- toes 346 " and Potato Balls. 183 " 44 Browned Po- tatoes 497 " >ith Yorkshire Pudding 59 PAGB Beef, Rolled. . .v 103 " 364 Beefsteak, Rolled. 20 J" 44 41 au Maitre d' Hotel. 446 Baked 291 Larded, Broiled... 566 ' 44 and Onions 173 44 with Onions 84 Pie 623 " Pudding 232 " 491 44 with Wine Sauce.. 430 44 Stewed 206 Beef Stew, Brown 536 44 Stewed with Macaroni .. 551 Beefs Tongue (Langue de Boeuf) 89 " 358 44 44 with Green Peas 494 44 44 with Sauce Piquante . . 650 Brunswick Stew 477 Calf's Head, Baked 108 226 44 4I and Mushrooms. 467 14 4< Imitation Turtle. 258 44 4I Ragout of, and Mushrooms . . 142 44 4I Savory 419 Calves' Hearts, Stewed 527 Calfs Liver a 1'Anglaise 130 44 44 and Bacon 594 . 44 and Ham. ' Pick x/ up" Dish 388 44 4I a la Mode 56 ~ " 44 Larded 308 Calves' Tongues, Fricassee of. 553 Cannelon of Beef 564 / J' Casserole of Rice, Chickens and Tongu* 525 Chicken, Boiled 249 702 INDEX. PAGE Chickens, Boiled, with Maca- roni ...... 86 44 " and Tongue 456 " Braised ...... ." ..... 462 44 Broiled ..... . ....... 470 Chicken, Browned Fricassee of .............. . 179 Cutlets ............ 434 Croquettes (Potato). 592 44 Dumplings ........ . 639 Chickens, Fricasseed, Brown. 105 White. 55 ....... 534 44 Fried .............. 421 Whole ....... 396 44 and Mushrooms ---- 560 Chicken Pates ............... 163 44 and Ham Pie.. ...... 683 14 Pot Pie, with Dump- lings .............. 383 44 Pudding ............ 296 41 and Ham Pudding.. 193 Chickens, Roast ............. 73 " ............. 432 44 and Pork .......... 337 44 l4 Rice .......... 161 44 Scalloped .......... 235 Chicken Scallop ............. 437 44 4< and Baked Eggs ...... 464 Chickens, Smothered ........ 188 44 44 with Mush- rooms... 517 " with Oys- ters ..... 12 44 with Mushroom Sauce 223 44 a la Viennoise ..... ... 637 Chicken, Roulettes of ........ 557 44 Stewed ............ 147 " ............ 323 " Whole ..... 409 ...... ..... 578 MOB Ducks i la Mode 666 Duck, Braised 208 Ducks, Fricassee of 547 Larded 485 44 and Macaroni, Casse- role of 486 Duck, Pate of ico 44 Ragout of 605 44 " and Green Peas 452 44 Roast 31 Ducks, " 167 Duck, Salmi of 34 " 424 Ducks, Stewed 98 Whole 450 Fowl, Mince of 81 44 and Rice Croquettes... 628 Goose, Rechauffe of I 633 44 Roast 631 Grouse, Braised 652 " Fricassee of. 615 Ham and Eggs 170 44 Baked 133 44 Boiled 45 44 Broiled 487 44 Glazed 241 44 and Macaroni Pudding, Milanese 351 44 and Omelette 330 Hare, Roast 67 Hot Pot 95 " 570 Imitation Oyster Scallops.... 543 Kidneys, Saute, with Wine. . . 501 Lamb, Breast of, with Macaroni 390 " Chops 349 44 Cutlets 379 44 Pudding 573 44 Minced ..-333 44 Roast 287 " " 33* 44 Stewed a la Jardiniere. 512 INDEX. 703 PAGE Lamb, Stewed a la Jardiniere, with Mushroom Sauce 360 Mutton Batter Pudding 507 44 Boiled Shoulder of. . 187 " 139 Breast of, Roast.... 272 " Chops, Baked 653 " " Breaded and Baked .... 549 " " Breaded and Fried 181 " Broiled 75. " Larded 230 " " " 368 669 " " and Tomato Puree 149 " Cutlets, Baked 256 Fried 127 " " Stewed 343 44 Game 458 " Haricot of 488 44 Leg of, Boiled 262 44 Mince of 27 Minced and Eggs... 199 41 Ragout of 247 300 415 " Roast 93 " 197 Pie 264 *' Pilau of. . .... 274 " and Potato Pudding. 402 44 Saddle of, Roast 608 " Shoulder of, Larded. 400 " Stewed a la Jardiniere. 69 41 Stew with Dumplings 587 44 " Peas 435 44 Stuffed Shoulder of. 316 Pate de Foie de Veau 513 Pig, Roast 685 " Ragout of 687 PAGE Pigeons, Mock 417 44 " with Mushroom Sauce 276 44 Jugged 165 Pigeon Pie 195 Pigeons, Stewed 125 Pork and Beans 71 44 Chops with Tomato Gravy. . . ; 625 " Pie, English 144 44 Roast Chine of 613 41 Steaks 641 Quails, Mock 509 Rabbits, Jugged 49 648 44 Larded 689 Rabbit, Ragout of 626 Rabbits, Roast 603 Sheep's Head baked a la Russe 520 Sheep's Tongues, Stewed.... 381 Stew, Irish 221 " Killarney 606 Sweetbreads, Fricassee of. . . . 370 44 Larded, Stewed 112 Pate of. 254 44 Roast 328 11 53 '.,'.. Rissoles of. .... 568 " Stewed brown.. 239 Turkey, Boiled 78 41 and Ham 137 14 Minced and Eggs... 657 44 Roast 37 4 620 44 44 and Sausages. 655 44 Scallop ... 40 " 621 Steamed 135 Turnovers, Swiss 219 Veal, Braised 411 44 Breast of, Braised 541 44 " Roast 156 704 INDEX. PAGE Veal, Breast of, Stewed 294 44 Oysters and Sweet- breads, Cannelon of. . . 660 " Collops 454 " with Tomato Sauce 582 44 Cutlets 634 " " a la Milanese.... 673 " " Breaded 442 " " with Brains 204 44 and Ham Cutlets, a la Polonaise 532 " and Ham 64 " with " 321 Fillet of, Baked 596 " 473 44 " with Ham .... 243 Stewed 658 Stuffed, Fillet of, with Bacon 353 " Fillet of, Stuffed 46 44 and Ham Pie 159 44 Lemon 398 44 and Oyster Pie 598 " Loin of, Stuffed 177 Pates 245 " Pate Dijon 475 11 Ragout of. 122 Scallop 356 11 Scalloped 427 44 Stuffed, with Green Peas 425 Venison, Haunch of. 117 " 643 " Larded 120 44 Pasty 645 Steaks 671 VEGETABLES. Asparagus in Ambush 309 41 and Eggs 296 with 326 " Omelette 375 " on Toast 288 Pudding 338 PAGH Asparagus, Rolls 350 Beans, Baked 21 44 Boiled 149 " French, a la Creme... 597 " Boiled 244 44 " and Fried Brains 109 " Garnis with Sau- sages 173 Beans, French, with force-meat Balls 301 Beans, French, Stewed with Peas 391 Beans, French Saut6 (Fresh). 358 " " " (Canned) 60 44 Fried 619 44 Kidney au Maitre d'H6tel 645 Beans, Kidney 125 44 " Fricasseed.... 586 44 Fried 421 4t 4< al'Anglaise... 609 41 44 with Sauce 178 " Lima. 118 " " (Fresh) 360 14 " Stewed 387 447 . Navy 352 44 and Pork 71 44 String, Canned 47 14 String, Fresh 321 Beets, Boiled 393 44 Saute 374 44 Young 358 Broccoli 216 Brussels Sprouts 8a Cabbage au Gratin 546 Chopped..' 589 44 Ladies' 106 44 44 au Maitre d'Hotel ... 623 44 Minced 140 44 Sprouts 223 44 " and Eggs.. 277 INDEX. 70S PAGE Cabbage, Stuffed ............ 243 " and Sausage ....... 635 ColdSlaw ................... 598 * " with Cream Dressing 618 14 i< Egg Dressing.. 233 Hot Slaw .................... 173 Cabbage Salad .............. 21 Cauliflower a la Creme ....... 209 " au Gratin ........ 13 " Cream Sauce.... 64 " Boiled ........... 522 with Sauce ....... 115 " " " Tartare. 511 ' Scalloped ....... 267 " Stewed .......... 159 Carrots, Mashed ............. 99 " Stewed ............. 607 Celery, Baked ............... 175 " Minced, with Egg Dressing ........... 51 " Raw ................. 28 " Salad ................ 13 " " Egg Dressing.. 123 Stewed .............. 32 " " with Egg ..... 112 " " Savory ....... 73 Corn, Baked ................. 47 11 Green, Boiled Whole.. 395 " Cut from Ccb.. 478 " " Fritters ......... 509 |: Fritters ............... 323 11 Pudding ' .............. 221 < " Green ......... 412 Puddings ............. 137 ' and Tomatoes ......... 484 " Stewed . . 85 " ... 466 " Stewed ................ 38 Cucumbers, Fried .......... 406 " Raw ............ 424 Egg-plant, Breaded ......... 484 Fried in Batter... 498 PACK Egg-plant, Stewed 505 " Stuffed 491 Hominy, Baked 153 44 Croquettes 90 " Pudding 256 Macaroni al Napolitano 59 Baked 115 " Boiled 223 " Chopped 259 " au Gratin 602 " with Cheese 45 " with Cod 619 " with Breast of Lamb 390 " with Eggs 237 Shred 166 " with Ham 67 " Savory 290 " and Tomato Sauce. 406 " Stewed with Toma- to Sauce, 189 " with Bacon.. /..... 640 " Pudding. 654 Onions, Baked .'V 630 " Boiled 364 " " with Sauce... 444 " Cream 430 " Stewed brown. 477 " " plain 292 14 Young, Stewed 332 Parsnips, Buttered 228 Parsnip Cakes 87 Parsnips, Creamed 245 Fried. 35 Parsnip Fritters 283 Parsnips, Mashed 570 " Stewed 131 Peas, Canned 63 Pea (Green) Cakes 368 Peas " (Fresh) 288 44 " and Fried Brains 90 " " 168 Pea 4< Fritters 340 Peas, Puree of. aoS 30* 7 o6 INDEX. PAGE Peas, Pure of with Crean . . 317 Pea (Green) Pancakes 309 " (Split) " 235 Peas Pudding. 613 " Stewed, with French Beans 391 Polenta 591 Potatoes d la Duchesse 57 " " Lyonnaise 45 " a 1'Italienne 53 " alaCreme 250 " Louise 381 44 ' 4 Parisienne 577 " " Reine 98 auMaitre d'Hotel.. 80 " 4< Naturel 60 " " Gratin 130 " with Ver- micelli. 176 Baked... 106 " 138 " " with Beef. 151 " " " Steak.... 292 Potato Balls... 145 " with Beef. 183 11 .Baked 389 " Batter Pudding 402 Potatoes, Boiled, Plain 156 " Bermuda, au Naturel 206 . - Baked 217 " " Boiled..... 259 " " en Robe de Chambre 309 " " Whole 271 41 en Robe de Chambre 362 " Broiled 555 " Browned 21 Potato, Browned 76 Potatoes, " Whole 103 44 Buttered 385 Potato, Casserole of. 461 " Cannelon of. 597 " Cakes 47 Potato Cakes 563 " 257 Chips 185 Cones, Baked 633 " Chopped 252 321 41 " with Corn. .. 403 " Cheese Sauce 453 44 in Cases 109 44 Creamed 143 " Croquettes 161 531 44 Edging 317 " Eggs 288 Potatoes, Fried 267 Potato Frill 27 Potatoes, Glazed 171 Potatoes, Mashed, Browned.. 38 14 Moulded.. 404 " 4I au Gratin. . 513 44 Milanese 181 Moulded. 118 " . Mound 529 New 393 11 " Stewed 401 Old, " 232 " Omelette 410 Potato Pasty 341 4 Puff d la Geneve.. 544 44 Puffs, Fried 457 " 378 4 Puff 18* 44 Puree of. 349 Potatoes, 4< 567 44 4< with Gravy... 593 Potato Rissoles 198 Potatoes, Roast 41 44 Savory. 228 4i Scallops 343 .....159 44 Scalloped, with Eggs 643 Scooped 354 INDEX. 70; PAGE Potat DCS, Scored. ...... '. ..... 63 " Stewed ............ 134 " ............ 261 " ............ 65 14 " Creamed... 215 Potato Stew ......... ........ 154 Potatoes Stewed Whole ..... 93 Cream ..... 348 Potato Strips ................ 149 Potatoes, Stripped, Fried.... 325 Stewed.. 553 Potato Snow ................ 299 Potatoes, Squeezed .......... 283 44 Sweet, Baked ...... 82 44 Boiled ...... 136 " " " ...... 101 " " Browned... 535 " " Fried ....... 121 " Glazed ..... . 627 " in Jackets... 35 " " and Irish Chopped. 84 " ' Sliced ...... 183 Whipped .......... 87 " with Halibut Fillets. 493 44 " Vermicelli ..... 615 Pudding, Scotch, Savory ..... 168 " Bread, " .... 610 " Graham, " .... 647 44 Yorkshire, No. i...- 59 41 No. 2... 584 Rice, Baked ................. 315 44 Boiled, a la Geneve ____ 95 " ' 4 in Broth ........ 489 " 4I Plain .......... 301 4I with Sauce ..... 550 '* Buttered. ...... ........ 330 " Casserole of; with Calf s Brains .............. 339 ", Casserole of, with To- mato Sauce ......... 226 " and Cheese ........... 123 PAGH Rice Croquettes 31 44 Croquettes a fa Princesse 582 " 4I with Giblets.. 409 44 " Savory 366 44 Pudding, Naples 136 44 4< Savory 79 " 279 Salsify, Fried 73 Fritters 57 44 or Mock Stewed Oysters 145 Saute 601 Stewed 35 Sea Kale 290 44 on Toast 310 Spinach a la Creme 93 44 4< 44 Parisienne. 241 44 44 44 Reine 294 44 Beaten 378 44 Boiled 24 44 Dressed with Egg 348 44 Garnished " ... 281 44 in a Mould 169 44 Moulded 252 44 on Toast 325 44 with Eggs 133 Squash a la Creme 416 44 au Gratin 496 " Baked 409 " 593 44 Creamed .....438 44 Mashed 374 44 Scalloped 393 44 Stewed 399 44 Stuffed 514 41 Winter 147 Succotash 101 44 Canned 202 44 with Lima Beans.. 503 Tomatoes, Baked 28 44 4< with Ham... 383 44 Whole 390 " <4 with Gravy. 463 INDEX. Tomatoes, Broiled 471 " Devilled 443 Tomato Omelette, with Cheese 278 Tomatoes in a Mould. 547 Tomato Puree 149 Tomatoes, Raw 319 Tomato Sauce 41 " " with Macaroni. 189 " " Onion 496 44 Salad 338 " . " Egg Dressing. 376 " Scalloped 121 11 " with Corn. 270 Tomatoes, Stewed " 76 44 " with Onions. 53 " " Onions and Bread. 313 " " with Onions. 394 and Corn (Fresh) Stewed 466 Stewed Plain 14 " Stuffed 364 " with Corn 521 " " Meat 480 4 II ii roj " " Gravy. 480 Turnips and Corned Beef. . . . 441 44 Mashed 143 44 Puree of. 563 44 Stewed. 360 44 with White Sauce... 95 44 Young 339 Vegetables, Ragout of 448 EGGS. Eggs and Asparagus 296 44 Baked with Scallop 464 44 and Cabbage Sprouts.. 277 44 Fricasseed 617 44 and Macaroni 237 44 with Minced Mutton... 199 " " Ham 34 44 and Mushi^oms 540 warn Eggs, Poached 334 41 Puree of 580 Omelette, Asparagus 375 44 Baked, aux Fines Herbes 501 44 Giblet 519 44 with Gravy 482 44 " Ham 330 44 Tomato with Cheese 278 41 with Tomatoes. . . 600 CHEESE. Cheese Custards 603 44 Fingers 164 44 Fondu 54 44 Ramakins 285 SALADS. Salad, Bavarian 567 44 Bean 611 44 Beet Root 140 44 4< " and Potato.. 589 44 Cabbage 21 152 44 Celery 13 44 " Egg Dressing. . 51 44 Chicken 252 44 Cress 299 Cresses 269 Cucumbers, Raw 399 Salad, Cucumber and Onion. 500 4 ' Lettuce 198 44 ' and Cress.... 311 44 44 Cream Dress- ing 219 44 " Plain 229 44 4< and Veal 246 Mayonnaise of Lobster. 446 41 Fish 236 Salad, Oyster 56 14 with Lettuce... 261 44 Potato 290 44 and Beet 36" INDEX. 709 PAGE Salad, Potato 451 Slaw, Cold 91 - " Cream Dressing. .. 162 14 Egg " ... 599 44 Hot 173 Salad, Summer 331 " 492 " Tomato 338 " " Egg Dressing.. 354 " Iced " .. 376 Turkey 82 SAUCES FOR MEAT. Sauce, Apple 60 Bread 31 44 Caper 24 44 " for Mutton 263 " Cheese, for Potatoes.. 453 " Cranberry 37 " Cream, for Mackerel., in " " Cauliflower 64 .1 ii .. II5 " for Codfish 30 44 Egg 211 " " for Chicken 249 " Horse-radish 392 559 " Mint 288 " Mushroom 223 44 " for Lamb.. 360 Mustard, Made 60 Sauce, Onion and Tomato... 496 " for Kidney Beans 178 " Beef's Tongue.... 358 " Piquante 90 " Oyster 217 44 Tartare 511 44 Tomato 41 " " for Macaroni .. 189 " " Rice 226 " Rhubarb or Pie-plant. 294 " for Salmon 44 White, for Turnips. . 95 PIES, TARTS, ETC. PAGB Pie, Apple 32 " " Custard 460 44 " Meringue 128 44 Sliced 180 44 Blackberry 447 Cherry 359 14 Cream Peach 521 " " Raspberry 408 " Corn-Starch Custard... 279 14 Lemon Cream 567 14 Lemon Meringue 432 44 Mince 80 " 686 44 Peach 470 44 " Whole 496 44 Pineapple... 309 14 Potato 99 44 " Irish 331 44 Pumpkin 136 Squash 555 14 Sweet Potato 665 Napolitainoes 597 Strawberry Meringue 328 Tartlets, Chocolate 617 Tart, Damson 529 44 Gooseberry 393 44 Open Apple Custard... 479 44 Raspberry and Currant Jelly 121 14 Raspberry and Currant. 423 44 Rhubarb 242 Tartlets, Jelly 116 44 Lemon 677 44 Orange 627 PUDDINGS, PUFFS, ETC. Pudding, Alice's 260 Amber 557 44 Apple 614 " 468 44 " Meringue.... 63 41 44 Souffle 531 INDEX. PAGE Budding, Apple and Tapioca. 22 Apple Compote au Gratin. . . . 455 udding, Arrow-root 152 Hot 682 " Batter 625 " 307 " Blackberry, Baked.. 514 ' Boiled, Plain 178 " 607 Bread 334 44 " and Custard. 638 44 " and Raisin... 277 44 " Steamed 205 " " Corn 391 " Cherry 410 " " Susie's 45 44 " Custard 564 " " Brown Bettie "... 91 41 Bubble 559 Cabinet 96 44 Cherry Souffle 420 " Cocoa 604 Cocoanut 570 ,. 218 281 354 " " Sponge... 182 44 Corn-meal Fruit.... 58 44 4< Hasty... 230 44 " Steamed 250 " " without Eggs.. 209 44 Corn-starch Hasty.. 18 44 ' 4 Custard 403 44 Cottage 25 44 Cream 374 Puddings, Cup 684 Pudding, Diplomatic 519 41 Dorchester Cracker Plum 675 44 Essex 156 44 Farina Hasty 173 " ' ..668 PAGB Pudding, Farina, Cold 418 J Fig 68 44 " Custard 191 ** -V" 44 Flour Hasty 624 44 Graham Hasty 321 44 Huckleberry, Baked 443 44 Indian 449 Jam 65 44 Lausanne 583 44 Lemon 176 44 Macaroni 150 Plain 261 44 4I and Almond 51 44 4< Sweet, with Brandied Fruit 83 44 Minced 71 44 Neapolitan 301 44 Newark 286 44 Nursery Plum 224 44 Oat - meal, with Cream 292 44 Orange 612 44 Omelette Meringue. 588 Peach 546 44 Batter 248 " 154 Potato, Sweet 164 " 585 44 Plum, Impromptu.. 661 44 Poor Man's Plum... 162 44 Queen's 171 44 621 Puddings, Queen of 235 M with Straw- berry Me- ringue... 311 Pudding, Rice Meringue. . . . 687 44 44 Southern 183 44 ' and Tapioca.. 289 44 Ruby's 548 44 Seymour 134 44 Sponge-Cake Souffle 66; INDEX. 711 PAGE Snowballs , , 109 Pudding, Sponge-Cake 143 Tapioca 257 " " English 126 Puddings, Transparent 198 Pudding, Unity 104 " Wayne 220 44 Willie's Favorite... 196 Puffs^ Corn-meal 140 " Cottage 187 " 412 " German 297 44 Jersey 336 " Lemon 265 44 White 207 DUMPLINGS, FRITTERS, ETC. Dumplings, Apple, Baked 48 " " Boiled 542 44 Belle's 227 44 Berry, Baked 487 44 Cherry, " 371 Suet 639 Fritters, Apple 593 " Jelly Cake 238 " . Orange 76 " Peach 506 44 Potato 540 1 ' Rusk 649 " Suet 639 Marmalade Roll 324 Pancakes, Plain 636 " with Preserves 160 Queen's Toast 222 Roley-Poley, Blackberry 473 Cherry 385 41 Jam 87 PUDDING SAUCES. Sauce, Bee-hive 77 " Brandy 48 FAGR Sauce, Cabinet Pudding 96 44 Cottage " 25 44 Cream 104 44 Sweet no 4 4 Hard 22 " Jelly 157 44 Wine 88 " ; ... 194 CUSTARDS, BLANC-MANGE, JELLY, ETC. Ambrosia " Pine-apple Apple Charlotte 44 Meringue 44 Snow Apples, Stewed with Cream.. Blanc-Mange Almond Corn- starch 14 Almond 44 Chocolate 44 44 and Cocoanut. . .. 44 Corn-starch 44 Lemon Narcissus 14 Neapolitan 44 Ribbon Velvet Charlotte Russe Coffee, Meringue Cream, Bavarian Coffee 41 Spanish 212 273 550 634 148 611 14 424 284 338 632 326 liV 679 516 X, 383 581 533 434 387 41 Turret 169 Creme du The, Cafe et Choco- lat 85 Custard, Almond, with Cocoa- nut Frost 451 44 Ambrosia 431 712 INDEX. PAGE Custards, Baked, Chocolate.. 233 Custard, Barley 644 Custards, Cup, Baked 313 ' ' Boiled 629 " 271 " Cup, Boiled 101 Custard, Burnt 295 " Chocolate 131 44 Farina 138 ' French Tapioca 94 Custards, Jelly 554 Custard, Margherita Lemon.. 74 '* Mountain or Junket. 376 11 Quaking 240 44 Rose's Rice 35 " Snow 214 " 346 44 Island, Floating.... 42 Ice-Cream, Self-freezing 414 " Peach 485 Jaune Mange 200 Jelly, Birds' Nest in 244 ' Claret 438 44 Lemon 145 " Raspberry and Currant, with Whipped Cream. 401 " Wine, with Whipped Cream 119 Omelette aux Confitures 315 " Jelly 462 " Souffle 113 Peach (Canned) Leche Crema. 263 " (Fresh) 474 Pears, Stewed with Rice 528 Pie-plant (April) Fool 229 Quince Souffle 569 Rock-work 538 Snow, Apple 148 ' ' Orange 426 " Rice 572 44 Tropical 39 Syllabub 502 Trifle, Apple 202 PAG Trifle, Ambushed 269 " Apricot 591 " Drunken Dominie.... 589 " Lemon 299 (Cake) 406 44 A Mere 123 44 Peach 492 " Strawberry , 369 " Tipsy 28 CAKES. Cake, Apple " Corn-starch, Cup 44 Cream Cakes, " 41 \ " Boston Cake, " Rose Charlotte Cachee Cake, Huckleberry 41 Martha's 44 Myrtle's 11 Orange Sponge Mrs, M.'s 44 White 44 " Mountain Gingerbread, Sponge Soft... Shortcake, Blackberry, Hot.. Huckleberry 44 Raspberry, Cold.. Hot.. 44 Strawberry 189 663 436 544 255 609 244 465 644 216 536 IS 566 632 572 54 106 253 504 458 382 367 343 FRUIT DESSERTS. Apples and Nuts 29 Bananas, Oranges and Cher- ries 428 Bananas and Oranges 320 Blackberries 453 Cherries 399 Currants and Raspberries .... 429 INDEX. 713 Grapes, Boiled Chestnuts and Apples ; 586 Huckleberries and Cream. . . . 440 Melons, Peaches and Pears.. 494 " Nutmeg and Peaches 484 " Water- melons... 471 Nuts and Raisins 144 Peaches and Cream 457 Raspberries and Cream 395 " Cream and Cake 404 373 Straw berries and Cream 348 PAGB Strawberries 378 Watermelons and Pears 487 DRINKS. Cafe au Lait 107 Chocolate 54 Cocoa.. 15 Coffee 19 " Iced 46*; " and Whipped Cream. . 260 Tea 42 " a la Russe 574 " Iced 436 A. NJ3TW EDITION Uniform -with the re-issue of "Common Sense in the Household* THE DINNER YEAR-BOOK By MARION HARLAND, AUTHOR of "COMMON SENSE IN THE HOUSEHOLD," "BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON, AND TEA," etc., etc. One vol., 12 mo, 72O pages, Price, $1.75 KITCHEN EDITION IN OIL-CLOTH COVERS AT SAME PRICE. THE DINNER YEAR-BOOK is, in its name, happily descriptive of its purposes and char- acter. It o-cupies a place which, amid all the publications upon cookery and their name is Legion lias never yet been occupied. The author truly says that there have been dinner-giving books published, that is books of menus for company dinings, " Little Dinners," for e.speci a 1 occasions, etc., etc. ; but that she has never yet met with a practical directory of this important meal for every day in the year. In this volume she has furnished the programme in all its details, and has superintended the preparation of each dish, proceeding even to the proper manner of serving it at the table. The book has been prepared for the family, for the home of ordinary means, and it has hit the happy line "where elegance and economy meet. , The most numerous testimonials to the value of Marion Harland's "Common Sense" books, which the publishers have received, both in newspaper notices and in private communications, are to the effect always expressed with some astonishment that the directions of these receipts, actually followed, produce the prom- ised result. We can prophesy the same for the new volume. The purchaser will find that he has bought what the name purports The Dinner Year-Book a practical guid-e for the purchase of the material and preparation, serving, etc., of the ordinary home dinner for every day of the year. To these are added twelve company dinners, one for each month, from which a selection can be made according to the time of the year equal to any occasion which will be presented to the housekeeper. This book, however, is not valuable merely as a directory for dinners appropriate to various seasons. It contains the largest number of receipts for soups, fish, meat, vegetables, entrees of all descriptions, and desserts, ever offered to the American public. The material for this work has been collected with great care, both at home and abroad, representing the diligent labor of many months. Note, T/ie original Rdttion of The Dinner Year Book, with six colored plates, illustrating twenty-eight subjects, handsomely bound in cloth, will be continued in print at the regular price, $2.25. *** For sale by all booksellers, or will be sent, post or express charges paid, upon receipt of the price, by CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, PUBLISHERS, 743 AND 745 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, " To those tuho love a pure diction, a healthful tone, and thought that leads up to the higriff a.nd better aims, tha-t gives brighter color to some of the hard, dull phases of life, that awakens the mind^tit renewed activity, and makes one mentally tetter, the prose and poetical works of Dr. Holland mill prove an ever new, e-ver welcome source from which to draw,"" NEW HAVEN PALLADIUM. (Joraplrf F Mrilings of #p.3.(J.];[oHanb WITH THE AUTHOR'S REVISION. Each one vol., 16mo, (sold separately,) Price, $1.23. Messrs. CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS have now completed the issue of a New Edition of Dr. Holland's Writings, printed from new plates, in a very attractive style, in artistic binding, and at a greatly reduced price. It is believed that the aggregate sale of Dr. Holland's Books, amounting as it does to half a million volumes, exceeds the circulation of the writings of any other American author. There is not a single book of his which has not had an unquestionable success, and most of them have been in such constant and increasing demand that the plates were actually worn out. ESSAYS. TITCOMB'S LETTERS, GOLD FOIL. THE JONES FAMILY, LESSONS IN LIFE, PLAIN TALKS, EVERY-DAY TOPICS, First Series, EVERY-DAY TOPICS, Second Series. A New Volume. POEMS. BITTERSWEET, ' MISTRESS OF THE MANSE, KATHRINA, PURITAN'S GUEST, AND OTHER POEMS. NOVELS. ARTHUR BONNICASTLE, BAY PATH, NICHOLAS MINTURN MISS GILBERT'S CAREER, SEVENOAKS. 16 Volumes, in a Box, per set, - - $2O.OO. Complete Poetical Writings of Dr, J. G. Holland, With Illustrations by Reinhart, Griswold, and Mary Hallock Foote, and Portrait by Wyatt Eaton. Printed from New Stereo- typed Plates, Prepared expressly for this- Edition. One Volume, 8vo. Extra Cloth, - $S.OO. " Dr. Holland will always find a congenial audience in the homes of culture and refinement. He does not affect the play of the darker and fiercer passions, but de- lights in the sweet images that cluster around the domestic hearth. He cherishes a, strong fellow-feeling with the pure and tranquil life in the modest social circles of the Ameri an people, and has thus won his way to the companionship of many friendly hearts" N. Y. TRIBUNE. %* For sale by all booksellers, or sent post-paid upon receipt of price by CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 743 AND 745 BROADWAY, NEW YORK } r ^ // ^