PROGRESS MEATLESS COOKBOOK Ixll THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES THE PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK AND VALUABLE RECIPES AND SUGGESTIONS FOR CLEANING CLOTHING, HATS, GLOVES, HOUSE FURNISHINGS, WALLS AND WOODWORK AND ALL KINDS OF HELPS FOR THE HOUSEHOLD PUBLISHED BY THE NEW LITERATURE PUBLISHING CO. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA COPTRIGHT. 1911 BT LOTTA M. LAKE THB HICKS-JODD Co. Printers & Binders San Francisco, Gal. CONTENTS PAGE Preface 7 Suggestions for Starting the Day 9 Weights and Measures 15 Yeast 17 Helps About Breads 19 Biscuits 26 Griddle Cakes 29 Cereals and Breakfast Dishes 32 Eggs 34 Cheese Dishes 40 Sandwiches 45 Soups 47 Vegetables 53 Asparagus 53 Beans 54 Brussels Sprouts 57 Cabbage 57 Carrots 58 Cauliflower 59 Corn 59 Cucumbers 60 Eggplant 60 Spinach 61 Macaroni 62 Onions 67 Potatoes 69 Protose 73 Parsnips 73 Green Peas 74 Peppers 74 Boiled Rice 75 3 4 CONTENTS PAGE Squash 76 Tomatoes 76 Turnips 78 Mushrooms 79 Nut Recipes 63 To Blanch Nuts 63 Salted Almonds 63 Chestnuts 64 Nut Roasts 65 Peanut Butter 66 Sauces, Relishes, etc 81 Salad Combinations 84 Fruit Salads 90 Fritters 93 Pies 94 Puddings 103 Pudding Sauces 110 About Milk 113 Cream and Whipped Cream 114 Fruits 119 Doughnuts 123 Baking Cakes 124 Cakes 126 Cake Fillings 135 Icings 138 Cookies 142 Chilled Dishes 145 Ice Cream Sauces 148 Punches 150 Cold Beverages 153 Hot Beverages 158 Candies and Sweets 160 Jellies and Preserves 166 Canning in Jars 174 Canning Vegetables 176 Chutney, Catsup and Pickles 177 Wines, Flavorings and Vinegars 182 CONTENTS 5 PAOK Personal Comforts and Things Good to Know 185 Bathroom and Toilet 189 The Hair 192 Gloves, Parasols, etc 194 Shoes and Rubbers 196 Hats, Feathers, Ribbons and Laces 199 Removing Stains 211 Furs 217 Disinfectants, Scents, etc 219 Pests of Various Kinds 222 Flowers, Plants and Green Things 225 Bottles, Glass, Mirrors, etc 230 Coal, Stoves and Furnaces 237 Cleaning Metals, etc 242 Cleaning Bric-a-Brac 247 Cleaning Compounds 248 PREFACE THIS BOOK is gotten up to meet the wants of young- housekeepers who wish to use plain practical methods of keeping house in such manner that they do not spend all or even one-half their days in the kitchen ; who wish to manage their household so sensibly that the feeling of drudgery is removed, and they can be "chief cook and bottle washer" if necessary, yet meet with a smile the husband coming for meals. And for the "tired out" housekeeper who spends so much time planning and executing the family cooking and the serving of varied and elaborate meals, that she has no time to devote to the so-called recreations of life, fre- quently feeling obliged to give up everything to prevent a "complete nervous breakdown." If your children hear constant talk regarding food and its preparation, unless they learn better later on, they will most likely consider eating the chief thing in life. While every one must eat, let each one endeavor to make the preparation and the partaking of the daily meals a pleasure to the cook, and the manager of the cook. For unless a house is run on one or two "flat wheels" (as the streetcar men express it), there must be a manager. This book is also a plea for "the simple life" in a sensible way. We are independent beings, and we must decide our course for ourselves. If any of these things appeal to your thinking selves, use and enjoy them. If not, just 7 8 PREFACE ignore them, but, do not dictate as to the right or wrong of your neighbor's using them. You remember Epictetus said "Does a man bathe quickly? do not say that he bathes badly, but that he bathes quickly. For unless you perfectly understand the principle from which he acts, how do you know whether he is acting wrong." The aim in this book is not to present an immense variety of recipes, but a number of good, plain, wholesome dishes ; with directions for using and not wasting ingredients. The housekeeper need not be what is termed "stingy," but it is criminal to waste, and statistics prove that no other nation is so prodigal as the American. So let the women, the rulers of the house, see to it that they are doing their part in benefiting mankind. "Charity begins at home." Attend to yours. SUGGESTIONS FOR STARTING THE DAY You will find, by sometimes pleasant experience (some- times the reverse) that rising before 6.30 o'clock summer mornings, and before 7 in winter, is conducive to a smooth day. Of course, this is under ordinary conditions and environments. You have time to "do" your hair and don a neat shirt waist or dressing jacket and skirt. If a plain tulle veil to match the hair in color is fastened lightly over the head, it does not look unsightly, and may be removed before luncheon, a curl or puff (as the style may be) added, if desired, and the hair found dressed for the day. It is also surprising how such a filmy, almost un- seen, cover prevents dust entering the hair. While breakfast is cooking, a carpet sweeper can be run over rugs in the downstairs rooms; the hardwood floors wiped with a "dustless duster" (which absorbs the dust and polishes at the same time), or with a dust cloth two feet square made by stitching old stockings together. After breakfast, a few moments will suffice for the dust- ing of furniture and bric-a-brac, and the first floor is cleaned for the day. Dusters should be frequently shaken out-of-doors while dusting. After the breakfast work is done, the upstairs can be ar- ranged and dusted. All bath-rooms, wash bowls and toilets should then be 9 10 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK left in absolute cleanliness, and hardwood stairs wiped with a dust cloth if necessary In some houses, twice a week is sufficient to clean stairs and bathroom floors, and once in four weeks for cleaning windows. If the work in a house is attended to regularly, there is never any need for the old fashioned "House Cleaning." Whenever rugs and draperies need cleaning, have them cleaned immediately. THE KITCHEN SINK If it is convenient, by all means have a row of brass hooks over the sink, on which to hang the following articles, viz : A small three-cornered piece of zinc, each corner differ- ing in shape, to use in cleaning corners of pans, etc. Have a hole in one corner to hang by. A small stiff bristled brush for cleaning vegetables, with a screw-eye in one end to hang by. A wire dish for holding laundry and toilet soap, and an- other for sapolio and a small piece of flannel (or cotton cloth). A perforated dish into which to empty coffee grounds, etc., to prevent stoppage of the sink drain. A wire soap shaker to hold scraps of soap. An ordinary granite water dipper. A medium size sauce pan also utilized for dipping. Do not omit a wire dish cloth. A long wire with bristles on one end for cleaning bottles. A medium size scrubbing brush with pointed ends for cleaning the sink with Dutch Cleanser. A granite dish pan should hang or be placed near the sink, also a granite basin in which to wash vegetables. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 11 A sink should have boiling water poured in it each day, and if signs of stoppage occur, throw in a handful of copperas and usually the water poured in during the day will dissolve the copperas slowly and clean the pipes. On a shelf near the sink it is well to keep a can of Dutch Cleanser, a package of borax, if the water is "hard," and a package of pearline or similar powder. THE KITCHEN FLOOR The best linoleum is the most satisfactory and lasting cover for kitchen, pantry and back hall floors. It cleans beautifully with a scrub brush and naphtha soap, rinsing and wiping dry. Ordinarily, once a week is sufficient for scrubbing the kitchen, but the floor should be wiped or carefully mopped with a small mop at least every other day or oftener, if necessary. For spots and stains difficult to remove from linoleum, Dutch Cleanser is almost a certain remedy. THE KITCHEN TABLE If possible, have what is termed a combination table, and have a tinner cover the top with zinc. On this all hot dishes may be set with no ill results, and it is most easy to clean. If you can enjoy the luxury of a kitchen cabinet, select one with a tall cupboard on top, as that uses space otherwise wasted. If not already zinc covered, have it done. The cost is small, and the comfort and time sav- ing enormous. In the upper drawers in the combination table, you can keep whatever articles you wish. But somewhere, manage to keep a bunch of papers, for their 12 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK use is manifold. When gathering the dishes preparatory to washing them, always crush several pieces of paper and wipe out grease ; wipe off the table with paper when grease has been spilled ; and wipe off the stove with paper. All this is a great aid to greater comfort in wash- ing these things. THE GARBAGE In some cities a garbage collector calls on certairi days, and a convenient way is to keep an old coal hod indoors (so as not to attract flies) with a newspaper in it, into which to empty garbage as it accumulates during the day. This can be easily emptied into an outside garbage can each night. These matters must be governed by existing conditions. AROUND THE KITCHEN STOVE Brass hooks are convenient for holding the following, viz : Dust pan, soft brush, and old whisk broom. Asbestos plates or old shallow baking pans to invert under kettles to prevent burning. Cover squares of old shoe leather with ticking or any material suitable for holders, leaving a space about three inches not sewed in one edge of cover through which to slip leather when cover is washed. Sew a brass ring to one corner to hang by. Hem a square of ticking and attach a brass ring to hang by, to use in handling hot dishes about the stove. A turkey wing is most handy to brush under low furni- ture. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 13 Provide a place for drying dish-cloths and towels. For drying glass and silver, make towels of linen, to do away with lint. But nothing seems so satisfactory for drying china, as the soft towels made from flour and sugar bags, the one hundred pound size. Knitted dish cloths of fine twine can now be purchased in any linen department for a few cents. They are dur- able and just right to handle. By all means have a nickle tea kettle. OTHER HELPS Have a small dish in refrigerator or other cool place, into which to drop egg shells which are washed before break- ing eggs for cooking, and save for settling coffee. A good can opener and cork screw. A good, not too heavy broom, and an old one. Save all worn out flannels and soft cotton underwear for cleaning purposes. Pieces of medium grade sandpaper tacked over a strip of board 4x10 inches, similar to a razor sharpener, is fine for whetting knives. Always keep a pair of clean shears convenient for cutting orange and lemon peel, certain vegetables, etc. A rubber window dryer, used on or off the handle. Get a good Fireless Cooker. And a steam cooker, if you can a copper one, or it will rust out, and get it with two doors. Three or four empty pound baking powder cans, with covers. A light weight mop. Good scrub brush. 14 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK Wire basket to keep vegetables from burning to bottom of kettle. Buy a good clock. COOKING UTENSILS A word to the wise : have plenty and proper dishes for cooking, and if you cannot purchase both dishes and bric- a-brac, by all means leave out the bric-a-brac. Have a good food chopper for grinding nuts, cheese, bread, herbs, etc., etc. A wooden chopping bowl and sharp chopping knife. A nutmeg grater, also a large grater having different size punctures. Quart measure with other divisions marked. Measuring cup. Small sharp vegetable knife. Large sharp bread knife. Two steel knives and forks. A long doughnut fork and doughnut cutter. A cooky cutter. Lemon reamer. Egg-beater. One draining, two mixing, two table, one dessert, three teaspoons. Pancake turner. Steamed pudding dish. Bread pans. Large baking pans. Perforated pie tins. Patent cake tins. Six granite cups to hold left-overs, etc. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 15 Granite saucers and different sized round basins. Double boiler. Small steamer and kettle to fit. Funnel. Three different sized stew pans, granite. Three different sized sheet iron frying pans. A granite colander. Three sizes, wire strainers. Moulding board and glass rolling pin. Flour sieve. WEIGHTS AND MEASURES For convenience in using, measurements in this book are given in both cups and pints. Have a measuring cup and no difficulty will be ex- perienced. 2 cupfuls butter= 1 pound= 1 pint 4 cupfuls flour= 1 pound 1 quart 2 cupfuls sugars 1 pound 1 pint 2 l /2 cupfuls powdered sugar^l pound= 1 pint 1 cupful bread crumbs 4 ounces 1 cupful grated cheese } pound % cupful macaroni^ ^4 pound 1 cupful nut meats ^ pound 1 cupful dates= % pound 1/4 cupful dates= 4 tablespoonfuls 1/3 cupful dates= 6 tablespoonsfuls 2 cupfuls milk or water= 1 pound 10 eggs 1 pound 16 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK READ THIS Granulated sugar is used almost universally. Soda may be dissolved in either hot or cold water. When mixing, add ingredients in order given. Butter is softened, not melted, by placing on small tin in oven. Flour is never used without being sifted, and measure- ments given mean after sifting. All measurements given are even or level. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA YEAST A yeast cake may be kept fresh for a week by burying it in the flour. A liberal pinch of soda dissolved in a little warm water and added to slightly soured yeast will sweeten it. EVERLASTING YEAST 1 cupful mashed potatoes 1 tablespoonful salt 3 cupfuls lukewarm water 3 tablespoonfuls sugar yeast cake }4 teaspoonful ginger Peel and boil old potatoes, put through a colander, mix with the other ingredients with the yeast dissolved in a little warm water. Add the ginger the first time in start- ing the yeast, but not again. Let this mixture stand for three days before using. When you make bread, repeat the formula, omitting the yeast and ginger, add the in- gredients to the first mixture and let stand over night. In the morning, stir it thoroughly, take out a pint to start your next yeast, sift the flour with the remainder, knead and put into pans. By noon the bread may be baked. This makes three loaves. Keep the yeast in a tight jar, and it will keep for about ten days in warm weather. MAKING DRY YEAST After mixing bread at night, the following morning take a large cupful of the light sponge and stir into it dry corn meal. Spread it out thinly to dry, stirring occas- ionally. When perfectly dry, like coarse powder, it is 17 18 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK ready for use, and will keep indefinitely. Use about two tablespoonfuls for a medium size baking. YEAST 1 yeast cake y t cupful salt ^2 cupful sugar Put the hops in cold water, let boil for five minutes and strain. Add potato, salt and sugar, boiling all together for five minutes. Have a yeast cake dissolved in a little warm water, and when the potato mixture is nearly cold, stir in the yeast cake and let rise. HELPS ABOUT BREADS When the temperature is too low for bread to rise well, set the bread pan on folded newspaper or something to prevent it getting chilled ; an asbestos mat is good ; cover the pan with towels and newspaper; a hot water bag filled with hot water and placed on top of these coverings, and the bag itself covered, is one of the best helps. Always stir in all the flour possible at the first mixing. Never fill the bread pans over half full. Knead the dough into loaves, let rise, work over again, let rise in the pans and bake. If you mix bread dough with water, your loaves will stand a hotter fire than when mixed with milk. If flour is warmed before mixing bread in cold weather, it will aid in the rising. Too much kneading is unnecessary. One cupful of liquid yeast is equal to one dried yeast cake or about three-fourths of a compressed yeast cake. A little sugar sprinkled on the bottom of the oven helps brown the top of your loaves. For sandwich making, bake the bread in one pound baking powder cans, filling them half full of the dough. Some good cooks add one teaspoonful of glycerine to every four cupfuls of flour in making bread. It makes the dough "richer." KEEPING BREAD FRESH As soon as bread is cold, put each loaf in a paper bag, 19 20 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK putting the bags in an earthen jar with cover, or in a bread tin. A dish containing a wet sponge set inside the bread tin is good. Of course, see that the sponge is kept sweet. And a cut apple inside the bread tin helps. Bread wrapped in paraffin paper before being placed in the jar or box, keeps well. STALE BREAD Dip stale loaves in water, quickly removing to a hot oven for about ten minutes. When not needed as bread, put stale pieces through the chopper and save every crumb in a receptacle covered with a cloth, not with a tight cover, to prevent mold. CUTTING BREAD Tie a piece of coarse white thread or common twine around the hot bread where you wish to cut. It cuts per- fectly smooth and straight. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA BREADS OF VARIOUS NAMES ENTIRE WHEAT BREAD 1 pint milk 2 teaspoonfuls salt 1 pint water 1 cake yeast foam 3 tablespoonfuls sugar entire wheat flour At night scald the milk, add water, sugar and salt and the yeast dissolved in a little of the warm milk and water. Stir in all possible of the whole wheat flour. Cover and keep in warm place till morning. Knead just enough to work into loaves to half fill bread pans, and when the loaves have risen to nearly the top of the pan, bake. WHITE BREAD, ROLLS AND BREAD DOUGHNUTS 1 pint hot water or milk 3 tablespoonfuls sugar 1 pint cold water or milk 3 teaspoonfuls salt butter, size of egg 1 cake compressed yeast Mix at night. Dissolve yeast in ^ cupful lukewarm water. Stir butter, sugar and salt into the pint of hot water or milk, adding the cold water or milk after butter becomes softened, then add the yeast and all the flour you can stir in. Cover and keep in warm place till morning. Place on the floured moulding board, and knead just enough to work into three loaves, leaving a fourth loaf to work into rolls. Place the three loaves in bread pans, cover, let rise, and bake. Take the fourth loaf, work in a second piece of softened butter, mould into rolls, place in tin to rise. 21 22 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK Usually, in about half an hour, bread and rolls are ready to bake. If the rolls are wanted later, place them in the refrigera- tor or cold place, till time to allow them to rise and bake. BREAD DOUGHNUTS Take one loaf of the bread mixture, dip a tablespoon first into hot cooking oil, then into this one loaf, and drop a small thin piece from the spoon into the hot oil ready for frying. They are fine with maple or sugar syrup. RYE BREAD 1 cupful scalded milk 3 cupfuls flour 1 cupful boiling water 2 tablespoonfuls butter Yi cupful sugar 1 tablespoonful salt 1 cake compressed yeast Mix at night. Dissolve the yeast in a little warm water, and as soon as the hot liquids are simply warm, not hot, add them to the yeast; then stir in the sugar, softened butter, salt and flour ; cover and keep in a warm place to rise over night. Next morning, add rye meal until thick enough to work into loaves. Allow this to rise, then work it into loaves, place in bread tins, let rise again and bake. Makes two loaves. BOSTON BROWN BREAD No. 1 1 cupful corn meal 54 cupful molasses 1 cupful graham flour y t teaspoonful soda l l /3 cupfuls sour milk 1 teaspoonful salt Pour molasses into your mixing bowl, add the milk, then PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 23 the soda dissolved in a little water, then meal and flour, and pour into two one-pound baking powder cans, put covers on tightly and steam three hours. BOSTON BROWN BREAD No. 2 34 cupful graham flour % cupful molasses Yz cupful corn meal $4 teaspoonful salt $4 cupful sour milk */* teaspoonful soda Mix as in No. 1, pour into a two quart granite basin, cover tightly (place a weight on cover if necessary), steam two and one-half hours, and bake ten minutes. BROWN BREAD No. 1 2 cupfuls graham flour }/ cupful molasses y t cupful corn meal 1 egg 1 cupful milk 1 teaspoonful soda butter, size of walnut ^ teaspoonful salt Pour molasses and milk into your mixing bowl, add the soda dissolved in a little water, salt, the butter softened, flour and meal. Bake in ordinary oven. BROWN BREAD No. 2 2 cupfuls milk 1 teaspoonful salt 2 cupfuls corn meal y 2 teaspoonful soda 1 cupful graham flour 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder Yz cupful molasses Mix and bake as in Brown Bread No. 1. 24 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK GRAHAM BREAD No. 1 1 pint milk 2 cupfuls dried raisins 1 pint water 2 teaspoonfuls salt 3 tablespoonfuls sugar 1 cake yeast foam graham flour Have the raisins washed and dried the day before, then proceed as per Entire Wheat Bread recipe, adding the perfectly dry raisins in the last kneading. GRAHAM BREAD No. 2 2 cupfuls sour milk 1 teaspoonful salt */4 cupful molasses 1 teaspoonful soda 2 cupfuls graham flour butter, size of egg 1 cupful corn meal 1 cupful chopped raisins Dissolve soda in a little water and stir it in the sour milk, add molasses, salt and part of the flour and corn meal, softened butter, adding the raisins and remainder of flour and meal alternately. Bake for about three-quarters of an hour. ROLLS One recipe is given under White Bread. If these rolls are molded and the pan placed in a dish of warm water, or in a gas oven with the flame turned very low, they will be ready for baking in from ten to twenty minutes. A cupful of finely chopped nut meats added to the above /ecipe at the last kneading, is fine. 25 NUT ROLLS Use the recipe for Baking Powder Biscuit, roll very thin, spread with butter and sprinkle with chopped raisins, or nuts or both. Roll this dough tightly, like jelly roll, cut into slices, and bake. PARKER HOUSE ROLLS 2 cupfuls milk 2 tablespoonfuls sugar % cupful butter 1 teaspoonful salt flour 1 compressed yeast cake To the scalding milk add salt, sugar, a little flour and the softened butter. Dissolve the yeast cake in about half a cupful of lukewarm water, stirring into the milk mixture as soon as it is lukewarm, not hot. Add sufficient flour to form a soft dough. Knead till it is smooth, put back into mixing pan, cover and let stand in a warm place till light. Usually it becomes very light in two hours. Turn it on the bread board, knead a little more, roll and cut into pieces to shape into rolls. Spread half of the inside with butter, fold the other half over and press it down. Place these in a covered well-buttered pan till they are twice their original size, and bake from ten to twenty minutes. BISCUITS BAKING BISCUITS Have the oven hot at first, letting it cool gradually. BAKING POWDER BISCUITS 4 cupfuls flour 1 teaspoonful salt 2 cupfuls milk 3 teaspoonfuls baking powder Yz cupful butter pinch of sugar Sift the baking powder with the flour into the milk and the softened butter, add salt and sugar, roll to half-inch in thickness, cut and bake. Instead of milk, water may be used by adding a little more butter. By rolling the dough very thin, cutting small biscuits, placing one on top of another to bake, very convenient biscuits for buttering for parties and luncheons can be made. GRAHAM BISCUITS 1 cupful sour milk y 2 teaspoonful soda 1 tablespoonful sugar graham flour 5/2 teaspoonful salt butter, size of egg Stir the soda dissolved in a little water into the milk, add salt, sugar, a little graham flour, the melted or softened butter, and more graham flour till the liquid has absorbed all possible. Dip a dessert spoon into cold water, then into the dough, taking enough to make a small biscuit, place in a buttered pan, repeating till dough is all used. Bake about twenty minutes. 26 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 27 Use same recipe for white biscuits by substituting white flour for graham, and two teaspoonfuls baking powder for soda. MAPLE TEA BISCUITS 4 cupfuls flour y 2 teaspoonful salt Yz cupful butter 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder 1 cupful ground maple sugar sweet milk Into part of the flour stir half a cupful of milk, salt, then the softened butter and the balance of the flour with baking powder sifted in, and enough milk to make a soft dough. Add the maple sugar (ground by putting through the food chopper), roll about one-half inch thick, cut into biscuits and bake in a quick oven. GRAHAM GEMS iy 2 cupfuls graham flour 1% cupfuls cold water 1 teaspoonful salt Stir the flour gradually into the salted water. Stir very briskly for about five minutes and pour into hot gem pan. Makes 12 gems and takes about 15 minutes to bake. MUFFINS 2 cupfuls flour 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder 2 eggs 1 teaspoonful salt butter, size of egg } cupful milk To the flour sifted with the baking powder, add the salt, the well beaten eggs and the milk. Drop from a dessert- spoon into hot gem pans, and bake in quick oven. Makes 12 muffins and takes about 15 minutes to bake. 28 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK POP-OVERS 1 cupful flour y 2 teaspoonful salt 1 cupful milk 2 eggs To the beaten eggs add milk and salt, stir in flour, pour in hot buttered gem pans and bake about twenty minutes. BAKED BUCKWHEAT CAKE 1 cupful sour milk buckwheat flour 1 tablespoonful molasses 1 teaspoonful salt Yz teaspoonful soda Into the sour milk, stir salt, soda dissolved in a little warm water and molasses; add buckwheat till the mix- ture is like cake dough. Bake about thirty minutes in a rather deep pan, serve in squares thick enough to cut in two and butter. This is a fine bread for winter luncheon. JOHNNY-CAKE 1 cupful sour milk y^ teaspoonful salt 1 cupful corn meal 54 teaspoonful soda 1 cupful flour 1 tablespoonful sugar butter, size of egg 1 egg To the beaten egg, add sugar, salt, corn meal and softened butter, then the milk, soda dissolved in little water, and the flour. Bake in buttered pan about twenty five minutes; makes a medium size loaf. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA GRIDDLE CAKES BAKING POWDER GRIDDLE CAKES 2 cupfuls sweet milk butter, size of egg 2 eggs y-i teaspoonful salt flour 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder 1 teaspoonful sugar Add the beaten egg to the milk, stir in the salt, sugar and softened butter, and sift in the flour in which the baking powder has been mixed. Use enough flour to make a batter like that of cake. Corn meal with part flour, buckwheat or graham flour, may be substituted. In berry season, huckleberries, blueberries or raspberries added to the above griddle cake batter, are delicious. Cold boiled rice and left over cereals may be stirred in almost any recipe for griddle cakes. A little vinegar added to the sour milk batter of griddle cakes just before frying, is good. BUCKWHEAT GRIDDLE CAKES No. 1 1 quart buckwheat flour 1 yeast cake warm water 1 tablespoonful molasses 1 teaspoonful salt Mix at night. To the yeast dissolved in a little lukewarm water add the salt, molasses, a little warm water, a little flour, continu- ing to add flour and water till you have a thin batter. Keep in a warm place till morning, add a pinch of soda, 29 30 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK fry and serve with butter and syrup, maple or sugar syrup. SUGAR SYRUP FOR HOT CAKES Into one cupful of cold water in a quart basin, stir all the granulated sugar that will dissolve. More sugar and water can be added as necessary to keep the syrup the right consistency. This syrup never becomes hard. BUCKWHEAT GRIDDLE CAKES No. 2 2 cupfuls scalded milk buckwheat flour l /z cupful bread crumbs J^ teaspoonful salt 34 of a yeast cake % teaspoonful soda 1 tablespoonful molasses Mix at night. Pour the hot milk over the crumbs and when the mixture is just lukewarm, add the yeast dissolved in a little warm water, salt, and enough buckwheat flour to make a batter about like that of cake. Keep in a warm place till morn- ing, add the soda dissolved in a little warm water, and the molasses. Fry, and serve as desired. If about one cup- ful of the batter is set aside, it can be used instead of yeast for the next making. OATMEAL CAKES 1 cupful oatmeal flour 1 cupful sour milk ^ teaspoonful salt Yz cupful sugar 1 teaspoonful soda 1 egg Mix at night. Stir the oatmeal into the milk and let stand in a not too PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 31 cold place over night. In the morning, add the sugar, salt, soda dissolved in a little warm water, and flour enough to make a batter like that of cake. Fry on a but- tered griddle and serve with butter and syrup. SOUR MILK GRIDDLE CAKES 2 cupfuls sour milk butter, size of egg 1 egg */ teaspoonful salt flour, either graham, wheat 1 teaspoonful soda flour or buckwheat 1 teaspoonful sugar Add the beaten egg to the sour milk, then stir in the salt, sugar, soda dissolved in a little water, the softened but- ter and enough flour to make a batter like that of cake. Fry and serve as prepared. Bread crumbs or even corn meal with part flour may be used instead of all flour, or buckwheat, or graham flour may be substituted. FRENCH PANCAKES WITH JELLY 2 cupfuls flour 3 eggs 2 cupfuls milk }4 teaspoonful salt 1 tablespoonful sugar Stir the flour into the beaten eggs, add the sugar, salt and milk. Stir thoroughly, fry, spread with jelly, and roll. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA CEREALS AND BREAKFAST DISHES Good directions for cooking cereals will be found on each package. Many cooked cereals sliced cold, dipped in flour and fried, are fine served with syrup and butter. CORN MEAL MUSH Wet two cupfuls corn meal in one and one-half cupfuls cold water, stir in slowly three and one-half cupfuls boil- ing water and one-half teaspoonful salt. Cook at least one hour in double boiler. If cooked in a kettle, butter the inside first, to prevent sticking. Serve with syrup, or sugar and cream. Cook enough mush to have some left to slice and fry. Dip the slices in white of egg to make crisp. FRIED CORN MEAL MUSH Cut slices about three-fourths of an inch in thickness from the cold mush, dip on a plate containing flour, and fry in butter. Serve with butter, syrup, or any desired way. Cream of Wheat when cooked, may be sliced cold and fried like corn mush. PLAIN AND FANCY TOASTS BIRD'S NEST TOAST Have buttered dry toast ready. Break each egg and leave 32 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 33 the yolk in the shell. Add a pinch of salt to the white and beat stiffly. Arrange the beaten white on the toast, place yolk in center, put in the oven and cook to suit. CHEESE TOAST Butter slices of bread, lay on a thin slice of cheese or cover with grated cheese, and place in a pan in the oven, leaving just long enough for cheese to melt. Crackers may be similarly toasted. DRY TOAST Place slices of bread on clean top of hot range or on as- bestos mat over gas stove, turning over to brown on upper side after under side is browned. MARSHMALLOW TOAST Cut bread in thin slices, butter, or spread with jelly, cut marshmallows in halves, place on top and put in oven for about two minutes, till the marshmallow is a bit browned. Serve immediately. MILK TOAST 2 cupfuls milk butter, size of egg 4 tablespoonfuls flour y z teaspoonful salt Stir flour smoothly in half the milk, heat the remainder of milk to boiling, stir in the flour and milk, add butter and salt, pouring over previously toasted bread. Serve hot. Bread is easily toasted by laying in a corn popper and holding over coals. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA MEMORANDA MEMORANDA EGGS BEATING EGGS A teaspoonful of cold water added to the white of an egg, makes it whip more quickly, as well as increase in quantity. A pinch of salt will make white of an egg whip more quickly. Add a pinch of cream of tartar while whipping white of egg, to keep from falling afterward. TO PRESERVE EGGS Add one quart fresh slaked lime to two gallons of water, pour into a cask and put in the eggs till ready for use. They will keep for months. Eggs may be kept for months in table salt. Or to three gallons of water add one pint fresh slaked lime and one-half pint table salt. Keep the eggs always covered in the brine. EGG SUBSTITUTE One tablespoonful of corn starch is equal to one egg. Try it in doughnuts. Unused yolks should be put in a cold place in an un- covered glass of water, where they will keep several days. If a small piece of shell gets in a broken egg, take a piece 34 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 35 of shell and the smaller piece will adhere to it, so it may be easily removed. When a bit of yolk gets in with the white in separating the parts, touch the yolk with a piece of dry cloth and it will adhere to it. BAKED EGGS 6 eggs yz cupful melted butter 134 cupfuls bread crumbs ^ teaspoonful salt 2 cupfuls milk a little pepper Soak the bread crumbs in milk with pepper and salt for an hour or more in a mixing bowl. Add the butter, stir well, and pour in a small deep bread pan. With a spoon, make six depressions the size of an egg, break the eggs into these hollows, and bake thirty minutes. BOILED EGGS Cover eggs in cold water, and remove after water has boiled two minutes if soft boiled eggs are desired, boiling longer for hard boiled. Whenever soft boiled eggs are left over, boil them hard at once, so they may be utilized cold. DEVILED EGGS No. 1 4 hard boiled eggs dash of pepper melted butter 2 tablespoonfuls grated cheese y$ teaspoonful mustard 1 tablespoonful vinegar pinch of salt Boil the eggs fifteen minutes, and plunge into cold water 36 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK as soon as taken from the fire, to set the whites. Cut eggs in two and mash the yolks, add cheese, vinegar, mustard, pepper, salt, and enough butter to make the mixture right to shape in the size of yolks. Place these in the whites to look like whole eggs. Wrap each one in a small piece of paraffin paper, and pack in a small box. DEVILED EGGS No. 2 Proceed as in Deviled Eggs No. 1, substituting chow- chow sauce from a pickle bottle for mustard, and chopped olives for cheese. After making Deviled Eggs, try dipping some in egg and bread crumbs, frying in cooking oil. EGG GRAVY 2 eggs butter size of walnut 54 cupful milk salt and pepper Add to the beaten eggs all the other ingredients, pour into a cold stew pan and stir constantly over the fire till of the right consistency. Serve from a gravy bowl on hot potatoes. EGG OMELET No. 1 4 eggs 1 tablespoonful flour 54 cupful water pinch of salt Smooth flour and water together, stir in the beaten yolks and salt, then stir in very lightly the stiffly beaten whites, and pour into a hot buttered pan. Shake the pan gently PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 37 to keep the mixture from burning. As soon as brown on the bottom, fold it over and serve at once on a hot dish. Chopped mushrooms are nice in omelet. Add a little chopped green pepper to an omelet. EGG OMELET No. 2 5 eggs y 2 teaspoonful onion juice 2 tablespoonfuls cream pinch of salt 1 tablespoonful butter little pepper 1 tablespoonful chopped pars- dash of nutmeg ley Beat the whites stiffly and set in a very cold place. Beat in with the yolks all of the other ingredients, add care- fully to the whites and cook in hot buttered pan. As soon as the bottom of the mixture is a trifle set, lift the pan frequently to prevent burning. When the mixture is browned on the bottom, set in the oven to brown top. FRUIT OMELET raisins lemons prunes figs citron oranges currants juice of 1 orange dash of cinnamon Mix only enough of the fruit to just half fill a cup ; run it through the chopper, add cinnamon and put all in a double boiler with the orange juice and let cook thirty minutes. Make the omelet of 4 eggs 1 tablespoonful sugar pinch of salt 1 teaspoonful butter Beat eggs, add sugar and butter. Melt a second tea- 38 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK spoonful butter in a pan, turn in the mixture, letting it brown, continually lifting up the set part to let the un- cooked run on the hot pan. When it is all set, pour in the hot fruit, fold over instantly and turn on a plate. FRIED EGGS Eggs fried in a hot pan in which a piece of butter is first melted, salt and pepper added, are relished by many. A spoonful of flour sprinkled over butter in the pan ready to fry eggs, will prevent their sticking. POACHED EGGS No. 1 Break each egg carefully in a dish of boiling water, into which a teaspoonful of vinegar has been stirred, remove in a draining spoon and season. Serve on buttered toast. Dried sliced bread dipped in milk and quickly removed and fried in butter, with a poached egg served on each slice, is nice. Chopped olives mixed with one beaten egg, a little water, pepper and salt, fried brown, is a nice accompaniment to poached eggs. POACHED EGGS No. 2 Use boiling milk instead of water and proceed as in Poached Eggs No. 1. RAW EGGS For one who enjoys it, an egg broken carefully into a PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 39 glass, seasoned with salt, a few drops of lemon juice, vine- gar or a little wine, and swallowed whole, is delicious. Or, to a well beaten egg, fill the glass with cream or milk, a tablespoonful of sugar, and a sprinkle of nutmeg. SCRAMBLED EGGS Beat, add one tablespoonful milk, a little salt and pepper. Pour into a hot buttered frying pan and stir constantly, adding a bit of butter. Serve as desired. For a change, add a few drops of lemon juice when scrambling eggs. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA CHEESE DISHES BAKED CHEESE No. 1 1 cupful grated cheese 1 egg 1 cupful bread crumbs ^ teaspoonful salt V/ 2 cupfuls milk J4 teaspoonful pepper Mix all together, bake about thirty minutes, and serve immediately. BAKED CHEESE No. 2 grated cheese pepper eggs salt bread crumbs butter Butter a deep pie plate, cover the bottom with a layer of cheese, then break over the cheese as many eggs as desired, sprinkle with pepper and salt, add another layer of cheese, then a layer of bread crumbs, and scatter over the top small pieces of butter. Bake fifteen to twenty minutes. To keep cut cheese from moulding, wrap in a cloth wrung out of vinegar. CHEESE BALLS 1 cupful flour 1 egg y z cupful butter pinch of salt */4 cupful grated cheese dash of cayenne pepper Thoroughly mix flour and softened butter, add cheese and beaten egg, salt and pepper, roll to one-half inch in 40 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 41 thickness, cut with a small cutter and bake, or dip in a beaten egg with bread crumbs and fry in cooking oil. Serve on lettuce leaves with a dressing made of equal parts olive oil and vinegar. CREAM CHEESE Use grated cheese (grate it by putting through the food chopper), season with salt and a dash of cayenne pepper, and moisten with sweet or sour cream. After standing a day or two, mould the mixture into balls and serve like cream cheese. DUTCH OR COTTAGE CHEESE Scald sour or buttermilk ; as soon as the whey separates, pour it off, and let the curd drain in a strainer. When quite dry, add a little salt and enough sweet cream or milk to produce the right consistency to mould into balls. Cottage cheese may be moulded into various shapes, rolled in chopped parsley and used to decorate various salads. CHEESE CUSTARD J /4 cupful grated cheese 4 eggs J4 cupful milk pinch of salt dash of pepper Cook all together in a double boiler till like smooth custard, then pour into small buttered cups and bake ten minutes in a slow oven. 42 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK CHEESE DREAMS 2 eggs 1 cupful milk iy 2 tablespoonfuls flour buttered sliced bread cheese pinch of salt Cut bread very thin, butter, and lay in slices of cheese or sprinkle in grated cheese thickly, like sandwiches. Smooth flour in with beaten eggs, stir in milk and salt, dip sand- wiches in and fry brown in a buttered pan. CHEESE PUDDING No. 1 1 cupful grated cheese 1 dessertspoonful butter 1 cupful boiling milk 1 teaspoonful flour 2 eggs 1 teaspoonful salt 1 tablespoonful bread crumbs dash of pepper Mix in a bowl, cheese, flour, salt, pepper and crumbs, add the boiling milk, softened butter, yolks and stiffly beaten whites. Stir thoroughly, bake in a buttered dish twenty minutes, and serve hot. CHEESE PUDDING No. 2 Y 2 cupful bread crumbs 3 eggs \y t cupfuls milk y 2 teaspoonful mustard 2 cupfuls grated cheese 1 tablespoonful butter 1 cupful whipped cream pinch of salt dash of pepper Mix together crumbs, salt, pepper, mustard and milk, put in double boiler, removing when hot to add cheese and beaten yolks. When cool, add stiffly beaten whites and cream. Fill baking cups half full, set in a pan of hot water, and bake fifteen or twenty minutes in a quick oven. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 43 CHEESE STRAWS No. 1 2% cupfuls grated cheese flour Y-L cupful butter pinch of salt dash cayenne pepper Mix cheese and softened butter thoroughly, add salt and pepper and sufficient flour to roll the dough very thin. Put in a buttered pan, draw a knife across the dough in sections one-half inch in width, and bake in quick oven. CHEESE STRAWS No. 2 y-i cupful flour 1 egg J4 cupful butter y 2 teaspoonful baking powder y z cupful grated cheese y z teaspoonful salt dash cayenne pepper Mix part of flour, beaten egg and softened butter, add cheese, salt and pepper, and remainder of flour with bak- ing powder sifted in. Roll thin, place in pan and mark into straws with a sharp knife. Bake quickly. MACARONI AND CHEESE No. 1 l / 2 cupful macaroni 2 cupfuls grated cheese 1 chopped onion 2 tablespoonfuls olive oil 2 cupfuls strained tomatoes y 2 teaspoonful salt y 2 cupful milk Break the macaroni into inch pieces, boil thirty minutes and pour off water. Put olive oil in a stew pan, add onion and shake over fire till onion is soft. Add macaroni and tomatoes, heat thoroughly, stir in the other ingredients, cook for about ten minutes and serve hot. Two cupfuls tomatoes are generally in one ordinary can of tomatoes. This serves ten people. 44 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK MACARONI AND CHEESE No. 2 */4 cupful macaroni 1 tablespoonful corn starch 1 cupful grated cheese a little salt 1 cupful milk Prepare the macaroni as per directions in Macaroni and Cheese No. 1. After taking macaroni from the boiling water, butter a baking dish, put in part of the macaroni and cover it with milk and the corn starch smoothed in. Then sprinkle with half of the cheese, then the macaroni, then another layer of cheese, a little salt, and put in the oven to bake for about twenty minutes. WELSH RAREBIT No. 1 4 cupfuls grated cheese 1 teaspoonful dry mustard 34 cupful ale 1 teaspoonful Worcestershire yolk of 1 egg sauce dash of pepper pinch of salt 1 teaspoonful butter Melt butter in stew pan, add cheese, and gradually the ale, stirring constantly. Break egg and stir in mustard and sauce, pepper and salt. Stir all together and cook for a few minutes, then pour over toasted bread. If the mixture becomes stringy or curdled, add a pinch of soda to make it creamy. WELSH RAREBIT No. 2 4 cupfuls grated cheese dash cayenne pepper 54 cupful milk l / 2 teaspoonful dry mustard 1 egg 1 tablespoonful butter pinch of salt Melt butter in cooking dish, add cheese, then beaten egg and other ingredients, stirring constantly. Pour over toasted buttered bread. Serves five people. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA SANDWICHES ABOUT SANDWICHES Bake bread in baking-powder cans. Butter cans and fill one-third full when dough is to be baked with the covers on (which makes a tender crust), and one-half full when it is to be baked without covers. When necessary to make sandwiches some time in ad- vance of their being eaten, wrap them in a cloth wrung out of hot water and put in a cool place. Do not use bread any less than a day old. HERB SANDWICHES Mix chopped lettuce, pepper grass, watercress and pep- permint with mayonnaise dressing. VEGETABLE SANDWICHES Cold boiled oyster plant, beets and cauliflower with any preferred dressing. SANDWICH FILLING COMBINATIONS Cream cheese and dates. Apples and onions. Two parts nuts, one part preserved ginger, moistened with thick cream. 45 46 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK Olives and walnuts moistened with Mayonnaise Dressing. Sweetened mashed bananas. Jam or marmalade covered with cream cheese. For a sweet sandwich, chopped figs and dates, with a few drops of lemon juice. Many people like cayenne pepper sprinkled on bread and butter sandwiches for evening refreshment Chopped cold boiled eggs and lettuce with French Dress- ing. Finely chopped peanuts and Mayonnaise. Chopped nuts, cream cheese, olive oil and lemon juice. Chopped mint leaves with French Dressing. Chopped onions and Mayonnaise. Lettuce leaves spread with Mayonnaise, sprinkled with grated cheese and nuts. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA SOUPS If soup is too salty, add a few slices of raw potato and cook a few minutes longer for the potato to absorb the salt. If soup appears lacking in strength, stir in a little grated cheese. NUT STOCK FOR SOUPS Put two cupfuls of mixed chopped nuts in a stew pan with one quart of water and let them stew slowly for two hours, then strain and remove the water for stock. The nuts may be used in soups, cakes, or any preferred way. SOUP BASIS Water drained from boiled rice and from all vegetables, is used as a basis or "stock" for soups. CROUTONS Cut rather dry bread into one-half inch slices, and cut them into small pieces. Put in a pan in the oven to brown. Place half a dozen or more pieces on each plate of soup just before serving. 48 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK CREAM OF ASPARAGUS SOUP 1 bunch of asparagus y$ teaspoonful salt 2 cupfuls milk 1 tablespoonful flour Y+ cupful cream 1 tablespoonful butter dash of pepper Wash asparagus and cut off the tips. Put the stalks in cold water and -boil till tender. Put them through a col- ander, then put back in the water they boiled in. Heat milk to the boiling point and stir in the butter and flour smoothed together. Boil ten minutes, pour into the as- paragus, season, add cream and the asparagus tips which have been boiled by themselves in cold water till tender. A spoonful of whipped cream is nice on almost any soup, added just before serving. BEAN SOUP Take as many stewed or baked beans as desired, put through a colander, add as much water as wished and boil about ten minutes. Add butter size of an egg to a small kettle of soup, season with salt and pepper. Make the soup as thick as desired and just before taking from the fire, stir in about a cupful of milk. A few sprigs of pars- ley on each plate of soup is pleasing. CREAM OF PEA SOUP 1 quart shelled peas dash of pepper 1 quart milk 3 tablespoonfuls butter 1 onion 1 tablespoonful olive oil 1 cupful cream 2 tablespoonfuls flour Yz teaspoonful salt Put peas and onion in cold water to cover them, and boil PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK . 49 fifteen minutes. Heat the milk in double boiler. Smooth butter and flour together and gradually pour the hot milk on the mixture, pour it all in double boiler and heat. Take the onion from the peas and run them through a strainer, add them to the milk mixture, add salt, pepper, oil and cream, and keep at boiling point ten minutes. PLAIN POTATO SOUP Peel, and cut in very thin small pieces three medium size potatoes. Put one-fourth cupful of butter in a soup kettle and let it melt and brown, but not burn. Turn the potatoes on the butter and stir till most of the butter is absorbed, for about fifteen minutes, being careful not to let the mixture burn. Add one cupful of cold water and let the potatoes come to boiling point and boil five minutes. Then add, gradually, one cupful of milk and as soon as it reaches the boiling point, add one tablespoonful of flour smoothed in three-fourths of a cup of milk, one teaspoon- ful of salt and a pinch of pepper. Remove from fire and serve. QUICK SOUP 1 quart can tomatoes % cupful flour 1 slice of onion 2 tablespoonfuls butter 2 cupfuls water 1 teaspoonful salt a blade of mace Put tomatoes, water, salt, onion and mace to boiling point, and add flour and butter smoothed together. Stir con- stantly till the mixture boils, run through a sieve, heat and serve with croutons. 50 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK SALSIFY SOUP Salsify is the vegetable oyster. Scrape the salsify, cut in small pieces to fill a quart measure, put immediately into cold water. Cook till tender, being careful not to burn it, put through a colander, add one quart milk, butter size of egg and one-half teaspoonful salt. Let come to a boil and remove from fire. TOMATO SOUP 1 quart cut tomatoes 1 cucumber 2 cupfuls water % teaspoonful cloves 1 slice of onion 1 dessertspoonful sugar part of a bay leaf Wash, peel, and cut the tomato and cucumber in small pieces to make one quart. Boil with the other ingre- dients for twenty minutes, put through a strainer. Prepare 2 tablespoonfuls butter 1 teaspoonful salt 3 tablespoonfuls flour Vz teaspoonful soda Warm the butter and smooth in the flour, add salt and soda dissolved in a little hot water, stirring constantly, add gradually the hot soup, let come to a boil, and re- move from fire. VEGETABLE SOUP 2 potatoes 1 turnip 2 quarts water J4 cupful rice 1 cupful tomato 1 teaspoonful salt 1 carrot dash of pepper 1 onion 2 tablespoonfuls olive oil Peel potatoes, turnip and onion, scrape the carrot, slice PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 51 each very thinly, put into the cold water and boil one hour. Pour boiling water over the rice in double boiler, cook till partly done, then add to the vegetables that have been cooked one hour, and put in the other ingredients and cook one more hour. CORN CHOWDER 4 cupfuls chopped corn 2 tablespoonfuls olive oil 4 cupfuls sliced potatoes ^ cupful flour 2 chopped onions 2 cupfuls hot milk salt Cut the kernels from about a dozen ears of corn and put through the food chopper. Slice the potatoes very thinly. Put the oil in the kettle, and stir the onions in it for about five minutes, then put in a layer of corn, then potatoes, sprinkling each layer with salt and flour, adding the layers till vegetables are all used. Then just cover with boiling water and let cook for thirty minutes, turn in the hot milk and serve hot. NUT CHOWDER 4 potatoes 2 cupfuls chopped nuts 2 turnips 1 quart water 1 onion 1 tablespoonful olive oil 2 cupfuls milk a little thyme and sweet mar- 2 tablespoonfuls flour joram 2 tablespoonfuls peanut butter 1 teaspoonful salt Put the nuts with the water and stew slowly for two hours, then strain. Peel and cut in thin slices potatoes, turnips and onions. Put the oil in a soup kettle, then add 52 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK a layer of potatoes, one of the turnips and onions, sprinkle in a little thyme, sweet marjoram and salt, and then add a layer of nuts, then potatoes, turnips, etc., till the in- gredients are all used, and finally pour on the boiling hot water strained from the nuts. Cook about twenty minutes, and stir in the flour which has been gradually smoothed into the milk, and the peanut butter. Serve hot. Makes four plates. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA VEGETABLES BAKED ASPARAGUS 1 cupful asparagus 1 teaspoonful chopped parsley 1 cupful milk 2 tablespoonfuls butter 3 eggs 2 tablespoonfuls flour Yz teaspoonful salt Cook the asparagus and parsley together in a stew pan, same as Boiled Asparagus. When tender, remove from fire and stir in the well beaten eggs. Smooth the flour in part gradually adding all of the milk, and pour over asparagus in stew pan over fire, add butter and salt and when well mixed, but not boiling, turn into a buttered baking mould, set the mould in a pan of hot water and bake until firm. Serve with melted butter. BOILED ASPARAGUS Cut off the tough ends of the stalks, scrape the stem an,d leave the asparagus in cold salt water thirty minutes. Tie in a bunch, put upright in a kettle holding enough water to reach to the tips. Cook till the stalks are tender, and the tips will be done just right. Serve with butter, pepper and salt, or on toasted bread, or with a cupful of hot cream or milk poured over it. BAKED BEANS 15/2 cupfuls beans pinch of soda 54 cupful butter 1 tablespoonful molasses 5/2 cupful chopped nuts 1 teaspoonful salt dash of cayenne pepper Soak the beans in cold water over night. In the morning, 53 54 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK drain off the water, put into cold water, let boil fifteen minutes, drain off, put again into cold water and boil second fifteen minutes, and repeat a third time. Be sure the beans are put in very cold water each time. After the third boiling, pour off the water, cover with cold water, stir in the other ingredients and boil ten minutes. Then pour into a bean pot and bake all day, adding boiling water if the water bakes out. Leave off the cover ten minutes before finishing the baking. They may be baked at two different times, if the oven is being used two successive half days. A chopped onion is good added to the beans. A cupful of cream stirred in during the last hour of bak- ing is a delicious addition. Peanuts are good nut to use with beans. A half teaspoonful of mustard and a half cupful of butter instead of a fourth cupful, omitting the nuts, but using the other ingredients, makes a nice dish. In winter, set the beanpot on the ledge or shelf inside your furnace door. In the summer, if possible, bake in a fireless cooker, leaving in four hours. Re-heating for ten minutes and putting in the cooker for another four hours. Serve with Boston Brown Bread. Most people enjoy catsup on beans. BEAN CROQUETTES 2 cupfuls baked beans bread crumbs egg 2 tablespoonfuls catsup a good dash of red pepper Put the beans through a colander, work in the other in- PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 55 gredients, shape into small croquettes, roll in crumbs, dip in the beaten egg, roll again in crumbs and fry in deep cooking oil. BEAN HASH Put two cupfuls baked beans through a colander, add four cupfuls chopped cooked potatoes, mix, put in a fry- ing pan with a little water and butter size of an egg, season with pepper and salt, stir and heat till of the desired consistency. BAKED LIMA BEANS Soak one cupful dried lima beans over night. Next morn- ing, drain and cover with boiling water. Let them cool, drain, cover the second time with boiling water, cool and repeat for the third time. Slip off the loosened skins, put the beans in a baking dish, cover with hot milk, sprinkle with salt and pepper, cover and bake for two hours. Re- move the cover after about one hour's baking, add two tablespoonfuls of butter in small pieces, scatter over the top of the beans, and complete baking with the cover off. FRESH LIMA BEANS Shell and put in boiling water and boil till tender. Drain off the water, add one-fourth cupful butter to an ordinary kettle of beans, season with salt and pepper, and serve hot. STEWED BEANS Prepare as for Baked Beans; after the third boiling, put again in cold water and stew till tender. 56 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK Beans continue to improve by warming over. Put them in a buttered frying pan, with a little water, cover a few minutes, stir to prevent sticking and as soon as heated, remove from fire. Sliced raw onions are fine with beans. SUMMER BEANS Wash, cut in small pieces, cover with boiling water and cook till tender. Drain off water and season with butter, pepper and salt. BAKED BEETS Scrub thoroughly after green tops are removed, and place in oven to bake till tender. BOILED BEETS Scrub and wash the beets after green tops are removed, place in cold water, let boil till tender, remove from fire, drain, immerse quickly in cold water to make skins peel easily. Peel and serve with butter, pepper and salt. BEET HASH Use boiled beets and boiled potatoes in the proportion of two cupfuls chopped potatoes to one of beets. Mix, and put in a buttered frying pan with a little water. Add butter size of a walnut to each cupful of the vegetables, season with pepper and salt, and stir and cook till not too moist. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 57 BRUSSELS SPROUTS Pick off the old leaves and wash the sprouts. Put a pinch of soda in a little boiling water in a kettle, turn in the sprouts, adding boiling water to cover. Boil until tender, drain, add butter, and season with pepper and salt. BAKED CABBAGE 1 medium sized cabbage 1 small chopped onion y^ cupful chopped English wal- */ 2 cupful boiled rice nuts a little sage salt and pepper Hollow out the cabbage, and fill with the dressing well stirred together. Place in a bag tied at the top and boil about one hour. When done, remove from bag, add a few small pieces of butter on top, and serve hot. Egg plant may be cooked as above. BOILED CABBAGE Remove the outer leaves till those exposed are clean and fresh. Wash, cut in pieces and put in cold water in a kettle with a little salt. Boil about thirty minutes, drain and serve with this CREAM SAUCE FOR VEGETABLES 5/2 cupful milk 1 dessertspoonful flour 2 tablespoonfuls made mustard 1 dessertspoonful melted but- 2 tablespoonfuls warm vinegar ter Smooth the flour into just water enough for it to be pasty, add a little of the milk, heat the remainder milk in a 58 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK double boiler and add flour mixture, stirring constantly. When very hot, not boiling, add the other ingredients, heat for a few moments and remove from fire. Always soak cabbage in salty water a half hour before cooking. Place a piece of bread in the kettle with boiling cabbage to do away with the odor. CARROTS Always soak carrots in cold water three or four hours before using. And always cut them in slices when they are to be served in creams, because the outer part is richer in flavor than the center. BOILED CARROTS Wash, scrape and put into cold water and boil till tender. Drain off the water, and serve whole with butter, pepper and salt. CARROTS WITH DRESSING 3 cupfuls sliced carrots 2 tablespoonfuls butter 1 cupful milk 1 dessertspoonful flour dash of pepper y 2 teaspoonful salt Wash, scrape and cut the carrots into thin slices. Cover with boiling water in a stew pan and cook till tender. Drain off the water and return to fire, adding the butter and seasoning. Smooth the flour into a little milk grad- ually adding all of it, and stir it into the carrots, letting all come to boiling heat, then remove from fire. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 59 CAULIFLOWER Always soak cauliflower in cold water one hour before boiling in salted water about thirty minutes. Place it head down in the kettle, and be sure it is all covered with water. , CELERY Wash the stalks after breaking them apart, leave part of the green tops on, put in cold water for an hour, and dry quickly on a soft towel before serving. CORN Do not use salted water in which to boil corn, as the salt toughens it. BOILED CORN Husk the corn, cut off any brown ends or spots, put in cold water, and boil for ten or fifteen minutes. Re-wrap the ears in the inner husk, tie around with twine and boil. CORN IN MILK With a sharp knife, cut the kernels from boiled corn, place in a stew pan, cover with milk, add butter size of an egg, pepper and salt, heat to boiling point, and serve. CORN IN TOMATOES Wash, peel and scoop out the centers of firm tomatoes, turn down and drain for a few minutes, then fill with a 60 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK mixture of uncooked sweet corn kernels cut from the ear, a few chopped mushrooms, one-half teaspoonful of but- ter, and pepper and salt for each tomato. Pack closely in a buttered pan and bake for about thirty minutes. FRIED CORN CAKES 2 cupfuls milk 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder 1 cupful canned or fresh corn pinch of salt 2 eggs flour Add the beaten yolks to the milk, salt and corn. Stir in a cupful of flour containing the baking powder, then a little more flour to make a stiff batter, and stir in very lightly the stiffly beaten whites. If more flour is needed, stir it in carefully. Fry on a hot buttered griddle and serve with syrup or molasses. CUCUMBERS Wash, peel and slice cucumbers, soak in cold salt water one hour, drain, put on a cloth to dry, and serve cold. EGG PLANT Wash, peel and cut into slices about three-fourths of an inch in thickness. Soak in salted water for an hour. Put a heavy earthen dish on the slices to keep them under water. Remove from the salt water, dip in egg, then in flour and fry slowly in a buttered frying pan. Use butter enough to prevent the slices sticking. Cover part of the time. Turn them to brown on the other side, using a pancake turner. Serve hot. Egg plant may also be baked like cabbage. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 61 GREEN THINGS Save leaves of celery, parsley and other herbs, and dry in the warming oven. When thoroughly dry, pack away in glass jars to have ready for flavoring soups and vege- tables. A pinch of soda in the water in which green vegetables are boiled, is a help to keeping color. When root vegetables have withered, to" revive them, slice off the ends, then put the vegetables in cold water, leaving them for several hours. If a small piece of charcoal is placed in the vegetable kettle, disagreeable odors will be removed, and vegetables not injured. SPINACH GREENS Wash spinach very carefully in at least three waters to remove all dirt. Cook in boiling water till tender, drain and season with butter, pepper and salt. A little cream may be heated and poured over it. WATER CRESS GREENS Wash, leave out the large stems, and put the other pieces in a kettle of boiling water to cook thirty minutes. Drain well, and season with butter, pepper and salt. LENTILS Soak dried lentils in water over night, drain and put in a kettle with plenty of cold water and cook till tender. Drain, add butter, and season with pepper and salt. 62 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK MACARONI AND CORN $4 cupful macaroni ^ teaspoonful salt 1% cupful corn 1 cupful milk 2 tablespoonfuls corn starch Break macaroni into inch pieces, boil thirty minutes, drain and put one-half of it in a buttered baking pan about the size of a bread pan. Cover with milk, put one-half the corn over it, add the remainder of the macaroni, then the last of the corn. Scatter a few bits of butter over the top, sprinkle with salt and bake. Cooked sweet corn cut from the ears may be used, or canned corn. MACARONI AND RICE Cook like Macaroni and Corn. MACARONI WITH CREAM SAUCE */4 cupful macaroni 2 tablespoonfuls flour 1 cupful milk 54 teaspoonful salt 2 tablespoonfuls butter Break macaroni into inch pieces, put in boiling water to cover, boil thirty minutes and drain. Then cover it with cold water and put on the fire to boil fifteen minutes. Smooth the flour into a little milk gradually using all of it, add butter and salt, and stir into the macaroni, re- moving from fire as soon as mixture thickens. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA NUT RECIPES TO FRESHEN STALE NUTS Remove shells and soak over night in equal parts of water and milk, then dry in the oven, being careful not to burn. TO BLANCH NUTS Remove shells and pour boiling water over the nut meats. Allow them to soak a few minutes, then rub a few of them in a coarse crash towel and if the skins do not loosen readily, let them soak till they do. TO CRACK NUTS WHOLE Pour boiling water over nuts, boil for ten or fifteen minutes, remove from fire, let cool, and crack. SALTED ALMONDS Blanch the nuts, dry them in a towel, place them in a shallow pan and pour over them a teaspoonful of olive oil, stir them about, sprinkle with fine salt and put them in the oven to become light brown. BOILED CHESTNUTS Put in boiling water and cook till mealy. Serve in indi- vidual saucers, the nuts to be opened with sharp knives. The nuts may be sprinkled with salt. 63 64 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK MASHED CHESTNUTS Cut a slit in the shell of each nut and leave them in boil- ing water till the shells are easily removed. Put the meats in boiling water and cook till soft. Drain off the water, put the nuts through a potato masher, return to the kettle and stir in a little butter and salt. Serve hot like mashed potatoes. NUT HASH Take two parts chopped cold boiled potatoes and one part chopped nut roast. Mix well, put in a frying pan with small piece of butter and a little water. Cover for a few minutes, then remove cover, sprinkle with pepper and salt, stir till of the desired consistency, and serve hot. Chopped nuts may be added, if desired. Serve with sliced raw onions, or catsup. NUT ROAST No. 1 1 cupful bread crumbs dash of pepper 1 cupful chopped nuts 2 hard boiled eggs 1 cupful boiled rice 2 raw eggs 34 cupful milk 1 teaspoonful sage 1 teaspoonful salt Soak crumbs in milk for about one hour, stir in the beaten eggs, and seasoning, then add the chopped hard boiled eggs, nuts and rice. Press into a pan to shape, then turn into a buttered baking tin and bake from forty-five to sixty minutes. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 65 STEAMED NUT ROAST No. 2 2 cupfuls bread crumbs 1 teaspoonful salt \y t cupfuls milk dash of pepper 2 cupfuls chopped nuts 1 teaspoonful chopped onion or sage Soak crumbs in milk for one hour, add the other ingre- dients and mix thoroughly. Press into buttered baking powder cans, filling two-thirds full, steam three hours, remove covers, and serve hot, or let stand till cold, slice, dip in egg, then in bread crumbs, then again in egg and fry in a buttered frying pan. Serve with catsup. NUT ROAST No. 3 1/4 cupfuls bread crumbs 1 teaspoonful powdered sage 1 cupful milk Y-i teaspoonful salt 1% cupfuls chopped nuts 2 eggs Soak crumbs in milk, stir in nuts, beaten eggs and season- ing. Press the mixture into a pan to mould it into the desired shape, then turn it into a buttered baking pan and bake from forty-five to sixty minutes. This roast is good served with sage cheese. Makes a small loaf. NUT SCRAPPLE 2 cupfuls corn meal 5 cupfuls boiling water 1 cupful hominy 1 teaspoonful salt 2}4 cupfuls chopped nuts Moisten the meal and hominy in cold water, then stir in gradually the boiling water, and cook in a double boiler till like mush. Then stir in the nuts and pour into a but- 66 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK tered baking tin. Set aside to cool. When cold, slice and fry in butter. Serve on a platter with green garnish- ings for a dinner dish. ALMOND NUT FORCEMEAT 2-3 cupful chopped almonds y^ cupful cream 3 cupfuls bread crumbs 3 eggs 54 cupful melted butter 2 tablespoonfuls olive oil a dash of nutmeg Add cream to beaten yolks. Blanch and chop the almonds to fill two-thirds of a cup and mix with the white of one egg. Stir crumbs and melted butter in a mixing bowl, add oil, then nuts, then the cream and yolk mixture, nut- meg, and finally the stiffly beaten whites. Press into a mould and bake carefully, or form into small balls and fry five minutes, and serve around a roast. PEANUT BUTTER Shell peanuts and remove inner skins. Put them through the finest chopper several times, and mix with olive oil till like a very thick cream, and keep in a covered glass jar. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA ONIONS . BAKED ONIONS 1 cupful hot milk 3 eggs 2-3 cupful cold milk y 2 teaspoonful salt 1 cupful cold boiled onions 1 tablespoonful butter 1 cupful bread crumbs dash of pepper Soak bread crumbs in cold milk one hour, then add the hot milk with butter melted in, beaten yolks, salt, pepper and onions. Mix thoroughly, then stir in very lightly the stiffly beaten whites, turn into a buttered baking dish and bake forty-five minutes. Serve hot. To remove the smell on the hands after peeling onions, hold the hands immediately under cold running water. Hold the paring knife there too. BOILED ONIONS Wash, remove outer skin, and put into cold salted water to boil till tender. When done, drain off the water, cut into pieces in the kettle with a spoon, add butter, salt and pepper. Or leave them whole, making a cream dressing like that for new potatoes. FRIED ONIONS Wash, peel and slice the onions very thin, and put them into a hot frying pan containing butter. Stir them enough to keep from burning, and cook till browned. Lift from 67 r 68 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK the pan with a skimmer to remove the melted butter, and season with salt and pepper. RAW ONIONS Wash, remove the outer skin and slice. Season with salt. pepper, and vinegar, if desired. They may also be served with French dressing, and are fine with sliced cucumbers and tomatoes. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA POTATOES BAKED POTATOES Wash them, wipe dry, and rub over with a little oil or butter. They will bake beautifully. Potatoes may be first peeled, then baked in a hot even. To bake them quickly, boil in salted water ten minutes, then bake. Or place them close together in the oven and cover with a pie plate. If potatoes are immersed in hot water before boiling, they may be easily peeled. To prevent discoloration, peel them and let stand an hour in cold water, before boiling. A spray of mint in the water potatoes boil in, gives a nice flavor. BOILED POTATOES Wash, peel or not, put in cold water with a little salt, and boil till tender. NEW POTATOES New potatoes must be washed and scraped (not peeled), and put to cook in boiling salted water. When tender, drain off the water, add butter (size of an egg to a small kettle full), a cupful of cream into which is smoothed a teaspoonful of flour (or a cupful of milk with one and 69 70 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK one-half teaspoonfuls of flour), and a little pepper. Let come to a nice boil and serve. Instead of scraping new potatoes, let them boil a while till the skins are ready to peel off, peel them and put in the oven to bake. BOILED SWEET POTATOES Wash the potatoes, cut out any bad spots, cover with cold water in a kettle to boil about thirty minutes. Drain off the water, scrape the peel off, putting each potato imme- diately back in the covered kettle to keep hot till all are peeled. To be eaten with butter and salt, or mashed on the indi- vidual plates and eaten with plenty of cream or milk, with a spoon. POTATOES AND CHEESE Stew sliced potatoes till well done. Drain the water off and turn potatoes into a sauce pan and add chopped cheese. Stir constantly till cheese is melted, and the mixture is like creamed potatoes. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. FRIED POTATOES No. 1 6 large potatoes parsley 1 cupful flour 1 teaspoonful baking powder milk 1 teaspoonful salt cooking oil Wash and peel potatoes and slice very thinly. Make a paste by mixing baking powder and flour, adding milk PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 71 enough to make it smooth, salt, and stir in the sliced potato. Fry in deep cooking oil, drain on clean brown paper and sprinkle with parsley. FRIED POTATOES No. 2 Slice cold boiled peeled potatoes, heat a teaspoonful of butter in a frying pan, place potatoes in pan, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and cover. Cook a few minutes, remove cover, add a little more butter, turn them to brown on other side, cover for a minute or so, till done. LYONNAISE POTATOES \Yz tablespoonfuls butter 2 cupfuls cold boiled sliced po- 1 tablespoonful chopped onion tatois 3 tablespoonfuls melted butter y$ teaspoonful salt Yz tablespoonful chopped pars- dash of pepper ley Cook one and one-half tablespoonfuls butter and the onion for five minutes. Cook the melted butter, potatoes, pepper and salt, until the potatoes have absorbed the butter, then add the onion mixture, stir well and add parsley. MASHED POTATOES Boil peeled potatoes ; when done, drain off water, add butter size of an egg, pepper, mash with a potato masher, and add milk enough to make creamy. Or, after water is drained off, put through a perforated potato masher and with a large spoon, beat in butter, pepper and milk. Beat in one or two teaspoonfuls of baking powder when mashing potatoes, to make them light. 72 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK STUFFED POTATOES Bake medium size potatoes about thirty minutes. When done, cut in two and remove the inside from the peel. Put the potato into a heated bowl and mash. Then to each three potatoes, beat this mixture together: 3 tablespoonfuls grated cheese 5^ teaspoonful salt white of 1 egg 1 teaspoonful butter Fill the six shells with the mixture, set in a baking dish and bake till brown. By counting the potatoes you can get the exact quantities required for filling. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA PROTOSE, PARSNIPS, ETC. BAKED PROTOSE Slices of protose may be placed in a buttered baking tin, sprinkled with chopped onions, pepper and salt, and baked for about twenty minutes. FRIED PROTOSE Cut protose in slices three-fourths of an inch in thickness, dip in egg, then fry in a buttered frying pan. When brown on one side, turn them over with a pancake turner, fry on the other side and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Serve with green onions or catsup. PROTOSE HASH Same directions as for Nut Hash. BAKED PARSNIPS Clean with a vegetable brush and proceed same as in baking potatoes. BOILED PARSNIPS Boil same as potatoes, pour melted butter, and season with salt and pepper. FRIED PARSNIPS Cut boiled parsnips in slices, fry in butter and season. 73 74 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK PARSNIP CAKES Mash boiled parsnips through a colander and to each cup- ful, add the beaten yolk of an egg, a little salt and pepper, shape into little cakes and fry in butter. PARSNIP CROQUETTES Cut boiled parsnips into short pieces, dip in beaten egg, then in bread crumbs, dip again in the egg and fry in deep cooking oil. GREEN PEAS Shell, cover with boiling water in a stew pan. Cook slowly till tender, drain, add butter size of egg, one-half teaspoonful salt and dash of pepper. Pour into a hot dish and serve in small dishes. Or add a cupful of milk, allowing it to become hot when added with the butter. A leaf of spinach may be added to the water in which peas are boiled to help them to retain a good green color. A teaspoonful of sugar may be added to peas while boiling. A sprig of mint in the boiling peas adds a nice flavor. Peas may be cooked by washing the pods and boiling them whole. When done, the pods will burst open and the peas will go to the bottom. STUFFED GREEN PEPPERS Cut out stems and seeds, pour boiling water over them, let PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 75 stand a few minutes and drain. Fill with equal parts cooked rice and tomatoes, or with bread crumbs soaked in cold milk, and chopped nuts. Season with salt. Stand on the small ends close together in a baking pan contain- ing a little water, and bake. BOILED RICE Wash two cupfuls rice, put in a double boiler and cover with four cupfuls of boiling water. Do not stir, but let cook till each kernel stands separately. Then stir in one- half teaspoonful salt, and serve hot or cold. If desired for a pudding, add raisins, two beaten eggs and put in a baking dish and bake. Or it may be added, part or in whole, to flour enough to thicken like stiff dough, dipped in egg, then in bread crumbs, again in egg and fried in a buttered frying pan. Rice may also be cooked in milk. Rice may be served with fruits, sugar and cream, or in any preferred style. RICE TOMATOES Stir one-half cupful cooked rice into two cupfuls stewed tomatoes, stew for ten minutes, add a teaspoonful of butter, and season with pepper and salt. A teaspoonful of sugar may be added, if desired. BAKED SQUASH Clean the outside of a winter squash, cut in two, remove seeds, sprinkle salt inside and fasten the halves together 76 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK with long metal skewers. Then place in a pan in the oven and bake. Serve whole on a platter, the host open- ing the squash and scooping out the portions with a large spoon. FRIED SQUASH Take boiled squash after it is mashed and seasoned ; chop an onion and brown in butter in a frying pan, stir in the squash and fry, being careful not to burn. SUMMER SQUASH Wash, peel, cut in small pieces and remove seeds, put in cold water and boil. Drain off water, mash and season with pepper, salt and butter. TOMATOES Plunge tomatoes into boiling water and pour through a drainer instantly, peeling immediately. FRIED TOMATOES Peel and cut in thick slices, dip in corn meal or bread crumbs, season and fry in a kettle of cooking oil. Drain on clean brown paper. FRIED GREEN TOMATOES Cut in thick slices and soak fifteen minutes in salt water. Drain, sprinkle with sugar, dip in corn meal or flour, sea- son and fry in butter in a frying pan, or in a kettle of cook- ing oil. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 77 STEWED TOMATOES Peel, cut in pieces and stew till done. Add butter, salt and pepper, or sugar, for seasoning. SAUCE FOR FRIED TOMATOES 1 tablespoonful butter a little mustard 1 tablespoonful hot vinegar a little salt 1 egg a little pepper Melt butter in hot vinegar, stir in the beaten yolk, then the seasoning, the stiffly beaten white, and remove from fire. STUFFED TOMATOES 6 tomatoes 1 egg 2 cupfuls bread crumbs a little chopped parsley 1 cupful chopped nuts y z teaspoonful salt a dash of pepper Wash, wipe dry, and cut a slice off the stem end of nice, firm tomatoes, remove seeds and pulp, mix the ingre- dients given, fill in, cover with the piece cut off, and bake in a buttered pan thirty minutes. STUFFED TOMATO FILLINGS Equal parts chopped mushrooms and bread crumbs sea- soned with chopped onion, parsley, pepper and salt, and olive oil. Chopped boiled corn, bread crumbs, melted butter and salt. Boiled rice seasoned with salt. 78 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TURNIPS Wash young turnip greens, and boil in plenty of water for about one hour. Season with pepper and salt. But- ter should be added, unless they are to be eaten with vinegar. Add a little sugar to the water in which turnips are to be boiled. BOILED TURNIPS Wash, peel off the thick skin, let stand one hour in cold water, put in fresh water containing a little salt and boil till tender. -Drain off the water, mash, add butter size of an egg, and season with salt and pepper. STUFFED TURNIPS After boiling till tender, hollow out the center of each, mashing the part taken out, adding butter, pepper and salt, a little milk, one beaten egg, and enough bread crumbs to form a nice dressing. Pour into the turnips, rub a bit of butter over them and brown in a hot oven. Small turnips may be served individually, or large ones dished out by the host. VEGETABLE CHILI CON-CARNE 1 cupful kidney beans ^ cupful water 2 dried red chili peppers 2 tablespoonfuls flour 1 cupful stewed tomatoes 1 small chopped onion 54 cupful peanut oil y z teaspoonful salt */ cupful pecan meats Soak beans over night, next morning drain, cover with PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 79 cold water, boil ten minutes, drain, cover and boil a sec- ond, and a third ten minutes, adding a pinch of soda to the third water, and cook till tender. Remove seeds from the peppers, soak the pods in warm water till soft, then scrape the pods, saving the pulp and throwing away the skins. Put the whole pecan meats in a frying pan with the oil, with flour smoothed in, and cook and stir for five minutes. Then add the chili pulp, chopped onion, toma- toes and salt, and cook slowly for two hours. Add water, if necessary, to make the mixture like a thick sauce. Add beans just before removing from fire. One teaspoonful of chili powder may be substituted for the chili peppers, if desired. The tomatoes may be omitted if desired. MUSHROOM FORCEMEAT 2-3 cupful chopped mush- a little salt rooms a bit of mace 54 cupful butter 1 tablespoonful olive oil 1 cupful bread crumbs a dash of cayenne pepper 2 eggs a dash of nutmeg mushroom gravy Peel and chop the mushrooms to make two-thirds of a cupful. Cook with the butter, and cool. To the well beaten eggs add oil, bread crumbs and seasoning, the mushroom mixture, and mushroom gravy if needed, to form into small balls. Fry about five minutes and serve around a roast. GRAVIES To brown flour for gravy, put it in a pan when baking and brown it in the oven. It may be kept- in a jar ready for use. 80 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK MILK GRAVY Use two tablespoonfuls of flour and one teaspoonful of butter for each cupful of milk. Smooth the flour into part of the milk to make a paste. Let part of the milk get to boiling point, dip out a little and stir in with the cold paste, then stir the paste quickly into the hot milk. Add butter, season with salt and remove from fire as soon as the mixture thickens. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA MEMORANDA MEMORANDA SAUCES, RELISHES, ETC. CUCUMBER RELISH Peel and slice enough cucumbers to fill a quart fruit jar. Add a sliced onion, season with salt and mix carefully, fill the jars and pour over boiling hot vinegar and seal at once. Keep in a dark cool place. GREEN RELISH ^ of a head of cabbage 1 green pepper 3 onions y 2 teaspoonful salt 2 stalks of celery vinegar to suit Cut out the core of the cabbage, chop finely with the onions, celery and pepper, add seasoning and stir in as much vinegar as desired. Two tablespoonfuls butter and the same of flour is the usual quantity to one cupful of liquid in thickening sauce. HORSERADISH Mix grated horseradish with lemon juice. Serve with Nut Roast or Baked Beans. HORSERADISH TASTY RELISH Mix fresh grated turnips with vinegar, salt and a dash of cayenne pepper. Serve with Nut Roast and Baked Beans. 81 82 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK FRENCH MUSTARD 1 teaspoonful sugar 1 teaspoonful vinegar 1 teaspoonful mustard */ teaspoonful flour 1 egg Add sugar to the beaten egg, stir in mustard and flour, and beat till creamy, then add vinegar, put over the fire and stir until it thickens, then remove. TABLE MUSTARD 54 cupful mustard 1 teaspoonful onion juice vinegar 1 teaspoonful sugar olive oil 1 teaspoonful paprika Add olive oil to mustard till creamy, add onion juice, sugar, paprika, mix well, beat in vinegar to make a smooth paste, bottle, and serve cold with roasts. EGG SAUCE yolks 3 hard boiled eggs 1 tablespoonful butter 2 tablespoonfuls lemon juice 1 tablespoonful milk or cream Mash yolks, mix in butter till creamy, then lemon and milk. Serve with vegetables. MINT SAUCE 3 tablespoonfuls chopped mint 2 tablespoonfuls powdered *A cupful vinegar sugar The leaves stripped from six stalks of mint are usually enough for three tablespoonfuls chopped. Mix mint and sugar, adding gradually the vinegar. Serve cold with roasts. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 83 TOMATO SAUCE 3 tomatoes 2 tablespoonfuls chopped pars- 1 small onion ley J4 cupful olive oil pinch of salt 1 teaspoonful butter dash of red pepper 3 tablespoonfuls flour Put tomatoes through colander, add the other ingredients and boil all together a few minutes. Serve hot with vegetables. WATERCRESS SAUCE Chop watercress and onions, simmer in butter till tender, add a little cream, cook a few moments, and serve cold with Nut Roast. OLIVES When a bottle is opened and only part of them used, pour about two tablespoonfuls of olive oil over the remaining olives to prevent their becoming soft. Keep olive oil in the dark to retain its flavor. RADISHES Wash, put in cold water, wipe dry, and keep in a cool place till time to serve. SALAD COMBINATIONS Lima beans, olives and peppers, all cut finely, with French Dressing. Chopped celery and mint. Bananas and chopped peanuts with Mayonnaise. The mixture may be placed in the banana peeling and prettily garnished. Stoned cherries filled with peanuts, served with Mayonnaise. Sliced oranges on lettuce with French Dressing. Apples and celery with Mayonnaise. Apples and nuts with French Dressing. Chopped cabbage with slices of hard boiled eggs and Mayonnaise. A salad may be very lightly sprinkled with very finely chopped green peppers or pistachio nuts. Chopped raisins, nuts and celery. Cherries, oranges and bananas with French Dressing. Watercress served with French Dressing. Small cabbages may be cut and shaped into very artistic salad cups. Halves of oranges and grape fruit skins make beautiful salad cups. Red pepper pods cut in various shapes make a pretty salad garnish. Always heat crackers to make them crisp when serving with salad. 84 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 85 BOILED SALAD DRESSING No. 1 Yz cupful sweet or sour cream 1 teaspoonful salt 54 cupful vinegar 1 teaspoonful flour 54 cupful melted butter 1 teaspoonful mustard 1 teaspoonful sugar Smooth mustard in a little water, add flour, then salt, sugar and cream. Add this mixture to the heated vinegar on the range, and stir till it thickens, then remove from fire, add butter and stir till smooth. Serve cold. If milk is substituted for cream, use a teaspoonful more butter. BOILED SALAD DRESSING No. 2 2 cupfuls milk \y 2 tablespoonfuls flour 1 cupful vinegar 1J4 tablespoonfuls butter Yz cupful sugar \Yi teaspoonfuls mustard 2 eggs 1 teaspoonful salt Smooth flour in half of milk, putting other half to heat, after which stir butter, flour and milk together. Add the other ingredients, stirring constantly till thickened. May be kept in a cold place for months. SOUR CREAM SALAD DRESSING 5/2 cupful sour cream 1 tablespoonful vinegar yolk 1 hard boiled egg 1 teaspoonful sugar pinch of salt dash of pepper Cream the yolk, add sour cream, and beat in sugar, salt and pepper. 86 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK FRENCH DRESSING No. 1 4 tablespoonfuls lemon juice y* teaspoonful salt dash of cayenne pepper Mix and serve cold. FRENCH DRESSING No. 2 4 tablespoonfuls olive oil 3/4 teaspoonful salt 2 tablespoonfuls vinegar % teaspoonful pepper Mix thoroughly. MAYONNAISE DRESSING yolks 2 eggs 1 teaspoonful salt \y 2 cupfuls olive oil 1 teaspoonful mustard 2 tablespoonfuls lemon juice 1 teaspoonful powdered sugar vinegar dash of cayenne pepper Mix thoroughly, salt, mustard, sugar, pepper, then add yolks, mix well and add one-half teaspoonful vinegar. To this add one and one-half cupfuls oil, gradually, a few drops at a time, stirring constantly. Have ready two tablespoonfuls each, oil and vinegar, and as the mixture thickens, add this oil and vinegar alternately, stirring constantly. Always use a very cold dish in mixing Mayonnaise. One-third cupful of cream stiffly beaten is good added to the Mayonnaise just before serving. A pleasing change is made by using equal parts of Mayonnaise and Boiled Dressing. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 87 WHITE MAYONNAISE DRESSING In recipe for Mayonnaise Dressing, substitute cream for oil, lemon juice for vinegar, and whites for yolks. CHEESE SALAD No. 1 Press grated cheese into small balls, and roll in chopped nuts. Cut celery in very fine long strips, arrange like a bird nest, and plate two cheese balls within. Serve with French Dressing. Instead of celery, cabbage stalk may be cut in very fine long strips, sprinkled with celery seed. CHEESE SALAD No. 2 2 cupfuls whipped cream % teaspoonful salt *4 cupful grated cheese dash cayenne pepper 1 tablespoonful gelatin dash dry mustard Dissolve gelatin in the least possible warm water, not hot water. When cool, stir in with the other ingredients, mixing very thoroughly. Put in tiny moulds and set on ice. Serve with French Dressing. CREAM CHEESE SALAD No. 1 Smooth cream cheese and chili sauce together, shape into small balls, and serve on lettuce. 88 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK CREAM CHEESE SALAD No. 2 1 cream cheese milk 1 cupful ripe olives 1 head lettuce 54 cupful nuts Remove stones from and cut olives in small pieces. Smooth cheese to paste by adding a little milk or cream, and shape into small balls. Mix nuts and olives and place among lettuce leaves in center of plates. Put cheese balls around these centers, and serve with French Dressing. COTTAGE CHEESE SALAD Press cottage cheese into any preferred shape, surround with leaves or flowers, and cover with a dressing of two- thirds Mayonnaise and one-third whipped cream. COOKED CABBAGE SALAD y-t cupful sugar 1 teaspoonful mustard y^ cupful vinegar J^ teaspoonful salt Y 2 cupful cream 2 eggs Y 2 cupful butter 1 small cabbage To the beaten eggs add creamed butter and sugar, vinegar, mustard and salt. Mix thoroughly, add cream and let come to a boil, then stir in the finely chopped cabbage, boil about two minutes, and serve hot. Milk may be substituted for cream by adding a little more butter. EGG SALAD IN POND LILY STYLE One hard-boiled egg for each plate. Remove the shell PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 89 while hot, commence at the small end and cut nearly to the other end to form six petals. Remove yolks, and set whites in a dish for the ends to curl up. Mash the yolks, adding a little dressing and shape into small mounds in the centers of whites. Serve each egg on the stem of a large nasturtium leaf with Boiled Salad Dressing No. 1, on one side. For a pretty suggestion of water, serve on an inexpensive small round mirror. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA FRUIT SALADS APPLE SALAD No. 1 Peel and slice apples, pour over them at once a little lemon juice, to prevent discoloration. Add plenty of whole nut meats and serve with Mayonnaise Dressing. APPLE SALAD No. 2 Prepare apples as in Apple Salad No. 1, and add sliced onions. Serve with French Dressing. CHERRY SALAD Stone a sufficient number, of cherries, insert a peanut in each, arrange on lettuce, and serve with Mayonnaise Dressing. FRUIT SALAD Oranges may be used alone, with nuts, or with apples, nuts and pineapple. Serve with Mayonnaise Dressing. NUT SALAD mushrooms stuffed olives nuts celery Cut in small pieces, place on lettuce leaves and cover with Mayonnaise Dressing. NUT AND APPLE SALAD Combine sliced apples, nuts and a few chopped figs. Serve 90 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 91 in shells made of halves of orange skins, and put whipped cream on top. POTATO SALAD No. 1 Boil potatoes in their skins. When cooked, pour off the water and let them remain a few minutes in the kettle to prevent their becoming soggy or sticky. Chop one-half an onion and mix in with potatoes, with some chopped parsley. Serve with French Dressing. POTATO SALAD No. 2 Slice a dish of cold potatoes. Chop some celery, parsley and an onion, mix well, sprinkle with celery salt, add one- half of sliced hard boiled egg to each plate, and serve with French Dressing. A little chopped cabbage is an agreeable addition for a change in Potato Salad. PRUNE SALAD Soak dried prunes all night in cold water, or leave a few moments in hot water. Remove pits and cut fruit length- wise. Arrange on a lettuce leaf, sprinkle with chopped nuts, and serve with a dressing of equal parts whipped cream and Mayonnaise Dressing. TOMATO SALAD NO. 1 6 tomatoes 1 dessertspoonful chopped i^ cream cheese parsley 1 dessertspoonful sherry wine 1 dessertspoonful chopped pinch of salt pepper 5/ teaspoonful chopped onion Peel tomatoes and remove a portion of the center, sprin- 92 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK kle with salt and chill on ice. Smooth the cheese to a paste, adding the other ingredients, and fill in the tomato centers. Put a bit of Mayonnaise Dressing on top, setting each tomato on a lettuce leaf with any preferred gar- nishing. Tomatoes may be stuffed with asparagus tips. TOMATO SALAD No. 2 Peel and slice tomatoes, place on lettuce leaves, cover with Mayonnaise Dressing, and scatter over that a few nut meats. TOMATO JELLY SALAD Harden the jelly in a large flat dish, and cut out any de- sired shapes and place on lettuce leaves. Mix one-half cupful each stoned chopped olives and chopped cucumber pickle, with a little Mayonnaise Dressing. VEGETABLE SALAD No. 1 Keep onions, lettuce and young mustard in cold water an hour or two, chop and serve with French Dressing and sliced hard boiled eggs. VEGETABLE SALAD No. 2 String beans, peas, lima beans, sliced tomatoes, cucum- bers and onions arranged on a lettuce leaf and served with French Dressing is a favorite salad. Any one, or two or three ingredients may be omitted. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA MEMORANDA MEMORANDA FRITTERS CORN FRITTERS \Yz cupfuls flour 3 teaspoonfuls baking powder 2-3 cupful milk J4 teaspoonful salt 1 cupful corn 1 egg To the well beaten egg, add milk, part of the flour and salt, mix the baking powder with remainder of flour, and add alternately corn and flour. Dip with a teaspoon and drop in deep cooking oil to fry. About two and one-half ears of sweet boiled corn will make one cupful after kernels are cut off. This recipe makes sixteen fritters. Serve with syrup. APPLE FRITTERS Substitute two medium size tart apples finely sliced, for the corn in Corn Fritters. BANANA FRITTERS Substitute two medium size bananas cut in very small pieces, and one tablespoonful lemon juice, for the corn in Corn Fritters. 93 PIES When a pie is ready to bake, pour cold water over it, drain quickly and place immediately in hot oven. If a lower crust is wet with the beaten white of an egg before filling with soft mixtures, it will prevent filling from soaking in. Do not take hot pies suddenly to a cold room, as the sudden change makes them "heavy." And do not leave them on a hot stove after being baked. Grease pie plates with butter. It helps make a flaky crust. A strip of clean muslin about two inches wide, wrung from cold water and pinned around the edge of juicy pies, will keep juice in and keep edge from burning. Another plan is to insert a small funnel of white paper, small end down, in the center of the upper crust, for the escape of steam. Sprinkle a little flour over a lower crust before filling in juicy pies. A very good way to prevent juice running out, is to put the sugar in the lower crust before filling in the fruit. See that under crusts around outer edge are loose from pie plates before baking. Under crusts to be baked a day before using, are made even by baking one crust between two pie plates of the same size. 94 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 95 CINNAMON ROLLS Whenever pie crust dough is left, cut in narrow strips, spread with softened butter, sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon, roll and bake like a jelly roll. SHORTCAKE Use directions for Baking Powder Biscuit. Cut open the biscuits, butter well, and spread with whatever fruit is in season. Place the upper half of the biscuit over the under piece with its crust down, that is, on the fruit, spreading another layer of the sugared fruit on the top, with whipped cream above this top layer, if desired. Berries, pineapple, oranges, etc., etc., are all nice in short- cakes. PIE CRUST No. 1 1 cupful flour salt y z cupful butter 54 cupful very cold water a pinch of baking powder Sift the flour and baking powder together, add the salt and the softened (not warm) butter, then the water. Turn onto a floured moulding board, sift a little flour over and turn over till right to roll out. This makes just two pie crusts, or a lower crust for one pie, and four small biscuits. PIE CRUST No. 2 * cupfuls flour y^ cupful very cold water 2 cupfuls butter pinch of salt Mix salt in flour and add one-half softened (not warm) 96 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK butter and enough very cold water to form a stiff dough. Turn this on the floured moulding board, sprinkle with flour, spread with some of the butter, fold over, roll out, spread on more butter, fold over, roll out, spread for the third time, fold and roll and fit on pie plates. Will make four pies. SOUR MILK PIE CRUST 1 cupful flour pinch of salt 54 cupful sour milk ^ cupful butter % teaspoonful soda Mix the softened butter with part of flour, add milk with soda dissolved in it, salt, and remainder of flour. Turn on the floured moulding board in a soft dough, roll, and fit on the pie plate. APPLE PIE Have ready, apples peeled and cut in thin slices, or apples that have been cooked like Apple Sauce. Line a pie plate with crust. A little chopped fresh lemon peel sprinkled over the fruit is a tasty addition. Or powdered lemon peel flavoring is fine. A teaspoonful of strong cold tea added to the apple sauce filling is nice. FRIED APPLE PIE Roll out Baking Powder Biscuit dough to about one- quarter inch in thickness, and cut in circles about five PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 97 inches in diameter. A tin can cover that size is a good cutter. Fill the center of half this round piece with about one tablespoonful Apple Sauce. Moisten the edge of dough with cold water, folding the empty half over the sauce, pressing the two edges tightly together making a pie shaped like a half circle. Fry like doughnuts in hot cooking oil. Drain them on clean brown paper. Eaten hot or cold, with cheese if desired. APRICOT PIE 1 cupful mashed apricots 2 eggs y^ cupful sugar \y 2 tablespoonfuls flour pinch of cream of tartar Soak apricots in cold water over night, or scald. Cook till tender. To the beaten yolks, add sugar and flour. Mix thoroughly. Pour into a crust already baked and bake. Add cream of tartar to whites, beat stiffly, add two extra tablespoonfuls sugar, spread over pie, and return to oven to brown slightly. CUSTARD PIE Spread crust on the plate the day before filling, and keep in cold place. This applies only when no baking powder is used, as baking powder works as soon as it is dampened. CUSTARD PIE FILLING 2 cupfuls milk 1 tablespoonful melted butter 2 eggs pinch of salt y$ cupful sugar a little nutmeg Stir in the well beaten eggs to sugar, milk and salt, add 98 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK butter, pour into pie crust, grate a little nutmeg over it, and bake in a moderate oven. Heat the milk before mixing Custard Pie Filling. COCOANUT PIE FILLING Add to recipe for Custard Pie Filling one-half cupful shredded cocoanut, and sprinkle more over the top in place of nutmeg. A little vanilla flavoring may be added. CRUSTLESS PIE 1 quart milk 54 cupful sugar 3 eggs 54 cupful flour pinch of salt 5/2 teaspoonful flavoring To the well beaten eggs, add the other ingredients, pour into a buttered pie plate and bake. DATE PIE FILLING 1 Ib. dates 2 tablespoonfuls butter 1 cupful thick cream 1 teaspoonful cinnamon yolks of 3 eggs 5^ teaspoonful cloves Soak the dates (2 cupfuls weighing 1 Ib.) over night in cold water, and stew until soft enough to put through colander. Mix well and add all the other ingredients. Mix thoroughly and bake brown in one crust. Cover with the following meringue and return to oven to brown. MERINGUE To the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs, add three table- PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 99 spoonfuls of granulated sugar (not powdered). Flavor with a few drops of flavoring, if desired. In making Meringue one tablespoonful very cold water may be substituted for one egg. Beat the water in with the white of egg. LEMON PIE No. 1 1 cupful water 3 tablespoonfuls flour 1 cupful sugar a pinch of salt yolks 2 eggs juice and grated rind of 1 lemon Make crust as per directions given, and bake. Beat yolks, smooth in flour, add water, sugar, salt and lemon, cook in double boiler till the mixture thickens, pour in baked crust. Beat the whites very stiffly, add 1 tablespoonful sugar, spread over pie and put in oven to brown slightly. LEMON PIE No. 2 1 cupful sugar 3 tablespoonfuls flour 1 cupful milk juice and grated rind of 1 2 eggs lemon Beat sugar and yolks together, add flour and milk and continue beating. Beat the whites stiffly and stir lightly into the mixture. Make crust as per directions previously given. This fill- ing may be poured into a baked crust as per Lemon Pie No. 1, or filling and crust baked together. 100 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK LEMON PIE No. 3 1 cupful sugar 4 tablespoonfuls water 3 eggs juice of 1 lemon Beat yolks, add sugar, water and lemon and cook till thickened, in double boiler. Remove from stove and beat in stiffly beaten whites. Pour into crust and bake. Add one crushed banana put through a colander to a lemon pie filling, if desired. MINCE PIE */4 cupful chopped nuts 1 tablespoonful vinegar 1 cupful tart chopped apples 1 tablespoonful currants T /4 cupful raisins 2 tablespoonfuls butter 54 cupful fruit juices % teaspoonful cinnamon Yz cupful sugar */ 2 teaspoonful salt a pinch of cloves and mace Mix all together very thoroughly, adding more sugar or vinegar to suit taste. Bake in two crusts. Makes one pie. PUMPKINS AND PIES Pumpkin may be grated raw and used as when cooked, making less work to prepare. Grating, now-a-days, usually means running through the food chopper. A pumpkin may be baked by cutting it in two, removing seeds, scooping it from the shell with a mixing spoon and crushing through a colander. In selecting a pumpkin, choose a glossy one that is flat on both ends. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 101 Chopped pecan and English walnuts sprinkled over a pumpkin pie just before putting it in the oven, give an agreeable flavor. Shredded cocoanut sprinkled over a pumpkin pie just as it goes in the oven, is nice. PUMPKIN PIE No. 1 1J4 cupfuls pumpkin ^ teaspoonful salt 1 cupful milk Y-2. teaspoonful cinnamon Yz cupful sugar 1 egg Prepare the pumpkin by washing, cutting in pieces, par- ing and steaming till soft. Rub through a colander or sieve. To the required amount add the beaten egg and other ingredients, mixing thoroughly. Pour into a crust with a high rim. This recipe may be varied by using squash instead of pumpkin, and the required amount of sweetening used being half sugar and half molasses. PUMPKIN PIE No. 2 Prepare the filling as per Pumpkin Pie No. 1. Butter the pie tins, just cover the bottom with corn meal. Pour in the filling, and bake. PRUNE PIE May be made by substituting prunes for apricots in Apricot Pie recipe. RHUBARB PIE No. 1 2 pints rhubarb 1 cupful water 1 pint sugar juice of 1 lemon Peel and cut rhubarb into half inch lengths, add other 102 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK ingredients and stew until tender. Bake between two crusts. Serve with whipped cream, if desired. RHUBARB PIE No. 2 Peel and cut rhubarb into half inch lengths and place on. lower crust. Mix one cupful sugar very thoroughly with one tablespoonful corn starch and put over rhubarb. Moisten the edge of lower crust with cold water, put on the upper crust and press edges firmly together. Bake about thirty minutes. SQUASH PIE 2 cupfuls Hubbard squash 1 tablespoonful butter 3 cupfuls milk 1 tablespoonful brandy 1 cupful sugar y 2 teaspoonful ginger 4 eggs y 2 teaspoonful cinnamon pinch of salt ^2 grated nutmeg Beat eggs and mix thoroughly with other ingredients, the butter being first softened and squash run through colander. Pour in crust and bake. If crust is spread on the plate a day before and kept in a cool place, it will be nicer than when freshly made. But dough will not keep fresh when mixed with baking powder. SWEET POTATO PIE 1 cupful mashed sweet pota- 1 egg toes 5^ teaspoonful salt Yz cupful sugar ^ teaspoonful nutmeg 1 cupful milk y^ teaspoonful ginger Mix the beaten egg with the other ingredients and bake about thirty minutes in one crust, adding Meringue. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA PUDDINGS APPLE DUMPLINGS Cut into about eight pieces each, ten or twelve pared and cored, rather tart, medium sized apples. Put into a kettle with water enough to about half cover them. Add one cupful sugar. Have this apple sauce started boiling when the dumplings are added. For the dumplings Y-2. cupful sour milk ^ teaspoonful sugar y z teaspoonful soda butter size y z egg y z teaspoonful salt flour Stir the soda dissolved in little water, into the milk, add salt, sugar, a little flour, part of the softened butter, more flour and butter, and flour till no more can be stirred in. Drop from a dessert spoon dipped each time in cold water, on top of the boiling apple sauce. This makes eight dumplings, not too thick, the size of a biscuit. THE SAUCE Use Pudding Sauce No. 1 and substitute a little ground cinnamon for lemon flavoring. Place a clean piece of white cotton cloth over the kettle after putting dumplings in, fit the cover on closely and your dumplings will not "fall." BAKING POWDER DUMPLINGS y z cuplul milk y z teaspoonful sugar 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder butter, size of egg y z teaspoonful salt flour Mix part of the milk with a little flour, salt, sugar, add 103 104 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK softened butter, then more flour with the baking powdei sifted in. Mix to right consistency to make a soft dough, roll lightly, cut with a small biscuit cutter and drop over apple sauce as in directions for Apple Dumplings. Peach sauce may be substituted for apple sauce in Apple Dumplings, and Pudding Sauce No. 2 used. SOUP DUMPLINGS 2 cupfuls flour 3 teaspoonfuls baking powder 1^4 cupfuls boiling water J/ teaspoonful salt Put flour, baking powder and salt in the sifter, sift into a mixing bowl. Stir rapidly while adding the water. Turn on to moulding board, roll, and cut like biscuits. Drop into hot soups and boil till done. BREAD PUDDING 2 cupfuls bread crumbs 54 cupful sugar 2 cupfuls milk % teaspoonful salt 1 cupful molasses 54 teaspoonful cinnamon 2 cupfuls graham flour y 2 teaspoonful lemon flavoring 1 cupful chopped raisins 1 teaspoonful soda 2 eggs Soak crumbs about thirty minutes in milk, add molasses, soda dissolved in little hot water, beaten eggs, flavoring, sugar, salt, spice, and the flour with the raisins well stirred in. Steam two and one-half hours. One-fourth cupful chopped candied orange peel may be substituted for lemon flavoring. One-half cupful chopped nut meats may be added if de- sired. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 105 PLAIN CUSTARD 2 cupfuls milk pinch of salt 1 egg 1 tablespoonful corn starch */4 teaspoonful butter 2 tablespoonfuls sugar 1 teaspoonful flavoring Smooth the corn starch on part of the milk, adding to re- mainder of the milk that has been heated to boiling point. Add the beaten egg, sugar, salt, butter and flavoring. Stir constantly till it thickens. Cooks easily in a double boiler. If boiled custard "separates," it is cooked too much. To overcome this, beat with an egg beater till smooth. When no corn starch is used in custard, use one egg in- stead of the tablespoonful of corn starch. ORANGE CUSTARD 2 cupfuls milk 2 teaspoonfuls corn starch 1 cupful sugar 2 tablespoonfuls powdered 4 eggs sugar sliced sugared oranges Smooth the corn starch in a little cold milk, adding it to the two cupfuls of milk and the sugar when milk has reached boiling point. Stir constantly, add the well beaten yolks and let thicken. Remove at once from the fire and when cold, pour over the dish of oranges. Beat very stiffly the whites with the powdered sugar, and drop from a tablespoon into a shallow pan of boiling water. Cook about one minute, turn carefully over and cook the other side. Place over custard and serve very cold. Peaches may be substituted for the oranges. 106 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK CARROT PUDDING 1 cupful grated carrots % cupful butter I cupful grated raw potatoes y 2 teaspoonful cinnamon 1 cupful sugar y z teaspoonful cloves iy z cupfuls bread crumbs y 2 teaspoonful nutmeg y 2 cupful raisins 1 teaspoonful soda y z cupful currants y z teaspoonful salt Dissolve soda in a little hot water and stir in the potatoes. Then mix in all the other ingredients, pour into a pudding mould and steam three hours. Serve with sauce. By doubling the quantity of fruit, and steaming six hours, a fine rich pudding results. It may be steamed three hours at a time on different days. COTTAGE PUDDING 1 cupful sugar 2 eggs */2 cupful milk 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder l^a cupfuls flour butter size of egg y z teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Cream butter and sugar, add eggs, milk, flavoring, and lastly, flour and baking powder sifted together. Bake and serve with Pudding Sauce No. 1. FIG PUDDING \y 2 cupfuls bread crumbs ^ cupful milk 1 cupful chopped figs 1 egg y z cupful chopped nuts 54 teaspoonful salt y 2 cupful sugar r / 2 teaspoonful cinnamon y 2 cupful peanut or olive oil 54 teaspoonful baking powder Pour the milk over the bread crumbs in a mixing bowl, add the beaten egg, then the sugar with baking powder PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 107 stirred in, figs, nuts, oil, salt and cinnamon, stirring well together. Steam three hours. This fills one ordinary steamed pudding dish. Use dates instead of figs, if preferred, and serve with Pudding Sauce No. 1 or No. 2. In steaming puddings, breads, etc., when necessary to add water, be sure you add boiling water. FLOATING ISLAND 2 cupfuls milk 4 tablespoonfuls sugar 2 eggs 1 tablespoonful corn starch Place milk in double boiler and when at boiling point, add well beaten yolks, three tablespoonsfuls of the sugar, the corn starch smoothed into a little cold milk. Con- tinue stirring till mixture thickens, remove from fire and pour into a dish. Beat the whites very stiff, add the fourth tablespoonful of sugar, and drop like little islands over the top of the custard, putting in the oven a few moments to brown. One-half cupful chopped nuts may be sprinkled over the islands for a change. STEAMED FRUIT ROLL Roll biscuit dough as in making biscuits, spread with jam or marmalade, roll tightly like jelly roll and steam on a pie plate for about thirty minutes. Place in the oven about ten minutes. Serve with sauce. 108 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK GINGER PUDDING 54 lb. ginger snaps 2 eggs 5/2 cupful raisins 1 teaspoonful butter milk 2 tablespoonfuls sugar pinch of baking powder Break the snaps in small pieces and soak in enough milk to just cover them. Mix baking powder and sugar, and stir into beaten eggs, add butter, raisins, mix all together and bake. Serve with sauce. BAKED INDIAN PUDDING 54 cupful molasses 5^2 teaspoonful salt 1 pint cold milk y 2 cupful yellow corn meal 1 quart boiling milk Stir the meal, then salt, into the boiling milk, and when nearly cold, add molasses and cold milk ; bake slowly for three hours. Serve hot or cold with sweetened cream. POTATO PUDDING 54 cupful sugar 1 tablespoonful melted butter 5^ cupful chopped nuts 1 tablespoonful lemon juice ^4 cupful potatoes 4 eggs To the stiffly beaten whites add sugar, lemon and beaten yolks, and the other ingredients. Mix thoroughly. Steam two hours. Serve with hard sauce. TAPIOCA PUDDING y\ cupful tapioca 54 cupful corn meal 4 cupfuls scalded milk 54 cupful molasses 1 cupful milk 3 tablespoonfuls butter \Y 2 teaspoonfuls salt Soak tapioca two or three hours in water to cover it. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 109 Pour the scalded milk over corn meal, add molasses, softened butter and salt. Cook this mixture about twenty minutes in double boiler, drain water from tapioca, stir tapioca into the cooked mixture and pour into a buttered baking dish. Then pour the cold milk over this, being careful not to stir. Bake about one and one-half hours in a slow oven. Serve with sugar and cream. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA VARIOUS SAUCES BRANDY SAUCE No. 1 *4 cupful butter y z cupful milk 1 cupful sugar 2 tablespoonfuls brandy 2 eggs Cream butter and sugar, beat constantly and add grad- ually the brandy, beaten yolks, and milk. Cook in a double boiler till thickened, Jhen stir in the stiffly beaten whites. BRANDY SAUCE No. 2 y z cupful butter Ys cupful hot water 1 cupful sugar 1 tablespoonful brandy 1 egg Cream sugar and butter, add beaten yolk, beating con- stantly while adding very gradually the hot water. Then add brandy and then the stiffly beaten whites. BRANDY SAUCE No. 3 1 cupful sugar whites of 2 eggs J4 cupful hot milk 1 teaspoonful brandy To the stiffly beaten whites, add gradually the sugar, then milk, beating well at same time. Flavor and mix in- gredients in a dish set in another dish of hot, not boiling water. One-half teaspoonful of any preferred flavoring may be substituted for brandy. 110 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 111 CREAM SAUCE 1 cupful cream y 2 teaspoonful flavoring V* cupful sugar pinch of salt To the stiffly beaten cream add sugar, salt and flavoring. EASY SAUCE Yz cupful butter 3 tablespoonfuls wine 1 cupful sugar 3 eggs Cream butter and sugar, add beaten yolks, and flavor. Then beat in the stiffly beaten whites. One-half tea- spoonful flavoring may be substituted for wine. HARD SAUCE No. 1 */2 cupful butter 3 tablespoonfuls cream 1 cupful powdered sugar 2 tablespoonfuls sherry wine Cream butter and sugar, adding slowly, beating con- stantly, the cream, till the mixture is light. Add wine or one-half teaspoonful any preferred flavoring. HARD SAUCE No. 2 y 2 cupful butter white of 1 egg 1 cupful sugar 5/ cupful whipped cream 1/2 teaspoonful flavoring To the creamed butter and sugar add the stiffly beaten white and cream alternately. Flavor. 112 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK HOT SAUCE 1 tablespoonful melted butter 1 cupful tart fruit juice 1 tablespoonful flour sugar to taste Smooth butter and flour and add juice and sugar. Cook till thickened. PUDDING SAUCE No. 1 l*/2 cupfuls water 2 tablespoonfuls flour 5/2 cupful sugar 5^ tablespoonful lemon flavor- butter size of walnut ing Measure the water into a small stew pan, smoothing the flour into a little of it in a cup. Boil the water in stew pan ; when it starts boiling, dip some into the cup with the moistened flour, stirring rapidly. Pour from the cup into the pan, adding sugar and butter, stirring constantly till thick enough; then remove from fire, add flavoring and serve hot. PUDDING SAUCE No. 2 5^ cupful sugar 3 tablespoonfuls hot milk 1 egg y z teaspoonful flavoring Beat the beaten yolk with the sugar, add milk, beaten whites and flavor. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA ABOUT MILK TO TEST MILK Put a bright steel knitting needle in the milk and if on withdrawing it, the milk runs off slowly, it is pure ; if it runs quickly, the milk has been diluted with water. Milk absorbs all strong odors, and should never be placed near them. A pinch of soda added to a quart of milk before putting it on to boil, will prevent curdling. When milk boils over, sprinkle salt on it to prevent the smell. Usually when milk or foodstuffs burn on the kettle, if it is instantly set in a dish of cold water, the contents of the kettle may be removed without tasting burned. When you wish to scald or boil milk, rinse the dish with cold water, pour the milk in immediately and it will not stick to the dish. Sour milk is best when it sours quickly. If it is too thick, beat until light with an egg beater. 113 CREAM AND WHIPPED CREAM EMERGENCY CREAM y z cupful cold milk 1 tablespoonful butter 1 cupful hot milk 1 tablespoonful sugar whites of 2 eggs 1 teaspoonful corn starch To the stiffly beaten whites add sugar and corn starch, beat constantly and add gradually the cold milk. Heat a cupful of milk to boiling point, melting the butter in it, beating in the first mixture. When thickened like cream, remove from fire, strain, and set on ice. This will not "whip" but is for use in place of plain cream on fruits, puddings, etc. WHIPPED CREAM Scald cream and set on ice till very cold, before whipping. When cream will not whip, add white of an egg. Dissolve a little gelatine in two teaspoonfuls of water and whip in with cream to prevent whipped cream becoming watery, after standing some time. Always have cream as cold as possible, before whipping. DELICATE CREAM 1 grated apple J /3 cupful sugar white of 1 egg % teaspoonful flavoring Add apple and sugar to the stiffly beaten white, and flavor. Use as a change from whipped cream on desserts. 114 DESSERTS APPLE SNOW 2 cupfuls stewed apples J4 cupful chopped candied 1 cupful sugar lemon peel whites of 3 eggs 54 cupful chopped raisins Mix the stiffly beaten whites with the other ingredients, and serve with fresh sponge or white cake. BANANA WHIP 6 bananas J4 cupful sugar whites of 2 eggs % teaspoonful vanilla flavor- ing Crush bananas through a colander, beat in sugar, add flavoring, and stir in very lightly the stiffly beaten whites. Turn into six sherbet glasses, place a bit of pineapple or other fruit on top with a spoonful of whipped cream. Serve very cold. BANANA CREAM No. 1 6 bananas 1 dessertspoonful corn starch 1 cupful milk 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring y 2 cupful sugar 1 egg Slice bananas very thin and sprinkle with half the sugar. Put one-half the milk in double boiler and when at boiling point, add beaten yolk, one-half the sugar, and corn starch smoothed in remaining one-half of milk, stirring as it boils about a minute. Add well beaten white, flavor, and 115 116 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK remove from fire. Do not pour over fruit till cream is cold. Other fruits may be substituted for bananas. BANANA CREAM No. 2 6 bananas 2 tablespoonfuls butter 3 eggs 3 tablespoonfuls sugar milk 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Peel the bananas, mash, add enough milk to make a creamy mixture. Cream butter and sugar, add well beaten yolks, bananas, and stiffly beaten whites. Flavor, pour into moulds and bake about thirty minutes. CRANBERRY WHIP 1 cupful cranberry sauce 54 cupful sugar white of 1 egg 54 cupful chopped nuts To the stiffly beaten white, beat in the sugar and sauce alternately, beating till very fluffy, then adding nuts. FANCY CREAM 1 cupful milk 54 cupful chopped nuts 54 cupful chopped marshmal- 1 dessertspoonful gelatine lows 54 cupful sugar 5^ cupful chopped dates 54 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Heat the milk in double boiler, dissolve gelatine in it. stir in marshmallows, dates, nuts and sugar, till mixture is smooth. Remove from fire, flavor, pour in mould or into small dishes and set on ice to cool. May be served with whipped cream, jelly or any pre- ferred addition. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 117 MARSHMALLOW CREAM No. 1 1 cupful cream 1 cupful grated nuts 94 cupful chopped marshmal- ^ teaspoonful flavoring lows Cut marshmallows in small pieces with scissors. To the stiffly whipped cream add flavoring and pour over marsh- mallows in six sherbet glasses. Sprinkle nuts over top, and serve very cold. MARSHMALLOW CREAM No. 2 1 cupful milk $4 cupful marshmallows, cut in Yz teaspoonful flavoring small pieces Heat the marshmallows in milk till melted to a cream. Add flavoring and serve cold in any preferred style. MARSHMALLOW CUPS Fill sherbet cups with a layer of chopped marshmallows, walnuts, and pineapple. Place on top whipped cream and a couple of small pieces of preserved ginger. ORANGE CREAM 6 oranges J4 cupful butter 54 cupful sugar 1 dessertspoonful corn starch 3 eggs Wash and cut oranges in half, remove juice with a lemon reamer, saving the skins. Smooth corn starch into the beaten yolks, add juice and cook with butter and sugar, in double boiler, till the mixture thickens. Then stir in very lightly the stiffly beaten whites and remove at once 118 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK from fire. Cut the orange skins in scallops, with scissors, around the top, the inside scraped dry and brushed with melted butter, with sugar sprinkled over it. Pour each skin half full of cream and set in the oven for a few minutes to become firm. PRUNE WHIP 1 cupful prunes whites of 3 eggs Stew prunes, put through colander, add stiffly beaten whites, bake in a buttered dish fifteen or twenty minutes. Serve cold with whipped cream. SPANISH CREAM 54 box gelatine 1 cupful sugar 2 cupfuls milk 2 eggs ^2 teaspoonful flavoring Dissolve gelatine in enough cold water to soften it, add it to milk at boiling point, stirring constantly. Then add well beaten yolks and sugar. Remove from fire and add well beaten whites and flavoring. Serve cold with whipped cream or any preferred sauce. Cook in double boiler. FRUITS BAKED APPLES No. 1 2 quarts sliced apples 54 teaspoonful soda */a cupful sugar J4 teaspoonful cloves % teaspoonful cinnamon Peel and slice apples that are rather tart, and put the two quarts in an earthen baking dish, stone jar or bean pot; mix all the other ingredients thoroughly, adding a little at a time to the apples in the dish, shaking the dish frequently to mix the contents. Bake slowly for five or six hours. BAKED APPLES No. 2 Wash and core apples, fill the centers with preserves or marmalade, sprinkle with sugar, and bake. Serve cold with whipped cream, or with plain cream with a little flavoring to suit the apple filling. Baked apples are good filled with raisins, dates and figs. BAKED PRUNES Soak dried prunes in cold water all night. Next morning (when baking bread is a good time), put them in an earthen baking dish or bean pot, cover with water, add sugar to taste, and let bake several hours. APPLE SAUCE Peel and cut in small slices as many tart apples as re- 119 120 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK quired. Just cover with cold water and when it boils, add sugar to suit the taste, and boil till sufficiently tender. A few chopped dates may be added. Or some finely chopped fresh lemon peel. Or a little cinnamon. Serving apple sauce with whipped cream and a few chopped walnuts is good. FRIED APPLES Peel and slice (not too thinly) tart apples. Dip in cold water, then in sugar, then place carefully in a wire basket and plunge into hot olive oil to fry till tender. Drain on brown paper, lay again in sugar, and arrange in any pre- ferred style on a hot plate. Nice to serve with Nut Roast. CRANBERRY MOULD To one quart of washed cranberries add one and one- half cupfuls water and simmer till the skins burst. Strain through a colander and boil again, adding, as soon as it boils, one cupful sugar. Simmer slowly till thick, and stir often. CRANBERRY SAUCE Wash one quart cranberries and simmer in one pint of water in a covered dish till the skins burst. Then add two cupfuls sugar and boil twenty minutes without the cover. Add a pinch of soda, but do not stir. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 121 STUFFED DATES Cut open dates lengthwise and remove seed. Fill the place of the seed with a nut meat and roll in powdered sugar. CREAM DATES 12 dates cold water whites of 2 eggs powdered sugar */2 teaspoonful flavoring Remove seeds from dates. Measure an equal amount of water to the whites, beat whites stiffly, and add to the water with enough sugar to form a thick paste. Flavor, and fill in the date centers. STUFFED FIGS Steam figs until soft. When cool, cut lengthwise and insert one-half of a marshmallow and a walnut meat. GRAPE FRUIT Prepare the night before, by cutting in halves, loosening the juice by jabbing with a fork. Remove seeds, put over the center as much sugar as it will absorb. Add a few maraschino cherries, or a little wine if desired. To be eaten with an orange spoon and served for breakfast, luncheon or as a dinner salad. Very artistic dishes may be made by cutting the grape- fruit skins in pretty designs. 122 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK LEMONS Keep lemons in a vessel filled with water, changing the water twice each week. When lemons have become hard, cover them with boiling water in a covered dish, allowing them to remain two hours. Lemons may be kept fresh for months by placing them on a flat surface and inverting a glass jar or tumbler over each lemon. DRIED PEACH SAUCE Remove the skins by letting peaches stand a few mo- ments in hot water. Boil and sweeten to taste. The skins may also be easily removed after soaking all night in cold water. STUFFED PRUNES Wash dried prunes, soak about three hours in cold water, drain, place in enough cold water to cover and boil ten or fifteen minutes, when pits may be removed. Then proceed as in directions for Stuffed Dates. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA DOUGHNUTS 1 cupful sugar 2 eggs 1 cupful sour milk J/ teaspoonful soda Yz cupful butter 1 teaspoonful salt 4 cupfuls flour y 2 grated nutmeg Cream sugar and softened butter, add beaten eggs, half the flour, soda dissolved in a little water, spice, salt, and flour enough to form a soft dough. Turn on the mould- ing board and work in more flour if necessary to have mixture roll out one-half inch in thickness. Take one- half the entire mixture to roll at a time, cut with a dough- nut cutter and fry in hot cooking oil. This makes fifty doughnuts. A tablespoonful of molasses added to this recipe is good. BAKING POWDER DOUGHNUTS 1 cupful sugar 2 eggs 1 cupful milk 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder 5^2 cupful butter 1 teaspoonful salt 4 cupfuls flour 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Cream sugar and softened butter, add beaten eggs, half the flour, flavoring, salt and more flour with baking powder sifted in. Stir in all the flour possible, turn on a moulding board, working in only enough flour to make the mixture roll into a soft one-half inch dough. Then proceed as in Doughnuts. 123 AS TO BAKING CAKES Slamming the oven door will often cause a cake to be- come heavy. A little flour sprinkled over buttered paper in cake tins prevents cakes sticking. When creaming butter and sugar for cake, if the butter is pressed through a perforated potato masher, it is done very easily and satisfactorily. Stale cake may be freshened by immersing quickly in cold milk and placing immediately in the oven for a few moments. A wooden toothpick is good for testing cakes in the oven. If the wood comes out perfectly dry, the cake is done. Raisins should be washed a day before using, placed in a wire basket and plunged quickly in a dish of boiling water. Spread on a platter or towel and dry. Flavoring can be sprinkled over the cake dough after it is in the pan, in case of the flavoring being forgotten till then. Stirring in lightly is usually the same as "folding" in. If a pan of water is placed in the oven your cake will never burn. A piece of paper placed across the top of a pan of cake when first set in the oven, will prevent it from rising unevenly. To remove a cake inclined to stick to the pan after baking, 124 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 125 set the tin immediately on a thick cloth wrung from hot water and after five minutes, the cake can be turned out without breaking. Chopped nut meats may be added to almost any cake, for a change. Pour one-half the batter to fruit cake into the pan be- fore adding the fruit, stirring fruit into the batter left in the mixing bowl, then pouring the mixture over that already in the pan, and fruit will not all sink to the bottom. A cake without butter must be baked in a quick oven. Fruit cakes and most dark cakes should bake slowly. If sour milk is used in baking, use one-half teaspoonful of soda to each cupful. If sweet milk is used, baking powder is the usual accompaniment, and should be one and a half teaspoonfuls baking powder to each cupful of flour. ORNAMENTING CAKES Crystallized mint leaves and violets and candied fruits can be formed into most artistic decorations for cakes. To fasten candles on cakes, push a hot hat pin or knitting needle in the bottom of candle, remove and put a wooden toothpick in while wax is soft. After the wax hardens around the pick the candle may be easily placed in posi- tion on the cake. CAKES OF MANY KINDS ANGEL CAKE 1 cupful sugar 1 teaspoonful cream of tartar */4 cupful flour 1 teaspoonful almond flavor- whites of 8 eggs ing pinch of salt Beat the eggs, add cream of tartar, then the sugar, beat- ing constantly. Sift the flour three times, add salt and stir in as lightly as possible to the mixture, add flavor- ing and bake in unbuttered angel food tin from forty five to sixty minutes. When the top begins to brown, place over it a buttered paper. IMITATION ANGEL CAKE 1 cupful sugar 1 teaspoonful almond flavor- 1J4 cupfuls flour ing Yz cupful milk \y 2 tablespoonfuls butter whites of 2 eggs 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder Cream the butter and sugar, add milk, then the twice sifted flour with the baking powder sifted in, flavoring, and lastly stir the well beaten whites very lightly into the mixture. Bake in a buttered angel food tin. APPLE CAKE 1 cupful sugar 1 cupful chopped raisins Yz cupful butter 1 tablespoonful boiling water 1 cupful unsweetened apple 1 teaspoonful soda sauce 1 teaspoonful cinnamon 1^4 cupfuls flour Yz teaspoonful cloves Yz teaspoonful salt Cream butter and sugar, add apples, soda dissolved in 126 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 127 the boiling water, salt, spices, and raisins well stirred in the flour. Bake in well buttered pan about forty five minutes. COFFEE CAKE 1 cupful butter 2 eggs 1 cupful brown sugar 2 teaspoonfuls cinnamon 1 cupful strong cold coffee 1 teaspoonful cloves i/i cupful molasses 1 teaspoonful soda 1 cupful chopped raisins 3 cupfuls flour Stir together the softened butter and sugar, add molasses, coffee, eggs, and soda dissolved in a little water. Stir spices into sifted flour with raisins or any desired fruit, stirring all together and baking from forty five minutes to one hour, according to depth of pan. CHOCOLATE CAKE 1 cupful brown sugar 1 tablespoonful butter 1 cupful milk 1 teaspoonful soda 1% cupfuls flour % cupful melted chocolate 2 eggs 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Cream butter and sugar, add half the milk, and the soda dissolved in one tablespoonful hot water. Melt the chocolate in small tin or granite cup or saucer over the fire, and stir into the mixture alternately with the flour, beaten yolks and flavoring. This makes two layers. Any preferred filling and icing may be used. 128 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK CREAM PUFFS y z cupful butter 1 cupful flour 1 cupful hot water 3 eggs pinch of salt Pour the water in a stew pan, add the butter and boil till melted. Stir in flour, when well cooked in, remove from fire and cool. When cold, stir in one at a time the unbeaten eggs. Drop from a dessert spoon on buttered tins and bake about twenty minutes. For filling use Yi cupful milk 1 egg y z cupful sugar 1 teaspoonful corn starch 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Bring milk and sugar to a boil, add cornstarch previously dissolved in a little cold milk, then stir in the well beaten egg, flavor and when cool, fill into the split puffs. DAINTY CAKE 1 cupful sugar whites 5 eggs y$ cupful cocoa ^z teaspoonful cream of tartar y 2 cupful flour J/ teaspoonful flavoring To the stiffly beaten eggs, add cream of tartar, sugar and cocoa, beating constantly. Then add vanilla and stir in the flour very lightly. Makes one large or three layer cakes. DROP CAKES No. 1 2 cupfuls sugar 1 cupful butter 1 cupful molasses 2 eggs 1 cupful milk 1 teaspoonful soda 2 cupfuls chopped fruit 1 teaspoonful salt 6 cupfuls flour 1 teaspoonful each, cinnamon and cloves Cream butter and sugar, add eggs, molasses, milk, part PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 129 of flour, soda dissolved in little water, salt and spices, and fruit stirred first in the remainder of the flour. Drop from a teaspoon on buttered tins. DROP CAKES No. 2 2 cupfuls sugar flour 1 cupful butter 4 eggs 1 cupful milk 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Cream butter and sugar, add milk and beaten yolks and sifted flour with baking powder sifted in, to make rather a stiff batter. Then add flavoring and the well beaten whites. Bake in buttered gem pans. DROP NUT CAKES 1 cupful sugar 1 egg 1 cupful chopped nuts l / 2 teaspoonful lemon flavoring y$ cupful flour pinch of salt To the well beaten egg, beat in the sugar and stir in the other ingredients. Shape into eighteen cakes about the size of an English walnut, put about two inches apart in a buttered tin and bake. Serve with lemonade, tea, or in any preferred way. DRIED APPLE FRUIT CAKE 3 cupfuls dried apples (soaked flour over night in cold water) 1 cupful sweet milk 2 cupfuls molasses 94 cu Pful butter 2 eggs V/2 teaspoonfuls soda 1 cupful sugar 1 teaspoonful each cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves Chop the dried apples slightly and simmer for two hours 130 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK with the molasses ; add sugar, milk, spices, butter, eggs, soda dissolved in little water, and flour enough for a stiff batter. Bake in steady oven. FRUIT CAKE No. 1 2 cupfuls brown sugar 1 teaspoonful soda 1 cupful sour cream or milk 1 teaspoonful cinnamon 1 cupful chopped nuts 1 teaspoonful cloves 1 cupful chopped raisins 54 teaspoonful nutmeg flour 1 teaspoonful salt 3 eggs 1 teaspoonful baking powder Mix beaten eggs and sugar, add milk to which soda dis- solved in little water has been added, nuts, salt, spices^ flour in which baking powder has been sifted, and pour one-half this mixture into buttered pan, stir fruit into the other half and pour over first half in pan. FRUIT CAKE No. 2 54 lb. chopped English walnuts 1 cupful sugar 54 lb. chopped pecans 6 eggs 54 lb. chopped almonds 2 cupfuls flour 54 lb. chopped citron 1 teaspoonful nutmeg 1 lb. currants 1 teaspoonful cinnamon 1 lb. raisins 1 teaspoonful allspice 1 cupful warm molasses 1 teaspoonful cloves 54 cupful wine (or fruit juice) 54 teaspoonful soda 1 cupful butter \Yz tablespoonfuls orange juice 154 tablespoonfuls lemon juice Cream butter and sugar, add beaten yolks, molasses con- taining soda dissolved in little water, flour, spices, nuts and wine. Dip the fruits in flour, pour half the cake mixture in the buttered tin, stir the floured fruits into the PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 131 other half of batter and pour over batter in tin. Steam one and one-half hours and bake twenty minutes, or bake slowly about two hours. When cold, wrap in paraffin paper, or keep in a box with a fresh apple. PRUNE FRUIT CAKE \y 2 cupfuls sugar 1 teaspoonful soda 2 cupfuls mashed prunes 2 teaspoonfuls cinnamon 2 cupfuls flour 1 teaspoonful cloves % cupful butter 2 eggs Cream butter and sugar, add beaten eggs, prunes, spices, soda dissolved in water, flour, and bake in buttered pan, or make into layers. GINGERBREAD No. 1 Yz cupful butter 1 egg 94 cupful sugar 1 teaspoonful ginger Y 2 cupful molasses ^2 teaspoonful cinnamon Y Z cupful sour milk 1 teaspoonful soda 2 cupfuls flour pinch of salt Cream butter and sugar, add molasses, milk, soda dis- solved in little water, beaten egg, flour and spices. Bake in buttered pan. GINGERBREAD No. 2 y 2 cupful sugar 1% cupfuls flour y 2 cupful molasses 1 teaspoonful ginger y z cupful sour milk % teaspoonful cinnamon 54 cupful butter y 2 teaspoonful salt 1 teaspoonful soda Mix as for Gingerbread No. 1 without the egg. 1 cupful sugar yolks of 6 eggs ^2 cupful butter 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder 2 cupfuls flour 1 teaspoonful orange flavoring Cream butter and sugar, add well beaten yolks, the flour with baking powder sifted in, and flavoring. Bake in buttered tin in medium oven. GRANDMA'S BREAD CAKE 2 cupfuls bread sponge Y* cupful chopped fruit 1 cupful sugar J4 teaspoonful cinnamon 2/3 cupful butter J^ teaspoonful clove 1 cupful warm milk flour In the morning, after bread sponge from the night before has had a very little flour worked in and allowed to rise, take two cupfuls of this, stir in all the ingredients but the flour, adding just enough of that to make a soft dough. When this 'has risen to double its size, mould softly into loaves and bake in well buttered tins. HERMITS \Y 2 cupfuls brown sugar 1 tablespoonful hot water \Yz cupfuls chopped raisins 1 teaspoonful cloves 2y 2 cupfuls flour 1 teaspoonful cinnamon 3 eggs y 2 teaspoonful soda 1 teaspoonful baking powder To the well beaten eggs add sugar, raisins, spices, soda dissolved in hot water, and baking powder sifted in with flour. Drop from a dessert spoon on a buttered tin and bake. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 133 MARGUERITES 1 cupful chopped nuts thin crackers sugar white of 1 egg 1 teaspoonful flavoring To the stiffly beaten white, add sugar to spread, nuts and flavoring. Spread on the crackers and brown in the oven. Do not let stand long before serving. PLAIN CAKE No. 1 94 cupful sugar 1 egg y-i cupful milk butter size of egg 1 cupful flour 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder 1 teaspoonful flavoring Cream butter and sugar, add beaten egg, milk, flour in which baking powder has been sifted, flavor, and bake in buttered pan. PLAIN CAKE No. 2 y^ cupful sugar 1 egg % cupful sour milk butter size of egg 1 cupful flour % teaspoonful soda 1 teaspoonful flavoring Cream butter and sugar, add beaten egg, milk, soda dis- solved in a little water, flavoring and flour. Bake in buttered pan. SPONGE CAKE No. 1 6 eggs 2 cupfuls flour 2 cupfuls sugar juice of 1 lemon 1 cupful boiling water 1J^ teaspoonfuls baking powder To the well beaten eggs, beat in the sugar, add lemon juice, boiling water and flour with baking powder sifted in. Bake in buttered pan. Angel food tin is good. SPONGE CAKE No. 2 3 eggs y 2 cupful cold water iy 2 cupfuls sugar \y 2 teaspoonfuls baking pow- 134 cupfuls flour der 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring To the well beaten eggs, beat in the sugar, add water, flavoring, and the flour in which baking powder has been sifted. Bake in buttered pan. If this cake is to be iced, the white of one egg may be saved for use in icing. Never stir sponge cake batter any more than is necessary. WHITE CAKE No. 1 2 cupfuls sugar 1% cupfuls flour y 2 cupful butter whites of 4 eggs y 2 cupful milk 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder 1 teaspoonful rose flavoring Cream butter and sugar, add milk, flavoring and the stiffly beaten whites, then flour, with the baking powder sifted in. Makes a good layer cake. WHITE CAKE No. 2 y 2 cupful butter 2 cupfuls flour 1% cupfuls sugar 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder y 2 cupful milk whites of 5 eggs 1 teaspoonful almond flavoring Cream butter and sugar, then stir in first milk, then flour till flour is nearly used, adding the last of it with baking powder sifted in, flavor, and stir in very lightly the whites, and bake in buttered angel food pan. This makes one medium size cake or two layers. CAKE FILLINGS 1 cupful of chopped nuts, fruit or caraway seed may be added to any plain cake batter, changing it to a choice cake. A good filling is made by adding chopped nuts or fruit to ordinary icing. A little flour added to sugar in thickening icing is good. CHOCOLATE FILLING No. 1 1 cupful brown sugar 2J^ squares Baker's chocolate yolk of 1 egg 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring 3 tablespoonfuls milk Stir sugar into melted chocolate, add milk, the beaten yolk, flavor, and cook till thickened in a double boiler. When cool, put between layers. CHOCOLATE FILLING No. 2 1 cupful powdered sugar 1 square Baker's chocolate whites of 2 eggs 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring To the stiffly beaten eggs, beat in the sugar, add melted chocolate and vanilla, mix thoroughly and put between layers. FRUIT FILLING *4 cupful chopped raisins J^ cupful chopped nuts 54 cupful chopped citron ^ cupful powdered sugar Yi cupful chopped dates whites of 3 eggs 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring To the stiffly beaten whites, add sugar, then the remain- ing ingredients, and spread before cold. 135 136 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK LEMON FILLING 1 cupful sugar juice of 1 lemon 1 egg Add sugar and juice to the well beaten egg, and cook till thickened. LEMON HONEY FILLING 1 cupful sugar yolks of 6 eggs 54 cupful butter 3 lemons Wash, press out juice and grate rind of lemons, put in double boiler, add butter and sugar. When near boiling point add well beaten yolks, stirring constantly. Keep stirring till mixture becomes very thick. This is good in sandwiches as well as cake, MARSHMALLOW FILLING No. 1 y z lb. chopped marshmallows ^ cupful water 2 cupfuls sugar whites of 2 eggs Y 2 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Boil water and sugar till it hairs, remove from fire and stir in stiffly beaten whites, then the marshmallows and flavoring, stirring briskly till cold. This quantity is suffi- cient filling for a three layer cake. Chopped nuts may be spread over layers before adding filling, if desired. MARSHMALLOW FILLING No. 2 1 lb. marshmallows */3 cupful boiling water 1 cupful sugar Yz teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Boil sugar and water till it hairs, remove from fire, slowly PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 137 stir in the melted marshmallows, add flavoring and stir till right consistency to spread. NUT FILLING 2 cupfuls chopped nuts */ cupful sugar 1 tablespoonful melted choco- 2 tablespoonfuls cream late Yt teaspoonful butter Mix all together thoroughly and put between layers. NUT AND FRUIT FILLING 2 cupfuls chopped nuts 1 cupful citron 2 cupfuls chopped raisins 1^ cupfuls chopped figs little wine Put nuts and fruit through food chopper, and rub all together with enough wine to form a paste. Put be- tween layers. ORANGE FILLING 3 tablespoonfuls orange juice 1 teaspoonful lemon juice 1 tablespoonful butter confectioner's sugar Heat juices and butter just enough to melt the butter, adding sufficient sugar for a thick filling. TART FILLING 2 grated apples juice of 1 lemon 2 eggs 1 cupful sugar Let apples and beaten eggs come to a boil, beat in sugar and spread when cool. ABOUT ICINGS COLORED ICINGS Use cranberry juice or pieces of beets for pink. Grape juice makes violet. Spinach makes green. Yolks of eggs produce yellow. Dip a knife frequently in cold water when spreading. When icing runs down the sides of cake, a strip of par- affin paper pinned around, standing above the top, will prevent it. The paper may be removed when icing is cold. BERRY ICING About 8 crushed strawberries beaten with confectioner's sugar till right to spread. Any juicy berries may be substituted. BOILED ICING 1 cupful granulated sugar pinch of cream tartar Yi cupful water white of 1 egg flavoring Boil water and sugar about three minutes ; beat the white of the egg slightly, and add half of the slightly boiled water and sugar, and a pinch of cream tartar, beating constantly. As soon as the remainder of the syrup will hair, pour it into the mixture and beat until cold. Flavor. 138 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 139 CHOCOLATE ICING No. 1 \Yz cupfuls sugar 54 cupful melted chocolate 3 /4 cupful cream 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Mix sugar, cream and chocolate, boiling four or five minutes. Remove from fire, add flavoring and beat till mixture thickens. Spread quickly over cake, frequently dipping knife in hot water. CHOCOLATE ICING No. 2 Use any preferred rule for icing. Melt one-half cupful Baker's chocolate by placing in dish over teakettle of boiling water, setting in a small dish inside of a larger one containing water boiling, or placing a small tin or granite dish over a gas burner turned low, or on a stove where it's not too hot. Spread this melted chocolate over the icing, making an effect like chocolate creams. A sprinkling of cinnamon in the chocolate is a pleasant change in flavor. COCOANUT ICING Use any preferred rule for icing. Stir in the shredded cocoanut, or press it carefully over icing before it hardens on the cake. FRUIT ICING Add one-half cupful chopped figs, raisins, or any desired fruit to any preferred icing. 140 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK MAPLE ICING No. 1 2 cupfuls ground maple sugar 1 cupful thin cream Put the maple sugar through the food chopper, boil with the cream for fifteen minutes. Remove from fire and beat with an egg beater till thick enough to spread. Walnut meats placed on an icing while soft, is a nice trimming. MAPLE ICING No. 2 1 cupful maple syrup confectioner's sugar y z cupful chopped nuts Stir the sugar into the syrup till thick enough to spread ; add the nuts or fruit. MARSHMALLOW ICING 154 cupfuls sugar 54 Ib. marshmallows 54 cupful butter 54 cupful water Melt the marshmallows in a dish set in a larger dish of water boiling. Boil sugar, butter and water till it hairs, add marshmallows and beat, till ready to spread. NUT ICING Add one-half cupful chopped nuts to any preferred icing. ORANGE ICING 1 egg */t teaspoonful orange flavor- 1 teaspoonful cold water ing powdered sugar To the well beaten egg add water and flavoring, beating and stirring in enough sugar to spread. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 141 UNCOOKED ICING */4 cupful cream 2 tablespoonfuls butter melted confectioner's sugar 1 teaspoonful flavoring While beating cream, add gradually enough sugar for the mixture to spread. Then add butter and flavoring. YELLOW ICING yolk of 1 egg 1 tablespoonful water juice of y 2 lemon confectioner's sugar Add the lemon juice to the beaten yolk, water and enough sugar to make it quite stiff. COOKIES If your cookies are inclined to burn, bake them on the pans turned bottom side up. Place cookies in pans with a pancake turner. Cookies take but a few minutes to bake. Place cookies while warm in a cloth in a covered jar. CHOCOLATE COOKIES Use Cocoanut Cooky recipe, with the exception of chang- ing cup of cocoanut to one cupful of melted chocolate. COCOANUT COOKIES y^ cupful sugar "% teaspoonful salt */2 cupful butter . y z teaspoonful lemon flavoring 54 cupful milk 1 teaspoonful baking powder 1 cupful grated cocoanut 1 cupful flour Cream butter and sugar, add milk, cocoanut, salt, flavor- ing, and baking powder stirred in with the sifted flour. Roll thin, cut out and bake. FRUIT COOKIES Use recipe for Cocoanut Cookies, substituting chopped fruit for cocoanut. Place them when cold in a jar with paraffin paper be- tween each layer. 142 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 143 GINGER COOKIES 2 cupfuls molasses 2 eggs 1 cupful butter 1 tablespoonful ginger 1 cupful sugar 1 teaspoonful soda ^2 cupful sour milk flour Cream butter and sugar, add beaten eggs, milk, soda dis- solved in little water, ginger, and flour enough for dough to roll thin. Cut and bake in buttered pans in quick oven. GINGER SNAPS 1 cupful molasses 1 tablespoonful ginger Y-L cupful sugar 1 teaspoonful soda y 2 cupful butter flour Heat the molasses and stir in the sugar, add softened butter, soda dissolved in little water, ginger, and suffi- cient flour to make a thin dough. Roll, cut, and bake in buttered pans in quick oven, being careful not to burn. OATMEAL COOKIES 1 cupful sugar 2 eggs 1 cupful butter 1 teaspoonful nutmeg 1 cupful sour milk 1 teaspoonful cinnamon 3 cupfuls flour 1 teaspoonful soda 3 cupfuls oatmeal pinch of salt Cream butter and sugar, add beaten eggs, milk, soda dis- solved in little water, salt, spices, flour and oatmeal alter- nately. Roll and cut, or drop from a dessert spoon on buttered tins to bake. 144 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK PEANUT COOKIES 1 tablespoonful butter 1 egg 2 tablespoonfuls sugar y 2 teaspoonful baking powder 2 tablespoonful milk pinch of salt y 2 cupful flour 2 cupfuls chopped peanuts Cream butter and sugar, add beaten egg, milk, salt, pea- nuts, and baking powder sifted in with the flour. Roll thick and cut, or drop on buttered tins from a teaspoon. Any preferred nuts may be used. SUGAR COOKIES 2 cupfuls sugar caraway seeds or flavoring \Yz cupfuls sour milk \y 2 tablespoonfuls boiling wa- 1 cupful butter ter 2 eggs 1 teaspoonful baking powder flour 1 teaspoonful soda Cream butter and sugar, add beaten eggs, milk, soda dis- solved in the boiling water, any desired flavoring, and baking powder sifted with flour enough to make dough roll out soft and thin. Cut in any desired shape. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA CHILLED DISHES CURRANT CREAM 1 cupful water whites of 2 eggs y 2 cupful sugar \y 2 tablespoonfuls gelatine 2 cupfuls currants juice of 1 orange juice of 1 lemon Boil water and sugar, add gelatine dissolved in just enough hot water to cover it, orange and lemon juice, and currants that have been crushed through a strainer. Place on ice to chill, then mix in the stiffly beaten whites, place the mixture in a tightly covered mould and pack in ice to chill. 2 lemons 5 eggs To the well beaten yolks of the eggs, beat in the juice and grated rind of the lemons, sugar, let come to the boiling point and stir in lightly the stiffly beaten whites. When well stirred in, place in a mould and pack in or set on ice to cool. NUT CREAM 2 cupfuls cream 1 cupful chopped dates y 2 cupful sugar y z cupful chopped figs y 2 cupful chopped nuts white of 1 egg y 2 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring To the stiffly whipped cream, stir in all the other ingredi- 145 146 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK ents, put in a mould, cover tightly and pack in a bucket with finely chopped ice and salt for several hours. FREEZING ICE CREAM Put ice and salt in the freezer and press pieces of news- paper all around the top, covering all with the ice sack. Turn the crank a few times, let stand fifteen minutes, then turn for about five minutes. After the cream is frozen, pack in pieces of newspaper very closely, instead of using more ice. MAPLE ICE CREAM 2 cupfuls milk 2 cupfuls cream 1 cupful maple syrup 3 eggs 1 teaspoonful vanilla flavoring Scald the milk in double boiler and add the syrup, then the well beaten eggs and cook till thickened. When cold, add the cream whipped. Freeze, and serve with small pieces of preserved ginger scattered over each dish. PEACH ICE CREAM 10 large peaches 1 cupful cream 25/2 cupfuls sugar 1 teaspoonful pistachio flavor- 1 quart milk ing Mash the peaches with sugar, add the other ingredients, having each one very cold, mix well and put in freezer. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 147 PISTACHIO f cupful sugar green coloring 1 cupful mashed strawberries 1 cupful milk 2 cupfuls whipped cream y z cupful pistachio nuts 1 box gelatine Dissolve gelatin in a little warm water, to one-half of it add one-half the sugar, berries and one-half the cream. Stir chopped nuts in the scalded milk, let cool, add the remainder of the gelatin, sugar and cream, tint green with coloring purchased at drug or candy store. Then put one spoonful of first one, then the other mixture, into a mould and freeze. PLAIN ICE CREAM 1 pint cream 1 cupful sugar 1 pint milk 1 egg 1 teaspoonful flavoring Beat in sugar to thoroughly beaten egg, add the other ingredients and any preferred flavoring. Put in double boiler and get hot, but do not boil. When very cold, pour into freezer. This serves six people. The custard may be prepared the day before. Fill sherbet glasses half full of vanilla ice cream, add to the top a spoonful of jam and over that a large spoonful of whipped cream. Vanilla ice cream is nice served in half a cantaloupe. So is coffee ice cream. SAUCES FOR ICE CREAMS CREME DE MENTHE SAUCE 1 cupful cream mint flavoring Yz cupful sugar nuts green . coloring To the stiffly whipped cream add sugar, flavoring and coloring (which may be purchased at drug or candy store). Serve the ice cream in sherbet cups, put the sauce on top and sprinkle with a few finely chopped nuts. CHOCOLATE SAUCE y z cupful milk 4 tablespoonfuls melted choco- 1 cupful sugar late Mix milk, chocolate and sugar in double boiler, stirring till sugar is dissolved, then boiling till syrup hairs. Serve ice cream in sherbet glasses, pouring hot syrup over it. STRAWBERRY SAUCE Boil for ten minutes three-fourths of a cupful sugar and one-half a cupful of water. Put a pint of strawberries through a sieve. When syrup is cold, add the berries and one-half teaspoonful vanilla. Serve with vanilla ice cream. GRAPE SHERBET 1 cupful grape juice 1/4 cupfuls sugar 1 cupful milk juice of 1 lemon Allow the milk to become very cold in the freezer before adding the other portions, then freeze. 148 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 149 LEMON SHERBET 1 quart milk juice of 2 lemons 2y 2 cupfuls sugar juice of 1 orange Strain orange and lemon juice, add sugar and melt over fire. When melted, set out to cool. Have the milk thor- oughly chilled in the freezer and when the juices are cold, add to the milk and freeze in the usual way. ICE SUBSTITUTE If ice is not obtainable, put in a box about three feet square, coarse salt to the depth of five inches. Keep it moist to set milk, butter and food in. To prevent dishes slipping when placed on ice in the refrigerator, first place a newspaper over the ice. TO KEEP BUTTER WITHOUT ICE Put the butter in a small pan, and set this small pan in a larger pan which contains enough water to reach the top of the butter pan. Put two tablespoonfuls of salt in this water. Place a flower pot in the water and after it has absorbed all it will hold, invert it over the butter. Re-soak the flower pot occasionally. SERVING PUNCH ARTISTICALLY Heat a stove poker and melt a small hollow in the center of a large block of ice. Keep punch ready to fill in this hollow as fast as it is used. PUNCHES CURRANT PUNCH 1 cupful cracked ice 1 cupful currant juice Yz cupful sugar 1 tablespoonful lemon juice 10 sprays fresh mint Shake ice and sugar till sugar is dissolved, then add mint, pouring over it the lemon. Add currant juice and enough water to make one quart of this liquid. If too strong, add more water. FRUIT PUNCH \% doz. lemons 10 quarts water 1 doz. oranges 8 cupfuls sugar 1 doz. bananas 1 pint canned raspberry juice a few strawberries or cherries Roll lemons and oranges to loosen juice, slice, slice bananas, add the other ingredients and ice, and serve from a punch bowl. GRAPE JUICE PUNCH juice of 6 lemons 2 cupfuls sugar juice of 2 oranges 2 quarts Apollinaris water 1 quart grape juice small pieces of pineapple Boil sugar with enough cold water to cover it, till it resembles syrup. Let it get perfectly cold, then mix all but Apollinaris water in the punch bowl, adding that water just before serving. Have plenty of ice in the bowl. 150 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 151 RUSSIAN TEA PUNCH 1 quart strong tea 2 tablespoonfuls orange juice 2 cupfuls sugar Vz cupful lemon juice 1 quart Apollinaris sliced orange, pineapple and cherries Have all ingredients ice cold, mix and pour over ice in punch bowl just before serving. TEMPERANCE PUNCH 5 lemons 1 quart water 1 cupful sugar 1 quart ginger ale y z doz. sprays of mint Slice lemons, cover with sugar and let stand one hour. Add water and ginger ale in equal proportions till strong enough to suit. Crush part of the mint sprays and add to the punch which should be poured over a block of ice in the punch bowl. VIOLET PUNCH 1 cupful grated pineapple fresh violets 4 cupfuls water 2 quarts water 2 cupfuls sugar 1 cupful grape juice 1 cupful strong tea juice of 2 oranges juice of 2 lemons Cook pineapple in two cupfuls water fifteen minutes, strain through cheese cloth, add two more cupfuls water and sugar, and boil ten minutes. Let cool, add cold tea, two quarts of water and other ingredients, pour over ice in punch bowl and serve with two violets in each glass. Have the punch bowl surrounded by violets, if a dainty effect is desired. 152 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK WINE PUNCH 2 quarts wine 3 sliced oranges 2 sliced lemons 2 quarts Apollinaris , 2 cupfuls sugar Have all of these ice cold, mix and pour over ice in a punch bowl. Or use these ingredients 2 quarts wine 1 quart champagne 1 quart Apollinaris COLD BEVERAGES FOR COLD WATER Keep a large bottle of cold water with half a lemon over the top, in the refrigerator. By refilling when necessary, cold drinking water is always ready. In case of emergency, water may be cooled by placing it in a tin vessel covered with a coarse wet cloth where a breeze blowing on it will cause it to cool, by evapora- tion. CLARET CUP No. 1 1 quart claret rind of cucumber 1 cupful sugar 1 liqueur glass brandy 1 liqueur glass curacoa Mix all together, let stand thirty minutes, remove cucum- ber rind and add ice. CLARET CUP No. 2 $4 cupful seedless raisins 2 quarts Apollinaris 1 quart cold water 1 4-in. stick of cinnamon 2 cupfuls sugar 1 cupful lemon juice 1 pint claret l 3 /^ cupfuls orange juice sliced fruits Simmer the raisins in the water thirty minutes. Strain, add cinnamon broken in small pieces, sugar, and half the lemon juice. Boil all -together for five minutes. Then add orange and remainder of lemon juice, strain and let become ice cold. Put in the punch bowl a block of ice, 153 154 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK pour the claret over it, then the mixture and then just before serving, the Apollinaris. Put in small slices of fruits. This is for a company of twenty five. FRUIT COCKTAIL Cut pineapples, bananas and strawberries in small pieces enough to fill one cup. Fill another cup with small pieces of grapefruit pulp, mix, and add 1/3 cupful sherry wine y z cupful sugar J4 cupful brandy pinch of salt Mix and pour over the fruit, set on ice and when cold, serve in cocktail glasses. GINGER AND GRAPE BEVERAGE Use equal parts of ginger ale and grape juice. Serve ice cold in cocktail glasses, with maraschino cherries on top. A few small pieces of cracked ice may be in the glass. ICED FRUIT JUICE 2 cupfuls sugar 2 quarts water juice of 1 lemon 2 cupfuls raspberry juice 1 small grated pineapple Mix and serve with ice in glasses. ICED TEA Into a large size granite tea-pot put six teispoonfuls of tea, and pour on it three cupfuls of water that has just PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 155 boiled about two minutes. Cover and stand in a warm place five minutes. Strain into any desired tea-pot, ready to pour into glasses half filled with cracked ice. A crushed mint leaf may be placed in each glass, and a little lemon juice added. Half a dozen cloves added to tea leaves just before pour- ing boiling water on, gives a good flavor. KUMISS 1 quart fresh milk 1 tablesponful sugar 154 cupfuls warm water 1/3 cake compressed yeast Dissolve yeast in water, and sugar in milk, stir all to- gether, bottle and cork very tightly. Leave in a moder- ately warm place for six hours, then put in a cold place. Never fill bottles more than two-thirds full. LEMONADE Cut lemons in two, remove the juice with a lemon reamer and pour into glasses, or according to quantity required, pour into a pitcher. Sweeten to taste. Dissolve the sugar in a little hot water and let cool before adding. One ordinary sized lemon makes three glasses of lemon- ade. Add sugar and ice water or pour water over cracked ice in glasses. A cupful of grape or raspberry juice, or a few crushed mint leaves are good in a pitcher of lemonade. 156 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK LEMON SYRUP FOR LEMONADE 2 quarts water 4 cupfuls sugar \Y 2 cupfuls lemon juice Boil water and sugar about ten minutes, add lemon juice, pour into fruit jars and set in refrigerator. Dilute part of the syrup with ice water for lemonade, making strong as desired. OATMEAL WATER Mix one teacupful oatmeal to a paste with a little cold water. Pour over it one quart boiling water and let it get cold. A few drops of lemon juice may be added. Drink it as cold as desired. ORANGEADE juice of 1 orange 1 egg juice of Yz lemon sugar Pour the well beaten egg in a glass, add juices, fill the glass with water and sweeten to taste. Ice if desired. SODA WATER 1 quart sugar juice of 1 lemon 3 pints boiling water whites of 3 eggs Yz cupful flour 2 tablespoonfuls wintergreen 2 oz. tartaric acid flavoring Mix acid, sugar, lemon juice and boiling water and boil three minutes. Let partially cool, and add the stiffly beaten whites into which flour has been smoothed. Add any desired flavoring, bottle, and keep in a cool place. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 157 .Shake well before using. Fill a glass two-thirds full of ice water, put in two tablespoonfuls of the syrup, add while stirring rapidly, one-fourth teaspoonful of soda. CREME de MENTHE mint syrup juice of 2 lemons 1 pint brandy Wash about one dozen sprays of fresh mint, place in a fruit jar and pour over them the strained juice of the lemons, then the brandy. Cover closely, let stand from one to two weeks, according to the desired strength, strain, sweeten to taste with syrup, cork tightly, and keep in a cool dark place. MANHATTAN COCKTAIL a piece of lemon peel a dash of angostura bitters 5/2 jigger vermouth a little syrup y 2 jigger whiskey a little orange juice Put in a mixing glass half filled with ice. Stir thoroughly, strain, and pour into cocktail glasses. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA HOT BEVERAGES CHOCOLATE Take a piece of Baker's chocolate one inch square and melt on a small dish on the stove, set in another dish of hot water over a teakettle of boiling water, or in the oven. Heat two cupfuls milk, stir in melted chocolate and bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Serve with cream and sugar, if desired. A marshmallow may be dropped in each cup just before serving. A drop of vanilla may be added to each cup. COFFEE Have a large bottomed granite coffee pot (because it heats quickly and does not boil over). Take one heaping tablespoonful of ground coffee for each person and one extra tablespoonful for "the pot." Crush in the hand two or more egg shells (saved for this purpose), stir in with the coffee, add one and one-fourth cupfuls cold water for each person ; boil three minutes, allow to remain hot, but not boiling, about two or more minutes. This makes one cup delicious clear strong coffee for each. If more than this is desired, add coffee and water in the same proportion. When serving, pour the coffee on the cream, not cream on the coffee. Add a tiny pinch of salt to coffee for an agreeable flavor. 158 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 159 Adding half a dozen raisins to a pot of coffee is a pleas- ing change. A pinch of flour added to the coffee before water is poured over, is another way of "settling." When cream is slightly soured, a little soda stirred in will restore its sweetness for use in coffee. DRIP COFFEE Pour boiling water into a drip coffee pot to get it hot, then pour it out, and put one tablespoonful finely ground coffee in the bag, fasten it in and pour over it two cupfuls freshly boiling water. When the water has drained through the bag, pour it in again, drain, and continue to pour and drain four times. Remove the bag and if the coffee is too strong, add boiling water. Be sure to clean the bag by scraping off the grounds with a knife, wash- ing it in cold water, and having it perfectly dry before using again. Serve the coffee with cream. This coffee is made in five minutes and is delicious. TEA For a teapot holding about four cupfuls, put in two tea- spoonfuls tea, pour in freshly boiling water, set in a warm place to stand five minutes before serving. Milk should never be used with tea, and only a little cream, if any. To take it with lemon juice is considered by experts the proper way to drink it. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA CANDIES AND SWEETS FONDANT This is the foundation for most candies, and should be kept a day or two before using. With it almost an end- less variety of candies may be made, viz : 2 cupfuls sugar 1 cupful water J4 teaspoonful cream of tartar Put these ingredients to boil, not stirring after sugar i? dissolved. After about five minutes try it in cold water, to see if it can be moulded by hand. Beware of cooking it too long. Let cool gradually, then stir briskly till creamy and ready to knead by hand. Work in a little sugar if the mass becomes sticky. Set away in an earthen dish covered with a damp cloth for a day or two. Then flavor and form into candies of any preferred kind. BUTTER SCOTCH 1 cupful sugar ^ cupful butter % cupful molasses 2 tablespoonfuls boiling water 1 tablespoonful vinegar Boil all together till it hardens in cold water. Pour into buttered pan, when sufficiently cool mark with a knife into squares. CHOCOLATE PEPPERMINTS 3 cupfuls granulated sugar 4 oz. melted chocolate 1 cupful hot water 1 teaspoonful cream of tartar 5 drops oil of peppermint Boil water, sugar and cream of tartar till it hairs. Re- 160 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 161 move from fire and add peppermint, beating constantly till it begins to cool, when it must be dropped quickly from a teaspoon on buttered or paraffin paper. When cold, dip in the melted chocolate and return to paper to harden. If the melted chocolate becomes curdled, add a little olive oil. Any desired flavoring may be used. DIVINITY CANDY 2 2/3 cupfuls sugar 2/3 cupful corn syrup 2/3 cupful water 1 cupful nuts whites of 2 eggs Stir sugar, water and syrup together, boiling till it hardens in cold water, making a tinkling sound when it hits the cup. Mix the stiffly beaten whites with nuts, pour the syrup slowly into the mixture, beating con- stantly until it is cool enough to form in a ball, then roll out on a buttered platter and cut in slices. DIVINITY FUDGE 2 cupfuls sugar y 2 cupful corn syrup 1 cupful water 1 cupful chopped fruit whites of 2 eggs Boil sugat, water and syrup rapidly together till the mixture forms a soft ball when dropped into cold water. Pour the hot syrup slowly into the stiffly beaten whites, beating constantly, and as soon as the mixture begins to harden, stir in a cupful of chopped citron, candied cher- 162 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK ries, orange, or similar fruits. Pour the fudge on to a but- tered dish, and cut it in squares before it is cold. NUT KISSES whites of 2 eggs 54 teaspoonful flavoring 1 cupful pulverized sugar 1 cupful chopped nuts pinch of salt To the well beaten eggs, add sugar, then nuts, salt and flavoring, beating with a spoon as ingredients are added. Drop from a small spoon in little balls on buttered tins and bake slowly. KISSES 5 tablespoonfuls powdered whites of 3 eggs sugar 1 teaspoonful flavoring To the stiffly beaten whites, add flavoring and sugar, dropping from a dessert spoon on a buttered paper in a pan, baking till slightly browned. AFTER DINNER MINTS white of 1 egg confectioner's sugar same quantity of water y z teaspoonful peppermint flavoring Mix the beaten white and water, adding sugar till the mixture may be kneaded like bread on a board without sticking. Add flavoring, knead again, roll and cut any preferred shape, and set away on a paraffin paper for two days. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 163 PEANUT CANDY 2 cupfuls molasses y z cupful vinegar 1 cupful sugar 1 cupful peanuts 1 cupful water butter, size of egg Boil all but the peanuts together till the mixture hardens in cold water. Then stir in the peanuts with skins re- moved. Pour on buttered plates to cool. POPCORN BALLS 34 cupful coffee sugar % cupful butter 94 cupful granulated sugar 1 tablespoonful vinegar y z cupful molasses % teaspoonful soda Yz cupful water 4 qts. freshly popped corn Butter a stew pan or kettle and boil in it without stirring the water, molasses, sugar and vinegar. When it will hair, add butter. When the mixture hardens, in cold water, add soda and pour over corn, stirring with a mix- ing spoon. Dip the hands in cold water and form the mixture into balls, continuing to dip the hands in cold water when making each ball, working rapidly before the syrup hardens. It is sometimes necessary to keep the dish containing the mixture in another dish of hot water to prevent hardening before balls are formed. Keep the finished balls in a cold place. PULLED CREAM CANDY 4 Ibs. sugar water 1 teaspoonful cream of tartar flavoring Use enough water to cover sugar in which cream of tartar 164 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK has been stirred in a stew pan, boil this till it hardens slightly in cold water. Flavor, pour in buttered tins, and pull when cool enough to handle. PULLED MOLASSES CANDY 3 cupfuls sugar 1 cupful boiling water 1 cupful molasses 3 tablespoonfuls vinegar ^ cupful melted butter ^ teaspoonful cream of tartar Yn teaspoonful soda Heat molasses, sugar, water and vinegar to boiling point, add cream of tartar, stirring occasionally. Boil till it hardens in cold water, stirring often toward the last. When almost done, add butter and soda. Pour into but- tered pans till cool enough to pull. It may be cut with scissors in small pieces. SEA FOAM CANDY 3 cupfuls sugar 1 tablespoonful vinegar 1 cupful water whites of 2 eggs 1 cupful chopped meats 1 teaspoonful vanilla Heat sugar, water and vinegar to boiling, stirring till sugar is dissolved. Boil without stirring till it hardens in cold water. Remove immediately from fire, and when partially cool, pour over the stiffly beaten whites, con- tinuing to beat until the mixture holds its shape. Add nuts, flavor, and drop from a teaspoon on paraffin paper. CANDIED MINT LEAVES mint fondant syrup Prepare fondant as per Fondant recipe. When the syrup PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 165 is boiled so it will "hair," remove from fire, stir a little and dip each small spray of mint in it, laying them on buttered paper to harden. CANDIED ORANGE AND LEMON PEEL Cut fresh peel from four oranges into one-half inch strips with scissors. Put in cold water, let boil five minutes, pour off this water, put into cold water and boil five minutes more, pour off this water, put into cold water and boil five minutes more for the third time. Make a syrup of one-half cupful water and one cupful granulated sugar, boil till begins to thicken, throw in peel, stirring constantly till syrup candies on peel. Turn candied peel into a colander to drain, then roll in sugar. CANDIED VIOLETS Violets may be prepared the same as Candied Mint leaves. The syrup may be colored by using grape juice, and the stems made green with spinach leaves crushed and juice added to the fondant. JELLIES, PRESERVES AND CANNED FRUITS Never cook fruit in dishes of tin or iron. To prevent mould gathering on preserves, keep a pan of lime on the shelves of the fruit closet, and have the closet dark and cool. When newly-made jelly is a trifle too thin, set the glasses in a pan and put in the warming oven until of the right consistency. One way to see if jelly has cooked sufficiently is to try it with a spoon. If it runs from the spoon in drops, not in a stream, it is cooked enough. When jellies refuse to "jell," add a pinch of powdered alum. If the preserving kettle be placed in a pan of boiling water, the contents can cook any length of time without burning, and need but occasional stirring. Sprinkling ashes on the stove lid under a kettle of boiling fruit will prevent the fruit burning on the bottom of the kettle. Drop half a dozen small agate marbles into the kettle of jelly. The marbles will keep in constant motion and prevent the juice from burning. HEAT SUGAR FOR JELLY Place the sugar in a granite dish in the oven and stir fre- 166 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 167 quently till all portions of the sugar are heated. Do not close the oven door. JELLY BAGS AND GLASSES Make a jelly bag from coarse white flannel, pointed on the bottom. Bind the top and sew strong loops to sus- pend it by. The little hair like threads on the flannel seem to hold every little roughness, making the juice perfectly clear. Have the bag as large as will hang in the kettle. Put a stout stick through the loops and suspend it in the kettle with enough cold water to cover the fruit. Cook until soft, lifting the bag occasionally to stir the fruit about. When the fruit is cooked very soft, sus- pend the bag in a convenient place to drip till morning. Do not squeeze it. In the morning, add the juice from the bag to that in the kettle, let boil about twenty min- utes, add an equal quantity of sugar and boil about ten minutes more. This is the usual way to make jelly. JELLY GLASSES Have them very clean, place in a large pan on the fire in cold water, and heat to boiling point. Turn glasses upside down to drain, then place quickly on a cloth wrung out of hot water. Fill the glasses and set aside for a day, then cover the jelly with melted paraffin, pouring it in the glasses from an old tea pot or gravy dish. When a glass is opened, save the paraffin and use it over and over. EASY WAY FOR JELLY Berries and soft fruit may be washed and crushed, placed 168 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK in a cheese cloth bag and squeezed carefully. Measure the juice and put in a kettle and boil ten minutes. Add an equal quantity of heated sugar, boil five minutes, and pour into glasses. APPLE JELLY Select perfect fruit, wash, cut out all imperfect parts, re- move stems and cores, and put in a kettle with cold water to cover. Boil slowly till apples are soft. Strain through a jelly bag, and suspend the bag to drip over night. Next morning, add the juice to that in the kettle, boil twenty minutes, add an equal amount of heated sugar. Let boil ten minutes, skim and turn into glasses. A few quinces added to apples make a delicious jelly. A rose geranium leaf placed in the bottom of a glass before pouring the apple jelly in it, will impart a delight- ful flavor. A drop of oil of cinnamon put in apple jelly is much liked by many. A handful of cherry leaves thrown into apple jelly while boiling will give the jelly a perfect cherry flavor. The leaves may be removed after boiling about twenty minutes. APPLE AND FIG JAM Wash and wipe the desired quantity of apples, cut in two, but do not peel or core, remove stem, cover with cold water and cook till soft. Pour in a jelly bag to strain. Cut each fig of the desired quantity into three PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 169 or four pieces, cover with cold water and cook till soft, then cool. After the figs are cold, stir in with the apple juice and sugar, using one pint of sugar to one pint of juice, and two cupfuls figs to four pints of juice. Boil this mixture till it jellies, then put it in sealed jars. Part of this jam may be flavored with a little whole ginger. CRANBERRY JELLY Cook one quart cranberries in one cupful of water for ten minutes. Put through a sieve, add one cupful of sugar, stir till sugar is dissolved, then pour into glasses. Do not allow juice to boil after adding sugar. CURRANT JELLY Wash and remove imperfect berries, but not stems. Mash, bring to the boiling point and simmer till currants are colorless. Strain through a jelly bag. Let drip over night. Next morning, measure the juice and boil for five minutes. Add an equal quantity of heated sugar, boil five minutes and pour into glasses. Currants and raspberries make one of the very best jellies. GRAPE JELLY Pick over the grapes, wash and remove from stems. Put in a kettle, heat to boiling point, mash and boil twenty minutes. Put through a colander, then through a jelly bag to drip till morning. Measure the juice and boil ten minutes. Add an equal quantity of heated sugar, boil five minutes and pour into glasses. 170 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK RED RASPBERRY JELLY Pick over the berries, wash and cook slowly till soft, using one cupful of hot water to each quart of berries. Let drip all night in a jelly bag. Next morning, measure the juice and allow an equal quantity of heated sugar. Cook enough apples to make one cupful of apple juice, strain, add to the berry juice and boil twenty minutes. Add the sugar and stir until dissolved, cook five minutes longer and turn into glasses. RHUBARB JELLY Wash, and cut rhubarb into small pieces, put in a kettle with cold water to cover and boil till soft. Let drip through a jelly bag over night. Do not squeeze. Meas- ure the juice next morning, and allow an equal quantity of heated sugar. Boil the juice fifteen minutes, add sugar and boil five minutes. To each quart add one teaspoonful of gelatine dissolved in a little cold water. As soon as gelatine is dissolved in the juice, pour into glasses. DRIED FRUIT JELLY Wash the fruit, let soak over night and cook in the same water. Cook till tender and proceed as in making Apple Jelly. ORANGE MARMALADE Wash and cut the peel in quarters from eight oranges and four lemons. Cook the peel until soft in enough boiling water to cover. Save four cups of this water and pour it PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 171 over three quarts of sugar. Scrape the white insides of the peelings with a spoon, throwing this inside lining away, and cut the peelings in narrow strips with the scis- sors. Remove the seeds and the tough skin from the orange, dividing it into small sections. Then cook the syrup, pulp and peelings all together for nearly one hour. CARROT PRESERVES Wash and scrape three pounds of carrots, steam until tender, add two quarts of sugar, grated rind and juice of six lemons, and one-half cupful chopped almonds. Cook thirty-five minutes. LEMON RIND PRESERVE During the summer, whenever lemonade is made, after squeezing the lemons, drop the shells into a jar of fresh water, keep it in the ice box and change the water twice a week. At the time of changing, drops of pure oil of lemon will be found floating on the water. Put these drops carefully in a bottle. After about two weeks, scrape the white inside out with a spoon and throw it away. Weigh the shells and add an equal weight of sugar and cook slowly till thick. RASPBERRY PRESERVES Take an equal weight of fruit and sugar. It is usually cupful for cupful. Cook one-fourth of the fruit till soft. Strain it, and pour the juice in the kettle with the sugar, stirring till sugar is dissolved. Put in the remainder of the fruit and boil for five minutes. Dip out the fruit and 172 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK put in jars till nearly full. Boil the syrup till it jellies, pour over the berries till jars are completely filled, and seal. If a tablespoonful of glycerine be added to each pound of fruit used in making jam, it will prevent crystallization. FRUIT JARS Turn fruit jars upside down to prevent fruit becoming mouldy. Put a teaspoonful of pulverized borax into a pan of cold water, put the jars in the pan and set on the fire till the water is at boiling point. Remove the jars, place on a cloth wrung from hot water, and fill immediately with fruit. Put on one rubber and screw on the cover. Let stand till just cool enough to handle, and to harden the paraffin. Pour the paraffin all over the rubber where it touches the jar and where it hits the cover. When opening jars, save the paraffin and use again. When a fruit jar cover refuses to come off, run a knife around the jar under the rubber band, and the cover will loosen immediately. SAVING PEELINGS Whenever apples, peaches or similar fruits are peeled, dry the peelings, and at preserving time they are fine for jelly. TO REMOVE PEACH SKINS Place the fruit in a pan and cover it with boiling water. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 173 Place another pan of the same size over this, and let stand until cool, and the skins will come off almost whole in the fingers. And when the peach is cut open, the pit will drop out. When putting away fruit jars if the rubbers are dropped inside and the cover screwed down, the rubbers will be just as good the next season. Discoloration on the hands from vegetables or fruit may be removed by dipping the hands in very strong tea and washing them in warm water. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA CANNING IN THE JARS CANNING APPLES Add four quarts of cold water to one quart of sugar and boil to a syrup and cool. Wash, wipe and cut in quarters rather tart apples and pack in fruit jars. As fast as a jar is filled, cover immediately with the syrup to prevent the fruit turning dark. When jars enough are ready to heat, put them in a wash boiler, galvanized tub or dish pan, setting them on small pieces of wood to prevent them from resting on the bottom. Put in cold water to nearly the top of the jars and let it boil ten minutes. Some of the fruit will cook down, and all such jars must be filled with hot syrup. Seal immediately. CANNING APRICOTS, PEACHES, PEARS, ETC. Proceed same as Canning Apples. CANNING PEACHES AFTER SEALING Prepare a basket of firm peaches by washing, wiping, peeling, quartering and removing pits. As fast as peeled, put into cold water to prevent turning dark. Add one quart of sugar to four quarts of water and boil to a thin syrup. Set the jars on a cloth wrung out of hot water, fill tightly with the fruit, and pour in boiling syrup to fill the jars completely. Seal immediately. Place the jars at once in a tub or wash boiler and cover with boiling water. Place a cover over them and leave until cold. Pour paraffin around each jar where cover hits the rubber 174 and where the rubber hits the glass. Old blankets or rugs may be used as a cover for jars in tubs. CANNING PEARS, QUINCES AND GRAPES Proceed as in JCanning Apples or Peaches. CANNING RHUBARB Wash, peel and cut rhubarb in inch lengths. Place im- mediately in jars, fill them, with fresh cold water and seal at once. CANNING TOMATOES Proceed as in Canning Peaches, substituting boiling water for syrup. SPICED PEACHES Wash and wipe firm peaches, but do not peel them. Add one and one-half quarts sugar to one quart of vinegar. As soon as the syrup boils, put in as many peaches as it will cover, cook till tender and seal in fruit jars. TUTTI FRUTTI Put one pint of French brandy into a three gallon stone jar. Put a layer of unsweetened stewed strawberries in the bottom, and cover with an equal quantity of sugar. Then add the fruits as they appear in market, stewing them till soft, adding one cupful of sugar to one cupful of fruit. Keep covered with a piece of thick white paper to fit in the jar. Dip the paper in olive oil and take it out each time fresh fruit is added. When the jar is filled, cover well and keep in a cool dark place. CANNING VEGETABLES CANNING GREEN BEANS String and break into one inch pieces, then proceed as in canning Peaches, substituting boiling water for syrup. CANNING CORN 9 cupfuls corn ^ cupful salt y z cupful sugar 2 cupfuls water Cut sweet corn from the cob, stir in with salt and sugar and boil twenty minutes. Pour into glass jars and seal as in canning fruits. After opening the corn for use, rinse in cold water to remove surplus salt. GREEN TOMATO MINCE MEAT 1 peck chopped green tomatoes 2 tablespoonfuls cinnamon 4 Ibs. sugar 1 tablespoonful cloves 1 Ib. raisins 2 tablespoonfuls salt 1 Ib. currants 1 tablespoonful allspice Y$ Ib. citron */ 2 cupful butter Put tomatoes through the food chopper to crush and loosen the juice, add all the other ingredients, cook until tender and can in glass jars, for use in winter. 176 CHUTNEY, CATSUP, PICKLES, ETC. APPLE CHUTNEY 6 tart apples 54 cupful brown sugar 4 tomatoes 1 teaspoonful ginger 1 onion pinch of cayenne pepper 1 cupful vinegar a clove of garlic Peel and chop apples and tomatoes, add onion and garlic grated, spices, sugar and vinegar. Mix well and boil ten minutes. Allow the mixture to cool, then seal in jars or bottles. BENGAL CHUTNEY 2 Ibs. green apples 1 teaspoonful ginger 54 lb. brown sugar 1 teaspoonful garlic 3 cupfuls vinegar dash of cayenne pepper Chop apples and mix all together in a stone jar and bake five or six hours till the mixture is like pulp. Seal in jars or bottles. EAST INDIA CHUTNEY 3 pints vinegar 2 oz. ground mustard 1 lb. brown sugar 4 oz. mustard seed 1 cupful salt 54 z tumeric 12 large sour apples y 2 oz. cayenne pepper 7 large tomatoes 4 oz. onions 1 lb. raisins 2 cloves of garlic Put all spices in a little cheese cloth bag and tie. Pare and chop the apples, tomatoes and onions, add the other 177 178 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK ingredients, mix all thoroughly and boil for two hours. Put through a colander and seal in jars or bottles. GOOSEBERRY CHUTNEY 2 pints goosberries 3 tablespoonfuls mustard V/z cupfuls raisins 3 tablespoonfuls ginger 3 onions 3 tablespoonfuls salt 1 cupful brown sugar y 2 teaspoonful cayenne pepper 1 quart vinegar J4 teaspoonful tumeric Chop onions and berries, put on to heat and add the other ingredients and cook thirty minutes. Strain through a sieve and seal. QUICK CHUTNEY Scald and peel one large tomato, chop, add one small chopped onion and one chopped green chili. Mix thor- oughly with one-half teaspoonful lemon juice and a pinch each of salt and sugar. CATSUP To keep catsup from moulding, place a few whole cloves on top just before sealing. Always keep pickles and vinegar in glass jars. PRUNE CATSUP 4 quarts prune pulp 1 teaspoonful cinnamon 3 cupfuls vinegar 3 teaspoonfuls pepper \y 2 cupfuls brown sugar y z teaspoonful cayenne pepper J4 cupful salt 2 cupfuls mustard 1 teaspoonful cloves Soak dried prunes over night. Drain and cook soft in PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 179 boiling water. Remove pits and put through colander. Mix the pulp thoroughly with all the ingredients, cook for one hour and stir constantly. Seal and allow to stand at least a month before using. TOMATO CATSUP 5^ bushel ripe tomatoes 1 tablespoonful allspice 2 cupfuls sugar 1 tablespoonful cloves 2 cupfuls vinegar 1 tablespoonful cinnamon 34 cupful salt 1 teaspoonful pepper }/2 teaspoonful cayenne pepper Scald and peel tomatoes, cut in small pieces and put in a preserving kettle to cook till soft. Strain through a sieve, add the other ingredients, cook about three hours and seal. Have the spices tied in a cheese cloth bag. CHILI SAUCE 1 doz. ripe tomatoes 2J^ tablespoonfuls brown 3 large onions sugar 3 large green peppers 2^ tablespoonfuls salt \y 2 cupfuls vinegar 1^4 teasponfuls ginger 2y z teaspoonfuls cinnamon 34 teaspoonful cloves Scald and peel tomatoes, slice and drain. Chop onions and peppers and cook all together about three hours till thick. Seal at once. QUICK CUCUMBER PICKLES 1 quart vinegar Y 2 cupful salt 1 cupful olive oil 1 oz. white mustard seed cucumbers Wash cucumbers, put in glass jars and pour the well 180 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK mixed ingredients over them. Cover, and allow to stand for a week before using. SMALL CUCUMBER PICKLES Wash and wipe four quarts small green cucumbers, put in a stone jar and add one cupful of salt dissolved in two quarts of boiling water, and let stand three days. Drain off this brine, heat it to boiling point, pour over the cu- cumbers, let stand a second three days, drain, heat and pour over and let stand for a third three days. Then drain, wipe the cucumbers, and pour over them one gallon of boiling water in which one tablespoonful of alum is dissolved. Let stand six hours and drain from alum water. Mix the following: 1 gallon vinegar 2 sticks of cinnamon 4 red peppers 2 tablespoonfuls allspice 2 tablespoonfuls cloves Boil these ingredients for ten minutes, then take one- fourth of it and boil with the cucumbers, a few at a time for ten minutes, putting the pickles as fast as boiled, into a stone jar. Strain the other three-fourths of the mixture over pickles in jar. DILE PICKLES Wash cucumbers and lay in water over night. Next morning pack tightly in jars and fill the spaces between the pickles with dill. Make a brine of three quarts water, one quart vinegar and one cupful salt, boil together and pour while hot over the pickles and seal. Dill may be added to suit the taste. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 181 FRENCH PICKLES 1 peck green tomatoes 2 quarts water <> onions 4 quarts vinegar 1 cupful salt 2 tablespoonfuls cloven 2 Ibs. brown sugar 2 tablespoonfuls ginger 2 tablespoonfuls cinnamon 2 tablespoonfuls allspice 2 tablespoonfuls mustard 1 teaspoonful cayenne pepper Slice tomatoes and onions, sprinkle with the salt and let stand over night. Next morning, drain, add two quarts of water and one quart of vinegar, boil fifteen minutes and drain. Then add the remaining two quarts of vinegar and the other ingredients and boil twenty minutes and set away in a covered crock, or seal in jars. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA WINES, FLAVORINGS AND VINEGARS GRAPE WINE Wash and pick grapes from stems, press out the juice, measure, and put in a stone jar with three pounds of sugar to each gallon. Skim it for twelve consecutive days. Then strain, and add one and one-half pints alco- hol to six gallons of juice. Pour in stone jars and cork tightly. STRAWBERRY WINE Proceed as for Grape Wine, using two and one-half pounds of sugar to each gallon of juice. UNFERMENTED GRAPE JUICE Have thoroughly fresh ripe grapes. Wash, remove skins, boil skins and pulp together in a little water till tender. Strain through cheese cloth, but do not squeeze. Hang up to drip several hours. Measure the juice, put it on to boil and as soon as it starts boiling, add half as much sugar as there is juice. Boil till sugar dissolves, put into jars and seal hot. MAKING LEMON FLAVORING No. 1 Cut the rinds of two lemons in small pieces, put them into a four ounce bottle, fill with deodorized strong alcohol and let stand in a warm place for one week. Put two 182 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 183 drachms fresh oil of lemon, four ounces of deodorized strong alcohol and the juice of half a lemon in a large bottle and strain into the contents the contents of the smaller bottle. MAKING LEMON FLAVORING No. 2 Cover small pieces of fresh lemon peel with brandy in tightly covered jars, and use the liquid later for flavoring. DRIED LEMON FLAVORING Put dried lemon peel through the food chopper two or three times, sift, and put the fine powder away for flavoring. MAKING ORANGE FLAVORING Proceed same as in making Lemon Flavoring. MAKING VANILLA FLAVORING No. 1 With one ounce of finely cut fresh vanilla beans, rub two ounces of sugar and put in a pint bottle. Pour over this four ounces of distilled water and ten ounces of 95% deodorized alcohol. Let stand for two weeks in a warm place, shaking occasionally. MAKING VANILLA FLAVORING No. 2 Proceed as in making Dried Lemon Flavoring. Vanilla should be kept in the dark. 184 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO CLARIFY VINEGAR OR WINE To each gallon of vinegar, pour in one pint or a little more, of new milk, and let stand one day. The milk will be curdled and caked in the bottom of the jar and all the sediment will adhere to it, and the vinegar may be drained off perfectly clear. WATERMELON VINEGAR Take the inside of very ripe watermelons, crush in a stone jar, strain the juice into glass jars, cover and set away to sour. Makes good vinegar. A small button of garlic in a quart of vinegar gives a good flavor to salads with which it is used. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA PERSONAL COMFORTS AND THINGS GOOD TO KNOW GOOD COMPLEXION CREAMS Plenty of buttermilk drank each day. At least a tablespoonful of olive oil each day. Tomatoes eaten daily. Onions eaten three times a week. Plenty of good drinking water. Apples eaten daily. CUTS, BURNS, ETC. Put a few drops of carbolic acid in the water to wash cuts, burns and bruises. Never close a cut with court plaster. When necessary to cover it to keep out dirt, or to prevent hitting it, fasten a soft piece of linen over it. AN INSECT IN THE EAR Hold a lighted lamp to the ear, and the insect will at once come toward it. TO REMOVE A SUBSTANCE FROM THE EYE To remove a foreign substance from the eye, slice a very thin piece from a raw potato, raise the lid and lay the 185 186 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK potato on the eyeball. Leave for a little time, remove and the substance will be found adhering to the potato. A moistened flax-seed may be used in the same manner as the potato piece. TO PREVENT EYE-GLASSES STEAMING Rub both sides of eye-glass lenses with soap or vaseline, wipe off with a soft cloth and polish with tissue paper or a silk handkerchief, and glasses will not steam in cold weather. TO REMOVE A FISH BONE FROM THE THROAT Swallow a raw oyster or a raw egg. BLISTERED HEELS If heels are blistered from slipping up and down in low shoes, paste four small half circles of velveteen smoothly to the side of the heel and the nap of the velveteen will prevent the foot slipping. Another way to prevent blistered heels from low shoes rubbing them, is to stick a strip of adhesive tape around the back of the heel at the spot where the shoe rubs. HOT CLOTHS Hot cloths may be quickly prepared by heating them in a steamer, which is easier than wringing them out of hot water. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 187 HOT WATER BAG Instead of the rubber bag for hot water, a screw top coffee can is a good substitute, as it never leaks, and keeps hot all night. Cover it with a washable case of outing flannel. Another good hot bag is one made of strong muslin with a washable cover. Heat clean sand in the oven and fill the bag. A bag filled with hot salt is also gjod. LOCKJAW PRECAUTION When a rusty nail or any other metal causes a wound, bathe it, and hold it for half an hour or more over a burn- ing woolen cloth. A piece of wool may be burned over a shovel of coals, or in any other way, just so the smoke pours on the wound. TO MAKE A MUSTARD PLASTER 2 teaspoonfuls mustard 2 teaspoonfuls ginger 2 teaspoonfuls flour water Mix the mustard, flour, and ginger with enough water to make a paste, and place between two pieces of soft muslin and apply. If it burns too much at first, lay on an extra piece of muslin and remove it later. TO STOP A SIMPLE NOSE BLEED Press with the fingers on the upper lip beneath the nostril. 188 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO EXTRACT A NEEDLE FROM THE FLESH Apply a magnet immediately. POISONS In case of accidental swallowing of poison, mix three tea- spoonfuls of mustard with a cupful of warm water and swallow as quickly as possible. TO REMOVE A SPLINTER Fill a wide-mouthed bottle nearly full of hot water, place the part containing the splinter over the mouth of the bottle and press tightly. The suction will draw the flesh down and the steam will remove the splinter. LAVENDER SMELLING SALTS 8 oz. carbonate of ammonia cut y z oz. oil of lavender in squares ^ oz. oil of bergamot 1 fluid ounce oil of cloves J^ oz. oil of cassia Put the ammonia into a smelling bottle, mix the oils thoroughly and pour just enough into the bottle to cover the ammonia, keeping the remainder to replenish the smelling bottle. TO RELIEVE THIRST WITHOUT WATER Keep a dry pebble or button in the mouth. BATHROOM AND TOILET TO CLEAN COMBS Put a few drops of ammonia in a basin of water and let the combs remain in it a few minutes, rinse and wipe. Combs may also be cleaned in gasoline. TO CLEAN A BATHTUB Use kerosene, gasoline, or turpentine on an enameled tub. FOR THE BATH Mix four ounces of alcohol, one-half ounce of ammonia and one drachm of oil of lavender, and pour a few drops into a bowl of water to perfume and soften it. FOR BATH BAGS 4 Ibs. oatmeal 2 quarts of bran l*/2 lb. powdered orrisroot 1 Ib. white castile soap iy 2 lb. almond meal 3 oz. violet sachet Have the soap dried and powdered, mix all together and keep in glass jars from which to fill small cheese cloth bags to use as sponges. Another pleasing softener and perfume is made with two and one-half pounds of fine oatmeal and four ounces of powdered orris root. Make cheese cloth bags about four inches square, and fill as wanted. 189 190 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK Two tablespoonfuls of powdered borax is good to soften the water in the bath. A few drops of lavender and cologne in the bath are pleasing. A few drops of camphor seems refreshing in a bath. TO CLEAN BRISTLE BRUSHES Wash in warm water in which a little baking soda is dis- solved, and rinse in warm water and turn bristle side down to dry. FOR THE HANDS Immediately after washing and wiping the hands, dip in vinegar and rub together till dry. Corn meal used with vinegar is good. Lemon juice is fine for removing stains from the hands. Putting salt into water for rinsing the hands after clean- ing them in soapy water, will be beneficial. A little granulated sugar should be kept on the wash- stand to dip the fingers in after covering with soap. The sugar makes a fine lather and leaves the hands very soft. Do not keep much sugar on the stand, as it soon gets hard, but add to it as needed. Rubbing the hands with a cut tomato once each day will remove stains and whiten the hands. FOR A DISCOLORED NECK Dissolve one teaspoonful of salt in one pint of fresh milk, PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 191 wash the neck with it at night, let it dry on, and wash off with warm water in the morning. TO CLEAN A SPONGE Rub lemon juice well into it, and rinse in several luke- warm waters, to remove a sour smell. THE TEETH Put a few drops of lemon juice in the water with which the teeth are brushed. Occasionally brush the teeth with salt. TO CLEANSE A TOOTHBRUSH Wash toothbrushes occasionally in a strong solution of salt and water and dip them, once in a while, in boiling water. TO MAKE A TOOTH POWDER Mix two ounces of precipitated chalk with two ounces of powdered orris root, then add twelve drops of eucalyptus and mix again. THE HAIR A DRY SHAMPOO Sift yellow corn meal till fine, and rub into the hair, brush thoroughly, and repeat. AN EGG SHAMPOO Beat two eggs, add the juice of a lemon, rub thoroughly through the hair, and rinse in several warm waters. Dry in sun and air. Rub dry salt into the hair at night, wear a night cap, and brush out all the salt in the morning, to make the hair lustrous. Washing hair in warm salt water is very good if not done too often. Always dry in sun and air. A GOOD SHAMPOO Lay a cake of Ivory soap in a pitcher, pour over it a pint of boiling water, and stir till there's a good lather. Add one teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda, wash the hair and scalp thoroughly and rinse in several warm waters. A SHAMPOO FOR AUBURN HAIR Put five cents worth of Salts of Tartar in a pint of warm water, rub into the hair, making a fine lather. Leave it a short time, and rinse in several warm waters. 192 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 193 WASHING BLOND HAIR After shampooing blond hair, to the last rinsing water, add the juice of half a lemon strained through a cloth. Dry in sun and air. TO KEEP HAIR IN CURL Put the white of an egg in a cup, beat to a froth, and fill the cup with rain water. Apply this to the hair, and roll on clean strips of old stockings and tie in bow knots. TO REMOVE TANGLES Put a little alcohol on the tangle. GLOVES, PARASOLS, ETC. TO MEND GLOVES Sew over and over on the wrong- side with cotton thread, or place court plaster of the same color on the underpart, smoothing till dry. TO PRESERVE NEW GLOVES Wrap in paraffin paper to prevent fading. TO FRESHEN BLACK KID GLOVES Cover with ink and polish with a soft cloth when dry. TO CLEAN CHAMOIS LEATHER Wash in a weak solution of soda and warm water. Soap the chamois skin with Ivory soap and soak it in the soda water for two hours. Rub it softly till clean, rinse in two soapy waters (not clear water), wring in a rough towel, dry in the air, and when nearly dry, pull carefully into shape. TO FRESHEN SUEDE KID Rub with a piece of emery paper. TO DRY-CLEAN WHITE GLOVES Lay the gloves on a table, rub into them Fuller's earth and powdered alum mixed in equal quantities, rub well, 194 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 195 then brush well, and sprinkle with dry bran and whiten- ing. Leave 'on a short time, then shake. TO WASH WHITE SILK GLOVES Wash at night with Ivory soap suds. Rinse well and let dry in the dark to prevent turning yellow. TO CLEAN WHITE KID GLOVES Put on the hands and proceed to wash them as though washing the hands in a bowl of gasoline. When clean, wipe dry on a clean white flannel or towel. Remove and hang out to air. Use gasoline out of doors. TO CLEAN A WHITE PARASOL Put in a tub of warm Ivory soap suds, and scrub inside and out, carefully, with a small scrubbing brush. Rinse well, and dry open, out of doors in the sun. If the para- sol is white silk, dry in the shade. TO CLEAN KHAKI TROUSERS Use warm water, soap, and a scrubbing brush. SHOES AND RUBBERS TO BLACKEN SHOES Use a discarded tooth brush to apply paste blacking. A few drops of paraffin added to shoe blacking will impart a good polish to damp shoes, and help preserve the leather. TO CLEAN PATENT LEATHERS Clean with olive oil, then polish briskly with a soft woolen cloth. Wipe off dust and dirt, clean with sweet milk, leaving the milk on for a few minutes, then wipe with a soft cloth. Wipe the patent leather to remove dust, then wipe with olive oil and polish with a soft cloth. CLEANING TAN SHOES Rub with the inside of a banana peel, then wipe dry with a soft cloth. A flannel cloth dipped in turpentine cleans tan leather. CLEANING WHITE CANVAS SHOES Use a preparation purchased at the stores where the shoes are sold. It is much more convenient to use and costs no more than preparations made at home. 196 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 197 CLEANING WHITE KID SHOES Dip a clean white flannel in benzine and rub the kid, dipping frequently into the benzine and rubbing quickly, then rub with a dry flannel. A piece of Art Gum is also good for cleaning kid, but if badly soiled, plenty of benzine or gasoline is better. FOR CREAKY SHOES Have a cobbler drive a couple of small wooden pegs into the soles. CARE OF NEW SHOES If allowed to stand over night in a pan with enough olive oil to cover the soles, they will last longer, and never creak. Rub new shoes with a slice of raw potato, and they will polish as easily as old ones. Coat the soles of new shoes with three or four coats of copal varnish and they will seldom need resoling. Rub new shoes occasionally with vaseline to prolong their wearing qualities. If the soles of shoes are oiled with a little vaseline about twice each month, and let dry over night, rubbers will seldom be needed to keep out dampness. Wet shoes should be stuffed with paper to absorb the moisture and prevent the leather getting hard. 198 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK INNER SOLES Inner soles for shoes may be cut from old felt hats. Soles for bedroom slippers may be cut from old felt hats and glued to the ordinary sole, or bound and sewed to a soft top shoe. SHOE LACES If shoe laces are slightly waxed, they will not come undone. Tie a shoe lace bow as usual, and before pulling the loops tight, slip a second loop through the center and tighten. This will never slip. TO SAVE RUBBERS Cut a heel shaped piece out of an old rubber and glue in the heel of the new one. Always mark your initials inside your rubbers. To varnish rubbers helps looks and wearing qualities. When heels of rubbers are worn out, cut them into strap or toe rubbers. Turn rubbers wrong side out to wash, and they will dry without rotting. HATS, FEATHERS, RIBBONS AND LACES TO CLEAN FELT HATS Rub corn meal carefully into the felt, and remove with a soft brush. Or scrub with corn meal and gasoline. The inner part of a stale loaf of white bread rubbed into the felt is sometimes very successful in cleaning. Rub the entire hat with fine sandpaper and it leaves the hat like new. To dust a felt hat, use a piece of velveteen. TO CLEAN STRAW HATS Clean a black chip hat with a soft cloth dipped in alcohol. To restore the color, use one-half pint hot water with one teaspoonful of ammonia. Cover the hat with a cloth wet in this mixture, let stand a few minutes, then place a warm iron over the cloth, and press into shape. TO FRESHEN BLACK STRAW HATS Mix one ounce of black sealing wax and one-half pint of alcohol. Leave the bottle in a warm place till the con- tents are creamy, shake the bottle well, and brush over the hat. TO CLEAN WHITE STRAW HATS Mix corn meal and gasoline, and scrub with a small scrub brush. Apply till clean, and brush dry. 199 200 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK Another method is to make a paste of sulphur and lemon juice and scrub the hat with it, rinsing in clear water, very quickly. And still another way is to pour peroxide of hydrogen on the hat and brush it with a small scrub brush. Repeat till clean, shape the hat, and dry in the sun. TO CLEAN AND FRESHEN CHIFFON HATS Mix equal parts of magnesia, French chalk and pulverized soap, sprinkle thickly on the hat, leave for a day, and brush off. If a chiffon or flower hat is caught in a heavy shower, shake it well and suspend it bottom side up in some con- venient place to dry. It will rev-ive like new. Any lace or flower or other hat may be dipped in gasoline entirely, and cleaned thoroughly. Always be careful to use gasoline out of doors. TO CLEAN FEATHERS Put one cupful of corn meal, one-half cupful of white flour and three tablespoonfuls of powdered borax into a paper bag and shake the feathers in this till clean, then remove and shake. This also cleans laces, etc. Feathers are also cleaned by dipping in gasoline, rubbing the feathers toward the tip, then shaking dry. This does not take out the curl. Never use gasoline indoors. TO CLEAN WHITE FEATHERS Make a paste of flour and gasoline. Put the feather in it PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 201 and rub carefully the entire length, toward the tip. Re- peat till clean. Rinse in clear gasoline and shake dry. TO CLEAN RIBBONS "Wash ribbons" washed in warm soapy water, squeezed as dry as possible, smoothed, placed on an ironing board and held down with a warm flat iron in one hand while the other hand pulls the ribbon quickly under the iron till it is dry, will be like new. This is good for cleaning ribbons. Dip in lukewarm water, spread on a table and scrub with a brush rubbed in Ivory soap. Rinse in clean warm water and press be- tween folds of thin cloth. TO WASH DELICATE RIBBONS Immerse in salt and water, and dissolve shavings of Ivory soap in boiling water till like jelly when cooled slightly. To a little of this jelly, add warm water to form a good suds, add a pinch of borax, put the ribbon in and squeeze back and forth through the hands till clean. Then rinse in warm, then in cold water, roll smoothly in a towel and in about two hours, press between paper. Gasoline is fine for cleaning ribbons. Do not use gaso- line indoors. Ribbons and silk may be scrubbed with Ivory soap and gasoline, rinsing in clean gasoline. TO STIFFEN RIBBONS Put a teaspoonful of sugar in a cupful of water and rinse 202 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK ribbons, and when pressed between paper, they are like new. TO CLEAN WHITE WINGS Make a paste of naphtha and French chalk, letting it dry on the wings and remain for a day, then, brush. Ordinary white wings may be scrubbed with a small scrubbing brush and Ivory soap suds. Scrub in the direc- tion the wings grow, rinse well and while drying, brush frequently. TO CURL OSTRICH FEATHERS Sprinkle salt over hot coals, and shake the feathers over them. Or place the plume in a warm oven for a few minutes. TO COLOR FLOWERS Squeeze a little oil paint of the desired color into a cup. Pour in a little gasoline, and mix it with a stiff brush (about one-half inch in width) with the paint. Add gasoline a little at a time till the right shade is reached. Try a leaf in it, dipping in, then shaking dry. Drying makes the color several shades lighter. Ribbons, laces, gloves, etc., may be tinted in this manner. TO PREVENT SILK FROM CRACKING Press with a hot iron. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 203 TO CLEAN BLACK SILK Brush black taffeta with a piece of velveteen, pin it smoothly to the ironing board and sponge with one tablespoonful of ammonia in two quarts of strong black coffee. Sponge both sides and rub dry with a clean soft cloth. An old soft stocking makes a good sponging cloth. Equal parts of ox gall and boiling water are also good for sponging black silk. Another sponging liquid is one teaspoonful of ammonia in a cupful of strong tea. TO REMOVE BEESWAX FROM SILK Put the spotted places between clean white blotting paper, and press with a quite warm iron, changing the blotters as the wax is absorbed. Grease spots are often removed in the same manner. TO WASH PONGEE SILK Wash in lukewarm Ivory soap suds, rinse in warm water, hang* on the line and let drip dry, and press on the wrong side without dampening. Pongee sometimes shrinks when wet. TO FRESHEN VELVET Spread a cloth wrung from cold water on top of a not too hot range, or over an inverted flat iron, spread the velvet over it and brush lightly with a whisk broom. Velvet can be made to look like new. 204 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO CLEAN WHITE SATIN To dry-clean white satin, use dried bread crumbs finely sifted, mixed with an equal quantity of pulverized blue. Spread over the satin, let remain an hour or two, and brush off with a piece of soft clean linen. If gold or silver trimmings are on the satin, use a piece of clean white velveteen for brushing. TO WASH WHITE SATIN Use Ivory soap suds in lukewarm water, rinse in luke- warm water, and press on the wrong side. Silks, satins and velvets may often be cleaned by using gasoline and corn meal, cleaning a small space at a time and rubbing with a soft clean cloth. By adding little salt, the gasoline will never leave a mark around edges. TO CLEAN SILK GOWNS Grate a large raw potato to each quart of soft water nec- essary to wash the dress. Cover the potatoes well with cold water, let stand two days without moving, pour off the clear water carefully into the tub or large pail in which the dress is to be washed, and dip the pieces up and down till clean. Do not wring, but hang out to drip nearly dry, when the pieces should be laid flat and wiped on both sides, and pressed between soft cloths or paper. TO WASH LACES Fine laces, handkerchiefs, doilies or trimmings, may be made like new by soaking them in lukewarm Ivory soap PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 205 suds for a couple of hours, changing the water and re- peating till clean. Squeeze them very gently, rinse in several warm waters and while quite wet (do not squeeze), pat them carefully in shape on a flat smooth surface to dry. Place them right side up and they will look exactly like new, and it is very easy to spread each tiny figure into shape when it is quite wet. A large piece of marble or glass, the bottom of a large platter, or the bottom of a flat porcelain bath tub is good to dry them on. Thin laces may be dried on the window pane, but heavier lace will not stay on the glass. Lace yokes are beautifully done in this manner. TO DRY-CLEAN LACES Rub block magnesia or corn starch carefully into the lace, roll or fold and lay away for several days, when the powder may be shaken out. If not perfectly clean, repeat. Flat pieces of lace may be laid over a piece of white paper that is covered with block magnesia, the lace itself also well covered, another sheet of white paper laid on the lace and a heavy flat weight, like a large book, placed on top and left to press the lace for several days. Shake, or brush carefully with a soft brush. TO CLEAN LACE YOKES Sprinkle boric acid on a lace yoke, lay away for a couple of days, shake well, and the yoke will be clean without re- moving it from the waist. TO CLEAN LACE WAISTS Put a delicate lace waist into a two quart glass jar filled 206 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK with gasoline with the top tightly screwed on, and let stand over night. Next morning pour out a little of the gasoline, shake the jar thoroughly, remove the waist, and shake carefully dry. If the gasoline is much soiled, rinse in clean gasoline. And do not use gasoline indoors. TO DRY-CLEAN LACE WAISTS Put a lace waist in a pillow case, cover thickly with corn meal and flour mixed, leave for several days, take out of doors and shake well but carefully in the bag. Then re- move and shake free from the flour and corn meal. TO WASH LACE WAISTS Shake the dust from a washable lace waist, immerse it in clean warm water, with a tablespoonful of ammonia stirred in, then lay it in a wash bowl, cover it with strong Ivory soap suds and set in the sun for three hours. Do not rub, but dip up and down, rinse well in several warm waters, starch if desired, and press on the wrong side, on a padded ironing board. TO COLOR LACES Proceed in same manner as To Color Flowers. TO CLEAN VEILS Put the veil into a glass fruit jar, filled with wood alco- hol, screw the top tightly on, and leave for about ten minutes. Then pour out a little of the alcohol, replace the top and shake the jar thoroughly. Squeeze the veil PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 207 carefully, and shake partly dry (out of doors), then pin over a sheet on a bed or table, to dry in shape. Do not use alcohol near fire. TO WASH VEILS Dip the veil into a warm suds of Ivory soap, squeeze it carefully till clean, rinse in several warm waters, and pin on a sheet on a bed or table till partly dry, then press under a cloth with a warm iron. TO FRESHEN BLACK VEILS Stir a dessertspoonful of ammonia into a quart fruit jar nearly filled with alcohol, put a black veil in, cover tightly, and shake thoroughly. Remove from the jar, squeeze carefully, shake till nearly dry, pin on a sheet on a bed or table, and leave till perfectly dry. TO FRESHEN BLACK LACE Spread the lace on a flat surface, brush carefully with a soft brush, and shake out the dust. Mix in a saucepan one dessertspoonful of dry tea, one pint of boiling water and one teaspoonful of gum arabic. Simmer slowly, stirring till the gum is dissolved. Strain into a dish and soak the lace in it for thirty minutes. If the lace is silk, add a teaspoonful of alcohol to the solution. After soak- ing, squeeze the lace carefully, then put it in folds of cloth and squeeze. Then smooth it in shape, roll carefully in a dry cloth, let remain an hour and press over paper on a padded ironing board, with a paper on top of the lace which must be pressed on the wrong side. 208 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO STIFFEN LACE Put a pinch of sugar in the last rinsing water. TO CLEAN A BLACK WOOL GOWN Sponge with ammonia and warm water, a tablespoonful of ammonia to a quart of water. Rub powdered French chalk into the spots, leave for half a day, cover the chalk with clean white blotting paper and set a warm iron on it. Then sponge again with ammonia and water, and press carefully under a cloth, on the wrong side where possible. TO WASH A BLACK WOOL GOWN Boil one ounce of soap bark solution in one quart of water. When thoroughly steeped, strain, and add to two gallons of hot water. Put the dress in this and dip up and down till clean. Rinse in warm water, squeeze carefully, shake out doors and let drip partially dry. Shake again, hang up again and when nearly dry, press carefully on the wrong side. TO CLEAN COVERT CLOTH Mix six ounces of water, one ounce of sulphuric ether and one ounce of ammonia. Sponge covert cloth with the mixture, then sponge with warm water, cover with a damp cloth and press dry, pressing on the wrong side where possible. TO CLEAN SPOTS FROM CASHMERE Make a paste of Fuller's earth and cold water, and put on the spots and leave for several hours, then brush. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 209 TO CLEAN MACINTOSH COATS Dissolve a handful of the best gray lime in half a pail of water, and apply to the coat, with a sponge. Repeat, after three hours. TO REMOVE GLOSS FROM CLOTHING Rub carefully with fine emery cloth. After using emery cloth on very smooth surfaces, rub carefully the way of the nap with a warm silk handkerchief. Sponging with hot vinegar is good for removing shine from woolen garments. Black wool may be sponged with borax and water, then with clear water, to remove gloss. TO DRY-CLEAN WHITE CLOTH Rub pipe clay into the soiled places, leave for a few hours, or a day or two, then brush off the pipe clay with a small scrubbing brush kept for the purpose. TO CLEAN WHITE FUR CLOTH Brush the cloth the way of the nap, shake, dip a clean sponge in alcohol and wash thoroughly in the direction the nap goes. Have mixed one part powdered borax and three parts powdered starch, and sprinkle on while the cloth is wet, all it will hold. Leave in a clean place for three days, then brush out all the starch. TO WASH WHITE SWEATERS AND SHAWLS Use a tablespoonful of Pearline to each pailful of warm 210 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK water. Cover the garment with this, press down with the hands to squeeze out the dirty water. Let soak thirty min- utes, pour off the water and repeat till clean. Rinse in several clean warm waters, but do not lift from the tub or bucket the garment is washed in. Take out of doors, pour off all the water possible. Squeeze the garment into a bunch in the two hands and dump quickly on a dry sheet on the grass in the hot sun. Spread the garment in shape and let dry. It will be perfect. If the sun is not hot enough to dry it on the grass, the garment may be spread on a sheet stretched on quilting or curtain frames across boxes or chairs. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA REMOVING STAINS TO REMOVE BLOOD STAINS FROM COTTON To remove blood stains from cotton, wet the spots with cold water, sprinkle with salt and rub lightly. Or soak the material in salt and water, afterwards wash- ing in soap and water. A spot on a starched garment may be removed by apply- ing a thick paste of corn starch and cold water. TO REMOVE BLOOD STAINS FROM SILK Use strong cold borax water. TO REMOVE CHOCOLATE AND COCOA STAINS Wash first in cold, then pour boiling water through the stains. TO REMOVE COFFEE STAINS Spread the stained part over a basin, rub in powdered borax and pour boiling water through, and let soak. TO REMOVE FRUIT STAINS Spread the stained part over a basin, and pour boiling water through, let soak for thirty minutes and launder as usual. Let dry in the sun. Another method is to moisten the spots with camphor before wetting with water, then launder as usual. 211 212 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO REMOVE GRASS STAINS Rub the stain with molasses, laundering as usual, after- ward. Another way is to saturate the spot with kero- sene, and launder. Alcohol will remove grass stains in materials that will not launder. TO REMOVE CANDLE GREASE Use gasoline on a soft cloth. TO REMOVE AXLE GREASE To remove axle grease on washable garments, cover thickly with butter, let stand a few minutes, wash in gasoline, and then in soap and water. Grease may be removed from overalls by putting them in cold water, with plenty of soap, and as soon as the water boils, add about three tablespoonfuls of kerosene and boil a few minutes. Do not pour kerosene from a kero- sene can near a fire, but pour it from a can into a dipper away from fire, and then pour from the dipper quickly into the boiler. Chloroform will remove grease from the most delicate fabrics, but it is apt to leave a mark and for that reason, ether is more universally used. French chalk put around the edge of a spot before clean- ing with gasoline on cloth, will prevent a mark from showing. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 213 TO REMOVE INDELIBLE INK OR PENCIL MARKS Dampen the spot with water, and rub with the head of a common match. TO REMOVE INK STAINS Cover the ink stain on any fabric with Hydrogen Perox- ide, lay in the sun and air, and repeat till the stain dis- appears. Ink may be removed from wash goods by melting a piece of tallow, putting the spot in the hot tallow and washing as usual. On colored garments that will not wash, drop melted tallow and scrape off with a knife. If the stain does not all come out, put a clean piece of blotting paper over it, and press with a hot iron. TO REMOVE INK FROM WOODEN FLOORS Use lemon juice and salt, without soap. TO REMOVE RED INK Use ammonia and water. TO REMOVE IODINE STAINS Cover the stain on cloth as soon as possible with a paste of corn starch and water. Change for fresh paste and repeat till stain disappears. If the stain is on wood, apply the paste, let stand a few minutes, and rub with a soft cloth. 214 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO REMOVE IRON RUST FROM WASH GOODS Wet the spot with lemon juice, sprinkle with salt, and hold over boiling water so the steam can go through. If very badly rusted, add three tablespoonfuls of cream of tartar to three gallons of water, and boil the stained garments in it for about one hour. Another way is to boil pie plant in enough water to soak the dress, remove the pie plant and soak the dress in the water for some time, then wash as usual. TO REMOVE LEMON JUICE STAINS Mix one tablespoonful of ammonia in four tablespoonfuls of water, and sponge lightly. TO REMOVE MACHINE OIL Apply kerosene to the spots, and launder as usual. Cover an oil spot on silk with block magnesia shaved in fine powder. Leave on for a time, shake off, and repeat if necessary. TO REMOVE MILDEW Cover the mildew on wash goods with molasses, then launder as usual. Or soak the stains in buttermilk several hours, then wash. TO REMOVE MILK STAINS Wash first in cold, then hot water. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 215 Apply absorbent cotton at once when milk is spilled on woolens. Alcohol will remove milk on colored garments. TO REMOVE MUD STAINS FROM CLOTH Use water in which a sliced raw potato has soaked. TO REMOVE PAINT Rub turpentine thoroughly into the material. If the paint is very dry, mix a little ammonia with the turpen- tine. Keep all cleaning fluids away from fire. Ether is also good for removing paint. TO REMOVE PERSPIRATION STAINS To remove perspiration stains from white waists, soak the stained part in baking soda and cold water. Repeat, if necessary, after thirty minutes. For silk waists, sponge the spot carefully with a little cold water, and cover with powdered prepared chalk. When thoroughly dry, brush carefully with a soft brush. To remove perspiration stains on white cotton from wear- ing black silk, boil the garment in one-half gallon of water containing a handful of peach leaves. TO REMOVE SCORCH STAINS Apply Peroxide of Hydrogen. 216 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO REMOVE TEA STAINS Wash in cold, and then pour boiling water through the spot. Soak an obstinate tea stain in glycerine. TO REMOVE VARNISH STAINS Saturate in gasoline, then wash in cold water with naph- tha soap. TO REMOVE VINEGAR STAINS Mix one tablespoonful of ammonia in four tablespoonfuls of water and sponge lightly. TO REMOVE WINE STAINS Moisten a red wine stain in cold water and keep covered with salt, and the wet salt will absorb the stain. Wash yellow wine stains in cold water, then in warm suds. FURS STORING FURS Beat the furs well but carefully, out-of-doors and hang, if convenient, on a line in the sun for an hour or more. Then lay in a box lined with newspapers, putting paper between parts of the furs that must lap over one another. Wrap the box in newspapers, putting a heavy express paper over all, sticking all edges of this last paper with mucilage. CLEANING BLACK LYNX Clean it with a stiff brush dipped in a solution of am- monia and water. TO CLEAN CHINCHILLA Make a paste of prepared chalk and water, put on the fur with a wide brush and let dry. Beat the fur lightly to remove the chalk. If chinchilla fur gets wet, suspend it near heat, beating it lightly every few minutes. Harder furs require stiff brushes to smooth them, always stroking in the direction the fur lies. If furs get wet, absorb all possible moist-ire by applying hot towels, before hanging to dry. 217 218 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO CLEAN ERMINE Smooth starch with water till like paste. Dip a piece of clean white flannel in this paste, rub the furs well with it and leave near fire to dry. Then brush it with a stiff brush, and shake thoroughly to remove the flour. TO CLEAN MINK Brush thoroughly with dry corn meal. TO CLEAN SEALSKIN Spread sawdust over sealskin and spray benzine over the sawdust. When nearly dry, brush off with a whisk broom, then brush so the hair stands up, and let it air. TO CLEAN WHITE FUR Lay the fur flat on a table, take a clean white cloth and rub dampened corn meal into the fur, always rubbing the way the fur lies. Rub carefully till the fur is filled. Shake, and if not clean, repeat the operation, using plenty of dry corn meal to dry it at the last. White fur may be cleaned by rubbing in a paste of corn meal and gasoline, repeating, if the fur is badly soiled. Shake well, and air. Clean all things out-of-doors when using gasoline. DISINFECTANTS, SCENTS, ETC. Essence of cinnamon evaporating in a shallow dish is an agreeable disinfectant. A little charcoal mixed with water thrown in a sink will deodorize it. A small piece of charcoal should be placed inside the refrigerator to insure a sweet interior. It should also be placed in dark closets. Renew every week or two. Put a piece of camphor gum in a saucer and apply a hot poker. Put a few pieces of dried orange peel on a hot stove, or in an old tin can or shovel, and allow it to smoulder. Broken pieces of pumice stone may be saturated with oil of lavender to create a pleasant odor in a room. Or a few drops of the oil may be dropped into a bowl of boil- ing water, letting it stand till cold. Eau-de-cologne may be burned in an old iron spoon made red hot ; or it may be poured over block ammonia placed in an earthen jar. A little oil of sandalwood dropped on a hot shovel will impart a delightful fragrance to a room. The odor of paint, and of tobacco smoke in a room may be dispelled by setting a dish of cold water in the room. A dish of ground roasted coffee is one of the best pre- servatives to leave in cellar. 219 220 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK LIME WATER Put a piece of unslacked lime the size of an egg in an earthen vessel, pouring over it a quart of cold water. Allow it to stand a few hours, then filter it through clean white blotting paper. Pour it into a clean bottle, cork and keep in a cool dark place. A teaspoonful of lime water in a cupful of milk or water, almost destroys any deleterious substance there. It gives no unpleasant taste. SCENTING LINENS Underlinen is delightfully scented by placing broken orris root in the bureau drawers and hanging in small muslin bags in the closets. A few drops of any preferred scent put on broken pumice stone and scattered through drawers and boxes, gives a delicious perfume. Sachet powder mixed with powdered orris root in equal parts, preserves the fragrance much longer than by using sachet powder alone. Pack away bed linen with leaves of dried rosemary or sweet lavender. COLOGNE y 2 oz. bergamot ^2 oz. English lavender *4 oz. oil of lemon y z drachm neroli 1 quart alcohol FILLING A ROSE JAR No. 1 Gather rose leaves in June, pack in a covered stone jar with alternate layers of salt, and keep in a dry cool place PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 221 for a week after sufficient leaves are packed. Then turn ou\ on a paper spread on a table, and mix very thoroughly. Add the following ingredients, mix well and put in the jar for six weeks before filling the rose jars. Leave rose jars uncovered for a short time only, as the perfume is easily exhausted. % oz. powdered violet % teaspoonful mace y z oz. powdered rose ^ teaspoonful cloves y z oz. powdered heliotrope 54 teaspoonful cinnamon 1 oz. powdered orris root 2 drachms pure alcohol 4 drops oil of roses 20 drops oil of eucalyptus 10 drops oil of neroli 10 drops oil of bergamot 20 drops oil of lavender FILLING ROSE JAR No. 2 Gather rose leaves in June and put a layer in a covered stone jar, then add a layer of salt; spread thickly over this stick cinnamon and whole cloves ; pour over these a pint of alcohol, cover and allow to remain one week, then mix and fill into rose jar. PESTS OF VARIOUS KINDS ANTS J4 cupful water 1 teaspoonful sugar 1 teaspoonful tartar emetic Mix and place where ants congregate. Wash a large sponge, press dry, then sprinkle with fine sugar and place where ants are thick. They will fill the sponge, which may be dropped in boiling water, squeezed out, and placed ready for them again. A small cloth saturated with oil of sassafras will cause ants to leave. RED ANTS Several ways of getting rid of red ants are good. Use whichever is easiest for you in your locality. The sponge remedy given for ants is good. 1 teaspoonful paregoric with one-fourth cupful water is effective when sprinkled around. Sugar well mixed with pulverized plaster of paris sprinkled about will drive them away. Sprigs of fresh parsley laid around food will cause ants to disappear. RATS AND MICE Put sprays of peppermint or peppermint essence where mice have been, and they will not return. 222 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 223 Or stuff pieces of sponge in holes where they enter. Sprinkle sulphur about house and barn where rats come in, and they will be driven away. To stuff the holes where they enter with soap sprinkled with cayenne pepper, will keep them out. FLIES Mix one-half teaspoonful black pepper and one teaspoon- ful of sugar in one teaspoonful cream and put on a plate, and flies will disappear. Two teaspoonfuls formaldehyde in. two cupfuls of water poured into shallow dishes and set around tables where flies are troublesome, will destroy them. A little bit of sassafras on a small cloth laid in an old baking powder or other can cover, will drive flies away. Flies dislike mignonette, and they despise hop vines. ROACHES Cucumber peel scattered around the haunts of roaches and left over night, gets rid of the bugs. Mix a dough of corn meal and strong borax solution, shape into little cakes and place on pantry shelves to feed roaches so they will refuse to return. A weak solution of turpentine might be poured down water pipes once a week to keep water bugs away. SPARROWS A little molasses put on their roosting places causes them to leave. 224 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK MOTHS Blotting paper saturated with turpentine placed where moths are apt to work, will prevent their havoc. Sassafras bark scattered among woolens and furs is a preventive of moths. Saturate an old sheet with formaldehyde and hang in the closet containing moths, first stopping all possible cracks and keyhole, and leaving there for a day. If moths get into carpets, draperies and furniture, use the just given formaldehyde cure. Where moths are apt to injure carpets, boil a few camphor balls in water and sweep with a clean broom, dipping frequently in the mixture. Or scatter powdered borax plentifully about. An effective, quick way to rid carpets and furniture of moths, is to use an oil atomizer and spray them with one teaspoonful carbolic acid, mixed in one quart benzine. SCENT BAGS TO HANG IN CLOSETS */4 oz. ground cloves */ 2 Ib. lavender flowers 54 oz. caraway seed y 2 oz. dried thyme 1 oz. dry salt y z oz. dried mint Mix well and put in small bags in closets and among clothes. This mixture is said to be a preventive of moths. FLOWERS, PLANTS AND GREEN THINGS Add a little salt, saltpeter or soda to the water contain- ing cut flowers, or place them in cold soap suds, to aid in their preservation. Another way is to fill a vase nearly full of fresh bits of charcoal, adding water till the vase is nearly full of water, place flowers in it, and change water daily. Cut flowers with a sharp knife instead of scissors, if you wish them to keep for a longer time. NASTURTIUMS After picking, put them in rather hot water and the stems soon become stiff, so the blooms will stay up. By tying a soft thread around buds, they may be kept from opening for several days. A FLOWER CENTER PIECE Cover any size embroidery hoop with mosquito netting, placing over a low bowl, and stick short stemmed flowers through it. A GROWING CENTER PIECE Plant a five cent package of old fashioned portulaca seed in your fern dish for beautiful greenery. A flower pot may be covered with a straw sleeve pro- tector or made attractive by decorating in green oil paints in leaf designs. 225 226 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK GROWING GREENS Mix mustard and turnip seed and sow thickly in odd spots in garden or yard. They grow rapidly, can be cut off and will grow again. Horse radish is also good to have growing. MINT Grow fresh mint for cooking, in less than a week in a glass jar of water. Do not change, but add to the water each day or two, and keep the sprays short by pinching off the tops. VINES Vines should be trained on a strong black thread in a window garden. A sweet potato, not kiln dried, placed in a bowl contain- ing a few inches of water, will grow beautiful greens. TO HASTEN GROWTH Thoroughly dissolve one tablespoonful epsom salts in one half gallon cool water, and pour over plant roots. FLOWERS FOR WINTER Save the most perfect buds of the desired flowers, cut with a three inch stem and cover the end immediately with sealing wax. When they have shrunken some, wrap each one in a piece of paper and keep in a dry box. When ready for them in winter, take them at night, cut off the ends, and place in water containing a little niter of salt. The following day the flowers will bloom as though just picked. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 227 PRESERVING FOR DECORATION Gather red berries like pods of roses, and bright red berries and dip in melted paraffin for decorating in winter. HYACINTHS Plant four or five bulbs in October in a six inch pot, and place in the cellar till six weeks before Christmas, then bring gradually to the light. If about to bloom too soon, put in a darker cooler place ; if too slow, put in a warmer lighter place. TO KEEP CYCLAMEN BLOOMING Do not cast it aside after repeated blooming, but in the spring, dig a hole in the ground, set the pot in and water as usual. In the fall, place it in a sunny window, keep moist with warm water and it will bloom like new. TO ROOT OLEANDERS Cut off a strong slip, cut a slot in the end and fill full of cotton, wrapping paper around it so it will not touch the bottle, and put it in a bottle of water in a dark place for a week. It should have plenty of roots by that time, and is ready to plant carefully in rich soil. Other woody plants may be rooted in this way. SLIPPING GERANIUMS Insert an oat or a grain of rye in the bottom of the slip, put in a pot, keep moist, and the result is wonderful. 228 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK FERNS AND PALMS Do not place ferns on windows or in a draft. Moisten the soil around them each week with not too strong cold tea. When the fronds droop, the fern is usually root-bound. Two tablespoonfuls of olive or castor oil poured on the roots of large ferns and palms once a month, does wonders. Use less quantities for smaller plants. PALMS Keep palms washed clean with luke warm water and milk and give them from one to two tablespoonfuls olive or castor oil, according to their size, once a month. A fresh green pineapple top may be planted and grown into a fine palm. RUBBER PLANTS Give them oil as advised for ferns and palms. If the leaves become spotted, turn yellow and drop, give the roots some sweet skim milk once or twice each week. FROZEN POTTED PLANTS Turn boxes or other covers immediately over them, covering them with blankets, papers, or anything to en- tirely keep out light; or set them in a perfectly dark closet to thaw naturally, without light. Bulbs frozen in water should be set away from a ray of light and brought out on a milder day. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 22!) TO KILL BURDOCKS Cut off close to the ground and drop a few drops of gaso- line from an old kerosene can on the roots. PLANT BUGS One teaspoonful ammonia to one quart warm water on roots of plants destroys worms and bugs. To rid plants of lice, spray with two tablespoonfuls oil of sassafras well stirred in one quart of lukewarm water. TO SHARPEN LAWN MOWERS Spread a mixture of emery dust and black oil as thick as molasses, on the concave cutter bar beneath the knives. Remove the cast head covering on the outside of one wheel and place a crank on the end of the axle, and turn backward. This turns the knife cylinder rapidly and draws the knife edges through the emery and oil. The kitchen range shaker or clothes wringer crank may be utilized for the crank. BOTTLES, GLASS UTENSILS, MIRRORS, ETC. TO CLEAN BOTTLES Wash first in cold water, then in hot water with baking soda. Cut up raw potato parings very finely, fill the bottle with them, cover with warm water and let stand twenty four hours. Remove a few of the parings, shake the bottle thoroughly, turn all out, and wash the bottle. It should be perfectly clean. Crush egg shells and put in a bottle with clear cold water. Shake thoroughly, empty, and rinse well. Put a piece of soap and a handful of small cinders in a bottle with hot water, shake thoroughly, rinse well, and drain. TO CUT A BOTTLE No. 1 Wind cotton twine two or three times around the bottle just below where it is to be cut. Drop kerosene or alcohol very slowly on the cord until it is saturated, then ignite it with a match. When the flame has nearly died out, pour on a little cold water, and the bottle separates smoothly. TO CUT A BOTTLE No. 2 To file, drill, or saw glass with a hack saw, keep the tool edge wet with camphor dissolved in turpentine. 230 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 231 TO CUT GLASS Fill a deep pan with water, put the hands, glass and scis- sors completely under water and hold them there while cutting any desired shape in glass. REMOVING STOPPERS FROM BOTTLES Wrap the stopper round with a cloth dipped in boiling water. If the bottle contains smelling salts, put it into vinegar and water. Leave it a short time in a warm place, then stand it in hot water. Then hold it in one hand and tap it on first one side and then the other with a piece of wood, with an upward stroke. Another way is to put a few drops of olive oil around the glass stopper, leave for an hour or more, and if it refuses to be moved, place the whole bottle in warm water and tap the stopper carefully on each side. TO REMOVE A CORK FROM BOTTLE Tie a nail on the loop of a string so it will not float, get the string under the cork and pull it out. To keep a cork from sticking in a glue bottle, rub it with vaseline. TO MAKE A CORK SMALLER Cut two wedge shaped pieces out of it at right angles across the small end, and it will fit tightly. TO KEEP GAS GLOBES FROM BREAKING Keep a paper clip over the edge of the globe. 232 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK POURING HOT LIQUIDS IN GLASSES Put a silver spoon in a glass to prevent its breaking, when hot liquid is poured in. WHEN GLASSES STICK TOGETHER To separate glasses that stick together, set the lower glass in warm water and fill the upper with cold water. WASHING GLASS Wash cut glass in lukewarm water and brush with a bristle brush. A little soda in the water is good. Use small turkish towels for drying glass and silver, or fine linen ones. MIRRORS To clean mirrors, use a soft cloth dipped in alcohol, and polish with a clean dry cloth. Stains may be removed from mirrors by using a soft cloth dipped in spirits of camphor, polishing afterwards. Never allow the sun to shine on a mirror, as it softens the backing, making the glass cloudy. MENDING CHINA Use common white lead for mending china and glass. Apply the paint to the edges with a small stick, place rubber bands or twine around it to hold the parts to- gether, and set away to become thoroughly hardened. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 233 It is very much better, however, to immediately throw out a piece of broken china, as all the mending in the world never makes it perfect, and there can be no satis- faction in having an imperfect piece of china that is liable at any time to fall apart and break several other pieces. CEMENT FOR CHINA AND GLASS Use common white lead. CEMENT FOR ENAMEL WARE Mix equal parts of finely sifted coal ashes, sifted table salt, and soft putty. Fill the hole with this mixture and set the dish on the fire with a little water in it till the cement hardens. Cement for joining leather, wood, and paper to metal mix one teaspoonful of glycerine with a gill of blue. FOR MENDING RUBBER ARTICLES Try a piece of adhesive plaster where it is practicable. CANDLES, LAMPS, ETC. Keep candles in the refrigerator several hours, to harden them, to prevent drooping when used for decorations. Fancy candles may be washed with a soft brush, with soap and water. Put fine salt on a lighted candle to make it last. Save all small candle ends to use in sealing fruit jars. 234 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK When carrying a candle in a draft, fasten it by its melted grease in a tumbler, using a short candle. FILLING OIL LAMPS, ETC. Fill oil lamps with a funnel kept for the purpose. Boil the burners occasionally in soda water. Place a small lump of camphoi in the oil to brighten lamp- light. If a lamp gets overturned, never pour water on it, but use earth, flour or sand. LAMP WICKS Soak a new lampwick in vinegar and dry perfectly before using, to prevent it smelling badly. When a lampwick is too large, do not cut down the side, but draw several threads from the middle of the wick. Put a new wick in a lamp through the top instead of the bottom of the burner. Dip one inch of the end of a wick in starch and iron perfectly dry, to insert it easily in a burner. Sew a piece of white flannel to the bottom of large lamp wicks and they may be used a much longer time. TO CLEAN LAMP CHIMNEYS Wipe chimney with a cloth moistened with vinegar, then polish. A few drops of alcohol rubbed on the inside of a lamp chimney will remove all the black. PAPER AND BOOKS TO MAKE WATERPROOF PAPER Mix sulphuric acid of an exact strength with one half its weight of water. A sheet of common paper placed in this solution becomes hard and fibrous, yet its weight is not increased, and it makes a better parchment for writing purposes than animal parchment. TO RESTORE FADED WRITING Moisten the paper with water, then brush over with a solution of hydric-ammonia. TO PREVENT MOULD ON BOOKS Wipe the shelves with oil of cedar. TO CLEAN SOILED BOOKS Use two parts of water to one part of vinegar, rub over the soiled pages, and leave the book open to dry. Book covers soiled by grease may be cleaned by putting pipe clay or French chalk over the spots, then applying a warm iron. To clean the edges (where they are not gilt edges) close the book tightly and erase with an ink eraser. COOK BOOK COVERS Cook books should be covered with oil cloth or waxed paper. 335 236 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO MAKE LIBRARY PASTE \Y 2 pints rain water 1 oz. gum tragacanth a few drops of essential oil Put in jars and be sure to keep tightly covered, and it is always ready for use. MEMORANDA MEMORANDA COAL, STOVES, FURNACES, ETC. TO PREVENT SOOT IN CHIMNEYS Burn raw potato parings in the stove, or pieces of zinc to prevent having soot accumulate. TO SEE OBSTRUCTIONS IN A CHIMNEY Remove the soot-pan, place a hand mirror in the opening, and you can see to the top unless obstructed. Vinegar will remove lime spots and soot from an open chimney. TO START A FIRE Keep ashes in an old tin can and pour over kerosene enough to soak them. Have the grate clean and wood laid on it ready to light. Place two spoonfuls of ashes on the wood, then lay a few sticks over the ashes, have dampers open, and light the ashes. Keep the can of ashes outside, away from fire and your kindling is always ready. A brick may be soaked in kerosene a short time and laid in a grate and lighted to start either coal or wood. When the kerosene is burned out and the brick cold, it may be soaked again. To start a fire in the grate, first take a newspaper and in- sert in opening just above grate, then light paper; this will warm up the chimney flue and prevent smoke from 237 338 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK coming into room after lighting fire. This also applies in starting hard and soft coal burners. To free a grate from cinders, dump clam or oyster shells into the grate. TO KEEP A FIRE Soak two or three newspapers in clean cold water, squeeze out the water, and make the papers into good sized balls. Pack these tightly together on top of the red hot coal fire, and it will keep for hours. When a quick fire is needed , tear a newspaper into quarters without unfolding, twist each one tightly, lay closely in the stove, and light one end. Throw on a few pieces of coal and sprinkle table salt over them. At the end of several hours, there will be a good fire. TO WATERPROOF MATCHES Dip them in very hot melted paraffin and when eool, they are ready for use. TO CLEAN DISCOLORED FIREPLACE BRICK Rub into the bricks as much linseed oil as they will absorb, and repeat till they are clear. BLACKING A STOVE Use a paint brush to apply the blacking. Just before using stove polish, mix a tablespoonful of gasoline with PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 239 a saucer of polish. Be sure the stove is cold and never use gasoline around heat. Turpentine is also good to use with polish. Clean the steel parts with boiled linseed oil on a woolen cloth, and clean the nickle with whiting and ammonia. If a stove is washed, then rubbed well with a few drops of linseed oil on a woolen cloth, it will never need polish- ing. IN THE OVEN Paint the inside of the oven with aluminum paint and it is a pleasure to be able to see every article in it. A little salt sprinkled on the bottom of the oven will pre- vent cakes burning. When possible during the winter months, do the baking in the furnace. When the hinges on the oven door are worn and the doors fail to catch, put washers of iron on the bolt. TO CUT STOVE PIPE Cut stove pipe easily with a can opener. GAS STOVES Wash them each time they are used, and wash with kero- sene once each week. Keep two pieces of sheet iron on top of a gas stove, large enough to cover it. Enough heat will be diffused from 240 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK one or two burners to cook a whole meal. It will also keep dishes hot. On top of the gas stove under the burners, is a good place to spread a paper to catch falling particles. TO CLEAN ASBESTOS GAS LOGS To clean the asbestos gas log when it becomes blackened, sprinkle it with salt, light the gas, and the asbestos turns white. TO CLEAN A GAS MANTLE When smoke has blackened a gas mantle, sprinkle salt from a salt shaker on it, slowly, light the gas and let the salt burn off a little at a time. TO WHITEN A HEARTH Melt a little size in a jar with a quart of boiling water. When the size is melted, mix in the same quantity of whiting with just a bit of washing-blue. Wash the hearth, then paint with the mixture. Clean it by wiping with a cloth wrung out of cold water. When the whiting needs renewing, wash the hearthstone in hot water, and apply the mixture. Add more water when the mixture requires. PACKING THE STOVE AWAY Rub a little oil, vaseline or kerosene over a stove before packing it away, to prevent rusting. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 241 ABOUT PLUMBING Slip a piece of garden hose about an inch long over the end of the faucets in the kitchen sink to prevent breaking dishes on the faucets. TO PREVENT PIPES FREEZING After water is shut off, always sprinkle a good handful of coarse salt over the holes in the sink with just enough water to carry it to the curve of the waste pipe. Treat all similar curves in the same manner. TO THAW FROZEN PIPES Use a hot water bottle. When pipes become frozen in the yard, have an electrician connect a transformer of suitable size into circuit ; one lead of the secondary is connected to the water valve or pipe near the curb and the other lead is connected to the water piping in the house. The current is then turned on, and the heat developed by the resistance of the water pipe to the flow of the electric current soon thaws the pipe. A pipe-thawing electrical outfit is now manufactured. CLEANING METALS, ETC. TO CLEAN ALUMINUM KETTLES Boil rhubarb peelings in them for thirty minutes. TO CLEAN BRASS Dip half a lemon in fine salt and rub over the stains, wipe with a soft cloth, and polish with a woolen cloth. After cleaning brass, polish with equal parts of paraffin and naphtha with enough rottenstone to make a good paste. Then polish with a soft dry cloth. Ammonia in a little water will remove verdigris from brass. Drop rusty curtain pins into ammonia water and let them remain for ten minutes, then dry on soft cloth. TO CLEAN BRONZE Use salt and vinegar (or lemon juice), then rinse in clear water and polish with a clean woolen cloth. TO CLEAN COPPER Proceed as in To Clean Brass. TO CLEAN ENAMELED WARE Use salt and vinegar. Or, put soda in the enameled lined vessel, and let come to a boil. 242' PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 243 TO CLEAN GOLD Dip in a solution of one teaspoonful of ammonia to one quart of water, rinse in clear warm water, and dry on soft cloth. TO PRESERVE POLISHED IRON WORK Add olive oil to copal varnish till the mixture is rather greasy, then mix in as much turpentine as there is var- nish and apply. TO CLEAN NICKEL Use whiting and ammonia. TO CLEAN PEWTER Wash with hot water, rub with fine sand, dry and polish with leather. TO CLEAN SILVER Apply kerosene with a brush or soft cloth, rinse in boil- ing water and dry with soft towels. Dissolve one-fourth cupful sal-soda in one gallon of water, heat to boiling, immerse the silver, being sure it is en- tirely covered in water, let stand five minutes, rinse, and wipe dry. Another method is, boil the silver in an aluminum kettle for thirty minutes, and dry with a soft towel. TO REMOVE EGG STAIN FROM SILVER Use wet salt. 244 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK TO KEEP SILVER UNTARNISHED Sprinkle a few pieces of camphor gum in boxes or drawers where it is kept. TO CLEAN STEEL Emery powder and oil nabbed to a paste is good to clean steel. After cleaning, polish with an oiled rag, and then with a soft dry cloth. TO REMOVE RUST FROM STEEL Use plenty of kerosene. If possible, lay on or wrap about the rusted parts, cloths soaked in kerosene, leaving them for a day or two. Then apply salt wet in hot vine- gar, or scour with brick dust. Rinse in hot water and dry with a soft woolen cloth, finishing with an oil rub and polish with a soft cloth. TO CLEAN TIN Rub with a damp cloth dipped in soda. TO CLEAN ZINC Clean with kerosene on a soft cloth, and wash in boiling water. Dampen a flannel cloth in warm water, dip in whiting and apply to the wood. Rinse in clear warm water, and dry with a soft cloth. PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 245 TO CLEAN OILED WOODWORK Use cold tea with a soft cloth, and wipe with a dry cloth. TO CLEAN PAINTED WOODWORK Use one dessertspoonful of soda to one bucketful of warm water. Wash, and wipe with a dry, clean, soft cloth. Kerosene is good to clean any painted or polished wood- work. Use one tablespoonful to a bucketful of warm water. Rub with a lemon, all marks left by scratching matches on painted wood. TO CLEAN WINDOWS Use a cloth moistened in denatured alcohol, and polish immediately with a soft dry cloth. Or a tablespoonful of kerosene to a gallon of warm water. TO CLEAN OLD PAINT BRUSHES To clean a brush that is dried and stiff from standing in paint or varnish, dip it repeatedly in boiling vinegar till it softens. Then wash it in warm soap suds, rinse in warm water, and dry. TO POLISH FURNITURE Mix equal parts of olive oil, vinegar and turpentine. Apply with a soft cloth and rub dry with a soft clean flannel. 246 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK DUST CLOTHS Dip a soft piece of cheese cloth about a yard square in kerosene, do not wring very dry, but hang out of doors for twenty four hours before using. Old pieces of soft flannel soaked in paraffin all night, wrung out as dry as possible and hung out of doors about twenty four hours, make nice furniture polishers and cleaners. CLEANING BRIC-A-BRAC, ETC. TO CLEAN ALABASTER ORNAMENTS Apply a paste made of quick lime and water, leave on a few days, and wash off with warm water and soap. TO CLEAN IVORY Brush with a soft tooth brush in lukewarm water. Use alcohol if the ivory is discolored and dry in the sun, if possible. TO CLEAN MARBLE Mix two parts of soda, one of pumice stone, and one of salt, with warm water to form a paste. TO CLEAN PLASTER STATUETTES Dip the statue several times in a strong solution of soda in water, rubbing badly soiled places with a soft cloth. 247 CLEANING COMPOUNDS TO REMOVE GREASE FROM ALL FABRICS 1 pint deodorized benzine 1 oz. alcohol 1 oz. spirits of ammonia Shake well, apply with a sponge and rub. When dry, press with a slightly warm iron. TO CLEAN ALL FABRICS 3 drachms sulphuric ether 6 drachms alcohol 3 drachms chloroform 1 quart gasoline Let the articles to be cleaned remain' in the fluid from one to twelve hours. If small pieces are to be cleaned, im- merse them in the mixture in a glass fruit jar with the top screwed tightly. Laces, feathers, silks, woolens, etc., clean beautifully in this. TO CLEAN CARPETS 2 buckets lukewarm rain water 1 oz. borax 1% bars naphtha soap 1 oz. cleaning soda 1 oz. Fuller's earth Scrub the mixture on the carpet with a scrubbing brush, and wipe dry with clean cloths. TO CLEAN WALL PAPER 1 quart cold water lOc worth oil of sassafras 1^4 cupfuls aqua ammonia 2 teaspoonfuls salt 1 teaspoonful soda Mix, and add flour till stiff enough to drop from spoon. 248 PROGRESS MEATLESS COOK BOOK 249 Cook in a covered pail set in a kettle of boiling water, stirring often, till done. If the mixture does not stick to the hands when cool, it is done, and can be kneaded into loaves. Rub the wall with pieces of the loaf, using the pieces over and over. Keep the loaves covered when not using. MEMORANDA INDEX PAGE around the kitchen stove 12 cooking utensils 14 other helps 13 preface 7 read this 16 suggestions for starting the day 9 the garbage 12 the kitchen floor 11 the kitchen sink 10 the kitchen table 11 weights and measures 15 COOKING RECIPES after-dinner mints 162 almond-nut forcemeat 66 angel cake 126 apple and fig jam 168 apple cake 126 apple chutney 177 apple dumplings 103 apple dumpling sauce 103 apple fritters 93 apple jelly 166 apple pie 94 apple salad, No. 1 90 apple salad, No. 2 90 apple sauce 119 apple snow 115 apricot pie 97 baked apples, No. 1 1 19 baked apples, No. 2 119 251 252 INDEX PACK baked asparagus 53 baked beans 53 baked beets 56 baked buckwheat cakes 28 baked cabbage 57 baked cheese, No. 1 40 baked cheese, No. 2 40 baked eggs 35 baked indian pudding 108 baked lima beans , 55 baked onions 73 baked parsnips 73 baked potatoes 69 baked protose 73 baked prunes 1 19 baked squash 75 baking biscuits 26 baking cakes 124 baking powder biscuits 26 baking powder doughnuts 123, baking powder dumplings 103 baking powder griddle cakes 29 banana cream, No. 1 115 banana cream, No. 2 115 banana fritters 93 banana whip 115 bean croquettes 54 bean hash 55 bean soup 48 beating eggs 34 beet hash 56 bengal chutney 177 berry icing 138 bird's-nest toast 32 biscuits 26 boiled asparagus 53 boiled beets 56 INDEX 253 PAGE boiled cabbage 57 boiled carrots 58 boiled chestnuts 63 boiled corn 59 boiled eggs 35 boiled icing 138 boiled onions 67 boiled parsnips 73 boiled potatoes 69 boiled rice 69 boiled salad dressing, No. 1 85 boiled salad dressing, No. 2 85 boiled sweet potatoes 70 boiled turnips 78 boston brown bread, No. 1 22 boston brown bread, No. 2 22 brandy sauce, No. 1 110 brandy sauce, No. 2 110 brandy sauce, No. 3 110 breads 26 bread doughnuts 26 bread pudding 104 brown bread, No. 1 23 brown bread, No. 2 23 brussels sprouts 57 buckwheat griddle cakes, No. 1 28 buckwheat griddle cakes, No. 2 30 butter scotch 160 butter without ice 149 cake fillings 135 cakes of many kinds 126 candies and sweets 160 candied mint leaves 164 candied orange and lemon peel 165 candied violets 165 canning apples 174 canning apricots 174 254 INDEX PAGE canning corn 176 canning grapes 175 canning green beans 176 canning peaches 174 canning pears 174 canning quinces 175 canning rhubarb 175 canning tomatoes 175 canning vegetables 176 carrots 58 carrots with dressing 58 carrot preserves 171 carrot pudding 106 catsup 178 cauliflower 59 celery 59 cereals and breakfast dishes 32 cheese balls 40 cheese custard 41 cheese dreams 42 cheese pudding, No. 1 42 cheese pudding, No. 2 42 cheese salad, No. 1 87 cheese salad, No. 2 88 cheese straws, No. 1 43 cheese straws, No. 2 43 cheese toast 33 cherry salad 84 chili sauce 179 chilled dishes 145 chocolate cake 127 chocolate cookies 142 chocolate filling, No. 1 135 chocolate filling, No. 2 135 chocolate icing, No. 1 139 chocolate icing, No. 2 139 chocolate peppermints 160 INDEX 255 PAGE chocolate sauce 148 chutney, catsup, pickles, etc 177 cinnamon rolls 95 claret cup, No. 1 153 claret cup, No. 2 153 cocoanut cookies , 142 cocoanut icing 139 cocoanut pie filling 98 coffee 158 coffee cake 127 cold beverages 153 cold water 153 coloring icing 138 cooked cabbage salad 84 cookies 142 corn 59 corn chowder 57 corn fritters 93 corn in milk 59 corn in tomatoes 59 cornmeal mush 32 cottage cheese salad 88 cottage pudding 106 cranberry jelly 169 cranberry mould 120 cranberry sauce 120 cranberry whip 116 cream and whipped cream 114 cream cheese 41 cream cheese salad, No. 1 87 cream cheese salad, No. 2 87 cream dates 121 cream puffs 128 cream sauce Ill cream sauce for vegetables 57 cream of asparagus soup 48 cream of pea soup 48 256 INDEX PAGE cream de menthe 157 cream de menthe sauce 148 croutons 47 crustless pie 98 cucumbers 60 cucumber relish 81 currant cream 145 currant jelly 169 currant punch 1 50 custard pie 97 custard pie filling 97 cutting bread 20 dainty cake 128 date pie filling 98 delicate cream 114 desserts 93 deviled egg, No. 1 35 deviled egg, No. 2 35 dill pickles 180 divinity candy 161 divinity fudge 161 doughnuts 123 dried apple fruit cake 129 dried fruit jelly 170 dried lemon flavoring 183 dried peach sauce 122 drip coffee 159 drop cake, No. 1 128 drop cake, No. 2 129 drop nut cakes 129 dutch or cottage cheese 40 east india chutney 177 easy sauce HI easy way for jelly 167 eggs 82 egg gravy 36 egg omelet, No. 1 36 INDEX 257 PAGE egg omelet, No. 2 37 eggplant 60 egg salad in pond lily style 88 egg sauce 82 egg substitute 34 emergency cream 114 entire wheat bread 21 everlasting yeast 17 fancy cream 116 fig pudding 106 floating island , 107 fondant 160 freezing ice cream 145 french dressing, No. 1 86 french dressing, No. 2 87 french mustard 82 french pancakes with jelly 31 french pickles 181 fresh lima beans 55 fried apples 120 fried apple pies 96 fried corn cakes 60 fried cornmeal mush 32 fried eggs 38 fried green tomatoes 76 fried onions 67 fried parsnips 73 fried potatoes, No. 1 70 fried potatoes, No. 2 71 fried protose 73 fried squash 76 fried tomatoes 76 fritters 93 fruits 119 fruit cake, No. 1 130 fruit cake, No. 2 131 fruit cocktail 154 258 INDEX PAOB fruit cookies 142 fruit filling 135 fruit icing 139 fruit jars 172 fruit omelet 37 fruit punch 150 fruit salads 90 gingerbread, No. 1 131 gingerbread, No. 2 131 ginger cookies 143 ginger pudding 108 ginger snaps 143 ginger and grape beverage 154 gooseberry chutney 178 gold cake 132 graham bread No. 1 24 graham bread, No. 2 24 graham biscuits 26 graham gems 27 grandma's bread cake 132 grape fruit 121 grape jelly 169 grape juice punch 150 grape sherbet 148 grape wine 182 gravies 79 green peas 74 green relish 81 green things 61 green tomato mince meat 176 griddle cakes 31 hard sauce, No. 1 Ill hard sauce, No. 2 Ill heat sugar for jelly 166 helps about breads 19 herb sandwiches 45 hermits 132 INDEX 259 PAGE horse radish 81 horse radish tasty relish 81 hot beverages 158 hot sauce 1 12 iced fruit juice 154 icings 138 ice substitute 149 iced tea 154 imitation angel cake 126 jellies, preserves and canned fruits 166 jelly-bags and glasses 167 jelly glasses 167 johnny-cake 28 keeping bread fresh 19 kisses 162 kumiss 155 lemons 122 lemonade 155 lemon cream 145 lemon filling 136 lemon honey filling 136 lemon pie, No. 1 99 lemon pie, No. 2 100 lemon pie, No. 3 100 lemon rind preserves 171 lemon sherbet 149 lemon syrup for lemonade 156 lentils 61 lyonnaise potatoes 71 macaroni and cheese, No. 1 43 macaroni and cheese, No. 2 43 macaroni and corn 62 macaroni with cream sauce 62 macaroni and rice - 62 making dry yeast 117 making lemon flavoring, No. 1 183 making lemon flavoring, No. 2 183 260 INDEX PAGE! making orange flavoring 183 making vanilla flavoring, No. 1 183 making vanilla flavoring, No. 2 183 manhattan cocktail 157 maple ice cream 146 maple icing, No. 1 140 maple icing, No. 2 140 maple tea biscuit 27 marguerites 133 marshmallow cream, No. 1 117 marshmallow cream, No. 2 117 marshmallow cups 117 marshmallow filling, No. 1 136 marshmallow filling, No. 2 136 marshmallow icing 140 marshmallow toast 33 mashed potatoes 71 mashed chestnuts 64 mayonnaise dressing 86 meringue 98 milk 113 milk gravy 80 milk toast 33 mince pie 100 mint sauce 82 muffins 27 new potatoes 69 nut recipes 63 nut cream 145 nut chowder 51 nut filling 137 nut and fruit filling v 137 nut hash 64 nut icing 140 nut kisses 162 nut roast, No. 1 64 nut roast, No. 2 65 INDEX 261 PAGE nut roast, No. 3 65 nut rolls 25 nut salad 90 nut scrapple 65 nut stock for soups 47 oatmeal cakes 30 oatmeal cookies 143 oatmeal water 156 olives 83 onions 67 orangeade 156 orange cream 117 orange custard 105 orange filling 137 orange icing 140 orange marmalade 170 ornamenting cakes 125 parker house rolls 25 parsnip cakes 74 parsnip croquettes 74 peach ice cream 146 peanut butter 66 peanut .candy 163 peanut cookies 144 piecrust, No. 1 95 piecrust, No. 2 95 pies 94 pistachio ice cream 147 plain cake, No. 1 133 plain cake, No. 2 133 plain custard 185 plain ice cream 147 plain potato soup 49 poached eggs, No. 1 38 poached eggs, No. 2 38 pop-corn balls 163 pop-overs 28 262 INDEX PAGE potatoes 69 potatoes and cheese 70 potato pudding 108 potato salad, No. 1 91 potato salad, No. 2 91 protose hash 73 prune catsup 178 prune fruit cake 131 prune pie 101 prune salad 91 prune whip 118 puddings 103 pudding sauce, No. 1 1 12 pudding sauce, No. 2 112 pulled cream candy 163 pulled molasses candy 164 pumpkins and pies 100 pumpkin pie, No. 1 101 pumpkin pie, No. 2 101 punches 150 quick chutney 178 quick cucumber pickles 179 quick soups 49 radishes 83 raspberry preserves 171 raw eggs 38 raw onions 68 red raspberry jelly 170 rhubarb jelly 170 rhubarb pie, No. 1 101 rhubarb pie, No. 2 101 rice tomatoes 75 rolls 24 russian tea punch 151 rye bread 22 salad combinations 84 salsify soup 50 INDEX 263 PAGE salted almonds 63 sandwiches 45 sandwich filling combinations 45 saving peelings 172 sauces, relishes, etc 81 sauce for fried tomatoes 77 sauces for ice cream 148 scrambled eggs 39 sea-foam candy 164 serving punch artistically 149 short cake 95 small cucumber pickles 180 soda-water 156 soups '. 47 soups, basis 47 soups, dumplings 104 sour cream salad dressing 85 sour milk griddle cakes 31 sour milk pie crust 96 Spanish cream 118 spiced peaches 175 spinach greens 61 sponge cake, No. 1 134 sponge cake, No. 2 134 stale bread 19 steamed fruit roll 107 stewed beans 55 stewed tomatoes 77 strawberry sauce 148 strawberry wine 182 stuffed dates 121 stuffed figs 121 stuffed green peppers 74 stuffed potatoes 72 stuffed prunes 122 stuffed tomatoes 77 stuffed tomato fillings 77 264 INDEX PAGE stuffed turnips 78 squash pie 102 sugar cookies 144 sugar syrup, for hot cakes 30 summer beans 56 summer squash 76 sweet potato pie 102 table mustard 82 tapioca pudding 108 tart filling 137 tea 159 temperance punch 151 toast 32 to blanch nuts 63 to clarify vinegar or wine 184 to crack nuts whole 63 to freshen stale nuts 63 tomatoes 76 tomato catsup 179 tomato jelly salad 92 tomato salad, No. 1 91 tomato salad, No. 2 92 tomato sauce 83 tomato soup 50 to remove peach skins 172 to preserve eggs 34 to test milk 113 turnips 78 tutti-frutti 175 unfermented grape juice 182 uncooked icing 141 various sauces 110 vegetables 53 vegetable chili con carne 78 vegetable salad, No. 1 92 vegetable salad, No. 2 92 vegetable sandwiches 45 INDEX 265 PAGE vegetable soup 50 violet punch 151 watercress sauce 83 watercress greens 61 watermelon vinegar 184 welsh rarebit, No. 1 44 welsh rarebit, No. 2 44 whipped cream 114 white bread, rolls and bread doughnuts 21 white cake, No. 1 134 white cake, No. 2 134 white mayonnaise dressing 87 wine punch 152 wines, flavorings and vinegars 182 yeast 17 yellow icing 141 Personal Comforts and Things Good to Know 185 about plumbing 241 a dry shampoo 192 an egg shampoo 192 a flower centerpiece 225 a growing centerpiece 225 a good shampoo 192 an insect in the ear 185 ants 222 a shampoo for auburn hair 192 bathroom and toilet 233 blacking a stove 238 blistered heels 186 bottles, glass utensils, mirrors, etc 230 candles, lamps, etc 233 care of new shoes 197 cement for china and glass 233 cement for enamel ware 233 cleaning compounds 248 266 INDEX PAGE cleaning bric-a-brac, etc 247 cleaning metals, etc 242 cleaning tan shoes 196 cleaning white canvas shoes . . . . 196 cleaning white kid shoes 196 coal, stoves, furnaces, etc 237 cologne 220 cook book covers 235 cuts, burns, etc 185 disinfectants, scents, etc 219 dust cloths 246 ferns and palms 228 filling a rose jar, No. 1 220 filling a rose jar, No. 2 221 filling oil lamps, etc 234 flies : 223 flowers for winter 226 flowers, plants and green things 225 for a discolored neck 190 for bath bags 189 for creaky shoes 197 for mending rubber articles 233 for the bath 189 for the hands 190 frozen potted plants 22? furs 217 gas stoves 239 gloves 194 good complexion cream 185 ..226 growing greens hats, feathers, ribbons and laces 199 hot cloths 186 hot water bag 187 hyacinths 227 innersoles 198 in the oven 239 lamp wicks 234 INDEX 267 PAGE lavender smelling salts 188 lime water 220 lockjaw precaution 187 mending china 232 mint 226 mirrors 232 moths 224 nasturtiums 225 packing the stove away 240 palms 228 paper and books 235 pests of various kinds 222 plant bugs 229 poisons 188 pouring hot liquids in glasses 232 preserving for decoration 227 rats and mice 222 red ants 222 removing stains 211 removing stoppers from bottles . . . .231 roaches 223 rubber plants 228 scent bags to hang in closets 224 scenting linens 220 shoe laces 198 shoes and rubbers 196 slipping geraniums 227 sparrows 223 storing furs 217 the hair 192 the teeth 191 to blacken shoes 196 to clean alabaster ornaments 247 to clean all fabrics 248 to clean aluminum kettles 242 to clean asbestos gas logs 240 to clean bath tubs . . 189 268 INDEX PAGE to clean black silks 203 to clean black wool gowns 208 to clean brass 242 to clean bottles 220 to clean bristle brushes 190 to clean bronze 242 to clean carpets 248 to clean chamois leather 194 to clean chinchilla 217 to clean combs 189 to clean copper 242 to clean covert cloth 208 to clean discolored fireplace brick 238 to clean enameled ware 242 to clean enameled woodwork 244 to clean ermine 218 to clean feathers 200 to clean felt hats 199 to clean and freshen chiffon hats 200 to clean gas mantles 240 to clean gold 243 to clean ivory 247 to clean khaki trousers 195 to clean lace waists 205 to clean lace yokes 205 to clean lamp chimneys 234 to clean mackintosh coats 209 to clean marble 247 to clean mink 218 to clean nickel 243 to clean oiled woodwork 245 to clean old paint brushes 245 to clean painted woodwork 245 to clean patent leathers 196 to clean pewter 243 to clean plaster statuettes 247 to clean ribbons 201 INDEX 269 PAGE to clean sealskin 218 to clean silk gowns 204 to clean silver 243 to clean soiled books 235 to clean sponges 191 to clean spots from cashmere 208 to clean steel 244 to clean straw hats 199 to clean tin 244 to clean veils 206 to clean wall paper 248 to clean white feathers 200 to clean white fur cloth 209 to dean white fur 218 to clean white kid gloves 195 to clean white parasols 195 to clean white ribbons 201 to clean white satin 204 to clean white straw hats ; 199 to clean white wings 202 to clean windows 245 to clean zinc 244 to cleanse a tooth brush 191 to color flowers 202 to color laces 206 to curl ostrich feathers 202 to cut a bottle, No. 1 230 to cut a bottle, No. 2 230 to cut glass 231 to cut stove pipe 239 to dry clean laces 205 to dry clean lace waists 206 to dry clean white cloth 209 to dry clean white gloves 194 to extract a needle from the flesh 188 to freshen black kid gloves 194 to freshen black straw hats 199 270 INDEX PAGE to freshen suede kid 194 to freshen black lace 207 to freshen black veils 207 to freshen velvet 203 to hasten growth 226 to keep a cyclamen blooming 227 to keep a fire 238 to keep glass globes from breaking 231 to keep hair in curl 193 to keep silver untarnished 244 to kill burdocks 229 to make a cork smaller 231 to make library paste 236 to make a mustard plaster 187 to make a tooth powder 191 to make waterproof paper 235 to mend gloves 194 to polish furniture 245 to preserve new gloves 194 to preserve polished iron work 243 to prevent eye glasses steaming 186 to prevent mould on books 235 to prevent pipes freezing 241 to prevent silk from cracking 202 to prevent soot in chimneys 237 to relieve thirst, etc 188 to remove axle grease stains 212 to remove beeswax from silk 203 to remove blood stains from cotton 211 to remove blood stains from silk 211 to remove candle grease 212 to remove chocolate and cocoa stains 211 to remove coffee stains 211 to remove cork from bottle 231 to remove egg stain from silver 243 to remove fishbone from throat 186 to remove fruit stains 211 INDEX 271 PAGE to remove grass stains 212 to remove grease from all fabrics 248 to remove gloss from clothing 209 to remove indelible ink or pencil marks 213 to remove ink stains 213 to remove ink from wooden floors 213 to remove iodine stains 213 to remove iron rust from wash goods 214 to remove lemon juice stains 214 to remove machine oil ^ 214 to remove mildew 214 to remove milk stains 214 to remove mud stains from cloth 215 to remove paint 215 to remove perspiration stains 215 to remove red ink 213 to remove rust from steel 244 to remove scorch stains 215 to remove splinter 188 to remove substance from the eye 185 to remove tangles 193 to remove tea stains 216 to remove varnish stains 216 to remove vinegar stains 216 to remove wine stains 216 to restore faded writing 235 to root oleanders 227 to save rubbers 198 to see obstructions in a chimney 237 to sharpen lawn mowers 229 to start a fire 237 to stiffen lace 208 to stiffen ribbons 201 to stop a simple nose bleed 187 to thaw frozen pipes 241 to wash a black wool gown 208 to wash delicate ribbons 201 272 INDEX PAGE to wash laces 204 to wash lace waists 206 to wash pongee silk 203 to wash veils 207 to wash white satin 204 to wash white silk gloves 195 to wash white sweaters and shawls 209 to waterproof matches 238 to whiten a hearth 240 vines 226 washing blond hair 193 washing glass 232 wet shoes 197 when glasses stick together 232 *&&A**#5. ^ . >!/ * *&**w -tts**62i*tjt*>v S